HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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2 Clicks of Death
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Dr. Gets Years.
In Prison" Fine· WEDNESDAY AF.TERNOON, JUL y [I o, 1968
' • . • • ar1ne I na
'-" ""'· ob ~
Heat Wave . .
To Continue · . .
For Coast
Be a ch g,o ers, ho u se wives
workingmen, mnworkingmen, small
children and dogs can all look forward
to continued w.arm weather today and
Thursday over the orange CoasL
The h1'gb tildes: that have been
lapping up against the coast recently
have done no damaoge either t.o the
beaches or to harbor structures,
report.a the Newport Department of
Marine Safety.
Sweltering coast area residents can
conoole themselves, with this bit of the
grass is always greener news' out of
the na:tion's bot.spot, Palm Springs,
where it reaches 110 degrees Tuesday,
while the residents oC Marquette,
Micbig.an shivered in · 34 degree
t.emperalure.s.
Castoff Ice6ox "
Becomes Tom6
For 2 Children .
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot tM Dlllr """ ,,.., • La Habra youngsters Johnny Rubio
and Salv-ador Riamot Tuesday joined
more than 300 children in a f'Ollow-the-
leader game that e~s with two clicks :
the last the sound of. a closine coffin.
The first comes with the shutting or
an abandoned refrigerator.
Pablo Ramos also joined hundreds
of parents who are not spared ttie
grim, per:sonal discovery, wtlen he
opened the old k:ebox and two
crumpled bodies tumbled out mto Ws
garage floor.
His son Salvador, 5, and playmate
Johnny, 2, were dead oo aITival at St.
Jude Hospital in Fullerton, after
emergency treatment at the scene
failed to revive them.
Orange County coroner's deputles
listed tentative cause oC dea1h as
a~idental asphyxiation, saying the
boys were appacenUy huddled in the
choking, cramped confines for some
twq hours.
TRAGIC DEATHS
The tragic deotha -imich are alJO
criminal deitbe under CllJlornla taw
-brougl>t to five tho n1Snller ol
children ldlled Jn La 11o1n "1 abmloneclg ___ lbo
put17m-.
'Ibomie WUliamlOll, 5, of·t.. Hlbl'I,
and his cousiul, Ladona Willi-amlOD, 4.
and Wanda Williamsoo, 3, . ol La
Mirada, died Feb. 6, 1116'7, under
idenbl circu.mstancel.
The Rubio and Ramos boy1 were
noticed missing shortly alter noon
TueMlay, Mien Mai'1aret Rodriguez.
16, babJ·a.itter for the aeven Rubio ·tS.. ICE BOX, P11e I) l
~
~ipe for
.
Belief
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MILT PILOT , ..... .,, .... 1"119
Tue sevtrat. square yards ol weil-Cbilled .C...., add one generous
port1ooy6(Sea. Sprite like Paula !Wn~akl and you have a tall cool
one 1 Paula to be speclllc -without even lhlklng well. Tbe pretty
Fullerton miss who journeyed to the Harbor Area to take the waters
was clolng jUJt that-shaking -u she 1llppecl deeper' into the nippy
•ea. Others from the simmerlni Inland followed her to the coast,
seekin& relief from.the current :;,at wave.
er.
1
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~ ......... 1 IHTIOlllt. .. PAHi -• I s e.·
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E.. h h v !ii'. ir~ ·.-om , ers ~-aU:~
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Reagan's Home Target of Y outki -·
. SACRAMENTO, CaLif. (AP) -Two
Negro youths. canying firebombs
approaohed Gov. Ronald Reagan's
home Tuesday night, but fled wben
ordered to halt by a Secret Service
agent "'110 fired a warning shot.
· 'lbe youths drOpped the hqmemade
bombs ·ee they fled, but nelther
exploded or iginited.
Secret Sel'Vice aigents and state
police who guard the home in a quiet,
well-to-do area of eastern Saeramento.
chased the yout!hs but failed to catch -· No flll'tiler trouble was reported
near the Reagan h001e during the
• nigh\.
. Later, .a neighbor of tile Ree,gans
Search Centers
In Harbor Area
For Flag Defiler
Santa Ana Police today asked {W·
tblJrltles in Ille u..-Area ID look
for a 73-year-0ld bearded, long-haired
youth who they 'say sprayed black
paint on a huge American Flag July 4.
Sought is William Reid Parkel", a for-
mE[I' resident of TusUn who has been
living in the Newpo<t Beach-O>Sta
Mesa area for the pa11t year, relatives
told police.
Partc.r was traced tbzough the li·
oenee number of. hil car which was
parlcod nearby when two passing mo-
torist. aJl<leedly NW him defacing tile
:IM>y.:JO.foot flag m 1he Tolo Inc. pl>nt
at 2401 Pullman St. The flag could be oeeo from the Newpo<t Freeway.
Parker bad allegecly 1prayod "Viet·
nam, 25,233 dead; 15.3'4-wounded"
8cr"Olll the Flag when the two meC1 COT·
ner<d him. They said he broke free
and --1 in hi& .....
Girl's Kidnaper
Takes Own Life
MARYSVILLE, £alil. (UPI) -A
Marine prival<O hunted in seven
Weatern 11a* for 1ho lddnaplng ol a 2-
year~ cirl com.mitttd auickle today
Jn hi& br-:a home here. (See
Earlier Story Pace 8)
''lbomu F. SCltoWeld •hot blmaelf luat below the heart with a .2kollber
plltol. Ho-wu dead on arrival at Yuba
General Hoapital.
The llhootlng took place tn the bcm>e
ol a brotbOr, Wayne Scholfield.
'Ille YUba County Sbetllf'1 office
Hid Tueaday it had received ,..port>
lf:)1olflel!I bod been -in ·three 'f'lerent mas.
called Police to report that stiots had
been fired al the governor's home , but
st.ate police said, "no shots were fired
at the roansi<ln."
Sacramento police said the incident
""'8S apparently relat.ed to sporadic
violence whiOO broke out during the
afternoon in a predominantly Negro
neighborhood about two miles away
and continued into ee.rly today, In that
area, a policeman was hit with a
bottle, a man wss stabbed, and there
were numerous reports of fires, some
of them caused by firebombs.
Reagan and his wife, N>ancy, were
watahing television inside the wnite
brick tudor-style home which tlley
lease when the incident happened, 1t
about 10:30 p.m. They were not
immediately a\v.are of what transpired
outsiide .
The governor had no immediate
comment or statement on the 'tncldent.
Lyn NOfziger, his commtinioationt
director, said the tW9 men approached
bhe home on foot.
"They. were challenged by Secret
Servicemen and then ran. Jn doing 10,
they dropped the bottles." One agent
fired a warning shot into the air as he
chased the youths down the street, but
one of tti.e pair esoaped on toot and the
other jumped into an auto which sped
away.
Dr. Spock, Ftiiends Get
Prison Sentences, Fines
BOSTON (AP) -Dr. Benjamin
Spock was sentenced today to two
years in prisw. and ordered to pay a
$5,000 fine for COMpiracy to aid, abet
and counsel young men to avoid the
draft. .
His three codefendants also received
two-year prison sentences, but were
ordered Ito pay Varied fines. ·
U.S. Dist. J udge Francis J. W. Ford
granted. ste·ys of execution for all the
sentences, pending appeals to the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, a n d
continued the defendants' ,1,000
boll&.
Convicted with the 6 5 -year · o 1 d
pediatrician were Yale. Chaplain
Willlam Sloane C-Olfln Jr .. 43, fined
$5,000; Midlael Ferber, 23, a Harvard
gNldual<O student, '1,000 fine; Mltcllell
Goodman, 44, an author from Temple,
Maine, fined $5,000.
Lawyers for the four immediately
announced intentions tc appeal Ule
sentences.
tn a brief statement before peasing
sentence, the 85-year-old Ford told the
crowded courtroom : "Where law and
order stops , obviously • n 1 r c hy
begins."
"Almost every week in this=•
F«d said, "~ men 1re 1e ed
ID three y-. in prlaon for ading
the dralt. It is ,..aolmol>le to eonclude
thit. thu1 'tlefen.dr1.nt1 were
J obless Rate Rises
WASHINGTON (Al!) -The ni.t1on'1
joblen ratll fCll hee·tentbl of one
percont in J..,. wlllle Ille clvlliMJ
labor fOn:e towed 80 mUUon workers
kr the · !lril Ume, tbo ~ ~DI ._-led today.
instrumental In .fnclting .Ome ol lhesa
men to flout the law."
"Be they hJgl> or low. intellectuala
as well as otl:iers mnst be deterred.
from violating the law. T h e s 1
defendants sboutd not escape under
the guise of free speech."
None of tile . four' llisplayed any
emotion as they stood' to-hear Court
crerlc Austin Jones aAnou:ifcf • th•
sentences. 1
Oraaae
Weadler
lleturnin& after a standing
ovation from the beach croWd
ls another llot day., No chenges
in precedent-setti.ng heat wave.
Temps to tip lower IO's.
INSmB TOD~Y
A teen-age nort~~rn California
Qirt tried to make tht IC'CM GS
a hippi• and ditd m l1wi proccu.
Poge B. ............ 1=c" ,:
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J DAILY PILOT
Arsenal
Captured
By Marines .
SAIGON (UPI) -American
--captund a npmontal .. iud
..-1 ll'om N<Wth Vietnam.,. lorc:ts
fllo)' --bad< Into tha Dtmllltarlud
Z-(DllZ), tha U. S. command
npoiUd today. Communl!t .........
abot down a U. S. jet nearby and a
Navy pilot bagg<!I a North Vietnamese
l\llG jlDI above the MDZ.
The battle Tutlday around the
M>rtne Bue at Cotl Thlen alooc'tba
frontier between the two Vletnanu
was the latest In a ....i.1 ol fi&hta lbat
some ienerall believe may escalate
into a full·scale CornmuriSt offensive
timed with a new attack on Salp.
American headquarters P1d tbe
M>rinet fighting just Darth ol Con
Tblen killed at least 22 North
Vietnamese in the force of about 200
men whil~ suUering no casualties
themselves .
Ttie· ·uatherntCks uncovered-242
bunk~rs. three tons of rice, ~ t_9und~
ol D-mllllmtler -·· 'l1JO -o1 -manan, 21 ,aoo
roundl ol am.Oll arms ammunKloD, :11111
rocket·propelitd gnnadeo and pile• ol npt machioe gum and rlflel, The
cacba included large quantities o1
uniforms, · boots, wire &Dd field "'!...._. "Wlai all th• equipment and field
"'lapboat sotup I would atr°"'I)' suspect that there was a regiment·
sized unit (1,500 men) based in the
area," Lt. Col. Edward j. Lamontagne
ol Manchester. N. H., said of the
fortress several hundred yards south
of the •MZ. He is commander of the
3rd Battalion, 9th Marines.
While the temPo of the a1r and
&round war intensified in the northern
quarter ol South Vietnam, the Sooth
Vietnamese general in charge oC
defending the Saigon front today
predicted a new Viet Cong attack on
the capltal Ju1y 20. That is ~e 14th
.nveraary of the Geneva Accord
dividing VieQwn into north and south.
U. S. military spokesmen said allied
troops early today, turned back an
enemy force of about 200 men trying
to probe Saigon's outer defenses.
Frem P .. e l
ICE BOX
dlildron, couldn't find little Jolmny,
the youngest.
A neighborhood. search, includinl •
d>edl: of the nearby .,..,...y 1tae,
!ailed to turn up ony trace ol the boys,
and n..... -ealled borne from l\'Ork to help in the bunt.
Investigators said SatvaOor's father
remembered the icebox with a sick
suspicion when Leticia Rodriguez, 13,
1111.et' o( the baby-sitter, s ·aid
neighbomood youngsters had looked
everywhere.
BODIES F OUND
Polke and fire department rueue
equ.dl were dispatched to the 1cene
--found .,. two llllOll bodie«, but it was too late to save
them.
nteir mothe:ra were summoned
home from work and efforts are
under way today to find the Rubio
boy's father Jdm, reportedly an
unemployed chemical worker last
known to be in the Live Oak area.
The Rubio family had lived in the
apartment complex on the c:regt of a
hill in La Habra for about thrff years
and the children played together like
one bir flmily when the Ramos'
recently arrived. They are a 11
immigrants from Mexico.
A former tenant of t!he apartment,
fl.trs. Juanita Portillo, said the
refrigerator was turned to the well
and left in the garage -whose door
v.•as wired shut -to be junked when
they left.
Ramos. however.~ had left the
garage open Tuesday after WOl'kiog on
his car inside.
DAILY PILOT
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Tli••• JI.. M•tphln• MMllMI • ., .....
J11fr l. C1rley P11l Nl11111
...... MIMW M'l'9rtltl!ll DI~
Offlc••
C1181 MIN: • Witt llY ltntt ......,, ~ 12'11 .... _ ·"""'*"
.....,,. ... -4_' m """' "-•-·•-u ••"""
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Te4Wee Special
Nixon Offers
• To Debate HHH
' -
Pants-seat Arrest
Washinilon, D.C. police orders were defied by 17 Memphis young·
sters wlio conducted a demonstration at the Capital Tuesday in sup-
port of the Poor Peoples March. Demonstrators were arrested and
taken from Capitol steps as tourists in background watched.
Harbour Feels Airport
'Not Going to Happen'
J'remW!nServl ...
Richard M. Nixon said -y he
would llkl to take part in a televised
deblte with Hubert H. Hwnphrty oetl
fall to bring out the "very deep
differencet" between the two -
assuming they are the Republican and
Democratic presidential nominees.
Nixon, the lemling GOP contender,
felt euch a debate would 11serve the
public interest because it would
create .an inunellJe interest in the
election." "It would bring out, perllaps, a
better undenlanding of the dUfer·
ence5, which are very deep, between
Viet Pre&ident Hwnphrey and my-
self," Nixon told reporters in Cleve-
land.
He rejected any possibility, howev.
er, of debating Gov. Nelson A. Rocke·
feller of New York, who is challenging
Nixon for the Republican nomination.
'MAIOR BENEFICIARY'
Nixon said Humphrey would be the
"major beneficiary" of any Nixon·
Rockefeller debate.
Humphrey, meanwhile . .said today
he '1welcomes the b r o a d e s t
involvement and partkipation of the
party's rant and file" in drafting the
Democratic platform -and selecting the
Democratic presidentia1 nominee.
Rockefeller was considering
undertaking Individually a v o te r
preference poll -Y. Iller Nixon
rejected the 11111..Uon that Ibey conunllslon oae jointly ,
The New Vorlt governor mdicated
shortly after receiving N l x o 11 ' 1
rejection Tuesday that he would go
ahead with the canvass if he could find
ba<:kers who were willing to pay for it.
RVNNING MATE
Rockefeller had challenged Nixon to
join in a pOu of voters in each of the 50
sflate1 to determine which of .them
would nm best against tbe possible
Democratic nomidees. .
Nixon also said today tha.t Ohio Gov.
James A. Rhodes bas urged him to
chooge New York Mayor John V.
Lindsay as his vice president1al
running mate if he wins t b e
nomination.
Nixon said he rates Lindsay a
potehtially powerful candidate but
added that he pointed out to Rhodes
the constitutional problem that would
be raJsed by putting hvo New Yorkers
on the GOP ticket.
Under the Constitution, New York
members of the elecl'Oroal college could
not cast their votes for two inhabitanta
of the stat~. That would mean that if
two New Yorkers were on the ticket,
one of them would be ineligible to
receive his state's electoral votes.
Despite lJrgeney Report
U,IT .......
FRONT·RUNNER?
Nixon Rushes in Ohio
Airport Hearings Ordered
By JACK BROBACK traffic, predicted to be triple the ef!'ectively administered on a
or HM D•llr ,..., '"" current total. voluntary basis at W a s h i n g t o n
Despite Ule Urgency indicated in Extensive increases will be National irport, it was pointed out. w"'~-Perelra's Phase One of the . th 'air d The Washington constraints were Ulialn necessary m · e ' ea Y ~over-listed as:
Master Plan of Air Transportation for saturated" terminal bu i Id in g. -No air carrier may operate to non-
Orange County, the Board o £ Suggested was a possible second· stop destinations in excess of 6.50
Supervisors Tuesday voted to instruct decking cf the building to provide an miles.
the Airport Commission to hold public enplaning level above the present -All four-engine pure jet aircraft
hearings on the question. terminal height. are prohibited from using the airport.
Alter listening to the report as Suggested to a 11 c v I ate the Only two and three engine jet aircraft
delivered by James Sink of the overcrowded parking space at the arc allowed and none of these in the
Pereira and Associates staff, the airport was a dispersing o f stretch category, nor any of the
board ordered eopieii made and automobiles to the clear zone areas proposed airbus configurations.
distributed to ~terested parties and with connection to the terminal by -The air carriers (13 now using the
instructed the commission to "study tram or some other on-airport access port) are limited to a Combined total
the report and hold public hearings." vehicle. of 40 operations per hour.
Strangely overlooked in the hubbub Also urged was an instrument -Pure jet oper.a{ion ls prohibited
was the role of Or.ange County Airport landing alld approach lighting system after 10 p.m. and before 7 a.m. This
in the "five years it will take to "at the earliest possible date." 'pui'e jet ban applies to private
develop a nn regional, airport." To soften ttie blow to airport corporate jets as well ..as air carrlert~
By WILLIAM REED
CM ,... Dllr 'llel Jtwff
The report said I n t e r i m ·opponents a set of restraints were The report urged that the county
likely would oppose any seriout!i improvements would have to be made suggested for the next five years. negotiate these constraints at the
movement by the county toward to accommodate certain growth in Such regulationa have b e e n earliest possible date. A feeling that "It's not going to
happen" is apparent in the Huntington
Harbour section of lluntington Beach
today following announcement that c:.
site adjacent to tl1e m a r i n a
development Is unaer consideration
for location o! a major airport.
buHding the airport on the Bolsa Chica f!r:;;::;;;;;;;~~~~~~~::;:;::~:::;;::;:;::~~~::;:;::::;:;::::;:;::::;:;::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;--
site.
Homeowners g e n e r a 11 y are
expressing the opinion that the land
east of Hunti.ngton-Harbour is too
valuable for use as .mi airport and
probibly will be developed someday
as combination marinas and expengive
homes.
City officials, however, point out
that the proposed airport could be "a
great boon to the towist picture" and
would set the pattern of waterf.tQnt
development as one of hotels, motels
and tourl1t-0riented buslness.
Wallace Ahearn, president of the
Huntington H a r b o u r Homeowners
Association, told the DAILY PILOT,
• •1Jt's a little early to become excited
over the aiJ1>ort propo<al.
CHANCE UNLIKELY
"It's unlikely they (Ute county
Board of Supervisors) would build a
large airport there because of the
tremendous cost o! acquiring potential
marina land, the beach an d
construction of arti.Ckial peninsulas
for the runways."
He said the homeowners group has
not discussed the matter as yet, but
"!l's almost incomprchcn6ible· that
they would even give this location
serious consideration," Ahearn said.
He promised that. his group would
make a complete study of the
proposal, however.
Another Huntington H a. r b o u r
resident, former couneilman Thomas
Welch, told the DAILY PILOT that he
too does not believe the county would
seriously consider building the airport
at Bol.sa Chica.
"It'! too costly. It's much like the
frce\\.·ay situation ; everyone agrees we
need one, but no one wants it next
door to him.
"We all can think of many other
ways we'd like to see the Bolsa Chica
properties developed. l don't th.ink
there's too much to worry about,
though, the land is just too costly."
EXCITING PROPOSAL
Looking at the other .side!' Acting
City Administrator Br&nder Castle
pointed out that "It's an exciting
proposal." He indicated that a first
impression view is one of optimism.
"It would be a boon to the tourist
picture and a solution lo the beach
devel~ment problems. \Vith a major
airport the waterfr911t development
would be hotels and tourist·oriented
business.
Reagan Urges Parties Join
To Pusl1 For Tax Cut Bill
SACRAMENTO (AP) - G o v ,
Reagan urged Republicans a n d
Democrats today lo unite in a
nonpartisan effort to push his $210
million property tAJ: cut blll past Its
two final Jegtslallve tests.
"Members of both parties ln the
leJl11ature have long recognized the
pressing need to provide meaningful
property tax relief," Reagan said
after his meaaure won expectedly
sWln awroval in a Senate commJttee
Tuesday after weeks o! delay.
"This bill ... provides us with the
opportunity to meet this commJtment
.and to take a major step forward
toward easing the tax burden on the
Cllltomia homeowner,'' Reagan tald.
1be bUl'1 Republican author ,
Assemblyman John G. Veneman of
Modesto, upectod a tough light in
""1llng the nqulr<d two thirds vote -
'ZI out of the 40 mem btr1 -to win
Senate pass.age.
The blll then goes· back to the
Democr1llc.controlled A ' 1 e m b I y
wbert It would need 54 votes out of the
membttablp ol 80, !or !Ina! po ...... It Puled there May 211, . l> u t
assemblymen would sUll have to vote
on Senate revisions.
The measure :
-Allocates $155 million to the 58
counties. They would e s t a b 11 a h
property tax relief funds and would
have to state on tax bills whether the
money was used for tax cuts or other
purposes.
-Do away With the current tax on
personal property such es household
furnilhings. Thl$ reduction would
amount to en estimated $55 million.
·-Keep the state sales tax at th e five
percent level. The tax drops back to
4~ cents on the dollar unles1 the
legislature uses the $155 million -get
Nlde from last year'1 •1 blWon tu ·
hlko'-.,. In some !orm of~ tu
reductlODS by Oct I,
Raegan tald In a 11ai.meot be
believes 1be bfil ls the most important
of the 1968 session. He said the Sent.le
Finance COmmlttee'• a ppr ova 1
Tuesday "con1titute1 dram at I c
recognltton of this f1ct and reaffirms
the ' necessity .for providing Jong
ov-.e relltf to Calllomla't a1tead1
om!Jur'1•nod proPfl'ly 'tupay•." l
'
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Huntington ·~ B~aeh Yov Bometewa
••
:VOL 6f, NO. ·165, '6 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES WEONESD~Y. JU LY 10, 1968 .. TEN CENTS
Harbour Feels Airport 'Not Going to Hll;ppen'
B1 WILLIA~! REED
Of nri. Dely Pllet Si.rf
A feellng that "It's no-t going to
happen" is appar.ent in the HunttngtoJ1
Harbour section of lluntington Beach
today following annquncement that ::.
site adjacent to the m a r I n a
development ls unaer consideration
for location of a major airport.
Homeowners gen er ally are
Board Asks
Hearings
6n Report
By JACK BROBACK
Of t11e Dair 'llol Slaff Despite tb.e urgency indicated In
William Pereira's Phase One of the
Master Plan of Air Transportation for
Orange County, the Board o f
Supervisors Tuesday voted to instruct
the Airport Commission to hold public
hearings on the question.
After liste~· to the report as delivered py· · es Sink of the
Pereira and ociates staff, the
l)oard orck!red copies made and
distributed to .interested parties and
instructed_,W commission to "study
the repoit,""'1 bold public hearings:"
Strangely overloOked in the hubbub
was the~le of Orange County Airport
in the "five years it wilt take to
deve~ a new regional airport." T~· report said ·interim
i.)nprovements would have to b:e made
to accommodate certain grow.th in
traffic, predicted to be triple the
current to~. ,
Exterisive illicre&ses will b e
necessary in tbe t•aireacly over-
saturated" tmmlnal b u i 1 din g .i
Suggested was a possible second-
decking of the building to provide an
enplaning level above the present
terminal height[·
Suggested 1;Jo a 1 l·e vi ate the
overcrowd~arking space at the
airport was a dispersing o f
automobiles to the clear zone areas
with cOnnection to tJ1e terminal by
tram, or some other oo-airport access
ve~
Allo urged was an instnunent
landing alld approach lighting system
0 at the earliest possible date."
To soften the blow to airport
opponents a set of restraints were
suggested for th e next five years.
Such regulations have been
cf:ectively administered o n a
voluntary basis at W a s h i n g t o ?
National irport, it was pointed out.
The Washington constraints were
listed as:
-No air carrier may operate to non ·
stop destinations in excess of 650
miles.
-All four-engine pure jet aircraft
are prohibited from ~ng the airport.
Only two and three engine jet aircraft
are allowed and oone of these in the
stretch category, nor any of the
proposed airbus configurations.
-The air carriers (13 now using the
port) are limited to a combined total
or 40 operations per hour.
-Pure jet operation is prohibited
alter 10 p.m. and beforet;7 a.m. This
pure jet ban applies to private
corporate jets as well as air carriers.
The report urged that ~ cotmty
(See AffiPORT, Pafe Z)
County Accepts
ReJ>()rt Quietly,
But Foe Doesn't
William Pereira's Master Plan of
Air Tranoportalion for Or.aoge County
with its recommendation for de·
emphasizing the Orange Co u n t y
Airport was received qulet),y Tuesday
by the supervisors. 11ley moved to get
the recommendations into action.
But longtime airport foe Daniel
Emory of Newport Beach would not
Jet it pass without a few jabs at the
Board.
Emory said ltls group -the Airport
Noise Abatement Committee -wa!
happy with the report, but pointedly
remarked that that 11 what be and his
friends had been .odvocating llince
19111.
"Dts¢te yo!D' promlae fo the
contrary In 19111," Emory told Ille
superviscn, i·tht v o lume of
commerda) lllgbll ml Ille advent of
corn.merdal jets bu a~ady created
11e"'1!'e and growing nusisances that
are affecting thou sands oC
homeowners.
"Because these fact! have been
Ignored lo-r seven long years. thi~
<:ounty mu&t now "play catch up" in
the field o! air.. b'"'8PQrtat.ion. An
(See COUNTY; Pace I)
! •
expressing the opinion that the land
east of Huntington Harbour is too
valuable for use as .c:in airport and
probably will be developed someday
as combinaUon marinas and expensive
homes.
City oCl icials, however , point out
that the proposed airport could be "a
great boon to the tourist picture" and
would set the pattern of waterfront
•. t'
,.,,
' ~
Recipe for Relief
development as one or hotels, motels
and tourist-oriented busi.ness.
Wallt:'Ce Ahearn, president o! the
Jluntington H a r b o u r Homeowners
Association, told the DAILY PILOT,
''It's a µttle early to ~ome excited
over the airport proposal.
"It's unlikely they (the county
Board of Supervisars) would build a
large airport there because of the
Take several square yards of well-chilled. ocean, add ,one generous
portion ·of Sea Sprite like Paula Rempalski and rou have a tall cool
one -Paula to be specific -without even shaking well. The pretty
Fullerton miss who journeyed to the Harbor Area to take the waters
was doing just that -shaking -as she slipped deeper into the nippy
sea. Others from the simmering inland followed lier to the coast,
seeking relief from the current heat wave.
Heat Wave Holds Firm
·Grip on Orange Coast
Beach g,o er s, h ou 1e wives
workingmen, nonworklngmen, small
children and dogs can all look forward
to continued w.arm weather today and
Thursday over the Orange Coast.
The high tides that have been
lapping up against the coast recentl y
have done no damage either to the
beaches or to harbor structures,
reports the Newport Department of
Marine Safety.
Sweltering coast area residents can
console themselves, with this bit oC the
grass ts always greener news out of
the nation's hotspot, Palm Springs,
where it reaches llO'degrees Tuesday,
while the , residents o( Marquette,
Michig.an shivered in 34 degree
tempe~.
Reagan Urge s Parties Join
To Push For Tax Cut Bill
SACMMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Reagan ID'(ed Republlcena a n d
Democrat.a today to wri'te in a
nonpartisan effort 11> push' his '2!0
mllllon property tu cut blll put JI&
two final legislative 1<818.
"Membera or both parties in the
legislature have long recognlud the
pressing need. to provide meaningful
property tax relief," Reagan said '
alter hls mea5ure won expectedly
swift approyal in a Senate committee
Tuesday after weeks 0( delay.
"'l'hls bllt ••• provides us with lbe
opportunity to meet this commitment
', .'
.
end to take a major 1tep forward tOw.lrd eulog the tax burden on the
C&lifand& homeowner," Reagan .aid. nie· liill'1 · Re~bUcan au t b or,
AuiorilblJmai' Jolol G. Veneman of
M-. expee!od a toogh fight in
ll<!ltth&.the ~ulrelftwo thlrda vote -
Z1 out of tht 40 member• -to-win
Senate passage.
The bill then. goos b~ck to the
Democretic..controlled A a s e m b 1 y
where It would need 44 votes out or the
memberahlo ol 80, for.final p11•gf. lt paased thi re Ma'y 28, ti u t
.... mblymen would atlll.Jave IA> tote
on Senate revisions.
tremendous cost of acquiring potential
marina land, the beach a n d
coos1ructl.on of artificial peainlulas
for the runways."
H~ said the homeowners group has
not discussed the matter as yet. but
likely would oppose any serious
movement by the county toward
building tile airport on the Bolsa Chica
lite.'
"It's .almost tncompreh~nsible that
they would even give this location
serious consideration," Ahearn said.
He promised that bls group would
n1ake a complete study of the
proposal, however. ,
Another Huntingtoo H a.r.b o u r
resident, former counallmal"\ Thomas
Welch, told the DAJl,Y PILOT that he
too does DOf.·believe :th6 coUnty would
seriously consider-bWlding the airport
at Bolsa Chica.
"It's too costly. It's much like the
freeway situation; everyone agr~es we
need one. but no one wants it next
door to him.
"We all can think of many othtr
ways we1d llke to gee the Bc.Jsa Chica
properties devieloped. I don't th1Dk
• (See llARB'OUR, fall 2)
Firehomhers Fail
Reagan's Home Target of Youths
&ACRAMENTO, cailf. (AP) -Two
Negro yooths carrying fil'ebombs
.. approached Gov. Ronald Ret.gan's
home Tuesday n~gtt, but fled wten
ordered to halt by a Secret Service
agent who fired a warning shot.
The youths dropped the homemade
bombs as they fled, but neither
exploded or ignited.
Secret Service a,gents and state
police who guard the home in a quiet,
well-to-do area of eastern Saa'amento,
chased the yoollhs but failed to catch
llb!$n. No IUl'1her trouble wes reported
near the Reagan borne during the
night.
Later, a neighbor of the Reagans
called police to report that obot.. had
been fired at the governor's hOme, but
state police said, "no shots were fired
at the mansion."
Sacramento police said the Jneident
was apparently related to sporadic
vi,olenei!: which broke out during the
afternoon in a predominantly Negro
neighborhood about two miles away
and continued into early today. In tbet
area, a policeman was hit willh a
botUe, e man was stabbed, and there
were oornerous reports of tires, sonu1
of them caused by firebombs.
Reagan and his wife, Nancy, were
watdling television inside the white
brick tudor-style home which they
Jea.se when the incident happened, at
about lO:l> p.m. 'Ilhey W«e not
Immediately a\Wll'e ol what transpired
1outsiide.
The governor had no ~ate
comment or statement on the iAcident.
Lyn Nofziger, ·rus communications
director, said the two.men approached
the borne on foot.
"They were challenged by Secret
Servicemen and then ran. In doing so ..
they dropped tile bottl<I." One ag<nt
fired a warning mot into the air as he
chased ttie youth.II down the street, bu~
one of the pair escaped on toot and the
ollher jumped into an auto which l(led
away.
Abandoned Icebox Tomb Dr. Spock Gets
·For -~·lffJ ~tMbra ¥ outns ·
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
CH tlll Dilly l"llol Slllf
La Habra youngsters Johnny Rubio
and Saiv.ador Ram<lEi Tuesday joined
more ttian 300 ahildren in a follow-the·
leader game bhat ends with two clicks:
the last tihe sound of a closing coffin.
The first comes with the shutting or
an abandoned refrigerator.
Pablo Ramos also joined hundreds
of parents wbo an not splll'ed. ttie
grim, personal disCOVfil"Y, when he
opened tihe old icebox and two
crumpled bodies tumbled O\lt onto hls
garage floor.
His son Salvador, 5, and playmate
Johnny, 2, were dead on arrival at St.
Jude Hospital in 1'~ullerton, after
emergency treatment at the scene
failed to revive them.
Orange County coroner's deputies
listed tentative cause ol deaUt as
accidental asphyxiation, saying the
boy• were apparently huddled in tlie
choking, cramped. con!mes for some
two hours.
TRAGIC DEATHS
'lbe tlagic deaths -which are also
criminal deaths under California law
-brought to five the number of
children killed in La Habra by
abandoned garage iceboxes within the
past 17 months.
Thornie Williamsoo, 5, of La Habra,
and hi!: cousins, Ladona Williamson. 4,
and Wanda Williamson, 3, of La
Mirada, died Feb. 6, 1967, under
identlical circumstances.
The Rubio and Ramos boys were
ooticed mltllt>g shortly after llOOll
'l\teoday, w!len Margaret Rodriguez.
16, baby-sitter for the seven Rubio
children, couldn't find little Johmly,
the youngest.
A neighborhood search, including a
check of Um nearby grocery store,
failed to tum up MY trace of the boys,
and Ramos was called home !rom
work to help in the h1.lnt.
Jnvestig.ators said Salvador's father
remembered the icebox wittt a sick
suspicion when Leticia Rodriguez, 13,
sister ~ the baby-sitter, s a i d
n<ighborbood youngsters had looked
everywhere.
Police and fire department rescue
Armed Bandit
Holds Up Ma1·ket
A young . armed ~bandit Tuesday
forced Huntington Beach 1tore clerk
Daoiel Metzger to .hand over the cash
regllter contenij at the Spetdemart
Market, ml BUJhard St, Huntington
Beaoh.
'!'be S fi>ot S, 140 pound· robber
entered the late clostng market about
11 p.m., waved customers outsld~ with
a· .22 ca Uber pistol, then demanded
that Metzger open the store safe .
Police said.
Motzger told the bandit \bat he
didnJt tnow the combination but gave
h.im the tstbnated '100 tn the cash
d,rawer. Tiie r:obber fled •• loot.
!·
squads were dispatched to the scene
after Ramos found the two small
bodies, but it was too late to save
ti1em.
Tlleir motbcrs were sun11noned
home from work and eff orts are
under way today to find the Rubio
boy's father J ohn, reportedly an
unemployed chemical worker last
known to be in the Live oak area.
The Rubio family had lived in the
apartment complex on the crest of a
hill in La Habra for abOut three years
and the children played together like
one big family when the Ramos'
recently arrived . They are a 11
immigrants1rom Mexico.
A former tenant of the apartment,
Mrs. Juanita Pcrtillo, said the
refrigerator was turned lo the wall
and left in the garage -wbose do or
(See ICE BOX, Page !)
Campaign Costs
Do Not Assm·e
Election Wins
Spending Large sums of money didn't
necessarily guarantee sue<:ess in tile
June 4 Orange County primary
election, reports made pUblic todray by
county officials showed.
U.S. Sen. Thomas H. Kud!.el spent
more than anyooe else filing as a
oand:idate in Orange County, $64,029,
but was defeated in his bid for
renomination fw the -office by State.
School Supt. Max !Wferty.
Third District Superv~su-William J .
Phillips, on the other hand, spent more
than any other local oandjdate,
$2.5 ,425, .and successfully defeated
three opponents.
Republican 3'lh District Coogress.
iona1 candidate BUI J. Teague spent
the most among county ~an
a91>irants, $22,544, to win the GOP
nomination for the post.
Rep. James B. Utt (R-S.nta Ana)
&peat $19,936 in defeating t w o
candidates for the nomtnatlon of his
party,
Of 60 candid.ates wtlo were on the
Orange County ballot. 13 failed to file
reports as required by law: F'ailure to
file 13 not a criminal offense, penalty
is prohibition for running for 1'>e office
in the future 01' being certified as a winner. None ot' those who failed ·to
file wu a Winner,
Rep. Rlebard T. · Hanna ( D.
Westminster) ~t 1$,463 • ..,, though
he was unoppojed /or hio party 's
nomtnaUon. ,
Aalemblyman Robert E. Bodhmn
(R·Newport Bead>), elao Unopposed,
&pent $3,124. IDs Novtmber opponent
on the Dem<>eratJ.c· ticket, Frank W,
Rac zek, 11pent only '208.50 to wtn the
right to run in the ran.
Jn the 11-candlclole First District
supervilorial r .... leading vote getter
Robert -Biltln spent only ' '2.935,
(See CAMPAIGN, Page!)
I
2 Years Pri.Son
Sentence; Fine
BOSTON (AP) -Dr. Benjamin
Spock \\'as sentenced today t0";two
years in prison and orde red to pay a
$5,000 fine for' conspiracy to aid, abet
and counsel young men to avoid the -
draft.
His three codelendaDts also received
two-year prison sentences, bUt were
ordered 1o pay varied fines.
U.S. Dist. Judge Francis J, W. Ford
granted stays of execution for all the
sentences, pending appeals to the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, an d
continued the defendants' $.1,000
bonds.
Convicted with the 65 ·y e a r -o 1 d
pediatrician were Yale Chaplain
William Sloane Coffin Jr., 43, fined
$5,000; Michael Ferber, 23, a Harvard
graduate studeot, $1,000 fine ; Mitchell
Goodman, 44, an author from Temple,
Maine, fined $5,000.
Lawyers for' the four immediately
announced intentions to. appeal the
sentences.
In a brief statement before passing
sentence, the 85-year-old Ford told the
crowded courtroom: "Where law and
order stops, obviously a n a r c hy
begins."
.. Almost every week in this court,''
Ford said, "young men 8nl sentenced
to three yem ,in prison for evading
the dra£t. It is reasonable to conclude
that these d efendants were
instrumental in inciting some ti. ttiese
men to flout the law."
"Be they hil!!!._or low, lntellectuala
a...well ~ Othera must be deterred
from violating t:hd' law. These
defendants should not escape under
the guise of free speech."
Orange
Weatlaer
Returhlng alter a standing
ovation from the beach crowd
is another hot day. No changes
in precedent·settJ.ng heat wave.
Temps to tip lower &O's.
INSIDE TODAY
A tetl><lpe northern Co!l/cmli4
girl tried to mo.kt the sCme, ai
" hippie and died in U.. ,,,_.,.
Pagt 6.
•
I
,
I
• • •
2 DAILY I'll.OT Wfdnnday, Jvb 10, 1968
Bolsa· Airport? Minds Open
UPI Tf*"""'
l'RONT-RUNNER?
Nixon Ru1he1 In Ohio
Nixon Seeking
HHH Debate
On Television
From w'tu Services
Richard M. Nixon said today }\e
"'ould like to take part In a televlse<f
debate with Hubert H. Humphrey next
fall to bring out the "very deep
differences" between the two -
asswning they are the Republican and
Democratic presidential nominees.
Nixon, the leading GOP contender.
felt such a debate would "serve the
pUbllc Interest becaUse it would
create an immenst intereat in the
election." "It would bring out, perhaps, a
hotter undei'saodfut of the dUfer-
cnotS. which are very deep, between
Vice President Humphrey and my-
seli," Nixon told reporters in Cleve·
land.
He rejected any possibility, howev-
er, of debating Gov. Nel!on A. Rocke·
feller of. New York, who is challenging
Nlxou foe the Republican nominatiOll.
A mutloul, but ___ lo tho
possllilJlt7 Gt 111111J Ibo 1,IOO ocre
BolM Cbioo property alouc Cout
Highway in HuntiDJton Beoch for a
major airport wW be t.11<111 by Ibo
landowners.
"It'• an excltlng proposal," said
BolJa Corporations Vice Presldent
William Garland thia morning.
"I can't HY whdber we will be for
or agalmt the idea unUl we 1ee the
fJ.aure1."
He po~ out that h11 companies
are land holding corporations and
,.,.... P .. e I
HARBOUR ..•
there'• too rquch to worry about.
lboulb, 'the land Is just too costly."
Looking at the other slde, Acting
City Administrator Brtnder Castle
pointed out that "it's an exciting
proposal." He indicated that a first
impression view J1 one o! optimism.
"It would be a boon to the tourist
picture aDd a s<1luUon to the beach
developmeJY.. problems. With a major
a.irpOrt the waterfront development
would be hotels and tourist-oriented
busi ness.
"However, an airport there could
b • v e an adverte effect on the
homeowner1 in the area. It depends on
how the facility would be engine_ered,
but I'm sure that if it bad a bad ef-
fect on the residents the airport just
wouldn't be built there."
Huntington Harbour o f f I c i a I s
indicated they are not going to get too
excited about the proposal until the
matter is explored further and costs
are known.
From Page I
AIRPORT •••
negotiate thes'e constraints at the
earliest possible date.
A moratorium on -all zoning changes
in the Santa Ana Heights Jrea ls urged
"until !ta relationahip to the airport is
clearly defined and new standards are
drawn up."
l'l'Om Pqe I
COUNTY ...
adequate,air'port even if construction
is begun immedi"atel y, will be three to
five years late,'! be CU11tinued his
tirade. • ' '
''Because construction and land
costs have risen sharply between th e
tin1e you should have started a new
aiJl>orl and now that cost will
probably be twice what it should have
been," Emory shouted at the quiet
'MAJOR BENEnCIARY' supervisors.
Nixon laid Humphrey would be the He said that while the airport Is
"major beneficiary" of any Nixon. being cona:truded, the 1upervt1or1
Rockefeller debate. must take the meaures necessary lo
Humphrey, meanwhile, said today prevent the growtog air traffic at
he "welc6me1 the broad es t Orange County airport from causl.ni
involvement and participation of the further damage to the community.
party's rank and file" in drafting the "Three or four years from now. il no
Democratic platform and selecting the control is exercised there wiU be
DemocraUc presidential nominee. between 150 and 250 jet takeoffs daity
Rockefeller was consider in g as opposed to the present 20, '' he
undertaking individually a vole r warned.
preference poll today, alter Nixon He said other federally-controlled
l'tljected the suggestion that they airporb around the country had taken
commiuion one jointly. steps to prevent jet flights at certain
The New York governor llldicated • times of the night. "You can tell Ule
shortly after receiving N l x on' s Federal Aviation Administration t,bat
rejection Tueeday that he would go needed expansion of the airport will
ahead with the canvms if he could find not take place until the FAA permits
backers who were willing to pay for it. the county to place reasonable an4
RUNNING MATE e{{~tive limitations on its use." he
ll h all N, adVlSed. ~ocke!e er ad ch enged ixon to Emory warned that la\\'SUits against
jom in a poll of vo~s in ~aclt of the 50 the county will continue.
&.tates to determine. wh1eh of them "They will exceed $10 million \vilhin
v.'OUld ~ best .against the possi ble several weeks and go much higher De~ocratic no~mees. before the Sept. 1 deadline." he
NlXon also said today that Ohl~ Gov. warned. "I suggest that you look James A. Rhodes bas urged him to . . Uf?On
choose New York Mayor John v. ~ese lawsuits as a h~althy 1ncentiv~
lJ.ndsay as his viee presidential ~ the early completion oC. the n.ew
nmoing mate if he wins t h e a.trport and as a rtlmolu~ to res~mg --•~on local cootrol 9yec tbe eDsting au'JX)rt nuu.~ · in the interim."
DAILY PILOT
~eNrt H. W•~ -TI.em•• k••'ll £dilot
Tllem11 A. M11rphl11e MIMI~ l!dl!or
~art W. a.tM Willl1111 l1td
,,...... """""""" lffctl • ...., City lditor
HWllkti• ..... OfRMo Jot 1tti Sl+Ht
MeW., ~r.w P.O. In 7'0 •2••1 otW Offlcet
..... """' •11 w ..... hUll¥tf11 et119 iMM1 »I Wflf .. 'I' ltrftt _,... lhiltfl1 m ,..,.., ,.,.,_
Cll Jd'R........,.
... .... a SW c:.e .... , .. a n • .wsan · 1 .....,. -"'" -.=. ::::::.:. -~--=::: II ..... ....... .. _$ .... ..., ... , ....... .. '¢.,.,,....~. ...,.._,,_.. ............
..._ ai•w&. ti ••.., _ ""'11.n ....,,, ., ....... ~
llf't ...., I bls MJI ..... .
He concluded with a final threat.
"Under these conditions I think it will
be possible to establish a spirit of
wary cooperaUon betWeen this board
and the residents or NewpQrt Beach
and Costa Mesa. I say wary because
v.·e have received promises from this
board in the past and they were
broken."
A latecomer to the airport wars also
had his say Tuesday. Al Jarvis or TV
and radio fa.me-said he was speaking
for his neighbors in Vjsla Bahia, in the
Newport Upper Ba.y area.
"Five homes are for 1ale and there
never were homes · on the market
btfore. At 7:20 a.m. we were
awakened by a jet taking orr and there
was a repeat performance 30 minutes
later.
"\Ve are losing our individual
rights ," the entertainer continued.
·'with the development of ilrporU and
tileir ef:re<:t on very fine homes.
"It la• moot point,'' he added . "Why
all this progress if indivtdul11 are
made unhappy. Do we really need this
J>!'Oll'tll?"
· Payments Okayed
In Sheep Deaths
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -The
Arrey Clllms Servlc. has app<oVed a
claim Gt '376~ Ille deaths ol 1,300
abe1p Jut In UU..'s Slolll
VallO)', S... Wolloct F. Beonetl (R-
Ut:all), llld Tllelday. l
olthoqh lbere bu been coDJ!derable
odVln<"O plannlnJ !or p O 111 b le
mldfntlal and marina devolopmenll
on the land, 0 nothln& hat been decided
for certain."
"We'll ce1·taJnly take an open
approach to the Possibility o! using our
land u an airport, but we need to see
the figt:l'ea before malting any
de<:ls!0111. It loqu like ·a gOod location
for an·airport, howe\."er.
''Tbere are too mauy µnanswered
questions at this time," Garland
pointed out, giving as an eiample the
. q-ol how mud! land a<tuaUy
WOllld bo needed for ID airport G
whotl>er the land would be the m'!'shy
lowlends or the plsteau areas.
ln a'c:l.dition lo the B o I s a
Corporations, owners o! the land from
about Warner Avenue south to tlle city
limits near the blu!fs area on Coaist
Hlghway, Signal Oil and Gu Co. has •
leases for some 336 oil wella oo the
rropcrty. •
C. E. "Bill" Woods told the DAILY
PILOT this morning that the oilfield is
"too valuable to abandon." He said
thll( It lhlt point there are "tmo many
Jndefinltes to be able to ea.y with any
certainty what would happen if the
slte 11 selected for a regional airport-."
He i;Jid, however, that it migbt be
pot1sible to group wells or to take other
&tepg to keep the oilfield producing.
The possibility o! using the Bolsa
l1nds for an airport may send school
cfficials back to the studies again.
Huntington Beocb Union High School
Datrlct currenUy Is trying to buy e IO-
acre site on the property for a future
high school and the elementary school
district ls eyeing locationa !or future
1choo!I.
Tho school·plannlng h• been -
on Ule llkellbood of the 1,900 acre.a •
being used for r esidential
developmeot. Ute .., ~ alrport could
elimlnate most of the need for scboob:
in. the i&reL , ~
The proposett airport would be jU1t
south of the proposed Bolsa Island
nuclear desalting and pcwer artlacJal
island It lblt project Is built. Southern
Cl!ifomla Ed!Jon Co. already hao
tncllcatad It will need a large paroel ol
land for switcli.ln"g operaUons if tho
is•and project 'oes ahead.
Beach Billho~rd Bugaboo Frem Pqe I
ICE BOX
Advertising Space Big Headaclie for Newport
was wired shut -to be junked when
they Jell.
Ramos, however, had left the
garage open Tuesday after WO!lking On
his car. inside. By SANDI MAJOR 6f Ille DllMy r llft SI.rt
Newport Beach is temporarily in the
advertising business, whether it likes
it or not.
The city owna two acres on the
1outbealt comer of Brookhurlt and
Adams in Huntington Beach. Oit this
!>and are a few watter wells and several
outside advertising bill boards.
The city used to ignore what went on
at its property. They just collected
$450 a month for its: use from
Col umbia Outdoor Advertis ing.
Then in November, the city had to
take the company to court to collect
back rent amounting to $4.700. It won
the judgment but los-t the war, because
ColUmbia could orily come up with
1700.
And during this time the rent was
still going on. By the time the contract
ter.minated at the end of the year, the
company owed the eJty to $.5,XK>.
In December, the city decided to
begin collecting rent for the bWboards
d.Jreetly from the people who advertise
on the m. bypassing Columbia. For
three months, the city collected $800 a
month from the rental of advertising
space.
Then i'n March and April, the total
rent ca·me to only '675. accordlng to
city officials. No one wu maintaining
the boartls. The dl!play signs lurthe<'
deteriorated due to weatber and
negligence In May and Jib and th<
monthly collections look another dip.
Under California's so • ca It e d
11Charle1 Houghton Law," it is
misdemeanor offense punishahie by a
$50 !me or five days in jail to keep an
abandoned icebox or refrigerator
without removing latches and locks.
La Habra Police Slit. Ronald
Meehao said he does not know if any
citation will be issued in the Tutlday
tragedy, due partly to a question of
ownership.
Marines Capture Arsenal
From N. Viets in DMZ
So far t.J:tls month, the city has only
collected $150 from tile use of the sign
boards.
And Columbia's debt, meanwhije,
ticks on. They naw owe the city $5300.
Tully Seymour, Newport Beach city
attorney, and City Man&gf:r Harvey L.
Hurlburt have come up with a way to
get the city out of the advertising
business and stw collect what is owtd
by Columbia.
Charles Houghton, for whom the law
is named, was not respan.sible for the
1951 piece or legislation, at least not
directly.
Orville Liggett
Funeral Slated
SAIGON (UPJ) -A mer I can
MarinH captured a regtmentaJ...sizeJ
arsenal from North Vietnamese forces
they drove back into the DemilitMized
Zone (DMZ), the u . s. command
reported today. Communist gunners
shot down a U. S. jet nearby and a
Navy pilot bagged a North Vietnamese
h1IG just above the MDZ.
The battle Tuesday around the
Marine Base at Con Thien along the
frontier between the two Vletnams
was the latest in a aeries of fights that
s-ome generals believe may escalate
into a full.scale Communist offensive
timed with a new attack on Saigon.
Americ8Jl headquarters saJd the
Marines fighting just north of Con
Thien killed at least 22 North
Vietilamese in the force O! abP.14 200
n1en ·while &uffering no caiUilties
themselves.
The Leathernecks uncovered 24:!
bunkers. three tons of rice, 300 rounds
of 82-mJWmeter mortars, 700 rounds
of 60-millimeter mortars, 2 5 , 6 O O
rounds of small arms ammunition, 266
rocket·propelltd grenades and piles of
light machine gun1 and rifles. The
cache includeQ large quantities of
uniforms, boots, wire &!M:1 field
telephones .
"With all the equipment and field
telephone setup I would strongly
suspect that there was a regiment·
sized unit (l ,500 men) based in tlle
area." Lt. Col. Edward J. Lamontagne
of Manchester, N. H., said of the
fortress several hundred yards south
Frem Page I
CAMPAIGN •..
\\'1hereas his closest c o m p ·e t i t o r
Patrick Dug.gan, spent $5,6M. 'Ibe ~
v.'i.ll nm otlf. for the pest in November.
Democratic Assemblyman Kenneth
Cory. of Garden Grove, spent $12,746
despite a lack or opposition for the
nomirlatlon.
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·
lluntington Beach) spent •t.386 to
regain ttle nomination unopp<>6ed. His
Democratic opponent Jim Bentson of Hunting!A>n Beacll spel!t only $160.
Only one ol Utt's opponent& in the
35t:h District reported expenditures.
Robert Jones said it cost him '3,172.
William 0ou....-iy filed no report.
Trustees Re-elect
Bentley President
John J . BenUey, president ol the
board of trustees of Huntington Beach
Union Hlt1h School District, !Or the
past three years, wu returned to the
post for another year by fellow
trustees Tuesday night.
R.ay Schmitt w.as re-elected clerk of
tile board, for the si1:th time. Trustee
~tatthew \Veyuker was named a
1nembcr of the nominating committee
for thl" County CommiUce on School
J)istrlct Organl.zaUon.
Wesllninster OK's
Low Bid ·of Bank
Thew .. -City Council
Tuesday .-..i Iha' low hid ol 3. 9
perc.nt Interest submitted by Security
Pacific NatJonal Bank (fOrmerly
Security F'lrst Nadonl!) on a $1
mlUion short·term Joan to the city .
Rtipayment deadline iJ June 30, 1969.
In en otherwise routine meeung, the
couneU unanlmou1ly ,ccepted tbe new
Civic Center C-..cilOo. City ottJces
will open ot the moi!Wed·'l'lidor '*l'led cenw-, locat..i just U4 ol Beach
Boulevard on WeatmlDltor Aveaue, In
AUtlUS~ 4
or the DMZ. He is commander or the
3rd Battalion, 9lh Marines.
While the temPo of the air and
ground Will' intensified in the northern
quarter of South Vietnam, the South
Vietnamese general In charge of
defending the Saigon front tOOay
predicted a new Viet Cong attack on
the capital July 20. That is the 14th
anniversary of the Geneva Accord
dividing Vleawun Into north and oouth.
U. S. military spokesmen said allied
troops early today, turned back an
enemy force of about 200 men trylng
to probe Saigon's outer defenses.
The American plane d o·w n e d
Tuesday in the DMZ area w1.-s an FlOO
jet piloted by ll!aj. Mlchaol Ryan ol
Kingspqrt, Tt!9J1. , }lyan1 -who was
rescued by hellCOpter, said ,NorUi
Vietnamese gunners firing w h a.'
appeared to be .50...caliber machine·
guns hit the plane a.s he made a bomb
run in support oC Marine forces.
•
The company and the city are
working on an agreement under which
Columbia will maintain the boards and
change tM advertlsing on them, but
the advertisers will continue to pay to
t.he city.
The city will keep $450 of the total
c:.mount -what they originally
received ~ monthly rent from
Columbia and apply the rest to the
judgment agai:tlst Columbia.
Being generous, the city is also
considering applying every dollar over
$450 collected in rent of the boards
since De<:1.?mber to the lndi!btedness
a'l.so.
No one aeem1 to know what will
happen when the debt la paid.
The city can continue operating an
advertlsin-g bu1ine1s from th e
shadows .. Or another opt.Jon ii to sell
the lane!. City olflclala said it would
bring a handsome prlee.
The property happens to be jn a
triangle, apparenUy destined t o
become a shopping cente.r.
OUTDOOR
Services will be held 'Dwrsday at 3
p.m. at the Peek Family Colouial
Funeral Home for former Huminston
Beach resident Orville W. IJggett, 56,
who died July 8 after a loag illness.
ll!r. Liggett, a native of Kanno, had
been a California. reaidlent for 12 years
and had lived in ON.nge County !or
seven years. His most r e c e n t
residence was 17037 Mockingbird
Canyon, Riverside.
The former Orange Countian b
survived by five children Jamoa L.
Liggett, Linda Ligget%, ll!rs. Belfy
Vlne4 ll!rs. Peggy HmlDtrton llDd
ll!rs. Nora Frazer •n d 10
grandohildren.
More ll'J?Vivors include hir mother
Mrs. Lora M. Cleghom, and sitters
ll!rs. Robert. -.it, ll!rs. Doris
Callaway, -ll!rs. Lyno Anglemyer,
all of Kansas. A hall brother Charles
Cleghorn resides in Corona, Callfomia.
Interment will be at Westminster
Memorial Park.
SIUIT IHUUllCl
TOP. QIWITl
LIVI NG IS A WAY OF LIFE • • • IN ORANGE COUNTY!
.•• anil Santa Ana Tent anil Awning nos tne New loo·li·
for '68 ••. everything to ma~e outiloor relaxation a
family pastime.
ALUMINUM PATIO COVER
Planned for either large or small homes , •• mobile
homes tool Durable; long lasting all aluminum construction.
Screene'd enclosures -large C!oors •.• completely liug proof. . . .
--.,.
OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW
AND DOOR AWNINGS
flATURING 11 STUNNING OICOUTOR COlDllS fDll YOUR S!llCTION.
HIGHT, YllUNT, MODDN, llAUTlfUl , , , AND SO MANY STYW
fOR SO MANY NllDS.
(•Ill• 'IJJl ... r --"'" fart.rt Wtt-ftr 4$ 'fff"' Wt ....... !Jff~ rll•llUfetfutlnt ll'yl•I
,. _,., .. "' .,,., ,,,.. et .m.1'""'"'· c .. ,1.11 ~ ,...tHtlell • IW"'td "''°" 4..,.,IM -' mi.ti""*' lttt et ell • , , .t '-"" Ml '"'' eH A....-111111 ,... •tw.ra ,_"" .. Mtfl'1 ., ........ ct'lll'tery, 11•lc• ecft.. ... _, .... 4•,..,,..lllty
• • • pltn -I ,_.. 1-1ttl
Tll lllW LOOI JOI '611 WIYAS IWlllllS • YIUllCU • CUITA•S
Nothin g Oecoralt1 Li~• Convat. ltautlf\.11 Hew Colon
&. New Fabric::s, For hoMes ••• for bu1 int1sl
SANTA ANA TENT
.-AWNING co.
PACTOI'{ IHOWIOOM
2202 S. MAIN' ST., SANTA ANA
141•049 I
lltAl!IClf OPPICI
OUNOI COUNTY AWNING CO. -.-o .... ,.c_.,
41J I. MU .... ML9ITOll """ a,,_.nl '"" • AJ .. JM ................. ,.,.....~
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Laguna Bea eh
• • DAI LY PILOT Today's CIOlllng
ED ITI ON N.Y. Stoeks
VOt 61", NO. '165, 7 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES LAGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, '1~ JEN CENTS
Young Planning ·to Fight Festival Change's
By RICHARD P. NALL
or n. D•lr ,lift lttff
Colorful Clarence Upson Young will
have ran argument for the Festival of
Arts memberelrip when ballots go out
with proposed changes 1n by laws and
articles of incorporation.
Young's opposition surfaced at a
Tuesday meeting of the Ffftival boerd
wben attorney -lticbanl, Mudge r.ead
his coment.s e:bout the situation and
Young's opposiUon.
2 Y outlas F'lee
The upshot was that Young will
prepare a 150-word argument against
chaogee he opposes &lld Mudge will
pr~ en egument ol llke l«l(th in
favor.
Yoong resiined from lhe board last
fall "in frustration" when tbe board
delayed approval of his p u b 1 i c
relations budget. Asked by the DAILY
PILOT ·today U he 'intended to seek
relection in the upcoming election,
Young said, "I doubt it; I've had
Firehomhers Fail
At Reagan Home
SACRAMENTO, Cam. (AP) -Two
Negro yooths carrying ftrebombs
.approached Gov. Rooald Reegan's
home Tuesday nigtlt, but fled when
ordered to halt by a Secret Service
agent wbo fired a warning shot.
The youths dropped the homemade
bombs as they fied, but neithtr
explpded or iOUted. ·
Secret Service agents and state
police who guard the home in a quiet,
well-to-do area of. eastern Secramento,
chased the youths but falled to catch th..,..
No lurlher trouble was repocted
near tile Reag13n home during the
nigbl Later, a neigllbor o! 1'"' Reogans
called police to report that ohob had
been fired at the governor'• home, but
state police &aid, "no shots were fired
at the mansion."
Sacramento police said the incident
was apparently related to, sporadic
violence which broke out during the
afternoon in a predominantly Negro
neighborhood about two miles away
.and continued into early today, In that
area, a policeman w.u hit with a
bottle, a man was Jtabbed.. and there
were n.unerous reports of fires, some
ol. them caused by firebombs.
Reagaa and his wife, Necy, wue
wa.tdling television in&lde the white
Irick tudor-style home whim they
lease when the incident happened, et
about 10:30 p.m. They 'ftl'e not
immediately aware « what transpired
outed.de.
No Underground Utilities
For Arch Beach Heights
A 460-lot assessment d l s t r l c t
prop:lSed for Laguna's Arch Beach
Heights will apparently not have
underground utilities.
The matter was raised at a City
Cotmcil meeting recently w h e n
councilman Charlton Boyd said, "A
couple of us wanted to inquire about
utilities."
City Mtorney Jaclt J. Rimel said 1'"'
ordinance requiring utilities be placed
underground applies only to nelf
aubdivisloos. I
He noted jhli,Areb Beach Helgbb is
probably ~ o}~~-st in .tile city. It was
subdivided. in 1911 and aooexed to the
city in recent years.
Rimel i&aid in the first Boyle
engineering report the p r o p e r ~
owners wanted to underground
utilities but the costs were so high that
it was necessary to ei"81-abm:ldon the
\\'hole project or change provisions.
Rimel said in the second engineering
report underground utilities ~ere
eliminated to pare costs of Che proJect.
He said if under.gnrund uUllties are
added to the hillside project it could
push coots baclt up beyond the price
limitations.
The counclll earli_. by • 4 to 1 vote
agreed to accept ho bonding com pony
offer to purchase up to S825,<m worth
of bonds for ttae improvement district.
Rimel said at .an earier session, "lf
anything occurs which ,causes this
project not to proceed, the expense
incurred for engineers and incidental
Pageant Nearly
SRO to July 22
It's a 98.56 percent 1ell out.
'!bat's bow the Pageant OI the
Ma&ters ticket sales stood at
Tueroay's FestiV111 ol Arb boord
meeting.
Box office c:halrman Manball Clerk
told fellow board members that the
show, which begins Friday, is sold out
lo July 22.
He said there •e 6,000 or 7,000
untold ticl<eb of the s:i cmgory for
the remainder m the alx week show.
Claris: Mid there w•e ippt'Oxknrltely
10,000 tlclteb remahiing Friday but
laid thol 3,000 <I' 4,000 bid IOJd during
tho weetencl.
' l -
expenses up till that time have to be
borne by the city."
The director or public works
estimated the ex:tent oC city risk to get
the project off the ground would not be
greater than $75,000.
Questioned by the DAILY PILOT
today, City Manager James D.
Wheaton said the city could legally
require underground utilities because
they were "an item of improvement"
in tlhe original petition al Jl<OPel1Y
owners.
However, \Vheaton said the costs of
such undergrounding were very high
in the first engineering report. He aaid
if the city is going ·to stay within the
proposed comtruction figure f o r
improvements there are no funds for
the undergrounding.
Festival Pays
To Halt Work
On New Theater
The Festival of Arts is buying time,
time and space to stage it.I show.
The Festival board Tuesday agreed
to ante up $1,500 to the contractor for
the new Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
adjacent to the Festival ground.I.
In return; the' contractor will pull off
the con1truction job Thursday evening
and stay off unW the 1ix week ahow
closes.
Board members wm trying to plan
for parking lost to the construction
job, when Director David Youne
broached the arrangement.
Young Rid be bad lolked with the
contractor' about pulling o!f tbe job.
He noted that the wages o! carpenters
and cement finishers will go up 35
cenll an hour Sept. 1.
Youag aatd for $1,500 the contract.or
would pun out Thursday evening unUl
aft'r Fer«val seaaon. Young uid be
.had gone over the contractor's.fiaur••
and found them fair.
Young iatd that Geoffrey Ritw,
Players vice president, felt the
arrangement was fine.
The Fe1Uv11 board bad worried
about noise, Iott parking ll1Ci dust
(See PAJUDNG, Par• I)
~ al It. You con't accomplish
anything on the board."
A former producer ol the Pageant ol
the Mutera, the wtspobn Young ls a
1" member of the Festival and had
been -ve In it &il>ce about 1950.
Referring to the articles o I
incorporation of. the Festival and a
proposed change, Young said it would
mean a director could not be removed
except by a m&jority vote ol. the
memliersblp.
• •
"They're trying to make l t
impo11lble to remove a director," said
Young. "If you had 2,000 In your
memb•nbip you would DHd 1,001
votes to remove him (a director)."
He llid the ~ history of the
membership atMJWed this wes not
in<tlcal
Mudge told the board, "Young's
point that it will make it more diffieult
to remuve a cilrector is well taken."
lllud&e Aid 1hal be perSOllOlly
Ie Ill
believed it should be mor• dillkult to
remove a director. He amd the
po$stb1llty that en organl.ied vocal
minority mitfit remow a director at a
membel'sh.lp meeting b a danger that
should be eiimlnal<d.
He Nid the removal of a director is
a matter of sufficient importance that
it ahould be deckled by the entire
vct.ing memberlhip. ·
Mudge said laws governng the
matter provide that articles of
, .
DAILY l'ILOT .....,_ n f9111 0«1M11
JUST PK!E ME, PEL,LOWS -Instructor, John
Cunillngham .leads Laliuna Beach Sea Cubs lri push
ups, pa.rt of. their calilthenics program. Later in
Sea CUbs first meeting, they held a foot race and
went swimming. Day was climaxed by a registra~
t1on. Described as the biggest group in several
years, 70 boys turned out for lifeguard sponsored
program.
70 Sea Cnhs Hit Bea~h
Mock Rescue ·Highlights Start of Cours e
By TOM GORMAN
OI flle DIHJ l'lltt Ili ff
Main Beach was "invaded" Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m.
The hippiell had no part of it.
The invaders , were short-haired
young men aged eight through 12.
They were atten<liJ;lg the first meetitlg
of h Sea Cub program, sponsOl'ed by
the Laguna Beach Li f e. g: ~ a r d
Department. 4
Under direction ol lifeguards John
· CUnnlngham, John Herdman and Tim
Davia, 70 boys will be taking part in
· the five-week course. ·
If Tuesd<&y's meeting Is a n y
. reflection of the things to come, it's
going to be • wild five weeks.
Things got off with a big splash as
the . llfegumla put on a simulated
HIRE'S HOW, GU'fl -':Surfer Boy" nm Davia (center), shows
Sea CUbs what he thinks is tho rtgbt way to go swimming. Jim
Herdman (left), and John Cunningham (rt1hl), look on as boys got
few good laughs. Moments later, Davis went_ into •ll>e water, got In
trouble, !"'d yelled for help .. G"!"' 11\Y Herdma,n m-10.dar!n1.reJcue
as Cunmngbam gave a play-by-play descripUon lo Sea Cubs.
I
rescue. It just so happened tlhat while
Cunningham aDd Herdman were
talking to the group, .an idrlgulng
yoong man (later identified as Davis)
strolled up, decked out in a wet suit,
hat, snorkel and lead weights.
After questioning the "surfer boy,"
Cumringham and Herdman watched
(See SEA CUBS, P1(e 2)
Festival of Arts
Board Rejects
Bowl Light Show
"ll people on the hill think the
School of Art .and Design ls noisy, wait
Ull they hear this."
Thus spoke Verner Beck, Festival of
Arbdtrectoc,~aproposedli~lshow
for Irvine Bowl.
Relic Productions requested the
bowl in September for three musical
groups and a light show. A letter by
Gary Provence read at the Tuesday
Festival board meeting said the group
had been in operation one and a hall
years, bad done siX ahows and never
had trouble.
Que1tiooed about the matter, Don
Willlamson, producer of the Pageant
of the Masters, said "I know nothing
about these 'people; my only effort
wias to tell them what procedures to
follow to obtain the bowl."
Mayor Glenn Vedder suggested it
might be well to check on the group in
other areas where they performed.
Director Richard Brooks offered a
motJon to deny the show. Beck 1ec«lded. •
Director Paul Griem asked, 0 wha t
are we deoytng it for?" Beck said,
"noise, they've got three bands and a
light show."
Director David Young suggested
that business manager Robert Leppert
make an investig.a"tion and get a vote
from directors by phone. He put the
1uggestloa into an amendment to
Brooks motion.
Director Stuart , Durke said an
il\fonnal acreemont existed with th•
police department that there would not
be noise ofter 11 p.m. The Ugh! 1how
gioUp bad asked to 1l1e tbe bo1tl from
8 p.m. until 2 a.m. • 1 •
Br:ooiu aaid \he , board bad )>een !
(S.. DENlED(Pa,. i)
l
• -·-
incorporaUon may be amended by:
-A majority vote of the board.
-With written consent of a majority.
of the members.
-With a certificate filed with the
Secretary of State.
Mudge saJd signed consents are
needed to change the articles and
since consents must be signed it is
impossible to have secrecy as Youpg
(See YOUNG, Pa.. I) •
Icebox Left
Abandoned
In Garage
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI tM O.lr Pht staff
La Habra youngsters Johnny Rubio
and Salv.ador Ramos Tuesday joined
more than 300 children in a follow-the·
leader game tihat ends wittt two clicks:
the last the sound of .a. closine coffin.
The first comes with the strutting of
an abandooed refrigerator.
Pablo Ramos also joined hundreds
or parents who are not spared the
grim, personal discovery, when he
opened the old icebox and two
crumpled bodies tumbled out onto hia garage floor.
His son Salvador, 5, and playmate
Johnny, 2, were dead on arrival at St.
Jude flospital in Fullerton, after
emergency treatment at the scene
failed to revive them.
Orange County coroner'a depuUe.
listed tentative cause ol. death as
iaccidental .asphyxiation, saying tte
boys were aP'parently huddled in the
choking, cramped ·confines for some
two hours.
TRAGIC DEATHS
111e tr>aglc deaths -which are abo
criminal deaths under California law
-brougbi to five the number ' ol
children killed in . La Habra bJ
abandoned garage· iceboxes' within the
, ~t 17 montlhs.
'Thornie Williamsoo, 5, of la Habra,
and his cousins, Ladona Williamson, 4,
. and Wan~ Williamson, 3, of La
Mirada, died Feb. 6, I96Z, under
identical circum'Stances: ·
The Rubio .and .Raloos boys were
noticed missing shortly after noon
Tuesday, ~hen Margaret Rodriguez,
16, baby-si.tter for the aeven Rubio
chil~en , couldn't find litue Jdmn)',
the youngest. '
A neigbborhood search, including a
check of the nearby grocery store,
failed to turn up any trace of the boys,
and Ramos was WJed home from.
work to help in the hunt.
Investigators said SalvaOOr's father
remembered the icebox wittl a siclc
suspicion when Leticia Rodriguez, 13,
sister or the baby-sitter, 1 a t d
neighborilood youngsters had looked
everywhere.
Piolice and fire department rescue
squads were dispatched to the scene
after Ramos found tlbe two small
bodies, b!ft it wu too late to 1ave
them.
Their mothers were summoned
home from work and efforts are
(See ICE BOX, Pare Z)
Cem
Weather
Retumlng after a st.anding
ovation from the beach crowd
is anoth_. hot day. No changes
in precedent-setting heat wave.
Temps to Up lower 8011.
INSW E TOD~Y
A tten-aoe 11orthena COl.i/orn.fa
gtrl tried to make the •cne o.s
o hfppit end dftd in ~ proctas.
Pao• 8.
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•
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·-·~=~
w.i .. 1<111, Juli 10, 1963
group that does jumping jacks toge ther. swims to-
gether.'' They will be doing a lot of both in the life-
guard sponsored program, to last five weeks this
summer for boys ages ·a through 12.
COME ON, GUYS, STAY TOGETHER-Instructor
John Cunningham checks out his group of 70 Sea
Cuba, a1 they go through calisthenics. Noting their
great uniformity, he soon realized he will have a
close knit group. M the old saying goes, "the __;,.....;:;--=..--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
F,...... Page J
SEA CUBS ..•
him hit the waves.
And , the group contirrued their deep
discussion ot the ocean.
Moments later the yell "Help" ~'as
heard over the roar of the waves.
Herdman made a daring rescue, as
Cunningham gave a play by play
description to the sea cubs. of what
was happening. The man was saved,
and was heard mumbling to himself,
"Those waves sure are a lot bigger
than tbe surf ut the swamp I came
fiom ."
Cunningham finally admitted to the
group that the whole rescue was
staged. But the kids loved it anyway.
Following that blt of action was a
footraoe, calisthenics, and a swim in
the ocean. The afternoon w a s
climaxed the ever -exciting
registration.
For those vAw> wint to watch the
action ringside (sea side), they cen
come down on Tuesday and Thursday
atbernoons at 1:36. And don't worry
about getting into trouble.
There are 70 kids who are more than
willing to save you .
,..,...... P,.., 1
YOUNG .•.
had 1uuested.
DlrectOr Stuart Durkee, wllo bad
warted on the changes, said, "Young
received coptes of the changes last
April ; it was not until late June thaf
we received any protest. ·
"Durkee asked attomey Mudge if the
board could refuse Young's 15()..word
obj-. Mtldfe sold no.
"It certainly would have been more
convenient if he bad been more timely
with his objections but he got them m," said Mudge.
At tb1np atend, the F e s t 1 v a I
menanbip will apparently be voting
°"' -'nte method of removing a
direct«.
-The method ol tallying ballot.s.
-Change in the Festival fiscal year.
-Houte keeping type changes.
Yount laid there are 35 changes in
oil bu\ sold he is cbieily Interested in
tbt cbanee ln method a director may
be removed.
Jobless Rate Rises
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tho nation 's
jobless rate roee tbree·tentils of one
percent in June "'1ile the civilian
labor fo~ topped 80 million workers
for the firs.t time, the Labor
Otpartment reported today.
DAILY PILOT
&.,.me ..... C•hz••
ll•~•rt N. W••• --Ttt.Mtl k••Yil ....
lk•,...• A. M11rpkl11•
INrMl!ttl Edller
klcli1'4 P. N•ll U.. IMdl CllY t:llltor
.Hell: l. C.W, '•111 Nitt111 ....... MIMIM' Mwrtl•lnl 01r«1tl' ---..... ~ P.O .... ''' 9Z65Z w ........ .....
otMr Offlc••
C.... ._., m.w.t In Sim'! .....,, ...,,_,tilt w ...... ~
""llseli t a.di:. M 1111 Slreet
.,
Arch Beach Finds View
Not What It Used to Be
Residents of Laguna's Arch Beach
Helgbts have come up against a
problem that they say ls rising to new
height! as the days roll on.
In order to discuss these problems,
a general meeting of the Arch Be&ch·
HeighU Property Owners Association
will he he!d Thurlday, July 18 at 8
p.m. in the community Room of the
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan
Assn. buliding, 260 Ocean Ave.,
Laguna Beach.
The main problem, say residents,
has to do with speculative builders
who are COMtructing dwellings that ae restrlcUng or ellminaUng fl ?
views of established homeowners.
"They're looming way up," said
Mrs. Robert W. Bolls in describing the
new houses. She is the secretary pro
tern and chairman of the organizing
committee of the ABA.
"The new dwellings are completely
shutting views Of homes that have ,
been fn tfle hilts for years," she ·
continued.·
Mrs. Bolls inlormed • the DAILY
PILOT that tho buildings are being
constructed on lots that are 25 feet
wide. There are three-foot setbacks on
the sides, according to her.
"He (the contractor) can buy 25-foot
Jots for one half or one third the price
of 50-foot lots and still have everything
we have. lie just builds up,"
commented Mrs. Bolls.
She furtber explained that the city
calls for an average height of 30 feet
for the residences. "One wall can be
From Page J
DENIED •.•
concerned a few weeks aa:o about a
·youth dance at the Festival grounds.
He said he thought lt nlatively sedate
compared to the proposed use,·
Young's motion to delay action until
investigfltion was defeated. The board
denied the llg!X show by a 5;-3 vote.
It now will go to the Irvine Bowl
Policy O>mmittee for review. The
committee consists of two Festival
directors. two city councilmen, and a
citizefl at large.
only ten feet high, and another 50 feet
high, and still have an average height
of only XI feet."
William Harnevious, lawyer for tbe
Dssoclation, told the DAILY PILOT
"apparently the building code (the 30-
foot. average) is meant for flat land."
He me~oned tnat some homeowners
have terrflCed. their homes, and he was
hoping all t.he homes could be designed
in that fashion.
Also slated for discussion at the
mee ting are tlfese items:
improvement and dedication o f
Sum·mit Drive; enforcement of the
safeguards of zoning ordinances and
building codes; establishment of
communication channels to t be
plarming commission and city council;
and school bus serviei!.
Homeowners will have an opportu.
nity to air their problems and sugges.
tioos at this meeting.
Laguna Council
Okays Budget
Of $2.9 Million
Laguna Beach councilmen ha ve
appre>ved the Art Colony 's $2.9 million
preliminary city budget for 1968-69 but
lon\ght thOy'll he taking up both •
Chamber request tor $39,800 and the
question Of a fulltime recreation
director.
The budget carries with it an
expected 10.8-eent increase in the
municipal tax rate. 'I11Ls may vary
With the ~essed valuation of the city.
Councilmen will take up in August
the matter of setting the tax rate.
A· good share of the budget increase
is foc fire department expansion. The
fire department's -budget is up
$131 ,493. Another $57,000 is set aside
for likely city employes salary hikes,
the first in a year,
Councilmen have c on s i d e r e d
changes in the business licen~ fees
and other fees in an effort to rake up
more revenue for the city.
PARKING METERS\ \STATE SUBVENTIONS
GARBAGE t TRASH rEES
PARKS~
RECREATION
12 .5t
SALES t
CIGARETTE
TAXES
GENERAL
PROPERTY
TAXES
311~
24 _5 '4
GtN!RAL
GOV'T,
3!1 1.
PUBLIC
SAF'ETY
HOW IT'S CARVED -Thia is how the Laguna Beach budget shapes
up when pictured tn pt .. !onn for readers. At top is the breakdown
on municipal Income and lower pie Is the dlvlalon of upendilures.
•
------- -~· -'
ICE BOX . Laguna9rins By Phil lnltrlondl From Page J
uodor woy todoy to IJnd the Rubio
bO)<'I flllhei-Jobo• nportedlr an
11Ml4lflo1td dMtmkaJ worker last
-IDbolDlboU..Oot-.
'ftlt Rol>lo lemlly bad lived In tho
.,.. tmmt complex on tbe uest ol •
h1D tn La Habra for lbout three years
and the children played toget!>er like
one big family when the Ramos'
recently arrived. They are a l J
!mmigranfs from Mexico.
A !onner tenant of the apartment,
~· · Juanita. Portillo, said the
relrigerator war turned to the w,.n
and left in tbe garage -whose do or
was Wired shut -to be junked when
th<y left. .. -
-:i;;q-~
..
... . . ·-. -.
R41mos, however, had · left th'e
garage open Tuesday after working on
bis cu inside.
Under CalUornla's 1 o -c a 11 e d
1'Cbarles Houghton Law,.. it is
misdemeanor offense punishable by a
''Would You Mind Getting Rescued Somewhere Else Up CNtt?
You Don't Quite Flt Jn With Our Jm-s1• Here ••• "
$50 fine or five days hi jail to keep an
abandoned Icebox or refrigerator
without remcwing latches and lock!.
La Habra Police Sgt. Ronald
Meehan said he does not' know il any
citation will be issued in the Tuesday
tragedy, due partly to a question of
ownership. r •
Charles Houghton, for whom the lat.)
is named, was not responsible for the
1951 piece of legislati~n, at least not
County Calls Hearings
On Urgent Air Report
By JACK BROBACK Of ,.,. 0111¥ , .... ,,.,,
directly, Despite the urgeacr indicated in
Charles Houghton was found William Pereira's Phase One Of the
crumpled in an abandoned iei!box on a Master Plan of Air Transportation for
weed.clloked Norwalk field in May of Orange County, the Board of
1951, after a 27-day search for the Supervisors Tuesday voted to instruct
missing youngster· the Airport Commission to hold public
Loss of life still continued .. however, hearings on the question,
and GoV; Goodwin J. Knight signed a After listening to the report as
bill in 1965 add1Uooally requiring delivered by James Sink of the
icebox hinges to be removed, while the Pereira and Associates staff, the
federal government joined t h e board ordered copies made and
campaign three years later. distributed to interested parties and
Interstate shipment of household instructed the commission to "study
refrigeration mlits which cannot be the report and hold public hearings,"
easily opened from inside was barred Strangely overlooked in the hubbub
and today, most of those was the role of Orange County Airport
manufactured are magneitcally op-in the "five years it will take to
erat.ed. develop a new regional airport."
The National Safety Council in late The report said i n t er i m
landing and approach lighting system
"at the earliest possible.date."
To soften the blow to airport
opponents a set of restraints were
suggested for the next five years.
:Such regulations have b e e n
effectively administered o n a
voluntary basis at Wa shi ng t9 n
Na,tiog,al irport, it was pointed out.
Th_e Washington constralnU were
listed as:
-No air carrier may operate to non·
stop destinations in excess . of 650
miles.
From Page J
PARKING .•. 1964: listed 301 llves lost in the previous improvemenU would have to be made
decade, shortiy after Steve Caine, 5, to accommodate certain growth In
number 299, his sister Denise, 3, traffic, predicted to be triple the during the art show.
number 300, and Roger Foltz, 5, current total Mayor Glenn Vedder said "that will
number 301, boosted the tragic toll. Extensive increases will b'e save the city $800." He referred to
That cue also occurred in Norwalk, necessary in the "already over· eouncil 1 a·greement to buy back
where the Charles Houghton law had saturated" terminal bu 11 din g . its origin. Suggested was a possible second· parking lost to the FesUval at the
Perhaps the mott bon'ifying case of decking of the building to provide 8lJ. veterans parking lot across the street.
all ts that of J .A. Hallman, whose five enplaning level. above the present Director Richard Brooks said,
children perished in August of 1953 in terminal helghl "maybe you'll cOlltribute that to the
an old icebox on the porch of their Suggested to a 11 c v late the $l,500." Vedder thought not.
Proctor, Ark., tenant farm. overcrowded parking space at the st 1 D After five small white caskets were airport was a dispersing 0 f uar urkee, Festival treasurer,
buried, Hallman took an ax and automobiles to the clear zooe areas asked how the proposed expenditure
methodically smashed the old icebox with connection to the terminal by should be· classified fOr the budget, if
into small pieces, later tiurning them. tram or some other on-airport access it should go in as transportation.
The icebox had c&t him bnly. '5, one vehicle. Mayor Glenn Vedder commented
buck for every Hallman child.'· Also urged was an instrument softly, "politics, I'd say." ir=~~~~~~~~~~
SMAil IPPDUllCI
TOP QUAUTY OUTDOOR
LIVING IS A WAY OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTY!
••. and Santa Ana Tent and Awning has the New Loo~
for '68 ••• everything lo ma~e outooor relaxation a
family pastime.
ALUMINUM PATIO COVER
Planned for either large or small homes , •• mobile
homes tool Durable, long lasting oil aluminum conslruction,
Screened enclosures -large doors ••• completely bug proof.
OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW
AND DOOR AWNINGS
--•••
FIAT!lalNG Ta STUNNING DKOllATOll COlOllS FOii YOUlt SILICTION.
l!IGNT, YllUNT, 'MODfRN, llAUTJUL ' ' ' AND so MANY smn FOR SO MANY HIEDI.
C•1111 Ylt!t ow ..od•lll lacloly wh-for 4S ~ -"--.,_ _,.111octvrltit ity!H
lo co111pl9 .. 1ft! •ftJ' •'YI• •f •rd'lfl9d¥re. Co111pl•hl ~ ,roi.ctlo" N itrOIKf
wilv9.t .tro,.,i11 •"" fvmilhlflt•· .. "' et oil ••• et S.11,. Mer T•"' e11ll AW11l"f ,... •'"°"' nc11'H " lllG"J' 1•tro1 •• ' t""'1tolJ', 11111lck Mlioft •IHI ftl.,, ... .t1,.111tolJL11fJ'
••• ,~UI •vr j }'Mr l11G••11fll1I
Tim .. llOI FOi '611 WYAS AWllllll • YAWICU • CUITAlll
Nothing Dttorale1 Like Canvas. houtiM New Colon
l New Fobrlc1. for hom11 ••• for bv1ine)1 I
... MANUPACTUUD • INITA" D '
SANTA ANA TENT .
•AWNING co.
PACTOIY '.SHOWROOM
2202 S. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA
141•0491
IUllOI omc1
OllAHI COUNTY AWNING CO.
Serrf119 .,.,.,. Onm9e Cffftry
427 .. llAll-. M&mmlll ,._ 879_.7~ll .,.., • 62~_.784 -
( '
I
I
I
\1
I
Ir I ~
I
-~------·----·---.. ; . . .... ---
UPI Telt,"919
FRONT-RUNNER?
Nixon Rushes in Ohio
Nixon Seeking
'
HHH Debate
011 Television
From Wire Services
Richard M. Nixon said today he
would like to take part in a tele vised
debate with Hubert H. Humphrey next
fall to bring out the "very deep
differences" between the two -
assuming they are the Republican and
Democratic presidential nominees.
Nixon, the leading GOP contender,
felt such a debate would "serve the
public interest because it would
create an immense inten?st in the
election."
"It would bring out, perhaps, a
better understandlng of the dJ!fer·
ences, which are very deep, between
Vice President Humphrey and iny-
self." Nixon told ~porters in Cleve·
land.
He rejected any possibility, howev-
er, of debating Gov. Nelsen A. Rocke·
feller of New York, who is challenging
Nixon for the Republican nomination.
Nixon saJd .Humphrey Would be the
"major ~neficiary" of any Nixon-
Rockefeller debate.
Hwnphrey, meanwhile. said today
he "welcomes the broad e s t
involvement and participation of the
party's rank and file" in drafting the
Democratic platform and selecting the
Democratic presidential nominee.
Rockefeller was considering
undertaking individually a v o t e r
preference poll today, after Nixon
rejected the suggestion that they
commission one jointly.
The New York governor indicated
shorUy after receiving Nixon ' s
rejection Tuesday that he would go
ahead with the canvass if he could find
backers who were willing to pay for it.
Rockefeller had challenged Nixon to
join in a poll of voters in each o! the 50
states to determine which of them
would nm best against the possible
Democratic nominees.
Jail, Fine
Ordered
For SP,Ock
BOSTON (AP) -Dr. Be~
Spock wu Mnlenced -Y to two
,_.. la pr-and ordered to pay a
Sl,000 fine for COlll)llrocy to aid, abet
and coumel young men to avoid the
dn<ft.
His three codefendanta also received
two-year prison sentences, but were
ordered to pay varied fines.
U.S. Dlat. Judge Francis J, W. Ford
granted stays ot execution for an the
1entence1, pencling .appeals to the U.S.
CircuK c.o.zrt of Appeals, & n d
continued the defendant» $1,000 -· Oonvkted with the 6 5-y ear-old
pediatrician wen Yale Chaplain
· ~illlam Sloane Coffin Jr., 43, fined
'5,000; Michael Ferber, 2.1, a Harvard
.gr.aduate student, $1,000 fine: Mitchell
Goodman, 44, an author from Temple,
Maine, fined $5,000.
Lawyers for the four immediately
announced intentions to appeal the
sentences.
In a brief statement before passing
sentence, the 85-year-old Ford told the
crowded courtroom: "Where law and
order stops, obviously a narc by
begins."
'
0Almos1. every week in this court,"
}""ord said, "young men are sentenced
to three years in prison for evading
the draft. It is reasorrablt to conclude
that these defendants "·ere
instruplental in inciting some o( these
men to flout the law."
"Be they high or low, intellectuals
as well as others must be deterred
from violating the law. T h e s e
defendants shOuld not escape under
the guise of free speech."
None of the four displayed any
emotion as. they stood to hear Court
Clerk Austin Jones announce tile
sentences.
Ray Extradition
Said Possible
By Early August
LONDON (UPI) -James Earl Ray
could be extraditeC to the United
States .as early as the first week in
August to stand trial for the slaying oC
Dr. Martin Luther King, legal sources
said today.
A court official disclosed Tuesday
that a he~g on Ray's appeal against
the extradition order bas been set for
July 29.
Three white-wigged, black-robed
justices of the Queen's ben ch
divisional court of the high court of
justice will hear Ray's lawyers fight
the extradition order.
It is the British equivalent of a U.S.
court of appeals.
Legal sources said that should the
.appeals court turn down Ray's appeal
of the extradition order, he could still
appeal to the JJouse of Lords. But
permission to go to the House of Lords
could be refused.
In that case, Ray would be returning
to the United States about the first
week in August, the sources said.
Ray appeared at Bow Street
magistrates court Tuesday to answer
charges of v1olating British gun and
immigration laws.
It was carrying vr'hat police said was
a loaded .38-caliber pistol and two
forged passports that got him arrested
in the first place as he amved at
London's Heathrow Airport Junt 8.
"'IT ..... Reagan P1"9• It Straight
Actr .. s Belly Hutton breezed Into Sacramento for 1 speaking eng1fe-
ment and ~ In on Gov. Ronald Reagan, who found hlm1ill pla~g str man Tuesday for bis old screen slar colleague.
0 It s j:reat." e saJd concerning bis rote as top executive in the it.ate,
"but now r have to write my own acrtpl" Replied Miss Hutton:
.. Didn't you always want to ?" The visit was deacrtbed as a real
1u~r. ~
'
•
Pants-seat Arrest
Wtdntsdly, July 10, 1968 DAILY l'ILOT :J
•
U.S. Spreading
Talks 'Rumor~
PARIS (AP) -Ambu•ador Xuan
'Ibuy, pressing for a quick end to all
U. S. attacks on North Vietnam,
accused American authorities today of
having 0 .spread runllOl's'' of progress
in the Parts peace talks to serve their
OWD poll~cal ~·
Thuy> denying progress, told U. S.
Ambassador W. Averen Harriman
that the search going on }\ere for a
way toward peace in Vietnam would
fall unless the United States halts all
atbacks on the North at once. In case
of such a failure, he argued, the
United states would "bear the full and
enliri! responsibility."
Thuy made his latest attack on the
U. S. position in the 12th session of the
talks which· began May 13. 'lbe
meeting lasted about ~ree hours.
Harriman contradicted Thuy. l ie
told newsmen: "I still maintain there
are straws in the wind despite what he
said ."
The coffee break today lasted only
about half an hour as compared with
45 to 50 minutes last Wednesday and
about 40 minutes in two meetings
before that.
There have been· co nflicting
assessments of the d e Q d 1 o c k e d
discussions for several weeks, but Uris
was the first time the differences had
come up so openly in. a fonnal
meeting.
North Vietti.am is seeking to keep
maximum public opinion pressure on
the United st.ates to end all bombing
without getting any de-escalation in
return.
The United States has fought this
maneuver and tried to b o 1 s t e r
optimism by talking of evidence of
move ment or progress. In recent
weeks two Cabinet member's, Dean
Rusk .and Clark M. C l ifford,
secretaries of stiate and defense, have
made such slightly hopeful estimates.
o!!iclal conversatlons la Paris. -
"These atatementr •e o n t y
designed to appease American. public
opinion which Is demanding Lrom th•
Johnson .admirUstra~on revisiOn of
American poliCy in Vietnam and from
the representatives ol the U. S.
government in the Paris conversatiou
a serious attitude in conformity with
tlbe aims of these conversations."
When he left the conference hall
Thuy told newsmen: "There waa nn.
adw.nce in today's session because the
United States spoke of the !utUre of
the Southeast Asian region to avoid
talklngaboi.lt the un co ndi ti o na 1
cessation of bombardments.''
Harriman, back· at the l J. s.
Embassy, said he could not claim any
"immediate resutt.s" in the ta.lb, but
he stuck to his line of ''straws in the
ind " w .
In his statement to Thuy, Harriman
renewed promises of U. S. support for
a postwar Asian developme nt
program in which North Vietnllm
would participate. He eppealed for an
end to the war.
Coast Shakes
As New Jersey
Flexes Muscles
The battleship USS New Jersey flex ..
ed her muscles Mond4y po~ the
San Clemente Island bombardment '
range from morning until midnight as
Orange Coast residents woodered
whether they: were in the midst of an
earthquake and hearing thunder at the
same time.
Washington, D.C. police orders were defied by 17 Memphis young-
sters _who conducted a demonstration at the Capital Tuesday in sup-..
port of the Poor Peoples March. Demonstrators were arrested and
takeri from Capitol steps as tourists in background watched.
"In order to serve their political
designs." Thuy said, "the Arneriean
authorities have on one h a ·n d
coll'Sciously created obs'bacles to ttrese
conversations by refusing the
unconditiona l cessation of
bombardment and all other acts of
war against North Vietnam. On the
other hand they spread rumors on the
existence pr 'similar points in the
positions o(_j)oth side', 'some signs of
progress', of ;•new · movements', of
'new ideas of the American side' in the
The battlewagon is bound for Viet~
ne.m this tall but is presently
maneuvering off the Orange Coast.
Following the sea trials, the ship will
return to the Long Beach docks where
public tours of the ship will be given
during the first two weeks of August.
Bomb Explodes at Cuba Mission
The New J ersey is presently the on·
ly commissioned battleship in the
world. Her fire power includes nine 16-
ineh guns and ~ five-ineh turret guns.
During the present sea trials, the ship
has a complement of 1,400 enlisted
men and 70 officers.
NEW YORK (UPI) - A bomb
exploded near the Ctban mission to
the United Natioot early today end
•Iring Your
Friend•
•Iring Your
Pall ems
• Iring Your
Checkbook
New Material•
Cemlng In
llMrlyHour
AH Doy
~
,
sllattered windows in six nearby
buildings, including the Yugoslav
mission.
'100°0
in FABRIC
~VERYBODY HAS A OIANCE-JUST REGISTERlll
No Purchase Necessary-You Do Not Need To
Be Present To Win. WINNER RECEIVES $100 in
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below I
DRAWING AT I ,.M.
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION CENTER
800 W. Katella
ANAHEIM •·:.::~';.:,
1 DAY
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PRIDAY
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10 A.M. to 10 P.M.
IN THE HUGE ARENA
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4 '!..'": ........ $3.80
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ZIPPERS
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I
4 Do\11.V PILOT
•
~ ............. ...,
Marine Capt. Raymond I . Por•
.. ,, of Albuquerque, N.M., wrole
hoino last October, telling his
mother • he needed nothing for
Chriltmu but that 400 South Vlet-namen children near Hill 5J need-
ed eorythlng. "I requested about
400, tby1,11 he wrote home reCenUy,
'1And I received ass boxes, each
containing anywhere from ·5 to 30
gi&. By Christmas day, I bad
'(,:m> toys, 3,651 complete outflt-
tings of clothing, 1,214 assorted
pieces of clothing and over 200
poun<IJ_ of ca~" It appears as if
the kood Cap will have a bead
start on Christmas this year.
W-. July 10, 19611
85 l11j11~ed
800 Circus Goers
Trapped in Tent
AUBURN, N.Y. (AP) -Elephants
trumpeted, 4lle wlod lloWled, the tent
cratbed. State Police said 85 of an
e1tlmated aoo spectators •t the circus
Tueldly night were injure1, but none
critically.
Scores had fied before the collapse,
because of tbe violent thundentonn. Poli<e said _..wmately 800 per>ons
t*1 been in tbe tent. watching as tbe
v.arlou1 ectJ were speeded. The ten t
... bold 4,000.
ot the injured, two J.,spitals
admltt.d two dotell, hospital attadl<s
said. Others were discharged or
treated OD the cireu& grounds.
The 300-foot.Jong tent wtlid1 had
4,00> seatl W9'S half filled for tt1e
performance by the Clydei Beatty-Cole
Brothers Clrcu.1, ~ officials and
-· (l8ld. Some in the iaudience did' the
stomach&, caked with mud, cougbing
from swallowed rain water. Circus
workers llubed knives u they ripped
at the canvas to free as many pen~
as they <OU!d. Elephants bellowed in
the background," be 18id .
"Glancing aloog the collai-! 1i<le ol
the t-ent, one coukl lee people
constanUy crawling from beneath the
canvas ....
"People reached out everywhere to
lend a hand in getting out. SOme
helped o1bers to their feet."
Jim Plugb, who was ~
beneath ttie canvas for about five
minutes after the collapse, said:
•
•
colla(lle wu ~ by a k:losenin g
of some of the alwnlnum poleo holdin g
--~ _ up tbe tent and by a rush of water
down the top above the center ring.
"My eye caugtit one of the ride
s<tt>port poles pull out of the grouod
and llart to go up. My elate got out in
Ille aisle and started to go out and I
grabbed Ille dilld of a lrie!ld in my
arms and darted down.
"Then the pole was all the way out
~nd awinging. We made it to the
ground, clodgtng Ille owioglng poles.
"I looked up and saw the center pole
coming toward us md dropped to the
~. lll>leldlng the ctild underneath
me. We la7 ili.tl'e for ebout five
minut.es -couldn't 1ee my da1le but I
felt her hand -ancl then there were
people behind 1111 cutting the canva1
witrb knives.
. ••• • • •
.•
::, Warrn Beattv, actor and chairman oJ
'1 the Arti&t'1 Committee of E'mtrQencv
: ~ 9un Control, Uatem to the voice of
: " the crowd tn Cand&ertic'k Park aa the11
:: voice ,both approval and dtlcpproml
! 0/ hil ~tch. Anud. boos and cM1r1,
_; Beat~. at tht: f'eque1t of San Fran-
.. , cilco MaJJor Joseph Alioto, 1'rgo1d the
; crowd to write to their Congre1nnen
.; /Of' gun control. The actor UIOI allo
• v1Tballt1 cmaored for hi.f hippie-.style
· ... haircut. • ..
•'! ·: Hank Tuck, who operates a
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, rest-• aurant, recenUy served lunch •••
• to regular cu1tomer1 only ••• at
• 1932 prices. Hambur1er1 were 15 · cents hot do2s a diine, cotf.ee a
nickel 111 ju.sf wanted to show mx
appreciation f or 'their patronage, '
Tuck said. . • Norm Barry, of. Hastings, Michi-
gan, towing service operator, bad
not been paid for bis service and'
county supervisors hadn't provid-
ed promised storage areu lor the
junked cara he had been asked to
pick up. So Barry despollled five
rusty auto1 In the parting lot of
the -county courthouse. • Los Angel .. Police and FBI as·
ents have arreated a slender bank
robbery •uspecl who signed his
holdup notes, '"lbe Fat Man."
Rkh•nl All•n Clifton, :I.I, ii aus-
. peeled of robbing banks In Van
Nuys, Sei>ulveda, Canoga Park and
Mission llills, all suburbs of Los
Angeles. • "I've got an alligator in my pear
: tree," reported Jam11 0.rn of
• Cincinnati, Ohio, as he swnmoned
police. Police chased the creature
: and caught him on the ground~ It
•turned. out to be an Iguana, a non·
poisonous tro~ical lizard. It was
: taken to the Cincinnati Zoo • •
Killingsworth Productioni b1'd-
gettd a cool $15 fO'J' iti recmt
motion picture spectacular. IC
10GI produced b11 the .sevnth
grade .social .studie1 clas.s of
Killingnoorth, (Connecticut) Jr.
High School The film toa.s done
fn the 1tud11 of Africa 'in.sttad
of the usual term paJH!rl.
• PenY Lennon, of the singing
LeMOD Sisters, has given birth to
her fourth child, a 7 pound, 9 ounce
; boy, In St. John's Hospital in Santa
•Monica. She and husband, Dick
'Cathcart, a mu1ician, named the
boy Michael Matthew. • · Letters are being carried from
: the SL Jooeph (Missouri) County
·Jail to Iha main post office and
back to Ille county Jail aa re1ult of
a I-writing trlendablp that bas
• bl-.d between a man and a • .....,,.., In jail. Sheriff c. A. J ....
ldao 1914 each letter ii cenaored, ' NmfM and bandied like regular
mall. 'nit potlml~ pleb It up and
• Ihm dlllven It bad: to the jail.
: I ••
.' An llJplam towlaf an adverlis· .Inc wmw carried lfa commercial
11111.,.. rlcM to Ille doonlep In :~~ ~~ i:-4" .v:'t -:::·~
9lalall. N• Ar•k•
I ol llDwnri:J!!ded to a
I dlr 1111 I enpe
Jail plae ll'U llllt damafed.
'
·~ waa a loud scream but tber::!
was no time for paok," aa.ld Bob
Fa1ce, a reporter for the Auburn
Citnen Advertiser who was in the tent.
"Eveeyl>ody bit the dirt and 11he
poles camedllwn," be oaid. Faac< said
IOID8 people crawled out from under
t.be tent and others were freed when
cinm wvrbn cut the oaava1.
"People were a.wllng on their
Elderly Warned
Against Swindle
By Bunco Artists
LOS ANGE!ES (AP) -Police warn
that a gang poling u bank exarniners
is tryiq' to swindle elderly California
women.
Lt. Samy Arabian of the bunco
squad said the group of four to six
men and women; appa ren tly
Canadi1D1, recently worked their way
throueh oa.Jdand, Sarramento, San
J'Ole and Pboe.nix, Ariz., and bu now
contacted nveral potendal victi.nu,
perUc\iarly in the Los Angeles area.
Arlllllan said ft'!ndlors try 14
per1u.:ie victiui• to d i 1 r e & a r d
wanWics by bat managers ..
Report that the eug WU Calilornia·
bound came from Toronto, where
aev•-1 members reportedJy live.
AnlUn rave this account ot their
operatloaa:
Potential victims are telephoned,
warned 1bat ~ account! are being
mismanaged by the bank and asked
their accounts' values.
The wealthiest subject J1 then asked
t.o withdraw his or her savings &o
"fedcal bank examiners'' or 0 the
FBI" can audit the bi'.nt's record of
tile tranNction .
One llDI member, oiten dressed as
a oearlty olllcer, tben plcka up the
-and promises that the 11vll11s and a reward will be returned within
two weeks -and tht! money and the
gang member Ulen dilappear.
Arabia said at leut l& persons in
the Los Angele1 area were similarly
swindled last )'ear. About tine·
quarters of aucb nindle1 are never
reported, he added.
Portrait of Pain
"It never mtiered my mind that we
could suffooate," Plugb aald •
RetCUe worters wwe fU'Old to
crawl throoJll> onkle-dffp waler In
,.ardl of -!nipped underneath the ripped CIDVM.
A patron in a restaurant mote thin
llOO )Wdt fl'lllY said the -· .. the .tent fell could be beard dearly .
About 2.9 lndwo of rain fell In a hn>-
hour period and Winds-· guating up to 40 mlle.s an· hour. Tbe force of the
8tolm ripped down power lines and
flooded streets in tbe city, causing
Mayor Paul Lattimore to order all
nonemergency U"affic from t h e
slreels.
Cima offici.als said the canv·as,
wortb about $42,000 would ~ replaced
and that the ~ planned lo play as
scheduled Friday ni~t in Bulfalo.
Marin County
Housewife, 28,
Raped, Robbed
NOVATO, Caiil. (UPI) - A 28-year-
old housewife, along with her two
sons , one and five years old, Tuesday
was kidnaped .in front of a
supermarket, raped and robbed.
The victim said a short, dark man
jumped into the back seat of her car
as she was loading groceries. He
showed a kitchen knile and said:
"I need a ride. I'm in trouble. DG
what I tell you and your kids won't be
hurt."
He forced her to drive to a weeded
rural area wtiere she said lhe was
as.sau!ted. The victim and her children
were left bound hand and foot on a
side road when the man fled, but !he
managed to free berselt and bail a
passing motorist •
Mrs. Ruth .Harr of the Bronx. N.Y., Is in extreme pain aa ahe ls re-
moved to Jaeobi Hospital with a gearshift lever through her arms
and Into her chest. Firemen used • n1cltsaw to cut throusb tho lever.
Mn. Harr auffered her injury In a hn>car craeb wblcb Hnt sir per·
SOii! to the hospital Tuesday.
J
ARTICHOKE CONNOISSEUR -Meadow mouse
makes a meal of artichoke In a field In Salinas Val·
ley where an ariny of mice threatens fields that
produce 90 percent of the nation's artichokes. Mice
bad already ruined 50 percent of this year's crop
with a $3 million loss to growers. July 13 has been
designated as "Kill a Mouse Day" in Monterey
County •
Ba111e to Save Ar1i~hoke
Who Have Best Laid Plans: Mice or Men?
CASTROVILLE, Calif. (UPI) -
Tine decas 110, John Stelllileck wrote b1I novel "Of Mice and Men"
and placed 'tta setting a few miles
from thia community In Califoroi11's
agrlcultUNI heartlaod.
T()(iay, Ce6troville has & new atory
of mice and men: they are combatants
in a battle for aurvival of the area'• '6
million artichoke crop.
'IGdnaped' Girl Found
In Daze in Woods by Home
CORRY, Pa. (UPI) -Karen
Cocmey, 15, "isn't a girl to run off.''
About Tl hours aft er she
disappeared, a rescue helicopter fcrund
her wandering in a dense woods less
than a mile from home.
Doctors at CGrry Memorial Hospital
said the girl waa not harmed, but was
suffering from shock and exposure
when fOund Tuesday. She WQS listed in
satisfactory condition.
Karen dia:appear-ed Monday alter
she went to the backyard to hang the
family laundry. An intensive n>-man
grGund and air search was launched
when she failed to return. F BI agents
joined the search, fearing she had
been kidnapped.
A st.ate trooper t1aid Karen was "in
quite a daze" when the helicopter
c:Uscovered her wandering near a
lakeshore. She told police stie had been
nervous and high-strung lately and
decided to take a walk in the woods
"to get away lrom it .all."
Her mother, Mrs. Mildred Cooney,
said Karen often rode her pony along
the paths: througt the woods, "but
never weat off without permission.
She isn't a girl to run off."
Mr1. COOlley said her daughter still
was hazy about what happened, "but
she remembered being chased from
tbe hoUJe by a big man with a knife."
"He chased her a long ways through
the wood1," Mrs. Cooney said, "until
she aaid ahe fell asleep."
State police discounted M r s .
Cooney'• 1tory.
· "Her d isappearance was
deliberate," a trooper said. "She took
her time. She could have come out of
there yesterday. but she didn't. She
took her little religious book in there
with her.
"She thinks ehe remembers a
number Of things she couldn't. She's
imagL'ling these llilngs."
Doctors and state police said Karen
"''as not badly scratched hY; the thick
underbrush. "She's not as scratched
as we are and she's mt es muddy as
we are," the trooper said.
Morton Switches
Vote to Confirm
F ortas Selection
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Sen.
Thruston B. Morton, an influential
Republican moderate, has switched
sides and will vote to confirm Abe
Fortas as Obie( Justice of the' United
States.
Perhaps more impGrtant, t b e
Kentucky senator baa decided he
would vote to crack any filibu!ter that
might develop against the elevation of
Fortas and the nomJnation of Homer
Thornberry 14 Ille high court.
The diJClosure of Morton's position
-taken aome time ago, according to
an aide -lends weight to claims by
Senate Republican Leader Everett M.
Dirksen that opposition to t b e
nomination! ia shrinking.
Morton was one of 19 Republicans
who signed a position paper -
circulated before the nominations
were disclosed. -opposing Supreme
Court appointments by Pl'f:sident
Johnson on the basis he is a "lame
duck" chief executive.
The Republicans argued that the
vacancy created by the resignation of
Chief Justice Earl Warren should
TQmain until a new administration
takes over in Jam.iary.
Field mice currenUy are w1D1U.ng,
boJt the growers are making plans for
a masai'\o·e air and gr o u n d
counterattack which wonld allow them
to get their .crop -90 percent of the
nation's artichokes -on grocen'
shelves .
They plan to spread poisoned oat
groats from the air over fie lds where
young artichok<:s are growing, and by
hand in fielc'ls where m a· t u r e
artichoke~ are ready to ))e t.arvested.
"U we don't get the n1ice, there
won't be a crop," Slill Altert W.
Culver, Monterey County agricultural
commissioner.
The poisoned grain method was
decided on l:ecause of the pP.euliar
Gverlapping sbi:cture of an artichoke.
State reguJalioris forbld the use on
artichokes of poisons usually sprayed
on fruit crops.
"'The situation is critir.al," said Don
Barsotti, partner in the California
Artichoke nnd Veget.Jble Growers
Corp. "We have spent years educatipg
the public in other sttltes to eat
nrtichGkes, and this1all upect 1o reap
a profit. But the mice arc getting it."
DarsGtti said that durinP,: June, July
and August, plants are i:ut back tG
n1ature t·:ir ha1vest during the other
nine months of 1he year. 'I'he mice are
attacking Utls new '&1l'Owth.
About 50 growers produce
artichokes on 9,000 acres in the
northern end of the Salinas Valley.
The field mice (mlcrotus Callfornicus)
population began expanding abcNt
three years ago. The prolil.ic pest6,
which produce litters of 12 to 15 every
month, crawl up the artichokes and
gnaw -eventually killing mature
plants.
Barsotti ruled out cats and garlic as
solutions tG the mice influx.
"\'ou put one cat into a field and
he's like a kid with a ton of candy.
After the cat has eaten fGur or five
mice, he 's had it." As for 5Uggesilons
garlic be planted between rows Of
artichokes because mice dGn't like
garlic, Barsotti said: "That's just an
old wive's tale."
"\Vhat we i:reed is another pied
piper," said another grower. "If we
can find him, "'ll treet him rigbt this
time."
Awesome Winds in Auburn
Gale Crashes Circus Tent on 800 People
Cellfurala
$aulhtr1'1 C1llf(lrr!11 Wll JUftrrt lodl 'I' wllfl ll'IOtl'll"" cci.tlll lqw cl-,, T""'"r•tvrt• _.. 1 lll'lllY w1m.r ll'lllnd •nd cool.,. In _,., -•·
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By SYLVIA PORTER'
(Lui ol • 1trlet)
'!be imminent in<reue In
income taxes underlines
the wisdom of figuring
ways to cushion the impact
of th~ blgger burden and
also of rev.iewtng overall
techniques 10f m!nJmiling
the income tax blow.
Wlth the aid ol Leon Gold ,
clllef tax expert Of the
Re1e~ch Institute o f
America, I have compiled
these vital hints.
-IF YOU expect to -
receive a substantial bonUJ
or pay hike later this year,
It mlght be sound tax
atrategy to arrange to defer
aome or all of the amount
beyon,_d 1969.~The surtai:· ls
scheduled to be off entirely
by 1970 and if the Vietnam
war is ended, regular rates
may be lower by then too.
A deferred compensation
plan will pay off to the extent that t.he
cor.1pensaUon can b e
deferred until it will be
taxed at lower rates.
-If you expect a higher
income in 1969 ..:! are
thinking of shifting some or
au ot it into 1968 to pay at
lower tax rates,
reconsider. It well-may be
econo.m.ically unsound and
the reason is that while you
would save some taxes,
yOu also would have to pay
the lower tax ' !ull year in
advance.
At current steep interest
rates, what you would lose
in interest (or profits) by
laying out thls tax money a
year earlier will
substantially reduce and
could easily erase your
anticipated tax savings.
MAKE YOUR declalon on
shifting iilieome on these
eroullda: your estimate of
income your 11eed !or
money: the· amount of
pos1lbl1 sav1ngl ; t b e
business problem in
arranging an in<:pme ahllto
-U you're a bu1ihe11man
concerned about holdlng
your key execuUves and
employea 1n view ot the
higher tax burden on their
lncomes, weigh enhancing
their fringe benellll. Theoe
are either tax-exempt, tu·
deferred or preferentially
taxed ··and become
i n c r easingly attractive
wheQ. taxes go up. Here's a
list of top fringe benefit.
you may want to adopt:
(I) Group' term II le
insurance which you, the
employer, pay for, may be
tax.free to Your employes
up to $Ml,OOO each of
coverage and you
can deduct the premiums;
(2) MEDICAL and dental
expenses Of your employe
and his family can be
n!l!nburltd tu-free by you
under a medical
reimbursement plan while
you, the employer can
deduct the reimbuisement
payments;
( 3) Qualified pension acd
profit sharing plans, though
they must be set up on a
non-discriminatory . basis,
enable a portion of yOur
employe's compensation to
be tax-deferred and set
aside where it w i 11
accumulate income lax·
!ree; ·
( 4) Sick pay under a plan
can be received tax.free up
to certain amounts :
(5) EXPENSE accounts
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SOFT DRINK INDUSTRY
A REFRESHING INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
-Sain of soft drlnkl have nnrty doubled In uch decade
since 1880
-Aldln1 the boom 11 the rapid Inc ruse of the youn1er pn·
eratlon which is the largest consumer of these products
-Per capita consumption in both domestlc and for.Jen ·
markets h11 risen dramatically over the past )'Mrs
-New convenient packaging concepts are supplemented by
more auresslvt advertislne and promotional programs
-Low Calorie bevtrlges represent a dynamic new 11Jes
area.
There are many additional futures which 1iva the Soft
Drink Industry appealin&'lnterrnediatl and· Jona·tenn
1rowth prospects ••• Write today for a complimentary copy
of the latest iuua Of INVESTQR'S DIGEST contalnln1 1
completf analysis. of the Soft Drink Industry and hl1h·
lla;htlnc 1ttractlY1 lnvtstment opPortunltJes.
LESTER, Rv'oNs & Co.
Smi.~Shlttl911 . • • ' f -
"' -· -· ';.:. 3421 i.. .,
=.: -·· CCIII!: H......., ·-~ -· C... Del .._, Calltomfl I... = I T ......... 17"'310
MlMIEllS Hrw YOllK STOCK DCCHAHGI:
'•tl!ic CO.st Sl•k luMn,1• • Am•rign StK~ hchll!P
Address-------------
CitY-------------
State, Zip Code
WALKER &. LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
154 homes sold
June 23rd·30th
because service is our name I
Thi tile ti ut Ii 1t Wdlker & Ltt
-147«71 -·-~
omca Ill 'l'OIOI MIA
11J111:.:s-.
MIS!I O«r IUDI
-7711
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•
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Lf1tln11 hr Tuesday, July t, 1'61
Mutual Funds
Wtdntt<f.ly, July 10, 1968 II.Ill V PILOT l).
Riot Fears Reshape
Insurance Structure
! uoi--1--1--
l..,1-t--
..
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Southland Business
Eases Off May Pace
Soulbem California
buslntt1 ac\lvlty remained .
. notably brl1k -g Juoe
but eaoed Oii tile record
paee set In ,May, 0 . C.
Adams, mana1er of
Security Padlic Notional
Benk'e Costa Mew brand!,
reported -y.
Eltimated et 178.4 on tlle bank11 lad.ex of business
acUvUy, perforrii.ance in
June was ll percent hlg'hcr
1llall t,"iOJ;t r -j1167, but •llatl ; than in M1y.
-a recor,st high of 119.1
WU 11llblilh1d . A
prevloua ..-of 171.7
-rec<rded fOr April. ( Ma y ' 1 unprecedented
ecooomlc 'cllm.b w a s
lar(ely' attributable t •
unu1ualt1 1l11abt.
~·s.-d.nncs
&Del ~nt llora aal•, ·~-l Real 111111 Ill... ldlYtl)'
increased during J u n e ,
partially_ off· 1.e 1 ting a
decllnt in bank d-q, .
Among other ot tht index'•
individual CO!"flO!leoll, all
ol whi<h f!I'• fdjullod for
s e· a 1 G n a l fltJcotmtJom:,
doporlmtnl ·-aaln 11111 cOllllnlcUOll a c ti v II y
r~ al ""'7 Jewlr.
Empio,,nent d • c It n e d
durtng May, .1111 !atoll
mootti to< whidl ficure•
an 1valllbt.. Emplo,td on
the Sou«Nln4'1 n i n e
metrai>alllll -·were 4,'74,900 ctrillalll -10,IOO
Inv -ID April, wllan a reeord n111111Mr o( 4,111,IOO
-emploJed. May
empto)'mtlll. --· .... up ts:l,400 -..,., of 11167. ~ 1o lbe
Ql tms*;m int ~ <A. U pen:ilt lll o ,.w·1 llmt
lstha-1-o(
3.lptl'Cll!lb
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DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
L
Help for a l(id • Ill Need
Where does a younaster go In Orange County for
holp with problemJ of drug abuse or other behavioral
maladjuslmenl?
Jr a youngster lhro\YS up adult abuse of a1cohol, the
psychiatrists don't defend thl> abuse.
They take the tack that any unregulated drug use
can be dangerous, even permanently damaging. And
they will medically give the specifics if the youngsters
are interested.
There are private psychiatrists and psychologists,
of course, but they're expensive and the family may
not have the funds.
There is the Orange County Child Guidance Clinic
in Costa Mesa, but it has a waiting lis t o! JOO.
Bu~ somewhat amazingly, there Is no provision for
chUdts II or younger with behavioral problems lo be
admitted to county facilities unless they are admitted
to the community health center as part of a family unlL
The story last w .. k of a pilot program lo help
bridge this st.ark deficiency was ~ood news, at least ~or
the Laguna area. It is an expenment worth watching
by every other commwlity in Orange County.
'Ibe Assistance League of Laguna Beach has fu_r..
nlshecl the meeting place for the weekly clinics and
$4,000 to help fund the program.
Dr. Louis A Gottschauk, chainnan of tile depart·
ment of psychiatry and human be\lavior at the UCI
school of medicine, has, along with other staff psych1a·
trist&, donated his time for the counseling.
It is available to youngsters up to the age of 18 ~1ith approval of parent or guardian. The parents of
participating youngsters may ·join in to learn the whys
of drug abuse and the generation gap.
''We focus our counseling at just these problems
and not trying to restructure someone's personality/'
said Dr. G<>Ushauk.
He and fellow psychiatrists are attempting during
the counseling to bridge the generation or communica·
tion gap and to provide relatively neutral information
about the use of drugs.
The role of the schools will be to make parents and
youngsters aware that the pilot program exists and ad-
vise wh at it entails. YounBsters might also be referred
by family doctora or mirusters. The clinic has the en-
dorsement of the South Coast Community Hospital
medical staff.
The fledglin~ program is off to a good start and
certainly there 1s a need. More volunteer help from
psychiatrists, psychologists and soci~I workers is need-
ed to keep the clinic going. Funds will be needed too U
It is to expand.
Those who have made this positive approach at the
local level to a national problem of magnitude are to
be hearWy commended.
Youth Fair Fine Idea
Hear, hear, Laguna Beacb Youth Council! Good
\vork. •
The council's project this weekend staging a C~·
terbury Fair to exhibit art and crafts along with
renaissance plays was a creative, positive approach to
the summer doldrums. .
It makes a point too about an issue which has some
teenage.rs complaining frequently: not all lo~l young·
sters sit and smoke pot; some are out creating.
Aduils shouid give the exhibit its deserved support.
l
Are We Moving Closer? Are Words
Cuha-15 Years of Castro Of Wallace
By WILLIAM GERBER
Editorial Research Reporll
Cuba will C1!1ebrate later this month
the lSbb anniversary of Fidel Castro's
.attack on the Mone.ado Barracks at
SantiQgo de Cuba. Although tile atta<'k
was unsuccessful, the date on whJcil it
occurred -July 26 -gave its name
to the movement which. no~ much
more than five years later, led to
Castro's victory over Cuba's old-style
dictator, Fulgencio Batista.
On Jan. 1, 1969, Castro will complete
a full decade as leader of what turned
out to be the first Communist ;egime
In the Western Hemisphere. Through
that period. he ba.S managed to keep
contro:I. of Cuba despite an American-
(inaoced attempt at invasion of the
country, an economic boycott pro·
moted by the United States, expulsion
from the Organization of American
States, and frequent quarrels with his
principal outside sourC1! of assistance,
the Soviet Union.
ANY Jo~RANK assessment or U1e
situation in the island republic tOday
would have to .acknowledge that the
Cuban ma5ses aTe materially better
oU than ever before. Cuba's 7.8 million
people are entitled to rece1ve, free of
charge, education at all levels,
medical servicen, meals on the job,
electricity, JooaI telephone service,
tickets to spoct& events, And a funeral.
On the other side o( the ledger are:
-Failure ol Cuba's gross national
product to rise appreciably since 1959:
an actual reduction of per capita an·
nual income, from $450 in 1959 to $400
In 1967.
-Strict rationing necessitated by
shortages o( food, clothing, and
household articles. The ration book in
February 1968 entitled each person to
buy two shirts and two pairs of shoes
a year, tlh.ree pounds of r ice and 20
cans of evaporated milk a month.
three.fourths of a pound of meat and
three ounces of coffee a week, and a
liter (slightly over a quart) of frtsh
milk a day for each child.
BEFORE AND AFTER Castro
came to power, he promised that free
elections would be held in Cuba -
'"'it.hill four years, he said on "Meet
t.ae Press" on April 19, 1959. However,
no elections have been held: U1e
government rute& by decree and the.re
is no legislative body. Every citizen
must at all times carry with him an
identification card containing his pic-
ture, description, and fingef1>rints.
The Soviet Union, which provides
Cuba with economic aid amounting to
more than $1 million a day, no longer ,
acti\&ely uses Cuba as a sprin·gboard to
spread communism in the \Vester
llt!misphere. Cuba itslef has sought to
take the lead in that effort.
Beginning in 1965, the chief in-
surrectionary acti·vities in La t i n
America were guided, on the spot. by
Ernesto Che Guevara, an Argentine
physician w.ho had met Castro in Mex-
ico in :1955 and joined forces with him.
Guevara "'as killed on Oct. 9, 1967,
after a skirmish with Bolivian govern·
ment forces.
THE ADMINISTRATION that will
rake office in Washington next
January will be faced with tlhe task of
reviewing U. S. policy toward Cuba.
One group or Americans faVOl'S active
interventicm to overthrow Castro. That
group, although small, includes a num-
ber of prominent citizens. As a
measure short of m i l it a r y in·
tervention, the economie boycott of
Cuba has been a doubtful value.
' The chairman of the Sen.ate Foreign
Relations Committee, J. W. Fulbriibt
(D Ark .), considers the boyeott "a
failure as .an instrument for bringing
agout the fall of the Castro regime."
Elimination or diminution oi two ir·
ritants seems ne<:essacy to establish a
situation in whlcti the United States
can comfortably restore diplomatic
relations with Castro's regime and end
the-boycott. The irritants are Castro's
support of guerrilla movements in
other Latin American countries and
his allegiance, such as it is, t.o the
Soviet Uniori.
It is, howeve-r, not certain tha.t
Castro would welcome an .overture
toward wrmal relations with the
United States.
Many ·Americans believe that it and
when peace is fainally achieved in Viet
Nam, the Castro regime and the
American government will find it
mutually advantageous t.o sit down
and work out en agreement thiat will
provide for better relations between
th.ese two physically, if not politically.
close neighbors.
The Child's View of Life
Anyone over 30 who has trouble fall-
ing asleep at night usually turns hls
restless thoughts back to h i i:
childhood.
He umembers it with a vague sense
of loss, as mankind remembers Jost
Eden -with a pang.
Most people like to recall their
childhood as a happy time, and their
minds obligingly turn away from the
woes they knew when very young.
But was anyone's childhood e"'er as
happy when he lives it as be later in
life prefers to recall it to have been?
No. indeed. In this respect memory is
a soft liar.
The secret heart of any child is
hardly bathed in constant seli·smi\e.
He approves of himseU far Je ss than
the grgwnups around him do. for he
never ls quite as innocent as they
think him to be.
THEY TEND to regard him as
either 1 perfect angel or a little devil,
•
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gu.s:
Feed·lnli and love·ins are said :to be Cbrlltlanity ln action.
