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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesal • DAILY PILOT Family of 6 Found Dead JUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 23, 1968 I In Miehigan Mass Slaying . . VOL. ti, MO. 17 .. I S•CTIDNS, II "-'•IS ·I esa Police Confirm Girl, -7, Drug ear ch for Babysitter on USS rm . . on . ·--· ... . Child Eats Hunt Bahysitt.er Pretty pink capsules found in a live- in babysitter's bureau drawer and gobbled by a little girl contained the h·anucinogenic drug LSD, according to police who ,a-e seeking the young woman today. Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow said the District Attorney's office inu.d a complaint shorUy before 5 p.m. Fri· day, charging Olarmane Bellow<, W with possession cl dan·gerous drugs, Miss Bellavue~ who. had been baby- sitting for Dennis Griffith's three children in their aparibnent at 719 Shalimar Drive, bas disappeared since the 'incident. A neighbor woman was baby-lliitting witb Gloria Griffittll, 7, a'.nd her two older brothers wheil tne little girl was stricken with typical symptom~ caus- ed by LSD comumption. Little Gloria was taken to Orange County Medical Cent.er, where sh~ ~as slnce been in satLrlactory coodttion, accordin.g to physicians. tained the controversial, hallucinogenic drug. Two men were arrested at the same 'n9 Shalimar Drive apartment building a week ago in a sweeping, \Vest Orange County narcotics· raid, but not at the Griffiths' unil Capt. Glasgow said today that In- Yestigators found no evidence of possi- ble child neglect because Griffiths, who i& a divorced salesman, maintains a baby-sitter all the time. The case U similar to one involving the five-year-old son of a Laguna Beach psychedelic shop operator who comumed a compound believed to be the hazardous drug STP several weeks ago. Little ~rry Griggs, 5, h a s recovered and gone home to 1250 Roosevelt Lane, an address near where another narcotics raid occurred several days before he was stricken la.gt month. . . " .. OROERED TO STAND TRIAL Mrs. Irene Tucker - Police were at first cautious about contents of the pink, non-prescription pills the child found in her regular baby-sitter's dresser drawer. Mrs. Tucker Ruled Sane, The Orange County Sheriff's Crime Lab technicians analym;I the capsules, however, and said they definitely con- Coast Weatlier Clear skies, warmer temp- eratures are In store for the Orange Coast for the next couple of days, with some morn· fng and eveni.Dg overcut. Tem~ eratures are in the hlgb ?O's, Water temperature 63 degrees. INSIDE TODAY The "glrl/mfa• oi Jlldg• Parker'• &on. ii appa.renU11 up to "° good. Ste condc.r Pag• 16. ''"' ..... 1 E . ' -n .. --. ,_ --... _... ....... 7 .............. ~ 7 0,.... c_,., 7 "'*'i.• hM n .,...,.. .....,.._~ • lhttrt•...... ' ltd-' ..... 1>1J ft.... ... .... ,. •• NN c.lh r C:.-:-'"' •• ...... ,. ' ........ t1........ ~ -~ 11 ..,,. ...... /' r: Must Face Murder Trial By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ....... ., .... •ten Psychiatrists say Mrs. Irene M. Tucker is·sane and able to stand trial and a!d in her own defense as the ac· cused carving-knife killer of her next. door neighbor 25 days ago. SUperior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron granted a motion by defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr.. to pro- ceed with the murder case against the wile of Costa Mesa City Councilman George A. 'Tucker, based on optn16ns by two court-app<llrrted expef11'. Mrs. Tuclter, 'II, of 1&4%'"·Minorca Drive, was ordered to appear back In Horbor Dia1rlct Judicial Court Frldoy at 9:~ a .m., at which t t me pnJlmlnary hearing dato will bo soL During the brief seas Ion Monday, the dark-haired defendant unexpec;:tedly uttered her own ftr&t, brief public hint concerning what may hive happened on the fatal Friday afternoon. WON Rfil'USAL The District Attorney's offlce won another refunl by 1be "°"" to IOI be.it, however, dting a1 UIUll the no- bail c:lauae 1n Ca1ilorDla PeDll Code Section 1270, covering capital offenses. Mrs. Tucker is charged with the stabbing death or Mrs. llarr!-::tt V. \Vestphal, 68, of 1648 Minorca Drive, on June 28, during some type of backyard dispute at their Mesa Verde area homes. Augustine pointed out Monda~· !n seeking ball U..t Dr. Philip 0. Kramer and Dr. Sigmund Kosewick ny the defendant hadn't the mental capecity under circumstances on th1t date to deliberate. premeditate, or harbnr" malice against Mrs. Westphal. Dr. Kramer. of Metropolitan State llospltaL aDd Dr. Kosewick, of Fairview State Hospital, are expected to be key llgures In the Tucker trial, wllich will be ba"d primarily on phyalcal evidence. Judge Camtt<>n then Mked lor the prosecution's thoughts. Depuly District Attorney Mlch1el Capizzi meotloned the CPC sedlon 1pecifically prohiblUng bail when -u it says -proof ol guilt is evldent, ar at leut qulto stroag. ,.1 WM ett.cked rrom behind," Mr1. !See TUCKER, P ... J> ---------- or er MijSs, )ioaiJel;te· ' . .,...,, '~ Familyof6FoundDead Takes Trip In Lonely Forest Cabin r From Wire Services PETOSKEY, Mich. -The bodies of a mother, father and their four children, apparent victims of a "multi· pie homicide," have been found in a cabin in Northern Michigan, state police said today. The dead wer~ ldenWled as Richard C. Robisoo, 42, Lathrup Village; his wile, Shirley, '40; their sons, Richard, 19; Gary, 16, and Randall 12, and their daughter, Sue, 7. Robison was the publisher 0£ the theattt and music m a g a z i n e , ''Impressario." "The bodies were badly decomposed and the cause or df!ath has not been definitely established, although it is believed to be a multiple homicide," state police said. They said the family apparently was staytng in the cabin "during the latter part of June when they were supposed to leave for Florida, so nobody missed them for quite a while." They said the bodies w e r e discovered Monday afternoon. The family's two cars were found in the driveway of the cottage area and their private plane was at Pollston Airport, north of here, police said. Robison ran an advertising agency in Lathrup Village and published Impressario magazine, whJch covered the art field. Bliss told Emmet County sheriff's officers that he spotted ooe body when he opened the door to the cottage. He hurriedly locked the door and sum- moned police. They found one body in the living room, three in a hall off the living room and another alongside a bed. Robison's body was found in a passageway leading to a loft. There were some indications that some of the bodies had been dragged, police said. Emmet County s heriff's officers scaled off the cabin area as they ex- plored the possibility that one or two oC the victims might have been shot outside the cottage and been dragged into it. Chicago Expects Strike to End CHICAGO (UP!) -Today is tl1e day the mayor says a telephone strike will eod, ending speculation about whether the Democratic National Con- vootion opens here Aug. 26. Other participants in the long di.3· pUte between the Illinois Bell Tele- phone Co. and striking International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers don't appear quite so confident. And Democratic National Chairman John M. Bailey concedes the conven· tion "could be moved." Mayor Richard J. Daley's statement Monday: "I still believe it will be set- tled by tomorrow," was the only op- UmlsUc note sounded in the contin- uing round· between Bell and the !BEW. 'The Oldest Prof e.sion' To Prague MOSCOW (UPI) -The SOViet Unlm1 today announced the start of bu1~e military maneuvers along the eotit a 1,(1()().mile long frontier with Weslent Europe in a move that colncided wit!• the reported departure of the entire Soviet ruling politburo to Czechoslovakia. Twin front page boxes in the govefn .. moot newspaper Izvestia announced the maneuvers and the unprecedented 11-member politburo mission to a con• frontation with Czech mormiata aim• ed. at negotiating Czechoslowlrla'a return to a normal ralllance with the east bloc. A Soviet source said the pcilitburo already had left Moscow. It tncludes President Nikolai Podpny, Premiei' Alexei Kosygin and party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev. lt was the flrst time in Soviet history the entire politburo had left the country and it underlined the urgency the Kremlin Mt.ached to holding Czechoslovakia Within the Communist camp as a major -..lit in Soviet defense strategy. FEARS POLICIES Moscow fears that the llbenllzlng poUcies or Czech party first secretary Alexander Dubcek may have ·got out of hand and that "anti-socialist, anti .. Soviet, rightist forces" aided by "imperJa.lists" arc trying to overthrow the Commurdst s tate and restore the capitl.llst system of pre-1N8 wben the Communists took over. The war maneuver announcement was the more surprising because it in-- eluded the call up of civilian reservists for the first time in memory and tbt (See CZECHS, Pago 11 Sex Business Supported Edit.or'• Note: Whu do men bu11 .se.i? The question b ezplortd todau b11 DAILY PILOT •t4/f tonier P .... 14 Hallan in the final inttaUmtnC Of Cl three-part stries on "1lh1 Old11t Pro- f tssion.". By PAMELA HALLAN Offllll .............. .... Prostitution has been called "'Ibe oldest prolession. 11 It'• posit!oo In society has ranred from the respected ancl -..i het.aJre class of ancient Greece to tho degraded, despised brothel dwellers of lndustrlal alwns. Today !ta po&ltlon It paradoxical. Allhoogb it ls condomned by law and basUons of public morality, it is nevertheless st1pporled a n d en· couraged by an aUluent population. The question, "why are there• pro- aUtutest" is relaUvely &lmple to answer. according to Dr. Jerome Kirk, UC! soc:loloSitt-But the .....,er, I "because there are c:u1tomcrs" Is a more complex cbollderlllon, plvoUng on a quest.ton relavaot ~all age1 , •• what exlC!Jy ha~ customera betll buying! Hin a very large proportion ol cases men have been buyina some kind of sex activJty they can't get from their wives or strlhiends." said Dr, Kirt. "SomeUmet it ls 1Dtercour11 bul (See·PJ\OSlTtUTES, P ... I) \. I i l J I I • i I I I I l ! I • I' ' -·-. • • --. ···~ .. . __ ... _ -.. :~;:::::..;:;:.:;L~·~~= .. ~ .. :::.-,:.~~.~-:--.~,--~~--~,~-~-!~.~-=-~~:~:·~·~-~.:~--:::.·~.:.-:::.~.~.~-.-.~-~~-.~.~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---·-·--.c....;....:..... .: --:".';" •• ~ ...... · •• ••• : .-••• : ;·· .... • •• ........ ' , ..... -.:: • ;. : ----=~---= ,t DAILY PILOT --Tut5da1, Jub 23, 1968 llniversity Pops Concert Janauaed carrying their own chairs or just •ltttng on the grass, 1,500 coast area residents crowded into UCI 's Gateway Park to hear the San Diego Symphony Orchestra conducted by John Scott Trotter. Tht free concert Sunday at 5:30 drew larger than ex- pected crowds. Israeli Plane ·Hijacked by Five Arab s ALGIERS (UPI) -Five Arab com· maodos armed with pistols and hand grehades today hijacked an Israeli El Al airliner and forced tbe pilot to flv fri Algiers where they demanded the 43 persons aboard be held as hostages for captured Arab ruerrtllu. Algeria refused t h e demand a n d ordered all 38 pasaengers, including 14 Israell1 and one American, freed. It 'was not clear, however, if the El Al B707 jetliner and its IO Isr aeli crew members, including two hostesses, would be released. The plane had just taken off from Rome for the filgbt to Tel Aviv when t h e commando• overpow!red t h e .pilot, wounding him with a blow on the head, &Dd then forced bim and his co- pilot to fly to Algeria, one of Israel'& most bitter foes. The Algerian government said all the passeagers could fly to Marseille, Paris or Rome later today at Algerian t:overnment expense. A communJque iasued by the 'guei· rilla group urged the Algerian govern- ment to consider "the plane. its Israeli crew and passengers as hostages for priloner1 a n d arrested PalestinJan commandos" in Israel. The Algerian government refused although it still Is technically at war with Israel. Algerian government sources said an Arab Palestinian commando unit of five men, one a Syrian air force of· ficer. bust into the jetliner's cockpit shortly after it took off from Rome. They were armed "''ith hand grenades and at least one pistol. 'l'he sources said the pilot , Capt. Ocl· ed Arbarbanel, was clipped across the skull with a pistol butt when he tried to--protest the seizure, but that he did not lose consciousness. All passengers were forced to put their hands on top of their heads. But seven Italian Roinan Catholic priests en route to a pilgrimage in the Holy Land \\'ere allowed to put their hands down when the commandos realized who they were. DAILY PILOT "-'ert IHcll C•tte Mite H1111tl119t•11 h •cll L•11• le.cll W•Mhlltff F•••t9Ni Y•ll•y CALIFORNIA. ORANGE COA$T f'IJ&LISHING COMPANY ~oi.e,t N. Wied F,.._ie...1 tl'oCI Publli.Mt J eclr •• c 11,J1y Viet ,.,..ldlftt •1111 G-•I "'-W' Tlte1111t k1eYil EdllDr Jhe1111t A. Murp hi"' IMrMltl"' Edllor Ptul Nh1111 .......... Olrtt• """' ""'"' (11d11 Mne:,. wr,, 11•¥ Sl•HI H_,, a.ld'I: n11 Wll!'SI &tlbo~ &oulntrd LttuN 1.-h: m F°""I -'""""' Hun11ne1on 141«11: JOt S!h St•"" -~ .. I__,, F rom Pqe 1 TUCKER ... Tucker interjected. as ·Augustine "'ho says he is confident of her ex· oneration -quickly and calmly mov- ed to hush the defendant. HEAR FACTS "I wi sh the Dislrict Attorney would hear the facts," she tddt!d, apeat:ln" in ordinary, conversational tones, but visibly alarmed as Judge Cameron refu sed to set bail. Judge William Christensen can set bail if he chooses at her appearance Frid·ay, or subsequently, in Harbor District Judicial Court. "They're taking me to jail instead of the Mpltal. Why is that?" she n1urmured to her husband. parents and a brother si tting in the front rov1, only five feet from her chair. The entire proceeding look little more than four minutes, but the defen· dant's bearing had changed from a pale resoluteness to dejected confusion about the next step. "Keep in touch with me," she sz.!d almost bitterly to the family -all present at each court appearal)ce, ex- cept for her little glrls -as she was led out of the cool , high-celling courtroom. SHOWED EMOTION fo just 49 minutes, the petite. dark· haired housewife showed a range of emotion from near-gaiety to resigna· tion, while her previous courtroom reaction has been one o! seeming bewilderment. She entered Department 0 n e . pt nelled in carved oak the color of cara1nel at 1:26 p.m ., walkin g purposefuUy and briskly beside a Marshal's matron wearing a curly blonde wig fall. Each time the creaky door opened. she turned to see who it might be and finally sinlled happily when Tucker ar· 1ived, followed later by the other!, At · 1:37, two marshal's deput ies .could be heard as they discussed body shops and fender repairs in a comer a n::I moments Jaler, two more depu ties escorted seven n1anacled prisoners in fo r Uleir hear ing on states of sanity or possible narcotics a::ldiction . ;\J•PE.\RED BOTHERED Mrs. Tucker appeared bothered. both by the sight and by the clatter of chains cs the 1nen were uncuffed to take their se als in the jurybox. She seemed increasingly nervous as time passed. "George is doing a beautiful job at home.'' 1\ugustine assw·ed her t.:asua lly at one point . She smiled. "I worked so hard on that little bit of dichondra ... " she replied. The first defendant on the dockt:t falled to appear and Judge Cameron ordered a bench warrant for his ar- rest, with Sl0,000 bell, plus penalty assessments. One. of Ult next men was ordered to undergo 90 days of psychiatric observation -to deter1nine If he will face prosetution then, or continued conlmilment -and Mrs. Tucker stared at the floor. Another man's case \\'Us continued pending a third psychiatrist's report, because two others split, on whether he is. or is in danger of becoming, a narcotics addict. HUSHED WllJSPER The hushing whisper of U1e air con· dltloner. broken repeatedly as Judge Ca,mcron ex plosively cleared his lhro<1t, filled the roon1 bctu'cen cases as the docket "'as thinned out. Mrs. Tucker, "'earing a white blOl.&M!, pink sweater and light·blue skirt, sat a lmost directly beneath two ,epla·toned portraltl of o I d • t I m e judgM on the north wall. One ol hfr handJ re s t t d on the other, which clutched a r o 1 J e d handkerchief. as 2:10 p.m.. and another chapter in the story of Irene M. 'rucker versus The People, ap- proac-hed. Sued on AucusUne'1 comments ( 'I both on l\1onday and in \he past, he will pr obably defend Mrs. Tucker on the basis that she was acting in self· defense on June 28 \\'hen the victin1 was kiJJed . 1-fe has frequently made reference to the fact that Mrs. Tucker weighs sllghlly mofe than 90 pounds, while tile stabbing vjctim was a robust woman some 80 pounds over that figuJ'e. The defendant was also treated at Bristol Park Medical Group Jn Costa Mesa after the fatal incident and showed obvious signs of a beatlng as she was led from her home. Be.sides scratChes acros~ her face. l\1rs. Tucker had a red n1ark across the back of her neck -visible at ar- raignment proceedings a n d 1\ugustine said at the time that several of her teeth were loosened. One of the primary points to be determined at the trial, since Mrs. Tucker Is the only one who knows just what transpired, is how a con· frontation arose between the women. HEARD SCREAMS A handful of "'itnesses, incl uding neighbor Donald V. Schenk. of 1645 Minorca Drive, "'ho 1n ini stered to the dying woman as she Jay in fror:it of h.is home, reported hearing screams. Another point wiU be this: was it both <>r only one of the two women screaming? Augustine has also suggested in building his case for Mrs. Tucker that o~ stab wound such as that suffered by Mrs. Westphal Is extremely dif- ficu lt to lndica~e murder. The inevitable sell-defense angle to be presented in the trial will probably be based on a contention that both women were in hea ted mutual co1nbat when the stabbing occWTcd. FIGHTING ENDED \Vhen J\1rs . Tucker took steps lo de· fend herseU. in this case with a btad.2 ~·hich the Sheriff's Crime Lab has been unable to posi tively identify. the fighting ended, Augustine will also suggest. The DAILY PILOT has uncovered information that Mrs. Tucker does not believe the nelghlxlr she barely knew Is dead. although she has been told so repeatedly. . The defense is likely to also use this point of disbelief in the death to SUP;- porl a claim that Mrs. Tucker wanted only to get away from a violent situa- iton anj proteet herself. Whatever her motivation was. In the ultimate decision returned by a jury - frantic self·protection <>r murder - the re!ults of the clash are ir- reversibly and continu.ingly tragic for two families. F rom Page J CZ EC HS ... L'Omman-:Jeering oC civilian trucks and cars at a time when thry are vitally needed for U1e harvest. It waa further noted that So\'iet Defense Minister Marshal Andrei CTrechko had cut short an important \'isit to Algiers late last week alld hur· ried back to f\1oscow. presumably to dlrect the war games the Kremlin ap· parent.I)' found necessary at the last n1 lnu tc .. Soviet newspapers and !JroadCHSls h<ivc expre~sed alarm lh<it Jorthconi· ing West German army maMUvl!rs. with allied air support. were being he ld to demoostrate backing f<>r Czechoslovak dissidence. And a report from Munjch today said E as t Ger1nany ma)' be building a barbed wire fence along i~ border with Czechoslovakia to close a new escape route to the We it. Czccho:ilovakla removed barricades and land mints along Its border• wlth West Germany nnd Austria In April. ' - 2 T ourists Shot Dead I Strolling ·Down Street SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -Two stroll.in&: New York tourists were kill· ed -and a thlrd wounded M®day nl,ht, shot at point-blank range by a man wh1> broke into a sporting goods store, stole a Ri;&tol and bull~ls .¥d came out tiring, acwrdlne lo pollco. Killed were Auf\llt Marsala, 48, and Victor Cricco, ~. both of Yonkers, N.Y. Marsala'& wife, Evelyn, 44, stru<:k in the cbest by a bullet which •llo broke her left wrist, was listed in f&ir con· dition today 1n Sierra Vista Ho1pttal. P ROSTITUTES . usually it'1 other thina:s. "A HtUe creep with flOO can get an attractive fem ale to be nice to him. 1'his might be the only way. Or maybe the girls be knows don't like h.is perversions. Or maybe he has to keep repeating 'I love you .' People don't pay money foc what they can get free. They're buying something." The nature of the commodity purchased has changed. Jn some cultures the prostitute was selling her companionship, betng e d u c a t e d , cultured and relined. Jn other cultures she was selling a sacred act with religious connotations. Jn the Victorian period, she was selling sex. "Today it ls relatively easy for males to get sex.'' said Dr. Kirk. "But not exotic sex . There is also the ques· ti on of discretion. Prostitutes are kno\\'Tl to be discreet but a girl you pick up in the street might kiss and t e 11 and 11 your'e a public official it m.ight ruin your career." Despite the functional nature of her posi tion in society, the prostitute is publicly condemned in the United St a t e s and otehr countries a n d is legally prosecuted. The motivation for her condemnation varies but much of it ste ms from her indifference. "The female is emotionally in- different and willing to sell her favors ," said Dr. Kirk. "In order to become a prostitute you have to be in- dlfferent if not numb. In a real sense the prostitute doesn't get to choose her sexual partners or in most cases he r sexual activities. Basically this is not a ve ry attractive idea. "It is even less attractive to people "'ho are enthusiastic about sex. Cer· ta.inly it would be most boring. "On the other hand, there are lots or people who ·have a hostility to pro- stitution because they want to stamp out sex. "Obviously If prostitutes are of- Booked on susplcioo of murd&r was WiU}am B. Duff, 38, of llavre de Grace, 111d., described by pollce as a transient of slender build, long black hair and wearing old unkempt clothes. Duff was being hel4'without ball in a mutmum security cell in County Gtneral Hospital. Nur&ing supervisor Donalda Hun1 said he had only a small ga1b on his arm. Police did not know how he was lnJu,.d. DuU11 arraignment was set for to· From Pqe J fering services to husbandl they can't get from their wives, the wives wm be 31alnst it. In1Ututlons art agalni;t It because of the breakdown of the famJ. Jy. It also makes It dlf!icult for nice girls to restrict their favor1 lt it Is easy for men to get sex aomewbere else." The very presence of a double stan. dard in 11x, wh1ch says that men may engage In as much sex activity as pOssible' and women as little as possi· ble, could theoretically encourage pro· sUtuUoo, accord1ng .to the profei;sar. "There Is somethlng wrong wltt'l this idea. The only way it works is to have a small number or women servicing a large number of men. Why should these women. give it away?" Dr. Kirk believes the double stan· dar d to be unfair in other respects. "Women are in slavery in this culture. \Von1en can't buy men, for example. In Southern Europe where there are r ich women and starving men you have something very close to boys prostituting themselves to women but this Is disguised. The term gigolo doesn't usually imply sex. \Vhen it oc- curs. it is called a "fantastic love af- fair.' This isn't a reflection of female psychology. Women are trained to think or it that way." "There is a theory in the United Sla'tes that men enjoy sex more 'than women. This ls going out. I think there are lots of girls who can't get what they want from thP.ir husbands and it might be a lot healthier lf they could eaU the neighborhood ptmp rtihcr than get a divorce.'' Dr. Kirk ·believes that prostitution sun·ives because social condemnation d02sn't ha\'e any effect on an in~i­ vidual's behavior. "Society condemns sharp business practices. violence, racial discrimina- tion, too ," sajd the sociologist. "When people cry wolf too often, a child growa up not paying any attention." "There are certain things 10ciety day tn San Lula Ob11po'1 3rd Justice Court. Lt. \Vllllam Sperlo, w h o ap. prehended Duff with the aid of officer Gary Grant after a foot chase, said a caller reported the 7:30 p.m. shooting on Higuera Street, the main buslnes1 street in this city 200 mUes north of Los Angeles. He aald he and Grant arrived at the scene minutes after the shootings and bystanders yelled: "He ran around the corner." cannot con de fin 1uecessfully. Prlvate behavior is impossible to control in a democracy. We put the police in a bind by saying stamp out prostitution on one hand and respect private bebavlor on the other hand . "Pol.ice can't put a microphone under a prostitute's bed and cannot proposition her according to the letter of the law because we live in a d:?mocracy. Yet these are crimes without victims. Thus the police must engage in marginaUy legal practices. "They must engage in undercover work and spy on us ..wd this makes tt difficult for them to carry out thtJr mandate in democracy and .th•ir reputation gets tarnished." The sociologist believes Americans inadvertently encourage di srespect for the Jaw by accumulating too many. In- stead or disapproving of something _ they pass a law against it. Thus, law books get fatter every year. "l think it's ftdJculous t.o have Jaws against pr<>stitution because It isl\'t discouraged." said Dr. Kirk. "I al10 think it strange not to punish clients of prostitutes. U there are going to be laws agaiDst prosUtution the clients are the ones who should be pro- secut~. The undercover agent's job would certainly be easier." But Dr. Kirk does not foresee any changes in the law. Nor does he foresee any reduction in the number of prostitutes. He believes that even if there were extreme promiscuity, or free Jove, there would still be room for specialized experts, females who were more sensitive, more attractive, or sexually more skilled. Could prostitution ever hold a moral position in society? "It Is not inconceivable." said Dr. Kirk, "but it is highly unlikely. If it is ever moral in our society it won't be called prostitution. 'We'll call 1t some- thing else." .·.•111111i~tt.mB:' has it! 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CALL TODAY: FIB UTIMATI RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 21st y..,. of Service in Oron9o County 2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA l'HONE 546-343l • I I ' ' I t I I I I I' I t I -Huniingion Bea~h · ' .VOL:. 6f, NO. ·116, 3 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES Union Hits LBJ Wage Restraints An official of the United Auto Workers Union, one of the two unions threatening to strike the huge McDon- nell-Douglas Huntington Beach com- plex MOOday, has blasted the Johnson Administration's plea for w a g e r estraints. "Totally unrealistic, and will be ig· nored," said Leonard Woodcock, UAW vice president heading c o n t r a c t negotiations involving 1,513 employes of the McDonnell-Douglas Astxooau- tics Corp. Woodcock said that the union membership has set its sight:s on "the cWTent wag? hike pattern and they're not going to take less." Two unions are involved in the dispute witit the company, the UAW which Woodcock represents, and the International A s s o c i a t i o n of Machinists (IAM). A strike by the two unions would idle about 70,000 workers throughout the entire McDonnell-Dougtas Corp. which includes plants in Long Beach, Tor· ranee, Palmdale and Vandenberg Air Force base, all in California. Membership of the unions voted strike authorization Sunday with the machinist's union voting 96 percent in favor and the UAW 99.5 percent in Cavor of -a strike. The statement by Woodcock came in reaction to a letter to union and aerospace industry leaden from the President's Cabinet Committee on \Vage and Price Stability. The committee said that an annual price rise of four percent and yearly wage hikes of between six and seven percent represent a "dangerous road" for the nation's economy. "For the Cabinet committee to say that the CWTent pattern is now between six and seven percent and then to ask our mi:!mbers to be statesmen and go in the opposite direction is obviously not realistic," Woodcock said, Little League Title Game Set For Wednesday Bolsa Little League of Santa Ana meets either San Clemente or Del Obispo LitUe League Wednesday in a 5: 15 p.m. game on the Fountain Valley Little League field to determine the winner of District 55. San Clemente and Del Obispo play tonight to determine which one will be the Area 1 champions and to playoff against Bolsa, the Area 2 d\ampions. In tournamentp Jay last week Stanton beat Fountain Vailey 12--0, Ocean View took Westminster American 1~, Bolsa measured Westminster Natiooel 6-1. and Stanton whipped Ocean View 6-3 ln a game which took two days to play. On Thursday the two teams played to a 3-3 tie in nine innngs. The loth in-- ning was played on Friday and Stan- ton promptly Scored three runs to win the right to play Bolsa Lltle League a few minutes later_ DennJs Booze hit a home run for Stanton in the third in· ning and Jim Straube hlt one in the third oCr Ocean View. Roy Eckles hlt a sixth inning homer for Ocean iVew to teep the g~e alive. Bolsa toor Robinwood Little League 2-0 in the following game with Scott Wilderman pitching for Robinwood and David Millan for Bolsa. S a t u r d a y Bolsa and Stanton squared off with Charles Phillips pltching for Bolsa and Todd Cuilici for Stanton. Bois& won , 8-2 with Booze getting a home run in the sixth inning for Stanton and R. Garretson in these- cond for Bolsa. Boys Club Due In West County VERY IMPORTANT GIFT -Kenny White. who will be two ye•rs old Sunday, got one of the most important gifts be may ever receive for this birthady. John F. Thompson, commander of the Huntington Beach VFW gave the toddler this tricycle last week. Doctors said it was needed to keep the boy from possibly becoming a cripple. Wheels Aid Legs Tot to Pedal Now, Walk Later By SANDI MAJOR Of ""' DellY ,Llol S!ltf Kenny White of Huntington Beach may not remember his second birth· day as he walks through the world in later years. But the fact be is walking will de- pend in part on a fire-red tricycle, a present for this second celebration of his birthday. Ever since Kenny, son of Mrs. Lor- etta.Wldte. 14f1l Florida St., began to walk, doctors shook their heads. "He's not irog:ressing with other children his age," his mother said doctors told her. And then he began falling when he ran and needed a support to walk. "Oootors said the booes in his legs aren't strong enough to support him," said Mrs. White, a divorcee who has been out of work since last fall be- cause of surgery. "They suggested corrective shoes and a tricycle and peddle car. If that doesn't help, he'll have to wear braces." Mrs. White was able to buy h e r youngest of four children one pair of corrective shoes -at $16.64 a pair - six weeks ago. \Vith wedges and steel reinforcements on the outside, they will hopefully keep his legs from bow· iDg out. She also began exercising bis legs in a bicycle-pedaling motion six times a day to keep the tousel-haired redhead !rom becoming a cripple. But she couldn't afford a new tri· cycle for him. Her !().year-old brother, Randy Ty- ler, decided to get his nephew a tri- cycle for his birthday Sunday. He went from house to house in the neigh- borhood asking if someo!).e had a tri· cycle he could get for Kenny. Some three blocks away, at 7'rt Wil- liams Ave., he approached John Jt,, Thompson, who wu working In h 1 s garage. Thompson is post commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 7368, and two times county-wide command- er. The World War I veteran didn't have a tricycle himself, but he and his VFW associates soon found one. They presented it to the youngster Friday, slightly more than a week be- fore hls second birthday. "He's so happy with it," cried his 27-year-old mother. "He won 't go to sleep at night unless it's in bed with him." Proud and happy, just like any oth- er little two·year-old with a shiny new posesssion -that's Kenny today. Coast College Seat Tax Bill Dies for Good in Senate Orange Coast Junior Co 11 e g e District's seat tax bill finally died Monday j n the current session of the Legislature. "It wertt belly up," said the secretary to Assem:blyman Kenneth Cory, (0-Anaheim), "\\Th> was author of the bill. The vote w.as 8 to 1 not to forward the bill out of the Senate Local Government Committee. "We're just as delighted as can be," said Dr. Fred Bremer, superintendent. elect of Saddleback Junior College District, which die bill was principally aimed at. Orange C o a s t Superintendent NonTia n W.atsoo said he has no Idea whether" the bill will be introduced again next ye.ar. Tbe bill, after several votes, passed the Assembly by the bare margin or one vote but got no....1lere in the Senate. It would have required new junior col1ege districts sud! as Saddleback to pay established junior colleges f150 per transfer student. As it now stands. Saddleback is ex- empt !rom paying seat tax to Orange Coast and other districts for three years, but Orange Coast must accept Saddleback students. Saddleback does have to pay $600 or so operating expenses for each student alt.ending other district's schools. Durin·g its first year beginning U'lis fall, Saddleback will not be able to handle sophomores or vooational student$ on its interim campus. Orange Coast College will get most of lhem sans seat tax. 'The Oldest Prof esslon' . . -•• ·- Your Bometew:a Dally Paper TUESDAY, :JULY 2l, )968 lEN CENTS Russ Move Army Czech Border War . Games Planned MOSCOW (UPI) -The SOvie! Unton today anounced the start of huge military maneuvers along the entire 1,000-mJle long: fronUer with Western Ew-ope jq a move that coincided with the reported departure of the entire Soviet rollng politbu ro to Czedloslovakia·. Twln front page boxes in the govern- ment newspaper Izvestia amounced the maneuvers and tbe unprecedented II-member politburo m.Ls6ioo to a con- Nixon Keeps Resting Place Close Secret Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon reportedly remained i n seclusion somewhere along ttie Orange Coast today as the press played peek a boo with Secret Service agents in trying to track him down. In the absence of confirmed fu.. formation, rumor mills hiave happily sprung into action to place the presidential e<>ntender v.ariously in Laguna Beaoh, and in the ex-elusive Cameo Shores section of O>rona del Mar in Newport Beach. One DA[L Y Pll..OT source, a neighbor of J udge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke, 4633 Brighton Road, Corona del Mar, said mysterloos men acting like Secret Service agents cootinue to float in and out of the Clark residence. The neighbor said it was thought that the Clarkes turned their residence over to Nixon \"tu.le the ·judge and his wife occupied a home in Los Angeles. Nixon reportedly was r ,e s t i n c , writing an acceptance speech for the presidential nominatioa he expects to win in Miami in August, and nursing a hand which be bruised while shaking hands with admirers Suoday at the Centuey Plaza Hotel in Lot Angeles. The former vice president will spend the remainder of the week resting. He will m.ake no public .appearances dur· ing this time, a spokesman said. The Republican hopeful's daughters pro~ to be veteran campaigners as they shook each hand extended. to them and gave a personal greeting to each visitor Sunday in Lo6 Angeles. Patricia, 22, said later she .enjoyed every aspect oi. ca.Jl"19aigning, "but the hard part is being on display so much." Julie, 20, a brunette in contrast to her sister's blonde hair, stood beside her Hance, David Eise nho wer , gnandson of the former President, throughout the reception. Nixon's two television appearances Monday were on taped panel sh~s. but he also made a gurprise visit to Art Linkletter's show, House Party. The two men oh:atted informally fOT' a few minutes on the stage and when Li1:Jk.letter .asked wtien Julie was going to get married, Nixon replied, "I'm an expert on Vietnam, but don 't ask me when my daughter is getting mar· ried." Buried Utility Program Slated Plans for a major two-month un- derground conduit project in Hun- tington Beach have been announced by the General Telephone Company. The pr0ject iJM>lves installation of underground telephone facilities as well .as the removal Of overhead cables next to the Huntington Beach High School and the new Civic center. The project should be completed by the end of September and will Mrve the residents of ~ Huntington Sta Cliff housing deve.lopment. fronaUOll with Czech monn!Jb aim· ed at ""ltotlating Czecboolovakla"s niturn to a normal alliance with the east bloc. A Soviet source aatd the politburo already had left Moscow. It includes J\"ei1ldent Nlkolal Podgorny, Premier Alexei Kosygin and party leader Leoald J. Brezhnev. It was the first time in Soviet history the entire politburo had left the country and it underlined the urgency , ORDERED TO STAND TRIAL Mrs. Irene Tucker Councilman's Wife to Stand Trial in Slaying By A RTllUR R. VINSEL Of IM OlllY '11•1 Slllf Psychiatrists say Mrs. Irene M. Tucker is aane and able to stand trial and aid in her own defense as the ac· cused ca:vlng·knife killer of her next- door neighbor 25 days ago. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron granted a motion by defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr., to pro- ceed with the murder case against the wife of Costa Mesa City Councilman George A. Tucker, based on opinions by two court-appointed experts. Mrs. Tucker, 37, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was ordered to appear back in Harbor District Judicial Court Friday at 9:30 a.m., .at · which ti me preUminary hearing date will be set. • During the br!ef session Monday, the dark-haired defendant unexpectedly uttered her own flrst, brief public hint concerning what may have happened on the fatal Friday afternoon. WON REFUSAL The District Attorney's ofUce won another refusal by the court to set bail, however, citing as usual the no- bail clause ln California Penal Code Section 1270, covering capital offenses. Mra. Tucker is charged with the stabbing death of Mrs. Harriett V. Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, on June 28, durlng some type of backyard dispute at their Mesa Verde area homes. Augustine painted out Monday in seeking ball that Dr. Philip O. Kramer and Dr. Sigmund Kosewick SJY the defendant hadn't the mental capacity under cireumstances on that date to deliberate, premeditate, or harbor malice against Mr1. Westphal. the Kremlin atlachtoil to boldtng Czechoslovakia within the Commun.lit camp as a major unit in Soviet defense strategy.' Moscow fears that the Uberallzing policies of Czech party first secretary Alexander. Dubcek maY have got out of hand and that 'l.antiMsoclallst, anti· Soviet, rightist forces" .tded by "imperialists" are trying to overthrOw the Communist 1tat.e and restore the (See CZECBS, Pase I) Missile Repair Base Planned At Seal Beach; Opening of the Na"3'"• nm rn1l:ite repair facility at Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station this fall will mean the eventual employment of 200 to ~ civilians, Navy officials said today. At present, Navy officers are look· Ing for 41 persons to fill jobs frorn head admJnistrator of the Naval Ordnance Rework Facility (NORA) to engineers and down to assembly line workers. ' Lt. Cmdr. R. L. Lfne· the only military person cormected ~ the new repair facility, said it will have an annual budget of S1 bllllm f~ tbe1lr1t couple of years. ••we will be employing 4.1 penom In the beginning. This iJ sort of a pllol program," he said. "We will hir1 u many as 200 to 300 people in tbl Dl!:D two to three years." Seal Beach 11 currenUy -cl fonr Navy atatfont anembllnttbe service'• Terrier and Tartar surface-to-air missf.les, the commander 1aJd. General Dynamics, Pomooa, ,,.. the manufacturing agent for the com. ponents and did the repair war.t until it phased out ~oductfon recently, be added. The Navy declded to take ita: equip. ment, installed at GD-Pomona, Mid put it at Seal Beach. The local station will be the only repair facility for tht entire Navy missile system, Com· mander Lane explained. He said part Of the 41-peraon staff to be employed by the facility's opening Sept. 15 has been hired. But he is ltllJ taking applications for mechanical and electrical engineers, electronic and hydraulic technicians, instrument mechanics and factory assemblymen. Tlle $14,000.to-$18,000.a-year job o! head administrator for NORA is 1UU unfilled also, he u.id. The person taking thl.s position will be responsible to the Seal Beach com· manding oUJcer and to Washington, D.C. "It's equitable in private indwrtry to the manager of a small company," Lane said. Loan Rates Increase WASHINGTON (UPI) The average interest rate on home mortgages across tbe nation roae from 6.69 percent to S.88 percent during June, the Fedtral Home Loan Bank Board reported today. The increase was 8'ttrlbuted to higher state ceilings on interest and more competition for m o r t g a g e money. c .... Retired Army Lt. C-01. Joe Carpineto wm take charge of West Orange C.OUn- ey's newest chapter of the Boys' Clubs ol. America. The new club, which filed its in- corporation pQPers with the national organization in April, will serve Westminster. Carplneto, who lives in Westminster, estimates the club wW serve nearly 2.000 boys. It will be open the first year to youth aged 7 to 16 years old, and later 17-year-old5 and 18-year-olds will be allowed to join. Sex Business Supported Dr. Kramer. of Metropolitan State Hospital, and Dr. Kosewick, of Fairview State Hospital, are apected to be key figures Jn the Tucker trial, •whkb will be based primarily on physical evidence. JUd1< Cameron thM uted !or the prosecuUon'a lhoughta. Clear 1kie1, warmer temp- eratures are In store for the Orange Cout for the nm couple of daya, with some morn .. Jng and evening overcast. Temp- eratures are lD the high 70's. Water temperat·W'1 63 degrees. INSWE TODAY Th< "glrlfrl<M" of J!Ulae Parbr'a ion ia appartwtlV' "llJ' to "° good. St• eomki Page JO. Carplneto was In the Army 'rt years. serving in the plans and operadon1 department of the Sixth Army general's staff. He aald the club w1ll not have its own buJldlng for about a year, but the boys wlll meet in the Chamber of Commerca ofilces unUI then. I • Editor'• Nott: Whv do mm buy aex1 The queation ia tzplored todav b~ DAILY PILOT ataff writer PaJMla Hallan in the final inrtallmtnt of a thrtt·parl atrie1 on "Tht OlMsi Pro- feslion. '' By PAMELA BALLAN OI' "" DllllY ''"" ., ... ProsUtutlon has beea called 11Tbe old eat profession.'' lt's po:slUon ln society has ranged from the respected and admired > • hetalre class Of anclent Greece to the degraded, despised brothel dweller• of industrial alums. Today Jt4 positJon Is paradoxical. Although lt ls condemned by law and b~stions of public morality, it ls nevertheless supported a n d ea· couraged by an aflluent. population. The questioni "why are ther1 pro- sUtutcs?'' Is retaUvely simple to answer, according tD Dr. Je.rame Kirk, UCJ sociologist. But the answer, ''because the.re are customers" is a more complex consideration, plvotipg on a question relavant in all ages ••• what exactly have customers been buying! "In a Vil")' large proportion o( cases men have been buying 10IOe kind of sex acUvlt;y they can'l fel from theJr wives or girlfriends," laid Dr. Kirk. "SomeUmea it 11 lntercomse but (S.e PROSTITIJTES, Par•!) Deputy D~triot Attorney Michael Caplz%1 m the CPC section speclCicaUy ohlbitlng bail when -as tt 1ays -pr of guilt ii evident, or at least qulte strong. ''I was attacked from behind," Mr1. Tucker lnterjecte~ as Augurtlne - who 1ays be is confident of her U:• oneratlon -quick})' and calmly mov· ed to hu.<h the defendant "I wiah the District Attorney would (See TUCKER. P•I• !J cc ) ...I M ' ' ' .. • .. ' ll .. , • • I I • • i I l' I I 1 I 1- ) I t OAILY PILOT ,,,.._ P•e l • TUCKER ... ...... tbe lacll, " ..... added, speaking ia otdlbarJ, converutionll toots, but tllllll1 --u J ..... c-~ --lloll. JudltWllUanl~ ... ... bail lf he eboDI M at bll' ..... We Frlday1 or auboequootl;t, lo Harbor Dbtrict Judicial Court. "Thty'rt 1a1<1o1. me to jail Instead of tbt horpltal. WJJY ii that 'T" she murmured lo her b111bud. pano!a and a brother sitting in the front row, ooly five l<•l from her chlllr. Tb6 eollre proceeding took JltUe more than four mlnutel, but the defen· dent'• beorln( hid cbloeed from a pale .-lu-• lo clojedod C<llllu1lon about the out llep. "Keep in touch wlth me," she said .imoet lllU.rly lo the family - all P£e&enl at each court appear.ance, ex· cept for htr little g1r\I -as 1be was led out of the cool, higlt...W., courtroom. Ocean View May;· Fingerprint Own · School Employes s.ca.... the coot or flDCerprlotin( achool employea rMChea "&houaand.I ol dollJra Mcb yur", Ooeen V!ew district trustees are looking into the )>OSSiblllty ol doing tbe job themselves, The l.u:ue came up at the board. meeUuc Id~ night, 'lrtleo Supt. Clarence HU uked for $1,llXJ to im· plemeot a volunteer c 1 a s s r o o m assiltanta program. "Why do we need. $1.,IOO for a vohm- lary pn>p.mT" uted Trllllff James Shaffer. Dr. Hall explained the sum is needed to PIJ' tbe M flncetpriutinc charge on eacb ol the :.t wluateen who are ex- pected to belp out at each school in the -The board approved the program, which use.a non-certificated personnel as teacher aslirtant.. It hu been piloled lllnce Deceml>er at Roblnwood School and wu "very IUCCeulul," W!Dr. Heil. Tna:tee Robert Zlnngrabe, who also wted fur ttie program, asked wby the school district couldn't do t h e fingerprinting I t 1 e I f to save "tbonsmd1 m doll8n each year ... "U we did do it ourselves, I don't think tbe result! would be ~ptable to the agencies (FBI and California lntelliCence and Investigation)," Mid Dr. Hall Tho coot d fingerprlnting itsell iS minimal, he explained to the trustees, but the m11i.D upeoee is the follow-up lovutlplloo 11lroup the two ageo· des. Mn. Zlnngrahe 1e1kecl thel echool ectminiltrator1 ask for a comment from 1he Huntlnctoo Beach poll<:< department oo the possibility of red.Uc· fog tile llngerprlntinf a • d fo. vestifOflon coelt Father Lugs Bags Of $250,000 Cash To Bail Out Son Cash -$250,(Q) worth of it in live large bags -wu counted out by sheriff's deputies Monday to secure the: release oa bail Of the son of a Newport Beach marine contractor. Charles J . Trautwein, 31, of 20292 Cre.imer Line, Huntin&ton Beach, an.ltin1 trlal on a Gr.00. Jury ln· dk:tment charginc rape of 1 Newport BetlCh woman was bailed out by his father, Paul A. Trautwein, 1906 Holi· day Road, Newport Beach. TrautW'ein lugged five laundry bags filled with c16h into the jail, deputies 1ald, to secure the release of hJs son. Trautwein is scheduled for ar- raiounent AUJ. 2 on cllarges of first deeree bur&lary, .attempted rape by force and threat of force and assault with intent to commit rape. Police allege he broke into the apartment of a 26-year-old . Newport Beach woman June 21. OAllY PllOl " ............ Cllh:olk OAA,,GE COAST P\JlllSHIHG (OfgAHY R~fff N. We-4 l'rttlltowlf elld hblf ... Jer.• II. Curley Vke l'r•kltnl ....r Gm.rel MIM- Th•W1e1 IC•e¥'il Editor TI!eme1 A. MwrplllRe Mtne1ll\tl Edllor Allt••f W. let.1 Willi1m Ree.I AsMdlli. Hllllllt'ltton ll"'i a.iw (lfy Editor ----lot lffl Str•et MeiliRt Addr111: r.O. l•1"ffO 926•1 --........ lletdl: "" w ....... ......,.. c-.11 Meu: »O W• ...,. SI'"' L-a..dl:m,._.,A....,.. I l11tsd11, Ji.ly 23, 1968 ON THE BOX -Official E>anllner Officer Robert Marks of the Huntington Be~ Police Department checks for heart fluctuation in rt1ults of a polygraph eumlnation. Sclwol Trustees Mount Fence in Freeway Route Deoplte tlle r.ct tllat oee echool plamed by the Ocean View School Diltrlct will he affecetd by the pr .. posed rouUug of the H-.iglab Beach Freeway, district trustees ref111e to take a ttand for or against Jt DiBtrict Supt. Dr. Clarence Hall ask· ed bHi trustees Monday night how they wanted him to represent the board at the Friday hearing on the freeway routing. "I think we should present a map at t.he hearing oo what will happen to the district witb any route without com· men!," said Trustee Robert Zin- ngrabt. Dr. Hall, wh:o told trustees that "ac· tual planning was being delayed" on a school s t t e located near where t h e Orange (Eastern) Route would pass, said he would attend the meeting "for information" and "determine at a later date what action we should take." This tmeommitted position ignores a suggestion 'from Fountain Valley School District trustees, who Thursday ca.me out against the Orange route and publicly encouraged other school districts also to take a stand. Prominent County Artist Harry K. Budd Rites Held Funeral services were held today foc Harry K. Budd, of Corona del Mar, who died Saturday at Hoag Memorial Hospital after a loog illness. Mr. Budd was a fou nder of the llun· tington Beach Art League and pro-- minent member oft.he Southland's art colony. ·Noted for his oil seascapes, desert scenes and portraits, the artist was a member of the Desert Arts, Palm Springs Art Center; Artists League of Seal Beach; Laguna FesUval Associa· Fro• Page 1 .CZECHS •.• capitalist system of pre·1948 \Yhen the Communists took over. The war maneuver announcement was the more surprising because it in· eluded the call up of civilian reservists for the first tlnie in memory and the co1nmandee.ring of civilian trucks and cars at a time when they are vitally needed for the harvest. It was further noted that Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Andrei Grechko had cut short an important visit to Algiers late last week and hur· r ied back to Moscow, presumably to direct the war games the Kremlin ap- parentl.Y found necessary at the last minute. Soviet newspapers and broadcasts have expressed alarm that forthcom· ing West German army maneuvers, with allied air support, were being held to demoostrate backing for Czechoslovak d.Jssidenct. And a report from Munich today said E 1 s t Germany may be building a barbed wire fence along its bordcl' with CzechoslovakJa to close a new escape route to the West. · Czecho.\lovak.ia removed barricades and land mines along its borders with Weit Germany and AustrJa in April. Grace Roberds Services Held Services for Grace E . Roberds, a resident oC Huntineton Beach since 1921, were held Monday at Smith 's Mortuary Ch1pet, Huntington Bfach. Mrs. Roberds died Friday at the Huntincton V a I I e y Convalescent Hospital alter 1 l<nrtJ>y lllnen. She WIS 80. She Is 1urvived by her dautnter, Wllda Bryant of Huntington Beech; t w o brothers, Leonard Tln1ley of Alhambra and Clarence Tinsley of Ojai; three grandchildren eod four ireat.rrandchlldren. Jnterment wu at We1tmlnstor Memorial Perk. ( lion and the Business Men's Art Association. He was a retired executive or Bullocks Inc . and was instrumental in ·tbe opening of Bullock's Santa Ana and other branches. Services were conducted by the Ben- jamin Franklin Masonic Lodge ; Scot- tish Rite Consistory at Forest Lawn, Glendale. Survivors include a son William, two grandchildren, Newport Beach ; and a . slater Mrs. Irene Artman, C:OSta Mesa. Parents Urge New Principal At Ct·est View Crest View School may gel a new principal before school starts, thanks to a gentle prodding Monday night by a parent. Mrs. Ann FE.tlCher, 18041 Gull Lane, Huntington Beach, appealed to Ocean View trustees for the appointment or a school principal. She was representing the school's Parent·Facuty Organiza. lion. "It's alm06l August and we have no principal," Mrs. Fancher told the trustees. She said the previous prir.· cipal left at the end of last term, t.nd her PFO now has no one to make plans with. The trustees adjourned to an ex- ecutive session following the regular board meeting, and appointed .a com· mlttee to screen "four or five " ~rsons for the position. School officials say the committee, Including Trustee Ralph Bauer, Is to make a recommendation for the job by the Aug. S board meeting. Ernest Asltland Ftmeral Set Services for Ernest W. Ashland, a residen~ of Huntington Beach since 1940. will be held 2 p.m. Wednesday at Smith's Mortuary, Huntington Beach. "'tr. Ashland, parts manager for Terry's Buick for 25 years, died at the Long Beach Veterans Hospital. Sun- day after an illness or a month. He wa 70. Survivors include his w I f e , Josephine ol t.be home, 418 8th St., HunUngton Beach; two daughtMs, Mrs. B.F. Sherrill of Florida and Mrs. J .R. Van Doren ot Washington: two sisters, Mrs. W.C. Nichols and Miss Harriet Ashland, both or North Dako- ta; four gral'ldchlldren. Interment will follow at Good Shepherd Cemetery. H u n t I n g t o ft Beach. } . . -. ' ' . . . . . . .. . . ... ... . -._ ......... ~-.. -... ' , .... --Polygraph Prognosis Lie Detector Makes No Mistakes, Says Examiner By JAMES·Jl!eNAllB, JR. of ... D.11, l'li.t Steff Nervous? Maybe high b 1 o o d pressure or a fast beating heart? A combJnaUon of the three might turn the truth Into e Ile, according to Hun· tlngton Beach police department j>olyarapb .. -Robtrt Marta. Marta, lo an Interview with Ibo DAILY Pijhl', uplalned that o pr .. perJy operai.ct polygraph -more commonly Jcoown u the lie detector - makes no m.Jltakes. "Error la po11lble, but only lo the hWMll element,'' be claimed, clttng that results from a byper-1ea1lilve, high btood-pres1w-ed 1UJpect are com· -led for by the macbloe. Located In 1 soundproofed, pastel green chamber, the Sl,345 medlwn· priced Huntinrton Beach polygraph consists or a visible console of dJals. UU'ee needles, a roll of grapb paper all set in a desk top a'tld a low·slung. leather armchair whose truth-seeking purpose ls hJdden in Its flat, extended arms. An examinee is fitted with finger electrodea to measure galvanic skin reponse (sweating}, the familiar in· fiated arm belt to register . blood pre11ure change, and rubber chest or waUt ~ll wb1cb cbeeka breathing pat· 1er ... "The liar b detected because his body register• its anx.lety by faster or slower breathinc, blood pro11ure or F,.... P .. e l perspltattori r1tu," atttltl Marts, whose clear eyes and sqU&re jaw reveal 20 years ln the Marine Corps. A veteran polygraph examiner, Marks bas been testing since 1961 and has been a member ot the Huntington police fofce since 1983, when he retired from the mJlltary. He strongly defends t h e in· strument's effectiveness but warns against Its excessive use. "Jt'1 not supposed to be a ci'utc~}A~or In- vestigations; some officers~ it too frequently." ' Marki bas assisted the seal Beach, \Vestmlnster, Stanton and county Juvenile Authority d e t e c t I v e s • Newport Beach police borrow the Cos· ta Mesa polygraph, he says. PROSTITUTE BUSINESS •.. usually lt'1 other things. "A Httle creep,wtth $200 can get an attractive female to be nice to him. This might be the only way. Or maybe the girls be know• don't like hi• Perveraion1. Or maybe be hu to keep repeating 'I love you.' People dOn 't pay money for what they can get free. They're buying something." The nature of the commodity purchased bu changed. In some cultures the proetitute was selllnc her companionship, being e d u c a t e d , cultured and refined. In other cultures she waa: selling a sacred act with religious connotations. In the Victorian period, she was selling se:i. "Today it is relatively easy for males to get sex," said Dr. Kirk. "But not exotic sex. There ls also the ques· tion of discretion. Prostitutes are known to be discreet but a girt you pick up in the street might kiss and t e 11 and if your'e a public official it might ruin your career." Despite the functional nature of her poslUon in society, the prostitute i1 publicly condemned in the United S tat e 1 and otehr countries and is legally prosecuted, The motivation for her condemnation varies but much or it stems from her indifference. "The female is emotionally in· different and willing to sell her favors," said Dr. Kirk. "In order to become a prosUtute you have to be in· different if not numb. In a real sense the prostitute d~sn't get to choose her sexual partners or in most cases her sexual activities. Basically this is not a very attractive idea. ''It is even less attractive to people who are enthusiastic about sex. Cer· ta.inly it would be most boring. "On the other band, there lte lots of people who have a hostility to pro- stitution because they want to stamp out sex. "Obviously U prostitutes are or. fering services to husbands they can't get from their wives, the wives will be against It. Institutions Art! against It becawe of the breakdown of the famJ. Iy. It al.Jo makes it dUficult for nice !drl1 to mtrict their favors if it is easy for men to get se:i somewhere else." The very pre1ence of a double stan· dard in au:, which says that men may engage in ai much se:i activity as pc>ssible and women a1 litUe as possi· ble, could tbeoreUcally encourage pro-- stituUOIJ, accordinc to the professor. "There ls sometblng wrong with this idea. Tbe only way it works is to have a small number of women servicing a large number of men. Why should these women give it away?" Dr. Kirk believes ·the double st.an· dard to be unfair in other respects. "Women are in slavery in this culture. Women can't buy men, for example. In Southern Europe where there are rich women and starving men you have something very close to boys prostituting themselves to women but this is disguised. The tern1 gigolo doesn't usually imply sex. When it oc· curs, it is called a "fantastic love af· fair.' This isn't a reflection of female psychology. Women are trained to think of it that way.'' "There Is a theory in the Ui:iited States I.hat men enjoy sex more than women. Thls is going out. I think there are lots of girls who can't ~et what th:ey want from their husbands and it might be a lot he althier if they could call the neighborhood pimp rather than get a divorce." Dr, Kirk believes that prostitution survives because social condemnation doesn't have any effect on an indi- vidual's behavior. "Society condemns sharp business practices, violence, racial disc:rimina· lion, too," iaid the sociologist. "When people cry wolf too often, a child grows up not paying any attention." "There are certain things society cannot condemn successfully. Private behavior is impossible to control in a democracy. We put the police in a bind by saying stamp out prOllitilutioo on one hand and respect private behavior on the other hand. "Police can't put a microphone under a prostitute's bed and cannOt proposition her according to the letter ot tbe law because we live in a democracy. Yet these are crimes withoot victims. Thus the police must engage in marginally legal practices. "They must engage in undercover \\'Ork and spy oo us -and this makes it difficult for them to carry out their mandate in democracy and .their reputation gets tarnished." The sociologist believes Americans inadvertently encourage disrespect for the law by accumulating too many. In- stead of disapproving of something they pass a law against it. Thus, law books get fatter every year. "I think it's ridiculous to have laws against prosU tution because it isn't discouraged,'' said Dr. Kirk. "I also think it strange not to punish clients of prostitutes. Ir there are going to be laws against prostitution the clients are the ones who should be pro· secuted. n»e undercover agent's job would certainly be easier." But Dr. Kirk does not foresee any changes in the law. Nor does he foresee any reduction in the number or prostitutes. He believes that even ,if there were extreme promiscuity, or free love, there would still be room for specialized experts, females who were more sensitive, more attractive, or sexually more skilled. Could prostitution ever hold a moral position in society? "It is not inconceivable," said Dr. Kirk, "but it is highly unlikely. If it is ever moral In our society it won't be called prostitution. We 'll call it some· thing else." :1111-=: has ·it! We lay it on the line ... O££P ~teiZm 4 CR KP ET CL ERR/RC THE ULTIMATE in CARPET CLEANING Recently, D•ap Staem Cerp•f Cl••ners introduc M • new profession•! carpet claenin9 proca11 to thii CO\lnfy ••• Prio r to off•ring this t•m•rkebla s•rvice to you, our customers, wa co~ductad our own comprahansi•• testin9 progrem .in ord•r to verify the cleim1 meda for the process by its cfa•elop- ari . Not only did we find Deep Staem to be • r•volvtlonary departure from our tredit ion•! cerpaf cl••n· ing method, but we found it to be eb1olutaly s•fe for ell cerpat end upholstery febrics. Concurrent with our te1tin9 progrem, we thoroughly treinad our parsonn•I in the effactiv• use of DeaD Sfttm cleening equipment •• , Only wh•n we wart compltfely setisfied that Deap Steem mat with our stenderds did w• off•r thi1 vniqu• new service to you. A successful compeny's reputetion is its bast ed••rfisaft\tnt. W• fey it on th• line by cordl•lly inviti"9 you to try sefety-ta1ted Daap Staem Well-to-Wei Cerpat and Upholst•ry Cleening ••• Th• fin· e1t profassionel cerpat cleenin9 service yet developed for the industry. Protect the life of your cerpef1 end the beauty el your lloma by celling today! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We era drepery aii:parts! W• 1fr•11 quelity of workmen1hip & instellttion, Free Estima tes In Your Home At Your ConVffienc;e. CALL TODAY: WHIM YOU WANT THI FINEST- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 Y••r• of collecti•• ••p•rience between ti(. 2 man doin9 your work. All work don• in our plant. We pre.ttsf all fabrics before claenin9. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenienc;e. CALL TODAY: ND ISTIMAft RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 21rt YHr of S.rvico in Or•ngo County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA l'HONE 546-3432 I \ .... , .. _ Cell Dot"" 7-116H . -... ..• . Lag-una · Bea~h , DAILY PILOT Today's Ooslag - ED I TI O N N.Y. Stoeb IOL 61, NO. '176, 3 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES 1.:A6UNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 23, '1968 TEN CENTS occ Seat Tax Bill Dies • Ill State Senate -.. RICHARD NIXON'S SECRET SERVICE GUARDS? C•su•llY Dreued Trio Stick Close to Coron• del Mar. Home Nixon Hidden Resti ff,g in Laguna or CdM Former Vice President Rlch.a(d M. Nix on reportedly femained i n 1eclusion somewhere along the Orange Coast today as the press played peek a boo with Secret Service agents in trying to track him down. In the absence of confirmed in· fOrmation, rumor mills have happily 'prung into action to p~ace ~e presidential contender variously tn Laguna Beach, and in the exclU5ive Cameo Shores section o! Conx!a de! \1ar in Newport Beaoh. One DAILY PILOT source, a neighbor of Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke, 4633 Brighto~ Road, Cor~na tel Mar saJd mysterious men acting ate Sec;et Service agents continue to bt in and out of the Clark reside~. The neighbor said it was thought .ti.at tbe Clarkes turned their residence 1ver to Nixon while the judge and his wife occupied a home in Los Angeles. Nixon reportedly was rest in g , writing an acceptance speech for the 9res.idential nomination he expects to win in Miami in August, and nursing a hand which he brujsed whUe shaking hands with admirers Sunday at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los An·geles. The former vice president will spend the remainder of the week resting. J-Je \\'ill make no public appearances dur- ing this time, a spokesman said. The Republican hopeful'S daughters prov~ to be veteran campaigners as they shook each hand extended to Utem arid gave a per90nal greeting to each visitor Sunday in Los Angeles. Patricia, 22, said later she enjoyed every aspect ol. campaigning, "bUt the hard part is being on display so much." Julie, 20, a brunette in contrast to her sister's blonde hair, stood beside her fiance, David Eisenhower, grandson of the former President, throughout the reception. Nixon's two television appearan«!s Monday were on taped panel .shows, but he also made a surprise visit to Art Link.letter's show , House Party. Laguna Council to Study Garbage Segregation End There may be an end to tlte segrega- Uon by Leguna Beach residents of their garbage and trash. Also in the of'ii:ll'g are a proposed 10- cent per month rate hilce for collection of rubbish and discontinuance of the separate· collection of g:arbage. These are matters councilmen will mull at a Wednm:lay night study session. Laguna Beach Disposal Service, Jnc. !las requested both the hike and the Co-mingling oC rubbish with garbage, which some residents admit they have done rigtlt along. City Manager James D. Wheaton 1aid the varustilng · hog farms of Orange County have eliminated ~t method of gartiage dispOsal Ad· ditlooally, he said, the county now not only allows but requires that com- bustible materials be combined v.·ith garl>age !or dispieal. The disposal company hasn't had an lncreMe in its base rate for collection of garlJage and trash since 1959. Residents now pay 11.45 monthly per unit and 50 cents for pickup at each additional residential unit. 'Ibe hike l'-"Ou1d mean $1.55 plus SO cents for each additional unit. 'lbe ce>- mJogling would also mean the end ot the extra runs the sanitation company now conducts to pick up garbage separately. 'Che company, then under another name, bid ln 1959 to pickup twice weekly for the Sl.45 rate (garbage on- ly on the second pickup) or once week- ly !or $1.35. Under an opt.ion renewal, the city now has the service isgned up at the existing rate until 1970. However, John H. Lindley, owner of the sanitary service, 'pointed out in a May letter to councilme.n that the sanitary business is 'no bed of roses in Laguna Beach. Linsley detailed the problems of steep hills, deadend streets, alleys fill- ed with parked cars, undedicated streets with chuck holes and deadbeat customers who don't pay their trash bills. He also said the volume of trash has increased 50 percent over the past 10 years adding to the per unit aperatlon cost. Lindley also noted that Laguna Beach Is less than an optimum labor market to fill vacancies in the Tanks of trash oollecton. The city does the billing for Undley for a percentage or the take. City Manager Wheaton agreed that billing problems in a resort city are scmH?th.ing of a mess because Of turnover in occupancy and the fact that llWIY just don't undentand the requirements. Wheaton also noted that co-mingling . of trash and garbage may call9e a tigllteoing up on the t;ype ol containm used, lidded containers to avoJd fly problems. Water Bond Turnout Moderate The land-owners election to decide a ~6 million bond issue for expansion of \Vat.er and sanitary facilities in Moulton-Niguel Wat.er District and a n1oderate voter turnout by noon today. There was also opposition reported ·rom unidentified medium size. land- wners in the 25,000 acre district. Carl J. Kymla, district manager, >Id the DAILY PILOT he understood ;pposition had developed because of he water board policy to place Jcreage assessments on the land. The board took this step to avoid in- equitable burden on homeowners dur- ing long-term repayment of the general obligation bonds. Kymla said he believed the op- position came from owners of land ranging from SO to 100 acres. He predicted that homeowners will, alter all, decide the election that would re· quire a two-thirds yes vote for passage. Votes are allowed on the basis o[ cne vote for each $1 assessed valua- tion on the land. Hence, a homeowner with a lot assessed at Jl,000 would have 2,000 votes.· Kymla estimated that big land- owners now control about SS percent of the votes in the district which ls about 10,300 in population and growing by aOOut 50 persons monthly. Kym.la said homeowner associaUon s in both Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo have endorsed the general obligation bond issue to keep up with growth. The public works include additional facilities for the North American Rockwell A'cltonectics plant scheduled to begin employing about 7 ,000 persons in the district late ne:1t year. Polls will remain open until 7 p.m. today.1 The palling places are Crown Valley Element.Ary School, room one; Mission Viejo High School, room 218 ; and 25221 De Salle St., Capistrano Highlands. Botl1 'Reject' F estivals Boom Neither "reject" art restivals are being rejected by t-0urists visiting the Art Colony. Both the Sawdust and Splinter festivals report sales are going strong in Laguna Beach. Dolores Ferrell of the Sawdust Festival reported Gloria Fickling sold a ·$1,000 painting Saturday, wh.ile she was in a hospital recuperating from a recent automobile accident. To date, according to Mrs. Ferrell, the gross sales at the festival have approached the $10,000 mark. "'We were jammed all weekend," said the spokesman. ''There must have been five to ten thousand peo· pie." The Splinters don't keep records of gros.s sales, since the group doesn't take a cut. But the exhibitors reported their sales have also been high, and in· creasing steadily, EXPERIMENTAL RING WORK -ljeri Hof!; wll<J has been exhibiting at the Laguna Festival of A,rts for six years, has returned once again wilh his cau of contemporary jewelry. Balanced Imbalance ls Contradiction in Art A oneUme German army trooper who watched Hitler's retreat house burn after it was bombed wu is today a Laguna Beach jewelry maker specializing in happy contradictions. "Try to figure th.is out," comments Heri Hoff, who specializes in designing rings in what he terms balanced im- balance. Hoff, an eight-year Laguna Beach resident, currently exhibiting bis work at the Festival of Arts, was on sentry duty the night Hitler's retreat house joined the Nazi's crumbling empire. l-lcrff's ingenious style has evolved considerably sirlce he began jeweiry maki ng in 1944, nine years of that career spent in Canada, where his wcrk was admired but not bought. "You couldn't give them away he re.'' dealers told him. Hof! uses a multitude of stones for his rlng designs, but the commqn denominater among them is that they are not available in ordinary jewelry stores. Three of his most unusual stones are a green garnet. a cat's eye moonstone and triangle cut diamonds -the latter used to focus the eye on the larger set- tings. He never builds a d upli cat e, although some · rings share the same aesthetic theme. Holr, however. falls heir to the same problem faced by an artist -the pain of giving a thing of beauty form and life -and having lt perhaps develop dlfferenUy from what was originally in the mind's eye. When he does get snagged on tile emotional han gup of creativity, he hurries to another object Of emotional nature. Mrs. JtoU usually has a constructive comment. The Hoff children also -as any children will -have ideas about his work, but the ex-German trooper hints that he still maintains a measure of authority in the household. One of his greatest rewards, he .explains, "I don't do spooky, depress- ing works." While Hoff's work -in its various facets -steers clear of the spooky and depressing, It haa also helped hara rlcade the lives of others against such feelings. Ine of his greatest rewards, he says, is congratulations by a relative of a man who was wasting away into t~e vegetable life of one with too much time and too litUe interests. The man enrolled at one of the courses Hoff has been teaching at Orange Coast College tor the past two years and literally found a new life to fulfill h1s remahnng year!:. ART ·FES T IV AL NOW SOLD OUT In cne you havtn•t heird, Laguna's Pageant of the Masters Ja indeed sold out. , , FesUval of Arts officials said that some tickets are still avallable, though, due to those who can't use their own tickets returning them to the box office. This can be as many a 10 tict:ets a day, the Festival reports. Attendance to the Feltival grounds ~s also bi&:h, running "neck and neck" with la rt year. Also, to the dellgbt 'of the exhibitors, the aale of art b: up. "The good word ta, people are buylnr.'' said a leotlvaj apokeaman. 'Tlae Oldest Profession' Sex Business Supported F;dttor'1 Note: \Vh y do me1l buy sex? The que1tion is explored today by DAILY PILOT 1toff writer Pamela Hallan in tM f inal imta.Um.ent oj a lhree·part serlea on "The Oldest Pro- feultm ." By PAMELA HALLAN Of ... Dal" l'llM llefl Prostitution has been called "The oldest proleaaion/' It's poclUon In lbctety has ranged from lbe respected and admlr8" beta.ire class of ancient Greece to the '"because thm are customers'' ts a degraded, de spised brothel dweller1 of more complex consideration, "'votln• Industrial slums. t"' e. Today its position is paradoxical. on a question relavant in all age1 ••• Although It Is condemned by law and what euctJ,y have cu1tomer1 bNn bastlona ol public morality, It 11 buyln&! nevertheless supportN an~ en-"1.n 1 very large proportion. of cues couraged"by an aflluent populaUon., men have been buyJa.s 1ome kind or The questioa, ·'why· are there pre>-• 111: acilvtty they can't get from their 1Ututt1 ?'' is relatively slm:p}e to . wlve1 or .. g1rlfrlend1,'' said Dr" Ktrk. answer. accordlnJ to " '?r· ~erome ~ "Somet1m11 tt 11 inttrcoune but Kirk, UC! 1oclolo(IJL But Ule.....,.tr, . (!lee Pll08'l'ITIJUl,.J>Qe.I) ! Saddlehacli Officials 'Delighted' Orange Coast Junior C o 11 e g e: District's seat tax bW finally die:d Monday in the current sess.J.on of the Legislature. "It went belly Up," &aid the secretary to Assemblyman Kenneth Cory, <D·Anaheim), ~ was author ci the bill. The vote was 8 ta 1 not to forward the bill out of the Senate Local Government Committee. "We're jltst as delighted as can be," said Dr. Fred Bremer , superintendent- elect of Sadd.Jeback Junior College Dimict, wi>icb 1he bill wa. principally aimed at. Orange C o a s t Superintendent Norman w.atson sald he has no Idea whether the bill will be introduced again next year. The bill, after several votes, pealed the Assembly by the bare margin of one vote but got nowhere in the Senate. It would have required new junior coU.,e district11ucb as 5addlebact to pay establiRled junior collegta $™! per tran&fer student. AJ it now 1~nds, Sadd,leback is ex- ~ from paying seat .tu to Orange Coa~t ~nd o,ther district! . for three years, but orange Cou:t must accept Saddleback otudents. · Saddleback does have to pay '6(X) or so operating expenses for each student attendini other district's school!. During ii& lint year beginning this fall, Saddleback will not be able to handle IOphomores or rooational sb.J.dents on its interim campus, Orange Coast College will get most of the~Dt sans seat tax. Lagunan Found Dead in Bed An elderly Laguna Beach man was found de:ad in bed by a friend Monday and coroner's deputies todiay are pro· bing to de~mine cause of the ap- parently natural death. The victim was identified as Carl R. Oleson, of 318 Ocean Ave ., fOlmd by Le:llie Miller, of 379 Aster St., ac· cording to investigators. · Funeral arangements were pending today at the Laguna Beach Funeral Home. NEW YORK (AP) -llelplte selec- tive galnl, the stock market slump con.Unued this afternoon. Trading was moderately active. (Sec quotations Pages 8, 9.) · The Dow Jones industrial average cut lt.s early Jou. Declines outnwnber· eel advances by well over 2 to 1. 0r..,. Weadter Clear sties, wanner temp- enturn art Jn store for the Onnge Coast for 'the next 1 couple ol days, with tome morn- ing and evening ovt1raaL Temp. eratures are in. the bJgh 10·s. Water temperature 63 degreea. INSmB TODA.Y Th• "girlfriend" of Jud~< Porkff'1 .son il.appar111tt~ up to no good. See comicl Page 16. e.= • =-n 1141 • .. • 0 SI 4 : =--= .. =-=--.. ' --' ............ D . ........... ..... I II al • ...... """" ,,.,, ·-•• ~ ·~ ........ , -" ............ u :::n... • ---u N > , I ' ! 1 L • lj 1 ' I 1, I I ' l I % DAil Y PILOT TutstUy, July 2J, 1963 Prostitution~ Why Is Business· Supported? ,.,.... r.,e usually it'a other tb1ng1. "A Hltle creep with $200 can get an aUractlve female to be nice to hlm. 'lbil mJ1bt be the only way. Or maybe the girli: be knows don't like bis perver&IOOJ. Or maybe be has to keep repeating 'I love you.' People don't pay money for what they cao. get (fee. They're blzying aomet.blnJ." The nature of the commodity purchased has chanced. In 1ome cultures the proatitute wu selling her cornpaniomhip, beln.1 e d u c a t e d , cultured and refined. In other cultures 1he was selling a sacred act with religious connotations. In the Victorlan period, she was selling sex. "Today it is relatively easy fo r males to get sex," said Dr. Kirk. "But not exotic se:r. There ts also the qup· tion of discretion. Prostitutes are known lo be diJcr<ol but a girl you pick up in the strtet might kin and Mesa Official's · ' Wife to Face Murder Trial By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ~ Of tllt Dt>U_. Pllff SI.ti ... Psychiatrists say Mrs. Irene M. Tucker ts sane and able to stand trial and aid in her own defense as the ac· cused ca:ving-knife killer of her next- door neighbor 25 days ago. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron granted a motion by defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr., to pro- ceed with the murder case against the wife of Costa Mesa City Councilman George A. Tucker, based on opinions by two court·appointed experts. Mrs. Tucker, :n, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was ordered to appear back in Harbor District Judicial Court Friday at 9:30 a.m.. at which t Im e preliminary hearing date will be set. During the brief session Monday, the dark-haired defendant unexpectedly UUered her own first, brief public hint concerning what may have happened on the fatal Friday afternoon. WON REFUSAL The District Attorney's office won another refusal by the court to set bail, however, citing as usual the no- bail clause-in California Penal Code Section 1270, covering capital offenses. Mrs. Tuck.el' is charged with the stabbing death of Mrs. Harriett V. Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, on June 1.8, during some type of backyard dispute at their Mesa Verde area homes. Augustine pointed out Monday in seeking bail that Dr. Philip 0 . Kramer and Dr. Sigmund Kosewlck say the defendant hadn't t.he mental capacity under circumstances on that date to deliberate, premeditate, or harbOr malice against Mrs. Westphal. Dr. Kramer, of Metrapolitan State Hospital, and Dr. Kosewick, o! Fairview Stale Hospital, are expected to be key figures in tbe Tucker trial, which will be based primarily on physic al evidence: Judge Cameron Ulen asked for the prosecution's thoughts. Deputy District Attorney Michael Capiui mentioned the CPC &ectlon specifically prohibiting bail when -as it says -proof of guilt is evident, or at least quite strong. "I wa.s attacked from behind," Mr s. Tucker interjected, a.s Augustine - who says he is confi~ent of her ex· oneration -quickly and calmly mov- ed to hush the defendant. "I wish the District Attorney would hear the fa ct!," she added, speak.in~ tn ordinary, cenversational tones, but visibly alarmed as 'Judge Cameron refused to set bail. Judge William Christensen can set bail if he chooses at her appearance Friday, or subsequently, in ·Harbor District Judicial Court DAILY PILOT ___ .. cmANOt ct!AST PUll1SHOt!G COM~ANV ~.it.rt H. W•td PresKIM!t '"' rve1111M Jtc\ ... c~rley Viet l'ml*"f .... o--el ....,..._ n•rn11 ICttY'll ..... Tli.•111•• }., Mu rphi"' ~flt E-llor --"""" 222 •• ,.,. "'"'· M•ill"f Aitlre11: P.O.•••••• fllS2 ..--c.• Mine: :Dt '#tit .. , Sll'wf H-'1 9"0!~ ttH Wftf teltlM teollMnl ~····· IMCfl: • Mt! '""' t e 11 ud II ,..ea a public oll!clal It inlgbt nlD 1our carter." .. lltoplte ,Ibo fuactlaoal llalure If ber posl-lil ilCldel7, Ibo prooUtute la publicly condemned lo the UnJted S t a t e s and otely' cg_untrJe~ .a n d Is legally proaecuted. The moUyatioo for her condemnation varies buf much of it stems from her indllference. "The female is emotionally in. different and willing to sell her favors," said Dr. Kirk. "In order to become a prostitute you have to be In· dlUerent if not numb. In a real servse the prosUtute doesn't get to choose her sexual partners or in most cases her sexual activities. Basically this is not a very attractive Idea. "lt is even less attractive to people who are enthusiastic about sex. Cer· ·tainly it would be most'boriDg. "On the other hand, there are lots of people who have a hostility to pro- 6titution because they want to stamp out sex. "Obvloualy U =lutes ere If. fwlDJ ....-to • ..., they can't &tt from -wt..,, tho wtvea will be qllut tt. laltHutleoi are aplmt" It becauae of the breakdown of tlte faml· Jy. It also makes it dlf!lcult for nice girls to rectrtct their favors if It ii easy for men :O get sex somewhere else." The very presence of a double stan- dard In sex, wb.lch says that men may engage in as much sex activity as p05slble and women as UtUe as possi- ble, could theoretically encourage pro- stitution, according to the professor. ''There 11 somethlng wrong with this id~. The only way Jt work1 Is to have a small number of women servicing a 1arge number of men. Why should these women give it away?" Dr. KJrk believes the double stan· dard to be unfair ln other respects. "Women are in slavery in this culture. Women can't buy men, for example. la Souttietn E urope where there are rich women and starving men you blYt oomething very <IOle to boys protUtuUng themselves to women but ih1I la dJsgulsed. 'l'h• term glgelo doen't usually imply se:r. When It oc· Cur.s, it Is called a •;ranta11Uc love af· fair:.' Th1s Isn't a re.flecUon of female J)6ycbology. Women are trained to think of it that way." "There Is a theory in the Ufl lted States that men enjoy sex more than women. Thia is g,oin& out. I think there are lots of girls who can't 1et what they Went from their husbands and it might be a lot hetlthler if they could call rhe oel&)lborhood pimp rather th8.Jl get a dl\torce.'' Dr. Kirk believes that prostltution survives becauff social condemnatJon doesn't have any effect on an indi- vidual's behavior. "Society condemns sharp business pracUces; violence, racial dl1crim.h1a0 tion , too," Nld the sociologist. "When people cry wolf too often, a child grows up not paying any attention." "There in corta!n th!np 1odety cannot condemn successfully. Private behavior is impossible to control lo a democracy. We put the poUce in a bind by saying stamp out prostitution on one hand and respect printe behavior 011 the other band. "'Police can't put a microphone under a prostitute's bed and cannot proposltJon her according to th e letter of the law because we live In a democracy. Yet these are crimes without victims. Thus the police must engage in marginally legal pracUces. "They must engage In undercover work and apy oo ua IDd this makes It dllltcult for them to carry out their mandate Jn democracy and their reputation gets tarnished." The sociologist believes Americans lnadvertenUy encourage disrespect for 1he law by accumulating too many. In· stead of disapproving of somettung they pass a law agalnat It. Thus, law booU,get fatter every year. ••1 thlDk lt'• ridlcWoul to have laws against pro1tJtullpn because it isn't discouraged/' said Dr. Kirk. "l also think it strange not to punl.sh clients of prostJtutes. U there are going to be laws against p}'Ostitution the clients are the ones who should be pro· secuted. 'The undercover agent's job would certainly be easler.'1 But Dr. Kirk does not foresee any changes in the law. Nor does he foresee any reduction In the number ol prostitute•. He believes that even If there were e.1.treme promiscuity, or free love, tberr would stlll be room for specialized experts, females wbo were more s~sitive, more attractive, or .sexually more skilled. Could proetitution ever hold a moral position in .society? "lt ii not Inconceivable," said Dr. Klrk, "but tt ls highly unlikely. U it ls ever moral in our society it woo't be called prostitution. We'll call it some- thing else." Saddlebw;k College Sees .Roger Holden, Laguna Civic Leader, Dies 20 Cent Boostin Taxes ORDERED TD STAND TRIAL Mrs. Irene Tuc:ker By mOMAS FORTUNE Of .. Dlllr ,lllt ,,.., Saddleback Junior College l>lltrlct trustees Monday nlJl'.ht discussed what tax bills will look like when residents get them in the fall. Probably they will show a~ut a 71}.. cent increase over last year's 56-cent rate. ·Trustees anticipate the hike will be only for one year and the tu level will .fall back to around 53 cents thereafter. But there are certain imponderables ·such as a revived seat tax bill or change of tax base by pllttlng land in agricultural reserve that could change the ouUook, Business Manager Roy N. Barletta cautioned. At any rate, the tax bill homeowners get Oct 15 will be for about 75 cents oer 1100 of assessed valuation, be said. It will be broken down 40 cents for operations, 2n to 25 cents for tuition and 13 cents for bond payments. The tuition payment is for students sent out of dist.rict to other junior col- leges last school year. Actual cost figures to be 80 to 65 cents with the state picking up the tab for an amount Mayor Picks 5 Lagunans For General Plait Group Five Laguna area residents have been recommended by Councilman Charlton P, Boyd to serve on the General Plan Citizens' Committee. · The recommendations were made by Boyd ttiis past week In response to Laguna Beach Mayor GICDll E. Ved- . Laguna Beach Land Swindle Trial Starts 111ree of low-men went on trial ~fonday before Superior Court J udge Ronald M. Crookshank on a charge ot perpetrating a land swindle ~gainst Laguna Beach real estate man Jack Adams of 3197 Bern Drive. Defendants are Fred A. Tarran!. Garden Grove; Robert Higgins, Seat- tle. \Vash.: Robert Harmon, Long Beach tnd Fred C. Bangle, whose ad- dress· is only "Northern California." They were indicted May l by the Orange County Grand J ury. ,Bangle has not been brought to trial. There is an outstanding bench warrant or $5.0IX> for his arrest. The four are charged with con- spiracy and grand theft in an ;;.Uegcd plot to fleece Adams of $10,000 in a land development deal Involving pr<i· perty Adams owns in Chino. Adams said he gave lliggins. alleged mastermind of the plot, '6,000 and signed an $8,CXX> promissory note half ol which he later redeemed for a total loss of $10,000. Two Sites Slated For Park Control Irvine Bowl is still gruwing, and lt may include an art :school. The city of Laguna has adopted a resolution that would make property already owned by lbe city park pro· perty. Parcels that would be included are the city nursery and ttie Girl Scout house. These two Jou are in the area being sought by the Laguna Beach School of Art and Design. Should the two new sites be included 1n the park land. It would. wlth city ap- proval, enat>Je the School ol Art •nd Design to use the property u Its site. Residents or the !Ugh Drive. Llnden· Olive are.a had protested the use of the property as a site ror the school, since II la zoned R·l (resldenUaJ). Coun· cllman Roy Holm suggested that In malclng all the clty .. wnect land parcels part of the park system, the school could be bu11t under the restrictions th•l pertain co bulletins in c1z park;, der's request that co u n c 11 m en nominate persons to serve on the com· · mittee. The five residents suggested by Boyd are: James W. Diiiey, president of the Citizen's Town Planning Association and a resident of Three Arch Bey; Marc T. Gamblner, a Laguna resl· dent of two and one haU years, a member of the CTPA and head of his own land development firm : John B. PhlWps, a Laguna resident l of 11 years, and owner of the Ralph E. Phillips, Inc. consulUng firm con- cerned with electrical .and mechanical communication systems for s i t e development: Vernon Spltalert, Emerajd Bay resi· dent and publisher of the Laguna News-Post; and Alberto F. Trevino, involved in Laguna's activities for six and one half years and manager of community research and planning for General Electric. Boyd , in his letter to Vedder, said. " .. .it is my reeling that the .soundness of our ph ysical planning and the degree to which we are able to im· plement planning concepts will de- pend, to a large degree, upon how well greater Laguna is unified a n d r e)ll'esented as well as the caliber of the individuals selected to make up the group." Rattlesnake Likes Top of the World A tunny thing happened to Betty Elder, a Top of the World resident on her way to turn on the lawn sprinklers Monday. Another Top of the World resident changed her mind. It was about l2:40 p.m. when the housewife noticed there w a s something in the grass, and It "''asn 't a sprinkler heard. lt turned out to be a two root Diamond Back rettlesnake. Police were called to the 2965 Alpine Way residence. Armed with a shovel, an o(ftctr approached the 1nake. After a robust bash on the head, the snake stopped hissing. $212 in Loot Taken From Laguna Auto A Laiuna Beach man told pallce Monday that the rear window of ht~ sports car bad been bashed In and '212 worth of Items stolen. Gary Martin, 2801 Chtllon Way, reported the loss of • radio, 12 stereo tape_• and a 1k:1 parka from the car parked in bl• driveway. equal to the operations cost, or 40 cents . "The state payment ls to prevent a new district from gettlng hit double," Superintendent-Elect Fred H. Bremer explained. "Otherwise the district would have to pay current operating costs plus payment. on students sent to other districts the previous year." Since tuition is for last year it will include seat tax payments of $300 per student. Saddleback's seat tax ex- emption won't be noticed by tu:payers until the following year. In other matters, the Saddleback board : -Received notice that a $4:.5 million bond sale Is set for Aug. 6. Anticipated interest charge is something close to five percent, the legal maximum. -Granted a contract to Follett Corporation of Chicago to operate the college book store. The contract runs tor five years with an option to cancel .after three and returns the college fiv e percent of net revenue. -Employed music i nstructor Richard M. Raub and fore i g n languages instructor George B. Sowa to round out the staff at 'l1 instructors for the fall. -Presented an engraved gavel and resoluUon of commendation to Hans Vogel for his performance as pres!· dent of the board during the college's organizational year. LAGUNA LEADER SUCCUMBS Players' 'Angel' Holden Lagunan Reports Carbine Stolen A 30.30 carbine rifle was n!port.ed stolen from the home o( Ricky R. Col- bert, 2785 Solano Way, Laguna Beach, police reported today. The rifle, valued at $85, was hanging on a living room wall. The thief ap- parenUy entered through the Wllocked front door, police said. .... Memorial services for R o g e r Cramer Hold en. prominent Laguna 13each civic leader, will be held at 3 p.m . Wednesdav at Pacific View Mfl!morial Park Chapel. Mr. Holden died at his home, 111 Sn. La Senda. Three Arch Bay, South L1guna, Sunday .after an extended il· lness. He was 70. A retired financial consultant for the Beaver Association of Chicago , he had been active in the beach community for the past seven years as a member of the Laguna Players, Rotary Club. South Coast Hospital Board, Three Arch Bay Association and the Com- munity Chest. He also served on the Advisory Board of the Orange Empire Council of Boy Scouts of America and was a member of the Laguna Beach Art Association and 4guna B e a c h Hamber ·Music Society. Mr. Holden recently contributed $50,000 toward the building fund of th6 Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Survivors include his wife. Sylvia, or the home ; two brothers Henry and Philip, both of Massachusetts. The family suggests that those who wish may make memorial con· tributions to the South Coast Hospital Cancer Fund. gl II IR;IC1 has it! We lay it on the line ... 0££P~t@m. 1 CRftP£T CL£RntnC THE ULTIMATE in CARPET CLEANING R•c•ntly, Deep Ste•m Cerpet Cle•n•rs introdu c.d • new profes1ionel cerpet cle•ning proce11 to thii County ••• Prior to offering this r•merkeble service to you, our customers, w• conducted our own compr•h•nsiYe testing progr•m in order to veri~y the cl•ims mede for the pto~~11 by its de't'elop· er1. Not only clid we fincl Deep Steem to be • re't'oluf1on•ry d•p•rture from our tradition•! cerpet cleen· ln9 method, but we found it to be •baolutely safe for all carpet and upholstery fabri cs. Concurrent with our testing pro9r•m, we thoroughly treined our personn el in the effecti .. e use of Deeo Steem cleaning equipment •.• On ly when we were completely 1eti1fied thet Deep Steem met wlth our 1tenderd1 dicl we offer th i1 un ique new 1ervice to you. A 1uccet1ful company's reputetion i1 its be1t .d .. erfltement. We ley it on the lln e by cordielly in .. itin9 you to try 1efety.te1ted Deep Steam Well-to.Wei C•rpet encl Uphol1tery Cl~aning •• , The fin· ••+ profe11ion•I carp•+ cle•nin9 1ervice yet clev9'opecl for the inclu1try, Protect the life •f your carp•+• encl the beeuty of your home by <•lling tod•yf TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We ere clrep•ry experts! We 1tre11 quallty of workm1n1hip &: inst•lletion. Froe Estimalos In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIM TOU WANT THI ~NEST- CALI. UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 yeer1 of collective experience between the 2 men doing your wotk. All work clone in our plent. We pre-test •II febrlc1 before cleanin9. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenien ce. CALL TODAY: FID 1$11MAR RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS • Our 21st Y oar of Strv ice in Ortngt County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA PHONE 546-3432 ( • '• • University Pops Concert Ja1111ned -Carrying their own chairs or just sitting o.n the grass, 1,500 coast area residents crowded into UCJ's Gateway Park to hear the San Diego Symphony Orchestra conducted by John Scott Trotter. The free concert Sunday at 5:30 drew larger than 'ex- pected crowds. Liz Okay After Surgery LONDON (UPI) -The girl with the violet eyes that every guy in America's Bijous and Palaces always knew looked only at him sat up in a hospital bed today, roses on one side and champagne on the other. "She is resting . but miserable," Elizabeth Taylor's secretary said. The actress her fifth husband calls "a real woman" almost died in another London hospital in 1961. This time her life was not threatened. But the operation she underwent Sunday ended her ability to bear children. "She knows how to take suffering and is very brave," said Richard llanley. "If she is in pain, she refused to talk about it." Miss Taylor's operation was the kind that is not unusual for a woman "who has reached her age." Still considered one of the most beautiful women in the world, s~e was 36 last February. The surgery involved removal of fibroid tumor, a mass of muscle fiber, and her womb. "But, thank God, there is no ques- tion of cancer.'' Hanley said. Richard Burton, Miss Taylor's fifth husband. sat at her side. "He is very anxious about her," Hanley said. ''Mr. Burton hasn't left her side since the operation." Burton and Elizabeth have no children although she has three from her marriages to British actor Michael Wilding and showman Mike Todd and a daughter adopted when she was married to singer Eddie Fisher. But Burton said before ,the operation they had not been planning to have children. Flags to Honor Servicemen \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Th e displayed by organizations with wh ich Defense Depai'tment has authorized two companies to manufacture and sell red·bordcred flags, with a blue star on a white field, for display by families of servicemen. Three companies have bee n authorized to produce lapel buttons for similar use. The nags also may be U1e servicemen were or are.affiliated. Use of such flags and buttons was widespread during World War II, but only r ecently began in connection with the Vietnam war. The servicemen (and women) so honored need not be serving in Vietnam-just be on active duty. ... DAILY •!LOT 3 Rocky Likes Chances: Says Wallace Hurting Nixon Campaign CINCINNATI (UPI) -Gov. Nelson A.~Rockefeller ~eplcted himlleU tOdty as the Republican with the best chance to win the presidency because ol growing support in the south for the American Independent party can- didacy of George C. Wallace. He told newsmen during the national governors conference that public opi- nion indicated he would run eight to 10 poinU ahead of Richard M. Nlxon in the East, Mldwest and West, where he felt the presidential election would be decided'." Referring to Nixon and Gov. Ronald Reagan of California, now regarded as Post Offices Now Closed On Saturdays No longer will residents of the Orange Coast area be able to dash to the post office on Saturday morning to pick up a stamp for that letter that has to arrive Monday. All offices will be closed. The halt in Saturday over-the- counter transactions is the latest in a wave of cutbacks issued b y Postmaster General W. Marvin Watson to comply with a coogressional mandate reducing the personnel to the June 30, 1966 level. However, all major offices will be open from 9 to 11 a.m for the pick-up of mail by general delivery patrons and business firms whose mail is regularly handled in that mooner. Also effective thls Saturday, col- lection service will be converted to the less frequent Sunday schedule. Plans are also being developed for ti1e elimination or Saturday home delivery service. Individual postmasters have been asked to submit plans fur the elimina· lion by Sept. 1, at which time a date for the Saturday curb or home delivery will be set. The elimination is expected in October or November. "Until the mail is actually not there on Saturday mornings, the people wUl not be heard from," Watson safd. "Monday mornings will be an im- possible problem," Watson continued. "The post offices are physical1y not equipped to handle tile backlog of two days' mail." He said he could back off on some or his orders for service reductions if Congress gave him a clear indication before adjourning for the political con- ventions that it will ease the personnel ceiling when it comes back later in the year. an active but un-announced candidate, Rockefeller 1ald : "1 think I have the best chance by far. Under present circumstances in the polls and the situation in the South. I don't see haw the others could win." Rockefeller estimated. Nixon now was FA. least 100 delegates short of the 667 needed to win the nomination. lie put his own delegate s1rength at "over 300" and Reagan's between 200 and 300, He also made clear he was relying on five favorite son candidates stan- ding firm as part Of the strategy to deny the nomination to Nixon on £!l early ballot. ' The New Ycrter said Republicans now estlmated Wallace would Can')' three to seven toutbern states and Vice Pres.ident Hubert H. Humphrey, Cront-running candidate for t h • Democratic nomination, would carry enou gh states in the North to win the election if Nixon were the GOP can• dldate. He said he was stronger in tbe crucial industrial states than Nixon. Rockefeller also estimated 5 S delegates had shifted recently troni Nixon to him or Reagan, with about . two-thirds of them going to the California governor. AF Gen. Worley Killed By Red Artillery Fire SAIGON (AP) -Maj. Gen. Robert F . Worley, deputy commander of the U.S. 7th Air Force, was killed today when his RF4C photo reconnalssanee plune was shot down by enemy gun- ners northwest of Da Nang. The 48-year-old \Verley, who played a prominent role in directing Ule bom- bing in Nortn a.nd Soutti Vietnam, was the third general killed in action in the war. A U.S. 7th Air Force spokesman in Saigon in a statement said Worley was killed shortly after noon. "He was piloting a photo recon· naissance mission when ttie aircraft was hit by ground fire," he added. "The second pilot in the aircraft ejected safely and has been r~cued. "Gen. Worley became 7th Air Force vice commander in July, 1967, and was scheduled to become deputy chief of stall for operations, headquarters Pacific Air Forces, Honolulu on Sept. l ." The spokesman said that Worley was a command pilot qualified to Oy the. RF4C, a Phantom fighter-bomber changed for ph()tO reconnaissance. "He had previously flown similar aircraft on combat missions," the spokewiao said. "It is not unusual for a general to participate in the flying activtt.y of his command." Worley had been directly in charge of the huge armada of Air Force planes bombing North and South Viet- nam since last Tuesday when the com· mander Gen. William W. Momyer, left for the United States on reassignment as commander of the Tactical Air Force Command. The new commander oC the 7th Air Force, Gen. George Brown, Ls due here about Aug. 1. The spokesman said that Maj. Gen. Royal N. Baker, assbtant chief· o! staff for plans fOr the U.S. military command ip Saigon, will become depu· ty commander of the 7th Air Force ef. fectJve immediately. Baker previously had been nmned to replace Worl,y about Aug. 9, when Worley was due to leave Vietnam. Worley is survived by his wJdow, the former Bette Lorraine Fury, and five children, Sue Ann, Dana Ellen, Gail Lynn, Vicki Lomline, and Robert Morgan. He listed hrs home town as Palm Desert, Calif. Another Air Force general, Maj. Gen. William J . Crumm, 48, corn· mander of the Strategic Air Com· mand's 3rd Division based on Guam. was the first~general ofiicer killed in the Vietnam war. He died July 7, 1967, when tW<> B52 stratofortresses on !.he way to boonb targets in South Vietnam collided and crashed in the South China S~a ,about 30 miles off the coai.;t ol the southern end of South Vietnam. .Maj. Gen. Bruno A. Hochmuth, com· mMder of the U.S. 3rd Marine Division, was killed last Nov. 14 when his command helicopter exploded while he was on an inspection tour over the "Street Without Joy" 400 ·miles northeast of Saigon. Fire Near Riverside Blackens 600 Acres RIVERSIDE (AP) -Firemen con· tained a brush and grass fire Monday after it swept over 600 acres 10 miles east of Riverside. The fire burned in Rache Canyon near the site of last year's 4,()()()..acre blaze that forced evacuation of the Olive Del Nudist Colony. Buffums' Own acrylic sweaters reduced! • • •. lltlPOIT c.arTER • L 9 • 9 9 reg.13.00 Buffums' brings you special savings on this washable shaker knit cardigan. Crochet trim and buttons, long sleews. Choose white, bone, yellow and aqua, sizes 36 to 41. Come in early. Save now on gaily_ printed shifts 6 9 9 Comparable values • from 11.00 to 15.00 Wile ,away the hot summer hours in our cooling shifts. Choose from a large selectioo of nylon, acrylic, cotton, rayoo or Dacroo• polyester. Short sleeved or sleewless with conwrtible, jewel or cowl collars, sizes 8to16 • 11 FASHION ISUHD 644-2200 • • lllOHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 Till f:lO • OlllER DAYS 10:00 T1lL S:30' • • ; I . I • c I ' • • ' . ) :· I l , -- .f DAILY PILOT tc:-.1111 ... ...., ,..., ...., "She smiled a lot,"' said J • h n Seto, proprietor of the Old Frank· Jin Market In San Francisco. Also, be told police, she had a gun. So wben •he demanded all Soto's money from bls cash register, he handed over about $50. She was atill smiling when be did that. Tben $he left • , . smiling, of course1 ; . British actress JoM Asher and Btatle Paul. McCarhiey ore calling it quits. Miu Asher icdd that htr tnQagflntftt to McCartmv ha.a been broken off. TM 22·veor-ol4 actreu broke the news in a BBC ttlttn.rion inUrtMul. • Adliing inJult to anned robbery, a lone ~nmaa robbed the 20th Centurym atudio of more than fl0,000 late Monday ml lied in a car belonldng to .a cameraman. Gene W. Flynn, 32, a cashier at the studio, said the short, 11.igbt ban- dit took all the currency ~ coin at gunpoint from the studio ..ate, then lied In the auto belonging to cameraman Wllll•m Cron)H .. r. • Don•ld Cl•ypool of Pleasant Plain (Illinois) was rushing bis wile, v.1 ..... about to give birth to their fifth child, to Memorial Hos- pital in Springfield. Mrs. Claypool suddenly said she was about to give birth. Claypool rushed into a funeral borne where a mortician delivered the child. Mother and daughter were doing fine • • • lat er at the hospital. • 1 An unidentified passenger who said, "I wont to go to Cuba" 1DOI removed from Ecuttrn Air Linet Flight 955 to Miami. A <Uputu sheriff aaid lattr that the incid- ~ ent was "just a bad joke •• , a "• stupid remark." Seven comm.er-~ ciaL airli'ners have been ~jaclc.. ti ed to Cuba thil 11ear and two a. tempts have btm thworUd. • . ' A St. Bernard at the Vancouver Kennel Club 1bow 'forgot that his breed is supposed to be the kindly rescue-people-in-the-snow type ••• so he bit the judge. Oliver H•rri- man, of Pebble Beach, who was judging the St. Bernard class, had to be treated at a hospital for head and neck lacerations. The dog? He \Yon fourth place in his class. • Los Angeles City Councilman Arthur K. Snyder says the Depart· ment of Animal Regulation is do- ing all it can to deliver traps to persons complaining about skunks. "Skunks have become so numer· ous,'' Synder said, "that the de- partment is workinf overtime ans. wering complaints. 1 • ., ' .... "" '* TutsdQ, J1111 2.J, 1968 Crowd Sees Texas DA Shot Dead Cl..ARENOON, Tex . (AP) -}1ve shot.a from a rifle killed Diat. Atty. John R. Gillham outtide tu1 county courthout e office Monday. AuthoriUes lodged a murder charge against a building contractor. About 10 persons witnessed the shooUng on the aquare in the center Of this Texaa panhandle town of about 2,200 people. The complaint chargi ng murder \\'ith malice named Clyde Gilbreath, 60, who was ordered held without bond. Police Chief Gary Gerdes said Gillham, in his late SOs, had been representing tile wife or Gilbreath in a divorce suit. Among the spectators was a 17-year· old son of Gilbreath, who seized his fatile'r and held him until Sheriff Bill Cornell arrived. Lawyer William J. Lowe saw Gilbreath 1tep to his truck and remove a X>-~ rifle moment.I earlier, he told authorities, adding, "There wasn't any way you could get the gun away from h. .. UD , Basil W. Smith, manager ol an au' to supply store, told officers the shooUng occurred u he started acroas a street toward where Gillham and Gilbreath were standing. "Mr. Glllham was 1houUn.g1 'No Clyde -don't do thil'" Smith 1aid. "As aooo as the boy grabbed tus dad, it knocked tbe rifle a litue away from him llDd I picked it up." Gerdel reported tbe district at· torney wu shot twice in front, twice in the back and a fifth time as he fell ti) the sidewalk. Texas Hospital Scene of Another Heart Transplant HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -SUrgeons transpl~ tile heart ol. a youth fatally injured in an auto accident into the body ol a Nebraska man today in what they descrlbed as a very suc· cessful operation. It was the 27th such transplant in Mte world and tM second in three dt '}'s at Sl Luk.e's Episcopal hospital, where seven now have been perform· ed. Hospital spokesman l•ntified the recipient as Henry W. JurgeM, 57, of Beattice, Neb. They said he entered St. Luke's Sunday suffering from ad· vanced heart disease. The donor was Michael K. Buxton. 16, of Houston, who suffered massive head injuries in an auto accident Mon· day morning. He died at 12:47 a.m., the hospital reported, .and t h e transplant surgery w. completed at 2:15 a.m. Dr. De!Mn A. Cooley supervised th• operation, as he has the othets at St. Luke's. Attendants n.ld he cODSidertd it very successful and pronounced J~ns in highly satisfactory con· di lion. Cooley, who has supervised more heart transplant operations than any other aurgeon, said the procedure also shou1d "no longer by considered surgical feat.s or surgical spec· taculars.'' Six J>OS$ible ~cipienlt are awaiUng operations at the hospital to be performed when suitable d o n o r s become available, he said. Six have died for lack of donors, he added. Everett E. Thomas, 47, of Phoenix, Ariz., wbo received -.. new heart Mav 3, has left the hospital and plans tU start work Aug. 1 at a Houston bank, Cooley said. ~ ~-.... . .. ' ........ . VPITt ...... Professional Job Joseph Granatelli, of the famed racing family, surveys the havoc left by burglars who looted the Santa Monica equipment office o( $51,000 in cash. Police termed the burglary a "very professional job.'' The burglars used equipment found in the building to cut their way into the company fioor safe. •Like Ato1n Bo1nh' Gas Storage Tank Explodes ''· .... .. ~ .t '! ..,_ ...... - Am~naent Defeated House Rejects Gun Licensing WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House today reJe<tod a propoaal Jo require llcenala1 ol. IUD owner1. An amend· mezit to add tbe llcenaing provillon to a bill to ban lntentat. sal" of all flrearina wu tumed down o n a nonrocord voi. of 17' to &I. Uoaal regiatraUon ot firearma failed Friday by a nonrecord vote of at to 168, but adml.n11traUon atrategtata 1a1d absenteeism amona: the1.r supporters hod mucb to do wl\h the poor 1bowtng. They hoped for a better turD011t today. Defeat cl. the' llcenaing proposal -B al1tt Friday's r. j. ct I 0 n " Rampagm' g ear amendmentl to require f e d e r a I reclsfraUon ci l1Jlll -left the bill to regulate •Ilea ol flrtarma ln • poaiUon Shot After Attack far poallble HOUie panoge by tonlgbl flop. Robert McClory (R·IU.), P<O· posed the un.11Cet••ful amendment to On 3 Campers give the 1tate1 two years to set up "permit'' 1y1tems for gun owners and then require federal licenses where WEST YELLOWSTONE , Mont . any 1tate1 failed to act. (UPI) -The Forest Service 1aid to· In. the meantime the Texas White day a rampaging grillly bear attacked House announced that 40 of the 50 a group of young camper• in at.Bte governora had agreed to Yellowstone NaUonal Park, biting two coooe(ate with Prealdent Johnson in girls and 1 boy aa they Jay in their revleWina: thelr 1tate gun laws with a view toward tightenln& them. -sleepin& bags. 1be committee on. crime and law en· The bear, which bad al$o attacked a forcement of the National Governors' man from California last week, was Conference moved at the same time to killed by a Montana game and fish put itself on record as favoring in-warden. <Uvidual state responsibJllty iD the The nine y<iung campera from the matter of gun control laws. New York City area were attacked The basic bill before tht House Swlday by the bear, according to Phll v.•ould, with limited exceptions, allow Hoskins, district forest s e r v i c e gum to be bought only i n the supervisor. puicbaset'a home state. Sup-Hoskins Hid the bear was an "out· plementing hand gun controls enacted cast." with a. history of attacking last month, it would restrict rifle and campers. shotgun 1ale1 to persons at least 18 The girls and boy were not serloualy yeara old, regulate ammunition salea, injured, Hoskins said. He said the and forbid gun 1ale1 to felons , drug IJinly bit through the Sirls' sleeping addicts or mental defectives. bags and didn't break their skln. 'Th.e PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) ·-A bringing the towering blaze under con· But the administration had put its boy's forearm had puncture marks on gasoline storage tank exploded. "like trot, but each time another blast rock· hopes f()f even stronger controls in the it, he said. an atom bomb" today, h u r 1 e d ed. th tank d f'-ed defeated amendmeht to require the The unidentified. group ol campers e an m"1ues leap licentlng of gun owners. left Monday for San Francisco, residents of nearby homes out of their r'iikywa&iiird;,;;.;iia~giialiini;. iiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiii..iA~co~m~pa;;;;:n~ioo~p~r~opoe~~al~to~r~eq;:::ulr~e::,::na;·~,;H~os:::kl~ns:.s:a~id~.iiiiii .. oo;,.o;o• ... •l beds, and shot flames 300 feet high II over the Pensacola waterfront. Seven hours after the first of three ex·plosions, the 200,()()()..gallon tank still burned furiously, blankeUng the .Qfea witd1 oily $lDOke. The fire threatened other tanks loaded with gasoline and kerosene. , Mr. and Mrs: Jim Hicks were knock· ed .out of theil' beds by the first blast, whwh blew gasoline and sparks through the windows, starting several sm·all fires in tbe house. Both suffered burns as they beat out the fires before fleeing the home. Barrancait Avenue running past the storage · field was barricaded and reiidents of several hofil~ ... -were evacuated. Traffic headed IM8'1he ci· ty, Wilich normally crosses a bridge over the Bayou Chico was sent on a five·mile detour to anOther bridge. "It looked like an atom bomb ex· plosion," said shet'iff's Deputy Edward Mayo. Twice firefighters caQl.e close to Search Launcl1ed For Lost Youth SHAVER LAKE. Cali!. (UPI) -A massive search is under way today for the missing four·year·old son of a Fresno television personality ""ho strayed from the family camp Monday afternoon near here. The air and grou nd search for Richard Martin, son of KMJ·TV an· nouncer Chester (Chet ) Martin, began at daybreak today. l\1arUn told authorities his son ·was discovered missing about 4:30 p.m. Monday. He said he and other family members searched the mountainous area unW midnigh t and then notified Fresno County authorities at Shaver Lake. Now! YOU really can make buttonholes that look expert ... because there is a new and wonderful GJJUIEI'-INGJJUI'fONHOLER on the 4 newest 30UCH&$EW . . zig-zag sewing machines by Singer! Just turn the dial on the Built·in Buttonholer .•• and you turn out a perfect. buttonhole in seconds! -_...,. "' 11111111 -~· Newest Golden TOUCH & SEW' sewing machine by SINGER has Built·ln Buttonholer. So do· three more of the five TOUCH &SEW machines. -,_ $~ ' 'r-•1' M "~ . -ki>!!I . . __ ; ~ --"'--«-· Tornadoes Rip Midwest What else i.i.ne!t? A Speed Control with an Electronic sense that keeps the sewing speed constant no matter how Tliundershowers Hit U.S. From Nebraska to Maine MOlll1' l1lf -1'1'11f Wlltl llttll ltmfffl!Ufl dll"" t'fW'illllol I" SWtMrn C11!tor"l1 !M1y, Tllf!re were, ~. v1rl1bll e1tuc11 11"1 br-111 I flow tl'MllMrJl'towtl't to hl1111r mollfllllfl 11td ....,.. '""''*'* e1url.,. t"8 1ftt,,_ 1t'ICI ft'lnlftf. P1tdtY low clWdt -.C:ur911 c:oa1t11 1r111 durl.,. fhl i.tw rlllhl •ltd t1r1Y mo<nl.,. .......,,.. LOI Anttltt w .. IMlll'f !flt wlltl RI· 111 temPtrtfln dll""-Thi ..... ldld llf1h ,,..~ .... ''· """ .,.... ...... MGMIY't fllfl\, l"Jlill'ICIM low fllllltllf It '" Tltfl't W• ............ to Mot.., - Jn "'-i.. ......... l•ln .....,., tc:• eot'dlfle .. .... Alt ~""""' ("""94 Ol11T1Ct. .i eeKI'* _,. """"' e*""' 1111HI m~lllll lfMI llwlt blul'!le lllMY wttft t llltlt d n. W"'"' tt1nPW1tvr1 CouCal l/.S. St1•••rv Moll of Ille f'llflott fnloYld Wl t1'1\, lllflll~ -!fl.tr --~. Wllll tilt tM~ !loll ot !hi loOVltl 11td 1M MJ11lul!Nol VIiie~ Wl'llCJ'I hid Kllltf'td ~ .......... Torllldon lllmMM IMO Plrts of tout 1 .. lft MonCllY, Ind !Urbuie'.nl -!Mr Ill 11'4 Mldwfll mtrr..:I 1n olhefwl~ d Mr Wl!'ll'MI" d1y. Torf'lldon liollt.IWCI town Mtr Siirlnt· 1111<1, Olllo. PrHCOn. Art ,, Jrlr!>otl. Ktn.. •Jld S.•1tof1, Fiio. S."r11 bulltlntt _,.,, 01m11td 1.w ......_ dllwntd, bu1 l'4 llllu•lft wert r-11fd. Hllll Wll\lll l ftl 1.:Jl 11'(11" of fli" In 6G "'ln!Jtft llllHIHI ttnlt ti the' Mount Vtr,.,.. Ohio, Flll"f!"O\lf>Ot, />. flfn'lff Wit •lltt(I bl' IJth!ftl... ntlt EIVt ll. A 4~11\l"Utt tnllft(tt•t!oflll C111"'"" l .)5 lnelln ol rtln 1111r !llllw. In IOUlhH•~rn N1br11ok1. Cornntlth wtrl 1trlHt(I 11 hllW 1'1111 tlrl>Clo; .... toU!t- trnlM. ·~ r..,...,.,.1\1,_--.11ove 100 •eetd'old lollltl-1 ... , .. MOndtv, 11111 fO.oe- 11'11 rudl11t1 Wt'lrM ..... ntlton. Temperatures .. " ·'° Anettor111 n SI Alllnll lltkt,.llt 16 lll1m•rck llolu llOll'Ofl Chle.10 Clnclnf'llH C1t~1l1nd OMlvtr ~ Molne1 Detroit Ellf'-"'1 Fort Wort!I ·-,,_ -·· -KeM11 City t.11 v- LOI A""'ltt Mllml 8"c:tt MllWl ulM MlritllOll• Mft' O<"hn1 N.-. York OlklllMI °"''"' P•so ltobl!:• Pllllldt l!Ml1 P"°'"l• Pll'tstl\lrtll f'ortltM 1!1plCI City "" etvtr ·-ller1m1nlo St, \.1\111 S1U"11 Stf9 L1•1 Clf\f 5111 01-.0 $1" Fr111c:IJCO $6n!1 l tr1>11t ..... -OM Thlrll'ltl Wtll'll""°"' .. " lM 13 I! j:J ,10 ti .s• ,, 71 '' 70 •I it .ot ti .. ·" " y ,, 71 '' ., .01 " " " "' • " u " • 1~ .10 " .. • • " " " • •u u • " • " • .. ., ·'° 11 .tl n " " ·~ • " T " " "' " " " .M " " ... 100 ,, " .. " u ,. 11 ,, ,, " .. 11)1 71 • u .. " 11 Jl ... lll:t II ,, 7J ·" thick or thin the fabric is. All5ofthenewest TOUCH & SEW machines ·haw: The exclusive Push-Button Bobbin that winds up ti8t!:t In tht machine, saves you 18 steps In ordinary bobbin winding. TOUCJl&sk"== Choose your favorite from $J499S ff'?tnfi fl(WjJT fomon'tJal ii Of SINCE R tod.~!" SINGER IUENA PAIK lllO On The Mill TA 8-7540 8uene Perk C•nter COSTA MESA 2300 Htr~or Blvd. Kl 9·1195 H•rbor Center GAIDIN 610¥1 99) I Chepm•n 510-40 I 0 Orent• County Ple:i• HUNTIN•TON Ill.I.CH Ecflng~r •t Beech 197-1041 Huntin9ten leech Center I ANAHEIM 515 N. Loire 515 1126 Anth1Nn Cent•r SANTA ANA Downtown JOS W. 4th $1. Kl 2-3945 • LA MIU.DA 15014' S. lutweiltt' LA l·l5l2 Lt Mlrtcle Center COSTA MIS.I. lrl•tol ' Sunllower 540°26ll South Coe1t Ple1e J • • T"""'1, Jul1 23, 19611 DAfl V 'ILOT 7: Park Development For The Record Chopper Lands s County Approves I ~TUIDAY JULY 27 Meeting• TUllDAY T011!1N1te11 Club, 710F, ICitl.t't Ttblto lttllllH'llll, w .. tmlntlt!', 'I.II\. koltry CIUll al Nl~·Salilf:Wo, lrvlM S"" Coulltrt Clllll1 '"'° I . eo.11 ltllWl'f', $Ml ... en. 1 I.IT\, '"I' Mfw·N.w-t H•r~ Llon1 C Ub, Matt Vertie Coun!N C~. CO.. 1,11 MtW, •:~1.m. ltlblM 11v Club. vrnf Mtrlna, 100 ltYlhle r ""'• NI-had!, 1 •. ,... S.t "9Kll TN1tm..1!1!r1 (l11b. 101 Rtl'dl HllVH, uaa P~lfk: COlll H0•1llw1v, SNI l!KJI, 1 11.m. MYnt M!Otl aMdl Elk1 L.Clllt9, Elb Club, ICM OcMn Av•.. HIHlllMfon h.c-11. J:JO "·""· Socltty for Tiit PrtMrvtlloll tl'll i;,,.. c.,rtffm.111 tf lltrber S'* c;,1,11rttl Sf1111l111 lo Alntrlai, CD1i. Mt11 Cll11ter, Colltcle Ptrt Sdlofil, nto Hil'rl Ot~Cotlt MtM. I _p,m, l .0.0 .M,1. ,. NI. llM. QS (, I"" (0111 -·· : I! •·"'-Or~!IM Coesl 8'11.tl l 'tlll'I MllN loott. T'emt>k Sl'l,ron, •IJ W. HtmHton, WIONllD•v Wfft"'llllltr lM\11'1911en Club. J, ~·· P'en<t t KWlt, Wnlmlristtr, C '~I ~-:.Or CNll l'-Club • °&111•1. 212 E~ SI., COii• M ... , I ··~ 111111 l'IMM Toe11m.i,,.,_. CI w b ~1rd JGll11Wr1'1 H11110r 1 euir.1.-.. II MIU. 1 1.rn. H11 ntlon fluc:ll l:otm."" Clv'- Kl11r1 T1blt Rt1t1ur1111, Wt1lm\111 .. {, 1101111 Ccr.111 Mtu Rof•rv Clull, Mest Vll"df Country Clull. COili ,,,,. .. , - Wn,,,.l111t.r Exchl1191 Clu•. H•'P_,, Inn. '1611 hktl 11¥<1 .. Wtslmlruiter. :co'm"Mtt<I OPllmht Cl1•ll C°'lt MG-Goll Ind (:OU{'lll'Y Clllll, \191 Olt Ccr.ur11 Orlvt, 1:;0111 Mftll, 11 noon00 NIW!>Orl Hlrboo.r ·~r Gtoup, VI I M1rln1, 10.U lt'flldt Otl,,.., Ntwport fl"cll, 12:JS p,m. Fou11!1l11 VI It'!' l:lldllll .. Cl!Jll, l'fl ... cal1'1, 11151 a.1cll e 1vo .. Hufl!lllflM llHCll. 12: 15 ~.fl\, Divorce• , OIVORCl!S l'ILl!O I Eltftt A. Or1111do vs Frtdtrldl; J, Gr1111dc" Jr. JHll Tllolrnt OUGuttllt VI ltrntrd L_.rd OUG....tte Ptts'f AIWI J".,.,.. '>'I W!1ll1n1 ,IMr'C\11 DEATH NOTICES HANSEN Julhll T. M1..-. 1J2 f11VSldt Vllltlf, N.wpo<I llHCll. OINI ol HI"'' July 10. ,s.,,..,1¥1<1 II'/' wl'9, Ch1rlolft T. Hun111; d1uvhter, C1rol TollelOI'! 11'1d 11• llfll\dtlllldrtn. Senolcn were hekl S11'urdty, July 13, ROlt HUii M-111 P1rli)OlrK!e-d l>'f Rose Hllh Mortlllr'f, w111n11r. HAUGH Sll!l>hltl K, Htuvll. Me!or. USAF, Rtllflld. Aoe ~. of 7t5S Mlul P t1ct. Cotti Mes.I. $u,..,lve-d l>'I" Wiit. E!IX..De"' J, H1119h ; sonio Terry Frt"" els '"" SIH>IH!n Dovell11 d1111111i.r, Jtc<llHlllll MI r I 11 brotlltr1, A It x Kltm1t1 tnd Htnrv Jen1en1 1l11t", Kt'>' Fon, Peu1!11e Perry ind Mtrv leilntk!. Cll111tl ltf'Vlct Ind lnttrmeM, Wtdnes-d1y, 3 PM, Wt1lmln1111r M&morlll P1rli Mot"luerv 111<1 Cemeterv. Directed II'/' Wnl!'fll"sler Mernorl1I P1r1I MOl'1uary, WILCOX Lt'lll 1'. Wiicox. A91 tS, of SU 31111 $1 .. NtWJIOrl lle1th. SUNlvtd bl' -.1, Wlrd Pe1ri:t, Sr .. 111d Ooutlts 11ruct PHN:el <1111th!tr, Mtrlo•!t Purce; 1l1!11r1, Sl/'I WllSOll 111d Orl'lll lmtl: •r•l'ld-. C1pt. Wtrd Puf'C'I, Jr. tlld Ooutltt Petree 111 11'1d -trt•I· 1r111dS001. ClltPtl M'"'lcn llld '"" ferment, Widnes<!•'>'• 1:30 PM , Wnlmhuttr MtrnOfltl Plrli Mortv1rv •nd C1m1111rv. Dlrecttd by Wntmlnder Memol'l1! P1r11 M0<1vtrv. WALKER l.!.x1t'lc!H IC. W111t1r ... ,. IO, ol' 1101 8er1ulllrl Ltnt, NewPOr1 leach. D1l1 of Niii, Jul'>' io. su .... 1ved by - Jtd: Wtlll1r, N-1 8Ndl, t rod Llw....ct L. Wllktr, DoWMY; brother, Dunc111 R. Wilker, Ger...,.. St"'ftts. lodt'f, lllft(lty, ll:JO AM, flllTI Chtpel, 3520 E. C(llll Hlgllw1y, Coront del Mtr. 1ntermt11I, orlv1'9. 111!1. Mor'llllrv. dlrKlo•I. WWELL Erhll L-n. ll' lluck.,.11 llotd, c°''' Mnt. Strvk91 pendlnt. llftl lroadwl'>' Mortu.ry, 110 IJ'Mdwt'>', COllt Mist. HOLDEN Roger C. Holdtn. 11! $. Lt Stlld1, Ser.um t.11una. 01te of dellh, JulY 21. SUNl\led by wilt, Sylvl1; lwo broll>efl, HHlry, ol P1lmer, M111.; ind Pllllle Holden, ol we1111111. #o'\111.1 "'"'' nl!'Jlhtws tnd on• niece. Mell'lorl1I lfNlt;el w!lt be held We-dntodty, 3 PM. P1c!l!c View Chtpel. '*"" lltv. E!l1wortll L. Rlcfl.lrdr.on on1c11tl119. Femi,_,, re<1ue1ts tlloH wlllll"' lo m1k1 mtmorla! contrlbllllon1, ole1M ton· tribute lo tlle Sou!h Cots! Cemmu"ltv M01Plt1I Clr>etf' Fund. Ptc!llc v1 .... M&rlu1rv, dlrt<lor't.. CARTER Ttm"" IC. C1rter. 11315 lllSllWOllod St .• Fcr.unt1ln Velle'f. SUrvlve-d tl'I """"ts, Mr. Ind Mrl. Montlt C1rttr; lll'o"11rlo, llot11r 111<1 01n"y; •r1ndP1rH1i1, M", Ellen' C1rpenltrl1, Mr, MOits L.opt1, tlld Mrs. Gtr11dlM Shlllel. II:_,.,, tonlt hl. Tundey, 7;JO PM, Peet F1ml· hr Colonllt Ful'lfrt1 Homt. 11 ... 1111m MtH, We-dntt111y. t AM, SS Simon &-Judt Cttllolfc Church, Hu1111.,.1on le1c11. KUT AN ll lc,..rd Kulln. J.002 W. McF1<id!lll Avr .. s.1111 Ant. Survlvt'd 11'1' wit., Sophie; sons, Jlld~tnl, Edw1rd •nd Norm•" K11t1n; tnd 11• trtMchlldre". StNlg,s, Wedntldl'>'· 10::111 AM, Pttlt Ftmllr Coloflf1I Fu.,.,rel Hom<i. GEISLER M1b!t o. Gelsltr. 47t w. 171h st .. L~• A1111e!ts. Survlvld II'/' son. KHllM'lll, &I Hu"Unuton fleach: dt11thler, MIH Mlldre-d Gel11eri bre!llo!r, Art Olllb1e; 1l1ler, H•••I Ctdtr!>nlml to'ld two gr.,ldchlldren. Prlval~ 1•rvIce1 We-d'lt'Sd~'>' fl P~ F8..,llY ColOlll.i Futlf:rt! 14om8. RODER TS May Herrl,a" Jloberb. A_. i<, o! l•l Wttlo Drlvt. Coste Me.-. SllNl\lfCI llY wlft!, C11!'1er1nt1 !WO sons, llldllr~ 'Ver•es, 1.•tU"ll lier.Mr!. of COit• Mn.t: !wll o .. 19hltr1. Dolores C1rdou. of Dublin, C1Ul.1 C1·,.r1tM J'>hn..,,,, Klr11.ll""' Wl'11fntlOll; brolhe'1. M1rlon Robrrls, L11 Vel!IS; eitw1rd w . Jlober11. lnvltwood; slster1, Mrs. ze111 lltct": 1,,...-, 111<1 Mr1. v1 .. 11n NlcNlll, Wltml1>111W11 111<1 I II re t 1r11•dthlldr..,. S.rvlu1, WtdMMllf, 1 PM. Wnltllff ChePel, lnlt!rme<>!, F1lrtll""" Memorlll Ptr•. VltJltlJOfl, '°"ltM, TIMl.o•'>'• 7 1'0 t PM, W911C~ff C,._Pll. BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR 3-9451 Costa Meu Ml "-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Meu LI 1-3433 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortuary Chapel 3509 P1clfle View Drive Newport Beach, Caillornla 844-2700 I PEEK FAMILY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME '7801 Bolu Ave. Weatmtuw.r W •su SMITH'S MORnJARY m Mala SI. Bntlal10• Beaclo LEMm WESTCLIFf' MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17111 st., Coc1a M-1• taa ll'ESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortug_",.i.Cem_, 14111 11 .. c11. w--AJ.1721 e .a UZI ' • ·~· JtAIM Dt-VI Mlrrtll WI'>' ... 0.--l5lnafl Judlll'I JolvlMln .... Tl'lomll Gr11'M .Holl- lloOlrt .1-kurtlOla vi Wmuel • J. louttto11, Jr, AWrl!tnt HOlmtl "' Eldon Wl'l'M ...... Juli• Cllllrletfl ,,...... "' Or11 Ntw1M lfootl Luc.Ill Mlrlt H1rlk11t!t \II Ltwll E,,.....rd M1r«•llle /leNr•t. m.il11t...,. tnc:•) 1111 Er!t Oin!e11 ¥1 JO<lfl G. 01111111 Prv<ltoKt JI. Avl,11 vi ""'9111 H, A¥!1t Ntll l tr ECOllWll'f VI He,...,. Jo.ellfl ·-· Htleft MH MIKMll vs Edw1nl °'tltm Mfldlell JI,,,.. M. ltrlier vs .¥.viii G. ll•tkll' ltfll Ellett C...1111111 vs Herry AtlHorl Culll"' Ottf'!\lr A. Mlll*I vs Ttd 5 ....... 1111 Dl1111 Llnci. $Mrt YS Freel Owtlt1 ... ~ V'l'OO'Mlf It. ......ntctld vs Eldoll 11. ·-· ...... rv JO S._ vs Glor-.. Lnlt!r ··-Amtllt Ht'>'MI vs Elmer M. Ki'nn At School Ttrf'I' L. Sfl\!ltl ¥1 Ct•ol Jttll "'111!1 Robm Al•" Hottmen v1 Jotnfle 1111 SANTA ANA Vaca· Kollm.111 .;.....,. Rolltrl z..,.11.11<v ,.. ,,.,...., tianlng kld.s p.la,Ying on the Ntoml l.'w11a~v Saddleback High Sc ho o l JOlll "· Mlch111~• "' •abtrt 1•fll/lfn grounda here got an Mlcll1IM1 d H•rold e. GlMon vs L'tdl• Glbtoll unscheduled thrill Mon ay 0eto111v ,..,.,11 ''"* vi J,,,.,. LIMlll•rd afternoon when a huge Fll'tk Marine Coprs helic.'Op{er lan· Pll~llf· A, LYdlr \II Phllll• E. (:. Lwdle ded on the football field . Lor11" w, J-. v1 Jim11 .i.11111 "-• El Toro Marine Alt Base o.u1 wr19h1 v1 J1mt1 K. w r11nt offi'et'aJs repor•~ thJ the lhtrrv Lllell !WIN '>'t G-• WlldOn ~ -~ ev1111 chopper made a precau· G!orlt J. Cltl'IOfl Vt Gllfl G. Cl1'fl011 • Cllrl1U"' LOUIN Kllltlll ¥1 Oe•ft lionery landing when I w1111 .... Knl1M. Jr. dicated a motor malfunc· Llnd;I J, Mtrtlft '>'I Ar~ L. Mtrtlft L+111111 H. 1t1rv1c11 ,,, w11111m L. cockpit warning light in· ~::Vr.i""'i't-fitt>tH "' Jllclword LH dlc-ated a motor maUunc· 'K"'" ti<Jn . ':::::': ''"' s11141" "' Ji,_, JO!tiJ/\ The big UH34D rescue Hoop Star Enters Plea Pacts With State SANTA ANA -Stat• bond &.lJacont to UC! Will -1 grant agreements r or from a 1229.500 gr an t development nt three matched by county funds to Orange County reg I on a I partially complete the finlt parks were signed by the 100 acres of a 350-acre park. Board of Supervisors today. The site wias a gift ol the Devek>pment funds o f Irvine Oompany. '364,00> Al't provided for Vllla Park Dam will University, ONeill and Villa re<'.'t!ive a $100,cm design Park Dam parks. The state and construc~oo matching grants wiU be matched by grant to provide Junds for FULLERTON -A Cal county funds t() provide con!jtn.ICtion drawings for D E w A . L K State Fullerton basketball more than l700 ,000 for park the 290-a~ park M well 88 1111 ......, s A L E I·•,\· 1 \" -I •1,. f · 1.-. •• 1 -1~1· K1ttileln AWrv ~ vs win., Fri ... cl1 H\llhtt {ltPt r t !t m•I"" -M•I · J1mt1 J. H•"°" .... L..cult •. H1rdY Craft lalided 01'l the football ~= "11111 Remick wi s~''°" Le• field without damage and Nlctlol•• ""'"''"'' w1 t>om1111et Mt"" was immediately joined by lrldl team captain, held in jail on"' construction. construction for 50 acres of c... .._. ~__:::U~n~iv~e~rs~lt~y.....'.~~'.'..._~~....':c~am~pin~g~fflc~~ili~·u~··~•·:__ __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ charges of raping two coeds,,- Canll A"" T,,_lct>tr \ll ltrry W1,,... Tlwlldlfr Ev11f'n J1t11 li\!hotill• \II Joll11 Fr•ncn Mll'Wlnk JI-Evelyn Orern1111 VI LIOlll•d Arlhw Ortmllfl Jallfl JI. MKOon11d "' Antlt l. Mtcl>oMld Frant; Jcr.-11 Conlorll VI Jo An11 Con- "'" H11t11 ,,,_.ue~ 1r1 L••..., wit..., a "buddy" plane flying on ~r::'~tt• J. cu.,. vi w iuord E•rl the same traimng nunion. en... · Pi:klt of the craft was Me.j. P1ul1 L. Hou11on ¥1 Llovd w, Hou1lon W. S. Ebersole of Marine \llrwlrit1 LOC.IH Nllea ¥1 °''°" SNrrv Niii• Unit HML m of Willow ple1ded guilty Monday to unlawful violation of the pe';sonal liberty of another girl. NIGHT .nd DAY SERVICE . HtrN ~I WlllOfl lrl Shtron 0. WI'-' Mlldre-d L, H!1cocll VI ll:(llllld '· MT1codt Edltll M1t T~lll v1 GtorM Jlll!n Thlll G JllCl'lffl Ann Woodrum \II P1ul s . rove, Pa. !['he chopper was Woodrum flying out of Los Alamitos Joseph L. Ware, 21, o.f Anaheim, entered the plea when the case went to trial before Superior Court Judge Karl Lynn Davis. 9:30 A.M. TD 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAV 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. Al~n1 J"ll Gtrlllrdl '>'I Willer J-11 Ger111rdl Nell Joll"IOll Purcell '>'I Ethel Elle Purcell Miidrid H11e1 .klv vs Flovd Wlllltm ,,. Jlldy Jolntr ¥• John Jlobert JotMr arendt Ca~H111 TIMll1 v1 J1mu I:. """ Lvn11 M1rle c.,..,..,. vs .s11n!ty Gtrv "~ Low1N11 K•"'lffrl IC.ettrot1 v1 Jtromt JtrN Kertl'Oll Llndf Kff Morthoust VI Wlllltm Flo'fd ........ llllH M1rle Oom!11quez '>'I ...... fluot DomlftVlH!I ..,lforu Jull111 Vluolty VI JKoutt Ltr V(UOllY N111I Thomes Htrt "1 Mtrv M1rc1t1t "'" V!vltn Mlrle Alltll VI Gllbtrt EU- A!tt n Audr.., c. flrMN11 ¥S Joh" T. llrennt" l.nMne F. Tull-•1 v1 F.-r1c A. lUllHltU Oonna MH Luc• vs John Ed*itd l.uct Pttrlclt Jetn ltktr VI Dol\lld E"t"fle llt~tr Rot.tr! J. Frlh Vt Marie A. Frl11 Ruth !Ubfl Stepper VI J1me1 Robert Ste- Slllrlt'>' ...... ~Int llnk• \II Otvld lllct.lrd ..... llt!IY Idell P1rterton "' Clifford R•'>' P1tterson Ront ld Jloy Wiii v1 Jetnfllfle AdrlenM Wiil Ad.It c. Jenkll!S vs Georet w. J8"1cln1 Glf'>' M. L.e vs Nancy Lrnn LM Jo Dtrltfle lrown vi fltflnv 0111 lrown AU<lrt 9tltrkt CO<nP1011 vs Geor" S!t11!t'>' CompJon He'"'1 F•r ¥1 0Uld1 Ruth Fllllr P, l l•k• Alftf VI Oebrl K. Allller • P1trlcl1 Lynn Twitchell va Oon11d J1me1 Twltchttl Mt,., V. Garcl• '>'I Jewa Roclrltuttl G1n::l1 Janlu Eiieen Gorfllm vs GeorM John .,. ... !~o;;.1 c. sar~r wi Mirv Loul.. Naval Air Station where the P1t11t11 Norte<> H111i111 v1 Jtmt• unit is undergoing reserve Runall H111<ln Ir · · e1111belh M. voe. .. ~~-,,, Georte .i.. airung. 6=11 Jlotter Anc1e•111n vi Dor• The dlopper was to be .. ndtrto11 towed out or air lifted by carot El1h>1 Ekn1v1" ,,1 Ar""nd another helicopter today. E~n1y1n Gtor11e111 L. Me1111 v1 J1011 A, M111..,., The UH34D Sky Horse craft i~., ANll!ne G1m1>re11 "' Al'ldr• J•c-are used for rescue, evacua· G1ma..1t, Jr. tion, supply and tr.arw;:port in Mtry f:llen Vtn Mooli; w1 11.ooer Allen v· tn "'" "°'* 1e am. _ Nln('J' L. SlmplOI'! WI Sl1nley F. -----,---------~11':.'°~-v1n DY•• w1 lobbV JI•~"'" Kids Li Ice to ..... Lllf't n ltmtrd C1mpbfll v1 01.,,. Ell• 'Aslc Andy' C1motJt;lt E'lti'fn F. Twll~tr "' l url I. Twlle••• Enth ltrnea •• Pnl!lp JI. 9trllll'I Judge Davis ordered Ware to return to criminal court on Aug. 8 for pro- bation hearing and sen- tencing. Charges of rape by force, assault with intent to com· mit rape. two counts of rape by threat and two counts of assauJt with a deadly weapon were continued to the probation hearing. Tlmo"'y L..Fr-v1 Lindt Lou Frt nt 5ut A, ltulllll vs Jtromt L. ll:vbl" Lindt L. Nomwtll..,. vt Don11d A. Not\- .. wet .. r Je1~ $1\lrrv v1 Frtnc:la T. Sllerrv JUOOMINT1 Nico!