Whatever happeped 'lo "Cleanli-
neu la ne:rt lo Godllntss" and
"He who 1'ilJ not work •hall not
Nt0 7
-R. N. P.
,... ....... ....,. ....... """ ... ,11111f_lf .. WISI .... ..................... ...,,, ....
depending on the day or what they
know about his conduct at the mo-
ment. But the child himself is haunted
by the knowledge that he is never a
perfect angel. although he may for
fleeting seconds "'istruuy yearn 'to be
one.
Every child is troubled by hidden
guilt1 which comes early to the human
~ace. He always has done something
\\'rong which his parents haven't yet
found out, and so he !eels like an un·
caught criminal always in peril of
being discovered and punished.
This self.knowledge of guilt and fear
of retribution is the sword of
Damocles that hangs in the soul of
every chJ.ld. It keeps him uneasy. no
matter how small his transgression
may be. and shuts him rrom the
paradise In which his deluded parents
th.ink he dwells .
\\'ELL, THEN, since chlldren are
actually hypocritical little worry.
warts. just like gr~w ps. what 11
there truly about chi! bod that makes
adults look back n it wtlh such
fondnes s! \Vherein Iles its real magic?
The real magic of childhood lies in
the fact that It is the only period of ex-
istence when you look at Ufe as if you
were seeing It through a magnifying
glass. Everything is bigger, closer up,·
and more emotionally a r f e c t i n g •
Everything is sharply accented.
Your thoughts are m0tt fanciful
and exciting: your 1ensation1 a.re
more thrilling: you feel more keenly
and deeply ali\·e tha.n you ever will
again.
You bump your knte and roll In the
grass with an agony worse than any
'
human being ever bore before. You
taste an ice cream cone or a
watermelon, and no Caesar in ancient
Rome ever knew such an orgy of
taste, though he banqueted on peacock
tongues.
WHATEVER HAPPENS to you oc-
curs as if it _.ere happening for the
fir st time since the globe started spin·
ning. No rainbow has any dust on it.
every plush-covered caterpillar is a
mo nster of mystery. ·
You Jook around you. and beauty.
joy, terror, awe and ecstasy -they
are everywhere. You wade mind-deep
in wonder.
Slowly as we go through U'fe.
cobwebs accumu1ate on all these feet.
ings. We see through the magnifying
glass no more. The monsters bttome
less fearsome, the joys less stirring.
\\'e tend to turn from live sparks to
dull clods. more moved by threnody
than thrill.
That is what we miss most about
our vanished childhood -that view
through the magnifying glass, that
bonfire raptUN o( bein& which, when
it goes, comes not again.
Dear George:
11 it true that the key to
popularity with the opposite aex
11 the caveman approach with
women? They setmed to do O.K.
WONDERING
Dear Wondering:
Think Jt over. How many
cavemen do you gee?
(Send your problems t o
~or(e, who never let.I common
sense interfere with tbe fad.I.)
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Catching Up?
It was Humpty Dumpty who in·
formed Alice that "a word means just
what I choose it to mean.0
George Wallace, although he has not
as yet had a great fall, nonetheless
reminds one of the legendary Humpty
Dumpty. A word to George Wallace
means just what he chooses it to
mean. If anyone persists in asking him
about the possibilities o( other
shadings of meaning, be 1grows ir·
ritated, sometimes angry. The word
means what he aays it does.
THE WORD •'racist,'' (or example,
means to him what he says it does. He
increasingly informs interviewers and
audiences that 'he Is not a racist. He
menUons taldng legal .action a gainst
any person who suggests the word
means something other than the
meaning he gives to it. or late he gives
even the word "segregationist" a
meaning that me.ans only what he says
it means.
Hi1 Conner speeches in other cam-
paigns, however, are a matter of
record.
Meanwhile, Mr. Wallace seems
somewhat subdued. Thi1 may be
merely a matter of mood or of timing.
But· a word keepi coming out of
Montgomery and Birmingham which
has a meaning he is not able to con·
trol. This word is that the money
necessary to run the sort of sem.l-na.
tional campaign now being !ttaged by
Mr. Wallace just isn't in hand.
"THE U'l'l'LE PEOPLE," a phrase
delll" to Mr. Walla<'t, are loyal, he in·
sists, and they keep the money coming
in. But Mr. Wallace has had his
political hand out to the little people
for a good many years. He promised
mueh, but the delivery service has not
been all that was anticipated.
Mr. Wallace talks about all he has
done for educatio~ and about the voca·
tional and junJor colleges he has built,
Education is in a desperate condition
in Alabama.
This also is the year Ythen
Alabamans say the state's bonded in-
debtedness is scheduled to reach a
billion dollars. Mr. Wallace's op-
position points out that, while he cer-
tainly did not create all this debt, it
did seem to have a surge or increase
during his years in office. This debt
will be one or those albatross
neckpieces for the next legislature.
Mr. Wallace finds that, as the word
gets arounnd about A I a b a m a ' s
predicaments, the tycoons of con·
servatism a.re sending smaller checks.
His appe:al to the little people grows a
bit 1tale. The political picture is
cllanging.
f\1R. lVALLACE'S fierY bl•sts at the
"Warren court" seem a lltUa old now
that the Chief Justice has submitted a
resignation. President Johnson. having
obtained the first Important dlsanna-
ment talks with the Soviets and the
hopeful 11 not yet productive
discussions golng on with Hanoi. no
longer is vulnerable to the Wall1ct
techniques.
Still another of ~fr. Wallact't whip-
plng boys, Senator Robert Kennedy,
was removed by aenaelest, tragic
auassinltlon.
The \\fallace campaign bas by no
means collapsed. It ttill ll formidable.
But lt h11 not picked up any new
momentum.
Time does indeed eUect change.
We'll wait and see what the new word
really means about George Wallace.
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°)..t-\-H~! WATER!''
Collective
rAnd Gun Control:
To the Editor:
In Dr. Norman Nixon's column
"'Everyday Problems" entitled "High
Noon in Orange County -Let the
Lawmakers Know" dated Friday, July
5, 1968, there appears to me to be an
hysterical and highly emotional reac-
tion and "pandering to collective
guilt" by the author.
Although most of the article is
devoted to support of gun control
legislation, the merits Of which I shall
not argue, I would like to comment on
the statement that ".,a., responsible na·
lion will not cominue to fill its air
waves, movie screens and comic
strips with exaltations of violence and
irrespoosibillty. ''
Also, referral ls made to the glori~
fying of violence, robbery and murder
in such movies as "Bonnie and
Clyde."
IF DR. NIXON is a student of
psychology, sociology and history, he
will have to agree t!hat our nation
historically has been a "violent and
energetic" nation and its great suc·
cess and genius has been its ability to
channel thls violence and energy, to a
large extent, into productive, creative,
and meaningful undertakings. For
many years now the public depiction
of violence bas almost universally
been in the context of its futility,
tragedy and horror, and its moral in-
acceptability.
The acceptance of the presence of
sexual pervension and violence as
described in the Old and New
Testaments of the Bible ls becaus:e of
the moral context of the story.
U there is to be censorship of violen-
ce,. why not of. Communist doctrlne<J,
sexual education and .sexual erotica,
and anything which w i 11 "'con·
laminate" the minds of men?
PSYCHOLOGISTS, sociologists and
other students of human behavior
have even advocated that
pornographic and erotic material may
-reduce sexual crimes, by providing a
vicarious outlet that will reduce the
need for participation in the depicted
acts. ls the depiction of violence an ex·
ception to this!
Man cannot grow by putting hls
''head in ~ sand like an ostrl'ch ."
Most people who have seen the movie
"Bonnie and Clyde" are stunned by Its
senseless violence. and the hOrrifying
end to which its principle characters
came.
How can Dr. Nixon imply that such
a movie would . encourage violence?
My feelings. and those of many with
whom 1 have discussed it, are revolted
and Our response is a greater
awareness of the futility and horror o(
violence.
IT IS MY CONTENTION that Dr.
Nixon's theses of the causes a(
violence are backwards and that, u
civtlizatlon progresses, there ls less
violence in the streets and in the
homes, and more In the fantasies
portrayed on screens, ln books, on
television, and ln eomic2. Perhaps the
fuUUlment of Dr. Nixon's ~m·
mendation1 would revene the trend.
Is it not better to be a apectator to lm-
a,glned violence than to participate ill
real violence?
GEORGE J, PRASTKA, M.D.
'Otloft' Slllle' Spelll<s
To the EdJtor:
I have been foJloW'int your editorials
• and letters to the editor since the
us1sa.ln1tlon or Senator lttinnedy with
irtat interut. To say that you Jre
preJudjced ln J1vor of atrong anti-gun
legl>latlon wl>uld be • gron un·
der1tatemtnl
Al1q -0 or printing mo!lly anU·
L•IMn frwn rHC!en .,. -lcerM. Nonn-11y wr""9
sl!ould convey nwtr rMIH!ll' In 300 WMC11 or .._
'the r!1ht to conM"" lrttt r1 to nt 1peu Cf' 1llnltMN
l\IMI 11 rnoryed, ""II llll&TJ mu1l lncludl 1l1n1tirr.
1NI m.allln1 1ddrea., but n.rna will tllo w1lhtltltll
on T-'IUCll.
gun lette{s, you finally condescended
to print a few of the letters from the
other side, hand-picked, of course, to
show the least valid and convincing
arguments.
.JUST BECAUSE the Supreme Court
ruled that the Second Amendment
does not mean. an individual right to
bear arms (according to you) this
does not mean that this was the in4
ten ti on of the "founding fathers."
"Autos are registered. why Jl.Ot
guns?" Because primarily reg1Stf.i4
tion leads to taxation and the IOV4fll·
ment (local, st.ate, federal) could and
probably would tax guns (in the
hands of law-abiding cltuens anyway)
out of existence.
Just because a gun is registered lflll
not stop it from being U!ed. And the
fact that mo~t homicides are com4
mitted by "first-time" offenders, how
do you propose to screen the potential .,.
murders?
TffiEVES, robbers, hold·up m~n.
bank robbers, etc., whoever needs
guns in their trade will steal them if
necessary to obtain them.
Criminologists may wonder whether ·
it is a good idea for the average
citizen to keep a gun for defense (also
1ccording to you). l have no 4oubt
what choice I wou1d prefer when !aced
with the possibJe alternatives. ·
God grant that I may defend myself
and my family from any lntrudef.-.nd
J challenge the expertise claimed·lor
the burglar. I doubt if the average
burglar is any better shot than any~.~
else. ·
AS TO THE l\.fORAL issue :at
whether a burttar deserves to be t:X·
ecuted. \Vhat about the count.less
youngsters who are sho.t "lrying·~to
escape" from the police .after a
joyride in a stolen car! Did tbele
poor, confused and frightened ch~n
who will never grow up, deserve tolle
executed! ::· .
If you want something to crusade
about. crusade about that and stop
knocking guns and the National RllJlt
Association and help the American
pecple retain one of their all too few
freedoms that we have 1eft. ·. W. D. BEAIJDEN
·-· _,
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Wednesday, July 10, 11168
TJ1e ediroriol page of die. Dailv
Pilot sttkf to tnform end rtim·
ulate rrad111 by pre.scnttna &his
TlftDtpepcr'.s optnfon.s and com-.
mdtaTV on topics of intereft
and aignificonoe, bv protriding a. ~
Jorvm for rhe t:prtuion ~f ::
cnir readtn' opblfov, and ltv •.
prnntina the diveni oiew-
pointr of fn/on'!Ud obstrvert
ond spoketm«n on topics of &he
day.
Robert N. w .. d, Publiabcr
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•
Debs, ·oads Learn Importance of Ball ·
Importance of Ille fund·ralslng bonefil, Ille 1968 Children's
liome Society Debutante Ball, was stressed to debutantes and their
fathers today when they toured the Santa J\na District offices.
GreeUDJ guests was· Edward J. ~oaney, d.is~ct director •. "'.ho
revealed tentative plans for the extensive expansion of the existing
facilitie-s at 3oo S. Sycamore S£. ' . .
Included in future plans are additional office space, enlarge-
ment of :tlte well·baby clinic areas, more convenient access to the
natural Par~nt wing and a specially equipped observation room with
twoway miI.f9rS for observing children under care. . ' In brder to keep in step with the ihcreasei:t ~ernand for serv~
ices to adopting families, natural parents and t}\e vo11:ffileer program,
plans .call for an additionfl} 2100 square feet. It is'bQped the work will
be finished by next spring. '
To undtrwrite expenses, ·funds are raised by auxiliaries, in-
cluding the NflWport Harbor group·which sponsors the ball to be pre-
sented Dec. 28 ln the Balboa Bay Club.,
Money al~o · is raised through private dQnations , contributions
from trust funds and other interested individuals.
. · The society is th~ largest and oldest .Privately supported adOJ?-.
lion agency in the nation and was responsible for placing 1,820 chd-
dfen in pennanept homes during 1967.
Debutantes are the Misses Kristine Boyd, Christine Sue Callis,
C8.rol Edith Garver, Cathy Jo Clarkson, Nancy Evans Creamer,
Georgeanne· Hanna, Sally Holste\Jl, Patricia Ann Huddleston, ~udy
Ann Hylton, Kathleen 'Allis.on Kell.ey, Isabel E~zabeth Lawson, Linda
Kristine Nissen, Deborah Porter, Roxanne Elizabeth Ray, Georgene
Lunde Smith Katherine Louise Smith, Anne ·Storch, Alicia Stanley
Turner ·and Susan Ann Vernon.
Accompanying the~ on the
0
tour w'ere-Dr. Edward, Angl~ Boyd,
John MalComson, Joseph Logan Garver, Joseph Hen®~son Clarkson.
Michael Creamer Paul Hanna, George Meade Holstein III, Donald
Insley Huddleston'. Leonard Irving Hylton, Porter Allison K e I 1 e y.
Howard Beesley Lawson, Paul Nissen, John Frederick Porter, James
David Ray Ira Warren Smith, Randall Felix Geddes, John Arthur
storch, Roger Ebert Turner and Richard Colman Vernon.
. ...
' t
BLUEPRINTS FOR EXPANSION -Donald Insley Huddleston
and his debutante daughter, Miss Patricia Ann Huddleston learn
of expansion plans for the district offices of Children's Home
Society from district director, Edward J. Mooney (left lo right).
Touring Ille facility today were 1968 CHS debulantes and their
fathers.
W...,...'f, 'ulY 1 .. 1Ht Nl.CM-L.. P'-11
Junior Ebells
Sol id Service
Build
Record
Building is a key "".Ord in the Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach.
For not only has this been a year of accomplishment in building the
superstructure of the organization, but also in building the confidence of the
members.
One way this has been accomplished has been through building a
better community and in this capacity the club's committee by th'e sama
name bas gleaned statewide recognition.
, In the B~d a Better Community contest conducted by the Cali·
forrua Feder~tion of Women's_ Clubs, Junior Membership, the Newport
group was cited for outstandmg community service participation and
presented a check for .$125 by the sponsor of the contest the Sears-Roe--
buck Foundation. '
According to Mrs. Edward Whitehouse Jr., club president who was
responsible for the prize winning report, emphasis was placed on' the llllit's
uniquen~ss, d~signed so that it serves ~ wide variety of areas and not just
one ma1or philanthropy. With 35 working members a total of 52 projects
were completed this year. Charitable donations totaled $2,000.
Other junior women's clubs throughout California also have been
busy building bridges of service, During 1967-68 100 percent participation
waS' achieved with. 2.10 clubs completing 5,390 projects. '
Constructing a successfuJ fine arts program was. another of the
year's accomplishments. Mrs. Cary Rawlings, fine arts chairman com·
pleted many projects with her group to capture first place on the state
level.
Included were the artist of the month series featured in the Marin-
ers Library, a summer children's art workshop, a "ghost tea" to raise
money for the South Coast Repertory Theater and the Creative World of
Children's Art show which 1400 people attended.
Two scholarships were given in music and art to Orange Coast Col·
Jege students and three sets of rhythm instruments were n;iade for the pri·
mary music teachers of Newport--Mesa Unified School Distrlct.
«UILDING BLOCK FOR NEW PROJECT -In recognition for
utstanding community service in the Build a Better Community
'lntest sponsored by the Sears Roeb~ck Foundation, J~ck Mason,
:presentative of the company puts tbe final block into place,
symbolic of the $125 presented to the Newport Beach Junior EbeU
Club which will be used for new projects. The contest was con-
ducted by the California Federation of Women'1 Clubs, Junior
Membership.
The juniors also have been buJlding prograrris in the vital area of
youth and t!iei~ achievements were recog~zed with a second prize by the
state organization. Mrs. Garry Short, chairman, led her unit through the
operation of a summer youth employment service, financing and printing
the Codes and Conduct Booklets in cooperation with the Newport Beach
Police d~partment, SPC?~soring two Junior Auxiliaries for high school girls
and a Miss Teenage Citizen contest. Support also was given to the Harbor
Area Coordinating Council, Boys Club and the Albert Sitton honle.
Thus, inspired by this year's· accomplishments, the Junior Ebells of
Newport Beach are building toward next year with the same blueprint •
service in all areas of need. • •
-
Twinkle T,oes' Casanova Goes Solo Doing the Bossa Nova
DEAR ANN LANDERS' If you say
this woman's behavior ii correct 1 will
take your word for k and not givt Jt
another thought. Mrs, X Is forever
turning over the cups and plates when
she attends a tea or a luncheon to see
if it is bone china or tomething
cht;apet\ I have 'seen her take
eyeglasses out of her purat and ex·
amine the silverware.
SM tape glaKes !Mting for Ille lrue
ring of expensive cryrtal. She fingers
the tablecloth to determine tht quality
or the rs.bric. Sbe sniffs boot covtra to
learn if they are genuine le~th~r or
plastic. Once she touched a pa1n~1ng to
see if it was a lithograph or an oiL The
hostess was visibly irritated.
This woman is stipJ)osed to be one of
ANN I.ANDERS
the Boston Brahmins -beauUful\y
educated and cultured to the Nre.
What do you have to say about her
conduct? -BROOKLINE
DEAR BROOKLINE' Cllltored peo-
ple don't ex1mlae cktna and silver for
hallmarks while v1JttJn1 friend&. AJ!d I
don't belleve lbe woman you described
11 beauttfaUy educ1ted. U she were
1he wouldn't ha\'e to piui the crystal,
11lff booU and touch pictures lit ltara
If they ire the rt1I McCoy. She'd
know.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 must
comment on the womar. who algned
herself "Mother of a Ruined Boy."
Some ol the details were so close to
my own life that J'm sure people who
kn 'JW me think" J wrote it.
My son ii 24 years ol aae and be
c11n't decide what necktie to put on ln
the morning. U the eggs are too hard
he throws them in the sink. We sent
him to three different boys'camps and
he didn't stay in any of them more
than seven days. He was turned down
by si x co lleges and when he was
fin ally accepted by a small junior
college he stayed only 10 days.
U his father didn't own a business he
wouldn't have a job. When a girl turns
him down for a date he cries. I have a
U.year-old baby on my hands and it ls
my fault. I ruined this boy and 1 am
sad and sorry. Thank you for Jetting
me get this off my cbest. -
ANOTHER FAIL URE
DEAR AN0111ER' Gtlllal U off
your cbe1t doe1n'l be.Ip lhe bo)' muth.
Re kq,Dteffd proreuioaa1 ltelp for 1
Ions time. S.. !lull be Jell tt.
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' 1 am a girl
with a strange problem. It Ja the way
my boyfriend dance11. It's not that he
fs a rotten dancer. He ii very good.
Too good. ·
J have done evetything under the
sun to rollow him but I just can't do
Uie rancy step!. I've practiced at
home but it hasn't helped. U he would
sttck to simple dancing we would get
along fine but be inslJU 1>n doillg the
sbow-off stuU and it11 not my style.
Why would a fel1o,r embarrass a fh'J
like that? ls there a· solution! -TWO
LEFT LEGS
DEAR TWO' I bow Ille type. Re
d~u't Med I partter IJtei• lle'I
•
1lw1y1 dota1 a IO&o.
Tell him YM'd be lfad to • tM
1hnple ''"ff 11111 wllia be..-lo.try
ror u.e c•r to ,aeae let ,.. aow ..
yoa can 11 tbe 11amber .. t ud .. en
le& a llrl wbo .. w W,·blm llol< fMd.
Drinking may be "in'' to the kJds
you' run with -but it can put you
"out'' for kf!eps,. You cin ,copl Jt ad stay popular. Read "&ore ad y.., _
For Tffnager1 Ooly." Stnd 35·C!IMU'Ja
coin and a long, Mlf..add:rM!ld.
stamped envelope wllh your requolt.
Ann Laodeu will lie flad lo help 1ta
with your problew. Send llem to her
In c.,. of Ille DAJL Y PILOT, -lni a 1elf·1ddressed, ttamped U..
wlopt. •
I
i
}
f
NO LACJGINO ALLOW•D -Mn. Jack M. Lyons,
who mps to admire flowers at th• Festival of Arts
gnnmdJ IJ called back to work by fellow Silver and
Gold chapter members, South Coaat Community HOlpital AU%111ary (1111 to right) th• Mmes. Oacar
Hofbnan, Violet Adams and Don Seal. They are
preparing to set up a soft drink concession during
the festival to r&ise funds to meet the aJJxiliary's
current $100.000 hospital pledge.
Luau 'Lure
Appealing
Hawaii and otber South
Seu nei&hbora will be
·honored when the Wom111 's
Gllild "" lhl Hunllneton -h 01UrdJ of Rellpou•
SelmK'e 'l)Onlon 1 potluck
.. port of lta curnol Other
Lands 1erie1.
The fiftb. dinner, a luau,
will take plaoo at 8:30 p.m.
Frldoy, July 12, in tile
Women'• Clubbou1e1 420
IOll! SI., HUlltinflon llMch.
Everyone .in the com·· mumty u invited to atfond
.nd. iliend costume1 may be
worn. Main diahel will
follow ·the Pol y nesian
theme, and add.Jti~l in·
formation may be obtained
by oalling Mrs. p • u 1
llicbard90D, 536·2120.
Mrs. R. W. Unzenmeyer,
chairman for the event, has
planned a program which
will feature authent ic
doncec and Mrs. Leefy
Benson , accompanied by
V.rs. Richardson, will sing
favorite aong1 from "South
Pacific."
Summertime
Menus Offered
Why not let a patio party
be your summer &pee·
~cular? A lood WIY to end
a warm aummer day i1 with
a barbecue for family and
frieOOB .
Miss Margaret Parmelee,
home economist, Js inviting
the pubU'c tii the Southern
California Edison Co. for
many new barbecue ideas
that can be easily prepared
~ portable electric ap-
•
DEAR NANCY : My hu&band aJJ4 I
both work. Alter a hard day at the
ott!C6 I think it'1 only fair to 1bar1
the cooking chore1. He doesn't airee.
What do YOIJ think? -WOllKING
WIFE .
DEAR WORKING WIFE: 11
there's anything harde r on a man
than a hard day at the office, it's
listening to hJs wife's bard day at
the office. WhUe you both bring
home the bacon, it'1 up to you to
cook it. A wotlf·
lng wife's best
helpmate is her
freezer.
Here's a freez·
er Chicken Tet·
• ;.-azzlnl which is
enough for four
separate dinners
for two:
Puta4to5
pound chicken in
a large pot with
water to cover
and add I lllalk of
celery, coariely chopped, l carrot.
1 onion, coarsely chopped, 1 table·
spoon salt, 4 pepper-corns and 1
bay leaf. Simmer for 1 hour or ·un·
til chicken is cooked. Cool and cut
meat from bones in small slivers.
Melt 6 tablespoons butter, add 6
tablespoons flour and stir for 1h.
minute; add 3 cups chicken stock
{strained), 1 cup cream, _ l tea·
spoon salt and 2 Tablespoons dry
sherry. Boil 1 12-ounce package of
noodle1 according to package di·
rections. Drain. Saute 1i2 pound
sliced, fr esh mushrooms in 2 Table·
spoons butter. Drain.
Divide the noodles into 8 portions
and put a layer of noodles Jn the
bottom or 8 individual freezing dish·
•
es, 4 inches square. Pour ~ cup
cream sauce over e1ch diah and
top with a layer of chicken and a
layer of muahrooms. PolU' anotfier
y, cup of cream sayce over the
mushrooms a.nd 1prinkle generou1·
ly with y, cu,p ol freshly g r a t e d
Parmesan cheese. Place in freezer.
When you're re1dy to !f:f'Ve, bake
tne frozen Tetrau.lni in tt 450 degree
oven fur 45 mlnutft or until hot and
bubbly.
DEAR NANCY: My young son is al·
ways complaining about the carrots
and celery I put in hi1 hmcbbox. How·
ever, he need& his roughage, What'1 a
mother to do ? -ETHEL M.
DEAR ETHEL : Monkeys are ape .
over roughage, but please try and
remember that Junior is hutnan.
Slip him his vitamins with fruits
that taste like fun ; melons, fresh
pineapple, berries, etc. Vary the
menu with dif!erent raw vegetables
such as cauliflower buds, cherry to-
matoes, cucumber sticks or bell pep-
pers that can be enhanced with a
zesty dip.
Here's a great one ; combine l cup
so ur cream, 1 tablespoon chili
1auce, 1 te,spoon dry mustard, 1
tablespoon grated onion , 1 teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce, 1 tablespoon
chopped chives, 1h: teaspoon salt and
freshly ground black pepper.
Pack the dip in a paper food con·
tainer.
What's your cooking predicament?
Send it in and see if we can cook it!
While we can't personally a-nswer alt
your letters, those letters with the
most etitertaining or pertinent culin·
ary problems will be published in
his column. Send your letters to
WHAT COOKSI </o THE DAILY
PILOT.
Weddings, Troths Thirst Profits Hospital plill!Cft. ,.._....,....,..,. ..................... ..,..-....................... ..,. ..................... ..,. ......... ..._.
Pilot's Deadlines Medical Future Aided
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white gl06sy photo-1
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart-
ment prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
Chapter Has Business
By now proficient
saleswomen, Silver a n d
Gold chapter m e m b e rs,
South C c a s t Community
Hospital are getting ready
to open their soft drink con-
cession on the Festival of Arts grounds beginning Fri-
day, July 12.
from preview night
throughout the festival. Four Area Students Cash In
Co-chairmen, serving one
week each, include the
Mmes. Violet Adams. Don
Seal, E. M. Johnston, Oscar
Hoffmac and T a n d y
Three area girls have
been helped on their way to
medical o r para.med ical
careers through tne finan·
cial assistance of t h e
Women's Auxiliary to the
Orange County M e d i c a 1
Association.
ple as the factors in· at San Diego State College. show luncheon, provides
nuencing her choice of a The a~'s annual funds for the scholoarships
cm-eer in nursing. White Cap Benefit. •fashion and special awards.
For engagement announcements it is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
with a black and white glossy picture, be
submitted early. U the betrothal announce·
ment and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac·
cepted.
A special award wa"s gran-1----------------'--------
ted to Sachiko, daughter of
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail·
able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questioru will be answered by Social
Notes staff members al 642·4321 or 494-9466.
Horpscope
Hospital volunteer~ have
been operating the booth
since 1958. All of this year's
proceeds will be applied to
the group's current •100,exx>
hospitaJ pledge.
Mrs. Jack M. Lyons, aux-
iliary vice president. is
general chall'man of the
undertaking ·and points oul
that her booth will be active
Coleman.
The concession requires
eight women daily to work
three sbil1a.
Discussion
The recipients, the Misses
Jacqueline Dow Abare ,
Sachiko Patricia Kaito, and
Cathy Lynn Blackburn are
three Gf 12 county students
who have r eceived
1cbol~hips or s p e c i a I
1ward1 totalling SS.000. Planned Miss Abare, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Abare of Hlmtington Beach,
The newly formed Oruge has won a scholarship to
County Childbirth Without California Lutber1n Hospital in Los Angele1.
Mr . and Mr-s. Matsuo Kai to
of Westminster. A graduate
of La Quinta High School,
she was ranked ninth in a
class of 350. She plans to
study bJological research a.t
UCI, perha)..,; specializing in
tenetiCI.
Also receiving a speci8.I
award wu Mill Blackburn
ol Newport Beach. Miss
Blackburn, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. William C .
Blackbum, is a graduate of
Corona del Mar High School.
In tht fall she will enter the
four year nursing gram
Leo: Get More Facts
Pain League ls offerin1 its Prior to her graduation
second se!ies of clas.!le1 for from Huntington Be a c h
expectant mothers. High School Miss Abare was
Classes in the preparafion active in Future Nurses,
THURSDAY
JULY 11
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Shake off lethargy. Accept
opportunity to meet people.
Be flexible. Fine for after·
hour get-together with work
associate!. Strive fo r
greater understanding of
those around )'OU.
for the Pavlov Lamaze Medical Careers and honor
called upon to speak -method of birth will be society organizations. She
assert views. T\lrn on hopes to do obstetric or
charm. Accept s p e c i a I preceded by an information pedi·atric nursing a ft er
assignment. meeting in El Toro on July receiving her Registered
18 at l p.m. Clas1es will Nurse certificate.
A M111Vf1elvr1r•1 ll:•Pf"e1.n!•llY•
Ill MASTECTOMY 1"1TTINGS
wltl bl IH!r• Trtura, '"'''II 10 1.m. for YOUr conv111lence. ............. _._
HUI ... ~ e '42·14JI
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES (March 21 • April
19): Accent on finding out
where you stand w i t b
reganl to hope<, wishes.
Friends can a.id, but you
must be specific where
needl are ooocetned. Don't
a1k for too much or too lit·
Ue.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.'l·Oct. 22):
Relations with y o u n g
persOM emphasized. A day
when change, travel, variety
also are in spotlight. Obtain
hint from VIRGO message.
F'rank discussion with loved
one clears air.
PISCES <Feb. 19-Mach begin July 25 and are She lists the auxiliary's
?JJ): Activity favored in co-tailored fOr tho1e expecting Health Career1 Conference
nnection with g r o u p s , babies in August a n d at Santa Ana. COllege and
organitations. Work with ~ptmber. Car pool1 may be her own desire to help peo-
material at hand. Grass organized. 1--'--'--'--'-'=-'--'-:::!:~::.!==========='I
really is not gr e e n er The course laat1 r ix piiiiiiiiii,..••••••••••••••• .. ~I elsewhere. Know this and week11 though women are
react accordingly. encoUI'IB.ged to attJend until
TAURUS (April 20-May
al): Travel plans may be
uppermost .in your mind.
Conaider expenses. Obtain
expert advice . Avoid wild
gooe:e chase. What yau seek
may be claser than you im·
aglne.
GEMINI (May 21.June
20): Good lunar aspect to.
day coincides with revision
of buic oplnionti. You now
take lonf·r111ge view. Your
attitude i1 subjeet t o
chanle. This comes about a1
addec1 facta are revealed.
CANCER (June 21.July
22): Activity connected. with
hnd,. project ii favored.
Now ii time to obtaJn
........ Do l50Ule personal
lnveltilllllng. Diocard the
auperfldal. Find out wh y.
LEO (July 23 • Aug. 221:
Be -.ant. Gau. in·
fanmtlaa. Doa't be in too
macb of a hurry, e1pecially
~wtme legal .tfa.irs are con·
cemed. Wait for apoclal 0..-mlclltiaD. More f1cts
-•"'lub«I.
IF TODAY IS YOUR the birth of ttieir babies.
BIRTHDAY you are highly The nonprofit educationa1
intuitive, c a p ab I e of organization offers classes
teaching, able to perceive t hr o ugh out Southern ~-·
. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. future trends. Home ad-California, as well 11 cor· : jui tment is indicated _ respondence courses. Each • 21 ); Accent on home, pro· group has a free lending 1
1
:
perty. family a f f a I r s . greater social activity also library and offers sun. •
M · ~ Id on horizon. r • essage rece1vcu c o u plemental information in the 1•
have much to do with fut\Jre G EN E RA L . T E N· natural method of feeding ':
security. Be a s hrewd DENCIES: Lunar position and the needs or the infant. •
observer. Add up the fa cts favorable for fishing. Cycle Fathers' cla.sSies and a film ·:
-deal from position of hiib for AQUA R I US. showing also are scheduled. ·:
strengtti. PISCES. ARIES. Special Further information may '•
SAGMTARIUS (Nov. 22· word to VIRGO: fulfill basic be obtained by calling Mrs. ·:
Dec. 21): Lunar position obligation to associate. Fran MJneo at 830-1712. ;:
emphaaizes ideas, 1 h or t.r:=====================.li:
journe)'J. You should be a •
good host. Some who visit :
~ir~. ~~~=to .---VIRGINIA'S--~ [!
then you i .. rn SNIP ~N' STITCH 1: CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-• _ I•
Jan. 191: Yoo could obtain SHOPPE ·:
genuine bargain. Be alert. 1 • W I:. atch possessions. Some JJJ4 E. Coa1t Hltlnny Coron. "" M•
may have roving eyes where • WfCIAl fAlWI
your asset. are concerned. l'lle• 011• J.1011 : FREE MeMt avoid carelessnesr. •
A 11101f unutu•I w••k1t1d lt•hi11d 111! C•ft Ot1y of :
AQUARIUS (Jan . 2l-Feb. 111 ••rn•mb•r r1i11 i~ Jul'f'1 •• WIGLET
18): Socia] activity tonight w. r;111'f co"lrol th• •l•111•11h l.ul w• ••• 1tlll I',: WrTH l'U•CHAll Of
could re&Ult in meaningful lucky +• t; .. , or "•c1tl•11 ;., N1wpert •••clol 011 1 HAND Tint Wto
compliment. You may be ,,,,., or ,,;.,,. 41.,, '"' ''" 1tlll "••• f11t1 "I.row•· '!
i119"· tliiro119h th1 1111011 1hop1, •II 1t•c••d with p•r•
1111ally 1•lar;t1d ll'l•r<:h111di1•.
THE N-E-W
LQQK
We IM" "'' l1r,.1t MltctfOft
of FAW ... WIGl!TS .. ,
CASCADES .•. oM WIGS hi
Orartft Co•ty. Many
,.....1y1 ... '°'"' .. try ... 1
CASCADES
'1995 up
FALLS
IAVI $21 IAYI $31 IAYI SIO
WIGLETS SALE!-
1-01. SAVE $6.00 ..... $6.tS
H»o1. SAVE $9.00 $10.tS
2'1i·oz. SAVE $12 .00 $15.95
WIGS
• • • • • • • •
'4erfts ind lenellls of Leasing Ille Family Car Our 1p•ei1lty i1 1111111111•1 f•bric1. t.i1111 •11d liut10111
for ,,,,+; .. , t•l1 who 111ak• tfrt•ir ow11 "•rl1l111t1." , "' s,..1.nn ., St.,llfl" hml:"'t •• """""" •' ·--------............ _____ ., ...,...,ltf MN.ft el A111•ftc•11• ll•w ''''' tti. f•111lly ii:•r. Ap. ~ ft. 14•• 1•t "wh•h.' t•M f•t co1t.co1ucl•111 l.111l11•n
... t. •he e-4 fw Mt, Ft111lly·t11•11." h•111,1.-. 11•• Celorry
Id...._ ••t"' wftl •lt cen4ltle11l11t c•11 M l•••N fer 1121
.....,, I ... ftMI ... llttl. C..ttt t••• f•t •M•t ttS I, wlrilclt ,....,_ .ti '"f•"-f -.,...; .. , ... 111•l11 .. ~11c• fer 40.00CI 1111/•1 f.,. ••111, .......... etc.I, lti. 4'e•l•t l.111y1 y•ut '''Miit ci r,
....... ~I hit "'"°•tM•1tt 111 the "'''lr•t ., tti•t ••c•fl•• ,..., • ...,. • "' n .. .,. AA •wcen111t ..... 1.t " ttii1 1ul.l1et i1
he t.r ... ••lrMt. P'kll• Jtfit11••• I S•t Lf11e•l11·M•ttul'y IR
·~°'""'r"°' .... rt ...... '4t.etll ., MJ.1271.
Sea ye• •••11,
'--------.,.-YIRGINIAI'---'
'·'· Jud •rriY•til l M•ide111 11111,erl•til fal>tcs, l.etli
fi•11d 1cra•11•d •11tl 1tlitil ctler., pl111 tt •d• 1H111 t•
111 lflltle \111t• 9••111111+t '' 1111•d for trilflt •11 Y•Vt
f.11 ••• 1.111. i m~ If,·. ', .... ~::ui:'_ -Ci ., S"TATll 'S ClNlU ---=-=· ··;;.:·-=-m AA Wll I IUIT1' SAUi
alli# ~ l~L~~ c.---..c .........
Sears
Costa
Mesa
Only
a beautiful
Vignette
Portrait
of your child
for onlv
Sears
HURRY!
Offer Expires
Saturday
tit 5 p.m •
HURRY!
per pound
of cliild's
weight
eacli additional ehil~,.
• your selection of poeea
• any child up to 12 ~
• no appolntmen!AJ ••• expert
photographer will take pio-
tures while yOll wit
LOCATION: S-. lA/-" ~
Sun Cotta Meaa bi Soatll Coast Plal
•
I I
--...
Newport Barbor
EDITION
vot:. 61', NO. 165, 1"SE.CTIONS, 74 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1968 TEN CENTS
Air Hearings .Ordered:
County Tells Commission to Study Pereira Plan
t " '
Recipe for Relief
' Take 'several square yards of well-chilled ocean, add one generous
portion of Sea Sprite like Paula Rempalski and you have a tall cool
one -Paula to be .specific .:.... without even shaking well. The pretty
Fullerton miss who journeyed to the Harbor Area to take the waters
was doing just that -shaking -as she slipped deeper into the nippy
sea. Others from the simmering inland followed her to the coast,
seeking relief from the current heat wave.
Heat Wave Holds Firm
Grip on Orange Coast
Be a c h g,o e re: . ho u s e wjve"
"'orkingmen, nonworkingmen. small
children and dogs can all look forward
to continued warm weather today and
Newport Police
Dump Weapons
In Coast Waters
Guns held in the hands o I
murderers, armed robbers, suicide
victims and assaulters will b e
embraced by the sea today.
• The Newport Beach P o 1 i c •
Department is to 4rop 50 guns,
collected during the past year from
criminals, to the bottom of the Pacific
Ocean.
Frank Brown, maniger of the poUce
property department, said . all the
weapons oce hafld guns, ranging from
.22 to .45 calibre. Some of the gwu bear brand names.
Thursday over the Orange Coast.
The high ti.des that have been
lapping up against the coast recently
have done no damage either to the
beaches or to harbor structures.
reports the Newport Department <>f
Marine Safety.
Sweltering coast area r esidents can
console themselves, with this bit of the
grass is always greener news out of
the nation's hotspot. Palm Springs,
V.'here it reaches 110 degrees Tuesday,
while the residents of Marquette,
Michigan shivered in 34 degree
temperatures.
Newpo11 Given
Liquor Fees
Newport Beach his received $26,523
in special fees paid by the holaers of
alcoholic beverage licenses in Ute city.
This wu part of a total of $319,017
reimbursed to all of Orange County by
the state. The sl'ate allocates ,90
percent of the license fee money back
to the cities to offset the costs ()f
police and fire service.
By JACK BROBACK
Of ttl9 D1ll7 Pit.t l .. tt
Despite the urgency indicated In
Wi!llam Pereira's Phase One of the
Master Plan of Air Transportation for
Orange County, the Board o l
Supervisors Tuesday voted to instruct
the Airport Commission to hold public
hearings on the question.
After listening to the report r.:
delivered by James Sink of U1e
·Two County
'.Air Services
In Showdown
A feud between t\~ro commuter
airlines serving Orange C o u n t y
Airport appears to be leading to some
kind of showdown between the
Oalifornia Public Utilities Commission
(PUC) and the federal Ci v 11
Aeronautics Board (CAB ).
The issue centers on which a gency
has the right tK> regulate commuter
airline routes within the state.
The PUC, as a result of a formal
hearing held Monday in San
J<'rancisco. is expected later this week
to order Cable Commuter Airlines to
halt most of its California routes.
The order u·ill be mootly academic,
Cable Commuter claims the PUC has
no jurisdiction over its· flights.
lnstead1 Cable has set up routes
under the blessing of federal approval
from the CAB.
"We're arguing that a J; UC
certificate ls meariingless for-i~
,..,.lthin the Los Angeles basin. which
we define as a SO.mile N.dius of the
downtown Los Angeles post office,"
said William Myers, Cable board
chairman.
Myers said most of the passengers
his airtlne carries are inter.state
passengers, going to Los Angeles to
catch connecting interstate flights.
As a consequence, the CAB has
ruled that it has jurisdiction over such
commuter services, and has certified
Cable, accon:ling to Myers.
Cable's feeler.al certification was
cbaUenged at ~1onday's hearing by
Golden \Vest, a commuter service
\\•hich also flies betu·een Oranli!c
County and Los Angeles Internation31.
"Our position U; that Golden West is
now operating illegaliy," Cable''I
chairman said. "They're carryjng
mostly inter·state passengers without
a federal certificate.''
Myers stressed, however, that his
(See CABLE, Pace %)
Halted Buses
Must Pay Fee
Public buses stopping ofr at the end
or their nm at the Balboa Pier parking
lot from now on will have to pay a
daily $3 fee .
Newport Beach city councilmen
f\.1onday night approved the new
parking charge on the beach lot, south
of Ocean Front at Palm and
Washington strtets.
In the past, fees have only been
charged for car and motorcycle
parking.
The rates for vehicles other than
buses wiU remain the sa·me, at 50
cents an hour up t<> Sl a day Monday
through Friday, Weekends and
holidays the fee increases to 75 cents
an hour. wit.ha Sl .50 maximum.
Councilmen agreed to continue
validation slips for shoppers, aUowing
them two hours of free parking i( they
trade in the vicinity of the lot
Pereira and Associates staff, the
board ordered copies made and
disb'ibuted to interested parties and
instructed the~ commission to "study
the report and bold public hearings."
Strangely overlooked in the hubbub
was the role or Orange County Airport
in the "five years it wili take to
develop a new regional airport."
The report said i n t e r J m
improvements would have to be made
to accommodate certain growth in
Lett in Garage
Castoff
traffic. predicted to be triple the
current total.
Extensive increases will be
necessary In the "already over·
saturated" tenninal bu l J din g .
Suggested was a possible second.
decking o[ the building to provide an
enplaning level above the present
terminal height.
Suggested to alleviate the
overcrowded parking space at the
airport was a dispersing of
Icebox
Entombs 2 Tots
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1111 D1Mw Plle! SllH
La Habra youngsters Johnny Rubio
and Salv.ador Ramos Tuesday joined
more than 300 Cihildren in a f()llOW·the-
leader game that ends witih two clicks:
the last the sound of a closing coffin.
The first comes witil the shutting of
an abandoned refrigerator.
Pablo Ramos also joined hundreds
of parents who are not spared the
grim, personal discovery, when he
opened the old icebox and two
crumpled bodies tumbled out ooto his
garage floor.
His son Salvador, 5, and playmate
JohnnY , 2, were dead on arrival at St.
Jude H"'P!tal in F-. ;ijt« emergeney'''fiall!l~af' 111-J 'le\iiit
fdlilf.11o"'revtve: thelQ • .,.,.. ·•
Orange County coroner's deputies
listed tentative cause of death as
aocidental asphyxiation, saying the
boys '\\'ere apparently huddled in the
choking, cramped confines for some
two hours.
The tragic deaths -which are also
criminal deaUts under California law
-brought to five the number of
children killed in La Habra by
abandoned garage iceboxes within the
past 17 monbhs.
'Thornie Wiiliamson, 5, of La liabra,
and his cousins, Ladona \Villlamson, 4,
and Wanda Willia mson, 3. of La
Mirada. died Feb. 6, 1967, under
identical circumstances.
The Rubio and Ramos boys were
11Qticed missing thottly after .noon
Ttt~sday, "11en Margaret Rodrigue z,
16, baby-sitter' f()r the seven Rubio
children, couldn't find Utue Jobruly,
(See ICE BOX, Page 2)
Reagan's Ho.me Target
Of Firebombing. Youths
SACRAMENTO. Cali£. (AP) -Two
Negro youths car:,rying firebombs
approachOO Gov. Ronald Reagan's
home Tuesday night, but fled when
ordered to halt by a Secret Service
agent v..·J-io fired a warning shot .
The youths dropped the homemade
bombs as they fled, but neither
exploded or ignited.
Secret Service agents and state
police who guard the home in a quiet,
well-to-do area of eastern Sacramento,
chased the youttis but failed to catch th<1Jn •.
N·o further trouble wa.s reported
near the Reagan home during the
night.
Later, a neighbor of the Reagans
called police to report that shots had
been fired at the governor's home, but
state police said. "no shots were fired
at the mansion."
Sacramento police said the incident
was apparently related to sporadic
violence which broke out duripg the
afternoon in a predominantly Negro
neighborhood about two miles away
and continued into early today. In that
area, a poUceman was hit wit:h a
bottle, a man V.l!.11 stabbed, and there
were numerous reports <>f fires, some
of them caused by firebombs.
Re&gan and his wife , Nancy, were
watching television inside the white
brick tudor-style home which tiley
lease when the incident happened, at
aboot 10:~ p.fu. They were oot
immediately aware of what transpired
outside.
The governor had no immediate
comment or statement on the incident.
Lyn N~ziger, his communications
director, said the two men approached
the hon1e on fool .
''l'hey were c.:h.allenged by Secret
Servicemen and then ran. In doing so,
they dropped the bottles." One agent
fired a warning shot into the air as he
chased the youths down the street, but
6ne of the pair escaped on fool and the
obher jumped into an auto which sped
.away.
One of tbe firebombs, filled with an
inflammable liquid and using rags for
wicks, smashed. Jn the street in Wont
of the governor's house. 11le other was
dropped on a neighbor's lawn .
A state police officer W'8:S asked if
'he guard around Reagan's house was
increased after the incident.
"It's been beefed up fur some lime
now," was his only reply. The
R eagans rented ttie home i n
fashionable ea.stern Sacramento about
two miles from ttJte old governor's
mansion. which the Reagans found
unsuitiable after a stlort Ny ttlere.
Council Cites
Newport Youth
For 'Heroism'
The Newport Beach City Council l1as
now made it official. Rantly LaDow is
a hero.
Some are home-made, fuhioned from
?22-<:alibre rifles and lhotguns. The
guns tiave snub noses, target length
barrels and baJTels nearJy one-foot
Jong.
Brown said alt the guns were used in
the commJssion of crimes, except a
few round in recovered caches of
stolen goods.
Beach Billboard Bugaboo
The long·haired youth who 1aved
three drowning persons June 4 with
llls surfboard was presented a citation
Monday night by the councll for his
••outstanding service."
Newport Mayor Doreen Mar:;haJI
congriltulated the youth, saying the
council "wishes to publicly commend
end pr-a.lse" the action so unusual "in
a period of general public apathy."
Many of them hirv• been used. as
evidence lo a cue involving the cnme
in whlch they were med, be addeCi.
\ "On<. a gun hlll bMa lll<d In tile
commission of a crime. it clllltOt be
returned (to ltl owner)/' Brown
explained as \be...-!Or &1nldDI tho
weapons ln the OCNO..
He Is to drop the .raenal from a
Harbor District boat about two milts
out&lde the entrance to NewpOrt Bay.
With in 48 hours, 1alt water will have
totally ruined the.m, Brown said.
l·te added that any of tbe guntc
reb'ieved before the corrosive !alt
takes effect caMot be fired anyway.
Parts ol the firing mechanlrms nave
been remaYed, and the barTeli b;1vt
(See GUN, Pace Z)
••
"
Advertising Space Big Headac li e for Newport
By SANDI MAJOR 6f ... h llr Pi.t Stiff
Newport Beach ls temporarily in the
advertillng business, whelbtr it likes
tt or not.
The clty own5 two acres on the
southeast corner ol Brookhurst and
Adams in Huntington Beich. On this
J.and are a few Wiilltt wells and several
outside adverUs!Og bill boards.
The city used to ignore what went on
at its property. They just collected
$450 ~ month for Ila use Crom
Columbia Outdoor AdverUslng.
Then in November, the city hid to
take the c&mpany to court to collect
back rent amounting to $4, 700. ft won
the judgment but lost the war, bec:au&fl
Columbia could only come up with
'100. ' And during this time the rent was
stlll gotng on. By the time tht contract
terminated at the end of the ye:r, the
company owed the c1ty to $5.300.
In Dteember, the city decided to
.. begin collecting rent for the billboards
directly from the pttople who Mlvertise
on them. bypassing Coly.mbia. r~or
three months, tbe city collected $800 •
month from the rental of advertising
1pace.
Then Jn March and April, the total
rent came to only $675, aceording to
city officials. No one was maintaining
.the boards. The display signs further
deteriorated due to weather and
neglJgenc!e tn May and June and the
monthly collection$ took another dip.
So far this month. the city has only
colJected t150 Crom the use or the sign
boards .
And CoJu mbia's debt; meanwhile,
lick.$ on. 'l'hYtlf"! owe tho c.~ty SS300.
(Se< Bl OARDS, Pa&• %)
The three swimmers were caught in
a riptide about 200 yards Offshore June
4 .at 8:1$ p.m. LaDow went to them on
hls 1urfboard and pulled them to
abort.
Mayor Marshall noted that two of
the three req uired firlt aid treatment
and were tllken to lloag Memorial
lloapltal. "One e>r mote would have
drowned" bad it not been for LaDow,
•he lldded. ·
, LaDow, clad In Jeana 11\d e 1trlped
tee·ihlrt, accepted the framed cit.all.on
describlna: his heroic· action fl'o m the
1nayor in the C()UDCll chambers.
automobiles to the clear zone areas
with connection to the terminal by
tram or some other on.airport .access
vehicle.
Also urged was an instrument
landing and approach li ghting system
"at the earliest pos.s ible date."
1'o soften the blow to airport
opponents a set of restraints were
suggested for the next five years.
Such regulations have bee n
(S.e AIRPORT, Page Z)
* * * , Airport Foe
Gets in Jabs .
At Cou11ty
\Villiam Perei.ra's Master Plan or
Air Transportation for Orange County
with its recommendation f<>r de·
emphasizing the Orange Co u n t y
Airport was received quietly Tuesday
by the supervlson. They moved to get
the recommendations into action.
But longtime airport foe Daniel
Emory of Newport Beach would not
let it pass without a few jabs at the
Board. ·
Emory said his group -lhe Airport
Noise Abatement Committee -was
happy with the report, but pointedly
remarked that that is what he and bis
friends had been advocating since
1961.
"Despite your promise to the
contrary in 1961," Emory told the
supervisors, "the v o 1 um e of
commercial fligbts and the advent of
commercial jets has already created
severe and growing nuslsances that
are affecting thousanda of
homflowners.
"Because these facts have been
ignored far seven long years, this
county must now "play catch up" in
thu field Of air transportation. An
adequate airport, even if con.struction
is begun immediately, will be three to
five years late," he continued his
tirade.
"Because construction and land
costs have risen sharply between the
time you should have started a new
airport and now that cO&t will
probably be twice what it should have
been," Emory shouted at the quiet
super visors.
1'1e said that while Uie airport is
being constructed. the supervisors:
must take the meaures necessary to
prevent the growing air traffic at
Orange County airport from causin&:
further damage to the community.
"Three or four years from now, Uno
control is exercised there will be
between 150 and 250 jet takeoffs daily
as opposed to the present 20," be
warned.
He said other federally-controlled
airports .aroi.md the couotry had taken
steps to prevent jet flights at certain
times of the night. "You can tell the
Federal A vlation Administration that
needed expansion Of the airport will
not take place until the FAA permlts
the county to place reasonable and
effective limitations on it.J use," he
advi9ed.
Emory warned that lawsuits against
the county will continue.
"They will exceed $10 million within
several weeks and go much higher
before the Sept. 1 deadline," he
warned, ''I suggest that you look upon
these lawsuits as a healthy incentive
to the early completion ol the new
(See COUNTY, Par• !)
Orange ,,..! ,,.an
~~,
Weather
Returning alter a standing
ovation from the beach crowd
111 another hot dsy. No changes
in precedent-setting heat wave.
Temps to tip lower OO's.
INSIDE TODAY
A te1:n-a01 norUltm California
gif'l &ritd to mokt tht SCf'M QI
a hippit and ditd in tha proce11.
Page 6.
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-. .
% DAllV ,ILOT •Wedntsd'.IY, July 10, 1961
Tidal Fee Plan Shelved
Newport in No Rush to Impose It
117 BRUCE BENSON ottlllfO.ltrP_.$..,.
Wba.tever final action is taken an
17,~ feel !w the use Of Ud<lands.
ewport Bead>. clty councilmen are in
no rush about IL
Debate ~ the tidelands revenue l"-1' Monday night was shel.ved
a.pin, tbl1 d.me until August.
Councllmln 1M tbe matter over to
allow a opec1el COUDcil commlltee
more Ume to JDMt with tide~da
users.
Opposltion to any kind of tidelands
revenue fee, however. already is
getting organized.
1'ro communicatlom delivered to
City Hall lndl...., an unallerable
oppooltlon to a Udelands We. The
memos were sent by ' the Bay Area
Cittzenl Council, a loose coalition of all
Jumbled Airport
T~xi Situation
Still Jum)>led
An eUort to clear up the jumbled
taxicab service at Orange County
Airport. resulted in a tie vote of the
Airport Commission Tuesday night.
Dlttctor of Aviation Robert
Bresnahan recommended calling of
bid1 for an exclusive franchlse to
proVtde taxi service to the airport.
He said criteria had been worked
out with the Real Property Services
department which would call for
properly equipped a u t o m o b i l e s ,
uniformed drivers and meters. The
high bidder would pay the county for
the privilege.
"At present.we have 10 taxi stands
and the county baa no regulations,"
Bresnahan explained. "Anyone who
wants to, can put a sign on a car and
be a Wtlcab firm. We have had
constant complaints of overcharges
from passengers."
Commls&i.onen James Gilmore and
Howard Lathrop agreed w i t h
Breenaban's proposai.s but a tie vote
resulted when commission chairman
Dennis Carpenter and Leland Launer
voted a1ainat the proposal. ~ the result of the Ue vote.
rlresnahan indic.ted it would now be
up to the Board oC Supervi~o~s to
decide the question. Comrruss1.oner
Roger Slates was absent on yacabon.
' ~
From Pa9e 1
BILLBOARDS •..
TUlly Seymour, Newport Beach city
attorney, and City Manager Harvey L.
Hur'l>urt have come up with a w;y to
get tbe city out of the advertising
business and still collect what ls owed
by Columbia.
The company and the city a re
working on an agreement under which
Columbia \\'ill maintain the boards and
change the advertising on then:i. but
the advertisers will continue to pay to
the city.
The city "'ill keep $450 of the total
&mount -wbat they originally
received as monthly rent from
Columbia and apply the rest to the
judgment against Columbia.
Being generous, the city is also
conriderlng applying every dollar ove.r
S450 collected in rent of the boards
since December to the indebtedness
a;l:so.
No one seems to know what will
happen when the debt is paid.
The city can continue operating an
advertising business lrom th I'
shadows. Or another option is to sell
the I.and. City officials said it would
bring a handsome price.
The property happens to be in ct
triangle, apparently destined t o
become a shopping cent et.
DAILY PILOT
--~ R•"'+ H. W•M ........
l1i•rn•t K••"i1 Editor
Th•111•• A. M1r .... in• --Inf l:dllor
Jere• F. c.111"' NtWNf "9ch CllY EllllDI'
J•c.k l. C.irley P1ul Nin•n ~ ~.... Altterll1l~1 Clnctw
.... ,.., ..... Offk•
2111 W•st l111IM• lh·d.
M•lli11t Mdre111 P.O. 1•11 1175 t266l
Othw otnc.11
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"4untlrt1Min INch: JO'I jlfl $1rHI .,,,
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,.,
'
city homeowner• lf'OUPI, and, the
Balboa Point A11oclatlon .
The Point Assoc:latlon tn 1ts lett~r
implied that a tidelands fee v.·ouJd
amount only to anottler source of
municipal revenue. There are better
ways of raising money than to charge
for the use of tidelands, they argued.
Councilman have stated tlu:it a
tidelands fee or so1ne kind may be in
order only to prove to state officials
that Newport Beach is a c t i n g
responsibly In administering t b e
tidelands.
Fees would be more of a token
measure than a revenue producing
one, councilmen have stated.
Tidelands, w1Uch simply are shore
properties covered by the tides, are
held in trust by Newport Beach for the
state.
• In tht MCOQd memo, the Cii:lltu
Council atlted that w a t • r t r o D t
properties already pay U1e highest
taxes.
Such properties are assessed at a
higher rate· becauze of th e i r
propinquity to the sea. Any additional
tidelands fee would be discriminatory,
the group says.
Moreover, they maintain the city
already is acting respontl.bly in
tidelands administration b e c a u s e
much or· the property tax paid by
tidelands users goes back into various
harbor improvements which benefit
the general public.
Jn other arguments against .a
tidelands fee, ~e Citizens Council said
fees are not tax deductible, and that
they become easy to hike up over the
years.
Bolsa Aides in Cautious
Tack on Airport Report
A cautious, but open approach to the
possibility of using the 1,900 acre
Bolsa Chica property along Coast
Highway in Huntington Beach for a
major airport will be taken by the
land<lwners.
"It's an exciting proposal," said
BQlsa Corporations Viet President
\Villiam Garland this morning.
"I can't say whether we will be for
or against the idea until we sec the
figures."
He pointed out that hls companies
are land holding corporations and
althougn there has bt?en considerable
ad\l'an..:e planning Jor po s s i b I c
residential and marina developments
on the land, "nothing has been decided
for certain."
"'Ve'\I certainly take an open
approach to the possibility of using our
land as an airport, but we need to see
the figcres before making any
decisions. Jt looks like a good location
for an airport, ho,vever.
"There are too many unanswered
questions at this time," Garland
pointed out, giving as an example the
question of how much land actually
would be needed for an airport and
whether tbe land would be the marshy
loy:lands or the plateau areas.
Jn addition to the Bo I s a
Corporations, owners or U1e land Crom
about 'Varner Avenue south to the city
limits near the bluffs area on Coast
Highway, Signal O.il Ml Gas ~o.>.has
leases for some 336 oil wells on the
rropcrty.
C. E. "Bill'' \Voods told the DAILY
PILOT this morning that the oilfield is
"too valuable to abandon." He said
Ui.nt at this point there arc "too many
-tr-* * From Page l
AIRPORT ...
ef:ectivcly administered on a
voluntary basis at 'Va s h i n g lo n
National irport, it \\·as pointed out.
The \Vashington constraints were
listed as:
-No air carrier may operate to non·
stop destinations in excess o( 650
miles.
-All four-engine pure jet aircraft
are prohibited from using the airport.
Only two and three engine jet aircraft
are allowed and none of these in the
stretch category, nor any of the
proposed airbus configurations.
-The air carriers (13 now using the>
port) are limited to a combined total
of 40 operations per hour.
-Pure jet operation is prohibited
after 10 p.m. a nd before 7 a.m. This
pure jet ban applies to , private
corporate jets as well as air carriers.
The report urged that the county
negotiate these constraints at the
earliest possible date.
A moratorium on all zoning changes
in the Santa Ana Heights area is urged
"until its relationship to the airport is
clearly defined and new standards are
drawn up ."
From Page I
COUNTY ...
airport and as a stimulus to restoring
local control over the existing airport
in the interim."
He concluded with a final threat.
"Under these condltlons I think it '''iii
be possible to establish a spirit of
'''ary coopcr-ation bct\\.·een thl11 board
and the residents of Nc\vport Beach
and Costa Mesa. t say ~·ary because
we have received promises from th.is
board in the past and they wcrt'
broken."
A latecomer to the airport wars <ilsn
had his say Tuesday. Al Jarvis of TV
and radio fame sa1d he was speaking
tar his neighbors in Vista Bahla, ln the
Newport Upper Bay area.
"Five homes are for sale and there
never were homes on the market
btfore. At 7:20 J.m. we were
awakened by a jet t&king olf and there
~·as a repeat performance 30 minutes
later.
"'Ve are losing our Individual
rlgh~,'' th11: entertainer continued,
"with the development of airports and
their effect on very fine homes.
"It is a moot point," he added. "\Vhy
1ll thit progress If individu•ls are
JD.ad• unhappy. Do we really need this
proge11?"
indefinites t.o be able to say with any
certainty what would happen if the
site is selected for a regional airport."
He said, however, that it might be
po'isible to group wells or to take other
s:eps to keep the oilfield producing.
The possibility of using the Bolsa
lands tor an airport may send school
officials back to the studies again.
Huntington Beach Union High School
District currently is trying to buy a SO.
acre site on the property for a future
high school and the elementary school
district is eyeing locations for future
schools.
The school planning has been based
on the likelihood of the 1,900 acres
being used for residential
development. Use as an airport could
eliminate most of the need for schools
in the area.
'l'he proposed airport would be just
south of the proposed Bolsa Island
nuclear desalting and power artificla1
island if that project is buJlt. Southern
CaU!ornJa Edison Co. already has
indicated it will need a large pe.rcel of
land for switching operations If the
island project goes ahead.
Costa Mesa Man
Faces Court in
Newport Assault
A 29-year-otd Costa ' Me~a man
cl1argcd Monday \\'ith the bludgeoning
of a Newport Beach \Vailress was to
be arraigned today in Nev.'port·Harbor
municipal court.
His victim, an 18·)'f:ar·old brunette
employed by the J olly R o g e r
restaurant, remains in satisfactory
condition today at Hoag Memorial
Hospital, where she waa taken after
the attack with Cuts on both hands, the
face and forehead.
A hospital spokesman said the young
woman had-a good night and was able
to eat breakfast today.
Bail was to be set at the
ai·raJgnment of Richard Lloyd Rhodes,
2726 Drake St., Costa Mesa, who was
arrested on a charge o£ assault with a
deadly weapon.
He allegedly attacked the girl in
front of her home shortly before
midnight Monday, as :she w a s
returning home from work.
He beat her on the head several
times with a foot,..long wrench he was
caITyillg, police said, and when the
girl began screaming, lie tried to get
8\V&y.
J.ler father ca1n c out of th e house
and gave chase, police said. The
suspect allegedly got into his car,
started to leave the scene but crashed
into a nearby fence. He was sitting
behind the steering wheel when police
arrived. He was not injured.
The alleged weapon, which was
picked up at the scene, is held at the
OrMge County crime lab.
Fro11& Page 1
CABLE .•.
airline has no intentiOn to "push the
point." with Golden West. "We feel we
need good, strong c o m m u n t e r
carriers."
Jnstead, Myers sald he hopes to
resolve the issue by dealing with the
PUC ~nd CAB.
He sald one remedy would be for
Cable to secure a federal injunction
,1ga insl any PUC command grounding
Cable flights. The questio11 \vould go
into the courts (or a determination.
Another possibility would be for
state legislators to take com1nuter
aircraft regulation out or the the
PUC's control.
Myers said a bill now is pending in
Sacramento to take c o m m u t e r
carrying planes under 12,500 pounds
out of PUC jurisdiction. leaving the
CAB a clear path for regulaUon .
Both C:able and Golden West are
nytng twtn·prap Otters weighing under
12,500 pounds .
Jobless Rate Rises
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Th• nation's
jobless rate rose three-tenths of one
percent in June while the clvUian
labor force topped 80 million workers
!<Jr the llrst time, the Labor
~·nt nporltd todtJ.
Nine Corona del Mar Beautle• Vie . .
One of these nine young beauties will be crowned
11iss Corona de! Mar Thursday, July 18 at the
Chamber of Commerce installation dinner at the
Irvine Coast Country Club in Newport Beach. Con·
testants are (left to right) Tina McComb, Wendy
Hurs~ Caryl De Gunto. Vickie Black, Kathleen
Kelley, Robyn Casey, Donna Lee, Linda Hatfield
and Patty Terrell.
Trio Injured
In 2 -car W reek
Two pregnant women and a Balboa
man were sllghtly injured today in a
broadside collision at the 5800 block of
'Vest Coast Hwy. in Newport Beath,
police reported.
AU three were taken to Hoag
Memorial Hospital for examinations
and were expected to be released
today. a hospital spokesman said.
From Page I
ICE BOX TAKES 2 LIVES • • •
the youngest.
A neighborhood search, including a
check or the nearby grocery store,
failed to turn up any trace of the boys,
and Ramos was called home from
work to help Jn the hunt.
Investigators sald Salvador's father
remembered t.he icebox witti. a sick
suspicion when Leticia Rodriguez, 13,
slst.!r of the baby-sitter, s a i d
IM!ighbor.llood youngsters had l0oked
everywhere.
Ramos, however, bad left the
garage open Tuesd"By after working on
his car inside.
UDder California's so · c a 11 e d
"Charles Houghton Law," it is
misdemeanor offense punishable by a
"50 fine or five days in jail to keep an
abandoned icebox or refrigerator
without removing latches and locks.
La Habra Police Sgt. Ronald
Meehan said he does not know if any
citation will be issued in the Tuesday
tragedy. due partly to a question or
ownership.
Charles Houghton, for whom the law
•
Kathleen S. Roberts, 19, HuL'ti.ngton
Beach. and Julie A. Foley, also lg, of
Arcadia, were making a left.hand turn
onto the highway from the Buzzy
Burger, 5801 W. Coast Hwy., when
their late-model Volksv.•agen collided
with anoUler Volkswttgen driven by
Paul M. Niher, 21, of Balboa. The
a<:cldent occurred a-bout 10:30 a.m.
Police said both women were about
seven months pregnant.
Police and fire department rescue
sqU"adS were dis.patched to the scene
alter Ramos found the two small
bodies, but it was too late_ to save
them.
Their mothers were summoned
home from work and effOr·ts are
under way today to find the Rubio
bpy's father John, reportedly an
unemployed chemical worker last
know to be .in the Live Oak a:rea.
is named, was not responsible for the
1951 piece of legislatioh, al)east not •·
directly.
From Page I
GUN ..•
been reamed out.
Some 50 other guns are still being
held at the po)ice station. Among them
are two or three, he said, whJch have
been turned in by in.:iividuals since the
assassination of Sen. Robert Jo'.
Kennedy. These guns must be held six-
moaths before they can be destroyed,
he said.
The Rublo family had lived in the
apartment complex on the crest of a
hill in La Habra f« about three years
and the children played together like
one big family when the Ramos'
recently arrlved. They are a 11
immigrants from Mexico.
A former tenant of the apartment,
~frs. Juanita Partillo, said the
refrigerator was turned to the 'Yall
and left in the garage -wfiose door
'\\'RS wired shut -to be junked 'vhen
they left.
•
Charles Houghton was lo u n d
crumpled in an abandoned icebox on a
weed-choked Norwalk field Jn May of
1951, after a 27-0.ay search for the
missing youngster.
Loss of life still continued, however,
and Gov. Goodwin J. Knight sJgned a
bill in 1955 additionally requiring
icebox hinges to be removed, while the
federal government joined t h e
campaign thre~ years later.
Interstate shipment of household
refrigeration units which cannot be
easily opened from inside was barred
and today, most of tho se
1nanufactured are _magneilcally op-
erated.
~MART APPEARANCE
TOP QUAUTY OUTDOOR
LIVING IS A WAY OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTY!
.•. and Santa Ana Tent and Awning has the New Loak'
for '68 ••. everything to mak'e outdoor relaxation a
family pastime.
ALUMINUM PATIO COVER
Planned for either large or small homes • , • mobile
homes tool Durable, long lasting all aluminum construction.
Screened enclosures -' large doors ••• completely bug proof.
--.,.
OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW
AND DOOR AWNINGS
FEATUllNG 11 STUNNING DICORATOll COlORS FOR YOUR SlllCTION.
IRIGHT, \lllRANT. MDDIRN, llAUTWIA. ••• AND so MANT srrus
FOR SO MANY Nl!DS.
CM11 .,lilt ---'-flfdllry wMrw lor 4.S '""' ~ be" ff.ft 111.,.11foct11ri,,. 1Tyl11
t.-COlllf'l•Mellf e!IJ t¥e tf treftlt9t:tvN. C""ple'P "9!h1r ,..IM!loll -"'°19d
'IOllff ""'IM etMll f11r11l1hl11f1, lld el 11n , • , .t Sen .. AM T1RI end A-111, yo.
•lwoyt rec-'" ae _,.., ••• ••• _,,.1y, 11ui<.k octloll ""' «1111pl1tt d11Mnd11billty ••• 11hn ..,, .s .,... ,__,.,..,
THE NEW LOOK FOR '611 WYAS AWlllllGS • YALAllW • CUITAlllS
.· •-:; Nothing Decorote• Li•• Convo•. l•ouliful, New Colors
& New fobricL for home1 ... for bulfne,sl
MANU•ACTVUD • INftAWD
SANTA ANA TENT
.... AWNING co.
FACTORY SHOWROOM
2202 S. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA
141·0491
IRANCH OrFICI
OllANGI COUNTY AWNING CO,
SerYltt9 Nortft Orange Counry
427 I. MAalOI, FULL•TOM ,~., 8ff .. 7Jl2 Aftw • •12 .. 714
S.. -_.... •Aa I It I ,..,."""' ·~
"' I
-------~---------~~"------~------------------------------
----~
Mneif• Wort1a
Def erring Bonus May Help OVER THE· COUNTER
NASD Llillntt hr Tutld•y, July'· IHI
• • ' ' ,
y . ou Escape Tax Surcharge ....... ~
~l;'i,~i,:~.. J1 ~''tt 1
. ,
'
' . ,
' ' • ' •• . •• ·• .,
•! ' ,•
' ,.
•,
. ,.
. • ' '
'• ' .
. .
• '
.. ..
By SYLVIA POllTER
(La1t ot a 1erie1)
The imminent !nero.,. In
in come taze& u.oderllnes
the wisdom oI figuring
ways to cuahlon the ltnpact
of the bigger burden and
a.Iso of reviewing overall
technlque1 ol mlnlmlilng
the Income tax blow.
With tho aid Of Leon Gold,
chief tu expert of the
Research Institute o f
America, I have compiled
these vital hints.
-IF YOU expect to
recelve a substantial bonUI
or pay bike later this year,
it might be sound tu
strategy to mange to defer
some or all ot the amount
beyond 1969. The surtax iJ
scheduled to be off enUrely
by 1970 and if the Vietnam
war is ended, regular rates
may be lower by then too.
A deferred compensation
plan will pay off to the
extent that the
cor.1pensation can b e
deferred until It will be
taxed at lower rates.
-If you expect a higher
income in 1969 and are
thlnklDg of shifting some or
all o( it into 1968 to pay at
l o wer tax rates,
reconsider . It well may be
econontically unsound and
the r r.uson is that while you
would save some taxes,
you also would have to pay
the lower tu a full year in
advance.
At current steep interest
rates, what you would lose
in interest (or profits) by
laying out Utis tax money a
year earlier will
substantially reduce and
could easll)" erase your
anticipated tax savings.
MAKE YOUR deelslon Oft
1hlftiag income on the1e
grounds: your estimate Of
income your need for
money: the amount of
poaslble savings; th e
bua:lne11 problem in
.arranging a,n income sh ift.
. -U You're a bu1in.1sman
coocerned about holding
your' key execuUvt1 and
employe1 in vtew of the
higher tu burden on their
Incomes, weigh enhaoclnr
their frlnre bene!lll. The••
are either tu.xempt. tax·
deferred or prtl.,....Ually
taxed and become
i n c r ea•tnclY' attractive
when taxes go up. Here's a
U.t Of lop frln(O benefits
you may want to adopt:
(I) Group tenn 111 •
insurance which you; the
employer, pay for. may be
tu.free to your employes
l.IP to '50,000 each of
coverage and you
can deduct the premium.a;
(2) MEDICAL ond denlol
expeoeu of your employe
ond htl lllJlllly CID be
reJmburHd tu.1ne bl you
under a med cal
reimbursement plan. while
you, the employer can
deduct the reimbufaement
payments;
(S) Qualified pension and
profit sharing plans, though
they must be set up on a
non-discriminatory basl11 enable a portion of your
employe's compemation to
be tax-deferred and set
aside where it w i 11
accumulate income tax.
free;
( 4) Sick pay under a plan
can be received tu-free up
to certain amounts;
(5) EXPENSE accounts
SOFT DRINK INDUSTRY
A REFR~SHING INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
-Sal11 of aoft drlnka have n•rlY.d01Jblld In Mch dtc1d1
1lnc11880
-Aldln1tht boom ls the 1'1pld Inc ruse of the younpr pno
eration which 11 the l1rcest con•umer of thtM pf'Cflucts
-Per c1pltl consumption In both domutlc ind fortlcn
m1rketl has risen dram1tleally over the p.1t )'llrs
-Newconvenlentpack11ln1concepts are supplemented by
more •ureulve 1dvertisln1 1nd promotional procnima
-Low Calorie bevtr11e1 rtprntnt 1 dynamic new Siio
area.
There are many 1ddition1t features which 1ivt the Soft
Drink lnduatry 1ppealln1 intermediate tnd lon1·ttrm
1rowth proal*fs ..• Write tod1y for t compllmtntary·copy
cf the lattat iuue of INVESTOR'S DIGEST contalnln1 a
complete anal)'ll& of th• Soft Drink lndu1try and '1l1h·
ll1ht1n1 attl'1ctfve lnvntment apportunltln.
LESTER, RvcNs & Co.
""
!lrn-1""""1Si9tt1912
H • -: 34211 E11t Comt Hlthwey I ~-:.. ~:· CofOnl Dt>I Mir. Ctllfoml•
HH • • Ttfephont: 17a-.380
MIMllllS NCW YORK STOCK txCHAHG[
l'1citic Co11t StKll Eiich•nt• • Amlfkan Sli:tell l111:hlftl•
N1me--------------
Addr11•------------
CitY--------------
Statt, Zip Code
WALKER&. LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
154 homes sold
June 23rd·30th
because service i1 our name I
n. .. to111h11W•·&·Lll
-·· 547-6471 -·---IWIMtc:.tlEACff
142-44S5
11&4 DIT IUCH -m1
6J7·ano COlf•--9"1
' ~-. )
can provlde fringe benefits ~~~r,~M ]~ n' 1
Mien they a.re properly ~~~1 ~ .» 1W, "'
Uled a.nd _!.~pported b)' ~w=t. ~~~ • .00 proper reco,\UI: Ah.,.'b •= -t.•
(9) ComblnaUon business· ::.,. IQlt=_ 1:•
plea11ure trlP1 can be the ~~\"t:~ ~°',..
equivalent of parUaUy lax· ~-Cr 'Jml~ :18
deductible vacaUona; ~~ .. '~:.C , ·•
(7) Compoay cars, planes, =r'1o bottl, ttc. allo can be the ~'l'f• r
source of tu-deductible ~T ~•JS
pltuure Ulldtr pr o p e r ~~~"~-,.., clrcum1tanct1 ~ wi~ ~~.,.« 1tt1 1.11 proper 1upporttng HCOJ'da. Av,_•!!'!
-JF YOll'RE ln a hJgh "~nt~ ~~ • 1 °' ta bracket, you'll fiDd an ~F~= lnveftment . in tu:-uempt w;::, l:rk~i. ·'° state and ni,,.,1.,1-1 "---la V•" "'I •If .JO ~ UUl.NO 1'1 Hi'tri'OW,.,. particularly appeallng now , ~ ... -more 10 becaUlt yields rtdle ~I i'roctu1,1r"
on tu--e.xempta are at or -ru! ~t;~ u"I" 1 "°" Clpl;;r' J <1 o~-toH hJ~rlcally high ,ie~·.r:diiu evel.lj, ere 11 what you 1runsw19 c"1o ''
would have to earn on fUlly C~ft( ·
taxable income to match r.\" ~11,11'" i1.\1J
the 1988 after.tax yield ~:!:•~r f.F.i~ 'T.111 from tu o:emp•• an._ M1f:C, UI. 11Tadl Inc
-
MlmMI T ...... I ....... Yllll If •Plt•I Rfftl'W Clo
"" Yl'llll 4~ "-1\'1'16. ucMt N" 0.l .U ,..,.,. c.....,., ... •MMt ..._ ttilru~ Pr~ ....... • ..... ....,. .. .. t~ •. ~'1'T''"'
It .... 1wn mlll/J.1: lntnl 110.000 •• ,,. ..... ,_,,. ltlt-Vi'
11.ooO .. I f.I 7.J ltl~llS 11 .t(
:-.... '-f 1A l,( OI '!oP._YMLf'f' ... 1·~ I.I t.o '" lnolftt ..... f,I lU U.4 I CO_J
.. ~ lLt lU 1•.6 Pllltr E4!1;;:t ...... ......-................ ._ 011M1 Rock r1 M u~ " auoo s.~ "'"' '·"" onwt f'i:t, Vil' to lll.000 With ~-4'11. lll!MJty •.J 7.! 1.t t. Oft'iOn L.-
Owf" UJ,ooo •.J '°'' 11.1 ,,, P~S!!. •
Long-term capital gains ~~11i':f:~'/rnfto
b e c o m e tnereutngly ; Eiect~onla valuable, obviously. For 011'r 1 indlWduaJ taxpayers, one-----~-------'--"'
half of the long.term
capital gain is exempt from
tax. The taxable half is
taxec!At the regular rates,
except that the rate can't
exceed 53. 75 percent in
1968, 52.50 percent in 1969
Md back to 50 percent
thernfter.
For corporations, t b e
straight maxlmwn rate Is
27.5 percent for '68, 28.25
percent for '69 and back to
25 percent thereafter.
, •
Mutual Funds
Wtdnt~)'. July 10, 1968 DAILY '!LOT JJ
Southland Business
Eases Off May Pace
Soutlhern Califo r nia
buslneu activity remained
notably brlak durina Jooe
but eated oil· tht record
pace aet in May, 0 . C.
Adams, manager of
Securlty Padflc National
Bank's Cotta Mesa branch,
reoortod-y.
E1timated et 178.• on the
bank'• lndu of business
..Uvtt;r, oel'for-oce In
June -it per<eat hijhe<
-In June, 11117, but •lllltll1 -thin In 11111, -a record bl(h ol l'lt.I
Wu eatabll•bed . A
--record ol 171.7 -,_od !or April •
( M • 1 ' 1 unprecedented
econom.Jc climb w a •
larfellr attributable t o
unu1uatt1 1l1table illo'-• ln -cl"'1DCI and :-at 1 tore
salel, A i ._ted.)
Roal HlatAt 10Jes .ct!YiQ'
increued durillC Jan• 1
parUallr o I I .. 1 e I tin~ a
decline In bank clwlllp.
Among other ol the lnde1'1
Jndlvidual compoo<DU, all
Of which ore adJUltod for
s e • 1 o n a I ftuctDatlou,
department nor. ,.._ end
COllllrucUon a c II • 11 y
mnolned at Mo, ~
l!lnlpio1m<!ntd • cUn • d
during 111.,., Ibo -
""""' !or which ftcuroa ere awlllhla, EmploJtid ca
the SOullllud'• alno
metnlPOUtln ccuntMi ,,_.
,,17,,IOO ci'llllonl -10,IOI
1 .... rtl>lnla~-· .......tnumberol.,..,Q
was employed . Mey
employmeot, bowover, ,..,
Ill' U2.400 .. , ~ o1
11117. ~-to tho lo<lll~=ot a.,.,....1a. ·-• thoullooll ot I. I porcllll.
......... • . .. -. . . ·' •
DAilrY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Help for a l(id • Ill Need
\I/here dots a youngster go in Orange County for
help with problems of drug abuse or other behavioral
maladjustment?
There are private psychlatrisls and psychologisl..s,
'of course, but they're expensive and the family may
not have the funds.
There is the Orange County Child Guidance. Clinic
in Costa Afesa, but it bas a wailing list of 100.
sUt, somewhat amazi~gly, the~e is no provision for
children 16 or younger with behaVloral problems to be
admitted to coµilty facilities unless they a re a~mitt~d
to the community bea1th center as part oi a family urut.
The story last week or a pilot program to help
bridge this stark deficiency was good news, at least for
the Laguna area. It is an experiment worth watching
by every other community in Orange County.
The Assistance League of Laguna Beach has fur·
nished the meeting place for the weekly clinics and
$4,000 to help fund the program.
Dr. Lou!• .A. Gottschauk, cbainnan ol the depart·
men! of psychiatry and buman behavior al the UCJ
school of medicine, has, along with other stall psychia·
trists, donated his time for the counseling.
It is available to youngsters up to the age oi 18
\Vith approVal of parent or guardian. The parents of
participating youngsters may join in to learn the whys
of drug abuse and the generation gap.
0 We focus our counseling at just these problems
and not trying to restructure someone's personality,"
said Dr. Gottshauk.
He and fellow psychiatrists are attempting during
the counseling to bridge the generation or communica-
tion gap and to provide relatively neutral information
about the use of drugs.
lf a youngster throws up adult abuse of alcohol, the
psychiatrists don't defend !hi! abuse.
They take lhe tack Iha\ any unregulated drug U•e
can be dangerous, even permanenUy damaging. And
Ibey will medically give the specifics II !he youngsters
are interested.
The role of the schools will he lo make parents and
youngsters aware that the pilot program exists and ad-
vise what it entails. Youngsters might also be referred
by family doctors or ministers. The clinlc has the en-
dorsement of the South Coast Community Hospital
medical staf!.
The fledglin~ program is ofi lo a good start and
certainly there 1$ a need. More volunteer help from
psychiatrists, psychologists an4 social workers is need-
ed to keep lhe clinic going. Funds will be needed loo ii
it is to expand.
Those who have made this positive approach at the
local level to a national problem of magnitude are to
be heartily commended.
A Good Investment
Two Newport Beach city officials will travel to the
l\lexican beach resort ol Altata this summer to help
set up a lifeguard service.
The roving diplomats will be Bob Reed, city marine
safety director, and Al Irwin, chief of training for the
lifeguard department. City councilmen have agreed to
sponsor Reed for a week with pay while lnvin will
travel at his own expense.
The pair will work with volunteer personnel in the
Mexican village, instructing them in modern lifesaving
and resuscitative methods.
Councilmen are to be commended. for readily agree-
ing to loan their two experts on this project. It is the
kind of investment that leads to dividends of under·
standing and friendship for both parties.
N
A r e We Moving Closer~ A re Words
Of Wallace Cuha-15 Years of Castro
By WILLIAM GERBER
Editorial R-an:b Reporla
Cuba 'Vr'ill celebrate later this month
the 15th anniversary (l( Fidel Castro's
attack on the Moocado Barrack& at
Santiago de Cuba. Although the attack
was unsuccessful, the date on which it
occurred. -July 26 -gave its name
to the movement which, n<t. much
more than five years later, led to
Castro's victoey over Cuba's old·style
dictator, Fulgencio Bati!ila.
On Jan. l , 1969, Castro will complete
a full decade as leader of what turned
out to be the first Communist regime
in the Western Hemisphere. Through
1hat period, he has managed to keep
control. of. Cuba despite an American-
finall'ced attempt at invasion o! the
country, .an economic boycott pro-
moted by the United States, expulsion
from ttle Organization of American
States, and frequent quarrels with tiis
principal outside source of assistance,
the Soviet Union.
ANY FRANK a.ssessment of the
situation in the island republic today
would have to .acknowledge that the
Cuban masset •• materially better
off than ever before. CUba's 7.8 million
people are entitled to receive, free of
charge, eduqtion at all levels,
medical servicen, meals on the job,
electricity, local telephone service,
tickets to sports events, and a funeral.
On the otller side of the ledger are;
-Failure of Cuba's gross national
product to rise appreciably since 1959 :
an actual reduction of per capita an-
nual income. from $450 in 1959 to $400
in 1967.
-Strict rationing necessitated by
shortages of food., clothing, and
household articles. The ration book in
Jo'ebruary 1968 entitled eaoh person to
buy two shirts and two pairs of shoes
a year, tlhree pounds of rice and 20
cans of evaporated milk a month.
three-fourths of a pound o! meat and
three ounces of coffee a week, and a
liter (slightly over a quart) of fresh
milk a day for ead1 child.
BEFORE AND AFTER Castro
came to power, he promised that free
elections would bt held in Cuba -
within foor years, he said on "Meet
tae Press" on April 19, 1959. llowever,
no elections have been held; the
government rules by decree and there
is no legislative body. Every citizen
must at all times carry with him an
klenUfication card cont.aining his pjc-
ture, descriptloo, and fingerprints. ·
The Soviet Union, ¥-'ilich provides
Cuba with economic aid amounting to
more than $1 million a day, no longer
actively uses Cuba a1 a rpringbc>ard to
spread communism in the 1Vester
Hemisphere. Cuba itslef has sought to
take the lead in that effort.
Beginning in 1965. the chie( in-
surrect.ionary activities in La t i n
America u•ere guided, on the spot. by
l~rnesto Che Guevara, an Argentine
physician w.ho had met Castro in Mex4
ico in 1955 and joined forces with him .
Guevar.a was killed on Oct. 9, 1967,
after a stirmi.sh with Bolivian rovern-
ment forces.
TRE ADMINISTRATION !hal will
take office in Washington next
January will be faced with tihe task of
reviewing U. S. JXJlicy toward Cuba.
One group of Americans favors active
intervention to overthrow Castro. That
group. although small, includes a num-
ber of prominent citizens. As a
measure short o! m i lit a r Y. in-
tervention, the economle boycott of
Cuba has been a doubtful value.
'l'he chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relatioris Committee, J . \V, Fulbright
(0 Ark.), considers the boycott "a
failure as an instrument !or bringing
agout the fall of th~ Castro regime."
Elimination or diminution oC hvo ir-
r itants seems necessary to est&bli54h a
situation in which the United States
can comfortably restore diplomatic
relations with Castro's regime and end
the boycott. The irritants are Castro's
support of guerrilla movements in
other Latin American countries and
his allegiance, such as it is, to the
Soviet Union.
It is, however, not certain that
Castro would welcome an overture
toward normal relations with the
United States.
Many Americans 12_elieve that if and
\\'hen peace is fainally achieved Jn Viet
Nam, the Castro regime and the
An1erican government will find it
mutually advantageous to sit down
and \Yor k out an agreement that will
provide for better relations bet\veen
these two physically, il not politically,
close nei~1bors.
The Child's View of Life
Anyone over 30 who has trouble !an.
ing asleep at night usually turns his
restless thoughts back to h i s
childhood.
He remembers it with a vague sense
of Joss, as mankind remembers Jost
Eden -with a pang.
Most people like to recall their
childhood as a happy time, and their
minds obligingly turn away from the
woe1 they knew when very young.
But was anyone's childhood ever as
happy when he Jives it as he later in
lite prefers t.o recall it to have been ?
No, indeed. In this respect memory is
a soft liar.
The aecrtt heart or any child is
hardly bathed in constant self.smile.
He appl'Ovea or himself far less than
the grownups around him do. for hr.
never t1 quite as innocent as they
flllnthim to be.
THEY TEND 1.n r~garri hitn as
either a perfett angel or a litt le devil,
))ear
Gloon1 y
Gus:
With the recont rise In parking
, ftnrr, l wonder why there are
~own meter regulaUon1 oo our Porldns llUltttl on East
Cout !Ilghw1y In Newport
Belcb! -H. C. T.
• I
Hal B~yte ,.,.,,
depending on the day or what they
know about his conduct a t the 1no.
ment. But the child himself is haunted
by the knowledge that he is never a
perfect angel. although he may !or
Oeeting seconds wistfully yearn to be
one.
Every child is troubled by hidden
. guilt, which comes early to the human
race. He always has done something
~Tong \vh lch his parents ha ven't yet
found out . and so he feel s like an un-
caught crin,inal ahvays In peril of
being di sco,·ered and punished.
This self·knO\\'lcdge of guilt anrl feor
or retribulion is the sword or
Damocle11 that hangs in lhe so ul or
tvery l'hild. It keeps hin1 uneasy. no
matter ho\v sm:lll his transgrl':ssion
may be , and shuts him from the
paradise in which his deluded parents
th.ink he dwells.
WELL, TAE~\ since children art:
actuaUy hypocritical little ~·orry
warts. just like grownups. V.'h<it i!i
there truly about childhood that makes
adults look back upon it with such
fondness? \I/herein lies Its real magic?
The real magic tlf c.hltdhood lies in
the fact that it is the only period of er·
Isle.nee when you look at life as If you
were 11eelng it through a magnifying
glass. EveryUtlng is bigger. closer up,
and more emotionally a ff e c 11 n g .
Ev~Utlng iJ s.harply accented. Your thoughts are more fanciful
and ercit.ing; your stn5ations are
more thrilling: you feel more keenly
and dec!ply alive: than you ever will
again.
You bump your knee and roll in the
crass with an agony worse than an)'
human being ever bore before. You
taste an ice cream cone or a
watermelon, and no Caesar in ancient
Rome ever knew such an orgy of
taste. though he banqueted on peacock
tongues .
WHATEVER HAPPENS to you oc.
curs as if it were happening for the
first time since the globe started spin·
ning. No rainbow has any dust on It.
every plush-<:overed caterpillar is a
monster of mystetiy.
You look around ;ou, and beauty,
joy, terror. awe an ecstasy -they
are everywhere. You wade mind-deep
in "·onder.
Slowly a!I \Ve go through life,
cobwebs accum ulate on all these feel-
ings. 1Ve see through the magnifying
,::-lass no more. The monsters become
le!JS fearsome, the joys less stirring.
1Ve tend to turn from live sparks to
dull clod!l, more moved by threnody
than thrill.
That Is what we miss morit about
our vanished childhood -that view
through the magnifying .-Jass, that
bonfire rapture of bei~g "'hich, when
it goes , comes not again.
Bit George ---,
'' Otar George: I ' Is it true that the key to
popularity with the opposite aex
is the caveman approach with
women? They seemed to do O.K.
WONDERING
Dear Wondering:
Trunk it over. llow many
caveme.n do you see'!
ISe.nd your prtlblems to
George. who never let.. common
scn5e interfere with the facts.)
~I
Catching Up?
lt was Humpty Dumpty who in·
furmed Alice that "a word means just
what I choose it to mean."
George·\Vallace, although be has not
as yet had a great !all, nonetheless
reminds one of the legendary Humpty
Dumpty. A word to George Wallace
means just 'vhat he chooses it to
mean. If anyone persists in asking him
about the possibilities o[ other
shadings of meaning, he grows ir-
ritated, sometimes angry. The word
means what he says it does.
TIIE WORD "racist," for e.."lample,
means to him what he says it does. He
.increasingly informs interviewers and
audiences that he is not a racist. fie
mentions taking legal action against
any person who suggests: the word
means something other tban the
meaning be gives to it. Of Jate he gives
even the word "segregationist" a
meaning that means only what he 1ays
it means.
IDs former speeches in other cam-
paigns, ho~·ever, are a matter of
r eeord .
l\1ean\rhilc, !\tr. \Vallace seemi;
some\vhat subdu~. This may be
merely a matter of mood or of timing.
But a word keeps coming out of
Montgomery and Birmingham which
has a meaning he is not able to con-
trol. This word ia that the money
necessary to nm the 1ort of semi-na-
tional campaign now be.Ing staged by
~·Wallace just Isn't in hand.
11111E Lrrn,E PEOPLE," a phrase
dear to Mr. Wallace, are loyal, he in·
sists, and they keep the money coming
in. But Mr. Wallace bas had bis
political hand out to the little people
for a good many years. He promised
much, but the delivery service has not
been all that was anticipated.
Mr. Wallace talks about all he has
done for education and about the voca·
tional and junior colleges he has buUt.
Education is in a desperate condition
in Alabama.
This also is the year when
Alabamans say the state's bonded in-
debtedness is scheduled to reach a
billion dollars. Mr. Wallace's op-
posfUon points out that. while he cer4
tainly did not create ~I this debt, it
did seem to have a surge of increase
during his years in office. This debt
will be one or those albatross
neckpieces for the next legislature.
Mr. \Vallace finds that. as the ~·ord
gets arounnd about A l a b a m a ' s
predicaments. the tycoons or con·
servatism are sending sma11er checks.
His appeal to lhe little people grows .a
bit stale. The patitical picture Is
changing.
J\m. WALLACE 'S fiery blasts at the
"'\Varren court" sttm A UUlc old now
that the Chief JustJce has subm.ltted a
resignation. President Johnson, having
obtained the first important dls3rntl·
ment talks with the Soviets and the
hopeful if not yet productive
dlacussJons going on with Ranol, no
longer ts wlnerabte to tile Wallace
techniques.
Still another of Mr. Wallaee'1 whlp-
plng boy1, Senato< Robert Kennedy,
was removed by 1enselt1s, tragic
ass111sln1tion. ' The Wallace campajgn has by no
means co!Japsed. It still is formidable.
But It bas not picked up any new
momentum.
Time does Indeed effect change.
\Ye'U wait and 1ee what the new word
rNlly mtanr •bout Georct Wallace.
· .. ...
Collective Guilt
And Gun Control
To the Edit.or:
In Dr. Norman Nixon's column
"Everyday Problems" entitled "High
Noon in Orange County -Let the
Lawmakers Know " dated Friday, July
5, 1968, there appears to me to be an
hysterical and highly emotional reac-
t ion and "pandering to collective
guilt" by the author.
Although most of the article is
devoted to support of .gun control
legislation, the merits Of which I shall
not argue, I would like to comment on
the statement that "a responsible na·
tion will not co$nue to fill its air
waves, movie screens and comic
strips with exaltations of vtolenee and
irresponsibility.''
Also, referral is made to the glori·
fyi"ng of violence, robbery and murder
in such movies as "Bonnie and
Clyde."
IF DR. NIXON is a student <lf
psychology, sociology and history, he
will have to agree that -our nation
historically bas been a Hviolent and
energetic" nation and its great suc-
cess and geniu1 has been its ability to
channel this violence and energy; to a
large exten!. into productive, creative,
and meaningfu l undertakings. For
many years now the public depiction
of violence has almost universally
been in the context of its futility,
tragedy and horror, and its moral in-
acceptabillty.
The acceptance of the presence of
sexual perveIISion and violence as
described in the Old and New
Testaments of the Bible is because of
the moral context of the 1tory.
If there is to be cemorshlp o! violet\·
ce, why not of Communist doctrines,
aexual education and sexual erOttca,
and anything which w i 11 "con-
taminate" the minds of men?
PSYCHOLOGISTS, sociologists and
other students of human behavior
have even advocated that
pornographic and erotic material may
reduce sexual crimes, by providing a
vicarious outlet that will reduce the
need !or participation in the depicted.
acts. Is the depiction of violence an ex-
ception to this?
Man cannot grow by putting hia
"head in the sand like an ostrich."
Most people who have seen the movie
"Bonnie and Clyde" are stunned by its
senseless violence, and the horrifying
end to which its principle characters
came.
How can Dr. N~on imply that such
a movie wou1d encourage violence'!
My feelings. and those of many with
whom J have discussed it, are revolted
and our response is a greater
awareness of the futility and horror o!
violcncc.
IT IS ~IV CONTENTION that Dr.
Nixon's theses of the causes of
violence are lwlctcwards and that, as
clvilizaUon progresses. there ts Jess
violence In the streets and in the
homes, and more in the fantasies
portrayed on screens, in books. on
television. and 1n ct1micJ. Perhaps the
Julilltment of Dr. Nixon's recom·
mendaUons would reverse the trend.
ls Jt not better to be a spectator to im·
agined vtoltnce tbao to parUctpate 1n
real violence?
GEORGE J. PRASTKA, M.D.
'Otltn Side' Sftfllk•
To the Editor:
I have been followin g your editorials
and letters to th• editor 1lnct the
assusJnation of Senator Kennedy with
great interest. To say th1t you a.re
prejudJctd in favor of strong antl-gun
legi.slatlon would be a gross un.
derstatement.
AflU wttb of printing mostly anti-
•
Letters from rt•dtrt .,. weltorM. No,.11111., •Jl•n &llould'auwey !llelr mes11,. In 300 worC11 or;lom. Tiit r1thl I'll ~de,,.. Jette,.. to Ill t.Pl!C. or •lll'l!lNlt• 11~1 11 rn.rvtd, All lt!ltr. must lnc1udt 111M1ur.
t l1CI ITlllllne 1cld111111, but M"* will be wlltltltld
1111 fMl\lell,
gun letters, you finally condescended
to print a few or the letters from the
other ~ide, hand·plcked, of cour&e, to
show the least valid and convincing
arguments.
JUST BECAUSE the Supreme court
ruled that the Second Amendment
does not mean an individual right to
bear arms (according to you) this
does not mean that tWs was ih8 in·
tention of the "founding fathers."
"Autos are registered, why not
gubs'!'' BeCause primarily regidfa.
ti.on leads to tuation and the govern•
ment (local, state, federal) could-and
probably would tax guns (in ._the
hands of law-abiding citizens anyway)
out of existence.
Just because a gun ls registered wilt
not stop it from being used. And .the
fart that most homicides are cOm.
mitted by "first-time" offenders, how
do you propose to screen the potential
murders?
THIEVES, robbers, hold-ut> i6,en.
bank robbers. etc., whoever needs
guns 1n their trade will steal them lf
necessary to obtain them.
Criminologist.s may wonder whether
ft is a good idea for the average
citizen to keep a gun for defense (also
ac&rdJDg to you). I have no doubt
what choice I would prefer when faced
with the possible alternatives. _
God grant that I may defend myself
and my family from any intruderi and
I challenge the expertise claimed. for
the burglar. I doubt i! the average
burglar is any better shot than anyone
else.
AS TO THE l't10RAL issue-or
whether a burglar deserves to be ex·
ecuted. What about the countless
youngsters who are shot "trytlfg t~
escape" from the police after •
joyride ln a stolen car! Did tttese
poor, confused and frightened children
who will never JrO'W up, deserve So ~
executed? ••
If you want something to crasade
about. crusade about that and -6toP
knocking guns and the National Ri.Dd
Association and help the American
people retain one or their all too ta~
freedoms that we have left. -.
IV. D. BEAUOEN
---m4.
Wednesday,. July 10, 1968 ,
The editorial (Jlltle o/ Ille Dalli
Pilot sttkt to htform and iii"'"
ulate rnulm by pnatnting thl1
new1popm-'s OJ)tntonr and c~
menta111 a" topics of httereit
and dgnificanct, by provklinQ i
forum Jor the ezpreslion of
our rtodtra' opfniom, and bf
pre1ni.Ung tM diver1t view-·
points of htfor1714d ob11ruer.r
and spokt.tmtn on topiQ of Che ®v.
Robert N. Weed, Publish<ir
j
-----------'
• Costa Mesa
vor. 6l , NO. T65, 7 SECTIONS, 74 PAGES COSTA MES>:, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, '19'61 JEN CENTS
Bethel Towers Seeks $100,000 TS:x Waiver
Efforts ore continuJn1l today for Ille
religious ocgani!.8.tion w b 1 c b p.it
togettier Costa Mesa's 17..story Bethel
Tower& ret:lrtment housing skyacraper
to turn the tax tables and avoid paying
any.
lf successful -and d~rminatlon is
expected in 90 days -t h e
development et 666 W. 19th St., could
escape a total tax package ~ some
$100,000 annually, based on asse!l~ed
valuation. •
Ottler taxpayers, essentially, would
pick up that difference.
The Rev. William H. Robertson,
executive director of the Bethe l
Towers project, confirmed today tha~
efforts to achieve a tax exemption are
still alive after ;.n iniUal a.pplication
was rejected by the state.
He was also pessimistic over
chances far the tax break.
"I doubt it very much," he tcld the
DAILY PILOT, "we hope that we get
it, but we're now merely working on
it."
Bethel T<1wers, built under a $3.3
million Joan from the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
opens its 270 units beginning Monday,
already with 65 percent occupancy
booked.
Cootill'gent upon r eceiving a Ulx
exemption wou'1d be a change in the
project's articles of incorporation,
making it a charitable instl.tutioo.
H'nte quest.km is," BeUlel Towers
attorney LeRoy Reynolds said today.
"Ls whether it can be labelled
charitable or not," saying Jt is in a
sense that the officers do not profit
from it.
It might not, however, be able to
meet further requirements for tax
relief as laid out by the state and th~
Federal Housing Act section under
which it was built.
Contacted in recent weeks, Vance
Price, of the State Board o f
Equallzation's Bureau of Asses&ment
standards, seemed optimlsllc about
chances of the Bethel Towen being
granted its tax nHe!.
"We'vo bem trying to cul1> !hi! sort
or thing," he said, citing other
projects, "they locate in wooderfUl
areas like Santa Barbara, Santa
Monica and Orange County, then
people in the turroundiJJg area have to
pick up the tab."
Reaction to tb.e nnewed attempt by
Bethel Towers to escape taxation,
after pledging to pay taxes like any
other property owner when approval
w.as given for the project, is
particularly bitter.
"This is a complete surprise and I
am very, very surprised," declared
an annoyed Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley,
when notified of the action mxl its pos-
sible outcome.
"I am surprised that a eroup
representing a church would say in an
open council meeUng that they would
pay their taxes end then do this," he
declared.
Bethel Towers Wat built under
auspices o! the Southern Califonlla
District Council, Asiemblies of God
Inc., which. slso has three churches in
Costa Mesa, "" well as Southern
Cali!ornia College.
"This welchlng on the tax bit may
·make the City Councll 1view tr.e next
one in a different light," the mayor
added.
Plans have been announce.! for
development Of a second, 25-story
Bethel Towera adjacent to the first,
when federal funds become available
-after the Jmaller project bas 75
percent occupancy.
The retirement bousing f:icility
which opens Mo~ay iJ the tallest
building .ir, Orange County, built on a
conditlooal use permit allowing it to
exceed the two.story city height limit.
The City Council would havti to
consider a similar permit for any
add.itiona: development of Bethel
·rowers property with b ; g h . r i s e
structures.
The 17·story skyscraper will include
recreational facilities, gar d e ns ,
personal services Of several varieties,
and is open to all persons who qualify
by -age and income, regardless of race
or religion.
Air Hearings Ordered·
County Tells Comm[;sion to Study Perei-ra Plan
DAILY .. ILOT Sftff ,.....,.
COOLING IT -With temperatures soaring along the Orange Coast
the best idea Is perhaps the one that's all wet. At least that seem~
t.o be.the thought o!.Oeft to right) Leigh Br~dford, 6, Gail Bradford,
4 and Chris Foster, 4, all of Costa Mesa.
Heat Wdve Holds Firm
Grip on Orange Coast
Beachg,oer&, hou s e wives
workingmen , nonworkingmen, small..
children and dogs can all look forward
to continued warm weather today and
Thursday over the Orwmge Coast.
The hl.gh tides that have been
lapping up against the coast recently
have done no damage either to the
beaches or to harbor structures,
report! the Ne-wport Department ()f
Marine Safety.
Sweltering coast area residents can
con90le themselves, with thl! bit o{ the
gra.11 is always greener news out or
the nation's hotapot, Palm Springs,
where it reaches 110 degrees Tuesday,
while the residentl Of Marquette,
Mktigeo tblvered In 34 degree
~.
By JACK BROBACX Pereira and Associates sta!!, the
or .,. oe•r """ lleff board ordered copiel made and
Despite the urgency indicated in distributed to interested parties and
Willlam Perelra'a Pbale One Of !he instructed the commission to "study
Muter Plan of A1r Transportation for the report and bold public bearings."
Strangely overlooked in the hubbub Orang~ County, the B~d -o f was the role of Orange County Airport
Supervisors Tue~y .voted to 1nstru~t in the "five years it will take to
the ~rt Conuruss1~n to hold public-develop a new regional airport."
hearings on the question. The report aaid interim
After listening to the report as improvements would have to be made
delivered by James Sink of the to accommodate 'certain growth in
Castoff
traffic, predicted to be triple the
current total.
Extensive increases will be
necessary in the "already over-
saturated." terminal bu i Id in g.
Suggested was a possible second.
decking o! the building to provide an
enplaning level above the present
terminal· height.
Suggested to al l e viate the
overcrowded parking space at the
airport w3s a dispersing o f
Icebox Two County
Air Services
In Showdown Entombs 2 Tots
A feud between two ~ommuter
airlines serving Orange C o u n t y
Airport appears to be leading to some
kind of showdown between the
Oaliforni.a PuJ>licHUUlities Commission
(PUC) and 'the federal Ci v i I
Aeronautics Board (CAB).
The issue centers on which agency
has the right to regulate commuter
airline routes willh.i.n the state.
'The PUC, as a result of a formal
hearing held Monday in S a n
Francisco, is expected later this week
to order Cable Commuter Airlines to
halt most of its California routes.
The order will be mostly academic,
Cable Commuter claims the PUC has
no jurisdiction over its !lights.
Instead, Cable has set up route~
under the blessing of federal approval
from the CAB.
"We're arguing that a PUC
cerfilic.tte is meaningless for routes
within the Los Angeles basin, which
we define as a 50-mile radius of the
downtown Los Angeles post o{fice,"
said William Myers, Cable board
chairman.
Myers said most of the passengers
his airline carries are interstate
passengers, going to Los Angeles to
catch conneCUng interstate flights.
As a consequence, th• CAB ha11
niled that it bas juritdiction over such
commuter services, and hu certified
Cable, according to Myers.
Cable's fedellal certification was
challenged at Monday's bearing by
Golden \Vest, a commuter service
whicll also flies between Orange
County iand Los Angeles Jn1ernational.
"Our position is that Golden West is
now operating illegally," Cable's
chairman said. "They're carrying
mostly inter-state passengers without
a federal certifiCate,"
Myers stressed, ho'wever, that his
(See CABLE, PIJe I)
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 Ille 0.Yr .. li.t Sl1ff
La Habra yo ungsters J ohnny Rubio
and Salvador Ra1nos Tuesday joined
n1ore than 300 children in a follow-the-
leader game that ends with two clicks :
the last the sound of a closini? coffin.
The first comes wilh the shutting of
an abandoned refrigerator.
Pablo Ramos also ji>ined hundreds
of parents who are not spared the
grim, peroonal discovery, when he
opened the old icebox and two
crumpled bodies tumbled out onto his
garage floor.
His son Salvador, 5, and playmate
.Johnny, 2, were dead on arrival at St.
Jude Hospital in Fullerton, after
emergency treatment at the scene
!ailed to revive them.
Orange County coroner'& deputie1
listed tentative cause of death as
accidental asphyxiation. sa)'ing the
boys were apparently hudd led in the
choking, cramped confines for some
two hours.
Tl1e tragic deaths -wlUch are also
criminal deaths under California law
-brought to five the number of
children Jdlled in La Habra by
abandoned glll9ge iceboxes within the
past 17 months .
Thornie Williamson, 5, of La Habra,
and his eousins, Ladona Williamson, 4,
and Wanda Williamson, 3, of La
Mirada, died l;'ch. 6, 1967, under
identical circumstances.
The Rubio and Ram<Js boys were
noticed missing shortly after noon
Tuesday, w:he n 1'-1argaret Rodriguez,
16, baby·sitter for tht teVen Rubio
children, couldn't find little Jolmny,
(See ICE. BOX, Pafe I)
Reagan's ·Home Target
Of Firebombing. Youths
SACRAMENTO, eaur. (AP) -Two
Negro youths carrying firebombs
approached. Gov. Ronald Reagan's
home Tuesday night, but fled when
ordered to halt by a Secret Service
agent who fired a warning shot.
The youths dropped the homemade
bombs as they fled, but neither
exploded or ignited.
Secret Service agents and state
police wilo guacd the home in a quiet,
well·to-do area of eaMem Sac;rament1>,
chased the youths but failed to catch
thorn.
No further trouble was reported
near t he Reagan home during the
nighl.
Later, a neighbor or UM! Reagans
called police to report that &bota bad
been fired at the governor'• home, but
state police said, "no ahots were fired
at the ntallsion." .. Search Centers
In Harbor Area
For Flag Defiler 10 Days Away From It All
Sacramento police said the incident
was .apparently reiated to IPoradic
vkllence whi~ broke' out during the
arternoon in a predominantly Negro
neighborhood about two mJles away
.and continued into early today, In that
area, a policeman was hit with a
bottle, a man WM stabbed, al'ld there
were numerous report.I of fires, some SMta Ana police today asked au~
tJo«ities In the Harbor Area to look
for a 23-year-Old bearded, long-haired
youth who they say spra,yed black
paint on a huge American Flag July 4.
Sought is WiWam Reid Parker, a for·
mer mideot o( Tustin who hu been
living In tho Newport Beocb.CO.t.a Mesa area for the pMt year, relltives
told police.
Parker WU iraoed _.,, the u-
Otnle JIQJD.ber of his CS' wbicb WU
perked -n1 when two poutnc m ..
tuiats aile9'dl1 saw him cfefocln( the
3>.Qy-30-foot Oag °" the Tolo Inc. plant
at 2401 Pullman S~ The Dag could be
.... from the Newport F....,.01.
Parker had alleleclJ{ :l:"a,..cl "Viet-nam , 25,233 dead, J 1 ~"
ac!'08S the ·Flag When the two men COi'·
........i him. They Hid 11< broke r ....
and escaped in bia car.
\ '.
20 Disadvantnged to Enjoy VCI's UN/CAMP
Ten .dan a""'8y from a distressing
poverty environment.
Ten days ol fresh mountaln air,
outdoor activity and c a m p f I r e
lellowahip.
That II whit 11 ahead ror 65 to 70
dUedwDtagta Orange C o u a t y
-11«1, Thftr JO clooy1 lo tho
--'lllo1 wlli be ~ot a\ UNlCAMP,
""' by ·-of m: lrvk><. Tbt cblldren, nine to 12 years old,
CQme from underprivileged homes
ldentlllod by wellare agtoeles. A
majorlly 1re Negr..., or Mexican·
Americans.
Sixteen volunteer student counselor•
will direct them by day In sports.
cral:ta, nature bikes and •'Nim.mini
and ~ntertain them at eveninJ::
c~flres witti songs, stories and
akit1.
• 1 his ls .a time for them to see guys
and lltla working together and not
alwa}'t at each otter's throats and
ff!llltlni.'• said Jan Creedon. pre1id"'1t
of tile UNICAMP board.
The camp, owned by U C L A
Reltgloua Conference, is at Barton
Flats ia tile Sein B e r n a t d i n o
Mountains. U'ClA atudenta: run 10
sessions each 1ummet, wltth UQ
students ,i .. n the comp Aua,JS-to 211.
O>rt for meala and c am p
maintenance is JOO per liludettt.
Ml11 Creedon, 'Wtio llve Jn Corona,
del Mar, said fl,O» has been raised
and another $2,000 is needed. The
student body government contrlbuted
$t ,200 and the rest as made at a
cam.pus c.arnlval.
DonaUOn1 ~ have to make up the
.additional ft,_000 or UCJ students will
ha.. to bo<Tow from UCLA ogain.
They bt>rrowed last JUmmer and
haven~ yet pold the 111m back.
l>onetjons may be malled to
UNICAMP, Interfaith C.nter, 4201
. Campus.Dr!"", Irvlne, Calif.
Sl!ldtots who attended UNICAMP
bst 1umnu:r won't be lf:lected apiln.
"Those kids have had a chance. There
are so many who haven't experienced
anythloJ like tlliJ." Mia er-. oakl. ,
'
of them caused by f.irebomb1. ·
Reagan and hi.a wife. Nancy, wue
watching television insldt the white
brick tudor·style home whJcb they
lea1e wilen the Incident happened, at
about 10::» p.m. They w$'e not
immediately aware~ what transpired
outside.
The governor had no lmmed.hite
comment or 1tatement on the incident
Lyn Nctdg~hl1 communloatloos
director. llald two ID"1 opprooOchtd.
ttl.e home on foot.
"They were d\alleoged by Seen!
Seirvlcemen and then ran. In dolnt 10,
they chpped the bottltt." One agent
find a warning shot into tho ab' 11 he
chaJed tho yooths down the stret\. but
on< of the patr elC&ped on fOot 1nd the
othor jumped Into Ill ooto wlllch sped aw17.
'
automobiles to ·the clear zoce ueas
with connection to the terminal by
tram or some other OO·airport access
vehicle.
Also urged was an instrument
landing and approach lighting system
"at the earliest possible date."
To soften the blow to airport
opponents a set or restraints wer\
suggested for the next five years.
Such regulations have bee ti
(st< AIRPORT, Pafe I)
* * * Airport Foe
Gets in Jabs
'
At County
\Vllliam Pereira's Master Plan el.
Air Transportation for Orange County
with its recommendation for ·de·
emphasiz.ing the Orange --Co u'n t y
Airport was received quietly Tuesday
by the supervisors. They moved to get
the recommendations into action.
But longtime airport foe Daniel
Emory of Newport Beaeh would not
let It pass without a few jaba at the
Board.
Emory said his group -the Airport
Noise Abatement Committee -was
happy with the report, but pointedly
remarked that that is what he and his
friends had been advocating since
1961.
"Despite your promise to the
contrary in 1961," Emory told the
supervisors, "the v o 1 um e of
commercial !light.a and the advent ot
commercial jets has already created
severe and growing nus:iaances that
are affecting t h o u s a n d 1 of
homeowners.
"Because these facts have been
ignored for seven Jong yeara, this
comty must now "play catch up" in
thu field of air transportation. An
adequate airport, even if ccostruotion
Is begun immediately, will be three to
five years late,". he continued his
tirade.
"Because conatructib and I.and
costs have rllen lharpJy betwien the
time you ahould have atarted a new
airport and now that cost will
probably be twice what it should have
been," Emory shouted at the quiet
supervisors.
He aaid that While the airport Is
being constructed., the 1upervilor1
(See COUNTY, P11e I)
Oraage
Weatlaer
Relurnlng liter 1 llaoding
ovation from the beaeh crowd
is another hot day. N0ichanges
Jn precedent·aettlna: heat wave.
Temps to tip lower I0'1.
INSIDE TODAY
A tten-aae northern Cali/orni11
girt tried to make tke 1cmc as
a. hi~t and died in the proccsa.
Pao« 6. -... , ....... ' E . " . ,... '' ---·-c.., • .,.,,... ..... 11 ..... -, .. , . ....,_ ... ,.
Dr ........... , ==--, .. ~ -" -. .... _ . --..
I
.1 OAICY PILOT .
Des,plte Vse Pe1•11dt
Bakery's Yeasty .
Quality -Falling
A plan by a commerclal bakery
compeny to buy a plot ol land ill
clownb>wn Coota Mesa -frosting the
-.., COlllDIUDlty witll some badly
needed developmental dollar• -ma,y
bavo loot Ill yeuty quality.
Oty oftldall are cautiously waiting
to beu whether the Cootinental Bak-
ing Q>. I& willlng to meet conditions
impoee4 on their cake and cookie
depot, aucb. as improvement ol its
aes12>etlc look.
Spokesmen for the firm were beard to make d1m comments on the project
u tlley left a City Council meeting in
which they were granted a conditional
use permit for the plant.
PW'cbase of the never-developed
parCet of Jand at 1810 Park Ave.,
hinges on whether or not the firm will
build anything more ambitious than
the facility origillally proposed.
'Ibat ooe - a concrete block struc-
ture with a comigated metal roof -
failed to generate much enthusiasm
from the Planning Commission and Ci·
ty Council, except for its downtown
economy stimulation.
Continental Baking Co. official
William Reed told' city officials the
bakery will operate 15 Orange Coast
area r~s for delivery of Wonder
Bread and their other products, at its
completion.
Charles Johnson , manager of pro-
pertiea for the Green Estate, wtUch
owns many downtown b u 11 d i a I a
however, urged agai.Dat the bakery
plan
He described it as being almost an
industrial use, rather than com·
merclal, for which the area is now
zooed, and WU joilled iD hia Nnd by
jeweler J. C. Humphries.
Bill Williams, of 3132 Green SL, co-
owner of the land, countered their
claims, saying be bas a good, subl'tlln·
tia1 buyer and a hardship as well,
because no one else wants the land.
He was supported by Wiillam Scott,
of 1809 Newport Blvd., wtio noted the
property bas been on the market for
five years and many dewlopers shy
aw ay due to \Ulcertainty of the
Newport Freeway location.
Spokesmen for the baking company
say they would have to get rid of the
prlme land due to high taxes, when the
freeway is built within eight or ten
years anyway.
As planned, the facility would in·
elude a day-old baked goods thrift
shop, but the firm would have to pro·
vide offstreet parking for customers,
another consideration in the develop·
meoL
Bolsa Aides in Cautious
'
Tack on Airport Report
A cautious, but open approach to the
posaibillty of using the 1,900 acre
Bolsa Chica property along Coast
Highway in Huntington Beach for a
major airport will be taken by the
landowners.
"'It'a an excit.iug proposa1," said
BolA Corporations Vice President
William Garland this morning.
"I can't say whether we will be for
or against the idea until we see the
figures." .
He pointed out that his companies
are land holding corporations and
althougn there has been considerable
* * * Jumbled Airport--
Taxi Situation
Still Jumbled
An eUort to clear up the jumbled
taxicab service at Orange County
Airport resulted in a tie vote of the
Airport Commlrsi.on Tuesday night.
Director of Aviation Robert
Bresnahan recommended calllng of
bids for an exclusive franchise to
P£ovide taxi 1ervice to the airport.
He said criteria had been worked
out with the Real Property Seniices
department which would call for
properly equipped a u t o m o b i l e s .
uniformed drivers and meters. The
high bidder would pay the county fo r
the privilege,
"At prHent we have 10 taxi stands
and the county has no regulations,"
Bresnahan explained. "Anyone who
wants to, C'll1 put a 1ign on a car and
be a tulcab firm. We have had
cOOltant Complaints of overcharges trorit pusenger1."
Commissioners James Gilmore and
Howard Lathrop agreed w i t h
Bresnahan's praposals but a tie vote
resulted when commission chairman
Dennis Carpenter and Leland Launer
voted against the proposal.
M the r~ult of the tie vote.
dresnahan in&cated it would now be
up to the Board of Supervisors to
decide the question. Commllsioner
Roger Slates was absent on vacation.
DAILY PILOT
C:.... M-. CefHwlM
11.tbert N. W114
'"'"""' lh•••• Kee•il ·-Thtlllll A. M11,,hin• Mlflttltnl llllllOf
Joel a. C.,ley P•11I Ni11t11 tue:-1NM1er AoYlrtl111'1t O!rKh:ir .._ __
JJO Wttt ley Street
Midi .. A14r1t11: P.O. leii: 1 s•o t2•26
Ottie. Offlc•• --1 "9UI:. !111 W ... ttool INtv1r• ""'9M M°'Ca o m ,._, •v•-
JIMl1$ .... "9dll M Mb llred
advan~e planning for p o s s i b 1 e
residential and marina developments
on the land, "nothing bas been decided
for certain."
"We'll certainJy take an open
approach to the possibility of using our
land as an airport. but we need to sec
the figcre3 be!ore making any
decisions. It looks like a good location
for an airport, ho\Ye\·er.
"There are too many unanswered
c1uestlons at this time," Garland
pointed out, giving as an example the
question of how much land actually
would be needed for an airport and
whether the land would be the marshy
lowlands or the plateau areas.
In addition to the Bo I s a
Corporations, owners of the land from ant·warner Avenue south to the cJty
limits near the bluffs area on Coast
Highway, Sign81 Oil and Gas Co. has
leases for some 336 oil wells on the
rropcrty.
C. E ... "Bill'' Woods told Ute DAILY
PILOT this morning that the oilfield is
•·too valus.ble to abandon." He said
lh<lt At this point there are "too many
indefinites to be able to say with any
certainty what '"'ould happen if the
sjte is selected for a regional airpart."
He said, however, that it might be
Po-'>sible to group wells·or to take other
1teps to keep the oilfield producing.
The possibility of using tbe Bolsa
lands for an airport may send school
officials b<lck to the studies again.
Huntington Beach Union High School
District currenUy is trying to buy a 5().
acre site on the property for a future
high school and the elementary school
district is eyeing locations for future
schools.
The school planning has been based
on the likelihood of the 1,900 acres
being used for residential
development. Use as an airport could
eliminate most of the need for schools
in the -area. \·
The proposed airport would be just
south of the proposed Bolsa Island
m1clear desalting and power ar:tlficiaJ
island if that project is built. Southern
California Edison Co. already has
indicated it will need a large parcel of
land for switching operations if the
island project goes ahead.
From Page l
AIRPORT ...
ef:e<:tlvely administered o n a
voluntary basis at \Va s h i n g ton
National frport , it was pointed out.
The Washington constraints were
listed as:
-No air carrier may operate to non·
stop destinations in excess of 650
miles.
-AU !our.engine pure jet aircraft
are prohibited from using the alrPort.
Only two and three engine jet aircraft
are allowed and none of these in the
stretch category, nor any of the
proposed airbus configurations.
-The air carriers (13 now uslng the
port) are limited to a combined total
of 40 operations per hour.
-Pure jet operation is prohibited
alter JO p.z:n . and before 7 a.m. This
pure jet ban applies to private
corporate jets as well as air carriers.
The report urged that the county
negotiate these constraints at the
earliest posi;ible date. ..
A moratorium on all zoning cftanges
in the Sarrta Ana Heights area la ursed
''until lta relat.lonshJp to the airport Is
clearly defined and new atandards are
drawn up."
J 2bless Rate Riaes
WASttINGTON (AP) -Th< nation's
jobless rate rose three.tenths of one
perctnt in June wttlle the ctvlllan
labor force topped eo mllllon workers
f« the fir1t time, the 1Abor
Deoartment rmnrted todav.
•
'
L•
Recipe for Relief
--......,
Marines Capture _Arsenal
From N. Viets in DMZ
SAIGON (UP!) -American
MarlMs captured a regimentaJ.sizeJ
arsenal from North Vietnamese forces
they drove back loto the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ), the U. ::;, command
reported tod~y. Communist gunners
shot down a U. S. jet nearby and a
Navy pilot bagged a North Vietnamese
MIG just above the MDZ.
Tht battle Tuesday around the
Marine Base at Con 'lbl.en along the
frontier between the two Vtetnams
wu the-latest in a series of figbt.s that
some generals believe may escalate
into a full-scale Communist oUenslve
timed with a new attack on ~algon.
American headqlW'ter~ said the
Marines fighting just north of Con
Thien killed at Iemt 22 Nortb
Vietnamese in the force of about 200
men while suUering no casualties
themselves.