•• Sidi vs M1ror1111 Wllllles Sldt ltr>fllltm .. o *NOTICE* M'GOO'S is FUN again! Fire Call• NuMlPllNlll S11ci. 10:51 t .m. MMdt'f, me-dlc1I 1ld, 1211 Yor~IOWll AY<I. 1111o1 p.m .. me-dlctl t ld. 5002 llueltY C!r(lt Tonight "GREAT FLICKS" "•"',....., ...... "THE ENFORCER" CAITOON -Phlllt G9fllloR SorMI M'GOO'S 2600 W. Coe1t Hwy., Newport ~:Doi p.m .. tr11ll fire, 1111 ICIMr 1,13 o.m., mtdlctt t ld, ''~2 llru1h1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Drlvl 1:2J p.m .. 11'\tdlctl 1ld, 1lll 1111~1 11 :oo P.m.. meo1c11 1\d, &1n S!ltot1 Clrclt 12:02 1.m .. lire lnVlltl•lfloll, 11111'1 Strei!! •nd Or1ntt .._.......,. C11t1 Meal l :ll 1.m. Mondl'f, ftlte 1t1rrn. 16111 Str:ttl I nd Pltttllltl AVlftl/'I Jtnl Ednt Webb Vt ltobert Let Wt'bb R~ R. Jt cobl VI Pttrlclt A. JKobt 0...-L. Lu1lc vs lluclolpft F. Lu•lc Sh1r(lll AnM Whllttletd vs Rtll>ll T"-1 Whl!t,,_td l1llrM11 L, Ou•rl• vs 01nlel R. Olllr!f Od!tflt M, Clll'lllt!No ¥1 Jlotilrt Ptul Outtltt~ Cllffonl"'RI'>' Ptlltrlllfl '>'I 9tt!Y 16ell PtlftrlOll flftly I . Duffer "1 Wltlltm T. Dutter P1lrlcl1 Ctrole Smllll vs Donald Ill'>' Smit/\ h eoerllt m1lnle111nctl 11:11 '''""!list tlttrllo ltlll Sir.el Ind ..,1111\elm Avenut t2:2J P.m .. w1!J'lclow11. nn 8 rl11'0! SI. ,,,, •.m .. ttlse tllrm, 1111> Slrttt llMI Pllce11!11 Avtn\11 7:!2 P.111 .. rucue, 11'111 Goll c:oUrM ... ~ 1:43 •.m., rlKVI!, 70fO M1rlon Wey 1Q:~ '·"'" llonnl ml1t1~1, Nt~ llOUleYlfd tnd Ftlr Drl'>'I _very s is a step-up car even ·w en its in t Allee M , Melling Vs Donekl E. Mtlllnt CMP1r1t1 rne lllttfl1nc1J Pilot Visitors l.enor1 El•lnt P1ulol "' D1n1~1 WH· rou,, ire~ Molldfft '""' 111m P1ulos Fr'de¥1 lcr td'loo• (I•-ot tlflll lier!! M. Rtber v1 John Wiibur R1btr 1rao:te ,..,., trld lbo"• "' olhlr °"" Lois M1rl1 K"'ln "• Golltllb Krtln lllnl11ll0111 of ti 111t 11111 111 i..... M1re1ret AIWI French v• Robert Elll1 lll.cJ11!tr.,..ttc1 orouPt mtw c111 Mr. Frtr1th ,_,,,, me1nt1t111ne1l ----'-"-~M:.._c•:•:.._~0:'':"cv:.._c'c'o'~•:T·:_ Adelllll V. Avlll VI /l;l'fmG!'Ml °'· A¥01 Ptlrlcl1 ,II, Jar111(1okY Vt Wtll1c1 It. JartO~k'>' L011l1t J , Mtllln .. r VI All>erf J, Mtlllflo!r J-! N1tl vs Ltrry AlllJll N""I El!11 A. Jl uUiertO<V VI Hlmlllol'I II. R\llllll'rlord J1cll Warren W{locl v1 M•r!11rle Ann w ... Fr1nk N. Plntdt "' Jlcr.1lt Pine-di J1111c1 Ellen lunon vi H1rolll Trut• llll'IOll M•rv JIM W1rwldl .... Dtfbtr"I L- W1rwlcll Winifred Ann J01111 .,. Jolln Jt. Jor111 W11lff Mtrtln Corvin"' J11111 E~ubelh Colvin ll)bbie Jttn P9tblft VI Dorlotld Gl'ffll'I ·-· M1rlt Rl<lcllf111 Conk v1 1111IM Rl'I' ,_ INTIJILOCUTOltV OICJlllS l.e11..,. L. Jlolll111 v1 Strtll ,11o111n1 C1roty11 L Fflll!' VI ll:ob«I JI. Fr1ter Oorl1 L. Phllll93 vs "'"''>' G. Pttlll~I Vtf'llle LoulM Hllll<lt v1 R~r/ Ervin Hinkle l1rll1r1 J, D'l rltfl "' WUlltrn T. O'lrlHI Helen Mid• '""" \II Low1ll Tllom11 ... JOlln L-11 Lud'Wll, Jr. v1 t1rblr1 Jttn L""wle H•lfl'I P, Polit~ VI Eu"llf! M1rlln Plllltrll, Jr, Lll!ltm E, MeGrtll! v~ D1riltl C. MeGrtlfl Gr1t1 Anni MCI""'" vs Gllbtrl Nell Mcln!Yrt Robt-rt JICl'I' S!1~n1 ~J J1111t Loulll! Stevtfl• Jtntl E!e11'0r' Ene1111d v1 Tfttrmon E"11l•nd M1rllyn GI'>'~ Arnold VI Henry s. A"IO!d Olg1 Dl1n1 Crvm!tY •• Cl>lrltt Fr1nc;l1 Crumley Mtr11\t GfKI l(emblt VS ll:obe<'I Llcnrd ,~ .. Helen D. Htrer. VI W!Tbur" Ht'l'tt LlrMlt CollH'O Hllldt VI HUllart Rld11rd Hinds RtOltlld 0-M. Jl1ollnd ¥1 Wl!!l•m G. CKJll LOUIM Scnrtdclt< "' Jt• GreoOfl' SctlreOder' Kii"'~" L. T-rll" "1 T~Oll'll1 G. T~r lln Don 011¥er Cut>er!Jen "' Slllr111 Mtt Culbtrhon C1N Ctr!tr VI \leY(lll A, Ctr~r l'INAL OICRl:IS M1rl1n~ J, Elllt vs RtDerl E. Elllt $ul'fl1 f , 5PeMtt "1 Rll'l .. 11 JOHii/\ SPfncer you are needed Everyone wants lo be useful and needed. And everyone~ be when it is seen that the purpose of man's existence is lo express God, divine Love. A Christian Science lecturer says "because divine Love is unive1sal we can always experience it and express it wherever we are.'' You a,nd your friends art Invited to hear "You Are Needed'' by Howard H. Irwin, C.S .. a member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship and a practitioner in the heal- ing ministry of .Christian Science for many years. Admission is hee, everyone is welcome. Cll~Sllall Scielr.e lecllll'I lt!unl1y, Jul'>' t7 t i ll:M 1,M, s.v111 c ... , r .... ,... 1'2 SI. C11tl H..,., Ltff"I Ifft/\ ....... ..,,., .,. I'll-II Cllllf'dl l'f Cllrltt, kllfl!IJI, L1111111 •1ec11 1on111t Jt.., Stnder"" •• Oe11nl1 l'-------------J I GeotN Slndtl'10ll , I See by Today· s Want Ads • N(I( one bot lwo good buy1 for the part)' looking tor A '67 VolkswAgon. Teke your pick! e A min 111 ottertng $25 re- ward for a geld wrlat witch he lost on Newport Bt!ech at G. Strttt. • Nttd 10me new lawn equipmerit? A Trimmer, power M wnmower and 1 rotoapa,der An yours •t a vel")' IQv.o price. • A ~T Chev. % ton pick-up In la1r condlHon II tor ule at I ttt.IOOAbl~ prict. • A ~I woman woo1d like lo a,.. an ~I with anot.bef' woman aver 21. - • avv-pnce range. Sure, you kn1 w Old1 is a step-up car- to everybody but your rich uncl1. But we'll bet you didn't know Olds step· ups 1tort down where most of the 10· calted low-priced car• or• found . That'• our problem . Too few people know how THIS IS OlDSMOllU'S SWINGING NEW CUTl.ASS S. $2632. mode1t Olds prices a r1. Fact is, they start ot $2512 -and we hove 16 Olds models under $3000. (There ore at least that many "M1nufaoet11t1f't 1uu••lld r1t11t pnt• fOf' 6-cytl11der Sports Co1101 nM:Fudln1 • lldtr•l ll1Cltt ll11rid eu11e1led d11l1r d•ll'fary •nd "'"dlllll cl\lfll (t,.n1f)OftlllO" e111r1••. K t tiaotlts, 01111on11 eQul11m111t, •l•t• t ftd IQe.t! t•••l •dditlon1I), 10-called low-priced car• priced 2!!! $3000.) Our point is, if you'd fike lo step up a little from what you're driving now- we've got on O\d1 for what you are willing to spend. fr.Ul See your greater Los Angeles Oldsmobile ~dealer during "GO·OLDS RUSH" Days! • ' .. e .. • • ' JJ; ! I ' I • I I \ I . I 'J ~DMl.~Y-P_ll_O_T~~~~~~~~~T~~"":=c'~J~,1~12=l~,,~1'68:::._ Your Worth -A- OVER THE COUNTER Farming • tl1e Year 2000 Ill NEW VOltlC fA,.j • 'T111tot.,.1. C'Otl"Mlltlt Mtw Yo~ Sl'Kli. ~en.~ •rtcu: By SYLVIA PORTER How can we curb the rise In food prioet over the long l@rm ! How can we help the hungry nations of the world 1a feed themselves? How can we meet the ch1llenge of a world populaUon that cou ld grow l.n the next 3CI • years as much as it has grown in the last 1,000.000 • years. to more t ha n 6.000.000,000 ( b I 111 o n I people! tops and pea pod a; 4) Today'• farm labortrs will be replaced by 1cien· l~ts. e n & i n e e r 1 and '·farmers" holding B A degrees and trained in fields ranging from elecb'ooics to air cood.ltlonlng ; NASO Ll•tlngo for Mondey, July 22, lff& many times ttie volume otJ••••••••••••m•••••••••• .. •••••-•••••I .... , N .. (INl1.I ""~ ..... CIR1 CQ, -A·-food 31 ,000.<0J farmtr1 pro- duced a century ago. A G R I C V LT URAL By our vast and f'ver swelling capacity to produce food. By exporting our technical skills to teactl hungry nations the world nve:r how to feed themselves. BY CHANNELING our talented youngsters I n t o careers as dedicated agricultural scienti9ls. The prospects that we'll come through on all three c:>unts by 2000 are pro- mising according to a two- year study or u . s . agriculture made by the f'ord Motor Co. a n d Michigan State University and just reported in the U.S. l~abor Dep a rtm e nt's E m ploy m en t Service Review. Among the predic· I.ions for the next 30-odd ye·ars. based on the study: I) A single acre of land will produce 300 bushels of wheat each year, more than 10 times today's yield. or 500 hushel!J of corn, vs. today's average 75 bushels : • 51 THE TYPICAL farmer will till h.is 1oll, plant and harvest his crops a n d regulate the growing pro· cess Crom a lounge equipJM!d with computers, radar and remote control devices. This dramatic fu ture ls foretold j,n the present. The U.S. farmer is right now making enormous in· creases in productivity. To· day the average farmer grows enoogh food to feed 40 people, four times t h e number he cou ld feed 30 years ago. Today the 7,(Xl).000 Americans living on farms are producing An econonUc prev iew plus investment suggestions for the second half or 1968. E. r . Hutton's s!udy "19681J,-The Second Si1 Months" discusses major industries and their outlook for the remainder of the year. More than 30 favored industries ar e evaluated and 120 attractive issues recommended. For your copy, just mail lhe coupon . No obligation, of course. I I I I I I I L Name ______________ _ ~ddress--------------- City _____ State ___ Z10 Code, __ _ Telephone'--------------- Business Phone ____________ _ E. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC. AAfMi.tll NEW YORIC &NO P ACIFtC COAST 1TOCIC EXCHANC.:ES '°' NOll"TJ>I ...... ,,.. STllEE T, SillNT.I. "-"·'· IO"~l!tl ?It EA5l tlllOADWit.V, LONG !If.ACM. d?·l'flt ------------------- ANNOUNCEMENT I I I I I I I ..::J The maqnifitflnt, fully ttquippEd rqb8 Continental drivttn p(lr1onally and exclu• 1i11ely by Mr. Clyd11 Joh111on. hat "ow b~11n relfl•sed for public 11le, es perl of . ' Johnsen a11cl Scn '1 •11'lnue l model c101eout Geohe91n. Generel Selet Manager. Direct your inquiry to Bill ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST ESTA8LiSHEO CONTINENTAL DEALER John son Newport 6'42-0981 & Son Costa ....... ... '* .. Mesa II t,t.., .. i:= ... ,... • t M:UT ASSETS OVEll < 142&.000.000.00 MEAD OFFICE 3 15 E••t Coforedo Boulev11rd1 .. ti' P11 .. dflna. Californle 11109 --..-.., ---' ·-•Ml MkM ... INGS • OTHER BR.ANCl'i otr'FICES Wfft ,.rclldl• • Covin• Glendet. I Din 'ti• 1.:111 D•n• Co 2.10 01vcoC• t.60 Dir Pl 1.52 Deert Co 1 DetP.,.ll 1.04 Del Mn~ l.!O Otll1Alr • .acl De"" Ml• .60 DtnnMll Pl I Oen!Sy I.JOI O.nRGr 1.10 O••KO pl II OeSOlolnc .Ill Ot1E<1i1 1.411 Del Ed 1115.Sft Oet Stttl ·'° Oe•ttr .m Ol1Sh1m ! . .00 OlaS 11'1 0 1.:!0 OlamlnTI l.IO Ol1n1Str .XI Ok !lphon •I Oiel>OIO .40tt OIGlortlo .IO OIU!llthm .60 p ;,.,.., .. ,, 50ll 0111\el" .lOtt Oi1IS.19 In 1 OrPe-r .oo OomeMln .IO Oom Fii .1211 oa~erCp 1.» Dowellm 1.•it Dr1voC11 I.XI Oreulncl l.'ll Or•u r 11'11.10 Oreu r n! 111 Orev!u' ,,It OVkt Pw 1.10 Dun11m .i.c D1111l1n 6.1! lluPon! 1.j(lt 111,oPont PU.50 lluPonl pfJ.50 O\l'Ql! 1.6.! Dv<ll• -' 1 °" 1.1111111.10 Ovrno1n11 .1'l! D•n• Am .IG ,,, ..... _.,_ ... .. .......... ' ~rL•• ......... • J j .. ' ' I I I . ---~· -. . . • J 0 DAILY PILOT T "'*1, JulJ 2J, 1968 Yanks End Speculation-Mantle Not for Sale NEW YORK (UPI) -The Yankee• have flnally ended all 1peculaUon about Mickey Mantle. He will nol be on their expansion list 12 weeks from now. He's not going to Seattle or Kansas Clty, the Amer leap League's two expanalon cluba. He ia_I(t going anywhere. He'll be back with the Yankees next year. He'll be back with them as a player even though he'll be YT by then, or he'll be back with them in aome other "official" capacity, which is more likely. No matter what, his name positively woo't be among those the Yankees will make available for the league's 11th and 12th clubs In mid-October. Mike Burke, the think youag, Progressive· mJnded presktent of tbe Yankees, guarantees it. "We'd never let ¥.ickey go to another ball club," 1ay' Burke. one ot those refruhi.ngJy rare lnd.ivlduals whO invariably stlcka to his word once he gives it. "He'll finish his playing career with the Yankees and wbe.n that time com· ea he'll continue to be &D official mem- ber of the family. In one capacity or another. But we certainly aren't going ID oUer him ID any other club. It's unthinkable for Mickey to be aything else but. a Yanku." At this stAge of Is career, Mantle Isn't at all sure about the f u t u r e. Nobody with the Yankees has told him he wouldn't be on the expansJon list, the presumptlcn passibty being that he would know that himself. Before Burke made his statement that tt would be unthiilkable for Mickey to be anything but a Yankee, someone asked Ma.ntle whether he would ever conaldu playit.g for- another ball club. "l don't think so," he said, slowly, tboughUully. 0 1 don't wanna say no outright. I might have to. One of those m1gulne guys ca(ne over the other day and asked me what I'd do if I WJIS put on the expansion list. lie was trying to sound me out." "What did you tell him?" "I told him I hadn 't given It any thought," said Mickey Mantle. "It wu the truth, I I Now that Burke bas made It official, the Yankees last remaining star from their bygone days cf wine aM roses needn't bother his head about ex- pansion lists anymore. But when you're putting in your 18th seaaoo like Mantle is and you're hit· tins .m Uke he la, you still have to bother your bead about the futu.~. "There's a rumor golng around th at you've signed a three·year ccntract wltb CBS to do TV and rad.lo work for them starting next year," someone said to Mickey. "Not true," he said. "Would you like to do that kind of work when you're througb playing?" "lt depends on bow my other stuff goes," he l.'lld. Tbe other stuff includes a substan- tial financial interest In an Insurance compay plus his most recent venture, the franchising of a restaurant chain known as M*1:Ue's C.OU.Otry Kitchen. Up to now, Mantle hun't done a1 well aa J, Paul Getty or Howard llugbes in financial investmeots. Tb• pa.lnfUl truth Js be hasn't come close. And then-there's the immediacy of bis daily Job, playing llrst bale for tho Yankees. Mickey said not Jong ago he wouldn't play a.aymore next year U the last bllf of this season turns out as paorl y for him as the first halt. But ManUe lcves the game and it's going to be hard for him to qult. The Yankees have fixed thing, so he reilly doesn't bave to. Med wick, Goslin,. Cuyler • Ill 'Hall~ Angels Say A 'Prayer.' For Rookie COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) - Med.wick, Goslin and CUyler -three' more names that st.and for baseball greatness. Joe "Ducky" Medwick, L e on ''Goose" G<>slin and the widow of the late Hazen "Kild" CUyler were present Monday for formal i n d u c t i o n ceremonies at baseball's Hall oI Fame. "It's been a long time coming," said Medwick. "But I'm very proud. My life is now complete." The 6&-year-old Goslin, overeome by emotion, said: '1I have been lucky. I want to thank WINTER OLYMPICS SOMEWHAT IN RED GRENOBLE, France (AP) Income from admissions and sale of television rights covered only about 20 per cent oI the cost of staging the \Vinter Olympic Games in Grenoble in February, a final report indicated Monday. Or ganiz ational expenses were set at $23,521,000. Spectators paid $1,231,400 for entry to the events in 1968 and pre· Olympic competitions in 1967. Sale of television rights and other advertising income produced an a d d i ti o n a 1 $2,400,000. The French government made up the difference with a s u b s id y $17 ,310,000. Dodgers' Slump Stirs Archives Of Better Days LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers are in their worst slump in at least two decades. But Manager Walter Alston remains as calm in the face of disaster as be was during those glorious years when he led the Dodgers to pennants in 1956, 1959, 1963, 1965 and 1966. Two years ago, the Dodgers won a pennant and finished 23 games ahead of eighth-place Houston. Today, the Dodgers are in ninth place, only 1 'h: games ahead of the last-place Astros. "We'll snap out of it," Alston said Monday night after Houston right-ban- Dodger Slate Jul~ 7J Dodlll!'"I VI HOl.lllon 7:55 p.m.KFI (6.0) July 2• Oodptrs n Hou1ron 1:55 p.m. ICFI (Mell J u IV 26 Dod~r1 ., Cnlc•IO II ;25 1.m. KFI {MCll der Dave Giusti handed the Dodgers a 4-0 defeat, th eir 18th loss in 21 games. Giusti pitched a seven-hitter and was helped out as two Los Angeles baserunners were caught in rundowns between third and home. "Kekich pitched well enough to win," said Alston, "and Haller con· tinues to h.it the ball." He was talking about left-hander Mike Keki.ch, who allowed the first two H-0uston runs, and Tom Haller, the catcher who slam.med three hits and raised his season ave.rage to .314. Kekich, 1-4, was trailing by only 1~ when he was li!ted alter walking Doug Rader to open the sixth inning. The Astros went on to ambush reliever Jim "Mudcat" Grant for three runs in the sixth and seventh innings. The victory was Houston's fifth in nine meetings with the Dodgers this year and put the Ast:ros in position to wrest ninth-place from Los Angeles tonight when they send lelt-hander Mike CUellar, 5-4:, against the Dodgers' Claude Osteen, 7·14, in the scood game of the tbree·-game set. Fana at the game will get an added treat -if watching the Dodgers now can be called a treat. Los Angeles will hold a pre.game birthday party for Don Drysdale, who will turn 32, and will hand out photos commemorating Ille big right-bander'• 58-illniDg streak ol sbutout hurling. MOUITOlf LOI AHOILll ......... .., ..... ·--T-• $!1Ub,, lb WYfll'I, cl """"'-•· 7b 11...-. JI> WI"°"' If er~. c Giusti. ~ S I I 1 W.0 1vla. cf .. I I S I I I 0.bfll'-, It .. • I ·f l)Ott.lltl'.C .. JO ... l1L~.2b ' ,. a•1IF1lrh'.lb •I I .. 1 t I II.Bil'", • • I t "'tttF1l,...,,rf J 1 t "'110\t1r1111t't.M) Of •tl tlt"tllldl.IJ I tt Ortnt. 1 t t t CNWford. ~ I t t l lllf!'llMlllt • • • • T9'111 a 4 12 t T•ll I: 1 0 MOVttoft .................. oae "' -• .... ...,.,... ................. -oot -• Df' -Heiut!M t. Lm Allfl!._ I. LOa -~ ton II, Los ..._ .... 21 •·• Mio!* .. ........,..,.., Sim,_. '8 -Sl/nlllOll, Rldlf', •rll!IL lt1UO. l -W~nn. 11 If II: •II: •• SO OMlt (W.4-lt) t• 1 0 0 I t Kdlld'I (l,1 ... 1 J 1 2 1 20 • Gr111t )JI' 2 lllllftoNrft 1 1 • • • • Tlnlf -1:W.. AtteMllU -11.141. God, who gave me the health and strength to compete with these great players. l will never forg~t this. 1 will take th.is to my grave." Mrs. Cuyler, whose hw:band died in 1950, said, "I know my husband would be. very proud today. Baseball was his life and it was a good life." Commissioner William D. Eckert presided at the ceremonies which preceded the annual game in which Detroit trounced Pittsburgh 10.1. Medwick, 56, was voted into the Hall last January by the Baseball Writers Association of America. It wu the final time be would have beeo eligible before moving into the jurisdiction of the 12-man veterans committee. Cuyler and Goslin were named by the Vete»ans group. Medwick played with St. Louis, Brooklyn .and New York of the Na· tional League !rom 1932 to 1948. He compiled a .324 lifetime average and won the TrJple Crown with St. Louis in 1937. Cuyler hit .321 and stole 328 b.ases while playing with Pittsburgh, Chicago, Cincinnati and Brooklyn from 1921 through 1938. Four times be led the National Leagu, in stolen bases. It's a Family Affair G06lin hit .316 with Washington, Detroit and St. Louis of the American League from 1921 to 1938. His hitting played key 1oles i'n Washington"s only three pennants. A NaUonaJ Baseball Library also was dedicated . In the game, Dem Wert's lhree·run homer off Jim Bunning, highlighted a four.run first inning far Detroit. Ray Oyler and Mickey Stanley also homered for the Tigers. Pittsburgh's' only run came in the fifth on an error and Doon Clendenoo's aina:le. Ul'IT ...... Johnny Edwards, St. Louis Cardinal catcher, out- fits his son with his catching gear prior to a father· sons game in St. Louis Monday night. Much to the elder Edwards' chagrin, six·year·old David went hitless in the fray, but gained revenge as the young. er set won the game. GLENN WHITE Sports Editor Denise Carter Jolts Aussie In Net Play HAVERFORD, Pa. (AP) -Denise Carter couldn't help become a tennis player. Her mother played, her father played and ber twin sisters played . At the Carter home in Los Altos , Calif., ttiey hung tennis balls on the Christmas tree. This family didn't play just for fun. Each member was a competitive star of sorts. Mom and dad once competed at Wimbledon. The twins ranked high in Northern California tennis circles before they got married. So what could be more natural than ttie youngest of the tennis-playing Carters coming up with the big upset on the opening day of the 69th annual Pennsylvania· Lawn Tennis Cham- pionships. Miss Carter, a 17-year·Old blonde with a big smile, Monday. ousted top- &eeded Karen Krantzcke, Australia's filth -ranked woman player and 1966 winner of this tournament. Miss Carter's 7-5, 6.0 triumph over the Aussie's formidable forehand drives really shook the sprinkling of fans in "the stands at the Merion Cricket Club. The men's competition went as ex· pected by the five seeded stars who played first-round matches. Second· &eeded Charlie Pasarell of Santurce, Puerto Rico, the No. 1-ranked U.S. star, defeated B.P, Stephenson of England's combined Oxford • Cam- bridge team 6-1, 6--0. Arthur Ashe o! Richmcnd, Va., the No. 2-rated American and third-seed- ed, disposed of Oxford-Cambridge 's A.H. Billington 6·2, 6-1. Marty Reissen of Evanston, Ill., fourth seeded, won 6- 4, 6·2 over l.L. Hewitt, another Oxford· Cambridge player. Premjlt Lall of lndJa, seventh-seed- ed, defeated Paul Crani1 cf New York City 6-4, 6-3, and eighth-seeded. Stan Smith of Pasadena, Calif., runner-up last week in the National Clay Court Championships, elimfuated Dan Bleck· Inger of Oshkosh, Wis., 6-1 , 6-1, Among the ether distaff players, second-seeded Vicky Rogers of Rye, N.Y., eighth-ranked American woman , advanced with a 6-3, 6-0 victory over Mimi Kanarek of New York City. Pugilist Corner MINNEAPOLIS.ST. PAUL (AP) - Tony Ollva's big bat and an 4!11Tatlc Califcrnia bullpen nearly robbed young Andy Messersmith cf bis first major league victory Monday night The 2"2-year-old roolde~right·hander hurled 3 113 perlect Innings ol rellel In the Angels' &-5 victory over the Min· nesota ·Twins. It was his eighth relief appearance since being called up from the minors a mMtb ago. He shut off a two-run Twins1 rally in the fourth innillg, retiring 10 straight batters before be left for a pinch..Jlltter in the eighth. The Angels led &-2 when Messersmith went out. ''I thought we had an easy one," he said. "l jU1t a:ot tired." Minnesota cuffed three California pitchers for three runs in the bottom of the eighth and had the bases loaded when Bobby Locke finally retired Cesar Tovar on a fly to end the inning, Southpaw Tom Burgemeier, the sixth California pitcher, retired tha Antrel Slate Juty 2J .l.119111 11 Mln-11 l :S5 1.m. lt"Ml"C mol Jul~ ,, """'' •• MllllMSOll l·U P.m. KMPC (1101 .IUIY 21 AnlleLI VI Cl'llCllO 1;$5 p.m. KMPC 1110) first two Twins' batters in the ninth. Then Ol1va pcwered a drive to left along the fcul line. Angels' Manager Bill Rigney .. thought it was a home run when it was hit. But 1 saw Vt'llere it hit -it wasn't." The ball missed clearing the fence by a few feet and Oliva pulled up at third with a triple . The tying run was stranded when Rod Carew grounded out on a close play to end the game. "His arm got a little tired, he had just pitched Sunday," Rigney said of his decision to yank his rookie. "He also had to make those two bard throws on infield outs. I thought our bullpen could hold them. It almost got away from us." Oliva also thought he had home run No. 17. "When I hit the ball I'm sure it got out if it was fair. I hit the second one better Utan the first." He produced the Twins' first run in the fourth with a 350-foot line drive which barely carried into the le!t field seats. "I didn 't think it cculd possibly stay in the park," said Minnesota Manager Cal Ermer. "Evidently it did. I was hoping it would stay fair because I was sure it would go out." CALIFOllNIA MIHMISOTA. ,;,,111111 11i r ll,.. 01 ... 111110, cf J o o o Ta.1r, u s o o o FrllOlll, 11 J I 2 0 A-, lb 5 l I 0 Rltltlllrdt, II $ 0 O O Ulll111dtr, cf $ I 1 O Morion, rf I I I 0 Ollv1, rl S I I I C1u11y,lll lOODC1r1w,2b Jll l BurtrM1tr, p 0 0 O O Ol.ollld, lb • O O o Mlnc:MI'", lb ' 2 D D Atll>Oll, If l l 2 0 Hinton, 2b 1 I 1 O A0110o10, c 2 D I I ACPOl,rf 301 011.Cllrlc,pr 0000 A.Aodrlt!Ml, 3b • I l 3 Zlmm.rmen1 c O O O O McF1r11..., c ~ o 2 1 AoLlnd, p 1 o o o Plltln. 1 I D 0 0 11.MILlw. 1 1 t I I MHM.....,111'1,PllOOHOl!,pti 1000 Wr1 ... f, I'll I O O O P1rr1nosJo;I, p O O 0 O ROI••·· O OOO Aomru,pll 0001 Elll1, p 0 0 D 0 D,Clll l'ICt, II 0 0 t t Lodi•, p 0 ' 0 0 K"'°'. :lb o o 0 o l ot111 31 6 10 S l ollls '1 I t t C1llfON1l1 •....•••..•...•• en ooo ooo -' Mlt'lllllOll , .•. , •• . . .• . . . . . 000 200 030 -S &.. -Mlndwf, Al!lsoro, C:1,._. LOS -C.lf. lof11lll •• MIMllClll '· n -A. ROclrltU.l. 39 -OllVI. HA -Ollvl (16). S8 -llffllh lleioar,. 5 - P1111n. "•"'" M•SHrtfftllll " " ,.,,, . Jtait••so 2 2 t • (W,1..(11 ,_,,, t I 0 0 2 Rol H 01 21 00 E!111 2/211121 Lorte lflOf OOO l!U'l\lnllrr 110001 lllol1nd IL,2·1J 2·1/3 5 6 I I t 8Mllltr +J/2 • 0 0 I I Perrelllltltl I I O 0 t I O.Chlra 1 1 0 001 TOKYO -HlfOll'll Kobl~ltlll, 132, J,,,n, -l'IOCll.14 ~ Miii' -ltolln4 IMl"Cl\lf), WP -111111 ..... ~t OU! Ut!JHI loltro. I»~ ColDn'llll•· '· 11(>1111111. --ROMllafO, Timi -J:U. .-.ntncl•~ -IQ,11 .. Flutt.erballer Will Be 45 Friday--Eyes 2 More Years Wilhelm Hurls • Ill MILWAUKEE , I Wis. (AP) Ageless Hoyt Wilhelm, the Ch.lcago White SOx' flUtterbaU artist, Ued the major league reccrd ror pltcblng ap. pearances Monday night when he worked the ninth inning against the Oakland Alllletics. The A's Reggie Jack.son, who was born fotr yeor1 after Wilhelm lllarl<d pltctilng minor league ball In 1942, spol..led it by slamming Wllbelm's se- cond pitch deep In Ille right field bleachers 11 Oak.land won 4.(l. Wilhelm, who wt1l be 45 Friday, allow· ed ooe more •lnsla belon retirlo& tho last three Athletics, two on pop-ups. "I don't have to thrOYr' as hard as other guys do," said Wilhelm , who has now pitched In 906 gam.,, lying Cy Youn g'• mark which has stood slnce 19ll. "A guy who throws a slider or a curv• twlsta his arm. The knuckleball is a atra.l&bt arm ind wrist motion. 1bere ls no twist or atraln," he 1ald. "l think I might have 1 chance tit tt,0 Wilhelm said, when asktd lf be thought he might make 1,000 ap. pearance~ "lf I could pitch anothtr two years I mleht make It. 1 don't see 906th Game, Ties Record why I cB11 't pitch another couple ot years.'' Wilhelm,. who has pitched for five teams In hls 16-year major league caree.r, pitched 10 years In the minors before bclng called up by the New York Giants In 1952. "I've alwa)'1 been a knuckleball pitch.er, even 1n high 1cbool," be 11Jd. "It's a pitch I don't thlnlc Jul! anybody can master. I'm not sure I've mastered lt yet." The Sox' new manager, Al Lopez, W alnce taklne over from Edd.Je Stanky, 11id c1tcher1 D'*9 JOHpboon and • Gerry McNertney "do a great Job" bandlin& Wilhelm's 1allin& deliveries. "The big mitt has really helped catching," ht said. "We Just ran into a good pitcher tonight," Lopez sald, turning hls at· tonUon ID the (lllle and ID Oakland'• Jim "Catfiah" Hunt.er. "Hunter looked real g:ood out there." Lopei saJd b11 team seemed to Hpltl.y better, with more enthusiasm," in Milwaukee, where 34,526 !ans showed up, lncludlJtf 30,Sla paid attendance, 'lbt turnout l>rou&ht to lll0,150 tht DUDlber wllo bave walched liJI Sos games In Milwaukee County Stadium this year. The Sox, 5-1 in Milwaukee, play three more games there. "That's a real good mound to pitch off of," said Hunter, now a.a ... It bas just Ille ri &bl drop to It." Hunter yield- ed only 1lil bill. Ja<Uon's shot ofl Wilhelm wu hla 1711l round-trlppor of tho HalOD. Rt had 1truck out three Um11 brlnl!nc hi.I season total to 100. The A's went allead to slay in the s. cond lnnlng oa a two-run homer b1 Dave Duncan, bl1 fourth. The blat came. oU starter Jack F'llher, +a. • I I ! I i I \ •• ' . ... _ , I Tuesday's Closing Prices -'Complete =- ' . • DAILY "LDT 9 New York Stock Exchange List I I' I L \. 11 Ii 1. /\ I • . ' ... - JllAN cox --,.....,. ""' Jlr ,... La .. 11 Artists In Harmony Crayons Ready Artists, be th_ey of the pop art, abstract, traditional or Impression!., tic school of thought, create in perfect harmony within the peaceful con- fines of one booth at the Festival of Arts grounds. However, despite their difierences, these artists have one character- istic in conunon -fresh, unspoiled talent. Of course, this is not too surprising since these artists are all children. They are participating in the Children's Free for All which is open to youngsters of all ages who want to express their artistic .telves. The drawing and coloring class with pastels takes place from 2 to 4 p .m. Monday through Friday, and the children are allowed lo hang lhek masterpieces on the wall or carry them home. . Originated by Miss Virginia Wooley 32 years ago, the class has prov .. en to be one of the most successful endeavors on the grounds, and while Miss Wooley is now in her 80s, she is still its sponsor. Helping her are Laguna Beach Junior Woman's Club members who staff the five day a week event and help direct the children in their efforts. l i • • l • -• .. 1 • I ALL SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT -Mrs. Ronald Dugan, a member of the Laguna Beach Junior Woman's Club encourages young artists (bottom to top) Lisa Dugan, Greg Dugan and Eddy Tucker who are participating in the Children's Free for All on the Festival of Arts grounds. Children of all ages are invited to participate from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday. All children are invited to put on smocks and try their hand at the ea!iel during the duration of the festiv.al while their parents wander off to enjoy other exhibits or stop and watch their children at work. Persons interested in donating some ftme to help with the project are asked to call Mrs. James Cowan, 494-2438. Laguna Maps Luau Opera's Future Spurs Venture A luau on the .beach al Monarch Bay Aug. 24 will help continue the production of opera in Laguna Beach. The event is being sponsored by the Laguna Beach Opera League to raise proceeds which will be used to retire past deficits of the Lyric Opera Association of Orange County, explained Mrs. Theodore E. Beane, league Publicity chairman. The annual luau and dinner dance will begin with cocktails at 6:30 p.m., and a committee, headed by Mrs. H. Donald Outmans, is making plans to assure a successful evening of food, entertainment and danc- ing. Mrs. Tristan E. Krogius, dinner and liaison chair· man, announced the Monarch Bay Club will provide an authentic and traditional island far.e for the occasion. A special attraction at this year's luau will be en· tertainment arranged by Mrs. Anthony Orlandella with the assistance of Mrs. Earl Woodard, Island dancers, Dick Kaianoano and the South Sea Rhythms will pre- sent native dances and music. Mrs. Robert E . Lawson, decorations chairman, said guests will be seated at low tables on the sand on luau mats. Aloha lights and Tonga torches lighting the beach along with a glow from a huge fire pit will add to the tropical atJnosphere. Invitations chairman Mrs. Stanley Eichstaedt and Mrs. Jack M. Lyons have sent invitations for the event so reservations may be placed with chairman Mrs. William Hinwood early. Telephone reservations may be obtained by calling Mrs. Harrell A. Vineyard, 499- 1693 or Mrs. George H. K. Bryant, 49S-5178. Additional committee members are the Mmes. Jarries Coen, secretary; Bryant, treasurer and John Bermel, door prizes. OBJECTIVE SIGfiTED -Opera League members (left to right) the Mmes. Jack M. Lyons, Theodore E. Beane, George H. K. Bryant and Dewayne Hurst are sailing toward the Monarch Bay Beach where they will stage their annual luau Aug. 24. The event will help raise proceeds to retire a i;>ast deficit of the Lyric Opera of Orange County so it may continue to bring opera to Laguna. Show Baby-sitter the Door If She Continues to Snore DEAR ANN: ldon'tneedadvice. l'd like to give some. Please tell your readers that no woman knowa for sure who her real friends are until she has amouoced she ii getting a divorce. Hene Ml what happened to me. My husband and I were having trou· ble. I sought OCJWlllOling (Jim would not go). After a white ~gs seemed utterly hopeless so I filed for a divorce. The moment the word was out -Jim and I ,..... 11>litting up, I was Oooded with phone calls from peo- ple. Nelghbon and acquaintances and even relatives offered to buy my bet· ter pieces of furniture (at low prices) "to he1p you out." Two of my closest tr!endo applJed for my job because 1h17 were IW'e I wouldn't wW to re· \ ANN LANDERS main in the city. A half dozen men (friends of Jim's) gallanUy offered to provide the sex that would be missing from my life. ,(They'd have been shocked to know bow little tilere was to miss.) rt '° happens that after' I filed, Jim agreed to go for counseling and now we are getting along much better. It appears now that there will be no divorce, but it was worth the trouble to learn who my real friends are. Please tell Y<XU" read.era they never , know what people are like until they run into marital trouble. -WISER NOW DEAR WISER: You told tbem - and la a w1y J aever could hive. Tbllllk1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our boby· sitter ii a nice girl, 15 years of age. Whenever we come home, even jf It's as early as 10 p. m., &he Ml sound asleep and we .have to abake her five miDute5 to wake her up, Th1I worries me. I w<lllder what would happen if one of the cbildre~ became ill and needed attention. I warry, too, about tbe poeribility of fin!, an intruder, or heaven knows what. When Illa! girl f&llt -.p tile children are as good u alone. What are your views oc this subject, Ann Landers? I have never seen this problem discussed in your column.- MOTHER OF THREE DEAR MOTHER: A allier who 1leepa lib It de1d eleplwll II of ao' valae to you -or for tbat matt.er t.o uyone elle. A flrl wbo eauot be awakened by a telephone, a doorbell or a chlld'1 call 1bolld aot fall uleep. Aller Ill, 1be II beln1 paid to lite core ol lbe eblldrt1 wllde Ibo panlll are absent aod U abe koab oat 1be ll aot dolnf ber job. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enjoyed your rtralght-from-t.he-aboulder reply to tbe man who cunplained because American womeo want tbe aame privileges that men get, such u smok· ing cigarettes on the a4?eet, •itt.int: on bor ltoola, lapping up the booze, driY. Ing cabo and lnlclul, working In fac- tories and becoming lawyer1, doctors and engineer&. Yet 111ey expect men to get up on tho bua and givt them lhelr ...... During tho last war, Germany had the 1ame problem and they eolved it very 11mply. TM.y removed alt the .-In the bulel and provided the -rill calllnc.....,. !netead. Tbll made everybody equal. -lll:llf. DEUTSCHLAND DEAR BEU.: Eq1laJ lo wulT CONFIDENTIAL TO NEEDLES AND PINS: Patieoce Is tho a-t ~ doing 1omelhlng else ID the mftDtime.'. Learn 1XI wlit He'll be bock. i Drlnklni .. , be ,; .. ,, .... - JOI RI wl~ -ht It eu ,. ~ "olll" for keeps. Y" cu nol I& M14. day -Ir. RHd "-1111 Y• ~ For fffaacen Oab"." Se .. • em.:~ cola bd a ltlf, ..Uadtr ...... stamped e•Ye)ope 1JD yHr reqlltlt. , Au Lladen wlll be Clld •Ille!; yn wilb 10ur prolllem. SttMI lboa • lier la cue of the DAILY PILOT eoclfflnl I 1elf...i-.e4, ""•II. envelope. ' r I ~ ' ! I I ' ' J4 DAILY PILOT Tuesd1y, July 23, 1968 : 'X' Marks the Good Eating Spots , Following the menu trail will lead Young Sophistic- ' ates Women's Club members and their husbands to · "caches" of good Italian food -salad at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Marskell, Long Beach, lasagne and fine red wine at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Conrad, cypress, and apples and cheese at the -last stop, the home of Mr. and Mrs. William John- Fresh, Pretty A Woman's Art • "w:_-··-~ .. son of Huntington Beach. The couples will· begin the adventure at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Sampling 'the wares a bit ahead of time are (left to right), Mrs. Bruce Mason, John Morrison and bis wife, who is chairman for the event, to be concluded by a party in the home of the Johnsons. • .• Horoscope Cancer: Money Position Due WEDNESDAY JULY 24 sense of shOY1manship. Take baClt aeat to no one. Get up front. By SIDNEY OMARR VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): "The wise man controls Secluaion may be necessary. his destiny , .• Aatrology Take time to g at h e·r points the way." thoughts and review situa- ARIES (March 21.Aprll tion. Avoid crowds. Get af- 19): Tonight there is greater fairs in arder. Being alone is chance for creative en-not the ~ame ~s being lone· deavors. Fine evening for ly. ~ealize this -act ac- dinlng out, attending theater -cordingly • or special lecture. Be with LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): loved one Expreas views Accent tonight on wishes, feelings ' ' friends. There is more solid TAURUS (April 20-May lndicaUon ol dlrectioo In 20): Conditions due to setUe. which you are going. Accent Recent flWT)' of activity left the pr~~.c~. Assum~ add~ you in state of fatigue. Now res~ns1bili~~. Reward wdl you begin to recuperate. Ac-be f rthco mg. cent tonight on home affaits, SCORPIO (Oct. .23-Nov. domestic situatioo. 21): ~ead influence; ex. GEMINI (May 21.June press views. TonJ~t, back· 20): Break from routine 1n_g could be received from strongly indicated. y 0 u one i~ au~oritative position. move about, relay and Obtain hint f~om LIBRA receive messages. Get ideas message: Utilli.e lessons down on paper. Be .elective~ le acned lD. recent past. Choose the boot. Call from SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22· relative featured tonight Dec. 21): Some of your CANCER (June 21.July detir<s could be fuUllled , 22): Money position due to but be ready to accept ad- improve. Your earning ded pressure, responsibility. capacity 11 highlighted. Key is t.o know what it is Message received today you really need.Then you at- could result in ultimate pro-tract favorable conditions. ffl ll<!alize this -respond CAPRICORN (De<. 22· accordingly. Jan. 19): Relief indicated LEO . (July 2.'1-Aug. 22): from opposition you have What wu aecret could be been receiving from mate, revealed tooi.gbt. Cy c 1 e partner. Now you can seWe moves up. Circumstancea practical issues, such u u:- tend to favor your efforts. penditures. Be receptive. Be CUlfldent. Display innate Listen Bl1d obse<Ve. Weddings, Troths AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Reach out for greater WKterstanding. M i n g 1 e socially, but do more listen- ing than asserting. Be nex- ible. Creative t h l n k i n g demands willingness t o change views. Ponder this. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Get sufficient rest. Fjnish tasks. C o m p l e t e period of adjustment to new situation . .Make your peace with children, loved ones. Highlight sincerity. IF TODAY .. IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are about to start new en- terprize which can brighten your prospects, socially and , professionally. GENERAL TEN· DENCIES : Cytle high for LEQ •. Spec~ w o r d to Aquarius: one who used to oppose you makes friendly gesture -accept. To !lrd out """o'• ludi:v for vou In = 1rod llMI, order S'f(lntV Omo•T't 1 "S1u1t Hint• lo• Men 1nd om 11." Stnd blrtl'ldal• 1rod 50 c111._ to Omerr A1troloovf.1rel11. lh!' DAILY PILOT, llox )'?Ml. ••NI <.tn ral st .. tlcn, N-York, N •• 10Gl7. Harbor TOPS Harper School In Costa Mesa is the scene where members of TOPS Harbor Llghters gather each Mon· day evening at 7:30. Dardens Make Home • A f t e rnoon ceremonies perfonned.by tile Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield linked Nancy Jo Carter and Walter Lee Darden in marriage. The bride, daughter ol Mr. Tustin and Mfs. Charles W. Carter of Costa Mesa, chose a simple white empire gown fashioned of textured cotton and carrying a long train. Her veil of white hand ·em. broidered organza made by her grandrilother, Mrs. ' Elinor Carter, was gathered to a cluster ot' daisies. She carried white orchids. Home Skills Preserved Pilot's Deadlines ··Mrs. Benjamin Karcher, the bride's sister, was matron of honor, we;µ-ing lime green. Bridesmaids Miss Candy Cain and Mrs. G. David Anderson wore lemon yellow ribbed cottoa aDd ,hair bows with daisies, and dressed similarly was flower girl Miss Shelley Jayne Hayes, the bride's niece. sew. : Flower power is Sum- mer's theme! Embroider daisies, butterflies on scalloped akimmer. Pat. 7090: printed pattern, NEW Misses' SiZes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34). Stale 1lu. FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for , first-class mailing a n d special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Books % the DAILY , PILOT, I 0 5 Needl<craft · Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, Pattern Number. Book of 16 Jiffy Raga - complete patterns -inex- pensive, easy to make. 50 cents Book No. 1 -Deluxe Quilts -16 complete pat· terns. Send 50 cents Betrothal Revealed By Camps Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Camp of Newport Beach an· nounce the engagement of ·their daughter, Debor ab camp to John Woods, son of Albert Wood.I of Tacoma, ·Wash. Both f.amlllea are GriglnollJ from D e t r o I t , '· Mich. The engaged couple ·-..., Orange Coast Col· lip ml U:CLA. The weddlag wlD take place al Our Ledy ol Mt C&nnel Olturch, Newport Buch OD NOY. 18. The cOU- @ll will spend I year In llennalU' belart making their home in the Harbor Area. , " Taieoted Harbor A r e a homemakel'6 are bringing home ribboru; from the Orange County Fair and Ex- positioo. WiMers have been announced by Mrs. Robert Cox and Mrs. Paul Bernhart, supervisor and assistant supervisor. They are: Mrs. Eleanor Young, Costa ?r.esa, a first and eecond in white breads and other breads; Mrs. Vlrgbia Mynatt, Hunting1oo Beach, second in while breads; Merlyn McKinn, Costa Mesa, two thirds in nutbread and coffee cake; Mrs. Robert Goff, ·costa Mesa, first, second, third in cinnamon rolls, o t h e r cookies, other jellies; W.on- na Fisher, Q>rona del Mar, three seconds, coffee cake, other jellies, relishes and chutneys. other winners included: Barbara Sales, Corona del Best man Jerry Kawlic Mar, three firsts, a n y To avoid disappointment, prospective ·00 b •· bl'scw't, -•1·1d's cotton dress, rid . ed th . eddi was accomparu y usu~rs .... .,, b es are remind to have etr w ng Jack H tt Jim C adult aprons; Jo an n e stories with black and white glossv photo-. D ·d uM er, and areJ y, Tatum, Costa Mesa, first, J avt orris a Y grap[)s to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart· Makemson. chocolate frosted I a Y e r ment prior to or within one week after the ¥'14 A cake; Marilyn p h i 11 i p s , pproximately 2 5 0 at- Costa Mesa, three firsts, wedding. tended the reception follOYl- three seconds, two thirds, For engagement announcements it is ing in the Costa Mesa Golf any pastry, chocolate fudge, suggested that the story, also accompanied and Country Club. wool dress, adult aprons, by a black and white glossy pi c tu re, be The couple are residing in strawberry preserves, other submitted early. If the betrothal announce-Tustin after a wedding trip preserves, chOCillate layer ment and wedding date are six weeks or less through Carmel, San Fran .. cake and peanut butter apart, only the wedding photo will be ac-ciscoo and Lake Tahoe. cookies. cepted. The bridegroom is the Meryln McKim, Cost a To help fill requirements on both wed-stepson and son of Mr. and d. d · t f Mrs. Thomas W. Franklin of Dining Industry Not Starving for Patrons ~~~ ;:;:1t :;1! =~Y a~~~ ~~ ~g~e~h: D~Y· ~fLQTar~ffic~: • Costa Mesa. Both he and bis dre ss; Zeno v 1 a Further questions will be answered by Social i' '4 bride are graduates of Costa Wryesniewski, Corona del Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. MRS. WALTER DARDEN Mesa High School and have Mar, second, dark trwr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~==~a~tte~nd~e~d=Or=a=n~ge=c=o=a=•:t Double Ring Rites College cake; Janice ~rge, Costa · Mesa, first, bar cookies; ~ Scbreiber, Huntington Beach, first, chocolate chip SAN PRANCISCO (UPI) -Anyone can fry an egg. The trick is to sell it at a jrOllt. This it: the crux of the food service industry, whose sales to those who "eat away from home" is BIG busln .... To find the income to be made from the f o o d services, the Bank o f America did a two year research project which runs to 16,000 w o r d s and 34 pages .including the charts a!1d graphs. The survey fmds the food service industry totals $21 billion at retail annually. Separate eating and drink- ing places now rank as 'lbe number one type of. retail outlet in the nation. "They outnumber grocery stores, theyou tn umber service stations,"· the survey s a i d . "American families now !Spend $400 to $500 annually. In fact, we now spend more to 'eat out' than we do to buy new and used automobiles." That means that there is a "lemming-like" impulse for t.nyone who can fry an egg to put his hand under this golden flow. The industry remains mostly s m a 11 businesses -independents DEBORAH CAMP Envagod operating a single ouUet. drop cookies; Judith Can, Eating out means buying Huntington Beach, second, one of the few remaining chocolate chip drop cookies; custom pr o d u c e d com-Jan Cohen, Newport Beach, modities still available at two seconds, chocolate drop mass produced prices. How cookies and other drop do they do it? cookies; Paul Ditzenberger, "The harsh fact is that La.gum Niguel, second, many don't," the survey third, other Ii'ving room said. 11Recent figures com-fwnishings, other cookies; piled by Dun & Bradstreet Mrs. David P e a r I m a n , 5how that over half of the Irvine, first and seeond, any restaurants in the United otller pie, other adult wear· States show no taxable pro-ing apparel. fit." Others are Kathy Stoldt, The illusion that anybody Laguna Hills, two· thirds, can fry an egg, coupled with any other pie, other adult knowing what raw food apparel; Hazel Courreges, costs in the supermarket, Fountain Valley, second in makes food service 6eem other jams; Debra Stuebi, like an easy, highly pro-Costa Mesa, second in other fit.able business to t h e pickles and r e 1 i sh e s ; uninitiated. R01Semary Cri'safulli, Costa That's the thumb in the Mesa, second in child's cot· soop bowl. ton dress ; Hortense "Each year, eating and Tulleners, Mission Viejo, se· drinking places account for cond in tailOf'ed suits; Kay around 20 percent ot all Small, Capistrano, first in retail failures,'' the survey other adult wearing ap- said. "Most failures occur in pare!; Mrs. Mary Ellen the second year of business Varva, Coot.a Mesa, first in and incur an average of pillows. almost '50,000 liabilities." Mrs. Miirgaret •laizlip, To s u r vi v e requires a Huntington Beach, f i' rs t, dedication that relatively dolls: Rebecca Cartman, few men and women are Costa Mesa, first in rugs; able to sustain for the long Marilynne Broderick, Hun· pull. An indication of this is tington Beach, second in that only hall of all food rugs: Clyde Cannon, Costa service operations maintain Mesa, third in rugs : Carolyn the same ownership for five Cannon, Costa Mesa, three years or more. first!, four seronds in knit· The tlick of making a pro· ted man's pullover, French fit is more than most angora sweater, knitted persons guess. It requires sheath dress, man' s attention to deta11 sweater, woman's s~ater, organizing a business that -woman's dress, pi 11 o w s : is actually a manufacturing Elizabeth Barkmeyer, Hun· plant; to people _ manag-tington Beach, two firsts, a ing a service business with second, a thll'd in carriage due respect to the servers lap robes, man's pullover, and the served, and, JasUy infant s we ate r set, to profit -the most im· Christmas stockings. portant of all. Mrs. Harry Dady, Costa The small restaurant or Mesa, .first in any other rug; lunch counter or hamburger Yvonne Cox , Huntington stand operator has more to Beach, second and third in fear in the future, the dre5'y dresses and other survey warned. child's apparel; Joyce "There has been :a Beauregard, N e w p or t noticeable growth in the Beach, second in cotton number of 1 a r g e cor· ~es: Marlajean Cook of por.ations in th e food service Westminster, first, second, industry," the survey satd. third in dressy dresses, wool "Chains or 11 or more units dresses, and w o m e n ' s account for less than 3 per-_bl_ous. __ •·-------t cent of total outlet.a : nearly 9 percent of the sales. The.\t percentages can be ex- pected to increaH ln the yeara lhead." Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' ' Now Buffums' can give your hair a conditioning treatment personalized for you by Clairol's Hair-Care Computer 1.00 reg. 2.00 Two weeks only! 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Fri. 10:00 till 9:30 O!ter days 10:00 tlll 5:30 I ~-------- 1, I I I I 1, f Newp0r·t Barbor Today's aos1111 rDAILY PILOT _ ·VOL. 61, NO. 176, 3 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES RICHARD NIXON'S SECRET SERVICE GUARDS? Casually Dressed Trio Stick Clos• 'to Corona del Mir Home Shh! He~s Here ,. Secret Service Thinks So, Anyway Former Vice President ftichard M. Nixon reportedly remained in seclusion somewhere along the Orange Coast today as the press played peek a boo with Secret Service agents in trying to track him down. In ttie absence of confirmed in- fCJI1llation, rUIJlQr mills h.ave happily $prung into action to p~ace ~e presidential contender variously 1n Laguna Beach, and in the exclUBive c,meo Shores section of Corona del Mar in Newport Beac.h. One DAILY PILOT source, a neig:hOOr of Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke 4633 Brighton Road, Corona del M~r, said mysterioos men. acting like Secret Service agents continue to float in and out or the Clark residence. The neighbor said it was thought that the Clarkes turned their residence over to Nixon while the judge and his wife occupied a home in Los Angeles. Nixon reportedly was r e s t i n g , writing an acceptance speecl\ for the }Jresidential nomination he expects to win in Miami in August, and nursing a hand which he bruised while shaking hands with admirers Sunday at the Century Plaza Hotel in Los An,geles. , The former vice president will spend the remainder of tile week resting. He will make no public appearances dur· ing 1lhis time, a spokesman said; 'Phe Republican hopefu1's·daughters proved to be veteran campaigners as they shook each hand extended to them and gave a personal greeting to each visitor Sunday in Los Angeles. Patricia, 22, said later she enjoyed every aspect of campaigning_, "but the hard part is being on display so m·UCh." Julie 20 a brunette in contrast to her sisier'~ blonde hair, stood ~side her fiance, David EiaenhoV'fer, grandson of the former President, throughout tl)e reeeption. . Nixon's two television appearances Monday were on taped panel shows , but he also made a surprise visit to Art Linkletter's show, House Party. Surfing Area Approved- H Behavior, Beach Last Early-rising Newport Beach surfers will be allowed to ride the waves alo ng the beach between 40th and 46th streets as long as: ·--They behave theniselves. ....:.The beach lasts. City councilmen unanimously ap- proved the exten~lon of the surflng area Monday night. It will be permit- Chicago Expects Strike to End CHICAGO (UPI) -Today is the day the mayor says a telephone strike will end, ending 1peculation about Whether the Democratic National Con- vention opens here Aug. 26. Other participants in the Jong dis· putc between the Illinois Bell Tek· phone Co. and striking lnternaUonal Brotherhood of Electrical Workers don't appear quite so confident And Democratic National ~an Jobn M. Bailey concedes the convcn· tion "could be moved." Mayor Richard J. Daley's statement Monday: "I sliU beUeve it will be set· tied by tomOTI"Ow," was the only op· timistlc note sounded in the contin· ulng round "between 'Bell and the IBEW. led between 7:30 a.m. and noon each day, under the black ball control system. This means when crowds get too dense, lifeguards will hoist a blackball flag, signalling the surfers to get out of U:ie water -no matter what the time. The new surfing area has been re-- quested by Newport Beach Surfing Association President Gordon Con· nolly. Although a small group of sur!ers, with hair trimmed to reasonable length, was on hand, no one in the crowded council chambers had anything to say about the· council ac· Uon. The surfers did beam, however. They did so despite West Newport councilman Donald A. Mcinnis' warn- ing that the action would be rescinded should the surfers c a u s e un· manageable problems. ';Just be good neighbors," advised Councilman Robtrl , Shelton. The vote was on Mclnnis' motion. Ile emphaslZcd: .., · -"1'hia is subject to the continuing ap- proval of the police and liteguard departments." COuncllman Paul J, Gruber added, somewhat glumly: "I hope the beach there lasts. We have a bad erosion problem , you know.'' "The surfers will bt uslng tho water only," omlled Mn. Marshall. ~--~------~------...___ ~· ~ -~ I ' • EDITION NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA: ' ' . N.Y. Steeb TUESDAY, JULY 23, .1968 JEN CENTs City Balk.s at Air Plan OK . Pereira Doesn't · Help NB . Noise: Emory By Jii:ROME F. cOLLINS Of tlM O.llY ..... '''" Newport Beach city coundlmon Monday night shrank from giving blanket endorsement to the recently completed William Pereira ma&ter plan for Orange County air travel. . Couocilmen, whose support of all the Pereira findings had been reCom- mended by a city committee, decided to give the study a closer look at the vigorous urging of Dan Emory. Czechs Eye Russian War Games MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union today announced the start of huge military maneuvers along the entire 1,000.mile long frontier with Western Europe in a move that coincided with the reported departure of the entire Soviet nillng politburo to Czechoslovakia. Twin front page boxes in the govern· meet newspaper Izvestia announced the maneuvers and the unprec~ented ll·member politburo mission to.a con· rrontation with Czech reformists aim· ed at negotiating Czechoslow.kia's return to a normal alliance with the east bloc. A Soviet source said the politburo already bad left Moscow. ·it includes President Nikolai Poc1t1omy, Preinlit Alexei Kosygin and party leader Leonid 1. Brelb.nev. . • It was the first time in Soviet history the entire politburo had left the coµntry and it underlined the urgency the Kremlin attached to holding Czechoslovakia within the Communist camp as a major Wlit in Soviet defense stra1egy. Moscow fears. that the liberalizing policies of Czech party first secretary Alexander Dubcek may haVe got out of hand and that "anti-socialist, anti· Soviet, rightist forces" aided by "imperialists" are trying to overthrow the Comniunist state and restore the capitalist system of pre-1948 when the Communists took over. T)l.e war maneuver aruiouncement was the more surprising because it in· eluded the call up of civilian reservists for the first time in memory and the commandeering of civilian trucks and cars at a time when they are vitally needed for tile harvest. Two .Tourists Shot to Death By Mad Gunman SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -Two strolling New York tourists were kill- ed and a third wounded Monday night, shot a.t point·blank range by a man \\1\o broke into a sportlng goods store, stole a pis tol and bullets and came out firi ng, according to police. Killed were August Marsala, 46, and Victor Cricco, 52, both of Yonkers, N.Y. Marsala's wife, Evelyn, 44, struck in the chest by a bullet wbiob also broke her left wrist, wa s listed in fair COD• cUtion today in Sierra Vista Hospital. Booked on SU4lJicion of murder was William B. Duff, 38, of Havre de Grace, Md ., described by police as a transient of slender build, long black hair and wearing old unkempt clothes. Duff w-as being held without ball in a maximum seeurity cell in County General Hospital. Tbe 36-year.ald free·lance writer is principal spokesman for homeowners' groups opposed to Orange County Airport ezpanslon. He expounded for several minutes on the Pereira report's "unworkable unfeasible and frightening" proposal~ for the county facility. Alter hearing him out, plainly Im· pressed muntclpal lawmakers in· 9tructed the city stall to get th.em ex· To Stand Trial tra cop!Os ol the report. They took no other action. Emory began by warning the council that masterplanner Pereira, in hls report, advises the county to get prepared for 5.2 million passengers annuauy at the local airport by 1973. That ls more than five Um.es the number of passengers -today, Emory noted. • · He said .the increase in traffic will (See PEREIRA, P11e %) Mrs. Tucker Sane In Mesa Slaying By ARmUR R. VINSEL Of f!l1 DlllY l'U1t Stiff Psychiatrists say Mrs. Irene M. Tucker is sane and able to stand trial and aid in her own defense as the ac· cused ca:ving.knife killer of her next- door neighbor 25 daya ago. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron granted a motion by defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr., to pro· ceed with the murder case against the wife of Costa Mesa CJty Councilman George A. Tucker, based on opinions by two court-appoi~ted experts. Mrs. Tucker, :rr, of. 1642 Mlnorca Drive, was ordered to appear back in Harbor District Judicial Court Frida7 at 9:30 a.m:.:' ,.at which time prellminlll')' heartng daU! will be set.· Durini,the brief seKlon Mon~ay, the ~:,~d"t:::.~r1~J!~ conc~1 what may have happened on tht fltal Friday afternoon. "The District Attorney's· oWi:e won another refusal by the court to sel bail, however, citing as uaual the no- bail clause in California Penal Code Section 1270, covering capital offenses. Mrs. Tucker is charged with the t1tabbing death of Mrs. Harriett V. Westphal, 68, of l&M Minorca ·Drive, on June 2.8, during some type of backyard dispute at their Mesa Verde area homes. Augustine pointed out Monday in seeking bail that Dr. Philip 0. Kramer and Dr. Sigmund Kosewlck say the defendant hadn't the mental capacity under circumstances on that date to delibet'ate, premeditate, or harbor malice against Mrs. Westphal. Dr. Kramer, of Metropolitan State Hospital, and Dr. Kosewick, of Fairview State Hospital, are expected to be key figures in the Tucker trial. which will be based primarily on physical evidence. Judge Cameron then asked for the prosecution's thouetits. Deputy DI.strict Attorney Micheel Capini mentioned the CPC section speclflcally·prohibiting ball when-as it 1ay1 -proof of guilt ia .evident, or at least quite strong. "I wu atUcked from behind," Mr1. 'J'llcpr toterJoclod, u Aup1tlne - w.bo says be Js confident of ber ft• oneration -~ulckly and calmly mov· ed to hush the delendanl "I wtsb the District Attorney would hear the facts," 1he added, speaking in ordinary, convenaUonal tones, but visibly alarmed as Judge Cameron refused to set.ball. Judge William Christensen can set bail if he chooses at her appearance Friday, or subsequenUy, in Harbor (See TUCKER, P11e %) Goal's Project Re-tagged As 'Newport Tomorrow' C"'1! it "Newport Tomorrow." That'• the new name for the city's tong-range "Goals and · Objectives" program. Newport Beach city councilmen did the rechristening Monday night. \Vest Newport Councilman Donald Mclnnis suggested the new designa· tion. He picked it from a lonl! Jist of names submitted by Planning Director Ernest Mayer Jr. "Newport Tomorrow" was the first on the list. HJ llke it." said Mcinnis. "It looks to the future." "It's straighUorward." said Mayor Doreen Marshall. "lt ties In with our Goals and Objectives slogan." That slogan, she explained, is : "A Com· munity Determines Its Future." City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt felt compelled to paint out to coun· cilmen that Costa Mesa has a forward· looking committee, too. "It's called Costa Mesa Tomorrow," he said. 110oes that bother you?" "Not at all." said Mayor Marshall, smiling. "After all, they borrowed our CHART." (Both cities have a Citizens Harbor Area Research Team - CHART. Newport w11 first.) The council vote on "Newport Tomorrow" was unanimous. In Other action related to the municipal goals study, the council authorized the mayor to · appoint citizen members to Newport Tomor· row's steerin« committee. Robert Shelton will represent the council on the committee: and David Curtis will represent the Planning Commi~sion. The first steering c o m m l t t e e meeting will probably be held August 12, said Mrs. Marshall. T im e schedulea for Newport Tomorrow's various project deadlines -all in- volving the city's hopes for tbe future -will be discussed then, she added. The projects include appointment of about 50 citizens to various sub. committees and the mailing of ques. tlonnalres to all Newport.hom,eowners. NEW YORK (AP) -Despite selec· tlve &alns, the stock market slump continued this afternoon. Trading was moderately acUve. (See quotations Pages 8, 9.) 1be Dow Jeoet industrial average cut Its early to.1. Declines outnumber· ed advances by well over 2 to 1. 'The Oldest Profession' Sex Business Supported Editor's Note: Wily do rnen buy st:r? The question is e.iploTed today bu DAILY PILOT staff writ<r Pa""'la Hallan in the final installment of a thrt,.port 1trlt1 on "TM Oldest Proo fe11ion." By PAMELA HALLAN °' "" ..., , ... ...,, Prostitution has been called "The oldest profession." It's pos!Uon tn society has ranged from ll!t respectecl 11111 oclmlred hetaira clasa ol ancient Greece to the degraded, despised brothel dwellera of indWltrlal alums. Today Ill po1ltlon !1 porad"'1ca1. Although It II condemned by low l1ld bastions of public morality 1 it 11 nevertheless supported a n d ID· couraged by an afOuent populatlon. The que1Uon, "why ·art 1htJ'e pro- 1Utute1?" 11 relatJ.vely "~Plt -.to answer. according to Or. ierome Kirk, UC! 1oc!olo(llL But Ille .....,.,, .l " "because there are cuatomera" ls a more complex conllderaUon, plvotilt& on a question J'tlavant in Ill a.aes • , , W'b~ •uctb' have cuatome.rs beeD bQylq! '1ID 1 very large proportlon of cues men have been buying 1001e klnd of aex a<tfvfty they can't pt from their wlvu or girlfriends," llld '!Jr. Kirk. "Sometimes It 11 lnltrcour11 bul (See PJUllTITIJTES, hie %) ~ . \ • MAKES HIS POINTS Airport Foo Emory * * * Can Mayors Join Airport · Commission? Should NeWJ>Ort Beach Mayor Dor· een M~hall and Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin Pinkley be members of the 9r· ange County Airport Commission? A1rp,ort expansion foe Dan Emcn.y thinks so, and Newport city officials rather like Jbe id,a. As ·a result, City Attorney Tully Seymour l.s ch,.i.tng It ouL Councilmen Monday night insttuct· eel Seymow-to r.esearch the matter after Emory· advised them of a re. cently adopted but apparently little· known California PublJc Ullit1es Code amendment. ·He said it contains a pro- vision "requiring" mayors of cities adjacent to airports to serve on air- port commission. This would mean Newport's Mar· shall and Costa Mesa's Pinkley, wtin are now merely occasional guests of the Orange County Airport 'Commis- l!lion ... "You should find out why they're not on It," Emory· told Newport coun· cilmen. "It should be pursued, may· be through the courts, if neel'!sary." He said that as airports grow in importance to a community, airport commissions will become "more autonomous." Most councilmen perked up at the prospect of the mayor serving on the commission. But ex-mayor Paul J. Gruber grumbled: "It'• my understanding that the County Board of Supervisors has al· ready taken a pasitioii on this. They have no intention of making any such appointments.'' City Attorney Tully Seymour added that he was of the impression that the state law is "permissive, not mandatory." He agreed, however, that the sub- ject is worth atudytng fm'ther. He said he would retW'n with a report on Aug- ust 12. 'The matter came up during council discussion of a Skybus, Inc., applica· tion before the Public Utilities Com· mission. The newly formed airline is seeking PUC approval of plana to op· (See MAYORS, Page%) Orance Coan Wea&laer Clear skies, wanner temp- eratures are ln atore tor the Orange CoaR for the 'next couple of days, with some morn· ing and evening overcast. Temp- eratures are1 Jo the hlgh 70's. W1ter tempenturo 63 dureea. INSmE TOD.4.Y The •g1rlfrit11d" of Judo• Po.rkt1"1 '°"ii appa.rfn1lt1 vp 10 no good.. St• comtet l'ogt J$, == ._... Cilae I I :::-:.::.···· ,.,,.,.., ,... ·-,.~ , .. "'" ..... llf -·-.. .._ ' . • • • .... " ,,., ' .. -• • --t: • ·--• =·-, .. .... : ::::' 1ll: • .. ,....,. ~·t , ~..,.a •• l: • =·"' • 11 .... .. • I I \, 1 1: . -. ~ lt DAILY PILOT 111Ud11, Jul12l1 1968 "" City Law Ease·s .Power Line Burials-Slightly ' I ! ! I I I . I 1' ; 111 llRUCE BENSON ............. WffOJ, an atUtude of every-litile-blt hel11<, N...,pon Bet.ch.clly· councUmeQ Mo..i.y allhl adopted 1 new law allowinl the clljl lo a«:ept uWJty com· pany money to repl.ace power poles wllb -IJ'OU!ld lines. 'lllo underground fund will be :eple0 1dMcf yearly, baled on a com· plex formula reoenily hammered out betw ... the utilities 80d lbe Calllornl.o Pubuc t!UUU.s Commission (PUC). Moller IYalllllle thll y-from Soull>orn.Clllfomla Eclilon Co., !or as· ample, -lo 164.JllO for Newport Beoch, -.. lo Rolpb c. X!Hr, Eel.. dlllrl<t llQPOrlallO-. Klier told~ al a MoadaJ att.emoon 1tudy session th1t the cur- rent cost of replacing aboveground wires with out-of-sight wires b: atiout ~ oc '80 a loot. The li'acllic TeJepllone Co. h-.s &greed t o match Ed.IAon Co. un- de~g projects loot for loot. * * * * * * $$ for Vndergrounding Under 1 .... nt -em with the Ollllomll Pubic Utilltlet Commlulon (PUC), the Sculller1l Cllllornl1 Edllon Co. w11J .,,.Dd more th111 •100 million tu lb< next 10 yeor1 w ploco overhead power Uoes underground. Allotments for Or111ge Coast cities In 19118 on: C09t& Mesa FounlalDVdley Huntlnston Beacll Lac-Booch '69,300. •11,900. '80,000. '22,000. Newport Beach fM,200. Seal Beach 131,300. Wesbninster $42,200. Each city's share II dettrmlned by Jt.s population in relation to an annual ·Edison Co. uoderground.ing fUnd. The company th1a year will earmark fe.i million 'under tM PUC formula. Jn tddition, Edison this year bu aet aside '4.3 million for undergNundlng projects t!lat fall out.side the PUC ruJ. lng. Newport Councilmen 01{ 'Bare Bones' Guard Pact Faced with no recourse, Newport Beach city councilmen Monday night reluctanUy agreed to approw: a COD· tract wblcb me111s that lbelr Uleguard department will be working harder for less money. The contract calls for the Orange County Harbor District to pay $17 ,876 for the use of Newport Beach life- guards on certain C?WJtY beaches ad· jacent to the city lim.ltl. The amount Is $1 ,864 less than last year's county payment for the same services, City Manager Harvey L. Hur I burt told councilmen. Marine Safety Director Robert Reed had sought more funds and not less. However, county Administrati•e Offi·· cer Robert E. Thomu issued a hold· the-line order on all county budgets. Hurlburt said he was told the cut· back ocC'lll'J-ed because Thomas had just stepped into his post, and was un- familiar with a city-county formula allowing for yearly increases in pay- ments for lifeguarding s~s. However, Newport councilmen did win some concessions from the coun- ty. 'The Board ol Supervllon agreed to increaae by 5 percent their payment to the city this~year for county-paid por- tions of lifeguard salaries. The county chips in to help support lifeguard services within the city be- cause of .inland residents who use the beaches. The S percent hike will amount to a net increase of $2, 730 in support ol llfeguard services inside tM city. No change was granted by the cour.- ty for direct payments of protection on adjacent county beaches. Council- man Robert Shelton approved a mo· tion to accept the hall-a-loaf county payment. The city staff also was directed to review the entire payment arrange. ment with the county Harbor District before the next fiscal year. Fro"' Page l PEREIRA ••. mean 3.1 takeoffs and landing-s an bour. "The vut majority of. tbese flights 'Will be jet aircraft," be saJd. "What's ahdd, in other words, is that 15 minutes of. every hour in much of Newport Beach will be consumed by noise." He said this . was based on al'I estimated overhead jet noise duration of M seconds. "Pereira recommends that a volun· tary system of noise abatement. be lm· t>Osed, but that1s not workable," he aald, adding that in any case, the restraints would be lifted on com· tiletion of a new regional airport. ac· cording to Pereira' 1 recom· mendations. Emory said U1e regional airpart pro• po6al! of. Pereira are "obvious ones." he aaid they should be SU,Pported , but not the rest o( the report. He pointed out that Pereira says the present airport would continue w be used, at an intensified level, even with other airports. "We're concerned about what ia go. ing to happen to Newport Beach be- DAILY PILOT N...,.n ...... Clll'•• Oll:A.NGE COA.Sl° PVBLISHING COMPANY Robert N. W1M Prnidtnl Ind Publ~ J1cli: R. c.,1.., Viet ,re.16tflt olld °'1>erll M&Mter Thow11• Xt1vll ..... Tholl'IOI A. Murp~lflt Mlnfllllt EdllW' Jeroll'lo F. Collilu r•wl Nitto1t ~ • ..,. MVft1111no City EllllW OlrfCIW "'•,.t 9"d Office 2211 Wt•f l1lbo1 l•1ltw1tcf Mtlllnt Acf4rttll P.O. In ttJl tJ66J .,,..._ C.le MtM: a:» Wnt ley Strwr u..... -..:fl: m ...,.., ,..,.... ~ aitlctl: --''"" ! cause of the astounding growth ol the airport we have here," ~mory said. .,Pereira makes no attempt to ap- proach a solution to this problem. Hls report is filled with elabocate charts, but there isn't one showing the noise impact on our community." He said it is time that the county ·began to work with the Federal Avia-- tion Agency in , an effort to cootrol County Airport growth. "The only thing that has resulted from the Pereira report is that we know now that the dimeD~lon» of the problem 8rtl wo,.se than we had sup- posed," he told councilmen, who listened with apparent intense in· terest. ''Limiting the number of flights and the type of aircraft Is the only 2.nswer. Pereira, by his own ad- mission. says that the jets ar1! going to sterilize residential areas, and it will be necessary to make zonini changes. "Ultlmately, unless something is done, residential .-eas in Newport lJeaCh are going to have to be con- demned as EK Los Angeles In. ternatlonal Airport," Emory warned. ·MOVE AHEAD Mayor Doreen Marshall said it ap. peared that the council "should urge county 11upervlsors to move ahead on a regional airport. but we should be cautioos about the other Pereira fin. dings." Other councilmen agreed. So did Emory, emphatically. "It 1eems that the problems facing Newport aren't going to improve, but will increase," 1aid Co u n c i 1 man RObert.Shelton. "The burden is on the county board to recognize this and deal with the FAA to try to restrict flights here." Councilman Donald ~1clnnls said before any city action is taken on the Pereira report, each councilman should have his own copy to study. There ls now only one at City •lall, he saJd. The matter was then turned over to the city staff. l'rom Page J MAYORS ... erate commuter service bet\veen Or· ange County Airport and Los Angeles lnttrnalional. Councilmen unanlmousty adopted a reso1ution opposing the appUcation. They had been urged to protest tht Skybut pion by hotJ> the city's Air Tralllc Advisory Committee llld by Emory. 1'1e Lockheed Conrte:llaUons that would be used are too nolay, too stow and have too slow a rate of cllmb, U»e council was advised. • -·eo. COit wor111 ou1 to -l,lllO laet ol undoriroundlnc a yaar, ltLMr II.id. Tllo dacllloa ... -lo opad the 11tt,:li'Otlli!!aa illatnioal wlll c In oomm.lllH, with representatives from Edison, tf\e telephone company and the city, Kiser 11'1.d,, lo r.e1pa:n1e to a quesUpn. frOm coun· cllman Robert Shelton, Kiser s.id the city is empowered with .a final choice on whiOO areas it want& to Me r'idded ORDERED TO STAND TRIAL Mrs. Irene Tucker From Page l TUCKER ..• District Judicial Court. In just 49 minutes, the petite, dark· haired housewife showed .a range of emotion from near.gaiety to resigna· tion, while her prevlou.s courtroom reaction has been OOe of seeming bewilderment. Parking Law Extended for Six Months t\n emergency ordinance requiring all developers to include parking pro- vision ln their commercial COll6tructlon plans will remain on the Newport ·Beach Jaw books Wltil Jan. 'll, 1969. City Councilmen agreed to the six· rn o:nth extension Monday night. Tile law was due to expire today. It was originally adopted last Oetober. Mayor Doreen Marshall, prior to the council's unanimous vote, said the emergency measure would be rescind- ed as soon as a permanent ordinance establl1hing parking requirements Is adopted. The first public hearing on the per· manent ordinance has been schedul· ed for Oct. 12. Planning commission· ers set the hearing date that far ahead in order to give the Chamber of Com· merce sufficient time to study the or- dinance, which would require one parking space for each 250 feet of floor space. The emergency law has a 350-foot requirement. Airport Group To Study Report A schedule. of public hearings on ttie Orange County Master Plan of Air Transportation will be studied tonight by tile Airport Commission. Sdtt?duled for public scrutiny ls Phase One of William Pereira and Associates' report on the future of air transj>ortatlon in the county. Pereira'• report was given to the supervisors on July 9, The 118,000 pro- ject is to be followed by Phase Two which will pinpoint favored airfield locations for the county. There is $100,000 ln ttie 1968-69 budget for tile second phase. In the first report Penllra suggested ttwlt Orange County Airport eventually will beeome a "super metroport" eDicfly for fUghts up to 400 mlles and to handle execuUve aircraft. A regional airport for the county for transcontinental flights ih a different location was suggested. Five sites were outlined including El Toro h-1arine Air Base, the Llghter·Than-Alr ~. Santa Ana : San Joaquin llill! between Corona del Mar and Laguna Bead!: Los Ata'mJtol Navy Air Field and a land-wat!r port at Bolsa Chic1 State Beach in HunUngton Beach. The l'ereira report stated that a decision Otl e:hase Two st.udie5 should be made wit&in &ix m-0nths so that a regional airport could be completed by 1973. In the meantime. a control plan for JJmitl.ng the number and Ume . of llllht.. u.. type ol alrcralt llld the noise of pla.oea was I UU'lted for Oranee County W'hlcb must continue to carry tbe flying burden until a new field la coll!1ructed. ·----------------· ... ---~ -------------· ol. j)OWtr pole1 first. · CtlY Public Workl DlnclGr" Jot Devlin said a priority list already la • beJ.nc put together. He mentioned !l•wvort Boulevard, BalboaBoult•ard aDd P,ac1f1c Coast Highway as obvious priorlt1 streets. Kiser said bis oompany will spend an oVerall 'M.a miWon thil. yeer, the first year of lhe new PUC-reJulated underground program. Clties receive their S'h1lre of Ute money based on popuiaUon. · Kiser allO told counc:Uinen that toob-0 1W1 llllllll the klndl ol lines thlt -OMl be placed underground. He dted ovemead wires recenUy in· stalled aloot Jflmboree Rood d Olle ·example of Unes that must be above ground. The Jamboree wife.s carry more than 34,600 V()lts. Bec1u1e they CiJ.D't be buried, eUorts have, been mlde to devise power poles that at least will be better lookdni, according to Kiser. To em the "laten ae1theUc look," • ,.,,_ .... l PROSTITUTE BUSINESS ••• usually it's other th1ng1. "A HtUe creep with S200 can get an attractive female to be nice lo hlm. Thia might be the only way. Or m&¥be the girls he lcnow1 don't like his ·perversions. Or maybe be bas to keep repeating 'I Jove you.' People don't pay money for what they can get tree. "They're buying something." Tbe nature of the commodity· purchased has changed. In 1o'me cultures the prostitute was selling her com'panionshJp, being e d u c a t e d , cultured an'd retliled. In other cultures she was selling a sacred act with reU4ious connotations. Jn the Vic\orJan period, she was selling sex. "Today Jt ls relatively easy for males to get sex," said Dr. Kirk. "But not exotic sex. There is also th.e ques· tion of discretion. Prostitutes are known to be discreet but a girl you pick up in the street might k.i s!I and t e 11 and if your'e a public official it might ruin your career." Despite the functional nature of her position in society, the prostitute is publicly condemned in the United S t a t e 1 and .otehr countrie1 a n d is 1egally prosecuted. The motivation for her condemnation varies but much of it stems from her indifferen~e. "The female is emotionally in- different and willing to sell her favors," said Dr. Kirk. "Jn order to become a prostitute you have to be in· dlfierent if not nwnb. In a real sense the prostitute doesn't get to choose tier sexual partners or in most cases tier sexual activities. Basically this is not a very attractive idea. "It is even less attractive to people who are enthusiastic about sex. Cer- tainly it would be most boring. "On the other hand, there are lots or people who have a hostility to pro- stitution because they want to stamp out sex. ' "Obviously if prostitutes are of- fering services to husbands they can't get from their wives, the wive& wiU be against it. Institutions are against it because of the breakdown of the fami- ly. It also makes it difficult for nice 2irls to restrict their favors if it is easy for men to get &ex 1omewhere elle." The very presence of a double stan- dard In HX, wblcb s1ys that men may enaaae in as much sex activity as pot1tble and women a.s little aa potli· ble, could tftloredcally encourage .PJ"O- sUtution, accordln& to the professor. "The.re la somethJng wrong with this Idea. Tbe only way it works is to have a small number of women servicing a large number of mM. Why should thue women give it away?" Or. Kirk belleve1 the double stan· dard to be unfair in other respects. "Women are in alavety in th.ls culture.' Wofllen can't buy men, for example. In Southern Europe where there are rich women and starving men you have something very. close to boys pt'OIUtutlng tbem1elves to women but th.ii Is disguised. The term gigolo doesn't V1Ually imply sex. When It oc· cur1, lt is called a "fantasUc love af- fair.' This isn't a reflection oI female psychology. Women are trained lo think of Jt t.hat way." . "There ls a theory in the Uplted States that men enjoy sex more than women. This Is going out. I think there are lotl of girls who can't get what they we.nt from their husbands and it might be a lot healthier II they could call the neighborhood pimp rather than get a divorce." Dr. Kirk believes that prostitution survives becau.e soclaJ condemnaUon doesn't have any effect on an · indi- vidual's behavior. "Society condemns sharp business practices, violence, racial disc:r:lmina- tion, too," N.ld the sociologist. "When people cry woU too often, a child grows up not paying any attention." "There are certain things society cannat condemn successfully. Private behavior i1 impossible to control in a democracy. We put the police In a bind by saying stamp out prostitution on one hand and respect private behavior on th.e· other hand. "Police can't put a microphone under a prostitute's bed and cannot proposition her according to the letter of the law because we live in a democracy . Yet these are crimes without victims. Thus the police must engage in marginally legal practices. "They must engage in undercover work and spy on· us and this makes it difficult for them to carry out their be Mid Edison hired famed indu strial ........ 11..y DN)'ll!u, a Cal Tech pn>fel901', to deAgn moni attractive poles. "Some of these new pales are so pretty now, that the story's going around about the man who complained becauie he didn't get one ln his 'bacl<yard whDe a neighbor <!Jd.'' Kiser joked. The new poles have an uncluttered appear11n~. l.nd are padnted a Ug'.ht ll'IY to blend betW' with Iii• •kt' mandate in democracy aud .their reputaUon gets tarn11bed." The soclologiat believes Americans inadvertently encourage d11re~pect for the law by accumulailnl too many. In- stead of disapproving of something they pass a Jaw against It. Thus, law· books get fatter every year. "I think It's rldlculoua to have laws agallist prosUtuUon becauie it isn't dlscouraged," 1aJd Dr. Kirk. "I also think It strange not to putU1h clients of prostitutes. U there are going to be laws against prostitution the clients are the ones who should be pro· secuted. The undercover agent's job would certainly be easier." But Dr. Kirk does not foresee any changes in the law. Nor does he foresee any reduction in the number of prostitutes. He believes that even if there were extreme promiscuity, or free love, there would still be room for specialized experts, females who were more sensitive, more attrlctlve, or sexually more skilled. · -Could prOltitution ever hold a moral position ln society? "It is not inconceivable," said Dr . Kirk, "but it is highly unlikely. Hit is ever moral in our society it won't be called prOfltitution. We'll call it some- thing else." Father Lugs Bags Of $250,000 Cash Cash -f2,50,000 worth of it in five large bags -was counted out by sheriff's deputies Monday -to secure the release on bail of the son of a Newport Beach marine contractor. Charles J. Trautwein, 31, of 20292 Craimer Lane, Huntington Beach, awaiting trial on a Grand Jury in- dictment charging rape of a Newport Beach woman was bailed out by his father, Paul A. Trautwein, 1906 Holi- day Road, Newport Beach. Trautwein Jugged five laundry bags filled with cash intO tbe jail, deputies said, to secure the release of bis son . ""I ii IRllC has "ti I . We lay. it on the line • • • O££P~1Mm. Cllffl'CT CL c11n1nc THE ULTIMATE :o CARPFT CLEANING R•c•ntly, D••P St••m C•rpet Cle•ners introduc.d • new prof•ssi on•I c•rp•t cle•nin9 proc•ss fo this County , •• Prior to off•ring this r•~•rkeble sel'Vic• to you, our customers, we conducted our own compr•hensive tttting program in ord•r to verify the cl•lms made for the process by its develop- ers. Not only did w• find Deep St••m to be a revolutionary cleperture from our tr•clition•I cerpet clean• ing method, but we fouP1d it to be absolutely s•f• for all cerpet •nd upholstery fabrics. Concurr•nt with our te1ting pr09rem, w• thoroughly tr•ined our personn•I in the effective use of Deelli Ste•m cleaP1ing equipmePlt .•. Only when we w•r• completelY 1•fi1fied that Deep Steem rnet with our stand•rds did we off•r this uniqu• new tervice to you. A successful compeny's reputation is lts best •dv•rfls•m•nt. We ley it on the line by cordielly invitint you to try 1•f•ty·t•1ted Deep St•am W•ll-to-W•I Carpet tnd Upholstery Cle•nlng ••• The fin· est profe11ionel c•rpet cle•ning 1ervlce yet de•tloped for .the Industry. Protect th• file of your c•rpets •nd th• be•uty of your home by c•lling tod•yl TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We ere drepery expert~! We stress qu•lity of workrn•n1hip Ir inst•lletiOn. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIN YOU WANT THI FINIST- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 16 yeer1, of coll•cth•• e11perience betwe•n the 2 rnel'I doing your work. All work done in ovr pltnt. We pre-test •II f•brlc1 before cl••nin9. Frn Estimates In Your Home At Your Con•enience. CALL TODAY: ND UTIMATI RUG & UPHOLSTERY· CLEANERS Our 21st Y11r of Serric1 in Oron91 County 2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA l'HONE 546-J4J2 ' •' ·-· ' ... ro s s:s -c f#it• •• . Panhellenic Files Open to Aid Sororities Like a giant computer clicking off tapes of ln(ormaUon, the Newport Harbor Panheilenic has files on every subjec~ wblch might be weful to sorority alumnae groups. There won't be any flashing lights or signaling bells but inLormaUon will nevertheless be dispeDied with efficiency at tomorrow's "F1les Meet- ing." Representatives of all National Panhellenic sororities will be on hand at the session which will take place in the Corona del Mar home of. Mrs . George M. Hoedinghaus. The name Panhellenic indicates the nature of the organization, being a Greek word for 11all Greek."Members of the society were formerly mem· bers of Greek letter sororities when in college. The Newport group, organized in 1951, is unlike some Panhellenlc organizations in that it bas an open membership and welcomes alumnae of all sororities affiliated with National Panhellenic Council. Many groups only have delegates from member alumnae groups. The Newport Harbor PanheJJenic was formed for .a two-fold purpose: to bring together women with mutual interests and similar backgrounds and to work togethe.r to further higher education and the fraternity system. One way this is accomplished is through "Dollars for Scholars,'' the slogan for Panhellenic's numerous fund-raising programs which provide scholarships for deserving young women who attend colleges where na· tional sororities are established. In a broader sense, the Newport Harbor group donates to the chapters of the Am erican Field Service in the area and donates to Hoag Memorial Hospital technical library. Another project is a loan fund which was recently established at UCI which will continue this year. . Serving young women about to embark on their college experience ls the Mother-daughter Information Coffee which is given in late spring. At this gathering the coveted Minerva award is presented. to the outstand· ing collegiate girl from the Harbor Area who is pledged to a national Pan· belleni c sorority. CUmaxing the year is the awarding of the Athena medal to an area woman who has contributed the most to her community during the year. Mrs. Leon Fry is head of the group this year and is being assisted by the Mmes. C. Ray Lenahan, Lloyd McCollom and Edwin steen Jr., first, second and third vice presidents; and 16 other board members and standing committee heads. UNDER "M" FOR MEETING -Members o{ Newport Harbor Panhellenic (left to right) Mrs. Leon Fry, president, Mrs. James Delmonte and Mrs. David Wing are preparing for the Miles Meet~ ing scheduled fo r tomorrow in the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. George M. Hoedingbaus. The purpose of the meeting is to supply inforrrlation to representatives of sorority alwnnae groups. Sailo rs' Delight Prepa red ··Mesa Ve rde Committee Rolls Out the Ba rr el BEA ANDERSON, Editor T...-.r, .IM .. 1MI N-..cM , ... 11 "Come and Get It" will be the enticing invitation Called by the Women's Div- ision, Newport Harbor Cha1nber of Commerce to participants at the end o! the 33rd Flight of the Snowbirds race. Traditionally the women serve hot dogs, cake and punch to the hungry sailors which they will repeat again Sund ay, July 28. at the Newport Harbor Yacht Cl ub. Ready to prepare the food are (left to right) Mrs. Laura Lagios and Mrs. Lloyd I. Fleming, chairman. Honoring hu sbands and thanking them !or their patience and sur.- port throu ghout the past year will be Mesa Verde Women's P\til· harmonic Committee members who will salute the fa therland in decorations and entertainment. A German beer garden will be created at the home of the John Costellos next Saturday when party-goers "roll out the barrel" and kick up their heels with a few polkas. And what beer garden party would be complete with- out an accordion asks the hostess, as ~1r. and Mrs. Al Carter and Mrs. Curtis Heaton (left to right) get in a party mood. Also serv· ing on Mrs. Carter's committee are the Mmes. William T. Camp- bell, Charles Lee, Oscar Clevidence Jr., Carl R. Stevens, Richard Johnson, Thomas Condon, Richard Newell and Richard M. Tracy, ' .. Show Baby-sitter the Door. If Sh .e Continues to Snore DEAR ANN: I don 't need advice. I'd like to give some. Please tell your readers that no woman knows for sure who her real friends are unW she has announced she is getting a divorce. Here is what happened to me. My husband and I were having trou- ble. I sought counseUng (Jim li'OUid not go). After a white things seemed utterly hopeless so I filed for a divorce. The moment the word was out that J im and I were splitting up , J was flooded with phone calls Crom peo- ple. Neighbors and acquaintances and even relatives oftered to buy my bet- ter pie«s of furniture (at low prices) ''to help you out." Two ot my closest friends applied tor my job bttause they were sure I wouldn't want to re· ANN LANDERS ril matn. tn the city. A hsilr dozen mP.n (friends of Jim's) gallantly offered to provide the sex that would be mis sing f~m my life. (They'd have been shocked to know how little there was to mi~.) It so happerrs that .after I filed, Jim agreed to go for counseling and now we are getting alon g much better. It appears now that there will be no dJvorce, but it was worth the trouble to learn who my real friends are. Pleaff' tell your readers they never ' ' know what people are like until they run into marital trouble. -WISER NOW ' DEAR WISER : You told tbem - and to a way I never could have. Tb1nkt. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our baby· .sitter is 1 nice girl, 15 years Of age. Whenever we come home, even if it's as early u 10 p.m., 1he "Jll 1ound asleep and we have to shake her five minutes to wake btt up. This womes me. I wonder what would happen if one of the cbildre@ became ill and needed attention. I worry, too, about tlle possibility of fire, an intruder, or heaven knows what. When that girl falls asleep Uie children are as good as alone . What are your Views on this subject, Ann Landers? I have never seen trus problem discussed in your column.- MOTHER OF TIIREE DEAR MOTHER : A 1ttler wbo 1leepo lilo It de1d elepbonll II of 10 value to you -or for that matter to anyone elte. A 1irl wbo caD.Dot be awakened by a telephone, a doorbell or a chlld't call tbollkt aot fall ulffp. Alter all, 1be la belnJ pold 11 tab care or lbe cbildre1 while lbe puull are absent and If 1be konkt out the It not dolnc her Job. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enjoyed your stralght-from-the-shoulder reply to the man who complained because American women want the same privileges that men get, such as smok· ing cigarettes on the &treet, sitting on bar stools, lapping up the booze. driv· Ing cabs and trucks, working in fac- tories and becoming lawyers, doctors and engineers. Yet they expect men~ ·get up on the bus and give them then seats. During the last war1 Germany bad the 1ame problem ana they tolved it Y«"'J almply. They removed e.11 the aea.ta .in the buses and provided the -en will> c:ei1Jne oU'ljl& insUad. This made everybody equal. -HEIL DEUTSCHLAND DEAR HEIL: Eqaal to what? CONFIDENTIAL TO NEEDLES AND PlNS : Patience is the art o( doing something else in the meantime. Learn to wait. He'll be back. Drlnk.lnc may be "ln" to tbe kkta you nn wltb -bul'l 11 cae pal )'h "out" for teept. You can cool tt ud tlay popular. Read ••Booze aad Yo• - For 1'eenagen Onb"." SeDCI as ce.eta ta coin, and a I o n S , aelf..atldreued, 1tamped envelope with your rtqaest. ' Aaa Loaders w 111 be glad to belp you with your problem1. Send them t. ber la care of tbe DA.IL Y PILOT, eDCIOIJnC I aeJl·addrtlaed, llaalpetl envelope. l \ I I I I [ l f. ! ' . I li I i I II j: I I J4 DAILY PILOT 'X' Marks the Good Eating Spots Following the menu trail will Jead Young Sophistic- ates Women's Club members and their husbands to "caches" of good Italian food -salad at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Marskell, Long Beach, lasagne and fine red wine at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Conrad, cypress, a nd apples and cheese at the last stop, the home of Mr. and Mrs. William John- Fresh, Pretty A Woman's Art son of Huntington Beach. The couples will begin the adventure at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Sampling the wares a bit ahead of time are (left to right), Mrs. Bruce Mason, John Morrison and his wife, who is chairman for the event, to be concluded by a party in the home of the Jobnsons. Horoscope . Cancer: Money Position Due WEDNESDAY JULY 24 117 SIDNEY OMAlll\ 1'1'1le wile man coritrots his destiny . • • Astrology points the way." ARIES (March 21-AprU 19): Tonight there ls greater chance for creative en· deavors. Fine evening for dining out, atteDdlng theater or special lecture. Be with loved one. Express views, feelings. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): CondiUona due to seWe. Recent flurry of activity left you in state of fatigue, Now you begin to recuperate. Ac· cent tonight on home affairs, domestic situation. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Break from routine strongly indicated. Y o u move about, relay and receive messages. Get ideas down OD· paper. Be selective. . Choose the best. Call from relative featured toni~L CANCER (June 21.July 22): Money position due to improve. Your e a r n in g capacity i s highlighted. Message received to d a y could result in ultimate i--o- ti.t. Reali!e thiJ -respond accordingly. , LEO. (July 23-Aug. 22): What was secret could be revealed tonight. Cy C I e moves up. Circumstances tend to favor your efforts. Be confident. Display innate sense ot showmanship. Tate baCk aeat to no ooe. Get up front VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Seclusion may be necessary. Take time to gather thoughts and review situa- Uon. Avoid crowds. Get al- l.airs in order. Being alone is not the same as being lone- ly. Realize th.la: -act ac- cordingly. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): Accent tonight on wishes, friends. There la more solid indication ol direction in which you are going. Accent the practical. Assume added responsibility. Reward will be forthcoming. SCORPIO (Od. 23-Nov. 21): Spread influence; ex· press views. Tonight, back- ing could be received from one in authoritative position. Obtain hint from LIBRA message, Utilize lessons learned in re~nt past. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 2l): Some of your desires could be fulfilled, but be ready to accept ad- ded pressure, respcnsibility. Key is to know what it is you really need. Then you at- tract favorable conditions. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19): Relief indicated from opposition you have been receiving from mate, partner. Now you can settle practical issues, such as ex- penditu.tts. Be receptive. Listen and observe. Weddings, Troths AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11}: Reach out for greater undersW>dlng. M i n g l e socially, but do more listen· ing than Usertlng. Be flex· Ible. Creative th i n k i n g demands willingness t o change views. Ponder thJs. PISCES (Feb. ·19-March 20): Get sufficient nst. Finish tasks. Comple t e period of adjusbnent to new situation. Make your peace with children, loved ones. Highlight sincerity.· IF TODAY .. IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are about to start new en- terprlze which can brighten your prospects, socially and professionally. GE'NERAL TEN- DENCIES : Cycle higb for LEO. Speelal word to Aquarius: one who used to oppo5e you makes lrleodly gesture -accep\. To find 111111 ""'°'' lu~ for vau In _..., •nd loY• oteMr SVdfWI' On'ltrt"t boc*i.t .. s.r1r Hlftb 1or ,,,,... •ltd Wamtn." Send b~M Ind .Ml !)tftll lo O!T>trr A1~ro S«reh. "'-OAILV PlLO!, kl! ti Grand c ... tru s1 .. lkin, Nt'll y, N.V, 10011. Harbor TOPS Harper School in Costa Mesa Is the scene where members of TOPS Harbor Lighters gather each Mon· day evening at 7::K>. Dardens Make • Home 1n Tustin A f t e rnoon ceremonies performed by the Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield linked Nancy Jo Carter and Walter Lee Darden in matTiage. The bride, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Carter of Costa Mesa, choae-a simple· white empire gown fashioned of textured cotton and cart'ying a long train. Her veil of. white band em~ broldVed orgama made by he!' grandmother, Mr•. Elinor Carter, wu gathered. to a cluster Of daisies. She CBITied white orchids. Home Skills Preserved Pilot's Deadlifiles Mrs. Benjamin Karcher, the bride's a.later, w a• matron of honor, wearing lime green. Bridesmaids Miss Candy Cain ""'1 Mrs. G. David Anderson wwe lemon yellow ribbed cottoo and hair bows with daisies, and dressed similarly was flower girl Miss Shelley Jayne Hayes, t be bride's niece. ,;:; ~~ ~ ...... -II ~ A6.& B, .. "6 Young, lreoh, pnottyl Tbia A-tine 1drimmer ta eesy to sew. Flower power i6 Sum· mer's theme! Embroider daisies, butterflies on scalloped skimmer. Pat. 7090: printed pattern, NEW Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 (bust 34). State size. FIFTY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for ·first-c1ass mailing a n d special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Books % the DAILY PILOT, 1 0 5 Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, P1Ue.rn Number. Boot of 16 JUfy Rugs - complete patterns -inex- pensive, easy to make. 50 cents Book No . l -Deluxe Quilts -16 complete pat· terns. Send 50 cent! Betrothal Revealed By Camps Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Camp of Newport Beach an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, 0 e b or ah Camp to John Woods, son of Albert Woods of Tacom1, Wash. .Both famllfes are originally from D e t r o It , Mlch. 1be engaged couple attended Oraage Coast Col- lege llld UCLA. The weddlng wUl take placo at Our Lady of ML Carmel Church, Newport Beach on Nov. !6. The cou- ple will ipend a year in GerrnM)' before making lbelr home In the Harbor Area. • Talented Harbor A r e a homemakers are bringing home ribbons from the Orange County Fair and Ex· position, Winners have been announced by Mrs. Robert Cox and Mrs. Paul Bernhart, supervisor and assistant supervisor. They are: Mrs. Eleanor Young, Costa Mesa, a first and eecond in white breads and other breads; Mrs. VlrglniaMynatt,Huntingtoo Beach, second in white breads; Merlyn McK.inn, Costa Mesa, two thirds in nutbread and coffee cake; Mrs. Robert Goff, Costa Men, first, second, third in cinnamon rolls, o t h e r cookies, other jellies; Moo- na Fisher, Corona del Mar, three seconds, coffee cake, other jellie6, relishes and chutneys. Other winners included: Barbara Sal.es, Corona del Best man Jerry Kavullc Mar, three firsts, any To avoid disappointment, prospective was accompanied by ushers biscuit, child'& cotton dress, brides are reminded to have their wedding Jack Hutter, Jim Carey, adult aprons; Jo an n e stories with black and white glossy photo-David Morris and Jay Tatum, Costa Mesa, first, graphs to the DAILY Pll.OT SOciety Depart-Makemson. chocolate frosted 1 a Ye r ment prior to or within one week after the Approximately 2 5 o at- cake; Marilyn Phil l 1 P s • wedding. tended the reception follow· Costa Mesa, three firsts, For engagement announcements it is · in th Co •-M Goll three seconds, two thirds, mg e sw. esa any pastry, chocolate fudge, suggested that the story, also accompanied and Country Club. wool dress, adult aprons, by a black and white glossy pi c tu re, be The couple are residing in strawberry preserves, other submitted early. If the betrothal announce-Tustin after a weddillg trip ment and wedding date are six weeks or less through Carmel, San Fran· preserves, chocola1.e layer 1 th ciscoo and Lake Tahoe. cake and pea""! butter apart, on Y e wedding photo will be ac-..... The bridegroom is the cookies. cepted. Meryln McKim, c 0 st a To help fill requirements on both wed· stepson and son of Mr. and d. d Mrs. Thomas W. Franklin of Dining Industry Not Starving for Patrons Mesa, second and third, ing,an engagement stories, forms are avail-Cos.ta Mesa. Both be and bis child's playsult and dressy able in all of the DAILY Pll..OT offices. bride are graduates of Costa dress ; z en o vi a Further questions will be answered by Social MRS. WALTER DARDEN Mesa High School and have WryesnieMkl, Corona del Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9465. attended Orange co a 1 t Mar, second, dark fruifl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~D~ou~b~l~e~R~l"IJ~R~il~H~=~Co~U~e~g~e=. ==~===-cake; Janice George, Costa I: Mesa, first, bar cookies; Obery Sc'hreiber, Huntington Beach, first, chocolate chip SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Anyone can fry an egg. The trick is to sell it at a profit. This is the crux of the food 6ervice industry, whose sales to those wbo "eat away frolil home" is BIG busines3, To find the income to be made from the f o o d services, the Bank o f America did a two year research project which runs to 16,CIOO w or d s and 34 pages including the charts and graphs. . The survey finds the food service industry totals $27 billion at retail annually. Separate eating and drink- ing places now rank as the number one type of retail outlet in the nation. "They outnumber grocery stores, they outnumber service stations." the survey s a i d . "American families now 6pelld $400 to $500 a.Mually. In fact, we now 6pend more to 'eat out' than we do to buy new and used automobiles." That means that there is a "lemming·like" impulse for t.-iyone who c3n fry an egg to put bis hand under this golden flow . The industry remains mostly s m a 11 businesses -independents DEBORAH CAMP E"IJoted operating a single ouUet. drop cookies; Judith Carr, Eatin·g out means buying Huntington Beach, second, one of the few remaining chocolate chip drop cookies; custom produced com· Jan Cohen, Newport Beach, modities still available at two seconds, chocolate drop mass produced prices. How cookies and other drop do they do it? cookies; Paul Ditzenberger, ''The harsh fact Is that Laguna Niguel, sec on d , macy don't," the survey Ulird, other lfving room said. "Recent figures coin· furnishings, other cookies; piled by Dun & Bradstreet Mrs. David P ear 1 man , show tilat over half of the Irvin,e, first and second, any restaurants in the United other pie, other adult wear· States show no taxable j>ro-ing apparel. fit." Other.s are Kathy Stoldt, The illusion that anybody Laguna llills, two thirds, can fry an egg, coupled with. any other pie, other adult knowing what raw food apparel; Hazel Courreges, costs in the supermarket, Fountain Valley, second in makes food service seem other jams; Debra Stuebi, like an easy, highly pro-C-06ta Mesa, second in other fit.able business to the pickles and rel i she s : uninitiated. Rosemary Cri'safulli, Costa That's the thumb in the Mesa, second in child'! cot· soup bowl. ton dress; Hortense "Each year, eating and Tulleners, Mission Viejo, se· drinking places account· for cond in tailored suits; Kay around 2(1 percent ot all Small, Capistrano, first in retail failures," the survey other adult wearing ap· said. "Most failures occur in pare!; Mrs. Mary Ellen the second year of business Varva, Costa Mesa, first in and incur an average :if pillows. almost $50,000 liabilities." 1\-trs . Margaret J-laizlip, To s u r vive requires a Huntington Beach, ff rs t, dedication that relatively dolls: Rebecca Cartman, few men and women are Costa Mesa, first in rugs; able to sustain for the long Marilynne Broderick, Hun- pull. An indication of this is tington Beach, second in that only haU of all food rugs; Clyde Cannon. Costa service operations ma intain Mesa, third in rugs: Carolyn the same ownership for live Cannon, Costa Mesa, three years or more. firsts, four seconds in knit· The tlick of making a pro-ted man's pullover. French fit is more than most angora sweater, knitted peNions guess. It requires sheath dress. m an ' s attention to detail sweater, woman's s-y,·eater, organizing 8 busi ness that \VOman 's dress, p i 11 o w s ; is actually a manufacturing Elizabeth Barkmeyer, Hun· plant; to people -manag-tington Beach, two firsts, a ing a service business with second, a third in carriage due respect to the 1ervers ~ap robes, man's pullover, and the served, and, lastly mfant sweater set, to profit -the most im· Cl1tistmas stockings. portant of all. Mrs. Harry Dady, Costa The small restaurant or Mesa, fir st in any other rug; lunch counter or hamburger Yvonne Cox , Huntington stand QPerator has more to Beach, second and third in fear In the future, the dressy dresses and other survey warned. child's .apparel: Joyce Beauregard, N e w p or t "There has bcrn 3 Beach, second in cotton ooticeable growth in the dresses: l\1arlajean Cook of number ol la r I e cor· \Vestnti nster, tlrst, second. poraUOM in the food service tttir industry," the survey said. . din dressy dresses, wool "Chains of 11 or more unib dresses, and w om e D ' s blouses. account for less than 3 per· ----------1 cent of total outlets; nearly 9 percent ot the sales. These percentages can be ex· pected to increase Jn the years ahead." --~=o..=--=-=- Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' Now Buffums' can give your hair a conditioning treatment personalized for you by Clairol's Hair-Care Computer 1. 00 reg. 2.00 Two weeks only! Just ask for ou1 new Clai10 1• treatment when you have your shampoo and set, color 01 permanent. Our skilled staff analyzes you1 hair. Our new Computer produces your own custom-caie for mula with instant conditionlna and lasting set inaredlents. Your hair looks beautifully healthy. Your set lasts and lasts. Call for your appointment now! Beauty salon Manicures • Pedicures• Facials • Electrolysis u umS' Buffums· D 011-f..j Elizabeth Arden face treatment is much more than just a facial A• lllnllllll Anln 11t1111 in Buf- fums' Red Door Treatment Room will help )'Ou discover delightful beauty secrets. You'll haw a face treatment and emerge with a Juxu1 ious new makeup as well as a radiant feeling. Cooiplete treatment, with 111akeupll.• Beauty Sludill Newpo1t Ce!\ler rl Fashioo Island • 644-2200 • Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10:00 fill 9:30 ODier days 10:00 till 5:311 I / c•. ~ . _, = aawz a a a ::;ttt .-1.;; p . 2 2 e • ·-- .. Costa Mesa --DAILY PILOT Today's dosing •• EDITION VOL. 61', NO. '176, 3 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES C",OSTA MESA', CAllr<lRN1,4 :TUESDAY, ~UL Y 21, 1968 BaHeir Hopeful John Bailey, Democratic na· tional chairman, in Chicago Monday to assess chances or the settlement of the telephone strike threatening the Demo- cratic, National Convention, said be was hopeful of a quick solution to the dispute. Mrs. Tucker Ruled Sane Councilman's Wife.Must Face Murder Trial By ARIBUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Delly ...... ''"" Psychiatrists say Mrs. Irene M. Tucker is sane and able to stand trial and aid in her own defense as the ac- cused ca.-ving-kni!e killer of her next· door neighbor 2S days ago. Superior Court Judge Howard C. Cameron granted a motion by defense attorney Paul Augustine Jr., to pro- ceed with the murder case against the wife of Costa Mesa City Councilman Babysitter Sought in Drugging Ge6rge A. Tucker, based on opinions by two court-appointed experts. Mrs. Tucker, 37, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was ordered to appear-back in Harbor District Judicial Court Friday at 9:30 a.m., at which t I m e preUmJnary hearing date will be set. During the brie.f session Monday, the dark·haired defendant unexpectedly uttered her own first, brief public hint concerning what may have happened on the fatal Friday afternoon. The District Attorney's office "'on another refusal by the court to 1et bail, however, cl tin( as usual the no- bail clause in Callfornia Penal Code Section 1270, covering capital offenses. Mrs. Tucker is charged with the stabbing death of Mrs. Harriett V. Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, on June 28, during some type of backyird dispute at their Mesa Verde area homes. Augustine pointed out Monday in seekine ball that Dr. Pbllip 0. Kramer and Dr. Sigmund Kosewick say the defendant hadn't the mental~capacity under circumstances on that date to deliberate, premeditate, or harbor malice· against Mrs."Westphal. Dr. Kramer, of Metropolitan State Hospital, and Dr. Kosewick, of Fairview State Hospital, are expected. to be key figures in the Tucker, trial, which will be baaed primarily oo physical evidence. Judge Cameron then asked for the prosecution's thoughts. Deputy District Attorney Michael C&pizzi mentioned the CPC section specifically prohibiting ball when -as it 1ay1 -proof of guilt is evident, or at least quite strong. "I was attacked from behind," Mrs. Tucker interjected, as Augustine - who says he is confident of her ex• oneration -quickly and calmly mov· ed to bush the defendant. "I wish the District Attorney would (See TUCKER, Pa1e I) N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS ORDERED TO STAND TRIAL Mrs. Irene Tucker Commission Master Plan Study Slated Pretty pink capsules found in a live- in babysitter's bureau drawer and gobbled by a little girl contained the hallucinogenic drug LSD, ·according to police who m-e seeking the young woman today. Motivation Issue A schedule of public hearings on the Orange County Ma&ter Plan of Air Transportation will be studied tonight by the Airport Commission. Scheduled for public sau.tiny is Phase One of William ' Peretr.a and Associates' report on the future ot air' transportation in the county. Pereira's report was given to the ~upervisors on July 9. The $18,000 pro· ject is to be followed by Phase Two which will pinpoint favored airfield locations for the county. Tb ere is $100,000 in the' 1968-69 budget for the ~econd phase. In the first report Pereira suggested that Orange County Airport eventually 'Will become a "super metroport" chiefly for flights up to 400 milel and to handle executive aircraft. A regional airport for the COUllty for transcontinental flights in a different location was suggested. Five sites were outlined including El Toro l\1arine Air Base, the Lighter·Than·Air base, Santa Ana; San Joaquin Hills between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach· Los Alamitos Navy Air Field and a 'tand·warer port at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Huntington Beach. The Pereira report stated that a decision on Phase Two studies S'hould be made 'Within ~ months so that a regional airport CQU!d be completed by 1973. Jn the meantime, a control plan for limiting the number and time o f flights, the tyi>e oC aircraft and the noise of planes was suggested for Orange County which must continue to carry the flying burden until a new field is constructed. Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -Despite selec· tive gains, the stock market slump c<:1otinued this afternoon. Trading was moderately active. (See quotations Pages 8, 9.) Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow said the District. Attorney's oUice issued a complaint shortly before S p.m.i Fri· day, charging Charmane Betlavue, 21, with possession of dangerous drugs. Miss Bellavue, who had been bab)'· sitting for Dennis Griffith's three children in their apartment at 779 Shalimar Drive, has disappeared since tile lllCldent. , · · A neighb0r wOman was ba\JY.~itting with Gloria GrlWtbs, 71 and her two older brothers wbeft the little girl was stricken with typical symptoms caus· ed by LSD consumption. Little Gloria wu ~en to Orange County Medical Center, where she has since been in satisfactory coodition, according to ph)'liciaos. Police were at first cautious about coot.ents of the pink, non.prescription pills the child found in her regular baby-sitter's dresser drawer. The Orange County Sheriff's Crime Lab technicians analyzed the capsules, however, and said they definitely con· tained the co n trove r s i al , hallucinogenic drug. Two men were arrested at the same 779 Shalimar Drive a p a r t m e n t building a week ago in a sweeping, West Orange County narcotics raid1 but not at the Griffiths' unit. Capt. Glasgow said today that in· vesti.gators found no evidence of possi· ble child neglect beeause Griffiths, who is a divorced salesman, mainfs:ins a baby-sitter all the time. The case is similar to one involving the five·year-old son of a Laguna Beach psychedelic shop operator who consumed a compound believed to be the hazardous drug STP several weeks ago , LitUe Gerry Griggs, 5, ha s recovered and gone home to 1250 Roosevelt Lane, an address near where another narcotics raid occurred several day$ before he was stricken last month. "The OJdest Profession' DAILT PILOT ..... hiflit ' First.Class Frisbee Flinger• These three youngs~rs, from left, Randy Wood, 11, Debbie Nutter, 9, and Kurk Clarke, 11, comprise Ccista Mesa's finest Frisbee fling. ers having proved their mettle in the hotly contested Frisbee con· test held at TeWinkle Park. This crack team will go forth to defend the honor of Costa Mesa Frisbee flippers in the regional tourna- ments later this year. Russian Army War Games • Start on ·Czech Border MOSCO\V (UPI) -The Sovie: Union today .announced the start of huge military maneuvers along the entire 1,000..mile long frontier with Western Europe in a move that coincided with the reported departure of the entire Soviet ruling politburo to Czechoslovakia. Twin front page boxes in the govern· ment newspaper Izvestia announced the maneuvers and the unprecedented II-member politburo mJssion to a con- frontation with Czech reformists aim· ed at negotiating Czechoslovakia's return to a normal alliance with the east bloc. A Soviet source said the politburo already had left Moscow. It includes President Nikolai Podgorny, Premier Alexei Kosygin and party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev. It was the first time in SOvlel history the entire politburo had left the c<:1untry and it underlined the urgency the Kremlin attached to holding Czechoslovakia within the Communist c~mp as a major unit in Soviet defense strategy. Sex Business Supported Moscow fears that the liberalizing policies of Czech party first secretary Alexander Dubcek may have got out of hand and that "anti-socialist, anti· Soviet, rightist forces" aided by "imperialists" are trying to overthrow the Communist state and restore the capitalist system of pre·l948 when the Communists toot over. Editor's Note: Wl1y do men buy sex? T.lie question U e%plored today by DAILY PILOT 1!a// writer Pamela Ilnllml in llu: f inal installment of a lllret·port series ou "The Oldest Pro- fcssio11." Bv f>AJ\1ELA ltALLAN • Of Ht. Pellr ltllfl .$1dt Prostitution has been called •;111e oldest profession." It's position in society has ranged Crom the respected and admired hetaira class of ancient Greece to the degraded, despised brothel dwellers of induatrial slums. Today its position is paradoxical. Although it Is condemned by 1•w and basUoos o{ public morality, it is nevertheless supported .a n d en- couraged by an amuent population. The question, "why are there pr1> sti tutes?" Is relatively simple to answer, ·according to Or. Jerome Kirk . UCJ sociologist. But the an$Wer. "because there are custon1ers" I! a more complex consideration, pivoting on a question relavant in all ages ..• Y.'hat exactly have~ customers been buying? "In a very large proportion of easel men have been buying some kind of sex activity they can't get from their wives or girlfriends," said Dr. Kirk . "Sometimes it is Intercourse but usually it's other things. "'A little creep with '200 can get an attractive female 1to be nJce to him. 'lblJ might bo the·'llliIY way. Or maybo the girll be tno.-1 don't lib his perversions. Or maybe he has to keep repeating 'I Jove you.' People don 't pay money for what they Can get ifee. They're buying something." The nature of the commodity purchased has changed. Jn some cu.ltures the prostitute was stlllng btr companionship, being e d u ca t e d , cultured and relined. In other cultures she wu &ellin& a sacred act with religious connotations. ln the Victorian period, she was &elling 1e,;, "Today It ls relaUvely easy for r males to get sex," said Dr. Kirk. "But not exotic sex. There is also the qucs· tion of discretion. Prostitutes are known to be discreet but a girl you pick up In the street might ldss and t e 11 and if your'e a public official it might ruin your career." Despite the functional nature of her position in society, the prostitute J1 pubUcly condemned In the United S t a t e s and otehr countries a n d is legally irosecuted. The motivation for her condemnation varies but much of it 1tem1 from her indifference. "The female is emotionally In· different and willing to sell her favor1." said Dr. Kirk. "ln order to become a prostitute you have to be In· different ir not numb. In a real sense the Proititut.e doesn't get to choose her sexual partners or In most cases her 1eJ"ual actlvitiel. Basically thil II not a very~tracttve Jilea. "It I ven less attractive to people ( PROSTITUTES, P11e t) The war maneuver announcement was the more surprising bec.iiu1e It in- cluded the c•U up of civilian reservists for the first time in memory and the commandeering of civilian trucks and ca rs at a time when they are vitally needed for tile harvest. It was further noted that Soviet Defense Minister Marshal Andrei Grechko had cut short an important visit to Algien lat. lllt week and hur- ried back to Moscow, presumably to direct the war gamt1 ·the KremllD ap. parently found necessary at tbe Jut minute. ~ Soviet newspapers and broadcasts have expres5ed alarm that fortbcom· Ing \Vest German army maneuvers, with allled air support, were being held to• demonstrate backing for Czechoslovak dls.otldence;. And a repart fro m MunJch today said E a 1 t Germany may be buUdJng a barbed wire fence along Its bordtr with Czechoslovakia to close a new escape route to the West. · ' I 'No Dou on Who Stabbed Victim' No one has much d l about ~bo fatally stabbed Mrs. Westphal, according a defense at- torney whose cllen efuses to believe tile victim la dead. What must now be determined is Irene M. TUc:ter'1 motivation. Wlt7'dlll llttt;do II! •. -· , Mi diit 1li0hitfti.rto klll! "There will be no prOblem in con-- necting her to the death of Mrs. Westphal," commented Mrs. Tucker's attorney Paul Augustine Jr.,. Jn courtroom conversation after her lifonday hearing. The hearing befo re Judge Howard C. €ameron was required by Section 1368 of the It.ate penal code, which requires that any doubt concUning a defen· daot'1 mental atate must be resolved. PROHIBITS TRIAL section 1367 fl'Ohibits trial ol an in· sane person. Now that court-appo inted psychiatrists have resolved the ques· tlon of Mrs. Tucker's sanlty to the court's satisfaction, Augustine is op· timistic. He has turned -to use a gruesome but effective analogy -to the bible of hom..icilk! case reference, the 1945 Ben· der decision concerning degrees . The act is the same: death or another -but degree ol personal respomlbillty under tile Bender ruling is dictated by state ol mind at the ac· tual. time, The Supr~me Court modified the convicted .killer's death sentence on a first degree conviction to lesser se- cond degree count, due to a lack of deliberate premeditation. "A willful act characterized by the presence of maUce aforethought and by a deliberate and premeditated in· tent to kill ... " is the main point of first degree definition. Manslaughter, however, b classed as a willful act characterized by the presence of an intent' to kill, engen- dered by sufficient provocatiOn and the absence of p rem edJ ta ti on , deliberation and, by pre1umpUon of law, malice aforethought. EXERCISE TENETS Psychiatrists' findings revealed in court Monday contend that Mrs. Tucker lacked the sa"nlty to exercise the t.enets of first degree murder Bis ouutned in the Bender decision. Augustine predicts evidence in the cue will 1u1tain· Mr1?'Tucker'1 to·far unsbakeable stray ol jurt what bap- pened between herself and Mn. WH!j)hal on tilat Friday afternoon. "I am confklellt she'll be ex· onttated," he said, adding ,"there's no Steelworkers Vote on Strike PITTSBURGH (UPI) -WIUI ju1t nltte days le!! oo their current con- tract, steelworter1 across the United Stat.1 llld C1111da vot.d today whether to authorize a strike if negotiationt do not produce a new •sreement by Aue. 1. lodicaUon1 wtre tbe 450,000 United Steelworkers Union (USW) members employed in basic steel would vote overwbelmlna:I1 in favor ol strike ac· tion. VSW headquarters here eipected to ILMOWlce nsult1 of tho ballollng w-.7 lllAIMIOOll. I magic or Ingenious defense involved. The facts and evidence will bear ouL the story." The prosecution is al5o marshalling its own forces for the trihl, which could wind up in 60 to 90 days. Converse!)', the prosecution 1·1 saying little. Two Tolll'ists Shot to Death By Mad Gunman SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -Two strolling New York tourists were kill· ed 1nd a !bird wounded Monday night, shot at point-blank range by a mu -broke Into a sporting goods store. stole a pistol and bullets and came out firing, according to police. Killed were August Marsala, 46, and Vict or Cricco, 52, both of Yonkers, N.Y. Mats.ala's wife. Evelyn, 44, struck ii'! the chest by a bullet \Vhich also broke . her left wrist, was listed in fair con;: dition today in Sierra Vista Hospital. :: Booked on ~ioion of murder was William B, Duff, 38, of Havre de Grace, Md.1 described by police as a transient of slender build, lohg. black hair and wearing old unkempt clothes, Dul! was bolng held without bail In a maxlmum security cell in Co!JDty General Hospital. Nursing supervisor Donalda Hunt sadd be hAd only a small gash on hi.~ .arm . Police did not know how he was injured. Duff's arraignment was set for to· day in San Luis Obispo's 3rd Justice Court. Lt. WUUam Sperlo, w h o ap. preb~nded Duff wittl tlhe aid of officer Gary Grant after a foot .chase, said a oaller reported the 7:30 p.m. shooting on Higuera Street, the main business · street in thh: city 200 miles north of Los Angeles. He said he and Grant arrived at the scene minutes after llhe shootings and bystanders yelled: "He ran around the corner.'' OrUll• Weadler Clear sides, warmer temp- eratures are In store for lhe Orange Coast for the next couple o( daya, with some morn· Ing and evening over~asl Temp- eratures are in the high 10·s. Water temperature 63 degrees. INSmB TODAY Th• "!lf'rlfmnd" of Ju4flo Parker'• 1cm U apparcntlv up to no good. Ste comics Pll{Jt JS, ·-• -n ,_ tl·11 -' _... " -• -• -·-.. --• ·--•• -• --• .......... n ''l'N ...... • C:lltt!'tll I 411 • --l).1. ·-•• -.. .. .... .... • :=...-.. •• :::::.=i:. •• .. • .. :::= ...... • ---" .. ! l . I I 1· l I i - I OAll.V ~ILOT 'Planuei:s OK Auto. Yar(l .Next to Apartments ., I\ ....... "' -permit for ..... of damaged and Impounded automobiles at a Cost.a Meta body ~hop adjacent to apartment units wls ttcammended for approva.1 by the City Plannlllg Commi5'ion-Mondoy. Frank Strlhl,"ol iu Costa Mesa St.. who owns property adjacent to Harbor Auto. BOCl1 Inc., 957 IV. 19tb $1., • however, complllned of anticipated ; ~ and unalihtlinesa: caused by car -~ . " •• : !>a Nang Hit • ·Hard by Red . Artillerymen SAIGON (UPJ)-Communlst artillerymen slammed l~ mortar and rocltet rounds into the U.S. war com- plex at Da Nang today, the most in· tens.Ive stielllng of the war against the northern base. Six Americans were killed and 30 woonded, military IOUfceS &aid. ·At the same time, the Communists hit Quang Nga! city on the northern coast with '6 rounds and were thrown back attempting to take over the radio station tbere. GoYernment spokesmen said 47 per&0n1 were killed or wound· ed, including four civilians. 1be two attacks were the heaviest shelllngs ln more than a morith in tile threatened northern quarter and may have been the prelude to the widespl'ead Communist Offensive ex· pected before Sept. 1. "Last ni~t was bad," said Lance Cpl. Ken Bood ot Johnson City, Tenn., telling of a 30-round mortar attack on the Marine helicopter base at Marble 11-1ountain near Da Nang. "Now I'm worried about tonight. They say we're going to get hit again." Eight U.S. military iMtallations in the Da Nang complex were hit by either shrapnel.spewing mortars or the six-foot four-inch. 1 0 0 • po u n d 122mm rockets between midnight and 2 a.m., the sources said. Five rockets slan1med into the sprawling Da Nang airfield itself, destroying two airplanes and heavily damaging two others. Eleven other rocket rounds hit just outside the field. All of the casualties were suffered at either Marble Mountain. the Marines' big helicopter base. or the main- tenance compound for helicopters of the 1st Air Cavalry D i v i s i o n (Airmobile). The Communlsts, as tlley have in the past, were apparently tryin,g to k-nock out the U.S. helicopter supJ5lies, thereby limiting reaction capability to \\'idespread attacks. "They tell me your first attack is the worst. I hope so, because I couldn't get a much worse feeling than I had last nit>4lt," said Lance Cpl. Bob Hughes of lndependeoce, Iowa, a guard at Merble Mountain. Over-all deml,ge and cas\l·alties were described by the U.S. comm'!'ld as light. Maj. Gen. Robert Cushman's Marine headquarters took five mortar rounds but 60.fiered 'no damage, s~s said. He Wasn't Really Sick Until Later Honesty is the best Policy. when· fac-+ ed with limited alternatives and the burden of proof. Costa Mesa police officer Eugene Norden was dispatched to 1 3 O · Broadway St., early today. where a man was reported lying on the grass. .. Are you sick? Do you need an am- bulance?" Norden asked. "I'm drunk," was the .reply, or words to that effect. Needless to say, he was transported to a new bunk less susceptible to the early morning dew. DA ILY PILOT ORANGE CO,t,ST . PUBLISHING COMP,1,N'( Aobtrl N. Wt•d Pl'tsldtllt •rid Publiltlfll' Jttk R, C111lty Viet Prtsk:lenl 8!111 General MalWIW Tho"''' J(,,,,;1 Ecli~r Jho"'•• A. Mw rphit'lt "'611atl<'lt ECll!or 1'1,I Nine" "~llJ1"" Olr«tor C.• .. ..._ Offlc.• JJO W•1t lty 5111•+ M1i li"g Addrat•: 1.0 . lo• 1560 92626 O"-' otfl«t N\wpe'l'I Buell: nu w .. 1 l•ito1 eovtc¥•1\1 LI!.,.,. ~: m Forni ..,,,_ ~un•lnetclrl kW!: JOit $th $~1 DAILY PILOT. ~ -.1e11 ll ~ tht Ne,,.·ll'rftl. It t11Wbl1Wotd ct.Ill\' ell(fP'I ~ Clll' '" ~tl'f .. d!l!A kit' (Cllolt MtM, NfW'llOtf kt<h, Lt-ltM;fl. Nuntlnt- ltt<.11,. ,,_ltflt Vllltl' llld W.111'11•"'• ''°"' ........ ""''°""' I'd/lb\. "'"'lltt ''lltl• 11 '111 M\I .. ltio.1 11..,,.. ~ lt«t.. Mid a """' ••r s"""'. ta.11 Ak'I., f•..,.._ C1141 '42-4J21 Cl•HW ,.._,...., '42·1671 C:.Wlofll, tM. Offllflt COlll f'ltiW!lltt c-11y. Nt fWwt sioritt. 1n11ttr-1llom. tdirtrlfl IMllW w .,wrt..,,_.. lltrtllt -~ "" r••• Diii • ..., ._... .,,,. ---...,..._.,,.. h<Mf t-. -.., ,, .... _.. ~ bllllr!llti, M110M .... a.t "''"" ti.JI' ....... tr, "' ......... ,,.....,,., ,,.,.,., ..,......,..,.__,,., 11. • I . "W• obje<t VfttY stron&lY to hovlac 10 1utomobll1 dlrmantllni Juakyard right U-." Slrlbl uh!. , No . dlamantllng will occur 11 an there, however, said Anlstant Clfy At· torney Robert L. Humphrey!, nol!~g that a statement on Jtie agenda pn· plying so was erroneousb' worded. Strahl was still not entirely happy. but commisslt\ners noted that the'body shop is properly located in the M·l ln· dustrial zooe and his apartments do not tab Pf'OC'Odonl· ~ Moad&Y ill&lt:I ailo: , -RocODlQl•D<\ld approval of .~ cop. Thi Pl11D•lna CommS.slon 11\aO held '-~ lppm11 Ii)' a. U . dltloesl -)lll'inll-for t11t_ nnt 1111p owr the' pl'GpOlld .......,., a pM-cel ~ ~s,on . tor Ro a co e B. House of Orange County to operate a ol land lltla( 1111 -Ihle ·oe Fllr •. ~GI' :Ill! I;'•lr1'•Y. Plac~, lo divldt, facJUty !or rO!uibllltaUon ol aicollollcs Ort ll'om Vl _,..,. w lo ...__ •-..-ot . land on Orange A venue and regular temperance meetlnJt• at ve ari....... •>' WM befWeen Cecil and Albert PJaces into 2015 Charle St., in a neighborhood ton· Newport Freeway r_tght-ol·way. . !o,ur Jots. -eel for duplexes. NQ acUon will be taken on 1he pro-,.. -Recommended approval of 11. -Recornm'ended approval or a con. Posa!. to ~one. f~m aeneraJ com· ma!Jter plan of development for the ditlonal use permit for the First f!lercial to msl;itutional and recrea.• Central Bible Chu.rcb, at 23rd.St .. sub· Assembly Qf God Church, 146 22nd St.. t1onal WJage until the Oct. 14 meeting, mitted In' compliance with granlln( of to uge an eiclsUng pre·8Cho01 for a at the reqe~t of Southern Calif~rnia a conditional use, permit for their maximum or !IO children, nve days College. church operation. weekly Crom 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., at tiic cbwcb. All '~ ,by 1111 ~I Com· mission a~ recomm!!.Ddaflons only a nd wlll go to the City Council next for approvol or denial. The City Councj l meets next on Aug. 5 ror official buslness, due to an upcoming l!!th Monday. · : Councilmen l1ave called a special mretlnsr: for July 29 at 7:30 p.m .. at which time they will 1tudy city r:onin.( and sii(n ordinances, phu other related matters • Coast College Seat Tax Bill Dies for Good in Senate ,FroM r.,,, J PROSTITUTE BUSINESS .