The Leatbernecks uncovered 242
bunkers, three tons of rice, 300 rounds
Costa Mesa Man
Faces Court in
Newport Assault
A 29-year-old Coata Mesa man
charged Monday with the bludgeoning
or a Newport Beach waitress was to
be arraigned today iD Newport·Harbor
municipal court.
lils victim, an 18·year·old brunette
employed by the Jolly R o g e r
restaurant, remains ln satisfactory
conditlon... today at Hoag Memorial
Hospital, LWbere she wu taken after
the attack with cuts on both hands, the
face and forehead.
A hospital spokesman said the young
woman had a good night and w.as able
to eat brealdast today.
Bail was to be set at tbe
atTaJgnment of Rlcbard Lloyd Rhodes,
2726 Drake St., Costa Mesa, who was
arrested on a charge of assault with a
deadly weapon.
of a2·mllllmeter mortars, 700 rounds
of 6()..milllmeter mortars, 2 5 . 8 O O
rounds.of.small arms ammunltioD, 266
rocket-~pelltd grenades an'd piles of
light macb1ne guns and rtfles. The
cache included large quantities of
uniforms, boob, . wire i:ud field
telephones.
,.,._ Pqe l
COUNTY.~.
must take the meaures necessary to
prevent the growing air traffic at
Orange County airport from caus..Lna:
. further.damage to the.community.
"Three or four years from now, Uno
control ls exertise<t there will be
between 150 and 250 jet takeoffs daily
as opposed to the. present 20," he
warned.
He Jald other .federally-controlled
airports around the country had taken
steps to pre.vent jet flights at certain
times of the night. "You can tell the
. Federal Aviation Admini!tration that
needed expansion Of the airport will
not take place until the FAA permits
the county to place reasonable and
effective limitations on its use," be
advised.
Emory warned that lawsuits against
the county will continue.
"They will exceed $10 million within
several weeks and go much higher
before the Sept. 1 deadline," he
warned. "I suggest that You look upon
these lawsul~ as a healthy incenUve
to the early completion of the new
.airport and as a sUmulus .to restmng
local coMz;pl over the exirtiDg airport
in the interim."
He concluded with a final threat.
"Under these conditions I think it will
be possible to establish a spirit of
wary cooperation between this board
and the residents of Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa. I say wary because
we have received promises from this
board iD the put and they .,..,..
broken."
Take several square yards of well-chilled ocean, add one generous
portion of Sea Sprite like Paula Rempalski and you have a tall cool
one -Paula lo be specific -without even shaking well. The pretty
Fullerton miss who journeyed to the Harbor Area to take the waters
\Vas doing just that -shaking -as she slipped deeper into the nippy
sea. Others from the simmering inland followed her to the coast,
seeking relief from the cunent heat wave.
He allegedly attacked the girl in
front of her home shortly before
midnight Monday, as she w a s
returning home from wor-k.
He beat her on the head several
times with a fo¢·long wrench he was
carrying, police sald, and when the
girl began screaming, he tried to get
away.
A latecomer to the airport wars also
had his say Tuesday. Al Jarvis Of TV
and radio fame said he was speaking
for h.ls neighbors in Vista Bahia, in the
Newport Upper Bay area.
"Five homes are for aa1e and there
never were homes on . the market
before. At 7:20 a.m. we were
awakened by a jet ta.king off and there
wu a repeat performance 30 minutes
later.
From Page l
Her father came out of the house
and gaye chue, poll~ said. The
suspect allegedly got into his car,
atartid to leave the scene but cruhed
into a nearby fence. He waa sitting
behind the: ate,ep.ng w.beel,when police
arrived. He w~ not injured .
"We are losing our individual
righta," the entertainer continued,
"with the development of airports and
their effect on very fine homes. ICE BOX TAKES 2 LIVES • • •
the youngest.
A neighborhood search, including a
check of the nearby grocery store,
failed to turn up any trace of the boys,
and Ran1os was called .home from
\'.·ork to help in U1c hunt.
Investigators said Salvador's father
remembered tihe icebox wittl a sick
suspicion when Leticia Rodriguez, 13,
sister of the baby-sitter, said
neighborilood youngsters had looked
everywhere.
Police and fire department rescue
squads were dispatched to the scene
after Ramos found the two small
bodies, but it wrui too late to save
them.
TI\elr mothers \', Cl'e summoned
home from w<rk ~d eff-orts are
under way today to find the Rubio
boy's father Jdln, reportedly an
unemployed cbemical worker last
known to be in the Live Oak area.
The Rubio family had lived in the
apartment complex on the crest of a
hW in La HQbra for about ttiree years
and the children played together like
one big family when the Ramos'
recCntly arrived. They are a 11
in1migrants from J\.texi~.
A former tenant of the apartment,
holrs. Juanita Portillo, said the
refrigerator was turned to the wall
and left in the garage -whose door
was wired shut -to be junied wtien
they left.
Ramos, however, had left the
garage open Tuesday after workJng on
hJs car inside.
Under California's 1 o · c a 11 e d
"Charles Houghton Law," it is
misdemeanor offense punishable by a
S50 fine or fi ve days in jail to keep an
abandoned icebox or refrigerator
without removing latches and Jocks.
La Hat."a Police Sgt. Ronald
MeehaD said he does not know it any
Frona Pflfle l
CABLE ...
airline has no intention to . "push U1e
point." with Golden West. "We fe el we
need good, atrong c o m m u n t e r
carriers."
Instead. Myers 5-Wd he hopes to
resolve the Jssue by dealing with the
PUC ~nd CAB.
I-le said one remedy would be for
Cable to secure M federal injunction
against any PUC comme.nd grounding
Cable flights. The question would go
into the courta for a detenn.lnaUon.
Another posslbillty would~ be for
atate Jegtslaton to take commuter
aircraft regulation out of the the
PUC'• contn>l.
MY•l'I said a bill now 11 pending ln
sacramento to take c o m m u t e r
carrying plaMs under 12,500 pounds
out of PUC jw1sdJetJon1 leaving the
CAD a clear path for regulaUon.
Both Cable and Golden West are
ftylng twin-prop OU«a welrh!nl under
12.SOO POtlnds.
citation will be issued in the Tuesday
tragedy, due partly to a question of
O\\'TI.ership.
The alleged weapan, which was
picked up at the scene, is held at the
Orange County crime lab.
' • "It is a m'oot polnt," be added. "Why
all this, progress if tfndfvidualJ are
made unhappy. Do we really need this
progress?"
OUTDOOR
LIVING IS A WAY
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OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTY!
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for '68 ••. everything to malie outdoor rolaxotion a
family pastime.
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Planned for either Iorgo or small homes ••• mobile
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OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW
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}
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t. co111,i.1111nt e"y 1tyl1 ef erd1rt.dun. Co•1tl.tte _...., preftt!IH .. ,....ct
wilue4 •~,.n.• .,., l111111lhtn9t. Ifft el •A ••• et '""' A111 Tell'I "4 AW11l11t 1" -'-1' ~·'"' .. _"., •• ire. ••• ..,..,y, <1111kk ....... "' to•,.. ... ,...'"'1
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Nothing D.c.orol•• lik~ Canvas. ltovliful New Cokln
" New fobr,fet. for horn et •• , for bu1ine11I
MANUPACTUUD • llllfA119
SANTA ANA TENT
....i AWNING co.
fACJOIY SHOWllOOM
2202 S. MAIN SJ., SANTA ANA
141·0491
lllANCH OPflCI
OUllGI COUNTY AWNING CO,
Senrln• Nottft Onrn•• CHflf'y
417 I. HAii-, fUUIRTO• ""'" 179·•71ll ,,,_ 6 alll .. 714 ___ __,_ .............. ,,.,, .... .,.,
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.-W-, Juli 10, 1968 DAILY PILOT jJ
: Yat.r MOtaefl'•· lfortla , • '
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OVER THE COUNTER
NAsD Li1t1"11 for Twoday, july f, 1161
Deferring Bonus May Help
You Escape Tax Surcharge IHOV>T• .... r·-"'= .N.-r.: ··~-"::
' ~':ifp,,:"l~ -;11 "ll 'jl Jjllj lilt ii"~~'" ff-[ !k By SYLVIA PORTER
(Lut ol a IOrlet)
The lmmiDeDI 1ncreue In
incqme taxes 'underlines
the wisdom of figuring
ways to cuab.lon the impact
of the bigger burden and
Ibo of reviewing overall
technlqu., o1 mlnlmlzlnc
the income tu blow,
With the aid o1 Leon Gold,
chief tax expert ol tho
Research ln.rtltute o t
America, I have compiled
these vital hints.
-IF YOU expect to
receive a substantial bonua
or pay tuke later this year,
It might be sound tu
1trategy to UTange to defer
some or all of the amount
beyond 1969 .. The surtaz. ls
scheduled to be off entirely
by 1970 and II the Vietnam
war ls ended, regular rates
may be IOwer by then too.
A deferred compeuatioo
plm will psy of! to tbo
ezten·t that the
cor.ipensattoo can b e
deferred until It will be
taxed at lower rat.es.
-If you expect a higher · income in 1969 and are
thlnkJng of shifting some or
all o( it into 1968 to pay at
lower tax rates,
reconsider. It well may be
econornically unsound and
the reason is that while you
would save some taxes,
you also would have to pay
the lower tu a full year in
advance.
At current steep interest
rates, what you would lose
in interest {or profits) by
laying out this tax monet a
year earlier will
substantially reduee and
could easily erase your
anticipated tax savings.
MAKE YOUR clocl&lon on
ah1ft1ni income on these
grounds: your e1timate of
income your need for
mocey: the amount of
polSible savings; t be
bualneu problem lo
arrangln& an income 1hl1L
-U you're a busltleasman
coacerned about boldlng
your key u.ecut.1ve1 aad
etn1>loye1 In view ol tho
higher tu burdu oa their
incomes, weigh eahancing
their frlnl• benollta. These
are either tu~1.empt, tax·
deferred or pnftreotfally
taxed and become
I n c r eutngly 'attractive
when taxes go up. Here'• a
lilt Of top frloge benefits
you may want to adopt:
(1) Group term life
insurance which you, the
employer, pay for, may be
tu.free to your employes
up to tt!0,000 . eacb of
coverage and you
can deduct the premiums :
(2) MEDICAL and d<ntal
expemu of your employe
and hll family can be
reimbursed tu-tree by you
under a medical
reimbursement plan while
you, the employer can
deduct the reimbuisement payments~
(3) Qualified pension and
profit sharing plans, though
they must be set up on a
non-discriminatory basl1,
enable a portion of your
employe's compensation to
be tax-deferred and set
aside where it w J 11
accum ulate . income tax·
free·
( 4) 'Sick pay under a plan
can be received tu-free up
to certain amounts ;
(5) EXPENSE accounts
SOFT DRINK INDUSTRY
A REFR£SHING INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
can provide fringe benefits :~~rii,f,~1111t Jli fft' ,{\1 'I ' ~:£ ii'c 15 ? =
wtiede• the)'nd are property t1~y~11 nc •• 1W, ~"' \~ ,,.,_ , t:4'il" ~rd ,,-. 1fi lr: lt
US a IUpported by :ru:: Prwwt : Ml 11,, nW. ~ ~7'11 rr:e,':iJ_4.,0!'• .U ,.m ~\',»~
proper roconlS; ~i t"r,1\1::, ' -~~ n~ m < -1\ 'iJ""'11."' >!ti Ill ~'":lo t"r-,\~M .m, sf,~ q:
(6) ComblnaUon business· ~ 'll'Pt'r: 1j__'a 101 11'\.\ : r r"DI'· r 1~ W•r!W a;;.~.:w r ell'~ pleasure trlpt can be the .-.E:H\'rli.:9 :it."' :: tr' " f r1 .f'• 1 , v. q ~:a11 '"hi 1 .... ,, 11~.
eqUivalentot.,PUUally tax· ~kbr"'l•if.~:a fJ n~ i~ .. , l~iT.. ::V:.~4i'Av~c· 1 11&'"1
deductible vacations: =r.:::r:-.. ~~ 4~ .t• ~ll!::;!:F.~ ... 1" ·~ bu !!:i:i.i;ovS-;. "" • i" ""j•
(7) Comp11>7 cars, planes, ~;;;;:,,<r~t.!. uo ?fa' '!.! ~~or.:.i i:::i• ,m ii ,r.; ~::I:~~·"• "' ! jl: I
bot ti, etc. lJIO CAD be the r~~=1~ llf' ' lJ" ft~ r ~l\.ltf A ti) !tt m !E~ 'rt'lormMI l' h~ ~ ·~ o~taJ.-deductible ~.·,11~.'=~ ~ n fi,. ~ ~r:'~Co I~ Ir'~ ~m~~ 'r,""' ,, .... 1•1: ~' pclreas er pr.op e r ~~~~"! c~.,.. ,... J f.!~ tf" r: ,.... ,, 21 ~ ~Jta:t: f 11! P. l:t
C I and With • llu I.It 3' '1 l'ldwtr Tl'°' '' ,.. ~ S ttf ~ 11"' 1:"' 1••
rt!. ~ .. vc11o1ron • 11 Vt 11 .,,.. .,. j •• , ~'l ~ ,. '!~ IUppo ng records. Allton'letlon 1111111 '° " Jt I • ,, ~ IAl 1 '-&.s'~' N co H •• f IF YOU'J;t.E ln a hlgh A~uhimtotl~ ~-· •' lGJ /OS ~Zlu:~: h1 I a ' W.Mllf' i u1Ji .u" 15 ... , 10
tU bracket, you'Jl ffucl aD ~fl<lf~~ n~ i ~t r1AA.i ~~r~tl I V. d~ 12; ~~"'\~ tit• t;. It~ \:~ ~
mveatment 1n tax.exempt :uty1 s-=;~ ·'° ft" ~ u: :itT l:t: (¥ " ~~. J~ ~2!\\ •~~~~~ ~iw~r'~ Al i!~\ 11·~· 'Ira State and, municipal bonds =lr:~.~itO, lf,, 1, .. ••II ~I _{fin Co I ™ !Int lf'lellln Fl,._n 2 1•
partlcul I _,,., I"°"' c _ " .,. Hl v.. "'i•• f '11\ \t•I rerv C0<1 1 Ill.lo 1l ar y ap~g DOW It c' SI~ ·'° '° 20\'> 2• ~ 1(.·2? " '° . '!~'"~'ft Fiii ltio "" --mote 10 because yields =Js.•I Pr.-ru ~ I' fl Korw:i. ~lw (t ~lt :~ f!U :~ltis':v ~141.11·1.!.o ll" ill! im on tax-exempts are •t or -~ :i.rrri ... u1tt •2'• ~t; ~~:.tr, ••1'"-"' '°" ~ Y9f•I!: F111 cor11 ~~ "Ji'.\ 2"
close to historically high :e..i:r.~c;.~J:: .1~ 1 'i,,. T" Jn ftdr~.1Mf.),;'° ttU y~ th::;-L;i~·r~JNcr: sr1it~": '
level!. Here is what you 1~wl':do,::'\, ""' 2'v. Jv.~n ,~, ~~1• ~f1•10J.,. ts ~'!-&.::,·:01.toDf {~ ~ f·r--------------------,..'--would have tO earn OD fully ~~umi Inc .7' fl U\.\ ~ nlm .. ltAJ~::' lo'° ~ C ti wt O~~~ ~~~· ~:IA\
11
, -\6 l~ f,~ taxable 1-om• to match Euillf~!i,ltln l .U n~ n"' n trrold Corp I ,,,. •• 11, Mat Ir. 0 .:I' :m 14\.11 13W. u.,.-. l lif Portld Ctm 1,5t U >I U JV~lfft Gr« .2S ~ ,,.. a· O 0 -~,. '" the 1988 after.tu yield 1Uf W•"'• Scrvlu' I.st fi" ti\~ ,,.,, Jtt Alr Frtltflf j Va ~ 361,\ ... ~ ... ... ~ ~ from~ exempts !:,i\f~'Uo..M n~ r"'j 1=1::~ 11:1~1M ir"'•, \( 70 ~:-y·3~ \~1v1~llf• 1jl\ !l • DTl'd'I nc: • 1 71'1 4' 1m1~ .CorP \Ill r i\~Vt°1:1.l11T.r~it11: ,IQ 14\l b l4 ~~ Tu-1,... •~ Yltfll • 11>1111 R••r~ cL • I 41'1 ,,...., l!I l"wr 2.U ~ubb Ofll 1.50 , 46 0 ~ ... .,.,. ..... ~ u, ... ,,.... E' 'S ·"-~r:· ., '' " ,._.. CIMHrlllM ....... ..._. ",.~v P"'"•llFI °" l,(i l6 entvdly rr Cl!. .10 ll" " rn-nc 1 " 46"'-.., ._ti ...... llht ..... Ill""" E1111J11Htll'G ~ 111 Fd lJD 1!, ~ '1~ltl & 2!a P,lil i!J at tead nu, A B I l,(i I tt'h ro " J~ N Ii n ~-r':f l.lJ l1'~ ll1 1j\;
•11::: !:."" ~ :::-4 'if:::mVJH:1i '~.~t lf'' 1m: 4 e=. rut"" 1ir ~ 31 ,n:~.~o °'""' , l'I J\t !C' •
io.a .. , ,.. ,, 1111 Dvnemka 12'11 ~·~o cvon.11 lm ~ ,..•rm.n O!!..w,,M"i'° t!l'I '°
RU,t Fears Reshape
Insurance Structure
2S1D 7,S 1.2 t:o !?..,, Co~~~ 1;• tll'i iU: rA~•Y• • l'~cO,."""t f fl n,,,, 2t V.
•,oao t .J 10.S ll.4 O/We1f"co .J 111 1J 11 j l'I ..-. ~iif' ~JM ,'," 3 ~ 1, ~!.[l/nwrt 'l,~",l:"-4J• ~,, .. ", NEW YORK (uPl) -The -.000 lt.O 1U 14.• om ttr Equl""'t H:U. 17t 6441 t:~i1 'F'Oou, .ll ,,. '" TITi.., "" .. v U ,. 11't
c ....... .,.. ......... "'""*" Roc:lll"roc11 .• u 21 1v. •viM ••owierM !', !J ''·~ ~~r~ 1~,1~ 31~n 'v.32J t1prea4inc property in· u., "" m,mo 5."" '-"" 1.~ _, '""'•• . .f5 1 n.t. 1 L~J" ., ~. :ao,., \Ind Arnwk • cos 1.sg 5o>.lo ~' .ftv.. 1urance controv . .,.1 created VP IG m.aoo wllll rtteenf Tech 4\, Jt .. t ~~rt G~A GtMriol lllf'"ll'IS J 2" 2 ..
'"' .,..1..., • s ,_, 7 , fis.., '°"' 1NoO "'4 14 ~ Ell : s'l'Oi ' '° 111 ns nt Kariover t' .. 2.20 .. \Ar .a by the milliOM ol dottars in
°'«• sH.ooo t.s 10,1 11',1 ~I: ~..J:~" L•ll lf.... lm 1= Ls s~f"D 1 ore,.4I 11 " "1" :1111 H•rtlord Ire 1 .. s'l4u•• ~~c~ civil riots damage 111· ~. Long.term capital gains tl'li.me1 t • .o 21. .P ll"' '°"'rue tc ~""°"'-w ~,.: T • '"'20 " 211 '""
b ~i.u1 c .Pclnl • ~ .:i M.crodvne • ff :n l5 1 ia\ If L1i. 10 .... nv. iov. past year is re5h., .... 1 .. g the e come increasingly Jc nna~ Ji 1s 1W' 151 Metn•~·MeYlol• H"' 11 13"' }' J: Sid Ljf• .to ~ffi •1 1'1 '° ..,..... valuable, obviously. F01 , 1'tS' l!ec:ironlm r,.,. ?lv. fl :..iilinckr:.ff1!~~. tt\i Ji ~r' t:i:l:Ji~ k~~n·ru. ~"'° ~«'VJ fl"" whole insuranee ltructure.
individual taxpay«S, one· ....,,, 1"1: • • 71'" 11'1 7111 ~~mr~~==-~11~ 29 }"" Mtin c ur.. u 14v. v. ?J In the last few months, ball f th McLNn ,'!!' ~ ffl !l;:Mt.'.~V~~·.a !m ' ~~ .,.,_,. bu•ine•am~n' 0 e long·t~rm. M~111FMUntt !7 ,. ffliil :rtT~~L,.r,.tt• i2~ 31" ~-·J oapital gain ls exempt from ~l:i ,.1f•~1111 .20 J:' l~ l" N•~••"'m it. IM j,. 1~1t. 12" municipalities with property
tax. The taxable half is Paper Deal =1~c:11,.1::i S\'I ·" :::., "' ~=: Z-L11ec ... 10 , ~ 1$~ lJ .... homeowners and mu·
taxed at fhe regular rates, =-p~:u= ~-en %2~ ~:: Id ~~ltt IJ~ '°l' )t>,li DfcipelitieS W 1 i h property
except that the rate can't HARTSVILLE, S.C. (UPI) !f!tS'i snf9m1 • t! tt22~v. ~~=.~~n~• 1L1'• • ,rv. ~ ,!1 1n the ghettos NJ<! what. the
exceed 53.75 percent in -Sonoco Products co. bas tl:~'lc·~ cf n"" th~ ff)2 =~~~!,~1'-1• ,4~14 '5~ u" insurance industry ca 111
1968, 52.50 percent in 1969 made an agreement to:~ ~i 11,'/,QO ~l "' nv. ~\~ & f•til ..... ~IF~ Joi~ ~\':I S~fft "rfot·prone &reU" b 8 Ve
and back to 50 percent purchase Downtngtoo Paper~. ~,~lrilnel JJ1,,. '~ ),],,. ~~,5' Ni irt 20.,.. 213m been met with abrupt policy
thereafter. Co. for an tmdiscloeed aum. ~,J;en1, Air ."'i.o11 1 11~ 1f ,:,..'t'lt. £fS :,. .t:. .r~ .t, ~·· re n e 11 a I For corporations, the Soooco manuEactures paperi~ill'll"rnc ... o 1ia~ 2~t. )l!~111'Tn~Ani111.«11 a oit .a~ refulalt and e1orbltaot
straight maximum rate is and pla&tle products, while ~,. ,M,•,•,•1 ·0575 .ffll lffi fr" r~:~~1·~~ 1... 21~24"21 aurcb · ~ 5 "" 11 l I.II 12 un11911 '"* Co Am .IO ~ 3114 :If "''. percent for '68, 26.25 DO'wnington makes paper ~:Cbl' :~~ j \'t 'tU uni.... Trvu Lii• io 1gv. ~ e aotloos follow a
perceot. for '69 and back to box board and f o Id i ng rz •,.c: erK1lr\C.O ~ 4n 1' 8f tW. c;~g· i..o ''~,,.' ~ .s" '150 mmlon tab for T'r,_..ru
25 t the all tt ,,, .. , Illa. 2-'0 .Q>A1 ~Volk f f\'I t I"' ~r-• •J percen re er. cartions. :~ =:-" ·': i:rr-14'-' ls" ~~y. .. ~~,. r' , ltt damage handed l.murance ~:<=~:\ ~~ .... °" Im ttl'I ,hi, 1111 .. ,. E0AsTERN BANKS 7¥1 companies following riotl tn
P•IQl'ft•• Motto"' m ~-ff' ~,.."'. Trust J.'O it: •n~ 1""' h .... ...+ year. They ~ect M S p '1(Yi.w G«n .:13 \Ii 111,itr NY Ci 1.10 .U'IO ~61'1 i--~I t • lt • ,.:ultn:•J.ru!m"' ~ 1" v. h'T1 ~"l c~ ~·~ , 11 ~"' ~ the alarm of insurance com· as er pecia ies l=.,p.~l~·.~~-\0 R7y,, Fnl U:1 !1~Cllf t '',. •211i,.,,•1n panles· who have re~x· l'uM« of NM .;o ,: "' Fr•nk"n H•! fl~ NY l.)Q .a? '°"" '° amlned the hundreds of
aura.nee policies, which In·
eludes riot<aUled dama&e
and conoequent looting, tlley
used computers, not cryltal
balls.
'Ibey never foresaw tbe
possibility, for imtance, that
they would have to d<al wllh
"target risks" in t b 1 o
particulw area. T • r g e t
risks usually involved en·
t.rtaJn,mont pononalltlec
wbooofur1 and lowelrJ' ~
mere than the uaual atten·
tion from thieves, or less
than. the u 1 u a 1 amOUDt
of proper c.n. But caretµI
study of recent riots ahowtd
·that certa·tn· re·tall
-lllhmento In the ~
lol cir..,. more altenll?'
from rloten and loot.ta
than otiiero -probably
beca.,. ol IOl!IO "91 or, IJll·
'1lined cuirtomer grievances
over the year•.
COVERAGE -S.I• of IOft drinks have nearly doubled In uch decad•
since 1880
-Aiding the boom 11 the n1pid Increase of the youn1er pn·
eration which Is the largest consumer of these product•
-Ptr capltl consumption in both domestic and for1l1n
marketa his risen dramatically over the past ye1rs
• Rldcor (or> ., ID\t Mf~ lill!OY•f TM! 29 ~ '4\:o '3? mlHI f do"--orth f
N N Rtv•" Irie • ,.,. ' t:'f'r: ,su~· ... ' llr' 'I"' 11.J"' oos o 'u.cu" w o Thll f t« al . ed. . anies ew Managers iiSi.~:! ·11 ~-~ it '"'~"'"r't'"" "~!.l 'II'."' :::r:.rllcl: :y~-~ -1ome ~apln'~ c;.,~cy •::r:-. • H l • "" ~::I: ::I ~·"'1 ». ' 4 • ,l: ~ covera1e. And there ore R et 11. ... trCl'I , ~; ,. k ol r°'-~~ S~ c1tf r, ,'°", l. t ~ "ll Mf1I 1 ~ "', "' ~ tn1IMl1 v1nev e .20 l 1t BOTH PAYING otben that may have o
-Master Specialties Co., components will continue to ~rfn~7':1-:-_:.m 20 11...11"'~~ g'11~119,fi"kk .to ui\"1,Jv.,..:l'I 'lbe' difficulty b that wait tor court verdictr. 'Ibe
-New eonvenlent packaainc concepts are supplemanted by
more aareaslve advtrtisln1 and promotion•! proenims
-Low Calorie beverages repreaent a dyn1mlc new Mita .....
There are m1ny additional features which 1ive the Soft
Drink Industry appe11Jn1 intermediate and lon1·term
1rowth prospects ••• Writ• today for a compllmtntlry CoP)'
of the lattlt issue of INVESTOR'S DIGEST contalninc a
complete analysts of the Soft Drink Industry and high·
J11htln1 attractive Investment opportunities.
LESTER, RvoNe & Co.
-• ..,· '-',_,., s;., 191l
M[Ml[llS HlW VOllK STOCK CXCH.-.NGI!:
l'1cillc Co11I lltck [ad1ens• • A,.,trk ln Stock (•(hense
Nime·~-----------~ Address ___________ _
CitY•------------
Stllo, Zip Code
WALKER & LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
154 homes sold
June 23rd·30th
because service ia our name I
Tlii 1M to Hi is II Wah & lee
-W-6<71 --9'10022
. •
1!2222JT4 ....
IEJJ DWT~ -m•
•
Costa Mesa, manufacturer be handled by the com-udl•r ~· • '"" " fi~~ens7111.• 1r"" ,r""' ,J'' neither the Insurance com-l~g created a few.
I I , •r""' Alndu• l&Vi 11 i.-. I' rd ll"~retloft , Jl"" W' 1~ I •~ · ""' B ••-•~--·•• 0 .~ sion information pany I OEM sales force Nnt'llii T~tol'I~ "1" 1""1 p,.. fL ... ' IKVN~r if l.so i"J141 r!tto '1J"' pan ~ nor wri;; F...9»9· ·~ ur..-J CU1Uul ,.,... .... :e
dispJay and control dev1ctl, .and the network of .tocking Scatt.,,t. ~If '·* a li~'° rm=~ btnk 11,, .,_ m owners caused tbe damage, pro.of of f~ced. .,.. BUt
b · · !::.~, •-• 21!1'~!"nll'""" """ "' • b!ltbothatepoylnl(fat.lt. It much <I the tllelt'from the a1 divided IU product line distributors formed during ~D c.,. I B~ ~ ~vi~rr.--fr3i>1t t i•'' l~ 1; may be argUed tha't the Jn. · ~nt rlota W.-Committed
into two groups and ap· the last year, while systems k7;,~~, cis°' lil ,,,"" ~~ftf 1~r1N\11 .;.i ;,: l'"' #J 1 u ·r·~ n c'e companJes. are bf ~rsom en~( at.ere•
pointed managers for each products will be sold orily by Uii 3'!{,1:1n /i Ji,,,. ~n rf:i~~8a\c,• .eo 111a 1 ,-.reneging because the Ir through window1 broten by
produot group, accord.Ing to the OEM sales force. 1 8,rlll ne .e:t 4 1'1 ......,11 =Vi uf~,f·~J ·f.' ~i\,v, ~ fJ: bUJtness has s u d·d en I Y others not nec..w1arl1y
Jerold H. Tuft, marketing Gilligan has been in the w c~ll"dl~!:e"I ,,.., ,,. f : lj~ ~11~v"N!\''°"D::.'~.l' «; li1l! = grown unprofitable, but that looters. And so mercantile manager MSC ctro-•m n :i 321-'1 ttv. ACF-wr str cvou72 'f ' " •ort of thing doesn't get o-st~k bur••·-· -""'•• james ·A. Car....,nter has marketing group slnce ~ny rr"~ c.111111 1:~~ 1114 ,~v. ~~c1e~vr:i/l:1Wi~ . J1 141 ur · ,........ .,.. -J ~
been .ppol~~ :::..ager or 1966. He WI& formerly 0. l•te '.2! ·~!Ion , .. d 9v; .-.nan'J Dftit CY(\1$1? ~~'s ,, 7Yto policies written. And it must be extended to include i1~ •• -..... contract administrator for f:f:.rir~att~s 1n~ ~ J~ E#:~".tt:u~!Yf~,, /a iii doem't help those who are a theft endorsement -at
group which will ha v' DoWney 11m•r ind" M 13\6 '" Env "' 111'> ,,',',,
72
,,,',',~ areas abd remoVe .a prtme cover, the lituJtion. a new comp«ents product Norlh American AviaUon, 11=1 JI:. 11, tM lf"'• ~cfi'v s~4\7t.t 121 1H trying to rebuild gtietto additional premium -to
-po..,·billty over the om . -·~ 'IL 1 1'1 Dntro1 o.11 cvw. of ~ ~~ N ·-:C • Carpenter's beck-ound '"", 1 , ,, rod!....Clilten1 4. ., catpe •.ne l"lVUog. o one Probably the 'blgillt a:·
pany'1 line cf l ii ht e d · eo =" 0 ·" " ffit •• w"' F -sv.i 79 r. U waiU to li1vect Jn ~ uea amples of ~i of the pushbutton switches, lighted includes tux years a 15 r:U~ .. hri.3.& '·'° 1n 1(k'14 ,.!"" ~==~;'" C:v3\.n i4 Jts without guarantee that the insurance wfructUre are tn ~ind· t • ....;..1 ~t mar.i:etJ.ng 1ervices=.:.;.i,11c..,, ~~~ 1 ·µ,~~~rrtf'~~!{J~~'' ~! 11: P in be WUl\4 1ca ors, ~g e 11w1 • manager for MSC. Tua. cir,:1t• caro,a w. o; tto1iv suo•r cv""'3 HZ 'fu vestment can pro-the date and federal lealJla· ches and other i:elated com· T•ll:•~ ic.11 1 lfollfllo'I COFll StM " ~ ii tected. · .u0n p·-·' -~•-con· Tlllrm _, ,liit \4i 17 •Yi MIU'll COii C•• cv.fluQ IO IOI ~ UDl.ll:l" ponents pro,duced f o r j'"'E 2N 21 ".c °""'' Ao -61 14 ., •s When -~·.,.1-determl 11deratlon to ... ,. 1et ·~ lild ~I and ll•rt urou11 '' IM4 11\.'J 171'1ultY Pt! 5~11' 11' 111 llt ...,..u ,..,. • ........, w""
aerospace, UoY1a r~.l!C 1! ,I''" .mR~11~·~11~c;,6':77 "•1 tJ,. "" ned the rat.ff for.extended property Jnlurr.nce policy commercial applicaUon. ,..,d co~ 21 1Ai i l!ll ~rll!V Marl cv 61 11 1e. '°" pr ......... ..+v coverage in fire in· machinery g .... i ..... again .
J L Gillig h ...... _ Trenteqnl 011 l'I" I ~ Okvo lhlb1vr1 c~I J! " U o_:_..,.-.:.:._:...;"':.,.:.;.._:;__.;:._.:..c _____ ..:_::._""""..:_;;_ __ erry • 8D as L'n"n l''Ck= .;rrnlt ID? f\.'I f w.·~ °1Jf~ ~~~Uf UI 1il 1ll I' muned to manage the new ,.~ , .u•n VI tt" w!Y1t l'•rtt0 )\lo• ~ 10 to system• product gro up J~~fl: ,•-~,' .:. is" ,,u~u_ whlittMr c'M~tiAL .. u~f;'ll »• "'
which will conceatrai. on i'?c:' ~.':g lf~ lfjl 1t .... O~fl~nt Miit Fil ,'· 1Jf~ 1!:1:
t.be development and union i~;; M•t ·'° 1-lll ~~ m v.;.;Jri\111 Miii Fd 1i 11.61 1 .s.i
mar'ketlng of varlouo lault
waming, alttra!t warnmg,
and m~ caution system•
!or mllltary, !ndustrlal and commercial use, tnctudlng
the recently announced au d lo-visual amnmciator
5Y1tem1 that c o m b t n e
prerecorded voice mesnges
with visual indication.
Tuft said the markelin1 d
LEGAL NOTiCE
•
• Mutual Funds
1:1--J--
Southland Business .
{-Eases Off May Pace
Soutbml Cal if or n I a
butlnesa ectMty remained
notably brisk dlrq JIXlt
but Hied Olf the N<Ord
pace Ml In M•Y, 0. C.
Adami, mana1er ol
Security Pacmc NM!onal
ll<ulk'1 Colla M.,. brlll<:I>,
reported~.
E1tlrnatad ol 178.4 on tile
bank'• iodex of buslness
acUYIQ', perlor,,,.nco In
Juno was U poroont hlJ!>et:
U1llO in June, 1887, but
1il&tllly ~ than In Moy' •
-a record bllh ot l'lt.e
WU 1.1tablllb1d. A
previous ~ et 171.7 -r-tor April. ( M 01 ' 1 unprecedented
economic climb w a 1
larfll7 ottribulablo I o
unuoually 1hoal>Ja
lncroaoeo ln -clHrlnCJ and dllstm.1nt 1 tori
lalal, A.dame ._tad.)
Raal -lo ..... *11•11:1
increased durinl J. 0 ••
partally • II • I • I tins •
dtcllnl In bank cJoorlop.
Among other d the blex'1
Individual compclllOllll; oU
<I wine~ 0<• adjuled for
$ e a10 Dal tlUcbatlau,
de~t•IOn-d
coollnlctlon a c ti Y 117
.-al Moy-.
'Emp!o,ment d t c I la a d
&Iring May, tllo latosl
moatb tor which ftcure•
are awilable. Emp1ored on the ......,,, atn1•
metropoll&.ln w•t• wre
4,'7f.to0 --10,toO
i.w.r lball 111 April; -a nccnl nmnber ol 4,885~IOll
Wiii •mp Io ye d. M91 empJo,-. botreVor, WU ;,~>:!'.:!
1-l~~o(
'·' percaot ln. -·• llm•, lttbo ___ ,, u.,..-.-,,
•••
·-· .-.
DAILY PILOT EDlTOBIAL PAGE
Help fQr a · l(id • ID Need
Where does a youngiler go In Orange County for
!:J.d1th problems of druc abuse or other btbavioral
twnent!
There are private psychiatrists and psychologists,
ol course, but th~y're expensive and the family may
not have the funds.
· There is the Orange Countx Child Guidance Clinic
In Costa Mesa, but it bas a waiting list of 100.
But, somewhat amazingly, there is no provision !or childi9n 16 or younger with behavioral problems to be
admlttod lo county faciliUes unless they are admitted
to the community health center as part of a family uniL
The story last week ol a pilot program to help
bridge this stark deficiency was (::ood news, at least for
the Laguna area. It is an expenmeut worth watching
by every other cemmunity in Orange County.
The Assistance League of Laguna Beach has fur-
nished the meeting place for the weekly clinics and
$4,000 lo help fund the program.
Dr. Louis A. Gottscbauk, chairman o( the depart·
men! of P5Ychlatry and human behavior at the UC!
school of medicine, has, along with other staff psychia·
bilts, donated his time for the counseling.
lt is available to youngsters up to the age of 18
with approval of parent or guardian. The parents of
participating youngsters may join in to learn the whys
of drug abuse and the generation gap.
uwe focus our counseling at just these problems
and not trying to restructure someone'• personality,''
said Dr. Gottsbauk.
He and fellow psychiatrists are attempting during
the counseling to bridge the generation or communica~
tion gap and to provide relatively neutral information
about the use of d_rugs.
If a youngster throws up adult abuse of alcohol, the
psychiatrists don't defend this abuse.
They take the tack that any unregulated drug use
can be dal!gerous, even permanen!ly damaging. And
they_ will medically give the specitlcs if the youngilen are mtere.sted.. ·
The role of the 1choola will be lo make parents and
youngsters aware that the pUot ,1>rogr~ ulata and ad·
vise what ii entails. Youo~slers might also be referred
by family doctors or mlrusters. The clinic has the .en-
dorsement of the South Coast Community Hospital
medical staff.
The Dedglloi program Is off to a good start and certainly~ there u a· need. More volunteer help from
psychiatrists, psychologists.and social workers is need~
ed to keep the clinic going. Funds will be needed too ii
it is to expand.
Those who have made·tills positive approach al the
local level to a national problem of magnitude are to
be heartily commended.
Downtown Picture
urakti pictures of downtown Costa Mesa in 1948 and
in 1968 and the only difference will be the cars," some--
one told the Costa Mesa City Council recently.
· His comments came during consideration oht con·
ditional. use permit to allow Continental Baking Co., to
establish a route depot and retail ouUet in the econom·
ically underfed downtown area.
The council gave the applicant every consideration
and was helpful in suggesting ways the permit could
be granted. But the council did attach conditions to
make the facility a better addition to the community.
They would also make it cost more. Word is now
that the baiting firm may be backing out of the deal.
The lot may remain a depository: for weeds and
windblown refuse. But councilmen conducted the matter
correcUy -even if bread trucks don't join the chang·
ing traffic in l!!e seldom-changing downtown.
c
A r e We Moving Cl oser? A re w ords
Cuha-15 Years of Castro· Of Wallace
By WILLIAM GERBER
Editorial Reaearcb Reports
Cuba will celebrate later thi& mMth
the 15th anniversary of Fidel Castro's
.i.ttack on the Moncado Barracks at
Santiago de Cuba. Although the attack
was unsuccessful, the date on which it
occurred -July 26 -gave its name
to the movement which, no! much
more tben five years later, led to
Castro's victory over Cuba's old-style
dictator, Fulgencio Batista.
On Jan. 1, 1969, Castro will complete
a run decade as leader or what turned
out to be the first C.Omm.unist regime
in the Western Hemisphere. Through
that period, he 003 managed to keep
control of Cube despite an American-
fi.naoced attempt at invasion of the
country, an economic boycott pro-
moted by !be United States, expulsioo
from the Organization of American
States, ud frequent quarrels with his
principal outside source of assistance,
the Soviet Union.
ANY FRANK assessment of the
situation in the island republic today
would beve to .acknowledge that the
Cuban masses are materially better
ofi than ever before, Cuba's 7.8 million
people are entitled to receive, free of
charge, education at all levels,
medical services, meals on the job,
electricity, local telephone service,
Ucket.s to sports evemts, and a funeTal.
On the other side of the ledger are:
-Failure of Cuba's gross national
product to rise appreciably since 1959:
an actual reduction of per capita an·
nual income. from '450 in 1959 to $400
in 1967.
-Strict rationing necessitated by
shortages of food, clothing, and
household articles. 'nle ration book in
February 1968 entitled each person to
buy two shirts and two pairs of shoes
a year, three pounds of ric.e and 20
cans of evaporated milk a month,
three-fourths of a pound of meat and
three ounces of coffee a week, and a
liter (slightly over a quart) of fresh
milk a day for each child.
BEFORE AND AFTER ·Castro
came to power, he promised that free
elections would be he1d in Cuba -
within four years, he said on "Meet
the Press" on April 19, 1959. However,
no elections have been held: the
government rules by decree and there
is no legislative body, Every citizen
must at all times carry with him an
identification card containing his pie·
ture, description, and fingerprints.
The Soviet Union, "\\-ilich provides
Cuba witb economic aid amOunting to
more than $1 million a day, no longer
actively uses Cuba as a springboard to
sp-ead communism in the Western
He..misphere. Cuba it.self has sought to
take the lead in that effort.
Beginning in 1965, the chief in·
surrectionary activities in L a t i n
America were guided, on the spot, by
Ernesto Che Guevara, an Argentine
physician wbo had met Castro in Mex-
ico in 1955 and joined forces with him.
Guevara was kfiled on Oct. 9, 1967,
after a sklnniah with Bolivian govern-
ment forces.
THE AD~DNISTRATION thot will
take office in Washington next
January will be faced with the task of
reviewing U. S. policy toward Cuba.
One group of Americans favors active
intervention to overthrow Castro. That
group , although small, includes e num-
ber of prominent citizens. As a
measure short of m i I i t a r y in·
tervention, the economic boycott of
Cuba bas been a doubtful value.
'1111e chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, J. \V. Fulbright
(0 Ark.), considers the boycott "a
failure as an instrument for bringing
about the fall of the Castro regime."
Elimination or diminution ol two ir·
ritants seems necessaey to establi&h a
situation in which the UJiited States
can comf«tably restore diplomatic
relations with Castro's regime and end
the boycott. The irritants are Castro's
support of guerrilla movements in
other Latin American countries and
his allegiance, such as it is, to the
Soviet Union.
It is, however, not certain that
Castro would welcome an overture
toward normal relations with the
United States.
M·any Americans believe that if and
when peaoe is finally achieved in Viet
Nam, the Castro regime and the
American government will find it
mutually advantageous to sit down
and "''ork out ari agreement that will
provide for better relations between
these two pbysically, if not politically,
close neighbors.
The Child's View of L~
Anyone over 30 wbo has trouble fan.
ing asleep at ntght usually turns his
resUess thoughts back to h I s
childhood.
He remembers it with a vague sense
of Joss, as mankind remembers lost
Eden -with a pang.
Most people like to recall their
childhood as a happy time, and their
minds obligingly turn away from the
woes they knew when very y9U,1Jg.
But was anyone's childhoOO ever as
happy when he lives it as he later in
life prefers to recall it to have been ?
No, indeed. In this respect memory is
a soft liar.
The secret heart of any chUd is
hardly bathed in constant self·smile.
He approves of himself far less than
the grownups around him do, for he
never Js quJte as innocent as the y
tblok him lo be. •
THEY TEND to regard him as
either a perfect angel or a little devil,
•
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus:
~ is the ftrrt summer l can
11awrnber tbat Costa litesa'a
mala -·haft not be<n torn
ap. &omebod.Y fOOled. -W. C.R.
•
' '
depending on the day or what they
know about his conduct at the mo.
ment. But the child himself is haunted
by the knowledge that he is never a
perfect angel. although he may for
fleeting seconds wistfully yearn to be
one.
Every child is troubled by hidden
guilt, which comes early to the human
race. He always has done something
wrong which his parents haven't yet
found out. and so he feels like an un·
caught· criminal always in peril of
being discovered and punished.
This sell-kno"\\o·Jedge of guilt and fcnr
or retribution is the sword of
Damocles that hangs in the soul o{
every chi ld. It keeps him uneasy. no
matter how small his transgression
may be, and shuts him from the
paradise in which his deluded parl'nts
think he dweJls.
\VELL, THEN. since children .are
actually hypocritical little wnrry-
\\·a.rts, just like grownups. what iii
there truly about childhood that makes:
adults look back t(pon It with such
fondness! Wh.f.Nin lies its real magic?
The real magic or childhood Ues in
U1e fact that it is the only period of ex-
istence when you look at life as if you
were aeeing it through 1 magnifying
glass. Everything ts bigger, closer up,
and more emotionally a t f e c t 1 n g • ~verythl.ng ts sharply accented.
Your thoughts att more fanciful
and exciting: your 1ensations are
more thrillinR: you reel more keenly
and deeply alive than you ever will again.
You bmnp yo ur knee and roll in the
ara11 with an agony worse than any
human being ever bore before. You
taste an ice cream cone or a
watermelon, and no Ca~ar in ancient
Rome ever knew such an orgy of
taste, though he banqueted on peacock
tongues.
WHATEVER HAPPENS to yuu oc·
curs as if it 'vere happening for the
first time since the globe started spin-
ning. No rainbow h8s any dust on it.
every plush-covered caterpillar is a
monster of mystery.
You look around you, and beauty.
joy, terror, awe and ecstasy -they
are everywhere. You wade mind-deep
in wonder.
Slowly as we go through life,
cobwebs accumolate on all these feel-
ings. \Ve see through the magnifying
glass no more. The monsters become
less fearsome, the joys less stirring.
We tend to turn from live sparks to
dull clods, more moved by threnody
than thrill.
That is what we miss most about
our vanished childhood -that view
through the magnifyi ng glass, that
bonfire r<lphlre of be.i~g which, when
it goe s. comes not aga111.
..---Bii Geof'!Je ---,
Dear George:
Is Jt true U1at the 'key to
popularity with the oppoSite sex
is tb.e caveman approach with
women? They seemed to do O.K.
WONDERING
D<ar Wondering:
Th.Ink it over. Ho" many
cavemen do you see?
(Send yollr problems to
George, who never Jets common
se.ni e lntmere with the facts.)
Catching Up?
It was Humpty Dumpty who in·
.formed Alice that "a word means just
what I choose it to mean."
George Wallace, although he has not
as yet had a great fall, nonetheless
reminds one of the legendary Humpty
Dumpty. A word to George Wallace
means just what he chooses it to
mean. If anyone persists in asking him
about the possibilities of other
shadings of meaning; he grows ir·
ritated, sometimes angry. The word
means what he says it does.
THE WORD "racist," for example,
means to him what be says it does. He
increasingly infonns interviewers and
audiences that he is not a racist. He
mentions taking legal action against
any person who suggests the word
means something other than the
meaning he gives to it. Of late he gives
even the word "segregationist" a
meaning that means only what he says
it means.
His fonner speeches in other-cam·
paigns, however, are a matter o(
record.
Meanwhile, Mr. Wallace seems
somewhat sulxl.ued. This may be
merely a matter· of mood or of timing.
But a word keeps coming out of
Montgomery and Birmingham which
has a meaning he is not able to con·
-Uol. This word is that the money
necessary to run the sort of semi-na-
tional campaign now being staged by
Mr. Wallace jwt im't in band.
•iTRE Llm..E PEOPLE," a phrase
dear to Mr.,Wallace, are loyal. he in·
sists, and the;Jtk.e&p the money coming
in. Bu't Mr. Wallace bas bad his
-political hand out to the little people
for a good many years. lie promised
much, but the delivery aervice has not
been all that was anticipated.
Mr. Wallace talks about all he has
done fOI' education and about the voca·
tional and junior colleges he hai built.
Education is in a desperate condition
in Alabama.
This also is the year when
Alabamans say the state's bonded in·
debtedness is scheduled to reach a
billion dollars. Mr. Wallace's op-
position points out thet while he cer-
tainly did not create all this debt, it
did seem to have a surge of increase
during his years in office. Thts debt
will be one of those albatross
neclcpieces for the next legislature.
Mr. Wallace finds that. as the word
gets arounnd about A 1 a b a 1:1'1 a ' s
predicanients, the tycoons of con·
servatism are sending smaller checks.
His appeal to the little people grows a
bit stale. The political picture is
changing.
MR. WALUCE'S fiery blasts at the
''Warren court" seem a little old now
that the CNef Justice has submitted a
reSignation. President Johnson, having
obtained the flrst important disarma-
ment talks with the Soyiets and the
hapeluI U not Y1!t productive
discussions going on with Hanoi, no
longer is vulnerable to the Wallace
techniques.
Still another of Mr. Wallace's whip-
ping boys, Sent!or Robert Kennedy,
was removed by senseless, tragic as~asslnation.
The Wallace campaign bas by no
mean1 collapsed. It ati.ll ts formid1ble .
13ut It bas not picked up any new
momtntum.
Time does: indeed effect change.
We'll wait and see what the new word
rMily meaDI about Geor1e Wallace.
~·
Collective Guilt
And Gun Control
To the Editor:
ln Dr. Norman Nixon's column
11Everyday Problems" entitled "High
Noon in Orange. County -Let the
Lawmakers Know" dated Friday, JulY
5, 1968, there appears to me to be an
hysterical and highly emotional reac·
tion and "pandering to collective
guilt" by the author.
Although most of the article is
devoted to support of gun control
legislation, the merits of which I shall
not argue, I would like to comment on
the statement that "a responsible na·
tion will not continue to fill its air
waves, movie scre'eni and comic
strips with exaltations of violence and
irrespoosibillty."
Also, referral is made to the glori-
fying of violence, robbery and murder
in such movies as "Bonnie and
C1yde."
IF OR. NIXON is <i student of
psychology, sociology and history, he
will have to agree that our nation
historically bas been a "violent and
energetic" nation and its great auc-
cess and genius has been its ability to
channel this violence and energy, to a
large extent, into productive, creative,
and meaningful un4ertakings. For
many years now the public depiction
of Violence bas almost universally
been in the: context Of its futility,
tragedy anti horror, and its moral in·
.acceptability.
The acceptance or the presence of
sexual pervemion and violence as
described in the Old and New
Testaments of the Bible ls because of
the mor.aJ. context of the story.
U there is to be censorship of viole11-
ce, why not of Communist doctrines,
sexual education and sexu6.l erotica,
and anything which w i 11 ''con-
taminate" the minds of men ?
PSYCHOLOGISTS, gocioJogists and
other students of human behavior
have even advocated that
pornographic and erotic material may
reduce sexual crimes, by providing a
vicarious outlet that will reduce the
need for participation In the depicted
acts. ls the depiction of violence an ex·
ception to this?
Man cannot grow by putting his
"head in the sand like an ostrich."
1\-tost people who have seen the movie
"Bonnie and Clyde" are stunned by its
senseless violence. and the horrifying
end to which its principle characters
came.
How can Dr. Nixon imply that such
.a movie would encourage violence?
My feelings, and those of many With
whom I have discussed It, are revolted
and our response ls a grNter
a"'·areness of the futility and hoi'ror of
violence.
IT IS MY CONTENTION that Dr.
Nlxon'1 theses of the causes of
violence are backwards and that,. as
civilization progresses, there is less
violence in the 1treet1 and in the
homes. and more ln the fmtllles
portrayed. on screens, in boots, on
television, and in comic:;. Perhaps the
fulfillment of Dr. Nixon's reCQnl··
mendations would reverse I.be ~nd.
ls it not better to be a spectator to hrl·
agined violence thlQ to participate ln
real violence?
GEORGE J, PRASTKA, M.D.
'011'er Sl<le' SJH!91ca
To the Editor:
I have betn following your editorials
and letters to the td1tor &iDce the
assassination of Senator Kennedy with
great tote.rest. To aay that you are
prejudiced in favor of strong anU·gun
legislation would be a gross un·
dent.atement
Aller ween of printing mott11 anU·
• •
L•He•• fr"Ofl'I rndtrl ,,. wtlcome. Normally ...;.._
t.l!ou!d COrw9'f , ...... --.. In 300 WGr~ occ • .-. TM rltht to OOIMMl"ll<r len...-S to fl! IMC. Of elll'l\lne-19
Ubll 11 re1•1VM. AU lttlers """' ll\CIVdt tl9Mt11,. •l'ld mt!l1fl9 1ddreu,. bllt 1111mes w!ll De wlll'llltld
on rt<;ual,
gun letters, you finally condescended
to print a few o{ the letters from the
oUler side, band-picked, of course, to
abOw the least valid and convincing
arguments.
JUST BECAUSE the Supreme Court
ruled that ' the Second Amendment
does not mean an individual right to
bear arms (according to you) this
does not mean that this was the in-
tention of the "founding fathers."
"Autos are registered, why not
guns?" Because primarily regirtra•
ti.on leads to taxation and the govern-
ment (local, state, federal) could.and
probably would tax guns (in ·the
hands of law-abiding citiZens anyway)
out of existence.
Just because a gun is registered will
not stop it from being used. And the
fact that most homicides are com-
mitted by "first-time" offenders, how
do you propose to screen the potential
murders?
TlllEVES, robbers, hold·up men,
bank robbers, etc., whoever ntedl'I
guns in their trade will ateal the.m if
necessary to obtain them.
Criminologists may wonder whether
it is a good idea for the average
citizen to teep a gun for defense (also
according to you}. I have no doubt
w~Oice I would prefer when faced
wittnlie possible alternatives.
God grant that J may defend myself
and my family from any intrud~. and
J challenge the expertise claimed. for
the burglar. I doubt if the avi?age
burglar is. any better shot than anyone
else. ~
AS TO THE l\tORAL issue. ol
whether a burglar deserves to be ex·
ecuted. \Vhat about the counPfss
youngster$ who are shot "trying tO
escape" from the police aftt~ a
joyride in 1 stolen car? Dld these
poor, confused and frightened cb;fldren
who will never grow up, deserve.to be
executed? . ·~·.
Jf you want something to cruiade
about, crusade about that and. stop
knocking guns and the 'National 'Rine
Association and help the American
people retain one of their all too few
freedoms Ulat we have left. ' ~
W. D. BEAUDEN
...
--~
Wednesdll)', July 10, 1168
The cditoriol poge of th• Doi!v
Pilot Ht.kl to inform and st~
'daft: ·rt~rt by prtst nting thil
"MIDtJ>Gper-'•· opbdona a-nd co~
7Mfttarv on topics of interest
and dgnlficance, b11 providing.o
fOf'UWI /or the c:zpr.,sion 61
our readers' opinion.r, and bp
pr11endng Ul.t divertt vi*
points of informtd ob.s rrvtrt
amt ipokumen on topic.i of the
dey.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
. ··~ . . .
~ ~
I
. ~ • •
'
BY
:WILLIAM
REED
•••d•1· ..
In .the Wind
The po11iblllty of a large airport
adjacent to Huntington Harbour
comes u quite a shock to
residents of the plush marina community.
'
-~
<
•
8 .........
• •
•
Wtdntsdllr, Julr lo, 1968 DAILY "Lllf ,;J
Scientific Institute
Rockwell ·Official
Heads Society
A North American Rockwell olllclal
will direct the Orange County ac-
tivities far the next year of one of tbe
nation's major scienWlc societies.
He is Dr. Frank A. A.s~nner.
assistant division director of.resemdl.,
engineering, and testing at the cor·
poration's space divW,on in Downey,
who was elected chairman ~ the
American Institute ol. Aeronautics and
AstronauUcs Oraoge County Section. Suggested bl an airpo~ similar to
Los A n g e 1 e s International,
handling all the huge j e t s
presenUy flying across t h e
continent and most of those on the
drawing boards.
ROUTE RECOMMENDED BY STATE ~ ENGINEER
Dr. Aschenbrenner and <1ther in··
coming officers will be installed at a
dinner meeting of the AlAA Executive
Council tonight at the Saddlebact Inn,
Santa Ana .
To the west of the airport bl the
community of expensive homes
purchased largely because they
are adjacent to the sea and are
away from the noise and fumes of
Los Angeles.
ROUTE RECOMMENOED BY STATE ENGINEER FOR HUNTINGTON BEACH FREEWAY The installation will be conducted
by the outgoing chairman, C. J . Dor·
renbacher, McDonnell Dou 11 as
Astronautics Co. vice president.
* Most of the people whd are
buying homes in Hun tin gt on
Harbour looked to the east and the
marsh land there and saw the
distinct possibility of m o r e
marina development in the future.
The land on whioh the t'roposed
\irport would be located is owned
Jy the Bolsa Corporations and
thbs far the spokesmen for the
corporations have indicated only
marine commercial and housing
development.
Beach Community Chest
Contributors Due Honor
Of course the regional airport for
Huntington Beach is only a
suggestion at this point. It seems
likely that the idea will be
strongly opfosed by Harbour
residents, bu still the idea will be
carefully considered by the county
supervisors.
* Of the other possible airport
sites, Los Alamitos to the north of
Huntington Harbour would be only
slighUy better, if at all. If this site
were selected the runways would
have to be aimed south -placing
aircraft takeoff and l a n d i n g
patterns right over Huntington
Harbour.
Sites to the south of Huntington
Beach include El Toro, termed "a
lousy site" by the planners; the·
Santa Ana Marine Corps Air
Facility, pointed out as not solving
the noise /roblems for Newport
Beach; an on the Irvine Ranch at
San Joaquin Hills, some 800 feet
into the air surrounded by hills
cutting off approaches, but the
second best bet to the Huntington
beach site.
No matter what happens, it looks
as if residents of Huntington
Beach can no longer ignore the air
transportation problems in the
county.
"For the first time in Huntington
Beach we are able to thank publicly
the men and women who de':ote a
significant part of their time, talent
and money to our town" Community
Chest President Bill Carlson declared
today.
He was referring to the first amual
Community Chest Awards Celebration
to be held Friday, beginning at noon ,
in the Villa Sweden Restaurant.
"Credit is long past due ttiese civic
spirited people", Carlsioo adde d .
Coast Sliakes
As New Jersey
Flexes Muscles
The battleship USS New Jersey flex-
ed her muscles Monday pounding the
San Clemente Island bombardment
range from morning until midnight aS
Orange Coast residents wondered
whether they were in the midst of an
earthquake end hearing thunder at the
same time.
The batUewagoc is bound for Viet-
nam thi! fall but is presently
maneuvering off the Orange Coast
Following the sea trials, the ship will
return to the Long Beach docks where
public tours of the ship will be given
during the first two weeks of August.
The New Jersey is presently the on-
ly commissioned battleship in the
world. Her fire power Includes nine 16-
inch guns and ro five-inch turret guns.
During the present sea trials, the ship
has a complement of l ,400 enlisted
meii and 70 officers.
Faculty Resistance Asked
To Reduce Teaching Load
T w o organizations representing
5,CXXI callfomia State College system
faculty members have i s s u e d
statements calling for a professional
revolt.
The Americcwi Federation of
Teachers, College Council, and the
Association of Callforn1a State College
Pl'Ofe1sors Morday called u p o n
faculty to organize a resistance to
reduce the teaching load.
The teaching load reform is seen by
spoke11men as a way of catalyzing
faculty political power, to be used for
greater reforms.
Statements f~m the two faculty
groupt bllatered Gov. RoIJald Reagan
and the Legislature. Here are exerpts:
''The disnmrtling of the California
system of public higher education is
proceeding steadily at the hands of an
administration which appears bent on
using every campus incident as an oc·
casion for repression and withdrawal
of support.
"lf it was not obvious in January
1967 that Ronald Reaga11 's anti-free
speech movement gubernatorial cam-
paign was more than political
haymaking, it should be now.
"State College trustee! a n d
University regents are also in·
creasingly dominated by t h e
repressive, do-nothing. retrenchment
philosophy Of the R e a g a n ad-
ministration... ·
"Public higher education i n
California also has been dealt a crip-
pling blow by a reactionary
Legislature.
Old Glorfl'• lupinstlon
Mrs. Margaret Krukenberg of the Fountain Valier Historical Soc-
lely and Arlene Kato, Fountain Valley High Schoo senior, examine
Betsy Ross' s masterwork for ideas lo incorporate in a proposed
Orang Counly Flag. Miss Kalo. an art student, ls entorlng the board
of suplrvlsor .. sponsored flag 1eslgn c0mpet1Uoo. · ·
,.
'
Special recognition will be given the
major contributors to the1 1967 cam-
paign such as corporations, employe
groups, businesses, school personnel
and some of the professions.
"I think our cootributicms .and our
community are going b:> be pleasantly
surpriHd," Ruranoe broker Steve
Holden offered.
As chairman Of the 1967 campaign,
Holden i pointed out that it was an
eVent of extremes -from generosity
l:O non-participation. "It's that first
group we want to hold up to the public
spotlight," he said.
Special recognition will be given to
29 corporations, 12 employe groups, 7
businesses, 1 school district, 9 school
personnel groups and 5 professional
people.
The 15 member agencies or the
Chest will be lauded for their health.
weliare end recreation services to the
people Of Huntingtm Beach. And the
year-round work Of those who sef;~
the Community Chest and its annua;i
cnmpaign as leaders and workers will
be recognized.
The awards celebratioit is open to
the public. The luncheon cost is $2.
Resel'V'8t1ons Will be accepted up to
Thursday noon by phoning 536-1166.
•PREE
j ADMISSION
•Iring Your
Friends
•Iring Yovr
Patterns
•Iring y-
Checkbook
1 DAY
ONlY
Coml"ll in
Hour By Hour
All Day
Long
Views Sought
On Proposed
Freeway Route
The California Highway Commission
is asking citizens and local govern·
ment officials to voice their opinioos
on the proposed routing of the future
Htmti.Dgton Beach Freeway.
As sugge!t.ed by the state highway
engineer, the seven miles of roadway
under consideration will run parallel
to Beach Boulevard from Pacific
Coast Freeway (Route 1) in Hun.
tington Beach to Lampson A venue,
just north of the Garden Grove
Freeway.
AeraiJ map.s and photographs show·
ing -the proposed route are on display
at the Huntington Beach M a 1 n
Library, Huntington Center; Fountain
Valley City Hall, Westmfnster City
Hall, Stanton City Hall and Garden
Grove City Hall.
A public hearing to discuss poa;sible
changes will be held July 26 at 10 a.m.
in the Huntington Beach High School
auditorium, 1905 Main St., Huntington
Beach.
Individuals and civic groups, as well
as local government officials, are en-
couraged to review the proposed plan
before the definite routing is decided
on.
Other new officers are Robert 'E.
Berry, director, Newport Beach
operations, space and re -entry
systems division of Philco-Ford, vice
chairman; A. Donald Fraser, chief,
markeet plans .and analysis, naviga.
tion systems, for Autonetrcs,
treasurer, and Frank F. Duquette,
customer relations director for
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co.,
secretary.
New members of the executive
council are A. C. Frazer, member,
technical 1taU, advanced systems
operation, Aeronutronic, Robert J,
Gunkel, director, !)'Items develop-
ment and integration, manned «biting
laboratory subdivision, McDonnell
Douglas AltronaUtlcs Co.: Leonard A.
Hanis, manager. structures and
desi~. space ,division of North
American Rockwell Corp. and Ted B.
ASTRONAUTICS CHAIRMAN
Dr. Fr•nk A.. AlchenbreNMr
Taykr, manager., program develop-
ment, Autonetics.
Dr. Aadlenbrenner received bis BS
degree in physics at Kansu State
College, and his Ph. D. in the aame
field afthe MassachuaeU. -ol
Technology.
He WU • Navy llg!ller pilot duriitg
Work! War II and continued his dve
participation ill the U.S. !m>al Air
Organlud Reserve. He · cuneiltly
holds the ranlt ol captain in ttie.USNR,
/ •septathal~n!'
Young Athletes Vie • in 7-JK>int Test
Hundreds o[ Fountain V a 11 e y
youngsters are competing i.n the "Sep-
tathalon" a seven fold activity of
softball throw, pull ups, ... standing
broad jump, situps, SO.yard dash,
reach and jump, and 440 yard race.
Polnta are totaled for each com-
peting child and et the end of the sum-
mer the top athletes from the seven
elementary acbool pLargrounds meet
for the championship runoff at the
Fountain Valley Hlgll School -I<.
Children 7 to 14 years m11
participate. Boys and girb compete
separately in three different ar•
divisiOlllS.
Playgrounds are located et Allen.
Fountain Valley, Harper, Momoe.
Nieblas, McDowell and T a m u r •
schools.
EVERYBODY HAS A OiANCE-JUST REGISTElllll
No Purchase Nec-essary-You Do Not Need To
Be Pre,.nt To ,Win. ,WINNER RECEIVES "$100 in
malerial of their cholcel Fill out a, dei-~ coupon
bolowl
DltawlNG A 1j I I' .M.
ANAHEIM
COllYENTION CENTER
800 W. i<atella
ANAHEIM '";::,:.:;,
I DAY
ONLY
MIDAY.
'.JUL 1'. .121fi
10 A.M. to 10 P.M.
IN THE HUGE ARENA J'.,::, '1i!. '· .~. ,.. __ L;_;;,;:;.;:;; .. •-~;:;;;;;;;;;:; .. ~ .. ;;;:;.~.~··;:;-~ .. ~-~-~,~.:.:,:-::.:1;.~:~~~.:-:-~ 5
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DON'T Ml5S OUI SPICtAL
Variltitl Patten ••llllratiot
...
llADID l'AND.S
hell -11 HANO llADtO. 19tti -•• .... • ..... &•;.,.-'"'*'
.. -200 "'"'"· ,... -w ••!Md .. ,.iy.,, .. $1JO.OO.., ......... 1,_......w,1; .......
$20 to $35 -h
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BRING'YOUR * .. ' AKl8 ·*una CIAAK
ZIPPERS
12~
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•
4 IWl.Y PILOT Wtdntsd&,r, J11!J 10, 1968
85 Injured
800 Circus Goers
Trapped in Tent
Mu1lle Capt. Roymond E. Por-
ter, of Albuquerque, N.M., wrote
home Jut October, telling bis
motber he needed nothlnc for
Chrutmu but that 400 South Viet·
namese children near Hill 5J need·
eel everything. "I requested about
400 toys," he wrote home recently,
11And I received 853· boxes. each
Containing anywhere from 5 to 30
Jlilts, By Chl'.i-as day, I bad
:I,320 toys, 3,651 complete outfit-
lings of clothing, 1,214 assorted
pieces of clolhlng and over 200
pounda of c:andtab;" It appean as If
the good Cap will have a head
start m Chl'.illtmu this year. •
AUBURN, N.Y. (AP) -Elephants
trumpeted, tohe wind bowled, the tent
er~. Sta.le Police said 85 of an
esUmated 800 spectators at the circus
Tuesday ni&fit were injured, but none
critically, "
, Scores bad fled before the collapse,
because ol the violent thunderstorm.
Police said approximately 800 persons
had been ih the tent. watching as the
various ecU \\'ere speeded. 'lbe tent
can hold 4,000.
Of the injured, lYt'o hospitals
admitted l'A'O dozen, hospital attaches
said. Others were discharged or
treated on the circus grounds.
The :ro.toot-long tent \"1hich 11ad
4,CXX> seats WU h:a.U filled f<ir the
performance by the Clyde Beatty-Olle
Brothers Circus, circus officials and
witnesses said.
Some in the audience said the
collaple waa: preceded by a loosenin:
of aome of the aluminum pole;, hold.in·
up the tent and by a ·rush of wate:·
down 1be top above the center ring. ' "Ttiere waa a loud scream but ther
was no time foc panic," said. Bob
Fasce, a l'eporter fOr the Auburn
CJ.tu.en !tOvertiaer who was in the tent.
"Eveeyl>ody hit 11le dirt ond Ille
poles came down," be said. Fa.see said
some people crawled out from under
the tent and others .were freed. when
circul WOrkb cut the oaoves.
· "People ....e CNWllng oe their
• . Elderly Warned
• ; Agaipst Swindle
• • · i By Bunco Artists
l lVarren Beatt11,·act0r and chairman of LOS ANGELES (AP)_ Police warn
' the Arti!t'1 Committee •I B'm.ergtncy that a gang posing as bank examiners
• Gun Control, listtn.s to the voice of is trying to sWindle elderly California
• t~ cro~ in Can4leS'Uck. Park aa the11 women.
: vqic1 ·win. qpproecl and dilapprooal Lt. Samy Arman of the bunco
~ of hil ipe'ech. Amid boo1"and cheers, squad 1aid. the group ol four to lix ! ~cattw,. at the. 1equest .of San. Fran-men ·and women, apparent l.y
stomachs, caked with mud, coughin~
from swallowed rain watel'. Circu1»
workers flashed knJYft u they ripperl
.at the canvas to free as many persons
as tbey could. Elephants bellowed in
the background," be said.
''Glancing along the collapsed side of
the tent, one could see people
constantly crawling from beneatb the
canvas , ...
"People reached out evei'f"'here t:J
lend a hand in getting out. Som:
helped others to their feet."
Jim Plugh, wh<I was trawed
hcneaU1 the canvas for abOut live
1ni nutes after the collapse, said:
"My eye caught one of the tid<'
support po les pull out or the grounO
and start to go up.· My date got out in
t!"le aisle and started to go out and J
grabbed the child of a friend in my
Jrms and started down.
"Then the pole was all tile way out
·1d swinging. \Ve made it to the
round, dodging the swinging poles.
"I looked up and-saw thi!: center pole
:iming toward w <and ~opped to the
;round, shielding the Clhild undtrneath
ine. We lay 1 there for about five
minutes -couldn't see my date but I
felt her hand -and then there were
people behind us, cutting the canvas
with knives.
"It never entered my mind ttiat we
could ruffooate," Plugb said.
Rescue WOr'ters were foroed ta
crawl Ulrou&b ·enkl&.deep water in surch of __ lr"l'ped underneath
the ripped CRDV ...
. A pat:r:oµ iii .a re1ta~t more than
800 yards eway said the screams a!
the t.nt fell C<Nld be beard clearly.
About 2.9 lndw.e of raiJi fell in a two-
hoor petjod ...i winds -e gusting up
to 40 m.iies an hou1'. The force of the
storm ·ripped down· power lines and
Dooded streets in the city, causing
Ma}'9r Paul Lattimore to ; order all nonemer~ ' :traffic Ir'om t h e
streets.
Clrcul official! said ,the canvas,
. \\'Orth about ''42 ,000 would be replaced
and that tbe troupe plilnD!d to play as
scheduled Friday. nl~ ID Buttalo. : ci.sc~ Ma~or Jo1eph AUoto, urged the Canadians, recenUy worked their way
· Cf'O\Od to torite to tMif CongTe1.smen throuiti Oakland, Sarramento, Saa
: jor PA .control. TM GC"tor wu clao JOH.and Phoenix, Ariz., and has now
: v.:rbolll/ .... .,,..d fOT hil liippiNtyZ. contaclod leve<al potential victims, Mar;JJ. Co' unty • liaircut. J)a.rUcu1Uly in· the Los Angeles' area. ., \ , · e Ai''1>lan said S)V!ndlers try to
H k T k h peraliade victlli>s to disregard ff 'f ·28 In . UC , W 0 Op~ates .. a --'--~•-• monagers. ousew• e WUkes-Barre, Pennsylvarua, real-.· "il:f,;( -".!!"' Calif · ~ ' ' aur.a.nt. receJIUY served lunch • • ! • ~ • C. 'IMI' sang wu orw•· ...
lo ~gular cuatomera only • ; • it _:-. came from Toronto, where R d .R bb d
1932 prt .... Hamburgers we,.."lJ' '~.memi!OI'• repo@,dly live, . (tpe ' 0. . .e
cents, hot dot11 a dline, coUee a · • . • ... this -of their nickel "'I jusf wanted to show mv. -alloal. . NOVA'J:'Q, Calli. (UPI):_ A 28·year·
appreciation for their patronage r. Potea.tl.al victims are tetepbon~, old housewlie, alone with her two Tuck said ' · wll'llld tbol 1llelr ICCOUllll are bemg · • nlism·anaged by the bank and askeCi sons, one and ~ve years old, Tuesday
. . . their accounts' values. was kidnapte, in front of a
Norn1 Barry, of HUtinJs, Michi-The weaMhiest subject is then asked supermarket, raped and robbed.
gan, .towing service operator,,.had to withdraw his or her savJ.nes so The victim said a short. dark man
not been paid for his service and .. federal bank examinen" or "the
county supervisor• hadn't proyt(!... FBI" can. audit the bank's record of jumped into the back seat of her car
ed. promised storage areas for the tfle tranuction. as she was· loading groceries. He
junked ca.rs h1 had been asked to oDe &ADI member often dressed as showed a kitchen knife and said:
pick up. So Barry desposlted. five a HC!Urity dlicer, then picks up the "I need a ride. I'm in trouble. n o
. rusty autos in th~ parking lot of money and promlna that tbe 11vin1s what I tell you and your kids won 't be
the county courthouse. and a reward will be returned within ht.rt." e two weeks -and UM; money and the He forced her to drive to a weeded
Lo s Angeles Police and FBI ag-gang ~em~ then disappear. rural area wtim she said she was
ents have ar.retted a slender barik Arabian said at least 15 pe~sons in assaulted. The victim and her.children
. robbery suspect who signed his .~ Los Angeles area were 11milarly were Ie'rt bound hand and foot on a
holdup notes uTbe Fat M .. swindled last year: About three· side road when the man fled, but she
Richard Alie~ Clifton, 21, ia ~~S.. quarters of such rwincUea: are never managed to free herself aDd bail a
pected of robbing banks In Van _r_epcrted __ ._h_•_added __ . _______ P_as_sin_g_m_otorl_s_t_. ------
Nuys, Sepulveda, Canoga Park and
• Mission Hills, all suburbs of Los
~Angeles. ·
.• .
;: ''I've gol an alligator in my pear
. tree," reported Jam•• Dem of
• Cincinnati, Ohio, as he !w;nmoned
~: police. Police chased the creature
;: and caught him on the ground: It
;; turned out to be an Iguana, a non-
-: poisonous tropical lizard. Jt was
7 taken to the Cincinnati ZOo. · . •
KUUnoswonh Production.s bud-
geted a cool 115 for it.r recent
motion picture .!pectacular. It
was produced by tile seventh
grade soCial 1tudies class of
Killingsworth, (Connecticut) ·Jr.
High School. The f ilm was done
In the 1tudy of Africa insUad
of the us~l term po.Pfrs .
• . POftY L..,._, of the singing
: LeMon Sisters, bas given birth to
I her fourth child, a 7 pound, 9 ounce
boy, In St. John's Hospital in Santa
j Monica. She and husband, Dick
: Cethcart, a musician, named the
boy Michael Matthew. • 1 Letters are belnJ carried from · 1 lhe St. Joteph (Missouri) County
J1lll to the main post office 'and I beet ID the county jail as result of 'l a teller writlnt friendship tb1t has
blo11omed between l man aud a
woman in j8IL Sliorllf C. A. J.,,.
ldM uld each Jetter Is censored,
, llam~ and lwldlod like nJuiar
mall Tbe ~cit• it up and
then dolltill ft tO the jail.
' .
. ID the doonjep /n Portrait of Pain
, ·An airplane tOwlnl ui advertis· ·~od IC. C:omznercial
~ ., u it made an 11mer· g~JabdiDI on a .llnlt ID · a 1>ou · aubdl91sion. Ala Arok•
11 ... , of Milwaukee, .(llded to •
landl!W after the cnft'• aqlDe
failed. "'nit..-.... aat ""'""''
Mrs. Ruth Harr of the Bronx, N.Y., Is ln e1trem1 paiit as she Is , ..
1noved to J1cobl Hospital with a aearshlft lever through her anns
and into her chest. Firemen w1ed 1 hacksaw to cut through the lever.
Mn. Harr aufiered her ~ury In a two-car crash which sent sit per-
sons to the hospital Tu y. \
,
ARTICHOKE CONNOISSEUR -Meadow mouse
makes a meal of artichoke in·a field in Salinas Val-
ley where an army of mice threatens fields that
produce 90 percent of the nation's artichokes. Mice
had already ruined 50 pei-cent of this year's crop
with a $3 million loss to ~rowers. July 13 has been
designated as 0 Kill a Mouse Day" in Monterey
County.
Battle to Save Arti~hoke
Who Have Best Laid Plans: Mi.ce or Men?
CASTROVILLE, Calif. (UPll -
'Ibtee decade• a10, •Jbhn Steinbeck
wrote hb: novel "Of Mice andf Men"
and plliced its setting a few miles
from this community ·in CalifOmi.a's
agricultural Heartlllld.
Today, Castroville has a new ltory
or mice and men: they are combatants
in a battle fDr 1urvival of the area'1 '6
million artidloke crop .
'Kidnaped' Girl Found •
In Daze in Woods by Home
CORRY, Pa. (UPI) -Karen
Cooney, 15, "isn't a girl to run off."
About Tl hours aft er she
disappeared, a rescue helicopter found
her wandering in a dense woods less
than a mile from home.
Doctors at Corry Memorial Hospital
said the girl was not hanned, but was
suffering from shock and exposure
when fOund Tueed1y.·6he·waa lilted in
satisfactory condition.
Karen di&appeared Monday after
she went to the backyard to hang the
family laundry. An intensive 200-man
ground and air search was laun-ched
when she £ailed to return. FBI agents
joined the search, fearing she had
been kidnapped.
A state trooper said Karen was "in
quite a daze" when the helicopter
d.Lscovered her wanderMg near a
lakeshore. She told police 'she had been
nervous and high-strung lately and
decided to take a walk in the woods
"to get away from it all."
Her mother, Mn. Mildred Cooney,
said Karen ofle.n rode her pony along
the patbs through the Woods, "but
never went otf without ~.nnisslon.
She isn't a girl to run off.' ,
Mr1. C0oney said her daughter sti ll
waa hazy a~ut what happened, "but
she rememtiered belng chased from
the house by a bJg man with a knife."
"He chased her .a Jong ways through
the woodl/' Mr1. Cooney said, "until
she 1aid ~be fell •leep."
State police discounted ~1 r s .
Cooney'I story.
"Her di s &p pear an c e was
deliberate," a b'ooper said. "She took
her time, She could have come out of
there yesterday, but she didn't. i;ihe
took her little religious book in there
with her.
"She thinlu. ahe remembers a
number of things she coU.ldn't. She's
imagL'ling these things."
Doctors and stat.e poUce sa.id Karen
"'as not badly scratched by; the thick
underbrush. "She'1 not as ,scratched
as we are and she 's not as muddy as
we are," the trooper said.
Morton Switches
Vote to Confitni ·
F ortas Selection
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen .
Thruston B. Morton, an influential
Republican moderate. has switched
sides and will vote to confirm Abe
Fortas as Chief J ustice of th! United
States.
Perhaps more important, t-h e
Kentucky sena(or has ·decided he
would vote to crack any filibuster that
might develop against the el~vation of
Fortas and the nomination·of Homer
Thornberry w the high coort.
The disclosure of Mortonls position
-taken some time ago, actord.ing to
an aide -lends weight to claims by
Senate Republican Leader Everett M.
Dirksen that oppoaition to t h e
nominations is shrinlcing.
Morton was one of 19 Republicans
who &igneei a position paper -
circulated before the nominations
were disclosed -opposing Supreme
Court appointments by President
J ohnsan on the basis he is a "lame
duck" chief execuUve.
'The Republicans argued that the
vacancy created by the resignation of
Chief Justice Earl \Varren should
remain 'Until a new administration
takes over in January.
Field mke currently are winiting,
\j'Jt the ~· are making p~ for
;, massive ' air and g r o 'tJ n d
1cour.ter attack which vrould allcw~tbem
to get their crop -90 per~ent of. tbe
nation's artichokes -on grocers'
1helves. ~
They plan to spread poison~ :oat
groats from the air over fields miere
young artichllkr::s are growing, 8:9~ by
hantl in fielcls where tn at u re
artichoke::: are ready to lie t.atvested.
"U \fe .don't get. the n1ice, ~Qlere
won't be a crop,". sairl AJttrt W •
Culver," l\1onterey County agricultural
commissioner.
The poisoned grain method' was
decided on l:ecnuse of Uie peculiar
overlapping strLcture. of an artichoke.·•
State. regulalioJ"ls forbid the use on
artichokes or poi.sons usually sprayed
on fruit crops.
"The situation Is critical," said.'Don
Barsot4, p!.ri:J\tr ~ ip-the CalJforina
Artichoke anrt Vegetable Gro~~rs
Corp. "We have spent years educatpig
the public in other states to , eat
artichokes, and this fall expect to reap
a profit. But the mice are gettiDS: it:"
Barsotti sdid that d.urin?," JW't', July
ancl Au gust, plants are ~ut b&ck to
n;aturc l ~l' h•uvest during the other
nine months of lhe year. 'fhe mice ue
attacking this new growth. ,-
About 50 growers prod:.uce
artichokes on 9,000 acres in· the
northern end of the Salinas Valley.
The field mice (microtus Californicu.s)
population began ei;,anding abbut
three years ago. :I'he prolific Pests,
which produce litters of 12 to 15 every
month, crawl up the artichokes and
gnaw -eventuall1 killing mat}lre
plants. J
Barsotti ruled crut cats and garlic!as
sol utions to the mice htflux. · ·
"\·ou put one cat into a fie ld and
he's like a kid wJth. -. ton of cazxly.
After the eat has ea,ten four or five
mice, he's had it." As for suggestions
g<U'lic be planted between rowi ol
artichokes becaust: mice don't llke
garlic. Barsotti said; "Thatts jlist an
old wlve's tale." b
"What we need is another· pjed
piper," said another grower. "U .We
can find him, we'll treat him right lbll
time."
Awesome Winds in Auburn
Gale Craslies Circi~s Tent on 800 People
C•Hfortd•
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Gunhattle E~upts
,Between Patrolmen
NEW YORK (AP) -Two
·patrolmen were shot and
Wounded When a gunbattle
erupted Tuesda~n· i g h t
among hee, of -duty city
policemen follo · g a n
automoblle mishap on the
Cro11-Bron1: Expnissway.
I
The 1.n J u r e d were Jacobi H0&pltal.
id~ntified aa probationary Police, who prompt 1 y
pati:olman Nicolo, J. Danisl, be&• an investigation of
24, in critical cood.iUOn with • the' incident, identified the
a • bead wOund; a n d third man as. detedlve
patrOlmaa Johll Dalton," 41, Frederick Gibson, 28, ol the
in ser~ous . c·o~itfon with a Bureau oC Special Services.
chest. wou.od~ Both Wilre 1n AU thtee were ~ssed in
Assassin Suspect's
civilian clothes and dfivtng"
their own cars when the
incident began about 10:15
p.m. ,
Red .Heart
Patient
Succumbs Brother Arrested
The car driven by Dalton
stalled on the expressway in
the East Bronx wb,ere the
roadway is partially 'blocked
MElllPffiS, Teoo. (AP) -
. A man who ideDtified
himself to authorities aa
Gerald Wfiliams R a y ·,
broUter of the mlin charged
V(ith murder in th e
usassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., w a s
· an-ested on a publ i c
drunkenness charge here
early Tuesday,
The man "claimed he was
the brother oC James Earl
· Ray, and we have no reason'
'to doubt him," said Asst.
Police Chief Joe Gagliano.
. He said the man gave his
by construction. B R A T I S LA V A ,
home address as 1902 Danisi w.as in . a .car Ciechoslovaltia (UPI) -
Cherokee, S( IAuiS. • . backed up behind the stalled Cbaflota Horvatbova; the
The 32-year-old man was vehicle and be got out and ·.Communist ' world'• first
arrested by oUlCi!rs' just ~o walked up to Dalton's cir. heart transplant reeipient,
blocks from. the , rooming Police sad Ute twO men died Tuelday .night , five
house from which police say started arguing. hourt after the operation,
an a ssassin fired the shots Gibson, who was several _..1 that killed King Aprtl 4. cars away, ·told. police he Czech radio said tvuay.
They said he was arrested saw Danisi pull out his Doctors at first had
just alter leaving a cafe. wellet and display his shield described the 49-year-old
City Judge Berni e to Dalton . · widow's condition Is good
Weinman dismissed the A police spokesman said aft.el' the 71h·hoor trans-
drunkenness charge. 'He Gibson then saw Dalton ptaat. But lat« they aa.id &he
had never been befOl'e the shoot Danisi, the bullet had turned '.'critical" w:ltb. court on a p u b1l i c striking the probatimarr
dr\Ulkeruiess charge," said patrolman above the right ubspecified complications.
Weinman. eye. Death followed .
INTRODUCI G
A N,EW CO'NCEPT IN.
WAS.HING YOUR -CAR
SEE NEW IDEAS-NEW DESIGNS-NEW EOIHPMENTI
SEE THE OSCILLATING SOAPER ~~· :~~.·:~~~1••H
SEE Min.NG CURTAINS •INTLT AND PllM~T WASH RllT
INCH 0, THI TOP OF YOUI CA.II '
SEE NINE INCH BRUSHES WASH IYllT INCH°" To•• CAl'S un110•
SEE CHE'MICAl TIRE CLEANER~~~'~!~~::,~~~~~~ :.7.~t·
SEE TIRE WASHER :;:.::: :"~: =~~ ........ .
A,,LY 61NUINI CAINUIA "HOT"' WAI SEE AUTOMATIC "HOT" WAXER :.:'1~':.': :ri~~:'~'~~,:" :::;
• ..----------------flNISH lllPS YOUI CAI SHOWROOM . CLIAN SEE FRON7 & REAR APPLICATORS. :1~0:.'o::'~~.:~:.:--·
SEE 5 SPE( \L SOAPS r:oHMo:":ft'~·:.:~:~.CTION ..• /
.. (
Wtdntsdly, July 10, 1968 DAILY PILDT I
Potnpldou Out
France Nam.es New Premier
PARIS (AP) -Georges
PomJ>idou bac iplit with
President Charles de Gaulle
over IOclal reforms for
France and will be replaced
as premier by torm·e r •
Fort:lgn Minister Maurice
Couve de Mm-ville, 61, sources close to t b e
government said Tuesday,
Pompidou, a former
banker, was understood to
OppG.9e De Gaulle's
"p.-ticipation" plan for
W'Ol"ken and students to
share in managing factories
and universJties. De Gaulle
has offered ttJe plan as hi!:
long4:erm answer to the
social frustrations t b a t
boiled up in the nationwide
riots and strike! of May and
June.
Labor union• and
businessmen ralso h a v e
voiced opposition to the
partlclpotion plan, al1hough
De Gaulle has never spelled
out its details.
De G.ulle praised
Pompkl:ou highly at the
height Of the crisis six
weeks ago. But a source
close ·to the premier
commented Tuesday o n
reports of his impending
ouster: "It's true."
It bad been expected f<>r
some tlm• that Pompidou
woulct step down as premier
but only t.o escape poOOcal
entanJlemenU and reedy
himself as De ci.ulle'a heir
i1.ppa·ren.t , for th e
pres-iclency. Now;
Pompklou's "1ture· course
waa unclear. r
The premier ii nominally
cN.ef Of government but at
the outset of De Gaulle's
Filtil . Republ i c the
prerideocy changed from a
somewti.at ceremonial job to
a position of great power,
Pompidou holds a
National Al&embly .eat that
he would retain u a
political base regardless of
any change in the
premiership. The n e w
assembly meets Thursday
for the first time.
The changeover w a s
expected to be announced
oftic~ally this week after
Wedne1day '1 regular
Cabinet meeting, 90Urces
said. Couve de Murville was
reported to have already
held preliminary talks on
forming .a new Cabinet.
Announcement of the new
Cabiliet list was expected
Saturday.
Couve de Murville spent
an hour end a quarter
tBlklng with De Gaulle at
tbe Elysee Palace. Later,
Couve de Murville and
Pompidou hid a long tall< at
the premier's office. .
Pompidov --... afternoon meet) n C ·of
Gaulllst usembly deputies
but dld not speak: Normally
.
Gun Control Bill
Moved to House
WASHINGTON (AP) -seod tile bill lo Ibo -·
'!be Housie Rules Committee floor.
voted Tuesday to send the It waa also under1luod.
gun cootrol bill, .mich would that th< committeo ruled
ban the intentate sale of that an amendment by Rep.
rifles and shotguns, to the Bob Casey, D-Tex., would be
House floor hr action. gecmane to the bill lbeuld
1be don came after 10. be desire to introduce it en
hours of hearings dtring-ttie tbe HoUse flocr.
past two days. T-b e Casey said bis plan would
committee ~oted t.o permit requiremahdatory an ope11 ru!• which will
enable members to amerid sentences foc c r i m l D a l 1
the bill. coovicted. ol. crimes while
Many of the witnesges carrying a firearm. He told
wtio appeared before the Ule committee Monda,y be
Rules O:>mmittee said if sought to amend the bill
1uch a ru1e were permitted. while it was ftl the Houae
t bey would sub m 1 t Judiciary c.ommittee but
1mendmenta. was told the ~
One committee oqurce was not -11DC! lllilo Mid the vote was 104. to -rUled out OE. order.'
-1
I
SPECIAL
OFF:.ER
CAR . .
25
CREDIT
CARDS
O.K .
lncliiding ·-..
STANDlRD
WAS-H
,PH. 546-11:91
·----... ~---~--
c
0
ti
p
O·
N
•••
..
•
I
• • • DAILY PILOT Wednt!dq, Jui11G, WI
••
Riots Hit
Sacramento
Negro Area
. SACRA.MENTO (AP) -
P.<illce &a)d ,ooe car was set ablaze and several st.ore
-. """'1>'4 In a ~It· ·secti on of s--Tuadoy nJtht
Ill a c1i!turbaa<e by N"'1"'
youths. ·
Police gealed off the four-
square.block business area
of O!il< • Piltlt aft2r youths
staried. dri ving through in
cars in hit·and-run rock and
bottle throwing incidents.
No shots were fired, poll«
said.
Several persons w e r e
injured in fights and six
young persons were booked
!1r: foiling to heed police
orders to disperse, said Don
Foley. city information
officer. He had no details on ftli injuries.
Mas F01hioo ClccAing * ANAHllM * conA MUA
1trGARQ£NGROYI
kllUNTINGTON MACH
JULY
SALE
NOW
IN
PROGRESS
Girl Di.es 'f.cy.ing t~. Be Hip Shoemaker Alters
•
PALO AL'ro (UPI) -A ·-ClloooalJlo. ·-t to pick op ·-10 more who ...,.. at !ht party
ad m It te d uperlmantlag
wWl marijuana and Gun Control , Bill molller today mourned tho A lODC·halrld yoUll( man
death ol her "plastic hippie" brought her to tho hospital
daughter, who died at tbti about noon Mooday from a
•II' of 16 lbr tiytng too herd party a a well-4<>-do home
to mate the acene. an a quiet, tree-lined street.
-mainly the &Ont and
daugbtera of affluent
peninsula famlllae. ·
Na11cy, a junior at Palo
Alto High wu a buoyant,
happy tetn-ager, given to
comie antics .oo getting
good marks, her motller
raid, until two months ago
wbeil. ''her manner
changed."
m-. 0 W• ta1W tt owr. Sbil !!"-to lllop," Aid the
m-.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Commit!••· Both
Domocretic ,,,_mblyman Slloemaker and Biddle now
W I n l I e I d A. Shoemaker propose language saylllg tho
amet>eled hla prOPl>'ed gun ~--• "'llatra(lon ond licensing legislature does not ~=
law Tueedaj '"to remove to preempt local
tomt . t.i, tbe Gbj~ona to gQvernment's power to pu1
Mrs. Doris Cbristlamen, a Police quickly broke up
widow, said Naoc7 was not the party1 'Wblch llad been
the "tYl1"" of girl who lal<es golllg on since the night
drugs. . bef«e at the ~ of a
Mt•. Chsllllaasen, Who
runa a Hltauran1.and bas a
21°yur-old ton on the San
Jose police force, dOean't
know why Nancy to o k
drugs.
"She was what they call a utility executive who was
plastic hippie. She liked to out of town with hi• wife.
look and act like &be knew Tb• executivt's son was 9ne
-what it was all aboul But of eight )'OUD& p e o p l e
she dldn'l She wa.sn't really arrested.
"She 1eemed. m o r e
introverted, more peppy
Ulan usual," s,Ud Mrs.
Christiansen. Ttle mother
confronted · her daughter
about the change. Nancy
"They Juat do6't realize
what they are doing," said
the :qi other. "I hope this. wilf
shock: other kids who have
bee• smoldng marijuana •..
but· it's a sad way to teach
a lesson."
IL'" firearms laws. •
Bui Sboomakef ( D • But Shoemaker did not
Lompoc), Hid bl1 • new u.y whether Biddle ·worked
Jll'opoNl ''11 not a wlth him on bis
compromln • lilll" and he amendments. ••'lbeae w~e
baa no idea bow Assembly prepared 'by my staff and
Cr l m i n a 1 Pr o cedure my staff in cooperation with
Committee members will other A s s e m b 1 y staffs,"
vote on it 'Ibe eo111mittee, Shoemaker said.
hippie at all," said the Three lt and 20-yell'-olds iJ~I T ..... mother. were i?Ooked on IUSpicion of -'PLASTIC HIPPIE'
Nancy Chrl1t1_...., .Nancy died frOm What murder. Officer& c.augbt five
was presumed to be an jUV<nllel and Aid tl>eY
•p1it 5.5 between Btddle, who attended the
Hughes Flew to Fame
30 Years Ago Today
B fA Star M• • · Republicans and Democrats , new conference, refused to 0 . ts m. or1ty has gcheduJed • bearing say wl!eter he would ••pport , Wednesday night Oil gun leg· the amended bill. ·
islattoa. 'n!.e new meas~ allo
Home Loan Camp.al. "gn Shoemaker, the would eiempl law
A 1 1 e .mbly's Democratic enforcement officers from
Caucus chainlwt, originally the gun co!lb'ol provlslm!s.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Thirty years ago today
Howard Hugbe1 1 the
mystery billionaire·
industrialist, left on a globe·
c i r c 1 i n g , ncord·setting
Right of 91 hour• Olld 14
minutes.
Then 3'l, Hughes and a
crev.' of four made the flight
in a Lockheed 14 plane. He
completed hb e p o c: h a I
jooroey by teudting down at
Floyd Bennett Field in New
York July lt, 1938.
The. New Yon•Pwll
leg loot 16\l boon.
NY PARADE
Hughes, who wu to
escape death eight YIOl'I
later -· .. experml..W plane ·be..,.. piloting
c:rasbed -• Los AnplN residential area, was a new
natiODll Idol wheD b t
-lils jounley.
He rocelwd a tldteroUpl
parade lo New Yort Qty. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -hand · at key Bank of -ooed licensing g u n .A.
The B--• of Amer 1.c a owner• and "'gial<rlng all * * :W Hughes' flight WM a 11.11&. America brancbe1 guns: AAembiy Speaker
huardoua one, Ho ran Joto a laUD<hed • •100 million throughout Ille . -· to · Je,.. M. Umllll ( D • . 800,000 Sign
sudden aqUlll ovu the rain· home loan program Tuesda)' .. illter:Jret credit data ill Inglewood), g a "· e the
m riot prone and blighted . -• _, be<!r;iog. Gun Peti"ti'on drenched wutee of Siberia. areas of California in an light of minority problems," ..,.Sh::u.er Niel hit new
But it was over San effort to improve minority he said. bill 'WOUld retain licensing (AP) A
Bernardino, Calif., that be housing. but remove the registration LOS ANGELES -
received hia b'"le-4. scare. The program will enable 111 ~ u-·e 0 group of the late Sen. ~ " •· ll · p Ji S • req remg, .... nuw ver, a Robert F. Kennedy's owner·occupant.il o • to 4 • 0 ce trip 11 U •-l d It occuned when be kept l ·1 h . th . cense app cani.o w o u Callfor-•-sup..,,..-1 will amt Y omes 111 • have to list the firearms Wiii. yv•"""" a rendez\IOUll with u airline Watts area of 1..()6 Angeles, th pre6ent to state legialator• ~· . The Hunters P oln t. For ,Arrest Zi.i~ tramlers.,, sales today petllione bearing
"Mterall tllefroedom we ·Dog 'Leaves Bayview area of Sa• of guns would bave to be more than 100,000
hod on 11io :fllllit, • llu&lie• FranciSco and all oilier LO reported te the state Juolice atpatum urging alrOllCU'.
npMined. then, .. tbt traffic areas clmsified by the S ANGELES (UPI) -Department. The bill would aun coDb'ol laW'5,
Lot to. Be Federal Hou1tng lbreeolLosAogeles'finest not-· effective until Theyllidthepr11mt"'•
bere WM pratr 'lblck. ·I Administration as riot prooe Nipped to tbelr ~ Jan. 1, mu. Shoemaker told will lal<e .place "" 1111 ...... thoaiht 1bat pilot wlDled to and blig!Jled to apply for Tuesday belore rushloc on a news conference ll>at the 11te Capitol BlllldlJIC In nm wJncs er nnlthinc. He· Des:red funds to construct, buy or unemployed painter who ran maximum license co st, _&acr ___ a_m_••_.,_·_-:-==,,-acted m:e be wu tryinc· to " ·improve their dwellings. amok·witb a bucket of blood "Would be $1.5... r
get in the Olbm. wltb UI. Bank of A ni e r i c a in the armed lo r c e 1 ni. new blll contains
'EXCUSE ME' SAN JOSE (UPI) -The President Rudo 1 p h A. indu;Uon center. llOOle pravlalons of gun
"I don't mind formatkm ricbellt oocket" spaniel in Peterson, who announced James A. Frazen, 21, was con tr o I I e g i s 1 a t i o n
LFASE: OR BUY
cn NTl,..(NTAL
MfltCURY +'• COUGAR
JOHNS.ON & S.ON
642.0981
H11I S.<1ndl'n, M~r
ftying in purwuit abtpt and noribem California has gone the lending program at a armed wi~ what police said Introduced by Assemblyman
l'IMll plan• " be <.'Olltbmed, news conference at the "definitely was b I 0 0 d ' W. Craig Biddle ( R •
.. but when Jou get up to to tn.t big dog kennel in the bank's headquarters, said probably from an animal" Rivenide), chairme.n of the
planel t1 the D of these -sky• leaving Wells Fargo he could not anticipate whe~ whe1l he waa cornered in a C r i m 1 n a l P r o cedure
excuse me." . Bal* to figure out what to the $100 million goal will J:!'e aecond floor' corridor of the 1;::::~~~~::::;;;,,~=~=========;
WOOLWORTH-S
Hugbe1 waa t e 1t1 n g do with his '96,000 estate. reached. llrildlng in downtwon Los
navigation inllrumenta fot The apanlel, George died However, he said, "we are AnJi~~i-Stewart Schwartz ::J!ee ~·th-:m~~ April 6 at the age Of i4. He hopeful that we:.i over $10 was summoned to trhe center
wu underlined by tbe fad: left, mnoag oiler property, million could be loaned by and when he arrived he
that World War D bepn i• 3,114 shares of the San Jose the end of this year." found Frazen sp~ng the
mon1bl later. W-ater WorU -which To implemen t the blood oo. the walls and Boor
I TH·E BEACH BUMS
UIT
PRICI
&oadli Cwt ?Ila
11rfotol It s..-~--' COSTA MESA
HITCH
N'SWITCH
TRAIN SR
88
'12.95
NIK ABOUT LAY-AWAY, 10% down holds y<>ur
~at Woolworth's, no carrying charges, ever.
• ~Wf'l ....... AT
... DILllW0.111'• ... ....,-....
M ' ' "'"' Pmt11Y """' ,. .. , ... -
llM•r "111 MO P.M.
Invite you to a
He WU plelNd wttb tbe r..-..e lnhertted from a dog program, Peterson said, the of the hallway, shouting SINGLES DISCOTHQUE
teltlng. ~. bank was "reducing its obscenities. He called for
"We ~ not YS1 more named Mac when be expired minimum standards r o r additional police.
1han 20 mil.et from our four years ego, homes to make a wider "The officers stripped to
cbal'ted course of 14,<XXI Mac and George struck it range of homes eligible for their -shorts, principally to
mlkl," be commented. "On rich in 1958, when rancher mor tgage financing in the protect their uniforms, and
our transatlantic fll&ht, we Thomas E. Shewbridge of target areas." took the suspect i n t o bit 1be euct tpOt on the . Un d e._.r re interpreted custody , • • a police
coast o1 lrelud for which campbeU, Calif., died. He minimum co 11 atera1 spokesman reported.
we t.d aimed.'' had llMll'ed a troat fund with re quirements, mortgages At the end of the ecuffle,
EVERY FRIDAY, 5 p.m. to I p.m.
899innl119 July 12
In the Bounty Room of
Rafferty
Win Cost
what be o b v I o u s 1 y will be avafulble t o everybody was covered with
ooasidired man'c b e s t homeowners with t w 0 blood. 2122 E••I Coost Hl...,w1y bedrooms, one bath and 750 Frazen was booked on "" lrielKb. ' square feet. at the J11m1ic1 Inn· suspicion of battery on a c d I M
'The bank, executor of the ''That comPares with the ~po~li~·ce~of~l~ic~er~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~iiii orona • •r S be w b r idge-Mec-George former minimum of tm-ee.iii
ni.t Fund, bu asked a bedrooms, llh: ba,ths, andl
.uperlor court whether the 1,000 square feet ," P"eterson
lm8ll fortune should oow be said. A -special force ofl $1 Million lending ---Officers w it h
divided among human heirs extensive experience i n
SAORAMENTO (AP) of tbe tucher. minority areas will be
Max IWferty r 1porled1---=;ijjjliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~-~=--=11 Tueoclay b• spent more 111an I
'1 million Jn wlllnlng Ille
lleplll>llolll nomlnaflon for
U.S. Senate <Ner tncuml>ent
GOP Sen. Thomu H •
KucbeL
llalfes1;y filed hla r<port
wl1b ttlO leCl'8blry " 1tate'1 of.flee and then t o I d
newsmen he expects. bi&
geoenil election OM1!pe1gn
to ooet '1.5 mlUion.
'Ibo 1tate superintendent
" public inslructlon Nld
-ball bJs .._.. ...... In 1be form' of JD.tied campa;p statementa and
brochures, moat t1 1hem awea"nc for cootributlonll.
"We were bowled over by
the reapooee,'' Rafferty
said,~ contributlOlll
from 75,000 different
persons ran&inl: in mnouuta
up ·!e "1,000.
Rafferty faces for mer
state Controller A 1 • n
Cnlllllon In lbe N<>v. I
general election.
Drink Up, 5%
Goes to City
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
The City Council bu tacked
a 5 percent. sales tax on
al<oholtc beverages. aold Ip ta"""" .... ,.s1a1nn11, but
4111...rn owners and liquor
iodustcy officials Mid they may tett . the measure's
legality· Jn Ille courtl.
The c:ouncll approved Ille
tax Tuesday by an a te s
vote, a bare majority. U
approved by Ma'/0< 111111
Yorty, the tax -1d IO ialo
effect by lata August. It 1 'WOuld nise tutal tuea OD
drink• to 11 perctnt.
WALKER &. LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
1154 ho:mes sold
June 23rd-30th
there mult be a reason why I
'
Ftr rtllhs, !nt call me at Wah & lM .
-M7-6471 --MIOC82
OfF!CU I~ YOUR ""ft'
WiitNITDN-.cM
842-4455 _,.,._
-.nu
637-6770 -·-545-9491
re~nt a Pl~NO NO OBLIGATION •. 96 . TO BUYll! .. . ff'l"AL Al'PUlll
OUR LEASE HAS,
BEEN TERMINATED
(FIXTURES FOR SALEJ
•
ONLY
DAYS LEFf
COME EARLY 1
FOR BEST SELECTiONI
_ENTIRE STOCK
MUST .BE SOLD AT
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS!.
•
• &IFT wms • CURTAllS •l>WU
e WAil DKOR . e, BEDSPREADS e lllllS
The HOME SHOP ,_ or 0 . YOuDO ...
• o.a~ . RGAN
.. p ' SPINl!l'S, toNsous, ' ~ -• -,. -• .. JP llA.BY GMNOS, ORGANS
"""----...... --
HARBOit CENTElt-2300 HAit-. COST A MES~HON! 545-1453 ~ .OPENDAILY10to6-FRIDAY10to9 •
D.Dj lankAmorlcenl et """9r Che'I' Wel-
1._.-.. .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,..
l ' I
I
I
' I
I
~
I
I
I
--.. -
. ...
:WUe Worrle•
I . I :(He Won't
I • '·y ' 1\ '...J · eeu .,,
6ctor ·-. -Peter J, -rob -::i!oor Qr. llleincrohn: I
-~ a very-stubborn bWJ·
~· I know be IOft1 me
-t!>O chJldrOJ>, but be will m lal:e core of bis health. :Pe wu told: four years
:. that he has two ulcers
• tbat be shouldn't smoke ~ and mUJt atick to a
ttiitclal diet. ' : put be 1moke1 at least
'lbNe pacb • day, drinks ;too mUch evory dar, and
;eoi. anything and too much ..
1Je we1gbl %11) pounds,. ~blch la too much for hls1
r:f.'tu al._.,,, -. He
'<omplalns of a paJn In bis ~cliest which doubles him up.
;JIJ often gets a very bad
;l:Ougblng spell. He bad ..
'electroclrdlogram t a k e n ~three ye1r1 ago and· doctbrs
!•aid bis heart WU alJ right ; then, so he says it must' be
• atay now. The pain!:, -he
~lbmk1, are due to gas.
.l'num EVERYTHING
~ I have tried everything td
:1et him to go· t() our doctor,
ilbut [have bad no luck. What
1da you do with a person like
ltilii? . Perhaps if you tell hlm In
your column that he is kill-
ing hlm~lf be will listen. He
Is only 39. -Mrs. K.
. Comment: Mr. K., your
wife invited me to speak to
you, so please do not
dismiss what I have to say
with the splrlt, "another
county heard from!" Please
hear me out before throwing
•ay 1our paper.
AGREEMENT
I agree with her that you
are actually killing yourseU.
It's a good.bet that you will
die before your time. Your
negative ECG taken four
years ago is no definite in·
dication that the pains in
your chest are not due to
heart disease. It may or
may not be due to coronary
ut.ery diJease c a u 1 i n g
angina pectoris! As the
1aying goes, 1motlng1,
ciil:arettes iS "m.~· for ·
'J>OOr-functloning coron8rles .
.. ,.,Your coughing spells may
~ due to broncbitlJ, caused 1:l:Y exce1sive smoking,. but it
:U·not unlikely that you have
.elhphysema, or that it ii on
the way. ~Cigarettes are "murder''
6'r this condition, too.
. , Neither do · they help
ttlcen. Overeating means
putting on exceu weight,
·which isn't doing your cor-
·anary arteries any eood,
·either. ... ,.
·UNBIASED
. ; I suppose you've heard all
·~ from your wife. ~ou
haven't listened to her ad-
yjce. I hope you take mine · U an unbiased medical opi-
lllon.
k : If you IOve her and your
· c'IUldren, as. she uys you do,
·then you aie courting
premature disaster and ear~
ly. aeparation, permanent
_,eparatlon.
·Ooes It Nke 11n1e
'to own I whole houN ~.Ind live In one ,_7
Your *''"' al' furnace giYll ' You h1lf lM eyllllL To ftl'lcl "°* e .. lly JOU &an 1fll the
".other hall .... , ... '°' • "'' turveyl .
;.-ynty havt Otl!y OM room thll'I
• Oomfortltllt wfllr'I II .,_. IO
;fllllo to enjc<y Ame""n\I,...
... ,d "air or good ll~lng'"
~ut 911 houlel Your ,'.houtl wll be toOttr. ,_. .... Id._ ..... _
. ltollutl•n. tlutt .,.d ""'•· "'\'ou11 1101' 1ounder, eat
M1rtler, wo,11 better, Itel
~.,,, ............ .
. (;)~~
H&M
.'.HEATING .. .. ,,
'" ••
1132 W. lorkloy °'""'°' C1Hf.· Tel.: 512>6171
\
·, .
• llMCh & Edinger Blvd., Huntington
leach
•'233 E. 17111 St, ~NI .. , ~1..,,·c~er. Costa M-
• 2300 Harbor llvcl. at Wiiien St.-
Harbor Sliapphlt CHl9r, Costa Mfta
• 6127 W•IMilllfer at Golden West,
Wwtml....,
Wldne!day, Jul1 IO, 1%1 DAILY PILOT • 7
.e 1406 W. Edlnt• and lriital 5t-
Edln91' Center, s.ta Ana
• 17904 MatllOla St. -, ... ". '
' Foll11taln Yaa.y
79c Men'•·
Stretch
Socks
. Not 5, Not 7, Not 9, liut ...
12·Tran1l1tor
·.•11•• Valuel •
lwag Lamps ·
111:.~ 4" Jc 10.1a
7K Orlon Acrylic I: 25% Nylon Crew or Stretch ylon tn Rlb a= C.ble De-signl. Buie ud Fubion
colon!
•1n Valuel Toll'
. Dre11e1or'
Diaper Sell r-99c QolCI
Wasbfut cotton diaper seta
with lined plastic bib-style pants, fancy trims, sizes 9 to
24 mo. Dresses in 1weetstyles
with embroidered trims in sizes l to 3. . ·
•13.88 Calendar
Sport Watch
· ldtol for Scuba Diving
Cllendar, full I:
heavy luminiz:ed '9'' dl•l, ., .....
time diaL Sweep second band.
CompletelJ ••-terprOo!:"
Breezy barefoot ,_Cllelco 74c· tbona 1n bi·fuh·
loo colon. I to 8. Smait Ul'l1 oC
1tylesl
Ce•p_,_ ... ,,.. .. :lace•
ii#U!t> AW.ey l•p•ror
Famencl1an . .._., .....
aradley'• •••--• Ble•dedWhlskey
.... ' . ..._, ...... -
•• ,, llhr'I
(iM!1C>
l•Cre1' I
I llwl••• ~ ....... 79• "
.................
••1 JI
Casa•1I· -a••••n ··-· 2i'I·
•
......
·~ ...
~ -------
•acllo ............. c ... a •• 11.,. s333 .
Compaa.. the tone, tunJac.
•PPN?aDtel No beu.r buy ln town! Choice ot
colon! Gift boud.
. llillllll-Peet ......... a.. ••
Stu.aruq lampa 1ou'n
IHI!. aellinc for ft.8,SIS in Dept. Stores! A 1tyle
,for every homel BUl'l")' for best Hlectlon.
..'!:~ .. :,!··-............. •1.t•
(i!f!:l' Multiple
Dall~. Vitamins ........... 65c 1 tablet daily auppllu all Yit.I·
mini 10 adult or child bormalb'
PHd.i.6 'U tt.1
"a'i'p.r1 to ot&'.ra •t 18.47
• httle ef 2St M.ittl11l1 Dilly Ylta•l•1 ••• .$1.J2 ._ .............. 1.
• '"''' of tao M11tt1,1o Dolly Ylto•lu/I,.. 7h
IOTNOfltl,ll,lllllln' 79 $1.19 Borlno Vitamin A c
co.a111oonnaa1$1,1S, 1W1 ;i.¢i:;.i.': Vitamin 1·12 65• ....•. Vitamins l Ml1111ls
Mml.Ofl ... IM•
73c Borbro Vltaml1
IOTTII Of 1 ... 2JI M
1.49 Borbro VltDMll C ....
98c Borbro I Complex
fl9TT,C... ... Qf'-A1 ....... 1'n 79• Chewable Vitamins ,
n.nT,C0-&111111-ATf7M,WI $)5.3 S1perJ'otency fonnula
•1•1 v.i ... Ml•latwre
••·•0Clock1
t3aa
==·'."'.tt~= I rl-'"11. . .... ........... , ...
· ...... TeF ·
=·1~ ==.:ii=-"""~~:;i-=·~-~··' . !
•
Where but at Thrift1 1tunnlng orillnals for
·under tlOI 12dO"' •.•
hudtomeb' f:rutedl ,
hilbligitt Walla -Nft ta.llone1ch.
Wiiii•-···• ... •1911
Thl1tly lulled lilop .... -11fety backs-ready to lay! 4
tweed.tones and muWcolor
nndy 1tripea.
PenetNy P•r 38
. .
Flood Lights , ......
Weather· proof Py: ., " l't& ti• -ebOlce . or !•Ion. Perfect . f:'.J.atlo, lll'd"'\ or
' -. ..
.........
lmteh •f'rft '!t!\~::. = '5" . enda In Golcl-
tone. r ·b11h1 i • ;
II" wide, 914' d'eep. .
lcecl Tea:
20-0z.· Tumbler
it•Yalnl
•1 ~•1• Watllm
I MaryKlng'
I c._••••ilcs
• U11t1ck ...,. ........... 39!'
•9" .. 0\IPtMll
, •lloflll•llt , . I
1 ~
,~-:--!; .... M. ---~-.
'•
• . . -
4 DAll.Y l"ILOT
Schmitz Author
For. The Record Student Control I See by Today's
Wini Ads
' '
Bit"tlas
JtOA• Ma#!OltAL MOC,ITAL -· . Mt ..... INs. lllcM1'11 ~ lnt
lllloMI Dr~ C•I• Mew, tlrl
Mt. .,... ' Mn. O.rlet ~ "" ........ ,. Clrtll, H.........._ IMdl. 9t'1
Mt. 11'1111 Mf'I. II_,, SulllVM. 1n12
S.11" ltlhl Aw .. ffllll'lt9111 Vtllw, birF Mr, 1fld Mr1o. G.,11111 INtftll, 9'I ~ Sf .. Coollo /Mu, ..., -· Mt . ..., Mn. P'r11'111 llllCllHll9, l'b
SNllll'llllr Or .. Cosl1 ~. 1lrl
Mr. Ind Mro. ltOMld Sdllodi;er, Mn
Denbury (lrci., Hv.......,. •Heh. .... ,Mr. 11'111 Mr1. H°'""'ft L1WSOfl, 176 Tr.-wr• LIM, ,._., JHch. ....
~Mr. 1nd Mra. Nick ltult, 1lt7 ltwubllc
Aw .. Cwt1 Men, 1tr1 Mr. 11\d Mn. H1,.w Gefltrtll. n11 f' .. c.,.111; Aw .. C'111t9 MfM, M1' ....
· Mr. a1M1 Mn. J11M1 llfnM'lt, tsll Ori-Aw .. ('111ta "'-• i11iw Mr ..... Mn. 0....111 .. MIMI, t\'91• • ,. .... LIM, Mui\tlf'llhlll hldl. t lrt
Mr. lflf Mrs. ,-.-It ... tu I . Jtlll
•·• C." M .. , 1111 IN. lftlll Mn. HKW Sou. 23'ft
W..tm ..... r Air&., C•I~ MfM, bov 'Mr • .,.. Mrs. I!-sr•ow.1i:.1. tltt C-llM Or., w..tmllUl!r, M
Mr. 1Nll Mt1. W1rr"' Min-1•71 L..-1t• .. T1111t111, ...,.
Mr ..... Mrs. Iller J--. 02 C.ltoll .... "........,., .Hell. tlrl -· Mt ..... Mrs. GttM ~ Jll 01"" st., Slnta AM, WI' Mr ..... Mli!. 11:-111 MobRm. l:WI °"".._,.,. st.. com ,,...., 11r1 Mr. ~ IN!.. Tllo!M• :w.rt. 1en
Met\ler Aw .• WnlmlMtsr, t lrl
IN • ..., Mrs. ,.r1nd1 •.,...u.. 1m1
or-IMf L-. HvmlMt.I ... di. •••• Mr. eNll Mrl. 1!""11 f'flllllltl. IM I . H1111Mr Av. .. Sllltl AM, tlrl
Mr. eM ,,,,,_, lteMrt Wlit.i. !1111
T'Ulw Cltdf, )f!,lllllM,_. •Heh. t lrl
. -· Mr. _. Mrs. 11:111 .....,_.,,, 1Wl1
C~ln LIM, HUfltl ...... a..cfl, t lrl
Mr • ....t Mn. •911 lfulte'f, 1U f'!Pltr st .. Cl9!1 Mftl, ....,.
Mr. _. Mf"l. ltldllN ldlllllt . n\11
MfllfMI LIM, HUfltlnthM IHdl. ...,. ....
Mr-1M Mn. Nici l"rlM. lHl'I
W1i.,...,..., LIM, Hut1tl"'Nll •Heh,
M":" ind Mr&, Wl!llll'll SM1I, 11'1
Whllft"'"" OI'., Hut1""9'9n IHdl.
"" Mr • .,,. Mn. lr\IC:tl Cr1vftnl, U11
DEATH NOTICES
BALTZ MORTIJAlllES
Cor.a ... Illar OR S.MM
C.-MIA IU 1-Mlf
llELL BROADWAY
MORTIJAllY
U1 ll'Mdw11, Costa Mell
LI J.Sas
PA.Cine VIEW
MEMORIAL PAlllt eom-r..! ..... -ary
-P..iii:View Drln Na .... -.~ -PDSFAJIJLT eoUINIAL FUNDAL . llOllB
,... ... An.
.... tr •• , j ....
a119'1 JIOBftldY __ ..
·r-..-..;~AllT ....... °'*._ l•llU
HOGUa-..1tEH(HI -J.-"' .,....
"''" E~ lilil.., •1. •!Id SP!el .. LYM 9•1'911d11, 2', lllt1'I _, LftvM ·-Cll. MOOllll!·Hl!Olt!CI( -J11M tf, It-Ill
w. """"· .a. and SMila Mavr-Hlllfrlck. '°' 1111111 .. Codi #.9H,
WELTY-HlltOLfJt -J\IM tf. 01ry G.-W1ttr, 1,, .rod Jlildltll Mii
Hl""i.r, II. illoltl .. C.lt "'-· WEL.lY.(UllNUTTE -Jw.t !f, L1rrv
0.11 W.lfY. , .. """ """"" Mtt\to Cvt1111"9, IL """ 9f Como MtM. Dl!MCl!-HOWA!tp -J-tt, DM9111 Wllfw DMC!L 41,. .. Mld'nY Clf'I',
af'llll ....... J ............... " .._
""'"" ... di. Nt:GlllTT~ -Jw.t It, lt1 ....
HMNftt. Jr~ 21. tfld Tl'llfl' INM MtllllC. 16. llofll "WW!ftlnmlr. HOLLOWAY-HUl'l'OllD -Ju11t 2f,
l-l'r.;.tldl "°'""""..,., t:J, INI lie~ V. Hufofrd, #, 1111111 or CMll
M .... TtltEMILAY·HETJl!:Y -J\1111' 2f,
ll1wrnoi!cl It-Trembley, II, ef
Huntintleft IMdl, 111d .... rry Su.
H1hlrf, 1', .. El Monie.
Divorces
Measure Okayed • Here'• a '49 rord Oulic
in exoe.lk'nt condiHcnl
e A PLAYER PIANO, .re-
built and nftnilbed .. IJ.
nut. Comes with &> ';Ou.
Santa Ana~
Short of
SACRAMENTO --: A btll r • q u l r e d m • n. dat«Y
aulhored by at>te Senator dllnlilHI of atata eolle1e
John G. Sc:hmlli (R·Tu•tln). ·emp1"1t1 cooYlcled of a
cracldnc down on 1tudentl · felony ac an,y lft crime,
ud faculty m e m b e r • was pre•em.d· to ' th 1
pa rticipating in .i.te college -by W 1111 a m
campus demonrtratiom wa1 Campbell, R •pub 11 can
approved Tuesday by thl a 1 I e m b I y m ian 6'un
Senate Finance Committee. Hacienda Heithts:
new and GM!· ' e That 110me ludty ~
can pidc: up 1C1me ~
GrNn acrlloo Ihle .oar-
petlnr ... \I origin&! >Ii"'· e You can make that va-
cation thl• aurnmer evtn
matt enjoyable with <dUI
li' n-&vellu tra ile r,
aleeps 8 and.. b: in MW '°""'"""· Pricod .....,, $100)! The ttll will now be 1ent 'nle bU! wu fir 1 t e A complete .t d rabl1
flrnitlft in beautiAal con-
dition. Teachers
on to tile !locl!" of the Senale -oved by the Education
for further action. Committee without a roll call wte.
Fire cans
·The m·easure w o u 1 d
require that state college
SANTA ANA The preskients cfunniss students
Unified School District he.re or facuJ!.y member• wbo
is sh-Ort 110 teachers for have initiated any .ct of
next fall. violence er destruction on
B e c a u a e o t the college campus.
n on competitive :salaries, F a c u l t y m e m b e r 1
prospects of r e c r u i t i n g following dismissal would
q~lified teachers to fW the not be eligible for rehiring
posi!-1ons are not good·, by the schools, w h 11 e
Howard Harri.soil , assistant students could return after a
superintender:it in charge of one year wait. The bill
personnel, told the school requires that the college
board Tuesday night. president i n i t i a t e the
disciplinary hearlnga or face
Most of the Vacancies are dismissal himseU.
in the elementary gradec Another bill by Sc:hmili
where the supply is less dealing with tbe a t • t e
1ban the demand, he &aid. college a y s t e m was
Teachers can shop around approved .IOd then killed by tile Aaoeml>ly Educ9tion
and get -to '800 more Qnnmittee Tuesday. ""'"°' ._. .with surrounding diatr~. The bill, which wotrld have
1:111 1.111. TINldly, 1trvdu,. ttro, 111··---------;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; tri. Aw. SUD di....... 1
4.:1:5 '·"'·· medic.ti 11d, f'ollrt1 Crhra 11111 Horlll Shir LI,,.
4:., 1.m. Wtdl'IOldiY, ll\Olllcal 11d, 30H w. c .. 1t H1111w1y
.......... hKJI t :M 1.111. Tlt0t41'. c.1r flr1, Hllflllfl91oon
AYt-llMI Cllftl1nd
11:10 11.l'l't .. rt$cut1, "" Sfl'till tnd Ollw
S:.W ''"'" 1lrvdvr1 flrt, 1'312 Senl1
•
Anlll LIM ...... ....
':10 '·"'" 1tructvno flro, '50 Yorktown Y Y 7:~~:.:,nu~Y:~~ Htwllnd Slrft! •nd HARBOR AREA REFORM TEMPLE
11 ~:1n!':i:d ::n,~· H11nl1ntlon SABBATH SERVICE
s;1' '·"'· ;::;~.,~ ;~'~""·nm FRIDAY, ·JULY 12-8:30 P.M.
1:~'1~:!"':.crnnd11, 1r111 ftr1, lift lltll • lnlw, .._.,.,, .._. 01-,.,_ • ., 11\d •1111h1rd S..IM Clrt.. IHJMtioA Cettter
Wlltnlln1!1r ht lllf• ........ : C9" 644-G140
l :tt 1.m. Tllflcl1y, m.cllc1I 1kl. STnr~==~~~~;~~~;~~~~~~~;~~~=~ G1rd"1 G~• tlYd.
t :'1 ,.m .. lr1111 lire. fdh•e' belweofl HtwllNI 11M1 Mf1noll1 ~
S:•I '·"'·• IMdltll 1!d, 1SU1 Llf1¥ttfe
10:ll ''"'" 1Mdlc1I 11d. UOJI LI f'll .........
10:21 1.lfl. T111 .... 1', l'fl<llt, 616 JMM,
Aloi. It.
11:15 1.m .. hon"! mlt11k1, ArN"'lon
Orlw 1f'llll N--1 t w1tv1rd
1:10 '·"'·· l1h1 111rm. H--1 &ovlo¥1r• 111C1 Mftl Orlw
7:11 1.m., fl lM 1llrm, ll'OlllWIY 11'111
Fulllrlon
1:,, 1.m., ltlM 1llrm. 1'"" Slrtot Ind
AMMlm A-, !:II 1.m. wtdnt.01y, MM.t 1t1l1l1k1,
........,, s ..... i.v1rd •NII lrt1~ SITtot
Youngsters
Interested
In Y Camp
How doH a y~gster get
the mort out of summer?
By notin"g the response, lt
mwt be by taking part in
the YMCA day camps.
South Orange C o u n t y
staffers reported th.is week
that the Y Day Camp Period
Three (July 15 through July
26 ) has nearly 40 enrolled.
Tht two-week c a mp s ,
open to boys ages 7 to ll1h,
run five days a week.
Youngsters are picked up
eittier at their home or at
pick up locations every
morning, and then returned
every evening.
Day Camp Director
WiW'am Kindel indicated
"we still have s o m e
openings and trips for the
third period including
Knotts Berry Farm and a
tour of San Diego Harbor. In
addition, we will h a v e
swimming, hiking, handi-
crafts ,' trips to nearby parks
and an over-night camp
WALKER & LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
. ' 154 homes sold
June 23rd-30th
aod lit in trade-.in1
List and see big resu s
come from Walker & lee
OFFICES IN YOUR AREA
lNl!L...-oNm
&42 ... 455 , ----ml
ant•
NIGHT •nd DAY SERVICE
9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
Later, · WiWe B r o wn,
Democratic' as1emblyman,1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ from San Franci1co,I·
challenged the irocedure
and the bill was returned to
the comm--... ii
l8lled to pall .. lb• r"1I call
vote •..
Orange
For
Coast's No. 1 Paper:
Top Sports Coverage '
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
NO'W!
NEW!
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED '.ADS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
3 LINE·s
l TIMES
52.00
IN THISI CLASSIFtCATIONS!
P:umltuN
Offf19 P:urniture
Offleo lqvlpmont
s~•~·'-"' C1fe. lt..t1vr1nt
... lqvlpmont
He1tHhehf a..11
Appll-
Antlt1U81
S.•l"I IMA••lllh~h1••• --··-
-I010
IOll
IOl2
I014
I015
I020
1100
1110
1120
ll:U
Pl1not & Org1n1
Rod lo
Teleivi•lon
Hl·fl & Stereo
Tape Recorders
C1mern & Equlll""fM
Hol;by Supplloo
1pon1.,.-. .. _,, ..... '--·-
1110
1200
1205
1210
1220
1300
l400
l500 '
1550 -.
e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
.... -a.or ....... c-mo..;o1 ,._ •
e ,.. ..,,. CMn111 e Ne J:.Wtrewlatlefte e
START MAKING
MONEY NOW!
CA~
642-5678
UK POI :YOUR
DAILY PILOT AP-VISOR
AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT!
(
..
' '
.. . '
. '
••
. ~
-l WedllfSda,r, J11l7 10, 1968 DAILY l'!LOT-'9
j 'News of· Coast Men in Service on Duty Around World
: .. !!~' . I' "'1 ".f •ft -.•;
• .cadet Rl<lulrd Re!lllf D, E. 15th St .. Cos)& MeH, a CUl!ord L. Donolioo, 718 Newport Be~h. & lludent at catllornia, b a I I end i o g marlot warfare aircraft llllped. to tilt Air fO«e N. Gibby ol illllt Alta
: ~'(AFROTC), •10n of Mr. and Jludenl at Uolvtnity ·9f Narc!Hut Ave., OorOll& llel ,~,CoDece, Cl&remoot, ROTC at Ft. Lewts,,Wuh. corrler, USS Yorktown, Technical Tralolng Cealer, Loguno, Leauno Btoch, bOI • ·':t; v L. Relnlg Sr of California, Davis. is mt· ·Mar. completed the air ii •tteoding ROTC at Ft. The cadet is a griduate of which has bef'n oper&ting off Lowry AFB, COlo., for been Utigned to the Air
' · • • · tending ROTC at Ft. Lewil, defenae automatic weaPons l.A!wil, Wash . Univenll•181.d..Scboo1. the coast of North Vietnam. , ........ lallzed · ·~Un11 . as & F,_..,.. Teea.. .. 1-at . TrUin" i &1. t972 Rubi Circle, HWl· " &" r.... __..,..... .......... "'~ • , WE.fh. course at the U.S. Army Cadet Meyer is a graduate muntUo'-1~lali1t. Coler. Ketdflr AFB1 Ml.11.,
• ~· n g t 0 n B e I c b • 1 I Cadet ljew is ~.graduate Defense Training center, of Claremont H.i&b SChooJ. E J e<:tronlcs Technlclan Airman S&evea O'H•lr I .. Mrmasa • O'Halr ! la I . ·f~ tlalnlnC .. Ml air traffic
: '!'?.:;.rticlpatiag in fie 1 d of Newport ,Harbor High Ft.1 Bliss, Tex. 2.c. Iln11&oa S. Lyta, USN, son of Mr. and ~s. Forrest graduate 'Of Costa ·Mesa speciat.i_.t. nit airman, a
'·~ encampment at Schoo!i 11161.· ' •· Guy A. McEocbeo, aon of Jon of Mr. &!Id Mn. Leo K. L. O'Halr of 2219 Avalon SI., High School, 11166. 11166 shduate of J.olguoa : '°'"-1.....,11, AFB Walb ·, '.';:---, ·Henry C. ,Meyer, DI, sqn Mrs. Mbinn P. MeE&ehen1 l.yonpl80Huntioctnn.\vt,. CoslaMffa,eompleted · ~ .. Bo.Ch HJcti Scl\oot/ltudltd
ii -•·r r---· • · J>\1-'·Rliilfte B. Ha\ll~r . ot Mr. ~, .Mn .. Henry 2U Via Lorca, a 1tudebt at Huotlngton Belch, iJ ttJ'V• b-.ic training at Lackland Atnnan stena B •. Glbby, • at. ~-.: ec.t: Col!e&• : ""°"' Cadoll become famllior DI, 20, IOll'ol Mr. and Mrs. .Meyer, 91& Citrus Pl&za, Uolvenlty of South• r n lng aboard the ontl-1ub-AFB, Tex. He hu been oon of Mr. M>dJdn. Melvin · bofon tm.iD1 lbe -·
:•wwitb'tbelit.andllCti~tlesl~-.,.-"'""....,,.~~~~~~~~~~~~-.,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~
c ,: =oil the basee and can ez·
: ~imm• .career.~·· : -1ii wlllch Ibey lillehl. wiah to
; "-"'·.-ve a oUlcen •
• ·-COdet Relolg ls • 111&
: groduata of Loyolo Hi(h l School ...i ;. Mlending
, Loyola Univenily, IAo
~.i...
Pvt. Jay J. Ge~, 17, son
JJ1 Mrs. Laverne C. Gettle of
1'11·A 30th St,. Newport
Beach, and Edward Gettle
of Mill Valley, has ~om-
~ a li(hl·vehlde driver ~at Fl Ord, Celif.
: He was trained in the
• operation. and mol~ct # ol mlll\.l1:Y vehiclel up lq
• and iDcludJM tho two'llld • I hall ton truck. · \ : • • • • • • .. • • .. • ; • " : " " 0 • = :: • • c • • ~
~ .. .. ~ ~
~
~ ~
0 • • "' ~ •· • • • " 3 • -• • • • ..
& ~ • ~
0 • ~ . .,..
~ • " " • ~ ~ • ~ • • ~ • i g
" •
Engineman . 3,C. ~ Hoofard, USN, 20, ·30!
Anade Ave11 Newp rt
Beach, has heOn ... tioed lo
the USS Haverfield oU the
cout ol Vietnam .
Tbt obip Is patrolliD( the ' '
Taiwon Slraill ml wlD . ,
participate in opera ti Ctjl .. ~: \
"Mutet Time" in prew~ linJ..,...Y~ ··:
Boilermm · Fi·reman ,·
Ra11eD W. We•~ USN, 22,
aon of I\-J. w .. 1ol1111 ·.
CeOO'e St., LaCuno 8-h, Ii '
aervlJlC •~. UM
des"oyer, USS Bemitr ot
Sa'M!bo, Japan.
The Beooer will join the
U.S. Seventh Fleet iD the ·,·
Far East.
Cpl. Lawrence Nyman, •
USMC, ·21, ·oon of Mr. and
Mr•. Pale P. N)11Wl of·8021
Vane Cl r cl•, HunUilglcio
Beach, .hu been usiped to
the Fir>t Hnepltal Compony,
Finl Marine Dlvttlon in
Vietnam •
His company provlde1
resuscitaUon and emergen-
cy surgery facilities for
force units.
Dale W. ~ew, son of Mr .
and Mrl. DOa Jl .. N'1f, 222 ' ~-.,.,. .... ,. 'l ~ ·-,,;;.. ·-~ . ..;. ,, .. ~ . Costa Mesan
In Program .
Annie Sd-'1z, 2 8 i 7
Nev\s Orcle, Costa Mesa
will be one of 60 young
rnu.siciam attending t b e
·Congress of Strtng1, an
eight-week . p r 0 c·r • m
spollS<l<ed by ' the NalJooal
f "eder&lioo ol'M•slcl-&!Id
aided by tho RockefeU.r
FoundalJoo.
. -
''Vano''
PAlllC PINISH
HOI.
3i1.00
.•;' .
Hll!Y)'"DUTY
}'Gain''
: Dttor111t with
'-.. retlS.41 C~lla II•~ SMll CINI
ri:: 1.05
·iJ<~1 · l<a~~
M.P.S.
CHok S1yl1
DOG POOD
, 14 IL ~Ill S 'il~OO
"PLAYTEX"
Swim Caps,
'-
''Cornella''
Bell.-•f& !e.·dlsltM ill "comt alivt"
"'''"""'"'
1 3 98 i.i.•• •
'
..• · Bathroom Scale
"'Dltect1" -~ irace, 1111 shape, the
lovely lines of 1 !lirllerfty. 5 98 "Auto-Zero" eMs adjost-
ment. Gold, whUe,1'10Cldo. •
2.00 .•
AT
IOTI' & lllLS'
.1-Pc. Sunsuits sac Ctlte, colorfld ~lea with plistic lined.
Pl'b, full "11111" °"'Inf. M·l·XL n.
T!.~!!~~~'~'8!!lil~~~~ !~~1 .. 1111111vable deflector. Fits !ant agai11St su'1Je11 stops.
Ill regolar toilets. Wtl!te Fits all ta'S -ll'Dnt or ~ ..... aid"""· age . bltk. 1. 39
Travel Urinal
§ "WH-WH" for boYS IOd· elrls •.• 11t1breektlllf ptn •
ti< wi~ little 79c
~s11111u Diaper Liners
DENNISON-Protection for baby, convtnient
lor mother. Helps to pr1Vent diaper rash •.. 59c
illtal for trip&\ ., 111 1t 111 ' ' . . '
"•
Pacquins
.... , ..., Ulllll
tr Sil I Sltll LITillf
1111' t i. Sin
IHULTON•I · ''Su•r ·
Fragrance''
SPECIAL
--SUMMmlMl • Beauty Sale ... ., ...
· I 1111 lt try FIUI ..,,
11uu1y w.~.
ln1 GralM -HI~
"Wallf lllf Pore Lotion. . •
I.II Y•IH rl1 OM\! -. e 1.50 ~
Colea-.lst
•. , hL Alnlll lfnl
lllstill Pnlllr
•.• I tL Sin l11'1ullc
l•lf•fftUlllesorl FlOW!f, Fnend$Jli~ Glrdert, .
Wpido & !Illy Am•I·
CM Old Spice.
IACM
1.25
Heal Dogs' t.tc11-sns
DR. MllllCK'I ''l•lfe4ene"
liq~ldmedlcitlotlstopSscutctl-111 1 IJ9 Ing In mi1111tes ••• kills fungus 4 IL
spom ~eked •P !n weeds and • •
I"'' • • . """y "°'""' UI 1 79 heilln1. l .IL · . 1 .
... 111. fltn; Tllb •••• ,...; ..... l1do .
''Scratcm'' ''ScrlfcMI''
'lC:I' SPUY.:.. Penetrates "'·-~·-POWDEl-for Dogs · -·-to s~in for fast rellef. •• & Cats. .. kitlslice•l30 Guaranteed to work. -worlswllerect!lers
fliL .... 1.34 Sin
COOl,.""A'Y ~ Cous, C1i111111;B"i1n1? DETICTO
· COllClllTIATID '
''Prell''
SHAMPOO
fer IH4ntf lollnll
''I.est''
'""'"'~ SOAP
loll Siii im
2i41 'C: . ' .
''Aiax''
DOUIU ILUCll ..
CIHnHr
CIHI Sin
3i47c . '
"Flea Cole;' '"Dip -l Cats f.~. '1
"Va,.,.U." '~I
-adiusl•blt ~-collar •ills 1 \,
llut ticks•~ to 3 montbs! Ji
01 ... 21 hoor protleioo. ' ' .iiu11.39
Insect "hr" ..... ,....tta" -kttOs holGIS free
ef flying l11Sects,
:11.39
POL'AROID
Sunglasses
·~'Foam-Eze' Pads · Clothes Hamper
"II•••" -t.ara:e sile with cushioned
lid, towel ring llllldles. 9 98 Swirlin1 sea ripples on
!lat~ed with sell-ldl!trin1 adlleslve, the p&d
stays ·firmly. in plact and wcn't comr1 olf
in bath er shoWer. Satin-~lh top pre·
•ents dr.I& on hos iery . ~inyl, flkl color trim., •. . • • • .. For the second year, USC
is hoetlng the coottU•
which wlli continue thrdugt
Aug. 10. Under the direction
of Dr. Walter Ducloux,
chafrman of the Department
of Conduc:tlng ood Opera,
the studeota from 19 states
and Canada will prepare for
concerti, perform in udgn-
ed chambe!' ensembles· a:nd
form their own ensembles.
r-~-...,.~~--------a Don't endlri tllitortv11 ar.d mis· • C.11 rw (!l's)
~ • ~ • > • • • • > ,. • • • " • ~ .. • • • • • ..
~
4 .,
~
" ~ • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • 0
~
M • • • • e • • • • •
Estancia High
Teacher Picked
Mrt. SUl&ll K. Kent, 2U6
Wettmlnlter Ave ., Gotta
Mesa, a social 1tud1 es
teacher ot EsW>cla Hfgh
School llu bten tei,,cted u
ooe of 65 participanll from
lbroul)lout Ille country to
ollend an NDEA lnltl1uto iD
history ttm 1ummer.
The lnotitute II f\mded by
the U.S. Office of Educ:atioo
&!Id --ed by the
ll<parlmfol of .m.tory of
the Unl v•'fi'IY of
Ma.-ch~~· ·
: M.,;, f.,/Wm Clodlinf
2 * ANAHllM . ·-·-: ··--: * --Olf •Cll i JULY • ~ SALE
i NOW ·· • , : IN
~~ 2ROGRESS
., .,.'. v ath & Shampoo
Sl'UY -with massaae brvsh that
wiH invi1crate the seal~ 59c Fits all faucets ••• choose
lrOl!l· ISl't CGloTS. l'f. lie
"Curr 'n Style"
20 Second SET
No water -no lotioos -no sleepina
on curlers! Kit con1ains all 8 88 you need to retouc~ or re-
set hrlr. ldtal tor fine hlir. 1
) •
ery If itr.lliJW, bumiftC, raw ind
achi•I toes or fett because of
Athlete's .fool
1 IJ'. u.,1• 1 11.
llltll••t
2 l l . -1.49 1.49 1.19
SCHICIC'-.W ,, , GlllATUT SHAYllll
DISCOYaY SfNCI SDl'lll STAIN\ISS SIDL
NEW SCHICK
"KRONA-CHROME'! ·Blade
Dutlasts any other
doubl1 ed~e razor
blade ycu ve ever
used •••
II TllUI ll9lllT lllCll
:~ 691: ti I
Only COOL-RAY l'O!AllOl1I
Sun&""" ""' ...... ~I POlNllllD lolm thlt
sto p r1fl1ct1• 1l1re, ''
Alronsbll<d " TY • .,
"Barracuda''
.
Co•t1mpcir1rr 11ylln1 for "*' lftd women •• :111
!lock or llool·Amltr/Ciys-lll'wl~ Sill lenses.
· caGL·IAY '
l'OWOID 3 98 "lltrnc,41" I
• ClllHI PHt (l's)
• l1ll01?1n (l's)
Y11r 431: Clllu 111
Extension Cords · ..,, •
Ir PACIFIC UICTllCDID ••. J.D1l11t ~
C1r•1-P1-1t 2-Containa 86C . · cnt 12 ft. Ivory cord ind 6 ft. brown cont. · ht• fir
BBQ Extension Cord
;llllAll-llllT"
Pillow-Case
.)Mps YolK hlir4o beauty parlor tresh
mn tht ntXt di~ ... little 1 79 or no combing·lftded in
the mor~ing. Ass't colcrs.. • u .
~------Utl lity Lamp
w/CUM' .., !itllt up ior l!tio, ..,,. sho~. 11rap, itC. ltt ft., -·
aluminllll'I rtflectar WN:2·59 w/b~avy clamp.· ettlCJlld 20 It: cord. · • ., ••
'ltlor Tttb-2a 119· ..._
tt. 1.,ct1 10 bri1h1 I"!!'!~----------... -· redco!Oi'of 161aua1. •
Extension Cori
Flitli11e desian In ~ritbt yellow qi· '
~, •• perfect for pov;ar pools, 1b:.
llft; ·NF!.
2.99 4.88
·~~ -.
rwLMtr. • Sfnl\'/111111
Cll1lic ciau
'
"Chip 'n Dip" sn
lo lllW ""'""'1"
C.lir •• , 3 pc."' wl~ 1 23 9" t'lj low\ 5." • .,
lowl "' Inn Jioillol • -. . . Ash Trays
•
·--Clftll•
ll1js -uflCI · • • • "l""'IPI" color • ' .
• ·' i
..
;hili~ •.• ~·.
~~ an.1 j
-e.1 ......... AU TF1JS __ -· """ ... ""' .. -llff .. llWI -."lllotll !llf,
"I" Sill ac '. :
•
w • o.?.-. --· •• -=ebnta. ---~-~>~~·CPto-~~===~~==~-~~---==~,·------=~.1..-=====,,.,,-----------. .
' '·
•
. ··~-....... ~··~~~~II""'~ ............................................................................................. ...,
Your
SOFT DRINK INDUSTRY
A REFRESHING INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
-Siles of soft drinks h1v1 nMrl)' doubled in uch dtcldt
ainct 1880
-Aidlna the boom is the rapid incruae of the younaer11n-
entton which is tht larpst consumer Of these products
-Per e1JMta consumption in both domtltie and forelan
merMts hn rtHn d:11matkllly vm the p.11t ye1rs
-Nowc:anvonilnt poclcillnsconcopb•,.suppltm1ntod by
men llllTIMMt ldwrtialnc ind promotlonll procnm•
-LoW C.loril blvtrapa npr11tnt 1 dynamic new 11fts .....
There are many addltlomil futures which 1iv1 the Soft
Drlrik lndu1try app11lln1 int1rm1dl1t1 and lon1·t1rm
arowth pro1peets ••• Write today for a compllmtntary copy
of the lattst issue Of U~VESTOR'S DIGEST contalnlnr a
complete 1n1lysls of the Soft Drink Industry and hlah·
lf1htln1 1ttractlvt investment opportunities. ·
LEBTER, RvoNs & Co.
MtMIEltl N[W VOJll( STOCI( tllCHANCIO
~111': Cowl MICll hclNlflll • Arolericflft "odl [•cfl911C•
"'""--------------. Addm•------------
CitY-------------
State, Zip Code
WALKER & LEE BREAKS
WORLD'S RECORD
154 homes sold
June 23rd-30th
because aervice is our name I
-547-6f71 -·-546<J022
_..,_,
---t• I•
-~Derr:• -_...,...
Wtd-y, July 10, 1'118
..
.. Tuesday's Oosing Prices
,• -·" ... -i -
' -Complete
IOAT IUffS .
-IM·N, " ... "" .... -...... ... ~ ............. ,, .. . "0-.. c-i, .... .. ...................
~~--·· ';«~ .... ~,
• ..,,, _ 1968 O.<ILV ,ILOT
New York
American Stock
I
+
"•
.....
I
I
I
I
'
•
...
I ,
. -
,,,~-~-·~=~ ..... ------------------------------------------............................... ....
DAILY PltoT EDITOR IAL PAGE t
'
Space Out Bond I.ssues
Jl Is very likely that voters oi Huntington Beach
will be asked on the Nov. 5 ballot to approve spending
some $40 mJllion for schools, parks and a library.
It is likely the voters will reject such a large spend-
ing plan and the result will be overcrowded schools, an
inadequate public library and a shortage of parks for
years to come.
Each of tbe governmental bodies a sking voter ap-
proval on general obligation bonds sees its request as
reasonable. But in the eyes of the voter all of the
money comes from his pocket, not from government
departments.
Huntington Beach Union Hign Scnool District lik ..
Jy will ask for about $22 million for construction of two
new schools, at least one new site and additions at
:rome existing schools.
The request will be in line with the rapidly increas-
ing population. Taken alone, this issue just might get
the necessary two-thirds majority, especially when it
is pointed out that there \Vould be no increase in the
district tax rate. '
The amount to be asked for construction and
equipping of a new central city library is expected to
be near $3 million. The city desperately needs a new
library located near the...city center.
Some $10 million will be asked for park acquisition.
Land is being covered rapidly with housing tracts and
within the foreseeable future the land available for
parks could be taken by homes.
In addition, as the available land is used, the price
of remaining land is forced up, making a park pro-
gram more cosUy in the future.
The fire department needs new stations and equip-
ment and fulfilling this need is a vital necessity in the
interest of a safe city.
All of these are worthwhile projects and taken in·
dividually could obtain public support,. but faced wilh
a total spending program of more than $40 million, the
taxpayer is going lo wonder if he can afford it all lle~s
likely to reject· everything. .
It Is Urne for the tex!ng bodies to realize that It I•
lne same taxpayer paying the bills for both city and
scnools. If both are to ask for bond approval, It should
be at separate el~tions so that the merits of each bond
proposal can be considered alone .
As it is now, a campaign against one is a cam-
paign against all and the taxpayer-voter will reject all,
good, bad or indifferent, in the confusion.
Women Pitching In
Cleaning up some a.reas of Huntington Beach is
almost a challenge beyond grasp, but it is the adopted
job of the energetic Women's Division of the Chamber
o! Commerce \vith Mrs. Charles Bauer as chairman
this year.
Cleanup drives in the past have met general apathy.
l\1uch was left to be done. •
Over the past few months th~ welcome sign on the
west entrance to the city on Coast Highway has been
cleaned and restored, anti·litteJ;' siJns ha:ve gone up,
trasi. barrels appeared and beautification plans for a
median strip from the pier to Beach Boulevard on Coast
Highway developed.
Increased interest in stronger police enforcement
downtown and encouragement of all to brighten the
city wherever possible is beginning to have results,
thanks to Mrs. Bauer's committee.
The women are not responsible for all of the pro-
gress, but have contributed more than their share. Next
pr'oposal is for an annual or semi.annual cle~l,lp cam·
paign. Jt1s a good idea, one which could aid materially
in keeping residents aware of a duty to keep the city
clean.
H
Are We Movi ng Closer? Are Words
Of Wallace
Catching Up?
Cuha-15 Years of Castro
By WILLI.All! GERBER
Editorial Re1ea.rc:b Reports
Cuba will celebrat.e later tis lTlOl'lth
the 15bh anniversiary ol. Fidel Castro's
attack on the Moocado Barracks at
Santiago de Cuba. Although the attack
was unsuccessful, the date on which it
OCC'Ul'?'ed -July 2' -gave its name
to the movement whicb, not much
more than five yeers lattt, led to
Caatro'1 victory over Cuba's old-style
dictator. Fulgencio Batista.
On Jan. l, 1969, Castro will complete
a full decade as leader of. what turned
out to be the. first Communist regime
in the Western Hemisphere. Through
that period, Ile hat managed to keep
control ol Cuba despite M Am.erican-
financed attempt at invasion of the
~untry, an economic boycott pro.
rno<ed by the United State<, •llJllllsiOll
from the Organization ol American
States, and frequent quarrels with h.is
principal outside source of assistance,
the Soviet Union.
ANY FRANK assessment ol Uie
situation in the island republic today
would tlave to aclalowledge that the
Cuban masses are materially better
off than ever before. Cuba's 7.8 million
people are entitled to receive, free of
charge, education at all levels,
medical servicen, meals on the job,
eleetricity, local telephone service,
tickets to spocts evemts, end a funeral.
On the oUler side of the ledger are:
-Failure of Cuba's gross national
product to rise appredably since 1959;
an actual reduction of per capita an-
nual income, from $450 in 1959 to MOO
in 1967.
-Strict rationing necessitated by
shortages ol. food , clothing, and
household articles. The ration book in
February 1968 entitled each person to
buy two shirts and two pairs of shoes
a year, three pounds of rice .and 20
cans o( evaporated milk a month,
three-fourths of a pound of meat and
three ounces of coffee a vi•eek, and a
liter (slightly over a quart) Of frtsh
milk a day for each child.
BEFORE AND AFTER Castro
came to power. he promised that Cree
elections v.-ould be held in Cuba -
within, four years, he said on "Meet
tae Press" on April 19, 1959. However,
no elections have been held ; th e
government rules by decree and there
is no legislative bod5'. Every citizen
must at all times carry wit'h him an
identification card containing hlJ pie·
ture, description. and fingerprints.
The Sovjet Union, which provides
Cuba with economic aid amounting to
more than $1 million a day, no longer
actively uses Cuba es a springboard to
spread communism in the Wester
Hemisphere. Cuba itslef bas sought to
take tihe lead in that effort.
Beginning in 1965, the chier in-
surrectionary activities in Lat in
America '"ere guided, on the spot, by
Ernesto Che Guevara, an Argentine
physician who had met Castro in Mex·
ico in 1955 and joined for~s with him.
Guevara was killed oo Oct. 9, 1967,
after a skirmish with Bolivian govern·
ment for ces.
THE ADllllNISTRATION that will
take office in \Vashington next
January will be faced with the task oC
reviewing U. S. policy toward Cuba.
One group of Americans tavot·s active
intervention to overthrow Castro. That
group, although small, includes a num·
ber of prominent citizens. As a
measure short of m i l i t a r y in·
tervention, the economic boycott of
Cuba has been a doubtful value.
'I1he chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, J, W. Fulbright
(D Ark.), considers the boycott "a
failure a1 an instrument for bringing
agout the fall oft-he Castro regime."
Elimination or diminution of two ir·
ritants seems necessary to establiSth a
situ-ation in which the U!R.i.ted States
can comfortably restore diplomatic
relations with castro's regime and end
the boycott. The irritants are Castro's
support of guerrilla movements in
other Latin American c~ies and
his allegiance, such as it JS, to the
Soviet Union.
It is, hov.·ever, not certain that
Castro would welcome an overture
toward normal relations with the
United Stares.
M'any Americans believe that if end
when peat::e Ls fainally achieved in Viet
Nam, the Castro regime and the
American government will find it
mutually advantageous to sit do\vn
and work out an agreement Uiat will
provide for better nlations betu·een
these tu·o physically, if not politically,
close neighbors.
The Child's View of Life
Anyone over 30 who has trouble falt-
ing asleep at night usually turns his
restless thoughts back to h i s
childhood.
He remembers it with a vague sense
of loss, as mankind remembers lost>
Eden -with a pang.
Most .people like tG recall their
childhood as a happy time. and their
minds obligingly turn away from the
woes they knew when very young.
But was anyone's childhood ever a~
happy when he lives it a! he later in
life prefers to recaJl it to have been?
No, indeed. Jn this ~pect memory is
a soft liar.
The secret heart of any child •~
hardly bathed in constant :self.smile.
He approves of himself far less th an
the grownups around him do, for h('
never fs quite as innocent as they
think him to be. ·
THEY TEND to regard hiln• as
either 1 perfect angel or 1 little de,·il.
Dear
Gloo1ny
Gus:
Nol oD1J did the lllat• decide to
rebUlld Cout Hltbway througl> Hllllllnll<n 11-=li durlng tht
IUIDJDt!J" aeMGll. with the miDlons
(ff v1.t1Jon UlllC the highway,
th• .....,. lllo loot down all the
rood ~ oo no -can find
bll Wl:J lrOUllCL -W. It G. · ...... ,..... ,,,..,., ,...... ...
r ., ..... • ......... ._, ..................................
" .. :0.. "'t'. ·'1
Hal,SOy1e ' .. • ' ' .
depending on the day or what they
know about his conduct at the mo -
ment. But the child himself is haunted
by the knowledge that he is never a
perfect angel. al!hough he may for
fleeting seconds wistfully yearn 'to be
one.
Every child is troubled by hidden
~uUt. which comes early to the human
race. He alwa,vs has done son1ethin ~
\vrong which his parents haven't yet
found out. and so he feels like an un -
caught criminal always in peril of
being discovered and punished.
This self-knowledge of guilt and fc;ir
of retribution is the sword or
Damocles that hangs in the soul of
every child. It keeps him uneasy. no
matter how small his transgression
may be. and shuts him from th e
paradise in "•hich his deluded parents
think he dwells .
WELL, TIIEN. since children are
actoally hypocritical little wnrr.\'·
"'arts. just like grownups. what is
there truly about childhood th at makes
adults look back upon It "'ith such
fondness? Wherein lies its real magic?
The real magic of childhood lies in
the fact that It is the only period of ex·
Is ltnce when yon look at Ufe 11 If you
were seeing It through a me.gnirylng
gla55. Everything is bigger, closer up,
and more emoUonally e. r I e c t I n g •
Everything Is sharply acce.nted.
Your thoughts are more fanciful
and l!:1eltlng; your sensations arfJ:
m<lre thrilling: you feel more keenly
and deeply alive than you ever will
1gain.
Yo u bump your knee 11nd roll in the
gras5 with an 11gony worse tJlan any
human being ever bore before. You
taste an ice cream cone or a
watermelon, and no Caesar 1n ancient
Rome ever knew such an orgy of
taste. though he banqueted on peacock •
tongues.
WHATEVER HAPPENS to you OC·
curs as if it were happening for the
first time since the globe started spin-
ning. No rainbow has any. dust on it.
e,·ery plush-covered caterpillar is a
monster of .,mystery.
You look around you, and beauty.
joy, terror. awe and ecstasy -they
are everywhe:re. You wade mind-deep
h1 wonder.
Slowly as we go through life.
co bwebs acc umulate on all these feel-
ings. \Ve see through the magni£ying
glass no more. The monsters become
less fearsome. the joys less stirring.
\Ve tend to 'turn from live sparks to
dull clods, more moved by threnody
than thrill
That is what we miss most about
our vanished childh<'>Od -that view
through the magnifying glass, that
bonUre rapture of being which, when
it goes, comes not igain.
Bii George .....,,.....-,
Dear George :
ls it true that the key to
popularity with the oppoSlte su
Ls the caveman approach with
women? Thty sff'nted to do O.K.
WONDERING
.Dear Wondering:
ThJnk .it over. How m•DJ
cavemen do you see?
($end your PlilDble.m., t o
Georee. wbo never Ieu common
aen•e Interim wtth the focts.)
lt was Humpty Dumpty who in-
formed Alice that ·ua word means just
what I choose it to mean."
George Wallace, although he has not
as yet had a great fall, nonetheless
reminds ooe ti the legendary Humpty
Dumpty. A 1"1rd to George Wallace
means just wt.at he chooses it to
mean. U anyone persists in asking him
about the possibilities of other
shadings of meaning, he grows ir-
ritated, sometinies angry. The word
means what he s~s it does.
TRE WORD ''racist," for example,
means to him what he says it does. He
inC!'easlngly informs interviewers and
audiences that he is not a racist. He
mentions taking legal action against
any· person who s.uggests the word
means something other than the
meaning he gives to it. Of lat.e tie gives
even the word "segregationist" a
meaning that means only what he .says
it means. _.
His Conner speeches in other cam-
paigns, however, are a matter of
recocd.
Meanwhile, Mr. Wallace seems
somewhat subdued. This may be
merely a matter of mood or of timing.
But a "'ord keeps coming out of
Montgomery and Birmingham which
has a meaning he is not able to con·
trol. This word is that the money
necessary to run the sort of semi-na.
Uonal campalp now being staged by
Mr. Wallace just isn't in .hand.
••THE Lim.£ PEOPLE," a phrase
dear to Mr. Wallace, are loyal, he in·
sists, and they keep the money coming
in. But Mr. Wallace has had his
political hand out to the little people
for a good many years. He promised
much, but the delivery service has not
been all that was anticipated.
Mr. Wallace talks about all be has
done for education and about ttle voca-
tional and junior colleges he has built.
Education is in a desperate condition
in Alabama.
This also is the year when
Alabamans say the state's bonded in·
debted.ness is scheduled to reach a
billlGn dollars. Mr. Wallace's op-.
position points out that, while he cer·
ta.inly did not create all this debt, it
did seem to l1ave a surge of increase
during his year3 in office. Thi& debt
u•ill be one of those albatross
neckpleces for the next legislature.
Mr. Wallace finds that. as the word
gets arounnd about A I a b a m a ' s
predicaments, the tycoons of con·
servatlsm are sending smaller checks.
lii.ll appeal.Jo the little pe<1ple grows a
bit stale. The political picture is
changing.
AIR. WALLACE'S fiery blasts at the
.. \Varrtn court" seem a liWe okl now
that the Chit.I Justice has 1ubntitted a
resignation. President Johnson, having
obtained the tlrst important disarma·
ment talks with the Soviet.I and the
hope.ful if not yet productive
dlscuslions going on wit!I Haooi. no
longer is vulnerablt to the Wallace
techniques.
Still anolller of !Ill'. Wlllace's whip-ping boys, Sooalor Robert KeMedy,
wu removed by renseless, tragtc
masslnation.
The Wlllaco campaign bas by no
means collapsed. It 1till ts fonnldable.
But it has not picked up any new
momentum:.
Time dois indeed eHe<:t change.
We'll wilt mtd '" ..mat the new word
really mes.M •bout George Wat11ce.
'•
-..
'jt..\-l-M-H! WATER!''.
Collective Guilt·
And Gun Control
To the Edltor:
Jn Dr .• Norman Nixon's column
"Everyday Problems" entitled "High
Noon in Orange County -Let the
Lawmakers Know'' dated Friday, July
5, 1968, there appears to me to be an
hysterical and highly emotional reac-
tion and "pandering to collective
guilt" by the author.
Although most of the article is
devoted to support of · gun control
legislation, the merits Of which J shall
not argue, I would like to conunent on
the statement that '"a responsible na-
tion will nOt continue to fill its air
waves, movie screens and comic
strips with exaltations of violence and
irresponsibility." ,
Also, referral is made to the glori·
lying or violence, robbery and murder
in such movies as "Bonnie and
Clyde.·•
IF UR. NIXON is <t student of
psychology, sociology and history, he
will have to agree llhat our nation
historically has been a "violent and
energetic" nation and its great suc-
cess and genius bas been its ability to
channel this violence and energy, to a
large extent, into productive, creative,
and meaningful undertakings. For
many years now the public depiction
of violence has almost universally
been in the context of its futility,
tragedy and horror, and its moral in-
acceptabillly.
The acceptance of the presence ()[
sexual pervemion and violence as
described in the Old and New
Testaments of the Bible is because of
the moral context of the story. _
If there is to be ceD.sorship of violen·
ce, why not of Communist doctrines,
sexual education and aexual erotic-a,
and anything which w 111 "con·
'taminate" the minds of men?
PSYCHOLOGISTS, sociologists and
other students of human behavior
have even advocated that
pornographic and erotic material may
reduce sexual crimes, by providing a
vicarious outlet that will reduce the
need for participation in the depicted
acts. Is the depiction of violence an ex·
ception to this?
Man cannot grow by putting bis
"head in the sand like an ostrich."
Most people who have seen the movie
"Bonnie and Clyde" are stunned by its
senseless violence, and the honifying
end to whJch if.I principle characters
came.
· How can Dr. Nixon imply that such
a movie would encourage violence?
My feelings, and those of many with
whom I have discussed it, are revolted
and our response is a greater
awareness of the futlUty and horror of
violence:
IT IS lllY CONTENTION that Dr.
Nixon's theses of the causes of
violence a.re backward1 e.nd that, ai
cJvWzaUon progresses, there Is less
violence in the 1treets and In the
homes, and more in the fantasies
portrayed on screens, in books, on
television, ~ in comic:.. Perhaps the
tulltUment ol Dr. N~·s re com.
mendat:lom would reverse the trend.
Ir lt not better to be a spectator lo Im-
agined. violence than to p&rµclprte ln
real riolencef '
G.EORGE J, PllASl'KA, M.D.
•ot•er SIU Speelcs
To the Edllor:
l have been followlnf your edltori.Als
and Jetta'• to the editor since the
auusJn1tion of Senator Kennedy with
great interest. To 11y th•t you are
prejudiced fn favor of strong anu.gun
feglslaUon ~d be a gross un-
dmtatemfl!L
l After •••kl of print!nt moaUy anti·
gun letters, you finally C()ndescended
to print a few of the letters frOm the
other side, hand-picked, of cour.se .. to
1bow the least valid and convincing
arguments.
JUST BECAUSE the Supreme Court
ruled that the Second Amendment
does not mean an individual right to
bear arms (according to you) t}lis
dGCs not mean that· this was the in-
tention of the "founding fathers."
"Autos are registered. why not
·guns?" Because primarily registra-
tion leads to taxation and the goveqi·
ment (local, state. federal) could and
probably would tax gurui cm·: the
hands of law·abidl.ng citizens 8DY1'8Y)
out of existence.
Just because a gun is registered wilt
not stop it from being used. And the
fact that most homicides are. com-
mitted by "first-time" offenders, how
do you propose to screen the potential
murders?
TmEVES, robbers, hold-up men,
bank robbers, etc., whoever needic
guns in their trade will steal them if
necessary to obtain them.
CriminologiJU may wonder whether
it is a good idea for the 1v1r1g1
citizen to keep • gun tor defense {pl.so
according to you). I have no -doubt
what choice I would prefer when;.faced
with the possible alternatives.
God grant that I may defend myself
and my family from any intrude!! and
I challenge the expertise claim~ for
the burglar. I doubt if the aVC"age
burglar ls any better shot than anyone
else. -··-
AS TO THE f!tORAL issut.r of
whether a burglar deserves to be l!:X·
ecuted, What about the conntlen
youngsters who are shot "tryJJli to
escape'' from the police after a
joyride In a stolen car? Did .these
poor, confused and frightened c~~m
who wlll never grow up, deserve 10 be
executed? ···
tf you want something to ctu!1de
about, crusade about that and -.stop
knocking guns and the Nation11 ll1fle
Association and help lhe Americ•n
people retain one of t.he.ir all too few
freedoms that we have left.
W.D.BEAUDEN
-----
Wednesday, July 10, 1968
The editorial page of the r>Dff11
Pilot seeks to inform and 1tfm-
1dote retUUr1 by µre1enting this
ncwrpoptr'1 opiniont and com-
mentory on topics of intcrea:t
and lignificcnu, by prouidfnQ ~
fon.m for th• t%pression ... ol-
our 1'tadtra' optnioru, ond "'b.t
prt1mt1ng ~ diver1e tiftW.
pointi of iraformed ob.terver1
and ipoktlmtn on topics of the
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
•
NETS CAST~ Little Mermaids Mrs. Donald Heberden, Mrs.
Charles He~er .and Mr_s. Harry Okuda (l~ ~'"right) ~re casting
their nets for treasure m the form of advertising donations for the
1968 souvenir program book which has become a ,PC?PUiar fea·
lure .of the annual Mermaid Ball, principal fund-r&sing benefit
Book Beat
Stimulating Fare
fEdl10r'1 not.: The fallow!ns
CIPSljll IXIOlc revl•WI ~r• Pl'IHred
lor Ille DAILY PILOT by Wllt.r
JohnlOI\, Htjnflneton 8tftCh llbr1r!1n. ,.,,. VGltjn'lel hlYI bell! r.alv..i .,
the lll)r1ry end 1n1 1v1!11bt1 for
clrcYltHon.
"SeWed in Ohambers" J>y
Honor Tracy -This is one
of Honor Tracy's, perh.aP5
her funniest frivolitiet: and
there's certainly nothing
very settled which takes
place here. Justice Roth is a
leading judge in divorce ac-
tions who has been noted fo r
his censorious attitudes in
adultery proceedings.
Ho"'·evcr, the judge sud·
denly flips h.is wig over a
y outh f u I, Au stri a n,
operatic baroness. ·On. and
off, this goee. -a civilized
lampoon ol a properly pro·
per Englishman and pursu-
ing its attractive course,
somewhere between French
bedroom farce and British
drawing room comedy.
a:enuity. A Broadway epic. '
.. Hail, Hero " by John
West:Qn -John Weston's
''Hero" is Karl Dixon,
secood•born and always No.
2 500 of .a prominent
Southwestern family who
have been inclined t o
dioreprd him. Or not liaten,
wtWdl is whet happens now
duling tbU one day stretch
when he comes home to-tell
tbem he 's dropped out of
college and joined u p •
although ne's alway1S been •
paciftsl It is a con·
temporary theme handled
with an idealistic bravura
a.nd convictioo,
"HOIW to Raise • Brigf!ter
Child" by Joan Beck -
Withoot any ol. the arrantly
exaggerated and didlat.or·ial
p os tulates of the
Engelmanns (earlier this
year, "Give Your Child a
Superior Mind") Mrs. Beck,
a Ohi.cago Tribune col·
umnist, discusses the in-
trend tow.ard early Ie81'1li.n g.
•
•
. .
for Children's Hospili!I of Orange County. Members of'the Little
Mermaid Guild currently are calling on area·merchants under. the
direction of Mrs. Heller. chairman of this year's· ball book and
Mrs. Okuda, donations chairman.
'
" I
.
JODIAN HASTINGS, 641-IUI
........ ~. -, .. ,,. • ,... 1J
'
Contributions Needed
Mermaids
C_ampaign
Hitting the (:ampalgn trail are members of . the
Little Mermaid Guild of Huntington Beach but their
eause iJ entirely nonpolitical.
Instead of individual cant1.idates, all the children in
Orange County will reap the rewards of their elforts.
Sustaining, associate and active members alike are
seeking donations from area merchants for the souvenir
program book which bas become a popular feature of
the aMual Mermaid Ball which this year ta.ke1 place
Oct. 12 in the Newporter Inn.
In charge of the book, which ii presented to every ..
one attending the semiformal bal1, is Mrs. Charles
Heller, ~ assisting with the art work tb be featured
in this year's book is Mrs. Harry Okuda, donations
chairman.
Many area merchants already have made contri·
butions to the book, but guild members have set a goal
of $100 ~r member for donations which will benefit
Chiklren s Hospit.al of Orange County.
Serving as invitations chairman ·is Mrs. Norris
Marshall, and an innovation of this year's ball will be a
no-bost preball cocktail party which will take place
between' 7 and 8:30 p.m. in the Newporter. An \)riental theme will prevail during the ball, and
heading the decorations committee are Mrs. A. Allan
Dowers and Mrs. Jack Thyssen. Others assisting Mrs.
Robert Risvold, ball chairman, include the ' Mmes.
Andrew Holtz, Ru,.ell Reilly, Frank Haigler and Hel·
ler, C<H:hairmen.
Ready for Fall
New Board
Takes Reins
Sixty years of service and philanthropy
in the community were concluded and new
officers were installed during the final meet-
inC of the season for the Woman's Club ol
Huntington Beach.
Heading the organiiatlon for the coming
rear will be Mrs. Arnold Pod1ade, who WAI
installed as president by Mrs. Jaclc Colvin, a
past president &t the club.
Seated with Mrs. Podsade were the
Mmes. Richard Roberts, LeRoy Benson and
Elmer Addison, vice presidents; Dan Rubel'"
ticchio, treasurer; Martin Campbell, record ..
ing secret.ary; Harry Bowman, financial sec-
retary; Pearl Jones, auditor; Phyll11 Sbllltz,
corresponding secretary; Gilbert Turnbull,
parliamentarian, and Charles O'Donnell, ••
IOC!ate coordinator.
Retiring president Mrs. Gonion Gommlll
will serve as trustee.
"Billy Rose: Manhattan
Primitive" by Earl Conrad
-Billy Rose, always a
publicity hound, w o u 1 d
nevertheless roll over in his
gilded mausoleum cit this
biography which portrays
him as a r uthless plagiarist,
pusher. hu s tler ; .:i
calculating 'opportunist of
"unr>a.ralleled nerve" who
donli n1ted ill the world of
grab and hold that was. His
ex-wife Fanny Brice labell-
ed him "the moet evil man 'I
have ever known." But Billy
is a peculiarly American
product and his life story is
an exercise in unethical in·
Much of it is batied on the
recent and seemi n gly
reliable proiessional studies
coming out. of var i ou s
universities and clinics and
a good 'deal of it is com·
parable to the• f e a t u r e
coverage this t.opic ha.s had
in many ma gazines .
Chaocel are that given tbe
interested.encouragement at
born<, :l"Jlll' cllild will learn
more e111Uy and more quick-
ly.
WE POINT WITH PRID.I! -Reviewing past ac-
complishments while anticipating a new year of
activity are new officers of the Woman's Club, of
Huntington Beach (left to rigbt) Mn. LeRoy Ben·
son, Mrs. Richard Roberts and Mi's. Arnold Pod·
sade. The new· board was installed during the final
luncheon meeting of the year by Mrs. Jack Colvin, a
past president of the club. The new president, Mrs.
Podsade, has attended a summer workshop taking
place in the Disneyland Hotel.
Chairmen who bave been appointed to
serve by the new president will · include the
Mmes. David 0. Todd, ameniUes; J . c.
Everett, art; Albert Cofer, Bible and inspir,..
tlon; Lowell /,. Stewart, bridge; Mamio
Seltzer, bulletin, press and foundation; Wll·
liam H. Creed, youth and citizenship; Paul
Richardson, pbHanthropy; Gemmill, .. win&
and gerontology; Bowman, d~oratiom;
Alice Freeman, health and welfare; J. P.
Rowland, historian; Addison, house; Francu
McKelvey, Indian afiaira; Earl Dettra, ESQ
and literature; Frank Catching, luncheon;
W. B. Harrell, reservations ; William-Lamb,
membership; Benson, music; W. Allen
Young, safety; Henrietta Jensen, aeals and
emblems; Ernest AJbland, IOC!al; Alber&
Ha,ler, sunshine; Durward Thurlo, vetel'-
ans affairs and waya and. means.
The club, dark during the llllDIDer wlD resume activitiea in September. •
Twinkle Toes' Casanova Goes Solo 'Doing the Bossa Nova
DEAR ANN J.ANDl!:Rli1 If you '"Y
this woman'• behavior·il correct I wlH
t.ake yO\U' word for it aiid not give it
another thought. Mr•. X ii forever
turning over the cups and plates when
she attends a tea or a ~uncbeon to see
ii it ia bone chiDA or something
cheaper. I have seeo her take
eyeglaae1 out al ber puree and n:·
amine die anvenr...
She lope gl .. 11 loltillJ I« the true
ring of eipon&iv• "'fllal. She nn,....
Ill• tablecloth to determine the quality
of the rs:bric. She sniffs book covers to
learn ii they are genuine leather or
plastic. Once she touched a palnting to
see if it was a lithograph or an oil. The
hoste1-was visibly irritated.
'l'hil woman ta 1uppoeed to be one of
~
ANN LANDERS ~
....
tht Boston Brahmincl beaUtllull)'
educMed and. <U!tured to the ......
What do you have to say about ber
conduct? -BROOKLINE
DEAR BROOKLINE : Cal-peo-
ple doa'& e11mtne clllna aH tllwr for
hanmarks wbDe vl1tua1 ftlead1. Aad I
don't believe the woman Jftl dtlerlbtd
11 btauUfully educeted. U ••• were
Me wouldn't lt1w to Jilal( fbe el'}'ltal,
oallf """ aacl loacll pldo,.. II leani
!
II llley an Ille nil McCoy. Sbe'• kDow. ..._ •
' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I muat
comment on ttie woman who lia:ned
herself ~"Mother pl a~ Rajned Boy."
Some of the detail& were 10 clote tG
my owJ,. Ure' thati I'm· sure peor>le wbo
know me think. l wrqte it.
My aon la 24·yean al 11e and bo
cen'~decide -·-"'jlUI! on ID
.
the morning. U the eggs are too hard
he throw• them in the 1ink. We tent
him to three different boys'camps and
he didn't stay in any of them more
than seven days. He was turned down
by six colleges and when he was
finally accepted . by ·a small junior
college he stayed only 10 day1. u b11 rattier' di<ln;t Owt1. a busioe11 be
wouldn't )lave ajob. Wbm·a l!rl turn.
him down for a date be cries. I have 1
24-yeer-o14 baby_ oo my b«ndl and It i1
my !.alJlt .. I ruined tills l!by •nd I am ud and sorry. Thank you for Jetting
me get this j of( ·my chest. -
ANOTHER FAILURE
DEAR ANOTHER,.-GeU1n1 It ell
'°"'.•boot doe11) •!' t)le boy mucb. a .......... ,.., ........ ...,,.,.
~
--·------~.----------------~---·------
lees Ume. S.. lllal .. ltll II.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a 1ir1
with a strange ~lem. lt I• the way
my boyfrieod dancts. It'• not that be
is a rotten dancer. He fa very good.
Teo 1ooct
I hove done everyllllnJ IUldor tile
IUD to follow llim bul I )1111 ean 't do
1llO fancy atopa. _!',. praclleed al
homo but ii -'I IMlpOCI, U !Ml would
stick to dmplo donclDI we Would lel
aio111 fine but he iDlllll on doinJ the
lflow.off 1turf and it's not m7 style.
Why would a fellaW embmus a firl
like that?' It there a 1olutlon? -T\\fQ
LEFT LEGS ,
DEAR TWO : I -t11e IJpe. B• -~-.,. ............... .
{
alw•1•cWac• .... .
Tell lllm 7H'• .......... ...
atmple """' llol w._ bo -to "1
ler i.. cwp to plelH lei yw -•
YM cu alt U. umber "' Md Ill aa IOI• sirl wlot ..al ..ip lllm ......... . Dr!nidna may be "In" to Ibo lddo l"" nm wllll -but It can ,.1 JOU
'out" f<r k-. You -cool It u4 ~ DODUlar. lload ·-a4 Yoe-For 'tHnoam Ouly," Sa4 •·-fa
coin and a '"''· ..u.-1o4,. olampod •lllltlope with yoor roq-.
Ann Landen will be Siad 'to h•lp JOU
with your pl'llbJema. Send them to lior
in c ... ol tbt DAILY PIL-OT, enclo., inl a lllf....,1111d, ..... • ....
'
1
P~·'i. !,.,.,::"J:, .... -.,~~.!""'~"'!:'""'.'~""::~"!"'!""'l!"""~'!"!'""'lll!!""''!!!!"'"!"lll!!' .. lll!! ............................... 111!!111!! ...................................... !l!!lll!'l!!!l'!!lll
NO LAGGING ALLOWID -Mn. Jack M. Lybna;
who stops to admire flowers at the Festival of Artl
grounds is called back to work by fellow Silver and
Gold chapler members, ·South Coast Community
Hospital Auxiliary (left to right) the Mmes. Oscar
Hoffman, Violet Adams and Don Seal. They are
pNparing to set up a soft dririt conce11ion during
the festival to raise funds to meet the auxlliary's
current SI00.000 hos pital pledge.
Luau Lure
Appealing
Htwail ond olher Soulh
Se" oel&hbor1 wlU ·be
honored ,wben tbe Woman'•
' Guild ol the Huntlnston
Beoch CJurcll ol RollJlOW
Science apon1or1 a potluck
•• part of its clU'feot Otber
Lands 1erie1.
The fifltl dinner, a luau,
will !eke place at 9,311 p.m.
Friday, July 121• In U>e
Women'• Clubhouse, 41'>
llltll St., Huntington Beach.
Everyone in tbe com·
munlty fJ Invited to attend
liOd iMnd c01tuq1e1 may be
worn. Main dishes will
follow the Polynea i an
theme, end 9ddiUoml in-
formation may be obtained
by oalllnc Mn. Pou I
--· 5311-2120. Mr1. R. W. Limenmeyer,'
chairman for the event, bas
planned a program which
will feeture authentic
dancec and Mrs. LeRoy
Benion, accompanied by
Wilt. Richardson, will ling
favorite eoaaa from "South
Pacific."
Summertime
Menus Offered
Why not let a patio par:ty
be your summer ape<:·
!acular? A Cood way to end
a warm sum.mer day ia with
a barbecue for falnily and
lr1"nda.
Mi11 ?tZaraaret Parmelee,
hOme economist, is invitin1
the publ'c tri the Southern
California Edioon Co., for
many new berbecue Ideas
that can bo ... Uy prepared
with poNble . tloclrlc ap-
DEAR NANCY: My bulbaDd ud I
both work. Altar a bani day· at Ibo
ofllce I thlnlt It'• only fair Jo, lllaro
the cooJdn& chorea. He doe•a't llf'ff·
Wllat do !""' thlnlt! -WORKING
WIFE.
DEAR WOl\KlNG WI F 11:: U
there'• anytblnc haftter on a man
than a hard day at the offict, It'•
111tenlne to h1I wife's hard day at
the olllce. While you l>oth brlnf
home the bacon, -'It'• up to you to
cook It. A work~
in( wife'• beat
helpmate II bor
freezer. .
Here'a a frMz-
er Chicken Tet·
rau.inl which ts
enough for four
separMe dinner•
for two : ·
Put,a4to5
pound chicken in
• large pot with
water to cover
and add I ota1k ol
celery, coarsely chopped, l carrot,
1 onion. coaraely chopped, t table·
spoon aalt, 4 pepper-corn• and 1
bay leaf. Simmer for 1 hour tit un·
W chicken ii cooked. Cool and cut
meat from boM1 in 1mall 1liver1.
Melt I tablespoona ·butler, add 8
table1poon1 flour and 1tir for "'1
minute ; add 3 cup1 chicken atock
(strained), 1 'Cup cream, 1 t~a-
1poon 1alt and 2 Tablespooru dry
aherry. Boil 1 .U.Ounce packaa:e of
noodle• accordin& to package di·
rection1. 'Drain. Saute 'h pound
1llced, fresh mu1hrooms in 2 Table·
spoons butter. Drain.
Divide the noodles into a portion1
and put a layer of. noodle• in the
bottom of. 8 individual freezin& diah·
"· • lncbot oquare. Pour V. (.Ill' c:rtam u.uce over each' dlah and
top with a lay• ol chlcktD and I
layer of m\Uhrooma. Pour another v, cup ol cream aauce over the
muabroonu and sprinkle 1enero ..
ly with y, cup of lrelhly Ir a t a d
Parmeaan cbeeae. Place 1n frffHt.
When you're ready to .kve, bake
Ibo !Nnen Tetranlni In a 41!1 delrff
oven for 45 mlnuttl or unW hot aAd
bubbly.
·DEAR NANCY: My young ton la al·
ways comp1ainlnC' about the carrots
tnd celery ·I put ln bia l~hbox. How-.
ever, he needs his rougba1e. What'• I
mother to do? -E111EL M.
' DEAR E'IHEL: Monkeys are ape
aver roughage, but please try and
remember that Junior 1, human .
Slip him his vitaminl with lrulu
that taste like fun : melona, fresh
pineapple, berriea, etc. Y.Uy the
menu with different raw ve1etable1
i uch a1 cauliflower buds, che:rry to-
matoea, cucumber lticltl ar bell pep-
pera: that can be eahanced with a
zesty dip.
Here's a creat one: combl.nl 1 cup
sour cream, 1 tabletpoon chlll
sauce, 1 teupoon dry muatard, 1
tablespoon crated onion, 1 tiupoon
Worcestershire 1auce, 1 table1poon
chopped chive1, 'h i.apoon •alt and
mhly (round blacl. pepper.
Pack the dip in a paper food con·
talner.
Whet'• ~ur cookino predicomtnt1
Send it in and 1ee if we can cook it!
While we can't per1onc.U11 an11Der all
your letttr1, thole l.etter1 toith the
most entertoinino or ptrtinent eulin-
arv problemi wiU be publilktd in
his column. Send vaur letttr1 to
WHAT COOKS' c/o THE DAILY
PILOT.
Weddings, Troths , Thirst Profits Hospital pliaoc•1. J... .... .-._..._._.._..._..._.._..._ .... ....,_..,_..,...._.. ..... ._. .... ....,..._..,.....,_,
,
Pilo1's Deadlines Chapter Has Bt,1slness Medical Future Aided ,
To avoid dis.appointmen~ prospective
brides are reminded lo have the11 wtddin(
' stories with black and white gloo1y phoJo.
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Deparl·
ment prior to or within one week after the
wedding.
By now proricient
salet;women, Silver a n d
Gold chapter m em be rs,
South co a 1 t Community
Hospital are getting re~y
to open their soft drink con-
ce11ion on ttie Festival of
Ano grounds beginning Fri·
day, July 12.
from-, p r-1; view night
throughout the fe1tivaJ. Four Area Students Cash In
For ena:aeement announcepients it is
1ug111tec1 that the story, alJo accompanied
with a black and white glossy picture, be
submitted early. U the betrothal announce.
ment and wedding date are six weeb or less
ap~ only the weddinf pholo will be ac-
cepted. · -. ·
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail·
able in all Clf the DAILY PILOT ollic ...
Further questions will be answered. by Social
Notes staff members at 6424321 or 49+9466.
Hqroscope
Hospital volunteers have
been operwlin1 tha booth
1lnce 1968. All of thia year'1
· procee<D will be oppUed to
the (r0up'1 cumat '100,000
ho1pltal pledce.
Mn. Jack M. Lyons, aux·
w..y Viice president, ia
cenera.1. chlinnan of the
undertaldn1 iand points out
that her booth will be active
Leo: Get More Facts
Cc-cha.it.men, 1erving one
week each, include the
Mmes. Violet Adams. Don
Seal, E. M. Johnston, Oscar
Hoffmt11 and T a n d y
Coleman.
The concession requires
eit;ht women dally to work three·-·
Discussion
Three ;tea . gtrols have
been helped on their way to
medical o r paramedical
careers through the finan-
cial enlltanee of t h •.
Women's Auxiliary to the
Oranee County M e d i c a I
AsaoclaUon.
The recipients, ttW: Misses
Jacqueline Dow Abare ,
Sachiko Patricia !Caito, and
Cathy Lynn Blacld>urn are
three or 12 courty ltudents
who have r ·e c •iv e d
scholarships or 1 p e c 1 a 1
awards totalling $5,(XM).
Mias Abare, daughter of
Mr. and Mn. Robert E.
Abare of Huntin&t.On Beach;
The newly formed Orange bu won a ICboLanhip to
Couaty Ohlldblrth Without c'o!llornla Lutilenn Hospital In Los Angei...
Pain LealUI ii offerinl itl Prior to her sraduation
Planned
THURSDAY
JULY LI
"-MCond 1eriea o1 .cla1111 for from Huntington Be a ch
elq)OC!.ant mothers. Hiib School Mhl Abue·wa•
' Clas1e1 in the preparation ad1vt in Future Nuraeti,
for the Pavlov Lamaze Medical C&reert and honor
VIRGO (Au1 . 23-stpt. 22): called upon to speak -method of birth will be 1ociety organlutiom. She
Shake off letharay. Accept u11rt view1. 'I\ll1J on preceded by an information hopes to do lnobstetrifct or opportunity to meet people. charm. Accept spec i a I pediatric nurs \ a er
Be flexible . Fine for after· 111lpment. meeUng in El Toro on July receiving her egistered 18 at 1 p.m. C1111e1 will Nurse certificate.
hour 1e~to1ether with work PISCES (Feb. 19·Mach belin July 25 ond are She lista tM auxllisry's
ple as the fact.on in-at San Diego State Colle1e. show luncheon, prOvldes
fluencing her choice of a The auxiliary-i annual fundt fOr the tcholllrlhips
cmeer in nursing. White cap Benefit. •fashion .and aped.al awardl. A special award wis gran-1 -:::..:::..c:.::::::..:::..:::...:.:==...:=:.:!==...==:::..--
ted to Sachiko, dau&hter of
Mr. and Mr1. M1tauo Ka.Ito
of Westminster. A graduate
of La Quinta High School.
ahe was ranted ninth in a
cta1s of 350. She plans to
study biololical research .-t
UCI, perhf.J specializing in
pnetica.
Also receiving a speciil
award wu Mi11 Blackbum
ol. Newport Beach. Miss
Blackburn, dl.ulhter of Mr.
and Mn. William C
Blackbum, la a iraduate of
Corona del Mar lllgh School.
In the fall she wl11 enter the
four year nuninc program
A Mt lllllttturt r'l lill'lll"t1fllll l!Y41
' I" MASTECTOMY l'lnlNG5
wlU bs 1tt1 ... TI!ura. lrOffl 10 1.m.
for '111111' COllWllll'l'lu.
Sears
Costa
Mesa
Only
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21 • April
19): Accent on findln1 out
where you stand w I t·h
~an! to 1-. wisheo.
Friondl can aid, but you
mull bl 1pecific where
needs are concerned. Doo't
ask for too much or too lit-
tle.
associates. Strive f or 3'): Activity favored in co· tailored for thoae upectJnc Health careen Conference
lfN!l!f undentsnding of nnoction with c r o up 1 , babte1 In Auiu1t o n d at Santa Alla Collep ond • HO-I L '""'--a b~ '!' .. 1
thole around you. or1anizatt0111. Work with Septmbtr. C.,. pools mlj' bo,_:bor=..:•::•::•.:d::Nir=:•,;.'°:..:bo::'l:!:op.!pe:o-~=="="=-==-==·='4=J=ol4=>=•=1 _,.._ llW
TAURUS (April 3>-May·
20): Travel plans may be
uppermost in your mind.
Consider expenses. Obtain
expert advice. Avoid wild
goo11 chase. What you 1eek
may be cloaer than you im-
agine.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Good lunar aspect to-
day coincides with reviaion
of buic opinions. You_ now
take lonc-ran1e view. Your
attitude is 1ubject t o
change. Th11 comes about as
added facts are revealed.
CANCER (June 21.July
22); Activity connected with
financial project is favored.
No)IJ is time to obtain
answers: Do som,e pecsonaJ
investigating. Dilcard the
1uper~clal. Find out why.
LEO (July 23 • Aug: 2Z), •
Be observant. Gather in-
fonndon, Don't be In too
mucb of.a bWTf, e1pecially
Wbete legal affairs are con-
LIBRA (Sept. JS-Oct. 22): motari.J at hand. Grlll or(lllilad.
Relations with JOUDI nall1 ii not l?llDlr The COU?H lutl 1lx/ ................... _ .. _____ ""1, v• tte
IJOl'IODI tmpbulltd. A day ellewhere. Know tbta and wHk•, tlloulh women are THE N•E•W ;, Jdfte
when cbanee. travel, variety react .ccordinlly. encotncect to aUend unW m '4~ , e Sears also are In IJ)O!li&ht. Obtain IF TODAY 15 YOUR the birth of ttielr babie1. • L(f)(i)K
hint lrom VIRGO mess•&•· BffiTRDAY you are hilhly The nonprofit educattooo1 a t ti d Portra1· t Frank discu11lon with loved intuitive, cap ab 1 e Of organization often cla1a1
one clears air. teaching, able to perceive t h r o u I b o u t Southern
future trends. Home ad· California, as well as cor· ;: e f child SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. j tm t 1 ,_,, led respondence courses. Each • Wt INi'ff the 1.,.,.., "'""'-e o your · 21 ): Accent on home, pro· UI en 1 urwca -group baa a free lending 1: !
perty' family a f f a i r I . rn~~~ll activity alao library and off era aup-I: tf FAW ••• wtGUTS . • • : f -1..
Me11age received ~ c o u 1 d plemeotal tnfonnation in th ~. CAKADIS • • • eM WIGS lit e Qr ULUJ
have much to do with future G E N E R A L . T E N· natural method of fHdln i: °""fl C..ty. MlftY !
1ecurity. Be • s hr e w d DENCIES: Lunar ~iUon and the need.a of the infant '.: ,........,. .. fw'" t. try enl e
obeerver. Add up the facts favorable for flahing: Cycle Fathers' cluae1 and a film .• !
-deal from position of hiCh for AQUA R I US, showing also are 1i!heduled. : CASCADES : 1tnngtll. PISCES, AltlES. Special Further lnformatioo may '• e
SAGITrAJllUS (Nov. 22_ word ta VIRGO : fulfill bulc be obtained by calllnc Mrs. :: •1995 :
Dec. 2l): Lunar position -=o=b=Ui::1a=u=·o=n=t=o=a='='oc=la=te=.===Fr=an=Mlneo===ot=l!O-=l=712=. =;Iii. ..,. : emphuizes ideas. s h or t1r :
journeys. You should be a • FALLS 0
good bolt. Some Who visit : :
.... oomethlng olvalueto .----VIRGI. NIA'S:--~ 1·:· : offer. Be a ftne listener _. ._..,... 'I" ,.. Wtt ,... e
then you learn. s. NIP 'N' STITCH 1=: $JO $45 $60 : CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· :
J'an. 19): You couJd obtain SHOPPE e 1av1 t21 1av1 tis IAVI fH e
genuine bargain. Be al!!rt. \! :
Watch possessions. Some J334 I. ~I H'-h-cor-dtl Mor •• WIGLETS SALE! • may have roving eyes where -... --, I: lflfO&l rMlll :
your a ... ts are concerned. ,._ 011o1o l·IOIO 1=:, FREI 14z. SAVI $6.00 ..... $6.fS •
Me-avoid carele11ne11. 1"•4L S'VI $9.00 . $11.fS A ..ie't. u"-'"1'1 wee•tM ~1hl114 111! C111 •rry •f 7• "
HURRY!
Offer Expires
Saturday
11t 5 p.m.
HURRY!
per pound
of child'•
weifht
• ...
-... cemed. Wait for special
· • cOanunlc•tl<m. More facts ' ,.,.. 'rOqUlrod. -· ' -
AQUARIUS (Jan. 3>-Feb. "~•-'" "'" '" J,1y1 WIGLET 2Y.4~SAVl$12.00$1S.f5
18): Social activity tonipt w, c.•n'.t c.ntr•I th•· •l•m•11f1 but w11 "•r• 'till ! wmt J\tltCMAll °' · WIGS
could result in mesningful lwc.ky fe 1;.,, 0, "'c•fl ... 111 N•wl'•rt •••chi 0 11 • • tlAND TIID WtO
compliment. You may be fotty ., t•i11y 1111.,. e11e c.•11 ••ill h•'+'• fv., "~r•WI• : (""'" c-• ....... .... 'IOM ... ... • UI\ : ..... , ...... -·~ $2959-·-............
eaeh Mlditional mM
• '1fl'l1: telection llf ~
.· •' Jlall IM leneffts of LNslnt lhe F1mlly Cir
II
l11t " tliite11rth t~ 1..-1 11 1hep1, 1U 1tec••-' with p•r· e• ""' ""· ,._ ... $111 tlll\S • a..-,..,,, 1e111lly 1•l•c.t•d 111•rc.h1114ii•, •9995 •1.v
Ou1 •J1•c.i1lty It 111u1111I f•lttlc1, trlfl'l1 1111111 l!Mtf•"' e
let 1r••fl'+'• 9111 wh• ll'l•k• fh•lr ew11 "erit l11•l1." ll li:,_,.._,.. ____ .. _-,...'"',..".-,.._-,.. .. _ .. _-,.._:;
S•• you 10011,
'--------VIR&INI ... ---'
'-S. Ju1t •rth>e41 M•1ic111 ll!ll'•ri-4 f1\M'c1, 1te+li
1!1114 1c:r1•11M 1111111 1ell4 cel•rs. ,.1.,, 1u•-'•' 1•111, t.
... "'''• 111"9 1em1e11tl •r , ... .i fer trlfl'lt en v•wr
'•" ••el•111.
• any child mp to JZ,...
• no appointmentl • -Wl*I
phof.olrapher wlll W. P..
tllre8 while ... ,JW
~._It' e·~
Sean Coda M•u In Sonlb Coast Ploa
'
I
__J
•
..
pl -
' ;
]
•
. ~· ........ ···-·---~...-..--,._,..·--~·~·-··-~-···-·---~~·-----~ ......... .,.,.. ____ ,......,,.._., ___ ...,...,~---... ----.r--------~~----::------::----"':'-.---
To Coin a Phra se ' •
..
'
Pennies Worth Weight .in ·Gold .
MRS. DAViD WO({KMAN
Episc:op.I Wedding
Newlyweds Make
Newport
Res.idJng in N e w p o r t
Beach after a wedding trip
to New Orleans are David
Bird Workman a nd his
bride, the Cormer Katherine
Leslie Mellette.
The couple were married
in double ring ceremoriies at
St. James E pi s cop al
Church. with the Rev. David
:\. Crump presiding.
The bride wore a wedding
~own of silk org1µ1za over
•Jeau de soie, embroidered
y,•ith lace flowers. Imported
embr oidered flbwers
covered the shoulder length
scarf which was held by a
silk org311za headpiece.
White sweetheart roses,
stephanotis, whi~ hybrid
delphiniums and b a b y ' s
breath with an accent of
pink roses formed her bou·
quet.
Her attendf!nts were maid
of honor Miss M a r c i a
Mohler of Newport Beach
and bridesmaid Mrs. Dar·
rell Atkins of Fountain
Valley.
Pale pink oa(rlations and
wh.ite gladioli stood on the
altar• while the pews aJso
were decorated with floral
bouquets of pink and white.
Jack Christy Of Hollywood
was best man, while ushers
Home
were Andrew Hecker of
Carlisle, Pa. and Mitch ·
Tschantz of Orange.
The Ronnie Brown Trio
provided music at the recep-
tion in the Balboa Bay Club,
wh.ich was decorated with
pink and white floral ar.
rangements.
Coming from Michiga11 Ci-
ty, Ind., were special guests
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bantz,
the bridegroom's aunt and
uncle.
The bride's parents are
Mp;. Betty Ruth Mell ette of
Newport Beach and Lt. Col.
(ret.) Marion M. Mellette, ·
of Tustin, while he r
husband 's parents are Mrs.
Clare Workman Of Newport
Beach and Joseph E .
Workman Of Latrobe, Pa.
The bride is a graduate of
Arlaheim High School and
Stephens College. She is a
member of Hoag Memorial
Auxiliary and has attended
the University of Arizona.
The benedict is a senior at
California State College at
Fullerton, having graduated
from Montclair Preparatory
School. He attended
Dickinson C o t I e g e in
Carlisle, and affiliated with
Kappa Sigma.
annual famous name
'
lllG. $5.CIO ~ f'.llO conON KNll' T-'IQPS
llripes, oalids, cliec:b
A1SO
' JAMAICA,$ and REG. SHORTS
Amel sharkskin, Aniilt/-on
Stay-press, navy, white, colors
2.91) ... 3.91>
t:emON KNl1' SHORT sm
""""' palto<ftl ' •• Rf:G. ;o<$811---
REG. $9-
By JUDY HURST
Of ... °'"" ~ .. Si.tr
A penny for your
thoughll.
Today tbat ls about aU a
penny can purehue ...
Years ago when litUe girls
wore lacy plnafores· and lad! .
donned knickers, a penny
would Ught up the eye oI '°y
youngst<r.
For one penny the)' could
bl&)' a Valentine, hair pins,
lot. of peanuts and candy
and wax-shapeit bottles fill.
ed. witll c~ored sugar water.
Remember when recipes
called •for a penny's worth of
Ingredients?
What can a pemy buy
today?
Gum in .a machine outside
a supermarket . . . a
"Cortune" in a weight
machine ... a stamp. Pen-
ni .. fill up piggy -aod
Peering
•
Around
1\1188
I. 0 UM EAU, 13-yaar-old
~ of Mr. and MN.
ium.d F. Loumeau ol
Newp:ri Beech is On a five-
week visit to Gmtemala Ci·
ty.
The eiglitti grode llludent
will visit three different kiti'ds ol scllools while there
including t h e European,
American, and L a t i n
American types, and will
bring a report back to her
own sdlool in the fell.
Twins Club
Seats Board
Officers of the newly
formed Mothers of Twins
Club, Huntington B e a c h
diapter, will be installed
following a dinner meeting
tonight in ttie Kona Kai
Restaurant.
Cocktail hour will begin at
6:30 p.m. with dinner to be
served at 7:30 p.m .
Seated will be the Mmes.
Dooald Stewart, president;
Charles Marvin and Cliff Clifton, vice presidents;
William Zohlman, secretary,
and Richard Klosterman,
treasur'er. · •
Any mothers of twins in
Huntington Beacti, F ountai'n
Valley or Newport Beach
are invited to attend the din-
ner, amt additional in·
rormation may be obtained
by colling MI11. Cliftoo, 842·
Jm.1.
The club meets the second
Wednesday evening of. each
moDth, and rn o r e in·
rormation may be obtained
by calling MI11. Sl<!wart, 1147·
0996.
_4.91J
_5.91J KOllA1RON CAPRIS
ARNS. KNIT UPllS as;, $1.._ ---l91J
South Cod Plalci, 3333 lrlstol, Costa Mesa
Harbol' Center, 2300 N. Harbar llvd., Catta Mesa·
' bring 11(<1: when fQW>d or
worn in a MIDI or thrown in
. a fountaln .
Pennies can be u1etlll.
They Ofter 12 min-ol
ti'me in some park.Ina
metera. They "Welllti 'down a
H<lOl'd ployer "-" wlllch
)WDPI, They poy ta.< 00 15
cents. And tney decorate a
penny loafer-shoe.
11111 mootly they bring
back food memorle. to 1ree
residents.
Roy Chlld6, -ol the Pottery Shack In Laguna
Beach, appreciated what ho
coold buy with a peMy. "In
those days I would ·.valk a
hal! mile with friends to the
closest grocery to buy a
penny's worth of candy. I
would select • the ' caDdy.
which offered the most," he
lauglled.
Raised in southern
Oregon, Childs re<:elled put·
tink · pennies on railroad
tracks and picking them up
~ ttley were flattenOO by
a train. "Today I think this
might derail a train," he
points out to j:hildren with
similar ideet.
Accord•in& to the
Lagunan, It w1111't anusual
to -pem1.. ln tho col·
lectkwt box at Sunday
&oath. Coast ?liu
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, ·COSTA MISA
ht ...mt! Oii? fall. tlcj1'1Wlt'
in avriJ9. ,.,... 11111 -bi.ad. IM·L lizel,
B. Durablo 1'rs Floral Print In
"""" and blue, or grey and
.turquoise.
C, 'Ibo Smut Solid ... pntty Ill
blue, boot, pd or pm.
In .... .., •• 1Dh11
..-.....• 0. WoolwOrdt11 for ,..,.n, .. ,, • ..,.. ,W WfcNI .:ic1111rt..
---.. --••w2aa.-a12111•
•• ' I
Shep ... ,., ...... ..
Monoloy·thrv ,rld'IY
Untll 9:30 P..M.,-
S•turday 'tll 9 P.M.
Wldondq, .My 10, 1961 OAJLY ~LOT
------~-------------------------·-----------~-""----·-.. --·--------
1
. '
I
···~ - -•' ,r . . ... . .. . ... ....... • -. . .... • ... ... • J>-••... ~ ~'· ·' •. J • -· •,I ' -• ' . ... -......
}I 041LY ~lLOT Wtdnt:id.,, July 10, 1968
Fl,ying Bat Gave Schoendien·st Worst Moment
' .
Owners
Stand Fast
In .Strike
CHICAGO (AP) -Nalioaal Footholl
IAap -Rl\laini fA) buckle fA>
addiliooal player pemion dMUllJ\da,
Tullday 'kept tbeJr camps cJosed to
veiwaa1 but opened the doors for
further negotiations.
-Tht owners said their training
cam.pl would remain closed unlels the-
Playere AllOCiatlm permit. a 11
vet.raps, 'lfA> report but added the
cupp1 would. be open to rookies for
tryout pur]iooes.
They lllo announced Ibey would
attempt to ful:fill preaeuon pme
conunltmentl "on the a.uumption that
club& have an adequate number of
players, properly coaliUoned and
prepared to play."
DOOR AJAR
Art Modell, -ol the C!ev<land
Browns and prllident of the NFL, left
the door ~ar for further talka by
.a.ying, "We will ~ avallable to ·meet
with the Pla,en Aaaociation anytime
to arrive ·at a mutiual acreement."
Afodell called the e m e r g e n t y
meetJ,ng ol. ownen Monday night after
negotiations between the Players
Association and NFL o w n e r s •
representatives broke down earlier in
the day.
Tbe players want an immediate bike
In their per11ion fund while the ownus
want to hold off until 1970 when the
merger with the American Football
League 11 complete.
At the c.ompletion tlf. the meeting,
Moele}.l aUl the owners are prepared
to cozainue negoti,Oons and were in
touch with the playera' attorney, Dan
Shuln\l1" of Chicago.
UNANIMOUS
Model! said \be owner5 were
unanimous in affirming t h e i r
negotiation committee's rejection of
"the t.1nion'1 unrealistic demand& on
pensions.
-
I •
Ul"I Tt"°Phol•
Nationals .
~ .
Getl-0 Win
Over AL Aces
HOUSTON . (AP) -A happy Red
Schoendierut. manqer of the National
Leacu• team, 1UI tila worst moment
in Tuetday .nilbt'1 1..0 victory over the
American Lt•iut came when a bat
flew into the du&out narrowly mJs,ing
hli bead.
Scboendieruit, ol the Sl Loui•
Cardinali, said "I hit the deck and
stafed down •. J got a 1trawberry on my
knee -the first 1ince my pbylng
days."
'I'ltle bat slipped from the hand of
Tony Oliva of Minnesota. Jt struck
Felipe Alou of AUanta in the back.
AJou wasn't hurt.
Schoendienst credited 1 e c o n d
bueman Tommy Helms with a
"hulluva a job. He made some sreat
j>lay1. Some of the plays he mad•
really au.e the pit.cher1 a boolL
"There WU tome lfl&t pltcbi.n& eut
there on both lide1,'' 1 aid
Se.hoendienst. ' ' E v e r y b o d y was
throwing the ball. I didn't lhlnl< the
1ame wu. boring. We won didn't we?"
Schoendienllt Uid he didn't pil<h his
Cardinal flreblller Bob G i b s o n
beolnae be bad a stiff arm.
Willie Maya, who ICOl'ed tbe miy
run, said Lull T!1nt'1 picl<-oll' pitch
glanced off Maya' back.
"They (the . Ameri'""' Le11Ue)
played a heck ol. a game," Mays said.
"We did't exactly kill them, 1..0.
"I was just lucky enough to ICGri:
the winning nm. J bad no idea jutt ene
run would win." ·
Don Drysdale of th8 l:.ol An&eles
Dodgers, who picked 'up the victory,
said "It was a great win. I'd lilce to
take this team on the road. I doo't
believe, even though w1 have won 1ix
in a row, that makes us any better
than Ute American."
Drysdale said he relied inoatly 1n
the fall ball and the slider.
"l try to give it my best 1tuff and
hope for the best," Drysdale said. "It
· seems like this ii-; the year of the
pitcher. This 1tting seems to nm in
cycles."
Another NL All-Star pitcher said
"we had great pitching and great
defense. It's hard to beat. It 1ure feels
gOOd to beat the American League
again." said Juan Marichal of San
Francisco.
AM••ICAM MATIOfllAL •• , tlll .-.11 ....
F•-l,11 31 fl Min cf •11
C•mNne•ll •• '~fl fl 11ki6i/, It 1 fl "They took this action in view Of the
man)r uncertainties affecting pensions
that cannot be detm'mined until 1970,"
nld 'Moclell.
ALL.STAR CRASH -Minnesota Twin second baseman Rod Carew
'190k a tumble On this play Tuesday.night when he was upended on a
hard sli de by Cincirinati's Tommy Helms. Helms halted the possibility
of a doubte play because Carew couldn 't throw out the Angels' Jim
Ftegosi. The Natiofi81 League won the All·Star game in Houston, l-0.
Clrt!W. 3b 3 fl 0 M.Alol.I, If T 1
Jotm•on, ?tt I fl I J1vler, 2b I I
V1•tr1tm1kl, cl 4 fl I McCovey. 111 ' I H_.rd, rt ! O fl AlrOI\, r1 l 1
onv1, 11 1 o fl s1n1'0, lei 3 1
"ThUJ, u the union hu repeatedly
been told, the· owners will not be in
po1itioa to conclude pension ne1oti.a-
ti0111 unlil the 111«111'< with . the Ameri·
can Football League HI completed in
1970."
Mod.ell aaid the owners would not
permit veteNm to feport to camp
althou&h "many have said they would.
But the re1ponae would undoubtedly
vary from team to te~ and create an
unfair competitive imbalance."
Mod.ell added that "s¥>ce the owners
obligated themselves to afford rookies
an opportunity to try to make the
team , the cemps will be open to any
rookies who wish to have such a t:ryotit." .
'lbe ownert also said they would not
dip into Mmipm ranks « h minor
leque1 for talent. .
LOSS OF TV $$$
FA.CED BY NFL
NEW YORK (AP) -H the National
Football League is forced to call off its
1961 schedule "" a result of the
threatened player strike, a1 some
owners hint iJ posEble. more thu Pl
million in television receipts will go
down the drain.
·"We're jUJt litting tight and w.aiting
to see whit happens," William
MacPhail, vice-pre1ldent in charge of
sporU for the Columbia Broadcasting
S°yslioln, Hid Tuesday.
"U they don't play any games, we
tmt't c#ry throu&h With our TV
Pf'OO'am llDd. IO they don't get paid -It's a. 1imple as that."
•
Laver Top Seed
For LA Open
Next Week
Newly-Crowned Wimbledon single•
OOamplon Rod Laver h.u been top·
seeded for the SZ},000 ·Loe Angeles
J>rok!ssional tennis tournament at the
Forum next week.
The touring pro from Newport
Beaoh Temia Club thus draws a bye in
tile first raur.ll, which geta under way
a week from today. He'll enter action
July lg again!t tbe winner of the Fred
Stolle-Andres Gimeno struggle.
Roy Emuson of Newport 'Beadl,
who recently joined pro ranks, will
duel ageless Pancho Gonzalez o~ the
opening day. The surviv~ oC tbet
competition will go ag1.1nst Ken
Ro.Hwall, number two 1etd in the
ttiree-day cla5sic.
I the women'• pairings.·Wilnbledon
vi Billie Jean Kini will fact
Fr se Durr Of ~ance and
Eng '1 Ann Haydon Jones 1oes
apinst Roeemary Casals.
Tlckell are priced at 16, ~. M. tl
tchlldren 50 cents) with a special
e1:c \u1lve· gold circle ducat costing W
· arid being good for all three days.
Mutual agencies, Wallich's Music
Ci1;)'. 1ton1 and the For:um are
handling advance sales.
No Chance for Big A Tilt
Between Rams';'Saints
CHICAGO (AP) -''The re's
prlCtiolllJ no cU.nce we C111. play our
~ pme." Coach Geor1e Allen of
aie 1M Allplac llaml said Tuesday 11fP1 •br ruction IA> a dtclsiOfl by
N~ .Jl'ootblll 1.ea,... owners to
11111111 fllll 'Al-player pension
~·-'owners. meetiaa 1n ChJcago. "* tllC IN!olnl camps would rm• d»ed tD veterw mle11 the
NPL .,.,.~-tltion permlll all ii::•...;... to .:.:f bo ~ ~...:.: .......... . ..,,. ...... dlcilioll hW'!.1 us
_, ... --tMnl In tlie -~Alim -la 14 Anreltl. ...,_ MIT -lift be 11enta In .... ........ 1l'ltll II In San
Fa '1 a·-in..'• ~y no ·t ____ _..,..,..
-
a.gainat New Orleana in Anah!lm, Aur.
J."
AIJ1n MJd he ha! invited only 14
rookie1 to their camp.
Coach Tom Feir1 ol the New OrltanA
Saints also questioned the decision by
ow ner1 to exclude all veteran&.
"It \1 not fair to lock out a veteran
who wan ta to report," Fears 1&.ld ln
Son Dte10. ''They lllould not be held
bacl< by the Playon AssociaUon.
"ID fact, baHd on the Jnlormation I
hive. t would 1ay t.htt lf they took
another poll today, .a majority of the
ollJtrl would vote to end the strike
lmmediatel1."'
The San Fraaclaco 49ers coadt, Diet
Nolan, commtntlld: "Everyb0dy11 bid
his pllyslOlll ond we'r• reodJ. We'll
1113 • ........._ wol'llouL!."
Future Great?
Alex Trompas-A Name
Worth Remembering
Alex Trompas ls a name which may
not mean a. lot to ttie majority ot
football fans .
The monicker is owned by a man
who was a Te&erve end on the Stanford
Vow Boys and who saw lctim in Role
Bowl loeses to Alabama (28-13) and
C-Olumbi& 17-0) in the 19.14-JS Puadena
New Year's grid clauie.
He ws alto a handball player of
merit.
But frankiy, there U: no epeclal
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
The lad toured the course with 1
classy &7, completing the front nine in
34 stroke1 then folloWing through with
• 33.
For the afternoon he chalked up six
birdie1 · and had 28 putts. He had six
one-putt green1 ond eleven two-putt
1reens.
The youth. recently graduated from
Horace Mann Jr. High in San Diego,
piciced up one bogey -on the ninth
bole.
He'• been in three SACC junior
invitationals with hl1 tiigheat score an
80 -that coming as a 12-year-old.
An elder brother. Greg. also excels
in golf. He ·was a finalist in the 1966
national USGA taurney at California
Country. Club, losing out· to Gary
.Sandera· of 'BuenA P&rli:.
WHITE
WASH
US A cu ••••••••• ''
Alex Trompas Jf. may some day
rank favorably with another Saa Diego .
. chap ~o Jatel weu O:ft 'the greens ...
a ,Uy named Bill OUper.· . * * * 11igniftcance to •tttth--to -Ale :r
Tromp.as.
However. there· is reason to pay
heed to the handle now. with the golf
ew:plotts of Alex 'I'Tompas. Jr .. a l&-
ycar-01d-linkster wtio has sl1ns of
becoming a future -great. At .a recent tournament 11taged at
Santa Ana Country Club , young
Trompas ~ormed like a pro against
• fteld ol lllll!OI'I,
George Lorton hurled back to . ba~k
no-hitters for the Costa Mesa Police m
current summer soltba1l a c t i o n .
Lort011'1 first effort was a perfect
game and he foanned 20 of 21 batters.
His next gem missed being of the
perfect variety when he dropped a
breaking curve to a southpaw hitter
.tnd atruck the batter. In that duel be
se.ot 18 men down via strikeout.
Big Test Friday
By GLENN WHITE
Of ... O.ltt .... , 119ff
Beat Hubl.rd. Washington, Stanford
and C.a1 Sbttie (Long Beach) -that''
AU, that Orange Coast College',; a.
oared crtw has to do Friday to gain a
be.rth In ttie final11 of the United States
Olympic Trial& at Long Beacti Marina.
U the Pirates don't win their heat
they get a second c6at!ce i.n Saturday
repecbq&, wtiere they'll meet ltle
other DOD•winner1 from Friday morn· Ing oompet!Uon.
Coach Dave Gr&nt'& Redcoats made
a final tes~ of Marina waters Tuesday ·
afternoon II a part of tbeir ,ruelling
preparatioo for 11le tlit.lt, ·from which ttre eVentuaJ winner wW be the U. S.
representatiYO bi lbt. Medco City
01,ympics. •
•·
Th~ Pirates plan to work out with
Harvard moat of tM week and Grant'•
drill! include 1.Q miles o( rowing daily
with 500-yard sprints covefin.g mort ol
the prtictice sessions.
TICKET SALES
Tick eta for ·Friday be1ta, Sat•rday
repecbage ud Suaday's flul1 ln tM g.
oar Ol1111plc trllll 1t 'Lo•1 Be1ci" are
e11ale.· ~~···· •~
Thy on avlillble Diiiy 11 the Lonf
Beattt. Marl.Da ettlce, coratr Of Oetu
1Dd Uedn aad are priced at $1 eae~
Ille !Int hn '!lls 1ocl Ii for the fla1b.
Olll'" -. 'ait ,,_ 10 a.m. Ill I p.ra.
Io!ermaaoo cu lit · Obtotned by
•aDDa (1111-411-
Imhoff Says
He May Not •
.Go to 76ers
INGLEWOOD (UPI ) -. The man
whose shoes Wilt Cham.berlaln will
have to fill when he joins the Los
Angeles Lakers next season. says he
may not report to the Philadelphia
76ers.
Darrall Imhoff. who was traded lo
the 76ers alorig with Archie Clark and
.Jerry Chamber8 for Olamberlain. said
Tuesday that he didn't know "U t will
be able to make the move."
Imhoff, the &-foot-10 f o r m e r
University of California center sajd
"It's a big decision I'm going, to have
lo make. It will take a while to make
it."
He went on that "ft would be awfully
tough to jerk my family up. ML_wife i&
awfully disappointed." -
Imhoff said he looked at the 76ers aa
a team with ''great chances." And he
added. "I think I baye a couple ol good
years left. though. My tut two years
were my best."
He played at Detroit and New York
before corrii ng to Los Angeles.
On Lakers' prospects for next
season with Chamberlain, Imhoff said
he didn't think the addition of Wilt to
go along with .Jerry West and Elgin
Baylor would brtng the Lakers the
NBA title. .
Hes a i d "Mr. (.la Ck) Cooke (the
Lakers' owner) t.t\inks so'but 1 don't
airee. t respect Wilt as ·a player. He 's
the greatest offenslve player who ever
was invent.Id for this game."
Horton. If 2 0 fl Pfrtl, lb fl t A1cue, c; 1 I fl H11mf., 2b J 1
klfttbr-. lb , fl 0 •nd, • • I
Powtll, lb l 0 fl K-rn111, • t t
Fft"'an, c ' fl O Grot., c 1 I
Mcltln, • O I O (1rlton, II I fl
McDowell, " o a o !t1Ub. l'h 1 o o
M1ntl1, •II l e o $t1w r, " t O fl S!tlnl.,..'fl't , JI 0 0 0 F.Alou, II 0 0 0 0
John, p II 0 0 K11S!n9!'!', • 2 0 0 0 RMllnSOll, )ti 1 0 0 0 Wllll1m5, pl! 1 I 0 II
Wtrl, lb 1 O I G C1rdtnl1, n 0 0 0 0 Tlan!,P OIOIOmdli.,,, 1100
Hir,..llOll. 11f1 l fl I O Mlrldwol, II 0 I fl 0
OdOm, p O I I O Hiiier, ~ l 0 0 0 MOndlv. cl' 2 o o o ltnell, c • o o o
TOleb 30 0 l 0 Tot1l1 JI I .S t 4mtrlt.1n •.. , . . GOii flOll 000 -0
N1llon11 ...... , ..... 100 oae 000-1
E -ICHlebnw. 01" -Amtrlc1n 2. LOI -Amtrlt.1n l. Natl-I I. 21 -F...atl, Htlrnt.
Ollvf, Wtn. SI -"''°"· 1 .. Ma••ttSO
Tl1nl Clo.I) 2 2 1 I 2 l
Odom 21 0112
Mcl•ln 11 0012
McDowtll 2 I I I l 0
SIO!!lem!'Tt 113 0 0 0 l O
John 2131101 0 OrVMlt lt (Won) J I O I o o
Mtrlcllll 2 O O I s o C1rl10f! 1 I 0 I I 0 SM~•' 120115 llted 1/l 0 0 0 • l Komm1n 113000 0 1
Wr> -T!1n1. Tlmt -1:10, Alltl'!dtna -41i321.
Gonzales Stops
Emerson," Laver
Zips Past Davies.
PARIS (AP) -Pancho Gonzales Of
Los Angeles defeated Roy Emerson Of
Newport Beaeh 6-0, M , U, :4, 6-3
'.l'uesday to sitar the qulrler-finols o(
the Paris Professional Tenn i 1
Tournament.
The close match, p~yed in mu1gy
heat. saw the American bearing down
front the start on Emerson, ·who
finally lost on a series of errors.
In other matches, MaJ Anderson ol
Australia defeated Earl Buchholz of
St. Louis by deflult S.2, 2-3, Rod Laver
of Cor:ona-del Mar defeated Mite
Davies of England 7-S, 6-4. 1-2.
An'd Fred Stolle of Australia
clefeatod .\ndreo Gim"1o ol Spolll, 11-7,
S.1,4-1, M,6-1
for occ .Crew
Orange COast's shell wHJ be -com·
Posed for four ex-Pirate: oatSt:i'len wtio
art now .tt UCL.A. plut'I five members
of the cr.ew :which did such .a &pa:rkling
job in repr'esf!ntlng ·occ in the
Western Sprtnts at Seattle and the In ·
tercollegiate ·R o w i n g A.55')Clati0ft
-Btgatta in New Yore-·
··we1N ~ ---alon& .. cu be
, expec~." Gr.ant confides whea al'ked
how the emataa.maUon 11 working out.
"W• tnow that Harvard is very 1tr'oD1-
but IO. is P-. We'tt Wry mueb a
datlcharse, at blst," bt add1 when
quiued about tile Bue•' cl!onces In tl1e
Upcomh!t trlai..
"+llld -;iou...-!t.---V-lloa! C1'jJ ol l'lll!lllelphla," GNlll CCII-
tinuft:. ~"Ibey were third in a Jul1
Fourth regatll bUt they have • ffPUta·
tion or coming up witb tbe ·tq:
performence when It counts moat."
Vesper won tbe 1164 Olympic gold
med.a) ln Tokyo,
Grant admit& bil char&es wen pret·
ty ... u -1'?Uowln1 their ...
cond place linilb at the IRA .
How1Yer, be Mf1 tbe Weal llnce
thAn pl111 llHI ..,,..;..... ol """"' with H"""'"1 on Mondly nrved to
recl!orJa.. Ilia' ifltlodto: "'lbo7'ni Ill
prett1 nclte4 now;" bit 1tate1.
C...nt predictl Iba! a 5:il0 wtl1 be ....
qldred IA> do' lll)'llltnr opeolleular at
the trlala -11111nlina the llhelll 1n on flit ... ttr. . .
l"ridoJ'• bull lot -... , .• "' .....
____ _,_ __ ..;_ _______________________ ,_ _______________ , _______________ ---------
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Bay Club Will Induct
Drysdale Into Shrine
WOOden,
Arnett
Also Set
By EA1tL GUSi &EY ..............
Don llrywdaJe, atartlng
pitcher far tile Naticmal
Lupe In 1Wsday'1 All·
Star eame. will be pr11mt
with GCller oparts celebrities
.. Ille Balboa Bay Clllb Oll ~lily 19, II i. inducted llllo
-a. °""'• Sports Hall of r-.
Accampuylni tile rano
_,.,. riPt-ilander will be
. "--.II be lndu<ted -
'"Dw:r llindl. I•• er a I m..aaacer of the Los Angeles
Rams; Jon Arnett, formett-
USC and NFL hallback;
Jolla Wooden, UCLA basket·
holl coocb, and George
YU'Clley, Newport Be1ch
prochd. wbo became a pro
b..aa.D reeord-breaker . BIY am spokesman Dan
Bayleu Aki, more names
"111 be reJeUed later IS
they ... wulbnwcl.
SQUASH, ANYONE? -Balboa Bay Club promotion
director Dan Bayless is a Jone figure in the Club's
unfinished gymnasium. By August, Club members
billiards, w1l1ht training, whirlpool baths and sauna
facilities. The new Sports Center will be dedicalod -
July 19.. ~
'will have acceu to hand.:c:lha::::.:ll•:_::.'q.!.u::.a::.sh;::,_b::.a::.dmln::::.:::ton_,c_ __________ _. ______ ~
EL TOROS
LA.ND 'HOME'
11 you're ttill searching
for the Orange County El
1)ros, they've b e e n
foca\ed.
All-Star Records Crumble; l
·Ontario Speedway Given OK
HOUSTON - E I f h t The eight hit& by both 72 loyout al sucll low _,
BEATING THE HEAT -Children at the Balboa Bay Club are taDng advan-
tage of. the new children'• pool, part of !4e near~ompleted Sport& Center at
tbe Newport Beach spa. The Center will be dedicated at special ceremo.~es
July 19. Don Drysdale, Jo~ W~en, Jon ~ett and ·other sports celebnties
will be present to be dedicated mto the Club s Hall of. Fame.
Also scbedaled for th1t
day's festivities wU1 be the
dedication. of the club's new
$400,000 Sports Center and
Spa of which the Hill of
Fame is • part.
Drysdale, Hirsch, Antett
And Wooden will join 15
other sports stars already
enshrined in the Hall, m.
cludine U ·USC hurdler Diet
Attletey, U ·Yankee Andy
Carty, u-USC football hero
Marshill Duffield, Corona
de! Mar awlnuner. Tnnl
Hewitt and Bay Club Wmi1
pro Hugh SU!wart •
. However, the entrant in
the Western Football
League is now known as
the Desert Thunderblrds,
with Palm Springs thell'
base of operations.
Initial tryouts for the
Thunderbirds will be sag.
ed in An1heim, however,
the first roll call Sund•y
at 11 1a.m. at Brookhurst
Jr. High School.
re<Xl'<is wert broken or tied teamt tie.s a ~ ror least
in 'l\lesday night'• All Star hits in •n AU.Star ,_.e
aame. aix o( them by Los with the 1952 edition at
Angeles p It c·h er Don Philadelphia's Connie Meck
Orysq..le and San F'Nncisco Stadium.
center fielder Willie MaYfi . ...,. """' ..,.
Wtlen Drysdale threw his LOS A N G E L E S -
ftrst pitch, he tie:1 two Construction of. 1 multi·
records. Hi! fi'ft all star m I Won-dollar all-pu.rpo•e
starts equal t:hose of NeW auto ricing fadUty, Ule
York Yankee Lefty Gomez Ontario Motor ~way,
and Philadelphia P h i l 1 i e wa1 cleared 1'11etday wttll
Robin Rob:erts. Issuance al $!5.5 mlllloa la
A rapid &bill in the
weather put many of ~
golf stan In tile Nnnlne,
including even fCGte Of the
short hlttert .
CIF Basketball Greats
Further tryouts are bill-
ed next Tuesday and
Thursday 1t 7 p.m. at the
umt Anaheim 1ite. His appearance in his tax exempt m •rt C •I e
ei(ltttl All star game tied revtaae -.... •
him with Bunning, now with The ,.. trad will lie
Duel City Stars To.night The Hall· fJi Fame repona
In an area tel Hide in the
men's lounge of tbt lpartl
center. .
The entire fac:Wty ii
regar ded by Bay Club . of-
ficials u one of the finest
recreational centers in the
country.
• Mater Dei
the Pit!Jburgll Pirates. who IMtltt IS -eaat of Loo appeared in si:r games while AagdtL
with Detroit and two 'tltile The bOllO. wMdri IBct.le
with Plillad<lphia. ~-,..._ --•~-for n-sd1le's three innings ippro ...... a-., .. ....._
That symbol of wealth -
better known as 11le Forum
-= rolls out the red carpet to
its firs t-ever prep attraction
tonight vfflen the C I F
Southern Section entry takes
on t.he Los Angeles City con·
tingent in the mauturar
SOutbern Californi& All-Star
Basketball Claasic.
·Although the f e a t u r e d
outing at 8:30 b ri n·11
together the best the AAA
Division oC the CIF bu to ·
Offer, tfle initial billing at 7
sihculd more then tet the
tempo.
It will be an all CIF affair
In that lidliller, wltlt lite AA
Star• matchiD1 talents with
lbe A-11 .
BW Annstrone, w b o
· d!rec1<d his Ccmptoo club to
'a 32.0 INSOD, will call the
...,ta for tile CIF AAA Stars
and he'll have two Orufe
Oooot aru guardl In his
1tartlne unit.
John Yule, a ~foot-I
f<rWard and r e c e n t l y
elected co-captain, will be
jcined in the front line by S-8
center M .. t Soderberg of
Muina. Yule 1a fr o m
Corona del Mar.
However, the top offensive
surge for tibe MA Stars ls
e:rpected to come from Paul
Westphal -tbe Cl F ' 1
Player of tbe v-lbla peot
1easoa at ~viatlon .
Weatph.al, headed fer USC,
became the first prep star
to bypa$S the 1,()00..point
mark for a single season
when he tallied 40 points
over that mark in 32 games
for a 32.5 scorDg clip.
The gymn11lum portion of
the center provides two in·
door handball e o u r t 1
(convertible to a q u a 1 b ) ,
badmJnton. volleyblll, aym.
nastic1, w e i r Ii t trainlDC,
yoga and dance lNtructlon
for women and o t h e r
recreational outlets .
The men's lounge features
a billiard room. game room,
stereo •nd TV lounge, a
mutlve fireplace and bar.
In 73-60 ~·, patthalO " tu.I ...... 1 pitched moved him Dad of epUoaed, wu hlrltM ever le
Gama and BUlllllng for Ille BaU of -'-81 most innlnp pit-. Olch -ta a llrlel cereaMy . with 18. Drysdale now baa ·v~. to 19 1/3 illftlnp of All.star ~ ii .. ...Ila IC ry -*' -... .,. "';.';~)., extended no. of 11!1 completM ta earl,y 11?1. ~~Del ---• 1~ third . own records with bla fit1t-AU fer.mt ef 9at. radq, _. -""""' • iDnint aingle and run. He lacladJa1 htd!aaape)b.type,
win In four outings Tuellday now bas 23 All.Star hit& and -k, EaropeH lfUd prh,
night with ~ '1MO victory 20 runs IOOl'ed. His four at· tportl ud ••& ncet, are
over Estancia at Campus bat.I moved him ahead of to be pretented •
Hall in UC IrviDe .. b111ketb1U Stan Muaial't p r e v t o u s "' ., ..,.
league action. record of 43 appearances at CARNOUSTIE, Scotland
Buena Park t r a m p I e d the plate. Mays now his 98. -Deleodinr c h • m p l o n
Fullerton to the tune of 75--1be American League's Roberto De Vtcemo teed oU
21, ln other loop action. three hits lies a record for in the first round 0( the 72·
Mitt Norton led the Mater least hits in an All.Star hole Bttlilh Open Goll
Det quintet· wfth 20 points, game set by the Amerlctln Tournament tod1y With the
for its efforts. Le&gue in 1940 and tied by modest conviction that at 45
the Natklaala in 1946 and he has as &ood a chanct as
hw'J' ... J.Ul(;O ..... -tM" 10,CIOO t,.r....-.--"2lll .._
You airt """ ...,,.. e fNe ~· dMc:ll. mt. ..,_.. .... a ,...
limn In .1Wt -dq. AMI -40t AAMCO. ,.ur tn_....., an ...
~IKtM la')" -r SOD MMCO c.t-•
ter. CHllt to ~ , '" EYerrmlftutitW •...,,-
-~··· .,. __ .....,,... .
• k ............ ..,
Newport Loses, Ties
In Legion Double Bill
But the LA City c rew ,
under the reins of Jim Ry.in
k'om Cremhaw, feel ttiey
have tihe man to match the
feats of Westphal.
'Ilba.t would be the talented
&..a Ron Riley, who was tab-
bed the Pl1yet of the Year
this past ~on w b i 1 e
tutoring at Jordan.
Men's and women'• locker
facWties will provide wet
and dry sauna roomt, a
hydro massage pool with 24
air water pressure jell, two
11tandup tun room1, a
private whirlpool tub room.
massage r o o m 1 and
1how1r1.
The roof of the spa portion
of the Center provide• an
outdoor IOlll'lum, dining
and beveraee aru. putting
green and a croquet course
resting on Astroturf.
Tht hard luck Newporters 1952 any in tilt 130-rnan field to blew 1he four-run lead when ·
while Steve Levesque (12), win. "I'm 12 b I, o1.1.-bookies Warner Raes (10) and Tom \\I ......
Waler (10) helped out. Tennis Lessons say." the Argentine star
said. 1.._11 11 1 ,, 21-111 "B t for Mlttr 0.1 11 112•11-n F All G u my money •• _ .. ·~· or r oups evecybody is ;!5 lo I. Any COSTA MESA
ANAHEIM -Newport
Harbor scored four rUDI in
the first inning of ·a
doubleheader with Anahefm
Kohne in American Legion
baseball, Tuesday night at
Boysen Park, but came
away .with a lOfls and a tie
for lts efforts.
The hard luclt Newpci<!On
blew the four-run lead whe!I
Kttlne came back in the
Daily Jaunts
For Albacore
Although albecon are ttlll
runnJng deep and far out.
Art's Landing Md Devey'•
Locker are both mU::inl dll:
ly runs.
At Art'a Ludin&, h
reporl h.11 large -'10-80 milu out, but tbl ma·
iority CCJl!IK to -bu been bait filh.
Nightly run• leave the
dock at 11 .llld proapec:Ca ••
expected lo pick up by tbe
weekend.
·Regullr .fiohblg pr._ctl
for tile da!y ru111 i.w -
and -.. lb• top cat· ch11, wl1h IPOllY lopdlnp of
hollhut and ,ol<lwtall.
Davey~a Locker eameup
bottom of ttle initial stanza ITA•TIN• llN•Uiat
f. al'-~ '"-· ,. .. ..,. .... kllMI with 1i..J". runt on 1ve w ""' F-Jolln v111e w c.,_ c1i11 ,,,,.,
and lbret singles to take the ~=~ ::;1tt!,.. ::: ':::
I d 't linq . hed G-1'1ur W•~I .. 2 AYll llOll ea J never re ws . G-Mlll• Klf!CMlll s.11 ,...,.,..,.,
Newport J?lade a run at Gn ,,1111'" ~~~o." w.11 ... the winners chi"pping away 1c.llforftll;1, o ........• ....,n 1vlfttllr11, 1 Crl1f (Ill..,.._ !lllMY H!tll). JI ftl
FISH REPORT
wun.,,. --"'"' "'~ "'""' ,_., .. ,~ .......
Tet1lt
~ "~ '"~ '~ ooe oi at least 25 can win it,
1 • • 2 Registration for tennis In-Jack Nidtlau1 and all the ~ J ~ ~; ttruction is takint pace dai-other• and me too, and 10
t -' ' tt ly at Costa Mesa City Hall, 8 ttiat makes allot us 25 to 1." 10 1 2 305 1 o 1 2 1.m. Ull 5 p.m., ln room · In fact, Nlckle.ua 1t 4 to t ~ I ~ : Tht two-week courSe is and Bill Casper .at 5 to 1
• 22 ,, 1t .. open to all · comen at S5 appeared to bt rather falie
.....,. Dllll 1n1 .nlece1ndin1tructlon favorites to m•ster ,.. ,.,. Pf'" TP -G
I 1741 ....;... •• 646-1"6 .
Garden.Grove
"41 ~ .....,. •"" •••• --
S1nta Ana ,. .. ,.,... ............... ..,.,..
with single runs in tht ~ !Sollfll Torrlfltt>. •kfl ,,,..,, . , (C.in.nit•l. o.or.. T~ (Mlllrl. second, fifth arid seventh ITA•TIN• l lM•U ...
MUMTIN9fON II.KM -n --II ~ , ' ' ,. Mgim immediately. roup-Carnoustle'• 7,252-yard p&r·
• llMlto.,.. ...... '-· '' .,..,.1 ' w1111er ' ' 2 10 1-. 1 net u de , ctildrtn's, _;:=.::::=:.:...:..:::===-<=----'"---------••rlC\Odl. M ....,,., » ..... 11 Oii..... 1 6 I I .......
before nnau,Y fallin& b7 • ,~ 1'::: ":. cl'!I=
slng1e run. ~.;11r11 :=: ~
lllHbllt. ·-S f 2 . II tffDlpn aod adults &nd ,..!!!!!!!!-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'~-!!!!!'"!!"!!M!l!!•!!!!!!!!!ll!l!!!!!ll!!!.!l•"lli NrwPOaT fo.-'I \AldlrM"I -111 0 1""1 ' o • • ...._ · ""-·· d II slont __. _ __.. ·---11n1 a 1 "'"· 11 ...,,.., ,. 1.~ , , , 12 """ one-,......., a y 1e11
.. .._ •• 1 w111owtto1~ • rwc11 •· ' M1Ut11 ... 1n1en s 1 ' ' .are tcbeduled from I a.m.
The loeert had Bob Leavy g::: ~ ::: =::\ :;;: lllllbllt. IA.rt't ~~ IMlt<tl <I Wfft 1 I J I until ....... aMu.s~-~'"":...·-----T~ ... ~·:...-~__;•:;_~n....:;n_n __ ~8~P~·-m_. ___ ~-oa second wMb one out in •
tlll teVeal'J (via a ?Un•
scoring double) but couldn't
get tbe tying run acr01s,
loolDI out 8-7. .
'Ille niglll<ap endtd In a I·
1 tie "trhen both team11
ocored In ... eig!Wh lnniDg
al a rtplttioa 11even inmng ·-· * _.,_
•MI H"""'1 H1,_. 4ll 1• 1-1 t I
AlllMll'l'I I( .... tlO ...... I 2
....... 0)
AUr11ft, t AUlll'llff, Ill; ......
IUM, IF
Clertc. .. ,,_,. -.d ,.....,. .. ..,_,,. ·-· Wlllltlw, • ...... T. ......
*
. ...... .
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2 I I 1 J I I 1
f · I t I ' . ' ' a I I I
t • • • • • • • I I I I
1 • ·• • • 1 ' • _.,_
Baseball Standi~gs
NATIONAL LEAGUIC
Sl Loul1
Ctn-•tl Atlanta s.n Francisco
Plttaburrh
Phila<lolphla
!.<lo An1ei..
New Yott
Chicago
Houston
W L Pd. 011
II IO .a.
42 JI .Ill 10.
43 40 .518 10
42 42 .!00 11\I
40 41 .494 12
311 40 .41'7 1211
41 44 .41Z IS
!!II 43 .471 !Sii
• 46 .... 1411
311 48 .m· 18
AJIElllCAH I.BAGU&
llotnltl
ClnoWld
Baltimore
BoolOn
Minnesota
Callfornia
Oakland
New York
Ollcato
W11blnston
W L Pel. 9 .. -ti a .llf Ill
43 :!7 .531 1111
42 38 .SZI 1111
!!II 42 -.Ill 18
31 43 .4'1'.1 1111
31 43 .471 1111 • .43 .461 17
at ·ff· .GI 1111
:Ill ·47 .J!10 II --· -All.ster ._ " ......... ·-·NtttlMI LMtw f, Amtf"leolft '--I ...... ...... ---~ ... --$·1~ ....... °"""""' .... .. e.i--. """' . .,..,... ............ .... ~'II.(~ at .......... """' w~ • ..,,..,..,.. ftliM .. .
the MARK Ill
Stunning
Old Crow
Half Gallon
save'l~
-'
-a fine -of --M<alay, i-. •al a I H I ~ tt.fN° •• ..._1 ' I 1---------------------------1 .. -
~:IOJllilaoolltio• ---·'' NicblJ nm -al ~ p,m.., ·but will fill. bllct
clalir . to midnlpt • U.. ~•h.retci--.
Roculor -... ii boldiDI
up •. ---·-...... top lilb .llld, bor·
-llld 7oQowtll. ....
-
"""""' ...,.... --•-t • ' 0 · , ~ ~ • • 811 °"""' Co.'1 ldtlt A MOii R•1p1CUd L~•llncury Dcaln
,..,.,,,, Ir 1 • • • ::1· 1\ f. i ! : Joh1101 & Son · (llrll, • t • 1 • . c":'l:''" ; l I l 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY;.NIW-T l lACH ..=,.~d I I I : 642-0911 MM211
.. ,.. "' ' • t • 1_ ...... _::._ __ ....,. ________ .._ __ ...._,...!:::= ,....,. .,., .· ,.... .. ' ... ' •
'
'
·' "
-----------------
OlDI-1'Hi l t 6t
MAl lC Jll lODAY
ANDI ll A IUllO
011· !Alt.LY DI LIVllY
• l WMD IATI> iiuart ••"'LUU o• '"' ' LafCeLM ' cotm"""ALI ·-
' -
l
1
\
1. '
--... " p .... ·.-·-.,, ··-
Ja DAILY l'ILOT
Same Old Story: Oiler Cager s
•
Outgun Marina f ~r 1st Place
• • i ' t! ......... ; . .. ~ .. . . . .. .-. • . .:-S
-
YET LINEMEN ·
IN FOLD Unbeaten Fives Down Foes
Orco-7 1eored a narrow point performanc~s out of .. w.. w,., <tt1 R~~;1:r~e •dde~out~\;' 94.90 vlctoq Tuesday .night John Vallely and oavs ·=11 : P: "! 1fi
fttrmer veterana to their at Orange Coait College to Waxman with three others 1<.oN11t 4 J 5 •11
P•lrt.l'llld Ell1'Mlrlll
\11il•IY ..... ~,.,.,,,.
TOll•ll
. ' I > II t -. ' ' ' . " Scort ~' Ntl'tt•
' ,,
' " ' .
Huntington Beach
-remains the only undeteate.d
team 1n the Huntington
Beach Summer Basketball
League after-Westminster
shocked previously
undefeated Marina, 58-52,
Tuesdi.y night on t b e
Marina hardwoods.
Marina.
rotter tody, linemen Mike Contin"9 · uadefUied alont hitting In doubJe figures. r.'r1'7"0lldl ~ : ; , ~
J llnco p-41 Corona del Mar w11 led la GJen and s b • I to n with Woodie 's Wharf in ,the u... ,...._ :~r" : : : 1:
the otfenalve departm•• by Moomaw. opfn "A" dtv.islon of the 0ru-i ~ ~ ~~ ~~ ro1111 ,_." ";;_, 11 " to J•~ "'":~/":r ,., r,.
Jollnson .. $orlt 31
' ' ' . " llW
~_,, ,, ....
We1tmln1ter11 wrpri&lng
win O'ltl' Marlol. WU rolled
up in the th1rd quarter when
ooacb Ben Taylor'a crew
outscored Marina by a...V-9
count. Marina bad led by
three at the half.
Cbria 'Jbomptoa, who took Gier• la I 230 pound All· City of Cort.a Mes a wooc111•1 Wllo(f 2 1 '" 1sa 1rv1"' " »-u Cl\apt'flf" 11 1 s ~
ove.r the lndlvidual 1COring We1tern Div i ti o a Con· RecreeUon Department bas-~~ ,._ : l :: :;: wlllld1r1 w1111::c1 cu1 JI »-lto1 ~~::, ; ~ ! 1:
leed for Orange Ooert area =tal Mo01:~ log~~~ ketball league. ~ ~-.:.., : : ~:~ l~. "• ,~ P~ "~ T1~ ~~~-r ! : : ,~
playerr, when be popped ' in brief atmt· with the Woo tt I e • 1 W h a r f , ...., " "'""" • = : : ~ 1! ~·T':."11 3~ 1; 1~ .t 3S polntl. Ramble lut meanwhile, tocii a lCK-86 0ttG-1 M ~ a.mo. s 3 1 11 Fountain Valley got ra I ea Ion decision fron\ Irvine and Gold9!! wn1 ,. -w1111o1111 7 o s 14 Jell-' = 1:~ "" TP
dooble·figure scoring from ~fore a brokep ankle Jabsco p p went by Or•r IMJ t:::i.,.wn ~ ! l ; J1coblorl ' 4 2 u
four ol ill p I 1yer1 to sidelined him ror· tbe Johnson &: 81..et. 01,,.,.r P~ ~ "~ '~ J.a-4 1 1 1 s s.rvt11t : : ~ ~ The loss lm.ocked Marina
into a tbree·way tie. for
seeond wttb a 5-1 record
ao1olw with Gardea Grove
and. Westminster.
Westminster made the big
quarter on a fatt-break
olfeue keyed on J e f f
Powers. Powers canned 24.
in all, eight from the field
and eight from the free
throw line ...
dominate Bo 11 a Grand-e. season. · Orco-7'a . int win twll:Mtt 1 • ' ':-• ::;_,, : ~ : 1! ~= 1 -i , 11
Gary Redmond 'and Dou&. Both will . join! 'tbth e was led by Tom Gr1nt : ; ~ '°''" Jt· tJ n u S.IY•• : ~ ! ~
Walker led tte offenae with Ramblers on Au.a. w n points on 12 from the field ::_r.. : : ~ J! ._..... Wiii,~ ii:;1 l"I' TP ~,.:r:;:o'" o ' ! :
15 apiece. they open trai.nln1 Cll'Qp and 11 gratis shots. K-2 2 4 , H..tirtt , 1 , l =.•'"" : l 4 ,
Huntington Buch h a d. ·-a•t•Ch ... •p;,.m.an-•Co=Ile..;l~•.·----~W~oodi~~·e"'•!_cWharf~~!...!1~•t~~28~·:__'~;"~·~··!!...----~ifc_:~~"_;w~'...!:i~-w!-~u~':""~1-----!:_'!l_:1..-!1:,__;,~":'""------'w"--'-'-H-D little trouble in pt11l>i111 IA, Huntington Beach,
meanwhile, crushed L a
Quinta to the tune of 92-47 at
Huntington Beach to up its
record to 6-0.
Ot h er action .at
H'Untington saw G a r d e n
Grove dis posing of Villa
Park by a 63-48 count while
Corooa del Mar w a s
stunning Rancho Alamitos ·
by an 86-60 score.
FOumain Valley evened its
record at 3-3 with a 77-51
"'rout of Bolsa Grande and
Ne\•tp0rt Harbor came from
behind to nip Costa Mesa ,
63-60. in other action at
Marina, meanwhile. could
not find the range from out -
side with the exception of
Rick M06ier. who hit for 23.
Kipp Baird was he1d to six
by a tenacious We$tminster <Serense.
Newport Harbor's victory
o\16' Costa Mesa came in the
fourth period when the wm:
nen outscored Mesa by a
21-10 count.
Mesa had pt.led up an
eight to 12 point lead
throun:holH. the first three
quarters only ta go cold in
the final quarter.
Quinta tilde.
~'·-.t W L "p "A
Murolh .. tioll ... di ' I ., JU
Mtrlllt J 1 JN 321 Wtllml,..ler 5 1 :MP 111 G•nllrl Gro.... s 1 .ns tn
lt•lldlo A111,,,ito1 ' t m .ar CorOllt dtl Mtr J J lt1 :M1
t<ovnt1ln Veller 3 J Sit Jf7
N'"°" Hl/llllr I J 3"' 312
COiii Mn.I I J 2t2 Jl'O
\111111 P•rk 1 S 221 416
""' Gr•ndt o ' 2'1 :ttS Lt Qlllnlt o ' lll ol06
+ * * Sttro i.r ...,,.,..
lltncl!t Allm!IOI 1' IS 10 lt--4e
Cor11111 del Mir U 11 2t 1A-16
Ctflllt HI Mtr INI
P•,TPl'TI"
Orr •1 4 1l
LIKl'I 6 4 1 II
Thornll10ft U 7 l l5 .,,,,,..,..,,..,,.. .. ,....,....,......,.D4..,, .. a,.. .. .,...,.,.n,.., Wl11t 100 1
Dotlz oe1a
Hollypark
"Entries
Nttll• 4 J 1 ll O'l•lf"I ltt2
WIN.ma 1111
Tof•ll tt 20 lJ .. ··-··-Tod<W _.__
l'•lrlclt ·-Tol•ll
*
·--......... , .. , N .. T P• TP I I I 11
I e 1 I 4 I J 11 s 2 :s 12 1 1 • l s J , ll 2S ,, 20 40
* * ... '"' .... .,.,. HunllNlal &HCP! " ,, 10 ......,,
l 1 Q11lnf9 U 7 1( 14-17 .,.,., ••. ,.llil.,._,,.,.,.,.,.,,,,ms,..,.rr••-.................. ~ ""'" .. *" IMc' 1n1 H P'T ,.,. TP
............. "'"' •111t1o1 l"N" TlMl,,,.."t', Julr 11, IHI
lid111I'lll Dir -!"Int ....i 1 :•' I" .M.
C1etr & l'ttl
tr1•ST •ACI!. 4 hlrlonts. 4 r11r 01d1
& UP brfd In Ct llfoml•. CMolml ....
Purst MOOG. TOI> tltlmt.,. price '4000.
Hemet Ml11 !W H1.,lli 10J
Gtllloftl S!ftl Ill C1ms>11) 117
DHrwood Ouk1 ID L-) 1U
l'•lllllul 5111y (M Y1,,.1) 110
SmoM Prlftl (W ... rrMIJ) lot
Miies CllY IL l'+IK.lr Jr) Ill M"t' $11¥tr ~ CJ Arttrtlllnll 109
F•r'll Orbit IA JUll"lll IU
Sl11bbl• M•n (J Trvllllo) 115
,,.,.,,,•a..Delloht (J Gollzlllez) 111
stoundtM1'owft (M \11..,._i.I 111
WllllllY ltM It• t F Gtn.tl 101
A!Mlhlltlll
E-.t"'9d (It C•mPll)
111111111 MOiter (tit Yorlt)
ltfd Spltll6our fJ Limbert)
Flll'I' 0 p_._. I• tll111COI
"' "' "' ·~ s•co110 It.I.Cl!. 1 1-1• mu-.. l .. ~
v.•r old mtldon !Ulla. P11rst '5000. ''' Tvttlff'tte CA Dl11l J! Dl1tlld11 c, G1ri1) 1!107
s11.....-Goblet tD Plerul 111 QulUesftll tL PlllC•Y Jrl \\,>, .S-Zwm CL GIU191"1 l J11n'""1 Dellmm& \A PINHl 112 DvriWil'lrll (J Trvl llol II,. • Glr1 jw H1rmot11 111 , Glrr w Htrm.td 111 -(AMI-) 117 1...owl"t' l!lol,. IE Mldl11t) lit Plott ll11cot<Y IW K.rThl llt 5"'"""' J•11 ID H•111 112 ..............