•. who are enthusiastic about sex. Cer- fainly it would be most boring. "On the other hand, there are lots of people who have · a hostility· to pro- behavior is impossible to control in a democracy. We put the police in a bind by saying stamp out prostitution on one hand and respect private behavior 011 the other hand. engage in marginally legal practices. "They must engage in undercover work and spy on us and this makes ~t difficult for them to carry out therr mandate in deinocracy and their reputation gets tarnished." Orange Coast Junior C o 11 e g e: District's seat tax bill finally died Monday in the current session of the Legislature. _ "It went belly up," said the secretary to Assemblyman Kenneth Cory, (D·A,naheim), who was author or the , bill. The vote w.as 8 to 1 not to forward ihe bill out o{ the Senate Local Government Committee. "We're just as delighted as can be," said Dr. Fred Bremer, superintendent. elect of Saddleback Junior College District, which tihe bill was p~ipally aimed at. Orange C Q a s t Superintendent Norman Watson said he bas oo idea whether the bill will be introduced again next year. The bill, after several votes, passed the Assembly by the bare margin Ot one vote but got nowhere in the _ Senate. It would have required new junior college districts such as Saddleback to pay establisbed junior colleges $150 per tr·an6fer student. As it now stands, Saddleback is ex- empt from paying seat tax to Orange Coast and other districts for three years, but Orange Coast must accept Saddleback students. Saddleback does have to pay '600 or so operating expenses for each student attending other district's schools. During its first year beginning this fall, Saddleback will not be able to handle sophomores or vocational students on its interim campus. Orange Coast C<>Uege will get most of them sans seat tax. stitution because they want to stamp <Jut sex. "Obviou11ly if prostitutes are of-· ferln.g services to husbands they can't get from their wives, the wives will be against it. InsUtuuons· are against it because oC the breakdown or the fami- ly. It also makes It difficult for nice Jrtrls to restrict their favors if it is easy for men ~o get sex somewhere elae." The very presence of a double stan- dard in sex, which says that men may engage in as much sex activity as possible and women as little as possi· ble, could the<lretically encourage pro- stitution, according to the professor. "There is something wrong with this idea. The only way it works is to have a small number ol women servicing a large number of men. Why should these women give it away?" "Police can't put a microphone under a prostitute's bed and cannot proposition her according to the letter <lf the law because we live in a democracy. Yet these are crimes \Vithout victims. Thus the police must Mesan Asks Assistance For Refugees Mrs. Thomas Wienenga of Costa Mesa needs help desperately. Not for herseU, but for Mr. and Mrs. Miguel Yero, Cuban refugees who arrived in Costa Mesa Sunday. The sociologist believes Americans inadvertently encourage disrespect for the Jaw by accumulaUng too many. In· stead of disapproving of something they pass a law against it. Thus, law books get fatter ev·ery year. "I think it's ridiculous to have laws against prostitution because it isn't discouraged," said Dr. Kirk. "I also think it strange not to punish clients of prostitutes. U there are going to be laws against prostitution the clients are the <Jnes who should be pro· secuted. The undercover agent's job would certainly be easier." But Dr. Kirk does not foresee any changes in the law. Nor does he foresee any reduction in the number of prostitutes. He telieves that even if there were extreme pr<lmiscuity, or free love, thert' would still be room for specialized experts, females who were more sensitive, more attractive, or sexually more skilled. Fron1 Page J Dr. Kirk believes the double stan- dard to be unfair in other respects. "Women are in slavery in this culture. Women can't buy men, for example. Jn Southern Europe where there are rich women and starving• men you have something very close to boys prostituting themselves to women but Mrs. Wienenga, a Cuba herself. though not a refugee has helped 14 families adjust to the American way <lf life by providing them with anything and everything she can. Could prostitution ever hold a moral position in society? TUCKER ... hear the 'facts," she added, speaking in ordinary, conversational tones, but visibly alarmed as Judge Cameron refused to set ball. Judge William Christensen can set bail if he chooses at her appearance Friday, or subsequently, in Harbor District Judicial Court. In just 49 minutes, the petite, dark· haired housewife showed a range of emotion from near-gaiety to resigna· tion, while her previous courtroom reaction has been one of seeming bewilderment. She entered Department 0 n e . pi:nelled in carved oak the color of caramel at 1:26 p.n1., walkin g purposefully and briskly beside a Marshal's mab·on wearing a curly blonde wig fall. EaCh tin1e the creaky door opened, she turned to see \vho it might be and finaHy smiled happily when Tucker ar· rived, followed later by the others. At 1:37, two marshal's deputies could be heard as they discussed body shops and fender repairs in a corner and moments later, two more deputies escorted seven manacled'Jirisoners in : for 'their hearing on states or sanity or J>?SSible narcotics addiction. APPEARED BOTHERED Mrs. Tucker appeared bothered, boUl by the sight and by the clatter <lf chains z.s the men were uncuffed to take their seats in the jurybox. She seemed increasingly nervous as time - passed. "'George is doing a beauti!ul job at home," Augustine assured her casually at one point. She smiled. "I wocked so bard on that litUe bit of dicbondra ... '' she replied. The first defendant on the docket failed to appear and Judge Caineron ordered a bench warrant for ·bis ar· rest, with $10,CXX> bail, plus penally assessments. One of the next men was ordered tu undergo 90 days of psychiatric observation -to determine if he will face prosecution then, or continued con1mitlnent -and Mrs. Tucker stared at the noor. . ·Another man's case WC)S continued pendiog a third psychiatrist's report. because two 0U1ers split, on whether he is. or is in danger of becoming, a narcotics addict. . - HUSHED WHISPER The hushing whisper of the air con· dltioner, broken repeatedly· as Judge Cameron explosively cleared his throat, filled the room between cases as the docket was thinned out. Mrs. Tucker, wearing a white blouse, pink sweater and light-blue skirt, sat almost direcUy beneath· two sepia-toned portraits of o Id· ti me judges on the. north wall. One of her hands r e s t e d on the other, which clutched a r o JI e d handkerchief. a.o; 2:10 p.m., and aiioth,er chaptu in 1he story o! Irene M. Tucker versus The People. ap· proached. Based on Augustine's comments 4 Mesa Women Win at Fair 1i~our Costa Mesa women sewed up the competition and won first prizes in their divl6iont in the ~H clothing con- test at the Orange County Fair which ended Sundoy. April Peterson won a first place rib- bon for her apron tntry, Susan Campbell won a first place for her to• try, a drtss; Suellen Coats won a first place !or ber skirt, and Mk:hdie Garlttll won a first place !or her skirt m· Separates for Fun. ' ) this is disguised. The term gigolo doesn't usu.ally imply sex. When it oc- "It is not inconceivable," said Dr. both on Monday and In the past, he curs, it is called a "fantastic love af· \Vil! probably defend Mrs. Tucker <JD fair.' This isn't a reflection of female The Yeros, both 74. will temporarily Jive with their 11on Muguel Yero Jr., one of the first refugees to arrive nearly six years ago. Kirk, "but it is highly unlikely. If it is ever moral in our society it won't be called prostitution. We'll call it some- thing else." the basis that she was acting in sell· psychology. Women are trained to defense on June 28 when the victim think of it that way.'' Mrs. Wienenga needs everything ex- cept a stove and clothing. "I would like to get them a television, washing machine. ice box, anything I can get a hold of. I would be very grateful to anyone who could help us," she said. was killed. ';There is a theory in the Upited He has ftequently made reference to States that men enjoy sex more than .Family Argument Brings Troubles the fact that Mrs. Tucker weighs women. This is going <lUt. I think there slightly more than 90 pounds, while are Jots of girls wbo can't get what the stabbing victim was a robust they want from their husbands and it woman some 80 pounds over that might be a Jot healthier if they could The assistance Mrs. Wtenenga gives begins as soon as a refugee arrives in the United States. In the case of the Yeros, she has been jn contact· with the Catholic Church in New York. figure. call the neighborhood pimp rather The defendant was also treated at ~. than get a divorce.'' A family argument involving a young Costa Mesa man backfired ear· ly today when police dispatched to the home discovered he was a wanted man. Bristol Park Medical Group in Costa Dr. Kirk believes that prostitution Mesa after the fatal incident and survives because social condemnation showed obvious signs of a beating as doesn't. have any effect on an indi- she was led from her home. vidual's behavlQr. Not <Jnly does she provide the refugees with household goods, but finds them jobs, provides transporta. tion. makes appointments. and in many cases helps them get additional educa- tion. Robert A. Hinchcliff. 22, of 1602 Placentia Ave., was arrested on an Orange County Superior Court war- rant carrying $6,2.50 bail for failure to appear in court on a marijuana case. Besides scratches across her face. ''Society condemns sharp business Mi·s. Tucker f\ad a red mark across practices, violence. racial discrimina· the back of her neck -visible at ar-tion, to<l," said the sociologist. "When raignment proceedings ~ and people cry wolf too often, a child Augustine said al the time that several grows up not paying any attention." of her teeth were loosened. '·There are certain things society Anyone interested in assisting Mrs. \Vienenga may call her after 5 p.m. at 646-3025. Patrolman Jack Koch said Hin- chcll!f ran out of the house, but was later found in the garage and arrested. One <lf the primary points to be determined at the trial, since Mrs. Tucke.-is the only one who knows just what transpired, is how a con· frontation arose between the women. HEARD SCREAMS A handful of witnesses, including neighbor Donald V. Schenk, of 1645 Minorca Drive, who ministered to the dying woman as she lay in front of his home, reported bearing screams. Another point will be this: was it both or only one of the two \vomen screaming? Augustine has also ~uggested in building his case for li-trs. Tucker that one stab wound such as that sulfere:i by Mrs. Westphal is extremely dil· ficult to indica:e murder. The inevitable sell-defense angle to be presented in the trial will probably be based on a contention that both women were in heated mutual combat \vhen the stabbing occurred. FIGHTING ENDED \Vhen Mrs. Tucker took steps to de· fend hersell, in this case with a blade \vhich the Sheriff's Crime Lab has been unable to positively identi!y, the fighting ended, Augustine will also suggest. The DAILY PILOT has uncovered information that Mrs. Tucker does not believe the neighbor .she barely J.-ne\v 1 is dead. although she has been told ~ repeatedly. The defense is likely to also use this point of disbelief in the death to sup- port a claim that Mrs. Tucker wanted only to get away !rom a violent situa- iton and protect herself. Whatever her motivation was, In the u1timate decision returned by a jury- frantic self·protecUon or murder - the results of the clash are ir· reversibly and continuingty tragic ror two families. Mesa Police Nab Tlu·ee Teenagers In Purse Theft Three teenagers chased from " purse theft by the victim's shouts "'ere ctpiured Monday night by C.Osta Mesa poUce. who discovered one to be an AWOL Marine. Charles E . Crawford, 18, or 21>304 Cypress St., Santa Ana, was tak~n Into custody at 2200 College Ave •. along with two glrb, 16, and 17. and lalu turned Over to military poUce. Mr1. Marcella l'toberson. o r Norwalk. said her car was parked al 2190 College Ave., ltfonday afternoon when she a.aw three younptm take her pune containing $10 from the vehicle. She ytUed1 they lied and OUDll the purse down 111 their haate. cannot condemn successfully. Private mil 1:11 NBC' has it! DEEP Steam. . CllllPCT CLCllnlnC THE ULTIMATE We lay it on the line in CARPET CLEANING • • • P.•c•ntly, D••p Steem Carpet Cl••ner1 introduced • new profe11ion•I c•rpet cl••ning proc•ss fo this County .•• Prior to off•ting this remerkable s•rvice to you, our cu1tom•r1, w• co~ducted our own comprehensive f•iting pro9r•m in order to verify th• cl•im1 m•de for th• proc•ss by its develop• er1. Not only did w• find Deep Ste•m to be • revolution•ry d•p•rtur• from our tradition•I c•tp•t cl••n· ing m•thod, but w• f'ound it to b• abiolutely safe for all carpet and upholstery fabrics. Concurrent with out f•stinq progt•m, we thoroughly frain•d our personnel in the effectiv• use of Oeeo St•em cle•ning equipment •• , Only when we were completely 1atisfied that D•ep Steam met with our st•ndards did ~· off•r thi1 unique new service to you. A succ•ssful company's reput•tion is its b•it •dvertis•m•nt. We l•y it on the lino by cordi•lly inviting you to try 1•fety-tested Deep St••m W•ll-to-Wal Cerpet •nd Upholstery C leening ••• The fin· 91t profesiional c•rpet cleaning 1ervic• y•+ deYeioped for the industry. Prof•ct th• life of ycut c.erpets •nd th• bt•ufy cl your home by ctlling tod•y! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? W• •r• dr•p•ry 9llpertsl We str•s• quality of workm•n1h ip I inst•ll•fion. Free Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: -IN TOU WANT THI ''flHDT- CALI. UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 y•art of c.ollecttve '•xperience befw•en the 2 m•n doing your work. All worli-don• in our plent, We pr•·+••f all fabric.s b•fore cle•ning. Free Estimaies In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: -ISTIMA11 RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS OUr 21st Ye1r of S.rvM:e in 2950 RANDOLPH PHONE 546-3432 Oron90 County COSTA MESA ,,_Tol- c.t -''°'" ------------ , BY WILLIAM REED ......... In the Wind Chamber of Commerce Manager Dale Dunn and his staff have been working hard to open the new offi- ces on Beach Boulevard and last Friday night proudly displayed the new pad to the public. The public was suitably impress- ed, but not quite ~s impressed a s Dunn was. Seems the manager was prepared to show the new quarters without furniture and was shocked to drop in Friday night and find the place fully equipped: Typically a boss, Dunn said the place looked ''just great" and praised au the work involved in oJ>.. taining desks and all, but com- plained that "someone hung the dr.apes all wrong." * None of this impressed M a yo r Alvin M. Coen too much. The Jnayor has law offices in the same building as the chamber and all he had to show to the public was an office containing only the open framework of future walls. He assured all his visitors t h a t someday he will have carpets, drapes and the things to complete his office. Perhaps he and his wife Felicia need to talk to the girls at the chamber ofiic.e. * Don Shipley, Huntington Beach's traveling councilman and former mayor, reports in today from the n1ain deck of the RMS Queen Eliz- abeth. "This is still a great ship," reports Don. He is on his way to North Africa by way of as many countries as he can pass through. That really means, that as is his custom, he is visiting every civic center in all of Europe and most of North Africa. The Queen Elizabeth is to be re- placed next year on the run with the Queen Elizabeth II and the old ship returned to service as a res- taurant and convention center in Philadelphia, which, as Don ob- serves, is "better than going to the scrap heap." N.EIPORT CENTER All Agencies Due to Give .J Route Views ' A public l><arin& on the _.-ed Huntington Beach Freeway routing Vlill be held by the Calilornio Highway Commission Friday In the auditorium ot the Huntington Beach High School, 1905 Main St., Huntington Beach. The section of the future freeway under consideration 'Will be located in the vicinity of Beach Boulevard, ex- tending no11hword from the Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach to Lampson Ave ., just nCl"th of the Garden Grove Freeway in Garden Grove. PREVIEWING THE PAST -This authentically Mrs. John Porter, with classic transportation. The restored 1911 Badger, the only one of its kind ex~ Badger is one of more than 200 cars which will be The hearing has been called, follow- ing two earlier public hearlngs, to give all agencies, local governing grou1>5, civic organizations and citizens an op- portunity to present a r g u m e n t s regarding the freeway, tant, provides (left to right), Mark Sheller, owner, featured on the UC! athletic field at the Big Brother Mrs. George Woodford, Mrs. William Holstein and benefit Pageant of the Automobiles Sunday. The commission has not decided on a routing and will consider all facts presented at the Friday hearing bef<>Nl adopting a route, a spokesman said. Aerial maps and photographs show- ing the variOUJ study lines are now on public display at tbe Huntington Beach Main Library, Huntington Center, Fountain V a 11 e y City Hall, Weseninster City Hall, Stanton City Hall, and the Garden G""" Olly Hall. Soap Boxer1 Await Derby Approximately 100 young soap box racers will rattle and roll down a 1,000 foot hillside course Sunday in co-m- petitio-n for the Orange County Soap Box Derby Championships on the Irvine Ranch at Peters Canyon. ' Jointly sponsored by the Santa Ana Elks Lodge and the Orange Chevrolet dealers, race activities begin with in- speclion and weighing in of the cars Saturday at the Peters Canyo-n track. Each car, inclµding the weight of its 10-15-year old driver, must weigh under 250 pounds. The race, which begins at noon Sun- day, will be preceded by a parade starting at 9 a.m. in the Sears parking lot in South Santa Ana. Brothers ·Sponsor Parade Sunday For Auto Buffs The Pageant of the Automobiles, sponsored by the Big Brothers of Orange County boasts that it has something for every type of car buff in it:s show set for Sunday at the Irvine campus. _ The pageant, the first Of its kind to be held in Orange County, will feature antique vintage, classic, unusual, elegant' modern, foreign and domestic sport cars, *S well as horseless car- riages. It v.ill be a public event. Show hours run from 11 a.m, to 4 p.rn. on the UCI athletic field. General admission tickets are $1.50 for adl.llts and 50 cent! for children under 12. The pageant is being held as a benefit for the Big Brothers of Orange County who will receive all prot:ita from Ule show. " . W estmmster l\lau Wins $1,000 Graul Chrystal L. Arnold Jr., recent graduate of Orange Coast College, has received a $1,000 scholarship from the J'OSeph Shinoda Memorlal Scholarship Foundation of the California State Florists' Association. A \Ve,tminster resident., Amo!d plans to continue hil sfudies at the University of california at Davis. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hippies Have Hard Time Finding Far. East Home SINGAPORE (UP!) -Basnished from Laos and banned by Bankok, American hippies ere having a tough time in tbeir search for a hospitable place to hang their beads. They blnme counterfeit hippies and U.S. officials fur most ot their woes. "The U.S. Embassy had a hand in getting the hippies out of Laos," said Bronx-born Sheldon "Shelly" Loner, a 41-year-old senior member of the hip- pie movement. His remark brought an enthusiastic nod of agreement trom his 21~year-old travelling companlon, Eliz abet h Temple, a native of Keysville, N.Y., who now claims Berkeley, Ca,lif., as her home. Un.ti! the flower children were banished from the country a little more than a month ago, Laos was the hippies' dreamland. Opium and mari- juana were sold openly and smoked openly throughout the land. Loner operated a "pad" and discotheque cz..lled "The Third Eye.'' "\Ve used to keep the whiskey prices high for the tourisi.3, and the ice cream prices low for the hippies," said Loner with a touch <.i nostalgia in his voice. Everything wa.s fme for the hippies, then suddenly they were all expelled. Unable to stay~ Thailand, the hip- pies have made their way through Malaysia, and many have come to Sing.spore in search of a new haunt. But there is "no happening here" they say. "'Malaysia and Singapore arc pretty tight," says EJ:izabeth. The immicration officials o f f\.1alaysia in particular are "very heavy on the hippies," says 1.-0ner. "As soon as they see a duffle bag, and they know you're not the suitcase type, right away the word i:s out to check you," he said. "They want to know how much bread {money) you got." The Singapore government is more hospitt;ble, but a free bed is harder to find . The hippies seek out Sikh temples wherever they go, since Sikh religion requirH its followers to give aid and a place to sleep to needy travellers. But the Queen Street Temple in Singapore, a wooden frame building from which the paint is flaking, herds all the hippie visitors into one tiny room, regardless o! how many seek shelter. Buffums' Own acrylic sweaters zeduced! 9. 99 1eil3.00 Buffums' brinas you special savings on this washable shaker knit cardigan. Crochet him and buttons, long sleeves. Choose white, bone, yellow and aqua, sizes 36 to 42. Come in early. Save now on gaily printed shifts 6 9 9 Comparable values • lrom 11.00 to 15.00 Wile .away the hot summer hours in our coolinr shifts. Choose fiom a larae selection ol nylon, aciylic, cotton, rayon or Dacron• polyester. Sho1t sleeved or sleeveless with convertible, ~ jewel or cowl collars, sizes 8 to 16. Accesso1ies .. .. Sheep Dog Has Nose For Pot WASHINGTON (UPI) -Wbea ftl'- weary Marines board a plane at Da Nang for a rest-&nd·recreation trlR to Bangkok or Hong Kong, "Cindy' ii there to see them off. Candy Is a German shepherd dog. And, rep<.-ts Frank Bartino, heed of the Oerense Department's Drug AbuM Committee, Candy Js a fool-proof way ot detecting marijuana in the luggage of men leaving the big Vietnam bue. "The dog never falla to find the stuff," Bartimo said. "The Marlne1 have a &ecood German shepherd in training .for the fob, and tbe Army i.1 training two ottiers. We've decided to make more use of them." Barttmo. who returned recently from his sixth inspection trip to Viet- nam, said a spare marij~':J:ant 1& kept in a suitcase to keep from beccming ~ated if DO Dllct lllld is made. Bartimo said in an interview that the number of m a r ·t j u a n a in· vestigattons is rising in Vietnam. The Defense Department, 1 n cooperation with the South Viet- namese · government. is also using covert civiUan investigaton and paid informers in an effort to stop the traf· fie in marijuana. Marijuana investigations in 1967 in· volved three out of every thousand troops in Vietnam, .or three-tenths ·of one percent. Through May of this year, it appeared the 1968 figure will be abo-ve four·per-thousand. The latest montlhly report 11hows 184: cue1 in May. Whether the number o f in· vestigaUoll! indicates the extent ot marijuana use can be question~. Bartimo conceded. Surveys among similar age groups on college cam· puses have shown that usually 5 or 10 percent had smoked "pot." Bartimo beUeves the percentage la much lower among troops despite 1he admitted availability of the drug at Jow prices. Most soldiers and Marines are kept busy seven days· a week and have litUe opportJunlty to experiment." he said. Polish Club to Hear Of Constitution Plan A preliminary draft of the propoaed constitution for the Orange County Polish Club will be presented to members at a dinner meeting Friday. Mike Anuszkiewlcz Of Costa Mesa. president, and A. Vaszilly, also of Costa Mesa, vice president, will make the presentation at the Hom ol Plenty Smorgasbord restaurant, 2414 S. Fairview, Santa Ana, at 6:45 p.m. • II FASHIOH ISLAND • 644-2200 • MONDAY, THURSDAY, rRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30' /. '· I I ... l \ .. I tc--.. _, .. Deltt Ptlll lf9ffl ''She smiled a lol," said J oh n Seto, proprietor ol the Old Frank- lin Market in San Frencisco. Also, be told police, she had a gun. So \vhen she demanded all Seto's money from his cash register, he handed over about $50. She was ~1111 smiling when be did that. Then "'ibe left smiling, ol course. •.. . I, • Crowd Sees Texas DA Sl1ot Dead CLARENDON. Tex. (AP) -•'lve shots f'rom a rifle killed Dist. Atty. John-R. Gillham oulliide his county <-'OUtthouse office Monday. Authorities lodged a murder charge against a building contractor. About 10 persons witnessed the shooting on the square in the center of this Texas panhandle town ol about 2.200 people. The Complaint charging murder u·ith malice named Clyde Gilbreath, 60, who was ordered held without bond. '.PoUce Chief Gary Gerdes sald Gillham. in hill late 50s. had been represenUng the \\1ife or Gilbreath in a divorce suit. Among U1e spectators was a 11.ycar· old son of Gilbreath, who !ei?.cd his father and held hint until Sheriff Bill Cornell arrived. \11'1 T1llPlltl1 P1•ofessio1iu:l Job A111c11d111etat Defeated House Rejects Gun .. Licensing 'VASJllNGTON (UPI) -Tht: llousc ~oday rej~cted a proposal to require licensing. or gun owners. An amend· n1ent to atlj the licensing provision to a bill to ban i.nteretate sales o! all llrearms wn1 tw-ned duy,•n o n a ' . nonrecru·d vote ol 179 to 84. oereat of the licensing proposal - after Fj'ld~y's re j e ct I 0 n of amendments to req,uJre f e d e r a 1 registration of guns -left the hill to regulate.sales of firearms 1n a posiUon ,for pos&.lble House p&ssage by tonlght. l?ep. Rob2rt McClory (R·lll.), pro· posed the unsuccessful amendment to give the slates two years to set u11 "i:~rntit" !:ystcins ror :;un v\\·r.crs and then require federal licenses "·here any states fa11cd to aet. In the nteantime the 1'exas \Vhile llouse . announced that 4-0 ()f the 50 state, governors had . agreed to cooperate wllh President Johnson in r2vie\vi11 g their state gun laws with a \·ie111 ttnvard lightening U1cnl. lional registratli>n of firearms failed Jo'riday by a nonreccrd vote ot 39 to 168. but admlnistration strategists sald abscnteels1n an1ong their supportc1·s had niuch to do ~\'lU1 Uie poor lihov/ln~. They hoped tor a better turn<>Ut today. Rampaging B~ar Shot After Attack 011 3 CampeJ's \VEST \'ELLO\\'STONE. 1'1 on I . (UPI ) -·n1c F'orcs!. Service said to· day a ra1npoging grizzly bear attacked a group of young ca1npers in Yel'.·:iwstonc National Park, biting l\\'O girls and a boy ·as they lay in their slee~lng bags. ;l 'ir., Dritish actrc.ts Jane Asher and Beatie l'aut llfcCartllell are catlinu it quits. Afils Aslu:r said th.at her engagen1e11t to McCartnev lias bee1~ broken off. T11e 22-year·old actress broke tlu: flf:WS in a BBC television intervitw. Lau•yer \Villiam J . Lo\\'C sa\v Gilbreath step to hi s truck and ren1ovc :1 3().3() rifle n1oments earlier, lie told authorities. adding. "There 1vasu't any 1ray you could get the gun <J\vay fru1 11 hirn ." Basil \V. Smith, manager of an auto supply store. told officers the shooting occurred as he started acrtss a street to1vard \\'here Gillhan1 and Gilbreath \\'ere standing. Joseph Granatelli. or the fnn1 cd racing: famjly, surveys the havoc left by burg lars "¢0 looted thc Sonta Monica equlpn1ent office of S51,000 in cash. Police tern1ed the burglary a "very professional job." The burglars used equipment found in the building to cut their \vay into the comp2ny floor safe. 'rhe committee on crime and la\\I en- fc:·cen1ent of the National Governors' Ccnfcrtnce moved at the same Un1e lo put itseU a11 recorJ as favoring in· di vidual state responsibility in the n1attcr of gun conlrol Jaws. l· The bear, \Vhicit had also attacked a man frcm Ca:liiornla last weeJ.r. was kille:J by a Montana game and flsb \\"arden. The nine you11~ campers from the i'lcw York City area \l'ere attacked Sw1day by the bear. according to Phi! lie.skins, district fort.St s er v I c e supervisor. • '·Mr. Gillham \\'as shoutJng, 'N o Clyde -don't do this' " Smith said . "As soon as the boy grabbed his dad, it knocked the rifle a li ttle away from him and I picked it up." •Like Ato111 Bo1nb' 1'he basic bill before the J.louse \l'OU!d, wiU1 limited exceptions, allow gWJs to be bought only i n the purchaser's hoine s t ate . Sup- plementing hand gun controls enacted lo.st n1onth. it would restrict rifle and shotgun sales to persons at least 18 years old, regulate ammunlUon sales, and for!Jid gun sales to felons. drug atldicts or 1nental defectives. Hosklns said the bear \V.as an "out· cast" with a. history of attack.inc campers. Adding insult to armed robbery, a Jone gunman robbed the 20th Century Fo:z studio of more than $10,000 lale Monday and fled in a car belonging to a cameraman. Gen• W. Flynn, 32, a cashier at the studio, said the short, slight ban- dit took all the currency and coin at gunpoint from the studio safe. then fled in the auto belonging to c:i.;neraman Wllll•m CronjNger. Gerdes reported the dislrict 11t· torney \\'as shot hvice in front. t\l'ice in the back and a filth time as he fell to the sidewalk. Gas Storage Tank Explodes The girls .and boy were not seriously injured. Hosklns said. He said the grizzly bit through the &iris' sleeping bags and didn't break their skin. The b:;:y's fore~ had puncture marks on it, he said. • Oon•ld Cl•ypool of Pleasant f'lain (Illinois) was rushing his \l'ife, Velma, about to give birth to their fifth child, to Memorial Hos· pital in Springfield. Mrs. Claypool suddenly said she was about to give birth. Claypool rushed into a funeral home where a mortician delivered the child. Mother and daughter \vere doing fine .•. l'.!ter at the hospital. • ·~-:-J::IS!!l!!* a ii'.19£5 cs .z •• ca . 1 An unidentified pa.ssenger who said, "I want to go to Cuba" was renloved from Eastern Air Lines Flight 955 to Afia1ni. A deputy sl1eriff said later that the incid· ent was "just a bad joke , .. a ~1.upid remark." Seven contnter· cial airli'11ers ha·ve been hijack- ed lo Cuba this year and two at· tcrnpts have been thwarted. ,-.1 ~·-------... -.? • l\ SL Bernard at the Vancouver l\cnncl Club show forgot that his Urced is supposed to be the kindly rcscue·people·in-tbe-snow type ... ~o he bit the judge. Oliver H•rri· man, of Pebble Beach, \vho was judging the St. Bernard class, had to be treated at a hospital for head and neck lacerations. The dog! He \ron fourth place in his class. • Los Angeles City Councilman Arthur K. Snyder says the Depart· n1ent o! Animal Regulation is do- ing all it can to deliver traps to persons complaining about skunks. "Skunks have become so numer- ous." Synder said, "that the de- partment is \VOrking overtime ans· \re ring co1nplaints." Texas Hospital Scene of Anotl1er Heart Transplant llOUSTON, Tex. IAP) -Surgeons transplanted the heai1 of a youth fatially injured in an auto accident into the body of a Nebraska man today in wllat they described as a very suc- cessful operation. It was the 27th such transplant in the \\'Orld and the second in three d<:.')'5 at St. Luke's Episcopa! hospital. where seven now have been perforn1· ed. I-Iospi.t.al spokesman identified the recipient as Henry W. Jurgell'S. 57, ol Beatrice, Neb. They said he enterecJ St. Luke's Sunday suffering from ad- \'anced heart disease. The donor \vas Michael I< Buxton. 16, of Houston, who suffere:J n1assivr head injuries in an auto accident Mon· day morning. He died at 12:47 a.m .. the hospital reported, and the transplant surgery \Vas completed at 2:15 a.m. • Dr. Dento n A. Cooley supervised thP. operaUon. as he has the others at St. Luke's. Attendants said he considered it very successful and pronounced Jurgeru; in highly salisfr:-ctory con · dltion. Cooley , \\'ho has supervised more heart transplant operations titan an\' other surge<Jn, said the procedure al sf.i should "no longe r by considered surgical feats or surgical spec· taculars." Six possible recipients are a\YaitJ ng operations at the hospltzl to be performed \vhen suitable do n or ~ become available, he said. Six ha\'C died for lack of donors, he added . Everett E. Thomas, 47, of Phoeni x Ariz., who received ~ new heart Ma v 3, has left the hospital and plans tU start work Aug. l at a Houston bank, Cooley said. PENSACOL...\. l"la . IAPJ .\ gasoline sturage t-ank expl<ideJ ''like an ato1u bon1b" today, hurled residen ts of nearby hGmes out of their beds , and shot fk1n1es 300 feet high over the Pensacola waterfront. Seven hours after the first of three explosioos. th'e 200,000·gallon tank still burned furiously, bl anketing the c:.1·ea \V·ith oily smoke. The fire thre;:i-teneJ other tanks loaded wilh gasoline and kerosene. l\1r. and r..tr s. JUn Hicks 11·ere knoc:k -1 ej out of their b~ds by the first blast \\"hich blew gasoline an.1 spark~ through the \\•ln dows. starting several smaU fires in the house. Both suffered bu111s as they beat oLtt tf1e fires before fleeing U1e h:lme. Barrancas A venue running past the stcrt!ge field was barricaded and residents of several homes were e\o-acuated. 'fraflic headed into the ci· ty, which nonnaUy crosses a bridge o\·cr th e Bayou Chico. \Vas sent on a five-mile detour to another brlJge. "It looked-like an atom bomb e.x· 11losion," s~·id sherifrs D c put y Edward ~1a.\ o. T w i c e fireficihlcrs came tlose to Searcl1 Launched For Lost Youth SHAVER I.AKE. CaHf. (UPI) -A massive search Is under 'vay today for the 1n issing lour-year-old son of a l-"resno television personality \1•ho strayed fron1 Lhe rantily can1 p Monclay afternoon near here. The air and groun d search for Richard Martin. son of Ki\>IJ-1'V an- nouncer Chester (Chet) ~fartin. began 1:1t daybreak today. Martin told authorities his son \Vas discovered missing about 4:30 p.1n. Monday. He said he and other fa1nily 1nembers searched the mount ainous area until n1idnight and then notified Fresno County autl1oritics at Shaver Lake. 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StlJ 7:5' 1.m. Ntw l"lrtt O. 1"11" Liii II. JulJ ,U A1111. I Au~ I Au9. U ll.S. S111Kinar11 MG,, Ill 111! 11111111'1 t~lorM Wl l"ll'\, 1"""" ...... 111>er hKllY ... rm lhe ,~,,,. llOll Ill rlll! '°""" 1"11 1"-MIHIUIPOI Vil~, wlli<ll llld 1t111,.-w ll'llH'd.,- 1~r~. Torno«ion •1imn1o:<1 !111a Dcrh of tcu• tM!tl Mon~tY. 11\0 lllrbultrtl ~•'""' l" ll>t Mk!W",I rnsHed ·~ Dille-Will tlelr """"'~ ell~. lo<n~ I~ dOw'n »!'Ir SP•!.,... 1l1kl. Df'llo. Prr.ccall. "''~.. JehYIOf-, K•11.. 11111 Sl••H'-· ""-· Seyerel ~llCll11<1~ ..,.re d1m•uM u>d !rt!!'> Cowl\t'd, tlul llO l11lur1..., -•e rtt0rtM. Ht1~ wlll<I• Inell l.ll l!IClll!I ol rt!ll 11'1 ICt m l<IUIH lltl~ ttnh •t lll<! MOU!'ll \ltfflOll, Ohl(!. Fll.,f"OllllCll. "' '••~ w11 Mlllfd lly llohtnl"'f 11t1r fl•ri.. " U-mlllUtil l'l'IUl!llH\ICl<rn du-~ l .lS lllCl<fil ot ••In Olt~f Elll•Y• In tOUlllNl!c>r" N•brf>lf C~r"!lt~ w-" ~lrlooNI 11 1111¥Y ~II t l•ll(k !119 CO...,,. 1•¥~1de. TMH!e•llUt?> •bO•~ IOD l<'OH~•tf :kl\ltll~I! d~lll'ff l>ll'l!llo>W, •P'\d tO-cf~· orH ttldl"'lll cwe•ta I!!! 1111!1111. Tett1perat11res Alltntl llll en•lt ld lllsm1ro. 11,,.tgt, CM(l~O (IMln~~ll C:lev•il'n<I DetivPr DCI MolllU ~troli Eurtkl rorT worm ,.,..,no Helin• ....... Hausloll K1m11 (lf>r Lis \'"11 l as Anttlo Ml1m1 ee.cto MlfWovk~ "llfll'tl'l-oli, l'l!"f Or~~"' N"• Yo•k Oak••,.., 0""'11• r~~ r~11·• l'llllfl1<"1ol•l1 PlwJMI• l"itl~bli ... ~ P&o-11.l~d F:lllld (.II• lll.o llluf! ·-S~t11m~"1o SI. Leuh s.u-, Sell L••· C1rv S.11 01-S!11 F;em;t:co :S..11!1 ll1rbt•t ~t~!I;• Sro~·r.·~ ,~.,.,..,~1 W•lh•n~'"' ff " 11 SJ " ~ !CS 1l " " " " ,, 11 ,, 10 t l ., 11 ~a " ,, n n fl ~' .. " •s n 10'! 6J SS ~· t i Ii " " •1 '' 10] 16 u ·~ Pl !1 .. ,. . " ti H ~~ fl I• ~' n rs 1ro n " " 101 !1 " M " !l 11 11 lt3 i1 " ·~ •1 n " " 6' St u 61 IC4 11 " " It 11 11 !1 :~ ., ,,, ~· " ,, " ., " ••• ·" bringing the towering blaze und~r con· 1.rol. but each tlme another blast rock· c.:I the tank o.nd flames leaped skyv.·.,1~J ~g~~1. But the administration had put Its hcpes fer even strong2r controls tn the defeated amendn1ent ta require the licznsing of gun 01vners. A·companion propcsal to reo_uirc nn- The unidentified group of can1pers left Monday for San Francisco I-I:skin o; s:>i:•. ' ' . ----- Now! YOU really can make buttonholes that fool< expert ... because t!?ere is a new and wonderful GJJUILT-INGJJUTIONHOLER on the 4 newest 3"0UCH&$EW . . zig-zag sewing machines by Singer! Just turn the diar·on the Built-in Buttonholer ..• and you turn out a perfect. buttonhole in seconds! Nevrest Golden TOUCH & SEv~· se1·1 ing machine by SINGER hc:s Built-In Buttonholer. So do th ree more of the five TOUCH & SEW machines. y111a1 elc;I) j<; nP'll? A Speed Control v1ith an Electronic .::ense that keeps the se111ing speed constant no matter hov1 thick Qr th in the fabric is. All 5 of the newest TOUCH&SEWmach ines have: The exclusive Push·Button Bobbin that winds up !.[ght in the machine, saves you 18steps In ordinary bobbin winding. TIJerc are live 1 JeWeSl TOUCH &SEW sew1rg 11 ;acJ11i;es. Choose your favorite from $J4995 'UENA PARK 8330 O" The Mall TA 8-75<0 COSTA MESA 2300 H•rbor 81 ... d. ~I 9-1195 Herbor Center GARDEN GROYI 993 I Chapm•n SJ0-'40 t 0 Or•nc;i• Cou rity Pl•t• HUNTINGTON HACH Eding•r •t Bt•ch 897-1041 Huntingto" 8t1ch Ctnfer < ANAHllM SIS N. Lo•r• Sl5 1126 An1heim Canter SANTA ANA Downtown lOS W. 41h SI. Kl l -1945 U. MIU.DA I 5024 S. lutwtiler LA 1-1512 L• Mir•Ga Center COSTA MESA lrl1tol & Sunflowtr 540-2611 South Co11t Pl111 r .. i I • -~· ea;: ·-0 .,, c:JE!f $ t p • , l il I lo '\>I Cities Struck By Violence NEW YOl<K !UP!l -An angry crowd pelted polcie with rocks a.od bottle5, broke windows and set a serie1 of minor fires Mon- day night. Police had been called to disperse more than 200 persons who h a d gathered in the city's lower east side. No serious injuries were reported in the second night of disorders in the predominantly Negro and Puerto Rican area, which apparently stemmed from a beating received by a neighborhood r e s i d e n t . Police said nine persons were atTested. !S FIRES SET Firemen were called out 25 times for what they described as minor rubbish fires but were often turned back by persons hurling bot· ties and garbage. ... of 20,CKX'J 11 tined with sandy Lake Michigan beaches and summer resorts. The east side is populated heavily by migrant farm workers who settled there after coming to work in the rich fruit fields of southwest Michigan. * * * AKRON, OHIO -Police arrested 75 persons. 66 of them for curfew violations, Mond-ay night and early to· day in a predominantly Negro district in the Wooster Avenue area. Officers, however, deseribed the area -hit sporadically by r a c i a I disorders since Wednesday -as relatively calm. A firebombing in nearby Copley Township caused an estimated $8,000 damage. FIREBOMBING s e 0 • . -• -. ·~ . • • --... -I ........... fftll -ri!t DAILY PILOT 5 Remember Pueblo? IVA SlllNGTON IUPI) - A group of Jio use Republicans ls pres&ing for a national "Remember the Pueblo" display of flags Sunday In tribute to the 82 surviving crewmen of the U. S. intelligence r;hip, seized six months ago today by North Korea. Pueblo and her crew." Rep. WlllJam Henry Har·· ri!on (R·Wyo.), r;aid the. Pueblo incident pointed up the need for militar y preparedneS& ''suitable for any magnltu~e of engage· The group raised the sug- gestion Monday as members Solon Asks took the llouse floor to castigate the J ohnson ad- ministration for its ha ndling o( the 1ilcident. ~1rs. Lloyd l\0:-. Bucher, 1~·ife of the Pueblo's skipper, was n1eeting with ne\.\'Smen later today. Rep. Charlotte Reid (R. fll.), told the llouse: 1'\Ve remember Tripoli. \\' e rcn1e1nber the Alamo. We ren1entbcr the Maine. \\le remember Pearl tlarbor. Dare \\"e, in this hour , forge t the Pueblo." New P ueblo Trade Deal SEOUL (UPI) -Former U.S. Congressman Victor 'Vickersham offered tocla} to l.rade places with the 82 survivi ng crewmen of the Pueblo if North Korea will allow it. ment." "But there is one more lesson wltich must precede m 11 ltary preparedness;" llarriaon said. "That la the willingness to use o u r miJitary capacity. If United States hooor is unjustifiably violated, lhil counb'y must never fear to defend her honor." DELPF'IJL LOCAL BAml "We just knocked them (the fires ) down and kept going ," said one of the fireman. "They w ere n ' I serious fires -just rubbish in the streets." The troub!e began when police started clearing th e crowd that had gathered along one block. Residents responded with tl}e bottles and rocks thrown from roofs and doorwayys. then dashed through the streets hurling rocks through the windows of a post office and six shops. Mrs. Josephine Stark, a Negro',"' was injured slightly when a firebomb w a s thrown through the front window or her home Monday night. Firemen said she was hit by flying glass and suf· rered minor burns. BEANED IN BOSTON -A policeman prepares to remove this young man du r- ing a melee Monday night involving police, hippies, and onlookers at the Bos- ton Common. For the third night in a row, Boston police arrested a number of hippies. A series of scuffles involving 75 hippies and c\ub·"'ielding police le ft 2 persons hospitalized and 28 arrested. Rep. Durward G. Hall (R· J\1o.), said the callup of 15.000 reservists s h o r t I y aftl:'r the ship's seizure ap· peared to have been no inore than a "pure and simple fRce · SRvi ng device by the Johnson-Humphrey admin istration, another ex- tension of the credibility gap, "I will be happy just to ~ive myself as a pawn H they turn all the boys Joos~." the Oklahoma politi · c\",r:i:said. "I will stay there tin North Korea) as long as they want me to." Wickersham arrived in S('ou l Monday night to see what he can do about the Pueblo crew's release. Thomas R. SWttney _Is Vice p,... ldmt in chatte of New Bll!lifte. Dev•lop1n•nt for our Oraa1c County Region. He will Mlp you '""anp • CoSNM'rdal l.Ollll; for butiMM n pantlon throa&h ..,. of owr fowr loa! offices, A1'o _. Torn 1bovt Ru! Ettatc l.oaal..t complttk f.lcrow Servkw. ~ Southem Callfomla First National Bank SANTI !NI MAIN OfllCE 9-0Z North Main St, Santa Anl 835·8383 Police said there also was some rock throwing in the Copley Township area. National Guardsmen mov- ed into the city Thursday morning after N e g r o e s began wide -s pread disturbances on the city's so uthwest side. Initially, 700 troops were ordered into the aru. They were joined by 400 more during t h e weekend. Two Murdered by Drug Users ? "The reservists are still on alive d t.."\~y. They are being used for a variety of purpose!\ with one notable exception. They are not being used in any way, shape or form to help bring about the release of the "The opposit ion have milked this thing to the fullest ex tent and I don't see why they shouldn't turn the bo ys loose now .'' Wickersham said . "They have been there in North Korea through all the cold weather and alt the h<1I weDlher. It is time to go home." Arro..jrom'&f{iltd 1loo: ADAMSAVENl.12 llRANCH 1919'1 Ad.o1r11 A~ H~ Jt*5I ..,."" * * * BENTON HARBOR, J\11Cl1. -Groups of Negro youths broke windows and hurled rocks at police early today in the third straight night of vio!Cflce on the east side. Police. reinforced b y township. county and state police, moved q u i ck l y through the area to disperse the groups and prevent looting. There were s e v er a I firebombings but damage was minor. police said. More than 70 persons have been arrested since the in- cidents began at 1 a .m. Sun- day when a bartender refus· ed to serve liquor to two Negro youths because they were under the legal age. The homes of Mayor Wilbert SmJth and Municipal Judge Elizabeth F <1 r h a n were -the targets o { firebombs early Monday, just as they were during an ou1break of racial trouble after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. SN IPER FIRE At times firemen came under sporadic sniper fire and police used the disabling chemical mace to break up A force of 350 police, deputies and h i g h w a y patrolmen also was patroll- ing the city. Quads Born In Carolina SPARTANBURG. S. C. (AP) -Mrs. Perry Norris of Spartanburg gave birth to quadruplets -two boys and two girls -at Spartanburg TIJUANA. Mexico /UPI ) -Police believe the slayers of two Mexican women who were shot from a rolling c;.r were under the influence of drugs. ··we have been unable to determine a motive for these cowardly murders and our only hypothesis is that they were the actions or in· dividuals under the in· £1uence of drugs,'' said Chief Hector Gomez Velasquez oI the state. judicial police. Both victims. Mrs. Julia Garcia Astorga. 68. and Bertha Reyes Garcia. 21. were shot Monday in a residential area of thi~ border city. Both d i e d before they could be ques· tioned. General Hospital today. 1.4iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii>J The girls arrived first. starting at 5:20 a .m. The four births occurred at several minute intervals. Mrs. Norris. the former Brenda Saverance, is 25. She is the wife of the Rev. Perry Norris. pastor of the First Free Will Baptist Church here. The quads are their first children. Hospital attaches &aid the children, premature, haVe been placed in incubators. All were reported in good C<lndition. LET'S BE FRIEMDL Y Huntinaton Beach Visitor 642-6-014 Costa Mesa Vi~tor 642-6-0 14 So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 a crowd that swelled to over ;==========::.,IJ 400 early Sunda y. Harbor Visitor The incidents have been confined largely to shabby east side neighborhoods. plagued by repeated out- breaks since the fall of 1966. when a week of vio lence and one death prompted G<>v. George Romney to alert 500 national guardsmen. BOAT BUFFS ., 642-3535 Almo11 l1ck1h•y 11 th• e11ly full. tim1 ho1tint •1fitor wor~i119 e11 111y new1p1per In Oran91 County. Hi1 •If~· cJuJi•• cov1r191 of hoe_t· in9 encl y1chtin9 n1w1 h "• cl 1ily f11klre ef the DAILY PILOT. I If you have new neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area, please tell us so that we may extend a friendly welcome and help I.hem to become acquainted in their new surroundings. The west side of this city _l Shoe Sale Special Wraups WOMEM'S DRBS SHOES Joh 0 •n1•n-Flor1heim--d• Li10 Yolun to $25 ................... . DICKERSON'S v.i ... ,. $21-................... . 13'° 18'0 Naturull1er-lltA1•9-#ettall• PARADISE KITTENS ~:1$~.so .. . 8'0 ,. I 0'0 -CHILDREN'S Dll'T. - Stride Rile-Speci1I Group Dreu Shoes 7so .. 9so -GIRL'S KEDS - further reductions ldllfi· HIWry-M .. ket•m- L.n..........Yla Vttteta RATS AND SANDAIS ~:'$~1 ........ ········· .. 5 to to 9 to Otte Group WOMEM'S KEDS ~t:.~ .... '. ··············· 200 Penaljo Wedge Sandals va1u .. lo $16 ························ 9'° -5'11CIAL IHOUPS - Men's florsheim Dress Shoes 16'° .. 2411 l F1 Mous Br•nd1 I MIN'S CASUALS •............... $1 0.00 SANDALS ·····-············-········ $ 6.fO --Sim -·······-··-········· 200 - • ff you ""••r • l•r9• li1• 'dan 't mi11 thi1 '''•· Si1•• to ll, COSTA MISA e l'HONE 548-9744 1831 NEWl'ORT BLVD • ,'\ A witness said the sho1 s were fired by a man who was a passenger in a 1959 \\•hite car "'1th California license plates. He said a womsn wa s driving. HUNT1NCfON8EAOf llRANOi l7ll2 Bt.di Blvd., HUJllin&ioa.Buda 8'7·11611 SADDU:!IAO:. BltANOt lot 1ndNtwportAw~ Tllltla !144·~ You gel 3 chances to win every lime youplGy inning-Ticket. 'WIN CASH! Every time you play Winninq Ticket at participo:!inq Enco stations, you get three separate chances to win cash, prizes or both. W in as mijch as $50 cash just by spelling "Tiger" In Tigerino. O r collect one of thousands of "instant cash" awards (up to $1.00) paid nqht on the ~pot. WIN PRIZES! More than $3.000,000 in cash and prizes. including Tigerama prizes like Oldsmobile Vista Cruisers. $1 ,000 and $500 vocation checks, por!oble TV's a nd phonoqtophs, Polaroid color cameras, and hundreds of other prizes. No purchase necessary, any licensed driver can play Winning Ticket. WIN BOTH! Vote for the Tiqer. or the Ad Manaqer who won ls to fire h im. Cast your ballot a t the station, and you're automatically entered fn our Election Sweepstakes ..• ond eligible for prizes like Olds Vista Cruisers with $1 ,CJCX) in the q\ove compartment, pertable RCA color TV's, other great prizes. Vpte as often as you like al the Ence siqn. Save the Tiger and win Oldsmobile Vista Cruisers! Hlllllblo OU & R111Dln9 Compcmy . I I I ( . IU.lLV "llUl Tutw!<Q, July 23, 1908 l y Phll lnterlandi Senators Kill R eagan Plan For Cuts in Property Taxes SACRAMENTO (AP) - With pre<:ious legislative time ebbing away. Gov. Reagan's pet plan for S155 million in property tu cuts haa crashed into a stone wall ln the Senate - possibly fatally. "There's no use kidding ourselves ... that's it." said Sen. Donald L. Grunsky after the measure he was carrying ln the upper house was rejected by a 21·16 Senate vote Monday even· ing. Grunsky said the measure "fulfills the commitment made to the people by tbe 1967 legislature that there would be property t a x rtductioa legislation l n 1968." Veneman and Gruusky aaid they weren't sure what thtJr next move would be, as the legislature aims for adjournment Aug. 2. Sirhan Insanity Plea Based on Horse Fall LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Community Hospital whert! Sirhan B. Sirhan will enter Dr. Richard Nelson reported an insanity plea -based on Sirhan suffered a cut on the bNlin damage suffered dur-chin, bruises and abrasJons ing a fall from a horse -to and "was juat generally the charge of assassinating banged up." "Well, if you u.y there's a. stoplight there a.nd tha.t l went through i~ I gueoa I'll just h~ve to take your word for it." During about a haU~our of debate, Grunsky (ft. Watson vi lle) waa the only senator lo speak In favor or the m·easure, wJiich already had cleared the Assembly. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. the Nelson said Sirhan com· Pasadena Independent-Star plained of hurting all over, News reported today. particularly his stomach, The copyright story said but said noUting about a defense attorney Russell E. head injury. Sirhan was Parsons is expected to enter hospitalized overnight for a plea of innocent and in-observation and released. nocent by reason or insanity but he continued to seek when Sirhan retul'IJ,S·-to !r~atment for an alleged eye Twenty-seve n votes were need.ed fur for Senate ap· Gun Bill Holstered; Sights Set on Ballot proval -a_t w o ·I h i r d s margin in the 40-member house. Grunsky said he didn't plan to a s k for reconsideration of t h e measure. He said the bill's author, Republican court Au g. 2. · injury. Parsons last Friday re· j'"~,::.,::,:-, :::"::"'::-:'."::,::.,::,_==,-,-,-.,-,.,.,._II quested the court to appoint ~~~/. .,.. a neurosurgeon to take Anl..., encephalowam, or X·ray I j SACRAMENTO (AP) - The 1* Sen. Robert F. Kennedy'• Oalifonna cam- paign m~ger has aban· doned his quett for a stronger state gun control , law tills year, but wiU try to take the issue to the voters. Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh (D-Inglewood ), said he hopes to give "the huge &ilent public" a chance to express a mandate for gun regigtration in the Nov. 5 election. Republicans t h w a r t e d Unruh Monday in the first step toward getting the question on the ballot. but he &1ld his colleagues were confident of getting the Cranston Leads Rafferty by 7% SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Democrat Alan Cranston has a seven percent point lead over Republican Max Rafferty in their U. S. Senate contest four months before the election, the Mervin D. Field Poll said to- day. Field said a public opinion survey completed last week gave Cranston 47 percent and Rafferty 40 percent, with 13 percent undecided. needed votes today. A 5 s e m b I y m a n John The author ol the Unruh· Veneman of M ode st o bac ked I i c ens i n g and "agrees there's no point" in registration bill, such an attempt to try to Assemblyman Winfield A. pursuade opponents t o S h oemaker (D-Lompoc ), switch Uleir votes. frankly admitted the.re was "It's unrealistic to Utink little or no chance ol passing we can pick up that number the measure this year. of votes." Grunsky said. Unruh blamed ' ' an Two Republicans joined 14 articula{e gun !Qbby'' for Democrats in Oppo6ing the destroying chances of the bill. Voting for it were 18 bill pl}tS"ing the legislature Republicans and t h r e e this year. Republican Gov. Democrats , wbile th ree Reagan frequently bas ex-senators -all Democrats - pressed opposition to gun were absent oc not voting. registration, but said he ---- ------ would favor some toughen· ing of the present state laws. The b a 11 o t proposition Unruh seeks would be an ex· pression of opinion only and STATE HITS 20 MILLIO N not bind i n g on the LOS ANGELES (AP) lawmakers. Unruh acknowledged on California's population has the Assembly floor Monday readied 20 million, with it bas been 35 years since nearly half that number liv· the legislcrture went to the ing in the five counties sur· people for guidance on a rounding Los Angeles, the controversial issue. Chamber of Commerce re· But he added, "This is an ported Monday. picture, . of Si rhan's brain. apparently to determine if brain damage exists. Superior Court J u d g e Richard A. Schauer ap. pointed Dr. Edward Davis to make the examination and granted Parsons a con· tinuance or the preliminary hearing until Aug. 2. Records of the State Jn. , d u s t r i a I Accidents Con1. mission show th at the /all occurred Sept. 25, 1966, while the 34-year-old Jorda. nian was working as an ex- ercise boy at the Granja Vista del Rio Ranch near Corona. He was taken to Corona * Show Times *] "RYKER" 6:00 l •:45 "FRIGG" 7:50 ••Ir l oI Office o,. ... w .. 111 •• ,. 6:45 Sohirdoy •ltd S11114cry 1Z Hoo,.,-<:... .. isme, it seems to me, of C. F. Horne, chairman of enough moment and enough the cbamber's re sear ch concem that we ought to be committee, said that for ttie ''===:::===================-::, able to submit it to the peo-past ele'lt years California I' air pie." has averaged a gain of Q: Republicans. eager to kill about 500,000 .a year and by all . the bill when it came up for the year 2000 the state's \!: a final vote ttiis week, said population could double. ai' "1e people already had1;==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:= II: made "1eir opilrion clear. j NEW IALB.. : ! Crossword Puzzle THEATRE I!! : ti! KARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONI" 546·3102 ACROSS l lll imlclfed S Checks lo Hot111ont 14 Wash IS Equa l: Fr. l& Girl's name 17 Self- evldenl: 2 words l' Bird 20 Spting of silt water 21 Bird 22 The "A" of "M.A." 23 lrrltat lngly sharp 25 lnvestlgalt Judlcl1lly 26 Ratio to speed of sound 30 Numbtr 31 Careless 34 Bliler purgative .... 36 Greek wriltr 38 Man's nickname 39 In a rela- ted mamer 42 "Ben -" 43 Quebec p1nlns ult 44 liter at the mouth 4S U.S. inventor 47 H11rlng organ 4' ····of Cleves SO Fuel 51 Warmth of ftellng 17 53 1'/t1Md express ion SS Span ish tltl1: Abbr, S6 C1ft 1mploytt il G1tmfllt '2 Comprtssrd cottons trd mass : 2 words 64 1111sfortunrs 'S At the point ol death: Arc hale '' Sttd COVt rlng 67 Schedule . of rlCt S 68 Confronts ""'' 6' Rtvolvlng dt vlc e DOWN 1 F1iTitd mountain rangt 2 Turl:lsh Monetary unit 3 Hot '"d morally 4 Half: Comb. lor111 5 Flaw 6 Ottom1n Emp ire off I err 1 7 Factory employee : 2 words I Composrd of lwo or 111011 strands ' Obser ved ' 10 Teeming 11 Keepi ng things going :, 2 words: lZ Weight allowancr 13 Onr of the And rrs rns IS Coll1ctlon of sayin gs 24 Gleans 2S llod1r1trly warm z• Par1•r····· 27 No ln an undtrlonr 21 Capab le of bring srt righ t 2' Possess ive word ll Unit of length 32 Kind of .... )) Mod e of exp r1ss i"g though l JS Bt ll·shaped flowers )7 Notrd pro go tfrr 40 Kind of hospital: Infor mal 41 Th r Blut Eagle 46 Most tatlonal 48 Mtchan lc1I devices Sl Fr1gr1nct SZ Go laster than 1 walk S3 Cruel and pitiless S4 Actor 's part 55 Car1n1,1ld fish S7 ltlVt t1st1n 11 Ill 1ff1ct upon 58 Uncovrred s• 111 lgrant agriculti.11 worker: ·ti lnfo11111 f 60 M1kt 1 toud noise 6) Thr11: It. " l STARTS WEDNESDAY e 4 DAYS ONLY e Alte "llctHT ON THI LAM'" wl" ht. H.,. Ir """"' DOMf • .._ ........ o.ty WM D"-Y't .. II.AR COU NTI T" ., '~ co..w•,. 0.:11,an ..-, Stanley Kramer ,, __ Spence! I Sidney I Katharine TRACY POITIER HEPBURN guess who's coming to dinner ~ TlCNNICOLOft• C.. w .. 111 Nlttt-7:11 & t :l l S9'. & S111.-Z:l0.5:00·7:l 0 & t :l I Po1ltlvely Ends Tuesday •loo 20TH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS NET of tkE 'A'-"?i ' ,_._ -"-- :Jldo -....llKll-•lliot-1 lit ...... "'-W. -OI. 1-...aM HELD ova NOW AT • POPULAR PRICES JULIE AS "IOU LCM HER .• Singin&. Dtoelng, Delighting ! ENDS TONIGHT -·-.. "Pl AN!T OF THE APES" "SUPERIOR ENTE RTAI NME NT" ·-·~:45 Motl"' S1H14eY'--2:41 .... 'THE Fl !M FLAM MAN" EXCLUSIVE SHOWING ., . J Llf ANDll MAllY TYLfll. MOOllf C.lllOL CtiANHIHG J.lMfl rox ~11JJE .... -·-· •lso Wolt Dl1My'1 "BAMBI" Continuous Show Starts W9dnesd1y from 2 p.m. COLOR -~ by0elu11 ~ -SHORT SUBJECTS ~ .. '"· SIMw Stem •:41 CHtla-Skw s..., ,,.. J , ... "YOUNG AMER ICANS" Sl1rri11g TIM Yo111t Amerk•111 Thrill to Thoroughbred action! • The Thoroughbreds are coming! The best and most beautiful of racing ... bright with color ••• charged with pulse-thrumming th rills as !he unloppable thoroughbreds make that dazzling , nerve-frazzling run for your money! Come, enjoy the hi gh excitement of opening day as rhey thunder away in the first spectacular race of Del Mar's 29th Season. Forty·t\VO thrill -filled days follow ... with nine race s daily , Monday Jh rough Sa!urday, through Sept. 11 . A brceze-eooled gold-and-azure holiday "where !he turr meets the surf" ha s a special glamour you'll never find at any other track. Come. sec for yours~lf! Opens Tomorrow! Bus, train, plane to track '~ Bui-Round-trip from San1a Ana, incl, general tdmisainn I: ta:a:. ---S.S.OS. Lc1v" 11 :JS. Call S•2-446~. Santa Fe Traift...!.iq.ind-1rip from Fullerton. incl. acncral admission&: tax, SS.60. 11 :20. tlTQ.IR anta Ana, SS.OS. Leaves 11 :•S a.m. GoWcw \\'tst AlrlMt-l.A. Tn San11 Ana, to Palomar Airport, Carhhld. Jn L.A. call 6•6·3~80 or 776-547 . 1a Ana, 540.7010. PaJomar A.itpert. (714 ) n:; .. 1. Seats from $1.20 /Sat., · ays $1.50 ' I • Post time, 2,p.m.'-.__ • ' .a:: Chopper Lands DAJL~ PlLOI _r,_rsd&J~~·-h~''-"-·~1_'168""-~~~-;;::;;;:;:::·:::o:~:L:Y:J>tUJ::.:'::T~·~-~ Park Development July 1%8 For The Record s County Approves· I lTUllDAY JULY ·J7 M- JtftlM Dll'IOOll ¥1 MM,..11 Wl'tllf 0. -SllWfl Ml"" JoflftJOll · ¥1 T'*"'t Gfl ..... JtlW6fl • .,, JMll lturtto11 " hlYllltl J ._...,,.,Jr. .v..r1.lt!lt ttol!Mt ... e-.i w.,.,. ..... Jun• Cllllrllitfl lroob "' 0r11 Nt'MfNI ·-· Luc:lla ~•I• H1rdl:11!11t 'II Ltwlt E4'nnl H1ntc:11fltl l .... t1!1 ..,.lftleJI• lllC:I) • .,, l!r1'9 D111l11t Ill k>lft G. 01fti.1t l"ruderlcl' ll. A.YI .. "' AnMll1 H. AYllt NIU ll'r lce!IOl'llY "' Hll'Yt'I' "°""' ·-· HtlM M.e Mltdwll .,; Etw1nl .U.m Mlldlt!I .hil'Mt M. 11111.~ "' 1oWM G ... rt.er •1111 lftlwl Oittmt "' Herrv ""*" ,.., .. °"'''"'' A. IMYll Yt TH S. ""°'"'' 0111111 Llfllll $1\&tfo "' l"rtd Dwe• ... ~ y...._ It. Manfokl "' lklo!I It, M-~ Jo ,,.......,. vs 0.-.. Ltstlr ·- o.iwy. htlY OtlwJI YI JeM PtNl' ..... Twrr L. S...ltll v~ C1rt1 J1M $mltll iltllltrt Altn HlffrNn •1 .IMMI Sue .......,. iltoblf't lw1t.akJ l'l ,,,,_r'f NIOl'l'll IWtltallt J-V, Mkllt lllll YI ltobtrl lllfllll'!I At School SANTA ANA -Vaca· Uonlng kids pllyt.r on the Slddlobock Hip S e h o o I &r'0\11dl here sot a n :.':;~~ 01._ .. , LNI• Git.ft unscheduled thrill Monday ~fh' Mtrle "11111 •• Jlt'rr I.Mn•"' afternOon when a buce ''1111 Marine Copr1 helicopter Iran· ..,,""'A. L1d11 ., 'hlfli. 1. c. l.rdlt ded on th6 footbllJ fteld. Lor111t w. JOMt "'J'""'' Art111 Jr1M1 El Toro Marine Air Bue O.tll Wrltl'll •I Jtmtt K. Wf10M offlci•'· ,~~ ·~ the $llerrv Lt Ith t:w1111 ... OtitM Wlldl!I .a "t'V' KN WJmlo ::t J. ci.11*' .,. Gr'" G. cfl"°" chopper made a precau· cP1r1111111 Lw111 l(ftllll'lt YI 0.111 tJonary llndin& w"6n a w1ma,.. IClll9M, Jr. dtclted a motor malil!.."M!· Ll1'11111 J. M.lrllft •1 Ard., L. Mll"!lft Liiii.. H. HtrYl<i YI WHlllrn l . cxkpit warnin1 llcttt in· ~~"~~ tie11tn ~ "1c:"'n1 L• dlceted a motor malfunc· ""'"' tioo. • Pacts With State D Hoop Star Enters Plea SANTA ~A -Sllte bond adja .. nt to UCI wlll bet>elit gre.nt agreement& r or from a $229,SOO Ir ant development of th re e matched by county fundt to Orange County re i Ion a I partially complete the' first para were signed by the 100 acres or a 350-acre· park . Board of Supervi10T1 today. The site was a gilt 0( lhe Devtlopment tunds 0 r Irvine Cmnpany. S3M,OOO are provided for Villa Park· Dam will University, ONelll and Villa receive a $100,000 design ! Park .De~ parka. The state and construction matching grants will be matctted by "grant to provide funds for FULL.ERTON - A Oal county fundt to pro\ride construction drawings for E w . A .. L K State Fullerton basketball mort than '700,000 for park the 296-acre park as well as lJH w-... s A L E """'"-HI-Vl EllMr M. H1-K1t111Mft ,,,.,., """"* v1 W1Ntr l"r111- dl tfvt'* I I I I I t I I I m.l11o --· C..rll "1111 TlltlCMI' " ur,.., W1Y111 = Jt111 "'"' ., J1rn11 JOHJh The big UH34D rescue J111111 J. "''.., •• l111:u11 a. Him · craft koded on the football ~= Alltft ilte<'llld; "' Ille,.,. Lii fie}d without dlJJ-.&e and ~:01•1 Mantre.11 "' Domlt'ILce M111-was immediately joined by tttltn Mllltutll .. , Lt rrf WUIM a "buddy" plane flyinC OD :=:in. J. c11n1 v• wtlford e:1,1 the same trainlna mtnioo. c111111 Pilot of tJ:ie craft wu M•j. '•1111 L . ....,,..,, YI Lltfrd w. Hou11on W. S. E'··oole of M·~-. construction. construction for 50 acres of c... .._ team captain, held ln jail cn,--~U~nl'.'.:v~e::rs~i:!tYC:·~r~•!ll~o~nll~.!:par~k'.._~c~a~m~p1~·n~g!_l~ae~ill~ti~··~··~--..'.!~~~~~~~~~o!!!!f! charps of rapln1 two coe"dl, DIVOll.Cll PIL.•O Elllll A. Gr•M<lo YI F,..,.rl~ J. G••lltdo, Jr. Jetn TIMl'ttl 0111111tt1 "' l1r111rd Ltoflard DVClllltM l't!.., Allll M\19" Y• Wlll11m Mll'CUI DEATH NOTICES HANSEN Junut T. """""· 1.n lenldl V11i.11. Nl'll'P0<1 8Hdl. Oet. al .,..If\, Jvl'o' 16. s ........ 1ved by wlftt. Cherlott. T. HtMM: 11111111ter, cerol Tolletoll 11'1d 1IK tr1Nklllldrt11. Servlcn -• Mid Sitvfdar. Jul¥ ta. ill:DH Hiib ,,.,.,,,.,111 Ptr-. Olrtcled b'f !tote HUii /rMrll.llrv. Wlllttl•r. HAUGH Steollell K. Hllllh. Ml\or, USA,, -Rtllrlll. Ate Al, ot :rtU Mtu1 PLKt, Cotlt Mew. S.."'l'lld Ill" wlftt, Ellu~lh J. H1111h1 ...,.., Terry Frt,.. cl• 111d Slwlllll O-le11 d1119ht.r, J1cq11111111 MI , l I I brotMri. A I •• KUmtn tl'ld Htntf Jtn11111 1f11ff1, K•V Fon, P111t1111 PtnY tlld Mar¥ ltHnKl. Cll1pel ""'Ice '"" Interment, Wld-dtv. J PM, W11tm1,,.11r Mtmorltl Ptrli: Morl111rv tnd Ctm1ltf'V. Directed br w11tmln1ter M""'°r11I Ptrtl MOrt11ef"1'. WILCOX L"'t T. Wlko•. Alt f5, o1 SlA lllh 51., N~I lttdl. Survived b1 '°"'' W•rd ""'~· Sr., Ind Dovlll• lrllCI l'f!lrcer d1t1t1llter, Mlr\orlt l"urc11 11,ltrs, SUI Wlboll 111d OrpN '""'" •••nd!Ofll, Cept. Wint l'Hl'l:I. Jr. end Dllllt .. • Petru th ind -,,..1- e r•n1b011. Cl'lei>et Hl'Ylctl tlld '"" 1er,,..11t, Wlldlllldty, 1 ::JI P M , Wntmlnsltr Memorltl Pertt Morfvlry and Cemetery. Olr1ct1d by Wntml111"" M.emorl•I Ptrll Morl\ltrv. ""-' '"*"'" ~ Mlhellk "' )eM FrtMts Mlfltllk lt.W f...io,11 Drtl'lltlft 1t1 l-•I ANllUr p,..,,,11,. Johl'I, t . Mad>erwild YI .1.,,.1t L Mtd)OMlll Fri .. J~ COflfor1I YI JO AM (lift-"" . HllTY Wnl Wlll«i VI $llttM D. w1i.... MllllfH L. HISCOU vs 11:6Nfll 5. "'-....... ,.,. Jun G..-l'ollrdt "' W1lter ~ G4rMrdl Ntil Jof!NM l"urull "' Eihel Eti. PllrC-11 M(ld/'td Hetti Joy YI Fio'fd WU!l1m ,., Judy JOIM!' v1 Jollrl Jlobtrt Joint• ~::'' C.nlllnt Thtft "' JunH f , Ly"" IMPle C. ....... VI Stent.y Gery "~ l.Ow•no. kltl'llNn l(eftren YI .lerDrM J1rrv kfffrOfl L.11119 ke1' ,,,.,,.ePIOllH YI WIUlt"' l'llWd -~ ll:ose M&rle Ooml,,.vu "' MtMOe1 Oom1ntue1 All'oN J11rlv1 Vtuoi., v1 Jei:-L-. VINDle1' NOll!I Tl'lorne1 Neri •• Merv Merulll "'" Vlvltn Mtrlt: Allfn YI Gllblrt EVtUlf .,, .. AuOr•• C. •-n v1 John T, •l"Hll'tn Arll'll!tll F. Tvl'-t'• v1 Frdrlc: A. T11lllntf1 Donne Mal Luu "' John l~nl L11e1 P1trlc:l1 Jffn B•ktr "' Ooneltl Euot111 •••tr ll:otllrt J, Fritz ¥1 Merle A. Frltr ll:IJ1tl 1..-.i S*'Hr v1 Jt"'h "*'' .. _ Shlrltv Meal ... B1nk1 "' Dtvld Jl:lcNrd ..... II.,,., Idell P1tttr10n Vs CUfford 111:11 P1tllrt0n R-lcl 11:01' Wiii v1 Jt1nn1,,. AdrllllM Wiii Adel• C. Jl!lklna YI G.eorN w. Jfllltl111 Gery M. Let vs N•ncv L1'nn Lee Jo 01r""' lrown v1 ttnn• 0111 lrDWn Alldr• ae1trkt C"""'ton v1 Gtor" S!1111...-CDll'lp._, 1-ttrbrl-Fettr n OVldl ltU111 l'tMr II':" llefll Al"' ¥1 Oetw't K, AIHr Petrlcl1 LYM Twltd!1H v1 Oantld Jtlfltl TwlklleM Mary v, G1rcl1 •• Jesu. ll:Odrlt.,.1 G11'1:le J1nlOI Eiieen Gothem "' Gea!'tt JOl!ro ....... \'Jrtll'll1 Levi• Wiiii w1 OrlOll ~ . ~ 111 w N1i.1 Unit HML m ot wwow t1:d1tti M .. 111111 v• G-.e Jllfln T1111t Grove, hi. -. ,~ w•• lltKM•I Allfl Woodr11n1 YI P1ul •• r I u Wmlrvll'I flyina: out of Loa ~tos ~=· c. ••rblr .... M•rt L1V111 Na\'al A.tr Station where the P'ttr1c.11 Nort111 H1t11111 •• Jetftt• unit ls undertotn& reserve iltutMll H1P:ln ainin l!ll1tbf1~ M, YWnl VI o-.. A, tr •· ~. "-r Andi•-Y• Dflr• The cbopper was to be A""'''°" towed out or air lifted by i::,.!111ne et1111111 Y1 Arm•nd another helicopter today. GMlrftlll L. Metltr ... Ron A. Mlltlr. 1be UH3tD Sky HGr1e craft i~, AMII"' 01,.111 ,1 Andre J-are u1td for rescue, ev1cua- G•mbl'111, Jr. tioo, supply and traneport in ~:;: .,.::.., v ... -.. Y• 11.00tf' Alltft Vietnam. NlllC'I' L. SlmJton w1 St•"'" I'. ---.,-.,---,,.-----~1{:.'°0. v1n o,~. v' • ....,. ll•" v111 Kida like to ..... Loron ,,,,.,.rcr c1"'Pbf11 v' 011111 r111 ·'Ask Andy' Ct~I IEWllYft I". Twlllter n •vrt I. Twlltttr 111111 l1r1111 "' Phlll~ It, l1r- Tlrno!IW L Freftf "' Llnl:lt LOii l"ren1 Sut A. ll:llbl~ "' Jlrlll'lt L ...... ft LJNll L. N01111wel1tr W• Donlld A. "°"'" ..... * pleaded Jullly Mondey-to un11wf\ll violation or the ptr1ona1 liberty of another 1irt Joseph L. Ware, 21, of An1h~im, entered the plea when the case went to trial befort Superior Court Judge Karl LyM Davis. Judge Davis ordered Ware to return to criminal court on Aug. 8 for pro. balion hearing and sen- tlncing. Charaes or rape by forct, assault with intent to com- mit rape, two counta of rape by threat and two counts of a1s1ult with .a d e a d l y weapon were continued to tbe probation bearing. JH" $herry wi Fr1ncl1 T. Shlrry JUDOMINTI Nicoll• Sld4o •• M1rtr11t1 Wl!lkn Sidi (IMUllf!Mt) M'GOO'S is FUN again! Fire £alb Tonight "GREAT FLICKS" w .............. ''THE INFORCER" CARTOON -..... ..,.._ ..,._, M'GOO'S 2600 W,. Coa1t Hwy., Nowport NIGHT .nd DAY SERVICE 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. WALKER Alex1ndf'r K, Walkff, "'e IO, al 1101 ller\1lllr1 LtM, N..-t le1dl. D1t1 of de1tl'I, Julw 111. S..••lvM bl' '°"" J tc-W1ll1r, N.--1 l•1cfl, i nd L1 .. renc1 L Wttker, Dowlley; brother, Ounc•n It. Wtll.111', G1rdl111. Service&, 1oi:11r. tuelder, ll:JO AM. 11rn Cht11el, 3Jl'O E. C011I H1t1hw1r, Co,_ del M1r. ln~mtnt, Jrtv1te. bltt Mor1111ry, >lirl'Cforl. Jt"" Edri. Wellll v1 ltoe:..tt l• WM ltoOtrt It, JICobt ¥1 P1lrkl1 A. JKGbl OonNI L, L11•k WI Jl:lldeWI F. Liiiie Shi ""' Anni Whl_.,eed "' lttlfloll Thornll1 W!llfttlted leHIMle L. Duer'T1 "' 0.11111 It. Dueffll 0oM. M. Qvtl11t11 v1 ltobert PeU1 Queltf11e Cllfforll 11:•1' Ptlttrton w1 '""' Idell P11ftrS011 IMty.a. Dufl.,. "' Wiiiiam T. oun.r P11rlc;t1 C.roll Sn'llltl "' Dol!llcl 11.n' Smltl'I (Mp11rst1 11Vlnlerie11U) _very ._.S LOWELL Elf\tl L_...11. 316 ludtn1tt ll:otd, Cotti M111. Service. f!endl .... 8111 ll'OldwtY Mortv1ry, 110 8ro.fi1y, Cos!t MIN. HOLDEN Rott• C. Hokltn. 111 $. l.1 Sindt, Sovtl'I L1111111. 011'1 cf dl11h, JulJ 11. SU"'lwtd by w1t1, Srlvl1; two bro""'" Henrv, cf Ptlmer, MIH.; '"" PlllHP Ho1<1e11, ot WllPOle, Meu.1 thrft n1phews ind C>l'lt 11lece, Mtmor11I strvltti Wiii be Mid WedMMflll', 3 f'M. P~cllfc View Cll1Ptl, wltl'I Rev, Ell1wt>rth L, ltlt;!l1rdM111 offfclallftl, Family re<1unh ltloll wli.l'llM la ll'IH• • memorial c0111r11>unon1, PIHM -lrlb!Jte Ill I~ Sol/th Coail Comrnllflllr Hospllt l C1nc:1r Fund. f'eclllc VJ"" Mort11erv, directors. CARTER T1mmr IC. C1rter. 11JU l1uwood $1,, F111111!1ln Ville,. SU!'wl\Old IW pl rent&, Mr. 111d Mrs. Molllll Ctrler; brothtt1, ll:t>11Cr anll Olnllf; er1.,.,1t1r1n1J, Mn. Etier¥ C1rpe111ffle, Mr. Molls L~ 1nct Mn. Gtr11dl111 sri111e1. lltot1ry, l'onlthl, Tund11, 1:311 PM. Plell 1"1ml· IJ Color!l1I FU111r1I Home. llt"vlem Mill, Wtdnescley, t AM. SS SJIMll & Jvd1 C•tl'lollc C,.,,,rd'I, H11nn119hln lle1cll. KUTAN ltlch1rd Kul1n. 50n W. Mcl"eddln "-wt.. S111t1 Alll. S<lrvlYecl Irr wlft, Sophie; .....,, ltldlwd. EdWerd .,... NDrm1n KU1111; 111d 11~ 1r111ckhlldr111. Servfce1, WMl!tldaf, lG:lD AM. Ptell Ft rnllJ Cololll1I l"vntrll Home. . GEISLER M1blol 0 . G1l1llr. Ot W. 17111 $1 .• lot 4"9lle1. Survlveocl by '°"' KIMlth. el Huntl111lofl leech• d•uthler, Miu Mlldreocl Gel1lerz broffltr. Art D1bbll1 illler, H11el Ct<11Molm1 and lwo 'll•tndttllklren, Prlw1te •tr v I c ~ 1 WedlllldtJ 11 P~k Ftmlly ColOl'llal '""'"'' Home, • ROBERTS M•~ Harri""' iltoblrt1 • ..,,.. 5', of 14 Weeki Drive, Cosl1 Me.-. SlirvlYtd oY wu1, C1tl'lerlnt1 two fOlll, lltld'lolnt Yerkes, Lttune; Roblrt, of Coste M111 ; two dlwhte", Oolor11 Cardoia, cf Dub1!11, Cell!,; Cl'llrltnt Jaf!lllOll, IOrkltlld, W11hlfl9'-"I brotlltrt, Mlrloll Roberts, Ltl v .. 11; Efitnl W. Robffh, lr'ltlll"""°"I 1l1ttr1, M .... ltlll Bledl. 1,,.1_, Ind Mrs. Vivien NJCllalJ, Wllml"'foll' 1fld I h rt t 1r1llddlllclr111. S.rYICH. Wed"'"411r, l PM, Wntcntl CM11el. l11Mrmenf, F1lrti1.....,. Mln'lol'lel P1'11.. Vl1ll1!1Df1, hlnltlhl, Tllltdtf, 1 lo t PM. W•h::tfft Cl>IPtl. Alie• M. Mtm"' "' Oorielo I!: Mt11ln1 1-r•M m.lllflll911QJ t.enore a .. 1111i P111ic. "' Denlll WH-rou" 1,. ~ MeriUys •II• Hem ~eutt. ... Fr<cll•'f ..,. ICllOOI n-ot flfll Berti M. ll:tbtr YI Jahi! Wiibur lt•ber ••8<1• ...,,, '"" •!love Of' elllef' -Loli Merl• K,.111,"' Golllltll Krtln ••nip~-~ st lnlt 11111 -.,. M1re•r1t Am Frfftdl WI Roller! Elllt "~"· .. .r-ttJ~.r.;' CJ~t,"': Fr-ii (._,..., ll'llln'-111/KI) .~-~....;;__c;;_;:;:;:..:_:_::~OT.::_ AdlllNI v. A•lle ... R•rmond A. Avlt• P1lrlcl1 111:. J1r...-kr l'• WtllKI ll.l r-----'-------il J1r-~r ' Loulll J, M.etzlriter w1 Alblrt \,. Me111,.. Jewill Mitt VI L1rry All111 Niii 1!1111 A. llvtt.rfonl VI Harnl!lon Ill:. ·-Jeck W1rren Wood YI M1rlorll AM .... Fr11111 N. '°lntde w• Jloslt PIMdt J1nlc1 IElltn Bllrttln YI Htrold Trvu ·-/Mry J1ne Wel'WIO; YI O.ltlwt lortn Wtrwlck Wlnlf,.., Ann Jan.1 "' Jolln II:. J-1 Wn"' Mertl11 Colvln w1 J-Etlltbllh ""'" lollOlll J1111 Pwblft v1 OGnllcl GIY1111 ·-· Marie ltedctltftl Cont •1 a .. 1111 J11r , .. UfTl!RL.OCUTOllY oac111a1 Le1!9r L. Rollln1 YI S.r1h ltolll111 Ctrolrn I. Frar.,."' 11.obll'l II.. Fre11r Oorl1 L. PlllHlllS •1 l'te!\ry G, PMH1~1 V.,llf LoulM Hl'*.lt v1 11.oNrt E"'lfl Hlnlllt l1rb1r1 J, O'l rlen VI WIHlell'I T. O'llrlen Helin Medi ICll!d w1 i.-n lllo!M1 ... J-L-11 LVdWlt. Jr, WI l1rblr1 JNll L.-19 lil'lft'l P . l"olltnf YI IE~ M1rtl11 Polltnl. Jr. Liiiiam IE! McGrtlh VS o ..... t c. MCOrtlll Gr1c1 Anni Mcintyre VI Gllblrt Ntll Mcl111Yr1 ll:QOerl ' 11:11'1 SllWlll• YI Jtntl Lovl• ·-· J-1 £1t1nor IE119l1nd WI Th""'"""' E"'I'"" M1rllrn G1r1 Arl!Dtd •s ltllltl' I. ...... Oltl 0 1-Cr"""l11 WI Cllerlet Fr1nd1 Crvmltr Mt rllll Gr•<• Kemllll "' 11.0blrl Llonll , .... tffllft o. ~vn w1 Wllbu"' "'''' Lindi Collet'!! tillldll"' H\ltlltrt ll.ldl1nt .,, .. Reg lend ~ M. iltqltl'llll "' WllllMI G. Ctclll lwl• Sd'lreddet VI Jt¥ . ..__ kat"""' L. T ..... rlln "' TIWN1 G. you.are needed Everyon1 i(lnts lo be uuful and needed. And eY1ryon1 !:!! be when it is s._en that lht JM!rpost of m1n's existence is to express God, diwint love. A Christian Science le<:turer says "bec1use divine love is universal we can alwiys experience it and exprm it wherever we are." ', Yoo ind your friends.,. jnvi.ted to he1r "You Ari t Heeded" by Ho.W1rd H. lriiin, C.S., 1 memb ,rof The Christiift Science Board of Lectureship and 1 practitioner in the hNI· ina ministry of .Christian sC:ience for m1ny yurs. Admission is free, everyons., is welcome. • TOl'l'ltlotrllrt BALTZ MORTUARIES 09!! Ollwf C\lblrhlll YI Wtlrll• MH Corona dtl Mar OR J.Mll ~:~., .. , v-A. c.1rte• Co1ta Mesa Ml 1-Ulf ''"AL 01c.111:111 Marl.,nt J. 1!1111 YI iltotMll'I IE". 1!1111 BELL BROADWAY 1111¥11 t . $teneer "' 111:1111.,.11 J-1111 -~ MORTIJARY •"'"" J1111 s.,.,..,._ "' o.n1111 ------------•I 110 Bro1dw1y, Co1ta Mesa 11 ~;;-;;;;";;;;";;-;;;;';;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I LI 8-3433 "' 1 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery • Mo-.,. Cllapel 3500 P1clflc View Drtvt Newport Be1c!I, Cl.llfonala -PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME ?IOI llolla A ... w •• --- SMml'S MOllnJARY m Mala 111. RHllllllOA- LEMAI WES'l'CLlrP llORTU 42'1 E. 1'1111 81., !J.lblo • I See by Today's Wanl Ads • tlot one ~t two pod bu,yt for U.. potty looldnc lot a ~Volbwqon. 'I'Ue ~pick! ./ . 0 • A IDM ii DftufQ& $25 re" w1rd for I Jold wrllt Witch he: lolt on N~ Beach at G. Street. e Need aome new la1r11 eq\llpmenl? A Trimm•. power lawnmower and 1 rotolpader are )'OUr'I It I -low-. • A 'ST Chev. 'ii Ion pick0up in Wt cmdltion ii Jar -at • '"'°"'ble price, • A YDlznt woman woWd like to share an Q&rtment with another woman ewer :n. ... ' even w en its 1n t e • ow-price range. Sure, you knew Old1 is a step-up car- to everybody but your rich uncle. lut we'll bit you didn't know Old1 1tep· ups 1tart down wher• most of the 10- called low·priced cars are found . Thot'1 our problem. Too few people know how ; modest Old1 prices ore. Feet is, they llOrf at $2512 -and we have 16 Olds moclel1 under $3000. {There are al least that many SO·called low-priced cors priced 2:f!!" $3000.) Our point i1, if you'd rike to step up a little from whet you're driving now- we'v• gol an Olds for what you are willing to 1pend. liiUl See y~~r ~rea.~er Los Angeles ~!dsmobile ~dealer during GO-OLDS RUSH Days! .. .l ,~ _ .. ~ I, \ ) • ! ' I ) I ~ • -· , ~ J • I .. < 0 :x :w .. . ... • ... l\.llf'.(-l>ILll'f ·, " 8 DAILY •!LDT Y .. r Worth 'it.':.11t1t11 ...., ci.w c':~ -11--A-OVER THE COUNTER Farming in the Year 2900 •'-~• l>I"' Jlf 117\11 111\o\ llllJii -I'll l l•n ll'IA•.JO 1 JO 1t 1t "'' '"' •• . te --411ilo " _,,,.. n A/i"1' .~ il ~ jfE ~~ :+It; Jll W ~llllo:.'l . MllM•Y't c~tl•lt ::,~~~ j~ :11 jn! 11"" l~"": ~ NASD Ll1tlnt1• for Moncloy, July 12, lffl By SYLVIA PORTER How can we curb the rise io rood prlces over the lone ttrmT How can we help the hunsrY Diilon& of the world to feed themselves? How can we meet the ch111.eng~ of a world population that could grow Jn the next JI - y u.rs .,,, m uch as it has grown in the 1.ast J,toCl,111 • y ears, to more t h .an 6,000.000,000 t b 1111 on ) people? B y our vast and ever swelling capacity to produce food. By exporting our technical skills to teach h u ngry nations. the world nver h ow to feed themselves . lops and pea podo; "4 \ Today'• farm laborers will be replaced b y scien· tlsts, enelneera and "farmers" holding BA degrees and trained in field s ranging from e lectronics to air conditionin g ; lrttw Y E•N1191 ork•. .,. 1i~s 1, 11 t ,•,~ •,f,!. fl" r-, , l t lM MM .W.l"w I.Ill 11 46;;: ,ui: J::: ' Ml.)""" t..w C•M Cltt. ~: -=• 11. I fl'-' ll 11 -'• many tlme.11 the volume or/•••••••••"".' ... ••••••••••;.,•••••••••-food 31,000,000 farn:iera pro-•• ...,.. ~ -............... ..... .... 111 ~.. •1• .,.. -\i ~ _,..._ , ..... ,.... •• 1111 11-. ,. 1'ti _,,,. ........ ... ~.,,. ,,.. t• "" " ~ -1\lt AbM.111 ..m , rrtn lJl.oi u.,. -1. • .. ,...., IA " S.11 s11.. 11,,. _,.,. '"'0UltlttALI ...... Mo ... Ct 1~ u .. ~t•tM ..Ct! 4 14'1 IS 1,._ AllMll l tlt I ft S""' '4\oi tJllo + IA Ft Sii .IO 135 IJ\i l \lo 'it1t -\it duc ed a century ago, A GR I CU LT URAL M l CWJO ti 71 It HwtHlll l'"u ttitu 3" ~ "6 Mii., "ll..."\.ti \~ AMII Co l.H 15 mo "6 lSW + .. J111dbn G<lll'I !s. lllll U IJ.16 ·· ••f , .. ,. '" '"' » • ""' ' W '' O ' -·•• 'hi ' =m I I -.M "°" 11 111'1 _.., ,.. ...,.. " ff' ClllJ d l'I Cl\o!I ~ "" I',~ ', ,• ACf' 1.,. :l.M 1 '1\0 ... ... -114 r:fl 15' ~I.Jo '4 .. ~ +1"" research Js aur"""I ahead at AitfM ri.c1r1c; .161 1w. itva " IW.c~~, " ~ 'F"·-l:"'ri, ,,..,,., ,Ni A(MeMti no 14 ,n~ .,"' ~ 11.: 1,4 12 "°" ... ... -111o f ti ·-p bli nd .,, .. ,, , •• ,, ,,.. II ..... "'' 1,41 II:: :t I'= • . ~ ' '' ,,. ,. ' -•ao '""" '"" ,. "-•'""""' f"t•I-H tllt 1JU. 11~ Ii• ,otli • •oo ... ,, ... -411 nt( w,, ' -• private , p , n d Ing for •, "" '•' ?... _. '~ ~ 1111.,..1111 141t1 !If .... ,. Z.Yr• 111 ·'I · u "' lll'I \W. Ad M1111, .,. tt ni. 11"' t 1 -i.. ~tn1'!'•¥ · JH 11~ ,1~ •,•~ -,:! -'" /' JITll'llll. AllOllrew M 311 llOll1 U!tll l llC • .$& II 11'4 l Adclr1u 1..0 1114 ~ 1116 '41-t -th nll Ol'llO U ,..., J"" f 14 -,.. I .._,,. C pac e , U C a Ait' ·~ltl'll IJ 1$ tt" ll.ltlr111!11t1t Cl'l9fn 1 a & I f llf • ·~ 11" t!,4 .. llelM il fJ..., <11'1 U1Ao -t agricultural research Is top-~/U:: :r1 ~'"" u11i 11"' ft'"lld C0tf.'~ .u 11 ~ Mv1N'Ui ~ L8.1." coM,.AMIEi ••m1111 i~ 11 .... 211\o m t + v. !&"r•!,,1!,I ,i,l! ffl°l> ,l:i~ ll~ :!_ ~ 5) THE TYPICAL farmer ping $850 million a \/ear. I n '-,,),",' ,'rw !II t.oe • ii 11r'.tl':f,,-"1 ,. j,~ 3~14 ~A~i'l~'f i:~ il= l:tt Mw. A1roou111 ' u '' 11 u -'" ~i ~.. .. ... " .. Clf#I .o r, Ii:: U •)m I'" I 7•11lo 71 ol11'" 1 t.L ' , Alt itrw ,JOb '' J1Vt )1 JHI ... "" fil SPP Pl S j 1111 \II -h Will till b•-1011 plaot and this coWllr" s ome 30,000 .. 'l) M11111 .• :is• "' • "'~ 1 ,,, 1111 " '·" ,, .. n -·1• •• , M11~1c 1 1• t•~ 2Aro -+ ·~ 1.3 ' J AJftl ,. -7'0 .. 1m111 c _ .... ti· ;;;, v. .. ';;:..,·,. 'n"•n. 7~Alr Pd .,,,,j •11•1411, 11$ -1 P11111 l.IO lj 1.1 ~11"' lf'IJ-1\.o harvest his rN\nJ! and research projects are now ... "'~ ~!!, Jl Mt ........ ,"' • •r,111 &r''wr LH f,... ... l'lrlt ~· ,,.·,·, I'" ,,n.t.'l22,:; Al1R.m11 l.M us ~ l'lft '°"' -Ii Rt P•c ,, '"' i~ -1, --r d W '" , -000 Am MN i'iif:, .IC. 'lll'"fn; 611 t 1"'"4 Ct l.OI 'I" n n ···~•tiill lllCCllll P'lllf.11 ,; /'~ n~ AJ '"""•lrlst at 1fll 12''1 131'1 -\o ":l~ctf' "w' •r,' u,~ ~\lo ,;~=I~ refula.te the .,.....wing pro· un erway. e ... ve s.1, ....,.., l"I• I c.o• ·ll , ,. 1•111 wilvd:y ,,, .. c11 ·" ,, rst -c-, ''" , ''• "' •• ., Am RIM' A; In . I C , I' -' "• ,-1111-All 61• tol 11 11~ 21 21 ~1:4; r :I "/ ) U ~ - Cf!CS from a lounge equipped a gricultural researcbera, a Amlcri 1"f!:'9rti.'a~M 1~'°' 1f~ Jt_ r.: ft1111':t d l.1I lJIN ,!» i::'i'I H1....:.=""fi~111 1t ,Jf: 1f~ u "lliotrt• c " Jt )It >t'~ ll ll" ., • Ml.Cr~~ 1'! 1; J::: 1)0.. :l: = :t with computer•, radar and number which is expected to ~=.: ,:,, t.-~"' ~-hSJ .!S=-"?".::• r... ..:Z ...... ,._. Pr!11':io.'-" i'L;, .ll :Wl'»I~ 1 •1i:.~111m 1 ~ n~ 1>"' "" --?'1 , .... 1.40 14 31~ 1 ., :i11 + ~. rem ote control devices. rise to 53.,000 by 1977 'ia: IUOi I .)I l7a ,..... Rone.,.. r. .... ~ n~ ~,:-,.:,• c .. rlftJll~ ~I :111 ~~;el L,!, ·~°'l n ~~ it~ "~ =1~ n:'11m1"ir1 -~ u 1 r li~ ~ -"' ' A Mlot'lltkJ Vi U Yl /("'fff 4.l cvpl J.U 4 O\'r .. LlllMS R"HCE IT l(S A Lud 9f .! '3\fo 63 '1,. -1 11rvm. .tl t ,,, lj ' n • nu dram1tlc future j s Is your imagln1Uon fired ;~.....:~:t~ 9f Joo ~ !: J"' tfb~t:•.u ,w. ""' J" .l.m.,,..11 -1~ ~-2 -~ ~ ... "Pw ,.. ... m. ""' 11.. nrv1t1r ' t1t ts J '3"' _,,,, foretold in the present. b y the r e v 0 1 u l i 0 II a r y ti:A:'~ tr.::.l'" UH~ ~ :~· 't:~':';. ,,,~ ... 1,l'J ""' 141'1 ...,,.,, Gentrll \ ... "' »" E.... );\; ~llr.ck~ \;: n~ ll!:~ .!lmi. ii~ -l'o l':a~~lf~:n .ii ~IF·~ l~ n~ ~ :~ --us f I 'ght A>>"'' -0 r. >• 0 •• ••-0 ·-· • », '.le ~".!!. HG111r Liit 1111 9o/o '"" N Al'~ l(ld "I Jl 14 ~ ~ ..• II E Pl. rlO \I 6111 + '• ''~ . • armer s r1 c hanges suggested here? .._,~"""'"•r, ••'",.,,· •" "r, r," •• ~ .. .,., ~ .. •r · Jn """ '""" er1 Llf1 1,. .1• 11 ,,.., il A I 111m1 ' xi s -41 " m i.10,I ~j I'll s. + •, k'• t t r 25\li 1' 2'1'1 .l.m Mii 1111 Co .3-< l:W. l•llo I~ A Pd ·'° 41 ... ""111 \'I -1 )Tf'lrt I to 251 -1.!l'o u UV. -11' now ma u•g enormous n· Below are others to :,.....!,""-,_..,, Ii" J r,~ f11~'~1~f;• •.-,u, ,! g A•aOfl.,''l' 1111c!1.20 :u11o >-1V. 3.-41'1 Al Pd lfJ ' " " • -"'F P!!.50 1 111"' 111..,. 1j'"" +1,... · od " 'I T , ..... t Mc.., '""' .,. .., 1t "'"" I l'o _,k •I 51d Otp ll:t U\.'i Ill A ~r 1.10 10 o ~J Ql9 --'ii )lltt s~c J lotO "'-~ 6:All j" _ • Creases lR pr UCwVI y, 0 • fascinate yoU • AualOll IM\11 • 1111 I 115 ,-, tlll !Olt .u 411Yi d \o'I -v Uo SylVtn Life 3"' \Ii A If • 1100 ...... nl'J 4J,IV. • . ly 111v lOll J6' ~ 5j 11.-n • d th f · .l.1 K 1~·G111 ,,~to ltl 1s .. 1 11 I! 1f11 Liii! 1111 C11> 1 17'1o j••1•111 Ml 61 lflolo ffl 11 -14 uvstrs ISi! 11 2)1.o ,.... -·-~ ay e average armer Crop land will be cove'""'d fi••• "'"' '"","'• r,·· lG .,..,_ )1 .... ~cli.'!rOo1v111':1:1:::' ,., " ll:! \4 1111.w11 ••11 $1111 .110 no,, 1•11! '"' A 1 ,.,1 · 1 n1 ""'* J\I. ,," -1-~rk Eq 211 lj 11"'° us. u • __.. gh food t f e d "n '" Mr ,.. ..,,.. •"" /I ~ llu6ti C«• 1.50 "3,,., .Ul4 .flloli A~INI P CM! U 11 6-li I~ -V. lflt 0 11 .Ml 41 6'1V. tl\'t ft2il< -7\lt grows enou o e ~ by huge plastic domes, or by •YI'!' ~-r1r,'.'•' " "• 11~ 1114• ~., •--·~M•.!':i'~., '"' 1" 1 MA F111a"'/•• .,Yi so ..,"' o1.11o1e .20 ., 11 j'" \ra~ --YCun 1.44 I 551' J5 w ! ., BY CHANNl!:LING our pl four times ; be 1111" '°""' • ,.. .. D ._ ....... " )0..., "" f'l111nc 11 01 3-ll't ls J3\t..., co. 1.'1 ,15 ,,.. •.M , _, ~e1111 1 tt 1 .iov, '°"' v. 14 led · t peo e . other m e ans to control the J~~.~.'" •• ~~-~11, ~ u•"' ?t ::~:n~ .... eU111'!!, nv, " 11111 ombl111• 1,.. . .oi Ill ~ ltl1' ........ 1s111 .• t !w. :n'llo ~ -~ w P1t l 50 110 ~ st,.. :u: ·~ 1alen y oungsters l n Q number he could feed 30 ll.""""" '.T"' ~ jl ""' 1,_ Sl!o!J.... n v. n l2v. !11111 Gener•• 1.n mt1 ,...., 1~ AMIAc .M •" llSi~ ,51~ ,,~ = ltY P 111 2 i uo 11 11 1 . c areers as de di c a t e d eavironme.nt afrecting crop iioJJ.'f:Jr iorot111w" ',~,• •,"",• •• "",,'." ~~~ .. 1... .. •11"~.·~~ •• ,",."" ' =. ~~ if~ ='•~tw,t . .!.~.~· °' All'I ·:~ ':~ ,:\l :;:::~~: ~20 ii. 'l 13\; ""' _, ~!!: ',;J/.50 'f"l .m Ir' 0: ='l: ul al . ·...1. y ears ago, Today the growth 8 1rk1Mr '°"' ..-. Mkl C II• 15"' !""° \~ 1rmer1M'N World .:re 'lYI f.SYr 6l M ltFU1r ... J J51.!, lJ lJ -"II ~P~1 10 1 .)NI 31V, l!\'r-\'i' agric tur sc1enu~. 7,00),IXXt Americans livin g • 1-....1.1r11111 u11n. 1u 200 u "'' · • ~ • F1~r1 UllClwrlttfl 2 ., " ., ""' A1r1111 .• "' ~ ~ ,..---"'" 1rs1G1 s nt •• """ ..-.s -1..., .... "'Y.'"•I .OJ lS,,., 30'1 3' !e'c" Mlrll SYI ·" d G 4 Fldllh't '""' :ll'llo """ T!l'I ""' •• ~ .. ' IO l2V. JI 1111. -l'Mo stSGs pt\.lt 11 lW. ""' l6'4 -~ The prospects that we"ll on farms are producing c R 0 r HARVESTERS ·-." ",' __ , ,IU ,.. •• •,• ', ~2'1'"-' '" ' u M 2!1\l "Ir• Unwtt """ 1... 4 • 4 "mlk Noi. ' l ""' nv. 3M + "" OCI Col 1.70 10'2 IS\!; , ..... ""' -lo ll thr ••-r, ,.., -· Kr n :w; 2•'4 tHi F r•I Am Tlttt Int .111 1'"9 15"" l•lili Am ou t 1 . .0 I• ~ UVI tt +1i.. :r,eu, 1.20 ' n o.. JI .... Jl\11 -1 come thro ugh on a et tr, m 0 t • controlled, of i",--··" •,2'.u' 11 Ji ~· n M.,,~'., •,•,·.~.·.XI :IHI 2214 21"' Fu NI' '"I Al• • 3..., ,... 1"" Am '"' '·'° 1«1 ~'.'? ... ti"' -11'1 ! Per 1•11 .. #Yo ~ ""' _ ,,.. b 2000 11tftlnls ,.,.. 111 •• """ ,..,,. M\'I n ff l"r1111!: 111 L 11 ,-lll.il; 31'ta ~ AC111 1t1 I.JS 21 311• 30'4 JIU +>..:. ~I" lfl 50 110 6.JVI '3V. 63"" •1°"1 counts Y are pro--I ill 1 1 k '$1""" , \Ir "~ Helm111 :'f'c111 .IG l"' ll u v. "1111111 Amerlc.t °' 1.10 ......, JO ~ Am cotn ..o 111 :iot. 1tv. Hiii -"• o1111A11t i:lj. ~ ~ »• l'"" _1 ..i:R course w n ot on y pc • IC UI Mlll• 1.12 "'" 2314 tJ\.'i M1twor111 11-c CD 131/o 13'\t Ith G-r11 JIO\ol111 2 J90 •s "° ... Clt•I" 1.14 II ll¥o JM41 ]I'" -'4 ol lftl:pd . S6 S6~• lo.I; -JI.Ii mi&ing accorWJ1g to a two-but also -·•o, package, •,,,'•"'·•~"·\:"!.,!~XI'·" ,•ill M., ~, .•,-~·~ •"• ,•,:!_o n 21v. ,, .. H1110ve• Fire 2,20 ., .., .-"""°"'' • ..st , itti. 11~ ''"" -"' 01o111tG 1. 21 .u "'" »'h-i.. ~ .. • f U S •• «U ,. '"" ,... 2™ Is-, II .., •l'h "3\IJ •1'1'11 Hlrlf"'d PJr1 I 30'.ll Jl"lo Jiii, AmCrlCllt .tO I JJlolo 17\'lo •21\'lo -~ o!o Sou pf I 1100 55 $5 .U •.. j y ear .:irwv)' 0 • • freeze' ••d deli food to ''"""' •W•b » • ...._ Mio 15°" AC 4' l2:wi ll:wi :O\l Heme 1"1ur1nce 1.• 52\lo s:i u ACr,su1 1.40 :111 l • 33V. JJl'o -•,, o11 Ind .40!! 105 tt "' 11 _ I It d b th ... , ver •n-Mjll• s.M • ny, 11 n Ho C111t Al•/l-!1111 $1,i sv. llldetl·Llr. 1,,. .1.m 1 n 20 ACr~ "' •.50 tto 1? n 'l +1 es l.o!Ob 3<1• !12'" snv. 51~• _ '\ agr cu ure ma e )' e ··""olesale "-Is · •'TKll 11e 11v. it 1~ Ho c1111 " r unn. 1i.t 1•1i 1:w; 1111wcot11 Lii• 10 11 '!'"' .1.mcy111 1.ts Jll '*"" 21~ 1 :w. -''• 111uG111 1.s1 u 21"t ,,"' JB41-_ " Ford W.otor Co. a n d "11 .. "I"' · -11111-11 11•..,,v. c~ 1~ u v. 1 Mor111..,.f' G11 .511 11y. 11JJ1 11111 Jl!.fl1rson siu \If• .111 n\4 ,3" • \4 ..,,,. 0u11ve1t 11 1""" h 11 -"" o1uP1e1 .lOh 13' Js 331-1 ~v. -l\<o A gr IC U It U r 11 Spac. i!!',,~ •,, .. _•,•,• ·,•4 1m,,, '!""• •, °'','"',' 11m lflC ·'°' It lJ 2 Llrw;a111 Mil L.. • 61'A .. tll'l AOUll Pl.U1 10 IJ~ ll'lo IJ\lo -"" ol SoOI! l.U 25 15 UI .. 11 -.,. Michigan State U niver s ity ~·· ., i. ... .. OIO c M\!o 21111. 26'4 LDlll•t"" a. Stftrn·1..11e 1tv. 20•1. 20 AmEIPw 1.n 151 :11v. J7'1(, :11•1; + ~ ~ombEn t.40 J2 16 7j 'l _,,,. 'at.Iii,., w ith remo•· sen•· ~~ •• e.11111ne,""' ~'" ,',v. ~ or,-··· ,M,•,•,11 .osn , • .,. l•Vi 1w. M••( c 11111u, .21 u"" ",.. """ AmE11k1 1.30 r• •"'-.0111 "°"" -1111 ome p11.10 1 ~J·~ • 1 _1 •. :. and i·ust reported in the US i.o:: t.e ... ,_ .i • ..... .... 16 n 16V. M1s11°" e111.1 rtt .10 11\4 11v. u,,. Am Ex' 1rw1 "' •r. !_,, .. , ~ + !'!' ...... 1cr• 1.ao 1021 ,,,,. Jt'4 5t l/o _, •• ' • 1·ng 1·n strumen'· will collect hMI M1N1no '"""" •• 13 1bl1 er.w .u .. 15 ... Nlanln:h Litt ·'' is~ ,. J$4j, "l!Jlnd .t.i.6 '"° ICll'o ... ,,,, ,•,:: -7: omsaiv .JOe 1.5 Jnr. J6'-!'"' • ... Labor De par I m e n t ' s '"11 llllMI Ull) "' ?.JU U llo 2•!Jo PK Aultl r,rocr ll.'I J'AI ]\It Mil U111oti Fire 2.10 32V. llV. ll'" Aml-lobt .71 " lf!I .. ... -.... omlSol of.ta I JI JI,. I un..to-the·minute data on s"oil ltt1enr UI I •. w !{\Ii 2~ ""' PK EIK!r card 13 11 14\4 "'" WHI•'" Lift In• ll" ll\lo lN " Hon>I-I.JO 2~ a.1~ ~. '• .~,x--v. !"""'Ed 2.20 101 17h ., '7\lo -114 Employme nt Service r-r.ot111 &r""m1c.s 1.A-1.or. 11v. PKF1r~11tLlne•2.e •jloli ~ 4'1.Nlllo<\wl<l!l iov; 11Wi 11 "Hornt1111 10 •5'-' .ti :tJ;;··, om11of1.12 1J 31v. 31 31 _\, Review. Among the pr~c· conditions, lnsect damate, &~!:'l~Lf',.'·ci 'i~ 'm ';~ ~=~ X.-.~R.,O:..,:': , uv. u Mo •mu ·Lu. c., .10 13v. ""' 1~ ~"' 1Hfson ll' Jm, ,. 1~ + ..,. c:i:',f11 . .-'°J I!"" J;v. ll~J: = :: ~ ~d crop growth pat•-Ole. ColWl!I Co o >I -11V. Pi e v.. 011 Corl' ltUV. '°1....._~, .. r~lllc Mii Llfulll4 tt ..!t'41f•C ~~ A:::ln~•I 1i'f: 1: h1~ ~ 11¥1 -\lo ~-Miiii I >7 21\0i b " "· •T. tions for the next """""' ""1U91 ComJ1U•••.JitulDm1 1111. i:" •5v. P1 G11 • W•te, n1~ 21 ...... ,,14 11-1ylv11111 LH• 1 11" 11v. ~ .. Al'llMFdl ,·'!. 211 21'A ~ ~ -)'2 Ot>C1o111m .1111 ,, »'-' 31 ~ 31~: .,: b ed ~ slud 'Ille satellites .also will make ~-5R ,,. .111 :I• 2' 2• P•totMr Mor111et: 1.,. 1~ "' Provkl·W•tr1 1 :uv. uv. :i.i111 AMt1 c .... 1w " ,,, .. if'' -;i °"'''<:CP .110 s1 s3o;, so" ~ -J:i.i. y ears, as on ,. .. e y : orMi tor•• • .u '"" ,..., 1 """11¥1ew "!..~. 31v. 32"' :n 1trc;:::t>11c "''LU• .1s 2114 nv. 21v. ~11M~"'• 1 ~ 12v. JN .IO'll + ... i~~11 LIO 11M :w ... "'"" :U'lo _ ,,, t ) A single acre of land J o n a: • r a n g e w e atber ~ie11d TKll 1:"' 1::z 1;v. ,.,P:r,~·AA;;im':'ri ... ''l'I u ~ • d>mOnd ~o•p u c ,,. u ""' ~.:.· 1 " ~ ~·.., ,..,,., _"' °"' ~1: :: ~ 111n.:i: 1~ 1n~ : : .. h I f forecasta and production II o.":~·11 Li b lt lfVJ 1t\lr IOllftr N Gii .IO r~ ~ rH<o tterau1c: lM .... E~ ll\IJ ~"A Pllt!o ·°"' J)I 16"'1 ui.. ]J:\li -~ "" ltclrwt 1 ... .o:i.. "° Ml1"' ··~ will produce 300 bus e s o _ ... ti 111 Pr 11 t1.\lo 1N 11 P11bc! P11ro1wm .u 1''" 1~ 1'"' S•le<o co •V. F>f """ JCl\!o 10 .... e.,ch .oa. " 1 11~ \6S'lo 1u:it -11'1 "'" aod 1,50 :n oil~ olll'I oll\lo = ·~ .. ~eat ea~ year, more than prewC ons. . 111terMt n•I . .e 2014 21•Ji :11 11,11b vc flf MM .to :is:w; :Ml'I ""' S1111Mrd Co•• ~• '"' •v. Am /••t 1 ~1 2'1"' n.... 2t +, °"'"o of•.so 11 ,, 9I 91 _ ,.. w11 ..:u • o.i..u~ Cl!Kl P•l111 e.1 .c:i .u <1'4 eclcor Corp 11 11 H Soverelo~ Liit 1111 67 ye 65 Am mtll J 135 t9~ 15'4 16 __,,,,. !""Freloht 1 19 ls•.> Jl~ J~ -~. toti. tod • ,. Id 500 Many f oods w1ll be Dl1IFln1nc 511 Ulll 16'4 1514 ••""ll lnc i:w. '"' 1v.s11.-.1vLlt1ln11 6'h 1 '"'Amsme11 wl 1 l$lil< •S:V. t S\li -ri onN11G 1.1a 11s 30•4 29"-~\lo -+. mes ay .!I Ye •or ll . . 01c111111 e~1;0111c1 16\IJ u 16V. lllct11rds011 .llt """ u •;, 351'> TUii 1n1 Tni't 1.40J o •~14 •l"" "mSl!Atr .10 nf 6'~14 ff\IJ ff -2r, 0111Pwr 1.tO •S •1"' •iw. •IW. _"" bushels o f c orn. vfi. l oday's genet1ca y ladored to 1n· O\otltl! u 1~" 1~ Roto11cr111 Mhl .1., 11v. 1111i ""' Tr1veltn 1"' .u 1a~ '"" '1fi'I ""'s"'' 111.10 11, ,,~ ,,,,. 3,.,, · · " onPw 011.so 1110 76\1 11"" 75v. _ ..,. d , 'd I d d t t 0 ve,.1 Inc 1 m 1 Roberti '°"'"°' ,611 lGV. 11 1m Tr11ck Unwrl "''n 1." l'O n 20 Am Sid 1 ''' ''' l1l•!, 11114 =t\lo M!llnr 1 . .0 !GI 33''9 36"' JIAli -1\• average 7• bushels ,· IVl ua nee s an as es. g1·-··· 1-,, '·'' ,,.~ is• ... •,e11ernon. H H 1.:io :i. 3, D u111teo 1110 co •m .• "" n~ lt\li .i.mS111111 1111 · ""'"l•L 50 1sa 11><. 111 u•· , <J ·~ -·-.,. ., QI! 111'1 ·~ ''" ,.,. ,, ••• , .. -,,,, '''' 'O '' >l~' .. AmSld r,11.IS t$ 11S\lo lU'h 11514 i 1/io ti k 1"• "' -., The housewife, for example, 'i~"'OU:~, ~.¥ ·'° .ilv. Yv. 1~ ll:Kk-n Jt,''""i.40 nih .,. ...... ,. .... uS F111' G~1, 1,60 M u'!li ,a" :7s1er 11 ;,,,"' 1~ ~ ~\lo ~ -1:w. ~1k1 111 s'.to ,~ l:11 ff~ if''.:~ 2) SINGLE cow will pro· will be able to buy milk with ''"ei:n~·~ 1 -i:,.,., ,;Yi ,:"" :=:1"r:,~°ltl't.•h ~~14 ~u. :T"" ~~~~:!o.!:>1111 ~ ·~,.. •~>ri. .i.mo/i'r · .111 u 1w. 1it" 1o>1o -"' =:: cC:,,n 1oto HnJ ¥/~ ~~ i~:. ~: due. I as many as 1,000 whatever butterfat conteot =-:11 ''~•·1;1"•"·"' • ... #•" #., ... :::,~1n2: ~ Amer Jl'n ll ,. we., ..... Tr1ve1trt :i.... '"" J~ :;:; Tlli> l:& ~~: U"" ~ ~ !.'~ °"' 1111 l.Jo •150 ioov. "',. ffi\ -'• ~ " " !: 11 d 41 Wll11!lr1 I,.. Cl 114 I )\lo "~WWkl ·56 U Ullo lllio l{Yi _.... ant Ml~ 2.J1 12 JJ\li 72111 72h -1 t · h "f.J: a l. • h C tu d lrwhlllr ti 15 l'fl4 11 1'111111 llldu1 16'1. 17\'o l"lo EA TERM IANKS ' ~ ,.,, -•• '' lf 1' _.... Otlt Mil! WI 67 2S 1•"> ''"" ->4 caves in . er u l:"Ume, vs. ••.ue WlS es. a e an IKtr.C••• '""' o •YJ tur11 A1,...,.,.. cm 21 '~" 24 ,,...,,,. Trvst '·'° 11~ ., .. 11>1 Aw/l;f 1·ci rm 1'""' Ml\''"" °"''Mot .• n '° 1u·, '° +"" today's 10·, through 1 pr• cer a'· wi'll be d "g •d to 1ecu.1u~ 1 lClu J1 lCl\6 ~11111111 1!:11e1ron1c1 14" 15\lo u ~1r1,r NY c1 1.10 nv. .,.,,, 41v. "m i:r"' · 3 71" 1w. Jl'll :; v. °"'' 011 2.11& 1s 69o/o '''lo 6JI(,, _ , .,.. e u e-R n EllCITonlc Ct• :D1olr. 311'1 ll\'J Oii & Ft flff 1.?0so Jll.!o ll:wi ll\li ~ lent H 1.40 •All H V. ~ AIM!lt< I• 11 t5Vt a ~l --3 Oii! ioii "' 2 16 51'" 5JV. 5l .... -o\o Cess J transforrm' g fer•ile meet a variety of specific e1ec1ro111c M11mor1e1 ..., "" •l\.'i 1 World 11v. """ ;,v. °"' 111 M!I Cftl 1.• 40V. •1 .i .i.mi•c 1rw: 1 ,.. !l s2:w. 51v. ·~ i~• 111 1.111 nr 61 •J •J • UI u . F•,,.,,., lret .1... 10 1av. '""" -C•nch' ~"-I 26\.'i JIVJ 361'1 Int NII I" Qtl 2 ''"" 42\1. 63 AMlt Corp nl 4t'llo 4'\lo o v. =1"-°"'' et .60 106 161-'t 251' !6~ _ ·,~ eggs from prize cows to C d1el needs . F1rr1ntton Corp ., "' "' Semttdl Ciro 21 zi 1111'1 Flrtr M11 c l'I' 2 n nv. ICl\!o AMP 1"' 40 5, JI"-J1 31"" -1"• ontrol 0111 Jts u1 l<1o1v.. 1.w1,1,; -'l<i A11l1tant ulaler F•d M•rt .so• :n 2J n>n s;,..._.u., Jal'o JJv. """ F•1n1t11n M11 1~ NY 1.20 36"4 "o.r. lit. ... m ..... cDr• 1ci 1AI. ,, tt'I< -~ .,,,_,, '·'°' 11 31,,_ lli:. lll-'o -''l Ord'•nary "incubator" cows: Fed s1011 & s1 .. n1! .~ 1 :iav. ~vi 11 !"', °"' :wiSdl111t1r .IH ~ •~ 111o Mr• H1nov'r Tr111t 1.10 u.,.. 'Iv; 6!1V. "m•h!o ~"' 33 1~ ,... u -IV. ~aol!Cllff .12'1 51 ll ~ Jlh -l'h D.JU. el L. Stephenson ~.s~,~ s11,,•,••,'1.2G !! ,··, •. ,.•~,,•,,,•••,',,',".·•«11 ,, uv. 16:wi Mo•v•11 G111• 1 1111 n v. "~ A11icond ii so •11 ~m .i •1~ -111 -r•n 1.20 u SJ so !Cl -J 31 Milk produc tion will ALL THIS and m ore will Fin ~--· c1 "" w 11.;. u 11v. Hu a1t"' N.i. " 30 11 ""'"HG 1·.o 36 sitio "'"" 5\~ +1~ -Ind pfAJ 1 i.o 1.0 110 -11'-• IC t M h be '/rll E~ec Carp 16\0t 17'h l•V. So U11lo" G11 1.10 lO JOllJ ~ WESTEltlN llAN KS .i.n0c1iv 120 1 3114 /'"" 11\fo -I _,"Tit 1 301 :n..., JI~ l l.\io ·-\lo so ar from ·today's 8,000 O OS a esa as en be achieved by a scant F" ehsc1e111u11; ·'° :zto~ 711'J ,,,,, Sou~1111rfl Drl!llna .os n !l "rlton• 1111k 1 :!6 21 "'" "nktn c111;,. 51 11114 2:io 12-11 .. oopT Dn.u 1 ll 3011, JOit. _ ,. · (ed al ta ( F lltller C1Pllll .... 1~ t>il Soul -II Gl i I 20'.4. 21•/o 1•nk DI Amtrlt1 1.:!6 16:wi 11\lo 11 °'llCO 011 lt1 1J Jl'lo )l 11'4 -1"" CoHllllcl 120 1t •~'II •S ~"' -1,. pound s per cow a year to appo1n 85 I n c a · 2,()(1t,OOO out of America's Fletclllr f'uNI 1•v. 1t-1• 1.-.i. sw ••ch • 6'111 l11v .JO 1ru 11 11111 •M o1 c11 SF 1.eo .... ~ ••" ••'A Aou. c~.m 15 ,.~ 31,.., lf'lo _ 1o1i Co•oRn; .JO Jlt "'"" •l'" .o..., _,"" h , 'lh S 't p 30() 000 000 h '! •1 ·Proo11ch Lid .~ ~"'r 7v. ~ .... Slolct Ord1nce J 6 S P.lk al Tokyo o1 c~1 2' Jll A•<~Olll 1.e.11 21 il 61'4 •I--1\/i CoDWIS!! 1.20 M UV. 15'11. 1$11io -~ 30,000, Milk aJSO will be S le! Wl etUn Y 3· , • W II Wl J be FOllr Sl•r TV 1'4 f'4 t\lo ul'•tctro-Oy111mlc1 11 1t 21 Ct11tl111l1 V1ll1' Ilk .2Q 11•4 11 11 Artt,.ubSvc 1 11 7•'A 13"' 21"' -~ Cor11 PG 1.11! 251 «1:wi 411 .j(lli4 + ~ manufactured fro m carrot Cl·11·c Nati'onal Bank. "'farmer•" In the y ear 2000. G•rdlfl u11o1 ca ""' ' ~"" Dr'llKI Street C..111111 •Iii ..,., c~ntu•¥ 11~11k 6l> 1v; ''" ,.,,,1,.1 ...:t1 .70 '-!.s 30111 ~ ttl\ _ ~orGW t . .so. 11 311 lllS'lo 305," _,,. r.a ~rvlc• I II 11" 11'11 ,. lndll" s 15 ... " Ullo C!l'I' NII lk .Ill 21v. 21~ 21~ A•mca ill l 124 SOI """' 50 -lit oronet .•o 31 .... ,,, ~"' olo!'4 ·~ -----------------------------------------------:Generll ftrlWI... ~\I; fl1 f l/o !fl t1 !!~lorlTIOll I 11' 7..., !:rock•r.Ctll1""' 1.ltll l&!o l6l'o 36W. "'"'"°"'' 1.60 ,UI dh U {t:W,. -'Ii -!ti .jjl 11 I•• ""' 1'141 -'4 I Gtn1r11 llttt••cll Ca 11111 , .... ,., .., .,, I llret •U. 11.!. ' FIOt!!lv link .10 u 1•V. 12!.lo .i.rmr pf J.7!1 I 11 '' u -\lo OKBdc11 .K 1' 1-l:wi ll"-53"--Hi (;-~ lllcl11strle1 lffi ., IS:wi ulttcr ILOtl Iv lllO 11\lo 11 Firs I llMll,_•tlon • U llo U\I 1~ Arm Ck 1 .O. Sl U1oo. 704' 15!.lo -V. ,••ntCo 1.4'0 25 411. 41i.., ..... _ '1 6ffl Ttl {'h r ,fl! 1~ I!>* IS Sum.et llduslrltl lW, llVo l)V. First Stt11rl1'1' iD 1.511 lll'> 3'\lr 3J .1.rmCk plJ:1s 11•0 6'11 '5\IJ U -+I ... ,,,....PICll .IO 40 111'1 ~ 101oo -Jt't I I I I I I I L An economic preview plus investment suggestions for the second half of 1968. [. F. H utton··s stud y "ltlll,ii -The Second Sia Month•'' d iscusses major Industries and their outlook for the rem ainder of tha year. More than 30 fa vore·d Industrias are evaluated a nd 120 aUrac ti11e issues recom mended. For your copy, just mall the couoon. No obllgation, of course . Address ______________ _ C ity _____ State ___ Zip Code __ _ Telephone ______________ _ 6 usiness P hone ____________ _ E. F. HUTTON & COMPANY INC. MEM!IEll NEW YOllK ANO P"CIFIC CD ... $T STOCIC EXCl-l.i.MGES ""0 OTHEll LEADING SECU RITY "NO COMMODITY EXCH.i.NGES 1161 NORTH M,1.IN $fltll!ET, SINTA .i.N ... , 511.(1101 11' EIST BRO ... DWAV, LOMG •EACH, Ill·!+" oc• • ·1 I I I I I I -----"J --------------- ANNOUNCEMENT <';111 Ttl 5 pf 1~V. I~ 1!'4 T1mer Ello(: 11111 11\to JJ>,; l:Rlo Gll"!'#IY Mii It 1 """ U U Armillllb 1.60 11 .sl"" SJ 5l -1'4 f reu1eHln lb .U :U Jl"' 31\<t -i . '~.eormnn lttrc1 In! "'" ~~ 7l't T1mp111 2.60 !ti JOO lri 1· lmll'!:rl•• ll•N: :11 JI Ar• Corp ta J l'l\'I 11 1t -,_ Coll 10'2 .o·~ Jt..., Jt'h _ ,,. r.&H Ttclllllllon 1111 f'lo I\.; T1~1r l'ldltl llV. lflT 11'1• Ll~r1v Nel lk .24 1'11i 1'4 7"' ""'I" Ind fO 6 J.11~ )•V. 1'1~ -"" •-n Cork • 15'4 1•" 71\~ t •, ~l1uca 11\1lrlim11111 I t IV. "l•11P111 Ca,.• ~ """ l!V! Mlnul1c111reri l•nk lOll> 11 1~ AlhlclOIJ 1:211 4111 {JY, ~ 4l't -1111 •-nle 1.JCI 11 5 .oft-Vo ..,,., ...,..., '• 1;,1 .. nell coro :i 1 11 111 11• T1111e Frtt~ ""' 17\li u y, 51111~ Mnnk.1 lltnk .S2 14 lA\I 1J>.; Andi• .10D 17 Jl\IJ 121'1 nw. .. .. nu;T 511 1.2!1 162 :JI~ J1" ll\\ \1 Guld111ee Tech 4 "'41 4 T~umll!ll Prodl '·j 1Jt 140 1'1 SK Pie Mii LA. 1Jto 1Foi ""' ff"'" °'Hd OG l.l'lt H .,llJ •I <II _, S Coro .40 18 1t'V. 21 I~ -I '~ GlllM~'I Teel! CV •I ~ 20'tlt t3 Ttlon Riii~~ •1 d V. U\lr So C~lll h t Mii 1.IO U 11 -I.I AldSPr• 1.31 6 ll l JI 31llo -.\\ 11dlh' Co 1!1 U'lo 14~0 H.,. -lot H111,yE1111l11 C1 7i; Hit "Vi T .. 11 ... m Oll~or•1 12'1-ti IJ\4 ll'-'ii1umltamolk C1!1.1G lO 311 A1tdTr1ft .IO '1 lW1 IJ\li 11,1 +\\ lt<llhv pl 6 16 11 I~ -1 H~•Ctl .H 61 .... ~ ,, .... T11111C••llll ero .2t H•t· lf'Ao 1~ v .. 1'1'M11a•1 I t '"""'.o<'"" .... t1 '31 3l JJ\l;-l"11CUlll01n ,41 l 59\Ao Jll/o 51'4 -lU HI Shtt r .2t 60'11 '3 6' T1kll1 Clllm!ce S .lG :ia,,. ''' ~ •• u0o,•~.,•,'",~. 'lo'· .. ,, ~ oi'o 41'4 "lchllOll 1.60 •:Kii Jl~ 32111 32\ft -.\\ c ...... mlnl .10 101 •l'lt •1 •1 _ 1.;, .._,, C11> 1 1t 2' 2'\lr Ti"'••'<"',',"-' .IOI • I>•• :Ill\(. ,.,,. .i.tchll o1 .50 112 11"1 11\IO 11'4 -l't CuneoPr .21'.i. o 16 15 11v. _ ._. 16\1 21\IJ 71 Valley N!I Pltoenl~ .!Os n~ 1l n'4 AICltyEI l.U 5 211'1 271/o 21~ -,,. Cun~Oruo .10 t l~ 11•1. 1 v. _,,. LEGAL NOTICE '!~·.~.<:.·-.IO 13'4 ll't! u Well• F1roa I•~• 1.«I 50\lo s1111 51\lo Atl Rich 1.60 1010 1t2 UJ 177 +1t'i'r Curun Wr 1 lll 2~ 15\lo fll't + 'lot -11 • ..,, ,.... 31"' l llONDS All ltllcll WI It 91 '1> 17'1> ttln+151 Curl r " 1 t i n .. ll JJ -'ft Tr•~"' Ill(. Mt 62 6 ACF·Wtl .sir C•l\4111 tJ .. II At,llch pt)Jl t61D '6 6J 6' +1 1ull1r H 1.J(I '" ••lit .0\11 ~ -1v. NOTIC• llf'llTIN• llDI Tr11C1 C"'• 111'o 2CV. 2:...":o ""'Ill! Rllb CYH,13 us 150 l•"I "'' l:lcll 9f l6S 1Sl'h U3 l•V.+J?Vo YCIOp• 1.IO 10 u .... ,, ... :i. ... -I'• N •• ''. ' ... '-··-, •• , --"--rd el Tr1n1canl G11 PIH I )(tl,O 20\IJ ~ A"'tll·M•l'l'tlr •• 1014 11 16 71 Allll Ch .to 119 21'4 21 Jl -'!lo Yll>rtJl.\I 1.40 lotl 56~ 5S11 "V.-1'"' .... , ... .. ... -Tr1n1 COM l11tu1111 1:1\'J ,,.,,, nv. "'L•ll'J Dl1>I CV4Vnll ltS 100 lH .... 1 •• Corp tlll '"' 6 •Yo D-Trv1fftl ol ltll Oft ... I Coto! JfJlllOt Tr1v1Ltdgs 25 111'1 21 ~ 1'11.l 0..11cfl CVl\l:tJt m .~ A1.,or1li'I :10 1S4 tt\11 J(I ?1'4 .:'.( -~::l:!'1t11,D:l~l':.ct~ !"::rb~C4:m:; l~l:1r' lllClu~I I ~ fl"' fl"" runttti::.~ :v·~~ ~rl1t 1lCI .. ~~~~~ ·~ 111 lf:\4 3i5: llJZ111·•+ g:~. ~~ tJ: ~~ '5~ !J .. ~~ :_ ''t J :CIO "·"'·· Wldr!Hdt~. A111<11! 1. !Ml, e.t Trln11¥ tr"'usr .llO 311'1 ltV. «t C111t01 D,., (••'il!ll ltl ns "t11S,,-.1r .1111 uo 21111 '1"' ,, .. -" O•,coCp 1 611 s .II) J9'1o 3~ _ \<o 1111 ~llfdlitl,.. DtMrlmllll 11>1 lllO 1Cf1eo1 ~ G11 .H 15"" 19-ii lSU Colf'!'l~~ tM fs n fl II Avca Cp 1.21 •U 01~ '6V. ... 'Ii -l'o D•vco ,,,..JS 120 fl tJ n •"''''' """"' ,, ,_, ,,,_,_ ,. •• , U .~'!: cor, ,1 11 1Hli 1111; i°"'"'ll DJI• C'flU.1ft 17l 11.5 "vca l'l :io xJ •• t1 n -l't'o O•t PL 1.11 1 n:i;, 31~ JJ\lo _ .,, •• ...... •w • • -u 11 ...... Rtct; MM ... ""' m 1\11 ...U1r.Cl1!1tM .... " 11 71 '~ AYfrY 0 • 11.1' 1 ···~ '4\i ""'"' -"' DP DIA J.1S USO 6' 6J.,, •2111 + .... CO.Ill Mell. C1lllof'nl1, •t Wflld'I time US l!:l);'l_!,':r, .60 21\IJ ll\'t nv. 1r Wftl F -JV-• 1t II 11 .i.vnet Inc .SO •51 S1!'o 511 50 -JV. CPL plll .l.75 l'Ht '11" 62'h 4Jl1 ~~ ~~; .. :~:!' :":::.r;.=.:lld"''':! ~::ii;:~ C"1 1;i,,,'·• ;;~ 1~11o ,~ ~~c~;1t ~~ n..::1 lE 1~ :::ip:12i~ .J! rn:; lfr'h lil111 =J: g:~:.l~t ,~o• ~ ~U ~1 .. ~~ ~'.:i;, District to 1111 DellwrlCI lo 0.-11111 Cot•I ~co ~~~1.,.• ~ ~ 2i~ ~~~ ci) ,;",t,~'' \~ J~ l1t -B-g:11i:~tr' _,4JD 26 35 :u,," ~ -14 Collett llld lo Gal01n W11t Ctllltl. ~fi:, d1:1co.7, •'.'o 5\~ 5 t-IOl!v $U01r cv4'b'3 1~1 16.:S 81bd; W 1.36 1) 61\o ~Yi ...... -'"° O.n11 Mio .60 J in: Jt•J: U~ = ~ c~11l::::. ~~~.!,,\':...111.:c;:::.,'k:.i~ Vr...:tv111 l:v. 1~"" av. :1':'v1:n:Jf'i!°k1~~ .... ,., ; : ::1~'8~T 1.: 1~/ i?"" 31• .. R~ +'Ill 8r.:rs'~1111.:Ja1 ~ .:~. ff ~ =1·1 wtolcll ••• llOW Oil flt. Ir.ii ml't bt Viteo Nila Co•p ,.)6 ,.... I ,.,... f>•C Outd• ... o ·~ 71 .. t5 '2 l 1IGPlll 4.50 11..0 1' ~ ,. . D1111t6r 1.10 ,, :!<l\/t 19 ... ll:wi -,,. HCUrld In flll oftlCI of 1111: Purci111l111 Y)lro (pof .l.fft l1'1' JI 3'\lo P1ulll¥ Pet 5tlo176 115 111 11 4 lan1Pu~I .6G Ill tO l!.\io J9 -I Oereco P1B t .sl'n 51 51 -l~• Alefll 11>1 lllCI Kl>ool Gl\trlCI. V ¥11"' WllOd1rd ~ 31)\4 31 511111 Mltwbltftl cvt"Mn " t3 !! 1•1!9P 9fl.25 I ..o .a «! , .. OtSololflC .IO I ll'h JI '.l!Vr _,,_ W1udlll • Retd 2.lt "9111 51 50'1> thrlllv M•rl cv 1' lfl 9' f7 ., l••b0l1 I.At "lf 4~</, •5 •S -llJ 8:'Edl 1 40 •I ;6,,. IO > f;•dl blckler nwtl I Ubmll wltll hit Ll!d • Wlllltr4(1Jtf ur1 UV. 1S"1 1•111 l ~rlltv Merl tW 61 Tl 10!' IG1 l•Jlc Inc: .ICl •• 21"" 11•4 21·~ -1V, ',,• •.• -,.· ' ' -,,., c11hltr'1 Cllffk, c1rtllfld dleck, O<' bid· W1r11tr !!IK I rk . .J• tt:wi 'lV. "l':I Tal!vo Shlb111•1 ~¥~11 U ti ~7 9111c 01 2.•• 1ta SJ 50'h 501'> -lV. .... 1 f11 102 + ,,, d • bond tO bt. to !I'll ~ flf W11h H11 ••• • II llV. 11 Tr•m Wttl Pl 516t 16 1• ... ~ Oel Sltol ·'° 6l 21 1<1\IO ~ + '· ~= '0.-1111111 ~Ol~I ~~Jar Cot~· 001.~r\ct Wey.-. M 0 ."1 • l• 31\0 3-< W1'tnt Mlq ~sl7 1't lll ,.,. ::::·~~o .20P 1l ~:; ~·4 ,:J.~ =l'lo ~·~~,.;:111~.o x"'t ~ IT i?:Z -•• ~:~.:!!.i:.~:·1~;,·~·:::~""~die:: ::r!ir£~?~11~"'1.40 ~~ ~~ ~ ;:;~,:;:~:~v~:L "u~~ 10.11··-~ni~·;~~~.···.·C 17! !l~ tt~ ~tt~ g::riprof.~ ~ ;?"' ~~ W::_ .• • 1u.•111tte ltl1t Ille lllclcJtr wlll 111ter lftto Well !l•v Fl11 Corp 1o.r. JV. 1\lo unJNncl 11:t1 11.M 11. .. 8",1...,5 111 1: .M: ~to lCl.\io _ 111 Dl1ml11ll I.lo ll "'6\lo •5"' •Slli -•.-, "'-·~ Coro1t1ct ff 1111 llmf' Is Wtlltrn P11bllllll111 .7' J11'o lJ\lo ll'h ll•ndtrblll Mui Fl f.Jt 10.4 f.4:1 loit f:d, i.11 lG• t6'4 IJ"' 1J'!o + l'I &I~;:'~ ·~41 ~ l~~ 1:~ ~~ .:s'" •wtt...i to lllm. 111 tM 1 .... 111 of 111111~"' .......................... ,. .... ,. ............ , IBeck pll.ltk tlO 11) 113 IJl . .. Diebold . ..otl 117 )tVJ 31'11! :lf.\io -1'~ r<iltlr l11to well CM!rect. 1111 "°'"°' ol !leckme11 .loll JI u>.lo-""' lili -v. 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TIM! 8tnO!X 1.40 VJ lt'IO ll 3ll/o -I Dom Fd .12'1 11 U"" ll 'la l'V, l o1rG DI Tru1te11 r1s.ervt1 It\~ prfvll"'• !lt..Olx pf l 26,,1, 61\lo ,1 .. _ ·~ Oo11111llev .60 •I •1 Vt •o>.o •o-'41 -1"• 111 •tlec:t!llD •nv •"" •11 b!O• .. r to W•lv~ ........................ • ............. )ltMIFnl 1.60 26 •• .,"" 43 -\lo Da ... D!l¥tr lJ 2~ ,,,,, ,,.,,, -'• •nv lrrt111llrlflH ar l11lorm1lllln I" '"¥ 41111"'!"r"•tt E " .ti !liiw:t;., 1..,uF IMl.50 l'HG 701; JO 10•,o +I Dove1C11> 1.20 61 6'>1< 61 '' -1 Dld1rl11 t1Mtb!ddl111. BenUF UJO '76'" 16'~ 16'1·-'.'• DowChm T.ltl 111 10 n v. ll"lo -1 .. NOl:MAN E. W"TSON J11tt n (."'""' W U11•v1!1 ln¥el 80! ~-" 11.6.JOPOfll I'd l.U f .•J leneu•to ' «fl ll 1"" 111'o + y, Dr•vCIC11 1.10 10 II~ IOVo 40\fo -'" dtVt!tlt M 15 l5 JS 15 l11vtll Gr111111>: Pfl!n S~ t" t .12 !lerkov Pt.a t l 11~ :12 lW. -1 Dre1tlnO 1.0lt .U lSS. 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S1!'1dm111 I'd$: B ,r,, " . 1 JJ Ulili 11 \'J ]1\IJ -I'" ,,,, <••r ' ']I If''• ,", lt -"' Thi magnificent, fully equipped 196t Contiftenta1 driv•n personally and excfu~ sively b y Mr. Clyde John1 on, ha1 now b ••11 rel1a1ed for public. 1ele, as p•rt of Johr11on and Son's annu al model clo1eout 1ale, Direct your inqui 'Y to Bill Geoh•g•n, General Sale1 M•t1•t•'· ~:: ~11 if!f :·Z: ~::' f ,t 1::~ +.Ii' ~~::~ J~·l~ Jt·I~ ~:,~nd 1:::: 1::~~ R~!iv•:~a!. 10,, J1~ flv; ij"' -3! mer El .61 lg:) I~~ Hl'JI,) 1~ =I~ Ci•lt 11'11: flt 10·0. Fnd LI U~IWft I M(dA Mui l .11 1:0 Sele" 7.11 I oft II nkl: n SO lO SI jjllllo JI -21'> lmrEI r,1.fl I 11~ 11~ )l~. -\, Ci1>ll $1\r Los a:,2 Fo1ma!r1 ,'·',',,',·t(.Moilof~C:"'"····,f.!7Sltl"ltael'UllCl1_: ::,.11,J 1·.i'O n 6 .flh •ll'> ,,,,._1 m~"'A \'ioa 7r 51>.i s,1r lPn .. C1n1 ~1t, 11n•·ttl'-1<1 •. ···~Fdi..60 •J.'6 l•I ?:l.l<l .l.J•aur"<IP IO 17 ~._,, 31\/t 11 11.-~ :;:.,g)!1 i.60 J9'1o ,• 311,1,:_1 C Gf'fl 1&02• •i"o1 Fr~nkl•r Cu11~n: 111<\r!Oll F11..01 . 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A INGS • OT><VI •RAl'ICH Of'l'lCES WM Arcedl• a Covin• Gltndafe ... • r !It ... ,_., ·--,\,....: ·~ ~ +.,, _, .,. + '" ,.. -\'o I.to -·~ ~ -\~ _, _,. \ii-''• -!~. ''J: -~ -.• + ., 14 + l, ,, v. -•• " . ..• -'"' ~ -\"' \0 I 'lot ,_, \oo -1 '~ l,lo -T'-'il. -Ho "· _, + ·~ "' -.,, i' + '• , "'-1'· h -'• _, llo -T>i ·-· " -·~ lit-·'-" -,,.. A _,, _.,, "_, J,.-+ A .4 _,., "t1·i ,._., -+ "• .;, -" .,._ '• .. -\. "' -•1, . -'· +-" ? -'• • -!11 .. _,,~ lo -l'o ~ -It _, ·~ -t\~ .,_ .. , _, ~-,,. '-l'o + ., _, ·-. • -1• • . -" ' '_, ~ = ~ '" , --'" ~-'" ' -" I -,,, • -1~ . '. ' •-'II ' . :: ~ . -'• . -" • -1\io . -· . ~ '• ' t 1, -" __ , . +. + -,, • -+ "' ,_ "• ·-· -" ' -1'1 ~~ .. ·-. - -. :";_ •'*"4i" • **""" aem ; a a 'I'":·-··--• Monday 's Closing --------- s a a -. -_. .-,.,-' •1,. N••-••' July 1'168 Prices -Con1plete .New . York Stock Excllange -List • ' • ..~­DAil Y l'tl.Of •• • I • • • I I ' i I I I Je DAILY PILOT TVfid,Q, JulJ 2', 1961 Yanks End Speculation-Mantle Not for Sale NEW YORK (UPI) -The Yank .. s have finally eoded all 1peculation about Mickey Maotle. He wtll not be oo their expansion list 12 weeks trom now. He's not going to Seattle or Kansas City. the American League's two expansion clubs. lie Isn't going anywhere. He'll be back with tbe Yankees next year. He'll be back with them as a player even tilough he'll be '37 by then, or he'll be back with them in some other "official" capacity, which i$ more likely. No matter what, his name posiUvely won't be among those the Yankees will make ava.ilable for the league's 11th and 12th clubs in mid-October. Mike Burke, the think yoWlg, progressive- minded president of the Yankees, guarantees It. "\Ve'd never let Mickey go to another ball club,'' says Burke, one of those refreshingly rare individuals who invariably sticks to his word once he gives It. "lle'U finish his playing career with the Yankees and when that time com- es he'll continue to be an official mem· ber o{ the lam.Uy. In one capacity or another. But we certainly aren't going to oUer him to ey other club. It's unthinkable for Mlc.kty to be ariyth.lng else but a Yankee." At this stage of ls career, Mantle Isn't at all sure about the ( u tu re. Nobody with the Yankees bas told him he would.n 't be on the expansion Ust, the presumption possibly being that he would know that himself. Before Burke made his statement that It would be unthinkable for Mickey to be anything but a Yankee, someone asked Mautle whether he would ever consider playiLg for another ball club. "l don't think so," he said, slowly, thoughl!uUy. "1 don't wanoa say no outright. I might h•ve to. One of those magazine guys came over the other day and asked me what I'd do U 1 was put on the expansion Ust. He was trying to sound me out." "\Vhat did you tell him?" ' "I told him J hadn't given it any thought," said Mickey Mantle. "It was the truth." Now that Burke has made it oUiclal, the Yankees last remaining star from U1elr bygone days ot wine and roses needn't bother his head about ex· pansion lists anymore. But when you're putting in your 18th season like Mantle is and you're hit· Med wick, Goslin,: Cuyler. • ID 'Hall~ COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -· Medwick, Goslin and Cuyler -three more names that stand for baseball greatness. Joe "Ducky" Medwick, Leo n "'Goose" Goslln and the widow of the late Hazen "Kikl" Cuyler were present Monday for formal i n d u c t i o n ceremonies at baseball's Hall of Fame. "It's been a long time coming,'' said i tedwick. "But I'm very proud. My life is now complete." The 66-year-old Goslin, overcome by emotion, said: "l have been lucky. J want to thank WINTER OLYMPICS SOMEWHAT IN RED GRENOBLE, France (AP) • - Income from admissions and sale of television rights covered only about 20 per cent of the cost of staging the \Vinter Olympic Games in Grenoble in February, a final report indicated Monday. Organizational expenses were set at $23,521 ,000. Spectators paid $1,231,400 for entry to the events in 1968 and pre· Olympic competitions in 1967. Sale of television rights and other advertising income produced an a d d i t i o n a 1 $2,400,000. The French government made up the difference \\'ith a s u b s id Y i11,a10,ooo. Dodgers' Slump Stirs Archives Of Better Days LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers are in their worst slump in at least two decades. But ?\1anager Walter Alston remains as calm in the face of disaster as he was during those glorious years when he led the OOOgers to pennants in 1956, 1959, 1963, 1965 and 1966. 1\vo years ago. the Dodgers won a pennant and finished 23 games ahead of eighth·place ~louston. Today, the Dodgers are in ninth place, only l~ games ahead of the last-place Astros. ''We'll snap out of it." Alston said Monday night after Houston right-ban. Dodger Slate J\111 13 Doil--• VI Hou1!on 7:SS p.m.KFI !UC) Ju IV 24 Ood9er1"' H0111to~ 1:S5 P.m, KFI (6-lOJ Jul1 26 OoOVIU ., C~lcauo 11:2S a.m. ICFI !6«1) der Dave Giusti handed the Dodgers a 4-0 defeat, their 18th loss in 21 games. Giusti pitched a seven-hitter and was he1ped out as two Los Angeles baserunners were caught in rundowns between third and home . "Kek:ich pitched well enough to win," sald Alston. "and Haller con· tinues to hit the ball." He was talking about lell·hander hlike Kekich , who allowed the first two Houston runs, and Tom Haller, the catcher who slammed three hits and raised his season average to .314. Kekich, 1-4, was trailing by only l -0 when he was lifted after walking Doug Rader to open the gixth inning. The Astros v.•ent on to ambush reliever Jim "hiudcat" Grant for three runs in the sixth and seventh innings. God, who gave me the health and strength to compete with these great players. I will never forget this. I will take th.ls to my grave." Mrs. Cuyler, whose husband died in 1950, said, "I know fny husband would be very proud today. Baseball was his life and it was a good life." Commis.sioner William D. Eckert presided at the ceremonies which preceded the annual game in which Detroit trounced Pittsburgh 10.1. Medwick, 56, was voted into the Hall last January by the Baseball Writers As sociation of America. It was the final time he would have been eligible before moving into the jurisdiction or the 12·man veterans committee. Cuyler and Goslin were named by the veterans group. Medwlck played with St. Louis, Brooklyn and New York of the Na· tional League from 1932 to 1948. He compiled a .324 lifetlme average and \von the Triple Crown with St. Louis in 1937. Cuyler hit .321 and stole 328 bases while playing with Pittsburgh, Olicago, Cincinnati and Brooklyn lrom 1921 through 1938. Four times he led the National League in stolen bases. It's a Fa11iily Affair Goslln hit .:ns v.·ith \Vashington, Detroit and St. Louis of the American League from 1921 to 1938. His hitting played key roles in Washington's only three pennants. A National Baseball Library also was dedicated. In the game, Don Wert's three-run homer o!f Jim Bunning, highlighted a four.run first inning for Detroit. Ray Oyler and Mickey Stanley also homered for the Tigers. Pittsburgh's only run came in the fifth on an error and Donn Clendenon's single. UlllTe ......... .Tohnny Ed\vards. St. Louis Cardinal calcher, out· fits his son with his catching gear prior to a father- sons game in St. Lou.is Monday night. Much to the cider Ed,vards' chagrin, six-year-old David 'vent hitless in the fray, but gained revenge as the young· er set \von the game. Ung .m like he ls, you still have to bother your head about the futu..~. "There's a rumor going around that you've signed a three-yea.r contract with CDS to do TV and radio work for them starting next year," someone a a.id to Mickey. "Not true,'' he said. ''Would you like to do that kind of work when you're through playing?•' "It depends oo how my other stuff goes,'' he 9aid. The other stu!! includes a substan- tial financial interest in an insurance company plus his most recent venture, the franchising of a restaurant chain GLENN WHITE Sports Editor > Denise Carter Jolts Aussie In Net Play HAVERFORD, Pa. (AP) -Denise Carter couldn't help become a tennis player. Her mother played, her father played and her twin sisters played. At the Carter home in Los Altos, Calif., t.hey hung tennis balls on the Christmas~ tree. This family didn't play just for fun. Each member was a ctimpetitive s'3.r of sorts. Mom and dad once competed at Wimbledon. The twins ranked high in Northern California tennis circles before they got married. So what could be more natural than t'he youngest of the tennis.playing Carters coming up with the big up set on the opening day of the 69th annual Pennsylvania Lawn Tennis Cham- pion.ships. Miss Carter, a 17-year-old blonde with a big smile, Monday ousted top· seeded Karen Krantzcke, Australia's fifth·ranked woman player and 1966 winner of this tournament. Miss Carter's 7·5, 6-0 triumph over the Aussie's formidable forehand drives really shook the sprinkling of fans in the stands at the Merion Cricket Club. The men's competition went as ex- pected by the five seeded stars who played first-round matches. Second· seeded Charlie Pasarell of Santurce, Ptterto Rico, the No. l·ranked U.S. star, defeated B.P. Stephenson of England's combined Oxford • Cam- bridge team 6-J, 6-0. Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va., the No. 2-rated American and third·seed- ed, disposed of Oxford-Cambridge's A.H. Billington 6·2, 6·1. Marty Reissen of Evanston, lll.1 fourthseeded, won 6- 4. 6·2 over l.L. Hewitt, another Oxford- Cambridge player. Premjit Lall of India, seventh·seed- ed, defeated Paul Cranis of New York City 64, 6·3, and eighth-seeded Stan Smith of Pasadena, Calif., runner·up last y,•eek in the National Clay Court Championships. eliminated Dan Bleck· inger of Oshkosh. Wis .. 6-1. 6·1. Among the other distaff players, second-seeded Vicky Rogers of Rye, N.Y., eighth-ranked American woman, advanced with a 6-3, 6-0 victory over Mimi Kanarek of New York City. Pugilist Corner NEW OA:l.EANS -Ptfn' 1'119!>. 14S, Ntw Orl• .. 1!, fllllPOlntlld JolHWIY lrook1, Utl~, l.•i YHll. Ntv .• 10; Be<1nlt MtC111, 1141 New O•INllS, CYll'O'lnltd Cwrvo $111 ... ,, UJ'IJ, Mt~ co cnv. 10. TOKYO -Hlrashr KoNy1sh!, ln, J•IM~. knM.ked 0<.11 Ul•»es l olfi'Q. ll21'1. Cal0n'IDl1, •· nanUtlc. The victory was J'iouston 's fifth in nine meeUngs with the Dodgers th is year and put lhe Astros in position to wrest ninth-place from Los Angeles tonight when they send left.hander 1.-like Cuellar, 5-4, against the Dodgers' Claude Osteen, 7·14, in the scond game or the three.game set. Flutterballer Will Be 45 Friday--Eyes 2 More Years known aa ManUe'a: COuntry K.ltcheo. Up to now, MacUe ha&n't done u well as J. Paul Cetty or Howard Hughes In financial investments. The painful truth ls be hasn't come close. And theo there's the Immediacy of his daily job, playing first base for thit Yankees. Mickey u.id not long ago he wouldn't play anymore next year ll the }aft half of this season turns out as poorly for him as the first half. But Mantle loves the game and it's going to be hard for him to quit. The Yankees have fiJ.ed things so he really doesn't have to. Angels Say A 'Prayer' For Rookie MINNEAPOLIS.ST. PAUL (AP) - Tonv Oliva's big bat and an erratic Cat.ftornia bullpen nearly robbed young Andy Messersmith of his first major league victory Monday night. The 22·year-old rookie rlght·hander hurled 3 1/3 perfect innings of relief irt the Angels' 6-5 victory over the Min· nesota Twins. It was his eighth relief appearance since being called up from the minors a month ago. He shut off a two.run Twins' rally in the fourth inning, retiring 10 straight batters before he left for a pinch-hitter in the eighth. The Angels Jed 6-2 w he n r.tessvsmith went out. ''I thought we had an easy one," he said. "I just got tired." · lo.1.innesota cuffed three California pitchers for three runs in the bottom Of the eighth and had the bases loaded when Bobby Locke finally retired Cesar Tovar on a fly to end the inning. Southpaw Tom Burgemeier, the sixth CaWornia pitcher, retired the Angel Slatfl Julv 23 Annis 11 Mlnnt""..olt l :,5 p.l"fl. KMPC C7101 J uly 1~ A~tell 11 Mlnnesat1 J•U p.m. ICMPC !TIO! July 26 Anl;ll!IS VI Clllc1~0 7:55 p.m. ICMPC (1101 first two Twins' batters in the ninth. Then Oliva powered a. drive to left along the foul line. Angels' Manager Bill Rigney 11though t it was a home run "-'hen it v.·as hit. But I saw where it hit -it \\'asn't." The ball n1issed clearing U1e fence by a few feet and Oliva pulled up at third with a triple. The tying run was stranded when Rod Carew grounded out on a close play to end the game. "His arm got a little tired, he had just pitched Sunday,'' Rigney said of his decision to yank his rookie. "He also had to make those two hard throws on inl-ield outs. I thought our bullpen could hold them. It almost got away from us." Oliva also thought he had home run No. 17. ''\Vhen I hit the ball I'm sure it got out if it was fair. I hit the second one better U1an the first." He produced the Tv•ins' first run in the fourth with a 35().foot line drive \\'h.ich barely caJ.Tied into U1c left field seats. t "I didn·t think it could possibly stay in the park,'' said ~linnesota Manager Cal Ermer. ''Evidently it did. I was hoping it \vould stay fair because I was sure it would go out." CALIFOll"llA MINN'ESOT•, l~fhrtll '''111'1 O~v1lillo, cl S O O O Tcwer. ss S o o O Fre11DSI, II i I 2 0 II-. JD J 1 I O Reich1tdt. It S 0 0 0 Uhl1~r. ct S 1 1 O Morron, rt 1 1 1 o 011v1, rt s 1 2 1 C1111ev. ~b J O O O C1rtw, 2b S 1 1 1 Bu•-lfr, p O O D O Quinci, Jb 4 o o o Mlnchtf, lD <I 2 O O A!li:lon, 11 J 1 2 O Hlntan, lb 1 1 1 o A:O!.ebo•P. c 2 o 1 1 Rt1>11!, rf 3 D I 0 R.Cl1rk, Pr 0 O 0 0 A.ROdrlOufl, Jb 4 1 J l llmmerm.111, (: O 0 D O M(F1rl1nt, c J O 2 2 Rol1nd, p I O O O P•llln, p 1 0 0 0 8.Mllltr. p I 0 1 l M ..... rsmllh, p 1 O O O Holl, ,,., I O a o Wrlg!ll, Pll I c 0 a Perr1110Skl, p a 0 D 0 Rol1s. p 0 0 0 a RPlllf\$, Pll D 0 0 1 Ellis, p a o o o O.Chlflte, p a o o o l.CKke,p G OOD ICnoaP, 2D 0 0 0 0 Tu~~ ~•105 h~~ V ftj C1Ulornl1 ,_,. ...... ., •..• O:ll 000 000 -• MlnMtO!I ..... , .... , .• •. 000 200 030 -5 e -Mln<hrr. A!lli.oti, Clrt'\lf. LO& -C1ll· fOrn it I, Mlnnt10!1 •. 28 -A. Rodrltuer. 38 -Ollvt. HR -O!lvl (If). $8 -II.HM, lltPOr. S - 1'1!t1n. " • • .. .. •• P1nln J.l/3 ' , , , • Meswrsmll!I 1 ..... 1-{IJ J.1/J • • ' • ' lil'ol•s • , ' ' • • Ell!~ "' ' ' ' ' ' ,~ .. " • • • • • Buf9mt ltr ' ' • • • ' Ralend IL,2·1) ,_,,, s • • ' ' 8.MIUtr ~-213 ' • • ' ' l'e111no1kl ' ' • • • ' O.Clllrn:e ' • • • • ' HSP -Role11d IMl11chtr1. WP -Rol1nd. " -A:os.eboro. l ime -3:2'-Atttndlnce -IQ,116. Fans at the game will get an added treat -ir watching the Dodgers now can be called a treat. Los Angeles will hold a pre.game birthday party for Don Drysdale, who will turn 32, and will hand out photos commemorating the big right-hander's 58·inning streak of shutout h\D'ling. Wilhelm Hurls • ID 906th Game, Ties Record HOUSTOlll lOS A"IG•Lll Slm11-. rt '°"'""· -.......... lfl ..,..., " ........ II...,.,,, a. Wlbol\t If ·-· Glllltl. • ... , .. "" '''""" s 1 2 1 w.01~1 .. <f , o o o SOllGW-,.IM:lll,lf •OOO I I J 0 Htli.r, c 4 O 3 O •OllL~.2b 00 20 :Jt2 1F•lfll<,lb •Ill ' 1 o o 11..1111rr. 3b • 1 1 1 f020 Fl ll'fY,M lOJO 4 1 10v,.wt1t1.N J OOO ,.IOKtltkll.t 2000 G••"'·" 0000 c..-1wton:1, "' 1 • o o l llllt191\am, 11 o o o o 1oltlt 311 4 11 J Tol1ll lJ o 1 O ............ ,.,..,,., ......... Ol3f OU lOO -• t.ot AfllollM .. . . . • . • . . • .• • 000 000 000 -0 Oft -~-t. la An.-. 1, LOI -~ 11111 11, I.al MMln f. 21 -Mfl'*t. Ufretmt. st-. •• -llfNIMrl. 11.ldt<, ''"""' S•w~ s _,.,.... 1•Mi:•• CMfl fW>lll ' 1 I e Kfkldl (L.looll S 1 2 2 Grant J S72 l lftln ..... m I I 0 0 Tlmt -J;U. Atlttll:llf'Q -U.:U4 •• 10 ' . ' ' . ' ' . MILWAUKEE, Wis, (AP) Ageless Hoyt Wilhelm, the Chicago \Vhite Sox' flutterbaU artist, tied the major league record for pitching ap- pearances Monday night when he worked the ninth inning against the: Oakland Athletics. The A's Reggie Jackson, who was born four years after \Vilhelm started pitching minor league ball in 1942, spoiled It by slamming \Vllhelm's se- cond pitch deep in the rlg1lt field bleachers as Oakland won 4-0. \Vi.lhclm, who will be 45 Friday. allov.·- ed one more. single be/ore retirlni; Ute last three Athletics, l\VO on pop-ups. "J don't have to throw as hard as other guys do," said \Vllhelm, who h8s now pitched in 906 games, tying Cy Youcg's mark which has stood since 191 l . ''A guy '\\'ho throws a slider or a curve twists his arm. The knuckleball is a straight ;1rm and wrist motion. There Is no twist or alraln," he said. "1 think 1 might have A chance at it," Wilhelm saJd. when asked i! he thought he might make 1,000 ap· pearance!I. ''If I could pitch another t\\'O years I mJght n1ake it. 1 don't sec - \vhy 1 can't pitch another couple of ycnrs." \Vllhelm. who has pitched for five teams in his 16-ytar major league career, pitched 10 years in the minors before being call~ UJ> by the New ''ork Giants In 1952. "I've always been ;t knuckleball pitcher, even in high school," he said. ''ll's a pitch 1 don't think just anybody can master. I'm not sure l'vr mastered it yet." The Sox' ne'v manager. Al LoPC?z. 6·5 ~ince taking over rrom Eddie Stanky, said catchers Du ane Josephson and Gerry McNertney "do a great job" handling Wilhelm's sailing deliver.Jes. "The blg m1tt has really helped catching," he said. "\Ve just ran Into a good pitcher tonight," Lopei said, turning his at- tention to the go.me and to Oakland's Jim "CaUiJ;h'' J.tunter. ,;l~unter looked real go6d out there." Lopez said his team seemed to "'play helter, with more enthusiasm ," In r..111,vaukee, where 34 ,526 fans shO'l\'cd up. includjng 30.818 paid attend s ncc . 1"he turnout brought to 160 . 150 lhc number who have Y.1atched six Sox • games in 1.tih~ukee County Stadium Utls year. The Sox, 5-l jn Milwaukee, play three more games there. "That's a real good mound to pitch off of," said Hunter, now 8-8. "It haa just the right drop to it." lluntcr yield· ed only six hlls. Jackson's shot oil Wil helm was h.is 17th round·tripper of the sea.son. He had struck out three Umes brin'1DI his season total to 100. The A's went ahead to stay in the 1e- -cond Inning on a two-run homer by Dave Dunc01n, his fourth. The blast ca.inc orr SlllJ'tcr Jack l"lshcr I 4-6. ). ~ ~ II I I I r I I '1 f ROMAN GABRIEL, THE VETERAN STAR, GETS SET TO HAND OFF Rains' Olsen Reports Vikings' Brown Returns While Starr Goe s Home By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Minnesota Vlklng , fullback Bill Brown is back ln camp after a brief absence and Green Bay quarterback Bart Starr ls back home -and the Packers hope that will be a brief stay, too. Starr, who quarterbacked l h e Packers tG the National Football League title and the world cham· plonshJp, Worked out briefly at Green Bay Tuesday, then was sent home . ap· paret1tly sUffering !rom a case of in- fluenza. Brown, who walked out of the Vlk· lngs' training: camp at Mankato, Minn., Saturdey in an apparent con· tract dispute. returned to camp, went Monarchs Win, Chandos Burns Mater Dei advanced to the winners' bracket ln the Costa Mesa Recreation Department basketball tournament at UC Irvine Monday night wtth a 65·59 victory over Buena Park at Campus Hall. San Clemente, however, dropped in· to the consolation bracket when II Jost a ~9·32 deci.Jion to Troy. Ralph ChandOI led Mater Dei with 31 point. on 12 field eoala and seven shots trom the tree throw line. Trev ,_, .-,. Clv1rtw1 '•"~'/ J'-5t S.n Cll'l'(l•nl• O-J2 1111 c.._,,,. 1n1 Tm c I l'e l'T l'I' Tl' l'O "' l'I' fl' .., .. ... ,_"' ,.,,.,. :hrl1twi1en Lombtrdl McD1nlel Geu!dtn Ltnbtrt fltll ll 1e• IGreODrv lJ2 1J \IJISd!ro.der l l!J 0 I ( 1 MIOl'IUIOll 6 J l 11 ''211wuwn 0020 2J17Mlllt!• 72116 002001<1t!ndorf 1•1• !022Sdlnurr 11 22 0 0 l 0 11 10 it n To1e11 2G " 12 5t Me._r Del 1-• 1' OU-cttn u It 11 11--41 l lllfl• P~rt 14 11 t lt -.H MMtr Ott flll I -"'111 Cffl Norton W11ktr ,,,._ 11111 Glbtrt McMln!men Flrtz Wltt ·--Te11t• ttftllf.... ..""" 1 111 Chldll'I' 1JJ12' ' 0 • ' D«nlntutl 1 • 2 2 117 •Jl$/lldld 20l• l 1l7ClllJrTMY 2411 2 JOf5evlll 501 10 J016Amtr 21 4• 111 tlcotl ,,, t 1 1 1 I 1 I I I 11 U 12 6S f 0!1l1 Jt7Uff through two workouts and said he wants to be prepared to play for the Vikings. General Manager Jim Finks is due in camp today and was expected to talk contract terms with Brown, the team's leading ground gainer . There were a couple or other notable contract disputes, and two notable agreements. Merlin Olsen, , all-pro defenslve lineman of the Los Angeles Rams, said he would return to training camp today but would defer his contract negoUaU~ns unUl the end of the aeason . The other agreement I n v o l v e d scI'8111bllng Fran Tarkenton and tile New York Giants. Q u art er b a c k Tarkenton signed -a one-year contract estimated at about '60,00J. The dlsputes involved safety Jerry Richardson and the Atlanta Falcons, and defensive tackle Frank Parker and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Richardson quit the Falcons when his demand for a guarantee that he play at least three games was turned down by Coach Norb H eck er . Richardson, a four·year-man, needs to appear in at leut three games to be eligible for the NFL pension plan. "I can't guarantee anybody anythlng," Hecker said. 111 told him he could get out there and make the club like the 73 other guys we have in camp, We just cl n't cut or make guarantees lndiscrlmlnatcly.'' Rlchard.!on said If he couJdn't have a guarantee, he wanted a release or a trade. Parker. obtained in a trade with Cleveland, failed to report to the Steelers' camp. The club said he wa1 holding out for more money. Safety Elbert Kimbrough, who s at out the 1967 season, signed a contract with the New Orleans Salntt. Kim· brough was obtained by the Saints from the San Francisco 49er1 in their exp:inslon draft last year, but he didn't report to Nevv Or\ean1 beca\lse of business commitments in San Fran· clsco. Bob Dee. veteran defen1lve end who has played In every Botton Patriota' ~ame -112 or them -since the American Football League wa1 fonn- ed In 1960, annotmced his retirement. Dee said he has a buslne11 opportunity "too good to resist." The New York Jets opened their training camp, and quarterback Jot Namath te&ted hi• 1ert knee. on which he underwent 1urgery during the winter. • •• 1 Playoffs Open Midway In Acti.on Tonig ht Mi dway City !ravels to Anaheim tonight to meet Garden Grove at La Palma Stadium in the opening round of the Orange County American LeJl•n baseball tournament. Finl pitch I• 1l1ted for 7:ll0. · Eddie Bane hll drawn the start1n1 pitching nod from man ager Gene Loomer ln Midway'• attempt at representing Orange County in the Atta V playoffJ at Ontario nnt week. Anahalm Pearson and the Fullerion Doelger. are the other two nines ln the doublHllminaUon tourney. · The Dodc•rt dull National Dlv!Jlon champion Midway City two of lb four Iona In loop action, dumping Mld••Y In th• first WI, W. and cominl beck latar In the year to rip the chamolons. t-3. Despita the two IOSHI, Midway City ended up IM whlle second place Fullerton completed !ti 1et10n •Ith a 14-&-1 record. f • Rams' 'Star' Head Mentor Limpi1tg Alter Ill-lated Race By EARL GUSTKEY Of .. Dlltr ,.IJll '"" The L<ls An1ete1 Ram.1 have been relaUvely free of the injury bu&aboo at their pre·seaa:o~ camp at Cal State (Fullerton) this summer but the star of the show as cut down In the llne of duty Sunday afternoon. Head coach George Allen, enga1ed in a foot race with Wendell Tucker, pulled ·up lame with a pulled bamstr· ing muscle. Allen is thankful, however, that his ls the most serious injury in camp. Running back Jeff Jordan was kick· ed In the thigh Jn Saturday's workout but shouldn't be sldellned tong. Tackle D ave Cahill twia:ted a knee, so did reserve squad Denn11 Brewster, The three quarterbacks in camp, starter Roman Gabriel, backup man Milt Plum and rookie Billy Guy Anderson are all taking turns running the offense, although Gabriel is the cinch starter. Plum was acquired from Detroit with Tom Watkins for BW Munson. Plum, in his 12th year, has passed for almost 10 mile& with his .stinta for Cleveland and Detroit. That figure includes 121 touchdowns. Anderso~ set nine national pa11ing records at Tulia In his 1enior season (1965). He'• llated a11 rooltle becauae he spent two years on the Rams' tixl squad and wu "loaned" to the Howton Oller• last year. He's llkeJ.rto remain on the tu.i th.ls year. Two players from WaShington left camp over the weekend. Defensive back Frank Smith and flanker Dave Carr dtparted Sunday. Reportin& 1n from NaUonal Guard· duty were backs H.enry Dyer and Vllnls Eierln.s, and euard Tom Mack, Jn speed test.+ Sunday , three Rams recorded 4.5 Umes In the 40-yard duh: Ron Smith, Harold Jackson and Wendell Tucker. . . Aut. 1 i\119, • i\119, 11 """· ,, ""'· 31 '''"· ' "''· '' '-'· 21 S111!, 2' ..... Oct. IJ OCI. 2t OCT. 21 Ntv. S Nff, 10 No¥. 17 Nov. 2~ Dec. I OK . I -" lHI •AM ICMI DULa HiW OllLIANI ANAHEIM CLIVllLANO LOS ANGfLllS DALLAS LOS ANGl!Ll!S kn Di-$1" Olteo KANU.I CITY LOI ,toNOILll!S IA"1 ~llANCllCO LOS ANOILll •"11...,.....,_ Sl, LOI.Ill PlnllUll.GH ci. ... 1t n<1 S,toN FllAHCISCO o.-•• ., ATLANTA l •lllmoA Dl!Tl:DIT A1!1"t1 Se" Fr1HKl1t11 NIW YOllK MlnntllOlt CHIC,toGO IALTIMOlll! SI. Louis LOI ANOl!LIS c1e.,..11N1 LOI ANGILIS MllWMN LOI ANGILl!S 81H!more LOI ANOILll Atl1nt1 s." 'rancl-LOI ANGl!Lll:S Mln-'°11' LOS ANGILIS LOS ANGILll DAILY PILOT IJ Injured-Allen ROOKll llLLY GUY ANDIRSON HOPES TO SEE PLAYING TIME In Connie Mack Connell Blasts Tustin; West-Grove Rally Wins Connell Chevrolet continued its domination o( the Ccnnie Mack baseball league with an 11·2 romp over Tustin at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa,to highlight Monday 's action. the distance for the wiMers, walking three and allowing two hits. \Vest·Grove's come.from behind vie· tory at Fountain Valley Hl&h was triga gered by a three·run outburst in the aecond frame and two more in the filth lo ed&e vlsltin& Marina. ' I We1t·Grove, meanwhile, dumped Marina D-4 after trailing by four run• In the fir1t lnnlne. For Connell, It was the 17th win In 18 tries for the defending ch1mp1. And It didn't take the Connell nine lone to do It. The boats 1cored four ttme1 Jn the cpentne round and follow· ed with five more Jn the ttcond to clinch it. Marina had scored !our tiriles to open the game, with Tom Lindley's bases·loaded double to right-center clearing the sacks for three tallies. ~ Jn all , the winners collected only three hlts Jn scoring the 11 run1, rely· ing mostly on Tustin wildne11 Jn t.ht pitchlng department. In the first Inning alone, Connell picked up five walks along with Bob ~ Warbington's 1lngle for it1 four runs. Joe LePaa:• 1trµck ()Ut ~o in going • H I IN HIS 12TH N~~ 11.UON, NEWCOMlllt MILT PLUM wM.:r~~OYI = :;: H j i WMf4N¥• UI MttftM (0 Al l M lll l Al ll H lll l f!u:u.ell, ll J I 7 I Ctl'l•l>lll, lti 1 1 o 0 Double Track Triumph S.nty, cl l 0 0 G McCl•~ltl, 7b 1 I 1 0 eov11,tb 2011w11t1ck,H 1 1 00 Mtck,f'f JlOOMoll,c '''' Slllm•ll, 211 J 1 o o M!x, H ? l 1 1 Crt .. e, cf J 0 0 0 DQl'llrlY, II 2 0 0 0 l lndlty, • ' 0 1 J McKton, If 1 O O O MltUlrt. '' ' 0 I 0 J, Carr1111. t ? o 1 1 •ndre1ten, 11 J I 0 0 Mc°"'8kl, p ] I 1 O Klu"'JUftt, lbJ 0 I I For Sooner Strongman Tol•IS 2~ s s s Totell ,, l ' ' 1Cfft ., lnnl~h I M I Bruce Wilhelm Jed all competitors In the flfth all-com1r1 track and field meet 1t Corona del Mar Hllh School on Mond1y, taking flr1tl In the open shot put and discus. The Urtiven:lty of Ole I ah o m a stronaman te1sed the 1hot 58-7"1 and * * * 1'1111tf -1, ltl'f"*/r 18Src'1 J. No l«Onll II' ltllrlf. Tlr;z:_t·/· llrmour (GWC) !, ''"" INHl J, Wh•IOl't ';1""8'~1i~'kllntU1 t0CCI !. HM CliNI J, Hln'l"'I"" ( Ml Tlmt : 2:r:Oll·'· lOLH -1. ~\ ••W l /· 411her11t ICdMl I. HI 1111 (SA llltY! llM' • , .i!;, -1. lllc.r '· wl1~em1. Mt tnlfll, f lm1: 4'tr.J ... Ml19 -1, IUllY 2. l l11W; Ht ftllrlf, f lf'l'lt t '';1·-t, kttmltz COCCI 2. 