Quelltv Control CW M1,_,,..,I Am 'J'«kff19 !J L1mbtrll
""" l"lllClr Jrl
Cold L P IK.lj "' MtlklW Miii t Mfntll)
"' "' Ill "' TRtlD ltACI. SV. furlon111. 2 v.1r
old m1i." t."t!I & tl'ldl1111s. Pur1t ..,..
5hln1"" llulh tJ l1mberl) Abdlt.l lor IA l"llltda! Don A \IH !ll Ctmlltl) Robtrt Htll IJ Gotuo!e1) P1rklrw Field Ut l l1ncal 1tcw1l1 1(1lfd !M Vinti) ttullflO ICnltM 8oudolr Prl11Ct CJ Artorbu•11l ...... !lt !W Htrfldll ~ of Ire tl'lcl ID V1l11air.1) l.~1,_11'1 lA V1ltftruel1) 1.114 Elltlllhi Clrtull (J Arlttburn)
&old Chtnct1 10 Htlll FIMI .1.111'11 !D Hill) Ot~l"lTllnttl Jtullr (L GH!ltlft) IO'i..t!est ot AH IE Mtdl11t)
"' '" "' "' "' '" "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' 11:
, POUltTM •ACI!. 6 fllrlllrlt1. 4 rtlr
oltl• & w. Cl1lmr"". Purte MSOO. TOI>
clllmf"o prltt noao.
SP1ntultJ (J L•mber!l $wHI Ptn (M Vti..nzutllll
Hlll'llY Sttn (E MMl111}
You 0..,. II (J $tlle<1)
Admlrtl ltMltt IW Htr11d<l
"' "' "' m
'"
Sol S..nlU1nl"" IA PlntNI AlflPl•no IF Girul "' "'
Ftl1TH ltACI!. ' 1-16 mllft. ' Yttr old•. Cl41mlnt. P11r1t MOOG. TOI>
ci.1m1n1 Pflct '8000. F•llm1s el f!I• ·~ C1tlrw Quotn IF Gt r11) Oon'I Lit CD Htll) T~od Thf Turf IE MC'dln1) Mr. K1I Olrd IJ Slllt<I) 'J'lqer Jeh11 (J G4nz1lel)
PreemlMnl IJ Trvllllo) Chola Son CA Plnedl) Witch'• ISl"Olh ·cw Htrfod) Cori>or1I ltoY {W H1rrl1)
Prl11Cd!ftt IM 'V1i..n1usl1)
•IOS "' '" "' "' "' "' "' "' '"
StXTH IACI!. 6 furlol'lt1. l Ytlr tkll. Allowtroce. PU™! "50G.
M•ll To Gtrr (F G1r11l Jt1!ot
Cedar Court CW Htrl1dt) 1111
Hlddeft CIUI ID Mill) no
Nttlmlenlo !D Pltrct! 1~
Society II IF Otlv1rnl JIOJ
Mod""' CJ 1.1mbtttl no
01rttln D1y IW Mlhorntrl UO
Mttt C°'"" Troirt>l9 Cl. "lllUr .'rl 111
St:YENTH It.I.CE. ' turlon91. "•llltt
& m11re1 l Yrlr old• & us1. Cl1ul!ltt
AllowlllCH. Purse llllOOO.
Ptciflc Cron (W Htr11Q)
Fn111CIM M. ID Plrrt.tl
M1btl'1 Holley (M Vinti)
MIU K•I lllrd {J Limbert)
Gtl N' Wi" ilt C1mp11)
:1.PIMI"" Around IL PlllUY Jr)
SU~ CA Ot1r)
Flaslw !lift CD H1lll
N1llvt l'loMY IW H1rmtffl
UnlrtterM (W Mollor11tr)
Clfm'1 GMI IJ $tlltrll
'" "' "' "' "' '" )111
"' '" "' "' EIGHTH RACE. 5\'t lurlollt1. 1 ntr
elll nme1. Holtrwoocl L~ssle Sle~e...
Purst 15',000 1ddtocl. Gron ,lt,575. 7e
Wlftner M.l,01S.
E"tt HHrl ! D Vtll1<1ueJl No C1ullon !W H1rrl1I
5uPlf" 8 rttrt IA Plllfdl)
l.YIVlt'I Orpl\e" !J S.lttrll
811rn1' ll1bt 10 H111l
Sntff•n taurl CW H1rt1dll
Jan Jeult Cl. PlllCIY Jr)
O'luc:ky Yau !0 Pltrct)
Ft l!Mul C.ncllt IM V1len1urll) -
'" "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "'
HINTH ltACE. Orie ml1e. 4 weir e!ds
& 11p. C!elmlllt. Purn s.ioo. '"" cl1lmlftj price 17500.
Br111d ov1I !D Hill) 111 Mon Zl9ue CE Medl111I 114
1Jnp1r•llll (Ul MtrmatU 114
Counlr AttorntY Ill Yorltl 117 P11t11'1 Virtue CW H1rltd) lU ll~l'lcll'I Jot (L Glltlm•n1 ·~ Lord 8Yron (M V1ltnrue t ) 11' W1r Trt•surt (~ TrtplllO) 120 51\0ft Atcounl ID Pltrct) 11'
So11,_r !D v:l:.'Tir~\i.1t 111
Los & l1mlto1 IJ L1mbtr1l 1u Trenwl11>er Ill Yorkl 111
12WWWSEG
Conlrtrt s
Mllllr
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Whlffltltl
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""" 8onw.lt Nicholl
Toltll
'""'-·-SI. Cl11r
l(Jiappful
Si>rltD1 .....
llrtlll
'"" Tott II
*
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4 0 4 I
2 1 I 5
2 , 0 J
2 ' 2 10 1 1 • l
3 t 0 •
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3$2211'2
... 9111111• 1471
PO l'T "" T" ' 0 s • I 0 J 11
5 ' 2 10
2 2 1 ' 1 1 2 3
0 0 l 0
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107 11•7
* * Se1r11 •v Oulrf<ln
WHlmlMltr t U 11 l~Y M1rl111 14 10 t 19-Sl
Moll
He""' lvlt
lltlrd
MOiier
Dtvld..,,
$1r~tford -Toltll
Mori"' (ftl
,G PT l'P T"
2 l s ' l 0 5 4
1 , 1 ' 2 1 1 • ' s 4 n 1 0 4 7
1 0 2 1
·1-o a 1
70 12 " 52 Wtllfl'llllltor l•l ·-· MonlgDmtr"'I'
&rodtf"ld; ·
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McCltflOoll Thom11
Mt C-ld
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4 • 1 •
1 l 2 '
0 0 ' 0 0 0 2 0
0 0 2 0 0 1 • l
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* s,.,. i.r OU•rten ~~-:
Casi~ Me$1 11 U 11 11)....511 N~ 10 11 It 21--.t.l
... ,_
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$19Vll'l>I
McC111elltl
Toft II
l(ellv
~I'll .. " ' ' ' . ' . . ' , ' . ' ' . ' ' 11 21
c..11 MtM "''
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' ' ,. ~
PO l'T I"~ TP
I J 3 7
1 I l l
2 0 ' ' • 1 1 17 e 1 1 1
Race Results
Dlt l
Addle..,,,
Erskine
Corl91
w.111 ..
Slltllrntylr
D1v!1
Perrr
Yerktr
I I 1 3
4 ' ' • 1 a 2 2
• 1 I t 3 0 J •
Tot1h '' 10 23 4C
* * * Scon llY Olllrttn NGll.YWOOO l"l.llK RESULTS llOHTH llACI. l" mlle1 on .... I oli• Gr111dt '11 12 12-.fl
Tlll!SDAY, JULY t , lKI lwl. Flllltl & .... r.,. 3 ,,,,aid• .. up. Fou11t1lft \l•ller 17 20 1( 1'-17 CLll.11 AND ~AST ISfYfrlv Hlll1 h1'ldlco11. P11r1t 130.000 P0111tTllll Vtlltr (17)
l"lltST ltACI -1 1/16 mlle1. 4 VHf J1;:tp19'°" !Hirrls) S.IO l.20 1.111 l'G "' ,., T"
okll •l'lcl I.HI. Clt\mlnv. PUr'$f S400ll. 0ntl"I LllW (L Pl11C•r Jr) l.00 2.1.Ct ltfdmorod , 1 I IS
Sl•ltl Of Gokl!M Y111tUJ.M1 lMI LIO Pomb1I !J lAmti.rl) 4.20 Dlfflt S I 2 '
S,,.n1.i. Ctv•ll.,. IW M1rrlt ) 4.10 l .20 T~0,0 2.u,,',"-_ "''"' Lo•·· Allltrtno s l 4 U c ..... Ciro IA Pll!fdl) •.oo " ~ \Intl) l 2 e I TIME -1.44 l /S. Cour1oeou1I•, .1.mrrkro'1 Ftnev. 1111d· MikPI 2 o s A Al SO ltAN -Goldtl1 Wed, Sw•! Creek It, T-1rd. s I l 11 Whtlt, Ytlrno, lll"Ol'IJ'I', Turft To PNtt. St.rltd'lfd -Cipher' "rl11CH1ne1ltn, M1tkrt J l O '
SCttATCHED -I'm Miah. PllY Gel II , Mfl. Jw · :;;~i: I l 2 lJ
Sl!CONO ltACI: -SV. turl0ft91. 1 NINTH Ill.Cl!. 1 1116 mlle1. 4 .,..r Tottll l3 11 17 11 J'lt•• olds. Cl1lml1>11. Pu•H $5000. old1 Incl uo. Cl1lmlfl0. Pur.e MOOD. lolH .,.... (Sil
•110 8u1htr !Mth0r11trl n .20 7.00 4.40 Don 8ob Jail/I (A Pined•\ N l'T ,.,. T" Wlkl l(u\1 {Pl11C1Y Jr) S.IO 4.10 1 .4'1 JAi 1.00 Dllrf 10 t J II DffrwOOCI"• Own {Htrm•h) 7.00 Pllf\llllllO (Mll\orntYl 4.60 1.1.Ct Grtvl• l 5 1 1 TIME -1.0S J/S. Lllllt RC'd Mtn Cit 11nca) 7.¥J Htlvlk 1 ' J 2
1.l$0 ltAH -Ctt1ler fltltonv. · Tl~o!:"','!. •_•· ••• •••-•• ·--. ltwls l 2 4 I N1W.lft Delroll, Fiery VM1111, Tlrnt ,. -~· 'Pl .., ~"" Wlllttml 0 1 2 l Trlpl>fr, Go!Oe" Kri. s.tn'1 PrlMt, Tlvoll, lt111htr, Dll>Comtl!e, Goof'I, Wtrd 4 3 l lS
Fll1hl"' 8t!le, 811Mul !lob, Mr. Tlmlrlsh. Teti • ?1 11 20 51
SC RATCHED -Grtlld 0111 N1me, E1111lftttf. :1-,";:;;";'"'"';:;;;;;-;;;,'':;'W~ll~•C~O ... iiii.mmmm;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;~11 Golden Co•-•I, Yo-LtYtn. ltedt!HI G1mltltr.
SECARD'Seee
w x 12'. w-OVAI
•
l 6x24 DOUGHIOY ICIT
.... k .. ...., $599 ,_, __ DOUGHIOY
llil'UICIMINT
CMIH
321 s. MAIN OllANGI
--I-TO 7,ao 7 DAY1 A -
•
All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Throu.gh Saturday
•
Thru Saturday Only!
UBEVDUR
EN NEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
TD DAVI
SAVE 15.95
hru Saturday on
our Foremost®
Premium auto
ajr conditioner
Reg 199.95. • •••••• NOW
• Exclusive 'chill' feature pre-cools your eor thru 3
large rectangular louvers and two ro.tating side venl1
WITH ADAPTER KIT
5184 • High performance 3 speed blower and variable
thermostat give you precise comfort control
• Slim, luxurious styling complements any dash
• Expert installation available NO DOWN'PAYMENT ••• USE
P~NNEYS TIME PAYMENT PLAN!
Custom air conditioner
Smartly styled auto air conditioner has 3-speed
Mower to distribute eool air. ldeal for compacts,
)'WI coolt bigger con, too. Cool off today and save!
Reg. $179.95
NOW$
Expert installation
•vail•ble
"Flex-A-Lite fiberglass fan
I
Lig"-ighl Flex·A·Lile Ion gives added cooling copocity for your co '
or truck and cuts gas consumption by using len horsepower. This strong
and d~fabt. fan also reduces noise, vibration and we<!r. See it today \
NEWPORT
(Fashi on
•
BEACH·
Island)
•
"
As low as 11.88
HUNTINGTON
(Huntington
I
BEACH
Center)
•
•
------------~---~--------------
" " • ' ' ' . ' "'
,.
" " • • " • "
" " , • " • ' ' • • ..
-. ---·--~ ---........ -~-----·---~~~~~~~.-~ ....................................... ~ ................................................................... '!' .. ~
Multihulls Close _Gap
. .
In Race to Honolulu
11, ALMON LOCL\BEY Sta ·-·•e, -• ·-• ~ ..• , -~ ............ . ...., ...... ....... ..... -MUlll,.... • ~ --..-
Thi aev.n multihulls ta Renmlow't Mama Jwa, a·• wte:
Ille 2,215 mllo trampacillc loot Ulcb, •• • mlles • -s-b, 1441 -
race to Honolulu were om away. 138-137 west:
third of ttle way ~oss Buddy Ebaen'1 Polynealaa . LIDI Kai, -.JO north, 133-
Tuesday with light winds eo.oept from aye w11 Cl west:
slowing their pr<>greeo. leading a li&111!1-banclltd Mua lwa,. :IMO nortll,
Jim Arness ' 58-foot -h croup ol lour moltlbulla 131::15 west;
Sea Smoke was &50 ~ miles •ailina withiq;litht 1ot •acb Ptlyneslu eo.eept, 2&-57
from Los Angeles with otl>er 45 mllei beblnd Manu north, 130-48 weat :
sevtrlll ·otnen· 1lowlJ la: Jay JobDlon'• Glu1 Glu1Sipper,25-21'1,)orth, c~1 the l"P· lllOrtin Slipper from Seal Beach · 130-34 ...ot:
Crumrine'• 46-foot -iletch, ·Yacht Olub; the ·11-Allrlp, 3'-06 ·-· 130.a Lin! Klllrom-Yacht trim!ren Aurige and " 1m1 west; . .
Olull hid clOl<d the l"P and Loo, 31-foet btcb "' ~.... ..... Loo. :tt-311 'aollll>, .130-
. ' .... only 25 miles aetom ol Stern's a1ao boom SBYC. 11 wee!. .. . .. .
,
•
Stormvogel .
ka'ding
Two Yachts
..
,
""* MATl~llS DAILY *
. Tl/lllS -1141 s.os a 1,30
LAIT I PRllO ... llC .. ---. . . ....""' ... _..._...., : : : .~ ...... '''!+:r:.,,:
· "A S'JREE·TCAR
NAMED DESIR£" --• ,._..,.II ;; d 11 lf;I• t ,.•l•dls• 'I•• ..
T RAV ·M· UEND• HAtiftntv,.. In .a,,...,. a.r·
' i;:, l!.I ' tllf 1i.. TIIHIN Prt-1111. 11• •.I'll.
Wed..U.,, Jv/y 10, 1968
~IE!~~ ~ATIE •
..... " •ocnt• awl Lffct
1Dt (AST lll.IOA l l'll •
IMIOA n:111"suu• 171·4041
GAim •••
VlllANCt
lAOIANCt
DAILY I'll.OT Jf
.......................
... .lllly 16. c..111111 .....
... • ....... Jill.,......,
...... 6llt I f t:ll. -. .. , .,...,.,.
' "fll.&TUll"I MAii I.Cit"
•
. . Germany .(~P) ~ Tri• 73-c.... ... OMet -rs 1 iuci:le. '46-1 J6J
foot ketch StonnvOfl'!l,t?~~~~~~·~~-·~-~~·~~~~~~~~~ &kippered by Cornelius
Bruyueel ol South Afrfca , • ..11==ii=:::1!==o=iC::=>11=-....i;.-i:z....zi,..1 wa1 the fiHt to pass ! 1 .. •w·s.._ 6:41
ClbeckpoiDt .\lpha' in ~ 1 ~-· ... c .... S... .,._ l·P.M.
:tranoallanlic or ace from-. '. · . ~!JOJ.u EXCLUSIV~ ·
Bermudl to Travemuende, b SOUTH COUNn 'UN Largest Fibe .tglms Boat the Genrtan navai tender NEWPOltf IUCN • Oll.3 .. 35 ,. ..---· :-WeMerwald r-l<>day.
or Grand llapldf Mich . She w:•_ clo"!ely. JOl1owed
l\.ubber ·lhalt ....fns1 are. l!I' Oildi!\0'.111, slLlppered :!If 'br . BJ 111ar1ne a.,,,;np of . s. A. "liu.Y" Cfui1 .of !'few,
&r1·Wai>er. . . ,, Y«k, llf!I . Klaloa,1! w111!
. ~Tbe but .. are com~ljl .:, dohn B. Kilroy of NllWJlOf!· 'llued .wJtli ·2 800 p..,..js ·of '· lloacll· ,M the h.ebn, Ille . urethane , ~· ·tt vi n I .. escort :vessel reported. . .
Willard Boat Works of ~ auppllod by Owens·
Costa Mesa .hof .pfOduced Cominl · ~ · Corp.
\rtlat, I& believed to be .Ille and UilJlod . M~ .and
wgeat molded tiberpae1 Mllliilllctliittt. The 23,500
power boat·1tr ·1»1 ~y.. pounds-ofr9sift·w•.tuppli"ed
The I 5 • f o o t y.acllt-1,P. bJ. Cyanamid Co. ' · ·. ·
sifl1ts..ln1 bOlt · -'-calleil The: --v I e w i n 1
the Cbral See -will be used wmdowa are over one 1ncb
in the Hawaiian I11ands as a thick, laminated in twti
lJlodem glus-bottom boat. layers of one-half inch
The "bottom has 16 glua tempered 1la.s1 with an
windows for under-water interlayer of poly v fn y t
viewing. It is U. S. Coast ~yral, having a safety ,
Guard certified for 149 factw of 14 to one. The &Ias.11·
passengers but posseises wa.s e n Ii nee red and
the quality and beauty of mmufactured by Slerracin
desicn normally found only Carp. of Sylmar, Calif.
Ht plueb yacht:J. · The vessel ii powet«l by
The boat was designed by two Perkins 11:1 cylinder
Blaine Seeley &: Associates turbocharged dieeel engines,
or Newport -. md . supplied by Qiarles E.
construct.d at Willard Boal Smith ol Ne1'j)Of\ Beach.
WMks Baker S-plant: , The aft encine locatloo
Principal dimensloPI are .tllowed the UM of V.Civu
M feet 9 indtes overall, 19 mmufactured 'by Precision
feet 6 inches beam, lour feet V. Glide Co. of Clilton, N. J .
•Ix indles draft and Mial>I Propeller• are !:qui.Quad
a p p r o x i m ately 80,000 four-blade brome with 26-
pounds. .inch diameter and 26-ineh
P'iberglus far the vesael. pitdl, by Federal J;ropellers
Antelt R•+unt To
llt :A. TeM•r~owl
' IOS'JOll RED SOX
Thur1., Fri. a+ i ,..,..
s .. +. Dty 6tl'll•, I p.,.,. Da1u ··'
"iN'. BEAlitiF'(j(" ANAHEi;.f ·srAiiiiif.if ............ .._ .................................... .
'l1CICnl: .W... ....__, •""· t. I J,m. •All MulllllAprldM •.w.iw-ta Mu*Clti.
All Ullllld ~ ...... en.,.. ~· Mloll Ol'lhn: ...... Tlllill Ol1Nf. ......... OI&'
Crossword Puzzle
ACkOSS .ti Hole In Mt
49 8tCOlllt
Y11ttrtltY'• Puure Solv1di
l Po pular complelely
s,umamt soaked
6 Ca.II to SI Bawled out
1"[l)L1rtL1 n n11 r1 nr1nn
•JWlll'tlt LaH11·J rtauu
LJllLJf tll Ll f.ln1·1 l:lltl111
ni:•rtai1111.1 w11nrtT.1nr.t
1ttract 53 Notlcld
1tltntion 57 lathlnt patt
~Jlll·l\4 11 l11 4Liijftl1
rt1.1r.1r1r11·ir'11 r11 '1,
10 Old World st W1ltr bof!J
tree 5t Food ltt:w
14 .E•slly 61.0ntarlo
LJrt 1r.1 1°1r111r111n1:11-·1 1
!·1 t .1 1Jtllll >ll!Ht f·lfl!t
.J .•J ·l!!i.lrll lilll IH·ll'll '
flexed c•unUt
15 Arthritis •s Ulll•1tt
l ld COltl•llltr 16 Mary L1111b's '6 Lacking
husi11nd h11r
1·ir111 !tUllUllWl t ll
.I t :...·1r)lj I Hit 11111
""'1•1 t .l lt Ll•Uli.Jlt:ll J :j •1·1.1 '.1 :•1u1 111u1nr.1 •••••I ur.1·.111 .t1·1111t r.1
'I It I 'h l'l[l llltl U~n
17 Trtt fruit covtfln1 11 Seldo111 · l7 One of a
occurring cl111 of jj 'lcke4 out lt kind of spirits FrUlt
TV progr1111 61 European 12 Suiquthannt
20 D1ficient c1plt1I or Sktlflt
In co lor 69 Identical 13 lilax, 8u11
21 Sch11ol 70 --·Ovo 11k tn.d Buddy
teictbock 71 '111ter of-·· 21 Daeply 22 In 11~h ar;d 72 Ian's n111e bitter every cast 73 C011lin1 l4 Man's
-,, St. Louis nickn11111
structure DOWN 26 Sharp
25 Grasping 1tlngln9 1pp1ralus 1· Hit cold.
27 Brought '2't$in glas s 27 Make
under conttol 3 Chemical · amorouJ
31 Htld a aifflx •dvances session 4 lndh:atlon 21 Ccncernln1 :
32 Tr&t ef soir.tthlnt Z Words
)J Waitnss' Impending H l uslntss concern 5 Ftmllt tst1blitll·
JS Juan or Ev' 1nh111I . 11t11l 39 Put 1way 6 · £pllhlt for 30 Suprtmt
41 "Whitt· Athena •r1r.11
Cllffs of-" i 1 AdJtctiv t o tvll
43 C0111pl•ttd ~ . Mifli1 · J4 Aell9lo1.1s
44 Dtslr!d with I Pun ish ht apostates txptelltloil • • ctrt'1tn W1~ '3' LWtl nalst •
4• Egypti•n · 9.c111111ru1 · .. J7--•v•r~
ptnlnsul1 fotw1r ljghtty
7/10/61
ll£11_,
40 C1rlalft
· TV program
'"42 CMpettd
'" ... id . 45 S1111U reund ....
47 l'hlllpplnt
Ntttlto
JO-ltaclt •
.52 Ctll lnj ler lm111ed 1tt action
Sl ·-dlVtf· ,4 l1Ull11g
'""""' SS Open to view
Sb Sfn k
60 Nevada com1111unlty
l2 Ont who 1, oppostd
61 C1rnlvorou1
1n lm1l
64 Coll•Jsiblt shtlltt ' 67 Empty
boat tint tilt: Slani
__.., 11·c-.:·1 · "' The. leadJnc . Clase .A .,.......ve otaUOn ui over yachts were about 21 hoUrs
ao,ooo pounds. The foam was ahead of the bulk of the ~actured by the CPR · field, competing in classes B
d!v:i1100 ol Upjolm Co. and C Westerwakl said.
Wiring and electronics Most of the' 15 contenders bl w~ supplied and' inatalled . theH clas_ats were. ezpected
by-B&rtell Q)rp. of Newport te reaeli Alpha t h i a
Beech. Circuit b r •at.er• · attembcll:
were ~ufactured b y They Jiel'e led by Rage
Helilem--Electric c:o., li!iPPel'fCI. by Homer Dealu Tr-. N. J. o( Me~: Fla., Wappen
Evolutioo of ttle concept, Vori '.Bremen, skippered by
design and conltruction of Dierk Qanl.~~· 0£ .Bremen-
tht CCl'al See im. conaidered Ltaurn, We.at Germany, and
a breikttlfoogh in the Small Spirit, with Canada's N. R.
commercial boat field . McCarvill of Y~ver at
In November of 1916 tbt helm, W'e1terwald
repreaent.ativea of See nported ...
Under Sea, operating out of The leading · yachts thus
Lahaina, Ma11i, visited the had comple.t~ witrun s~
malnllft(] to search for a days the ~st,.. Wrd ''Of ·the
boa~ y~d with t h e 3,500 ·nautlcaJ m1Je·-1l'ip · to
capability to cons tr pct a tbe . .B ,a 1t1 c.. port. ~ o.f
modem "1la6.11 bottom" tour Tr•vetn~endt. • :· boat.' Such a boat had not ,-. -· -. . " ~!"~mm :.::;r~\•iliJR!!!I
fiberglu1 l:onstruction: thus -~ !••!·!~·~-i~-;~
·railing 1tle question of ill!! lft¢
whellei a fiberelas6 boat·oC •'IV
thil size desliDlcl to~ carry ~~-~~., J*llfl:lll~ for 'hire would -~-~ ~.GIJ ·
be · acceptable to tbe ~u. s: ~ ii.!~-:;.--=. ,.
Q:i;iiit Guard. wtlo mU1i • ."YOU ONLY Uft TWICF'
approve every, detail of aU J•,.,.. Cobun'I • c.11r
. pllDI and specifiett,ioni o( "IN UKI PUNT" =.: .. ~, ~;:.fi~ for~ :J!Iij Ii[~. ··-·-......... At ....
a..'W:u ...... 12 PIHi ·
~ '' -
lu'1l111
-·-.·-~ .!:. ".!~!!: :·.1
116 J UNn IHOWI
AU. llSNnr .
"ONE AND ONLY
FAMltY BAND"
PLUI
"IAMBI"
1PlUS
''THREE LITTLE ,.c;s•
C9;tlfhl.. ..., tr.• 1 J ilt
c-1 .. July 17
PORT, THEATRE _ .. ...,
"SU~IRIOlt
INTIRTAINMINTI"
·N
0 w
WAlTl• MATTH"AU ll ··--"" ..... llA .. ... ,.... .... ..,
.::::..
I 141-1311
W ..... k*llAN .. Weyl
n.n M8"tll -J-S'llW1rt
'"IAflPOUlO"
K"et~ .. .,,II Bl:lf ic!rUI
, ~ TrKr • SY41MY ll'ollll' "•uas WHO'S COWIN•
TO •1MNll"
1n Colllr
ltod '"""" • Galor "NO WAT TO TllAT
A ·llAIY"
l '
., YOU ARI . A ltlD ILOOPID AMERICAN ...
YQI.! MUST Ill "GltllN llltlTS" -Diene Tirlco Tifl GjlesN HeHiis . . ' . .
" -
EXCLUSIVE
FIRST RUN
S~OWIN•
CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 , .M. f'UlllT--.............. , ...
"
HARBOR at ADAMS, COSIA·MES'A; P,HON.E -~
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!
.. BEST ACTRESS!
KATHARINE HEPIUAN
BEST SCREENPLAY!
WIWAMROBE
..,,,...,. l'ICtVfltS "' ..... Sllnley Kramer
·~-Spencer I Sipney
TRACY POITIER
Katharine
HEPBURN v
....... who'• ~ to dinner
,
. * .. _,..,.,. -
Kalhlrino HouaMDn -•-,.,; ar'4LINol 110K ,,_... ... ._... .. SWILIYllMlll • ~ IJl!'I
STARTS WID.
.IULY 17
J ACAOIMY AWAD
.. ·WINNIU
MATINll DAILY e PilFO~MANCI
SCHIDULI e
l ill-l:G0-7110.f:JO , •••
IXTlA SNOW SAT.
11:41 r.M.
IXCLUSIYI AllA lUN
e JlllATINllS DAILY e
flOM 12 NOON
COlOlt lrll' 0,LUlll ,
Jillie Andrews ~
I hi "
TllorOlllhJy ~ ..
r
.
I
I
I
~ .. . ' • ••
•
. . WILSON : 5,0RD SALES
18255 •EACH BOULEVARD r · '-. fHlWay· 39) · . HUNTINGTON B~CH
DESGRIPJION TOTAL DOWN M'IKl.Y.
n1c:1 PAYMT. PAYMT, . -'6Z~CHEYROLET $.495 $17 $17 YI. • .._tic, PS, alt
ce..d; N,•· '~1 · . . '60 ·G~l.A~E $295 s11 s11 Allt... U'H; ,_;., 1t..rf111o
""'_..,...,N •. 610 . -
'63 .IMPALA. $695 s25 s25 H1rt1t.,. R1dl,.~, ,...,
PS, 1lt. cetMf.:Ne. 110
• -
IMP.ORT .
1.EPARTMENT . ..
IPECI. LI
'59 llNAULT ~95 • ' laeifll..t ..... ,.,. • St.ck ..,..... tlJ, .
,'6., j'OYOTA '1695 C-.Aoto--"-· s+.ek ........
'66 VOLKSWAGEN '1295 Doi-. •°Ml· ............ ,.
st.ck """'"' t71
·WAGON. TIME . .
SPECIA·LS
[)ESCRIPTION TOTAL DOWN MTHLY.
PRlc:I PAYMT. PAYMT.
'62 C:HEYROLET $.495 '17 s17 hi Mr •19011. VI, 1rie.,
r1lllle, h11hr, Ne. 911 .
'62 FoALCON $.495 $17 $17 Dix. ••fO"· Auto., r1llll1,
)'•*· "'i·lott ,
'65 RAMBLER $195 $]1 $]1 Am1tiu11 W1 .. n. ll:1di1,
h11hr, 1h1rp. N1. 411
'65 RAMBLER $995 s34 s34 110 W19111. A1torn1tic., Ndi1,
h11hr, Ne. TATlll -'66 MERCURY $1695 $58 $58 Voy191r w19111. VI, 111to., 11.&H,
1-n. rick, "irtyl lnht, He. 61•
'66 Cntry. Squire $2695 $93 s93 W191n. 10 p111., VI, 111t.,, RIH,
PS, Pl, 1ir coH., reek. SUM56"7
. BRAND NEW 1 ~61 'THUNDERBIRDS
. : ttMB>IAlE DEllVERl .
. ' .
VACATION
SPECIALS
; l· , I . i
H1rdtop. 429 CID VI 1ntiM1 crui1·1·M1tic, .,..,,.,, dHrint I ~K ~ak11, ·AM r1dl .. click.
c•'"fort · •h••111 YHfll•tl•11, flltht llHch •••f, vinyl 111 .. rl~r trh11, couii••Y llthh, romot. c•11;•'
'"irror, rotroct•bl1 hoocll•mp cloor1, full who•J ''"'" oncl oll 1toM•rtil foctery oq11iplft111t. •
tit •. • . •31· II PULL NICI , oral-TOTAJ. $.•·03" ,_
OI SAVELk AT ' ~LEAfTN s;:o00~00
. ' . FROM OPFICIAL UST !!RICE ON ANY THUNDERllRD • t • l · .-'IN OUR HUGE '$ELECTION. · .
llAND '68. MUSTANGS · ,_,MIW . . .
HARDTOP. Fr••h oir'hootor l clofro1t.r, 1:.-.:•·up, domo I C•11rf•1y 11thho l:i11c.k1t 1•oh, oll •nyl
tri'", 11ylo11 c1rp~ r9c.kw p•n•I mo11lcll119s:I 1ir 1coop .. i!iill'io11t, soot I 1ho11lclor lielh, poclclod
ti101h &·vi1ors,,wJMlihloltil '#11h1ri I 2 .,..c1 wip1rL ·
$1288
. 01
-I 00/o. ~~~ ...i$60" =.
' 0. IA;I UP ~o '100 ON A ~L1rdtl.N°I~ 1Pic1AL .. GT MUITANCI
'Alt cotttillfloo11.t .. 21t CID VI •ittlM, cnliM·-•ffc,.p-or ... 9rl119 I cllK.ltr•~•I, r•cl lo, WTICS
oq1i1""011t p•dt•90, ffntM ''"• •11ttM -ft,.yt .... ry·~ti .. .ut .. ·wlff.ff1I wsw rt •. No. l21
" . ' .
·IOO FASTIACK. l02 C.I .~. VI 0119i110, Cr\ilso·o·motic, pow1r 1t•orl11f, r•cllo, ho~tor, ti11tM
tl•11, cloth I vinyl trim, w/1/w tire .. wheol CO¥lt1111cl 1ll 1t111clercl ·f•ctory oq11ipmo11t. No. 711,
rMMlDIATl DELIVERY .
OR IAVI ·UP TO ~800 ON A LOADID eALAXll 511 HARDTOP
ltO, CID VI 111ti110, cr11i11·o·m1fic, powor 1 .. ori11t It till1c l:.r••••, 11l1ct1lro c111cllt111l11f, •II
Yhtyl trim, c111tem Yi11yl roof, tintocl tloH, AM rocUo, clol1111 101t ~lh, ho•.,., cluty li1tt.ry, ""
mo .. c•lfrol mirror, whlt1 aldo w•lt royon tlr11, & f'11{I whe•I ~·••r•.-Ne. 201
"::: '68 F·250 CAMPER SPICIAL
·$2688 -
OR
AND $69"
0WITH THI PURCHASE OF· ANY
IL· DORADO CAMPll
IMME.DIATE QEl;IYIRY .
f250 Ill" Styl••ido l'ic.•·up. JOO CIO ·•lltino, 4 1po1J clirocf .tton1tr'iui111,, chrol!'lo w11t1rt1
111irro'1," Comp•r p1i:\•1• ·t1cl11di11t Iii omp .l .. rn•for, 7o '""I' ·lititt1ry, orlr• ceolin9 r•diotor,"
compor wlrint ~''"''!• ·1•11101, :t1111fril' hor111, fwil'I 1-1:.oom fro11t M1p1111l111, m••l11111m WVW r••f
'1111p1n1!011, 'rod10,· 1hoc• 1b1orb1r1, 10 .ply fir••, l:iritht l:io~y lll•ulcli1191, H. D. Yi11yl c1li tri"',
fylf ,fN111:i .. t,"No. 767 . . · • ·. • '
·~. '68 FALCON s1·9aa .
OR ··
I OOL TOTAL $52'5 P•
. , , . 70 DOWN .m . -
COUPE. Fr11lt 1ir hoot•r I dofro1tor, cluol hYclr1111ic I.to•• 1yt .. .f!'I, ·co11rto1y lithh. l111icl• &
011hido mirror1, cloth I ¥i11yl i11t1rior trim, p•d4o4 cl•1h I · Yi1on 'onJ •II 1t•ncl1rtl foctory oqu11•
111ont. No. 721. IMMEDIATE DlLIVERY • · · ' .... ~--Im!!'!'!~~~~~~~-----·· ~.:0
. 681/2 CORTINA
s111B8 qj& ·~~
I OOL TOTAL $4750 P• •
70DOWN oH · -
I 600 CC ontin•, 4 111••' tr1111m i11io11, tli1c br••••, int.rior cloc1r•tio11, whit. 1id• well fttet.
No. 126. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
DESCRIPTION TOTAL DOWN PAYMT.
PRICE PAYMT. PAYMt.
'63 MECURY $595 $19 s19 VI, 011fo1111flc, powor 1toorin9,
•irt_yl i11totlor. No, •17
'61 LINCOLN $695 s25 s25 Co11ffn1nt1L F11ll powor I
oir concl{tlo11i11g, No. 929
'66 FORD '
$1195 '41 . s41 C111toll'l tod•11. 'VI, 011to., 11.&H,
focfory olr c:ol!d. No. 161
. .
SPECIAL FACTORY
PURCHAS'E
WE PURCHASED 21
1967 FACTORY WARRANTEED
'us~~~~flt~~5uN"o~:S~~~s ·
'67 MUSTANG 51895 4 D•or l111d1u. Full powor, •
•ir, AM/FM,· tilt wh1•I. No. 1011
'67 FAIRLANE 500
A11to., rodio, h11tor, liro1110
lini•h. No. UJl154
'67 GALAXIE
H•rcltop. v1; •uto., PS,
lo11do11 roof •. No. !i4t
'67 T-BIRD
VI , powor 1f1ori11t, r1dio,
h•1tor. No. 719
~995
$1995
53395
TRUCK
DEPARTMENT
SPECIALS
DESCRIPTION TOTAL DOWN MTHLY. PRICE PAYMT. MTHLY.
'61 RANCHERO $395 s13 s13 A11to1T1•tic, torrHic 1oco11d
cir. No. ALl/214
'58 FORD F-100 $395 s13 s13 Allto111otic pic.11p,
G411t0
'63 FoORD F-100 $795 s27 s27 Lontli•d 11rc•11p true•.
No. 971
'66 -=OllD F-100 $1395 '47 s47 lor19b.cl pic.up,tr11c•.
No. 616
'66 FORD F-100 $1395 s47 s47 A"'tomotic, 11ic.11p tr11c•.
No. 1019 .
ALL PAYMENTS ON USED CARS ·INCLUDE TAX & LICENSE & RNANCING CHARGES FOR 36 MONTHS ON APPROYED ·CREDIT
-01111 NO'WJ "AYMINTl.IHClUD• TAX-lM;IHt~ • ,INAHCE CKAl:Q ES ,01:. MO. Ofil AP"lllOVID Cl:EDIT e WHITE SIDE WALL lll:IS AHO WHlll COVEl:S O"TIOMM.. '01111 NOWI
' .
. MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE AT WILSON FORD, T;<)DA, · · DU . INGTON BEACH .
. (Hlw1J 39)
~18255 BEACH BOULEV A.RD
.42•6611 •A_!A~~::·o.ye T~;~o'!;,~sra. 5:9 '2•5511
.. ' -
-
•
-·-· ·• ··.,.,. ... ·-·-~· _.,._ ,,,., ._-... W '4"4PUb i U CU• QPQ S,f4'F4UQI C 0 PC JI ~-----· • ' "' • ----· • -•-.. · -..--• ~' -. .,. __ . -~--.---~ ~·•rn-..... n-~~ .... .,~~ ..... ,..,,.......,....,,.., _ _,,.....,,.... ....... ..,,..,, ....... _...,_ ·~~---""---...... -~----~~!"'""''""-'.-i
........ , .. , ........ \' ,,_ '.
' ....... :' ................... . "' :.-, . ... . ":
! '1 • ''
56
Fine Shops .
and Service~
DEPARTMENT STORES . ""
Tbe'~roedway
Buff urns'
J, C. Penney Company
Robinson's
WOMEN'S APPAREL
Apropos
Back Street
Joan Buck
Christensen's.C.K.C.
Wallah Clarke's Hawaiian Shop
Desmond's
Di Orrio's
Fashions for La Femme
Ann Folger
l.erner Sbop1
The Look
Mandels Sh°"' a. Solil1!!hing Else
Marian's Fashions
Motherhood M91'inuty Shops
Pickwick
The Show-Off
Silverwood's
MEN'S APPARE[
Desmond's
Howard's Mens Shop
Nonn Meager's
Silverwood's
SHOE STORES
Paul Allan, Inc.
Fiesta Footwear
Gallenkamp
Leeds
Mandels Shoes & Something Else
Newport Childnn's Bootery
Wetherby Kayser Shoes
RESTAURANTS · ..
Bull!Jms'
Bob Burns Restaul"Qnt
COco's
Island Coffee House
Ontra Cafeteria
J. C. Penney Co.
The Rigger
Robinson 's
JEWELERS
Brett-Walker Gold6mith
Slavick Jewelers
Weinert·Cl<irk Fine Jewels
Zale's
SERVIC E SHOPS
Anthony's' Shoe Service
Golden Blade-Barbers
'The Hair H~nten; Salons
AND TH.ESE OTHER
FINE STORES
Bath Shops .
B. Dalton , Bookseller
El Pooo Caodl.S
Hatcli"s Hallmark of Newport
House of Harmony
Karls Toys, Stationers & Hobbies
Medit...raril!on'Imports
Neail's Sportin.e: Goods '
Plunimer's (furniture &
accessories)
See"s Candies
Success Broodcastin.e: Co .• KOCM
The Tobacconist, Inc.
Viltin~s IV (~ourmet foods)
Westbrook's Yarda.e:e
Wigs by Vance-Pepi ·
Site"'"' H ... -o,_ w..-, _. Prl·
Ny ......... te t:JO. S.•..,.. ......
lfttl•...t .......... .... '"' ... ,, .. , .....
... JM.. All ..... .,.. 10 .. ..
• • -.
I
> ""''II-,.\,,,,,., ., """"!"-l '·j' 'J '~' • uiotolj j;I h lo lh t ', < """I"· 11' I ,, '" "" ' ' ' ' .. ;:; ... ~. > , '"""''" '" I ~.~'l'l'""l'\''''""''''I.' '""'I" IU1>U (\.,J;,.,.,,,1,,,,,..;,.,,'/;!~~//l."'ll)1,11,.111•·"\'''" , • .l •lj,\J,u l.,1,, I "lllj•ll1on ••• I , "·' :-:"',':";;t .: j'-..'l"'lo· .. -,,~1:;"~',,,,_ •• ,,,.lt " .,,, ,,,,,..·",.1. ~ ••• io-.\.~·\·V..· ......... ,._:x -. .. · • .:~:µ···:~ .. ·It~ • '; ... --1· /,.;,/}.' '1"'.•:i,:;/,' • t" ' : -~ j .... , '""} •.y.....,,,t ~·~A"~ \\'.'ff':J.~.
·• ·,','!~,'.\ •· ,; ' ',;, /,.' ... •.\;; . ., ..... ,·,\·,/l". "·/,'" ,;/1-\-:-tJ·,:, \ ~·~ ':;:r.,, 'II,' .. I\ I, 'l''.' ..• 1,~ ... ,.,. ... fr1'+)-;,,·., ... : , -.;, • , >'If:,(., ?\: " /~Ar ~ ... -.~ "~·:\\;-~· ·,~,.,_;;_ ' ' . .. ....... ~ .. I '4 ~ij il1r jl'' " . .... -·-; '' '"'• '""""'"'l .''l•h '1 ' ''"1·· !'Ith ""'"··:••I •• .,.~,,)'{j, 1'· '1' ,· ''1 ",' '1',,'".j," ,·;:: . .',., ·;,• t . , .'-•·,,'.:•,,.
: + • '1 ".'. .. , • •·~: !• .. • ~ • ., • ·• .!· "' t • !;...:,".:. ~ · , ',~'. i.• .~'}l,',t.'.~,,; -!,._t,!1.'! l,1,1 I 1111!,_:} .. 1! ,, '.~' '"-'. , , ";' •. '.0.1.!1!,1_ 1 , ·1.1,~J,1·1 l~llti:,. 'ltlf111 I.' ;
'
•
.. '
. ., • •
i
• ' ..
' -z Fashion lslancl's many ,wonderfpl stores are celebrating the ,rrtval of
. '
mldi umn1er With ·thDUsands of speclaly purchased and specially priced . . . ' ' .
artlcm.s 'of merchandise. Tomorrow tliroUCJh Saturday at Fashion Island
• 1• '_ , • , I "~· ~
'In NewPcir!f~C.nter,." •.•. Just frHway·mlnUtes away.
J
' • '
~
·.~ .. ,\ . • I •. • ... ~ i • •
• . -" -..
' .
' • ' .,
·' • .......... ,_ ... ': ..
I ... " •
,, .; ..
• ' '
•
•
• •
'
•
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I
..
,,
' '
t r
\
'
•
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t. ..
'I I
1
• . -
Dolll.Y PILOT
DRESS
HEELS
~77
Mlic'5
WOMIN'S & TllNS'
FLATS
27'l377
BOAT
SHOES ~..,.~-,.....-
PAIHION ISLAND
NIWPOIT CINTll °'' ..... .,..,..,
\ '
]'°
~allenKamp's
HAltlOlt PLAZA
COSTA MISA '
Mentally GHted .. -
Schools Cultivate ·
• •
!Jrain Advantage
.-
' oat; '1a IO ·-"7ei -lllan< tboM Mea·· ~ hAf ~ l .Q. ol l:J!I UOld 117, Ille telllq.. I .•
tr ~ "1".cb, whejt · •• ICboOl II Ja 1t111on:i means 0 G.lftiednMs, ·~e ibtau-
hl II -Id ."mealally ty, LI mon lhili *In '1e,ep," Pltell .. he .My1,, "Lib bUuty •
.-...: ..,.· ·-• -· •. •. •. -...,.Ji!IOGws ,., lie f ""'71 ~ IQ .. will 1'1,..." .• 1!mWlde LI u bri(bt. · 'l'bll brm ~ ,_ '· Ho ,llOlei Ille h 1 ls ,.
---· q !DeUlft -mlc poteiltlal !»8int, cu It 1 v • t e d by only, not erutJ.ve talellta.
Aew(Mri·l4eu U a If led Al ~-,__._ I I Scboo1 Diltrict. Enrichment ""' e_... .... _,. eve, ••1/11111--1~-'=':!-~~it4:t~ :!.'!:l.:t"" lo~· lop -..... llio --· Some of Ille &dded -,...en.IL 'l'lllte · II daaJlimge rubl off oa'thenot I.Qi overlap bt t•t • ...... •
qub gifted, but · hlg!11J 11'0!'1"· In~~·-. plua mounted ltudenU w h 1 desire detenrunes j>lace-
... roond: out tbe special pro-meat., Dean said. \
gram1. At t:be high school level,
• ~fie, On 'Paper
·-.
' 'lb•· ·•dloOl d 11.'tr t ct the top achievera are put in
recelve! from the 11tlte $100 clauea that probe ~r ·
per lifted oludent. Of that Into llUbjed --E nlJIJh amOIGI~ '40 ._i...i on I y otuc1en11 -m • 1 eriUc&lly
...... 11 for t..unr to Iden· an&IYM mat literature .and .
lily tbe 1tudonll. Tho re-ICience llude.lill do ' In-
~ '90, for ertlcbment dividual researtb. 1 ·' •
supplies, Ls received each Dean ·bu noticed a trictle
year the atudent remalas in down ellept. As the conteftt
school of advanced diaes gets ·
Dr. John De an , cur· more topbi.aticllted, toe con·
riculwn drector for the tent al, regulM' duses ii
achool-district, b e I i e v e 1 modirltd upward too. he
there-·are many more &ifted said.
A student of the Laguna ·Beach School of Art and Design listens jo the con·
structive criticism of teacher Donna Sharkey. This popular teacher of life
dtawing -will present classes on Fridays at the School starting July 12 for six ·.weeks. ·
..
• •
MID-
SUMMER
,
·; THESE LOW PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY lOTH TO JULY 15TH ·-,. .. .-~ .
-
. ._, ....
--~-:-. ~.--..I I J
~
•J .
Little K"Hldlts
All •trlt• fl dloolt ""' 3" klchls hi. bel!dlblt, pose.tilt comti •
bnlslt Mr lltlr. it, $l:; 1.88
Canvas Surfer
21x4s~ lnflltld. Sturdy C111¥1S ri~
COllltrlctltl Wilt! ••l•_IJ 97 ..... List ,nee, $1.00. 3 ..., -·
.
lig laag Canaon ........ ~,.. .... ~ .. ..,
c Ult Ila C.• wltk 'JOWder ••• ...... .., .. : '
""!~ . . ' Ooly 3.99
' .
.., 1.97
Super hall
Machine by Whc.im·o
Maktt mottnllins of bubble
fo1m, Fun for 111 11rs. ll•j· 11-$1.29 VllUt. 011
PASHION ISLAND, Newport leach -::."="''l'hone ·644-0981 ·
• ' ,,
Slip 'n Slide
Thi ma1it
Wlltr Sfidt
""'" ""' 1plnhin1 tun
Tetherliall &
Pole Set by Voit
lnCliidh titherbal1 I poi. HI by
VoiL llleludes tttherball, cotton
ropt Ind l-pc. I' I" plnnlr.td
polf. Rtf. 11.00 -hlr
Yahtzet
for 1!1 11n
Action, wspensi, ch•nce ind skill.
Your b!ge1t 11m1
"'"'· . ""· 1.37
106 Carrom Board
Jl1!urtl wood wttk red & bltek desi(llS •
. Coinp11tl with 1qUipni1nt. 5 93
Ria. SI 1.00 list ltlf •
lltttrf """" lloat Wit~ ""' 10. incll rtdar MJhthou11 •
••• 15·"' "' 2 92 ... , I
Growing SallJ
111 ·o co
The doll lt'llt "rttllf rmis!" First she's
• sweet, youn1 ttiln1 lbtn-'lht dllna:es lntp
• • "Littlt Min." Yw won't
"""' "" ""' · 3 97 Lilt price $7 .00. • hlJ 1
Frisliet
As S.... 0.. TV
$ijps, tunes, loomlr .. , lm
of Fun!
le&. 98t lisl (Inly
Playskool Tyke like
_Kiddie . Pl1y Bill
Xidtllt. Play lall
IMl llHIL""' .... '" -"""""orlal .... 2 ,., 9t-
•
I
--... --.._ .... --.... -·~ -..-..,, ~---.... _ ... ,....._,....... --....---..........---...-····~·-.. .-·--.,,,...•-=-•,.,_.,.,..o,...•-•P";P'> .,,_,.,,_.,..,..,...,,.,,......,.,...,,,.,"-'~'""""--'11-=•-.v,....•~• ... ..--.~= -~~-~--·-'"""""*""-"""'w-• ... o~o -•...,•••••~-=-==~=--•.., ___ '""! • • •
Ceramle Tiie Award -
Robinson's Given Honor
J. W. Robin10n'1 new wor~p &aid Geor&e
store at Fubion I1lan(. N. Lavender&, tht inalitute'1
Newport Cealer, .... -,..c.rv. mMO&'DI dlroctor. ~'
ed the 'Oer.mi.-; Ti 11 McDoaekl. Rob l n 1 on ' 1
Institute'& & WI f d ·tor mAmtlirt act'eptred tbe JOld
routandlnf eeraml<: til& In-plaquO prlleoted by the in· ~llltion in s 0 u t ... ?· ft .. ltitute. .
Calllomia for tiff. 1bt .tore'• tlle1"0rk in·
The award w•a gi•en for clui1e1 antique white cob-
uniqUene. in dealll\t varie-ble1tone tilt floora and Tu·
ty m use, and excellence in u lhtllltone tile panele on
~~~PICKWICK'S =J!.
ANNUAL
CLEARANCE
ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK
SPORTIWIAR ·APPARIL
I SWIM SUITS A ... -:-:..~ 1;, ... j
I AU SKIRTS l/2.., ..
OTHER MERCHANDISE INCLUDl5
the 1econd level • n d
abruive Ina quarry tile in
the exterior entrywa)'I.
Han~iting
Analysis
Available
Mall tbopper1 at -
Island in N<wport ee,..
... invited to have their
hand writing analyzed at t!le
I.B.M. hnl·wrlfin« ~
booth oow locotod in sa.ce
Court et the ce?Ur mall. lb.is~ 'feature .
which hu app°eared in mmy
large shoppinc center. on
the west COMt, ii now
available to the 1hopplng
public through July 13.
Mr1. Ann Boron, oper-
ol Ile 1.8.M. equlpm<nt,
claims 86 percent accuracy ;
ot thla l.B.M. 111*"1ine .
which gives an analysis -of
.your handwriting in exad1y
111, minutes.
Know more about yourseli
through this electronic com-•
put.r.
Fotlhion lslMld In Newport
Center ia located t'.11>: Pad.fie .:
' ii ....
Cl••ll~aft Oeara.,ee:
8.9& Dress Shoes
3.98
Sav• !11'/o or ~or:• off original pritesl·Fincl JmOrt lao~ '!It;.,
lr•"!endouswlu•on Amtrica's to;..lling fashionJh091nncl.
eaaual •tyle• at Avbig9
1.99.2.99
Al!iazi111 you,...,_ 11uys1 All fr-. ow rweub . ..-.
NEWPORT IEACH HUNTINGTON IEACH COSTA WIS.C
s.idll c .... '''%• PANTS
BLOUSES-
SWEA'fERS
COATS
SUiTS
COlllt Highway b et w e e n ;.
~ur and Jemboree
ftoMs. Storet open] Friday t'.
and Monday nt~. Free
parking for oo.w 5,000 cars. CERAMIC TILE AWARD -Gold plaque for outstanding ceramic tile work in
Southern California for 1967 presented to J . W. Robinson's Fashion Is Jan d
. ·•
' \ · store. Accepting the award are, from left, Daniel A. O'Farrell, Irvine Company The Great Orange Coast's ' Autonelics senior manager of commercial properties; Carter McDonald, Robinson's man-
ager; Kent A. Berge, Fashion Island managor; and Linda Pfleger, Miss New-No. 1 Paper! Plan Tested -~po;:.:,rt..;:;,eea:.;:;cb"". _____________ ___: __________ _
, KNITS
DRESSES
. AND
LANZ
F~SHION ISµND
NEWPORT .... ·.'.
PASHION lfUAU
IANTA ANA
ENJOY niE B..BMNCE Oil'
RO'l'AL DCU..."JOM
Advanced. navigation ¥d
---syotemt, built by the Autmetics
Division of North American
Rockwell Corporaiijon, are
currently beine tested ill the
Air Force's FB-tllA
lltrategic bomber, it WM an-
nounced today.
The electronic gear is •the
nation' a lint all-diliW cOm·
put er<ontrclled avkmics
. ay.tem, accordini to Travis
S. 1bomas, resident
manater at the Fort Werth
Texas aU' bale. ComputU c'c>ml!nM!on of .•
all eledronic funt"tiom lets
the air crew change couree,
speed. weapons or other ·
mission variables as re-
quired and dill !ind and bit
the tar1et.
JUST $ 3 MONTHLY
Tia.• fJJ.H
U.w:d1kl ,,.. tw•ecrt of ..._ ' •• • ttltes
.,,--. ---fully cn4lod in E~ in )'<l<lr cl>oice el~--or coi...__, poftoml. Each ~
--~· bctt•trwurwd p$JJRJ9ian. Aftil8bte ifl Of>9ft :doctl. a--oillll cr-ploco Slltinp. Eacll.incloolM
....... -.-. 111-'llld-• ...,_,_, si-, ..., ___ ..,....,..~--·-·
lllaJJDllt. Ecqdia " tflmt cfMna.
K£•0lMCll9MCIRPlM •MtM!ZAUi OitCNS!IMQt'W
Rfg. 3.50
Now2/$6
ltr•tch 1ttwp M• wit"
-~"'~ .,.,,, ... 1,c ....
··-2.50 ' Now2/$4
lffl•f.1•1r1• MnllW
..... •f Mft IC.cJ.J poly-
..... .,_. Wliila. A, I -R119.'3
HOw2/$5
All Penney Stores Open Ever Night Monday .T~ro~~h. Satunlay
JULY BARGAIN DAYS
p~ JMkN IUf'lmW • ........ .-Ml ...
r'MICIMl--• .. IM--/ ...... .... ..,. ............. ~----.... .. ......... ,.. .................. .,_,. ............ ,_,. .... _,. ..
'
' SAVE 12% to 2,5%
··. on Penneys .famou.s
A·donna· fou-ndationsl
......... ,... ......
-lllyl9 "'-!IMdt ,. inlnlfte, WM!.. A. I, C ....
Reg. •2
Now2/$3
C.1tt111r .,, IM-1 h,_
~ Md<. hrl .....
MM!. WftiM. M, A, I -Reg. '2
Now2/$3
llw'•l••itht l ..... ..... .. ,._.. ... wltti
......... Whil9.·w.. ..,.,
Reg. '6
Now•s
. ...... --.. ....,.. Dll I ''11 ... __ ........,
.... '4
Now*3
"
•
.................
~ ......... ..
..... .... a.M4&.. ..... ,
NOW*5
----1 ~-1.o\.I kcl•I• ..................... .,...,.,
R119.•s ,NOW*4
_ ....... ......
tp11'4
L-r ___ r._.,... ...
~r.···•11 ........ ....
.,. ............. ,..,. 5 -"'"'c-. I .• . ft .. .Reg. 3 NOW~~'
........ ~ 11.Ylilflt' ...... ..., ....
~ ........ .....,..,.. ...... i ... , ... .,..... ............ -Mr..SM.La: . . '
Reg.~7 Now•6 II FASHION ISLAND
NIWl'ORT ClNTH
""4°IJIO COSTA-MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPoRT B~CH
• Harbor Shopping Contor Huntington Conlor
•
•
~ ..
I
. •
"
Cowbey Buslaess
Countian Now
:: ·Enjoying .Dream
" ·"toi aaUic to 'bl I~ -111cl'b7 tlio <OWboy
-
I ""' ol· lllo. Lemnc -· -up, -ho -IS, 11o..,. bu H°" • o D 1 ,-l(IWI 11 .. olod tbroq1>out t b o
-.. Mid 9iol, ..S bovo -y.-BUI, .. bl puta II; •
eadoll "P W«lillC ln • boud "'lbere'1 evft'11111nr I•
' up olflct 1D • llllOI infelted c • 1 j f 0 r D I I there 11
city? tfti)wbere-ellt."
' One Loo Anaeleo boy bio He ~ oe~ up bouo
. kept hlJ word. • (er, rui;!i)i ID h -ti/.
: Now a younc man, Roser Temecula, ~onH, 1s
Mlller (DOI Mle ..q., wbo mllH -Ill ~
hu -_.... -1lle 'l1Mn io Gperlled I raodl, . ""'boy b U 1 I·• e I I ) ._: ...... bl Hiloci ..illo oo4 : __ ,._ In Locuna llor-.;
~ Nicuel wtme pot• n ti a I At the rlbeh for el&ht ! .......,, eon --· 'Ill' C:• be ClpOl'atecl 1om1 • the boar. 1Uble1 for one year.
Ho boo -,1 .. b 0 1 a JOit ~ be muved to
•
D--Aod on July 4
llo 'C.. "P lilo lllble1 II
Countian Joins ~3i461~:'! =~·,'f'IHi T'oUclaeS
T ParkWllY ill Lallino Nl&uel; · · , , , . "
Geology rip '!'here be ii rontlnC hor~eo "One mon stroke here , , • &lid • • , we're done." Student Am~ Zerbe
. far fl.i!G Ml boor, lnc:ludiilt one! 'illltnlclor David Schnabel Pi1t on the final touche1 of I!! oil ~l A two
-It 8cbwm1, 2110 . • ~ tour. week wortabop ID portrait and ligure oil palntinC will open Ausmt,I, 11 the
Tblnl Aw., <Jona del Mar, Why •e;t llP, llal!le• In -~La::!:cuna:=..:llO:::'=•ch::::..:School:=:::...::o.l:.::Arl::....:•:::nd:=...:Dffl:..::::::i:::•·-------~-· ----I{ 1 1eotr'lliib1 tMlber at Lacuna? \1BftllyOM'1 very · ·
BolN GNftde Q Sdlool 'k!. reoeptive. They're reany
, Garden a..oo. , ~ been l!llM'I -the 1et up," be
selected from more than IOO expUined. OCC Schedules Swim Program
Don't mlN out oa. tlUJ motbln and 1 o U DI Ir 2:»-4:30 p;m. Mo B d a 1
dllldren. . 1llrauil> l'rldoy. (llorp ii
• •
CAPlZIC)
.. ,
• .$ .....
VANELI •
... • •
IH~
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER
.,.11 '"•"·• fri. 10 'Iii t :JO p.'in •• , • t11••·• wecl ., th11r1., ••f. 'iii • ';"'·
90 fl•y ch••9•1 i11,.il1d, l111kA'"1ric1rcl or M1it1r Cll1r91
EVERYONE'S FAVORITE
•
ly 1ct.1I t11il1t1hip ,.11 •• 1111 1f ............ ~'·· lllWI,..,., , ......... ii A••tic1 1.
l
I
r
1pplicanll lo pmicipolt lit Belldet -king ot the 1 a 11.......t 0......, Smn· *bill, be plw on at.
mer llllllluto II Arllooo ltndillc the Lac-Bucb
Stalt Ulll•-ty, · -of Art and llllip,
. FllrV !• ......... -24 u.. boo juot ·-poinltng, 1t:Me1 will "9eUu •ll'tb and be reports that bt ..
-...i ,......i -joyl It very mucb.
at 1llo -Sclenee . Wbol doa bo palnl? What Fo~ ID· _,. 111P14'111t>le ·Cowboy
load Wiim weather -R ecrutiON.l 1wbnmm1 25 caU for cbildren under
....,., Iba lime to enroll ill lfmr~•~·~"'!'-~!ll~oll~er!ed!_:fr~oi~m~~11!::, ·~·~<1~·~-~~-~ .. !bor~•~-~-_!:=====================7""==-tba Or•IO Coul Colle&• -, --
tti • .4.111 l11Miw. '''''""· lt'1 I tl1ily "r.t11l1r" IR ill· DAILY rlLOT •
1tltute. would pllint -hor1e1.
1ummer nrim irogram.
Reglalrail<lll for tile third
...ion will be July 13 fr om
I · •. m. to noon Jn the OCC
omnatl\KD. 'De session
BEAUTIFUL
will run from July 15
tllrouih July· 26. Par<nl5
must register their own.
children.
'. ........... ,,... , , • ' 'lo
AR Penne,· -tf-O,.n ;!very Night Monday,.Throvgh Sotutclci, r, "" ,
GENUINE CULTl:JRED
·,BAROQUE PEARLS
' . .
CHOKER, MATINEE,. OPERA LENGTHS
·' ..
Fee is '3 per 1tudent for
the two-wtek 1e1sion.
Students must furnish their
awn towelJ, caps and suits.
'Ibey should alto come
drund to 'IWim since
lockers are not •1"1ilabl~.
'lbe toddler clules have
· proven a bufe 1ucCess this
)'tar at OCC, the first year
1hey have been offered.
QUldren must be three
.,
year a okl to enter. I .
Clu•• begin at t a.m. YOUR CHOICE I . •, and run tor '5 minutes. Dur· •
, , inf ucb '5-minute 1eernent, ~ /
' ' c1uMI ore 014tod for tod-• • • i
•i4-' ·~ ';_. ~ \ "
FROM ilXTEEN bOLLARS
,, i dlerl, non-cwimmer1, begin· · . ~-:. ~·· ' ~ · ·• ·• . .t' Den, intennedlate llwim· ~ , .. • 1 t ' "' .,.
' ..
mers and nrimmer1.
There ia alto I 1peci1l
"Mommie and Me" class
tram noon to 12:45 p.m. for
.,, .. ,. un ,,,., #Oltll" . . .
FISHERMEN
DISCOUNT
PRICES ·
ON RODS
AND REELS
HEAL TH CENTER
• .;i~~.A Y•, 'et Ne.1'1 ~ eet
.... ,.too -44 ,_. "' ................. . ...,. .... _ ... _
·TENNIS ANYONE?
~ .• . ..... ...._ ...... . -........... ,·400 ............... ............. ....,. ...
;;11'1..t;: price ,. ~
wn .... ., 17' ,........... .
Can tf 3 Mly u.t I . , . .,...,..,
-Mis 2'°
SALE
von
CANVAS
SHOIS
'.
• TWllT MIDI 3ts .......... '*"" ....... ·--· o..., ........ ~ .. ..., .. ..._..... ,., ,.,.. ........ , ... , ......... "' .. __
• Al kinds of """ "' ... ~---.... & ,,, .. ,. ....
lllllllffJM
sun
IOIF CWIS
n.-....i-..~ .. ~ ............. ;..,. ...,,.., I
eAllY PLAYR AT : ::. . =Al '225
vort -• ...... 21.21 vorr .ata, -. ... 1 t.00
SKIERS
Olll T 3 MOI! MONTllS
Tll Sil SWOll
IMATll OlllT '!) .... _._ ......... ... ,..,. -w. !rlift .... ,, .. ..... .. __ ...... ,, 499 .... t .71 iowm --rao-. ............................
, .. -.... lo\ .. Ski _ _,_ .... _,_ ..
................. y
BACK· PACKERS
.. iliADGUunu
' • .-...... .......... ., fw "''I;:!""' . Kllly-llto<-
AIJ '""*
, ...... _,... ..... ,,,_ ....
J .. .,._T ... T..,.-lry PMk ~ c..-. ....... = ... c..e..,._._ .. _,... ....... _ ..... ...,. _ ___ .,.....,. __
.............. c..w. l""'9-,,..
...__T ... CMDl -.. M
w.-,i..... .,,., -Wt ..... ---"""'· ..... -.... -• o... ........ ""9 .... 26.tS ht Uttw-Alr ..... 1111 ,_ , .. ......... &lls:pcawf ... _ ....
=~~· .... · .11, ..
• -iiJiiN.,UH-_ .............. _ -
........ ,.,. ....... lu-k:e Aw-__ ..., ... ,_ .... _ ................ .__ftn .. _
... C Ill Wt, ,.,,.. ~ ....... ,.. .................... ... ..,. _____ _
NQL'$ ~ IUf& .,._,MOH
SPORTING GOODS
-·-11tl•
II 7ol711 -POlT CWITll ,.,,, ........... ...... ,.,
$
for
Men I Here's the buy te last yw aH sum-
mer long! Pick any 2 (er 4 or morel) of
these jreat vacat.,._ values ••• p11y only
-tow, low price! The selection is just as
.,f•rriflc as the savinpl Come in today ancf
; see our fantastic·;>ltuys cluring .July
Bargain Days I
~ .
..
Traditional buttonclown collar opart n.t 1or
tho in crowdl l!..'1 no nood le no thlo ,_,,.. • .....,
sl....· wonder ol fortr.1• pol) 11t• cftl cottan ••• fust wmh
.... and .-,_ gyl 'opuiar ......... """ tails styling.
111ah:hed' ched podcet. W.'w .. groo:;iwt 11l1ctioft.,.. of
"""' plaids in -$.M.L __ 2 .. •1
Popular ivy league styling -1ho ""'°" 1nr
"""'""· P......:-r.e•fortr.f•.-,111m~ mcf.or.I bleM '°">" -~On tlnugh .... hot.U..-...,., ,..,_.
·.,. and-'om gy ... no -.i-1-.... -.
lcr, laporod ........ ,,.. -1•1o ohort ._ ..,..,. a-1rom. nMtltvdt"' ..a.1.co1an. ~---:z..•s
COSTA MESA . HUNTINGTON BEACH
I Huntin9'ton Center I · • •
NEWPORT BEACH
SAL TY SALT -Wesiem Salt Co. boast• II! pro-
duct ia the •salty salt" which doesn't matter ift
Orange County since its the only producer around.
Manaa:er Buster Dill can certify its salty aince he
chews pieces like Lifesavers.
BUster Bill Harvests
Crop in Upper Bay
By SANDI MAJOR versely, a udry IPfll" not
Once a year • kitdten only doesn't spell dleaster, it couldn't be more welcomed. staple is harvested from the
waatelaois ol. Upper ONE-OF Fotl'R
Newport Bey, riglit unde!-The plant, located at 20501
the nose o1. residents in SW Bayside Dr., is one of.
Newport Beadl's Eastbluff four owned by the Western
cormnunity. Salt Co. It is built on land
• . , .
Wedntsdly, July 10, 1'68 DAILY PILOT JlS
Seminar Set F~rT~cher Of Reading
A rtmedLtl ttadlnJ
1tmllw •• d lobonito..y.
...,,. !« i.achera will be J ci«ered at tho ~din&
Guidance C.nter. 2 q 8 op '
per<eptllll Ir a In In 1. ID-.-1aa -t'e la
clod!D& vleual, m-; .U..C· Bolton, and -.,..,.
llona·llty.,audlt«y -•ua.A.~11
di1crimb>atlon and boncl· ol ~ ot I• at•
eye-~. IJlll· ~mlc.t-1-1
evatu6Uon wW be tba t'OW'te ·Beach. Boom Blvd., l!untlngton
Beach, Jul,y 211 thioulh CODlenL . Thi ... II llmllod • II laltNctor will be Richa<d -.. I n't or•• to d AUJU1l 30. . ,
D l a t n oatic 91>Prti.sal, remedJal tech n J q u e • ., Zwfil, a opeolter at tile re-i-tlor1 ,_ '"":'..::f con! tnt.notlo..t lltacllDi at W.2111 ltr
Mll1'D8L.S
ms~~n-~lt!l\lJ/fil!ki
SHOE
DRESS SHOES
Up to the moment styles and colors. . .
AU heel heigh:...
FlATS
Accenting this season's great
styles and colors.
Startinr at
" • Starting at
~9t!·
6"
4''
The '!crop" ts salt, and its leased from tile Irvine Co.,
sole "grower" in OrallC'O and...,._, producing its Read The Daily Dilot County is Buster Dill, who annual "crop", estimated at ed for seuoning, it baa to be ~ has, as he insist 1, 5000 tons each year, since further dried and pulverii-1--::----------_:__.:_ _____ .'l,,,_=..;.=====--====--==-=-=--====-1
NEWPORT, 21 F11hlon ls.I.ind SANTA ANA, 17· FHhlen Iii.,.,.
"harv .. ted" rather ttlan -in 1934 by 0. L .. ed. All Penney· Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Satu...1--
"m!ned" ttie mineral here Huffines. "'Ihese two little old · ·~7
nearly 20 years. 'Ihe salt produced here is ladies from Pa&adena h&Ve · J U L y "We cultivate it," M says 99 percent pure, according
emphatically, "a!'ld then we tc> annual tests done by a been corni.ng here buying a enne~J .
harvest it. 'Ibef'e's no Los Angeles chemical com-couple of. eeck6 at a time for
mining to it." pany, and therefOre can be as long as I can retpem· ALWAYS FIRST GUAUTY
As he exyl~s the pro-used as a food seasoning. ber ," Dill llJ8. "They take
cess, water from Newport However,. Dill sells bia it home and put the Jilt tn
Bay is turned into pure 1;alt to b;e used. for l!s· meny th!Jir oven and grind it 'Ii>· crys"8Jline .. 11 by "ooler .. 800 different ... ., '!l)d :rt>oy'll UM it till It runs out,
evapcx-ation", • tedlnlcal .appm-ently.1only ~ ·~mea al1d ·1hen come back .fOf
way of aayi-sunshine from Pmadena d'loofe to more "
ev.aporates tti;'lictmd from buy it for ib Ol'IDDlODe9t Bui their trips ~ ale
brine water leaving salt as a use. numbered, for the county,
residue. He sells it in quentitiea UC Irvine and various con
from one 125-poond bag, et tractors ha·ve any n1Jmber ol.
WATER PUMPED $1.M, to aevet'al tons to plansforthecJevelopmentol
After one ealt crop is fiW\ermen who me it to the ''b.aclt bay."
harvested in m 1 d -Se pack ~ trnd 1bol:neownew It may bicome a pM'k1 a
!ember, salb """" i 1 IJld ~ ~. housing development cc "
pimped in fro\D\4*bliJ'lnto -purii lii 11>1 p~ • secluded ""'t.rny !or UC
one of seven·ponds·V.arytng 1ystema of. their ,waf.er · student.a: to practice ~w
in size from 10 to 110 .a.cres. softeners, in nlrigeration mg.
Perioclioally " the water is units and in t!letf' gardens. Either way, the f41]t of
&yphoned into d i ff e r e n t Before his salt oao be us· this earth will be no more.
ponds as it becomes saltier, lr=:::r====:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;=:=::::::;:::=:::=::;I
When the' water · b a s A reached a ceTf..wt degree of
italtiness (a specific ll'8vitY
• r 20.aof it.is ready to be... A&Me· n'lrniH• into one oC six crystaliiing
vats. Only a small amount
or water :i5 put in the vats et
Small clepoalt hold1·
your pufcha .. on •••
LAYAWAY!
,
~~i:::~1a~~1;1'~~~t:.d'. s.uMM .. ~R . SAVINGS I.-
more is added. By the end ol T
the yeer, each vat holds a
solid slab of salt about five
inches dee?.
SALT SACKED
lt is then scraped out Of
tlhe vat& one layer at a time,
washed in salt water to
clean it end sac~.
"It takes about a year to
make any salt at all," ex· ·
plains Shorty Harrell, of
Costa Mesa, who has been
"ctiltivating" siatt since Dill
became manager of the salt
works in 1950.
During that year, the salt
"crop" is watched a 11
carefuUy by Dill and his twu
workers es any farmer
oversees his produce.
Unlike a normal crop,
rainfall only slows down the
salt yield. Every drop of
water that fallJ is tha~ mudl
more that has to evaporate,
Harrell·e x p I a i DI . Coo-
UCI Prexy
In Germi:tny
UC I r v i n e Chancellor
Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. will
visit West Germany during
the month of July to lecture
to administrators, faculty
and student.I at several
universities.
Dr. Aldrich will "'°al< on
tile development of new
campuses of the University
of California. Hi• trip 11
being made at the invitatioo
of West German officials in
higher education.
He will lecture to , 1tie
Geschafts1telle des
Wlasenschaftlratea (Science
O>uncll) in Col-. ..e Ubeneeclub ( 0 v e r 1 e a •
Club) in Homburg ll1d Ille
Mu Planck Society !0< the
Adavncement ol. Scientific
R__.cll in Munich.
CLEARANCE!
OF FINE
DIAMONDS I
. !AVE 20~. ON A LIMITED QUANTITY . '
tleilttt Hrto1n1 •w•ll y.u et Penf'leytl S..
th• emealnt Mr¥il'lt• •l'I th•M m.gnlflffnt
4W.""'"4 J--lry ••• ••• frle MP, 41•·
Jnlliwf 4VOS, '9Ml'l11 4~MJ.. Mtrlntl, ~rHt.ntt.. 4011lint e«ktoll rll'lf•I Meny
,..,.,. rhe" thowft, Alf Mt In 1t\ln11Mt1nt 1.4K
t .. 4. "'1 now eM ...,.,
lllutTU.ncl* IHlAIOIO
CffARGf 11 AT YOUR l'fNNfY'S
1/Nf JfWfutY Dll'AllTMfNT
., d ..... ill,... .... ., .. ................ ~ ---
' , i "' 1· . ..._., -¥ ~ •• • ,oJ' '
Bargain, priced!
Terrific styles!
C~lor splashed
women's'shifts!
. •
lhohot_.,._._ ............... .
..... collect ... af -4 -shifts to go with
th.ml Therit'1 a ll)'lo lo ploaso _,-···"'"1vr
,t,.linon ••• ploatod ... tmOeMd tents ••• fancy or
tailored skimmtn. All gaily colored in bold prinls,
sunny solids or perky do!S in a variety of criap cot-
ton fobria. luy a cloutful of. tllese comfortable
•!.....ina shifh for !he -ion da)'l o~I s.M-l.
larger li.1• owHJable m the tame tlin'ific ClllOr't·
moil! of stylft, pnilll and ..,ro..i. XL:*~: . . 3.99
Dr. Aldrich wlU be ac-
compenftd on the trip by
Mrs. Aldrich. They plan tod'::================ [,--------'-depart June Z1 and to return lr
tn early August and will
combine their busine.ss trip
with a vacation tour of
flULllaTOfl ..._ ""'r
Htr11ot ., Or•-""-
MUlfTIN•TOM auc11
Hufttl!lt lM OMtw
l.dlfltel' "'
COSTA MESA
(Harbor Shopping Centr
HUNTrNGTON BEACH
_ wee;tern Europe.
Sin D ...... .,.,, (Huntington Center i·'. .'
•
NEWPORT BEACH
fF~1hion-l1lencl I
•
. '
I
I
Wcdnesdlf, J11l1 lO, 1%8
Historical Flags
Major R. R. Booher, of the U.S. Marine Corps Air
Station, El Toro, explains to the Santa Ana Boys'
Club members the background of one of the four
historical Marine Corps uniforms currently on disp.
lll.Y at Groat Western Savings and Loan Associa-
tion'• Santa Ana office, 1418 N. Mljin Sl The period
uniforms are a part rt a larger cllspla7 entiUed
'1Flags of the United States.''
Parking Sticker Now
Coll.ege Status Mark
The badge or membership students and faculty be re-
in the academic community lege academic senate that
bu become itJ.e campus ' students and faculty be re.
parking sticker. quired to remove outdated
"I have atwaye defended parking permit decals from
tbe i.odividual'1 privilege of their rear bumpers in. order
displaying a loog series of to eas~ the task of campus
academic hashroarks," Cal police in recognizing current
State Long Beach President decals.
Carl Mc J n to s h said. Faculty members n n ,1
"Anyone who feels either a students enrolled for more
sense of P r i d e or than s!x units at the college
martyrdom because of his pay $11 per semester for a
long formal association with parking permit. The college
the college through the expects to enroll about
regular payment of parking 26,000 students this fall and
fees abould not be denied the will have a total faculty of
opportunity to display bis more than 1,200.
trophies." Dr. Mcintosh vetoed a There are 7,000 parking
recommendation of tbe col-1paces 00 tbe 320-acre cam·
lluses Get
New Center
A new central terminal
!<>r bw -flan Orange County to tbe major airports
of Somera Oalifornia is
now looated at the Grand
l-lotel in Anaheim, according
to Dooald W. Boyles, presi·
dent Qf Airpcrt C o a c h
Servlce.
Air coDditi.oned, 4 5 ~
passenger , buses w 1 th
reclining ·-will imwlde transportrati.on to the Los
A n g e I e s I ntematioo.al
Air:port and the Orange
County Airport every hall
hour durir.g the d a y . ,
Schedules also i n c I u Ji e
t r a n s p ottation to the
Omario Ai1J>ort and service
to El Toro Marine Corps Air
station.
TickelB Olld Jnlormation 111&1 be _,,.., by -1Jidg
fl&.9110.
!""~_:,_,_~·" oflj AuuUU111ica1.1on 'cials ,
while concedi ng th&t the
decals ere more of a hunting
licenae ttian a parking
permit, point out that not an
students and faculty a'.re :on
campus at the same time.
There is usually parking
somewhere f<ir everyone,
tbey say.
The decals are affixed to
the left rear bumper, and in
the course of two or three
years a student or facuMy
member can accumulate a
colorful array of them.
"l koow there ii eome ad·
vantage to having
everything neat and tidy,"
President Mcintosh said. "I
am not persuaded that the
increase in efficiency is
worth the price of con-
formity in th.is matter.
"Even enlightened
burea1:1c:radea can go too
fer, end I think telling peo·
pie tll8)' CID 't collect cigar
bands, ~ er old park-ine pea-.. Joinc loo
far."
Heroes Were .Co~~on in This Company
,.
B1 NAT GmSON !or gal\IDtl')': 1st LI. Two ........ awadod pooltloo and klll<d five, ~~~:;::::::::::::::~:;;;;;::;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;:-1
SAIGON (Up I ) Artllur Short ol West New U>e ....., --OommunlBll In q u I c kl j
• • G re oode ! grenade !" York, N.J.; lJt Lt. Edmi>nd for velor: Sit. Marcus tuecesston. someo~ =•ame<\. Foor Wi<:k ot IJOOuque, 1-; 1st .• Clute ol i'UR:;otlo., llld Kublmky ,. .. one ol ltie
Amerlcana Jn the follllole Lt. Michael Williama of Pie. Leiter L'n.,....... ol flrot to -1be ottacklng
froze. The flltb did DOL ' Spolu.ne Wuh. · SI t ~. Neb. !Otte, He killed two Viet
Tbe man WlM tlMI nerve BeDiamI'n F ~"l ol Mirlte:t. •medic, rv.sbed Cong wiilb a bunt or
w11 a 2 o -ye a r -old FayettevW., N.C., and U>e • :.. ~:""~edto i:"~ madik>e gun r... and
par.atrooper !l'Om Ohio. He c .om p • D 1. C,CIM>ander, !oxhoie He kllled 1 Vitt loosed &i'eoade• to rope!
decided lo a spl(t &econcl ¥ John 'f', ,Hendrix of · ;. · tile firlt wave.
that giving one Jlle to .. ~e ~-Ga', Tiie Silver Cooc "' ro~.., ' Burke charged out of a four was wor1ll JI. lie div"4. "'Siar ... jus\ ~low tile Hendrix ..tod •· 0 011 Y fo1bole Into willdl th• Vlet
...., lhe wooden.band!M 'llfedat ol 0 H"°'", the durm~ ll>e-battle Coog badtoosedagrenaclo,
Communist-made grenade Dlltlngui!hed Se r v i c e and directed -., de(eDM ol killed f o u r communl.st1
-onc1 somebow oumve.d tbe ;, C r o 1 a • a n d I h e •. =ti;:'~ fDp nearby and then helped
....~. Htl '"' IATH. ""1V•IO Pl
UCrrHleJ OllP.TOMID
• "'l\.Yft ftlWIU. ..
L,UXVlttOUt COLM.CO-
OU11An9 ....... ac-
caso-111 "' .... ,....
tll,YI• ptLl•I ••
ITWAM PLOllMT ....
10 .uct1 TO CAPTU•I
bla•4 though ~ , •Medal f<lrvw. · ~ ..., from _,_ Americana.
His ldeniiiy' ~ bejng • • Tw•lV• men 'reoeJvod"Ul<' ~ ,.:•~but1ngl;::::========~\. wllllbelclWllllhla~.ls ., llroi>U S/8r;rapldn~ l"'t limmwlllioa. ,
TNI JMA9tfU,TM* -...
UICTID · TO INDOW
YOC.1• ... TM W'ITM nt•
U.¥tltl LotK Of' LUX.
...... f'OU'U, ..... TMtl
-AJ&D MOe:I -AWAIT•
.... "°"AT ..... ,. .
notified.. . ... below the Silver Star. Sgt'. s b e r ma n 8 radio
1'1e par atrooper's _ J.ames Hedge of ~ghland, o~. put~ . ..-..,... his
LOCAC
The company ~nder \bis • Ind.; ~gt. Kem:ietti Brokaw , communlcatiom·~ No other ...... ,,,., hn1 ye11
recommended ·• Medal of of ln~maU~. l" a 11 s , for a rifle and a fiiho:&e 111.,,, '""' ~•Y· •lint what'•
Honor-the b.!g11est award . Minn., ,Spec •. 5 Kenneth .and held it throughout the toltit ,,. 111 the &Nater 0r•"9'' JI PASHION ISLAND n PAIHION IQUAll
for valor "above ~.n d Van Dusen . °!' Hermo68. battle. C-t th•• th• DAILY PILOT. NIWPOIT ~ -,........ ~· ANA
heyoodtl>ecallofduty. · .Beaoh, Calif., Spe<. * -~Eota~~~def~e~nd~ed~a~fl~ank~~==========d~~~~~~~=:;;:;~;::~~~~~~~ 'lbe act of. heroism last T erry n ·onnick of 1_
week on a batUefield 29 Pittsburgh, Pa.; P f c
miles northweet of Saigon J.ames W. Fields of Fort
wu exeep.ti.oDal but t.he Worth, Te:1.: Sgt. Gerald
paratrooper ··was not the Gueri'lro of Pbiladelphia, orV, hero that day in a Pa.; l.6t Lt. T b om a s
radng-close-quarters fi!fl t ·Souteer of K~as City,
in whidl American fighting . Mo.; Sgt. James Burke of
men ltZTlashed wave after Bnlnswick, Obki; Sgt .
w.ave of attacking Viet Dudley J. Estay of New
Cong. Orleans, IA..; Spec. 4 Terry
Nineteen other Americans Sherman of Norw a 1 k ,
received medals on the Oalif.; Spe<. U b a I d o
spot from Maj. Gen. F. K. · Maestas of Santa Mooice,
Me!.."lll of the U.S. Army's Cali!., and Spec, 4 Kenneth
25th Infantry Division. Kubinsky of · Fairbault,
Flve received Silver Stars Minn.
ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S
TWO GREAT RESTAURANTS
• '
FOR LEISURE DINING
BEFORE OR AF,TER
SHOPPING IN THE
WEST'S FINEST CENTER
• JOHNNY EAR.L . J.R.10
•t ~ ...... , . -~·
MONDAY THROUSH sATUR!lA•Y
• 37 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
BETWEEN BUFFUMS AND BROADWAY
Open: Weekdays-Luncheon: 11-5
Dinners: 6:00-12:00
Saturdays-Luncheon: 11:00·5:00 ,
Dinners: 5:00-12:00
Sunda)'.s-Dinners: 4:00-12 :00 . .
RESERVATIONS
644-2030
"-111.GIUM
"
•
All Penney Stor11 Open Every Night Monday Through Solurclay
ELECl'RONIC
Big savings ••• great values!
Save $100!
Penncrest" credenza stereo
.1 year guarantee on all parts
90 day warranty on labor __ _,
USBVOUA
EN NEV
CHARGE Acc;:auNT
TD CAY I
Save 61.95!
57" console stereo savings!
Hcn:I nibbed oil walnut w Cl1d la dwood tolids combine for •
lustrous finish. Sleek Danish Modem styled AM/FM stereo hos solid
Hondsoma lromitionaJ styled cabinet in pee~ "'""" state amplifier, 4-speed automatic c:hanger, record storoge.
U hardwood solids. Al.ldio m long lpindle 4-ipeed or•1g 299 9 5 _,m...,. ..... 11·-ta1o1o.o;............. • No·w $238 Oria. $369
. . NOW f269., · Meowwwllable 1n Co1on1a1 lfyllng.i
•
1 Y[.'.~ FREE REPLACEMENT OF
PARTS ON COLOR TV AND 90 DAY ~ SEMCEJ
Cal P-.ya fot ''"home 1...,.ict on Of11 Pl'l'lncre,t' toftso19 l .V. °' ._
~ Mnice oa portGble T.V,J fcir dtftdl appeoring •Tthln 90 days ef -.. rr.. reploc~ picture lube if ct.fldiw.""ithin two year1. fret~
_. .,.,... ii ~ withll'I °"' year fot ce1ot T. V .. wilhla 90 Ooy1 '" blade ..i whfftc T.Y. or-'-•111111. lobot 11 ••tra aflu 90 ~. COfltact Pennl)'I
for avlheii1nd MfYiao under lh• 11uo.l'Olltff.
••• hnc:iou1 color• in iri descent
pal9nt 1-atMn .NI green, oronge
block, -,.How, bone
r
' t t Save 72.95!
Save on Penncrest'
color televisions
-~-
-
\
•
Hl lJNUSUN_ value et ""'
oegulor price of 16.'1'1
Now! While~km
and 1lz• kill
$10.99
t
t
t
I
t
•
-
in colonial or
modern cabinets!
• lleautifully 1tyled t0mol" house 2r'
morpktw• tube, IMGWl"ecldiogonolr,.
Boosts 25,000 ¥Olts of pidur• power.
295 ·iq. In. of Yiewing OTllQ, VHF/UHf'
chamel MMctor. ChocM wolrwt or
""""' fioloh.
Orig. 549.95
Now"477
.11.---------.
HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH
• '
(Huntington Center)
•
(F•shion Island)
S~hool Bill Oppose·d
Badham Wants to Limit•' Bureaucracy'
l)flpositlon is coming to-school teacher. Assembly·
day from Harbor Area man Kenneth Cory (D·Gar·
1 rehoo1 offtd als to a den Grove) is also a co-
Jegi.slative JnP088} 10 limit authir.
'\ tcbool bureaucracy, . "Eliminating bureaucracy
A.s'5emb}ymml R o b e r t ls a iood thought, but is out ~ (R·Newpo_rt or place at this time,"
Bead!)-, a co-author of the N e w p o r t • :W..: e s a board
proposed qlll, said the k:ltent member Selim ' 'Bud' '
is to prevent sebool districts Franklin said. ' ' 'f b e
from addi~ extra layers of. Legislature just pMSed a
adminittrat.Jra. • bW io give local lcbool
N e w po r t -M e s a and dUtrfds fiexibility. Thi6 new
Orange Coallt Junior College predetennine w b a t is
ecboolmen have r e a c t e d bureaucracy.••
sharply to the attempt t<> Supt. William Cumlngbam
control by formula school told blli board, "This type of
district ~Jail organization. legislation gets ip..tle way of
The meesure would .eet a ingenuity.· I cannot for the
ratio· of number of teachers life of me see how people in
to number of cr~tially Sacramento can think they
non-teachers. Newporf.Nfi sa know better how to run the
Unified ls 54 nou-teacbing s<Dool district than you peo·
is.ilaff positions over the ple wb> live with it day in
formula and Or.ange Coast end day out."
Junior College is 21 pos.t· . Orange Colet Jun 1 o r
tions in excess. CWiege Supt. N o r m a n
Badham, coalacted In w.aon coounented thllt .be
Sacrarreul:o, said the bill conalders any attempt to ad-
was presented to him as a mlniJter statewide b Y
measure to at re n gt hen formula 1'Dot defensible.''
academics. "I may as time He noted that am'.ong posi·
goes on aDd I ttudy the im-tiOl'll designated non-teacher
pl'catlcms go off as co-•e 18 caunselors who also
autbor and oppose the bill,'' teach balf time.
be said. The bureaucrat formula
The bill WM written by c o v er a edminlsUators,
Assembfymon Leo Ryan (ll-stlpervison, llbrariana and
South Sab Francillco), a counselors.
Badham aatd U1e formula
came from the educ~tioo
subcommittee on &taffillg. It
allow.s one non-teacher per
10 taachers. ·
The bil, if passed, would
llO into effect In 1971, 111•
)'NI' school districts under
ireeent law are to be allow·
ed to let lhelr tax rate
without v«e of tne public.
"lf a lcbool district wanta
tv add an extra ad·
ministrative la.Y<yer~a~t ~t'--
tiQle they can ca well
do, it," Badham warned.
The auemblyman 1ald be
doesn't know what chances
oC the bill passing are; he
said be is concerned at the
moment will bis o.wn
legislation. .
Voters Sign Up
'lbe Orange Coast League
of Women Voters, i n
cooperation. with the South
Coat Plaza Sboppinl Center
in Cosl& Mesa will reglater
voters throughout tbe i um·
mer MOllday thr ou1 h
Friday, 1 to 5 p.m. aad 7 t<>
9:30 p.m. in Ille Ceroulel
Court area ol Ille Pi.za.
NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND
WedMSday, J1dy lO, 1968 DAJLY l'ILOT n
' I •
All Penney Storft Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday ... -
MODERN, EARLY AMERICAN DINING ROOM FURNITURE
~•lfff 411ntltla,, •••• styles fllor s..,ies Olly!
.,_VDUR
ENN CHAR BE
AE;CQUNT
. TClaAYI
Up to 5141 savings on
a 6 pc. modern pecan
diningr~~. ~roup
66" buffet
Ori1-$225 NOW
U"c'-d
. hutch
Orilo $225 NOW
Chino d-
s1so 42"x62" fll>le
Orlg,$ll0 NOW
s130 Side choir
Grit-53.SCI NOW
s144
s43
' "
Olnlngroom furniture with the look of today at
yesterday's pricell Pop91ar pecky pecan finish
adds IO the modem styling of "-·pl-. High
can• back choin have colorful print Mats; table
features bordered 1opJ hutch has lntwior light.
Orig. 275.50 •220 Ami chair s53 .. • NOW Grit-$6SNOW ....... -I I t ~,.------------------------------------.....:
I
·'
STOREVllDE SAVINGS/
THUR.·FRl.·SAT. ·
save 36% to 67 %
DRESS CLEARANCE!
orig. 5.99
to 10.99 $3 to'7
Real 1iuys r... -o1 -din ahoad. ......, YOiles. <ool blend• -... ed fabria.
-· junlon', pot;tn', youthful haK -
save 45 %
FASHION TOPSI
reg. 2.99 1.66
,._.\lolsol-•to-.S...ao
cool, easy-care fobria 1n dclllk: and drnsy
otyles. Spknhy prlnh, "'1do. Sino 32 lo 38.
save 33%'--
JAMAICA SHORTSI
reg. 3,99 2.66
You save $1 on ... ry pair during this aniwal
sale ••• and look at tM choice. Included are
· 101id$, stripes, prints, plaids in sizes ~ lo 18.
save 24% to '49%
GIRIS & BOYS SPORTSWUR
orig. 1.99 '2 for 3.00 & 2.99
E•ty ,,,. 1t p•rtt11 tnd 11h fo, ftW 9f •"Y
1111111 • , , et 1!111bl1 •••int•· Colorf•I 11llcf1 .M 1u1uhh11 pi'int1, Girl1 1i1•1 l te 14. lo1t,
Ma(• J to I.
save 33% to 44 %
GIRLS' DRESSES I
i~8s.~9 1.66 to 2.66
Out go e large group of..__.~ ... ,..
'Cf.ad for quick tcM. S*wlea Cottons, coal
blooodo, -.. -prlnh,·oolido.-1-14
-' -~'
•
Save up to 57.50 on a
modern-diningroom
8 ~·group!
The smooth, even lines of this d"mi119roo11 group
are clearly modern! Plastic laminated 1op1 lllClkh
select walnut '"""' finish aid ... Handsome,
lllOdem fumishlngs IUll lllml)' ds al! ........... .
Take aclwailage of the 111'1111111 llOWI
1,c.•Hlwlaetsd
Save up to 182 on a Early
American style 6 pc. group!
The warmth ond charm of Early Alt.rica -
to glow from thil authentically s1yled diningroom
Mt. Oiltinctive aoRd blrdi furnishings haft hancl-
IC8lcled, hand·llalned and hancHvbbecl lacquer
finis h. All decorative hard-• 11 beallttful
antiqued solid brau.. Slop lit today tllCI -i .,...,,,_,.,.,
NEWPORT "BEACH
(Fa shion Island)
t
50". buffet '96 Grit-$110llCIW
Mr buffet •10s Orig. $135 NOW
42" """"' toble Grit-$"NOW S81 .............
Grit-$UllOW
2~-.., __ ,...,.
. Orft.$1SO NOW
'I
'76
.......... .
aide ... $ Orft. 42.50 NOW 3 5 ........... --Grit-$55NOW
4Cl"x60" llW. •90 Grit-$100llOW
Side •1r q9 Orit.21.25-NOW .
Ami choir •23 Orfl.WSNOW
"
. )~ ~· " HUNTINGT ~)(f B'EA't:H
(Huntington Center)
'
..
'
I ,
', I I I
I.
I I
ZI DAILY PILOT . WodnfwlaJ, Jul,iO, 1968 ,
· Airline Link Victim of Cold War NOTICE
• • • • • • • • • • • ' • • . • • • • • • • • • • • ' ,, .. • .. .. • • .. • '
WASHINGTON (1JPI) -
The Moscow-New Y o r k
ah'line link, a lon.gtime
orphan of the cold war, is
now a reality -in time for
part of the 1968 tourilt
aeason.
lt ends • 1erie1 of off.
again. on ·aeain.
n e g o tiatlons stretching
back to 1961 when the
Russians threw a near-
agreem~nt into the deep
freeze by building t.Qe
Berlin Wall.
The subject was warmed
up periodically after that
as bait for better soviet·
American relations. By
November 1966, it reached
the point where t h e
Moscow was ready again to
sign an a-greement and the
State Department s a 1 d ,
,,~
SILVERWOODS
ANAHEIM CENTER • FASHION ISrAND, NEWPORT BEACH
'"3"'1~~~
JUIJSale SaViDDSl!I
special savings on Items seleeted lr0in
our July Sale stock for •••
WEDNESDAY• THURSDAY• FRIDAY• SATURDAY
umm&mi'f't,'•~
Harl Schaffner & Marz suits, including luzuriom worsteds'
and polyester/silk/worsted blends ... superb tailoring and·
styling. Top quality at low pri,ces:
SUITS REGULARLY 100.00-155JJO
NOW 84.75 8 99,75 • 104,75
/ 119.75 • 124.75·134.75
·-"'·'""""''l'-IPW' ...... ,. ..... , ..... ,.,_,.. ___ ~,·--.. -• --. . ,,,....-"""""";;;u:~™'~:PJlll:-.
Silverwoods own "label elothing-inclwling our entire stock of
two-pant suits.
REGULARLY 75.()()-95.00 •
NOW 59,75 8 69,75 • 79,75
SPORT COATS REGULARLY 49.50·79.95
NOW 39,75 8 69,75
SLACKS FROM 18.95·37.50
NOW 15.75 8 28.75
• !E&C ::•H &4 r·
FURNISHINGS & SP RTSWEAR
5.00·7.00 Dress Shim-fa-S. S, Regular & Button Down ...... 3.79, 3/11.00
6.00 Sport Shirts-Short~ Assorted Patterns -·-··-............ -..... 3.99
16.00 Cardigan Swealels-Orloa Acrylic, assortment _ .-...................... 10.99
l.S0.2.00 Hose-Slre!dl, Anklet and Orer·Tloe-Ca~ ............... ···-·· _ ... 99~·1.49
6.00 Pajamas-Assortment of Regular and Short Lengths ...••.......••... _ •..•... 3.99
! I . 111 It Ei:Z! I I 22 121 !!O'S 1~•·
NATURAL SttOULDER SHOPS
69.95 Suits-Assorted Styles and Patterns ...................................... 59.00
42.50·55.00 Sport Coats-Assortment of Tweeds, Blazers • , .••••• , •. , ..•.... 36.00·44.00
16.95 Dress Slacks-Wools and Dacron" polyester/Wool Blends ................... 12.99
7.95-13.95 Wash Pants-Penwa Press Cotton Poplin and Cords ................ 5.99·9.99
6.95-7.50 Dress Shirts-Assorted B.D. Collars, Solids and Patterns •.•...... 5.99, 3/17.50
17.95-21.50 Dress Slacks, Assorted Wools and Blends ..... , ..... .-....... , .... : .... 15.99
~'T $~"9 Ttl!E W I i! 'Qo\' '"W ~lj;Di!~~Jt-r~·~mlW!liW
COUGAR SHOPS
6.00 Dress Shirts-Patterns, Short Sleeves, Button·Down Collars .......... 4.49, 3/13.00
13.95 Sweateis-Fishennaa Knit Mock Turtleneck Pullover ,. ...... , ................. 9.99
traaiM: :m·•:ft!lt.US&!lllM'm; m'<IJJ I I
Aloo llANY GREAT SAVINGS OH ATTRACTIVE MERCHANDISE IN OUR LADIES DEPT,
Not all ......,lumdilie ittcirukt! moak; 7IOt all mes and eolon.
Bil! I 12 Ill : .. ::.111:::.1!r·ma11 ·1r ·1 JPIAl~l!WI
SILVERWOODS
service wa1 e1';pected to
start ''fairly soon."
But it didn't and ttie delar
was blamed on everything
from the Vietna m war to
Moscow's expressed desire
to wait until It completed
testing a new Jetli'ner for
use on ita tDd of the
Mrvice.
Bdt the Russi1111 did keep
life in the d iplomatic
ue certliln that then wW
never be a.ny UH for tbJ1
equipment for S o v i e t
airliner• are absolutely
aalt IDd dependable."
M tor the cost of a trip to
M0&cow, It won't be cheap.1
The • baile round-trip fare
will be $1tlot.&O for fir•t
claH passencer1 aud '730
for tourist clua.
acreement. A 1 t bough When tile aervlee opens,
acting w i t h apparently the schedule calls for one
deliberate atowne11, they flight a wfft by each
cleared away 1ome of the airline durin& tile ·,winter
cA~sh~
1113 N. MAIN ST.
SANTA ANA
IS
CLOSED
S.nlce
USE OUlt NEW SHOP AT
74 fASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
ALLW~NAUT
AT ANTHONY'S
Coron1 del ~r
red ' tape blocllins the one! two round·trips a week
/ft•u~al lllght. lo 111J11mer momru. ==== Aerofiot, th • otate-runl-:::..:==::::::.:::::::=c_-..:.:====================
Soviet airline, aent a
jetliner to the 1Jnlted States
-on a proving lllght and the
·Russians a gr e e d to
conform ·lo ~tderal
All Pennfy Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Safl.1rday
~~n~"!~~ r:d=:·~~ enne~· i:~~t delegates a 1s o ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY
worked out wit!'! Civil
Aeronautic Board officials
agreements on insur.1p1Ce
liability, and they settled
on tile ·mterlnedfate as well
as alternate ~ stops the
M06COw-New York flights
could make .
The final agreement hes
beeti signed by Prefident
Johnson and service rt.arts
Sunday.
P3n American w i 11
provide the American half
of the service, using the
Boeing 7rt1. Aeroflot's entry
is the Ilyushin 62, a four-
engine jet &;aid to be
capable of o&rrying 186
passenget'S over the .f,000.
mile r ou.f.e.
Americans who fly
Aeroflot can expect to find
ttlat the Ru.siaJ1s do things
a little differenfly from the
U.S. airline<.
For example , the
breakfast menu m i g h t
include caviar and salami
with cucumbers.
There are no in-flight
movies on Aeroflot. But
free cigars go with meals,
and children can fly at ti
fare. A1 an added fringe
benefit, Aeroflot boasts,
supply of "chess a n d
dominoes" oo every flight.
And depending on t a 1 l e
there also is plenty of
vodka and Russian mineral
water.
The RUS&ianl and the
Americans disagree o n
what a stewardess should
look like.
The RU1Sian g i r 11 '
uniform• are not a 1
attractive 8'those of their
A m erican counterparts.
And the Russians also
prefer their women on the
dumpy side.
But the interior of an
Aeroilot plane is every bit
as plush as an American
jetliner. ·
Aeroflot's teftt.y record is
nQf. known since t h e
Kremlin does not publicize
craShes. But Aeroflot
surely has had a normal.
share of crashes.
Under terms of the air
agreement with the United
States, the lluyshin 62 must
conform to all international
safety "standards.
The Soviets themselves
take care of worried
passengers this way: A
booklet f o r paaeengers,
(liscussi'ng life jackets end
"1-ubber rafts carried on
Aeroflot planes, says, "we
Kid1 Like to
'A1~ Andy'
Perky petunias
Sun-loving 1nnual gives 1
colorful man of blooms.
Choose from Apple Blossom,
Blue Jeans, Tango, Sugar D~y
or Fandango. . _
Purple bottle brush for
colorful landscape design
Use this for contrast with your .. d
ano. I gal. container.
"'Rose IMMI" lt9901dm
for .... mertlrn• color
69' ..
Sh•t:ly •r••l t•k• color from
thil e•sy io 4i1row pl•nt. S" pot.
2/77c
IHdl•I Plush for tr• .. .,,
ll•lthler lllcllOIHlra hnr111
Givel two tre•tm9nts at once.
Contains b•lancet:I feet:l in4i1 plus
in1•cticido. Covors 5000 1q. ft.
5.95
UB•YDUR
ENNEV
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
Ti:lt:IAYI
Band inf
PLUSH
STORE-WIDE SAVINGS. AS MUCH AS
• School Shoes • Dress Shoes • Sandals
•
OUTSTANDING VALUES
····-
Childrens thru Teens
30· FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
644.24M
. . -....... ----.___,,,_ .. .. .... -.
Handy l cu. ~. whHlbarrow buy!
Sturdy 111 stoel constructed whHlbarrow
tok .. the lo1d out of gardening. Seam-,
less tr1y, beked en1mel finish.
6e88
4 c:u. ~. whHlban'ow 12.88
16" economy lawn spr der
Feeding your lawn is easy with the
Penn-craft spreader. 32 lb. capaci·
ty let. you feed large 1reos without
reloeding.
5.88
NEWPORT BEACH -FASHION ISLAND I
__ ....... "" '• v ' ! • --. ' • ' -.... ~ ................... ,-. ., --r·· ........... ..., .... .,.. .............................. ,.,. ........... ,.,,r::o=---.... .... ·~·-~"""--\:' """ ..... ,.. _..,.._. ........ ~ ..... --............... -...
" f'UU .
'NatUrat mink Jacket In Emba-Tourmaline .. , Azurene•, Autumn Kale•
• and dark ranch .......... 1 •• , ••••• , •••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••• , , .111.•
~Natural mink stoles alld captS In Emba·• 19"f"laline•, Autumn Haze•
1 and dark ranch ...................................................... ,.,' •. ,411.•
•. Black•d broadt1il·proc,,.ed lamb jacket trimmt<I with natural or dyed Jllink •••. 271.GD ~Bleached white mink capes •· ..................................... : ....•••. m.ao
r11r jllod\ltb ltbtltd ,, 1MW tOl.!t'IUJ" ttlt!R •' 1.,.,, .. lllfl. 'l .M.-t•, Mwtttl ... Miflt. ,,...." MMt.
fbEStGNER COAn ~N6 suns,
~1llghtweight wool· coats for all-year Cal ifornia wear. White 1nd swnmer colots.
I •6-16, rt(. 70.00.136.00 ............................................ 4'.00.11.0D
j.,°'5iCM( suits In summer,._colOfs. 8·16, reg .• 60.00.156.00 •••••••.•••..• '.. :4t.•18.oa
f DESIGNlll DlllSSES. / ,
5~ summer fas hi Oh crOUP from our.designer collections; many ane ,of a kind.
! . I-pc. and 2·pc. lor1loy 1ndl1te-doy wear, reg. 96.00.196.00 , ......... ~· .1ow 'h OFF
~WOMEN'S BETTER DIESSES • 1 . •
~~P of early summer dmses and costumes. Broken sizes l214·221h. .
: 14-20, reg. 52.00·13&.00 .... , ............ •·· •••.•••••••••••••••••. 1tw V.·'h Off . '
IETTH MISSES AND PACESETTER ORES.SES :· .. ~-. -
Summer dresses and costumes for home or travel. Misses sizes
Cottons; blends and sheers. Patterns and solids; whites, lights •nd darks, , ~
reg. 46.00.136.00 •••.••• , •••• ~': ••••••• ; ........................... 30.47·1ll7
SPORTSWEAR DRESSES AND KNIT~ ••
Asst. summer dresses. ~II .famous ~bets. SiztS S.)8, reg. 23.00·60.00 ••• , •••• 1Ul·3t.ll
famous maker wool knit suits, cOStumes and dresses1 ree:. 65.00.100.00 ••• , •. 42.tl.,7.tl
IEYTEI SPORTSWEAR S.EPAIATES
l 1styles ~°"~le Cardir••iweaters1 ......................•.•• :: •. 12.99 l 1!.11
Cotton knit stnped shits, •11111f. reg. 7.00.13.00 ....... ·······'····· •• . .3.11-1.11
Famous maker tops, reg.15.00.1.?,00 ••••••••••••••••••••• ; •••••••. : •••..•• 10.99
Famous maker shifts, reg. 20.00.a.OO ! ........ , • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • • • •• 14.•
Famous maker fashion skirts, reg. 17 .00.23.00 •••••••••••• ,, • • • • • • • • . • • • • . • • • . .19
lllDAL SHOP
.-.. Sl.~al .iO'l"ns. S~ JM.~es and discontinued st~les. S.10, reg. ~.oo.300.oo .. 25.17·111.17
YOUNG CALlfOiNiAN COATS ANO SUITS '
Special! Orl1111 " acrytk ~ckets,. •hite, navy kr'tits, now .... , .•••.•• ; •••••••.. 17 .M
All·puf?oSe "1ini-tfench·coajs, blUe, ye no ..... , navy, 5·13, reg. 20.00 •••••••••••••••. 11.n ' . ,;Y.OUNG CALIFOINIAN SPORTSWEAR
~.Famaps-fnllile CCH!fdinates: jacket~. blouses, skirt,,.pants, reg. 7.00·20.00 , •••• 411% OFF
Famous maker cottoifSbifts, pant shifts, reg. 13.00-17.00 •.••••••••••••••••••••. 1.99 . ' YOUNG CALlfORNfAH 'DRESSES
Jr. arid Petitesumm.r diiiiei, famous.name, reg. 20.00.28.00 ............. 12.11·14.19
Meditation prhtts;safe·priced -.... -.• ,--; . ;-, .<.-;-, :. ;, ..... i ...... · .................... 10.99
Texturedllebru siimiiier;, f~vlirlte·niaker, tet 28.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 14.99
• \ ' 1 · • ., ~
DEl·ONAIRE SHO,
Cotton ducnportsweor, white, navy, red, reg. 6.00.13.00 ....... : •.•••• ; ••• ; .40% Off
Bra· shifts, faiioU.-rii.>ke, briilit prints and s<ilids, reg. 13.00·15.00 · •••••••••• ~ :t.99·9.99
Cott<>n Jam1Jcas. s'ohds, checks, pnnts,.reg. 6.00 •••••• , •• , •••••••• ; ••••••••••.. 2.97
Meditation shlf~ Olfr's:'atont, very spec.ial at •. : ....... ~ .................. , •..•••. i.99 ... ' '
PATIO DIESSES
Shirt shifts, Arne11· triacetate jerS~Y. prints, spic Tar·.-•• , ••••••••••.••••••••••••. 1.99
Cotton blend print shirt shifts, on Sale ••••••••.•••.••...•• t. ; .• •.•••••• , •••• _ . 1.99 '· . . ROBINAIRE WOMEN'S DRESSES
Asst. Arnel'" jersey on Dacron'! /cotton voiles, 121/2-22112, reg. 26.00·33.00 .... 14.99-19.99
ROBINAIRE MISSES" DRESSES
Famous·name Arne1~· triacetates, sheers, reg. 20.00·33.00 ••••••••••....... 12.99·22.99
Italian wool knit imports, now only •..•. _ ••.••.•.•... ,, •••••. .._ • ., ••••••.. 29.99-46.99
Clearance: assorted sllJ'lmer fashions, now ...............•••• , • ; • ~ ,: .. J3Vt·50% OFF
ROllNAIRE SUITS
Sleeveless 2·pc. suits, famoUs ·CaliforNa maker, reg. 36.00 ...... _ ... , ..••....... 24.99
Synthetic blend 2·pc. and 3·pc. unlined suits, reg. 40.00·56.00 ............ 28.99-36.99
ROBINAIRE ciMTs .
Summer cottons,;'m•{IJ styles to ch.oose, Hfg. 40.00·66.00 .•••••••......•.. 29.99-32.99
All·weather travelers, assorted fabncs, reg. 40.00.60.00 •••••••••.••..•. , , .24.99·29.99
' -AVANT GARDl SHOES ·-,
Car~ssa's Dickey cOlli/.~pUmp; pa_t"tht. calf,ief.'20.00 ........ , ...•.....••...••. 16.99
first Editions' gtnuine ~zard pump; black, brown, beige, reg. 30.00 •••.••••..•••. 24:99
Ad lib pump, black, camel, navy kid, black/while patent, reg. 20.00 .•. _,,. _ .. , •.. 15.99 ...
, SHOE SALON . . Ptacoc~:'s·Artisi!';mid·heel classic opera; black patent. calf, peau, re1. 20.00 .••••.. 15.19 ·
Mademoiselle's 'Museum lo-heel; patent, calf, peau, reg. 24.00, ••• •'·.: ••••.•••••.• 17.99
O'Antonio's Collier mid·heel pump, patent,,c.alf, reg. 32.00 ·········:···········25.99
WOMEN'S SHOES
Hill & Dales, reg. 24.00·25.00 •••••• ~ •• ~ ••••.• ,., ....., •.••• ~ •• , •••.• ~ •••• " • ., •.•.•. 18.97
Parad ise"Kittens, reg. 18.00 ................. .-~ ••••••••• • •••••••.••••• ', •• '-• •• 14.97
Florsheim's, reg. 19.00·2.2.00 •••.••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••..•.•••.. 14.97
CASUAL SHOES
Andante's spaghetti strap sandals from Italy, reg. 8.00 ...... , ....... · ........ , ... 5.99
Jack Rogers "Here We Go," calf, patent. vepeto. reg. 2~.00 ...• , . .,. •....•.....•.. 17.99
E• s Es ·'· .,,. ·~··1 YOUNG PEOPL S ~c;> ~-~. f' , ,. • ·~ (.
Famous·name brand boys shoes,.reg, 12.0Q-13.00 ••........• '···"., ...•. , ...•... 7.99
Girls, misses' party shoes, black/white patents, reg. 9.00-11.00 • : .. .,.'~' •....... ,.,. 7.99
BLOUSES . . ,
Famous maker shirts . Asst. prints, colors. re g. 7 .00·9.00 , •••••••• ,. ~\ •••......•.. 3.99
Blouses. Nylon and cotton, reg. 9.00.13.00 .•••.••••..••••••••••• ; •......•..... 6.99
GLOVES
Real kid gloves. Shorties and 4-button. 6-7'12. 5 colors, reg. 12.00.15.00 .•.......... 6.99
Famous maker cotton and nylon gloves, reg. 3.50·6.00 , ..• ; .•••• ~ •••.••.••...... 2.59
HANDBAGS
Imported summer crochet straws and plastic·coated wickers, reg. 8.00. J3.00 ... _. 4.99-7 .99
Ostrich or saff ian gra ined white leathers, reg. 17.00 ...•. _. __ •..............•. 12.99
~eather·like cocktail bags, reg. 10.00 •.. r.v--' ............................... : •. 4.99
FINE JEWELRY
17 and 22 jeWel watches for men and women, reg. 39.SOto 100.00 ............. 25% OFF
FASHION JEWELIY
Simulated pearl necklaces, reg. 4.00·8.00 ....... , ...•.. _ .•................. 112 OFF
Famous maker stone necklaces, pins, earrings, bracelets, reg. 4.00·12,50 ......... 1/2 OFF
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Orlon• acrylic sweaters. 36-42. White, colors ••••••••.•..•..•......••.•.•.•••. 6.91
Embroidered .llln11kerchiefs, 1ei.'3.(Xl·4.00 ...•.•••••••• , .••..••• , •.••. : .:": ... 1.00
Scarves. LOng and squares, reg. 3.50·4.50 .•••••.••.•••.•••.• ~· .•••••••••••... 2.29 . . .
ROllNAIRE SPORTSWEAR •
famous maker Antron• nylon coordinates, reg. S.00·18.00 •••••••.....•..••. 2.0.10.99
Famous maker shirt dresses. Prints, solids ...•...••.••. -•.•••.••••.•••••••... 11.99
f amolls maker pants.and tops, reg. 8.00.14.00 •••••••••••• , •••••••••• ~ •••• $ ...... 99
~: Ho~r~RY . , -:
Robl..On'l •wn·Arion> bik1oi.panty h0$e. l'roportioned sizes, reg. 3.00 ........... 2.49
fimous maker crnJ11 slipptn'.~9. (tg. 4.00.5.00 .. . ........ \, .... 2.49
COSMETIC~
Robinlon's own:'
Hand soap, reg. 6/3.50 ••••.. :-.•••••••••••• ,., .•.... , ..•.. , ..• , ...... : •.. 12/3.50
Beth soap, reg. 3/3.50 ..•.... -... : .•.•.•••••••.•••...•...•••••..•....... f/3.50
Toilet Tissue, case of 50, reg. 12.50 •••••••• : ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••. cast I.SO
Facial Tissue, case of 12. reg. 6.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••. cas1 5.25
Set·N·Curl bair spray.14 oz .• reg. 1.75 .•.••.••.••.••••••...••..•...••••.•...•. 1.35
FASHION FOUNDATIQNS
Fomou1 Maker Bras
famous ma~er'lact bras. Padded and contour !tyles: Stre tch sides and back.
Adj"'l>ble ribbon strlJ!S. Whie, pritels. 32'36, rer. 4.00.5.00 .•••••••••••••.••. 2.41
Charmfit contour bra$. Cotton ltce. Padded and wid~ set straps.
White, blaclo. A. 8, C, 32.J6, er. 4.00.7.00 .............................. 2.99·4.41
Famou1 Malter Panty Girdle•
Pull-ons. Aver op '"d lonc ltr.Reinlorte<I in ftoat, sid!I" back.
White 1nd paste It S-M·l, reg. 8.00.16.50 ••••••••••••••••••••....•...•. 5Jl.12.41
lily ofTrince Tijhlwei!M pUll-on~ Sl!!OS Include prter panty, panty cirdle with 60i ~r.
Whitt, ,.fow. coral. s-M-1.. ref. 7.00:9.00 •••••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••• ,4AM.• ·
,... Fn.eus Molctr Girdles •ml fHMotien•
Bian Jor~ li&hlwtichl pu11...,;. Clroost reinforced hon! panel or reinforced panels Iron~ sides, back. Wh ite, pastelL S.M-1, rec. 7.00-14.00 •.•..••••••••••••• 4.99· 10.91
• • Thursday, July 11, 1968 DAILY PILOT .f9
' . .
F""°"' miler li1htWeltllt p~l-on of power net White ind pastels. S·Ml reg. 6.00 . , 3.99
. LOUNGIWfAI
. Cotton dusters. P·S·M·l. S.1~·'re1. 1S.~J7.00' .................... .-••••• ,.l.9H.99
Nytoa q~llte<I ·short robes. 8'11, rer. 20.00 ................................... 12.99
Nylon tr1tot travel rotits.0P·S·M·l, rea. J7.00 .: ••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.•.. 7.99
Terry robtt. P:~·M·l, r•t.17.00 •.••••.•••.••••••••••••••••••••• · •••••••.••.•• 9.99
LINGERIE
Nylon. tricot slips. 32·36 Short, 32-40 ~""''· rec. 6.00.10100 ••••••••• , •••••. 3.99-1.99'
Chemise shps. 30-36. Pasteh:, rec" 6.00.10.00 : , ... , ...• ~ ••••••• , •••••••••. 3.99·6.99
Nylon t(~'!I h11f sllps. XS.S-M IS\ S.M·l IAJ. reg, 4.00.12.00 •••••••••••••••••. 2.Jtl.99
Nylon tricot b<lels. 5-8. White, rec. l35 •..••.••.•.•••••••••••••••••••••..... , .99
Nylon trrcot·eowns. P·S.Mil; "'· 7-.00.17.00 ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. 3.99·10.99
YOUNG CALi FO~NlAN LINGUIE . F "'-i 1, , _ '"'°"' mo .. r nylon Sletpwt1r gowns, baby d~ls ••.•..... , . . . . , ••.••.... 4Jl9-6.9I
F1mout C09(dinates;.brtt,.1'111·sljp$._•iips, bikinis, "l· 2.50-6:00 ...... : ....... 1.49-4.99
,JT.l,TIONEl'I' .
Hlah Intensity lamp, rer, 10.95 .............................................. 5.17
Hallmork brldi• cards, reg. 2.70 •••••••.•.....•...••.•••••.••••••••••••••• Yi Off
J~ own tooml~d stationery. White, blue, 11ay, pink .
100 pr!!ited sheets · 100 printed envelopes · 100 unprinted sheets •• , •• , •••••••• 5..91
NOTIONS '
Easy Wash, 1 aat~on, reg. 12.00 •....•..••.•••••••.•.••••.••••••••••••••••••• t•
Satin hanaers, boxed set of 4, reg. 3.00 .•••••••.••.•••• , •• ·~ .•••••••••• , • : ••• 121
Set saver salin pillow cover, reg. 2.50 ••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••• ,.,; ••• 1.11
SILVE.I:
Bread tray, rei. 10.00 ..........• , ••.••••.•• , •. , •.•••.•.•.•••••••••••• , •••• 1.•
12 inch round tray, reg. 12.00 • , •• , ••• , •• , •••••••••.•••••••••• , , •••••••••••• 1 ...
BOOKS
Childfen's books. Ovef 75 titles, reg. 1.95·4.00 ~ ••••• , •• • ••••• ,,, ..••• ·-· ........ c•1•
-coqkbook sale. Over 60 titles, rer. 2.50-15:00 ••••••••••.••.••••.••••• ~ ••• ;:.tlH ...
CHINA A~D GLASSWARE .. '°" 1 · · ' I CAMPYS SHOI', , . .. \ Noritake translucent china. 42·pc. service for 8: 9 palttrns,
CO!dUri!J•slacks. 27·~,lvy. lltll IOOll·Style, reg. 6.00 ..•...... ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 3.99 ''l· 74. 9(), 39.95. 3 patt,ns. reg. 84.25, 4l95
famous makef'knlt shirts. S·Xl.~Tartte and crew necks,_rea. 5.00·6.00 ...•.•• ,, , .. 3.99 3·intt:ial monogrammed gasses. 8 aod 10-01. hiball; 7-oz. old fashioned;
roly poly "on the rocks'' or cocktail. •.95 dot 12 and l5·ol. hiba/I; 15-ot double old
BOYS' DEP~•TMINT ~ ;~ fash ioned; roly poly hiba ll. 5.95 doz. Allow 3 weeks delivery.
Sr>ort shirts. Durable press Ni mortetlirlers. 8·20. reg.-4.00.4.50 •••••••••• 2.79, 2/5.50 HOU SEWAHS • • • famous maker nylon jacke\s. Pile lin;td. Slui:'~~llow, pewter, red. •12 reg 1"00 t Ml 14·20 rer 14 oo 11 90 Cosco adjustable Dar stool. Turquoise, reg. '5.98 ••• , ••.••.•...•••• , ,-, ....... ''" lD.81 O'" I • L. ,, • • \' •,••• • • • • •• \ ·~ , 1 • • • • • • • • • • •••• •• •• • • • • • 't ~. -~ \ t ,
' . t ~. ~-.... ..:'~·:--·-· ........................... -...... ...;.;_...;.~'~"...;. .. ;i...'~'~--~------------....... ~, ...... ... J • • • ' --)
f1m.U. maker jeans. 8·14,reg. 4.5-0·5.50 . . . . . . . . . , ..............•• 2/7.99·2/9.99
CHILDREN'S 3·61!'
Girls':
Assorted dresses. HX, reg. ,9.00 ...................................... , .... 5.49
Washable pile coats. 4·6X. Beige, blue, orange, white •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 16.99
Knit tops; assorted." 4·6X. reg. 2.~3.50 .....•..••.••• _ •••••••••.••••••.•••••. 1.99
Knit shorts. Assorted c'olors. 4·6X, 1eg. 2.50 ........................ , •••..•••. , 1.69
Boys': ·
No-iron wearlon jeans. 3.7, reg. 4.00 .................... .' ............. , .••. 2/6.99
Assorted knit-shirts. 3·7, rei. 2.50·3.00 . , .•••••..••. , .• , .• , .• , ••. , ...•.•• , •.. 1.89
Swimwear, assOl'ted. 3·7, reg. 2.50-3.00 ...••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••.••.•. 1.89
Nylon Shell park~, 4·7 ••••...... , •...•.•••••.••••••••..•.•.. , ..... , ....... 2.79 . '.