11111111 COC':CI S. Flllll. f : ,.,,, •• -'· HoYt L Mu•''l-~• c-11•. llm•• \'· Crlu c-11'1' -I. --J, IMNr J, Ill. 'Tl~I~ 1:i"lk -1. Offi1oln 2. Clltrr1 :S. D«n11ldlt Tlmt· 7·~·· ~ II -I, i§ tOllltllernel l. Vfl'IC>trf•ff. l.'lrlf. I l•tta: 1 ........ v;111f -I. ~llM, Ho ...,id II' lhl N. Hfknlll 1 ... OIKUJ -l, Wl!Mlm lr.l1flom1) J. V1nl)tnrll ~. 11. Wlnltn. Ollt•nc1: li , tllll'I Jilll\11 -1, ICl\ll'I 1 IOCCI 2, Hft1, No 1111'11. Ktlt hl t J.t, ... 1'HH -I, IEfW.::.ltlll1/111J, Ht ...... tf' 11!1,_: 'T'rot:_!.I\. Ar:.Y.-" ICfM) t. llr""' S. l f*t •Ch (Ta)·.!:r~ INHI L ,,lftf ((/Ill, H9 tfll,._, T'f;.:J·_·\ ........ ITvtl f. """*"" l. l tenlon. 'Tll!ll I 14.J, Mir -I. H11M ,, ~rldmert l. Otwflflt, ll,...; ''fit ~ 1y 11:~1f(,Lft,1tJ,:.:rn "lr."~.l:it Timi Ju,· -1. eow.,.. IT111) J. lltflttft. 'fo !hlf'CI. 0·~~a4ti'· _ 1. """""' s. ~r• s. Ht n . HlF-'-i. lfwenh. Ne ~ tr tMnl, 01tt1nct : 1 "i -l. '"""* (Twtl, Ne .....i « 11111•. ......,,, ~II. M -~· ~:"I(~,'!'-"'"''· lllT I : IJ . I. r ( ~I • T11n ICM\) J. l.oM.,.d 'T.:~ L I. ...... IAAI I. Httcfl u.c1. ~ l:._#.(: Mllfrn 2. Mtfd1f, Nt ..,.,.., Tlmt! -'· "'"" t "''" lw.":':''· -· •f'-~ -1. ~s. ....... -1 . V-.11 -1. Min I • ._lfM. Nt tllW. Htltllfl "" ,_, -1. """ t. WllYMk '· °""*' ""9M1 .... .• -1· ·~ 1cJr\. ~ ..... flll,... Tll!Wi1 II , ,. .. '"' .. --:1 hfTtn (UM) I. .,......... 111 T1"'f1 - hurled the discus 17o-8. Both events were with collegiate wellhtt. Golden West's Jim Sey m our garnered three first place flnl1be1 In the hurdles and 100.yard dash. Seymour toured the high hurdles In 9.1, came back to grab the low hurdles in 13.8 and won the 100 with a 10.5 clocking. l111tl" otO rx: f i 8 =n Clttvrtltt 1111 f~~ ~ii 1 41 I H 1111 Al I Iii Ill W1hl!,c OJOllohnttl,d 1100 Ltl''"'' 1 20 0Corntr.11 :1 001 1,..,..,.,, » ' ' • 0 llobl-. " :I ••• Wldltr .... 111'1, 111 1 1 l I Wrllhl, e 1 I I I L-1,)b JOOIOll!llrlt.e 100t I . Llrwwrt. II 1 1 0 ' '--"'rlll, .... i ' ' • HeUHH, ct 0 I I I Wlndtnl'llrlfl. M 1 0 0 0 Wllbrldll, rf I 0 0 0 ~rTI, tJ 0 1 0 0 W1rb1,..1on, H :1 I :1 • Wllll1m .. l b 1 0 1 1 <1m111e11. rl I O O O llefterl'I', lb % O O O J. Llnntrl, ftl I o t o Hormu111, .. lb I a a D Tat&l1 l~ 11 l 11 Tlll•h 11 2 2 t Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Detroit 511 36 Cleveland 55 42 Baltimore 52 41 Boston 49 44 CalUomla • 41 Oakland 46 411 Minnesota 45 49 New York 41 49 Chicago 40 62 \Vashington 33 58 ~··twlh llof!Oll 7, N-Vorll 6 Olkltftd l , Clll~ t Ct llltrn!I 6. Mlnntto11 J Cltvtl.ioort 7, ltlllmorr 2 T"'"' Glrnn Pet. .62l .567 .55t .527 .411 .484 .4711 ."67 .436 .363 GB 5 6 • 1!% 13 131\ 141\ 1712 :II laJlcm (l'llfrrv 2·1) II Ntw Yofk Cllalln~ t-6J, nl•~• Cltvflelld (Wllll1m1 1·•! et leltl"'°,.. (81111~•r ,.,,, nlllll 0e1r11t IMct,.elrl !I.JI 11 W•Nt111ti.ii l'ncwl t·Sl, n1o~t O.itl.,-lltr•vlH Ml 11 ChlutO tPrlltdv l•ll, "'""' C1111oml1 (8rvnt1 lt-t '"" Mii,.,,¥ 2·11 el Ml-.11 (Mrrrfn J.11 Mil Keller H I. 1. f'tlllo-nlclh! NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis Atlanta ClnclnnatJ Philadelphia San Franclaco Chicago Pittsburgh New York l.<>1 Angeles Houston W L Pel. 62 34 .648 50 45 .5211 41 45 .!OS 41 48 .!00 41 48 .!00 <!a 49 .495 45 49 .479 46 52 .411 41 q .441 42 55 .'33 Orong1 Co.'1 Ol4e1t le Mo1t Rtrpeckd Ltncoln-Mucury D14'1r Johnson & So~ "-"# GB 11 1/.i 131h 14 14 141,~ 16 17 '' 2012 1 · ..... ,~ 6424911 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NI Wl'OlltT llACH J4.1.1271 .\ West-Grove came back in the second with three runs, the big play a 1acrlflce bunt by John Carroll that 1cored two runners. In the fifth, Rick Russell drove acroa11the tying run with a base hit and he came home later on a sacrifice by Tom Boyle with the winning score. Rick McDonald struck out five in &olng the distance for West·Grove, while limiting Marina to three hits. Marina'• three hits were wrapped up in the tlrrt inning. H UNTINGTON EYES FLOOR HONORS Summer league basketball at Hun. Ungton Beach and Marina is in its final 1tage1 with games tonight and Thur1day nl1ht closing out the current campaign. HunUngton Beach. 9-0 in loop action, appear& headed for its second straight undefeated summer league season. The Oilers have winless Bolsa Gran· de to contend with tonight at 6, then v1rap up the season with Marina. Marina, 6-3 to date, would appear to be a solid underdog in the finale. Garden Grove, 8·1, battles Marina tonight at 7:15 'in the Marina confines and wraps up its season with surpris- ing Westmins ter (7·2). the MARK Ill 'The mo1t authorltatfv.ilv ituled, deci.!ively indiuidual motor car of thil generation• OROIR THE '''' MARIC 111 TODAY ANO IE ASSURlO OF (ARLY DELIVERY IMNIDIATI Dl lJYll1' AYAIU.IU ON ltH LINCOLN CONTININTALS ,, " ... I ·---"!":""'"-u1 • I I I ... . '~ -· ... . ' -I.I DAILY PILOT T11tsdfy, July 23, 1%8 Wliere tlie Turf Meets tlie Surf Del Mar Lo s Alamitos Del Mar Opens Wednesday Entries Entries t.OI AL.AMnOI aMT11ta1 ~It TUalOAY, JULY sa, 1rrt Cl.IAlt ANO "AIT, PIRIT ftOST l:U P.M. Pt•IT UCE -1lO v1flb. :I 'I''•' II* .,... \Ill In ...... A mioivt. Purw ...... •w•I n.n.o er. Colllft1) 111 Ctll Hwl' II For1111 11S 1t11111 •1c:tt111 IJ Mah...O.I II' D...,., ltldt IW Slr..uul "' 0...lck M Vin tR Ft11wrwl l ll ltlbtl 51111 IJ W•'-l 111 C-la'I ltMllftl (A Allllll lH Ot! Go Go Ill 81nlri1l 11' lllllldv Me0;1v tJ l(•nltl 11• V...:tn $hlmtodl (N P1n111 111 112 -Sf«IMD RACI -o100 ~lfll. 3 YMr cildl Ind \IP In lflde A Pl\lt bnNI In C.Hforni.. P11fM lltoO. Stir l•r Tom (H ero.bll 11• Miu TOP PKO (J Wlltoll) 111 llltl L~ Plritr IL Wrltlhll Ill Dlc*.n Ow Tin. (R AMHl 111 Pi lle& LU (It llanb) 111 Rulallll (N P11tLol HS PllOIM ltodltr CO C1rdoi1l 111 $alttv L•kll IN Pe"IO) 1'G .,...,,, ~I IJ Wet-...) 111 VffllUfllUI Fl'r (0 -•Id 111 1 .. -l'OUll'TM It.ACE -llll v1r1h. l vur oldl.. Cta1m11'111. P11rv 12000. Cellll'lll'll "\a $1.SOO. Send ltl'l'ff WI" {0 T~~l lit C-Otncl'I tW Sit-\} 1n Mlci1Y 0.Jfl IJ 0r ...... ) 11t HI Mio Ntno Ill: Acll!rl Ht Ml Dirk IJ lic•nlll I It H8cllhl1' ...,....., ID Morrl1I JU MT. OJo TOlll !C Smllhl ltt a-11 Don t• ••lnllle'rl 1\t lts-fl'U•TN RACll -liO v••dli l Ye•• 01$, AlloWlll(H. Pu•M 12100. Jt"ert-l R .-.0.Jrj l"ll Debt's ltMllHI HI Trulll1 1-. Arlllll HI FrtiN 11 ... Gtl lL WMllll 111 ,..,_'s en1 co Morris! 111 1"' Gr11tv re Thom-J no Lotti Son IN Ptttlo) !l'G !ml ltoc:kft (P Cn1sbvl 111 T ho r o u ghbred racng returns to "where the turf n1eet8 the surf" \Vednesday when deUghUul Del ~ar begins it.s 29th season of sport at the colorful vaca- tioniand course. Raci'ng will be presented six days a week, Monday lhrOugh Saturday. u n t 11 Sept. 11, "-'ilh post-time at 2 p.m. tor the first of nine races daily. A ppr ox i m atcly $1.8 million in purses will be distributed during the 42"ay meeting, $332,500 to be of- fered in a stakes program o! 18 events. / Del Mar's openlng~ay card wm be highlighted by tile tradltlonal '7,500 In- augural flandlcap, a six· furlong dash for !Illies and mares. Proopeots for this year's renewal include Mira Fem- me, Peggy's World, Native Honey, Sprinning Around, Mabel's !loney and Khalellen. Climactic race of the season again will be the prestigious Del Mar Futuri- ty, one of the nation's definitive fixtures for two- year-olds which will have its 21st running on closing day. The sprlna clAJsic, won in 1967 by Barne, Is expected to ofrer a gros:s. purse of almOist $100,CKXl. Counterpart to the Futurity is the Del Mar Debutante for fillie s and this race is scheduled for August 31 with an an· ticipated gross value of $60,000. The 1968 stakes slate also will feature such major con- tes~ as the $15.000-added Del Mar Oaks for three- year-old fillies Aug. ·1, the $25,000..added Ramona Han· dicap for fillies and mares Aug. 14, the $25,000-ad· ded Del rr.ar Derby for A""'tla 81111nd 10 Mor<ll) HI Mlklfoll ltockd ID Tvre) 111 HoD1er111 lJ IC•nld 115 P1uum 5ts IW Slaotl l;>O APrll Diet (0 T1r1I 120 Holly Park Race Results Albacore UO -THlllO RAC• -J50 Ylnb. M•lde!I t .,...r olds. P11ru 111UO. Ctlllvrnl1 $r!'I09 (J K•r'lli) 170 C~lclt9 W• (D Tyrt) 1J7 Sonia Moor! (It GI-I l:Pt Charte M Tr!Plt IC Sm/Ill) 10'0 Mqtwrf Miii (W Slrw») 1111 ~ ~ (It 81nbl 111 MlllY Go Go Ill Adair) 111 TV Sports Schedule WEDNESDAY 5,30 p.m. (5)CL -BASE· BALL -Angels at Minn. Twins. Buddy Blattner, D<ln Wells mikeside at C<lunty Stadium. Dick Enberg with pre and post game shows from Hollywood. g,30 p.m. (5)CF -COM· MENTARY -"They Lead Two Lives," features the careers pursued by NFL players, aside Crom pro foot- ball ... 9 p.m. (5)CL -WRESTI.- ING -Dick Lane at Olym· pie matside. 10 p.m. (M)F -BAXEO -(Bax.eo, de Mexico.) }.. i ~· .. ! ~l ,f4-,SJl(TH RACI! -"° vim. 3 \'ffr oldl 1nd llP lft 1rMK M phis.. PIH'M 1»00. Kllalld Dedr (L Wrt1M) 111 Plundtf' IJ Klnhll 11• l.adY L .. Rodr.rt ID Morrll) 111 BolCI Dove 1w Str1usd 115 C1ll Mt C\111• !Iii &lnkd 111 P!nk Perlu..,. (0 Tvrt) llS -Cllcher 18 llrlnkll'll lU Ofd: Jldc (J Oreyrrl 115 TOP EllmlMlor (H Crt11b<,) 117 Ll"le Emmy fJ WehOrll lJS 111 -SEVI MTH RAC• -MIO y1rd1. l ve•r o1C11 11'>11 llP In 1r11Sa MA. ml11111. Pllf'M uooo. H1rllquln 11'1 Crosb'f) 111 ~klr1 Dend't' IZ Collin$) 111 ThrH Coolo:ln fJ Drevtrl 11• s.aletv 111r ts Forlll) 117 W1ldl Ell (J Wiison! 122 I'll Be M1ny fR tltnks) 111 Pool Bir (C Smlllll 111 Lltl1t Town (W Str111ul 1\9 W!"nlnri Str11k (0 Morrltl 113 Go A Mlll CT Lfpflam) 113 1• -EIGHTH ltACI -350 yard,. 3 Yr1r Didi •nd 119. Allowl!Kfl, The I"° •uour•I. P11n.e llOOO. Tov !iPVr (R Adair) 1J7 Mr. RodtlT &Ir IZ Collins) 111 Blobl>Y Chlf'881' IJ Kanlsl 121 Top ll:ockt"' (8 8rlnklevl 11a Robin ,t..nn Donlan tll. 81nb) 11] Lumol1w (H CrotbYI 1,0 Truly Nloflt CC Sm\1111 171 Gs> Derui.w Go tJ DrevKJ llf lot -NINTH ltACE -4ao yard~. ! ve1r ok11 1nd .., In 9t1d• M mlnul. Purw UIOO. Au"t Etti CO Motrld 111 &old HOii (Z C0111111l llS Llk•"' 11.ocket (C Smltl!l 1J6 Lucke, Sl1rlel (T Llpl\lm) 1J5 Mldc'I Mlr11r CR B1nksl 111 Sntn Speecll !R Ad1lr) 115 MKkaV 11. Sl1rr fW $l1pel 1~0 P1lleo e1r Tlrnt (J Brookllekll 115 Qulcllett1 (H Croibvl 115 lldr Be SUr1 IP Crosby) 115 Run Dies That early s ea so n albacore run that looked S<l promising last week has come to a screeclting halt, Newport Beach l a n d i n g operators report. The action started to slow down Saturday and by Sun- day was dead. The two Ian· dings caught 178 albacore Saturday but only 29 on Sun· day. The Art's Landing craft went just off the east end of San Clemente Island and Davey's Locker motored to the 43 fathom bank. The rest of the fishing, however, is picking up. Davey's qnglers hauled in 1,117 bonito Sunday. "The barracuda a n d bonito fishing was pretty dead for the last three or four weeks but they're hit- ting like wildfire TI<lw," reports Davey's Vic Person. Art's Landing's George Newcomb rep<1rts similar results with cl<lse-in fishing. FREE ESTIMATE CHARGE IT! ' .. HOLLYWOOD PARK 1t•sULTI MONDAY, JULY 2'. lfff CINr • F•tl l'lll:ST ltACI!. • tvrlon9*-J & '' year olcl m1~1. PurH M500. ChOlte Humpty (W Mal>ornev) 7J.OO 20.IO 11.IO Jett Polll;Y (W H1r1ltkl 3.<IO 2.IO Urgent IL Plnc..11 Jrl (.ol(I Tl,.,._1.11 2/J, Also It.en -Prlnt;t0t, Wflll's \JP, Sas.11 E19ll, D-•' Bus~. B•,.. Fie· f\lm, His MoM'r, 01vkbon COl;nty. No Scr•k.hel.. SECOND RAC ... 6 fur ....... ' ~If old1 I. up bf'ld In C•lll. Clilmlng. Puna MOOD. P<JPPI Sllvff IM Valet!noelel 11.00 7.60 5.60 Miit$ (It\' CL P IM11 Jr) 4,<IO 3.l'G WllWIY RH Rtt (A Dl10 7.10 T!m-1.ll l/S. AllO RI" -Klowl l(lo, llllnd Masttr, Mari11l"1 Dell1ht. RubOIJfl Min, Sorrento Wive. No k••khn. DAILY oouau!. :M:llillc. "-'""'. l·P1,.a Sll¥w, Pelol MMA THIRD aACI!. 5"" tur1o"'91. 2 Yffr old mil~. Clelml"I. Puri.a MOOCL. Gira Revlr1 {Plned1) 10.00 J.20 3.IO Iron Admlr1I ClambVI) J,fG 1.10 Mltlv OJI (L Pll>UIY J r) 3.<IO Tlm-1.114 t/S. AlllO ll:1n -Abbev K1y. F•kltt, Mr. Punctu<JI, P•bble Mild, Thunder 811, Sweet Mollon, Duchtss Elllt, lilOH'i E"vov. LI Lll•r1. Scr11Cfled -EHllKt tit Tlme, J1v Diver, 81lbo9 It.OSI!, N1CO!TM'$ Pled1t1, HIM>Mr, Mr. Notti. ' FOURTH RAC1!. 6 fUriof!lll. ! & I vtar old mtldens. Purse USOO. ...... 18'1 Ire tW M1hol'llev! JO.BO 3.60 2.llO NI« M!1tllte flt C1mp1sJ 2.111 2 . .0· Jfft Punch IR ll:as1l11) 3.60 T!m-1.IW 4/S. Also RI" -Wind\' ltlll\CI, Sand M1rk, R1dlo 1111, Ster o• l<ent, • c We'll clean your draperies for only ... 100 PER WIDTH unlined up lo 3' long 150 PER WIDTH unlined 3' to 5' long 2 ~~1DTH unlined 5' to 9' long PRICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN 'AND REHANGING. 48 HOUR SERVICE Penneys exclusive new process cleans all types of draperies beautifully, draperies that could never be cleaned before (even beauty pleats al no ulro charge). Mehs thom look ond feel almod like new. PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE draperies• bedspreads • blankets• decorator pillows• qccent rugs. OrmPhNI. Sutlclled -FINI Cindy. l'll'TH RACE. 1·1111 milt$ on ll>e lurt. 4 re.ar Old$ & up, Cl1lml"'· Pun• """· Rov1 I French ll1m- bertl JO.:HI s.oa J . .io El Chfl~rr•I tl Pl'lCIY Jr) .5.20 J.~· Ac!W II (D Pltf'Cf) J.IO Tl,.,_1.'4 2/J. Also R•~ -D!1boll.eo It, Vol1ndero, MHll1. No Scr11c11H. SIJCTH RACll'. 6 furlo"lt. 4 nar okls & uo. Clelmlng. Pun.e 1J,500. ?ooron C.'-\ Vined 7.60 4,.., l.411 810 Dlddv Biii (Limbert) l .'9 2.IO ,t..Jl'I 81bv (II: Bl1nco) J.6G Tlf'M-1.ti'9 l /J. AllO Ran -Tlfl1r1, Lutlcy Bo!ld, Poltv Pie. Scrtlclled -S<Jv1g1 Kl"t· SEVl!NTH RACI!. Orie milt. 3 vrar olds a. l/P. Cl9ul11td Allow.11«1. Purw ..... P"« Sl11ntl 11 IS Tr..,1nol 11.211 5.'9 3.to Dr. ltow E. fA Plfttdl) •M l ,G Htl'I Cldtl CL Plnuiv Jr) •.H Tlme-1.l5. Scr1!ched -Slfr ,t..swt1 Goldtt Horu:s. 1!\0HTH It.ACE. 1'> ml~ en 1t>t lurt J ve1r old1 & uo. Junw1 H1ndlt111. Purw 1100.000 ..scted. Fort Mlrcl'I CPl"UIY) I.ID J,111 t.olll Quicken TrN fW H1rladr.) •.fG t ;~ Fiddle bit (L Glllloan) 10,N Tlme-1.16 3/J. <New course record! No Scr•khft. NINTH •ACE, One milt on the turt. I ve1r okls & up. Clllmln1. Puri.e ..... Decor1tor l<l"I (A PJ"ld~) Mon l ltue CE Med!118) BorleYcorn !A DIN ) Tlrna-1.31 2/S. Ne Scr1tc111'1. t.OG 4.olO l.XL 5.20 l.60 l.20 three-year-old.a: Aug. 24 and the $30,®added Del Mar Handicap for older horses ==l&l••=EIOlllCC::0""'""""'3!1"':'"'." ... °"'""'EI~ on Labor Day, Sept. 2. ,._ ., ,.,.-, ,11 YoRJ 11' Co I 1 h DUL MAit SNT•ll!.S "011 W ... "" ns dering the wea t of NESDAY. ,.,1_ Amot" cF ~ml 112 talent wtlich will be on hand, JULY M IHI E111H.tl Coml~ CA PIN<l•I 11• Del Mar figures to have one l'lltST OAY -FIRST POST 1:M ... M. C•r•I-(W ~rlftolll) ::: of its most exciting seas<lns. CL1!AR AND l'AIT TotC1HMlr Aea111. Cl! Kvnlt•k•l ''' 1111 -FtltST ltACI! -' tvrlon!I•· 3 Arwnd Sff (It Young} J-[eading an out.standing Yflf olds tnd ...... Ctalml119, P11,_ P•lhl'• V!r""8 (S TrevlM) llt j k I • 12400. Ctolml1111 Prl« $l200. Pl'D'ltft (J 1..ambtrO 11' oc ey co ony Will be the J 'An.nil (E Mtdlfll) 114 Cwnt C!MrlH (0 Pl.ml) 11, 1967 champion, Jerry s'"1 Rultt" <M Y1nu1 :i! Fkfdl.,-'1 Bov 10 V•l•t11ueZ) ~;~ Lambert, and among his ~~b~,!"'P~i t'i.. ~~~J 114 ROY•• R•kli IL G11119a11l rivals for the title will be Sliver Fir rw H1rm111. 1u k 1rd'I Patch IJ L1mberO 1U such ace riders as Alvaro BH T o.nc ... 1w M•hof.._v, 1u Pineda, John Sellers, Don Mv snver 011"'1 (M v11,~~uda1 Jti'9 Coklm111 Rlllfll (A Dill) 109 Pierce, Bill Ma borne y , LI••• Llb•t r (J ,t..rterwr"I 1n Canadian newcomer Wayne Ros1e·1 s1tt1 tD m il) 111 Hlllh«I Vtllev {It Vort! 111 Harris, Bill Hartack and ALso EL1c11LE Miguel Yaoez. Sll\lt r Soote {E MKllflll '" 'M Catfish Jumping The caUish at Irvine Lake are hungry. At least, that's what in· dications are alter the whiskered fish stole the spotlight £or the third week in a row at Irvine Lake. Russ Cleary, lake operator, said three fat ones were landed by anglers last 'veek. The largest <lne was a 21-pounder boated by Frank Rhodes of T<lrrance. He caught the largest cat the previous week, too. Two other big ones were registered by Steve Beasley of Garden Grove (15 pounds. 12 ounces) and Roy Lomelli <lf Long Beach (14 pounds >. Cleary explained all three were caught on stink bait. Of the trout fishing, Cleary repcirts: "They seem to be playing hide and seek but are biting on cheese and Zeke's Float'n Bait." He added that crappie are hiUing <ln \veightecl flies and that bluegill are biting on worms in the shallows. (. ' ' ivMY Clktf' CR B!1r>COJ Ro111 Reu>on5e {R York) '" 1ttl-5ECOND ltACill -1·1/1' l'lllfol. l ve1r Okh ....0 vs>. ClllmlM. Purs. 11500. TOP clalml"I ~•let 12soo. Scobetter IJ Lamber!) 114 Soonllh C1v1lltf' !W Ha.,111 111 Gal11nl Sleet CE M~ln1I 114 Tul\l•rl Veit (W Moho<IM!Y) 11 1 Tl¥oll (Iii Yort) 114 Cl\IQUlll Linell IS Tr ... h>o} lOf Golden Wed (A Pl<1ed.!l 117 MY Sin IJ Tru1111o1 109 Oiplom1ll• CL G m111nl 117 Complete Conl•ol (J Artt<tturn) 114 Rich Llmt' (A Herr<J••) 1ot Gooly CA Dllll 101 ALSO ELIGIBLE Soi<JllOOr iW H<Jrrlt) 114 -110:1-TH tlt.O •ACE -5U, fUrlonvs., ..ur olcl mt!Oen toltl Ind 9i!kllnts. Cl1!mlnt. Purst WOO. Clalmll!V prJ,1 "'" Flamlno Obsftslon ID LO"IJ 116 Sobrado !L Gilll11on) 116 Htf'ml"'I Chlel (R. Yorttl 116 5'!11 Gunfl!f" IW Ml!'IOr"tt! 116 Sev111 °"eans IJ Arlertxlr") 116 Tr1Kker 8ot (5 Tr"11f'IO) lU Strike Fail (D Pier~) 116 Don A Vtt IE Medlnll 116 P'S Rcm.o IA Plne<:lal 116 Formal Ru~r (R Blanco} 116 Abovla1lo (E Kunll1k') H I Golden Ccrpgr1I (M ValenJu@il) (16 ALSO ELIGIBLE Ohodl IW H1r11 tkl 116 R1lnbow Hue (W Harmalz) 116 No Pool (J Sellers) 116 Ba!kll CJ Trvllllol 116 NO PAPERS E!eclrDPl1tm1 IR Cllbl!lelo) ,16 An1g•r {A Pi""'al 116 UH-FOURTH RACE -6 lurlono5. l vear okls. C l~lmlno. Pur~ ~Jiiii. Clllml"I price UOOG. Mogul's Gitt (0 Vel8iOUU) 1~9 Canform11T IE MedlnlJ 111 Hord LOClk IF Gar:al Ht Charming Flttl (J Sellfnl Jl1 Cor111rat ll:ov iJ Lamberl) lit Ain't Norhln !R PenvJ JU IUo Nido tA Dl•ll 114 11~$-FIFTH RACE -' fUrlon9t. 3 v''' okl~ and up. Cl~lmfng. Purse tJlOO, Cl1Tmlno purs~ S62~. 11.ulllh H<>H (A Dta1f 111 Blick Mood IC Black I 11» Jerrv't 5'crel (0 Hall! 119 Mertv Road !0 Pler(e! 114 ElPEIT CIMlllT WOii 11 TIEIUIOUS DCTllllS • 1716-'SIXTH It.ACE -' turlonlll. 1 ve1t old lllllet, Allow1r1crs. Purl.I) ~ Wll'>CIW H-v IW Htrlldl) 111 GlllNlt (J Sellers) JU M1t<rll1 IM V1ltn?u.l1, 114 F 11! Mcwe (W Mlhor1M!¥ I I! l Go Gr1cl1 Go (R Yauntl 111 IMU•P1U11b1t (0 Pl••ce) ,,, CurrHh Ml• (0 H1l1) 114 H'1-SEVfMTH RAC!: S I~ t11rlon'il1. 1 yur old lllllH. A11ow1ncn. Purw MOOG. N,..r'• PePOOH CW Mahomet) 114 Ser!ui co M1tn 11t K\Hl"I Rl"ll ID Pltra) 112 The K\ldart Lid\' !J L1mberll l lt Bur"'' B1be (J Set~"! ll' CIHT• MYt1....,. tit C1blll9ro) ll( RobbJfll Efil fW Hlf'!fllll) 11, Mllorle'I Tl'tfm41 (M YllM!t) l it 1.U-EIGHTH llACE -' turlont'lo Flllln Ind m1r"-3 ve1r ck11 ind up, The ln1.,gur11 Hindle.ls>. Purse 51500. Mellow Marlfl (M V•ltn1uell) 110 She'$ Be1ulll\ll CJ Sellers) 111 Mira FemnM CJ Limbert! 1'3 Lil (W M1Pior111v) 111 Pf'ller'' w orld u TrullllO) 1u Fr•ncl~ M. (0 Plvtel 111 MIH Ket Bird (M YIMl) 112 17"-NITH II.ACE -OM milt on ll>e tvrt. :i yur olds. c111m1.,., Purlt 13100, Too cloJmlne prlte M250. L1velotl'1 Pride (D Pl1rc1) 11• Frftldle D.P. !J Sel~rtl 111 Tread Tiie Tull IE MtdlM) IU Tiie tlcfl (M YllM!l) 117 WllC11'1 Broth {S TreYlf'ICI) llf Lin SYe Cln (A 0 110 101 S,,.. Tllk IW Ml"°""Y) 11, Art111ta1 Red (R You.,g) 119 Kl"•word (W H•rm1t1) 11 f Prince Jutl1n (R C1mP1sl l\S ALSO ELIGIBLll! Forlllwllll (J Limbert) 114 Cheo'l'I Oellght (A D111) 101 Kodltk Kid (A Pineda) lU A·Pretmlnef!f fM Yaned IU A·ll: S c"'" lrtlned e;i!rv. Mak• The Uth o!fltr ,t..~lnry, .Keyes TD's Purdue juni<lr L e r o y Keyes led the nati<ln's ma· jor college scorers last season with 114 points. He had 19 TDs in 10 games and was chosen an All· America halfback. ' .. '" '" "' "' ... '" '" '" " " " ' .. " " " " " " " " ' " •• " • ' • • • ' .. ' ' ' ' • ' l JODEAN HAST INGS '42-4321 Bible Opens For Students Anticipating a record enrollment are members of the First Christian Church of Huntington Beach as they complete preparations for the summer vacation Bible School. Mor e than 500 area children will be attending sessions whlch will be conducted. daily beginning Monday, July 29, and continuing through Friday, Aug. 9, in the church at 1207 Main St., Huntington Beach. Teachers and volunteer workers now are preparing curriculum materials, visual aids and crafts to be used in the classes to be con- ducted between 9and11:30 a.m. There will be a $1 registration fee charged for each pupil and classes are scheduled to accommodate youngsters from 4 years through the eighth grade. Theme for this year's vacation Bible School is God's Word: Today's Hope, and the program will be operated under the auspices of Dan Moss, Christian Education director of the First Christian Church . Departmental superintendents who will be offering their ser· vices during the summer program .include the Mmes . William Robin- son, baby nursery ; Wayne Jorgenson, 2 and 3--year·old workers' chil· dren; Charles Armstrong and Edwin Ross, 4 yeal'-Olds; Robert Mer- shon and Harold Bowles Jr., 5 year-olds ; Lou DeHarb, first grade; Robert Heumann , second grade; Theodore Bose, third ; Thomas Over- ton Jr., fourth; Russell Mangum, fifth ; J ames Mangum, sixth, and " . Jerry Worthy, seventh ana eighth. . Other chairmen include the Mmes. Reginald Pate. kitchen; Charles Ca rlson, playground; Tom Neeld, publicity; Donald Murray, transportatio n; Orville Hanson and Rollo West. advisors, and DeHarb, assistant director. TODAY'S TRAINING -TOMORROW'S HOPE -Carrying out the theme of God's Word: Today's Hope, will be members of the First Christian Church when they sponsor a vacation Bible School beginning Monday, July 29. Instructor Mrs. Dale Killion uses vis- ual aids and crafts to illustrate Bible stories for son and daughter David and Debbie, 6 and 71 and Steven Tice, 8 (left to right). Registration will be $1 per child and is open to youngsters between 4-years-old and the eighth grade. Shipwrecked • We.stmi nster ALL AT SEA -Wondering where to look are (left to right) Mrs. Har' old W. Keys, Mrs. Walter J, Connors and Mrs. Emory V. Clifton, members of the Westminster Woman's Club . The women are scanning the horizon for new members to attend a Shipwreck Party at 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Westminster's own version o f "Gilligan's Island" wlll take place at 8 p.m. Sattaday, Aug. 3, when the city's Woman's ,Club sponsors a Shipwreek Party for new and prospective members. Setting for the summertime casual aUair will be the home of Mrs. Walter J : Connors, club president. Extending a greeting to visiting "survivors" will be the Mmes. David Aines, chairman of the party, Edwin Alexander, Emory Clifton, Edward Hyatt, Leo Shaw, John Wagner and Raymond Wollrom. Membership in the Westminster Woman's Club is open to femfnine re1idents who wish to support the group's activities in com m unity service, weifare, cultural achieve- ment, soci8.J. and philanthropic pro- grams. Among the sections which comprise the club are Arts and Crafts, Carousel, MatW'e Years and Mannequin. The 12- year-old club iJ a member of the California and General Federation of Women's Clubs whi ch was organized in 1890, and was awarded two first- place certificates during the Orange District Convention last spring. Regular meetings take place the third Thursday of each month . New officers of the club who will be serving for the 1967-68 year include the Mmes. Conners. Shaw, first vice presi· dent; Kenneth Hegg&trom, second vice president; Patrick Skoropada, third vice president; Lea Miller, cor· responding secretary; Edwin Alex- ander, reeordlng secretary ; a n d 'William Keys, treasurei. Women interested in learning more about the activities of the club or the Shipwreck Party may contact Mrs . Ernest Fresquez, m e m b e r s h I p chairman, 893-023),· or any board member. . New Chamber Office Keeps Its 'Cool' As their gift to the new office which celebrated its grand opening last Friday, members of the Wo-- men's Division presented the Chamber of Commerce with a new refrigerator. Making a cool pitcher of lemonade for chamber secretaries and staff mem· bers are (left to right) Mrs. Troy Avery, Mrs. Gene Foster and Mrs. Jake Stewart, division ,president. Mrs.' Avery and Mrs. Foster, identical twins and new members of the Women's Division, have been causing some confusion among the membership. Hostesses at the opening included' the Mmes. Charles Bauer, Ted Bartlett, Ila Dabney and .WU· liam Regan. Show Baby-sitter the Door If She Continues to Snore DEAR ANN : I don't need advice . I'd like to give some. Please tell your readen that no woman knows for stae who her real friends are until she has announced she ii ·getting a di¥Orce. Here is what happened .to me. My husband and I were having trou· ble. I sought <.'OUJ13eling ·(Jim would not go). After a while things seemed utt.rly h<lpe1es< so I filed !or a divorce. 1be moment ~ word waa out that Jim and I were fil)litting up, ~ was flood<d Witll phone can. from J!<O' ple. Neighbors and acquaintances and even relatives otrered to buy my bet· tier pieces of furniture (at low prices) "to help you out." Two of my closest friend< applied !<Jr my job beeau,. they were IUI'fl I wouldn't want to rt· ANN LANDERS • main ih the city, A hulf dozen men (friends of Jim's) gallantly offered to provide the sex that would be missing from my life. (They'd have been llhockeCI to know how little there was to min.) R "" happens that an.r I filed, Jim agreed to go for co unseling and now we are getting along much better. It appears now that there will be rio divorce, but it was worth the trouble to learn who my real .friends are. 'Plea&e tell your readers they never know what people are like until they run uao maritat trouble. -WISER NOW DEAR WISER• You told U..m - and la • way I aever could have. Tb..U. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Our baby· sitter i. a nice girl, 15 years of age. Whenever we come borne, even if it'• as e&rly •. 10 p.m., lhe ii sound uleep and we have to lbake her five ~· to wake be<' up, This wonies me. I wonder what would happen if one of the ehildf"eri became ill and needed attentl.oo. I worry, too, about the PoSSibllity of fire, an intruder, or heaven knows what. When that girl falls uleep the children are as good aa alone. What are your views on th:is subject. Ann Landers? I have never seen this problem discusMd ln your cohpnn.- MOTllER OF THREE DEAR MOTHER• A 1ltter - 11ff P1 Ui:e 11 dead elepllUll 11 ol Do vallle &o you -or ror that matter &o u yone el1t. A girl wH eaaaot be awa.teoed by a telepho•, a doorbell or • cllJld'• call 1hould not ran •lleep. Aller aH, Ille 11 belD( paid lo lllko ear~ or I.be ddldrea wbJJe OM pareah: are ab1ent and If 1be .ton.ti out 1be 11 not doln& her job. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enjoyed your stralgbt-from·the-sboulder reply to 1tle man who complained beca use American women want the 1ame privileges that men get, such as amok· ing clg&rettes on the street, ait"tmg on bar stools, lapping ~ the booze, drtv· ing cabo and trucks, Wortinll In lac· toriff and becoming lawyers , doctors and encm-s. Yet U!oy expect men to get up on the bus and a:ive them their -.. During tile last war, Germany had the same tnblem and they eolved it vory almply. They removed all tit• leM< In tlte -Ind provldocl tilo -en wltli celJlnc IVll[)I lndud. l This made everybody equal. -HEIL DEUTSC!ILAND DEAR BEIL• Equal lo wUIT CONFIDENTIAL TO NEEDLES AND PINS: Patience Ii fli6 art <ii doing something else ln the meantime. Learn t.o wail He'll be back. Drlaklng may be 0 la" &o t1N1 tlt'I voa rua wttll -bat It caa pat ~ 1•out" for keep1. Yoa can cool t& U. stay p0palar. Read "Booze and Yff - For Teena1en Only." Send 15 cni&1 a. coll. and a I o n 1 1 lfil·•ddient4. Ramped envelope with )'Our reqwest. Ann Landen w 111 be (ltd to llelp yoa with your problems. Seed the• te her la care of lb< DAILY Pllm eoclo1laf • ,.lf.tdclnued, alllm~ eavt.lope. I • ' j\ ,., ' ' 'X' Marks the Good Eating Spots Following the menu trail will lead )'oung Sophistic· •tea Women'• Club members and their husbands lo ''caches" of Cood Italian food -salad at the home ·. of Mr. and Mn. Jeff Marskell, Long Beach, U..agne ~ line red wine at the home of Mr. and Mr., Rich- , ard Conrad, cypress, and apples and cheese at the lut stop, the home of Mr. and Mrs. William John· Fresh, Pretty A Woman's Art .. son of Huntington Beach. The couples will begin the adventure at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 3. Sampling the ware• a · bit ahead of time are (left to right), Mrs. Bruce Mason, John M;orrison aod tu• wife, who is chairman for the event. to be concluded by a party in the home of the JohnsoDJ. Horoscope Cancer: Money Posi.tion Due WEDNESDAY JULY 24 117 SIDNEY OMAIUI '"Jbe wise man controls h1I dtatiey • • • Aatrology pomu the way." ARIES ~March 21-April It): Toolght t1ie ... 11 greater dlance for creative en- deiavor1. Fine evening for dining out. attending theater Cl' tpeclal lecture. Be with loved one. Expresa views, feellnga. sense of abowmansblp. Take AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb. back aeat to no one. Get up 18): Reach out for greater front. WMlerstandlng. M l n & 1 e VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22): socially, but do more listen- Seclusion may be necessary. lng than aaserting. Be flex- Take time to g.a t h e r lble. Creative t h i n k l n g thoughts and review situa-· demands willingness t o tion. Avoid crowd.I. Get af. change views. Ponder this. fairs in order. Being alone is PISCES (Feb. 19-March not the same as being lone-20): Get sufficient re~. ly . Realize this -act ac-Finish tasks. C o m p 1 e t e cordingly. period.of adjustment to new LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct.22): situation. Make your peace Accent tonight on wishes, with children, loved ones . biends. There ls more solid Highligltt sincei-ity. indication of direction in I F T O .D A Y' . I S which you are going. Accent YOUR BffiTRDAY you are the practical. Assume added about to · start new en- responsibJlity. Reward will terprize which can brighten be f"rthcoming. 7our prdlpecls, socially and prolesM.enally. GENERAL TEN- DENCIES: Cyele high for LEO. Special w o r d to AquarJus : one who used to oppose you makes Criendl,y gesture -· accept. To find oul wllo'I ludr'( fw 'fW In ,,._ aM i....., ordolr f'fclne'( ~ff'• bQokllt "SKrrl Hlnl1 tor Maft •llCI w ....... ~ Stnd tilnhcl1te ancl J.O c'""' to Om1rr Allmlo9Y S«rtht!M OAl l.V PIL0!1 BOii ;sUO, Gf1!1d .ntral , ... lkln. Hew Yorti, N.'r'. \0017, Harbor TOPS Harper School in Costa Mesa is the scene where members Of TQPS Harbor IJghters gather each Mou- day eveotng at 7:30. TAURUS (April :.>-May 20)': Conditions due to 1eWe. Re<:eut l1uny ol activity left Y9U in state Of faUgue. Now you begin to rec~rate. Ac- cent tonight on home affairs, domestic situation. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Break ' from routine stronglJ indicated. Y o u move . about. re1ay and receive menages. ~t ideas dCJWJl on paper. Be selective. Choose the best. Call from relative featured tonight SC-ORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Spread influence; ex- press .views. Tonight., back· ing could be received from one in authoci tative position. Obtain hint from LIBRA Dardens Make CANCER (June 21.July 22): Money posiUon due to improve. Your ear a in g capacity I s highlighted. Message received to d a y could result in ultim11te pro- ftL Reoll>e th1I -respond accordlllilY. LEO. (July 23-Aug. 22): What WU secret could be revealed toai&bt C y c 1 e moves up. ctrtumttances tend to favor your efforts. Be coofldtut. D!Jpl&1 lDDate message. Utilize lessons learned in recent past. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec . 21): Some of your desires could be fuUilled, but be ready to accept ad- ded pressure, responsibility. Key is t.o know what it is you really need. Then you at- tract tavorabje conditions . CAPRICORN (De<:. 22· Jan. 19): Relief indicated. from ewosition you have been receiving from mate, partner. Now you can settle practical luues, IUCh as ex- penditures. Be receptive. Listen and observe. Weddings, Troths Home • A f t e rnoon ceremonies performed by the Rev. Dr. Qiarles Dierenfield linked Nancy Jo Carter and Walter Lee Darden in man-iage. '!be bride, daughter ol Mr. Tustin and Mrs. Ch{U'les W. Carter of Costa Mesa. chose a simple white empire gown fashioned or textured cotton and carrying a long train. Her veil of white hand ent• broidered organza made by her grandmother, Mr1. Elinor Carter, was gathered to a cluster of daisies. Sile can-ied white orChids. · Home Skills Preserved Pilot's Deadlines Mr•. Benjam!D Karcber, the bride's 1l3ter, w a s matron of honor, wearing lime green. Bridesmaids Ml&s Candy Caln and Mn. G. David Anderson wore lemon yellow ribbed cotton and hair bows with dalales, and dressed similarly was flower girl Miss Shelley Jayne Hayes, the bride'• niece . . , Talented Harbor A r e a homemakers are bringing home ribbons from the Orange County Fair and Ex- position. Winners have been announced by Mrs. Robert Cox end Mrs. Paul Bernhart, supervisor and assistant supervisor. They are: Mrs. Eleanor Young, Costa Mesa, a first and oecood In wbite breads and other breads; Mrs. VlrglJU Mynatt, H~ Beach, second in white breads; Merlyn McKinn , Costa Mesa. two thirds in nutbread and coffee cake: Mrs. Robert Goff, Costa Mesa, first, second, third in cimlemon rolls, o th e r cookies, other jellies; Moo- na Fisher, Corona del Mar, three seconds, coffee cake, other jellies, reli.shea and chutney1. Other winners included: Barbara Sties, Corona del Mar, three fir•", 8 n y T ld ••·· . • cti Best man Jerry Kavulic ~ o avo ~ppomtmen.., prospe ve ·....i b -•-· biscw'l, child's cotton dress, h "d . ded t th deli was accompam"" y u~t111 S n es are renun o have eir we ng Jack H tt J. c adult aprons,· Joanne u er, un arey, Tatum, ~ta Mesa, firs• stories with black and while glossy photo--David Morris and Jay chocolate frosted la y e; graphs tO the DAIL y Pn.oT Society Depart-Makemson ... cake; Marilyn Ph 111 i P s , ment prior to or within one week after the Arproximately 2 5 o at· Costa Mesa, three firsts, wedding. tended the reception follow· three seconds, two thirds, For engagement announcements it ts ing in the Costa Mesa Golf any pastry, chocolate fudge, suggested that the story, also accompanied "' and Country Club. wool .dress, adult aprons, by a black and white glossy p i ct u re, be The couple are residing in stra-wberry preserves, other submitted early. U the betrothal announce-Tustin after a wedding trip preserves, chocclate layer ment and wedding date are six weeks or less through Carmel, San Fran- cake and peanut butter apart, only the wedding photo will be ac. ciscoo and Lake Tahoe. cookies. cepted. The bridegroom ts the Meryln McKim, c ·o st a To help fill requirement& on both wed-stepson and son of Mr. and -~~ Dining Industry Not Starving for Patrons Mesa, eecond and third, ding and engagement stories, forms are avail· Mrs. Thomas W. Franklin of child's pllysuit and dressy able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. "!,, Costa Mesa. Both he and his d r e s s ; Z e n o v i a Further questiom will be answered by Social bride are graduates of Colla Wryesniewskl., Corona del Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-94&6. MRS. WALTER DARDEN Mesa High ~hoot and have M --• dar" fr · attended Orange C o a 1 t ar, Sc..VIN, . • w'j:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~b~'-~R~l~~R~lt~====~~~~~::;:;::~~~-cake; Janice Georg., Costa "' ng 11 ege. Mesa, flNl, bar e<:bldes ; (])ery Schreiber, H-.irton Beacb, first, chocOlate chip . tyAa.. a. .. ,. ·:. Young, frelh, pretty! Thia .; A-line akimmer 11 eu:y to :.:1ew. · . Flower, power is Sum- mer's theme! Embroider ·daidel, butterflies on ::. scalloped skimmer. Pat. • .. 7090: prlJUd pattern, NEW · Missel' su.ea 10, 12, 14, 16. . Siu 12 (bust 34). State size. nF1'Y CENTS (coin>) . for each pattern -add 15 · centa for each pattern for first-class mailing a n d , apecial handling; o!herwlse : third-class delivery will take three week.I or more. Send to Alice Books % the DAILY PILOT, 1 0 5 Needlecrafl Dept., Box 1611, Old Chelsea Station, New York N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Address, Zip, Pattern Number. Book ti 11 Jiiiy Rug1 - complete patterns -inex- . · pensive, easy to make. 50 cents Book No. 1 -Delui:e · QJllltl -18 .complete pat· .. ·term:. send 50 cents Betrothal .. Revealed ·By Camps Mr. and Mrl. Er11e1t Clmp of Newport Beach &n· aoance the enpgement of •• tbojr claullltar, D e b o r a h -comp tD Jol>n Wood&, oon ol " Albert Woodl ol. Taeoma, ;wu11. ~ Both f•mllle• are I' Gri11Da111 """' D e t r o It , l(lcb. Tbl .,,.,..i couple SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Anyone can fry an egg. The trick is to Id. it at a profit This is the crux of the food service industry, whose sales to those who 11eat away from home" 13 BIG business. To find the income to be made from the f o o d services, the Bank o f America did a two year research project which runs to 16,000 w or d s and 34 pages including the charts and graphs. The survey finds the food service indu stry totals $27 billion at retail annually. Separate eating and drink- ing places now rank as the number one type o{ retail outlet in the nation. "They outllumber grocery stores, they outnumber service stations," t be survey s a i d . "American families now spend $400 to $500 annually. In fact, we now spend more to 'eat out' than we do to l::iuy new and used automobiles." That means that there is a "lemming-like" impulse for anyone who can fry an egg to put· his hand under this golden flow. The industry remains m061.ly g m a I I businesses -independents " oil 1'94-ar-Coalt eoi. lollud Ua,A. Tbl ftlldlnS w1D take ~ lit Our Lld1 of ML t.rmei . Cbun:ll. Newport • • a.di eo Nw. ta. The cou· _ --'• .,.. wm ope1111 a 1ear 1n ~ before mak!Di - -1D the Harbor , . . a. '' DEBOllAH CAMP ... operatina: a single ouUel drop cookies ; Judith Carr, Eating out means buying Huntington Beach, second, one of the few remaining chocolate chip drop cookies; custom produced com· Jan OobeD, Newport Beach, moditles still available at two secoock, chocolate drop mass produ"ced prices. How cookies and other drop do they do Jt? cookie6; Paul Ditzenberger, "The harsh fact Is that Laguna Niguel, 1 e c o n d , mat1y don't.." the survey third, other living room said. "Recent figures corn· furnishings, other cookies; piled by Dtm & Bradstreet Mrs. David Pe a r 1 man , show that over half of the Irvine, first and second, any restaurants ill the United other pie, other adult wear· states mow no taxable prO"> ing apparel. . fit." Other.s are Kathy Stoldt, The illusion that anybody Laguna Hills, two thirds, can fry an egg, coupled with any other pie, other adult knowing what raw food apparel; Hazel Courreges, costs in the supermarket, Fountain Valley, second in makes food service seem other jams; Debra Stuebi, like an · easy, highly pro-Costa Mesa, second in other fit.able business to t b e pickles and r e I i sh e s ; uninitiated. Rotemary Cri'safulli, Costa That's the thumb in the Mesa, second in chlld'.s cot· soup bowl. too dress; Hortense "Each year, eating and Meners, Mission Viejo, se· drinking places account for cond in tailored suits ; Kay around 20 percent of all Small, Capistrano, first in retail failures,'' the survey ottier adult wearillg .ap- said. "Most failures occur in pare!; Mrs. Mary Ellen the second year of business V arva, Costa Mesa, first in and incur an average of pillows. almost $50,00'.> Habilit1es." hfrs. Margaret HaizUp, To s u r v i v e requires a Huntington Beach, f i' r s t , dedication that relatively dolls; Rebecca Cartman, few men and women are Costa Mesa, first in rugs; able to sustain for the Jong Marilyme Broderick, Hun· pull. An lndication 'of this is tlngton Beach. second in that only half of all food rugs; Clyde Cannon, Costa service operations maintain Mesa, third in rugs; Carolyn the same ownership for five Cannon, Coat.a Mesa, thrte years or more. firsts, four seconds in knit- The trick of making a pro-ted man's ~over, French fit Js more than most angora sweater, kn t t t e d persons guess. It requires :meath dress, m a n , s attention to detail sweater, woman's sweater, orgarllzlng a business that woman's dress, p 111 o w & ; is actually a manufacturing Elizabeth Barkmeyer, Hun· plant; to people _ manag-tington Beach, two firsts, a ing a service business with second, a third in carriage due respect to the servers lap robes, ll\Bl'l's pullover, and th e served, and, lastly infant s w e ate r set, to profit -the moat im· Christmas stockings. portant of all. Mrs. Harry Dady, Costa n,. small restaurant or Mesa, first in any other rug; lunch counter or hamburger Yvonne Co :1 • llunUngton stand operat<r has more ·to Beach, second and third in fear ln the future, the dre.s&y dresses and other survey warned. child's apparel; Joyce ''There has btt.n 3 Beauregard, ,Newport Beach, second in cotton noU~eable growth io the dre5ses: Marlajean Cook of number oC large cor-porat.ionc in the food 5ervlct Westminster, first. second', induslry'" the survey said. third tn dressy dreue1, •ool "Chains of 11 or more unlts drHSes, and wome n '1 account for less than 3 per· _h1_0'* __ •·-------I cent of total ouUets; nearly 9 percent of the sales. These percentace• can be ex· pected to increase Jn the ; '~ ... • Kids Like to ',o! .. ~ A"tlv' I Now Buffums' can give your hair a conditioning treatment personalized for you by . Clairol's Hair-Care Computer 1.00 reg. 2.00 Two weeks only! Just ask for our new Clairol" tteatment when you have your shampoo and set, color or permanent. Our skilled staff analyzes your hair. Our new Computer produces your own custom-care formula with instant conditloo lng and lasting set ingred ients. You1 hair looks beautifully healthy. Your set lasts and lasts. Gall for your appointmenl now! Beauty satoo Manicu1es •Pedicures • Facials • Elect1olysis u umS' Buffums· DD Elizabeth Arden face treatment is much more than just a facial A1 Ellnkltl ~ °"" in Buf- fums' Red Door T1eatment Roo~ wlfl help you discover deligfltfuf beauty se<:rels. You 'll have a face treatment and emerge willt 1 fuxurlCllS new tnakeup as well as a radiant feeline. Complete tteatment, Wilh llllkeupU.M Beauty Studi' ------------~~-~-~~~--------- Golden Wedding Reception Clarence W. Huberts ' Honored on Anniversary Mr. and Mrs . Clarence Warren Hubert celebrated their golden wedding a n- n iversary during a recepUon attended by frlends and relatives h1:st Saturday. Hostinf the party wre the hooorees children, A I r WEDDING PORTRAIT Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hubtrt Peggy Jean Brennan Becomes Bride • CM Making their borne in Cos· ta Me~ followting a wedding trip to northern California are newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Roger L e wis Boyd. The former Peggy Jean Brennan, dau~ter of Mr. and Mrs. Keort David Bren· nan of Costa Mesa , and her betrothed. son of Mr. and Mrs. R obert Lee Boyd Ill or New port Beach. were mar· r ied by t he Rev. James H . Lamberth. Setting for the double ring afternoon nuptials was the home of the bride's parents. Given in marriage by her TOPS Clu b I n formation regarding membership in TOPS Merg- ing Mermaids may be received b y telephoning Mrs. John K ozloff at 548. fi213 or Mrs. Le o n To w n s e n d , 6 4 6-1801. Meetings take place at 7 ·p .m . every Thursday in \VOodland Scoo.I 2 0 2 5 Tustin A ve .. Costza Mesa. father, the bride selected a white chan Wly lace dress with a silk underlining. A nosegay or white stephanotis. pink rosebuds and a white orchid made up her bouquet. Mrs. Richard Karp, sister of the bride and matron of honor donned a yeUow dress while her headpiece was made of yellcrw ·and white flowers. She carried a nosegay of yellow and white rosebuds. Fred B. Goodwin Jr. was best man. The bride's parents' home also was the scene for a champagne r e c e pt i o n following the wed di n g , Among close frirends and relatives attending w ere Miss D iant Yorba end Mrs. Donnie Paradise. the bride's aunt. The newiyweds are both graduates of N e w po r \ H arbor High School. The benedict. a fourth genera · lion Californian. attended Orange Coast College and is a Navy Reservist. Force Capt. and M r s . Douglass E. Hubtrt of Fountain Valley. and the Messrs. and Mmes . William P. Van Ordstrand of Portuguese Bend: Arthur J . Maynard III, F o u n ta I n Valley, and C . Warren Hubert II, Costa Mesa. All nine grandchildren were expected. Mrs. Ruth Adelman, Hubert's tiller, and William J, Hubert, who were honor attendants: at the wedding in G r a n d Rapids, Mich. ln 1918, were p re sent ·to congNltulate the couple. Among other special ~uests were Mrs . Grace Gow-ley of Bel Air. another sister and Mrs. William J . Hubert. Hubert met his wife in Grand R~pids where he served as secretary of the YMCA. In 1923 they moved to Des Moines, Iowa. The golden weds have re· sided in CalifornJa s ince 1924. After making their home in Los Angeles for three years they moved to the Long Beach area until 1952 when they moved to Newport Beach. Hubert firs t c ame to California in 1915 with hi~ parents. After visiting the Pan-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco and the San Diego Exposition staged in Balboa Park, they settled in Los Angeles where he al· tended Los Angeles Poly High School and later, the University of Redlands . Mrs, Hubert, d u r l n g World War II, was .active with the Gray Ladies serv· ing in the Long Beach Naval Hos pital. a n d eventually held the position 0 r coordinator of the R.ed Cross Volunteers i~ the Long Beach area. She is a deacon and wedding direc- tor of St. Andrew's Pre 5 by l erian Church, Newport Beach. Her husband is past presi- dent o f Lakewood-Long Beach Lions Club. Long Beach·Lakewood Chamber of Commerce and l h e California-Nevada Associa- tion or Community , Churches. H e is founder and lirst president of t h e Furnitw-e Club o( Southern California. JUs avocatio n is writing and several of his articles .and poetry have b e e n published in newspapers and magazines. The honoree's trans lation of the rtalian opera "Andrea Che nier" by Giordano was presente d in the Biltmore Theater In Los Angeles in 1937. Both are active in church work. He has taught various classes for adults and young marrieds for more than 40 years. After ~ years w i t h Kroehler Man ufacturing Co. .q,s their representative in Southern California, Arizona and Nevada, he retired in 1961. ShorUy thereafter. he was commissioned to write a history of the furniture in· dustry in California. The book, commissioned by the board of direct<lrS Of the Los Angeles Furniture Mart, ii; entitled "The Story <l f Furniture i n California - Great Days-Great Names· and Great Places." OAIL Y •!LOT J 5 ...... MOTICI TO c•••rfN• •TICI .. •vu , • ..,...... PICtme.I ..... ~ t••Tt111te.Aft Of' IUllMlll, su•••• COUIT ... ""' ..... •Ill -... u.c..t.1 n. "'""'"'' ...... -""' .... .. l'l(TITIOVI UMI IT•TI .. ••u-•o• •O• Ht1ke Ii ,_..,, •l-W 919 C ... --.... ... __ • ......,_ •t >G .......... ~ ~ .._..,. --m~ tilt •• C$ll> TMI Cff"'T., ff.AMII ., CAllOLYM'I CL.Alli CHASSIS ;.: ;;-c ....... ...., .......... ..,,,. dlfd'M • Mlllflft& •I ""° 1 .. t \Piii llrwtt, Ne, .,._ CA"O\. 'l'H JUMI NOOMAN, t -, -.. CIOUY'I "-i.IMll... ""'-:11,~~·~~t··=· ~'.·~· •• ,., ... MVllTA •. Ml!WITT, .... CAl.OLVM L,\MMllllL r ........... ..._ HIATING .... ,,., wloll """ ~ -""'1: ft.uHIOHS inf !flat • "' b ;~. kMWl'I .. MYITA llTILLI HlWITT, ...... _ ....... It ,_ w .. t C'"I., ll'lf ........... .,,_ --... --M ft\ _,_ a...nt1, Hllllwer W .. II,..._, ltKll. (Wolly lull Mii llKf fl "9lclMM If• ! Chappel ls LEGAL NOTICE Wed in HB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ...... °' "-.......... NrlOll, """*" fltmt NOltCI IS HEltllY GFVI M t. IN el Or-., .... tf C•l!Jtnll1, !Mt 1 911111; ~-J. CrwW, 1'i ll••Afo Al home ln Lag una alter "' 11i111 • 1i.c. tf ,..,.,."'-1. •• .._ tr .. r'°"' e1 ,... • ..,,. -• ......, 1r..-.., n Miii.it .. i... ~ .. c.... Motu, c • ...,,,.. odd ,_ I ....,.: tflat •N --IM¥1ne ,tlllmt "•IMI h P'ATlllCIA A, lA.HHl11. ,,_..,.., o..., Jvl\' n. tMI w Ing ~emonacs n the ... wta 1, 111Ht1o. "" V•i.ta .. ., ~ .,. .-lrM .. nit "*""' ...._. ...,... ..._. " ..,. wttt "'"' ' ...,.... J, cN11¥ C m It M l h d I l L1M. C:0.11 Mtw, C11H. tMft. wl!ll lfll -.. .. " \IWO'lfn, 111 t11t oftlq H...,...r, M .. t , ,..._. IMdl. c-tr ITATI Oii CALl,.OllNIA. 0 mun y e 0 I 0.ftd Juff 2. ,.... el !tie (1111:., .......... ""11 ... °"""·"' "0r ........... el C.llflrllla. Ol:ANOI COUNlY1 Ch h H " B b IHlrk t I . 11"""' .. .,...v *""' Wiit I'll .-.., Tl'll "'....,,,. If M ... _..,,.,. 11 Of! -"""' n. , .... .....,.. IN, • .._,. urc , unungton eac , s111t1 e1 c111tom11. °''-C-ty; .....w"' ........ .,,...111 .. MC c11 1!111,., tocttld 11 MN 1.11. , .. ..., c.w P'lltllk 111 ...., .., .... ....._ .,.... are the Jack Rees Chap-°" JUI\' t. 1,,.., ......,._ •· • ,, .. ".., ...__, ,.,_ & "'.,.,.., Attw....,.. ,, H1t11w1¥. ""-' ~ Ctuflll' " ...,.,.. ~ J. """" ._ • .,. U P'\IMc: "' Mill W Mio 1 .. 11 • ..,_..., L1w pl 0 IU 1.... lffw-1 ltKJI. 0tlfll9, &lrelt. 91 C.lltenlie, .. M tllt ~ ....... ,..,,. It ....,,. pe S. -Id IH!rlu fl. 11,,tltt ~ 19 c.1t.:on.ia 9-wllldl 11 #II. 11.ct el It .. -ty b ~t1MI "' '9Mfll Id .. 11111 wltlllfl ~ ,,,,, The former Jud'1th Anoe !"!..~.,." ........ IOll wMM ....... "' b\l•lrtlll.,"" lll'lftr1lfM4 "'•II ""-"'" •1: •• ,._ .. ......_ ,._., 11111 ••• Kk_....,..,. ueev"'..,. .-.. -"' 19 Wlllll" lftet,_...I ... lffrtelflfl'll .. tM Hllllo ef Wld ~ MC ........ If .. , c.t'tltlr\ IMllllU (Otfklel ... II Aull it the daughter Of Mr. ~(S""'llldt4" 1111 UIC!.ltld1111-. wllfllll al• ,,_fhl 1ttw !tit 11~1 "*'lu'. ,_ ti CAllOLYN'I CU.•tl CHASSll ,..._..I!. Dl\111. -· d M •. d Adr' ..._ tlllfl If "* llOflU .,,. *'"" 11 ,. wnt c..11 Hllflw1w. No11.., "*"' · C. an ra. .,,.. mon 1-.n Mlw•ttto siw.w °'* J111., 1 1... 1111N 11. H~ a.tell. c-"' ., f'rlroclHI ~ 111 Ault ol Hunlin"""n Buch. ~7 ~u.,bHc • C•Mltt11I• llel:ltrt ·,.. 1,..;11. °''""' 11111 ot C1111'11n111. 0t1Mt COlillh' , •-r II(•• 1u 111 Ext'(l#IH ., 1111 wrn n.. bvlt l••lltftr will N ~fled M• C-llKM •..t'*' lier hus band s parenta are °'1"" Cll\lfll.,. ., NMi •tro¥t ,..,,,., •<tdefll Ot'I /11 •""" 1111 111 111" o1 Autv11. 1..., 11 J11111 ,,, 1t11 Mrs Jean-Marie Chappell of :" Jo;i;ll'l::t;o" l•P1•11 •1L•••· LOllWI. u•AtM•ll a '• wn1 c:&ut ....,._."' "-'"' n. P'11bll,,... o..-C••• o.•~ """'' » Anaheim and ll~ward W. "~ 0r • .;., CH1t D11iv p111111, :.~·:.~ 1.,.. ~=1a~ °''• C-ty. ll•Mi er"' n, 31111111 A""''"''' 1• ltl'MI Ch ll ol , -· A I Jul\' f, l•. 1l. '°' ,,,.. 111-Mt ......,. -..caa. C•llNrflll '"'3 SO 1111' 11 k-.. 1111 TtMtltt•, •II LEGAL NO'nCE appe ~ nae es. AtterMn.,. • ...,.., M1-...,,... 11111 .......,_ """' "" , .... ..., For her wedding day lhe LEGAL NOTICE P11C1111111d 0r1,.. c... °''" Pl1111. :=..,..,.: "" """ l'Ht'l "'' ... ,,, " NOtic• to ca1onou b 'd b hi" 'lk Jut" 1, '· '" n. HM ~ 9llo'H ""' --.W.. '''1 """ •• su,.l•IOtl couaT -TM• n e c ose .. w '""" SI' '"*" o.tM Jul\' IS. INI, STAT• Of' Ul.t.-O•IHA ... ~ organza over peau de so1e c~~:;.~~ :r.,:u::::,,.1:1. LEGAL NOTICE "ATl1C1A A, TANNEI TH• COll:-'~OUlltl , empire gown and carried a .... '" ,.... "'Pi':"::' °'"'" C-t111 011"' "11ot, J.,,. Eit• .. 91 ALMA IC. tllOWM. ___.., white orchid with Ill cascade ,,.,. ~ dt lllttbr unify lhll C•lll!PICATI Of' IUllNIU • It~ NOTICE IS HlllflY GIVl!fll .. ,.. f th "'" ,,._COl'l'M;llllt I MtM ""'"'· Mllllll'I P'ICTlllOUS JU.M• LEGAL NOTICE Ctldl!GN Ill .......... ftMMlf ....... o pompon chrysa.n emums ''' ~•l'tMt•) 11 1w N. P•fll•• st.. Tiie ,.. l9Md dt 11.... "" 1111.1 111 .,.....,. IWi\11119 ci.snw ...-r ..._ d t h ti Or-. C1llf&ml1, uMtr tM fle!ltlOlll 11 r-t Cit " 1'1 .,.Id dfcaditft l 1r• ttwll'MI .. fits ....,.. an s ep ano s. tlr111 "'"" ,,, C"EATIOHI .... AHTOl'flO tMd!Kllnt. ~'""'•I.,,., Wnlf!llMler ClllTIPIC•TI oP IUllHISt. llh "" .., \l'IMl(llln. Ill .. ~ She was assisted by •l-•1111 .... , Mid fll'fl'I 1' CGYlll0-9 "' Ille :~i1.ii"'!"'ii'::1er~~N1ot;11• l~r 0 '!'; PICTITIDUI MA.Ml :; "", .. ~~ .,.,.,. '"""" cwrl· ~ tendanls the Misses Adrien· ~!.ie.:':n~rs;i::i~r, "!:'::'1~ 1~ TllOl"IC•L PISH •nd 11M1 111d "'"' 11 ...!,!!_,llftdt1 "' ... ''"', ._. c•t1!t-t "''" ,,, 1o •••""' "",•,,.· .~!'!--"" "'!i"':~ ' CllmPOllld of .... ~lowllllt H,_, wt1ott ~-........, llt t ""' ti 32• .IMr(M A... VOUC.lllrl, lo "'"""'• SIU ne Ault. ma.idol honor and wtt:E•ie J. &ODEN, 11a.1 1,111111" 111m11 111tull 11111 •lice e1rHldlnc•1r1 ~~,=:: ,'1~11•1111• C•lltot•'",·,""", ,•0 t11e 11('. "v;t:ll~~o,. 0•0•,!~N 1:,,•~:,::ri.:.C,., th b 'd ' I te d ... lollowl· fttmt !TICHE "' ---. . -' .. e r1 e s s S r, an Wooob o. .. s.n11 A,.. EctwlR · 1. •illll, '432 Dowll o.w., IMO,. 11111 !Mt ••kl t!tfl'I i. ~ er c1111or~ "'6:1, wl'lldl k !14 •IK9 bridesmaids Lee Chappell WANOA WILLIAMSON. ffi C!Mnl!ll\I, HIHl!lntlol'I tt1Cfl. (•Ill. •1111 J1111f Slit .... !Olltwlnt ... -. wtlott Mmtl lft 11,111111Kl11tt• tf"" Ullde...itolld Ill~-• Anlflllm I lld ll-d2 00-Ot!w, H nll11tlOll 11111 Pll<f1 el rnldlftct ,,. 11 fol_,. Whollllllf Ill #!I 1Sl1>llo ttl Mid • bridef('OOm'S lister; Susln AHTOHIO ,.l!LICI , •.P C"-1111111, &!.«, C !II 11 GAYLI! HUNTEll: of f"IOJ Tou'.c.11 wlltll11 111 "'°"""Mier""" flm kl· F. h f Chu! V'·ta. L ,.,...,.1m • 1 · ........... P-111n v111t¥. c1ntorn11 11001 tt1 "'t. notkt. IS er 0 a i. • ynn JC)MN G. l"ONE 111. 1'06 '· Ct11k11. D•l9d J-2'. '"'· LINDA SADLll 111 lU fflll W11 i..-0•1111 Jul\I n. 1 ... l,.uei! of Seattle and Beth ••nt•""" J.':t~·:~ t'tS"•Jc~•~· Mlr'°';1J·:."t:wrner Wer"e of La Habra both o.i.ti Ju"','•· '!",.. St••• "'Ci11torn1i. Ot•M• C11111ty: 11 GAY·L~":.uNTEI ~~~ 11tl'Md .......,, /0 ' r ~. tn Oii J""' 2t lfM. btfwt 11'>1 I Nol•l'Y a Adfll sorority sisters of the bride. !i:;'i'.,.~· ;:::;1 111 •111111c 111 1..d tor 111d 11 .... ' ",_. • .., 51111 ,,, C•~=i!. ~~:;,•counlY': ~~. s,=--, Kris Ch a pp e I the w111111 w11t1•mt011 •-11 '"' Ellwln .s. ••1111 1""' Jt,,.t s... °" J111y n. INI, Otlot'll m1, •. Not•rY .....__. Midi. Cltlftnl't ""' · , ' STATE OF CALIPOllNl.r., ) 11. Rtl'lll k-h Int M lie lhl per-P'ubll( 111 lfld fOI' t•lll Sltlt, Pl<Melt\o T1l1 .,..._ bridegrooms brother, stood COUNTY 01' Dll:AHGI I ....... llllTlll .,.. wbtcrlbld lo fhl •1111111 ...... GAYLE HUHTEll lfld LIN~ A'*'-Y• .... IQCVlrll J as best man. Ushers were °" Jul¥ 1. '"" "''°" me, • Not1ry =:::~n: .!::! .u....,..11e1p:1 t11t1 ••· SAOLl!I known to me 1o 1111 t11e "'-""'"'llhld Orlll'll• Cols! O•lh> "'~iisli Dayton Aull the bride's 'ubllc: In 11111 fOr Mid Count-. 11111 "'''· tOFPICIAL Sl!Ai.) =:..:"r",!,'' ~~bid 111""' wu1i111 1¥ 16, n.,. •1111 Aue111t" IHI • -IOlllllY' • .,..,..., Jo/I" 6. P-111, J1c~111!1n1 IE Mo<g111 ewltd in. llclltlll Iller t•· LEGAL NOTICE cousin· Tom R h o a d e s, Eric J. · '*''"· w...... wu111mt.on. Ner•"I P...tioll~111tor11I• ~•1nt. Marsh' Wilkinson and Norm A11"'°"" 1<111c1. knewn te mt...!! 1~ "r PrlndNI 001ce 111 N;:~ ~~~1~<•H• 1 ci•TIPICATI 011 1us1N•11, NflOl\I wt'lolf fttmft •ro w ..... r o OtlMt Count-. Prl I orn 1 PIC'TITtGUS NAM• Wilky all f r a t e r n j t y Ille wllllln J"'lr\IMllll. •nd •cicnowltdttd M" c...,m1511on E••lrt1 Or "' ••~kt 1" Tiit \l!Odtf•~ doff Cffttf'W" 1'11 b ~ br ' f h b 'd to ""' tlllt 1111¥ llllKlllMI 11>1 •1rM, NovllftMr 1J lHI M '"r ty duetl"" 1 Minni 11 210 WKI W1r11<1r others o t e r1 egroom. witness "'' "-1111 •"" ..... Pub!!.,... D<•nt• 'c6111 o.n, Pilot. ,,.,1 di etnm1111on Eu1'"' ·-s.1111 ,.,,. c111torn11. ul\dll' -r !Offklll S.111 J t I 'I 1'61 1131.... p ir ?7, ltn ' ' 8' GOLDEN WEST A reception al the home o "•ul 1<1rowlch. Jr. ""' 2• • " • "" ~DM,,.tJ'otd1111 o •• ,,... Cot11 D•'"' P'11n1, Jv-1Jl'~':ri:11 1~;'.;ra4' '""' ,..., wld ti'"' h the bridegroom'• mother Not•"' P11bHc . c1111"'"'' LEGAL NOTICE , • A11111:11 '· lJ. 1"1 n1• .... __..,""' io11r>w111t _.-., wtooow tte ded b )El\ •• Prh\c:IPll Offlc• In LEGAL NOTICE Mrnl Ill lull tl'lll 1l1a ef rn.lde!K.• Is '' was a n y ...., gue1u. o. ....... c""""' 1o1toW1' Afterward the couple left Mf COllVl\lltklll l!~•lr.s Pll:•IJI H,;,., G. Mc.L•ll'l"Mn. 1))1' Mc.Kl"llY . June lS, 1'11 SUP'lll:IOJl COUllT Oii lNI 141tu Clrdt. Wtslmlll•ltr. c.1t1or11l1 on a trip to Monterey a n d P'!>l!HlN!d o, ..... CCM11I D•llY l"llol, Jll' STATI OP' CAL!POll:NIA ,.o. Clllll,.ICAll °" IUllNlll, 011td Jul• n. ,,.. San F a cisco "" 1', 21. >& 11111 A111u1I •• lffl 111..... TNI COUNTY 0,. ouNO• PICllllOUI NAMI H1rrY 6. McL111tllllll r n . ..... A4151• Tht Undtrsl111111 don Clr!llV IM 11 STATE 01' CAL!Jl'O•NtA. Chappell was graduated LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI 0,. N•AlllM OP' PITITION ~ucllnt ......... , ••• n1111ve bu1ln.11 ORANGE COUNTY1 ... r H• h Sch ) POii: ,.IOIATa DP' WILL ANO ,.0. II H11nllntlon fltlCh, CillfDrnlt Ulldtr Oii Jul't 32. INI, belorf rM, I tN rom Savanna 1g 00 • NOl lCl·OP T•USTll'I IALI L•TT•ll• lllTAMIHTA•Y Ille llctltlou1 11, ... 11 ..... of Miss' KA,RIE P'ubllc I" 11111 lot .Mid Slllt .... ..,...1 .... Anaheim· Orange Coast Col· ...._ 4211 E111 .. ,,, AllTHUI s, IL.ACK. JI., •nd t11e1 uhf n"" 11 e°"'-" °' lllt •PP41"'" H••"I o. wL.1111hl1n --~ l ' th U j I f Oii Jul\I lO. lt6', 11 11 :00 A.M., UNIOH DecuMd. IOllDwl"' H•tor1 wll8't ,....,. 1 I I rM to lie lllt "''°" .._ ,..,... • ege, and e n Vers ty 0 llANK 11 TrU1olH UllOtr 11111 puJWlnl to NOTICE IS HEll:EIY 61\l"l!N Tll.ot PllCI of rnl~t Ii 10 IOlillwl•n ul llld wttKrlbecl lo 11>1 wllhlll IM~ IM Southern California where be °'" ~ Trv11 .. , ... Jul'f n. 1ff.5. """ Jl:UTH MAllOH flLACllC II•• H~ Mr•I" Mr1. 0...M W11lnld:. :io.i11 Pebtlll •Ck-ledt'lll llt •~KUlld ""'1"1rnl· . . • b\I Tl-tOIM.S A COX ANO KATHLEEN I Ptlltlolo IOI' Probllt ttl WUI tnd for It· L1111, HU11!111tlon l•idl Calllotnll COll1eJ1I 11111 obtained h I s degree lR M. cox. husblllll •1111 wife ... l'KOttled i\ll lQ of L•tlttl Ttll•~••rY lo l"ttl-D111<1 JulY II, INI. • . .i-Pll E. Dtvtl J. our I' H af(iliated Jul'r :io. lff.5 1" llOoll nu "'" n.1 ,,, Of. t!wwr. rtitrent• lo Wflkll i. midi IOI' Mri OoMt wasl111Ck Mol•"I PllllM< • C•Mfor"I• , 00 ~· e , !klll •KOrdl I" 114 ' office ef 11!o1 fl.lrtlltf' Pl t1lcul1n. •nd !Not .... tlrnt Slei. ef Ctillotllli, o,1.,.1 C011nt.· PrlllCINI Oftkl In wtth Sigma Alpha Epsilon ltc0'°" °' or•-counl\I, c1111on111, 11111 111c.e"' ht1r111t 1111 .womt N1 ~ On JulY' 11 ,,.. 11e1ort IM 1 ·N 1 or-• co1111t. nd I led lo S• f1¥tfl h 11(\lf'I •n llllltbl-H In t111&r Ml !or AutU1t 2. lffl, 1t ,,30 •·"'·' Ill P'ublk In 1..d tor' Hid lllle 'ff o 11";: M~ ComtnlHIOlt Explr .. a was e ec 1gma ef UNION IANK, I (1ll!Ol'nl• corPO<'ftlOll lht courtroom ,,, °""'""""t No. 1 ,,, •PPNrtd Mn. DoMI W11IM~k k ......,. JUM ti, 1f1t Delta Chi j o u r n a 1 i s m wnt otll •t P\lbllc •uct11111 to hlthllt 1110-.wold COYtt, •• •1 N. tro-dw1y, I" 1111 m• " 1111 ""' "''°"' wllost ,;:"'" ~0 p1u1111,11M1 or1111• CMll DtllY' ,.11111. J,,.. ho 'ff U . ..,, tor ci sfl (P'AYAflLE AT TIME OJI' Cllt' OI $.lnl1 Ane, C1Hlotnl1. 111bscrlbed to ll'li wllhl" lllatNmtnr:i• nd 1Y 13, 30 11111 AUlllll 6, 11, IMI UJt-411 norary. e curren y 1s on SALE .,. LAWFUL MONEY OF THE 1:111tc1 Ju1" u. 1H1. •dlnow1t<1ttc1""" •~Kut111 llll .. m • LEGA NOTICE the staff of the DAILY UNITED ST,t,TES) •l 1111 wnt et11r111ct w. I!. ST JOHN, C011111-f Cle•k (OFFICIAL SEAL! •· 1 __ _::::;.:;cc;L"==------to Union link •I SQO Soulll M1ln Slrlll ti ,,_ J. MIYI •M H1r.., L. Mllltr ,..,._, P ILOT. L1 \fell AVfl'tle 111 l"t City of°''""' •1111 ~11 M, Clllt"9. Nol•r~ P11bllc<1lltornl1 Cl!ITIPICATI! OP COll:,.Oll:ATI . . , County Ill Or111H, Slllt ol (1lllor"l1, Ill flt Wtll ll•lli SlrHI, PrlllCINI Office In P'l(llTIOUJ NAMI Hts bnde s schools were r11111, 1111e. •nd 1n1ere1t ~v•.,.. l• .1111 ""1 .. Nvfl'IW m Or•11t• c-,., ESO COM,. A HY, • c1111orn11 '°" Hilltop High School of Chula 110W tltld tw It ulllltr ••Id Offd In !ht ~= ~:fu'"W~~,...... fMU -::v CM1..,l111on EKPl•K .\111ut1 2, 1"' ..,r1111111, Mrttn• ctrt111._ ht It is . , . ...._,..., 1ll\ltM I" tM Cil\I OI Cnhl 1 ut>llolllll Or11111 Co111 0•111 Piiot l'lnitctllll bullntll 1t ~ CNrll Strtet, Vl&-ta . and the Umvers1ty or MKt,_ In 11ld Cou11ty 1nd 51111, delcri.-A=~fer t::.*'Cotit DillY Pl ... I, Jut¥ 1', 23, 30 11111 A111u1t •· 1MI 120ll~ Colli MIN, In 111t Stilt ef C1lllornl1, \I!'!· Washington w here she ec1 ''· Juty 11 u n. ,,.. 1111M1 LEGAL NOTICE n r • *'""'11111'1 '"" "°' .-ino '"" . . . l"A•CEL 1: ' ' """" o1111t cor...,111011 lnMrnltd 111 IUdl received her degree 1n fine TM wn1 1u.oo '"' 01 Lei 604 111 LEGAL NOTICE 11u11neu. to-wit: rt Sh · be ( H_,,MtNTrKt,l111Mcll\lofC-IAll 111 ELl!CTllC SU,.,.LIES a s. e IS a . m&m r 0 t• ~. CCII/flt¥ ef Ot•-· 51•11 OI NOTICI TO ClllOITO•S OISTl1flUTING co. OF COSTA MESA. Zeta Tau Alph1. (1llffwnl1, .... rm•• •KorlMd In book HOTICI TO ClllOITO•• SUP••10• COU•T 0,. THI ESD COMl",t,NY s Pitt 1 ef MIK1l .. _.1 MIP1. kl llH! IU .. •1t10• COUIT 0" THI ITAll Oii CALIP'OllNIA "0• 1, Fll:ED 6 . GOSS Card Play Finds Best In Bridge ofllct of lf4 county recordtr ol 11ld STATI 0,. CALIP'O•N IA ,.01 THI COUNTY o .. O•ANGI Prnldlllt county, THI (OUMTY OP OllAMll "'· A_,.Mol •15 SKolld A¥en11t PAltC EL 2: N._ A· .. 111 E1ttle OI LUCILLI! MAllY DEPEW S.n 0 1"°, C1lllornl1 Tr.. E11t 63.00 ,.._ Ol lht Wtil lH.00 l"'I 1!1ttll ol llEHE AGNES COLE, 1k• AKA MAJl:Y LUCILLE DE,.EW AKA STATI! OI< CALIFOINIA I of Loi MM ol Ntw"rt MKf Tr1d, 111 llENE A. COLE, Otct111d. LUCILLE M. DEPEW OKt•Md ' COUNTY OF SAH DIEGO l 11 tl'll dlt' ttl Co1!1 MKI, coun" Cll N'OTICI IS ttl!llelV GlllEN ID lhf NOTICE IS HEllEiiY GIVEN to th Oii Jul-r 15, lfM, betot1 me per0011111Y Or1,,..t, 11111 ti C1llftl"'l1, lo ,..r ll'llP crlltltors ef 114 Ibo ... lllmHI llKedenl Crtdlhl" ol Ille 1bo~t MMld dtctden~ t-ltlll l<ll:ED G. G0S3, knowfl lo rM i<I, rK:Ol'dtd lo bDoil S •••• 1 of lh1t 111 Mr-IMvlllt clll"'• •••l111t lllt 11111 111 """"' !11vl11t cli lmi •o•lnst 1111 1111 ""' Pr111d•11I ol 11\t coroor111en !Mt MIKllll-M1P1, 111 11>1 ottlct ol !ht Miii dlctdelll l<t '""'lrlll to fill ltlenl, Mid dtcldtllt lrt '""'lrtd te Ille lhotn l•Kultd Iha within IP1INoTl'"I, llWI cou""' reo:ordtt ef 11kl c-t-.. Wll!I lhe l'IKlll•.., 'lt!Udlen, !ft 111t elfle1 Wll!I lf4 nettsut~ voudllrt, In tlle llffl~ kNIWn to rM lo lie lllt Pl•IOll who •x· Slld Mlt wlll M ...... ""' wl""'"' OI ""' cllrtt of lllt •bow '"'"ltd covrt. "' el ,... Clerk of "" •bow llllllled COIH't or Klltltl Iha •1111$11 l11•tr-t °" MNM of COWf!l lll or •••••111¥, ••• ,.. .. Of 1...iled, to ••ttlftt """"· wllh "" llKKMl'\I le P•Hlftl """'· •1111 "" necn.s'.. .... Ille ~·tlOll '"''''" lllfntd, ..... rttlt'dlM llllt, PoOM'911111, or Ill• voudlen. ID Ille IHl6t!'o11Md 11 L1w OI· ~ f1I Ille 11111Mrsl1...., •I Ille oftke1 ack.,....~ ID me 11111 slldl CIN'Mtlllon tumbrff!<fto ID Pl¥ tl'll prl1Ki.11 wm ef lkt ttl GI""" II:. kMnt, Altornlr ttl Llw, ttl Ills Attor....,1 GATES TALflOT tiec:uled !ht wlll'llll l11Sll'1,1fl'lettl --nl Hkl nolt. HC.,,IMI "' Mid OHCI. to Wit• •1• Notlll Newport l«lio1¥•rd, NIWl'ot'I MOll:llS .. Ml!lll:ELL, 15.!1 Wllsfll~ le Ill 11\l·LIWI or I ll:aolutlon If lh w.000.00. wtlll kllt'"I '""" APtll 7, !NJ ... di. C1Hlot11l1. ""°· wl\kll ,, 11\t lllvd., J.1111<1 101. Loi Allfflea. C.lllotnl1 ..... rd "' Ofrtctors. •t Ille r•tt fll '"'""' '°'' A,_,m, •I In 111d Pllce OI -..111111 ef "" lllldlnltMd Ill 111 f0011, wflkll It Ille Pllet o1 buslneu '11 WITNESS m1 Miid 1nd otllcl1I -1. llOhl •revldld, 1dv111Ca. It • ...,, Ulldtr n.. """"' ""11111111 "' tl'lt .. ,.,. el H id "" UlldffsltMd In 111 """•r• Pf!rtir111111 CIM•ll• Fu, Jr. 1erJn1 f11f Mid DH(J; f-. clllrfft 11111 I•· dfalller1t, wlllllft 11• ll'IOllllll ffllt 11>1 l1r1! to 1111 1111'9 or uld dKHltfll, wllllln •I• N"'lf\I Publk.C.lllot11I• PtllMI el !hi '"'''" ..... ,,, 1111 ftlltll 111bllc111on "' "''' llOllCI. """'1'111 •llw """ llrit 111btlullon of 1111• Pti11dp1J Olfl<I IP Harbor Duplica'le Bridte crH1'd b\I 111ii DHCJ. D111e1 JuW 11• 1"'· ""11". s111 DI-c ... c.111. fl4 befipfk:ll <Y llllftt 11111 Def!d, 11'1 L1¥l11l1 IC., C•,,l1•11 D1ttd Jul¥ 12 IHI · M• Comrnlu10t'I Eu!rtt Club will participate in a r...... "' 1 bf"11dl or d1f11111 111 '"-l!!•Kut•i• o1 1111 wrn w11111 ... 'Ntwe1i HaKln• ""''un 4, ,,., . , , d obllt•ll-Ucurlll tllereb'f, herttolort Ol tlle lblt'l9 n""td dKtd«llt Ad"\l11l1tr1lor o1 11>1 Eoltl• !OFPl(IAL Sl!ALI c o ntlnent.w1de Olympia ••tclltff 11111 ohlllvt•td to lhl 11nci.,.,11ned OALVIN 1. 1t1•N• er """ •bow n1m1111 11ec-.. t , um • I wrllt.fl O«llrttl1111 of Dt11ull Ind D .. 414 Hirt~ N_, .... ltv1'41 OAT•S, TALIOT, M 0 ll I IS ' I FOX AND WHITI Fund Game Friday, July 26, 11'111'111 for s.1o1. 11111 wrltttt1 111111c1 "' M---1 1 .. ~. c111W1111 nu. Ml1•1LL, Att h bretcll •1111 tlldlon fo Cllllt Iha ...... Tll"'"""'' '46-lftl A""'"'• Al L.. _,. ................ under auspices of t e dtr.ltll8d i. .. 11 uld "'°"'""' to 1111.,., """""" m ••1e11ttt1 U41 w111111r1 11\!d.: t11t11 111 ;: .'