GIRLS 7·14, _
Blouses. Berm uda, button-down collars. Prints, reg. 4.50 •.... , . , ................ 2.49
Permanent press skirts. Solid brights, reg. 6.00i ...... .',,. , ••.. 1., ••••• , ••••••. 3.99
Jamaica shorts. Prints. Zip front , reg. 4.00 . _. /, ........ , ......••••••••••...... 2.49
Farl)QUS ijame bathi_ng suits. J ·pc. and 2·pc. bikinis. reg. 7.00· 10.00 •• , • , •••• , • , •••. 4.99
T arpoon plaid· 311 weather coats, zip·out Orlon · acrylic pile lin ing .... _ •••••• , ••.• 13.99
Shifts. Asst. bfight lloral prints,.reg. 5.op ............. ... . . ............. ,3.49
P16-,TEENS 6 TO ·14
Cardigans and pullovers, reg. 8.00· l 1.00 ....... ·. . . . .
Skirts. Cottons, WDols & Orlon ft; acrylics, 1eg. 7.0~·'.0.00 ..
GllLS" ACCESSORIES
....... 4.99' 5"9
........ 4.99
Cotton knit underwear. 4·14, reg. 9oC .•.. , , . , ..... ~ ... _. , .•••... , .. , •..• , .•. 3/ 1. 75
Nylon stretch socks. 6V2·ll, reg. 75C ...••.......••.•••.••••••••••••••••••• 3/1.-45
Sleeping bags, reg. 12.00 .................. , ....••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 9.98
flannel and brushed nylon sleepwear. 4·14, reg. 5.00 ••• o •••••.•••.••••••••••.•. 3.49
Girls' cotton·blend slip. 4-10, reg. 3.00 ....................................... 2.29
NURSERY FURNITURE SAVINGS!
Traditional crib with decal by lullabye. reg. 45.00 ............................ 37.99
JWR's own floral qu ilted innerspring mattress by makers of Kantw.et. re a:. 24.00 _ .. 19.99
Stroller by Strolee. reg. 24.00 ...... , •.••••..•.•••.•••..• , •••••..• , •••.••• 19.99
High chair by makers of Pride· Trimble ............. , ......................•.. 17.99
• Wearing Apparel -Babette and Toddler
Assorted Babette dresses. l 2·24 mos ., reg. 4.50·6.00 .•.....•.. , ..... , ........ , '. 2.69
Boys' and girls' topper sets. S·Xl, reg. 4.50·6.00 .•••.••••..••••..•••••••••••••. 2.89
Toddler girls ' pr inted shifts, pai1t dresses. 2·3·4 ••• , •..•••••••••••••••••••••••. 2.69
Toddler boys' 2·pc. slack sets. 2·3-4, reg. 4.50 .............. , ....•..•..•... , ... 2.99 . . .
FASHION FABRICS 11 ART NEEDLEWORK
Assorted 45" cotton and synthetic prints ..................................... 99¢
Pure silk pongee, twelve colors, reg. 3.t .............• , • , •••• , ••• , • , ••• , . , ... 99t
finest quality 60" double knit wool sui ngs, reg. 9.50 • , • , •• , • , •.••••••••..•.... 5.99 ~.,,Washable 60" polyester double knits . . . ••.•.•••••••• .' ••••• , •••••••••••. , now 5.9\
Reynolds ''Super Cabri," reg. 1.60 . _.,,,, •••.•••••• , ••••••• , , ••••• , , •• , ••••••• ltt
Pauline Denham "Chale t," reg. 1.55 •••.•••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 79t
Spinnerin ''Coquette,'' reg. I.DO .•••••. ,, •.• , •••.•..• , .•••••••••• , .•• , ••• , ••. 19~
MEN'J FURNISHINGS
Half ·sleeve shirts. Perma-press Dacron• polyester.cotton, reg. 6.00 • , ••• , .•. 5.25·2/t.50
Grand Vino shorty pajamas, reg. 7.00 ... , ............................. 5.75-2/11 .'oo
Dacron• polyester or all·silk neckwear, reg. 3.00·4.50 .•••••.•.••••••••••. 1.95·2/J.50
Medalist Dacron' oolvester·cotton underwear;
Perma·press boxer shorts. 30·44 , reg. 2.50 .............. , •••••.•••••.••. l.90·3/5.50
Perma·press slim boxers. 30·40, reg. 2.00 ...••••. ,,.,, ••• , ,, , , • , ,, ••• , .. 1 .75-~/5.00
Knit tee shirts. Crew. V-neck. S·Xl . reg. 2.50 •. ~., ..... , ...• , ..... , , •. , • , • l.90·3/5,50
Medalist Ban·lon' stretch hose. One size fit s all. Black, brown, bfivt, grey. ''
Ankle!. reg. 1.25 ............................................ ,. ... 1.00·3/2.75
Mid-calf. reg . 1.75 ....••.•.• 1.45·3/4.00 Over the calf, reg. 2.00 .... ,, 1.15·3/5.00
MEi:r'S A'CCE,SSOllES
Asst. cuff links and link sets, reg. 5.00·lo:oi:t--:"": ... . . ..... 2.IS
BilUolds·and cred it card cases, reg. 5.00·12.50 ..... . . ... 'h OFF
MEN'' S'ORTSWEAI
SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:30
2·Qt. stainless steel fondue .set with 4 fond11e forks, reg. 34.9.S • , •••••••••••••••• 29.U
Stainless steel salad bowl with servers, reg. 15.00 .••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 10.U
Proctor ironing board with pad and cover, reg.14.95 ···········••••••••·••••••·lll Q~ker 5-Dc .• TV trav set. ree. 15.9,5 ..................... :.~"··············~·11 .41 12 round Tefl on no·smokt non·stick broiler ••••• o ••••••••••••••••••••• Spec1al3.n
Samsonite bridge set-, reg. 47.75 •••• : ••.••••••••. ~······•••••••••••·········29.91
BEDDING
Wamsutta Lustercale' 100% cotton white she~ts. Flat or fitted.
72•1 08, reg. 3.60 .••.•••••..•••••. 3.20 108•120, rer. 8.99 ................ 7.99
72xl20,reg. 4.20 •••.•..••.••••••• 3.89 42'38 case, reg .. 99 •••••••••••••••• 19
8lxl08, reg. 4.00 .: ••••••.••• : •••. 3.59 45•38 case, reg.1.09 ••••••••••••••• 99
8hl20, reg. 4.79 ••••••••••••••••. 4.29 42x48 case, rer. l.29 •• ::: •••••••• 1.09
90xl20, reg. 5.99 ••••.•••••• ,, , ••••••••• , •••.. , ..........•. _., ............. 4.99
BLANKETS / BEDSPREADS .
Satin Soft blankets. 1003 Acrilan" acryl ic.
Twin,. reg. 14.95 .....••••..••• , .11.95
Full, rec. 16.95 .......... o ....•.. 13.95
Queen, rer. 21.95 ••.•••••••••••• 18.95
King, reg, 26.50 •••• , •••••••••••• 19.&S . ' . Bates Milano spread in orange, gold, olive.
Twin, reg. 29.98 ••..•.••.•• , •• , •. 24.98 Queen, reg. 42.50 ••••••••••••••• 37.50
full, reg. 32.50 ................. 27.50 , Ki,g,reg. 47.50 .. , .............. 42.50
IATH SHOP _ • .. , '
Fieldcrist Royal Velvet 'towels: r · '"'' ....
Ball1. re g. 4.00 •.•.. : ............ 2.99 Wash clolh, reg .. 80 •••••••••••••••• 19
Hand, reg. 2.00 . , .••••••••••••••. 1.79 Ti p towel, reg .. 90 •.•••••••• ,;, ..... 71
Tub mat. reg. 5.50 • : , •.••.•••.•... 4.-49 Bath Sheet, reg. 7.00 , ••••••••••• ,5.49
Tempo rugs, by Regal: 27" rd., reg. 5.95 •.•• , 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,4.95
24"x36", reg. 6.95 •••••••.••••.•. 5:95 · 27"x481', reg. 10.95· •••••••••••••• 1.95
30"•54'~ reg.12.95 .••..•.••.••.. 10.95 lid cover, reg. 2.95 ..•.••...••••.• 1.95
LINENS
. Country Spun-perma·press cloth. Soil·releas! finis'h. •
52"!52" sq., reg. 5.00 •.••....•.•• 3.99 60"xl08" oblong only, reg.14.00 ••• 11.99
52"x70" oval or oblong, reg. 7.00 •... S.99 60" round, reg. 8.00 , .•.••••.••••• ,.6.91
60"x90" oval or oblong, reg. 12.00 •. 9.99 . 17"xl7" napkins, re1.1.00, •••••••••• 69
Stealer no·iron luxury lace. White, ecru, moss: '
52"x7011, reg. 8.00 •.. , ............ S.95 68" rd., reg.1'2.00 •••••••• , ••••••• 1.95
70''x90" oval or ob'ong, reg. 13.00 .. 9.95 70"xl08"twal or oblOflg, rer. 16.00 .12.95
TV, RADIO , RECORDS AND FLOOR CARE EQUIPMENT
Clock radio with automatic shut·off • ···•••••••••••••••••·••••••···· •. , ..••. U.11
RCA Color TV table model. 295 sq. inch •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 44lll
POrtable stereo phonograph ...................... , •• ,., •• ,,, •••••••••••••• 69.61
HOover upright vacuum with attachments •• , •••••••••• , ••••••••••••••• • •• ••• 59.68
SLEEP SHOP
Selected ex·Hrm twin size mattress/boxspring set ••••••••••••••• ,, •• , •••••••• 59.95
Selected quilted firm twin size sets, reg. 89.95 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• .1.9.~
Selected qu ilted ex.firm twin size sets, reg. 99.95 •..•••.••••••••••••••••••••• 79.95
Spring Air "Mfiilowlane'' quilled firm, twin or full size mattress set,. reg. 139.95 •• ,.99.95
Modern 6811 sleeper. Walnut capped arms, reg. 229.95 •••••-'•···; •••••••••••• 179.95
Tuxedo 78" queen sleeper. Quilted, reg. 299.95 ••••••••• , ,, , ••••• ............. 24l95
Single love seats. Asst. arm styles, reg. 249.95 •••••• , •••.••••••••••••••••••• 219.95
Spanish corner grouping. Oak finished corner table, reg. 319.95 •• ••••• •••••••• ~ 2$9.95
CURTAINS ANO DRAPERIES ' Custom made draperie's ; : • , ..•.••• , ........... , ... '".,, •• , •••••••• _.\ 15%·25%. OFF
Custom re-upholst ery, fabric and labor on· stock faeries •• , •• , ••• , •• , ••• _.:: .15% Off
Custom slio-covers. fabric and labor on stock 1abrics ••••••••• ···••• , •• ,,, .10" Off
Shasta Fiberglas· draperies. Washable, sun·5afe. .. ~
48"x58", reg. 6.95 .••••• : •• :.~ •••• 5'.951.; 72x84";'rer. 13.95 ••••••• ; • .-.~ .• 11 .95
72"x58", reg. 11. 95 ••• , ••••••• , ••. 9.95 961184", reg. 17 .95· ••• , , •• •• ••• 15.95
96'1x58", reg. 14.95 ••••••••• , , • , .12.95 t20xB4", reg. 22.95 ••••••••••••• 19.95
48""84", reg. 8.95 .••..•••..•..•.. 6.95 144•8-I", rer:29.9S. ............ 24.95
·flllt fflH ii I rt1l11eirir 1tadt1111r\ of Owtn1·Cornl~1.
Ele.gante quilted taffeta spread. l<odel-palyester fitfed.
Twrn, reg. 19.95 ••••••• ~-••••••••.• 17 .t5· _ Q~en, rea:. 29,95 ., •• 1 .......... , ••• 25.95
Full.reg. 24.95 •• , ••••••••••••••• tl.95 ~inr. reg. 29.95 ••• •• • ... ,; ••••• 21.15
D1-1al,1reg. 29.95 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..•••••••••••••••••• 27.95
FLOOR COVERINGS
100%10tlon~ acrylic cardigan sweater, reg. 16.00 oo·'. ' ... r.:.'. ' .. ' ...... •,• ... 11.90 NyrOn pile hi-loop broadloom, B colors, reg. 9:95 inst •••• : .•.....••••••••• ;.. lat .... OBrlo~l~ !fryhh_ctluprtle neck sd·s wh ikte shirt8s.00reg, 11. ......••.•.•...•.... 6. ·.;._· 2.1.1. 72.0090 Mulli·color cut pile nylon, 9 colors, reg. 11.35 inst •••••••••••••••••••••. Jd. inst. UI
an-011 • s ir . lacket an moc , reg. . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .,~. . Deep hi·Pile sh a a 27 colors reg 13 35 1·nst yd ~t 11.111
Assorted sport shirts, reg. 7 .00·9.00 ...••...•. : ••. i •• o ......... ~ •••••• "' .4.90-2/t.SO ' Heavy all ~I tiP·sheared_.8 co10rs,· re& .. .1.4.~~ JRSt~: ;.: ~ :.: : : : : : :,:;: :::.~:1d: ~t11M
-MEN 'S CLOTHING/ SPORTSWEAR CLOT~ING ' . . ' ..• .o:~uxe Acrylic Sha~.}~ .colors, reg. 15190 inst,, ....... ,, ..•.•••• "' ••••• ; .Jl-liit.42M
Read&~le sui ts_. Lt. wei~ht Oac~on ' polyester·wool, reg. 89.50 .-. ••••• , ••••.••• .., ••• 14.00 , ~U.llNITURE ,..11 . . , .
H. FreeRian suits. Wayhte tropicals, reg. 110.00 •.••. -•• ~ •• , ............ i.·· ...... II.OD New' Heritage Upho!Sterfd Gallery cUstoni!made sofas, chairs ••....• ~ .• : • ..Wil.'i Off
Readga!e suits. Regular. reg. 125.00 ...••. -.....•••• ~ •• •. : •••••••• (, : ••••••• 99.00 Heritage "Cor~ente" 0;tcaSio,nal tables. Italian provintiat style, 1eg, 119.00 ......... ..
Dacron Polyester and woorsport coats, reg. 59.~ ••••••••••• ~•··· ............. 4'.00 la·7·Boy Spanish Recliner, v1nyt upholstery, ret .. 199.00 •••••••••••••••~····•·~·.1hJMI
Roeer Drake sport coats, reg . .100.00 ...•.••••• .-'. •••••••••••••••••••••••••.• 79.00 Tudor 3·.PC. bedroo"!. 72" triple dres~er, rer. 3391~.;1 ••• ., ••••••• ~······•••t•••
All·wooi R01dgate sport coats, "\oll5.00 •.••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••.• 83.0D Loose pillow back 8 custom ·-ered sofa rar '"' , ' -• I ·• II ool 37 1'.ID ""'' ' 'OJ'I, '••'' ''' ••• •••• • •••• •• .--mporti;v a ·W slacks, reg. . ••.••.••••••••••••• •• • •••• •••.• • ••..•••• 21::;-i louoie chairs, 4 styl~s. reg.139.95 •••••••.••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••·••
ALUMNI SHOP • • _ ~reit!l 3·pc. Pemb roke dining fo,up. rei. }49.00 ·~··•••••••••••••••••"·•:\'.~.
Hall·1leeye ~utton~own 1port 1hirts, reg. S.00·7.00 •••••••••••••.•••• now 1.75·2/7.0D ·CAM'S "
Natural shou!~er trad . suits, reg. 75.00·85.00 ........... , •• •.•" ,,, ,_, ......... ; ... 14.80 Tole lamps l9Vz" desk tamp 1415 29" three-<:andle desk famp 4UI I All·wool 1radot1onal troums, re1. 26.5-0 .............................. 19.00.2/31.0D ' ........ ' ••• ., ·••
ART ANO GIFTS • MEN 'S SHOES S 14 . . ' ' Ali 'd ond u--. t Bl k b 37 00 d,. 00 "'OD d...... . et 0 lV-snack tables 11tth stand; l<i~lz•. •lcoltol pool, lt(.-34-00 •••••• ···-II.IS : en~ m s ~sin oe. ac or rown,rer. . '" ~. • • • • • • ... '" ~.w Germani.act wt aystlf dleorlthii $peclal 4.llH.11 ~ Stetson's Pia In t~ or straiaht Up. Black or brown, reg. 34.00 .................... 30.00 ••• • •• •••• ....... ·' • • ••• • • • • • • '._. • · · 1 frtnd>ShrinerA.ijhlwtic111 mo<casin toe or !Oller, "I· 28.95 ._ ••••••••• , ... , •• 23.911. TOYS ~
lUGGAG~ IWR Dtlm Fo!d'•.Roll l'illflml&Tlblt, rt(.,,_,. ...... , •. ; ••• ,,.< ............ 21.11
Atlintlc men's and YtOmen's luggaae in rawhide and metanic ll'IY· Wnhlbft. Custom 4-Pllyer Pi~ Set, l'lf. lOO .... : •••••••••••• ~'•••·•••••••••••··-"'
Men's Vita Pak .................. 21.95 ·126" rrnshoJllllC' •••••••••••••••• 11.ts Jr. Swilir-Stt-by Gym 0.ndy, ns. 24.18 •••••••••••••••••• ...-. -•••••••••• MW 1:1
tidies' va11 Pak ••••••• , ••• , •••. i:us 29" arushof>per ................ 21.fi 0u"" .~1~~"-;~.!!!.'!' D1ryc1¥. Stlts lour c11nite11, rer. 17.98 ............. flUI ; . r PA ~1•r _,~-By Pl'YW!tl;fe,r. Z+.~ •••••••••••••••• •••••. ·• ~
' . .. . ....
THOUSANDS OF OTHER VALUES TOO NUMEROUS TO.LIST. SHOP EAR~Y FOii BEST SELECTION
Robinson's Newport • Fashion Island • P.hone 644-2800 >
H OAIL v' PltOT w-.... ~ 10, 1961
)'' . . ---Fall Registration Now Open ·
Otanee COut Collegecur·
rem1y ii processing d•Y
school applicatlona fur the
fJU semester. StudenLs who
have not •PPlied for ad·
ml&sion bad better do 10 a.
1oon u DOssible.
School begins at OCC on
Sept. 10. Before studenu
can be cOUMeled a n d
ttaiitered, they , mµst h.ave
on file a completed ap-
plication form, all high
school liDd c crJ J • ( •
transcripts and tbt result of
ttleir SCAT aptitude to&!.
Officials 1aJd that all pro-
ipeetive students who have
not com.pleted t h e • e
preliminaries should contact
the iidmisslona oUlct at
OCO as soon as possible.
Registration will begin
Aug. 22 for those student.a
who have ~mpleted the ap-
plication materialS. Siudents
who Me late will not have 1.1
great a claat telection.
The SCAT test ts an ap-
titude test and does not keep
anyone out of coiiEge. Jt ii
merely an aid to 1bt
rounaelor in 'helping the lbl-o
dent maik.e out a pr-ocram.
The SCAT 11111 wHI be
given at l :J) p.m. in the
OCC Science Hill on July 29,
a..i Aug. I, 5, I, 15, 11, ...i
%!. It will alto be given Aug.
U at 7 p.m. in th• Science Hall. I
The
Colorful
Sound of
Orange
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM
FROM FASHIOl'J ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH
'JULY
CLEARANCE
at Fashion " Island
IAU STARTS THURSDAY
Junior Dr•1181 and Beach Shlh1
s; ... , J te 11 •• , ll•t· to 1.1.00 5.80
MeditadO!ft Jaekel1
Solid popAn _, 1t.i,..._ leg. l'l.00 5.80
Cotton 5blrtm and Top•
Lg. 1lv. loocly sliir+o. R19. •11 le $15. Slee .. le11 tonk tops 7.80
Fashion Beach Shifts
Mini shifts ...i pant shifts. lle9 .. te 11.00 8.80
Goll Skim and ,Tops
F1mou1 designer. II•• I lw 16 ••• lle9. +. 11.00 9.80
Better Sport1wear Clearance
off
.le•k.t.. skirts on~ upril. R ... +. 4§.00
Wool Knit Dresses with Vinyl
of f
v""1. fomou• Msigner. lteg. to 44.00
Casual ~um:mer Dresse1
S,.Ci1I cle1r1nc1 price. Reg. lo 44.00 17.80 to 22 .80
F1dl Letigth Lo ungewear
off
Fuhion lsf1njj • Newport Contor
'
-
-2 Receive SC Degrees ,
Twv ~i. from Hun· physical education. H I t
tington Beadl have received d I s 1 e r t a t i o n WM on
tbelr PhQ lrom USC. "'Critical TH<h!ni BohOV•
Wlliter Martin Lou.net, ior1 Effecting Attitude Dev·
6162 Shlelda Drive, bas elopment ln Physical Educl•
earned a doctorate i 11 ti<>n."
s oc l 01 0 g )'' I.==========; ''Complementarity,
H o mocenity, Hetrogenity
and Marita) Stability" was
the tapic of his dissertation.
Robert August Pestolesi,
9382 Molokai Drive has
euned the degrtt i n
SHARP
1, y011•,, • th''' ..,.,.,,,, 11111
th1 DAtlY 'ILOTS f1-111
f)J ... ,.;..LJ111 cl111IR14 141 s, ...
11r41y1. M••• • lt.ttt, 4••1 •••
wlot<11fftor yo11't• b11yh1t •r 1•111111.
SUMMER
SALE!!
SAVE!
SAVE!
• • en many femou1·n•m• brencl1 •f linteri•, t iridl • ..,
br .. 1, sl!•pwe1r. A~sor+ecl colors, br.ok•n sises, ~is·
cont inu•id 1tyl••· Its your opportunity to buy "w
•nd SAVE ii
BRA encl GIRDLE SPECIALS , • ,
Limited Time Only!
LILYITII UNDDWIU llA
•• ,. 6,00 C CllJ' ••• o • • o •• • .....
lt•9. 6.50 D c111t •••••••••• <4.t t
•• ,. 7.50 DD CU J' •••••••• I .ft
All the excitement of the restless sea breaking on the rocks, minus the sound
effects, is present on this canvas painting by Bennett Bradbury. Bradbury
will demonstrate special techniques of marine oil painting in bis ~lass open.
ing August 19, for two weeks, at the Laguna Beach School of Art and DeSign.
LILYITII SMOOTH CUP PUSHUP
lt•t· 7.SO 1.-C c111t •••., ••• I .ft
YANITY PAIR UNDUWIRI llA
Beach Youth
Among 800
At Mee ting
A group of aoo-high school
leaders -including Br ian
Hanrahan o f Huntington
Beach -meeting in Fort
Worth, Tex .. set the blame
for youthful rebeHion on
misunderstanding between
the generations.
The students from high
schools coast to coast were
delegates to the Nalionl'.11
Assn. oJ Student Councils
1 convention last month.
Brian, one of fleveral
students who spoke wittt a
United Press International·
member newspaper ir. Fort
Worth. praised bis school 's
student-faculty commit
wh~e ''we get together and
exchange beefs."
Among other commen~s
by the students are:
-"All our problems stem
from a lack of con1·
munication between faculty
and itudents," a aid Calvin
P'airbankg of Birmingtlam,
Ala..
-"Lack of understanding
C"auses friction wherever
you att." explained Ken
Bromfleck. Pittsburgh. Pa.
-"We're not. taugh~ the
ti'lings in school that we
need in the outside world "
was the opinion of Jan de
Graff. Bronx. New York.
Brian will be a seniof at
Huntington Beach H i g h
School 1'li1 fall.
GOP Group
Picks Aid e
Geu-ge Morrison, 25·year·
old management assist.ant
for Mcl>omell D o u g l a I
Corporation. Huntington
Beach fiacility, has been
elected president of the
Westm i nster Area
Republiom AS6embly for
1116M9.
Other orflCers elect.ed klr
the oomin& year include
Fred Schanke, fi rst vice
)X'esident; Donna Mon'iS'Oll ,
aecretary; Les Broeker.
Ina.lurer ; Jian S m i t h .
publications director. au of
We,,tminster: and Stew.art
Case. An.aiiti.m. second vice
preii.dent.
The CRA unit currently
~ the third Friday of'
•ad! month in Sigler Park
ClubhOUl!le, Westmtost«.
Reserves End
Training Class
1be klllowing re!Jel"\le of.
ticera bavt qxnpleted 51
hours ol in·service police
1"ainintl. oecording to Jmn
H. Seltzer.Hunt i n Ito n
U.dl, chief "' police. Ktnnetb Grant. L o n
11,yland, Joe 1.q>ft, Don
PoleWek, Howard T I c e .
Gary Tnick«t, .lames Wflllr.
Roba:t Ml\"'•· Howud Sub·
1lick, Jom• He..ienoo.
~
El Toro AUk's Son
Gets 2nd Decoration
SANTA ANA Son orEI lieutenant's feet. He fell on
it. then threw it into nearby
brush.
• ... •.oo 1.e ... , •••••••• •.•1
lt•t · 7.00 D cu, • •••• ••••• I .ti
YANITY FAIR TRICOT llA
lt•t· -4.00 1.c cup •.•. , . , , l .t l
TULIP PANTY lilRDLI
•• ,. 15.00 .............. 12.50
IEYERL Y YOliUE SKIRT SAYER
Helf Sl ip. 11.,. 7.00 . ..... "·''
Full Slip. ll•t · 10.00 ..... ' 1.•• Toro's Marine Air Station's
non·commissioned officer in
char ge of airfield operations
was decorated for the .se·
cond time in four months in
Vietnam.
He recei ved the Bronze
Star four montm ago 't\·hen
his platoon came under in·
tense fire while protecting a
bridge,
fashions for • . •
Marine First U . Howard
W. Langdon Jr., a platoon
commander, was re\\'arded
for his action June 11 near
Phu Bai when his helicopter
landed in an open field. As
his men were di sembarking,
enemy fire sounded arounei
them, and a live hand
grenade fell at t b e
The lieutenant's father is
Master G'unnery S g t .
Howr.ird Langdon Sr .. who
came to El Toro in 1942 as
the station's first weather
observer. His mother is in ·
structor.supervisor at ihe
Station's child care center./
They live at 1453 Sycamore.
NEWPORT BEACH-F .. h;on hlend 17 14 1 h44-0170
Op•11 4•ilY 10 •·"'· +. 6 P·"'·: Mo11. 1119 Fri. t.O f :JO P·"'·
Op•11 • L• F1mm• C~1r9•. l111JrA,..11ic•rd M M1it•, Ch•rt•
..... llT ......
America's Oustanding Clothing Values
SEMl-ANNU~L CLEARANCE.
MEN'S SUITS I
Ughtwelght le Year 'Round Weight
Reg. 579.95 R ... $95. Reg. $125, R ... $165.
&8 11 -84 11 104•• 144••
..
SPORT COATS
Single and Double Breasted Stfles
R ... $45, R ... $55. Reg. $15. R ... $100.
31 88 42 88 72 88 87 88
SHOES
Reg. $12.95 R ... 11 4.95 .... 116.05 .... $21.50 gaa 11 88
SPORT SHIRTS ·-.2 $6 SHOfl:T POI Sl ff:Vf:S
s"' 2 $7 ..... NAMl FOR
$7 I ll.ANDS 2 $8 FOR
$8 LATEST 2 $9 STYLES FOR
TURTLENECKS
.... 6" 1.00 ........................................... .
.... 7"
9.00 ···································-·····
:~o ................... ·-········-I 0 11
WE HONOR ALL
MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
STORE HOURS
MONOAY through flllOAY
10 A.M. to 9,30 P.M.
SATUROAY 10 A.M. to &,JO
FASHION ISLAND
••w.eaw-•••-
Ol'POSITI BROADWAY
NEWPORT CENTER
644-2875
. .
I •
• . ' -~-'I" --r y • .w 'W .., • ,, ,.. :s; • .. F V•» W eu CP U' :r4s+ :PW¥$ 1!¥¥-•44¥J" J ..pc+ F +T ..,,
'
w.......,, Joly 10, 1961
Education Funds OVBBJWI B • DAil v I'll.OT Sl t
··Little Guy' Heeded
Vocational T y pe Stepchild Cou!f-ti.an Asks Freeway Arbitration
Ottlciala In S~ramento
and W.ashlngtoo, D . C • ,
charged wJth school affairs
are worrled that·vocatiorial
education has become the
ste pchild Of the natlobal
obsession fot· a college
degree. ~
Not only Is the dream at a
college education for all,
dear to the heart.a of·
parents; the dream hu
smitten po1iticia111,
As a result, in a 1t11tlon
where only one yo uth in five
graduates from c o 11 e g e ,
three times as muCh federal
money ioes to higher educa.
..
' tian than to vocaUonal
education.
Now under way for tbt
State Board ot £dueation la
a '400.000 study of how to
improve vooatlom.I ~uca
tion. Jact White of the
management firm making
~e study calls It an actioa
program aimed at ~
duclng pi.na for change. '
The study involve1 probes
Into bigb tcbool, jUn.ior col-
lege and adult education
programs to find out how
students ge t into vocational
education and why,
In Congi'ess, educition
program critics are won·
derlng out loud if a better
natiooal goal wouldn't be
l'OITle sort of vocational
education for all. A college
-
An Orange C ounty op,lnloos known, and want a ,tlon'a mc.t 1ophJ1tJcated
organizatlon lJ blctin1 a new hearlnc on the routiag. freeway f)'lttlft, would be
move to have a government lAlt I e s I l ob 1 the the f.trlt •tale to appoint
officlal a p p 0 J n t e d to Calitornll Assembb' ruled •uch u offlctal, Karcher
arbJtrate ••tor tbt UtUe IUY" that rio freeway ~earing Mid. The· appOlntment, .be · could· be n-opened .,... & added, 11 nppilrted by Jolla
in the planntnc Of freeways. route Js adopted .. unl~ss 0 . Bronson, cbalrman ot th•
This Official, who would be· new ·1n1ormation ·can· be · .Hl&fiway Committee of th•
Nisponslble only to the broueht forftrd,'' Karcher CaUlornia State Chamber· of
governor, would carry the said, exptaWng Jt costs the Commerce.
tiUe of • • fr e e w a y om· stat.e $30,000 to stage a full. Gordon c. I.Alce, head · ol
bucbman." 1cale bearill.1. the State Transportation
George P. X archer , The ''freeway om· Agency, to whom Karaber
chairman of the C&llfornia budllman" would also act a1 presented his "freeway om•
Highway and Freeway com-a liaison between "hardlhip budsman" Jdea, is rtudylnC
m.Jttee, an Orange County· cases," people who· loee it and bu agreed to okay
based group dealing with business because of pro-the idea or turn Jt down
ttie state'•· road w a y s , posed freeway routes, far . wjthln .XI day•. It.would then
returned last week fron'I example, and the iO,\lerD• go to ~e. governor for final
presenting this proposal to ment. .approvaJ, ending in the
officials in Sacramento. , miiCallfiiiiiioiirruiiii· • •• ii"'ii.iithiiiilhiiii• .~;;•.·-~;;;· eaiiiitlO;;;i;;~ ~?lii:~the~. ;;iDe'f~iioliifi;;;ceiiii. ii
"The purpose of t h e 1• ' ' 'freeway ombudsman' would
education would for some be ""-:::::"~~::-.'."'.'ii.7~'::·-~:;s,.....,::;:•:,· ;'"'~· !:'"'~·~·:::"";:-:::.;·-::;;.J~. the way to prepare for a de--''Tb '"r. 'tel · · · cent job, but there must be ---:---•-t_=_· _,uu_:..Y_in_c_Iu_w_;_y_o_u,_Mr_._Mi_·tchell.~-·-• __
other way3 too, they say.
be defending the little guy,''
explained Karcher. ' ' He
would see that fr01.lps, in·
divlduals, cltles, a n y o n e
Rep. Albert Quie (R-
Minn.) estimates 90 percent
of those who come into the
job market without a college
degree have never leerned a
marketable sldU.
The framework for a na-
tional policy of lftversal
,·oc&tional educati011 has
been prepared by an ad·
visory committee l'O the
Department of H e a 1 t b ,
Education and Welfare.
Salvation Army Asks
Camper Program Aid
t h e Malibu Mountains
b e n e f i t immeasurably,"
Brigadier Taylor explained.
c o n cern• d with the ............ t&..<A .<A.
alignment of ·a proposed 4'" '4' '4" "'° "I'
freeway, would get their
feelings before the right
people."
He said 90 perc.ent of the
complaints arisinc after a
freeway route Is ad opted
comes from people who
claim they didn't know to
whom or how to make their
QUICK
loc1I
l 'l"lflh, ll1111i Y"" 1 einp1d , Cl in•
~relt1111f¥1 liein1tew. 14itlefl ef
tt.. DAILY P!LOT.
elegance
-.
'" fashian NUMBER ELEVEN
· FASHION ISLAND
644-2252
SPECIAL SALE -'JUl Y 11, 12, 13
(we DO make elegant mistakes_)
De1eribed A! "one of the
best investments one can
make to help reduce ttie ris·
ing. crime rate in Los
Angeles," T he Salvation
Army is appealing for public
support of ib a nn ual
campenhip program for un·
derprivileged children in
Souther-n California.
·C.Ontributlons may b e
sent, in any amount, to The
Salvation Army, 832 W. 9th
St., Los Angeles 90015, or to
a neighborhood corps. Five
dollars will ·enable a needy
child to spend one day at the
camp, $30 for a week.
1t suggesb that occupa-
tional preparation begin in
elementary school with "a
realistic picture of the world
of work" on through specific
job training in high school
and port graduate voc•·
tional institutions. The p~a came horn ;j~ .. ~~~~ilii~ilii~~~~ .. ~-.iWl ... 1~~iiijii~iiji:iij:iij~ij~iij:iji~ii~iij~~ The proposed n a t i o n a I Brigadier Orval A. Taylor, I
commitment is $1.5 billion. Divisioaal commander of
the Salvation army, who
pointed out, "The Army's Mesan Receiv es campersrup campo:cn i separate from the on going
program which is supported
by the United Way. Because
of this, the thousands of
Toledo Degree
The toll of. a Costa Mesa needy youngsters enjoying
resident, Mr. E. M . the ad v ant a 1 e s of
Shugarman, bas received wholesome, outdoor living
the Joctor of ptlilosophy must be entirely subsidized
degrff. by funds f r o m generous
The degree was conferred doners."
on ·Arnold L. ~ m , "The boys and girls who
Toledo, Ohio by President L. manage tq escape crowded
A. DuBcidge of. t b e city street& and teme, ex·
Callfomia I n 1 ti t u t e of plosive areas of Loi Angelet
Tedloology at the annual for a wen at Camp Mr.
Caltedi commencement. Crags and Camp Gilmore in
Summe.r
fun
begins
... with a
superb
Thomas
NMI llfOll SUCH SAYINGS • , , NIVR MA.II SUCH AH OPPOllTilllTY.
AM ••. ,.. oolor II ti ,._ .,.., MYM'--,.. 1ovy ,_
HOUSE Of IWMOHT.
00
HAS A Mutw btertaMw lnrwn w• ..,., ..,. .., .,... .. ether .,. ... ~ ......... 1\eMet. w ........ .., ................ II .... ...,..,._
~ ,........, " T .. tr111 ...., lilln • Mtttr .,,.nw .. it, te ~ tt.lt
fiM .,..,. tltttl •• Wrifltl .., """'-ki"""9r kh.
NO MONEY
DOWN
These and MANY MORE MODELS SUMMER SALE READY
FOR IMMEDIA n DtUVERY
A LIMITED SELECTION
OF FINE REGULAR
INVENTORY, OFFERED
AT MOST SUBSTANTIAL
PRICES.
' •
STARTS THURSDAY, JUL'( 11th
FASHION ISLAND SHOP ONL YI
•
833-1333
'
"15 F1odnllfint
Rhythms
Allf1lmltk1lly"
whh lht 111 new
PLAYMATE
Now. IVITI th1 beginner c1n pl1y lS u1u1lly difficult rhythms.
The Pl1yrr11t1 fits ThOffllls tr1nsi1tor org1n1 t ttd crutn Of11•n
1CC0111p1nil'l'll!nf i nd ptd1I rhythms 1utoni1tict lly. If your
Thoni1s Is B•nd lox equipped, tht Pl1ym1r1 plrfS tht h nd !l'ox
percussion 1ffects t ithtr with tht org1n voieot or with tht
l tnd l ax 1fflds by themselv1s. V1ri1bl• f1mpo control, down
bt1t lndic1tor 1ttd exchnive down bt1t 1CC1nt.1lhythms, W1ltr.
VienntU: Wiltz, Jiu Wi ltz, fox Trot 214, Bcogie 6111, Sw-ino.
lock, W1tvsl, S.mb1, l 19uine. Ch1<h1. lthumbt, T11'190, lo-
ltro, l osw Novi.
SlllU ......... , , .... ,, . $739.90
llLAIR ................. $159,,00
PALLADIUM •••••• ~ .••••. $1795,00
TRADITIONAL CLASSICAL ••. $2495.00
LAWRENCE.WILK DILUXE ••. $2695.00
CIUlllTY , .. , , , ....•.. , $3995.00
PALACE Ill •••• , •..•.•••. $5195.00
• Poy No MoMy -
•Tlktllplo s y..,.,. ,,,
• Frw Private L11son1
• ''" DtblrJ
•hnclo lncL
s79990
"
"FMBlON IN MIJSIP ' ' I I • t
fAIHION IQY,\ll
114 ra-Jiail-
1,tNTA ANA
-·-, , •4.l·S~71 •
I
1
I
I
I
I
I
...
U DAD. V I'll.OT ~.Ju~lO.lM
•
'
TOWELS
F;.lclcr..+ Royo1l Velvet cotton terry towels.
htli +owel, r09. 4.00 ·-··--·---.. ··-·--·······--··J.49
Hend +owel, reg. 2.00 ....... __ .1,79.
Cloth, reg .• 80 ··--···-........ ___ . ___ ._,. __ .69
Fingertip towel, rog •• 90 ,, ___ ...... -...... -... -.... 79
Mel, reg. 5.50 ....................... -.... _ ...... _ .... _ ........... 4.49
Both.1hHt, reg. 7.00 ...................................................... 5.49
Fielcfcrest Imperial Brocade two tone.
loth towel. reg. 5.50 ..... _. __ .. _._ ........... _.4.49
Hend towel, reg. 2.80 _ .. ----.... --............ 2.29
Cloth, reg. 1.00 ........................ ____ ,__ ...... --··-.89
F"'9er1ip towel, rog. I . I 0 _ ...... -.................... 9'
Mot;-Ng. 7 .00 ........................ -.... --.. --...... 5.49
coSMmcs
Max Factor Moisturizing Liquid Cleans,r, 12 02.
·reg. 3.00i Skin Freshener, 12 oz., reg. 2.75 each:
Astringent, 12 01.., reg. 2.75: Ory Skin Cream,
41/, oz .• reg. 3.00 .......................................... 1.75 each
Tabu, from Dene, perfume bath oil and cologne,
uch rog. 3.00 .............. : ............... 3.50 boxed together
Endocreme lotion end flon-9reesy ·cream, reg.
5.00 Heh ................................................................ 2.50 Heh PlowilNJ VelY..-Moisture Lotion, 8 oz.,
reg. 9.50 .................. ,._ ............................................................ 5.15--
Super rich night crHm, 4 oz., reg. 9.50 ......... 5.75
Moisturizing bath oil, reg. 13.00 ........................ 6.50
Body Emollient, 12 oz., reg. 5.00 ........................ 3.50
Nine Ricci perfume spray in L'Air du Temps end
Coeur Joie frangences .......... ,................................. 4.00
Nine Ricci perfume spray, Capricci fragrance
. . " ....... " . " . . ... . .. .................... " " ............ 4.50
Schiaparelli Creme Pour Massage, 9 01. si1e,
reg. 3.00 ........................................................................... 1.75
Schiaparelli Creme Pour Masse9e, 16 01. si1.e,
reg. S.00 ............................................................................. 2.75
Gift of re9ular 2.50 Dressmaker parfum with
2 oz. of reguler 2.75 cologne .................................. 2.75
A gilt of regulor 3.SO 6olden Pu"• Flocon of
perfum with 4 ot. reguler S.00 cologne ......... 5.00
Mary Chea Essence Sprey, 3 oz., reg. 3.SO Z.50
Both or hend soeps, reg. 5.00 4.00: Guest soeps,
reg. 3.00 Z.00; Soop ensemble, reg. 5.00 ...... 4.00
Dorothy Grey cleansing cream, 6 oL reg. 3.00
2.00: 12 01., reg. 5.50 .............................. "" ....... 3.50
New Orange Flower Skin Freshtntr, 4 01. site,
with 1/1 ot. gift of Extra Rich Dorothy Gray
Night CrHm, o 2.75 velue ................................ 1.75
Ondine Spray Mates, 2 oz. Purt Mist end free
5 01. Sprey Tele ............................................................... 6.00
Buffums1 Own cold cream soap i" boxes of
twelve bors, reg. 2.95 ......................... .. ........... 1.50
John Robort Powon Fluid Gold Skin Bolence
Lotion, '"j" 12.50 ................................................... 7.50
Fluid Gol Emulsion, reg. 7.50 ..................... _ ... 5.00
Dry Skin Cl .. nser, 16 oz., reg. 5.00 ....... _ ....... J.50
Fluid Fresh nor, 16 01., reg. 4.00 ..................... 3.00
Enriched Cl .. nser, 16 01., reg. a.so .................. 5.00
FUR SALON
· Nolur•I mink 3/4 stroller cool ........................ 777.00
Natural mink boas in pastel, dark ranch, dyed
bleek, tourmeline and cerulean shades .... 33.00
Natural mink stoles with double fur collars in
long or short fronts ................................. 377.00
Dyed black bro•dloil processed lomb 3 /4 coots.
mink ccillor •nd cuffs ............................................ 477.00
lle1checl white be1ver jackets, mink trim 477.00
N•tur•I mink jackets ................................................ 417.00
Nature! mink jackets in good lengths with varied
coller stylings ............................................................... 666.00
N•turol mink 3/4 cools with border ......... 777.00
Natural full skin mink hats in several styles and
shodes ............................................................................... 55.00
One-of-a-kind designer fu,. now 1/3 lo 1/2 off
Fur bags for home and travel are lightweight,
weler repellent, Gold/block, 33" reg. 7.98 6.49
Fur bog, 50", reg . 11.95 . ....... ... . .. ........ 9.SO
COAT AND SUIT SHOP
Special sale of year around wool coats for
women, reg. 60.00 to 76.00 ................. ..... ..38.00
SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR
Imported lambswool sweaters in cardigan end
slipover styles, reg. 16 .00 lo 26.00 ........... 12.99
Choice collection of sportswear chosen from
our reguler stock ............................... 1 /J to 1/2 off
DRESS SHOP •
Misses' two encl three piece suits, 8 to 20, val.
from 40.00 lo 60.00 .............................................. 29.99
Misses' dresses by famous maker, v1lues from
21.00 to 56.00 ................ _ ........................ -· 11.99
YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOPS
Stretch cotton/polyester/nylon jeans, sites 5
to 15 , reg. 7.00 ........ _ .. ___ ......................................... 1.99
Wide selection of jemeic1 shorts sites 5 to I),
._ ... _ .................................................................. -........ " 2. 99
Knit tops or Ben-Lon• "ylon, cotton, or Acrilan9
ocrylic, sizot J4 to 40, rog. 7.00 to 11 .00 .... _ .............. _ .............................. _. __ J." to 4. 99
C.nli9e• or pullov.,. sweet ... s, si1es 34 lo 40.
'"9· 9.00 to 17.00 ---.. --.... ··-""' ............... J.9'
Cotto• blousM, sins 5 to I J, reg. 11 .00 to
I 7 .00 ...... ---........................................ _.. .. ........... _ 6."
Cotto• dirndl skirts, reg. 9.00 to 13.00 .......... 6.9'
'•Ill suits, sites I +o I J, reg. 36.00 to 40.00 -... _______ ....... _ .. ____ .. ___ ,, __ ,,,, .... 19.tt
Cotto• sh ills, tires 5 to 13, ,.g. 13 .00 to
. -v
26.00 .. -·-·---· .. ···-···---·-·-··-.... ·-··-·--·--···--·· '·" Bikilli& end motching 1hi~s ...... , ............................ 1.99
Vill19er cleer1rtee of t.r1ditiorial sporhw11r
'F~iT;J;;~~;s-~1i·-i;-;;;;;···~9~1;;·;1;~k:···;·;g~;~ 1 ~
to 20.00 .... -......................................................... 1J.99
BUDGET DRJSSES
Mid-season dresses in the new deep tones to
compliment your tan. ~is11s' '"cl half sizes,
rg. 17.00 to 20.00 ............ ·---·-· __ .. 1J."
MIWNERY
Luxurlou1 f•n slrin miok hots in Mvuel stylot and
shedes, reg. 79.00 lo 89.00 .................. ____ .59.00
ACCESSORY SHOP
Excellent selection of pents in nylon, Orlon•
acrylic or sh an stretch, 8 to 18, reg. 7 .00 to
I 0.00 ............................................................... 5.99
Assorted 9roup of pant tops in colorful prints,
sizes 30 to 40, reg. 7.00 ............................................... 4.99
Fomou1 "L•dy" shirts 8-18,-reg. S.00·9.00 2.99
Famous maker cardigan sweaters, sites 14 to 42,
reg. 13.00 to 17.00 ..................... _______ , ....... 9.97
HANDBAGS
Wide ossorlment of handbogs, reg. 6.00, 7.00
.................... , ................................................................................ 3.97
Better handbags, reg, 28 .00 lo 40.00 ............ 19.97
Entire stock of 9enuine alligator bags noW re-
duced 25%. Reg . 40.00 -390.00 JO.GO. 335.0D
Large selection of handbags in dressy and tail-
ored styles, reg. 14.00 lo 20.00 ........................ 10.97
HOSIERY
Proportioned seamless hosjery, 81/2 to 11 med-
ium , 91/, lo 11 long ........................................ 6 for 5.00
Support hosiery, medium length, 81/1 to 11
..................................................................................... 2 for S.DO
Wide selection of slippe.rs in large assortment
of fabrics and colors, reg. 4.00 and 5.00 2.59 ea.
or .................................................................................. 2 for 5.00
Wide selection of slippers, reg. 4.50 and 5.00,
2.59 ... or ........................................................ 2 for 5.00
GLOVES
Fabric gloVes for summer ere PK or handsewn
in 1 shortie to 4-button length. Siz11 6 to 8,
rog . 4.00 to 6.00 .......................................................... 2.99
• FOUNDATIONS SALON
Charmfit bra has fiberfill lined lece cup in White,
sizes 32-36 A, B, C ........................................................ 3.49
Sarong Bandeau Bra with criss-cross under-bust
·bond, sizes 34·40 B, 32·40 C, reg. 5.44 ......... 3.99
Sites 32 to 42 D, reg. S.95 ...................................... 4.95
Nemo panty girdle has reinforced panels for
oxtro control, S,M.L, reg. I 0.00 .......................... 7.99
Long log length, reg. 11 .00 .................................... 8.99
Maidenform stretch bra has nylon/Lycras span·
dex bands under the lace-over-cotton cups,
1ites 34 lo 38 Bond 34 to 40 C, reg . 4.00 ...... 3.19
s;zes 34 to 40 D, 5.00 volue ......... -....................... 3.99
Maidenform fiberfill contour bra has stretch
strops, sizes 32 to 36 A, B, C, 4.50 volue ...... 3.49
' LINGERIE
Famous maker teilored brief.s: 4 to 7, reqular
1.50 Heh .................................... 99 eoch or 6 for 5.80
Very famous maker slips; 32 to 38 short, 32 to
42 •verege, reg. 6.00 to 25 .00 ...... 3.99 to 15.99
Famous maker pettiskirts in short-short, short,
average and even formal fashion lengths, reg.
4.00 lo I 0.00 . .. . . ........................ 2.59 lo 5.99
Famous maker nylon trieot pettipants in new
shorter length, 4 lo 7, reg. 4.00 .............. . ... 2.59
Famous maker "luxaire11 sleep gowns of brushed
nylon ond ocelot e S-M-L, reg. 9.00 .4.99
Famous maker shi.{ts , long gowns or paiamas.
Gowns, S-M-L Pojomos 32 to 40, reg. 6.00, 7.00
end 8.00 . ..... ..3.99
large group of flared shifts perfect for loung-
ing .............. . .. ............................. 1/3 to 1/Z off
Famous maker Perma-Press duster of polyester/
cotton: 10 to 18, reg. 15.00 .. .. .. ................. 6.99
A-line sleveless shifts; 10 to 18, l ittle care dust·
ers of acetate surah, 10 to 18 ............................. 1.99
Extra large sizes ........................................•.. _ ................ 1.99
Famous maker sh ifts and long gowns for sleep-
ing , reg. 9.00 lo 20.00 . .. ..... .. .. , .5.99 to 13.99
Warner's matching robe and pajamas come in
severel colors, sizes 32 to 40, re9. 13.00 .•... 7.99
Warner sleep 1h ifts of fitted waltt gowns in 32
lo 38 p.s,M-L, reg. 4.99 to 7.99 1.00 to l!.00
Warner robes of nylon tricot; 8 to 18,
reg. 20 .00 . .. . .......................... 12.99
Buffum's Own told Water soap,
reg. I.SO ........... , .......... 99c, 3/Z.90
SHOE SALON·
Finest nam11 in dress encl street shoes. I Y4"
to 2" huls, reg. 24.00 lo 32.00 ................... 11.97
Ad Lib speciol purchue pumps, reg. 19.00 14.97
L•rge selection of femous brands clress •nd
street shoes, re9. 22.00 to 25.00 ..................... 15.97
Youn9. designer dress shoes with newest toe and
hul shepes, reg. 11.00 to 20.00 ....................... 12.97
C.suel end dNssy shoes in meny styles ond col·
ors. Reg. 13.00 lo 15.00 ....................................... 9.97 --' . I • 11 FA.I Ill,... • , ....
---------~ -... _...... ______ -~---~~~~------------
•• .. ,I
•
INFANTS' SHOP
P.+erso11 color coordi111ted furnishings, r.eg.
8.00 to 29.00 ......................................... 5.99 IO 22.99
"Hush" thermel blonkot by North Ster Is 100%
Acrilan• acrylic. 36x50'' site, reg. 8.00 ............ 4.9'
Generel Electric IHding dishes, reg. 11.00 8.99
.Stondord dish with signol light, rag. 14.0011.99
Dish end lroining set, reg. 18.00 ........................ 14.99
lnf&nl dresses, reg. 5.00 to 8.00 ........................ 2.99
Bonnie Doone lace tights for toodlers of 100%
stretch 11ylon ere eesy-c•re, reg. 3.00 ......... 1.99
Toddler Brother and Sister coor.dinates. His, reg.
12.00 ...... 7.99. Hers, reg. 14.00 end 15.00 ...... 8.9'
Permanent Pres1 Buffums' Own pl_•y clothe.s for
infants and toddlers. Infant sizes M, L, XL, reg.
4.00 ... 2.19. Toddlers sizes 2, J , 4, r0g. 5.00 ... J.29
CHILDREN'S SHOES
6trls's +ennis shoes by B. f. Goodrich come in
white a"d colors, some slightly irre9ular, sizes
•P lo girls' 8, reg. 5.00 to 6.00 ....................... Z.9'
Boys' tennis shoes by B. F. Goodrich come in
navy •nd white. Some 1light Jrregular1, sites up
to boys' 8, reg. 6.00 ond 7.00 .............................. 3.99
GIRLS' WEAR
Foll foshion dresses for girls, 4 to 12, reg. 5.50
to 12.00 ............................................................ J.99 to 4.99
Famous maker skirts and sweaters, color coordi·
noted, 7 to 14, reg. 6.00 -9.00 .................. 4.49·S.49
Back to school lingerie by Her Majesty, 6 to
14 ................................................................ 1.60, 2 for 3.00
Nylon tricot panties, sites 6 to 14 ..... 3.49 to 3.99
Stretch •ylon tights in seamless fishnet, reg.
3.00 ................................... l.39 lo 1.99
Sleeping bags in assorted prints, reg. 12.00 9.99
Dress-up je1ns in cotton corduroy or cotton
denim; 7 to 12 , reg. 6.00 .......................... _ ........ 4.29
COSTUME JEWELRY
Selection of costume jewelry ................ -1 /Z off
STORE FOR MEN
Colton pojomos, wosh, wear, reg. 6.00 2/7.00
Shorty style p_erma"ent press pajamas of poly-
ester/cotton, A-8-C·D, reg. 6.00 ......... 2 for 9.00
Coet·style perm11nent press pajamas of Dacron8
polyester/cotton blend fabric . long sleeves ,
A-8-C-D, reg. 8.00 .................................. 2 for 12.50
Collon hondkerchiefs, ,.g. 13 fo r 6.50 13/4.50
Stretch hose. woo l/nylon blend. Anklet style,
reg. I.SO eoch ............................................ 3 for J.00
Over-lhe·colf hose. reg. 2.00 Heh ...... J for 4.00
Orlon® acrylic stretch hose, crew or elastic top
anklet styles, reg. I.SO ond 2.00 ............ 3 for 3.00
Silk ' neckwear in exceptional colors and pat-
terns, reg. 3.50 to 4.00".:: ........................... 3 for 5.00
Designer neckwear, all fine silks, reg. 5.00 and
7.00 ..................................................................... J for 10.00
8uffums1 Own Crest short sleeve dress shirts
of permanent press Dacron® polyester/ cotton,
reg. 6.00 ............. . .. ............................... 2 for 9.00
Buffums' Own cotton knit crew neck T-shirts,
s;zes S-M-L-XL , <0g. 3 for 3.75 ... 6 for 6.00
Athletic undershirts of cotton rib knit, sizes
S-M-L-XL, reg . 3 for l .00 ............. ... .6 for 5.00
Collon kn it briefs, 30-44. reg. 3 for 3.00 6/5.00
Boxer shorts of cotton broadcloth are fullcut,
s;1os 30·44, reg. 1.25 ... . 6 for 6.00
Permanent Pr•ss Poxer shorts of Dacron• poly-
ester/cotton, sizes 30-44, reg . 2.00 ...... 3 for 4.00
Buffum 's Own better sport sleeks, no ironing
needed, 30 to 42, reg.14.00 .... ..... . ......... 9.99
Better short sleeve sport shirts, S-M.-l -XL, reg.
7.00 lo I 0.00 ... ........ 4.69 or 2 for 9.00
I 00 °lo Orlon® acry lic link stitch cardigan sweat-
er, S-M·L-X L, reg. 16 .00 ... ........... . .... 10.99
Buffums' Own better full fash ion knit shirts
S-M-L-XL, reg. I 0.00 to 13.00 . . ........... 6.99
Famous maker golf jacket, reg . 14.00 ···-...... 9.99
Famous maker al l-weather ja cket , sizes 36 to
46, reg. 22 .50 ........ -... 14.99
Great savings on our regular stock of fine fa.sh -
;on sport cools reg . 45.00 -1 4S.OO 39.99·109.00
Important savings on our entire stock of fine
slocks for men . reg. 20.00 lo 55.00 15.99-39.99
Save up to 22 °le on our biggest suit sale of the
year!
Reg . 225.00 .. ..... .... .. ........................................... 189.00
Reg. 210.00 to 215 .00 ........................................ 179.00
Reg. 200.00 . . ........................................... 169.99
Reg . 185.00 lo 195.00 .................................... 159.99
Reg . 150 .00 lo 165.00 ............................................ 129.99
Reg . 135 .00 to 145 .00 ............................................ 119.99
Reg. 12 5 .00 .......... ... .. .......................................... l 09. 9'
Rog. 110.00 lo 11 S.00 ............................................... 89.99
Reg. 89.95 to 100.00 ................................................... 79.99
Rog. 75 .00 lo 85 .00 ........................................... 69.99
MEN'S SHOES
Crosby Sq uare's "Ran chero" casual shoes, sizes
7 lo 13, reg. I S.00 ............................ 9.99
VARSITY SHOP
Ent ire stock of natura l shoulder sport coat s now
o" sale!
Reg . 39 .SO ............ -.......... -............ -........................ 29.00
Reg. 50.00 ....... -................................... _ ............ 39.00
Reg. ss.oo ................................... -.......... _ .. __ .. 49.00
Reg . 60.00 ...................................................... -... 49.00
Entire stock of natural shoulcler suits reduced.
Reg. 60.00 to 70.00 .................................................. 49.00
Ro9. 75 .00 ................................ _., ........... 59.00
-
---------
t ~ \ I
-
----
-
' Reg. 80.00, 85.00, end 90.00 --·-... -........ 79.00
Femou1 maker dress sleeks, rtg. 17.95 to 25.00
_ ............................................................... 1 J.DO +o 22.00
&.tire stock treditlonol sport shirts, rog. 7.00
to 8".00 ....................................... -.. 5.89 or 2 for 11.00
Reg . 9.00, 10.00 or 11.00 ... 6.89 or 2 for 13.00
BOYS' SHOP
Zipp8r front reversible j1cket of waterProof
wosh end wHr n'ylon, 8 to 20, reg. 15.00·17.00"
............................................ . .. ... . . . ... .. . ... . .. ...... . ... 1 o.tt
Entre stock of Buffum11 Own short sleeve l•
shirt&, 8 to 12, reg. 3 for 2.75 -···-.. J for 2.21
Sites 14 to 18, rag. 3 for !.00 ____ J for 2.IO
Permanent Press short sleeve tpori 1hirfs, si1d
8 to 20. rog. 4.00·5.00 ......................... 2.59, 2/5.00
Permanent Press bermudas; 8 to 12 regular and
slim end 27" to 30" waist, reg. 5.00 to 6.00 J.tt
Entire stock of bulky slretoh hose: 81/2 lo It,
reg. ,I .00 'poir .................................................. 6 poir 4.89
Sizes I 0 to I J, reg. 1.25 peir ................ 6 poir 5.~
Acrylic sweaters in full and mock turtlenKR
stylos. Completely washeble, 8 to 20, rog. 11.00
,............................................ . ................ '·"
Entire stock of boys' cotton pejemes, si1es 8-20,
reg. 3.50 .................. Z.59 reg. 4.00 ................. 2."
Entire stock of B~ffums' Own bri~fs, 8 to 12,
reg. 3 for 2.50 ................................................. 3 for 2.00
14 to 18, reg. 3 for 2.75 ........................... 3 for 2.25
Short sleeve knit shirts of fine ell-cotton ar•
mock or full turtlenecks, 8 to 18, ••9· J.00 to
3.50 ................ ""'''' .. """ , ............................ 1.79
Sizes 8 to 18, reg. 3.00 lo 3.50 .................... _.1.79
LITTLE SHAVER SHOP
Entire stock of Buffums' Own combed cotton
briefs, 4 to 6, reg. 3 for 2.SO ..................... 3 fQr 2.00
Famous maker sport shirts, Permenent Press,
short sleeves: 4-7, reg. 3.00·3.50 1.79 or Z/3.50
Famous meker creW socks of IOO i'e cotton, 61/21
to av,, reg .• 45 eech ...................... _ .......... 3 for 1.11
Reve,.ible woterproof jacket of oll·nylon, 4 lo 7,
reg. 13.00 ...................................................... : ............. , ....... 8.9'
Entire stock of cotton pajames, 4 to 7, r19.
3 .00 to 3 .50 ................................................................... 2.59
Buffums' Own T-shirts of white combed ~otton~ ..
4 lo 6, reg. 3 for 2.75 ............................... )for 2.25
Permanent Press bermudas of polytster/cotfon,
soil release finish, sizes 4 to 7, reg. 3.50 ...... 2.40
Solid color assortment of knit shirts. Turtlenecks
of fine combed cotton with short sleeves, 4 to 7,
reg. 3.00 ......................................................................... 1.59
Pullover sweaters, I 00 % Acrilan9 acrylic. Full
end mock turtleneck, 4 lo 7, reg. 7.00 ......... ,4.99
STATIONERY SHOP
Famous make photo albums from regular stock.
Single flip, reg. 3.95 ..................................................... 2.80
Double flip olbum, reg. 5.95 .................................. 4.95
Scrap book, reg. 3.9S ................................................. 2 .80
Address Book, reg. 3.95 ............................................ Z.80
1968 selection of Christmas cerds from the
best mokers , reg. 13.50 lo I 04.00 10.80 lo 83.ZO
Boxed stationery and notes, shades 2 boxes 1.00
Deluxe double quan+ity stationery ·-······--·······1.29
Famous maker once·a-year bargains on sta-
t ionery and notes, reg. 1.59 each ............ 2 for 1.59
Stolionery, reg. 2.00 H<h ...................... 2 for 2.99
Rose ·Glo night Ughls , reg. 5.00 .................. l.99
Boxed Christmas cards, reg. 2.00 to 6.75 .•.........
. ... . . . . ............. ....... ......... ... . ..... 1.00 to J.JS
Card table covers of wipe-clean quilted plastic.
30x30" odjusls lo 32x32", reg. 3.50 ............. 2.49
33x33" od justs to 36x36", reg. 4.50 .............. J.49
42" d iameter, cover adjusts to 48", reg. 5.50
.......................................... . . .. ... " . . ... ' ' ................. 4.49
GIFTS AND CHINA
"Royal Albert" bone china cups and saucers,
reg. 3.50 .............................................................................. 2.79
Hand crafted cut crystal from Western Ger·
mony . Volues from 7.00 to 12.00 4.99 end 7.99
Buen ii um serving accessories, reg . 8.00 to 21.00
... ... .... ........ . .. ...... _... 5.99 to 16.99
PACTEkN 5.,c. Pl. Sit 42-,c. Set •'l·Pc. Set
re9.• ,,le 1e9.• 11 11 , ... e "''
Piueden1 6.55 J.4• •l.60 J4.,, 1)1.90 7,.,,
Whitebreok,
Whitehi ll 7.10 4.4, 6•.JD l '·'' ISl.25 .,_,.
lor1lei.
M11n1lll1 I.IS 5.4t 16.l i , .. ,, 111.00• I It.••
•Lorett l•0.55 •o,. .. Stecli:
Noritake china new reduced! Choose from five
lovely patterns.
SILVERWARE
Masterpiece table accessories by Webster Wil-
cox International Silver Co., reg. 20.00 to 45.00
............. .. ........................... 14.DO to ll.50
Annual trey sale, all si1es end ,hopes, reg. 13.50
to IS0.00 ............................................... 10.00 to 120.00
:~.~ R .. -.::. .. '.il'.'..'.~l~~ .. ~~~~~s_,5:~· t~ ·:.:o
TABLE LINENS
Quoker Lace "Serenale" tablecloth, reg. 13.00
to 20.00 ........... -.......... -....................... 10.99 to 16.9'
Wonder looper mots, reg. 1.25 .... .... . .. ··"
"Eyelet El19ence" all vinyl cloth, from 54x54'\
reg. 4.00 .................................. -.. -··-. .. ........ -...... 2."
"
• OIB llllTS 10:00 TU. Milt
'
•
' ,
•
' ,
'
Family Recipes
uroo often the poet sees
but the tear1 that live in an
onion : not the smiles," said
an 18th century food wr.ltez,
who lived before the days of
easy~ dehydrated onion
products.
Household" hint! of the
past have generally included
suggestions for p e e I i n g
onions without bursting into
tears.
Modern dehydrated onions
in a hall dozen or more
forms are sold an over the
United states. They are
~asily stored, without ibe
problem cf "sprouting" or
rotting. Besides being.a con-
venience and ~ great time-
saver, dehydrated onion has
an aroma which is uniform-
ly onion-y, never too strong
or too mild.
The use of dehydrated
onion products has jumped
phenomenally during the
last few years as women
have tried and loved these
handy seasoners. Old family
recipes using fresh onion
are easily up-dated: Use
just about one-eighth as
much instant minced onion
as minced fresh onion .
If the instant minced
onion is to be used in a soup,
stew or sauce -any mix·
ture with free liquid -the
onion can be measured right
in wit.bout further edo. If
wanted for a salad or
sandwich filling, mix a
meuuni of water and a
meuure of instant miflced
onion and let this stand for
eight to 10 minutes. Because
onion contains a lot ol. sugar
i t mU!t be rehydrated,
In addition to instant
minced onion, you can buy
instant onion _powder, fUll
sµugth, to be wied ill any
kind of ooion-llawrt<! diah;
onion salt, a blend of onion
powder and. llble salt: onion
flakes, which abould be
handled like inatant minced
onion, execpt that jlJlt a llt·
tle less water ii needed for
rehydrating -four pert1
onion flakes to three parts
water.
Instant minced o n i o n
gives the final Oavor fillip to
these shrimp and . green
bean stuffed tomatoes.
SHRIMP AND llEAN
5 large tomatoes
I> pound cooked, peeled
and deveined atrimp
1 package (7 oimces)
frozen cut green beans,
cooked
i;, teaspoon powdered
mustard
1/.a cup olive or salad oil
1 tablespoon white vinegar
2 teaspoons instant mine·
ed onion
~ teaspoon salt
1·16 teaspoon gr o u n d
black pepper
Cut lif.-inch thick slice
!i'om stem end of each
tomato. Scoop out center&
and dice. Invert tomato
shells to drain; chill. Re-
serve 6 whole shrimp for
garnish; Combine diced to-
mato, shrimp and beans in
dice remaining s h r i m p •
Combine diced tomato,
tbrimp and beans i n
medium bowl. Refrigerate.
Mix powdered mustard
with · Y.t teaspoon warm
water; let stand 10 minutes
for flavor t.o develop. C.Om·
bine mustard w i t h re·
maining ingredients; mix
well. Pour over tomato mix-
ture. Refrigerate until well
chilled. When ready to serve
spoon mixture into tomato
sh ells. Garnish with reserv-
ed whole shrimp. Serve as
luncheon main c o u r 1 e .
Yield: 6 .. rvtngs.
Borscht is world-famous
·for oawr, e1pec1ally when It
g1ve1 off the arOma of ill·
stant minced onion.
C HILLED TANGY
BORSCHT
1 bottle (1 quart) borscht,
chilled
1 egg
1 cup dairy sour cream
2 tablespoons 1 n 1 ta n t
minced onJon
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Pour borscht liquid and
half of the slivered beets In· •
to electric blender jar.
Reserve remaining beets for
later use. Add egc, 1our
cream, minced onion and
lemon juice. Blend until
smooth. Serve well-chilled,
either as an appetizer in
cups or as a refreshing
drink in tall tl•11e's .
GarnJsh with re served
slivered beets. Yield: 5
cups.
CUt . this onion bread In
squares and serve it while
still warm from the oven.
Espeeial.ly good with green
saiads and cold cuts.
ONION FLAT BREAD
1 pack.age (13% ounce hot
roll mix
1-3 cup instant minced
onion
1 tablespoon softened but·~
ter or margarine
Prepare dough following
package directions. Le t
dough rise unW double in
size. Meanwhile, soften min·
ced onion in 1-3 cup water;
let stand at least 10 minutes.
After first rising of dough,
roll on a UghUy floured
board into a 9x13-inch' rec-
tapgle. Pla~e dough on a
greased cookie s h e e t .
Spread top with butter and
sprinkle with softened onion.
Let rise again until double
in size .Bake in a preheated
moderate oven (375 F.) 30 to
3S minutes. Yield: 1 loaf.
Wednesday, July 10, 1968 DAILY PILOT
Easily Updated DAILY PILOT
OOD
SECTION
THREE CHEERS, NO MORE NEED TO SHED TEARS
Lasting Freshness
Bananas and Cake Mix
For ·Foolproof Dessert
'Ibo -ill having • pkl· ,. '·n.tc and it ts your assign-
ment to bring the dessert.
Here ii ~· recipe dd tt ls
quick, fool-proof and
dellclous.
Banana Sour Cream Cup-
cakes will ltay moist and
fresh like a fndt .cake. Bake
the cakes in aluminum or
.paper 'cUP nn'er1 so .they are
ready to. pack and travel
with ease.
These can be prepared
two or three days ahead and
safely. The 1ruit suarantees
freshoess.
The frosting is the easiest
of all posstble decorative
toppings. Melted chocolate
chips or your favorite jelly
spread on the warm cakes
and sprinkled with coconut
or c~ nut.a are all you
need. Not even a recipe is
needed for this kind of fcing.
If the dessert hoe:tess is
the leall bit tlmld, or hur·
ried to deopatr, oubotltute a
pocllaged <W mil: for the
t.se recipe and .:Id. zmshed
bananas fOI" tile liquid In·
gredient. Try . the Banana
Java Cake recipe for a
quick and easy homemade
cake when time is of "the
essence.
mix
2 eggs.
lf.s cup Water
1 tablespoon honey
2 teaspoons dry iMtant
coffee
1 cup mashed banana
Dissolve honey and dry
coffee in water. Mix all in·
gredlents Jn large mixer
bowl. Blend until moistened.
Beat ' two mJnutes at medium speed or 3 o o
\'igorous hand strokes. Bake
30 to ~ minuttt at 350
degrees. Cool.
Froat with Banana Butter
Cream frosting, May be
baked in two 8 lncb layer
pans, round ; or two 9 inch
square aluminum pans. Line
pans with paper ; grease and
Clour. For picnics and to
travel, cool and frost in
disposable pans.
BANANA. SOUR CREAM
CUP CAKES
21/• cups sifted all purpose
flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
Y.r: teaspoon soda
lh: teaspoon ·salt
Jf.a cup softened butter or
margarine
11h cups sugar
2 cups diced ripe bananas
(about 2 large)
TOPPING
1,z cup semi·aweel
chocolate chip1
1-3 cup jelly
1,{i. cup shredded coconut
itc cup chopped nuts
Silt flour with baking
powder, soda and salt. Com·
bine ·butter, sugar and
bananas ·in large-bowl and
beat with rotar:y or electric
beater unW blended,. Beat in
eggs then sour cream. Fold
tn sifted dry tn8redlent.,
stirring just to bleD<t.
Put aluminum or paper
cup cake liners lo 2-inch
muffin pans and fill ~ full
with batter. .Bake in a
moderate oven (375 degrees
F'J 25 minutes or un ti l
center sprin·gs back when
lightly touched. Makes 20 to
22 cupcakes.
To Froat
TASTl!-T-IMPTING DESSl!RT l'OR PICNICS
BANANA JAVA CAKE
l package caramel cake
2 eggs
:i,i cup dairy 10ur cream
While cup cakes are still
warm carefully put about 1
teaspoon chocolate chips on
top of half of the cupcakes.
Let atand a few minutes to
soften and spread over top
of cakes. Sprinkle with
coconut or chopped nuts.
Spread about 1 tea~n of
your favorite jelly on top of
each remaining cup cake.
Sprinkle coconut or nuts on
jelly.
. Home News and Views ,,,
Easy-do ·Dishes Help Mom Keep Her Cool on Hot, Summer Days
By DOROTHY WENCK
~ C-'F ~ ,,..,,_
During vacation a n d
especially when the weather
is bot we don't feel like
spending much time tn tho
kitchen fussing over meels.
Do4head meall -... y.
do meals are the answer.
Yau might beg1n by mak·
Ing a list of all the really
easy to fix foods that you
can think of. You'll be
surpriled at bow long your
list is.
In addition to tbe obvious
easy-do main dJ.Jbea like hot
dogs and hamburpn, there
are convenience ,foodl like
frozen dllton pies, euned
stew or corned beef bub
and blbd -· OtlJer mull 11'!11dl roqllin JIUl1
preparatlcn and a I b or t
cooktnf time ore ftsh, lamb
or park chops, cbkken,
steak, liver. Hard cooked
eggs, cheese and cottage
cheese are good for instant
protein too.
A almpte, yet hearty meal
c a n be built arouod. these
quiet-to-fir main dilbe1 us-
lnl a camed cir troun
•
_ _J_
vegetable, French bread or
rolla, end fresh fruit which
doubles as salad a n d
dessert. Raw vegetables like
carrot!:, cucumbers a n d
cauliflower add color and
cr:lspness.
On hot day1 keep tbe
menu as simple u passible.
If ,,..,.. family -.. potatoes, . the imtant mash·
eel, the canned 1h.,..trtng or
the frozen French fried can
be prepared in a jiffy.
Another way to save time
in the kitchen on hot ar.
ternoons is to do your cook-
ing abead of time -the
night before. or early in the
morning. If )IOU b a v e
freezer apace you can make
-or triple ndpe1 of ....,e -s and freeze part
for other meall.
Even without a freezer
you can mate big recipes of
foods like hearty soup (din·
n'er in a dish), casseroles,
spaghetti and.meatballs and
serve them far several
meals during tile week (o n
.altemati.ng dayt of course).
A J.rge rout or·baked him
oJso Pl'O'lde• cold allctd
j
meat for several meals.
I like to try to dovetail
recipes that b8Ye many of
the same ingredients and
mate several foods at once .
For example, when I
make our favorite chill soup
which ineludes hamburger.
spaghetti, chopped celery
and chopped onion, among
other Wnis, 1 also like to
make a tuna salad which
also uses spaghetti, chopped
celery and onion. It saves
time to chop celery and
onions and cook enough
spaghetti for the twu dishes
simultaneously.
And there'• nothing better
on a bot day tbln a main
dilb. 1alad -one that bas
protein lite tuna, meat or
ecgs ac chicken, starch like
macaroni or spaghetti. and
crisp vegetables. With it I
serve fresh frui~ potato
cblp1 or rolls and a relish
tr1y. It's a meal in minutes
with no 1wea t. ,
Another satisfying sum· mer salad ca n be m1 d e
qulctly-fnlm tr .. h fruit with
collage cb°'M for protein.
~
. .
The men in my ramily think
this is a little too dainty for
dinner though.
We seldOm make
the spaghetti and th• meot
sauce and freeze i t
(,.por.tely)?
ea
A. You could made tile
meat sauce bl advance and
freeze it withou! any pro-
bi..11. And this . would be
euy t.o reheat without
de!rosttng. Homver I would .
not recommend leeztng the
spoghetU. It leGda to get
muaby "Wbeft frosen and
would be a pnitiJem to
rebeat. desserts at our house during
the summer. Fresh fruit and
ice• cream -together or
separately -are t h e
standbys. Fruit flavored
yogurta make a nice topping
for fresh fruits ·too. .
whipping cream would be to
whip it. sweeten it to taste.
then place individual swirls
on a cookie sheet and freeze
them. After they're froteo
slide the dOOs of cream into
a plaott"c bag: Nw they'll be
all ready to U8e, one at a
time, whenever YoU need
them. Creole. a la S·alad .
C>ccari<loll1y one oe the Q. ls 1t"fe~ibtc to make a Amon I Amer 1ca'1 atuimp
children makes a qlliclde big batch of fried chicken regional cookery, none ls 10 6 cups cooked rite
-•--se pie by stirring a and freeze It so we could distinctive as the Creole 2 !mi to di-·' w~ h I I l!r'd p en a, ""~ third cup Jen1on juice into a ave severa moa s o 1e cookery of Lout1ana. While
can of , condensed milk (it chicken wHhout having . to it· la essentially French. 1 small tom.to, diced and
thickens ), ttien adding a cook it? there are Sp an 1 sh UJ'I· draiMd well
cartoo ol whipped cottage A. Yes, cooked dlicken derlonet tohanced by con-1 cup diced celery m.O..: It's "pbured klto on freezes well llld could be . trlbuUona made by tho 2 tabletpoou e b 0 pp• d unbaked graham crocker . eaten "!Id·« relleated. Yau Negro ancj the Choetaw Ill· _. !lilPI>" . Cl'Ull..,. ill refriger-lor , mlJ!lll tind Iha! yw. pnler dlans. 2 .... _ --~
• kw houri. -fried -· made u ubd to -· ftyt -......--· wllbout a oorinc -creole ·dlabes, one wOa!d V• --...,.. QUESTIONS WE A R E eopeoWiy If yw .. fOlng aureiy be Shrimp Creole. A 1 teupoon drf mUl!ard
ASKED to eat tt cold. Tile ~g modern adapliltioo ol the 2 tab!.._. latTagoa or
Q. Once tn a ~ilile I loses Its <:nspnen In tbe cluslc cllsh, Is thi1 Shrimp wine vinegar
splur.ge and buy • cariton of freezer. Creol• Salld.. ~ cup olive or salad oU
whipping cream. Usually Salad ereens
my busbarxf.and 1 only use a Q. We are planning to SIIRIMP CREOLE SALAD U shrimp 11 troien, thaw
little of it at a time a. top-entertain a crowd .and art 2 pounds ahri.mp, cleaned, .at room temperature or on
ping, and often it gets 1our go i n g to serve Italian cooked and cMlled, or ·2 refrlgeriator !helf. Combine
before w get It used up. spaghetti. Jwouldlt.'ke tO'get (8 ounce or 10 9U11ce) rice wt.th PimJ.entos. tomato,
Could 11ree,,. part ol ltl •s much --of -pacac• peeled, · de· • celOry and cr~n .P«PP8f· Ill A. Tba -way to tr .. ze as pogslljlo. Oould I eook veined and • o o k o d small jar ... -, combine
• • '
tall with sugar, mustard,
vlnegar and oil. Shake or
beat well until blended .
Add to rice; mix well.
Turn rice into plain or ring
rµold, or arrange 1 on large
platte.J.:; chill well. At serv·
Ing time, top rice with
shrimp. SUn<IW1d with salad . .....,.. Pu1 Remoulade
Sauce to be ·.ntd over
allrlmp. .._ I tln!DI•·
REMOULADll: SAUCE
Blend together * cup flno-
ly chopped sour pickles: 2
table1poon1 drained, finely
chopped capers: l tables· poon prepared mus taro ; l
tablespoon chopped parsley:
t t~ cbOpped cblnl; and cupo ~ ...
Chill
•
• l i4 DAILY '!LOT
r
' .,
• I
• U.S.D~Chlli»T~holil ftDc Rib Steak o o • oLLilU
U.S.D.A.OokooT~hMI s111 Club Steak ••• LL
U.S.D.A.Chck• flf'd .. cry ......... $189 Spencer Steak .u
U.5.DACholmflolorTriclnlli. .711c Rullp ·Roas~ •• u: "· • '~IY$i;k .... 95'
t m OUI DILICIOUS
, MAm1' 8ASKtT
.SALADS
We flllab , .. nh daity In our own
""'""',_ ... ,_ .... ..d-w. odd llOflltlg but lO'lfng CON -
"....., ~ Jint Ilk• you'd
nioke 1hem 111 your ew11 ki1ehen,
with nothhig I.ft owt 1Mrt th. bolh«l
Tenderay Takes The
Guesswork Out Of .
Buying Beef • • • •
Only li.S.D.A. Choice beef is cho~n for Tenderay.
This fin• beef is placed tn special room1. whMI con-
trolled climate speeds up natu,.I tendering action
-protects natural juices ond flavor. No other
·beef so fresh co~ be so natu rally tender ••
(h~s'i;'ift:': .. 48'
G-..1 ,,_. Hollrl, . 79c Ground Round , u
\
'
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
TENDERA Y BRAND BEEF
FULL CUT, BONE IN
ROUND
.STEAK
Market Basket Has Discount
Prices On Quality Products-
No Games, No Stamps, No
Costly "EXTRAS" • • • • •
Moll .,.. dol9I lo hO'.. low prkel. a...r on who! -lllft o hanclfol ti ...,., w
lflJerlot prockictt? Net Mcirbll la.ut. We diKOlllll pricft all thtough 1111 t1o111•,
AMI l llOtonlw ldllfodltill w your .,._., bod: on -ry purthme.
Trv., you t"'-• a--9'ld llo!rtps to .tiop GI Mark.et 8a1ket. a.it you ... -
go!.-OtW:I qubhly 9lwoys, fN«"fdoy. S" for yourself.
1~1"F'ood •• ·~ gc "-. CoffH ••••• ~59=.
• H!SHSKANICPORTIONSMC>m>HAMOI 3nc Leg O' Pork •••• ta. ii-
AlMCXJI STAR AlL A De Meat Wieners •• ::....,-
· M.J.B.
COFFEE ·
I-LB. 69C CAN
U.s.D.A. CHOIC! nNOPAY IUNO
IONfl!SS ROU.(D sec Clod Roast ••... ta.
2-LI. THICK SLIC!D,;11c . '
...,.,..,, .l'Jo P•cak1 Mix "=:w-
'"'""'" 1!1:11 SJllP •• , •• ":: w-
aoi .. o-i.1ca1~ ... 24i S... Piiis. •°'"
"'"',.,.,..,,., lt.ol. jftC Preserves • • .. 'til-oa.wJru.Y, :ak
Siitii Oil •• "~t 33c
.
I
............. 5 S1' BlllTltos • • • ::: T I ,.... .... ,v.... t!ft: Lunch Mells .... w-t.\w....ww. """"'""• 37 SlllOlledH•';: c
COOked HUI .~5~
iliC~hc.n "~&SC
Je• u w1 ... Oot/W. ,.. one Dinner •••• ~2~ ua-
N;dies •• ''Ii~ 2SC
.. uw;~ 2'1c Soy Sauce • ·~t ,-
-1. ,..ot Gl!c ICI , , • , • • l'l(c,. ou-
hGnvt Oil • "f.t 60°
-3 $1' '-"···· = ""'* 1Ull. IJICa Ll•lft J1la o ITL .Jil-
,._ .ll!i!
PN• J1lct • ":: 'IU-
M.;.J •.. ~ 3gc ... .._....... 4'1c
Margarine •• ~· L -
Kroh 1"'9• Chocojor. lu c...,.. 31 T I IO-OL C °" ng • • • JAi D;.t I
Breakfast .. , ~~51c
l'lom.r• °"Y ·-511c Peanuts •• , ·~ .. -
13i,t.oz. 7tc
"J'":(~1..... 2s.n. 24c 01 •••• ,., • fKG.
"'"'Nlooli31S.,...0t1 17 Cat Food .• :·~ c
CHICICfN UVll. 1 k
CONYlll..-0, SAPI,
1111Xr1N•IYI •IPUaUC
MONIY •••••• SOLD AT MAim IASIC
I .
1urry a.-i. o.i~ • I
""""'·~ 3 s1 r Cookies • • • ·~,<
Ngbit<oH<:....,.Gtaha"' 'JQe ' Cracken ••• ~ .JU-.
1 .lttle)'ll'old Cot"1ng 1~ Ice Cream •• '"'~ .,-
.... 57' I Bleach ••••• ~ I
{IMl.10.0lft..W)~ 00& .JDi Joy Lltplld • • 1111.'IO-
~ ..••• "=:7t , ... ~.-1~ Dash ••••• ~ a-
M;yonn~ise • : 4SC
WldM.Kt.y, July 10, 1968 DAILY PI T :JS
Am ericans Have I\fixed Opinions Toward Advertisi g
NEW YORK _ People Generally people w h o made an lmpruslon oo the feet or u n 1 c r up u lo U 1 passive, heJpleas target of conducted among a cross the attitude tecUon wu adv er til 1 o'
appear to 1:ipprove of dislike ad"'rtising feel that public, 35 perceot are advertiliers.'' They .;ay communlc.Uom. He is an sectlon. cl adult Americans completed in Ja(e 1967. No executives, Dr. Donald
advertising in principle and Jt ts boring; lnterrlU)t!ve or evaluated 'IS tnrormati\'f', that the consumer has acUve de!ender ol h11 tJ.me. by the Opinion .Research bas.le shifta: In the attitudes Kanter, vice pre11cltnt and
criticize it 111 pracUce. entertatrunept and insu.lting 36 pefcent as enjoyable, 23 bu i 1 t -in .def en 1 e energy, act Ion and . Corp. lA 19&1. for the of individual Am er i can d.lrectcr of resnlcb or
When asked about their to t be i r, intelli&eoce. percent as annoying and 5 mecbaniams again 1 t lnteretta." American A.ssoclaUon of con 1umer1 toward Carton·Roberts in L 0 1
overall attitudes toward Of 1 n div Id u at ad· percent as offensive. advert 1 ting sus:h as 'l1le book is a result of Advertising Agencies 1t.udy advertising had taken place ADgeles, and WllUam i1.
advertising, 4l percent of v er t is em en t' s which The authors note that, boredom, <soutit, personal more than four years of on the consumer judgment during the lntervenlng Weilbacher, partner o l
Americans . con 1 id er untruthful or misleading is •·while the ind l v l du a 1 experleoce and disinterest. extensive research and or advertising. period. Jack Tinker & Partners, a
t.hemSelvea favor a ,b I e a less frequent criUcism. consumer can be deceived, In addition the auUtors interpretation including As a further check on the Collaborating , with' the divi5ioD 0 f Interpublic
toward It, 14 percent adverti&ements w'hich he is not helpless at the claim\"thecoll!lumerisno 1,846 peraonat interviews initial study, an update of authora were two companies in New York.. unfavorable, 34 percen):1_::;.::.:=.::.::.:...:....---------+---------------------------'---'--------'-'-'-.C.:.'-'-'-'--:,;;.:;::.:::;;;:..=...:.......:....:.=.:::_
have mixed opinions and 8 \
pefC<flt are indlf!.,..L
AlmOlt a 11 (.'ODIUmel'S
draw c I e • r cllstincUon.&
between what tbey like ·and
diJlike obout adverU.illg.
They approve of its role ati
an economic contribution
but they quesUon 1ome of
its social impacts.
Contrary to the views ol
social c ritics, few
Americans think
advertising ii in need of
immediate cll.ulge; onl7 J
percent o( the eotin ..iuJt
Amaican p.ll>lio IUiJlelt
adverti&lng ls Ill need ol
more governme n t
regulation.
These are some of the
findings o! "Advertising in
America: The Consumer
View," a book published by
Clarvard Business School's
division ' or re&earch.
Publication was announced
here Monday.
Written by Harvard
Business School professors
Raymond A. Bauer and
Stephen A. Greyser, the
book, for the first time.,
catalqgues in an economic
and social context, the
opinions of a aoss section
of American consumers
toward advertising ~s an
irusµtution and toward the
individual advertisements
they see and hear daily.
Specifically, the authors
note the public's attitudes
toward what advertising
does for the American
consumer and what the
individual advertlsemenU
do to him.
The book notes, that while
c:ilmost all ·American
consumers , can r e a d 11 y
comment on advertising,
t~ subject does not rank
as a burning issue for
Americans of the rr.~d·
1960'.s, when c.o mp are d
with other aspects o l
American life.
The authors report that
"in addition to being a
source of real concern to
some people, advertising -
like the weathf!r -is also a
convenient t o p i c !or
ritualized griping."
However, data· in the book
shGws Ulat 78 percent of
American consumers0agree
that advertising is an
essential part of Americ:in
life. In addition the book
notes that 71 percent of
American consumers agree
advertising bas h e I p e d
raise our standard of
living.
Specilically the findings
point out the chief reason
people like 00.vertising is
its informatiooal role; it
and services and where to
get them.
Relatively few people say
that they like advertising
because it is enjoyable,
although wtien evaluating
individual ads people judge
as many enjoyable as
informative.
The book identifies the
in tru s 1 ve n es' and
unp l easantness ~
individual advertlsen1ents
as the public's ma i n
complaint about
advertising.
I
i ' ,.
7 Varieties
HOUN
BABCOCK PEACHES
~N~~~fflll ACID-fllEE
mRa "" .
IHACICS
•
LVZDZNZS7
COFFEE
-Qoli!y
1-& CAN•••·.•• z ~ •1 1•
3 ~·111
SOUD-llED lllrf LL
l~fSH, alS' AHO CIUHCHY 2i29' CELERY ......
CooWAMll<AN 2 ·25 BANANAS ~:" ; I
IUSH »ID DW00US '""'1\.10' SPINACH
A OICUf fAVOWJ! ~lAG 4i'l" PEANUTS
iJ ORANGE
JUICE
"""""" fNS1I
Frozen Food Va lues!
SWAllSOH COIN SOUflU ~ ......... ..&...-
SWANSON POTATOIS AU GIATIN:.':'.·zr
SWANSON SPlllAOI SOUflU ~ ..... it
3-COURSE DINNER .. . •. . . .. 63<
l I •
• . 16«. -·· GINO'S CHlfSI PIZZA -.................. II•
GINO'S PIPPllONI PIZZA :::~ ..••......• 71'
µLAV0 AVOCADO DiP ::'~ .............. ~
VONS MEAT PIES
.. . 4: 89'
SQUARE CAKES
VONS, WHITE, CHOCOLATE, 69'
Al'f'lE SAUCI, 1ANANA, Y-
OIOCOlATE MINT. Ch9ir1
~~~~ ..... 351
. ..,.,,.....
SPRECKELS i)
SUGAR· ,.,.
Granulated 5 LB. BAG
';:>-
.,_-s --.
FILL OUT fRfE IEGISTIATION FORM IN
''lET'S GO TO THE IACfS" CARD NO. I
287 AND DEPOSIT IN DRAWING IOX.
Drnl.11 Sat. Jllr· 2~
Wlnnws.Will I• Notili.J
. :,~'. .. 3· 59 JUICY, FIAVORFUl •. , SIZZ.UOOUS I FllSH, JUICY FIYllS. GUDI A
QT •• , .$4.S9
FYFE & scon .. ··-OTCH
CHUCK
STEAKS
ClNTEI 49~ CUT CHUCIC
CUT-UP
OI QUUTEREI
Scouts Air
Explorer
P ost Read y '"
0
"" 41s U.l'l.rtl'JH ••
' QT •••• $1.'9 Btntlm Flllily Steaks '::'' 19~ M , MOI. ....
An Orange County "first"
took p8ce in tile month ot
May.
Culminating many months
of plaming ond preparaU..,
the county's first Air Ex·
plorer Post came into being.
Sponsored by the Kiwanis
Club cl. Ile Irvine complex,
and chartered by t h e
Orange Empir~ Council of
the Boy Scout. o{ America,
tho group Includes neorly 40
boys from all over the coun-
ty.
The goal ol Poot 236, ac·
cordi.og to ~e advisor .
.Patrick E. Therrien. is to
study the many4acetro
aerospace Industry as a
VOCJltjonal opportunity !or Youth. Current plans stress
~· ond tec:tmical ~ ol the Industry : -I -It lid:; -t job ~UH exist; and
what tdu.cation al
ba~«ereq'*<d.
QUICK
Miler's lr19h lit, BHr •;;'.:'." '2"
SAVE 18< lb.
C•tch "' C!Yl••fy •II f1C.ll .... "... It••• ro•r C•lllP•Ct, 10 11 &da & I .. --._L_ __ ,/ H -al ... .• ch
""'"''"'" "•••••• ,;i. ,. 1111 ,.ve., at ,__.., lnnllellll 11•11 ef ttl• DAILT PILOT. • • '
• I .. I•
CHUCK ROAST
~ CENTER45c ·~ CUTS •
IONIUSS CHUCK c~"r,:., 7'~
IOLilD IOAST ~'t'ia• w.
GAME HENS """""''" 69~ lO.Ol. ... WT.·
BONELESS HAM ::'...;'.~ 1~
LINK SAUSAGE ·~ :.< 29'
'\ Stalood Stleclion1
HMlllVT IWlllOW
lftAU ftOUT =· 69L =·-49!. ..,._,, M ... -="'=• W ,..·cm• ~,:-•
ltlll 1111...... :... l /rl'
M IM4 lotf ...... -~ .. W
Applo V ...
YOUNG,-PRODH, 12-16 LL
AVDAOE Wf.
5922 Edin"' Ave., at Sf!rifl9dalt, Huntington lffcli
..
TOMATO
JUICE
UilY'S
'IMl1 "-I . 46,oz,. ' CAl-l
1511
'IN/1111 Ill
llUYnllll
11'1ML1r1-.in ___..
H•,.....Hwwtf
• CHECK VOH,.
,. SUM PNICES & S•Vll
. POSTAIUPlllUr fLAlll •• t ••• :-•
VONS .• Alt!ll .•• : ..... ;.:: 21 ..
DJ.OM'S talli RAllS ...... ~ ..
ltUCH'S CODY
,,........ '-* lOlli .. ········29 ........... 111-............ c .,........ ... _ ................ .
Jelly ----"' -•• • • .......... \ 0.....-lCllili-........... -Moo Joli ..... -. .................... .. ....... -......... ::·• asn ... IVTnl ..••••• :-ci: .,.
~FOODS 111,,_ftll. •• •. :.. 8'
I
-I
I . . • •
--w. :Jealure Onf~ US. :J)..A. ''Ckoice ''Steer Bee/
IJ~.DA. ll'C!l,.BCl'Elt • BONE 'N FRYING . •. ·
_!CHICKEN ROUND STEAK ·
• 'FRYD TlllOllS
5~.,..; p,;,L:_ US.2J..A. (j,..tk ".A" c
·GAME HENS·.ll WMITEM~T LI.
IOCK COllNISH
I ·LI. 4-0Z. MIN. WT.
c
nYll BllAITS 57L
flYll ' • •
DIUIASTICKS 57L
MIATY
FITw.1-1 WINOS 29L
FOi 500'
IACKS a NICKS IL
NO IACll:S, NECKS., SllLfTS 111ST of.PIYll 49L
u. RYIU ·~·T 31L
IUY A CASE
OF 12 FOR $7.39
. ftoDN FOOD 8PllCJAU
• CAINA,__, ... ,. II' MU.PAUL'S-I ........ 71' :· ...:111 oa coe Ma.Ill..... • ... ...., e.&m • . . . • . • • • . . • • ·
==----~-~ .... ·w. =·=-~~~.k~91:. =-·~-:.'.~.~ ... 61!. :..~-.~:~.~ ..... 49!.
MIS. PAUL'S -J .... "''' 1 491 80RTOH'~ -1--. .... 551 ... Clim • ••• •, .•.•.• ,.. • lllSH Clift ••••••••••• , , . • "°"" suena -•·"' ..,. '1 " ........ ,.., ..... -
"TENDER.LEF' FINE QUALITY
IXftA UAJI
CORN•D
· ROUNDS
c:i:v~ ·79c w...... 1•
-"JJ/ !Jt; !Jn Sea.1on ... Jt; Jn :J~ri/timartf"
CANTALOUPES
c
LB.
FRESH •HAWAllAN 39 PINUPPLIS • • • • • • • ~.
HEINS-4.0Z. CU, 10 C CIUM STYU HONIT • • ..
THOM'50H •
SEEDLESS GRAPES ..... 29~
LEO'$ -J.OI; PKGS.
SLICED ·:MEAT . . I . '
IEEF, SPICY BEEF, 1-!AM· or CORNED BEEF 3 PKGS. •100
KRAFT "11LADELPHIA-l.OZ. ~G.
CREAM CHEESI ...... , ..... 394
JANE ANDERSON -IEEF or CHEESE
ENCHILADAS ........ P~;::i·2 394 ..
IOl'S -16.0Z. JA~
ILUE CHEESE DRESSING . . . . . . 69C .
R.l.D, '/s•THI . .
IOll!lllltl
ROUND
ROAST
TO IAR·l-QUE
010NIDlll
ROUND 99c STIAK Iii
EYE OF THE ROUND $1 09 ROAST......... ..
EYE Of THE ROUND
STEAKS ...... ~ 13!
IONE-IN RUio!,
ROAST .. ,. ....... 75~ . .
IONEl.ESS -LEAN TINDER
S'nWBEEF 79~
'
IONIWS
SIRLOIN TIP, CUBE
OR tOP ROUND
STEAKS
TENDER AGED
BBEAil'AST SPECIALS SEAFOOD SPECIAUI
HORMEL'.S -RED LABEL NORTHERN,.-WHITE FROZEN
SLICED 59c HALIBUT5-9c BACON Iii STEAKS lb
lUU'S VACUUM PACK 67f IUCID UCON •. , •••...•.• , , , •...••. , , , , • , • , , , , a FRESH SEAFOOD
t!'::·~~=~~~.::.~--~-~k~····•••·•••••••····· 27:. :~ ~ICH ·······••••••····•·••••••••··••••• 59~
~·'i!~oli 1.~.~~.~1.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49~ :~ ::~ •••••••••······•••·•••••••·~······· 19~
-= IJig f 80 Counl Roff:J)ecoralor
SCO'TT TOWELS
.$
6-0Z.
TINS
,... $ ,,
IOLLS ' I
ALL GRINDS -I ·LB. TIN 00 YU BAN COFFEE .......... 69C
KRAFT SALAD DRESSING
SALMON 59c iosli1li ADINNE1RS •.. 39e I CHEESE~PizzA ••• 39e
MIRACLE
WHIP :. 49'
.A//' Variefie& i MOSTACCIOLI . :Jhrifiimari :po/far Streicher&
CAKU, COfFll cAll, CHDll CAKI
AND DANISH PAITRT
~~~: 39c FOR
Ll(llJOll DEPT. SPECIALS PEAS .......... .
KARAsqv
VODKA
'2!!
QUAIL -303 TINS
APPLE
SAUCE ........ . FOR
HUN'F'S-8-0Z. TINS
c
EA.
~;~·CA~l:rV.GALCTN. . 69c Cilij~~~:~ ...... ''·'' TOMATO 1 o FOR ·1CI C•IAM..... . . . iiiuiLi~~-· .. '3.99 rSAUCE.. . ..
' • • • l
PRICES EFFECTIVE THU~S. thru SUN .. JULY 11 , 12, ll, 14
13t2Z aOOKHVRST, GARDEN · GAOVE • I 130I w. IDINGER, SA'NTA ANA' •
.. ·-\. l , I
--~~~~~~~~~-----------
(
-
,_
•
PEAK OF
l1fE SEASON
SWEET l
JUICY
FREESTDIE
.PEACHES .
6-~
LIS. .
FDR
00
Better Produce at
DISCOUNT PRICES!
VINE RIPE • LOCAL GROWN
HONEY DEW or
WABAMELONS
~-~,,,
, LL
-GMtEll F11£Sff • LIRGt: SIZE
CELERY
flOllST QUAII1Y
llOWflS ol DISCOUNT
NICESJ
';'led (!Me .
·MARGUERln 59c
DAISIES BUl«:ll
RATH IU=IHAWI OR 58¢
FABllER JOKI UCOI ~
SWEI1'111111B•llOl-
... IE!ll --· -sa-lt.ICED llCOI IU. -
FUMY JOHN • ;\ U. PACKAGE 28' SlllLUS PORIC UllCS '
~ U.S.DA ;RADE A • ll OL MIN. ~ BREAST BON[ REMOVED
CORNISH &Be
GAfll'E HENS U.
Wt1nfsd.ly, July 10, 1%8 DAILY PILOT §7
"
Meat you can trust aacl at DISCOUNT PRICES tot!
• 1111111 IEll. DEPIROMt.E CllAlllY
GROUND
BEEF
U.t -lllSPICTID PM llOllY
FIUET OF
OCEAI PERCH 79~
, .------.... KCl.D KIST • AOlEft
BUTTERED ""'
•EEF sruis 59;
KOl.D IOST • FROZBI
180% li:'-
YUL STEAKS · 5g;
Pl.UMP I TtMl£Ji ·
@)FmtESH 8
FRYERS
WHOLE IODY
.. --Ol Qlll£IS IEST If flit FRYU
II.Piil IEll WEmllll lwl-ta IEEF
IW.CIJT·-·111 88' ROUID STUii •••••••• ••••• •• •
1tM1E CIJT • WIECUE FAVOlllt 491 lllUOIC STUii •
TOOOlt • flJYOl -89' IOIELESS FllllLT STUii. ..... •
IAllll:UE FAilllllTE '101 IOIELESS Ill STUKI •••••• , • • •-
IONWSS 1111 TOP llRLOll ITWS ·····••••• a.·
IONWSS . -89~ SHOULDER ILOD IOAIT ••••••• ,
THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE 1HURSOA'l 111ROUSH WIDll£!OAT JULY 11-11 I THESE PRICIS EFFECTIVI: THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY JULY 11·17
SOME ALPHA lfTA STORES Dl5COUNT CHARGE ""ICE
ALPHA HTA FIATUllS
SISc nc .....
10% DISCOUNT GNAU.
MHlllllJ, -& llllTllll -
i'liooiitcLu• 11.11' 95'
WBtTE ~JllU.T 21' VISEL11E ....,,_ '"" 21c
DISCOUMTNICID tit ALPHA lll'A
SUNTAN PRODUm
COP'8TONI •TANYA• SU.• llCI
@Ficlii:'uuiu 13c 1oc
~i~:frwwtO ••. · s31
I,
-
MIS CELLA llEOUS
ITEMS
........
$rtl!fS 111SCOt1S1 -· ... MISCELLAllEOUI
ITEMS .
!0M£ At.PHA l!n. STOR[S DISCOUNT CHARGE Ptl.ICE
@~,~~ » @111uti'Rill · .. 83' '""m 'J1F""' ldm.. 37'
Jtu-0 • Jl-OUllCZ 11 ~ --~ ....... CHEESE CHE 55c ....
l>h-0<.C.. ._. lliOiOi RAlll AllT I IOACll lie IU' -
LAURA SCtIDODt • QUA11T JAA ..... MAYONNAISE 55c .. ,
Pa:k o! 4 En• •I non""' 7""' C..ltlll Silndw l9c •r
BOY AR DEE • .O.OZ. CAH. 72' IEEFARDNI 75c ·
B•llv Croc:k•r • IS.0.. Clm-SieJ!. &7' ANSEL FOOi CME OIC ~!JU*" !omE .~~. ,,._.,._ .. ~ .:: ~I 01111 SJnp lit 61 1
FUDR llDWNE lllX 411: W' .----------DEL MoNtt • s.OUNCtCAR JtM PAC%0F I~
FllUIT CDCKTAll lit U ' ·t;;e) DIET ·D~Cll>C.. CllOC. i'itr~"" 11o • ~ IRUiFIST lie 48' GIAWI' SID!! • DIC(., ll!t M ....
.JDT llQDlll .. ,.., ~,,,.,..,... ,, °"""" -. wfi'E\~-Ile ~ ~lmfllllf Pttll• lie 591
KUm sm: '1.11 -1 ODNCE .MCV.OC • ..,.,
GIANT l lZE • .ft.EGULAR IUDS 4ow Rl~HR IETR DETlllEllT ~LUE Ill'
ICING SIZE BOX 11.29 VALut a.
ilSr WriA~"lii"'0" 1u1 '1'1
\D-UI. IOX • LOW SUDS •111 Rl1HR IETR DETIRG!NW.J:'ut • .
nfi· L11'Ui Ct~~. • 73¢
12.a:. CAN'S • 3 VARttnES 1 Al HfC flUIT DRlllllS Ile U'
11-_C!.u~c;t •amz ~ &Z' IMZ1llA Oil -41-0UNCI: "IOTTtE 9e . n.-
~lii. '1-az """"D: 57;
:J.lB CAN ~ INCL. ~ orF ltlM
SNOWDRlfl SffDRTDllllC 7'c UU'
PACKAGE OP 10 • AS60RT'fD •
iu:tiuii1ss1.11 •1"
li'llcoFFii"11c 691
-Clln llaf'J• lOc Ill'
ALPHA BETA
total
discounts
I '
2-Lll, CAN, R9Q'. ' !lee. P•it: 11.41 St.If J.U. CAH, R.g. '2..05 II•
• .
DELICATESSrn &
CREAMERY
SOM! ALPHA I ETA
STORES DISCOUNT CHARGE PRICl
l&a. BOTTL!S • l trl.1 • lOlll IltAHt> 5 7' 1111111 lllll DRE$Sll&S • .i!in:
•IS.OZ. • JIOQUEFOM CHU8E lie VALVE•
llrtll lffl • l•LI. 14·0%. Ml?'tal9f YT SULEO IN tuvoo • •1.39 v
ftf lf l. 11.!!"""" '1 2
'
nr iE'Afw1E'iiE'ils ltc 631
iii i'1i j • PACXAO<
FRlllS • YAL!l? 491 Wa.cH'I • rilOZDf • a.c&. cu
&RIPE .IUIOE 211 21'
---fD DETERIEIT mcuma tOl:I orr
~· 69' C~ftc
OH KMPC • 710
ROM! GAMES nus W?Zr• rot.T I' ''-11 lHUJIS,, FlU., SAT. IOC'J'OI!; JUL J.1~ fUM.vl.M~JlULJ 11,1 , 1._
f.LI. 10X •lie V.lWt:
MMIETIULTMIU
STOii-HOUIS
MOM.~ NI. 10 AM .. 9 "" SAT .... SUN. 10 AM •.7 'M
271
COSTA MllA-141 L 11'11 It.
HUMTIN•TOll llACH--11611 M. ..... .
HUNTl•TON llA~I ..... -
POUNTAIN YAUIY-ltJt W...
U.•UNA-llUI l.·C.. ~
. '
••
•
s.te 1'"""4 Sl/utWe 7 ';tdt 'D•!
STATER BROS. RAllCllG .IRDD
OADE "A" OVEll RUDJ
GROUND ALL
BEEF WIE
·7c OFF .
KRAfT 1111 DIPS
M J I •·L•· , t.LL s1n ; e e e CAN 69 ¢ CAIL ...... .. COFFEE .. ~~ .... '1"
.. '· llEW POTATOES ......... ~ .. 2:::.31' PICKLES
~··' lf.c~ -""" -~-~ TOMATO SAUCE .............. 3~ ... 33' .=!·~: .. niE IHllEI u111Ulir •. _ ... _._, _ _..,.. w .SODA CRiCKERS ............... ...29' .,. ... 52'
D.ACI II: :m'Jl:~:::::::::::_"":=:J:::. llAllAlll PRUllES • .....-........... 47'
UZ01 llElllEI llAIYPOlllEI .. --·----• llAllSCO CHIPS AHOY .. ~ ....... 53' MAGIC
SPRAY .;::,,. '=~·=·~·;;;·~:::'..:.:·i'I YAlllW WAFERS .. ,' I ........ . : $)27 •e1snU1TIOll ...... _ ... __ ,,_-:'., · GULQEllS MUSTARD __ ...... 11' ,;_.~ =Ill Ull SPUY. ____ ,_,,._ 1.11 · • ....__ .. ,,,
. llC •TlllZD CIUl ....... D' •z,=-11. UllElllEllAllAIEI........... 1
--AllOlllD MAIN DltNll
w•••c•s a _.1_.. U1.u•1111•'1WT ...... 1-11 DLl1PN. TNO. INR5:..t. 69c. I 1&• • a l'llJL.,JooJr UL m mn mw ..... ;·;;··2~» qs.mmr&. •-• lmll4CID H•-.1-»
j • •
-uCIOUS IAR·l\I r IULK .. UH -1'JIH -... IUT lHf.M 1LY Tiil POUND !JltOUND DAltT pejUH BOX ~ou•OWNSTOlUc . 1.5. SD c •ftc
u. LL •7~.
:. ',~'-,.1-i&oNE STEAK
· •., d.S.D.l. CHOICE OR STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF
$
URGE,
RED-RIPE
GUARANTEED
LI.
LARGE, SWIET, VINl~RIPE
CANTALOUPE ..... 6for$1
LARGf, lXTRA·FANCT, LARODA
RED PLUMS ........• 19~.
LARGE, FANCY, DESERT SWIET
GRAPEFRUIT •••LL,AG49c.
i'Yoci"Dos IACH25' iiD'.oNioNs !2sc·
SAU PRICESEmCTIVE 7·FUU DAYS. THURS.1!iru WED~ JULY 1111t-171k
I
-W. LtMCCM.111. AU.NllM mt Wlll'MINITllli I LVO,. WllTMINITll
Wt W, l l Ol.DWAY, AHAMllM tau MINIS A't'I,. WHITTlll
II• MIWiao.T ILVD., CGnA MllA IM 1. COU.IMS. OltA Nll ,. •. ,,. ., .. cos~· MllA -IOINN'& n .. UHTA AHA.
-CllUMM A't'INUL eAJ:DI• .. O't'I
'· -
<
... ·~ ._~--·· ,_.,,...,._,.....,._~..,..~·-......, . ...,........,_, ....... """ ___ ...... ...,......,,~ ........ ~ ..... -•
Fl 'PILOT-ADVERTISER Wednesday, July 10, 1968
· /
. I ~ ............. II:
\ ~
Fine aecompaniment'for meat.1111lood., llbeeae ••• or with other frUita in ulada or duserts,., delicious!
•
Wtdnt~, July 10, 1968 OAJLV PILOT 31)
I
There's a g'ood reason why .El Rancho's Produce'
Department is called the 'Garden Patch'. Be,c(iuse
of our buying · practices, everything
you buy ·is · truly fresh! Come in,
discover the big difference
this makes in the eating!
•
. .
Blu1b1rr1• .. ~ ..... 41~.
. . ' Plump, firm ••• with the d~p blue color that aanJMy1re just rilhtYTey our Blueberry and Lime Mold?
Seedleu,,. fresh, plUDIJI a~' ao much 1weet goodn~.I Get our reCipe for Grape and Avocado Cockt.ail. Crisp, firm and fresh.,. so green, so cool~ Surprise them with a Cucumb~r-Onion Salad!
' '
• • r-----~--------------------------------------,
I \ \ . !'hi<;, th< h~ht •I th• gord"' '""'°"· Watennelon ... delightful thirst quencher • • • fresh Corn ... tender kernels, milky goodness \
\ El Rancho h<L8 a. wide va.rietv of peak-of-red meat so sweet, 10 ripe, so luscious ! , .• serve .them roasted for a special treat! \
Squash ... delicious summer varieties •.. your Cantaloupes ... sweet, fine.textured, fragrant I th.t~8ea.son delicacies for 11ou .•• a.nd .L • f ch' · 11 ed kn k f h LllOJce o . zuc 1n1, sea op or croo ec . . . res ... "'.rap wedges in slices of prosciutto ! and tender ! 1ome special recipes, too! Gr B T t I "' eefl eans , , , fresh and snapping CJisp , , , oma oe5 , , , vine ripened, juicy and flavorful ·~I . f ,~
He~i'a,rt some of the items try stewed green beans with tomatoes! • ··try serving stuffed tomatoes! I
I w• recomm•1td this ·week! Apricots ... orchard fresh . , , favorite e~ting Romaine ... crisp, colorful leaves ••. a colorful I I . I ••• but try our Apricot-Cottage Cheese • Salad ! bed for any of your favorite salads!
L--------------~-----------------------------J
El Rancho Liquor
Red Burgundy Wine ..... ~1~~ .... '2.98
A.M. Dubois Chateauneuf du Pope, eoes -,.ith beef!
' White Burgundy Wine .. ~~~.:. '2.98
A.M. DUbois. Pouilly Fuisse ..• dry and dfJieious !
Old C Wh• k Hllf·GALLON •10 99 row 1s ey ............... .
For sipping or for mixi ng, 86 proof ... save $1 .50 ! .
El Rancho Scotch ....... ~,~~ ....... '5.98
Bottled in Scotland ••. 86 proof ••• 1ave $1 .00
OD. 3 bottle.!!, or sa~e lOo/o b)'. the CMe.
\ :
El Rancho Delicatessen
Rod's Dressing .......................... ~9'
Blue Chee11e or Thousand Island .•• 16 oz. bottle.
Roquefort Dressing .................. 89'
Rod's .•• big 16 oz. bottle ... with imported cheesel
Schirmer' s Salami .................... 49'
German style ... in 8 ounce chun k'. ... robust!
American Cheese ..................... 59' • Each slice individually "'rapped l ... 12 oz. pkg.
Left-over slice1 stay fresh and 1oft!
El Rancho Meat Department Specials
I I J I
I I
Thick ••. tender ... j uiey ... from the top sirlQin
of U.S.b.A. Choice Beef! • , • boneless and cloaely
trimmed • ·, • broil over coals for a roast tl'rat haa
~be heavenly!
Jim Brady Steak ........................... $1~~
Top sirloin at ita bonelesa 'beat ••• cut extra thick lo give you better barbecued beef !
Cornish Game Hens .................... 69~.
~ ... thtat'a unsurpused ••• plump birds, a~all boned to offer mon meat ••. 1 lb. 8 oz. bir!
Armour Turkey · Roast .... ~~~~ .... $~98
All meat,,, no waate .... from &ele<:ted birds ••• 2 lb. 8 oc. can ••• (all white meat •• , $3.49 1
---
I ••
El Rancho Grocery Sp2cials .
Simple Simon Cream Pies ............ . .. ...... 4 FOR s1.oo
Ch008e your favorite froze n varieties ... and serve a popular dessert with no trouble at all !
Danish Margarine ............................................... 3 LBS. S1 .00
The spread that gives you the \\•holesome goodness-and · flavor. yo~ \\'ant-at a budget price!
Mazola Oil ................................. 59' · Salad Supreme ....................... 39'
Pure corn oil •.. for salads or cooking •.. quartl Schilling's ... made to enhance flavor of all foods!
Vegetable Cocktail ......... 3 1 .. '1.00 Oven Baked Beans .......... 3. * '1.00 ·
S and W .•. , 46 oi. can full of nature's goodness! S &. W plump beans, New England style .•• 28 oz,
Hills Bros. Coffee .................... 69~
Consistent flavor,. cup after cup .. 2 lb. can $1 .37
Minute Rite ............................... 79'
CookS up fluffy ••. save 14e on 28 oz. pkf. . .
Cold Power ........... .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... 69'
G·iant packlige : .. r e ts clothes clean in cold water I Nabisco Cookies ....................... 39'
_ Frozen . , • ready to bake . , • 16.oz. pkg. 4 va rieties!
Johnson's Pledge ................... '1.19
Regular or lemon •• 14 oz . aerosol •• you save 20cJ
Finish .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. : .. .. .. . .... 49'
Dishwuher deterrent ... , big 85 oz. size.
Pric'es in effect ttt all ttores
Thurs. through SuK., Julv t1, It, 13, 14
ARCADIA: Sunset & Huntington Dr. (El Rancho Center) .
PASADENA: 320 West Colorado Blvd. • SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont & Huntington Dr;
HUNTINGTON BEACH : Warner and Algonquin (Just East of Huntington Harbour)
~EWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Center)
/. I
•
ff DAILY PILOT w• t er. July 10, ltMI
Forecast: Many
Bridal Showers
Wut a ne• JdM far a pony ... tllo bride l
Give blr a D•11ert Sh•-· All: dlo ..... "' brlllJ 11111 ~ lo<
makinl llDd 1erv!ni eiat
last dellckJu1 course of a
meal.
There's lots of latitude
here. Call the roll: mam·
moth glAH compote; berry
bowl set; cake knife or cake
cmtb: pie lft'Ver; individual
desaert pt.ates: parfait and
liqueur glasses; demi-taae
cups and spoons; cake mid
pie PIN or plat.es; a
casserole or open baker for
puddlni: cllldy oerver: iced
te• and coffee spoons:
lad.lea (small or medium
size ) for nrvina dessert
sauces. We'll ltop b.ere, but
we're sure you'll bave even
more nominations.
For a dessert shMt"er, you
must of course serve the
bride and her friends a
delectable dessert. What's
our suggestion? Or an g e
Bavarian. lt's really quite
simple to prep~e a n d
delightfully refreshing. Just
to save the cook a last-
minute chore, Or an g •
Bavarian is turned into a
pretty glass serving dish so
it doe sn't have to be un-
molded.
ORANGE BAVARIAN
1enve1 ope unflavored
gelatin
%. c~ncar 14 .. _ salt
4 eggs, -·"" ~ cup cold Watu
1 can (6 ounces) frozen
en.Jtge j u 1 c t con-
centrate, kept frozen
¥4 teaspoon cream of
-1 cup bN91 cream, w
G~ .
laamod!Wnu-
(about 211 quarts) or metal
round·boltom mlDnl bowl,
stir together the 1elatin, Vz
cup ot: the sugar and the
aalt. In a small mixing bowl,
beat together the egg yolk!
and water until blended; stir
hllo gelotia mhture. . Place
over lGW heat; ltir con·
staatly oround. bottom and
sides of. -pan -a rubber
spatula does a good job -
until gelatin dis&elves and
mixture thlckena slightly -
about 5 minutes.
Remove from beat; .add
frozen oran1e juice con-
frozen orange juke COO·
centrate and stir u n t i 1
melted. Mixture 1 ho u l d
mound slightly when drop-
ped from a spoon. (U mix·
tun II WC> numy to mound,
chill for a few minutes.)
In a medium mixing bowl,
beat egg whites until foamy;
add cream of tartar and
beat until white1t hold sli,,._·
ly curled-over peaks when
beateT is slowly withdrawn;
gradually beat in remaining
1/4 cup sugar; continue
beating if necessary until
whites hold stiff straight
peak.I; fold into gelatin mix·
ture; fold in whipped <.TUJD.
Turn into • 2 "' l\4o qum
serving diJh. aim anlll Ml
-several hours. Glrnilh with extra whipped ..._,
(sweetened to taste and
vanilla-.Qavored} and fresh
orange sections. S • r v e
ithout unmolding. Make.oi 8
to 10 servings.
No Trial Balloon
Youngster's Party
Becomes
At our house easy usually
does it when it comu to
decorating party cakes. We
treasure ,all the frosting fan·
cies that are no trouble at
all to arrange and yet are
wonderfully effective.
Here 's the lates t
Two-part Tog
'"'/ 7362
&,~'B .. £
Crochet fuhlon's popular
crocheted lace dress of S.p1y
fin gering or synthetic yarn.
Pretty peek-a-boo lace
flare dress -2 flat pieces!
Falls into graceful pleats:
naturally. Easy d o u b I e
crochet. Pattern 7362: sizes
32-38 included.
FIFTY CENTS (coins) for
each pattern -add 15 cent.I
for eacb pattern for first-
clus mallina and special
haodllllg; -wlot third·
class deUVVJ will take
three ,weeb er more. Send
to Allee Broob, tho DAILY·
PILQ:I', I 0 5 .Needlecraft
Dept., Boi: IA, Old Ch<laea
Station, Now York1 N. Y.
JOOU. Print Name, AINreH ,
Zip, Patter. N11mMr. Fint
ttm•I Jumbo 11&1
NHCllocrall CataioC -hun-dnda of dnl1111, I froo pat-
leru (lllcllMln d • II I D • r ·-> m-. ln-llldl. Knit, ~be~ em-
hroldar. 50 cents.
·-II II '1111.1 llqt -tVtilf&* pittlrnl -tn-
eJCPtflilf N, 1UJ to make. :SO
ctiata.
Boot No. I -Delu•
QoDlt -141 completa pat-
'"""· Snd acr cents. Boo1< Ne. 2 -M-
Qllllt -patterm, for 1J
quill. 10 outa.
a Circus
glamoroll! ganWsh of t!W
sort that we have come
upo!l. lt'1 for a Balloon
Cake, great for a childl'9ll'1
party that you are planning
around • circul theme.
BALLOO!i CAll
Mix up any flawor layer
cake mix you like, tollowin&
package directions, a n-d
bake in two round l&ytrelke
pans (8 or .9 by II> incl1"1).
Turn out tile cakes on wire
racks; turn right side up
and cool.
Prepare a package of
creamy white fi'Osting mix,
follow ing package dir«·
tions; fill and frost the cake.
Be sure to arrange wax·
paper strips around the
edges of the cake plate
before filling and fr06tlng IO
that the paper will catch
any frosting drip and may
be pulled filWay emily before
the cake is served.
For the decoration, we
thin round pastel mint
wafers, placing them in a
cluster at . one side of the
cake to resemble balloons.
Have long licorice rtrina:s on
hand or with a kitchen
scissors cut gumdrops {in a
single Coler) into thin strips.
Arrange t.be licorice
string1 or piece together the
gumdrop strips, radiating
them downward from the
minU, so that their ends
similate a group of balloon
come to one point to
similate a group of balloon
strings bei.Dg held t.ogtther.
That's au, and easy does it!
OTHER IDEAS
For invitationl y o u r
youngtten will enJOl' adding
a clu&ter d. balloon s
(similar to those on the
Balloon Cake) to the small·
size notepaper oc cards to
be used. These balloom: C&tl
be cutouts that are pasted
on or tbt:y can be drawn and
colored.
Placecardil can bl made
of .-lru<tlan p-aod docor_rill_uimal
cutouta. Y .... tmall frY will
bl happ)>"' obllp and -
-If you Ii" lbom • pilo o I dllctrdld maptillee,
groetlnc card& "' dbne-store cbildrea' 1 bookJ from wbidl.
to cut out the •m.als.
U more than 1De tnam
end cake II to bl allrVld,
~-to •ar 1111n1>11rpn or !ranks oo buns with
potaloclllpt and pjddaa .. • f:!:! cbolca.
1J C:::teDOw=~
UODlde ao u. red f;d
colorinc to color lemonade
plat. Or -pilllt milk. color!n1 it the nme ""'Y·
For take.borne gilt.I for
Ibo YGUlll guests, you mlehl
have small brown paper lllJ• of pum!a In Iha shell
witb a down crayoned on
NCh bag. Again, your 1mllll
try w!D be happy to color
Ille ..i-.
•
F4' . PILOT-ADVERTISER Wednesday, Jilly 10, I ~·
FARMER JOHN
FULLY
COOKED
SHANI POll1CIN
BUTIPORTION
' CHOICE IONR!SS I01TOll
HAM FARMER JOHN 53c FULLY COOKED, LB.
McCDn-12 OZ. PACWE
ROUND ROAST •·• 891~ BEEF BACON •
· llcCll'S· 11111 llllllf ' lllCI lO!lEI cur
I
SON·s CLEAR ,
'PUSJIC
MEil
'JIAYS
HIDE NOTHING
YOU SH IOTH SIOE5
• c..t. ..... , • , ••••••
'''"" • 0.t J11cHi" 'M1r1
,..., M111 • f r1111r ••ir -,,., i.w,.,,1,,,
• "'"" 11;..•.. t.•lr• •• .At.rM J-..1
"Fit for A King"
BONELESS-:
SPENCER
STEAK :
CHOlr,,E ·16 9 IONE·
LESS POUND
e I I 69C
CORNED BEEF • ••• 79~ HAM SLlaS •••• 98~
llcCll'S 1111111$ IAll IUCI ILIW«
CORNED BEEF ., ••• 891~. SUCED BACON ••• 5 91~ .. ESS SWISS DI 99c RIB STEAK ~ij~c~ .... LB.
SWEET RIPE '
MELONS
13~.·
CASAIAS-
HONEYDEWS-
PERSIANS-
~Mmontt~
OLD TIME BARGAIN DAYS.
. '
· · ·lill MONTI PEAS •
M , BEANS • CREAM CORN .
VEGETABLES
.. $
m
THIS
DEL MONTE CHUNK
-TUN ·A
$
112
TINS
GRAP·ES ·
JUICY BIG
BUNCHES
THOMPSON
SEEDLESS ••••• lb.
at!SH LOCAL GROWN'
. YOUNG-nNDER EARS I I • I
CELERY 2/29c
' EAR
'\ •
...
HILLS BROS.
COFFEE
• Delicatessen
FRANKS =::~c~ ............. ~ 49-
CHEESE ILBERTSONS JOG SLICED AMERICAN ••••••• lb. ii -
SALAMI ~~.'.'. .. 39c IO!. sr
SALADS ALEX POTATO, SUW, 3/ t I
GEUTIN, MACARONI ..... 'l'a
SLICED HAM ~~~0~F.49C 4V. u.59'
CHEESE BOROEIUONGHORN, MILD, ena
JICKIND SHARP •••• , ... 11. ii
CHEESE BORDEN SWISS ......... "· ggc
FRANKS OSCAR MAYER sea • ILL MEAT ............. It ii.
BOLOGNA OSCAR MIYEI 6~ Ill MEil ......... 12 n. ii.
BOLOGNA ~t:~~~~ ...... 12 .. 69°
SALAMI ~!~: ~~~'.'. ........ 12 ... 7~
'-7
• Wines & Liquo rs •:f.
••
CHERRY KIJAFA ~l~~s~.:H.E.Rf1~ pf
BEER IECKUS COLORADO r,:z.g
CASE OF 24/12 u . TINS .......... .)
RUM RON RICO. PLUS SHIKER ANO 5u
PINI COLIDI Mil.' .......... lth . -
VODKA ILIERTSONS !DI% IRllN r ~
NEUTRAL SPIRITS ......... qls. •
WINE GIBSON'S PINK 9'
· CHABLIS ............ V. Call" "'
WINE r~1~l~ .... : ............. m
RUM OLD ST. CIDIX ............ qnrts S!S: . .
. DAIQUIRI MIX ~~::u ..... mBf."
BOURBON Oll NllllU ..... q11rts 1UHISKEY IOLD PENNINl CANADIAN 5&1:
n FIOM MDII SCOTIA ... m ·~
SCOTCH MacNISH 1!11~
SAYE lie .......... Fult ~L Uc• -.•
I, •
------------------
Wedi
I
\
YC
CR
CL
I
re
ORJ
PRI
TOI .
REL -.
PIC
ROI
COi
TOI
l.M
SAi
CE~
BLE
• f;
EXCI
MOU
HAif
BATI
VITJ
•
ICE
FRU
COF
ROS
B ~EI
~~A
~~A
BDUILLD
CUBES-
C&I
1~
--------------------~~~----------------------.......
Wedneselay, July 10, 1968 PlLOT·ADVERTISER FS
You•
CHOICE-
CLUB-CUBE
BONELESS
roP .. ROUND \ . '
••
lB.
. I Seafood Specials .... ti
HAL 8 Bf.
CINTEI CUT , 1 • , I UT STEAK .......... ,.. I
.. RED SNAPPER ~~l'1,, ,,75c:'
SMOKED TUNA·~~'.c.~s98~.
TROUT 12 oz. PICWt .. , ...... 75c: .. '
. EPSTAKES .
1 • i I o anywhere In the Americas 'and ake up to 5·persons along. Just clip
e Del ~onte items from this ~d. a~d pick up eritl)' blank$ In. our store.
ORANGES ~~::: ......... ~ .... \1u. 23c
PRUNE JUICE ~~~.~~~ ... 11 .•• ;~ 46c
TOMATO SAUCE ~.E~.~.0.~... 10',
'
RELISH OUMONTESWEET,KOT 2scr _ • DllC, KIMIURG!I .. ;,,\. ...... ;. 12 , -l;f
' ' PICKLES DEL MDNTEKOSKll • ftc•
llU HALVES ••• -•••.•••••••• I. 22 IL 7 -• ~ ' ROOT BEER DID'S REG. 0111£1
12 oz. I PACK Pin 11,.slt .. . '
COFFEE KILLS llOS.137 311. 1 '' 11 119 ' 2 II. 111 .. • Tio .. • 11 •••
TOPPING t~i;10 ................. 15et 39c:
l.M.O. ~::t:~'.~:'.~~ ................... l't. 36'
SALT BCE.IN IRIND 59c . WATER SOFTINtl • , ............... 50 lls.
CEREAL ~0:t;~1s ................. 1111. 39c
BLEACH ALIE RTSONS 33c LIQUID ••••••• ' ••••••••••••• Callon .
• Health&BeautyAids •
EXCEDRIN 1!11.u ... &le ~11.u ... 81c
MOUTHWASH:~~~ 55c :.11 c :: ggc
HAIR SPRAY ~~~.".1.~ ......... 11 ... &gc
BATH OIL ~'.~~~ ............... noz. 5gc
VITALIS ~l~lllTION .............. 111 BBC
• Frozen Foods •
ICE CREAM ~"lltt~N FLIT ........... 5SC
FRUIT PIES ~~~~MlllT ........... 2gc
COF FEE RICH ~~'.~·~ ........... 11 11. 25c
RO SARITA ENCMILID~ MEXICIN, 2/ BBC COM111 DINNill ..... ..
Fresh . from Our \' . .
Own, : Hot In-
Store Bakeries
LAR~E SIZE -13
EGG RECIPE -ICED
IN A HOST OF
PASTELS & CHOCOLATE
FRESH LOAF-WHITE
BREAD 15DZ.
GLAZED APPLESAUCE . ·49 .c CAKE DONUTS DOZ. ' '
.Hllntlngton IMCh .-1911 Aclams Fountain Valley -16042 Matl!Olia ·
BEEF TACOS ~~~~~L ........ 2/88° COl'Ollll 'del Mar -3049 c-t Hwy. Laguna leach -700 $o. C-t Hwy.
[:~ANGE JUICE :::~'.1
............ 22° C• MaM -535 W. '9th Huntington leach -15511 So. ld.-ds
" ' L ~ANGE JUICE =~:~11
....... n "· 44c ' . '
STEERO -A LCOA CHUN .KING TIDE ·Palmolive . BOUILL ON 2 I 17 c !Oil 63< lbH.· l'OICNOP )05 tkDff 69C
CU8£S-S'1 ·WRIP . , 1.U!T-DIYrPIC • lllNT .• . . ..
C&H SUG AR SALVO DR EFT CHEER DISHWASHING 6 3 c
1 0~:, $1.12 lie Off 6SC toe Off a9e: CllNT 79c LIQUID • • REG~ GIANT CllNT
I '
'
LIGHT, AIRY DESS l !lT
Pie: Perfect
Ending of Day
Lemon Tally Chiffon Pie
11 a most delicious dessert
treat to oiler aummer din·
nu gUests. The crust la
ll)lade from. crisp flakM
e<1conut, the flllin1 ftom
unflaYOre4 gelatine an d
whi~ cream 1parked
w!lh fresh lolnon juic• ad
,.,,,.eMened wttb molal1es. •
Th1I 'comlllut!on al ID·
tredlents is enough to make
the pie •· dlottJllUlahed dessert anytime, but on a alulinC IUlllJIMlr dliy It's
twtce al!I welcome!
And, to odd f<I. Ila aeverll
WI'tu611 it'I qulta e811 to
-· Tho cruat nqulna simply comlllnillg llal<ed
coConut and melted butter
-there'• m baking ln·
¥0'l•ed .
The amootb. alJ'y.Ught 1111·
1n1 uses un&avored fliattne.
eggs and whipped cream.
Lemon juice and grated
rind, added to tbe creamy,
airy·Jilbt • filling, mai.. a
reftea&ing, zuty contrail to
the tweet, mellow richness
cup suear and beat until
very 1titf. Fold' in a;elallne
'mtxture and half whipped
cream. nm into the chlllfld
coconut 1hell and chtll
several hours until firm.
Garnish w i th remaining
whipped cream and sprinkle
wilb nutmeg. Yield: One 9-
inch pie. ·
Pleated Grace
of moi.11111. At serving
time, tilt pie la pniilbed>-.
...tth whipped . ctNlll ' and
nutmeg for • taffy-ftavored
deli~cy that wiµ add a cool,
pretty note to :your menus
all. summer long.
LEMON TAFFY CHIFFON
PIE
1(4 cup butter, melted
2 cups ftaked coconut
1 ' n v e 1 o p • \lllfll:vored
Jelaline .
"' cup Millt t divided·
\io teupoon 1alt
2(3 cup water
113 cup lemon Julee
'4 cup m.-.,.,
''"'·~ I IM>!eopoon lfaled lorn ..
rind
1 cup heavy cream, whip·
ped. dl>ided
Nutmeg Co-nW1'd butter
and ~ut. Pre11 on bot-
tom and sides-of -a 9-incb pie
plate. Chill until firm.
Mix together 1eiatine, 11,
cup of. the 1u1ar and the salt
tn a saucepan. Beat togMtler
water, lemmt j u 1 c e ,
molasses and egg yolks ; add
to the gelatine mixture.
Coot over medium heat,
stlrrlnJ 00!1$lant1y, until
gelatine is dissolved, about 4
m.Jnutll. Remove fr o m
heat; stir in lemon rlnd . ·
Chill until mixture
moundJ 1llghtly when drop-
ped from a apoon. BHI egg
whltea until atlff but no1 dry.
Gradually add remalnin1 Vt
Appetizing
Ly 11f ,..:-1Tf,..,.. ...
Lines ruahln& down f<I end
in pleata CN!llte a ape of
pure flattery· and
femlniD!ty I Look forward u.
compliments -ebooM linen or sbantun1.
Printed Pattern 9388: Half
Slzea 121', 141', 11\1, 111',
2011, 221>. Siu 1111 (bun
37) telM 41> yds. 35-ln.
fabric.
SIXTY·FIVE CENTS in
coma for nch pe.ttf:rn -
add 1& cent.I far each pa.t·
tern· for first-<:lass mailing
and speci'll handling ;
otherwise thir d · c I a11
delivery will tUe thr ..
weeks or mort. Send to
Marian V.artln, ti!. DAILY
PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept.,
Nlco will) before-dinner 232 West lath St .. New York,
drinlu' Romove the cru<ts N.Y. 10011. Print NAME,
from tl>lnly·allced brted; ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE
cut Hell b'uttered bread .00 STYLE NUMBER.
Ilic• into 4 aquare1. Chooae QDt pRtern fret -
Add • slice of cucumber clip coupon ln new Sorblf •
to each bread square and Summer Pattern Catalog.
top tile cucumber '"1th • 100 styles, all .a.. Send 50 dolltlp o l wtD-t:easoned cents. .
ch .. ,. apr<ad. New INSTANT SEWING
Spr!nlcl1 the Idles ol the Book -sh.Ws you bow 1o
bread -, the put . not sew It today. wear it tomor·
covered by Uie cucumber -·row , Over 500 pictures. Only
with minced pC'alef. $1.
r I
1
J
••
(
"-4J IWL V PILOT
Tlleater NetM _
'Stop the World'
I Start.s Thursday
• • j
l
l • • .
•, .. ..
• .
'
-
•DITOllll.'$ tlO'f1:: OniMI ertlrc T-
lllm • -wwtM. ow.... ... ... -........ ..,...,.. .... .. 'Mil .,. ....... ~ '-"Ir ...... -By PAMELA POWELL
Anthony Newley an d
Le'lie Bricusse's biurre
musical comedy. ··stop T'lfe:
World I \\'ant To Get O!J."
will open for a four.weekend
run Thursday ai the C•brillo
Playhouse, San Clemente,
under the dnctioa of Dick
AnderieD.
HeadinJ the San Clemente
Community Tbeater group's
cast will be Rell Lovejoy of
South Laguna u Little Chap
and Francesca L'Hoir of
Costa P.iesa who will tackle
four major role5.
Supporting roles •"ill be
held up by Non.ii Fouche,
Kathy crow, Romily Harry,
Angi Steffensen. K a r f. n
Jaeob&on and Judy Wil~on .
Rounding out Uie array of
choreographer, best kn~wn
talent will be Gina Geer.
choreographer, best known
from her School of Ballet in
&an Clemente.
A member of t h e
S..cramento Ballet Comj.any
for two and a half years.she
h currentb' a member of.
the Laguna Civic Ballet
Company.
Perfonnancoa ol "Stop
The Wcrld" win be given
Thuradayatbrougb
Saturoa)'<. July 11 through_
Aug. 3. The playhouiwi is
located at 202 Avenida
Cabrillo. San Clemente. For
reservations call 492-<M&.
* * * Three other productions
rare either continuing or
closing t.biJ week along the
Orange ():)a$l.
-·-South Coast Repertory's
t w o.... smaahing 1uces5es
have each been extended
through ttli1 w e e k e n d •
"Adventures in a Paper
Bag,'' SCR'• experimental
offbeat revue which has set
all records at the Second
Slep Theater, 218li Villa
Way, Newport Beach, will
run through Sunday.
''A dventures ,'' ll
populated by Michael and
Toni Douglas, J am e s
McK.ie, Bany O'Kane and
Saundra Deacon and
directed by John Arthur
Davis and Ron Thronson.
SCR't1 Third Step Theater
production o f Tennessee
Williams "A Street.car Nam-
ed Desire" will wind up its
engagemem Saturday.
Martin Benson ii directing
the cla&sic which features
Cllerie Patch, Hal Landon
Jr., Bonnie Gallup and Don
Tucbe. The theater l s
located a 1827 Newport
Blvd.
Tickets for both pro-
ductions maY be ordered
through the SCR central box
office, 646-1363.
* * * Neil Sim.00'1 popular com:
edy "The Odd COl:rple" Ciln-
tinues ill three-week run
this week at the Laguna
Playnouse. Taking tbe leads
are Phil lntttlandi and
Charles Shull. a former
NBC newscaster.
Directing the first of the
two 6UDUner c;.ttractionJ is
David Marlow. w·h o 1 e
credits include "The Beauty
Part." "A case of Libel ,''
and "Blood, Sweat and
Stanley Poole."
Roles ol the poker playing
pals of the "couple" are
enacted by Robert Engman.
Geoffrey R i k e r , B&b
D'hidoro and Alan Hart.
Patticia McQuade and Sally
Brown complete the cast as
the Pigeon 6isterli.
Performances will b e
given Thursday1 through
Sundays through July 21 at
Beach. Reservations are
319 Ocean Ave., La·guna
Beach. Reservation.a are
available at 494.-8061.
* * * "May Your House Be
Free From Noizies" or
"Tippecanoe and You Can
Too," an original comedy,
closes its run Saturday at
the Orange Studio Theater.
195 North S~ College
Blvd.., Orange.
Directol' ii Terry Gordon .
Cal Stale Fullerton veteran
director. The cast includes
Jill Lang, JI m Shirley.
Laurel Hotard, D a v i d
Kalmeyer. Ollie N a s h ,
Theresa Vilicich.
Last performances will
run Thursday t h r o u g h
Saturday at 8:30 p . m .
TiclQets may be obtained
through the theater, 526-66a.
Carnival on Ice Opens
In Anaheim Next Week
James Hetur's "Carnival
on let" opeu a four-week
engagement at Melodyland
!'beat.er in Anahe i m
Speaking
Course Set
For Monday
A program UJmg r-oatha
Yoga u a training aid in
public ipeakmg course will
be initiated ltlonday at the
Ea:st.ern Arts Sb..idio and
Theater, 811 East Llncoln
Ave.
Dr. Ed\\•ard Brown ,
former direct.or and speech
instructor a t California
State College at Flluerton
will teach dle class in voice
and diction at the studio.
Each class session will be
preceded by a 45-minute
yoga period led by ltfiss
Marley St.evens .
The four-week. 12-sesslon
course is desii1J td. to in-
troduce the stu dent to
speccb 5deoct!. correct
speaking deficiencies .and
imprO\'e 1peaking voice.
,
·~ Circus Nears ,,
Last Weekend .. Now in ita final days,
'
• performances for James
11 e tz«'• lntercont.inmtal
ctrctd at Mel odyland
Thuter are acheduled for
Tlnnday 1114 Friday at 8 ~ p.m .• sDtunlly 3 and 8 p.m.
...r·Sundoy I 1nd 5 p.m.
Good Hltl Ire I t J 11 ~ ivallabJe fo r all
pai«mance• and may be
~ .. Ille u ahow
time at Ille Melodyland
tbuter 8mt 018ce-
-,
Wednesday. July 17 ...
Out.standing among the
performers are J a n e t
Own.pion. who starred for
eight years in the Ice
Follies; Arthur Newman. an
alumnus of Holiday on Ice
and Dick Button's World's
Fair Ice-trabaganza: ·Jean
Sakovich, who baa played 52
countries with Holiday on
Ice : and John Urtin and Pat-
ti Hittle . formerly with Ice
Capades and Holiday on Ice.
Ticket prices are S'l.50 and
13.50 all rl3erved with
juni~s. 16 years and under
half price on Wednesday at
1 p.m. and 8 p.m., Thursday
at a p.m. and Sunday at 5
p.m.
Tickets are now on sale at
1'1elodyland box office 'and
all ticket agencies.
CSCF Holds
Play Over
John Millington SY11i•'•
comedy "Playboy of the
Western World." the &tory
of a sharp-tongued Irish
wench will again be hekl
over ror performances July
11 through 14.
The California S t a t e
College at Fullerton sum-
mer production was
originally Jebeduled for four
nigbb: ooly but heavy ticket
demand and limited seating
nect"ssitated the r e c o r d
campus run.
TlcketJ are available at
the college rou1ic-speech-
drama box office between
noon and 4 p.m, d:iUy. ex-
cept Sunday and at the door .
Seati are 11.50 for general
adiilis«f<'ln and 50 ceat1 for
1tudent1 .
I , I , I
CELEBRATING THE U~dt.A. * COMPLI •
GRAND OPENING 'CHOICI' VARIETY OF ·OUR NEW STORE
IN CUDAHY.
BllP NATIONAL 8
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LIBBY'S HASH
39c , .....
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MIN'l•WOMIN'l•CH!LD'I
$2 .25 SIZE -REGULAR OR HARD TO HOtD
aRICK HAIR SPRAY
$1 .09 SIZE
voa HAIR DRllllNG
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aRICK llYMPOO
G::ePBPJJ1_1!!1J!J'0::.".~::-63 c
WIWl\If~WIWW · ,,..----~
VandeKamps
SPECIALS
lllu11.-sun.1u1r 11-14
Apple
Strudel 1211 .... _. ... 59'
Walnut SWirl · 49 •
Coffee Cakes .. "1'. 1
Crumb, surar or
Assorted 33•
Dunkettes .......... .. wwwmwww
EXTRA SERVICE!
CHECKS CASHED
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ECONOMY ROLL KO$HEJ: OR R:EGUW DtUS
REYNOLD'S WRAP AUNT JANE'S 320, 55c PICKLES .1or
, QUAKER STATI:,
MUSHROOM SLICES1BUTTONS 4 2'~~·$1
• ' I
GERBER STRAINED BABY FOOD ~~~:9c
MJ B COFFIE ~1~6Jc ;;:·$1 34 :~1:· $1 99
CUT GREIN BEANS ~~ 2 c3.?~.29c
COLORTEX PAPER NAPKINS PKG. 9c Of 60
CHICK ..
CHIC·E .. oc
CAT FOOD. 60Z .. CAN
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CALPAMI
RIUIT 4 $ ..
DRINKS ~::·I
QUM'tf'V.$11( . llllYWHOt.t
49• Miracle White 79• Sweet Pickles
::: 3 7• h.kib 'syrup 39• !(;.k Pepper
"<.!" 291 Vanilla Wafers
1°..1~65•
#EW I.OW l'llCll .
TANQUIRAY
IMP•n• Gl!i LOllDON DRY
IAYl··12" •t.'10
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$14.69 HAlf
GALLON
CUSTOM
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IMPORTID TEQUILA RUM WHITE OA GOLD
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Fl"H flf'[H
BEST FOODS FOR SALA.DOR COOICIHU
CRISCO '\~89' DRESSING Oil
MOHONHOU5f
Meat Ball Stew ':;·: 49' .U.GIC CHO
Pancake Flour ·.~~ 39
HUTlA W1JH UlllON Ol U~t
Instant Tea 5COUllHO s.o.s: Pads
'fU0NAl 51Il -(IHClUDl5 l< "'') Ivory Soap
FOODGIAHTllCIUID Detergent •.. 49' ,,.,,,.
FROZEN FOODS
MINUTI MAID LIMONADI
2~~:;2Jc
JOHNITON'I t•INCH Piii
•Appl•• Dwkh Apple• P•ach
•Blackberry • l lu•IMrry 79.~.
DOWNYFLAKE WAFFUS 2 "•'· 29• · of6
HAWAIIAN PUNCH
2 6 0 " 391 12 o,, 3 7cRID _QN S!ICK39 Cant Ca11 PKG. OF 6 C
XLNT . GREEN GIANT •••i~-=f•MI VEGETABLES
::;.::~" 49c •MrnKlllUI&
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ENT.ff$
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YOUI 35 CHOICE C
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STRAINED OR CHOl'l'fD FROZlll CAlAVO
SWIFT MEATS AVOCADO "'"' 59c DIP "' 12"x75ft.81 C roll
COLORS ()fl WMJT( ltnd. 2t Off') French
KLEENEX '" "27c Old Homuteod
8 oz. 31 c REGULAR OR l.EMO~ s oz. 33< JOHNSON 'S
1 ASST'!) FOR BABIES -27c FROZEN l lJID!>'
TISSUES 200 1000 •land 8 oz. 35c PLEDGE 1'0L $]39 S!z1
3'h Oz.
Jar ORANGE
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2300 Barbor Blvd. at Wilson St., Barbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa
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f HOUll.Y
4fit.OUNDCHUCK
USDA 'CHOIC!' llfP-IOHll.US ~HUCKSTIAK
u.s.o.>..ctiota·ae~ '"
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RUMP,,,. •.!!.':. c ~···· .. .._ ••• . -· ·r
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USDA 'CHC»Cl' Jiff'·
LONDON •ROIL
USDA!CHOICf:' Im -IONIUSS
FAMILY ITIAKI
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$-1~.t. SLICED 65c ·
89~. BACON .t:. . .
... :69. flWtCOUMm'S'M!
IPARIRl•I
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DAILY llllT
OOGFOOD
12~·1 • t
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OS KINGSFORD 99· c TNABHINISCS 0 45 -:
E ' BRIQUETS ~ROZ£H POTATOCS.-12 Ot. Pk.. FROZEN SUPERSUEil.' •. .RINE
$j19 RUS-ETIES 21c OSAHNB~~ICH ~~ 79c HASH B,ROWNS
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2300 BarlJor Blvd. at 1Vl1ssa St., U-rller °Sllepplag Ceat.er, <:esta Me.a
' ' I
~. Julr l0, 1968 DAILY' I'll.OT 4S ---
Ope•,_ Ne~t Week
Entertainment Galore
At '68 County Fair
Feir end Ezposlttoo. Week Band and Dane er s,
• 6 8 come a to t be KiDgamen National Cbam.·
Fairgrounds fn Ooota M""1 pion Drum -Buel• Corpo, next 1"0k wilb .., array of Optimist You!b Band ol
entertainment atl!actions Orange County, Marine
ll8DgiDg from a n in· COfl)S "Pageant of the
temational festival of music Flag," aod others.
and dancing to recocdillg Senior citizenl' clubs from
and television &tars. throughout Ule Southland
The 1968 Orange County will-also stage a 1la1ent show
Fair and Expooilion, which at tbe Senior ~ Jam·
runs July 16 through Juiy-21 boree oo Wedneoday al·
MU open with the crowning ternoon, July 17.
of Mi&s Onmge County
Tomorrow." YOUNGSTERS SHOW
F' o I lowing · prelimioery Tuere will be opeclal
judging at 2:30 p;m., ttie 21 entertainment for t be
, , contestants, each from an youngsters too. The Bru.nner
Orange County oommllllity, Family will stage ta "Pop.
will .-,. final judging at corn ~ llW!oaette
8 p.m. aa tlle Ampbilbeator Sbowo otlerDOOlll and even·
atoge. illCB .. .,,. do7 ol Ule fair.
Sp<MI.,,..,. a ~·new FNm 9 a.m. to )I p.m. on
.. _ -Dlllll" on . Tueod9y, Wedneodey and
Wednesday,July17,willbe Thursday, young
M·aestro Leo D am i ant ' s eque6tiiam will vie for ritt.
"Festival of N at 1 o n s , ' ' boos and prizec kl three
Batjc:ed · by Q . symphony days of junior borae show
orchestra, a cast ol 150 will compeUtioo. Pooy 1 h o w
perlorri\ tol'C8 and dancel event. for the very young
from ~ natiom. ho!'Mmen have b e e n
BIG NAMES ~ for Sunday, July
The big '""""' appearin( . Jl!!l'formance of 1he Deisy
Oii ......... ~ olld Soalrd J :n, ot 4 p.m. wftb • opecial •.• _, ay, U• Clipper Ali POIQ' Show
· ly 19 alld 20, will be tbe ru .. xtrC Ule Junior. Falr =-ol ~loo~ '""!f will be the ~umor L!v .. tock
Ajlrll Sb!vem i--by tbO Aucllon, ~ f<r Friday
..,,_.,,-;. Back Porch -DOOi! and emilng. La.t
"•·'-year 218 buyen purdlased ,,..., •• lty vocal ll'OOP-344 ~ for • total o! The'speclal llllOrtolnment Jll"OlflJll will be climued '12.000 from tile young ...
-y -Ibo aepell'IUICe -·-Oil ~· ol GleQ ~ · The Juofor Falr will ~· Mc.tit ot Che "Summ include bundreds of exhibits Smotber1 Brothenl Shower, =d F.%er~:!rt: . ~ r:,: m Y·wimlllC llld 4-H Olubs.
MdliMoml ~mt For rodeo fa!ll, Ille cllma•
-dminc the t Jn. ol tbe fair will bo Ille IRA
Clud. f II ,...t Championship Rodeo,
u 1 a g • echeduled for Fridq, Satur· perlur II-~ 1he Sing-doy alld Sllllde,y lo th9 Out-Weot-End ',Up· With ~eel'--People" ldnl*'I, s.rber .tW-.
Shop ~ Jamboree, OTHER Vl.SITOll
Boyw ~ -Variety Other top v 1' Ito r at.
Show, <lllmfoi•I Wghlml tr-include Ille New
·· Product ~ opace ex·
M. ldblta, community exblbils, esan Takes -agriculture aod bom• economlca demomtt"at10lll1
2 Positions
Dr. <llsles Rice, Ille ...
ol Mr. ml Mrfl. Wilbur
Pw'*8 ol 418 E. 191b St.,
COila Meta, who bu been a
-ol ... faculty ol Salem Colle(1 In Nor1h
Corolloo mioe r•••M•c bla
PhD frOlll DuD~en!ty in IM'I bao ac two te~ l>OllU... !<r tile
c..ruacochool:i-. QmimenrJnc uext monlb,
Dr. Rico . will teach al
AclEns U-Colle(e In
Allee, Somb Africa. During
tbe second semester be will
be • membeT ol tile faculty
ol Duke Divinlly Scboo1.
A 1955 graduete of
Newport Harf>or H 1 g'h
Sc;MoT. where be w I I
valedictorian, be recelftd
bla bechelor degree fl'oiii
Baylo< Umvemly in Tuai.
~. diaplay•, a
mineral ml lepJdary lbow,
and'lop projectl from re-
cent Sd.eoce l"air1 i •
Sao-.. Oolifornla • ama pelntinp, antiques,
puppet.a, ahell8, furniture,
early Amerku wearing •P'
parel, momk:il, 1culpture,
oeramicl, doh, embroidery :.00 offldwy will be ammg
th• ~ at the Hobbles
Divition of the Orang•
a.dy Fair alld ExposiUon,
July 16-21.
Flower lovers f r o m
tbrougbout the Southland
1lii baw an opportunity to
tee #
11JnOl'eo -flower• per
aquare toot tbm hive ever
been ulilbited "' my -fn the Mate of c..utarnla"
~ding to veteran flower
lh<JW • producer H a r r y
-· A NCord total of 480 uhlbito,.. bave ent ... d
the '• "Onms:• QMmty is
Topi" flower abotr'.
NOi' COMPLETE Seats Available · N• folr ..., be Cfllllpi.te
-rides and • cornival For Hope Show l!lldway, and 1he Orqe
Seatr are no.w .aVailable br mail order on17 for the bi.I! AD-star ·Show for the
UW, ataniJll Bob Hope,
wti1cb lo -.for A .... 101111:15 p.m. It Ille
Anabolmlbdlum.
-. .,. ocaled Ill tz.50.
$3.50, • ..r fl.!4. Checks
or money onion lhould be
made out to 11USO.Bob Hope ~ow ... and metled, along
with a sell addreesed return
envelope to P .0, Box USO,
Anaheim, Ca!Jf.
Any amount over $5 is tax
deductible a a cOQ(rlb.ution
to Ibo USO.
CouD(y Fair and ExpoolUon
is no exception. There will
be a giant ferris -.1>eel,
Munster ride, roller COMter,
fun boule, ICl'&Dlbler, tilt•·
whirl, m«eoc.rlde, bowl of
milTors alld 'o t b 1 t at-
tractions. Atieodance at "11 .._,
and esllibits, -the ex· ceptlon ol the canilvai rldOI
and the rodeo lo free after a
single gate ad m I 1 al on .
Prices are St for adult&; 80
cents for students 13-18; 30
conts for students aiI-13;
and chlldren under 12 ..,.
com!llOlied by .a perenl,
free.
J
J
'
-' .
'.
! • • •
•
Pork Stu ff ing Bala nces
Sweet 'n Tart Flavors
~ new summertime "com· Salt
P811Y ipeclal" -thot'1 Pipper
"Nedarlne·ltuffed P o r t 'D tNapoon cinnamon
Roast... ¥• teupooa around clowt
The nectarine-bread cUbe 1 cUp water
1 tu I I I ~ I , -..UO&ly I tableepooo llour
sea.soned with on.ion and cin· . Have butcher bone rout
namon, iJ studded widl and cut a 1ar.ge pocket Jn tt
raisiM. The flavor balance for atu.Uing. Chop enough
in the stuffin1 seems to ~ nectarines to. me86Ul'e 2
the perfect blending of sweet and tart flavors for cups. Saute onion in. butter,
rich pork. then mix in nectarines,
Note that the recipe does bread cubes, raisins, 1 teu-
not caii for tbe nectarineLto poOn salt, ¥4 teupoon pep.
be -· Their ,IUlootb skin ii tender and adds per and 1pice1. --,
navor to tne rtuffing. ontY Generously aprinkle roast
rarely, only wtien the nee-~ide and out wilb N1t and
tar I.Des have to be really pepper. Spoon stuffinl into
cooked in a liquid mixture, pocket of roast. Tie roast
do you tieed to remove the skin of n e ct 1 r l 0 e 1 . wiUl String. Place oo rack in
Normally, just give 1he fruit ~~ ;:';,::
1 thorough rinsing and Jet of truck.est part of meat (not the flovotful, colotful skin add to your enjoyment of into stuffing). Rout at 325 the fruit. degrees about 21h boura, un-
til roast temperature f's 1&5
NECl'ARINE-8TUFFED c1egr,.. F . Tr.,.fer to plat-
POlllC ROAST ter and keep warm. .
4 pounds lretb por~ loin Pour water lnl<> Pon ;
roast, toned scrape drlpp:ing1 1 o o 1 e .
2 to 4 fresh nectarinel Strain, then skim off fat.
11'2 cup chopped onion Blend 1 tablespoon f~t with
11, cup b u t t e r or flour in roasting Piil; blend
margarine in remaining liquid and
2 cups day-old bread cook, stirring untU thlcken-
PORK LOIN RCJAST..' CALIFORNIA STYLE cubes ed. Serve over roast. Makes
'h cup seedlest ral.slns s to 8 servings.
L
a eplclnt!
The free exotic indoor plant you pick come! to you postage
free, guaranteed alive and growing. Just send in
the order form below, together wit h the inner seal
from any size jar of Instant Tender Leaf Tea and
we'll send your free plant.
Of course, free plants are nice, but the beauty of th is
offer is that you'll be treating yourself to the bright
tasting iced tea-Tender Leaf. Truly, it's got a
brightness you can taste ••• a brightness only
100% tea can supply.
So start enjoyi ng iced Instant Tender Leaf Tea
today. , . and send for your free plant. .J~~~
~~·-------------------------------------
A. Golden Vine
B. Bowstring Hemp
-C. Jade Plant
I 0. Snake Plant
l E. S.tt-Branchina Ivy
r. Pepper Plant
G •. Arrowhead Plant
H • .r Nest Hahn II
I L. Minlature Palm
J.i Tri·leafWonder
K., Heart-Leaf Philodendron
l.1 Alumlnum Plant
Send order fonn •nd Jir Inner seal lo:
lnstant Tender Leaf T••
P .O. 8011: 1 94 Apopka, n erida 3270S
The fn!e plant I want ls:
lstclloice C I
2nd choice ( ) {Sentonty If lst choice becomes un1v1llabte.)
"'""-----,.,,,,.,,,,,_.,_,--, -----Address __________ _
Clty•------------si.t.__ ______ _,,1p ___ _
(A1IOlll' 4 WMtc1 for deUvtl')'.) Otter llmllff to -fNt pltnt per
llmlty. Good only In U.S.,\, VOid WM,. restrlct9d or l)fOl'libltff
by l•w. OINr 11tplres o.otmber 31, 1968.
A.Wlt leul .._.. .. y h ertl•"' wt~, ... _...,
Ill•• tM t ce"'e' wit" Y••r flnt free plliflt.
"-·~~~-----------------------------------
I _J
•
/'
F1 PlLOT-ADVER> ioER Wei nesday, July 10, 1968
.. ~~
ffee Cake !\
Fro!h Fruit Filled-••
A Delicious .. •
Breakfast Treat_ .. -c•• -Ill --AKE-Of-THE·WEEK Sil
Cherry Delite Cake 111111
· ck for All .,
-W• '.,-cloll~=rat:.i •:a Onl•r -~ ftll Occoslan• -•• I --········· ... 511!1!111\l!l!I!::
ff t. Thu~ SUn July 11 thru July 14 in Licensed Safeways Pritts E ec 1111 • .... ·•
Cold Brook Blend $329
Blentled Kentucky Bourbon Fiiftll
80 Proof
Stanton's Gin
London Extra Dry
90 Proof
F1fth s32s
~~~gh~~on Whiskey s1osa
. . 86 Proof Haff GallOI i'Jl\ Gilbeys Gin. ~ .. ~ ..• ~~ '9" , odl. WI CU41 '2"
\, ·11lll1 V 18 80 ~r ""'
l\)) -~· '2" iij Dry Gin :~ ~ Flftl
ded Wh' k WiM<f• CLJ\I s321 . Bien IS ey 80 Proof Flftl ' ht Bo bo Winners Cup 13&1 Stra1g ur n 80 "'"' ""' ~,ll Scotch Whisky :n;::/"" Flftl '4 11
Light Rum ;\"~:i ~ Flftl '32
'
1000 Bayside Dr.-Newport Beach
24 Monarch Bay Plaza-South Laguna
• I , •
~----~ . --.
Wednesdlll. July 10, 1868 PILOT-ADVERTISER F3 J Wtdlifldl1, ~uly 101 1968
• ......... -.......... . ..... _..,
1-·c.ikW""'
.... i.. ""*'' . '!"' ' . '
. -, ... , .. , . ~ . ' . " •
Dairy & Delicatessen
··!e·-··~ .. • ~ ..... '
fir1 ·---:--3 ·i EMi .=.,. ·
,· ltiit~· -~ a.:,;::. w ' ' . a..111att .. =:;"'!'::'• Jt'
........ Cll "' ·6'"" •1 • :era.,~•, . •
J•Cli•ile=lllil ...... 79'. . :~ . . . ' .· -.
I ..
Chuck Steaks=~-;:,, . . .
Swiss Steab:.;::-
l11f & St1ab :::::.
Veal I-lone Steaks \:1
Spencer Steakt ::'."m""C:.
a.59'
a.69' ... .... ,.
a.'I"
7-lone 11111.a.t :-.:. .. sr
l•d lone Roast ·:::: .a.69'
lonelm Roast ::."':...-a.79'
loneles• Roast ::-..=~ · .. w
Boneless Roasts : '!"" ... .., "'tr
Chicken :. S..
·chunk
Tuna
. . a.Ctn• '
Coffage ··
Cheese . laClll•......_, __
""' en;• m C11111
Luctme .
Pure Fruit
·Drinks
-~ "::'::.=: 1'
.
lncff•
Toilet ·
r11sue
BllNK ON THE $11V/NCS11 T YOUR SAFEWllY.'
. . .
Crest Toothpaste .:t \: 66c ·:
. . • ,_lalld c . 9 . Jergens Lotion ~"~ ::4
Folgers 'Coffee ~';. ~ 69'
Mayonnaise
GardeulR
Green Peas ''* lftl S...t-17 .... Cini
Cmlll 0' ... ""
fn.fml'I And ..... 3• Fllrw Mctl ... ..,-
reen Beans · lltra llrp t-U:-• ..._1111:-.:.111
...... ___ Cm ,_ ,,,.,.. llDDITIONllL MEii T FEii TIJHES
Veal Shoulder Chops a. 6'
Veal Rllt Chops 1:"'111111 .. •1 1' 1 .sl
.... __ ...,.. Veal PaHy Steaks .. 79'
Veal Pannlgtnla ~ .. 79'
Peeled Sh"-p =ci.ir::-•1•
Turtc1y Roasi ::i r-2: '2 ... \~ ,: :,:,~ Frozen Food Buys
...... "" .. ___ " lie. . . _, ... a. .... 79, Turtcey Roast =. '::..':' '2"
·---·--... F . J hn F k ':;::-,·-.,;..-::;..:: .. r=:.:-~ 3' u!=! '0 . ' ran s ·~~~ ....::.,~ ._ 39' :!.."::.:' ~. 59c
---~!l
. CNaftl .....,... -rr-"' ,\... ... .• , ..... ""1 ~ . , ~
·-··--Cllt11tPl••1=•= '::'59' Rlitll -llacow1 ... -69-tilF ' __ ...,. "" .. ..._ .. _......,..... .
Strained
Baach·Nui ·.
Ba•y Foods·
.flM .. lld Jllst hr . ..,.._
~r~tsorJlilll
.... -.y c ..... -. 2~99'
YIOUlllP~k
· · Edwards
Coffee
Amcll .... Offme.n.&.
Clilllcl el lrlMI -Alet Daic M
'
Vine-Ripened
Cantaloupes
f~ 3.s1oq
Blng .Che]rJ~ ~..:-.. 4f
Sweet Onlons l:r.:t..i .. 10'
Sweet Clin :::.i:., 6-49'
Honeydews =..t..-i:.. · .. 15'
1! It Pies --3 ... 'I ...,.llkt-· · · · , ... Sf&
• •
211 L .17t S1 .. CtSI• Mesa 1• la91lit Dr~ llllpert lilcll 24 Mourdl laf 'Pl'Ua, S..111•• 6J6 II. <Id Hwr .. 1.111• lelldt h.m 1111nn at McF1dd• .,.....,
! • 1
• ' .
I , ,
I
•
fC ~LY PILOT Wtdlti4a1, Jwfy 10, 1968
• •• :: .. ·!
:!
• .. '-.. i: .,
~i .. .. .. .. " ~:
" ,,
:·
: ' ,.
" •• •
.
l •• • -•
. • • • .. . • .
.. ,.
~ \~ . . ..
•• '• . ,
" •\
.~
•? '• :: •• •• • .
' l .
·i ., ,, .. •• • . ;, ...: < • . •
• '.;>
' •
• • i •
• • • .
~~ . ' ' '• .. •• ~
·a ll •
••
• ~ ••
'Lame Duck' _Ofticial Handi~apped in Talks
WMlllNGTON (UPI) -
'1111 upcomlaC P a c I fl c
meetloC between Prftlclen1
-and SOUlll Viet
DllDIH Prelident NIU)'en
Vaa TWeu ts bound to un-
cle,_. the bandi<o!> under
wMch a "lame duck" ad·
mlDlalration labor• In seot·
lnl to end an unpopular w•.
Joruuca u-edly will
reassure 'lbieU that •the
Utated States plADll tio mate
no criUcel concessions to
Hanoi at ttle Paris talks.
But hie guanntee necesNri-
ly standa good !..-only six
months .
Johnson can express the
COCA.col.A
O!linloo that hit 1ucces10r,
no matter wlxt be ma1 be.
will not pull out ond leave
the S a i Ion government
defensele11. But Tbleu,
al">'' fearful ol American
intentions, can hardly be
comfort.bl• with this.
Thia diff!culcy,. w h I ch
....,. wh<tl the Presldeot
announced he would not
seek re-electioft, also is
bellfNed to be hampering
the elfcrta of Ameirican
negotiator W. Averill Har-
riman to maneuver Nqrlb.
Vletnameae representatives
at Paris into a more !ruWul
. FAlllllllG'l PICKLll
___ 69'
_29' mADl. llJfJfll l• 01.JA.l ·-·------.. ·--·
~~~~ru'n'-!.".J!ISHt1nWA0.1•~«,_..49c
~!!!.!!~1 ........ 101•1
~~~~r~UN~~!~~~ ..... 101_cAt6 6ff I
round
steak
FULL CUT-IONf 1N .
I
diacusalon of poealbillUe1 for Haniman extracts frca_ all
peace. the m°"' e ulted. 11 • S •
Johnson ..._-enUy dld cr1Uc1 ot.Amerioan ~ in
not antlci-pate....the rel'Jlti in Vietnam, appeer det.ermJn..
Hanoi and SallO• wl>on he · ed to moke no ~ee
made his dnmatic Mardi move until ~ hive I. new
31 announ~ent. He b<>p6d 'admili..'9tration to deal with.
bis reounclaUon of a 11 The Saigon a:overnment,
further poUUoal ambition 1t the same time, ,naturally
would uriderline the siQ. wonders whether the pew
eerily <II his peace tolk of. president might be·wlllillg to
fer. W'hich be accompanied make potentially fatal con·
with ia reduction in the bom· cessions in order to end the
bing of-Nortti Vietnam. war, which .is taking an ill·
Hanoi appears instead to creagingly beevier toll .in
have considered' Johnsoo.'a Amerlcall ltves and money~
action as a confession ol The J o b n s o n • T h i ey
f"'1tlte ol past policy. Tiie moeling, wbldl prd1ablY
Communists, r eciting t o... will take place in Ha.nolulu
orange
• • JUIC.e
MINUTE MAIO FROZEN
MAYFRESH
PEACHES NC' ·4 $1 "" HAlY(S,,.\Ll(tO for
in about two week.1,
IUblUtutes for a two-week
official vatt Thieu w,.. sup-
po 1 e d to make to
W ashineton and o t h e r
m81nland cities some time
. ' this summer. .
Thieu .suggested. instead
that be and JOO.Oson meet·
for a "''a few d a y s ' '
~e in the Pacific,
citmg anticipation ct a new.
Communist offensive i n
Soutn Vietnam,. whiGh he
felt made 'JWs' prolqed
·absence tran the counD:y
inadvi1able.1. '
Tbis may wen have ~en
toilet
tissue
MAYFAIR
•llCU ,AC(
"' . llfa)tfalr Froma Foods
simple simon swanson
cream pies ~~~L 29c dinners ::-~
~.COCOHUT,llmtl$COTOl,UMON . llfGtA.Usat:AS$Ol'llO --··
enchiladas
YAM Df lAMl'S7~ 0i.$in ·-····-
_69'
...... 1~s1
rolled .
roast
frying chicken
I ONElESS
parts
•THIGHS C
one of the reeeorui for
postpoolo1 the Washinlf,ol!
vl<. •
But a oumbier ol other
flctori are believed to have
hod a beerin( on the
decision:
-A Thieu visit. UD•
doobtodly would have apvk·
ed. new antl·V~etnam policy
demonstratlon1 in
Wiasbington and elsewhere
jU.st before tile polJtioal con·
wntial1, inllamlng tdle war
iseue even more.
-'lb.ieu's pianned visit to·
a number ol AmericMI. cities
would have expoled him to
oQ:emely c r 1 t l c a 1 ques·
tloolng. ,and lncr....d tile
temporal""' of debate et a tt m ~ "wM8 tbe ad·
mlDlltl'atlon eeelu to cool
the 1.... beneuee ol 1bt
Part.s talkl .. d t h e
f or U><xmlng COIWllltions
and elecUoa.
-Thieu may 0'Wtll have
felt tllot lengtt>y dlecwsaloao
in the United States would
be interpreted in South Viet
oam • giving -at to any laat-minute conce-.loac
the Jobnoon edminl-lio!!
migfit make is> ,an effOrt to
adtlevie • • breakthrouth on
Vletnam before the end ol
the present admlnistrltloo.
5 LB. BAG
~49'•
KRAFT c ~~~?,NNAISE 43
LOG CABlll IYRUP 69' 2•0Z. IOrf\t _,,__:__.,_:_,_ •. ___ _
~~!! ~~!~."! ... 1 1.09 • •
MAIOLA CORll OIL 89'
40l. IOTTU --·---------
CHIUIOICIRIAL 33'
10)1, OLIOXGl!Ml:IW.MllU ----
MlllURRIU 89'
:1101. IOll .. ------·----·-·
pork shoulder
roast
l"ICNlC STYlE '<LEGS59
• BREAST lb. '~~~ ... 39cJ -;-l'Otl Iii.
BONELESS ""o•• '" $109 <UBI OR STEAKS ,O .. OONO
WA~H'R!f USDA (>-10(1 lb
RUMP "" 79 ROAST ~!~~1
BOHi ll'O lb
FRllH •DF LIVU
MA't'f.uillutllUOtOSIHllfff-·---··
Atllll BllF HIARTI
,_ •. 59'
•. 49'
.49'
.• 89'
~Ma,f••D .. r._,...
.. _59! ~lt~.!~~-IUnl~l~ .. 6~49( IMYfA•ltUl llUOH STHl llU ......... ., ........... --bologna
FRllH •llF JOllGUll HOHMANS, All MIAT, NfW (_~.(:
#J>.Yf>.fl lll.ll lllllON Snfl INF ........................ '""'
CORlllD •11F ROUllDI
~ MGIET-M<C:Ol'S ··--.. ··------··-
~~~l·~!!~~-~-~~!_-....... _ 2 ,, l"ULASICI POLISH PICKLES, POLISH PICKlE 5TICKS or POLISH SAUERKRAUT , , • 32 OZ ....... : .......... -......... Jlc
I
,. ... ~:;,:;; ... tii.~.MO)lfdr fa•,,..,,...,. produee ----...
fAMOt.IS AJOeN ill,lrt:..
ICl CIEAM
LARGE SWEET FARM FRESH ROMAINE
~cantaloupes
-RED LEAF or BUTTER
lettuce
c'RIDCIURY T(JolO(f Gii:'" &AND ... , __ _ "" 19' NICJARlllll MM~·-"·:-............... . -...• 39'
• .______ 2 .. 29' ~!.~.!!.~~~~~-~ ........ 7 .. 1 1 ----· --~.-.--.._ ....... _...; ____ ~
CUCUMIRI
IONGGlltfH -.............. .
--~··Ill Mm de !Gimp's -__ ...
CllFFCHAll CHAIKOAl llUQUfTS s LI. Slc 10 LI 79c lO LI s 1 57 ... . ..
COLDHWll CAMAl PACIFIC STA.CllSP
DmKlllT IAI SOAP CIACllEIS
69' E" .... 3i39' 29' ...,., 1 l1IOX
"" .......
~~o~:n"'\
HL
""
beer
$J99 RIUCASI:
"'" 1101.0NS
IE.WICK'S 5111 er $]69 YORINOFF VODKA
IOl'll:OOf ---........ QWJ!'I
llaJUCllY QDALITY
STRAIGHT IOUllOI . .J4'' ... ,.~]''
lOOl'flOOf •VfAISOlD,
IURDEI
WHISKEY
W!STJIOllT. IO ...ocw'
LUZIAIM
COFm
PIPTO.llSMOL
.\IQUll
I OL .... .... 59' •n 73' f:.,.-59·.,I
-Mt 49• ; ,--------------------------
--"""' -PIKIS lffK1IYI 71111 IAJS-TMS,MT 11 .. -WR. llll 11111 ri-.•r :"'l":,,_:: ... 33° MAYFAIR MARKET-175 EAST 17TH ST., COSTA MESA
....... 2030 W. 1st St., S•nt1 Ane 9192 Westminster,, G1rclen Grew
•
e
l I
.
• rec i,.;.; a -= ---=a ::xx=: r ~ '• 4.
· ·1-:ar .i ei I -·
~.~_111!_!!_Al_T __ .• 59'
~~!!~,~.~~"~·----· 29'
~ ... ~~~~ ~~~S~I M,AWJ . t~.(~~G ... 69'
!!~~0!n!~~-~.~-~ .. ---•· 59'
~ .. ~~OF ROCK FllH _.59'
!;!;.~~---69~.
ARDEii
YOGURT
IWfl'IHT A$SOllTIO
·FAVOI lllClllll
FUllllTUll POLISI TDIYTOWILS
85' . "'"]iS 1 ....
"" . . " . • Bir
•
•
• '
'J1IANKS FOR A
WQIDERnJL DAY
People .e loft )'oil. We
...... t to tbenk )10U. for )"OUI'
patience in the Mpp.t
m!dboua"'e this side ol
the viDepr wodm, lut Wedo
neaday, F(U'lb ol Jul,y Eve
• • • The dtdlle decker 1 c •
erMID cmes flawed like red
wine and the Jll&tiest.p . i d
box boys in the bSstm'y al
--· the ""'" ltntbolidoy--
at:ft feet .• ruWne their acbhle badm: ~ 0 De
Huch M)M.tt. Gm!l'al Man·
ager and two,. the bif boll-
man bimlel! 0. W. Dick . , •
,AND THE WAITING
GAME WAS HAPPY
Derutla and Joe In ~ mtel
department a.re ., arateful
. • • Sei: they. "Tri! every.
body' B1l the nice folks who
waited ao patient],y and gra·
ciously for their lll)eCia1 cuts
of meat, that we'~ Put 'em an II.IP on CU' hero pedKtaI
•• , We think the nicest folk•
in town filop here." The
meat department was a fnn·
tk attair or to qUOte Demis,
"a staggering affair, too
many of )U1 fine people aak·
Ing for your <blble thidc
prime New Y orb, ti1ets arid
top sirloin.I ••• Yoa appreci·
ate the very finest top qiali. • t,y meats, and. we're ao glad
we have them ·to ofter you.
Yoo know, prime mee.t is
bard to come by. Most cf it
goes to hotel! and restat:r•
ants par exeellence ••. But
we've got pull, and ~'d go to
the end cf the world to sati5'
ty your every wbi:m and ape.
cta1 fancy , ••
OH THE EXUBERANCE
AND TifE FUN
A little girl made a spe-
cial trip upstairs to tell Ber-
nice Fay who plays the ~
gan, "You Slll'e' play good,'•
she said. Somehow the wait·
lng is ·easier when you have
organ music to listen lo •••
The bakery WU wild too.
"Take a ticket," the sign
58>,YS, "And ~ answer
wtien your nlirnbe!" Is called."
·But when the tidtet machine
runs out . . . Ever)'body wu
so polite patientzy waiting
their tui-n , , . Dale thanka
you all foc llkin& bi.ii bakery
goodies • • • He tries so
hard to dream up new swee~
for you to enjoy . , . He's m-
ly re<:etJtly a<kted a new
bread. It's called Granary
Bread .•• the recipe is an
oldie from Canada • , •
Al in the produce depart-
ment ~ couldn't believe
that that' many people would
buy watermelons, but you
did, along with the red l'IUp-
beries and fre!h figs . , . How
you love theae Ul'ft1SU.alffie9
••• The bmtain wbidi pro.
vides the lovely tool. and
calm in his ganlen pnxtuc,.
sanctuary tinkled with an
extra special &paride all day
long •..
Nocm in the deli<:atessen
said the number of bazt>e •
quetl spare ribs that made
their way l'o the happy eat·
ing grounds W I S tmbe-
lievabie . . • and the bmtie-
cued chickens if placed end
on end could have reached
trom here to the jetty , • ,
lOOJ pounds of egg '1Jld pota·
to &a.lad ran 11. close race with
the oran~ineflpple whlp
which is real big in the fav-
or circles rig\tt now • , • What
a joy to ('O()k for people who
-appreciate tbe taTUSUal •••
Frank in the grocery • • •
You know, we·~ small but
mighty when it'comn to var·
iety ••• When you ofter Z
klnd1 of CSMed beans only
have room to !Mw 6, you
must cut dawn on the amount
of spece for each • , . He
couldn't believe the coodltlon
of his 1'w!.lves by the end ol
the day ... 1bt>y were bare
as old mother Hubbard's cup..
board ... Even the I08p RC•
lion was wiped out •. , so
we had a real clean Foortb
too .••
WE'RE SO GRATEFUL
YOU lJKE US
••. You know ••• """' • .,..
been the people st~ of New·
port Beach for ~ yean . , ,
and this was the bigrest day,
next to 'lhankqiving, that
wt've had linoe we opened
our dooni . . • And by biggelrt
and "wonderful" we mean
IDtal cash ules , • • Where
would we be without 10'! , ••
You're the C2'Mm in our cof·
~. the cherry on the tr:ip
al our tUndae ••• yoo·~ the
grMtest •• the most pleeAAnt,i
most appn!ClaHve, mo.t pt1ti.
eont yummiest people Jovmi
of the fl1ll!t things, in 11~ we
know ... And we've put all
your names down in our ne
plus ultra book ••• .a ycq
, llhfluld all give )IOW'lefves a
pat on the ti.Ide .
·'
I
1
I
'
I . !
l
1
l
l
I
I
I
l
1
I
' l
I
I
-~-----------~~---------------..... -.... ---------------"":"!"'-
•,'
................................................. ,,,. ............................................ ..-W.1dllt .. ~~ •.• J,.lyl.0 .• 1968iiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii•O•ML·V·Pl·LOiiiiT~.
' ' PRICES 'EFFECTIVE JULY 11, 12, 13 PHONE 673-6360 F.OR HOME DEUVEltY 111.1c•11a ..
•,
THO~PSdN VARIETY, -
SWEET, FANCY, SEEDLESS
GRAPES.
29~. ~
FRESH CRISP, LONG GllEN
LOCAL GROWN
CUCUMBERS .
Combine with thi~ ""..cl onioM lc
R.ffse CUC<lmber 'n Onion Marin·
1l:l1 -• cool salad id•,•· .
. 10!.
.
FANCY, TREE 'RIPENED
SUN-GRANDE VARIETY
NECTARINES
Slic• end chil wit~ 1 tittle c.;mre•u
incl serve over ice. cream ·-e11y
de111rtl
29~.'
. ·•· -
GARDEN;FRESH, LEAFY GREEN
TENDER '
. BUTTER .LETTUCE
.. 10!.
.
l
Organ Serenados
For Y..W
Pl.a sure
by
.Bernice , Fay
L.100 MARKEl; CENTER
NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TD LIDO ISLE
• • • for a Richard;s customer. A dazzling variety •
of foods makes meal planning easier, knowledgeable
clerks are delighted to assist you, soft lights and
music help make Richard's the ,nicest place to spend. ·
YOUR shopping ·hours!
:m1:rs_
Fancy meats tlie easy way. If you need a particular cut of moat, stealis,
I \/2" thick, p1>ekeh in pork chops, beef for kabobs -just ask. (Besides,
you'll get the finest U.S.O.A. Choice Beef available! I
C•11DT IBOr
BAUER PASTEL
BAVARIAN MINTS CLUB ·STEAK ' ' 98~.. RINBNROAST
Bru1h with Singapore Sweet l~rbecue Sauce
Spencer ST~K ·
Sprinkle on a little laachcom1Mn1
·"Very Own Sea1onln9"-new ~a1tel
. SWISS STEAK ci~~i1in9
CHUCK STEAK
Slice thinly .and marinate in
Teriytki marinade. Pan fry, remoYe
meat and 11ute mu1hroom 1lice1 in
••m• pan. Good with rice pilaf.
~
Q
Prepared fer ea1y carvint · 1 ~ 19 u. LEAN EN&LISH STYLE
SHORT RIBS 35CLt.
89~. RICHARD"$ FINEST LEAN
Ground Beef 49Cu. 59~. lf,R.M
BACON 69CL1.
Regular or: Thick Sll~1d
V elYety chocolate
mint centers with
p11tel iclnt in 9r1en
yellow, pink.
R•t· 79c
69' IOX
IJ.OW'la IBOr
FRESH CUT ROM POM MUMS
All loYaly color11
lent la1tin9.
1e29 BUNCH
~~~~!ONIHt
King Size FRANKS ·
Demo Fri. and s.t.
Come in •nd try, theml
89-LI.
ARDIN COUNTRY STYLE
COTIAGE CHEESE ... 33c
I • . ' ' '. ~RAFT ,IN\)lVIDUA,LlY ~,tiEi> · : . , , ,
AMERICAN SLICES , , 11 .. : :69c ' . . •· . ' ' , .. ' . . ' . . .
'Reese SALAD· DRESSINGS
7 SPEGIAL FLAVORS
• &reen 6odd1s1
• Tomato Marinade
• Sp_lendour Rere Harb e Eccelente Italian
e Smiplicity French·
with imported O.liY•
Oil.1
e Sireek Dre11htt
• Cucumber: 'n Onion
Merine~•
..
METCO lllAND HOLLAND , •
BABY GOUDA CHEES~,...: 89c . . ' '
1ao11• rtODI
ROSY RED 6 to o Pl9. , , , .
Hawaiian Punch Bar$ ·, · 4,... '1
SU('l~IST 6 ••· . , ,
ORANGE JUICE ·5 '°!1
NABISCO COOKIES ,, u. 39c
E•sy b1kin g-ChHe1ete Chlp, Fudte
Nut, 9•trneal Ral~!,.· l ~enilla Suter.
LIBBY'S PEAS .
LIBBY'S CUT CORN
14 .. 3 ... •1
•14 a 3 "''1
tttOUllB'SllBNu: ~· ' :MAXEB8
WHAT COULD BE EASIER!
TUNA NOODLES I 11;, 01.
MACARONI & BEEF 11 \/2 oz.
WELSH RAREBIT IO oz. · ' ' CREAMED CHICKEN · 11\/2 ,oz.
SHRIMP NEWBµ,RG 12 oz. .
KING CRAB 12 oz.
LOBSTER NEWBURG I I Vi. oz.
wtP£(y
59e
59e
59e
, 79e
:i .79
. ii .79
1.99
Wa t1ka ~ work out of Gourmet cooking, by doln9 al
tho prep1r1tion for you. An 11sy way to •nt1rt1in.
Beef Roulades, Cooked & Peeled Shrimp, Lobster Tails,
Marinated Steaks, Squabs, Stuffed Cornish Game Hens,
Smoked Albacore, London Broil, Rainbow Trout,
Marinated Ducklings, Fresh Turkey Parts, Smoked
Turkey Thi9hs, All V(hite Turkey Rolls.
to aH of our cu1tom1rs for 'their
go0d humored patlonc• ovar the holidty
wttltnd -Wt wore just so busy. and
our 11rvic1 couldn't quite k.e1p pace with"
tho dom1ndl
pl u ~
A COMl!LETi SELECTION OF. U.S.D.A. PRIME BEEF
' Parties -
The Easy Way
See
Virgini• Fouts
Food, Service.-
Entertainment,
. Beverages, •Flowars
644-1791
~'PLAY TAG''
find the pink tap in
, -Gift Shop and
YKlit Shop •nd
SAVE MONEY!
New 1pe.c1al1 eY•ry .w_eekl , .
•
··o•IB.lDaT
TENDER 'N ~y
Clover Leaf ROLLS 6 i 29•
JUST THE THING FOR
SUIM~NDWICHES!
POO~ BOY .
FRENCH BREAD .
RICHLY STREUSEL TOPPED
FRENCH
CHERRY PIE
LOW CALORIE
CHEESE CAKE
~~M4• .tu.1MU~ MARKET
. '
Ol'£N DAILY; 9.7, SUN 9·6 OPE"! DAILY 9-6 OPEN SUl-!DAY 11-4 . '
•
tatCl&lll
ARDEN AA WAGNER BREAKFASt
, BUTTER I LI. 79' DRINK_. ·4'°~·1
'
SUNSHINE
KRISPY CRACKERS
l'OMPEIAN
OLIVE OIL
M.J.B.
~~ff E~~l.1 ~··
MJI COFFEE J LI.
SCHILLIN6 CHO,,!D
Freeze Dried Chives
HEINZ
BARBECUE SAUCE
SEGO u.,.u Dlol .....
C&H
·suGA_R I LI.
I~. 33c
.... 39c
I/I ...
1.)7
,1.91
49c
.... 49c
, ... 4 i.•1
49'
Tropical.Punc~, Or.•nt-'• &rapefruit, Grape
NEW "POP TOP" CANS
REAL FRESH
CHOCOLATE, VANILLA, STRAWBERllY
MILK ·SHAKE~ 6~'1
TEMPO 7 OZ.
INSULATED CUPS 11·:,. 2 ,,.49c
SPRIN6FIELD
PAPER PLATES
IH It. '" ~.~a.. tlJ. EXCITIN& ISLAND FObDS
"Very Own Sea~~ing;' · 39c ' . ' -17/1•
Flavettd with t lrtter1 1e1•me
••~•rllc •.
FLOWER SHOP ANTHONY'S SHO~ REPAIR BAY CLEANERS
• DAILY 9-6 ~01'! • .fRI. 9·5:30, SAT. 9,5 , .~Ol'·l.·f~I. 8:}~, ~AT. 8:30.S
I
-----------------'
I '
J
VARIETY -Jo)lllny Mathis, above, guest stars on
the •1Music Hall" tonight in color at 9 p.m. on
Channel 4. Other guests on the show, hosted by Ed
McMahon, include comic Jackie Vernon, the Harp-
er's Bizarre, Eddie Hazell and the singing team of
Jackie and Roy.·
TELEVISION VIEWS
Violence Not
New on Teevee
Dennis the Menace
• '
•• • ...
i
MUTI AND JEFF
MISS PEACH
...
' ......
' WAAH! •• ... I
!1
,._
~ 0r~ I
WHEl'H·THINK O' THE YEAAS OF
STRuGGLE AN' SACRiFlCE I WENT
THROOGH T'GET WHERE I IS!-THE
VERY PINNACLE Of DEPRAVITY! ...
.AN' WHAT KINDA RECOGNITION
DOES ·1 GET? ••.• A. STINKIN'
$9.75 WORTH!-
1-10
,
............. -
' -
By Ke1 8'1d
Hf LET ME PAY SlAIR FOR TttE.
60LD GDMf'OUNOS, lfOINICAU'f
l'M. NOT AGROOK.MORAltY,
I'VE 60T A I.Or Of SOUL
$EARCHIH5 TO 00! ' ~
.o "<t
i ' . vv
By Tom K. Ryan
MAKES YA
WONDER ABOUT THE
PRIVATE
ENTERPRISE
5mEMI •
By Al Smith
ON SECOND
illOUGHT··GO
TO MY ROOM
AND STAV1llER.E!
1)1
J·f . , !,
By Mell
'
WEDNlSDAY
JU~'f 10
1.1!0 B Nfl Adillt: (C) (30) "Tht
Ciiv1111'H1 Brow111: Grocwtd Power."
. Proe;r111 looU 1t the llilclp~nld
lfQllnd lttad ti tht llOWn's top
rilltllr. LNOJ Ktllty, 1M his lid•
kitk, &nil GIHll.
..... (30)
t.te•em--IQ (!0!1 ~. '"lht _., ~ rt4: 'l"I
,.. Ill.Ille .. we'I ES mll• ..
lllt ... Rlln I I; • tJdiO llllt '
00.. Dou&Jat I.Wt [ii (TOii! luttr) tor 1111 blrtlldey. (R)
8 KRAFT MUSIC HAU * Ed McMahon, Harpers
Bizarro, Johnny Mathis
flt NET hllW: "'Elllnstoft al thl Cote d'Az:ur." f111111 ttlt Frtneh RM-
'"· thil prvcr11m 111ture1 th• Ouk9 Emniton Orchntn II: I Jill flltl·
VII. Elli fllzltrlld l l91t pllform$.
@11 lllilrwlls Mtlliuil
__ .,.,..,,M.,,,..
(dnime) '.40-Joan 81111nett, Llllfd
Hol111.
·-.... -.. ...... (a:lllledJ') '43-Jin Mttal', .. .
st ..... rt •
D @ CJl"" --111
1!:00 .. ... .,.. '"
'"° 11 llt (J)11o --(t) (30) .1111110'1 monument1I •PIM· U:U D Merit: '1111 C..ic ....._.,,
tite tor food prmpb Jtd Q1mpttt (liOnor) '51-forrttt Tldtr to sp111d $200.000 on 1tttin1 his '
nephew up In the re1t111rent bosi·
MSI. (R)
8W-l<l C"l
D i!}l(J)--IC) (30)
iiifk• D1iow holb.
·--!<)(IO)
·-~ .. -1')(30) ·-·-
THLiR\DA~
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:JO DCCI ""'" -<-""> '51-lorettl Yovnt. JoMffl Cotten •
Cl '1111 ,_,. (dt11111) '41-Ptdro
hmtnd•lll. (C) ..............
(dr11n1) 'S7-Cl1f\ G1blt, YwirlM .. ""'·
1:008_, -~ .. -· l•ntholool '57 -Dlltftil O'ht.
frtl'lk lntoft.
D "'"" (C) '!lot "' .. -......... (lll"*'f) 1'-Jvne ...... ~MdN. ac. •• ....,._.....,.
•-111
ll:I08'T ........ (_)'IS -W.C.Fl.W.. .......... ,_.
_....,. (Clilllllr) 'J2 -Jf"""' °""""' . r U:JOm-n. ...... 0
(Mma) '4'-
tirtrd C. lail!llM. Wf• Y-c
Tt ...... (d""") '4~Joe11 ltllll.
l:JOIB"11o -•-..... 1Tr .. ) '50-... Durtn 0.., Mtlfin. '
•:1111 IC)""' .... ,... C"""'l 'll -=1.1.i11 lM4, •• Whitmon.
4:JO D 'M a., 1111" (,..ltwlf '51--Gr...,, I'd,, 1'1' Toni.
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • • JOB PRINTING
• /'UBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Pll OT PRINTING
2111 wnT IAUOA II.YO. NIWPOIT HACH
'
I • l
• •
WHITE .
FRONT·
Wedlltld11, July 10, 1968
NO STAMPS_~!.· NQ_GAMES I I •4 .NO .GIMMICKS~
JUST Low:· EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES!.
• w ........
lbs. (
WHITE ROSE POTATOES
U.S. NO. 1
IXTRA~FANCT
ALL PURPOll 10 !: 49(
-----· -----
'
,
. '•
f
'
·.
..
. . ... ..
~ DAil Y PILOT ' •••• ' w~. Ju~ 10! 1968 . . .
USDA CHOICE CENTER CUT YOUNG 'N' TENDER
ROUND :·STEAK BEEF LIVER
~----~JA~Nn~DA~VIS~.~..,
ROASTING CHICKEN '
MELON CUT
RUMP
'-::::!::=::::::u.::; ROAST
.. US~A Cl:IOICE
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
SIRLOIN TIP ·ROAST
"
SWISS
STEAK
USDA CHOICE I-less .
ROUND
STEAK
.
STYLE
HAIR
SPRAY
Tall 12 Oz. Can
COFFEE 2 lb. can ; • .1.37
11 lb~ can • • 69
DAIRY
FRESH
Process
CHEESE
AURORA
FACIAL CjlUALITY 2 PLY
TOILET
TISSUE
GALA .
L
L
s
; PAPER. TOWELS
, 2 LI. LOAF .. •
LIBBY'S
PIMENTO
STUFFED
SPANISH
OLIVES
S OZ. JAi .
ARROW
Pun Ground
BLACK
PEPPER .
u.
IAR M WE$TERN STYLE SKINLESS
C -PORK· :.:~ 29· c
lb LINKS . ••
IAR M WESTERN STL YE 2 lb. lat c MILD OR HOT .
1b LOUISIANA . $119
SAUSAGE ..
~ LUNCHEOHMEATS
• Pickle Pimento ·
C • Tasty Meats
lb • Olive Loaf ·
6 OI.
B·OLD
DETERGENT
R99. 1.39
FOREMOST
ICE
CREAM -
FLAT CARTON
l/i' GALLON
,•.!~~--~Cl¥:' ··
NABISCO 14 OZ. BAG
u.
c
•
IAR M WESTERN STYLE All Meat
SLICED. ·BOLOGNA
BULK
LI.
USDA CHOICE
RUMP ROAST
FRESH PRODUCE
U.S. NO. 1 WHITE ROSE
POTATOES
10 LB. 49c
CllLO BAG
VINE RIPENED
CANTALO.UPE
' 6 -~·1
SWEET . THOMPSON SEEDLESS
GRAPES
19~
GOLDEN RIPE
·BANANAS
10~
TH!CK MEA TED
BELL PEPPERS
19~ JOY
LIQUID
Detergent PACIFIC "R&G"
SODA ~o~ ..
CRACKERS
( ROD'S FAMOUS DRESSING
Roquefort • • . • 59c
. .
•
--
F
0
R
VALUABLE COUPON .-
HOLLY 5 Lb. IAG
SUGAR
I, '
22 OZ. PLASTIC .
GIANT ·.
SIZE
HIW BROS. 10 OZ. JAR
INSTANT99c COFFEE _
DELUXE 2'12 OZ. CAN
FROZEN FOODS
SWEET FROST " OL PKG.
GREEN PEAS OR
ETON FR. FRIED. POTATOES ~~:
I SLICED ~ c--__..__.__, ___ ...._ ............
1 C~PID ·i SPRINGflEi.D 6 ·oi 'CAN
FOREMOST 1/2 • ORANGE 11r~RT s:$1 JUICE
~$
R
•
1000 ISLAND 39" BLUE CHEESE I'
SOUR CREAM
Prices Effectives
. Thpn.,, Fri., .Sat. & Sun.
July 11, 12, 13, 14
Prfc., ""'!Kt hi stock "" "°""·
WE GIVE
ILUE CHIP
STAMPS
COSTA MESA
PLACENTIA -·
WE GIVf
BLUE CHIP
STAMPS
19th and Placentia
710W.Chapmu
I
(
Nll.Y PllOF Q
50UTHERN CALIFO'RNIA,'S FAC.TORY DIRECT .D~LE~ IS NOW ORAN•E COUNTY'S
NO. 1 LARGEST· V·OLUME .. DODGE DEALER
1 A..other HARBOR DODGE flnt ••• 48 iron+hs·b41il financing avalable Oii all uw can &: trucks Ill stock on approved II: I t ••·
SHOP at YOUR LEISURE ALMOST $1,000.000 INV•MTO.RY of NEW &: ·USED CARS h CHOOSi PROM
~ .... ~
' HARiot DODGE · ' w Volluwotiit Center w
USID LOW MIUAGI '611 & '67o 11llU '61
MANY TO CHOOll ROM
62 YOLKS TOTAL PllC• $19 $1•
dooo:· (1r.rfm +q~LIC. TOTAL 1'~TA~ ~~--'h'll-i: "'· 64 YOLKS · TOTAL ,PllCa $26 $26
1...1:;'·14.nlli $166 ~ '9W> '' . +TAX•• LIC. ... ' .
'66 YOLKS TOTAL .. IC• $46 $46
r:...i""7\*P1c 141 $1366 t?ilJk J~~t~. +--r.-.x·& t.IC. PYMT~ PYMT.
FOR YOUR PROTECTION
All llAllOI DODGE USID CAllS . . 0
with a GOLD STU
--lillu11111 TllS .STAI ST~!IS IN WlllM THAT WIOI -
111.lRAllTlll THI W 10K Al~ il!CIWllCAI. Mllm
IOI lot DAYS OR 4,DOI MUS 11(!!1(11 Ml COMIS
. MST AFTH MCIWI THIS INClUDB All lllCllAHtcAl 0 Plln, IUCTllW IQllPMINT, IATnlY, -ITP 0
RADIO, lllAIR ON All CAii. TNIS llUAUNTU covm
All PAID Ale LAIOl llll TD YOU.
All PAYMENTS ON USED" CARS INCLUDE TAX & LICENSE FEES AND AU FINANCE CHARGES ON 36 MONTHS ON APPROVED CR!DIT
'Q DODGI DART 'M MUSTANG COUP1
~.....,,. .........._ lll'Ml9 ........ fOEIC •I ¥4 ............ ...., ..... _, .. _., _...... NllL\-
$ 466 :[ct.,~ $16 "W:j! '16 -m't 1066.,;t,. 536 mt '36 ~-
1uJl 100« PtUa $795 ILUI IOOI NICI $1166
'65 DODGLCORONn '66 fORD FAIRLANI 500' GTA
,,A.UflllM!lc, -""'1nf, V.f, rWlo R i-tlr. lTGI •I t='..':"!!':i.. l\.'lt\ !J:fi• -~~~ UH~ "*· 1r-... lildwY air -.ii.
SeL L TOTAL · s29 ,29 l 66-TOTAL S60 S60
000 '!'~!x lO LIC, w:r. ~1t +~~ l~ WI. ~" ILUI IOOI PlltCf $1S9S llWI IOOI NICI $2360
/111 PLYMOUTH IAftL''.19 •u·DOMI tMO ITATION WAGON
1 ...... ,..... ...,,.,., .,...., viiwi lnlwtw, Ill!~ ....... IWW< "" ............................. -. ....... -.. ............. .i'V-1. uw. -
$ft66 TOTAL s33 s33 566 TOTAi. '19 '19 7 Pl~~AX HK. w:r. ~'t ~ 6 •IC. ml ~'t
1LU1 11001C Nia $1680 ' ILlll IOCllC Nia $11115
'62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 'M DODGI COll.QNn
•.
.................................
'76
TOT.._ DOWll
PATillllT
'76
'IOT~
l68 CllAllGl•I .
·--·Ml~-· llAND ........... a M .ioy1·-... 4' ,
NIW Nyloo ~l't 8 ._ -. s,.11 ... '"" ... 1., ............
......ic tioo 8 ·-Al. -S..+ G
UNIU -· Clock 8 .__ $uoN. Of ....... ,.., .IJthl • ~D. s,.i.,.
,8 H.D. T-lwoy .... Aok COi.ORS .., s+o.1c ""-.., 11o. ..... 11e.
lllf, Mo. IK. '.
'2569
~·· , ........... ; ...... it .......... ___ ,_ .................................
-n-:W:IRAND NIW . !!. ~
'59
TOTAL lloiml , . .,_,. ,.,_... ...................... ..,_ .. -·-..... ...
• ....,..... .,.., • s..t ""' • Al
V"'YI ""•• • H.a. a r>.r. .....
IW. tor ..... lClt. '°'· 'tM. I
'2859 --~·· . .. ... ,. iiiiiilT ................................. ' '
p1ctory ""'• -ww.-. ,,..,.,,.., ~. -t, rellllo. ,_...,., ..,..., lltrwl ~......,. ,,...., ..., ....._NON... '68 CORA..-. llA• NIW
$7'....,66· M w, ""'i~~IL $26 = $26 .!l\!t~ . -66 .TOTAi. '26 ~ '26 .t!!!~ -• . ....
+TAX &L•e. . PVMT. ,.YMT. +~uc. RMf. '1'ft+: Dam MODIL
ILUI IOOI PllCI S14H •. , •• --··-. -.A··--IOm NICI $1j5J !· ·~-.•.• ,.: _, u __ $........_ e .,~_, ~-' ~~~~~~~~~~----···-. -~--·....:··~-~-----•· ~--·~~~w....., ~"°"' , ...... ''"'9G",,,..
'66 FOllD FAIRLANI COUNftY IQll, '64 CNllYllOID IMPALA 1.10 slffoW 8 o.1-W'-1 Cov.., 8 0..
· · '--Trim • FoOM front -1s • ""-~• l•KMrV Mr 4.«, ,_.,,Hf""'°"' \1-1, - -.. l:&H., ftllo,.11111 \floll'rf. CTll! llt) 2 ~ ~ "tir· ..... -"9MIW lo ....,_, ., .,.,. Nilflll -ff ml '1766 TOTAL $60 $60 966• -:;OTAI. s33· '33 .W-ol tirts. Atlt for Stoel Ho. IJ6. P11c1 . TOT-AL .. -W.T:f: ~ .. w~
.+ '"" l "C. ii'.r. ")l;lji . • ~AX 6 UC. "71(f. ~t. .'69 '69 1LU1 BOOK l'tUa $2420 . 1W1 1001 NICI $1520
r;:; COMn.wAGON ' ... amhto&lr l'OTAL -b==•--. .w..~ ......... ._...._._,.._tmr.IJl'ViP .ml ,....,...,, ........... .-......... --(... • PA.,..,.
s566 ~;AX . CK. s19 ~¥. 519 ~t 66 · ;,'~. ,~ '33 ~ '33 ~-r· ................... _ ...... _. __ '!""'-' ...
llllf IOlk PRICE $115
'66 PLYMOUTH FUR.Y II
'~· .ir, V.f. ,.,,,, --~ ,.,.,,, ......,, ..-i.e.. ftM& D I
466 ,;~... '50 w:~. 'SO
-IOm Pltcl SIOTS
L ••niour IMPALA 't'I GllVllOLIT lllilPALA
~ ........................................... ,.,.. . ~-..-..-. .................... _ ...... ...,,. .........
'966 ~ ...... '33 mi. '33 ~w~ .1966 ;;,,, ... S67 ._ S67 ~'t.
ILll£ llOOIC PRICI $1515
lls1••r Dail1• tRUCK & CAMHll Dlvl1 ...
2111 HARIOR IOUUYARD
NEW .. iiOol!I 'A ~ MOOI . F
S'MPT\.M Willi 8' CAB MR
CAMPER st-. 4, --Allt,., Stock Ne. 192.
, 52599 576 576
I + "M"l Ml. 'VtMlr' -f<./111/r' 2112 rlM lew '&81/z-Ton Pick1p s
l:ir -lloN S...,.O.. Al_,,,... -'llOTAI. NICI ...._,u.-. .......... M.D ..... U...... +r..&.-AM ,., mdl llt. 711.
.,....11 , ....... ' lie. & -.. , --•• --""""''""-·-·-- -
ILUI IOOC NICI $2671
llADY TO
ROUI
,,,... .. y .....
,,1~· .. w..t
"""' I0-11>: ......
>' llO ..It oloohlool "Dr;s:,•" -al a , ,,,,...._....,.
.. u ............... ,,,...... .. ... _,-=·--____ ,.
OPEN . ALL D.AY SUNDAY
Ol'IN
7 DAYS
A .
WEEK
'A.Al
TO.
lj...!.M.
I
------------------· ---·-·~---
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... IRAND NIW . . ~· .
• l
'89 '89
• Nylo. ~ • W'tl. le wol urpets •
Aotom.otic tr-• ,,,,.., .-; ............
I Hlrettw .._ •.Dool liMt .,.._ a
W-. lthfs .G I ... wipM • '""''• e
DI<. -Miio. lvlt, ~ ~ ~ 111. .
'. '
'2979
--:.::11.1 ..._.. ......... -. .._---·-·--·--... _,. __ ,
• ..................................
168 WAGON RAND NIW
'
,
'71 '71 '2499 . ..... --,__,_. UIU NN•R U•lii11 ...... ,...... ............. -~. ·--•lill;.. ( I
, • •
. •
Wtdnittdl:JI, Julr 10, i-. ~~!!~~~c:n-~~1$ FOii SALa HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSIS FOil SALi HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi
11•~-~ol~;;;;;;;;;;;;l~O-~DO O-r•I 1000 0.-ol 1000 O....rol 1• Clowol 1000 -·• lllO Oowol \000 Coot• -., 11'! Nowpert -1200 II 2 Oft a Lot l BR. 130 tt wide lot. Oot• l · MOVE ID! Ntv ... 4 BR.,
Onerw.lsldlM ..tBf'C::. ~1!5~~.. FHA. VA Reil Estate f;.t·r; ~!!"""""""'N-~ •. ~.:~ 1. -,::.,-· ~~~~
IOI Ultlo cUI II -tor hli 1111,.... p-tbt _, ]•4 Or S Bedrooms I eaman • b1cl, wtlh built.w, .._ -y... 1110 , l'LUS VALUI 0 .,.. tn.t u -u you s I f!t -~ -~· ,..._ --··~~ .. ~·"
lfOlldllil-. s -..m ,_ "'"''" pack..i In bll •lo ,..,., _,, nloo . Newport H9'L 1210
-
-~ _ • 2 both -In ...wtui a1J1Do -Idol to -the lleouliJuUy ...,...d.d Holl Gii C-._ ,..... extro lu1e -BY 0.-'4-'f-4 Br • • ::--.~~· -cWMor.llt..u> ,._,,_,...soRRYWE ,...,.,BR!loarplu,.. Op.......,.lty' ~:!.. ,_109,soo.R<ntoneaod 2Bo,lamnn•Jld<Sfr111co '!'~:'..FurlondT•Y -· • -..,..irct.1 deu troa\ Ill OCIM' but we do baw CQ9oo duced . to s b.lie bedrooml r-·--· "1t Vilta ..,.. UIJV' Uw tar H tt.a $100.. ,. bllnl, .,, m.a cnU .,._ Wiii ..-p o eu ...... ...,. -....V Mewy thab fQGt to lta tatte-1CID6s wtltiftc who invtltl-ltluil.Y convtl'tfd tot or~). ~ ill ltll1rW VA A N ........ e.dli month lnchacUme taxes. out New p&lll. JlaybM. kt ltala 3 BR. 2 b&tb home
J10S ROClllYILT, c:M W .,...,..,.._. 1---~tin Gii merit °"""' w"1 ..u rnA or VA. PHA -....... ol-lloar S.aatlaaal Illy $46.231J _,171 127, ... MHlll -I plO .., a -1ot..Fplc, polio,
UDUCID $2710 ............ ~down ... ,.. -.. -•• -..... •t P>.!00. lime, • -=· .......... -la E-0,... ..... ·--...... olley. N-.
--:r • ..,... -.y--" Fret 1111L 8cGl!I plu, mid --111 ' • new. In • prin.te OWSlef'lo auQy OJnwrtiblt tD 411a. 6: ·~ to ltlCl.IN boolfled & othlr co. bmdill. One t111 01'illMJ. Model. 1'taee4 -R-2 lot -
~ --. ...,. 646-7171 e $46.2'13 will _...,. .. lrbor Ume nor • CO"TI ""°""'" .. ., IO ' ~-~•·•~ -od $14 500 Uttla point IC< br!Pt u •• -Olld\I + 1l'd .. th.-buyfJl'I or )'Ol6 i*opa't1 yard, prot/b.ndeca;ib'C Good 2 BR, SOXlw · ah.Ip ana. ~.900 -Make -vi AL LACI Oranae O:luntys taratat RH1 •·~ pool 1 -10% On. One~ 1-vin& otter-
(Go ~ ta Paulerlno when • Usttng ii entnl.ltod ltlAL TOU Estate ora:anl:aitkllll._ 0Jn. -.. • .., . State -mutt' MDI GRAHAM REALTY, M6.2'1~
rut tD Vu Burm Nc:rtb to lo our care. 5•• •141 \let Harr)' Boep 'M&r· S BR, 2'Ai ti., ~tchea PeUtte Rltr,. 54&a;22 (Nr. NB b.-Olfl-) cm-Eut to_.,) And Wo Naad llotlnp" • -11 omCES dinJne rm P1Uo lam"""' ~· "
..lu $29 750 .. T H M A di B k '°""" •-1•1 -..... -, .•• -1100 OWNER. --... 0-, • 491d1n1or • • C· r • ro er Onqecoun ... _ c.r. beowmOd:Sll" It.' BR. 3 Ba.; din. rm .• AVAILlmmed. OiffH•ven S
Br, 2 ba. I: 2 Br Ocean Vu 0na"' 111o ~ ...i "'°'' ,.._ '44-lln Victoria M11a ,.... rm. 1122 eon..,. 0r. _ ... ...,_.....,., mw ......... CM 14U81T 11~~~~ Honios 144 .000()otDDolly-BY<>wner; sBR..1-'" ~ t:irmal DR, Lara:e I h b -~ I'll, -tor ""'· • putiol VIEW HOME 0 n mac:na 11 NEW H~ Nawport INch 1200 Ir., well kept. Neor ~.
view clale to comnn•u" JUST LISTED 293 E. !Tlh St. -Low do. ""' 30->T loaD ..;S211='=;r.=;oor==! =Me-3079===;!
pool '...i o1moot 3000 ... It. DOVER SHORES COHYBllBKE PWS from $24,950 EASTILUFF Bollloo COY• Drutically reduced to Panoramic Ocean View from Dramatic Home wllh a View Vaney Road at Victcria 2501 Blmboo
-... -... , front TnTace, lJv rm & .. _ (JUlt E. of Brookhurat Ftne 4 Bit, Fun rm on oor. -·-M ._ Bd 8 tU ll 4 Bedroom.11, S baths, '"'at-To -~-•-, WESICIJ.FF FHA • 1nN DN u ..... f
"" Apt.149,500. --
1215
... "RING" .,,'Cl T'n:I . eau u 'I ..... ~-cuui low!. ~ up on bluff) l.ot. only $39,500. ·~ e.aa
•... . RING ..,,........ court yONI ond "' pool w; •• ~ • . SHOPPING cmrER ...i ' BFDROOM.9 -nr..1n1 Lido """ "'"· lee olmple .. Leue/()pt!oa, rm mo. IAYCllST -•SP paUo w I e~nsivf' moun-ta.in. Rldi&nt Pl lla'bt tn-public tranlprtation. Olstom ?OOm in muter suite, 2 Ml land -lUa:h above .ea kvel. Incl eatdener. Avail AUi 1.
'UISUM'E -•u• \=•REALTY t&ln Vlew. Rad)' to move-patio, rn xi> Lill~ with tbz'M bedroom. two bt;tha, blithe, utWty room, work Built-In electric kitchen.
WATERFRC!n'" 3 BR 2 bath
private pier 6 float. $50.500.
(U4) 5J9..3109 after 5 PM
I.I ~.,_......,. _.,. •• , tn. J Bdrm + Dining rm, tiropllce, U x 12 Sewm.r rm. t..rdwood floors, fOl'O!d air abop ln 2 prqe. Only 2 c.anvenient to shopping cen-
'*1 on tlUI outsbDdinl J "ANYTIME'' $44,500. BBQ in kitchen, beat, thake root and brttte-J'Mrl old. ter, nea.r schooh, 3 and 4 ~..::-~~ WELCOM~ M~rs. IUrv.e~-owr:::::~:·flt> :;!~=e·t~ Oran1!9=~~Lqtst ~::Sc~:.:~~
2I07 Cotolpo
4 BR, fam nn: fu.11 siu '°t,
tremendowl view, $41,500.
Dov1r Shores 1221
DELUXE
CONDOMINIUM
--235 •t $29,$0. ftnclng, landscaping. 2449 B•mboo -,.... _. C-na del Mar 17141 642.. MlchHI Kay, Buildar 4 BR, lam rm, l<wely home
Beautitully Furnished
For Sola by OWNER bee.utlfUl l!ll'dmo p LU S 219 JASMINE Co&dwell, a.le• & (o, 1181 Dover Drive Phone 642-28'll Eves 642-5106 lmmac. Nicely lndlCPd. room t o r poooL OWNlll I 1 5 :t11t •· c.-t MilllWeY Newport BdCb Chia 600
2 Br. 21n ba. Dover Shorep
U15 Cbrnwall ~. 64U5a1 ~uFF _ °':," !::. Y, m. l'!i "T.'r .. ":""o:~=· ,.. E. 1'111 ... r .. cowGE PARK DAVIS~E.; .. r:·" 642-'ftlQQ
'IY&00• boll" Hx:ll IMni: ....,, 4 Bedrooms Just Liatod $22,750 ·King's Plac:o Unlvorolty Pork 1237
OWNm LllAVING l'l'ATE ·~-.. + tamUy room . G.I. Rosale • Roblnhood Ln. Olde• Ho-· _ •·-e •-t Lowest pnoed txxne in W. MUST 11 •• J •• belt bur • a ' .... ...,,,.. ...... _, .... " .., Lovely Ranch style home in ae now' • tr .. -ett ...... ::,:..the laDt 1n W..edlff. ~~~;re-~ Mesa Verde Pool on Balboa Blvd. $29,!M ~ ~~ ~. ~: th.ls quiet & desirable area. l BR •• den, 2"-bath, wm.
Room tor p:iol, Room for 6 dn dble guage. Low $100 pe rmonth covers all. CX>STA MESA. • F~rmal din-Eveninp C8ll -646-t519 llfld family 3 BR, dining rm, Fplc, kit· ly room, Wt1 b a r •
boat, Room for dilldl'1!n. Ex-~. v~'0wner anxious. Bright 3 bedroom and .tam· ing room, lamily room, tire-I ii-iiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiilii I Squene Your SS =~ bQ)' Jor the~~ chen w/quarry tile, blt·inll, carpets/drais de x tr :J..
eellent )ocatke 0-to Rltr . ..._.. Eves. M2-01.E Uy room. Eating l.l't'll in all pla~. lalP' enclosed patio, (OllDQMINIUM ud buy thil 3 BR 1% bath minded. Owner. No down to nook, covered patio, encl/ ~:,:.. ·~ t ~
-· park aod -· •LACHENMYER built-in kitchen, """"'" ' car pr. · TRADE FOR llome. Neor -Eat· Vet. or low down rnA. yard, be<ulilully ~ $32,000 • moko oiler. WW Jean SMltll • pundrY room. No pmnts to $MAU.ER HOME OR DU-2 BR l'i9 bath, large 'J*klu aide, Costa :r.&a $21,500. ~2313 646-7171 Estate We at $32,500. Of. take 2nd. J..eue option? C-.lsh Modem pay, no interest increase. PLEX lN HARBOR JllGH room1 with flrepla~. ~ G«qt Willia1118M, Rltr. O~n Eves. fen corWdered. Lease'!' Owner 83J.-<J634 Realtor _,...n · Where elae can y ou find ARE.A. Eves. 968-0073 or w•sher, freshly decorated 673--4350 OPDf EVES. GRAl:IAM REALTY, 6f&.l414
400 E. 17th, ea-Nem Sunken· Uvirtc) Rm. 51A % financing'!' Miring 96S-3.5<6 S152 Pm. Recreational •rea !Nr. N.B. Post OtticeJ VllLAGE 2 lux extras 3 Br,
-
VA FHA 125 000 '" o~CES $2l 950 I ;;;;;;;,.-=::;:--..,=~"L'. I 2 b&, atrium .. lt ft cellinp, or • ' .J..J r r • with Inge pool. 2400 Elden, , XLNT Beach Duplex by 3 lush a:ardene, mirrored
Fasly H-· •_BIDBullROOMSt.l .. ::.~kiy•~ Colesworthy & Co. Orange County's Largest Unit #13. Drive by &: call 4 Bedroom & owner. CUstom built 1963. 3 closeti, glam Ip a c i 0 u.
rnr VII•.. ... ~-uao ~-=>., Newport F1mily Room -Br. 2 Ba e-ach, w/all bltrll, entertaining $26.500. Exe. m-
in exduliw: ll9dc Be.1 .._ dilllhn'• play houle in 642.nn •t . DrM.m kitd>en mahogany SHRUNK incl AM/rM radio & stereo vest. Nr UCJ 833-030I
f, Bedrooms .i fam11f room rev. TOP LOCATION. Eves 1004 Harbor Blvd., C.M. MS-449" Victoria wood cabinets: hµJt ins, !:~wints:u~·n~·mT~ =~="="=·======I
19' x 36• lftrilmD1nC pa t62-lll7 • Open Eves. 293 E. 17th St. 646-llt l hUge living room, park like Only the price has _shrunk on Rented IK>l.idly thru thia -• ..... °""""' ~ '-'" ,_H_a_rb_o_r_V~1'e_w_H~,.~11-s "' $15,750 yud. No -. GI. ~ .. """'5.•ttraon~ .. 3 .: ''"""""· $54,SOO. ()ptD daily l crv..;.l;;cne.:_ ____ 123..;..I
Orte 3 bedroom, one bath on (Open TARBEl.L 142-6691 00 ge. ize, qu ny, this wk only 114 38th St. NB. IRVINE
Coron1 del M.r -·1_. .__lined street. Fix' er Eveninns) 161.U 8::-ach, Huntington Bch appearance rem ain the BEST •·-· In Blull• "·m·
-· •= !========·= -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;o;;;I same Nefl.r South Coast ~ ......, Village 1, 2 BR Spanlab,
646-<M:M ~the ~w'::·': :~~ :'u'::~t·.:::r~ ~ Pia~. 2Baths, fenced yard, :~·5 3 mS:.· ;0 e~;h C:~ !hoppreen1~gt&~~ti:;: ~: lm""'•E•. ,.11,,111,.St··----•I airable I: tudnatinc area. -incCme. Lot has alley •c-JOP LOCATION + J Baths -steps to Ocean, fireplace & shakeroof. Price harbor. 2 min to Village 500. By owner. 297-4373 er
eYM 173-11!164 $18 050 Schools 6: Calil. IrvW cesa. An excellent opportun· Channel, Pooh:, Tennil Ct. juat reduced to $25,500, FHA Shopping Center. 2 min to t" Campus just moment 1 Uy for the wise shopper. + Recreation vea Street to S% % loan may be assumed. CdM Hi ;"2-=Zl=4l=. =====::.I .....,. •w.,.. -priced "°~ "::;,,.,,.! ": ...... = StcA"'vwt. • 00MU.STD RsEEEA·L~!!fi() Burr While, Realtor ... ~";'~ilfi:. ••ck a.y 1240
S BR W.tlkle home, Jn $34,900 ID $41,900 will aell this on GI or n1A 1 1 Owner 644-1552 ---..:...----
,NCmUy rtdec::icnted. Hurry LUSK HOMES terms. Ha a ~erytbina:: UJ6 W. O.st Hwy. 2901 Newport Blvd. LUXURY 3 br;2 bath condo,
cm ttm eneJ Dlrectiom: MacArthur Blvd. bullt·lns l baths firepla~ N. B. MS-1290 Newport Beach -Can Be Lease/Option frpl, pool. tolf, lee land.
-642-1771 from Pad.Oc O:>ast Hwy. or 2M.1 WEm'CIJFF DRIVE wa11c. to' an achoo. '18 & stiop.'. .. CH_,_..Ol~OO-NDOMIN _____ !U_M_ 6'15-4630 Evc1. 673-fi069 Be.yfront 3 Bdrm, 2 batha Owner transferred. $32,500
Anytifnl Newport Fwy. Tum on San Ev At tow ~'IA 1IEl'I ......,. bch/lrcflt terrace, eJl!C. By C>wner. 642-33TI 646-ml Open N . pmg. price ....-.,~ • S BR. 1~ BA. 1200 .q. ft. ltit, w/dr:ter. cipts & drpa _::.,._~_ ..... _W::_"""'_lld;i ::::. $19,670 "'~ Cori>eled. "-'· 0u1 .... Looking for Luxury i"'<:""c~ ~~ ~~:' ;.;',!\,~ ... ".' Jo!~~~~ A ~hm: !!b~-:_, $=• ~~ :~.: ~-~ \?A8I E' S,~;::zi{.t: MONTIC~:,L?T HOMES :llv~rU:ewport ::.-: =,=.=,.,=:=:=·=:=.~=:~:"=r=7=0=12=5=0 1
Hardwood 1loon.. larp yard "!lfll!I!!~~~~!""~~' home for the exeeutiw, on patio, maintmance fr ee rerrti .. washer, dryer. $3,IXXI for only SlOB.50 a month Aa-OM f:om park. 2 story 41 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I lot with acciea to .-r far ~ a choreleim pool-sized lot in 1003 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 to move tn. ~ 1 · t 1 . Br. 2 ha. din rm, -u, DAVIDSON ·R.....a... yard, filled with fruit treet. 'i:=:i:==:::::::::==o:;::~=:=:l--U'll:liif-princ p e &: intere.n. 2 BR ~ .. ""'' ........... VAJ::A?rr, -·' -(not -land). Ev ....m • v I E w • "'" "' 3 •• BR.., .,. ...... kit bllM ....... '""''"' OPEN HOUSE
THURS. & FRI. I • 5
323 Norcissus,
lmmediate II n1 11YJ• NORTH Corti Meu .FmnaJ. dining room, enor-es. 19 OFF1CES l/B luxe built-ln kJtchen, pri-back patio Xklt storage. $181500 l..arp 4 BR, bmal dinlni mous livin&: room,. awrrnet Orutge County's Largest va~ club with twin heated Cl.oee to all ldll.s. Fine avail
Wolls-Mceonlle att.... ..... + m.lly roont. Neer "'""'"'· 311 -· baths BEACH BEAUTY OCEAN ... m -room & pools. P.rt of NOWJ>O<t "''' i ,:;14:;;3"'·""=· ... 642,....,.5841=:-;;=c...
1810 Newport Blvd'., C.M. CathoUc ~.:._!-:1 ,!f"JO ~-~rl e mom. So light & $4,000 DOWN ~_:~ ~: :;~h:·ths~ bor &N!a. CHARMING adult Bayfront CdM
543-7729 Eve MU68f Rttr. 2'l'50 .:uu.....,.-5B, CM u..,.; ul -•beolutcly imm&. .,..is 160 LE.XINGTON LANE home. 2 BR, 2 bath, frplc.
a · 541-MeO l:ves. 545-5142 culate &-beautifully decor. C.OmplcteJy lumlshcd 3 Bed· Delt• Rt•I Elt•te 546-1210 Kitchen idea I for en-
Small, cozy 2 BR Cottage_
fireplace, carpets, drapes
close to Ocean· So. of Hwy.
SELLING Y0UR HOME
IS OUR BUSINESS. WE HAVE MANY
CUSTOMERS WAITIN6 TO BUY. IF
YOU ARE 601N& TO SELL, CON-
SIDER THESE REASONS FOR LISTIN6
YOUR PROPERTY WITH us ,
e We Know the Harbor Area and
the Harbor Aree Knows Us.
21 Y••ri •f c•ntln11••1 1ar.,lca tit th, lu1 m1
ewnart •f Orent• Ca11nty ~M 111rroundi119 .,.._
FARROW ltEALTY ha1 +lta moat 1pacialilad.
liitlily tra~d, 1an1pehnt tHI "t ... 1a11111al-
.,, h1 tha profa••ion.
Ha•• '"' 6000 II.Hiii' +. ..... ,, fr•"'· 11
affic11 h .. ,.., Y••-
• We Advertise Your Home
011r 1,,,, 14v1rtl1!1t9 ~H ... ,,....,,, r.1111h
far YOU -wateli ,.., llllally •'•· e We Will Sell Your Home
Wa ca111hlar it a11 al.litatian. n.. 11la af Y''"
ham• 11 '"'"'rtant ta you--ft'1 lmpo•f•nt to
a.-f., ACTION.
GIVE YOUR KEY TO THE
FELLOWS AT FARROW
•tea. Thill is very, vecy -~" .. ~,.h !;t. 64ii-4494 ~ home llx:ated on Jt.2 )iiiii0iii0ii~64&-141::::::.• ...... -,[lfi~iil!i~:l'l:l~~:;'i:;.';; [ t e r ta In in g. Boat slip
choice! S78,500.$U.750down. iiiii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iiiil Lot with room to build lln-VISTA IAYA ST, DIVORCE SALE! Back Bay •v•ll•hli! $31,500 Owner ~
Ruth Pardoll, Rttltor 5 BR R.,_....ion other unit. Walk to Bay -area horn~ neat & clean & 673-5966 'loa/-~
1600 Westcliff Dr. 642-5200 UNDER $31,CXXI! We're not Otftn ' lhoppirw. Good ft.. Clean 3 BR, tam rm, 2 bl, wtthin walking distance of SACRIFICE: Must Se.ll • ~ '.::-"1::..,"'"(..,..
kidding here'• a t room nancing. Only $29,aiO. d'ptl, drpi,. trplc, blt·ins, the wattt. Owner forced to trade befor• July :IJ. Bay --'-·-F.H.A. Resale house, 3 )'Mn ol:d with din-613-e"nl Eves: 673-8086 lnda'id, ~ quiet all aell 3 6: taml.Jy room with View Cuatom Conde.. 3 bt, 2 332 Marguerite, CdM
In.. 3 batha ~"I Bay & •--c;h Mme St. $3.1,500-10% down m.inimum-eai'e yard, but bo hm •-ft • ~ ~ $115 Per Month fi~ ~\ """ 'o1 obooi ...., MIZELL REALTY SIS-ml """" for boel, trailer etc. wfpoot;.';':, ~~. ~~I .,...,...,.,·...,·~...,...,..., ... I
Poys Al $27,900 at 6.6% lntettSt, 10% n5 w~~~ ~~d .. NB l',!"B~R~.~,~%~BA~. ~-""'","t.o:,:o,m">~ 1~ ... ted ~!f1ty.500. 546-"""" ';;129.,,300,,,. ou...,,. .. ""'' -::7~;,....~ To Entertain
A.r\.vone can take ovtt the down. Hurcy! !!!!~~!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!I i,. room. Fully carpeted, BY
0
""""' 1 2200 SQ, lt -4 br, 2!ii ba & 5~ ~ Joan on this 3 bed· College R••lty 546-5110 Near Beach dr1ped l fenced. Near w NE R : Cambrid~" Frpl, Lg F'amiJy Rm. Dbl: Be Entertained
room, spotless home on a 1500 Adam~ al Harbor grammar, Hi~ School A model. College Park. J lrg Ga • Pool -walking dist
quiet tree -shaded lltreet. I Near Cinema Theater) 18 Units fr eeways. A REAL VALUE br, 2 ba, xtra lrg fam rm, 2 to schl'a _ playground &-VIEW • graciously de~igned
Vacant and ready to move Trade • Trade at Sl6,500. Low &%. % int. used brlek trpls, cpts;drp:s -city lib. Owner • &12..Q936. 4 BR, F•m rm, 2~ bath.s,
In. Hai separate fenced Honeymoon Cott•91 Sl2-23f2 lndscplng. A Rt11tic Beau!)'. BY Owner. Lovely 3 tr, 2 ba $5,0CO On. Vacant.
11Pt1ce for boat er trailer, $20,900 Trade iiiiO;iiOiiOi~~~--1 $27,900. 540-7957 or 830-2537 Elementary, Harbor Hi BOYD REAL TY
Look at· this pricl! $18,950. The most spectacular big 19 OFFICES OCEANl'RONT BY OWNER _ $2(,500, 10% chtrict:. Co.re ft> shopping. 3629 E. O:iast Hwy, CdM
How oa.n >U1 bHt tt . Rott. l'Nl' yard, trait trees and ()ranp O:U.0"1 l.arsMt PENlNSULA PT, Belt Buy dn. 3 tr, 11)( ba, 'tull l>rtve by U'll. Mariners Dr. I iii0iii0ii..i'75-ii0i5930iii.iiiiiiii0ii""I rnan O:t. will show day ar f1owera galore. Dd~tful datllnc 2 BR.· J'ltlc, 40 ft. cptt/drps, lndM.-pd, xtra 646-6m t'
nigh. MS.8222 roverrd patio, frtt swim-Jot, ass.ooo. )'M"d for 00..Utrlr. Xlnt loc. nOCEAN'"""""v'"n.w"""'i -;F;:ee:-:..,.=ple Uttle Corona
How 'lout Thia $18,IOOI ming p>ol, king · liu beef.. Balboa RMI F..sta1I' Co. rr achla/llhops. ~7313, 3 Br, Iara:e family room Just • few 11.eps from this
Solid ho m.md val rooms, formal dinlnr room, 100 E. Bl.100. Blvd. Balboa 642--0721 tfef'ed b rt unusual home. Charmin1 !I me, ue! 3 plcturt windows overlook 293 E. 17th St. ~94 ' ORiole 3-4140 B="'o.n=:-:-;:"°"'.---9 Y P ply. Must
bedroom, 2 be.tbs, dining the park-Wee~ !pl.It rail -;;; .. NEW="ro=R"'T"""BEA=CH= .. ,.-y er; 3 BR., r1.m. rm., sell! $49,500. 642-3064 BR SrwUsh Haciend• +
•l"efL fOl' entl".Maining -rov-fence ' NEW 4 BR 2 B 1pac. Uv. rm. & yard. Mesa i 'L;';uxu'iiii'TIR"Y'eoo"'=-ido::m:'-. B"te'utt.i,-;, 4 Guest rm &: bath on lqer
m ti J · 4 + 3 Baths, Ul, 700 - a Del Mar FHA terms lot. Be surprised, $39,500. er pa o or summer P•rt-TARBELL 846-060( Ranch modem _ bJt.lna. tam nn, Vft ol. Coast Mu.st ...... ,,._. ·&<M> .,~,.,,· l 1 3 •. ' BR, 3 BA. Must sell! Owner
!es. Mature llh•de 6: frult l'iiiiiOiiiOiiiOiiOiiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOii ll 1 On ..... 500 _,,_,, '7"0,,....-.n. transl. $36,5CJO. Call owner R. L. Strickler, Rltr. trees. H:..-bl ..... k l-10,1 · Beautiful &l'I"• ·HURRY! .e -w · ...,.., 670-6000 673-65lO ~ -.. ~. Small V'illa LOS PADRES RL TY 1.-;,;;--.,,."""--,-,-""•fl 5, 64UWS.
complete privacy. Unbee.t-LIDO ISLE "OCEAN VIEW. $%j,900" 494-8833 4 BR. I~ ba. crpt., drp, I 01;;;812;;;-"'lfi""'g"'hlc-and~Dr~., ~-~~ I '~~~~ ...... !!!!!!!!!!'I able l!llt the price. 540-ln>. hrdwd flrs. 18x36 pool. BEAlITJF'UL 3 Br. So, cl TARBELL 295S Harbor Modem & immaculate 2 Bd-llus;e 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, 50xl2T 8!15 Glenneyre Strttt HiG"hl.ands ; 4 BR. 2 Ba. bighway. By Owner only.
mur surrounded by cool pa-Firepl•ce. Below market! l.qw1a Beach Halecrest Ire a. 545-7323 SJ2,!f"i0 548-2847; 1-729--2908 Reasonable 673--6636
Exciting 2 Story HOME 642.-SALES ASSOCIATES """'" Own" tio!. Walk to everything. Re--1 :-=-=-;c--..,.....,..,-"""~ MOVING Cameo Highlands, spacious 4 Ivan Wclls' model home ducrd to .......... $-45.CXXI 3 BR, 2 ba1 bit-ins, d.inin1 85/15 1pllt. Management 4 Br. 2 ba lrg yard, "5, DEN. 4 BAnts'' br, 2 ba. On canyon. S36,SOO,
with view. 2 • Story living Delan1y R•al Estate rm , fplc, buae covered opporttmlty. Double your plltio. $20,900 316 Ramona Library. 6 yrs new S OWNER 6734423 rm, dining al'1!a, lam rm, 4 2828 E. Co:i.st Hwy., CcL'\f ' patkl, dbl 1ar. Walk to Income:. ~for appt Pl. 548-4738 owner. car, bll-fns-$49,950
BR 3 ba. Buy now & move 673-3770 prl't/club I; 1 w i m m i n I HOME 642-4090 BY 0\VNER Must aeO. 4 br. 2 HOME 642-4090 DIAL direct 642-5678. C:wp 646-4494 in before 9Chool mrts. !!!!! ... !!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~ poOO. Low down pmt FHA. THE QUICKER YOU CALL, t.. tam nn. bltns. fri:>lc. lg. ror Cf\Dck. emo.ent multi yam M , thl!ll alt ha.ck ud ~~~~~Ro;y~J~,~W~ard;~eo.~~-:':"":1;Dl:ol~6'>0618==~l<r;;;RE:Stru::::""'~~F~ortin~~Co.~-:=~-.. i'l'H!:~~Q~IJICKER~i:~YOO:,~s~ELL~i.;1n~d~lot~.~$23:·""':.· ~~~:-~~=:~W~ANT:;~AI>:•~· ;042~·~'671:.~lin=m~tD th. pbme rhWI
293 E. 17 .. St.
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE 842-4455
7612 .....
'. SHI TOTAL DOWN TO ms
Dnmaculate 4 Bedroom. uaed brick flreplACf'. dlnim:-room. Spollcss In •nd outr
Quiet tne.Blwd d:rl!et Con to the beach and new park tor UM Kld1.
WUJNelTO DO SOMI HOMIWOIK?
Tbll i bedroom, 2 bt.th home I.I In need or PA-int fl.nd a few small T'l"pain but
M:ll ""'111 tbl price ol $13,~. Large kltchcn, double garage. for Dad. Tcnct'd
........ Kids.
llAT INFLATION! •
It-. to build on rtAJ' t>f thit R.J Lot wtlh a ne-,t 2 bOOroom, ~Ach cottaa:e.
~ to RU at $16,500. Submit on down payment.
M mT SZt.IOO tUYS
ycdl .-.._ J'OU see It. It'• ,located in A lovely lUft near 1chools and •boo-
-·-o bup lot. ,,,.,.., 3 bodtwma, 2 batho, "°"' brick l!roplace. Larp kft-illll* 1fttlt llllOdml IUlt--lm. Dwp pile carpet&. Doubll: G&rait:-Call for 1ppolnt.--IDllH AIOU• ftll. -a.ta llttll oalllt wUl ~ lt "Home Sweet Home." Vacant and ..UI 1tll FHA an4
VA _. pq .,_ """ to ollow lo< .... tint. Modml 3 bedroom. 2 Bath. Hard· ---'""" .......... -. Moo
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711
2043 W11tcliff Dr. at Irvine
WALK TO THI OCIAN
from this la.rge family horM. 2.200 squ~ fttt of llvln1 &rft ln thls aharp' ~
room home Three 1p&cioua bat.hi, two attractive i-ttOI, ""th MQ" maintenance f~ living. Huge lfvlng room "'Ith flreplaCf. Enjoy the summer, entertaininc
made pleuureable in • kitchen with all bullt-ln appliances. !)\joy the BhM Padtk:
and live ln 1\)'le. Only $33.900. Submit your amalltr home on our ruarante-ed
trade plan.
4,000 59UARI l'llT
S sp1.cioua bedrooms and den. 4 full baths. Larre Jlvlnc room and hup fAmDy kitch<'n. Thtt< car gara.gc, onf! with boll.t door to rear yard. Pool alte lol Uve ln
Newport Bfach'1 rtnest Uft. at tbe barp.ht price of onl)' $49,SM Cl1I for t.,ppoint-
ment-tod&yl! Sumbl~~r amaller bomt on our ruannteect trade plan.
COUNTRY Cl.Ut DTATI
i:xou1111a u"""' 1n t11t. ... ,,...., ' --., a both. fomllJ -a.t.m ._.,.., wall to wait .,....tlnL ..,,.... t•tey. Fonnol DIDlna Room end = .. tamllt room. Twtnltllna: ll'aia' AnthanJ ~ nD'l'CIUndtd. ll:r etw\om .. ~ •• 'l'hit
perltct ....,,,. !or ...,_, ~ -Onl7 2 blocb to tlM Coun"7 Oub. Jllst ul!du a,ooo _,. i..t o1-.. .....,..t 1 .. "7,9CIO. Submit.,_~
er home on our suuut.eedl tnda procram.
YllW 0. llAY AND OCIAN .
This mognlfbiht """ -" .... Jurt --SS,000. Built .... 1owh to take Ml adVaJ1tap ot watchln1 ..U boata. sun .ets r.od l"°rlou. CltlllnL A must eee, bn:atht&Jdna -U houri 1 41.,y Je.i)OQ.
' COST A MESA OFFICE-545-9491
2Ut Horbor ll•d. Opoo JYIOilltS 'tn t P.M. .... .............................. _.... ....
DANCI UNDll STARS
on the wlde deck surroundln& thla magnificent SWIMMING POOL Tr-rrlflc PAtlft are•. Br@ll.th·taklng land.seeping; 4. BEDROOMS, 2 BA11JS. DELUXE residence
RC.luded ln the heart of Colt.a Mesa. SPEOAL PRICE only $23,500.
SMC. fRR All
nu.r BJue Paci fic. Channlns 3 bt'd.room, 2 bit.th rffidenc:e. Uv:lng room with
tomAnUc fi.rcplaoe, bun t-In ldtc~n. quality carpeting and custf)m draperi~. 2
ear garage. Just move In and ffiax! A STEAL At only $17,:l50. $1M mo. includes a!J I
OCIAN AND llA Y YllW
from th1a maarunttnt Corona del Mar, on bup lot. 2,250 1q. ft beauty. 3 Bed-room.. 3 Bat.hi, FamU,y room, Fonnal Dlnln~oom. •ftimet"' heattnc. 2 CU pr-"9:• A Po)ynllllan 1etttna ln marntftcC!nt aufTOIJnds a larre wann
wa.ttt SWIMMING POOL. NU htce $S3.:Ql. LO WN. EXCEI.J..ENT J"IN. ANONG. • •
911 ....
NIAi llACI UY
--A NEW RICORD ••• Walker & Lee Soltl · 154 Resale Ho111ea In One w-kl
• I I •
"".., .................. ..,. ............ ~.~ ...... or.r--~·~~~~·· ------.-----.·~,, ...
Wtdnt""1· J11ly 10, 1968 DAILY I'll.OT Q
SOMETHING NEW-SOMETHING Dlf'f'ERENT11 NOW1! --~-=;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;....;;;;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;;;;::;:;=-~ '~-P_l_L_.O_T_P~E_N_N_Y_P_l __ .N""""'"""C_H_E_R___,J==\ ~~~T I
3 lines 2 times s 2°0
Mom C~~!~ T~~7:..tno .Int Say: "CHAltGI m"
Spodll -~·-llalo Ml Spo<ial Cluflcat;..
HOUSES POR SALi
Corona del Mer 12SO ---· ----
OCEAN VIEW Horneo e 3 BR with den, pool, aep-
din rm, ii n'ldter BR.
~ IW!W condition. Cameo
Short>a , • , • , , , • , , , • $115,All)
e 4 RR &efl· din. nn. lge
view lot , room ror pool.
Cus1om feeture.1. A -1
co nd. Cameo High1
lands • • • . • • • • .. .. MT .!¥X>
Robert Nattress, Realtor
• 642-1485 •
Lido Isle 1351
OPEN SAT I: SUN
2 BR. dell FumiJtied
11.B Via Qutto 6754l4
Huntington Be1ch 1400
2 BEDROOMS
51000 Move-Jn. Owne1· pays
all closing costs. Con1pleLely
repaintl"fl i.nsidc & out, block
wall fence, JandM:aped,
buUt-ln elect. R&O, double
garage. $139 per month in-
cluding taxes.
4 BR TRI-LEVEL
2'£7 sq ft. Garden entry with
leJl&l'te family J'OOm, wet
bar &: room fM pxil. table,
modem elect. kitchen with
eating area, M!p8.nlte dining
room 4 big BRll + sewing
area , 3 baths .Large fen ced
lot , room for pool. New car·
prt.<1. $3!1.995 • $.1100 down.
fiT illage Real Estate
L -·""'"11u,st &. Li a 1·t .... id
S02-'14.71 546-8103
Dainty Hounl
lmmacult1le 3 BR 1%. bath
n:.'31' Uie beftch with beauti-
ful landscaping. Room for a
r-001. Hurry? At $18,500 lull
price.
Pacific Shores Reelty
S47-'<;& Eves. ~
HOUSES FOR SALE R$...-!1ALS RtNTALS RENTALS
HouMI Furnished HouMt Unfurnished Aph. FurnlshM S.ntl An• 1620 Summer Rent•lt 2910 :=:;::=_;;:;;:_ ____ -------Huntington lalch 3400 Corona d•I Mar 4250 1 BR, 2 ta, fam rm, cpts,
dnp. patio, oor lot . Gl 51.40/e
sae.~ Owner 549-W46 Magic Isle
Spend a bewitdting week in
L-umi Belch 1705 !:hi!: true land of enchant·
-• rMnl. NHI, clean, cottages
RAMSHACKLE '"' weekly reut•b tn ""· trancing Avalon, Oitalina. RANCH HOUSE ALSO .. 1..i ... <1 .. 11al prop.
Sprawling Earl,y Calif. ranch erey for 11ale.
::.;e ~~. i;:·~~ :':;., Burr While, Realtor
runa meetion. Well designed 2901 N architecttre with exterior of N ewport mvd.
wood plank, heavy .tJake eYipOl't: Beach
_roOflioes, tarp picture w~ 6'754630 Eves: 6«!-22:>3
d:Jw atfordl vccellent ocean
vtow. NEW 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. Steps to
bay &: oceean. See at 310 E.
Bay Ave. Balboa
Spadoua 3 BDRM. " DEN "2"B"'R""'F'Ufu=-.-.. -=sEA=s=H'ORC: floor plan. serviced by 2
BATHS. \V/W carpeting Dr, NB. S175 wk. 615-1700
thru-out, (NEEDS CLEAN·. (633-4863 Alt'r 5 PMl
ING BADLY). An up lo dalf' NPT Bcf1 1 BR, Alf'cps t blk
KITCllEN HAS SILT • IN to Ocean, $60 pe.r wk JuJy.
RANGE &: OVEN, DISH-Avail Aug. 642-1Z72
f'R.EE RENTAL BOOK
Drop ln and Browse
WE ltAVE SOME
FURN lige Bacheklr
$125 mo. Incl ulll1.
°"!!r 401 Delancy
613-3770,
Unit
{Ait
Rlty.
,ttuntll"~ton Beach 4400
lruRN. Duplex, l bdrm. and
ED INGER e:arage t blk from beach
or 540-5140, · $140 mo. 536-n~
4 BR, 2ti ba, 2 a.try, 1 yr FR.EE Utilltiet1, furn apl.
new, 1 b1k Jclll, S min walk near beach;-pool. Yrly or
bch. Ls.a $281 mo lo Wkly. 53&-3777 ~1366
qualified ~ec. 961--1730 I=="'=·-======
'159; 2 BR. townbol.llSe, carp. L19un1 Buch 4705
il drape1, bltm, frpl. Close NEW furnished 2 BR 2 BA,
tlo beach. 962-1262 Eves. ll electric &uilt-ins: Pano-____ ,_ a
La9un1-B1ich 3705 ramie view ovf'.rlooklng Ali-_,__,~--·-so Beach. $185. 499--3755
MONARCH BAY ARE A A l...>
LOVELY OCEAN VIE\V. 31 4 !)ts. Unfut·n!shl!'d
BR &: den, 2 BA, cpts, Drp.<;, :--'--------
frpl, pool. $300 mo. Gener1I adults 496--1243 betw 1~5pm 1 .;;...;..... ______ _ 5000
WASHER. GARB. OISP., I BDRM, View, "' beach, RENT
BREAKFAST BAR, ETC, niO!. S85 wtt: ·2 bdrm Sll5 Condominium 3950 3 Rooms Furniture
and open11 to family den, 642-8358 or 642-3260 ---------1
-crnrER FtREPLACE I ;BALBO== .. ,,Ioland=-.-.... ..,,...~BR= BACK Boy • Br. .... rm, $25 Month
f1" USl!D BRICK W/WOOO--c.1-6) ; _,; 1, •• ,_· patio + be.lcoey. ExcepL ruu. OPTION 10 BUY .. 1"" ....... ; ......... .....,, lscil. T ok
m MAN'IU:. GJUI ~ Aue., Sept. n f: 499-ZJJ.6 ::.. 642.'lm.l =-• No deposit a .•. e.
"""' ., ....,. --t •--------·I H.F.R.C. reaemble "GODS r.rrn...E 1 OR 2 br apta. Furn. in blk 1 Pumiture Rent1l1 ACRE", WITH GRAPE AR-bly or bch S125 il $150 .tCNTALS
BORS. F~ n CORN & NU-week. * 673-7tl2 Apts. furnished 517 W. 19th, C.M. 548-3481 ·~ --------~·~ 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 MERDUS PLAf'T S il · 'ALS • Cost• Mesa 4100 ~..W41i.m· iM ~u:rs::a~·· all badly in Houses u_n_f_u_r_n;_,h_od_ -$-25---Wk ' }:i! !LU~ r R -I . 1.!p ..... n ~ .. This 1st qUality born!: is not Cost1 Meu 3100 a jtmker. It has been aban-_______ __;_.::.:; .• Studio Ir 8:1ch ap;~ om r;Er .. r ~
doned & ls in NEED OF LEASE OPl'ION. Rumpus e lncl Utils .It Phone t:erv. lli I.fr, iJ
PAINT, CLEAN-UP & MJ. room special . Good Eastside e Maid Service · TV 1vall .
NOR REPAIRS. IT'S AN location. 3 BR, hardwood e New Cafe il Bar
OU'Im'ANDING VALUE AT Doora p]Ul!I bonus room. 2376 Newport m vd. 548-97SS
BAC'tfELOR • UNFURN.
from $100
$30,950 FULL PRICE Lease $l6 7/ mo option -1 SI'ORY Triplex. lllll sq n, incl. utll.
LOW DN. PYMT. O.K. asking only S20,950. CALL 2 BR, 2 marble puU baths, 1 • 2 le 3 BDRM.
A REAL BUY FOR 540-1151 (open eve a) w/w qrts, dip;, bttins . .2 lrg FURN. Ir: UNFURN.
THE AJ\IBITIOUS! Heritage Real Estate enckl5ed cpted pat i o s . Heated Pools, O'tlld Care
MISSION REAL TY 2 BR.; garage, patio; carp., Adults only. 409 Ford Rd, Cenl<'r , Ar'lj. to Shf:11plns -
= s ~ •-1 f · 646-1546 No ""ts allowed ....., . '-"""st Hwy., Laguna uaapes, 'ove, re r 1 g , ..-.
Phone (TI4 )494-07n Tropical setting, for adults. BEAtJI'., 1 level 2 BR , 2 2700 Pel •. son Way, •I Har-
l BU<. lhops. $150 Mo. garden pd.tiofi. 2 BA. Avail bor A Adams, Costa. Mega.
,~,...,... -----. .... Lagun1 Niguel ~~~.,... 1707
544--4780 July 15 See 1'.1gr. 409 A. 546--0370
$170. 4 BR, 11,, BA
Raleigh A"Ye., Costa Mesa .......... Ford, C.M.
NcWPORT WEST * Manarch Bay * BACHELOR Apt, Ideal for Excellent, park • like sur·
w or k ing w om an o r rounding• for adulta requir-
pensioner. $65 util pd. No ing peeCe le quiet. 2 story GI no dn. 3 BR l.2x18' S. Coast's finest exclus:ive
fam nn, formal din nn, be&ch community bldrs off.
1 ix:11' cov. patio with BBQ er 8 new 3 & 4 bdnn homes
,t ""'<'l bar. Owner trans-wilh magnilieent Ocean and
S BELROOMS 2 baths. Walk
to school a. $150/mo.
546-w.17
pts. 548--3.128 aft S Discriminative Tenants
l BR furn 1. 2 & 3 BDRM. API'S.
$125 mo POOL. NO CMILOREN 1 -~·ecl. Ialand Views. Newport Be1ch 3200 "'j:§'•'. bcro ... noon MARTINIQUE ~RASH EAR REAL TY '-'2.tltlO • 1116,tltlO
1):7-S:J.1 \ l!:Vl'S. SJG.7000 $2850 49!}-JMS AVAD... Aug 1st, cor Unit fac-
ing pool. CarpeL'l. drapes,
Duplex11 For Sale 1975 bit-ins, 2 car carport, 3 BR,
1 BR FU<NBhed Duplex. an GARDEN Am.
$18,800
3 Bedraom-'2 S.th
Forest of tree!! surround thls
house, park like fl'OW'lds,
No Down GI.
TARBELL
5824 Ectinger, H.B.
Lovely Exec Home
REDUCED TO $41,950
16"38. heated/filtered POOL
5 BR, 3 BA'rnS.
HAFF'DAL REALTY
·•Homes to Match Income''
8740 Wamt'!r 84244(1)
Hardwood Floars
3 BR & den, a>V6ed patio.
allf'y access for boat or
trailer. Out of state owner .
must sacrifice. Only STl.500.
P•ul Jones Re•lty
847-12.;~ Evc5. 842·5844
--i.tUNTINGTON
VILLAGE
Near ~oil course. Immac 3
Br. New cri>1s thru-out. Pa-
tio. etc.
utilities paid. $110/mo. Per-l81h .l Sanla Ana, C.M. ron Realty 642--lm ==='°======ICall Mr5. Henderson 646-5.542 4200 1777 Santa Ana , Apt 113, C.M. 2\,ii baths, $25-0 mo on leaH.
CHARMING Dupl~ & guest AVAILABLE NOW Newport Be1ch
eottl.ge, 2 bUai beach. 301 2 BR 2 B • T-'-,.,_ • a, carpets, drps, STEVENS VILLA uin, ......,.ona del Mar. ShO'Wn I I 1200 t gt-ns, moon ease. .I WJll LEASE NEW -LUXURIOUS by 'apPt cml,j'. Ckvnn-213: 673--3663 Eves: 548-{;966 y ~ Bay&: Beach Realty, Inc. 1 & 2 BDRM. APTS.
RENTALS 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB ADULTS ONLY From $130 Month
J I A S Carpets. drapes, all built-
HoUHI Furnished EXECUTIVE 4 BR .t: lam U ' • Ug, • epf, ins. Adults only. No pets. ---------·I rm., 2 fireplaces, pool &: 381 Avocatlo. CM fi.t2-28M
Rent1ls to Shire 2005 rnaintenanc~. lmlllllculate FURNISHED APT.
condition, ln Baycrest. $400 2 BEDROOMS _ 2 BATlts LARGE 3 BR. APTS. WOMAN With 2 br &: 7 yr old -N ~-I Ir per month, 2 year leue. No Watorf-nt/Loc riir scir~"l s. t"eway~. son will share my d•-iex: •... 11 • ..1:.... 1 OCC ~ -ta. Reallor. 642-5200 wp ..... ,,.~,•'IN' o with same. 646-2769 aft 5 pm ,.... BOAT SLIPS 988 EL CAMINO
2 BR. Apt. CdM area. Share AVAIL. Aug. lsl : 3 BR., 2~i Channel Reef Apt. # 1 Cost• Mes• w/r~ns:ible male adult. Ba, Crpts. &. drpl., bltns. 25'2~ Ocean Blvd., CdM rn--~ g.g Pool. $250 Mo., I ease LA'RGE 2 Br. Pri patio
"''-' ..,.,twn p.m. 642-1896 673·1781 d11,'Shr. $1 25 mo. Manager .
Lagun• Beach 2705
BEAU. Furn. 3 bdrm, 3 bth .
in exd. Oceanside So. Lag.
community. Incl. frplce.
elec. kit., d/w, grdnr, dub
privilcgn. Avail Sept. 15,
$350. 499--2898 er 499--2428
-.-.-A-IL-A--1at-~3~B~R-2-" ~~~ ... ~~~~-1 1~~ B .Ja mrs St. CM, · ug. : ' -,, DELUXE ocnfrt 3 br 2 ba, ~&--191t f\42-8017 Ba. Crpts. & dl1>!1., bltns, bit . / •--.~ -~~ ~-• ~ M I -iru, w w, ui.,.. lnu•· \VAIL .. Jul_y_ \Olh: 2 BR ..
ruuo. f~"" 0·• ea•' BBQ smr SWJ1\;'k uo. I 642-1896 """""· W 0 ~ · nrw cpts.. draprs. bltns. "'""'°73 • CT'lln Front I 2S ,... Nf:\V 3 hr, 4 be, boat dock. 613-2306 A~ulls. no pct~. I .
am deck family only. S350 --61&.l
mo. 3605 F'\nley 52!1-30Sl BEAUTIFUL . Waterfront NEW de<"or tT 2 hr nl'ar
Bick B1y
V•catlon Rent•ls 2900
3240
Apt. 2 Br. patio, boat dock, OCC Sl2S & 5145 Call for
wkly -.tUmmer rental or t · 54oomg
winter tease. 3403 Finley ~••c:•~·-'-'-~-'-·~--~-
$23,000 By Owner PALM ~;,_.,, 3 bedroom 2 846--Clll2 .,,,.~ .. ~
LEASE 3 Bdr!TUI, Family
Rm. Ref. S200 mo. 2253
Golden Circle call owner.
NA 2-318j
675-4039 2 BR. carp .. drapes, bllns,
~ 1 1 2 BR 2 garage. $115 Month. No pets
I---~~~~---I bath pool and 11.ir con· $99.50 ditioned S'2f:(I pr mo leasf!.
"' ~" o ocean U)I , 1 °'&-"l' BA, patio. $200. 1vk. $700 P l'ase . .,., ,,., •
TOTAL COST w""' • w""'.nd ... .,. 11~
5..'f>..0093 after 6 pm. Corona d•I Mar
FOR LEASE
3250
mo. ar yrly lse 5119 River 1 BR WJW carpet, draJ)f':S·
Avr, £4'.!.3(12~ er fi38-5712 j Bll-i n:<. J9'1., Adults, No
------· ; !>(IS. 21S'.l ~11\nlr 5'18·100:1 to quaJlfied veterans. 4 large
BR~ f'lrctrlc kitchen many
extra~ or low FllA terms.
LISTER REALTY M2.fi63a
CASH TALKS-
3 bdr, 2 ba. $14,950. $1.Zl.
mo w/subst. clo\vn. 962-4219
3 BR. 2 Ba 1900 911. ft. Facing
1>1>ri<· $32,000. By owntt
536-«170
Fount1in V•lley 1410
:i BR, 21iii B.\. Separate faml.
Jy room. Fully carpeted,
draped & f,rQd. Near
grammar. High School &
frrrwaya. A REAL VALUE
at $26,500. Now 6% % Int.
842-2342
LOVEI .. Y 3 Br. 2 ha with u-
traa. Patio, lam I o t .
$2:1.500. 962-16711
G•rden Grove 1475
5 BR. Plua pool. Wettt Gtu'det
Grove. Dlrling, llmd!!Cpd,
sprlnklel'1. CfllU, drps, 2
rrpk:s, 2 slory. S36.«l0.
S3Z2 Trlnette e 897-fill!
WMtmlnatw 1612
LUXURY l Bl ,,._ ..... + .... ,i.,,
"""" -....... ,.,,,
"""' Its -ltbup • only $27,!l'il'I. NothlnJ: down
to vPte.-.ns. Low FHA
TCf'Tt\R.
LISTER REAL TY
1661.2 Beach BJ , ltB M2.fl6.\l
SOCK rr TO ·EM1
ow &12-161!1
Cr Dai!f Nf w5 tit
'
Summer Rent•l1 2910 Coron• del Mar •2SO --
LABOR Day Wrek. From
Sat. Aul?'. 31 ; $300 lsL wk . or
$500 for 2 wks. Exel.
Oceanside So. Lag. ldf'.al for
1 or 2 fam, Compt equip.
499-2898 or 499-2428
2 BR , cll't! bit-ins. crpl ~.
drps, w/pool , $23.'l mo.
G.H. Rohert!!On Rltr. 615-24'10
3 BR. 2 b11, bit-ins. crpts,
drps, $275 mo. R. L.
Stricklf!r. n1:m. 673--6510
GARAGE APT -Newl~•
decor l BR. Swrdish fr-pie.
bltin b1't'akfast bar , beamed 1
ceilings. Sl55 mo inclu<M-~
utils -yr lsc. 642--8733 or
eves & wkends 67rr3320
Costa Mesi 3100Coota Mesa 3100Cost1 Mt11 3100
Solt>t a Simple Scrambled Word Puzzle for a Chuckle
'8 Reorron119 l.tters of Iha
fOllr tcf(lmbl.d words be-
1
Sow 10 form four lirnple word•.
IHEDD.AN I 1 r1111~
8 PRINT NUMBERED I'
lETTEl!S IN SOUAl!ES
., UNSCRAMl!lf Lmus 1 fO@ ANSWES 11111111'. ..................
SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSlljlCATION 9600
---- ----------------------
S200
--·--~----EASTBLUFF
FOR LEASE
8 New Prestige
T own Homes
("l()kl ft1edalion all electric
living & prlv1tr patio • 2 b:;l;·com 4-den & J bPd-
rcnm with '2 nr 21., baths • Your nwn 1nrrc 2-cM" garage
Autf'mstic ck:~r openf'r avAIL • Dittow:udier, dr<\!W,!C, r.Al'lW!h•
& laundry laclllti~.
RPfMW•lort1 9wWble. • Yrur rw•r-t'ln1u1l k'y fn pool. • Ttrn! !!lartin:: ~~ s::;n mo 111 • S«; A.i\tlCO WAY
NEWPORT BF.ACll
NE\\'PORT RNiera. Back
Bay. Avail Ju.l.)i '11. 3 BR 21'
BA. W/W nigs, m,.,
btt·im. IArre pool 6 rec.
Pot OK 1245. 6'2-2JO'I
NEW-2BR,2BA
1croa tm W•tcllft Plaza ,
l&S!'i Irv1n• ll~. 542-
0"'..:::i.
-.. •l~v s2•0
XLNT Joe, 2 BR .. c1u11.,
dnilPf!I: htd. pool. Adulta no
..... .$1l5."8-4145 -·
..
RENTALS
Apta. Unfurnlthed
Coron• del Mir
RIAL ESTATE
Gener1I
STORE or office space.
,. _ tmmac.: 460 tq. ft .. $150
!'l.. c:;..,, -v ~to. Balboa Illand 642-9:;55 ~'l!!!!, 8u1lnesr Rtntal 6060
ON TEN ACRES
J 1 2 BR, !-'urn & Unlu nl LITTLE SHOPPIE
from $150 mo. Frplcs I Prl/ Finest Coron~ del Mar Al'ff.
Patios / Pools. Tennis . Con· Parking. $Ila mo Incl utlla.
tnl'l Bkfst. 9 hole PutU 304{) E. Cr 1rt r !I".·; .
G<..,n. CORBIN-MARTIN
9lll Sea Lane, CdM 6442611 REALTORS 615-1662
(MacArthur nr. Coast Hwyl Office Rantal 6o70
$115. 2 BR Corona High---
lands. P•tio. Ind"'' AdultL LAGUNA BEACH
673-4132 Eve&-weekends. ON FORES'i" AVENUE =,--,-,--,--,.,-=~-IDesk mpecea avallable In 2 BR, I bath cottage $180 mo. newest dtlce bulldina at
on lease. Delaney Realty pi•ime Joca!lon in d&.vnlown
673-.1770 Laguna &ach. Alr cond.J.
tioned, carpeted. beautl(ul
Huntington Be ach 5400 pan<'IM r 11,rt•ron\11;-:. T 11· n
entrant'C"I: Frontage on
Foresl Ave., rear leada to
REAL ISTATI
Gener ii
NUTVILLE, USA
COJ\1~ TO
BALBOA ISLAND
e N!,"'W e LUXURIOUS e
RESORT LIVING
4 NATIVE GARDENS
S POOl.s.SAUNAS-JACUZZI
MuncipaJ parking loll. S50 7 1 /3 ACRES BALBOA ISLAND l.OOA.-per month fOI' apace. Desk
and choln ov'11abt• lo< $5. • TION IS INSTAILED AND
Buaine. boon IMWfl'irl.a: TWO and 1/3 •cret vacant READY TO GO. IF YOU
ller'\lice available tor $10. land on busy thCln:>ugbfatt ARE, CA r. L FOR AP-
All utllitiel pUf excep: in Santa Ana. Bolsa Ave. POINMDIT A. N D PHt.-
HUNTINGTON
GARDENS •Iephone. ta anly major undewkiped SCliAL INTER.VILW ANY
DAILY PILOT ...__,, __ _, tn ~•-A IM.Y 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.
Tennis -E:itertainment 122 FOREST AVENUE ~ w..i artt. P-642 271"
BOLSA.CHICA & HEIL LAGUNA BEACH pnjsed at S60,0CO. Pr I c e.1---..:..;;::.":::...;c:• ___ I
ADULTS 847-8414 494-96 SS4.00 net to estate. Water ====~-,-~---1 -~--and Ml utilities available. ~DID 2 Br. 2 bA. fam rm. Newport Beach 108 ft. frontage. For furth'r
crpts, drpiii_, bltn stove & 432~ sq ft . ,ach oUlce. information phone 5f2..9533
dwshr. Pll.110. Ac!"CSS fl'nm. Thri . .:... . · h Cotn1'cu to brokl'rs park & ahopr;. $150 mo.\ vmg vusiness art'&, wit ~~ ·
842-~27 r>arkin;:;. Util!tics paid. 10 LP.VEI.. Ac. COLORADO
2 & 3 BR Division of Highwayt RJVF.R. nr BIG RIVER
· apts., carp., Mr. tri>ttwa.ld deve\, Riversi<M-County,
d r 8 Pe 1 • bltnll; pcol, t213) 62()..3514 8-11 am. $1.990. $100 dn $80 mo. clubhouse: ' $1.W &: $l50 Mo. 962-2l09 wk. da.y1. 67S-5017, L.A. 213 467-2133
2 BR U ta' . t re.I . MEDICAL Suite partially
SW . A';uJtslfSc:n~y~ti ~~ tum .. Dover Dr. area. Ample Out of State Prop. 6208
536-8523. parking. Large recept!oo '66 HOUSE Trlr 55 12' ·d · a.rea, 6 exam r oom 1 , I . · x Wl e,
NlCE • Quiet 2 Br. duplex Labora:tory. Lar~ front of-·white l tan w/concN!te
Patio, crpll. Adults. $130. fl~. Dr's priYale lounge. porch; pump house, 2. wrlls,
=*=======842-=833=7I Approx 2,000 iq. ft . 644-2924 500 gal. system;oo h11lsid&.
between 4-5 pm. tree shaded 100 x 200' lot, 2
Westminster 5612 ml. from Greer's Ferry
--------Air.ConditionMI Dam, Arkansas. Complete,
LARGE 2 bdrm, ~ts. drps, Offices & Desk Space $7,270 Cash. Owner 96l-6111
bit-ins. Laundry &: gar. 1115 with central secretarial, zer-
10090 McFadden 847-2413 ox end telephone answering Mount. & O...r1 6'210
service.
Logun• Buch sz.os Th• Munw Bldg. A mNTION
*WALK to beach & town* 286.l E. Coast Hwy. CdM DEVELOPERS & Call 8 AM lo 5 PM 615-4070 0 S 2 BR 2 BA very large apt INVEST R
with view-from private deck, COSTA MESA -BREA * 80 LEVEL ACRES*
built-ins, carpeted & drap-ANSW~RING_ .sERVIf:'.E Ideally located in high-dry
ed, large refrig, all newly Offen air cood1t10ned oHicee desert (no smog problems,
decorated. No children or & d~sk ~pace. + sccretan lt.I wond,rful dry-air!) L e ve I
lnvfttment Oppor. 6310 -·-·-· --ATIENTION
DEVELOPERS &
INVESTORS
* Ill LEVEL ACRES *
Ideally located in hJgh-dry
desert t no cnog problelTll,
wonderful dry-air!) L e v e J
land, pump &: well on prop-
erty. Just 18 miles East ot
Barstow <where great ex·
pan1ioo has already begun!)
90 man • made Lakes in
area! l&!&l tor r e .• o r t
d eve l opme n t. alfalfa
growing, fish raislrw. etc.
•.. opportunities boundlea.
'Ibis is a rare offerin&, af-
fording the investor a IJ'ftt
future! Per90l'la1 circurn·
stanoet1 foree this sale.; o~
er. smaller parcels avail-
able below market value.
Call owner: 8'17~ Eves/
~ends.
7<;t; ON YOUR
P..10NEY
O:iur•·h BornM
1-6.17-1733 pets, no one under 40, please service if needed. $25 & up. llllld, pump & well on prop-
Quiet building. $16.5 mo with 1870 PLACENTIA, CM t"rty. Just 18 miles East of ih';I E;t1te Loans 6340
c1ble & garage .Mgr 494-2rol 642-0127 Barstow (when! rreat ex·
LOVELY .2 br 2 ba view apt SECREI'A~IAL SERVICE'. pa nslon ha1 already begun!)
with garage. No steps. U e Mode1"11 oU~ces, carpet!, air 90 man • made Lakes in
$175 mo. 494--7891 cond. parking. From $65 per area! Ideal for res o rt
month Oran&e O>unty Bank d e v ' Io p m e n t, alfalfa
Rentals WintMI 5990 Bldg. 230 E. 17th St., Costa lf'Olving, fuh ral!lng, elC'.
Mesa 642-148.i. . .• opporturutles boundless.
YOUNG Lady with multiple 2 Commercial, 1 tndust. 1 This is a rare ottering, aJ.
sclerosis and well behaved with living quarters. CM 1 fording the investor a great
German S h e p h er d com-Owner 64&-2130 futur e! Personal clrcum-
panion needs !l1l unfw11ished 11tanct'S force this Bllle; oth-
one bedroom house or apart· er, ·-mailer parcf'.ls avail·
ment with fl'nced or encl-lndu1trial Prop. 6080 1ble below market ""'Ju,,
BORROW on Your Equity
Private 2nd Mortg. money
Free appraisal. No oblJa,
AJ.<iO
90% 1st TD loans to Sn 500
Serving Orange Cnty 18 ~.
Sattler Morlitage Co., Inc.
3.'36 E 17th St., Costa M'•
642·2171 545-0ru
-TOP-$$$$$$-
For 1st Trust Deeds
644-JG13 anytimt' 644-100 osl"d yard. Cld Huntington ---·-0.11 owner: 847-6640 Eves/
Beach location preferred. M-1 on 63.S X 108 lot, 5 ren-weekP.nds. Mo--·-
R bl ( ( tals, S39,CXXJ 1st l'D. Low Dn.. rtgag .. , T.D.'s 6345 ea~na e _ren p ease, am OR TRADE $7:>.CKXI (Loi . --···--· ---
on fixed income. Phone . h 1 673.-4!">21 R. E. W1ntl'Cf 6'240 SS.565 1st TD on spectacular
536-4937 if no ans ph 536-2'.lz:j soul AVaJ J • ---Oc-0 "l'IV\f'w Joi. Sold lor ~----· --~1 -·-· --WANTED Business ..,,·oman needs 1 Dr lndu1tri1I Rent1I 6090 IMMEDIATELY $7.950. Payable 1% per
' A I C'l N .... p cnt h in:-'~d -.,:; 87.. Alt dul' un urn P • "· ewpo, ,. -Home in Moo•:·ch a .. v IU'ea, J Corona del ft1ar, Hunt BC'.h OFFICE Space or M-l. 450 '-"" )'111 10% discount safely
or La::una. To $100 mo. Gar sq. ft ., SOO: 340 aq . ti. s~o. or 'La~na. Cash buyer. Nttd retllm!l approx 12% per )T.
or carpGrt necessary, 1700 sq , It. storage are• 14c 4 BR horn,, buy or lease 494--1137
642-0'.)86 atfe.r S p.m. a Jt. Amr.'~ pkg. 171h St. with option to buy, or good S1390""""2n<1=m=-.,-,-.,bJ-,·~Jo/.~.-..,.-I .-Bitliacii'-'it;;<ii;;>;;;;;J,!H~un~l.!,Bea~ch~. ~6;';-~t~54t_77~Eve. view lot. Principals only month inclu::iln; 10% all due 1 BR Bach Studio with plra~. 213-335-4m; days or s yrs. Covers ex~llent
•a<age, for 25 ..... old 4200 SQ· Ft. in modem o::in· 332·5368 'vcs. o
J• b lid! M 2 $300 ceanvirw lo!. 20% db;. engineer. Beach area. Sept crele u nr -zone BllC\INESS and · count. 49-1-1137
or Ocl 1. &'>)( P157. Daily mo. (2131 434-5082 --=::;----=~====-J Pilot FINANCIAL IL t 6100 ·-····· ··---1 Money W•nttd 6350 =s~11=s1~N7E!~~=,~,-,"-,-il:v-,-,-,,-;-n."' 0 1 Bus. 0.., .. ,,,.1,.,..rtf.,. 63f'K'I . ·--·-·----
w;oioi· '''""· 0c ... "' "'" O'E 1 " VIEW LOTS i -. _., ·--10% fmr:' n•1fy. 3 or 4 Br, 2 R11 ;.. #ff~ , . WANTED 11 : ln!Prr\·I nn $.17.fOO 1st TD : 2
673-"715 Rrh11h1l' narlv to rt>S l""k yr. term. Srcu~ by 40
f1JRN: F"or divurct'i" & 2 scn·j SO " 11-, leYl!I .•. · · · s: .:in, and t;ellect money from ""'" ac,>c, land worth $40.000.
M )I t20 level ..... , $11.003 voluoonary new eo!n op?r-Mr•. Adams, Bkr. 4•u ,.,...,. agt' chldrn . $100 mo mnx, OOll -• ~ 70 x 101 , , . , , ...•... $10, •I~ Snllck vendors. No S37 s.'.XI NEEDED ..... .:.. CM area. Ulil pd. 646--4965 Underground util • terms selhng ' """'ured by
RESPONSIBLE family of 4 R Nattreu Rltr. 642-1485 First ' tlm' in Wt"stern lsl TD. deluxe Dup lex, ap.
want 2 BR house, reason-States. (Handles national-proved leaaehold. P\eue
able lt'ase. Rl'fs. 499-2179 60x80 Oce1nfront Lot ly advertised snaciQ and call Art Gk>vinettl, f13..7C20,
!Balboa Peninsula) candy b•r1. I Exc,ll~nt in· I &67>-Ui9!"'87""""===~-I
Rooms for Rent 5995 1748 E. Oceanlront Street come potential for slx hrs. ANNOUNCEMENTS
Sell or trade wet'ky work. Sl~O to $4990 •nd NOTICES SLEEPING Rm. for man. •.··· ~· cash, plus references and ---1
Prlv. heme & entr. By ... -d~nd..-··ie rar l'l'{!Uir<'d. Found (Frff Ads) 6400
month only. $3S. 1 S 4 3 ~.. . For penonal Interview, Oran~e CM PAR1 [AL Ocean view : C.Jr· s~'ld na:rw. fl10r'51, •nd
• • ona del Mar. Choice o'size phont nu mber to:
PR!VATE ~~m for rent. Kit lot NOT l!Oschold. Lov,ly TRANS • WESl"ER.N
& bouB~spl;~e::~9140 trees. 673-2010 Realtor. DISTR.lBUTING CO.
PnTVATE It bAth . L~GUNA BEAClf, 1wecping 590 N. AZUSA AVE. room wi.lh 1 view, ct ty lmprove.ments. COVINA. CALIF. 91722 :s;:. ~~~ l patio. s10.ooo. 494-{MJ Broker UNIQUE FRANCHISE
--· • 2 l..O'TS nn S.nHago, • NB For men A Wl'lmf':n wtth mrt
FE~fALE Brown & white.
1ma\I dog. Vic 19th A
Pom.-na with flea collar.
642-8l20
FOUND Or1U1ge It white
male cat vie Ellesm~e A
Pttcalm, M!!ll V ~ t d e .
5'&-<l5U
Guest Homes 5991 cash, term1 OI' trade. F~ ahlllty. No eoxp; we tratn. I 'c""mu;=~o=-,,.--.~-.-5~.,-.
-----·---~--1implf'. 64&-Ki65 OffeN!d by Jnlcmational ''"9
PRIV 'TE Room r Valley HI Vic Sear'lJ prkinr " or am. ·---=-Y1.n111ge Fair. St'i,000 to
hu1111ory lady. Good food. I Citrus GrovH 6175 $25,00J invst opens rcwl ~~M. OJI A kl~ti'Y.
Nil't' surroundin1t1. 548-4Ts.3 ---···-----· -store in UllOC with thi! tam-
Prep1id Interest OUA Co. Jim 0wf'.nS, 5f6-.t&t7
M_;,_<_. _R_a_n_ta_l_o ___ 5_999_ Now'• the time lo check the SERVlCE "1.utt 1: Fok!
1WO c.rtaa tor cent tax aitt'ltion and 11low b" LAUNDROMAT Eltablithed
110 each. 918 Palm St., 1elcctlna a aood ~ ll fN at 788 W. 19th a.ti.
H-&odl llUch u Hu. )'OWlf 5""" M--Im>. t..q
ST, Btmard found In Corona
del Mar. Pleue c a 11
873--5878 uk for Nancy.
FOUND WMte malt kitten nr
NfWP(lrt Hip Se.boel -"RE"'A'°L~!"S"'T~A~TI'°'"'· =--·I nav.i F"'• ""' b handlod i.u., oult ooup1e. °"""'
General by loc<J -t NI prict --... LI MN!, T AX· F01111D mole mW ... ,.._ --------1 anly l31.500.&Jbmftdowltlal;;l;;PM=.==,..--~-I dla. 0.-mmt -· Income Property 6000 principal«' lntttett and lfl0. ESl'ABLISHEJ> v e nd I a I .-r...1291
13
_.tltlO...,._OOWN..;.....;.:"bo"-'-'-b..;;.;-"' e.t' will carry bflck ht.lane. route Ji.B. Al'lltll. Few hn. ro=UND=~B-IQ-~-1-,-. -..,-.,-. ~H-... -I
, yw t Is Ut-at 61i~. For more tnform11· per month. Net good r?lum. t In. 1 t 0 " H 1 r b au r .
COfrM' prop .. choice lot. lion plel'I.~., rr-11 K. W. Smfill tnvesl,.,,enl Imm $360. Clll n:J;43J..m-"8 Cd~·1 : ~ BR. h4"1U~f' •• 2 S R , Eckhoff & Anoe., Inc. 5J6.3.ti -~,--,,,-I
2 88. llopl., ~arp, ~apes: 1818 w. Ch .. Pinlln Ave. tt;:;;;;.,~,·.,.,,,..._=,.,.,.,-,-MALE Sl11.mete lclttf!n. Vic
11.bsC'nl("r owner pr1ctd to Orangt Cillf Atn'OMATED Bus In e 11 Vittnrl• .. Natlon111, C.M.
It'll, $41,00I) . .t!K-7795 $1t -'671 , Ev~~knds ·M8-5971 Milke living: ~r work ptr 646-,2580 DllAIL:;~Y~P;;llDl'~!!W~ANT~~-:~1~~;~!!1!;'!;~;, .,., small invtlt. ~ 's ,_MALL ___ Boy_'•~B-lt)'c-.. -.1c~.-·
-BR.ING USULTS! Wldse ..... ., necr . Uni IOCK rr TO 'DIJ c;,...,. Ln., HJI . .., .... ,
•
I
..
• ' .. •
ond NOTICES *
• •
* *
I ·L'-oat _____ _..;;64.;.0.;_1 B"'Ysrr lit home -or
LOST: Brown blUfo\d vk: •va N. Ht&. Bell. Vlc
pmibl3t NB PO o o Edwards 6 ~ S20 wk.
IUvenkle Dr-R...-atd b 897-4C52
-~-·_r:_:i_~;::...nt_l_ng ___ 6l;.;;.:JO_; Hel• Wanted. Me,, 7200 Help W1nttd, Min 7200
PAPERHANGER. WU! p&lnL
Sam11le1, Flock•·
Fol 1"'~ SCHWARTZ
l<l-1691
'I
return ol cudl • ,........ 8.ABY:,;;:S;::;l;,t'=1u=--e•""'P-'~u=,_= ~ .W., on tnDtp. ii. hour.
MALE Blodc •white-a.t....-. ~ PAINTING """ -U you call m1 WI bc>dli benaftt.
E:xclmtve tad not upenslve.
Try me and see. Ml-m7
INTER.IOR A: EXTERIOR
Pafntinl:. n.t estimate.
SKIUS>
MACHINISTS
Progreulv• man uf1c·
turlnl _,,pony In
Santa Ana has o~·
lnp on the d•y shift
fo r th• following P""'
ltlon1:
Mobile Home
Carpenters ~ t yrs. med Cll, 10 Bib~, nl1 homt, ..._ oame Jtw, aear ,_....,._oroccu:ioll&L
~$-~'or= CbrUll: ~l Mar. flS.Zd
BROWN Alllaator blll!old 1n BABYSl'1' Any ace. my bxne
A few openings
loft for ski ll e d
crafkmenl
Ex~llent benefits.
phone booth next t o 15e ptr hour
Alberl!IOl'l'I mkt, 19th l • 54&-2838 •
WMddy• Wont? WhoMy• Got1
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL IORN SWAPPERS
Spocl•I llo19
Uc-• 1111. arucx 548-<5314
Plumbing 6890
Harb-Rew. 60-1890 BMlYSlTTING -.-termY
LOST: AU IUt>' c a. t' bomt, ft&IC!ntble, fenced e 24 HOUR SERVICE e • Form Tool
Grinder mmetima Mon.; v I c • ,-.rd. Cali 54&--0'J68 I 11--S tlmaa -5 lluduo
AUL.U -AO i¥Ull llitCL UO I
Plwnbin& • repair•, remodel-
tq. Electric 1ewer clean-
ing. All -.......... ,407
Apply In person
Ba.ycrest area. Reward ,
Pleeacall~
LOST -Cft<n porilitt.
AnlWS'I to name "Kenue"
U f«nd pie .. call ~
er MS-U!K
LOST SEAL POINT
S~E. fem&.le. Y I c
Harbor It Hami:ton, C.M.
Pbone 64&-lliM
Brlck.-.Y•otc. 6560
BRICK. .,.,....., °"""'°" CUI-Obb>ets. Smlll ,...
OK. Frff Est. 96U:94S
~ ... Mw " ...... ......... yw .......... t-VOU• -'-dltt ...,_, .._. lll\tl Ill ....,.l•-
.,._THI ... ~· W ! -Tit ADES otilL VI PHONI 642-5671
Te Plad Yeur Tr..,.., Paradlu M
HA VE: 2 BR, ckn l pool ( IDcomt uniU on 21st St.
Remodel., Rep1lr, 6940
REMODEL &: REPAm
Q.rpe.ntry • Paint • Pia1te.r
il Concrete. Olek 642-1797
Butlneu Service 6562 bomt, 8 • n n i n I $21,0XI in Coeta Mesa. Trade Jor
;;;.:.:.;;._c. ... -----eq. $14.,700. Wanl: home, house or trusl deeds. In-Sewing 6960
Public Stenographer retiki income, land or ! R. come $402-5'1. °""'ner, --~-----~
XEROX A M.1MEO Roas ltb'en Jr. ~ * 54~ * SEWING ALTERATIONS
-E 17th 0 ' CM Profeaklnal l Fast ~ '""'• Trade: '65 VW, a•ocado 4 OWR: deluxe Barber Reuonable. · 646--6446
Call Vidd.0
• &U-1485 areen. Empl exhaust, new Shop Top loc., North c.M. -
• Tool & Die
Maker
• Precision Lathe
Operator
Explorer
Motorhome
Corporation
LG. Blk. dci:/'wblte 1treak
OD cbeSt-LI No. 33.lT. mt
UDoolD W1:1. C!d 54&-4C7l5 · l'OR 'VW tibtr-Sbop'1 Ctr-Trade for "eta-Alteratlona--642·5145
I ::B::ul::W::•::n.:.... ___ _;65::.:,7;0. ~done ...:m.. Oall 863-.aned" TD or eok1 nUK-Neat, accurate, :ll yra. exp.
Pe.::roona:=:::;ls:._ __ __:640:.;;;5~ I R EM 0 DEL, rt pa Ir• (095. pta! CoUeie Rlty 546-SIBI
• Turret Lathe Set
up and Operator
4000 Campus Drive
Newport Beach
-TILE, Coromlc 6974 plumb's •• pa1ntinr, elec., 25 View ACftS La1una Hw• lovely Npt Bch 3 --~------* Thunday Sj>ecial
$1 11.dmisslon which includes
Fiftl 'n Chips, served from
1 'tjl 9.
\lied, Thur11, Fri, Sat
DANCERS CORNER
1438~ Ma.in a1 Edinger St --........ *DRUMMER*
Must be OYll' 21 A hi Ible to
bandl• Btendudl, 13lues,
-· H<my-Tcok 6 llodc. Aoeompany piano ~·
Call 6'JS.360ll before 8: 30 pm.
RENOWNED HINDU
SPIRITIJALIST
Spiritual reading• i 1 v e D
daily. 9 AM-10 PM Sat.Sim
included. 1311 N-El. cam1no
Real, San Clement. 492-7652
FLY TO CATALINA
DAILY FLIGHTS FROM
ORANGE COUNTY AIR-
PDRT. Catalina -Vegu
Airlines. • ~
* * FULL membenhlp Newport Beach Temia Cl.ub.
Best oller, 6f4..0T3S * *
ALCDHOLIC3 ADanymoUI
Harbor Arn-Phooe m-1724
P .O. Box 1223 Coata Me.a.
DYNAMIC FRIDmS
With sterlini qualJtiH Jar
those who care. SJS,.334.1.
Do You Need Models?
(2131 428-5044
Announcements 6410
Lisetto_H11lth
Hospitality 1a Our Motto
FREE SAUNA WITH
SWIDISH MA!SAGE
Opeii wkdy1 10 am -11 pm
Stmdays 10 am -8 pm
519 E . Broadway
IA>ng Beach <71.31 437-1009
Funer•I• 6412
WESTMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK
Mnrtu•ry & Cemetery
Complete funerals
from $245
Cemetery Iota
from $130
Includes Endowment Cue
Everything in one beautiful
place meam leSlll cost.
No tralfic problems.
1~301 Beach, Westminster
531-172~1 893-2421
C811>6llrY. resld., commen:. Beach. s 0 me tmprov.-Br.+ fam nn 21n be.home.
room add. Rea1. 875-3038 menbl, Income $TJOO. $243,· Fee-View. $47,500 val. Want
*Verne, tbt TUe Man •
Cust. work. lllst6.ll & rept.ln:.
No job too small, Plaster
patch. Letl.ding s ho w e r
re;>alr. 847-1957/Sol&--0200
• AulomaHc Screw -~Fo=R=EMA"°"N--1
YACHTBUILDER REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS OOl eqWty. F'or TD'• or f 2 or 3 &. condo. or sm.
CABINETS. Any size job. Owner. 494-4853, 4.94-4007. home local area. 642--4977 Mach. (Traub) Imm"'""'' opoo;og 1, tho
Orient for man with back-
23 ;yrs exper. 548-6713 CLEAR dlx Apple Valley &. Have: 3 Store Commerclal-
6575 Hesperia ldt1. Valut Sll,IXKI. Banning • lsd • $00,@. Eq. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT sel Up & Oper ground as foreman oI large
Catering 1~ ·~ w t home --'d :::;;;o"-"'-----"-Trade for amall KOina: busl-...,,...,.,, an : , ,.,... .
Expert Catering neu Orangoe ety or prop. income, land, ! R. Ros.s Job Wanted, Lady 7020
' U.S. ~oohtbuild;og rom·
Excellent company pany, who i1 expert iii ALL
WW do cmrq yaur bcme lltOCk, eqllitiet, etc. 173-~78. Myers J r. 548-2181. F/C Bkkpr-Stey needa part
at c:ut. Dn!ll1ect food aod !i BR. J Ba. Bede Bay; 12,· # 62 Banx. O:NN S BR time work eves, wkmda.
btneflb ind working pha.aea of glass tooling, die-
conditions. sel, cabintry, etc. Top op-
portunl'> ""' """' "" .ervk» phll deanqt. WICl-CID ft Jot; ftl. $39,500; '95IJO waterfrmt with p.. Will Const., RE, hotel A: penon-
dbp. ~ ml pm1kil. equity. Tnda fer vacant lot, COl'lslder atl1tbinc m. ftlue ntl up. Alao PBX or
right man. Send re!IUIDe to
Box M158 Onmiie O>ast
Pilot, Ccailidentl.al. (213} a a;sa. (2U) fNI T· boat, od>ll heme, car, TD'• fOr dtl!d\Det abaft $:1i,OXI ~-l33-0354 ••• A DID Owrier MS-1671. loan. U I-Tm. -'":;:'=tpl=..-=--,....,.-~=..,.-
6590 U~5" Sid boat with 35 HP CLF..AR •. 4 Uniu lml. Jap1nne School Girl SALES
C•rponNrlng M""""" ....... $400 ..i.. ..,... ...... * bl<. Npt. Dom..tlc Worl<, uv .. 1n wltt. 1300 E. Normandy REPRESENTATIVES
CARPENTR.Y· ,.. Wlll trade b' Jli cc Honda Per. best~ a.ree. 158,-American family. 646-0384 Place, Santa Ana Leading t n dependent
MINOR REPAIRS. No Job ~bltl' ol ume value. 500 tBkoe: sm, bit 1n tndt. °'=-518-&82===·-----a---:~11sts deaJin<> in over -7689 _,, ~-·-A ......, ...,_ ""' (1 block N. ol McFadden & ~ H .. Too Small. cabinet in _..._ .,._ · · fNW7I ........... ve., u1~• WANTED Babysitting I: light 100.mutual fund!, •vnanding •-... -··--·-14 block W. of Grand) -·r
agee a: o t her cabinl'bl. Paymuter check writer. West O:wtna lot 90xlif>. 3 Br nuwiewwk Maiurt woman. iii O!'~e Ccuflty:"'I'hi! i• an
545-81'15 Evell 646-2372 Days Uke new. Cost $166.00 will fam nn. Bltn1, pstio. l!x37 No transportation. 642-9ffiO 1----------1 o PP or tun 1 t Y to enter
lL 0. Ancteraim. trade for good condition pool Qmler/C.C. aec. Owe DAILY Houeework $2.25 hr. dignllied professional aellinR
standanl typewriter. 646-$22,500. Val P>,500. Trade Reliable, own transportation Local manufacturer his full or part time Inve&tment
Cement, Concrete 6600 91195. down tor beach Are&. (213) ~ immediate opening• for: exp not neces,,a.ry, we train. ED UM88 547-6621. Mutual Fund
EXPERT CEMENT .WORK TRADE Impart or Dome&-CARPET Cl.eMing. F1oor e w·iremen Investors Inc. 2100 N. Main,
ReuooL>l• Prices Local tic car b approx 20-tt LAKE 'I'Ahot View lDt Na-· ltripplng. Waxing, WallJ; Sa,n.ta Ana
O>nlrOdor. wor1t' Guor. lnboanl bo&c South Cout vada oid<, pav<d st. IJJ!,500 Wind""' w8'h<d. 531--0567 EXPERIMENTAL
Free Estimate• .•.. 642-S496 or Lapemke Jftferttd but elev. Exdwnge for aome-Wt ar1 an 11tabllshed not nouc. ""-..,._9303 hoclY> """'"'"' Uruta. Job W•nlod commorcl•l firm with MACHINISTS CONCRETE, block, Spanish uk tor Dldl: ID's, or what have .,.,.,7 Men & Women 7030 llL-I I • L-1· tilt, wrought Iron, wooi • Bkr, 6'15-61'l6 ,,_ ""'r1 r1nge ... ne its. R&:D. no .producdon line, di-
alum. roots. Lie. MS-5107 l Bdrm.. Fum.Uhed condo. ===.,-.,~~~-I TOP APT MNG'T TEAM Only people with 1t versified experience requir-
F LOO R S.Walka-PatiOI & r: ~d:r· :::~· 1:::, D~E 3 BR 3 bl. fum Dix ooJ.y, N.B. &rea pre. INst s ix months ex· ed. 5 YT m.inlmurn. Attrac-~ Rocks. Exp er t Trade foe 1oca.1 aJ"N S to 4 :, Course, pool, wat-ferred, exper. a: refs. Avail perience should apply tive wages & benefits .
Woricmmahlp. 6C--851.f. n -...___
1
alls, OObby abop $15,500. Sept. 1. 536-lMfi to Advanced Kinetics, Inc. =. ,..,.,.,.. or vacant ot or eq, Want Income Uni ta. 1231 Victoria, CM
CUSTOM PATIOS A: both 6t6-1277 "--'-RJN ~ ~ -Block ,...,_ Allo .,.,..,... . *~~ v*~. -· Domestic Help 7035 PARAMETRICS An ...,i ':.": """'""''
sawing .l mnoval. 842-1010. * * * * HOUSEWORK Wanted from
CEMENT Wod<, all typM. \!'-~!!'!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 9-4 by the day. $15. Good 929 B•kor Stroot AHOY THERE! No job too unall. Free est. experience. 541-9377 or Cost1 Mesa Dra ftsman Needed
H. STUFL!a< s.-1615 SERVICE DlRICTORY $tRV t~E Dl~E~TORY &36-7971 549-2221 wUh -knowloogo of
CEMENT~,;:;~:=w=or:,:k::pa:.ctloo:;:.,=w=..,.,,.,. I Electrlul 6640 Gardening 66IO LIVE INS ---------1 sailboe.ts and equipment. &:drivet:fretffl..536-8917 1;::;::.;.;.;;:;::. ___ _;= , Employerpayifl!l!9 Ssilboat nw1ufacturer.
Llconoed _ Qv•llty ELEC'm!CIAN, Lie"""' • ANTHONY'S Geo<ge Byland "''""' CAREER Fring• bonctiu. Sond ,.,.
b o n de d , Smell j!U, Garden Sen-ice 100 B E. 16th, S.A. 541--0395 ume and salary expected to Cement wwk. £39.SOO& m"""'"· l ......,_ !M>-6203 OPPORTUNITY'. IM. Vlot" Mortoosen, 8Zll
Child C•r11 6610 Floore -"''-'----'-:_ __ .:.;._ 6665
SPECIAL summer Day care
Hot balanced meals, macka.
State llc. 2~ to 6 yrs. 7 .am-
6 pm. $18 Week. Oavis
Montessori Scbool1, 1525 N.
Santa Ana, C.M. 646-3700.
Contractors 6620
LINOLEUM, earpet, tilt. Re-
model, rep&lr. Many rem-
nanta. FrM di. U.-167'1,
541-8664
Gard•nint1
Japane .. Gardener
Exper., compete yard
• RDOM ADDmONSe .ervice. Free utlmatu
L.T. Omtrud Ms.7$8 e stS-Om
Family rooms. kitchen « I ~J~AP=ANES="'E~~G;:.ARD;o.c,,:ENER"'=
unita. Sin&:le atory at 2; Maint I: cleMup. Reliable.
plam cu.rtom deaicned. f'or Rtu imnthly r a t t a .
646.1941 ChineA live-ins. Cheerful LANDSCAPING Permanent. Experienced. Join todays fastest growing Le.nkersitim Blvd., North
LAWNS REMODELED Far East .Ai;ency 642-8703 profession-Mutual Fund 11ales1°"Hol;;:;.lyw;,:;ood~,_.:Co~li:::l._.:9:::1roi=--1
Exp hortlwlturist. No experience necessary-DR I V E R To d e I i v e r
nn.. monttily Gardentni ~i•, Me~ 7100 We train· full or part time sandwicbcs, must have own Mutual Fund Advisors, station wagon. 5 days, 3
Expert Japanese c I b• Inc. ~m. to 10 or 11 a.m. Apply
Gardening 0 um 10 Npt B. 1603 WcstcliH 642-642'2 Ill penion. Ha m burger
Cl!t gnss, edging, trimming, S.A. 1212 N. Broadway l1enry 2136 Placentia Avt,
weeding in the Bower beds, 5'17-833l _c-;°";i:;:',:M::.~:::;:•~-~~-I
by month. Frtt estimates. Employment Agency Taking Application For
548-5182 or 646-0384 PARTS MAN
MChVING, Edging. vaoal•W11. lnd'I -···•···•···· l l!Xll COOK SERVICE WRITER
G«l'l clnnup. Haulina:. ~ en.gr • •• •• • • ·' • • $100'.> Excel.Jent salary + incen. +
Odd Job&. * S48--695S ~t-tm ... ·;1··••· to l500S:n> 1:'v....-rj----~ ._ ___ ,_, _ _. •. full co. benctitJ:. Call Dick
"'6'" " 8eV •••• to £Mot"' t'JK."'1 .,............,,,,,, "" 6-16-9308
WarehouBeman ..•••• to $500 lwtch. Must be fast. Excel-l;;;=i:i=,,,.----~-1
Fry cook , •••..•••• wk $150 le!!I money and opportun-ENERGE'11C, young man in· General S.rvlca 6612
Appli delivery ...... to $3.00 ity. Apply in person only. terestcd in black &: white
Heliarc welder .•...... SJ.57 Surf & Sirloin photographic printinr. FulJ
esUmatea & layout, phone 82'7-S24B aft 6 pm
• 847.J5ll e PROFIBS. Wirdow, walls &:
Licensed Contractor snJDENTS workin&' their tlr. cle&~: bus in es a , Ofc mach repair trne , • $2.69 Time basis. 54~1403 er 5930 Pi e. Cst. Hwy. eakfast cook ..••.... $2.75 Newport Beach Residential -Cornmercilll ""say 1~~·-~~-Allen ~-. & coiutruction.
'-faint l Repaini. Free Eat l'OI. ""-' ., ........ comp. Q-ystal Window Ocanin~ Ag encies. Women 7300 6?3-212!1 lawn care. MG--003 n-ee Estimates S4s-8'7J7
~C:.:•c.m:.:•.:.••:.:rvL,L:.o:.:1::•_~64:::.::l I A '"'d<l°";.,11o-n-,---.-"~Re---~.~lin£-R E LI A B L E : R t a I • LIC Swedish Ma. I u t • e
GRAVESJTI: For gal•' ~• H "·-· k L" w/Orlentel cart. Clean-ups EUROPEAN TRAINED
MANY r-.IORE
MULTIPLE LISTING Columbia • '"" , u.u·wlC ' IC. .._ odd Jo'• VI t 1~0 N Pacific View Me m 0 r I al 673-61»1 * 549-2170 • ..... n ctn • 714. ll7-4145 Palm Sprinp °"" ewport, CM 642-581!2 Park. 642--0326 I "'="='=':i::=':=:=;;:;: 1223 S. Bristol, SA 546-8560
BOAT MECHANIC
Experien<-ed wilh diesel
and other marine in!talla-
Le~el Not ices 6450
PATIOS a Patio Coven H 709 S Anah ah Room Additions, Lie. GEN'L Clean-up, tr@e •erv, aulln9 6730 · , An 774~1
642-5952 D<>..,..,.Eve-Wlmdl rototll, aradhJ&, sprinklen,
"'Jg lawns, haul'g. Resi . 64&-5848 I.JTl'LE GIANT TRUCK rfeln W anted . Men 7200
tion!. ,
Je n"n Marine Corp.
235 Ficher, Costa Mesa
Employment Agency
Legal &ec:Y aev'I ... , to $600
Remodeling e Additions e JAPANESE GARD!:NING H1uling. 6' height, 10' bed.
I \Viii no1 ht> responsible for J, G. MacBeth, Uc. You n1me it I haul. Reas.
any debts oltlt'r !h11n my •6~5628 • Service Cleanup, LMdscap-Blg John 642-4030
SERVlCE Station Mechanic Seeys, Many • •· ..... to $550
Full time. Experienced 1n c;--.--~----Varitype operator .. to $520
tuneups, brakes It wheel New lm_port Car Age ncy Auto Agy cashier .... to $400
1llgnment. Guarantee + Now lak1n;: applications for Med S<.'Cy • , •••••• from $400 o~·n. Roberts. T. t-.1ark:t5 lng. 531-7034 aft 7p.m. ./ HAULING Tr_u _h_p_;,-.-,.-t
SERVICE; DI REC TORT Carpet Cl11nlnt 6625 FOR Commercial Landscape Trimming. Anything. we do commission for qualified Service & Parts Mgr. Gen"! ofc. SE"V"I ...... to $375 Maint~ance-. Bay Land -" 11 Ex
653
DURACLF..AN Your .... ""'.. " a . per work ~:2792 man. Apply Laguna Chevron Impor t Ci r Mech a n ic1 l\1cd lab te<:h ....• , , ,, . MiiCJ
Auto Rtp•iro O .,__ .-u lk.'ape Service1. 546-$44. ·---__ _.:.:.:_ le upholstery. Home, yacht t "=-'-=.:.:.:=,:,.::..::.:.:;__ [CLEAN Lots, 1arages, etc.
& trailer, No water or LAWN SERVICE $15 MO. TrN! re.rnoval. dump, skip,
ro4 s . Csl Hwy, Lagun& Bch lot & Detail Man Ml'd assf, back ofc .... S315
BooltkMper-.Accounta n t Contact Mr. Glen CoUey Dmtal a.ssts, 1ev'I , ... , , $30)
J im '• Repair Service
Complete repair
automotive -mechaniclll
d"'-ent ·---' a . Ol!l)(!ndable, Profesalonal. "-ck~-l!ll d """'-6 ~ ee.nmg ,.,.. '""'• • era e. 962-874.5 ind. ccmplete 3P(ltting-dry W!!<!kly Service. 962-6419.
thru p ii: L. Experienced re-3100 West Coe.st Hwy. Baker .............. wll $~
Newport Bee.ch quired. Prefer man over !IO. ·"'=;,.:_~;;,~'.:'.'.-Established cornmericlal WATER DISTRICT Oc.'Sires
Mfg. Send reswne to Box Field Maintenance Person-
t-.f-155 CID DaDy Pilot. nel. No e. x p e. r i enc e
145 E. 17th, C.M. ~ the same day. Worid Wide CUt a: Edp Lawn
Service. Done on pn:mise. Maintenance. I.Jee~.
Garage stalls tor rent.
Hoists, arr compressor •
accessor:iea. 842-Ql20
54S-S695 5@.4808. 545-5810 &ft 4 PM
Co rpot L•ylng &
THE mm of activley tor I -----'R.c.;0.:;P.o•l.;.r..:66=26
aervice bu1intll!!e1 •.• the ~' • Uc. O:intraetor
OU1ified Ada. DI.al su-· ·:!I a1.1 Jrice.s • fret l!fitim•tea
to oU!!r YoUr acnice NOW, 546-4418 evenings
LOW OOST Malnte.nance
MOW -E[X;E • SPR.AY
FERTllJZE. 962-7349
Is Your Ad ln our classlfled1!
Someone will be Jookil!I" for
ft. Dial 642-5678 __ _
Hou..clMnlng 6735
0.EANING -inside-out.
P&inting, rug cleaning wall
wash.Ina:-Fm Mt. 646-5103
Ironing 6755
MANY MORE
MULTIPLE Ll57ING
n e c e. s s a r y . Exccllent ~ Newport. 01 G4Z-5812
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT pa.y-beneflts. Appl:y No. l 12'23 S. Brl.stol. SA 546-3560
Prof-Foolbl.ll Team needs 1.fonarch Bay Plazi Suite 709 S. Anah ,An;ih 774-6491
"''' .... -~ .• ..,..,,;ve .'02m' South Laguno 8 ""'to 5 MISS EXEC AGENCY youn1 men, ages 17 to 22
pref. 838-2660 8-11 AM tor ..... KEPHART'S CUstom ironing
has moved to 130 E 17, Suite
T, CM. ()perl Mon-8a.t Young Men 18-28 s.cre1a-~:..P bkk•1 .. d .. ·~ __ SERVICE station man, lube • ., """"
L1ndscaping 6810 A: lt medi, day lhift, good Sales promotion ]obs avail. Bkkpr/Girl Fri( rclm) •. $."JOO
PRY, Sundays off, no gas l.arg!! int'I. oorp. U0,000 1st ~t&ry/bkkpr · · ... • S00J
GAYNOR 'S LANDSCAPING pumping. Viejo Union Serv, year. Management opportiJ-Seeretary/lnMlrance ·• S450
A GARDENING SERVICE 261TI La Paz Rd, Misskm nhies. CalJ 10 am • 2 pm Girl Friday, tplil ..•.•. $450
State. licen.Jed contreir, Viejo. 837-4826 539-1183. Oerk typist • •• ......... $4Zi
Rnidl!fltial • Commtrclal Secy/receptionist $300 Y.~ Cl•••up ~ • .,.... YOUNG Man part time, 2-3 2 ruu. Time positions, mlllt Cl.ertr: ..,..,151 • '' '.' s~ '" ....... ,=""""• hn. dall1, bid~ 1: pl.ant beavailabledaysdurln fall ...,,, ········•··· .J>N
No job to big, 893--3581 work. Must have driw-n &: winter No. I Del" t g: Applica nt Paya FM
CORRAL'S L n d 'I c P I Ir llcienlle. :iCl6 31..at St. Newport No. 2 stock Ii d.rdi~~s;::; Secretary/lfgal • • · · · · · · S'500
Rototilling ~-Fret e91-Beach determined b7 ~ence:. ~~ ...•......•... s~
(Have own e q u 1 pm en t =='~------See Harold 495 E J7th St .-..3 '" •• • • • ..... ' "»J 9&2-t7&4 <DJK-Manager, n I 1 ht•, Costa Men' ·• Prod n oontrol c1Jc •••• S3tG ~ aandwich opera. __ BIUlng clerk ..... , • ., • SJ40
p lion! P .M. to 4. A.M. 5 days. li-d1A_N Into woric: ru1J time, Put time typist ••. , $211tr
aperha"tlint A1JPly llalrDlrl'l!!I' Hem)', nve-reettturant, cooking
Paln tlnt 6150 2136 l'tacentia, Costa Meta e.x;ier nttU&arY· Ca J I 4.10 W. OJ8st. Hwy N 9 .. ' •• •
Fry Cook &per. :::::. e A 10 .,, l73-Cltll c.n -Broce, &;..,;m
BOB'S COn'EE SHOP 2 SERVICE Station At· LE:;... _,,.,._ t Painttnc. Window-Wuh!rw
20 yn exp. Ho..lJ or job,
Refa. 548-2920 aft ( PM
./ WON'TBeuaderbldt
Inter, atcr. S1tisfac:Uon
..,.,. 4.97-USl tittrt pm
e PA!NTING Y FENCES e
lnbrlar • Extwklr ' ... .,
lG S. D OUntno Real tend ants, part A full time, for ,_ • iw .. 6 •••••• to $tOO
Sin Qemenhl t92-1l53 Exp«. Ra1 Carey ~ ~ •ttcneJ"
!:'CP 8 1: A man. Xlnt aiaJ a: 6!)ot So. Cout Jt , ·--lJON ........ to $315
511 A ... -n..... WJ, ~ .... a J>hontl. lile t:YP!na eocnm, .......,., vac, hosp, uu1 SECT YOUl\I A Lane Tire Co, 482 • • • •• • • •• • • •• • .. tri $600 ~-1 ..... ....... BUTCHER, Exper, Ml Ume. hllndte VIP'e ~~ .. -~" Coll SER.VICE St& Attmdult Lou· 4.94-4410 •20 Thtlla Numerous ~ach artt. )libl
ft'lt.ocban ~. Do lube A St.l..qunA Bch
o'1 ~ tu.1n1. SERVICE Stat. Att~ant
• PWt -~au OIARGE rm ....... now. Harb:r BL, o.ra MHl
..
NO -MATIER
WHAT
IT IS • • •
YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIA"L DIRECT
642-5678
CHARGE IT!
•
"' ·-~ .... . . -. .... . . . • •
DAILY-
JOIS & IMPLOYMl!Nl JOBS & l!MPLOYMENT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JQIS & EMPLOYMENT AltnclOI, Mon & MlllCHANDISI FOR ,MlllCHANDISI "OR MEilCHAN DISI FOR Mi ll :
AIOnclM, w-1300 Holp Wontod Hol Wontod W01T11n 7SSO SALi AND TRADI SALE AND TllADE SALi AND tllADI SALi AND TllADI :
~ .............. S500
OMV ,,, •••••••• ••••• 10 $-115
Bookkeeper • • • • • • • • • • • • $450
ACIC'tl Clerk • , •••• , • , ... $4125
Med aen'l o1o .......... S40l
Jt.:.pt bWqir • • • •.• •.• • • • $toO
lltd tlllunmcl • • • • • • to $CIQ
Bn1bw' dlr .............. $968 n.m.. Dl(V •••••••••• $346
Trnee aaa'l olo •••••••• $315
'I'"-t;ypl.t •••••••••••• $30'.I
Trnee ce.lbier •••••••••• $290
ALL8E:l' AGENCY
CT W, 19th, C.M. ~
JOBS GALORE
Now ta the time lo Id' that
oft1ce job witb • _. l\,Tt ........
~-.PBX. -....."""--..........
UNIQUE·
PLAa::lia:Nr AGD«.'Y
Help W•ntod w-7400 \::-1400 Furniture IOOO Fumlturo IOOO -· ' w-7400 • -Muslcol lnat. 1125 Pion• a °'ION II
SECRETARY
0 p • n fn 1 bnmediltei,y avall.liQ b' a Secft1ar)'
1o our MnlC« cl B<ll*:
~
&. .. part ol u. X9'0S
FAintson Division we
are an e.._nc1;nc IJ'OWtb
company providing ICf'oo
vioel \o tchod libraries.
.._ .. """"" .. b;p
~ K?aduattt, ~
ocilece preferred with ---and at Leut OM ye&r --We otter competitive saJ..
&rlet, liberal benefits ln-
dudina: profit liharlng
and exoellent opportunity
lor-l
ltEOISTElt NOWI
Nurses Aide
Tr1lnlng Pro111m
SPONSORED BY
Perk Lido
Conv1l.acent Hospital
1446 Superior, Newport Beach
July 17th thru the 31st,
NO oosr to
qual;i!od ..,,..,.,, ..
ftnp)v,,mmt iruaruteed
upon Ntidactory
eo~ of the cour.
EXPERIENCED
COMMERCIAL
TELLER
Wanted •• ,
WOMEN!
LlcUN -•• oeed )'OW"
-to till woltloo ,...
.. Ol!lc:u ... tbt o.a...
Count)' atta. Reclattt now
I« short term or lOfll term
jobs dote ta )IOUI' bome.
SPOTLIGHT JOIS -T.._.,,._
• Exec Typlsft
• Tnntl. Secy
• L.lol Secy.
•Ke>!>unch<>pen.
• Bookkeepers
p, -* DRUMMER * t s;;dai W.1-..nmt"er Spanllh/Meclltt • Sliowroom Samples M"" ...... 11 , ... ~. • wE_.u., .... "'::I
• ~. · 8' Wood carved arm dlv1n1 lg. man11 chair; to handle Standardl, Blue•. stock, ot new• uatd:~~ ,
l'lllSONNll. beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexaion·dark oak din. set, &g1le, Honlty -Tonk • • ...--at lpoclAI -• .,NCY w/black Or avocado framed chalrsi 5 ·Pc BR Rock. Aceornpa ny ptt.M mer Sale )llictil!
,,. set, Jdr M:r. le: Mrs. dresser:, Jo ' mirror, 2 playtr. call fTS..3606 befcn • WJtAT!.'VER )'Oil are 111111 ... L17'thlt, • a-1r •~ C.t• M.. commodes, paneled headboard. : ... p.m. kt& ff:r-w. hnt • -
-· -,... will ,., • .,Ml .. llOI L l1'th t t. VALUE "9S -FULL PRICI $429.95 p· & O 1130 WARD'S BAJ.DWIN
ltiRt• An• ar terms •• law 11 $3.00 week ~---r·~~~ 1801 Newport, CM ..,.....
147...f7'21 Conn deluxe, theater orp.n, PIANOS & Olwiuw Items Sold Individu1lly -No Down -32 ~-·-lull 1on U 0 -~-~·~ se ur Stor-e Charge -No Fancy Front Used 11 studio organ, S•v@ Splnett, ~n. SNM
but -Quality Values Jnside! $2500. Full, new ora:an war-pl&DOll from $388. ,....__ Aeri•I Photo Tr•lnM ---
le $3.00 hr. Approved Furniture• 2159 Harbor, CM G:,~d Mus ic Compony WAU.J~ ~·1
U )'00. can dl!w:q,., and D•lly 9-9, 10.S Sund•y e 548-9"0 :nt5 N. Main, S.A .. 54.7--0681 MiJSIC CITY
Md blow Up ne£alivM WIT.:i:'l~To~~~~~~!!!!:!!!!:!!!!:!!!!:!!!!:!!!!~~ Baldwin walnut spinet 3400 So. Brllt:ol worir: with drtionll, theylJOtiS & EMPLOYMENT piano. 4 Ye.,.. aid. Uke So. C:O.atPlaza ·~ •
will train )".1\1 to be a special-Mu1lc1I fh1t. 1125 new $545. 1
i.t 101' their qency. A91ncle1, Men & Gould Music Comp•ny NOW HERE -the MW Women 7550 BEGINNERS Guitar $15, :kK5 N. Main, S.A., 547~1 Supumundlna T.. ,
Order Desk ----never U8l'd. lrl<'lude11 case. Hammond Spinet Olp8 ' Pit...... · u... "~~ '''"''" PIANO Wanted, Private par-_ tho •---• • To $450 ARGUS '~ PIP ~ ~ ty wanta to buy pl ... '"' SCHMIDT-PiiILLO.. 00.
F .. P.l.d WORK NEAR HOME GIBSON 12 strina; iUitar. cash. 543-933.5
MALE
• 18116 hri<, C.M. 61M831 Al>PiY In penon .. Ille
Pasca:nel omc.
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK with cut. SlOO. """"=,:,=.:_,,.,=--::= 1907 N. Malll • _. 2 Yeva collese. Sciences * 6'l3-.f2'nl * CONN elec. organ; modern Santa Ana
and tedl. C'Ol.UWN. .Pfl"llXI-FM, P•id style: 2 manualt; xlnt con-I ~5ii'~~~==-=:f:·
COME IN TODAY
'
He~.:.-.
7400
-BIGllERING
CLERK
Varied dutitt includ-.,._,..
ports, alistb, fil.
""'· -mJmeo. ....... -.-lng-.Muatbo
llCCUl'l.t. -alert i.n-d!vlduol. 'l'>PIDI ..
w.p.m.
Apply Ponennol Dept
STACO, INC.
1139 Boker St.
Cost• Me11
549-3041
An --"""ty """'°"' .
Relief & Salad
Preparlllon Cook
Experienced
Full time
Excellent beneflh.
Apply Pel'IOn~el
10 • 4 Mon. thn.t Fri.
ROBINSON'S
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
Anoquol-ty ...... ,...
Bookkeeper
Part or Full Time
Excellent opportunity!
S•l•ry open, Mt your
own hours. \,;Orona dtl
PROFESSJOIW.
LIBRARY SERVICE
A Xerox Comp•ny
2200 E. McF•dden Ave.
Sant• An•, Calif.
An equ-.1 OIJP(lr'tt.mit;y -
Billing
Clerk
Exrrlenced. Subttan-
tl• typing required.
Permanent, good op-
portunity! c.11 ar
•pply:
Cla-Val Co.
17th & Pl•centia
Costa Me11
548·2201
Anequal_,.-tunlty
employer
NEW ACCOUNTS
CLERK
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
2712 W. c .. st Hwy.
Newport Be•ch
646-2431
An ..... opportunity ..,...,...
ADVERTISING
AGBICY
Mor. Coll for oppolnt-l==-=----
ment:
673-6950
SECRETARY
. 309 Mlln St •
Huntlrttton looch
536-1111
An ..,.w -"· .....,,..,
BEAUTY OPERATORS
TOP OPPORTUNITY
Jn busy dept. ltore ..m.
SaJary + mmrnilaion. Ex-
cdltnt benefits, Inc. libe'al
.,... di9counll.
MARINELLO-COMER
Gnd. -,..,,
THE MAY C'O.
SUh Coast Plaza, C.M.
WA NT ED SEX:RETARY I
BOOKKEEPER to share
............... <qU!ppod,of-
fice ~. and operate her
own sec::relaria.J aervlce. Top
p&Y at hours W'-ddy, fOI' me.
Balance ol time to own
busineel Sfortl. Mu1t be top "°'"" ... ---.... .,. offioe bulldlng coo.
Men. 546-2820, eve1 642-1178
Part· Time Work
lnc:reasinr d e m a n d ...
A Yan bu made nt!W open.
q. for • llmlted riumber
ot. repreaent•live1.
54().. 700 Stli-5.lil
TELLER, Port Time
Experienced f,l'eferred
BANK OF AMERICA
18691 Main St.
Huntington Be.ch
847-35<1
An -opportunity · e~yer
lnurAttt~.
-.Ambelm 1714 W. Uncoln ' -Santa Ana, Ph. 560325
-Qma Mesa, 2'l'm Harbor
An eqtsal opportunity
employer
MATURE WOMAN, par!·
time, help aervice rriMI A:
dept storel tor creetlna: mrm Cl'.llQPllJY. Mmt blwe
OM'. ~paid. 962-7047
Jobo Mon. Wom. 7500
J, (.
PEtlN£Y co.
IN
Newport Beach
H11 positions
For sales In
e SPORTING GOODS
•HARDWARE
e COSMETICS e SEWING MACHINES
Rece!.t succetafu1 ~
ence prell!l'ftd. Generous
benefit prnrram.
APPLY JN~
Mondliy thru Friday
t :OO a.m. to 9::1> p.m.
J. C. PfNllEY CO.
Newport Center
24 F•1hion l1l•nd
Newport Beach, Calif.
An equal opportunity -
Wu Ben's
.tlit WiJl wutc: with Admln Au11t .... $600 DON'T siv. tt • ..,..,, ret =d~l~""'=",..,_'-=2900"'"-~~ I FOR SALE Wlll'lltzer 1
· · ms.: Oper•tlon1 trnee $600 quick cub tor It with • PLAYER. Plano, _ ttti1t a: piano. Mabot1111. cbm7,
tomer.. G•I Friday . , . to $450 Daily PUot warit Adi ttfinW1ed wabrt. 60 rolls ftlnut wood. Very _ IDC
Cost Accountont Lop I Socy · · · ' · · $SOO ~"2"'-567>iiiiiiiiii" iiiiiiiii.mi""'iii&iold.ii1$Tl>iiiiii..._iii,...iiiiiiililliiii•li"1ii'"i-ii"iS3l5iiii· !llM1'Siiiiii•
From $9,400 o...->JO ... paid ;oo. I
FM Pold
Young man with ~ hi Also Fee Po1itian1 t
aCIXIUnting and 3 yeua ex-ARGUS EMPLOYMENT
~ in .t1ndan:I manu-CONSULTANTS AGENCY
t.lcllll'inc co!Jt accountinc. roll WHtclift, NB 548-779G
16U E. 17th, S.A. srr.m;
RtM•n:h A11l1t•nt MERCHANDISE FOR
Trol"" SALE AND TRADE
$520 to 1tort
High School crad with a. Furniture 8000 .
mce 1111.t nlatb badq:round, Furniture returned from d~
play studioe, model borne1, Tr1lnM deo:raton cancella.tion.
$95 week to 1t•rt $pftnJ.sh & Meditern.ne111 etc.
r...m 1o -·"• on<1 ... .,.;r RD FURNITURE
........, .........._ Hlrb 1844NewportBlvd.,CM
l!IC'mol grad, military com-every nlgbt til 9
~. rnedw'liceJ aptitucM. Wed., Sat. A: Swi. 'til I
3 BIDRDOM 1eb comp!. Cl Print1~1 Helper old Spanl.!b M •ho r J •
to $3 00 hr. Recllnlng chairs. Antique
• ~ GE refrig crou
Pres.!man neech intdligent top freezer late rriodel $95.
)'OWlC m&n with minimum Kenmm"f: dryer a: wuhtt.
experiMCe U genera.I helper. Etc. 642-9879 ,
Linoleum L•y•r a::r:n. Walnut dining Aet
30 h """' $425, """ 1235: ...,,, .. $5. r. cor ti pUl $100, 9ell $55,
Experienced only. bottl like new. 673-41.n Ut 5
Plumbing ln1t•ller ~ ~ = ~· ::;: ;
$2.15 to start Golf club&, good beginner-'1
and advance to $4.00 htu-. aet $60: 962-6233
Tools .-id truck furnished. 3 PIFn: aectiorill, 2 end
Install water bee.ten llnd do tables. Llvirc room dnlir.
Kenen.l llet'YM:ing and repair. All in Xlnt cond. 00-76!16
Tronic Tech SOFA Originally $882, M•ke
oiler. O!ber Items.
To $550 *962-<ll56 *
Experienced man to aemce KING Ma.ttrem a: box IPfirw
el.eelro medwllcal tape, $45. Oib A: m1ttreu $25
puncben. Trav~ pa)'. l-1194-~2628.;,..o--~-~
Marble lop coffee table
60X20, us. 2 An.oe. rup,
$10 & sis. 67S-67C3
PCB Touchup
To $2.50 .hr. to lt&rt.
Expt:t~ed only.
FEMALE
SOFA, I FT. $7S
Xlnt cond. 541-5361
NOW!
.NEW!
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED ADS
WITH A
NEW-LOW-RATE
3 .LINES
2 TIMES
$1~00
IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! .
Furniture IOOO Pl•not I Organs
Office llurnlture I010 ltodlo
Office Equipment IOll Televlsien
Store Equipment 1012 HI-Fl & Stereo
C•f•, Rftt•ur•nt I014 T•pe Recerffn
B•r Equipment IOl5 C•merat & Equlpmfft Hautehold Goods 1020 Hobby Supplloo Appll•nc• 1100
Antiqu.s 1110 Sporting Goods
S.wln9 Mlchlne1 1120 Blnocul1rt, Scopn
Musical Instruments 1125 Ml1cellaneou1
1130
HOO
120I
HlO
H20
UGO
8400
UGO
1550
MOO
• EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e
• No Item 0.er •so e No Commercl•I Plrrns e
• No Copy Chon'" • No Abli ... 1111-•
_ START MAKING
MONEY ~NOW!
CALL ,
1 642~5678
ASK FOR YOUR
DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR
AN·D YOU MAY CHARGE IT!
• -• • • •
• '
I
...... -· .. ., .. , ...... . .... , .. , -...
,, 58 DAILY P'llDT WtdrttldQ, July 10, 1961
MERCHANDISE FDlt TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ;: MERCHANDISE ,OR I MERt HANDIU FOii l"'ilCHANDISE POR :f SALi AND TRADE SALi AND TRADI SALi AND_!RADI
!! T1Jewldon 1205 Mi;;i°1:neous -ea ~~·~·~ *600
;::SA;:;l:.::l:...:;AN::D=-:T.;:RA=D::.E _ loolt & y h --~~ ~ -.., .• 9300 C.mpon 9520 Imported Autoc
•• ..
' 1111rnD FABRICS AUCTION
FREE TO YOU 17 Ft. l'r....,_ ;.;Tii.iZ'm, · Putt, df!tO l1l•nder Deluxe Model
Fri., July 12, 7:30 p.m. ocbiem !or **apinl, VNY &ood OJndidon. lnclud.
.,.. FOR SALE New &: Uled Fumllurt, Top &&rdenin( Ir orpoic prdeo-in&: a.tom an1p dov.'n OOY·
OPBI ROAD
FACTORY DIRECT
SALE
l'ORSCHE
PORSCHE ·~ Cpe, rtd
w/blk Int. Am/fm .
Chrome11, Pirelr11, hea~.
$1650 Pri p1'1y. 5.16--0290
TRANSPORTATION
Und Co!:' 9900
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
H...t.d -Pr'« -eom. -
Htu1JOm -ll<LIDAYS
: ,,_, Heorl1 ,,_ g. aJ.IH:
~ Tv•, WASHIU,
alflllCllU.TOllS
m1n1S-t11YBS ·IWW
Remn•n~ .ampll!I A MUI N•tne o,iroitute in bedroom tnr. OM.n hotw manu~. er. Big wMd ttlt trailtr. ~ Sal. Only g 1.m. to 1 1811, dining room Itta, china fou haul. W~ alter• ~· Phone 6C2-4980 aletr
p.m. 9'l9 Bal<tt, Costa Meu cabinets, div1n1, kwfftalll, ~~•JI d~ Sal ' Sunl-;;;';;-tt"p.:"mc.·=-=_,_...,~
LA.'RGE Uphol51ettd chair occ:aNional d\alrs, cocktail 1ftll SI., 9'nt& Ana JULY lpecW, &.tll hauled
$10 ~v.'OOd mest d. tAble1, commodlol, 9f!Wtn& Heights 1112 bottom~ 6 painted'.
dJ'flwers, 4 drawers S50 machlnn:, chests, desks, PLAYIVL and W!ll-tnbwd, $1.90 per a. ·· ,.mt I; xlne.
General Elect r I c com-bunk beds, lami:s. P'IK S montb old, PY and.white All . other maintmt.nclp ,,
binlltkln ttfrig. m. 646-8004 llmJll, pictures, nuulre55e&, male kittn1 would Ilk• a engme wtd, Re ,,..
Sip on a doaed _...,
''Mother-in-Law I>Md. ea..
--------ed rar the HOUDAYS."
N"" 11 It !ul1> eqwwro l =~========
OPDl R<lAD cbaeia: mount
walk·thru houM cu. Equip.
peel to ao an,ywhen )'OW'
wanderlust takl!I )'OU. Moun·
ltd on Chev., GMC or Ford,
•uto trans, V8, pi>wer •lefr· tne .I. br'UH. duall .
TOYOTA
i .::..c=N~E~E=D'-A,__:;,CA.,.;lt,,;,?~-I .. ., ..
" ••
• Hi-Fl &. Stereo 8210
• STEREO 1968 .,!id state,
:~ cooMlll! modf'l. Like rww.
, Balance $79.li nr sm11U
paymenl8. Crtdit Dept.
·• 535-7289 '
PM TV's, Steftool!, reJrii:enitors, good home' and a y11rd lt'I Newport Dfy Docka &Th-lS(lj
PlANO $200. 2 blkt $15 a,, $7. stove&, Wflsht>r11, *>'trs: 1: play tn. 642-2857 1110 On the Bay at 20th St.
g Ol~ini St M . GulllU' 1: amp MUCH MORE! FREE TRADE 1mpcrt er Domeltic ~•>. roll hP<J aw.., w/moJ-WINDY'S ' AUCTION Kitten, btadt ""' ""'" .,.,-kr-"" »-tt lnboml fl'eS5 $10. 2 comer cab. $10 femalt. o.rte marklng1 . boat. South a.at or
• $1~. St .. mt>r 11unk. Call 1£ Rf'ady tor new h o me . Lapestack Pft"fem!d but not · · 2075.,. Newport 81\'d. neceas Phont 646-9303 uk •• ., 5 pm. ,. ... .,..,., 646-2388 119 '. ........, Behind Tony's Bldg. Mall'•· J ,::~~;.,,.-=--,,,,-_:; f<r D1ek
MOVrNG; contm115 ol Mf'sa Coffta Mesa 646-8686 LOVABLE Tiger kitten, 10 196l 23, Tm. Sedlir'I
Vf!t'le home &. garage, for OPgN DAILY 9 to~ co\orinJI; Aho part-&i.mese ~an lti5 hp.
.Ue; furn., aP11llancK, ac-~~~~!"".,.,!!!!!!!!""'d v.~s. all .hots. Unusual We took her In tnldf. l litle , ~iN & bardW11.re. Fri., MOVING TO MIDWE.ST coloring. AlllO. part...Siamese ~W~ ci:;· s~:i.:'
July 12th. 16.'i:I Pl\lau Pl, MUST SELL ALL WATER kittns. 542-200'2 1111 ' . ' ,;=.~""':;;::::...,......,...::,;~I Nev.·port Archet5 Manna, Co&tll r.1l'Sa. 540--7211 TOYS! Sabot No. 1425 l'lf'eds CANYON Killenl, beaut, xklt 3..133 W. Coe.st llwy. 642-T1U.
FOAM RUBBER. cut to size. work $lOO. Kiie aa.ilboat ~era, IMle, striped .'-16' BRUNS\VICK Fiberg\M!
Uph aupplies, f 11. bric 1 , 11'7" w/tniler $ 6 5 0 . eabco, 1 White w/blad< tail. boat 35 hp Evinrud Xlnt
WHILE THEY LAST
$5478.45
130 S. HARJIDl\i Bl VD .
SANTA ....,.,4-531-4655
OPBI ROAD
r"W"nrWTwni FACTORY DIRECT
SALE
You've never 5een a unlt like
this before. The Al..J.. NE\V 9
'68 TOYOTA
GET OUR LEADERSHIP
SAVINGS BEFORE
YOU BUY!~!
~wilflllU
• IMPORTS
1006 Harbor. C.M. M6-9300
TOYOTA
llEADQUARTERS
E~l~OR E
It. witb automatic toilet as 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstrnnstr
CAN'T BE FINANCED?
,e Bankru}>t! e RepoaellJorlT
e Bad Credit! e Divorced?
e Pttilitary e New ID Att&T
Make Payday Pl.)"DmJtl
McCARTHY MOTORS
lt20 So. Main • EdinJer
(2 blocks N. cl Sean)
Santa Ana Pb sc2-350T
:~ CABINET Model Magnavox
•r Hl-Fi. S35. 548-982~ n11ugahyde. Fact. outlet. Islander l'l, Sl.S.700. Custom 494-87511, 7/11 -d. , _ ......... '..· El-''Rick" ~rtboard 9'7". No ........ ...,6 w1..:ru . ..-""" Low pre. A-1 FOl:llD Fabric CUTE F rP.e k:it1ere to good start. $950 548-8257 after
: C1.mer•1 & Equip. 8300 '-Upholstery Supply Co., 3ll dings SJO. Al8o 61 Cl1t'V Sta-borne. 583 .,.-··•ll Pl., 4 .. 30 pm
standard equipment. Fee-Phone 894-332'.l J ;:;;:;;:;..-.-,-~==ol tures foond only in the ex-[ ===~:_:,;_,,;_~;:::::-~= I '
E 5th St SA ·~1181 tion Waaon w/tniltt hi!cb ....,,.,.... ; r.nm SE1L Nikm F, Pho-I ~·~·==''-''-·~·-~~---to haul boatc " boe.nk. Oleta Metil &12-3479 aftl~$8511="""~'~Lmenr~--~°""'~
: to.true, with Nikkor lenses: GNRDrn Marki._ "°taz..!:'"' Good ccnd. 1 OW!IS', $650. 3· 1/ll Alum. la HP ~.
: 28mm f3 .5, 43 to 86mm 13.5, mower. w v.g: .... qnace 54,5..3700 3 LlTI'LE Kittenl, 2 all Elec. etarb!r, Ta 11 d • m
14 -•-ml!: btdspteadfi, drapes; b'·"· 1 bl /"~ : 85 to 250mm .5. uu.a· ac.. ~chUdren'• cl~: aU UK..,., ack w wu1te trailr. Many xtras !
:. cessc.ies. 0vf'?' Sl.OCO worth items lea1 than 1 yr old. 11 ~~'::'.'~-~. su!fa-m:r!ll'.,· ga. 1 wka. 0
71
1
11d _64&-0196 _________ 1
• of equipment for $600. PhMe 84:!-847:i . ~ .... 54......,. 15' FIBERGLASS Runabout
m.2616 Skimmer, MaJntenancc KU.
pensive self-contained Wlits.
THREE LEM:
$1877.33
830 S. HARBOR BLVD.
SANTA ANA 531-4655
952S
TRIUMPH
• 1960 TR3A ~
Excellent condition
Private Owner. ...2967
VOLKSWAGEN •~~~·~-----· 1 Acrylon Sh•g C•rpetint FREE Ground Pad. BF..At.TM'FIJL Female Kittens TrAveler 1iO hp Johnson,
' GERMAN, All auto. mcwie Celery Grttn l5'xl5' Plus 9x $149.88 6 wics. old. Hsbricn k wean· dude trlr. Xlnt cond. fl.200. '67 HONDA (50) BAJA BUGGY BUil..DERS '66 VW DELUXE
camera: zoom len5• Pd. 10 piece for hall. BC'8.utiful! SECARD POOL ed. Free to ldving family I~......,~=""=='"' ~-~--1 600 Ac tual Miles. Completed Bu~es &. Acces-LOAUJ.::D ~ 26,IXXI miles on :!; ovpr s:m, &e.l.l $150. Pert. Only 3 mos. cut. Will sell for 3'l3 s. Main, Orange 644-0l4l 7/U 19' CENIVRY O\rysler ma· LlKE NEW! • it0ries. Used VW Par1s speedometer. Belonged to
:;: 673-49511 i,s COST. 644-0734 532_1991 0 NE I a r a:• S • r v e I rine inboard. See a t New-Will teke $85 cash dels. or 20706 Laguna Canyon Road little 'ole school teacher in
'i; HOlJDAY 8 mm Movil! PICTURE FRAME refrigerator, need& aome port Marine~ Worits. trade ~. Payments Laguna Beach 494-8100 San Clemente. Take $175
Came!'& with bit-in li&ht MOLDING. Over 1000 feet. Pool Tables repairs. Yours tor 1be takin& 280I La1.a..Yett• NB. 675-«!30. $16. per mo. Cell after 11, OCELOT Mtl Ok 164 VW cub del.!l, dlr, or trade.
;: meter $20 833-Cfi85 $00 takes all M•"" .i......-.-. ttu. Sat./ Gun only. 646--4660 WANTED 8' FIBERGLi\$1 ,;.....,,,:;;c~=·='o-=.....,.=='.:.'~~~I · w -.., -_....,-. New ' repouessed $9!150 Rm OJW~ dwsis, eng, roll bar , Pymta $36.86. Call after 11,
BUICK
'63 BUKK SP£CIAL
f ully !!Quipped. V8, radio and
heater, power lteering. ~
rlown or trade s:w !)el" mo.
24 mo. UTI.736
$795
THEODOR£ ROBINS
FORD
•• • Sporto'ng Goods l5GO S1670 Jewell st. So. Laguna T--•· Cb : • · 1'*de DINGHY. 13'5'' S10 Boat with Ii HP be&derl. '68 Uc. ex1nt. $1300. 494-9773 or 639-3617. 499-2780 llP· ~ul.Ui, ilf11llKG w/dQc. To IQOd borne cn),y, * IM-1195 * Mire. and traller. S400 '92-.1381 (San Qern.) '66 VW 1300 SEDAN. '"'-""'-2000 Harbr Blvd.
BINKSS BOOTH Quality;34.50up. 28'"'2 Ell•am•re memi value.Wili tradefor311ice l'=========-n.uJV a.t&Mea M2.m!D : PINBALL Machine SSO. Sab:Jt
.. sailboat DG oan er Mils $tO
:. Both in tood eonditbl.
: 500-5133
8600 ··-r.1adP to on:ler -any col<.-,
Decorator grapes, candles &.
olhet' accessories. 892-3438 , , ________ _
, SOFA Bed $45, end tables, 2
•1-for $'25. tbl lamp& $5 chairs
: $10 each 833-lli85. • ·• 18' SEARS sv.im pool 1 yr
-old beater, vac, ladder Ir
~ tilter. $300. 545-4819 aft 6
: CABOVER const rack for 8'
•. bed made ot pipe $45• ~ trade fir rifle, 847--m56 •
, ~~ CO.\tPl.El'E ..ot rattan fmn,
.. ~ beautiful <:ond. Crib '
I~ beater. s..-0215
:: RCA 'IV, :mack &: white with
" stand, like new, $45 613-5020
PRA y C•ll frank Verde> C.M. 7111 S•llboits 9010 w/a/w very dean. Mm!: 12'Xl4', 5 hp motor. Dt Vil-538-03) l --"----.c..;c.:.:; JJooda Scrambler <i aame Imported Autos 9600 aell immed. S127S 81&-3072 DON'T need 3 caIW. '66 fiUk:k
biss spn.y gun, 10 p:n. 100 FREE For tht digging 1 WOWI value. 962-7689 wes. Le Sabre, air, ps, pb, 23,ID>
ft &ir hole-675.3832 Misc. Wanted 96,0 Bnuiliam Pepper Tree .I. 1 CAL.XI $2900 HONDA Sttambler 3'.15 cc. WE BUY 1964 vw Bus 44,0XI mi. Nu I =ml=·="""==·=-="='='===I .;.;;.;.;:;_;.;.;;=c::..-_:: H)f>iscua about 5' ea, 2 palm Top racer • eomtomlff Complete rebuilt motor less ANY CLEAN tireti. Body & mot« xint l' ~~Jes~~ SS CASH SS trees, 'I" 545-4819 aft g Till crui.9f!f' -Hurry • thil than 100 miles. Set up for cond. Re-movable rnidclle
llZS. ga--iemania 2640 E. 1 LOVEABLE ft'male kittt'n& won't last! 546-1318 dirt, two Gelli gears. $375. LA TE MODEL l'i!!al. $1300. *642-0030 ..... _ We pay cub tor~ Coast Hwy o:li\1" 673-23'72 ,/ Furniture ,/ AppliUlCff 4 mOfl. need good homes. l~' Fiberglass sloop keel Phone 642·3403. SPORTS CARS. '68 VW; dlx. vinyl inter.;
J>'ind it first at Raciti'• ,/ Antiques ,/ Toola 1 caJJco &: 1 blk &. wtit. safe &. fut. New saiis. ss9s. CU~. Full-race '6!1 BSA Top Dollar To You radio. Rd . 6,000 M i ,
coo11 Mesa Jewelry Ir Loan ON ITEM or _ 646-l<M. 7/10 Fun Zone Boat Co., Balboa i;lreet & show bike. $4000 in-Golden West Shov.·room frt'sh S 18 2 5 .
Open 7 dys, ]838 Newport COMPLETE HOUSEFt.n.. BLACK I: whitr young ca.I, 12' SNOWBIRD. Ready for vest. Must sell. $10CXl or best AUTO CENTER Inc 646-3432
!downtown) 646-7141 Call 547-6748 or 827-8271 ferna.le , part siameu lo goo0 water! Needa aa.ib. $1.50. offer. 491-1151 eve11 '63 VW Sunroof. A-1 cond. nu
ho ~"2570 7110 t~o ''"'"~ 1984 Newj)Ort Blvd. pbol , ·-d~
UPHOlSI'ERING -$79.50, 2 WANTID 'I'rui<le bed "'"'m"•-;i.;=:i-'io-.:'--'''-""'C:.,-=:1 ..:~.=,~""=-~~--'56 TRIUMPH 650 CC dirt Costa Mesa 642.8460 u · ......... -= with extru
pc. (European craftsmen) frame, child's roll top desk P UP~ Y Tet good b o m •· 3.5' YAWL by Owner bike. $25(). 823 Towne, .l:.;';;":c· ~Ow~"';,;:":::8-0682:.:0"'--~
FrH Nt, del, pickup, 215 & chair. Reas. 642-2188 Mother small Collie. Must sell by 7115 Costa Mesa. 64&-1257 : Spot Cash._tor Imports '59 VW, $3$, nma good.
Main, HB "Berny" S.~ 675-3436 7fll • 673.6704 • e pay more , ..... any import 20142 Spruce, Santa Ana
TV ~"SOLE, -", w--FREE TO YOU FREE F'or Iovin<> care. Tea SNOWBIRD No. 561. Xlnt Auto Too .. & Equip9410 regard]~~ of year, make Jfeights. * 54>011"1 ......... , .6~ """" " ·..;.;.;__ __ .;._=;c:;:..;...c.o1 O'I' cond1tlon. Try us before
v.Ul, NEW picture tube. $25· cup Poodle. No childm . cond. Well equip. $400 •68 PORSCHE 912 Solex you St'IJ. ELMORE '66 VW. Clean. In parking
548-3210 2. % SIAMEiE male kttteM 548-5217 aftr 5 711 * 673--8182 * ~lors MOTORS, l5300 Beach Blvd. lot behind UCB Np! Bch.
8 wks old. 545-5878 1112 ADORABLE o.--.:. $1500 * 646-2431 8' ROY/BOAT With 5 hp out-•"YI:""· Power Cruisers 9020 -===*:=6;7>-42'1=::0:*=== 1-=w='="::;m:in::;':'';,':· ~""'";;=:;:;:·== board mot.or I: 4 life jackets. FREE 6 wk old puppies, to ~1<m -'57 VW. Good cond, new
$65. 646-98$ good home 841...fil25 1/101 ~=~-=---~--'c.,111=1 16' ~S Volvo in & out Trailer, Trivet 9425 DATSUN tires. battery, $400 firm 2080
SOCK IT TO 'EM! CHARGE )1>U1' want ad naw. 3 HALF Terrier, half poodle cont. trailr. 2ffi Cecil Pl. or [;;;;;'~;:--;-;';;;-::;;-::':0[.--~~~~'----~N~•~·~·o~na_Jc_, CM __ 54_S-4_:_822.;._ __
CADILLAC --
(2) '61 CADILLACS
Hardtops. Full power and air
ronditioning. 2.0'i'o down or
trade S29 pPr mo. >a mo.
JWV973
$695
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
ml Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 642-0010
'61 CADILLAC -" ·' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
pups. 6 wks old to good at!t'!' 6 ".m. 64&-7806 1:;f!(l~1~w.U:~. 8:!~: '66 DATSUN 1600 '64 VW; red w/grey inter.
homes. 548--2147 7/11 - --easylitt hitch, miITors, A·l Roadster, 4 !q)d, dlr. in per-Excllnt oondilion! Priv.
l8 LB. 1 yr. Female spayed Speed-Ski Bo•h 9030 cond, fll!l>. 1652 Newport fect . shape. Top like new. "pa=n=y=I=""~· "'=2-6oc940c-====
'61 Cadillac Coupe De Ville
Full power and t.actocy air.
One owner kM' mileage for
year model. J>'u.11 price $1005
1st car lo! on Harbor Blvd.
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• • ' • ,,
" .. .. •• •• .. .. ,, •• .
' ..
.. .. : .
' ..
.. .
' .
.. •
Imparted Autos
'66 vw w... WWte. '911y .. ,, •• + .......
'1599
'65 vw
s.d•n, lttcl. Air temf, &
radio.
$1599
'63 vw
...... 111 ... hlly "'.1,·• + ......
'I 199
'61 GHIA
c..-ttWI, IN. F1 I I y
...i.•11 + ,.tHe.
'999
9600 tmoe.rted Autl>!I
YOU KNOW
THE BUG IS
THE ANSWER
W• 9iv• th•m th• Volksw•g•n 16-
point Sef•ty •nd P•rform•nc• in·
sp•ction. Thet's why W• cen 9uar-
an+•• 100 1. th• repair or t•pl•c•·
m•nt of all major m•chenical
parls*, But not •v•ry us•d VW
9•ts thi1 insp•ction. Only VWs
1old by •uthori2ed d••l•rs. lik•
""
• En9in1 • Trensmi11ion • R•ar
axl• • Front alfl• ass•mblies •
Brak• system • Electrical 1yst1m
'66 YW
F•1tbeck, Whitt. Fully
-.u1,•d + rMle.
$1799
'65 YW
S.--IHtck, W • I t •· •illy .... , .• + '941e.
$1799
'62 YW
SHcM. IM. Fiilty "l•lp'• + ,... ...
'1099
'63 Porsche·
c •• ,... WlilN. 4 ,,...., ,...,,,
$3199
'65 vw
Sed•n, Gr• y. Fully
MIUl,'d + AM/FM.
$1499
'64 vw
Sedan, 0 r • • n. Fully
tc1u1,·11 + radio.
$1299
'60 GHIA
$999
'62 vw
' P8•Hftf•r, doubl• c ,1cku, with lnaula cam,.,.,.,.,,
s999
549-0JOJ 67J·1 190
1970 Hartlor llvd., Costcl MeM
dog. To good home, lOYf'! 13•5·• SK tBoat with~\~-.; Blvd. Racmg bronze-plush black ·•
d\ldrn. ~1842 7112 Mere and trailer $400. Value 16' -'VELEZE . bo intf'rior, new tires Take old-VOLVO
FREE Puppies, 6 weeb cWd. will trade for ~ cc Honda stov~~~vm. Si~ ~~Su~: rr trade or $1 85 Cash, dcls. r -------
Cute! To good homes . Scramber of same value. brks. New 1.."0fld. $99 9 . Pym!.s S4S.S6 mo. After 11. '68 VOLVO JOHNSON & SON
642-8043 7/ll 962-1689 .. ..,. '>'><'0 494.9773 or 639-3617. -~ !========= GET OUR LEADERSl-UP I ALL Black Mama cat & 2 IS '~A~CRIF!==CE=!~l~4~' ,~,~, ~00.-t.~7~\I ~sro==RA~G=E~. ,.,..~~ile-,..-.~bo~,~-. FIAT SAVINGS BEFORE
Lincoln-Mercury
Costa l\.1esa Branch
ldttffill (week old) or playful hp mtr. X\nt! $250 OI' ear etc. $7.50 per mo. Work YOU BUY '~! 1941. Harbor Blvd. 642-7000
1939 CADILLAC 4 dr. SN'.lan
w/tnJnk. Suilable to :restore
61}..F. Motor good shape ........ .
a:ray kitten. 642--0896 7/ll trade. 338-7650 space. 642-2601 & 548-3261
LOVELY blade male kitten, · -~· 15' TRAVEL Trailer. Good.
hous ebroken . Call M.rine Equip. 9035 SI 6 ~AUi ....... 525 ~1093 1/12 eeps · .,....,.,. ..,...,I!.
SAil.. & accesaorie~ for 1 ..:F..:alrlax"""~"'=-· "°"=-.::•..:M..:""""-' _
POODLE Blk min. Male 2 Malibu OUtrigger. r.11"1. N. 14' TRAVEL Trailer $40. wk.,
YM old. Friendly all lholli. A. JohnlOJI, 24U N , gu refrig, slps 5-6. 4~
646-0115 7/12 CAmeron Ave., Cov in a , or 494-1191 Mrs. Chanter
* NEW FIAT*
AUTOMATIC "850"
5199 DOWN -OAC * 546.58 per month •
'"850'" Sric• 542.65 PR MO
HERB FRIEDLANDER MALE POODLE Calif. 91722
5 mos ol.d 642-8581 1·25-W-AIT--h-,-,lh--,..-d-~-,cl-.T ::.'":.':;ks;:'.:::--:-:-c:--:-:-9c;5c:OOccl.=:;=:;=:;=
FREE To you, Guin& pigs, $100. Heath RDF Sl'i. '65 DATSUN % T. dlr. pick JAGUAR
'i42S Gorden Gro .. e Slwd.
10me cages. 545-6734 7/12 * eves. 545-8776 * up. Sky blue . This is the
1
________ _
HAI.F Poodle ~ pup. 5 , • work horse ol the truck 'fil JAGUAR 3 S Sed
mo. old niale, 540-2674 7/12 BOit Shp Mooring 9036 market. $125· Cash or trade. : an, Pym ts $.'l6.86 mo. 494-9773 or power: auto'. WU'e wheels
2 PI..AYFUL ~tie puppies. Wll1lted : Mooring or slip 639-36l7 low mlles, or1g. owner. $1500
Need nice hm. 54&-7357 7112 for 19' OweM. Balboa Bay. 67S.5200
PETS ond LIVESTOCK e 6'13-859' e
· WANTED
C:.•::;•:.:• _____ _::8:.:8.:.::20 Permanent slip for 30' crul1·
For Sale ACTA -CFA er. 642-0428
Catt«y us unit or
individually. 962-ll59 Bo•t-Yacht ======~=[ Chortors 9039
o;.Dog.=------'8c:82o.:5 e CHARTER THE FlNFSl'
New 40' Ketch
673-2517 • 615-2400
Sailing leuons, 40' aloop
Rei!SG11able rates; avW for
1956 FORD IA tm Pidrup Ex
oond. V8 stick shift, NeW 6
ply tires $475 642-3403
'66 DODGE Van. V-8. Auto .
R/H. All winctlw. Lo mi.
fl700 •4~
C•mpen
OPBI ROAD MERCEDES Benz 22nS
Auto., PS. Sacrifice. ll6
l ndus.tri11.J Way, CM.
ITAI.JAN GREYHOUND~
pies. AKC ~· OwnpiU'I
lreed. Ideal pets. 1 male, l
ft'mal,.. S12'i.00 Neb, inrlud·
ing Mn~ llJld papers. Cs!J
646-1.ml .
AKC SHE'n.AND SHEEP
dog tMiniature Colli(').
Best in liUcr: EXQUISIT~!
charter 646-!(y5() s.18-2592
BLUEWATER CHARTERS
27·-40• U-Dtive Skip. Ava.ii
Day/wk. 646-9000 24 hrs.
FACTORY DIRECT ~"=,_"''="=0 ~---
SALE GOlNG Tn Europe, i\fust sell
'61 221'.l S l\1rrcedes Bcfl7. f)(!W
clutch. u·an.s. i n I e r i o r . Rid!. sable l Y.'bite. Mal.-. Boa t-Yacht
3111 ll\Oli. Xlnt 1emperan1f'nt. Ch•rters 9039
Ownp lines. $125. 540--0910 --------'-
MAIAMUTE CAL 2.f. SAILING SLOOP
6 MO, Bl:AlIT BLACK $25 PER DAY OR $150
WITH SILVER MARKINGS, I c=:P:ER=W=E=EK==·="""=""== GOOD BLOOD LJNE -1~
We 'ooil ria cM1J)('r with iCc Sunroof. $12;,(I. 673--0319 alt 5
box, stove, sink, 25 ga.I WI!· SALE Or trade '56 1'1ercedcs
er tank, 5 gal butane. all Benz ?oro-B. 4 dr. convt.
standard ft"81lln'S included. I $600. 642-9261
It's built for your lii;:ht duty =========
% ton or 14 ton tn11..-k. lt's MG
9050 mly 8 ft. long A: has kits of1____ -----
BOXERS for Sale. Show or WANTED RACING SABOT. storage. '68 MG
pet. ~ ~Pf'Viao, boti~'li" Prefer hijr:h number . $TW8075LEF"1'49 GET OUR LEADERSFilP
PAPERS. $150 67J.-3007 Bo.1ts W•nted
dog tira1n1ng, b • I h l n g . 64~ • SAVINGS BEFORE
BE'l'l-l·EL BOXER KEN-830 S. HARBOR. BLVD. YOU BUY '" N~. &27-50.16 Mobile Homes 9200 SANTA ANA 531-4655 .,, ~rd.~=~ar~.ha~~ 1~X48 XLNT va_ltw -Not up OPEJf ROAD lftan. L11n:1
494-3&73. Dll.)'J 547-9561 ext 111 Park. Av.111n~. cooll"f, tCUIO
"" :;;:,.~, $3000. "' "''" FACTORY DIRECT IMPORTS
ARC Sable Collie ~ SALE 4 wk• .. champ. sired. MOBILE J-letme -lOxSO 1 BR, 1966 Harbor. C.M, 6'16-!0l.1
$50 & Up. 642-7:n8 frmt kitd\cn, nr Hoa& 1108p,
MINIATURE Poodle AKC 1 $3,200 962-2523 aft 5, New . , • The fabulous I~
wlq o Id , Bladt-frmllle. ~sell or tnl.de c.banft l ft.. ' lit'f'per, an OPEN 646-3790 trailer Udo Park, fOr ~ in ROAD ~xclu~ive. Loads of
\VIRE r: hnmedlatr area. 644-02•1 1torage &. equ\pt to take tht'
: AKC ~Pr.:~ Jqlll. 8x501~ NWiu 2 Br. ba furn big family to lime lar RWIY * 642-993:9 * w/awnmg. U850. 5'8-m9 places with Ford, ~vy. GMC or Dodge ~ ton. A111 0
SD..KEY Tefrier pupg AKC Mini Bikes 9275 Inns, V8, CM!per !iptCial I °'8mp stk, m I• -$1 26 , -.1~n~on f~~6'7!>-S26l MESA MINI BIKE WEHAVEONLYTWO!
AKC BASSET PUPS """ e p..,. e "'1»ln $4600
,.,..,,.,. ... """""· 541).8638 2167 !WW CM e -l30 S. HARBOR Bl VD. ...,,
TllANSPORTATIDN Mohrcrcloo 9300 SANTA ANA 531""6551==s =u =N=l =EA=:=M=:::;
loolt & Yochlt 9000 l<EW ~. -"""" '1--------Ulll& BSA. Victor. Xlnt fl,, not . c.'l!l.b-o'ltr. SletPI 3 '61 SUNBEAM A I " I n •
16' GLASSPAR AV11lon W/ oond. •.ooo street mi. to ' w1rh le.. bo.'<, t1blc. Rcll!ldsler. Brlli~h racinQ:
50 TIP Evinrude A: pier trlr. * S4!}.l849 * ~IOl"RJ:t', au.ume paym<'nl!t tl"l'f'n, Still und,.r 5(),(XXI mi ..
• .id l'quip -e:irtraa. $950. 1961 1'RJUMPH tknw>vUJe of 124.1.'i or $45(1. C.ll 19(.'fory wur~nly. Th\, rsu-
1 M4-0024 2.000 ml. Bt9t °"" tAkf!S. 64.2..J40.l, h11 hlld l)Mutlful e•rf'. s1n.
~willlDU
• IMPORTS
I 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300
59 VOLVO
$450
87.f. Darrll. C.M. 543-~
Autos Want~d 9 700
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR,
USED CARS
CONNRL CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa ~1203
WE BUY
ANY CLEAN
LATE MODEL
SPORTS CARS.
Tl)p Dolla.r To You
Golden West
AUTO CENTER Inc
1984 Newport Btvd.
Costa Mesa &42-8460
WE PAY
~ASH .
for used cars A trucks juat
call us for frff rstimate.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask for Sales Manaa:u
1821l Beach Bl..
Huntington Beach
Kl "3331 ----Will Buy
Y(lUr Volkswaa:en or Porsche
• P.llY top dollars. P&ld for
or not Call Ralph ,., ;.1190
9900
'63 CH((KER 4·DR.
'67 EL DORADO. Like new.
Fae. warranty S t er e o .
AM/FM. New tires. ..\u
pwr. Leather. 6~
CA MARO
BY OWNER 1967 Cama.rn 327
Auto. Nw brllks, hi rub-
ber. P/S. RJ-1. VERY
clean. Son In service.
Jo~ equity. T.O.P. on 11.p-
provd crdit. Shown by
apP'I 673-5513
CHEVROLET
• Premium Car • ·oo Olevrolet Impala V8
Sport Coope, All original,
one owner. low mileag,e. Has
pow.er steering, powergtide,
·radio, etc. You're lllre to
~ its finest you've seen
100% guarantee $19$. ·
1101..lDAY RAMBLER
1959 H11rtior Blvd., C.M.
'56 Chevy Bel Air
Hard Io p, V-11, 11utomatic.
~ by J>ollct riNic'f'r. On~nal pain!. hmnze And
white. Runs Jikr fl c!OC"k•
Take $Z> ca!il, pay ba/ $20~
per md'. Call 11.fter 11, t9o1.
9973 or 6.'JS.3617
'66 CHEVY 1mpal11 hard top
sport coupe, dlr, exo~ a:reen. bla.dc plush interior.
V--8, automatic, pow r r
steering, low miles. Will
take older tradt. Pvmnts
$46.86. 494-9773 or 6JS-3s17
1962 CHEVY Sup::-r spa;:j
be!GW Blue Book ; see 11 gJi
Main SL Hunt Be!!ch nr caJJ
547-5147
'64 CHEVELU.: ss "rllnw blk "' • ·' . I. Pl!. 11110. liur-krt
lll'lll~, r/h, wh wallt;, htoauc
O'lrld. Pri Pt)'. 49'1-l'l7'1. .
'67 Chevy It l27, 4 sriern,
Jlurst. g•ui.:rs. O P.!l n! ---=· 5'1/l-091!1 • ·~ai;v-V-8-* s-1.· •. *
• 5J6..71J)3 ..
"· .. '""a~l~EVEt.J.E ~M'"'•""l~i ~h -, -I
Powrs vinyl top. 4 BPd.
8 ~· RAdki and beat. 30,IXXI mi. tll)(I. 6C2.-<miO 1
er, aJr coodition(, JXJW!f '59 IMPALA <b'lvt a:ood
ttemria. ~ down ot trade ~Red, MW h .. $325
135 ptr mo. t1 mo. RPftl50 I 'iii(;im;'WC::-;,,..,-~I $795 . '82 OIEV w....,. X!nc ....i
16$ ..... 12. $ ... " oh 5
wkdl}'I, 54&-JOlS THEOOORE ROBINS 1'6.1 CllEVROLE'I' s .......
FORD ~'llll')n Sl7YI \l.'\I! U1k,. tMldl'
Dlr.~m1
I~ Your Ad in 11111 ctUifriedsT I' '59 OWENS Oi1isn" 2!1', fWin 67>2671, ~vea, 67!1+2492 SACUFICE lO"' Rllme.r O..~h df:.I~. Wiii !inane" N.I
l&i 11n1 .• dbl~ p\11n1i hull. 6? BSA -~. l,'100 mJle.. Mmflf"I', II( m (hl!¥J"Oliet for prit111te PA.rty. CAii aher _________________________ .. niUY equ:tp. '6250. lJ I-SB -,, -oil.fl'. 5'Ml.61 1"lck ••ail. 496-6804 1. a..sm "'~1
~Harbor Blvd. ~ml'MI! will ht! \ookin.1 tor
O:llt• M~ 6U-0010 It. 0111 642-Sm
' ---"'""---
• ' '
~::::Z!!'l~LliiiiE<l:ii~.,.,'."-:~=~•..,===~=•~-.o..,•o*""~"~•l""'IY,...•"""*""'C:'""•'""""""wcw=•o"*40'"""wP'"'==•..,•..,==•••=..,.»UW'•04S¥>,..sq~owc••.,.~<'"'"""''~~-..,W,..>OOSS.-o .. a .. aOW'oo;swwwwww-=•-..w•ow ... • -· ·~· -._.-~-·
' .
' ~COMMAND -PERFORMANCE--
"Command Performance." This is a particularly good time to ask Nahere Cadillac for a · "CommaQd Perform·
T
ance" ••• an id~al opportunity to take· the wheel of the elegant 1968 Cadillac and experience the responsiveness
of the largest, smoothest V-8 engine ever to power a passenger car. Enjoy Cadif.
lac'11 quiet comfort and the convenience of ite many power assists. A "Command •
Perf'ormance" test drive will be yours for the asking.
At last our new Cadillac inventory has increased -we're ready to talk bu11iness -in your favor •• All ' Model1 in Stock
------OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM
. '65 PLYMOUTH
The Sporty Barracuda model. A beautiful lit-
tle turq_~ car with black bucket seat In·
terior fUlly equipped including V8 engine,
radio and heater tinted glass and of course
white &Ide wall tires. This will make a perfect
car for the kilh or wife.
$1333
'65 RAMBLER
Hardtop coupe. The P:Ver' popUlar Classic 770
mod<'I. Equipped with V8 engine, reclining
bucket seats radio and heater, white 1lde wall
tires. A fine, little arctic white car with all
white vinyl tnlertor. This one won't be here
long so be sure you are the lucky buyez:, be
here firat.
$999
'67 CADILLAC
Coupt DeVllle. Stunnlna: Monterey green ex-
terior with black vinyl roof and full leather
tnt.erlor. Full power includin& power vent win-
dows and of course factory air conditioning.
Don't wait OJ'I this one bf!Ci!l.UR It won't Jut
long at this Drive Me Home This Weekend
Price.
$4777
'63 OLDSMOBILE
The popular F-85 model 4 door. Fully equi~
J)f!d with automatic transmission, power ateer-
ing, radio and heater, white aide wall tirf!s,
tinted glass. A beautiful desert gold exterior
with original.factory air conditioning. A lot of
car for very little money. Take this one home
I.his weekend for only
$888
I
'65 CONTINENTAL
A stunning Codd~ gold automobile with full
leather matching Interior. Hu all the pOwer
ac<:essoriea including power seat, power win-
dows, power steerina:, power brakes, power
antenna., power vent wiridows, AM/FM radio.,
cruise control and for summer driving in «Im•
fort factory air conditioning. An absolutely
beautiful car at a low price of
$2555
'65 CADILLAC
Sedan DrVille Monterey green with whlte
vinyl roof and nylon and leather interior. Full
power equipment including power door Joe.ks,
power vent windows, Wt 1tl'ering wheel, AMI
FM radio plus much more. Don't miss this
outst&ndin&: buy, at , ..
$2777
'63 PONTIAC
The elegant Bonnf!ville model equipped with
automatic transmission, radio and heater,
power 1lee:ring, power brakes, full vinyl in-
terior, tinted glus, white lide wall tirH and
air condiUonlng. This beautiful light gold
Pontiac with matching Interior is aale priced
for a quick 11!1.le this Week. Be 1ure to test
drive this one.
$999
'64 CADILLAC
Coupe DeVille sporting a lilver extf!rior with
the black vinyl roof. This showpiece is equip-
ped naturally with ~factory air conditioning
and has all the luxury power features includ·
Ing pov.•er vent.~ • steering • brakes -v.·indows
11nd the AM/FM radio. Drive this one home
now!
'63 CHEVROLET
The Impala 4 Door hardtop, a ' very popt.1lar
model. Fully equipped with VS engine, radio
and heater, power ateering, white side wall
Ul"ff, and of course factory air conditioning.
Beautiful aqua finlsh with matchlna interior. Ablolulely clff.11. '
$999
'63 CADILLAC
That mO!!t popular El Dorado convertible. Thi.I
automobile iA !inished in arctic white with
beautiful red leather Interior. Has all the
Cadillac power accessories including power
bucket &eats, power windows, power vent win-
dows, electric eye, center console, plus much
more. This Is an absolutely gorgeow automo-bile,
$1666
164 IMPERIAL
Crown 4 door hardtop Beautiful majestic blue
exterior with lN.ther and taJ>61ry interior.
Fully equipped with power steering, power
brakes, power wlndowa, power 6 way seat,
automatic dimmer, AM/FM radio and of
course fa<"tory air conditioning This is the
top of the Chrysler Imperial Hne and Is in ex-
cellent condition
$1777
'67 CORVETIE
Stingray fastbe.ck. Thls one will dt>finitely
h&.ve to be seen to be fully appreciat<'d. lt'a a
silver grey with black vinyl bucket seats and
pov.·ered by the 427 VS (3-2bbl earbs) engine
with 4 sµ<'ed transmission, aluminum wheels,
llJX'Cial rear tires, transistorized ignition, AM/
f'M radio, powrr window a.nd Jess than 9,000
actulll miles. This car i.s hardly used. Bl" sure
to see It. $1888 $4222
SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
'62 CADILLAC
Hardtop sedan. Alpine white exterior with
harmonizing interior. Power equipped with
power ateering, power brakes, power 6 way
seat, electric eye, white side wall tires, tinted
~lass and much more. This older cadillac 1till
flu more than.enoU&h driving Jett to auit the
busiest man or woman. You can't atford not
to take a look at Ulil one for only , • ,
$999
'63 CONTINENTAL
Stunning blue exterior with matching Inter..
tor and white top. This car has very, very low
mileage and shows outstanding care. Full7
equipped I ncluding power steering, power
bnt.kes, power wlndow1, power aeats, tinted
glass, power vent windows, white aide wall
tires, cruise control &nd fact. air eonditionc.
$1222
'63 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille. A shlmmering topaz gold exter-
ior with leather and nylon interior. All luxurJ
equipmf!nt including power ateerlng, power
windowa, power aeats, tinted glass, power
vent windows, whltf! 1lde wall tires, cruise
control and factory air conditioning. This fine
11.utomoblle shows the mettculoua care by !ta
previous owners.
$1444
'66 CADILLAC_
A beautifully finished Emperor blue C&dillae
with harmonizing interior. Al l the regular
CadilJac power features including power 6 way
!!eat, power stttrlng, power brakes, power
windows, and of course fac:tory air condition-
ing. At this price you can afford to at leut
look. Ready for dellvery right now.
$3666
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST llARBOR AREA
·N·ABERS
,
2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100
CHEVROLET
'66 CHEV ROLD
4 Door. Radio and beater,
factor)' equipped. 20% dawn
or trade $43 per mo. J'.l mo.
SZCl98 $1195
1H£000Rl ROBINS
FORD
DI(! Harlx>r Blvd.
O>sta Mesa . &42-0010
'64 IMPALA
UHCI Cars 9900 --------1 CHEVROLET ---1
·57 CllEV. Nomad station
wag. J«ilt· eng., new ~s ..
pakrt, tireS &i inter.: full
s;ower: atereo, etc. $1200.
6~2753
CHRYSLER
'62 MERCURY Comet
Auto. R fl; H. 2 door. $500. -... Chevn>let Im-...... ~. vs, MJto1 power\,,======== -· · ""'° • "'"'"· CONTINENTAL BewJtiU deeert bdsti In· -------·---lab matichltW lntl!'fior. Hu
low m!Jel,p. All for $12915.00
tst csr lot on Harbor mvd.
JOHNSON & SON
• 64 Continentql
'94 Unco1n Omtinental 4 Dr
Town Sedan. Has fUll pow·
« with factorY air. lmmJC-
Uncoln-Mttcw'Y ulate thru out witb silver
Co.ta Mea Btanch metalic flnilh. Now thil
19U Hamor Blvd. &q.-7000 fl'IXXJ.00 car new can be
4 SPEED _, '°' 11•·00· l.t car lot Cf_ Jlatt>or Blvd.
SPECIALISTS JOHNSON & SON
HIGH PEllPORMANCI Uoocolo>N.rcmy
CUSTOM CARS °""" --LUGZST SELECTION' lM 1941 lfartJor' Blvd. &t2-'lttiO
OIW<GE COIJNl'Y •
S.lectwd Auto • Pnnilum Car • . c----· .., em .... w 2 11oor """' .,..,.. b)p. Air conditioned . Le•ther
13032 Harbor Blvd. 53'1....tMll
1"' CHEVROLEr c.ortce
statlcn wagon. P ower
-""' -Ar cen d1t lonlng . CM be ---·-""'
inlldt. Yin1l top. All powtt.
Factory cuaranteet car l
,,...do. mllet. Mettcvloolal>
tr.pt. $4441.
HCx.IDAt RAMBLER
l9G9 Harbor Blvd., CM.
CONTINENTAL
'63 OORVETI'E 2 TOPS. 'M
eng. I: bodf, MaDJ Xtr&I!
Must aell. Belt o f f er •
174-4110 or 175-1301 1Jk far
Owck.
'9 CORVl:M'E. CI e a n ,
lharp. New tires. See to IP-
predatt. M6-tm.
--~-....---------------.
Ustd C1r1 9900
COUGAR ----·---· --
··-···· ....... --·--·=
Ustd Cars 9900 MUSTANG
MERCURY (2) '67 MUSTANGS
'
OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC
'67 LE MANS '63 STAR·FIRE
'6.1 O!.dstnobile Star·Fil'll! 2 dr '67 Pootiae Le Mena 2 dr
hardtop. Full power with hardtop. Hu powerful and
thrift;y OVf!l'head cam 6. factory air. The finest &p0rta auto, por.ver st.emng, nd!O
model G.M. puts cut. Full ~heater. One owner .t..cun•
price SWfi.OO. ' Beach car Full price $2295
lit car kit oo H.atW Blvd. ilt car 1ot'o0 Harbor Blvd.
JOHNSON & SON JOHNSON & SON
~ ~
Colla Meta Bnnch a.ta Mea. Bnncb
19'1 Hubol' BIW. 842-'lUiO 19U }lar1:lcr Blvd. &G-7tli0
PLYMOUTH
'64 Plymouth. J)Jry, 4 mo,
air cond., PS/PB, xlnt
~.$995.675-0338
PONTIAC
I
4 SPEED
SPECIALISTS
HIGH PERFORMANCE
CUSTOM CARS
LARGEs'l' SELECI'ION IN
ORANGE C0\1N1Y
Selected Auto
Center '
RAMBLER
T-llRD
14 T-BIRD Lo mL l cnmer
CfU'. All nu Urtc. 6: bric. uru,... mm. -
--. __ ·-·' --·---N~--~--~-----~--------
-,,
•
'
I 1' I I I
..• J .. HER'E IS A'.BSOLUTEL Y No · WA y· .... -. .
THAT TODAY'S CAR BUYER" CAN GET A BETTER BUY ••••
• • • ON A BETTER SELECTION ••• AT BETTER TERMS •••
ON '&as BEST CAR!
THIS IS THE FABULOUS 1:.§1
PONTIAC. THIS CAR HAS BROKEN SALES RECORDS
All OVER THE COUNTRY MOTOR TREND MAGA-
ZINE CALLS OUR GTO THE "CAR OF THE YEAR."
Al THOUGH THIS ISN'T THE END OF THE YEAR,
ROY CARVER IS SELLING THE 1:.§1 ,, .......
~----....~ -~· . ~ ,-=-..:.~
AT YEAR-END PRICES! ROY CARVER HAS A
LARGE STOCK OF U.~ PONTIACS • • • All
MODELS, TOO. SO BUY NOW • • • YOU
CAN'T BEAT THE DEAL •• THE PRICE
• • OR THE CAR!
EACH & EVERY CARVE R.CARE-CAR CARRIES 100'/. WARRANTY ON ENGINE, TRANSMISSION & REAR ENO!
'65 CHEVROLET
Cor11. 4 1pe1d tr1n1mi11io11, r1dio ind
h1at1r, Met wlt .. 11.
'65 MERCURY
4 Door. 6 p111. Colony P1 r• W19011. VI,
'111torn1tic, PS, PB, radie, h11f1r, whit1
wtll1, f1ctory •i,.
'66 OLDS $2977 Vi1ta Cruiser 4 d oor 6 p•1•nt•• w1gon. , ··
Aufometie. power tf11ri119, redio, heife r, ·
WSW, powar window1, feetory 1ir conditionin9.
'66 CHEVROLET
% ton plckllp with c1mp•r. VI, pow1r4licl1,
power 1t11rin9, R&H, 1plit rim1, ov1r1i11 fi,,,, H.D. c1mp1r equipment.
'67 BONNEVILLE
2 Oeor h1rdlop. Tu rbo-h'l'dr1m1fic, P.owe•
1t11rin9, power br1k11, r1die, h11t1r, white
waH1, f1etory air eonditionin9 ,
'68 . FIREBIRD
]50. VI, 't utorn1tc, po-r·st_u,in9, ,1di•,
,h..1tfr, white 1ii1 w~ll'tir11,l11ctory,rtir,
$2477'
$3377
$3277
MORE STAR-SPANGLED RE-SALE CAR VALUES!
EACH & EVERY CARVER.CARE -C AR CARRIES 100'/, WARRANTY ON ENGINE, TRANSMISSION & REAR ENO!
'66 MUSTANG
Coup•. va. 111tom1tic, pow1• 1+e1•in9.
r1dio, h11t1r. white w1ll1, 19.317 1t1il11,
yellow with blac• int1ror.
'66 T·BIRD
Autemetic, pewer 1teerh1t • l.r•••• -wl11·
dow1 . 1eeh, ,.dio tftttl he•fer, wkfh well1,
fectory eir c.011ditio11in1.
'66 FORD
Renchero. VI, •utom•fic, power 1t1•rinf,
rodio end hooter, wh ite 1ide well tirot,
16,211o5 mil o1. '
'67 COUGAR
V8, pow1r .+11rjr9. redio end heater,
white 1ida well ti•••· ony 11,715 mil11.
'66 GTO
2 Door h1 rdtep. VI, hyclr1inatic, power
1t11rin9 r1dio, heifer, now r.C li111 ti'''•
I 5,lt4 mil e1.
'67 FIREBIRD 400
VI, t 1p11d tr1n1111il•ie11, rH ie, heat1r,
1111 rly ttew tri-wkite ti'• wall firtt, in
f1ctory w•rr111ty.
'2177
'1977
'64 CHEVROLET
lmp1l1 cenv1ri. 127 V8, pew1r9lid ... power
1te1rin9, n11rl'1' new WSW li•et, yellow
w/bl1ck inter.
'66 DODGE
Monaco 2 Dr. H.T. VI, t.rquofl i+o. pewar
1t1ering, r1dio, ltoefM, white will tiret,
ll ,714 mil••·
'67 FIREBIRD
J50 2 Dr. Vt, hydra,,.etfc, p1wer 1leerln9,
r1dio, heeler, white w1ll1, f1 ctery w1rr1nfy
•ppli11.
'66 DODGE
De r+. 6 cylinder 1ngine, radie a nd heeter,
whit. 1ld1 well tire1.
'65 OLDSMOBILE
Starfir1. VI, eule,,.elie, 91ew1r 1t.erin9 &
ltreke1, radio, h1at1r. white w1ll1, fe•tory
eir, pow1r wind1w1.
•1577
$2377
~~~5 ~~~!~?.~~~!1tie, 91ower •f11rln9, s1377
r1di1, he1t1r, whit• well tir11. fectory ei,
conditioning.
'65 CATALINA $2477 I Or. 9 ptuenqer '"'•9on . Hydram1+it, power
tleering, power brake1. radio, heeler, WSW,
faclery air, l1nd111 top.
'67 IMPALA
4 Dr.' Jt•••· wegen, VJ, powerglltle, power
1leerii1g, radio, heifer, WSW, fatfory air,
fectory worrenfy epplie1.
$3177
'66 MALIBU ~2277 4 Dr. 6 pe11. wagon. VI, euto111atie, power •
•horinq, rodio and heater, white 1ido wall tire,, '
'66 PONTIAC GTO $2677 2 Door hardtop. VI, hydrornefic, power 1+••r·
inq I brako1, radio, h11t1r, WSW, fact1ry
air, vinyl lep, power windows.
'65 LE MANS $1877 I Or. Stden. VI, hydr1m1tic, powiir t+1erln9,
h11t1r, WSW, f1ctory eir, AM/FM ,..die,
vinyl roef, power window1.
.. . ~~~~-·~~· ~~~~~~~~~~=;l
It's True. The 1968 Pontiac at Roy Carver's Has Attracted the Finest Trades in Orange County!
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