~'::.!:' · . B 'd uld obl!Nllom. , ... llllrt1fter, °" ""'di Publfs!IM OtlPD• C:011t 0111¥ Pl ... !. J,,.. L" A11t1tH, CilllrMI fM11 American Contract r1 ge 27, '"'· 1111 1111111r11111td c•llffd .. 111 "' '•· 2>. 30 11111 ""'""' •· 1"" 111M1 T•L• uni ~..fm 1•;~':::, C•=!' ~!!, D•U" ,1io1, League. 110llc1 OI bf"udl 11111 ei..c11... to .. ~ LEGAL NOTICE A"""'"• 1ot AMllOlllft•IH JlllY' 23, 30 ,1111 A,,.1111 '· 1a. '"' ,,,'"411 tlaf&td "" loolr. l.Uol, P'lte m Ill' P11bl!1MO 0.-•llft C011! D•l/'f P! ... I Bridge hands prepared' by 1k111 1eciu-d1 In .. 111 ll.cor•ni Olllu. JulY' 11. u. 30 •1111 A11tu•t ,, ,,.. 1t1ui LEGAL NOTICE experts ih New York are (sg:.1;!, Jutv ,, 1•... ,..,11'1 LEGAL NOTICE Hot1c1 1NV1t1• 11t>1 mailed sealed lo the dire<:· UNIOH IANK. Cl•T':.'tt.~~u0: N=~~NISI. Nolke II""""' 1lv'" ""' 1111 ... rd flf to d ,, !rib led t •• ••Id T"'11ff, Tiit undtnlt,,.., • ctrll,., """" ••• ,.,.,. Tr111ten of Ille Or•llll Cold Junior r an wS u 0 11¥ Arcltlll Lel!cll. COllclllcll11t • bllllMU •I llm lle1cll ClllTIP'ICATI 0,. IUllNl!SS Cal.... Dl1trlcl ,,, °'-(OllflfV, Players at game time. Auflltrlud s11nttM fll¥d H111111.,.1on 111c11 c111tornt1 under ''''''''"' •••• C11ttor"11, •Ill rKtlw 1Hltd bin 1111 "" .... L !fell 111 ·•,, ,,,.... '' ' • ',,,., 7:00 •.m .. W""'""''' A11111tt 7, 1HI, 11 '""'"' 1 • , • c ""'' '"' ni "" J Tiit 11nftrtl111td doe• ctrtlf\I 14 11 c:on· me ,.11rc.l11•lnt O-rm.en1 of 11ld ,.:.lloel The same hands are 0.-r•ll.,.. Office• L01t11Ts 11111 "''' uld 11r"' 11 <omPOstd d11ct1"' 1 Mtnt11 ,, 111c N _ _, LMv<t., dlilrlct loc•ltd ., 2101 P•ln<I.. ll.,... Played a ll Over the COUnlrV 2731• I ttl lllt lall.,S...inl HrlOl'lfll W~Olf Mme/I) Cootl Mtw, (1llfornl1, llnder !11t HC• ,.,.,1 Mtll, Cillltrnll , II Wlllth !Im• • ' P11bll•h1d Or1,,..t COii! 0111, P' Ill. In full t nd Pltct!ll Cit r111dtnct •rt 11 tttlw1 firm n1m1 ol W1r1tn'1 l<iclol'\I <aid !lfds wm lie pllbll<l\I apeMd 11111 r1xd and local, district and nil· J111, ,, 14. 21, '"' nu-61 1o11ow1: Ol•Kt Me1n11ox c .... 11, ,.,. Mttni•o• ""' Furnlol!!nt ,,, •tt1t1I TOW1t. "' 111.o tional awards are given out. OTICE ll:el:ll'rl G. Jl:1lnt1. 123'1 G1mm1 St., Center -W1tret1'• 1<1ciw,, OlrKt •nd D!ilrld 10 be Dtll¥tred te Or111t• COid ~ LEGAL N G1rdtn Gro•t. C1tllornl1. lh1t ••lcl llrm I• cornPOlld ef lh.t fll!low-Collttl •1111 to Gokllll Wnt Collltt. Jn a recent charity game In A11111 M, ltlne1. 1m1 G1l'llnl1 st., G••· In• 11er .... 01 wl\OM. ....... c.i. 1n 11111 tnd AH bld1 •r• to bt 1n Kairdl11Ct w1111 Cos ta Mesa over 60 master IN THI IU .. •••Oll COUIT o .. THI 11 .... Gro .... C1lllot11l1. pltc:tUI "' rnlcllnu ,, •• tellowl: Condiff-. l"1trvctlorlt 11111 5..-clflClt\ofts STATI! 0" CAllPOllNIA POI 0.ml Jul¥ J, lHI. W1rr111 Olbrltl lonMt". 222 H. Sh11t1, wllldl lfl -on ffll 11111 INl\I .,_ points were awarded the TNI COUNTY OP o•ANI• ltcDfrl G. ltllll\ Or111tt. Ct lllM11l1. H<Uted Ill tM offlu ,,, ,,,. hrtlWI•"" . d • up ACTION NO. u• "' A-M. ltlll" 01i.ct Jwot 21. lHI. Ao'"' ef u ld Kllool dl1trlct. winners an runner • · ALIAS SUMMON• Sr•tt 111 c11r1«n11, or1,... COU11t-.: sr1111 ot C•lllornl1, 0r • .,., Cou11tw : E1cfl bidder'""'"' 1vbrntt with 1111 bid 1 Re"iStratiOn begins at 8 IOllEll:T G. IELOUD, Plllnlllf, \II, M. Oii Ju/'f S. lNL llefort m1, I Noll"I On Juho I. lMI, btlort mt, 1 Hol•"I Ul~ler'I dlldl, <1tllllld Cfttct;, ti' bid· ~. th W e o S SMALE, C, W, PIEK.OTT, ,t,ND ,t,LSO Put.lie In .... for ulll Sli t., HrlOlllll't P'ubllt In Ind fOI' Hid Slfl<!, NrllllllllV cllr'I bond mtdl 11\llbll lo 114 orcltr o1 p .m . 111 e 0 m n ALL OTHE• PEISONS UNKNOWN •PHIFlll l obtrl G. lltlna Ind """' M •PP••rell WltrM Dlbttll ·-· k-!ht Or•nte C&11t J\H'llor (OlllM: 011ttlct Clubhouse Costa Mesa and CL.AIMING ANY 11:1GHT T 1 TL E , Re1,,.1 k1111W11 to mt 10 "" "" "''°"' te ..,. to lie ""' ...,_ wi'Mllt """" 11 ""''ct or Tru111e1 111 •" •-• not ten . ' ' ESTATIL LIEN OJI: INTEll!!'ST IN THE w!low "'"'t(I) l fl Wbs<tlllell to !tit wllt.-1ublclrbtd lo flll Wll!ltn ln1lrumt11I 11111 lh1n f(\1 percent [$')1-) ol tllt '""'bid Ill Will be followed by the game ll:EAL P'Jl:OPEITY OIESCltllEO IN THE Ill l111trumt11t Ind •<knawledtld ,..., ••• 1cknowlldoect"' t1K11tld !I'll....... ~ 111er111t" flltl "" bidder Wiii ... i., 11111! t t. ( 8·)5 COMPLAINT ADVE"SE TO THE PLAIN· ecuted lht 11mt. 401'FICIAL SEAL! lllt P<OllOled Conl,..CI II !tit llrM Is S ar Ing a • • TIFF'S OWNEll:5HI,. 011: AHY CL0\.10 (0Fl'tC1AL $EAL) J~llPh E. 01vl1 1wtrc1Pcl ta lllm, In t"t ....,111 of ltllu,. !ft Refres hments will be OH PLAINTIFF'S TITLE TMlltETO. Jo~Ct MlnglMI!! Nol•.., l"ubll<-C1lllornl1 •n~r Into IUCll conlt~d. "" pro.ceeds ol . SUED ,HfllEIN ,t,S OOEI O NE NOit"' Publlt-C1lllornla PrlnclPll Offl<I I" lllt ellKk Wlll lie lorftlltd It 11ld t.dlool served . The game JS open to THIOUGH ONE HUHDll:l!D, l1Klu1iv•. "•lnci.11 Off!ca '" o ....... C-1¥ lll•lrJ(t. all br.dg I S Oeftl'IO•nh, Or1"'1 Cou11l\I M• Comrnl11fon E:.•1•11 No blddtr m11 w1ttldr1w Ills bid lol' • J e p a yer ' .. EO,.LI! OF THI! STATE OF M1 CornMIHion l!••lrH ..... ,,. 21. lf10 Ptrlod ,,, lortY·tlvt 1451 din •lier 111, ----------------------------------------------'-'--------CALIJOO•NI.\ •• '"-•bt'A Mmtd ...... , u. 1'70 l"uDn111«1 o ...... Coll! 0111¥ P'lllll. Ju-dltt Hf '°' ""' 0111nl111 thlrl'Of. TN O.f .... •llh: PubMt.lltd O.t11tt C&11I Ot11<1' l"llot, 1-r ?, f, 1•, tJ, IHI 113141 lolrd OI TrU1olttl rtHf\19'1 Jiit t•lvt .... Five Great Looks • W1 call thit fre•h new atyie The Swinging Sets, No qu•tion about it. this ls today's look In wedding sets. All In fourteen karat textured gold. A S-495 8. $250 c. '350 0.$-450 E. $295 BANKAMERICARD -MASTER CHARGE, too 11 FASHION ISLAN D NEWPORT CENTER .... 1110 ..... You ,,. lltf'elw directed 1o 1111 • wrll· Jul¥ t , 1'. n. •· lMI 1111.... of r11ec11.., 1n¥ 11111 1tt bids or Ill ._.,,.. left •INdlot 111 ._ kl ,,,. ~ttlllld LEGAL N011CE '"' 1 .. e.111trlt1n or lnlotm1IHIK Ill •111 ~lllm of lllt Ibo,.. MMlll • .. lllffff LEGAL NOTICE bid or '" 111t blcldl11t . wll!I !llt clerll ttl !11t ........ tnltlllll court t 2ff11 NOJl:MAN I!. W"'T~N Ill "" •bow flllllled •Cllon "l"DWl'll lllJI IUP•lllOll cou•T OP THI: Slcl\I •• Rol>rd OI Tr11tl'otl 19111111 'fDll Ill uld <Ollf"I, wllhln TEH MOTICI! OP SALi OP' •IAL STATI 011 CALl .. OINIA 1<01 °'*"'' AU.U1ol f, 1'611~• •.m. Mn ti~ 1111 Ml'\llU Oii \IOU ef 11111 •Hts P'IOP'l•TY AT ... IVATI SAL• T"S COUNTY OP' OIANOI r>ubNJhtd Clr1ntt Coa1t 01llY' 1"1111-1, JI!• 1-. II MIVIMI wllhl" lllt l bo\lt N._ A·llln "'' A.... 1¥ 1), 30, IHI 121WI 111m111 ("'1nh. et wlllllll THlll:TY di•• II 111 tl'lt SuNtllll'" Coutl ot Ille S!•t• ef NOllCI OP "•All"t o,. PITtTIOW LEGAL NOTICE Hr¥td tlMwlltrt. (•lltor"I• tor !I'll County ttl Or"lntt 11011 l"IOIAll OP' WILL AMD 110• You ... Mrtbv 111111/ltd lh•I UlllK• ~OU 111 "" M.ti.r tf "" IH•llo el TENA L•TT••• T•ITAMINTAllY 1--"•o;T;K=.~.;.-,~·"•"•"•"•"•"·s~.-.-,;.-• Ill Ille I wrlllen t1op111lll¥t 1i.1111,,.., Hkl HEWllUJl:GH, tlso knewft 11 KATIE 1!1l1t1 ttl MAllEL F. FITZ .. ATllCI(, LOAN NO, llMMa 4 Dl1lnllff wUI l1kt lud•~l IOr tn' monfV NEWIUllGH Decel Id C>t!Ctlled. --or dafl'lllll de .......... I~ lllt Vtrlt!ed Nollet 11' ..... ~ ·.,,,." lh•t HOTICl. II Hlll;ES'I GIVEN Tl!1t On Tuetda,, A119ull 21, , ..... 11 :!11 corn•ll!lll 11 •••• 1 ........ _ Cllllfrlct. Of wlll undenltllfll Wiii ••ll •• '""•'• Ille,": LOTIA HOSTMAN 1111 lllell lllreln • pe. o'clock A.M. DIVl!ll:Stl<IEO SEJl:VICES. l•PIY to 1119 court for '"' Oll>er r1~! 1111 lll1htlt Ind belt blll"'r lllbltcl lro 11111111 for P'rallltt ef Wiii llld for 11111' INC , 11 T....,.twe, imdet •nd PUrsuant lo d...,.nd.., Ill ""wrlllld complellll. COl'lll'"'•llllfl"' 1114 5-rlor 'eowt lllCt ,,, L11!1•1 Ttll1lft'lnl1.., to , ....... o..d "' T ...... 1 d!Oltd Mt'( 31. 19'), ••• Yov "''' NII! 11)1 1d\lkl ef l ft 1ttor...., llttf" 1111 7'111 dlf Of Jiii\' 1"' ' r i:: ll!lolltr. r1'1t.-1 II wf!lcll 11 mlele. tor ewted 11'1 ll'llON J"'CK l,t,OHAM. Ill Oii '"' mtller C911nteletl wllll 11\t ~ ottlu ef MIKE MAYO. Ill Sallffl 'G!ttttkf llirtlltr ~t!lwl1r1, and 11111 ll'lt lllT1e tnd .... COVJl:TNl!Y C, 11,t,DH,t,M. ,,,,,.,,. ... Phllflf .... IM1 .u •• --l\lcJI ...... _. Meotltllellt C1lltrer"I• --Pllce .. llffrlfll ll'lt 11me IMI bttfl ... 1 •1111 wlM, rlt<otlllll J11111 H. 1~ Ill koll lotM'f .,_Id bt -lied wlllll" 1111 flm1 COUlllY ttl LOI A11tell$. Sitt ef fet AUSllll 2, ,,.., •I t:• •·"'·• In Ille 6tOJ. '"••• JOO. Olllcl1I ltardl ef Ot•- •mtl ittled In IMS '""'-fol' 111111 • Cillfortlli, t H 111t rllfll, ttlll lllll Ill•! I COW"-ef OK>lflrntfll No. 1 OI r•ld Count-., Ctllfoml1, will Mll 11 l'Vblk lllC• Wf"l"tf! 1leldl,,.. 10 1111 (ln'!Pl1111t. ot llld dtce•Mct 11 .,. tlml ef ..,.1111'" cwrt. •I I01 Norlll lro1clw1v. In lllt City 11on te 1111 llllllttt blddlt tor uitft Th11 la •n Kllori i.,. •lllrilttl •DlllT itl "" rltlll ttllt •llll lllltrat llllt ~ el S.1111 ....... Ctrlfo•nll. IH¥1blt 11 tl mt 01 S.ltl '" llWllll _,. G. I ELOUD le llllltl 1'111 !Ult te llltt r:«· eolile .. .w.i:. dotelllld haa i1;1111l...i ..,. 0.1'd: Jul\I IS, lMI ttl 11>1 U"'ltd ll1M1, 111111 MUlll 111tr111C1 l•ln ret l pro1er1r ., •nr H r'I lllerfff, -911on ttl llw et Olf4r'WIM ef...,, 11\t W. I:. If JOHN, el lf4 C:lll' Hill, loclled 11• Wttf c- t.11'1111111 In llw C_,.,. tf o,._, Sl1bl Ill ot In 1ddltlon to !Ml 01 ..,14 d.c:11 ed ~ CovnlY Cll-r-. ll'OllWffllll Ar.-, ""llitrto!I, Cllltoml• (111"'1111, ••rll<ullrl'f Ollcrllllll I• 1111 tllnt ef dlllll, In •1111 .. •II lllt ;,,j,:11 o-.. L Otlllt •II rl1ht, !!lie, 11111 lftletfll CCIII""'" fl IDlklWI: p,_,-.... llluttld In '"-'-"" °' °'' .,. I, ...,.,,,. Drt.... 11111 -llltd "' II """"' ulll Delll 111 IM .. AICEL I: Tiii •• ,, ,. '"" ol ""' St1i. of C1l!for1111 •tlk ....... ._,,. NII .. , Clllffrlll•. "111 ··-"' •• ......_led 111 ttlt c-i...,,, Ot•-_, MCI lelt ,,, lllt OOUlll Jt '"' o• '"' •• follOWI. -111 • p ulltl'f <kK•lbtd lth ,,., tn·Ull ., "" 211.JIU Sl•le ol Ctlll&r"'•· dtKtlbecl II: l\Dl"lll •» '"',,,""...,...,~·ti ol""' Lor 312 OI Tr1ci Ho 1111 •1 "'' """*"' ,., P'tllll-•. Loi If ef TrKI Ho. :IOOO. II ... ,,. •• loOU~I -rnr fl! "" norl!INsl •ec:orftd In tool! ei •• ' ""'a '"lll>llshld Or•M• C&11t Dlllr '"'lot· Ju-~ 111 look l'f, """ 40 111d •i. Dlllrttlr ef Stctlon n. Towntf111 s tMllll. 111(11111¥• of Mhe.11o1'*"11 •;,,1.: I~ ti!! l\I ti, "· 'Jl. lHI ltlMll MllCtlllMoll• Mell•· In "" olllet of ..... ''"" II we1t, ''" ll'1111'1flno l•M tlfflcf; Ill "" ClllH'lty rKorfft' 'or ., LEG" NOTICE ~"' •"C&rdtr ,,, wld ~-t.. 11111 Metld!1"' I" 1'1'11 (Ill' of Hl,lnll11tlot! ~IY'. M a... S.ld Utoo wtl! lie ,,..,,,. 1M Wltlleut lleKll. EJCCEP'T •II en •• , .... oll!et" '°"-"' ., WAtr111ty ........... ., i.n..111111. ,.All:CEL tt1 Tiit tllt ,. tit'! l!f ""' '"'""'"' °' ~roe~ • ..,,, tllbi111'1(n Ill ... ,..,, ..... ,di.. "'"· --ion or -wet!*™''"' llW -"' M tttt"'"" Md"""' M., 111111 ...,..,. 1 dl9111 er iOO CllltP'ICATI! o,. 11ii1MIJI. <umbt111<n . "' "' 114 NM1llll11t Hlll-llotftl .. lief el 11'11 Wiii ~W ti 114 INf ~ fl'll W1'1Kt """"°'' -WrM' P'ICTITIOUJ NAM• Cllll 5\1!1'1 .. m.tn.H wllll lfttl'1111 from --1 -.rirttr of "'° nor11\elll "llrlkllty II·-1111 a111Kt. 11 Alll"'M T!lf \llldlri'-41 11De1 Ctr!"" 14 Is ~ S. ,,., .. Ill l!Old ... ~ • .Ull'let ti 5ICtlOt'I n. T.wMl'lll J Mllt!I. In 1111 dttd ll'Oftt Plwlllee KtlllrT\111 «WIClll(ll 111111 I 104 O N H\llll(ll If '"' .,.,.,_ .... ltn'lll Ill lflll ··-II Wnt, 1111 ltnll• .. fN .... .... E"""""· "' ·~ r~ """ " .. • .... • ........... °""' fftl.. d\lr.n, ...... _ ,,, ""' -ldltt\, In tht (II'( " "°"""rlrlel'I !f$C 111'1 tOOk ~ NH t ';,,'klll lllld., (01!1 -· (l llfotnll, under lllt T""'"' .... ff 1111 lrVlll ettelld bT Ml4 9Mdl. 11-.i,, wlllcll ...... """''*' ~ lotlowt llctltl-llrl'\'I """' el (AMl!ll:A WOllK Dttd . ... llwll tll lltlellllMik. "Wll!lllvl, llewwlr, 1111 •hlhl el Mll"r Ot'I GALLEllY ..,.. llMI Mid tltfl'I II <on>-Tiit btrltlkl•"I \lllcllf tlld Dtld, W Allll \'OU ltt ""'"' M!lllllll !hit, wnllu er fl'el'n 1111 wt!Kt ttl llld lllld" "9ld tt1 1111 loli.wlllt ""°"111, "'*"' ,.,_ " lllt trffC.11 or ..,.11111" I" ll!ol ....... Ill -·r •11111 m-. "" •tflnllfl-.. ~ ~-II' . llllftlfl) Ill lwtl •M •IK•Cll "' taf> obll••llollt _,... "'""" IWIN!elort ... •OIEIT G, llL0\,10 Wiii •PPIY lo 1111 f40 Otlltwood A~ S..I hldl dM<t II •I folllWI ' tcu!M •1111 ..... ,..,.19114 Ul'llW1itt1M. I Court tor""' r.llflf IMIMIMllld Ill ""' -C1tlf0r"fll1, • . Jaflll "· L1Mltl11, llS 1-Mlt It .. c_. 'lrll""' dlCl1r1tron ef !11111111 ...... """'nd •lllnt, -111 Tft.lt II .,_ ldludtetl 11111 114 TINN of Mlol c1sll 1f1 llwlul -~ .t 11 Mt11, (1llf, for Nit, tftOll wrllllll llO!lel ol llrtKfl '"' 1111111111 Is #It tolt -'ti Mi<f .,_,.., llllf UnltrM Sl•fft 1111 cM!ltm1lloll ttl wit, 011et1 Jut~ 1. Jt• ef •ltct!Oll If """ !hi urdtflft,,.., '9 In ftl •!~II llltolllli.. W Nrl <•sfl 11111 Mllnct f\lldlnted lw JolWI '°· Uimll l" .. 11 Mid _,.., le MllflY 11i.. $blft,.. WITNESS llW lllni' lfllll "" NI I el lllt l'ltf9 MCVf'ell b\I MOl'ttl,. ., tni1! Delli 111111 ti C1Hlptt1ll, °'"'" Coull!¥: tttM .... ""'"""' Gii ...... t11 f, 1,., 1111 '-' ..... ..,._,,... ....... l111 Hranf ,,, on Jull' I, INt, lltlot• 1'111, I Nollf\I lll'ldeo .. ,.,. """"' Mid llOlkt el ~ DI"' J-11, I ... , -I bid M be dMolllld w11f1 1>141 Publk Ill , ... tor Ul!I $!11t _,_tty ef tltclloll h bt ""°""" lfl ...... ,, W, I!. IT JOHN,'-"" (ten lhh w effttt ts .,_ 111 wtllll>I ,,;. wttt red Jllln ,. Lll'l'llllrl ~ ,_ p_, •n. Oflldll It-* If °"""" I r : W11ter E. luttl• ... !1IOfl\lld •I ltll ...,,.... ... "''" ., -~-.. -'1 ' -I 11'111 c-tw. C•lltlnlll. o-1'!' CIHt: MIN llfNI' "'° ft Pllblt<ltloll Mr "' ,.,. .. ,_I MIN I Ill 0.IH• JlllY' ft. 1-. JAMn 1. M"CM•u ""'°"" .,111 e1 .. ":: "'•1111 ...._t*ld N 1111 w1111111 1Ml'l'WN11t 11111 D1v11t11P11D' IEftYICIS. A"'""" .. Llw D11N1 lhh 11th .\.v 91 Jvh< ,... Id!_..,_ tit ••KVttl 11'11 Mrnl, IHC., '' Miii T,..,.tee IMt""""' ...... ''""' SWtt M Milt Ml 1 ' ' CCWPl(IAL SIAl.1 a,, LM (°'"" 1 .. ,. ...,, Cl!.._. ""' l•ec:utw' 1-111 C. IC:-. A"ltltllt S«r1tllf\I ,.....,,.., C1t0 ..,.... 0t 11>1 WIN NII•"' PubllC~lllontll WILLlloM e , Ila.MAN, Jtl, A"'""'ftr ,...,..... Of ..... Oec:.... M\I C-fl'llt.I .... lqlru llt YIN A- IAft_,. tn ,.,._ "" July I, 1... C..,_.., C....... lloll!l!\11111 Or~Mt Ce1•t 0 111\' Pll&I, "" Pl/l)ll!Md 0.lllfl C&l•t D1!1¥ l'll(lol, ll'trlll!il>M Ori,_. CMtl O.lt. ,.Hof, """"'" llr T""'" I\' !, t, 1,, n. l'Ni ll)MI Jul\' 16, 11, n, 1... I~ J!11¥ t I. 11. ». 1"9. 11,._.. l"Ubllll'M!fl Of•-COit! OPI~ f'!IOI, }W. l<I' tl, ll 1!1111 A\11111*1 I, '* IJ1Hf I ----------- ' \ VARIETY -Phyllis Diller hosts a variety hour taped in London, "Sbowtime," tonight in color al 8:30 on ChaMel 2. Guests include Frankie Vaughan, Anita Harris, Dickie. Henderson, Michael Bentine, the Shadows and the Five Luxors. TELEVISION VIEWS Pat Paulsen Man of Peop_le By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) -Beautiful, famous peo- ple poured out of fancy cars. Ropes. bel~ back the celebrity-watchers. It was. a lovely rugbt m elegant, downtown Beverly Hills. and the occasion was an 8kents-a-plate testimonial diMer (spaghetti) for Presidential Candidate Pat Paulsen. Dress was black tie. The setting was a cafeteria. OUTSIDE, .a young musical group tore into "Has Anybody Seen My Gal ?" Girl s in Paulsen sweatshirts shouted "We want Pat." And the crowd was impressed by a large picture of the candidate under the sign "Tippecanoe and Paulsen too." Camp followers awaited the leader's arrival in a Pierce. Arrow. And word spread of a wire from Richard Nixon, whd indicated he wouldn't mind sharing bis 1960 television makeup man with Paulsen. Inside, arrivals were greeted by the co-hosts of the Sunday affair: Tom Smothers, for whom Paul- sen appears on CBS·TV when he is not running for president; and Cass Elliott, who gainted fame as Mama Cass of the singing group "The Mamas and the Papas." Funds taken in for the dinner were to be pai!i to the cafeteria for preparing it. And a matching sum was to be sent to John Glenn and the Emergency Gun Control Committee. THE FACT that a television special for Paulsen is planned for the fall seemed somehow only part of the Slol"JI even amid this wildly successful promo-- lion. Sot!iethlng more was in the air Sunday - a feeling that this stunt had struck just the right con- temporary chord, that it wasn't too much sillier than the real affairs it was satirizing unmercifully. "My_ interests, if elected." said one Paulsen poster in the cafeteria, "Are with the general pub- lic. although I do have some personal goals." An- other explained: 'jTo take care of the problem of litter. I suggest legislation to provide for a woman to come in three days a week to clean your city." In an earlier announcement, Paulsen explained the cafeteria dinner site: "MORE PEOPLE eat in cafeterias than at swanky, dimJy-lit restaurants and posh sinbins." He felt the surroundings would not "make the ordi- nary working man or woman who support me nerv- ou5." and added that this was "a typical cafeteria in an average American town ." The working men and women who showed up included Groucho Merx, Debbie Reynolds, Karl Malden, Nancy Sinatra, Martin Landau and Bar- bara Bain. And the dais included Carl Reiner as a hilarious master of ceremonies. Steve Allen. Bill Dana, Dick Martin, Phyllis Diller. televisio n hum- orist Ralph Story and two bigwig Calilornia Demo- crats. Alan Cranston and Jesse Unruh, the latter sporting a pink jacket, white turtleneck shirt and pendant. . PAULSEN carried his tray with spaghetti to the dais. The audience was· as loo se and funny as the pros. Reiner noted he was supporting another candidaie, and Paulsen. sitting next to him, calm- ly knocked over his-microphone. A guy in the back shouted. "I want my 89 cents back." Groucho start- ed wisecracking with th ose on the dais. Paulsen kept eating. A group called "The Fir~t Edition" sang his campaign song. "Paulsen or Fight." Dennis the JtJenaee • DR. KILDARE MO to lCl..t'lf' 01t. l(ILDARE, l !Wft'S.f.Y HALF 1HE Fl!MAle POPUL•TION OF II.All'.. WOULD TRAPe THellt FAL5f. El?lA5Hf$ TO WatK --< WfT/'f 'fOO! GORDO JUDGE PARKER I ~HOULPN'T HAVE. Kl$5EP 'JO.I UKi THAT, SAM •• &UT I COULPN'T HE:LI' IT! t'M. A YMY E:MOTIOMAL PilSON! MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFP MUTI; MY TWIN BAO'TH!R JULIUS JUST BCUGIM' A YACHT! ·- I 13'f PAC<S? By Charles M. Schull By Gus AITiola By Ferd Johnson SUJ:"lE" ·-IF I cur ACROSS 1<~i..1.y1s VACANT l.OT1 1"1-lAT'S Al.l-I NEi:C>-TO GET TO i.SDDYIS IAV~RN ! By Tom K. Ryan By Al Sniltll By Men TUE~OAY JULY 2S 1:•. n. Iii Jt...: (C) (IO) Jtrry DunphJ. ••• ..,..,__ (C)(30) ·---(C) (90) Guiilta 1r1 Jull1 H1nll. Gtorp C.r· Un, Jot Tu •fld M•t1t Rldrnoad. D "FROM THE TERRACE" * Part 11--Goiotl Joanne Woodw1rd, P1ul Newm1n Olk·--(C) ,..,. Iii Twrtw.' P'•rt U (dRIM) '$).... l'lul ,.._.n, JoflflM Woodwlri. m-.., (C) (30) mu ...... <301 ....... , ..., ..... - ''" ·---_(C) (!OJ ""' ·--IC) (30) m-•-1301 CD McHa!t't Nny (JO) m Sptctr11111~ "Rid Chlnut Mtdl· tine." P111 II. D1vid l'rowiH 1111· r1tu 1 film on ltlt lnllr1ction b1· twMn tr1Clitlonal hulera 1fld mod· trn m1dlcl111 In Chh'll. filllltel 11 Ill• Ptklnt Ac:ldtl'l'IY of Mtdlcl111. • htlcltrt l4 (C) l:OOIDCIS """' -'illltr Cfonkitt. DF T1.., t30l GI I LM Liq (30) GI l llllp•'t tllaM (30) IC) (30) ID TM AMritM ... : "Amtric.ln G1l1iy." Dr. lrwln Swwdlow ltduru on th• bl1innin1 of a brllllant peri· od In Amtrican actini. lhrtln& with Junius l1utu1 Boottl In thl 1820'a. 7:30 8 !H (() Dttlllf: (C) (60) Toto, 1 biliJ chimP1nzH, 1ccld1nt.lllJ lrl1hl•ns off 1 111u111dlf11 l11>111rd, ind tribum1n mlltlkt 1111 tor th• r1lnurn1tlon of 1 1rNl thltl. (R) e IU (II I Dr.1111 " .lllnnlt: (C) (30) "MJ M1rtt1, th1 Ghost·B1eak· er." Tony lnharit1 1n Ent lisll est1te comp!elt with &holls. Junnit 1nd Ro1er 111111 Tonfs Cleclskln to ktep the m1no1 llou• whtn 1hos\s keep th1m 1w1ke. J1ck C.l1e1 1111st.s 1s BtitiMI Jlwyer James Ashllf. (R) D lnM '1-lu RKln1 (C) {30) 0 l1tJ (I> Curiltn't Corillll: IC) i'Q) "Tht M11nilitlnt Forau." The Gorill11 1tttmpt to secure 1 hind· written Ii.I of Sil~ Allitcl 111nts lthtdultd !Gr erttrmin1llon e.no·s 111ttt •'** .so. M01Mo • IQ¥ablt COii l'IMll 1trtfldM la #rii&t. wbo-aplut Illa -I-ls ..,.. lato IMdlA& • tr1N " ..... ,,_ thtlf tflOlllrll litialM tt I ._ llllll, MOl9S b KC:tptl.il ••• dtitr ~ tht Mtlvts Whlll ht pub OD I 111qlc lllow, allootlq tlt1 fro11 hb mouth 1nd .,tttq I bltall lfltml. Mill llklf "'1• Julit. • alteioMr(1 """'"'· (R) a ~m • " .. ' "'"' (C) (00) 'Th• lly of tllt Lulel." Hw· miont Gln&old' 1utsU •• Count .. wbo11 Pfltmol1a. II publllhtd, 11• uPttttcl to ca1111 srul tmhrra• mtnt to tM W..ttrn ,.,_.1$. The countm •!IQ kin • ...-, cloal tntnel of 1111nJ E111opun ind Amir· lean IQWlflll'Mnt 1Mdt11, Ind lltt mtltliofll trl uJ*ttCi to lit Ci)'M• tnlt1. (R) m--IC) (IO) ··-IC)"~ ....... _ l:Oll 19--ICl t30l m""' -"WLCAC.. • pfll( of lotlf '"WllllM ~ ltd Wilkins abollt hll M In the COl'fll'flllllltJ orpAl;ntlM, en ..... ""'1 ·~.!OB!lltll .... -- (Cl (lo}b\oo --..... tnel l1rl'J C11R 1111 hlr lltbon if thtJ btliM tlwr jokes °'" t.111 011 lh1 1lr 1bor.rt hi• wlft. (R) fin!~ =jy. (C)w1:> II~ eu11d of acc.tpllnr • bribe. Thi frontm1n tor 1 numbtn r1tkltew, t 11111ll·tiflll lurrl• 111111111 Cowu. 11 a11111 while Illini brouitit i. tar ~uutionlnt. (R) m -" '""' ICl t30I 1 Ill"""" • ..... I 11111:,. l•OOIDtlliCllOI ""' -(Cl (~) "BliCk Hllto!J: l.ell, StrlYld or stolen. H An tul'fli111tioft rl how white·wrilttll hlltDry ht• lntll.lllflelfl wfrr1t ttr• whltt 1111n thlrlb tbout ttr. black 111111.. This tll*t epi:lllCle WU ru:tltdultd to rlPlicl I ,,.. ir•m wttldl would lwYt .. lll'ltltd the r1111tb ef • llOll °" blKt ltl- tudu ef white J11f*11 1/ld ~ tttituCIU of blttkl. " .... , ...... """ (C) (60') "'1~~l'tn~~o~ ~~· t•nl's who cl1im1 h1 hta proof o1 tht 1U1n lnliltntion Is Cllicl1rtel hl· uni. (R) Cl Secr•l Aftnt (60) m J1ck LllN111 News (C) (30) m CrNt MIMltl Ill Musk/ Pllbllt """'(Cl £D lostln '1'111pbtlrr. &ith LW. doif tuds ttlt lull orthtllr1 Ill Str1YinUy'1 "Alon " l1lltt 11\d Co~ certo In D for YJOlil 1nd Ordlntf•: ind Prckollrfs Symplwlny No. l, in E·Fl1t minor, Dfi. 111. bJ the N12is ind subatitut• 111mu . ol c.oilabofilora. Lliry Sll!lfth luub lO:lO m N"": (C) {30) lhl1 ~hns. (R) 11:0011 ElMft O'Clld R.,.,t (t) (30) Cl Mlllltt ~ Mfril: (C) "ltl'a Jury Dunphy. DlllCll" (mlllltll) '50-BtllJ Hutton, frtd Am!rt, Robert YC)llni. m T111tli w c.na.q.,._ (ti (30) m' ''lc'"' "'•"'1 Ni&'\: it) tlOJ 7 1nllln1 Brothers, B1rnum tnd l1ll1y Cfn:r.tL" fll TIM f1t11dl CMI: J11ti1 Child sltowa how to Pl'•Plr• 1 him din· nt1 In hill 111 hour. (R) ti)- an.. 11111 "'• 11 ... : 1C> <Jo> Georrt Skinner. 11 st:ortea If Ille ClnbllJ (30) 1J Ntn: (C) (30) !uttr W1rel. G Mft: "11111 M1 .... 1 I Kl .. (dt1m1) '6l-t11ud1 D1uphln, Dl•n• Cilento. m IAI Cftt'lt '(C) (60) &l M•ll: "I*! II 1111'11" (Wiil· l:OO D 9 (i) SMwcal. 'II: (C) (JO) trn) 'SF-John P'1yn1, Rltlh lltom1-. kb bldlfn1 !or stuelol'l'I 1t tt'l1 Un!YerMty of t!llnol1 (11 Chim· ll:JO 1J Morit: (C) "t911t1. a.I tf pl1i1n) 111 Thi Clytn' Sh1mu, ind ttlt AMutll" (horror) '57 -»hit Arthlt !tll ind Tht Ortlli. both In· B1omf11ld. stnimenlll 11oup1; J1n1t Enns 1ne1 .lot lM Wi!JOn, 'tOCllista. U ROLLER GAMES-Li"! (C) * T·BIRDS vs. NEW YORK ft lltolltr 11 ... : (Cl (2 111) U. 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(f117Sllly) '!3-Glenn ford, Oi•n• WfDNf~OAY DAYTIME MOVIES l:JI D "1111 Mlttll& ti M~llt" (r o- NMll) '41 -Gltnn ford, Evtlyn ..... 8 "'1\1 T ttt_, 1.W tit llllndl• (d111n.1 ) '62 -Aldo Flbfil:t "11111 f1Mtll111t11d" (d11m1) '4g......{;11y eoo,.r. e JOB PRINTING "''· • C....ltf l111tti11 lttNI a-IC) 11:15 8 "1llt ~ Min• (Wllttm) '$2 -Jofln WIJM, M1ur1111 O'Ka1 .. larTJ FiU1ualel. 11:30 GI "1aJ M1rtill" (dUll\.I) '4!1- Vi11lnl1 MIJQ. •Jtlllilit ....,. (dr~ m1) '47~on•!d Rttpn. 1:)0 &t "M11rchr h1 Rllfftl• (fll)'dtry) '4~Wlllf1m Htrtlltll, Dilllh Sbtfi. ... 4:JO. (t) '1111 Aft911tw• " .....,. (ftnt.111) '60-Cirtoon frtrm H"n. C!l "Ttlt Mt• ,,.. c.i..• (westtrn) '41--CIHn Ford, Winitl9 .. .... • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Pl l O T PR I NTING IJ11 WOT IALIO.A llfl. NIWPOIT llACH -----------------·-----~--------------------------- ' DAILY PILOT '" BE. THE DAI.LY PILOT'S GUEST TONIGHT! HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES F OR SAL! SEE F.R EE e e HOUSES FOR SAL! HOUSES FOi SALi HOUSES FOR SALE 1;G;e;n;e;r•;l;;;;;;;;;1;ooo;;;J ;Ge;•;•~r~•~l~:=:::;~1;ooo;;l ,Gien·e-•~·-•jjiii;jjiiji!ii;;i1,ooojjjiil UNCUT!POPUl.Afl PRICES! ACADEMY AWAllD WINNER! Cost• M... 1100 Newport llNch 1200 C0<on• del Mor 12JO , LOOK -LOOK BEAU:r1FUL Lender's Jewel Large families BEACON BAY Vacant, redccorat<d 3 BR Custom designed bayt'.ront and Den, 2 J>.tb h0n1e. Big 2650 sq ft' of living. This spac-fen··• yard. Patio locatl'd · 4 BR 3 b th~ at d' home. 2 BR's + 1 BR apt. "'""' IOUS a •vml m· , ,.. ---'ud·" a-a Complete with view, Use of tennis D=-< ..,.... '" ini: room, family & aervtce electric kitchen bll·lns pt"' h hon '· -'d cts. Sandy beach. Mooring pore 1e must ue :11J1 • eatin· g oook. Price below Ow h •---f __, for 18' boat. One of New· ner as Ul;:'t'.:11 trans er.cu lenders cost & n1ust sell Home only S port's most desirable areas. $32,500 years old. Name your financ· $98,500. Mrs. Raulston. can t&Uor financing to fit ing. ..,... qualilled buyer. • COATS BEST BUY IN AREA. & EASTBLUff WALLACE Coldwell, Banker & lo. REALTY Ult £, C-1 Ml ... W•f REAL TORS ".,_, '-"· t•lftnlllf 2414 V••ta Del Oro -546-4l 41 _ ICI '4»1 o• WM .., · Newport Beach (01>9n Eveningt) ~1.1.1133 lmm•culat• 3 BR _.,. If you're, fastidiow, do see I ~~~ ~e.~ tlu. ultt'a '"'b. comptctcly POOL TIME charming 3 BR home with a ·~=--11 MIWE --1""'1 qt•t;tM·ijiiii~Hjfi! AT THE LIDO THEATER Chec k the ~rassifi~d section of today's DAILY PILOT to see if your name ts published. It can appea~ anywhere in the Classified pages. Just clip your na ~e out of the classified pages and take it to the LIDO THEATRE Ill Newport Beach and say you saw it in the DAILY PILOT. (You'll need identification.) OFFER GOOD THROUGH JULY 30, 1968 ONL y EXCEPTIONAL BUYI "S. DEN, 4 BA'lm" Beautllltl 3 Br. So. ol 3 Bt, 2 ba, tam rm, cpt1 au Llbrar)', 6 n• new 3 highway. By owner onJ.y. rma, blt·in music intercom, Car, blt·inr $49.950 Reasonable. * 67J.6636 encl patio, lrg cor lot w/2 HOME &U-4090 dbl garages. $24,SOO. By 1812 Highland Dr., Harbor Owner 54&-7fi63 Hi&h1ands; 4 BR. 2 Ba. BY 0 w NE R : cambridge $32,950 548-2847; 1-129-m model. College Park. 3 lrg ~Ow="~'"'=_,..,-,,-,-..,,--,,,­ br, 2 ba, xtra lrg tam rm, 2 LUXURY 3,br .. 2 bath condo, used brick frpls, epu, drps -frpl, pool, golf. fee land. lndscping. A Rustic Beauty. Owner transterrOO. $32,500 $27,900. 540-7967 or 830-2531 By Owner. 642-33'n . $'21,950 -OWNER MOVE In! Near new 4 BR., 3 Br. l~ ba. bltns, t.rplc. Pa· trpl,, new cpts. nr. beach. tio, dbl gar, fncd. GI or FHA $28,000. Open weekends; 35) 22'10 Maple St. &tG-2300 62nd St. Owner 6Th--0144 M·ESA Del Mar 3Br. 2 Ba. BAYCREST BY OWNER CU.st. pool. Low dn., assume 5 Large Bdrms. 3,250 sq. ft. lge. VA loan. Open, 1074 Ivan Wells built. Fee land. Mission 540-2420 Owner 2'100 Windward Lane HALECREST By Owner. 3 50me lucky family to move into, and cherrish ~ belk'h , doll house. Immaculate old· er home with overtme. of fairy tale charm. 3 BR, 1%. 1~: BA, pegged be.tdwood ftoon l & many olber a.lJuriDg fea· tures. $44,950. Burr W!lile, Realtor 29<n Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 675-4630 Eves: 673-5122 3 Duplexes $57,500 large formal dining room, 2% Qlinlng baths! Lush wool carpeting over hardwood floors, deluxe kitchen, panel· led game room with a fire- place. ExceUent Newport Beach residential area & N<Yr LEASEHOLD. A real vaJue for $50,500. Br., 2 ba. Newly painted, crpts, drps, bltns incl Inter· 4 BR 2 bath, tireplace, water-HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE contm. 4Y.i% GI avail. Ask- Newport Hgh. 1210 915 West Bay Ave. PH ""Ar'fl. . 3 pl"' BR'•· Unob-ct<d On choice 106Xl65' Eastside Jot. Cul-de-sac • near Catho- lic Church & 19th St. Excel- lent rental record. CaU now for appointment to see. 642·1771 Anytime HOME & INCOME 2 separate homes close to all &hopping. On a sp&cious tree shaded lot over 200' d<!ep. - $24,9'50. 546-2313 646-7171 Open Eves. THE~EAL ESTATERS STAGE COACH CHARM-$23,SOOI i..Qve at first glance! Cypress, palms & state trees, corral fence. King-sized bedrooms, rustic built·in bar in cozy den. Brick fireplace in living r o o m. Delightful covered patio. C\Jstom features in· side & out. 842-6691 TARBELL 16lll Beach Blvd. 3 UNITS 2 BRs each, good income. Ruth Pardoll, Realtor 1609 \Vestciilf Dr. 642·5200 Country Living Tired of the busy city life? Then here's a spacious 3 bed-- room home on a large wood· ed lot. SZI ,900 a••es~i~~G \·•REALTY •• "An-e" 5jl).oj824 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. ADDRESS OF DISTINCTION· $24,0001 Lowest priced 4 bedroom home in the area. 2 pullman baths, charming brick fire- place sets off huge living room • isolated in rear over- looking a beautifully land- scaped yard & nice neigh- bors homes. Built·in kitchen, very handy. Excellent fin- ancing available. 846.ooo4 TARBELL, 5824 E DINGER Cool Ill fountaatin &$"'2'2m,m9tn5g0POOL General 0 1000 G•ner al 1000 G ene ral _ ~~-~~ 1 ,,,'""c.o--$~23-:--·500~· -'-545-0256 __ ·_~ -~ ---FOR Sa1e by owner, 1ave !!! FHA i.t TD m.ooo "sum· Ivan Wells COUNTRY CLUB FIVE BEDROOMS 3 "'"· tuH cpi.Jdrpe. nice bl yard. Xlnt Io c . nr • e. New Homes VIEW • $23,500 ' "'""''hop" "'!cin• t24.500. Newport in Dover Shores Small custom home with TWO GARAGES • MS-7313, 642-0721 at Knotty pine interior, beam· • .':'~, .• : ~~ ~;"be?i:t~~: ed ceilings and nice brick Victoria uu " fireplace, tor those cold win. Ivan Wells homes now un· 646-8811 ter evenings. Large B a y der construction. (August window looks on to rear yard (Open completion) with huge trees and room e Each has 4 SR 3 ba, farn far 2 more units. 6ll x 150 Evenings) rm with wet bar, dining area, as well as breakfast ~~ ':o~f C:!: ~~fr: area for the children. LOOK! • 4 BED RM· Each is a distinctive & charming living room · and COOL POOL • $23,250 dining area. Mountain Cabin "0" DOWN G.I. • distinguished custom home atmosphere for the low price Wlth fabulous view of Up-LOW DOWN FHA per Bay & hills. of $23,500. Good Terms avail- "THE Good '01 Summer-• Excellent financing & a:ble, Quick Po~session. time" could never compare terms available.' with the fun )'ou'U have e Bey now & move in before here all )'ear round. Over· school starts. sized bedrms. 2 baths. 15 x R J W d C 30 ~ . 'th BBn oy • ar o. ST cover~ _patio wi "C (Baycrest Office) 2W3 WE CLIFF DRIVE & tables adjacent to a lovely 1842 S ti D 646-l550 64&.7Til Open Eves: 15 x 30 Anthony pool • beat an ago r. the heat!. Price. includes FIX'R UP washer & oryer, dishwasher. 540-1720 for only $250 tot.al down for TARBELL 2955 HARBOR you Vets. This 4 bedroom, FOR YOU VA & FHA Buyers. 2.200 SQ, FT., 5 \arge bedrooms, 16 X 32 POOL, 2~ large baths, 640 sq. ft. ol family l'QOm, all built • In kitchen, do U b I e garage. What A BUY toe only $26,500 MOVE IN TODAY. family home has everything. Large efficient all ele<:"tric kitchen, cozy wood burning fireplace off large cov~red patio, 2 baths and 2 car garage. NEAR THE BEACH! . COSTA MESA OFFICE 1190 Harbor Blvd. 2414 Vista Del Oro Newport Beach Sensational Buy ''Lusk" Home in Eastbluff beautifully 'appointed original Model. Fenced yard, prof/landscaping large pool. 2 fireplaces SCARS Mesa V1trd• 1110 4 BR & den, 2~ Ba, din rm., 4 years new. Pool size yard. $39,250. Call for appt. 546-3642 wknds M9-ll74 weekdays. OWNER -3 BR, 2 bath, patio. Newly decorated thru out Elec bltins. Orig rnA construct. 10% dwn , $27 ,200. Kl 5--0505 HOUSES FOR SALE Mesa Verde 1110 Friendly five bedroom, two story home that's big in the right places. Three luxurious baths impol1ant for your growing family. Many re&· tures for gracious living. En· joy "Ginger Gold'' nylon shag carpets and walls of rich walnut. Bar-B-Que WI· der Ifie stars in your own pa- tio. Drive your camper on solid concrete past adobe planters dlru the high door into a detached 3 car gar· age. Use the spare garage as a family game room?? $140 MONTH In cludes tax- REAL VALUE FOR Sl9,m. es. Excellent 5%. % loan -no ACT NOW!! fees. Immaculate 3 BR 2 'J!ll!llll!ll!~l!!ll!!l!l!lll!I!~ I bath home, e x c e 11 e n I r carpet!, freshly painted on quiet cul-de.sac s t re e t . .,...._, I Large k:itdlen in family room. Owner transferred- priced lor quick sale. CAU. 540-1151 ~open eves) Heritage Real EBtate Evenings Call 545-2833 REAL ESTATE SALESMEN WANTED Shore Properties 673-0060 LOVELY Mesa Verde 3 Br. fam r m. Many extras! Large lot, ideal for children. Can assume existing low in- terest loan. 3128 Country Club Dr. C.M. College Park 11 lS ' Alll JI .. View ot Bay. Private patio, Build your own Castle of Dreams on this roomy New· pent Heights lot. 65 X 150 It CAN auITOUnd you with your own private Eden. Faces Harbor High on Irvine. Price D4,500, Burr White, Realtor 2901 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 6754630 Eves: 673-5122 Ocean View forever Come see this prestige home with splendid view. 3 BR 2 baths, nicely decorated & many fine featui•es. Garage sundrek stressed for addi- tional guest house. A bar- gain at $34,750. Easy financ- ing -no loan charges. GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414 (Near NB Post OOice) $26,750 ATTRAC. Prime area 3 Br l ba w/w crpts. 400 Pirate Rd. 646-3079 Dover Shores 1227 LOT-Lg. View. Low leasehold, 80 x 120' av . No. 285 Santiago $21,500, build YoUr o~21J39 eves University Park 1237 wet bar. OPEN SAT & SUN 1 .5 Pete Barrett & Co. 642-4353 Near new. Owner traJlSferred -must sell. 4 BR, dining nn. OPEN SAT & SUN I ·5 ete Barrett & Co. Lido Isle 1351 Beyfront-Pi•r-Slip Handsom spacious 4 bd 4% ha + maids & bath. Htige LR & master. Blt·in elect kit 57' on water. UNEQ UALED. R. C. GREER, Realty 3416 Via Lido 673-9300 TWO STORY 4 Bdrms., 3 baths, plus din- ing. Some view from spac. mstr. suite. Lge. shady patio WALKER REALTY 675-5200 548-1467 Eves Huntington Beach 1400 FORECLOSURE- VILLAGE 2 Lux ext. 3 Br. 2 REPOSSESSION??? Ba. Atrium. 10 ft ceilings. 3 This ranch style 4 bedroom lush gardens, m i r r o r e d home bas 2 spadous ba.tha, closets, glam. spac. en-shake roof, lush l:n:9ical I Excellent lnves~ment $27,500 with a clive into the sparkling pool of this big 5 BR, 3 bath former model home at only $35,CXXl. It's a repossession· yet it ls immaculate. One loan of $31,500 with 6.6% interest ·will not be increas- ed. A real delightful large family home. COSTA MESA OFFiCE 2190 Harbor Blvd. 545-9491 Open till 9 PM 545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM 3 BR, 2% ba, elec/kilchen dining rm plus lam room Added attraction: 3 BR. 1 %. ba, M6\lme large tertaining. $21,000. Exe. in-landscaping, bullt·in and a 1 Wells-McC•rdle Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 5~3-7729 Eves 644-0084 I _Jr. Estate -3 Bdrm $18,SOOI Landscape artisl's dream. I Exciting exterior with stone trim front. 2 bath.. Sun- 1 streamed built-in kitchen. Quality carpeting & tasteful decor. 846-0604 TARBELL,5824EDINGER * Monarch Bay * COLLEGE REALTY 546-5880 S BDRM -110" DOWN payment to a GJ. Majestic 2 story residence, huge bonus roon1, additional family room ideal for "teen par- ties ·. 2 baths, FA heat. Ov- er 2,000 sq. ft. of supreme living. $.11).1721). TARBELL, 2955 Harbor $22,950 4 BEDRM-FAMILY RM $24,9501 NO DOWN PAYMENT Excellent neighborhood of well maintained homes &: friendly people. 2 baths. Family room, convenient off the dream all built-in kitchen • dishwasher too. Brick fireplace enhances !iv· ing room. Mature shadi> trees & colorful shrubs com- plete this perfect picture. No do\\'n payment GI or low down FHA. 846-0604 john macnab WESTCLIFF Quality famil,y home. 4 lxl· rm1, 3 baths, hugt> family room wilh walk in wet bar. Fomial dining room. Large pool size lot. 3 car garage. Immediate possession. $73,500. Call for Appt. 1714) 642·8235 881 Dover Drive Newport Beach S. Coast's finest exclusivt? beach community bldrs off- er 8 new 3 & 4 bdrm homes with magnificent Ocean and Island Views. 3 BR 2 ba, poolsized yard. Carpets, fireplace, built-ins. Near all. TARBELL 5824 EDINGER ------- VA NO DOWN Mid-Week Special I $52,too • $95.000 499-2850 499-3018 OCEAN FRONT A real 2 BR Gem! Near Har- bor entrance. 40 Ft. lot. $;)5,000. Rltrs. &12·9730 Eves. 548.{)720 • KEHNEDY Eastside, C.M. Near churches, 3 BR, 1 ~~ Bath $21,500 George Williamson, Rllr. 3 BR l* ba th. $26,750 full One of a kind $136 per month prlce • $214 mo include11 1ax-principal ancl l.nterest. No es. Walk to beach. Owner dOYm to Vets and low down transferred. Built-in range F.H.A. to all. Brand new & oven, forced air heat, fire-carpets over hardwood place, carpets/drapes, fenc· floors. New vinyl in the ing, landsc, cul-de-sac Jot. bright kitchen and OOth Balboa Real Estate Co. 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 673414 6734ll0 OPEN EVES. \]1llage Real Estate Cor Brook.burst & Gartield 96244TI 546-8103 baths. 3 roomy bedrooms. Cedar shingle roof and 2 car garage. Tremendous rear yard. SZl,000. Colesworlhy & Co. SALES ASSOCIATES 85115 split. Management opportunity, Double your ·Income. Can for appt. SALES ASSOCIATES 85/15 split. Management opportunity. Double your Income. Call for appt. 17~' FIBERGLASS '66 120 642-7n7 hp Mercruiser inbd-ootbd HOME 642-4090 f!OME 642-4090 'WI trier. $245(). 71 4 : 1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Open Eves. 675-4639 1-~-=-'~=--Corona del Mar IO°!o DOWN SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN and BAY Channel /Ze/-..Aparlm en/6 \ On Waterfront NHr Ntwport Harbor Entrance 1525 Oce•n Bl~., Coron• d•I Mar, Callf. AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium" Way of Ufe THE ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU You can purchase and get fee title -or lease If you prefer. ALL ants. have WATERFRONT VIEW. All have two bedrooms and two baths. -WITH LARGE PATIO. YOU ,lqE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL Buy $59,500 and Up -Lease $445 Monthly & Up Plrane 6 73-1788 for further Information Open Daily 11 to 5 219 JASMINE View, 4 hou ses Jrom beach. 3 BR 1 '% baths 14x20 living room + lg tam rm, large fireplace, built-ins, sep din· ing aree, service porch, car· pets & drapes, 3 car garage on alley + sun deck. Large lot. Vece.nt. Rltr. 646-3928 Eves. 642--0185 *LACHENMYER POPULAR MESA VERDE· $23,5001 First time advertised • here today & sold tomoITOW. Landscaped to perfection • your own private park. 3 generous sired bedrooms. 2 beth& • family dining area Off delightful all built In kitchen. Pride of ownership n!llected thruout. Convenient to park, library, major shop- ping & schools. 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 llARBOR "NEWPORT BEAC1-f" 4 + 3 Baths, $33,700 Ranch modem . hit-ins. BeaulJful area -HURRY! "OCEAN VTEW -S:IS,900" Huge 2 Bdrr.u, 2 ba, 50x127 Fireplace. l el.ow ma rket! HOME "424090 VIEW OCEAN from dining room &: lovtly garden kitchen. 4 large bedrooms It ~lii beth1. De lt• Reel Este te 646-«14 FHA 5%. % Joan, $.23,500. By vest. Nr UCI 83J.0304 or country type firepl&ce, 'VA-Can be assumed -51Ao/o Ph. 644· 1133 Coste Mesa 1100 Owner. 642-9192 833-5507 Owner. CANT. $$.00 Total Move In ---·-----1,======== ~=====:;.===I "°''' to VE."rS. r.ow Down SHARP SHARP EASTSIDE Quiet cul • de • sac location. Beautifully decorated thru- out. Huge bedrooms, 2 lux- urious baths, and large en· closed yard !or kids with plenty or room left over for swimming pool. See Today! $28,500. Submit your smaller home on our Guarantee Trade Plan. 2043 WESTCLIFF DRIVE 646-ml Open Eves. OON1 lOSE Ill At no costs • assume FHA 5~ % loan payments of $159 month lilcludes princ .. int., taxes & ins. Here's truiy an outstanding condition 3 BR tam room 2 be.th home. All newly painted, lush carpets &. drapes, covered patio. On· Victoria Mesa Homes 16 NEW HOMES L:iw dn. 6% % 30-yr loan From $24,950 Va!Jey Road at Victoria (Just E. of Brook hurst up on bluff) Lldo size lots, fee simple land • High above sea level. Built-in electric kitchen. Convenient to shopping cen- ter, near schools. 3 and 4 BDRMS • l &: 2 sty. Fire- places, carpeting, draperies, fencing, landscaping. Michael K•y, Builder Phone 642-2821 Eves 642-~106 COLLEGE PARK Beautifully kept 3 bedroom + family room • With new vinyl Door • Lovely exJl('n- sive carpets and drapes - $26,!0J. Try 10% down. 546-2313 646-7171 Open Eves. THE~EAL ESTATERS ly $25,r;m -hurry! I •-.... --..... ~,.-..-..-..-..-ii tfJ• 1093 &1kor, C.M. WHERE SOFT BREEZES BLOW &_ LIVING IS CXIOL Monticello Homes only $20, 950 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"-.!!!!!I Heart of Costa Mesa Area. Corona del Mar °"-luxe Living, built-ins, pri- Welk to Beach & Little Cor-vnte club, h{'ated pools. No ona beaches. 2 Br home with exterior maintenance. brick lrpl on choice 45' Jot. Courtrsy to Brokers Located So. of the hiway. 546-1210 Under$.\l.000. NEAR FAIRVIEW ROAD SO. OF FAffi DRNE. 'f31clln :Wll East Coa11t Hwy. Corona d<'I Mar 675-3745 3 Br2 Ba-$19,500 Convenient center hall plan with bath off master bdrm. 22' tivingrm, light &: airy, over\ook11 arti«tic yard. Sep. arate play area for the children. 15' kitchen with all the luxuriou~ blt·ln features. Payments less than rent. 842-6691. TARBELL, 16111 Beach Bl. Exciting 2 Story Ivan Wtlls' model Dom(' with view. 2 .Story Jlvlni;: rm, dining area. lam rm, 4 DR 3 be.. Buy now & move In befort school 1tart1. Roy J. Ward Co. 646-1550 Ustings Needed 19 out of 20 of OUR llstlnp sell. Let Ul !tell YOUR home. DAVIDSON REALTY Rltr, 1150 Harbor 58, CM 5'6-M60 ,· NO DOWN Gf Dandy 3 bedroom, wall to wall carpets throughout. Owner is leaving slate and W8Jlls a lsst sale. Conven- tional buyers try 10% d 0\1-'Tl, 646-7171 546·2313 OPEN EVr ··. THE~EAL E S TATERS 4 BR + RUMPUS Brand ~w listing • 1800 sq • ft In !his beautlfull,y improv. ed home With huge trees. Iota of walnut panelllna, wale.rlall & POnd, ete. $26,500 College Re1lty 546-5880 Open Hou,. Sun 1-5 pm 2231 MINER Sharp 3 br, 2 ba home. Shllke root, frpl, bit-in•. SEE THIS NOW! $22,!l!O, Scenic Properties, 675-.5726 'M!E QUICKER YOU SEU. Tl!E QUICKER YOU CALL, Newport Be~~~--12_00_ Irvine 1238 FHA. · DAZZlfR A rare gem in miniature just steps from channel & a block from the ocean. 11..ove- ly, smaU I BR. \I BA home wilh small rental unit in gar· age. $29,500. Burr White, Realtor 2001 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach 6754630 Eves: 673-6069 BY OWNER; Back Bay; 2 yr. old 3 BR. 2 Ba. Spanish style. Bltns., Jge. backyard. Below Owner's cost! Reas. terms. $37,500 2328 La Llnda !Cul De Sac off 23rd.I. 646-5970 .• Cliff Dr, Newport Heights ActOl!S lrt>m park, 2 story 4 Br. 2 ba. din nn, crpt.s, drps, kit bltns. Tree shaded back patio Xlnt storage. a ose to all achls. Fine avail $43,500. 642-5843 SAVE 6o/o by ovroer, 5 BR, 3 BA, 2500 sq It. Quiet. cul-d{'·sac, CdM HS district. $37 ,200. 310 Cher· ry Tree Lane (nr Santa Isa- bel & Redlands!. 548-7866 SPLIT-level; Mediterranean, Npt Heights. 3 Br. 2 ba. IRVINE 500. By owner. 297-4373 or Village 1, 2 BR Spanish, green belt location, nr, UCJ. shopping & recreation. $24,. 442-2141, Eestbluff 1242 BE:AUTIFUL view, spaciou.s Lusk 4 BR 2% bath home, walnut panelled family room with wall system & fireplace. Comer I o t , landscaped with sunny patio & fenced yard. Carpets, drapes & bullt·ln kitchen. l.A?ase or lease/option to ·responsible family. Avail 8/1. $350. 644-2657 BLUFFS, Rare "G" P 1 a n: Spacious 4 br, 3 ba, By Owner. $37 ,9fi0 644--0740 7682 EDINGER 842-4455 or 540-5140 $995 MOVE.JN No closing costs. Vacant 3 BR 1% baths, OOxlOO' fenced lot landscaped, carp.ell, drap- es, electric built-in R&O, dining area, private bath ott nwiter BR, double prag@. $159 pt>r mo. including taxes. 1llage Real fst~te Cor Brookhurst & Garfield 96244TI 546-8103 ELEPHANT SIZED BEDROOMS ====·====='!Royal blue w/w cerpetin&, Corona del Mar 1250 service porch, 3 BR + den WEEKENDER WITH FRIENDS f'or the cost conscious. 2 homes, + guest quarters, large p8lios, 50' n.'2 lot near main be11ch. $.'iS,500. De L•ncy Real Est•t• 2828 E, C ~1"t Hwy., Cdi\1 673·3770 + Z baths + ftte.fonn pa- tio + BBQ Ir: large hlced yard + owners will Jlll.l' points for FHA Of' GI financ- ing. Price? Call & ask! TRADEWINDS RL TY. 842-5011 or 842-5012 "MODEL HOME" VA no down only $95 coN «' FHA with low down. Loveb' comer 3 BR 2 beth with bon· us room. summer-winter deck. Schls I,.,..,..,.. ................ ~ ~~~'.::,;,:. " • "0 s · VIEW OF HARBOR HAFFDAL REALTY "Home to Match Income" 8470 Warner 842-44~ WESTCLIFFJ EWEL Newly dee, 3 BR 2 baths Family rm. Covered patio. Stl.9;)0 Owner, 1.206 Pembroke Lil 642-4251 Quaint home. Large living room & fireplace. Reduced to $38,900. CORBIN.MARTIN REALTORS 675-1662 Moving S•cr ifice 3 BR 2 ba, cpts/drps. 2 car garage. Lg yd. $133/mo., min. dn $2500 • low price $16,500. Ritt. 9624219 ff.mtS TAR GA'ZEK1<~ AllU Br cl.A}' J.. POLLAN 1a1A ~ ~· 22 H Your Doily Adi~ily ~id. H R1'!'. 21 J:"h ~NFL Y >.,cording ~ Iii• Stars. Y od. ;n@.~ To develop~ fot Wednesday, rood words cormspondirig to runbers of your Zodioc birth sign. I Vw ,.._,. ... ·-5 For•lon "" '""" '""' 9 """' IOR•I)" 11 An.,.tilM 12 Potch 13To 14)(~ """ l6Vour 17011f--. ...... 19 Fr;.,dly ,.,_ 21 PIOd1alf ~¥1::" ,. .... ,, .... 26 llript.t.'I ,,_ ,. .. ,,,_ 30-..0 @Good -•• ·------------------~--• n ~--• ••---•-• ---·•--• -• ·-• -• ••••• l I l • ( ( J - JS DAILY "IOI T....S.,,Jt.tr 2l, 1968 _•,",,7.uu,.,s"1"' ..... R'"'rr1i,_..==r.1«s •fO<MR'""SAriiL....-'-.H:uo""'sEs FOR SAL E RENTALI lllNTALS R!NTALS UAL ISTATI IUSINW •114 I 1705 Hou-Unfurnllhod Ap11. Unlurnllllod Apto. Unfumlahod o-rol _flNANCIAL ~vto Roptln 6UG Hunt! ...... looch l400 Huntlnston IM<h 1400 Loguno Buch ~~ LAsTINGSECUlllTY llEAtmnn. 4 BR.., 9'b<JOO LAGUNA BEACH Coote -1100 0-ol 5000 llont•I• Wonted 5'90R :;;•nc;;;hoo:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;lSO;;l:R~11~l~lo;;;;toto~~LN;:-"'~N~40~ '23.soot lot, lamll1 "'°"' !5l<lt, llv· !ISO Tera" W01, Temple VERY ~ 3 BR, iiliiiii I '~*;-~U~RiGOilEiNilT:-:*;-"" • Cance 1lalll for rut. BORROW on Your Eqult7 Hotlb, R o::mQftUOI' A RANCH HOME P11v1i. 2D4 ....,, • ..,.,... l=,,.""'=-= ... =,,.-===I - ; ,. Canlftl~t tt \ht JftStDl. l!'llroom~. 2 ha.tbs, DD l:lillL 3 BR. 2 BA, larae llv· cvpell, drapo. &eplacf, VEN DOME YOUNG Lad,y with mul~e Very boc>J&,able bomt. id.rll 1q n. bWU·lns. A atNl al l.ni rm., firepl1u:e, beamtd larte paUo. OUtataJXH.na. tderoill and wtll behl.ved for ontertalnlng • 10 b-lgbt s;s.t,500. ettllnp thru~. AD el«. t.fonth to month or lffk-t.l&b f'Oll"ISdool NOW Cmnaa S b e p h er d com- ~ cheerl\tl. 3"""""""' lam· T H McAnlle BroLer kl!d>cn, '°"' """"" 1o1. 1215 ""r mMth. v • .,..,. Newly Redecorated oanJoo """'an unfumtsh<d Bl' room the ICalC ol ba,ppy • • A l.55' fl'Qflt. Landsctped, Broker. S16-C1U 549-2490 one bedroom houlf or apart- memortes. E!fdclenc:y all m w. Wit~. CM 6CU81T lhrul». Ocffn Vl!!W. Prlced LF.ASE. deluxe l BR Ma. Cl ... to Shopplne. Perk mwt 1111.th fenced or encl- bullt·ln kltehl!:n. Ato11t con-rl&ht. P .0. Box 91(, l..q\ma Ucello tO'lt~, pool a loya Club & Girls Club osed yud. Cld HWltinat'OD ........ l Alluring littplac< $49.50 DOWN Belch, Owner. recr .. tian. Adults onl1 ll15. • SpocloltJ 3 ""''.. Beach loatloo prel<n..t. ltndl added charm to grac-To qualified vtts. 3 bomH nns OLD HOUSE 54&--0178 • Swim Pool, P\IVIJ'MD Ret.tonable rent pleue, am low! ll'rinl room. Farced air to roao.e from, all fulb car· l5 • Mtely 2 1101')' with 31,,:,;:..;=------• FrPl. -indlv/lndl)' fac'lll on filcl!d income. Pbone 3 """'°"" and """""""' rr.. ..... Wal No """· lobysltll"f pc>OI. U.cl-I bedrnom Al.SO iuHt.boUaetndlllt&DblJ'n. 90" JA Tt> mna lo $71,!IGO A'lTENTION Ttacb1r1; Northeut of TUllHn on 3 •o-Servln& Orans• Ol:ty 18 Yfl· Un~ra. K a l 1 , ,. or res of gently 1lopln1 land SaUler Mortgqe Co., Inc. Woodland achll. BabysJttin1 t!DUtely fenced $911,500. Far 336 E 11th SL, Colta Me-a tn my hOrn.e. Hot lunches, fw1her tnformaUoft pleuc gc.nn 56-0811 toys .I: ltnced y ard 1 • call Glenn 'I11ompson with BAKERY 6 <X>fTEE SHOP 548-9513 Eckhoff & Auoc., Inc. for Nle. My equlpped. 1 RELW1===u:="'ba....,..by-ll~ltln~g-111)' beet. Many •dded ddUR' petflll with built·lnl, dote to Br'1, wood paneled w.U. Is FOR Lease: 3• BR. 1 ea.. 1145 Auhelm Aw. 536-4937 lf no anl. ph 5J6..222!i ."i featuru. 842-6691 achoolt. CAii fl."Jf' information old minion brick floors I a fam. rm. homt, bJtns, carp., C.M. 642-2824 J.118 W. Chapman Ave. Owner wnta to retire. X1nC. home any hours. 54&-2-478. Orange, CaW:. prolltl. Beach b:at!cn, tao. Allk for N&OCY Pratt TARBELL. l6lll &ach m LISTER REA~ TV turn of the centur)I bath. drape:i. $22$ Month. f>45.-0ll63 Roo __ .,. __ 1o_r_11o_n_1 __ 5_99_5 1r541;;..1621;;;;;.·;Ev;,;•; .. ,Ow;lcnds;;.;538-'721;,m;;JE"-'~""'~""f'i'·673.'~~16~lS;,:ycle;;;;.l ·Cll=1-:-LD...-:C....=:-.~m-y-ho=m-,-.-=-ay COOL, airy room tn prlv. I· CARPET ' ul)hohtery clean-day or wttk. Vie 16th &- home; khdl. privil., phooe A ,;;.croo'-'= .. '------'6-200_1 q ~ulpment. Higb profit-Newport. Od 642-4964 I. . .. ----- B ., ... """~ Orchard lree:5 " gut'St 5 IEOROOM • 16612 Be•ch I., HB vu"""""' house. $32,!!50. MlAsk>n Rlty, Newport leach S200 _,,_ f.~~L !_~ --~. £3) ltUGE LOTS, near Ocean 98S S. Cst Hwy. 4%-mll AVAlLABLE NOW • '""7 uuc -''"'"'"V ,...,.,.,. 60' :ic 200' (fee aimpl~). 2 Br Studio. Blt-inl, wa.'lher-- dryer. Patio--Pool AdWts. Lease $150. 540-'IU2S in room.. Emplayed lady -low cmt buainea. $425 com-BABYSITI'ING in your home p r efe r red. West CM. AnENTION t..c•l::"::'·cc64>-815:=..='----·I by the week. penn. YW 5100 IUch wood paocllo& l book· PLUS MAGNIFICENT 2 Bedroom 2 b<th c.to -eues OVtt flttplace with 3 I: 4 Bedrooms. Luxury OCEAN VIEW LOT Car,>elll, draJ>P•, blt-W. indirect li&:ht.l.ni in living BUCCOLA·BUlLT homes. $5.!{>0 Ill! b t el $750 $200monthon1eaH HARBOR GREENS 616-1393 DEVELOPERS & forn. """P· 642-1"'7 SLEEPING room. M•n on!y, INVESTORS ANNOUNCEMENTS room. Spanish niotitt P~ SHERWOOD .ESTATES • iom ' ut ev 673-3003' Evee· 548-6966 vans thruoul. Enclosed stair-Brookhunt at Hamilton down, bal $.53 mo. Laguna Bay Ir. Beach Really, Inc. non • smoker. Rell req'd, * !JO LEVEL ACRES * incl NOTIClS Brick, Masonry,. .,c. 6560 w•y. 2 be.lht. Ex ..... "..ite car. Bch, (TI4) 497·t2tO 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB ,. ..... , Huntington Beach 968-3036 S<Nth ot Hwy, CdM. $20 wk. Ideally loc:&led in h!gh-dty Ado 6400 675-{jll.fi aft 6 desert (oo lnlOi problems, Found (FrM ) ,...,. " ...... ~ B"'" • "' COOL POOL NEW • BR. 2 .. WES!'CLIFF, • BR 3 ba, "' Jdtcbeb. Dect:ric pra.ge fam rm, View ot Coast !.tust tchooll, water and gardner ROOM With private ~ wonderful dry.aJr!) Lev e 1 & pliio. s min. to beach. ~=Pu' ;i~ ~: SCRAM-LETS BRIO<, Cancrete, Carpentry Custom Cabinet&. Small joba OK. Free Est. 96US45 door opener. ~tany features + 5 btodroom1 &: added fam· sell • tw Dn, $32,500 incl. $325/mo. 1.1 Ull Pem- fouod tn r.r h1&her priced Uy room, almost ne• CflJ'-LOS PADRES RL TY brokto, 642~6 bomt>s. sc.&i91 pets, drapes, watersofteru!r 895 Glenneyre Street BUY Like rent: $425 mo 3 TARBEU.. 161ll Btoach Bl. &: Iota of cement. A lot of Laguna BMch 494--8333 BR, 3 Ba, pier & Ooat. BACllELOll -UN1'lJRll. frolll $100 locl. utll. l • 2 6 S BDRM. 612-4961 Bantow lwti. .. "'"' tx· ANSWERS Ho 599. '""""" ... already ...... !) • Guest mM 90 man • made Laku in lulldon 6570 NEWPORT WEST 2 STORY house for cmly $3'1,900. 2 Balboa Covet 675-4111 FURN. A: UNi'lJRN. PRNATE Room for am- bulatory lady. Good food. Nice 1urroundin1lJS. 548-4153 Paul Jones Realty 34'?·1266 Eves. 842·5844 BY OWNER. Assume 6% Gl Joan, Spanish style 2 story, 4 Br 2~i ba, den, bltns. Water conditioner. Francillcan Fountain Homes. 842-8519 San Juain Capistrano 1720 Newport Shoro1 3220 CHARMING ~ .BR 2 BA NEWPORT SHORES home, fireplace, w a 11 e d 2 BR Is Den an yea.rs lease yard, double garage. $71,000_ $190 mo. 642..J4,:tl Bethke Realty, 494-2858 3242 Heated Pools. CJllld Care QaQter, Adj. to Shoppinc: - No pell allowed 2700 Petersoo w.,, at Haro tic.-6 Adami, Colta M-. 546-<mD ' REAL ESTATE Genlr1I Income '""'°"" 6000 GI NO DOWN or rnA low do•1'1. 3 BR: l2x18 la.mlJy room, formal dining room, 1~ coYHed ptitlo with BBQ or wet b 1 r. Owner E11t Bluff tran'1en-ed. Fountoln Volley 1410 RENTALS 841-85.11 5J6.7000 968-1178 ---------Houses Furnished 5 BR.. 3 Ba. Water I: Excdlon~ ,.,. • Ilk• ,.,,.: I ~c-~i!iiA ~Dll~MAR!i!ii I roundings for adults requir-VKVft ---------· I ed ed __ _.;.;.c..;..;.:.;;:.::.:;:;;:__ 1 gai·Jener paid. $350 month. 16 •6' POOL 5 BDRM Estate. R uc to Rentails to Share 2005 2601 Bunya, Newport Beach • uig-peace &: quiet. D!=imlnativo Tononts APARJMEllT HOUSE x~ .. u by awn ... 131,eoo. °""' Luxurious 3 BR borne, dining July 20th & 21st. 18860 Santa room, den I:: garden kitchen. Barbara 10 am-4 pm or by Fully carpeted &:. draped. Appt. (n4l 893-3577 Prof""'"""" landscaped. Will trade for units n~ the beach or submit otter to pur- """'· LISTER REAL TY lfi61.2 Bea.di Bl., HB 842-6633 BIG SPLASH! y,•ilh v,rbole famll,y in l h i S large 4 BR with lovely pool, carpeted, draped & de.sired built-ins makes Ibis a "must see" at $22,500, Pacific Sborea Realty 5J6:.8894 Eves. $7327 Westmlnsler 1612 GI RESALE Anyone may assume mis v1 5%. % loan, payable $1~ mo. 3 Bedroom on a big comer lot. Room for boat & trailer parking. Sparkling new pa.lnt job bl&ide &: rut.side, plus new wall to wall carpets. Vacant and immediate pos· session at only $18,950. STEWART REALTY 5.1().277<) MALE to shatt 2 BR studio · Corona dtl Mir 3250 Harbor Ir. Newport Blvd I ---- area. Xlnt l'OUnd system, no BEAUT. Oceanview 3 BR, 2 furniture, $10 mo, No rock & ba., 2 Fple, maint/pool, roll. ~1562 alter 8. re!rig, washer/dryer. Avail WANTED girl over 21 to Aug. 1st $290 leue. 67:J.6635 share Penn Apt, Call after 4 BR. 3 Ba., ra.rw;e, ~tric· 5:30. 673-35.78 Qshwshr. Adullll, no pds. $260. 424 Poinsettia 675-5213 Bailbo1 lsl•nd 2355 \VINTER - Lrg charming 2 Huntington BNch 3400 BR •• , No studenu, .$160 inc FR.EE REN!AL BOOK util. 4 BR Dix, Drop 1n and Browse Hinger RE 833-2036, 613-M0'.2 WE HA VE SOME Summer Rentals 2910 l, 2 &: 3 BDRM. API'S. POOL. NO CHil.DREN MARTINl9UE GARDEN Am. 18th & Santa Ana, C.M. Call Mrs. Henderson 646-5542 1TI7 Santa Ana, Apt ll3, C.M. STEVENS VILLA NEW • LUXURIOUS 1 & 2 BDRM. APTS. Ocean aide of highway Top condition Excellent l"t'l'ltal reconl $79,,,,. Cbntact Mrs. Pavlovich Eves. 673-6316 From $130 Month Cllrpets, drapes, all built-REAL TORS ins. Adults only. No pets. "!!~!!l!li67~3!!!!4~400!!Ti!!!!!!!!J!!!!! 384 Avocado. 0.f 1.fgr. Apt. 8 !! NEWLY DECORATED NEWPORT BEACH e TRA VELODGE e 2 BR. w/g~: .$110. Fenc-1967 Grou SU0,000: 1968 Ap- 1 & 2 Br. Furn Aplll. 1,» ed. yard with petio, Water fl<JC Own blk I ·~ w ,.A_ prox. gross .......... ,000. er o ocean. uu;:i • paid. 2515 .:>a.uta Ana Ave.. moving to Glendale, Price Balboa Blvd. Balboa. $75 Apt. D. Call between 2 & wk-$1.W wk. 494-5189 7682 EDING~An "!40 5 P .M. $525·~. R. GANGI PRNATE Cottage, 2 blks. 8424455 or on\l""J e 636-4120 e 00·1615 675-1669 EVES. from beach; Goldenrod SL, 2 LARGE Be<trooms, bath F I · V II ... 10 6 Houses on comm. acre, CdJ\1: slpe. s. $125 Week, oun a1n a ey -up, % balh dn. Patio. Mesa th room for mOl'e· 165-169 E. $500 J\.1on . 673-7099 North Apt!. Vac. 8/1. l l=,;C,"7'i=7.'-"'C:::O-.,..,-l 2 STORY 4 bdr, den, 2 bathl, n-A nst, Costa Mesa. Do not BALBOA Is. Attr, 1 BR apt. blt·ins, encl. patio. $190. $137 .SO F.d or va<.:ar &U-lm disturl> tenants. Prine. No Matter What It Is YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For Fist Service &: Expert Assistance DIAL 642-5678 DIRECT (llllps. 6); avail. July, Aug.1 c:;96~,....,==:·======' 1 2 BR, Blt-ins, car pe t1 , only, By owner 1·'158-0328 Sept. 613-1503; 49!}..2316 1 ~ drpaes, garage, nr OCC &: NPT Bch 1 BR, sleeps 4, 1 Laigun1 Be1ch 3705 shops, adult.a. SllO mo. Busi""' Rent1I 6060 blk to Ocean, $60 per wk. 673-4458 July. Avail Aug. 642-1172 1.fONARCH BAY ARE A 2 BDR townhse 1~ be, bit· *PRESTIGE STORE* 2 BR Furn on SEASHORE LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 iM, crpts, drps $140 mo in prime location. Dr, NB. $i75 wk. 67>1700 BR & den, 2 BA, cpta, Drps, Adlts. 3ln1 CoolldJe Apt 17 2500 Sq, ft. Air -1 pool $300 mo cond. See at 1801 __ <_6.13_""'3 __ Mt_e_r _5_PM_l_ ad:u'.. 400,:1243be~1~5 pm AVAIL. NOW 2 BR .. new Newport mvd., Costa 1 Bedroom tuml1hed apt. cpts., drapes, blln,. Adults, r.tcsa or Call Mr. Ward I k be k 100 Blk High Dr, 2 BR, w/w 1125 54• -.,0 •••• l B oc to ach. \Vee Jy no pea. . 0"1J""' U'M-"'O'tO't 642--03l6 cpt, 'tove & reb' opt. SJ28 $85. Newport Bch mo plta util. Lie only, adults 2 BR, 2 b8, blt·lns, cpl.I drps, BALBOA ISLAND for lease. VICTORIA Beach (ocean no pet&. 83'1·2933 181 H Del Mar. $145. Store or oUice space to side) Laguna Beach alps s1=::=:=:;:;===== 548-8278 after 6 PM 900 sq. ft. 6'ir206.5 $150 wkly. 1-639-5663 Lagunai Niguel 37071 =========-===~===== Newport Be1ch 5200 Office Rent•I 6070 ---'----~-~ ----RENTALS 3 BR 2 baths, 6 mo. old Houses Unfurnished home, large b1ckyard. $225 2 BR, open beamed, cpts, mo. 4!ffi...4690 drps, rireplace, bet. ocean & Cost• M.n 310011-"==------bay. Avail for adt1Jt5 leaslng .:..:.::;.::._ ____ _;,_ Condominium 3950 at Sllill. Sept ht. Appt. MRS. J. L. FOWLER !.:.:===-'---'-'-'-' ..:673-38<l::::=,==== 2671 WAVERLY Oil $300 DELUXE 3 Br. 2.000 oq. -NEWPORT BEACH ft. Nowpoct B•d< Bay. View E11t Bluff S242 You are. the winner of 2 tickets to the LIDO THEATRE Sho~·in~ THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE Pool. All elec. bltns, crpts, drps. Dbl gar. 646-2670 PRESTIGE Town Homn Cost• M1:u 4100 $25 Wk. Up • Studio • Bach apla. e lr&cl Utila • Phone .n. e Maki Semc. • TV avaD. For lease, 2 br & den & 3 br with 2 or 2% be.lbs. Gold r.tedallion all elec, Your own k P)' to pool. 2-car gar. Rent start& at $ZiO mo. 845 Amigo \\'ay, Npt. Bch. • N •-•-• ft-Corona del Mir 5250 ~ust clip lhi_s ad and t~e 2376 -;~ Bl;d" 541-w.D iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii it to the Lido Theatre 1n -::..,~""':.:...7=-:::;c-=; Newport Beach with ide\ti· $50. SMALL trailer, uti1. pd. fication. otter good through l\1an over XI. no pets, ~·: July 30th. 5-ti-1561 aft. 8 pm. Q,. _,... 2 BR: gar., patio; carp, drps, $140; 1 m1t. to K-Mart: Stove, rcfrig, Tropical :set· lovely 2 BR. sn Joann St. ON TEN ACRES Ung. For adults. 1 Blk. Cotta Mesa. 54S--07B1 1 A: 2 BR, Furn I Unhan shops. $150 Mo. 544-4780 N •_-ch from $150 mo. Frplca I Pril 1wport -4200 Patios I Pooh. Tenn.la. eon. IT'S WONDERFUL the man;, tnt'I Bid.at. 9 bolt Putt.I buys m appliances )'Oil find BEAlll1F1JL wBterfn:>nt •PL Green. LAGUNA BEACH Air Conditioned ON FORE5'1' AVENUE Desk spaces available In newest ci'Lice bu.ikling at prime location in dov..-nto.,..'n Laguna Beach. Air condi- tioned, c1.rpeted, beautiful paneled partitioning. T w o entrances: Frontage on Form Ave., rear leada to Munctpal parking Iota:. $50 per month for space. Desk and chain available for $5. Buslnesa hours answering service available for $10. All utilities paid except telephone, DAILY PJ.LCYI' 2'l2 FORESI' A VENUE LAGUNA BEACH 494-MGG Air-Condlfioned Olficff a O..k Sp- wlth Cl'nlral secretarial, ier- ox and telephone answering 1ervlce, up to 2,0CXI sq, ft. JUST SAY CHARGE IT! ln the Classified Ads. Qi.eek 2 BR., patk>, boat dock. 900 Sea t..a:M, Oi."4 S#-26ll tlrem now! Winter lease. 3403 Finley fMacArthur nr, Coast Hwyl The ?o.futual Bldg. 2863 E. Coast Hwy, Cd." Ct1ll 8 A.\~ to S PM 6T>4070 Gener•I THE SUN NEVER SETS on -~-·-61>-4039-~-·"'---1 Classifled'1 action power. Rent ot aa.le: trlr. on 2 DR. C'pts. drapes. TlO~, SECRETARIAL SERVICE For an ad to sell around Lido Penln. nr. beach. Marguerite. 1 BR, cpts, Modern olllce~. carpel!, ai r eondltlonlng, parking, From $65 per month. Orange Coun- ty Bank Bldg. 230 E. 17th St., aim MeSA. 642·1485 the clock, dial 642-5678. Rc-nt lo y,·otnen mly. drapes, 720 Margueriate. .. -Dial &12-5678 Mr. Key 6'i:>-0100 673-29b'2 For Daily Pilot \Vant Ads. OCEANFRONT Attrac. 2 Br. furn. Apt. Winter or yrly. 3000 Avail 9/15. 646-5832 BF.A.UT. l>lodern 3 BR apt, near beach. Canyon view, Month to mo. $275. 673-1244 3000General 3000 Generail $@\l~lA-~'B!rS" Solve a Simple Scrambled Word Pt.1.Ztle fo'f a Chuckle 0 Rearrange lettan Of the lour aaombled wordt b. low to form four shT1ple WOrds. ISEMROO I _111'11. ICOKAR I _ I I' I II R I"', orz . r I I Rook;• Poll~n'· occld<n1 . 1 ,.pan: ''The fellow hit o tree .-..,.------'-·"'in and turned turtle, $0 I took l~ULGET I him -tho -." I I Ii I 0 Compln the du,1Cld• quol1d 1 by fUUnv In tti. mlalng words • • • • • • )'Cl\! dewlap from atep No. 3 Mlow. • "\\'Jes~~~~. lfTTERS IN I' r I' t I' I • ~~~· LEmlS I I I™~ I I f ............. "'*" .... Long BNch 4500 ROBERT ISBELL 2811 BAYSHORE DR. NEWPORT BEACH You BTe the tliinner of 2 tickets to the LIDO THEATRE Showing THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE $165. 2 BR. Corona 1-llgb. M.dic•I or lands. Patio, lndry. Adultt. Professional Suite ='='=J.<=1=32=E=v='="'=w="="='"=d='= I in Orange. 741 E. Chapman. -Approximately 25c per sq. ft. BalbN l1l1nd 5355 Key at 42 Plaza Sq., Orange. ---------1 Rltr. 646--8811 WATERFRONT dlx. 2 BR· I ==~~~-==~ apt. wlboat ~.up privil. FOR RENT Yrly. lease ~ mo. Adults APP 450 Sq Ft ed l'OX. , , Carpet only, no pell or chlldren & drapes, alr-cond, ~ MARINER'S 81.JXj. l1gun1 BHdt 5705 1515 WtoslcHff Dr., N.B. L01JEL Y 2 br 2 ba view apt Just clip thla ad and take "(Ith garage, No steps. Lse lt to the Lido Theatre in $175 mo. 494-7891 Contact Mn. Rainio tw2-4<m EXECtmVE •Office 111ite. 320 sq. ft, Glendale Fed Bklg, Qll\f, Reuoo.able. 61S-S44< Nt'A'PQrt Beach with ldenli· cN"EW==D~,1~wc~i,..~2~8=R=.-,~8A-. tlcation. Offer &ood through N. Laguna., l blk lo ocean & July 30th. park. Leue. 49-i-4(8) evt tE NTALS Apto. Fuml1hod R1nt1ls W•nted 5990 SUITES AVAILABLE S50 • Up. I77D Ora!lge Ave. C.M. 543m3 Gen•r•I 5000 BEACH A Slater •torta for lease. llliO aq, fl .• 800 sq. BUSINESS Woman ncods 1 ft. 1213) 382-2391 Br unfum Apt. C ~J , RENT Newport, Corooa dt.l Mar, Industrial Rental 6090 Hunt Bch or ~nL To 3 Roomt Fumlture $.100 mo. Car or rarport 4200 SQ. FL in modem con-$25 Month """"'"l'· 61,._ altar 5 ...ie INlldhts M·2...,. $300 FUU. llP'nON TO BUT pm.. 1,:"'°'=':213;;;>:,-:=;;;:;'=:== No dt.'POlllt o.a.e. WANTED: Corona del Mar IL• H.F.ltC, untum Jeue.~ S Dr. lw. 6100 SCRAM-LITS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 6400 Furniture Rentals with pr. duorcu 1Vd nee. for l am child. '200. 175-4693 SJ'? W. 19th, C.M. MS-3'81 15GI W. 1'>olo. ...,,,,, 77""'10 , _ _:SOCK=;;.• ;.rr;_TO""'"_'EM;_..1 _ 2 LOTS on Stntiaao, NB cub. t.ttma or tndt. F" 11mple. 6f6..lfiliO ,\ aree.! Ideal tor r e 1 o rt Morose -Croak -Vii.or - devtolop m ent, alfali• Gluten-TO the ZOO growing, fi,lb nllllng, et.c. Rookle policeman'• 1ccl· ..• opportunities boundl.111. dent report: "The fellow hlt ThiJ la a rare ofterln&, af. a tree and turned turtle, ., I REPAIRS * ALTER.A'M.ONS CAlllNEl'S. "'"' -job. 23 yrs expel'. 54s.6'113 C1blnotmoklng 6580 fording the Investor a IJ'1!•t took: him TO tbe ZOO." CUSTOM kit cab s n e t 1 , future! Penonal clrcum~ ==~~~-=~-stances forte this &a.le· otb-MAN'S blk racing bike, has bthrm. pullmam:, formka er amaller parcela ~vail-lli;. number. BJk O>ckapoo top& exc. work reas. M7-9832 able below market value. wht oo chest. Med. siie. Call owner: 847-8840 Eve•/ Very friendly. Found on weekend•. Mesa Verde Golf Course. 54&-99'11 7,59 ACRE5, Bantow, Calli. ==~---~-~ Hwy. 66 fl'ontqe, $250 down MANY keys on key ring $40 mo. $4.800 fUll price. fOund in my hand-bag nt tn .fiJ 962-4166 aft 6 pm. "Kana Kua" Bowling LeJ1C5. BUSINESS encl =64>-~298!~_,,=,,.._,.,-,-,-FINANCIAL TURTLE. Vicinity of Irvine and Cabriilo. Call Sha.rel lus. Opportvnitl91 6300 and identify. 54S-9832 AmV£ ASSOCIATE IMMEDIATE INCOME FOUND; Burmese cat, vie. Westcllff lll't'tl. Call Ir. iden- tify, 646-1436 FOUND rimless heavy pres· cription glasses vie. Ward· low Park Htg Bcb. 968-<l.241 Looking for experienced bull-Lod 6401 lneu man with imagination, BROWN Aliiptor bilHold in good pet'IODailty, to join ag-phone booth next to greuive marli:etlng team Alberbon'• mkt 19th &. with real ability. Located Harb. Rew. 6(2.78oo Orange County. Man we se-t~=~~-~~-~ lect must havt> $15,000 cash PART-lriah .ettor found in to Invest which entitles him vie. Santa Ana Ave. a:nd to good salary, benefits + Mesa Dr. Flea eollar and share at profits etc., whlcb leather collar. 6'&:2-4816 should retum considerably PAPER Sack, articles of more than entire invest· rlathlng & record. Vic. ment tint year. No selling, Center SL , CM. Rei.vard. age no barrier. We train. 646-6389 Write giving all partlculal"8 LOST_.:,,,,,c.cco.:.:..,N_...,....--~Be-,-oh~a-1 G~ abou t yourself. PleB.lle give Street man's gDld wrist phone number. Sales Manag· watdl. 525 Reward. 673-0153 '" BOX M-163 1be Daily Pilot BOY Sblack rim presaiptlon glasses near :l\taina High Schad 84.Z-2145 CANDY SUPPLY LADI ES gold charm ROUTE bracelet. Reward. fPllI't or Full Time) &42·2145 Excellent income for few hrs. REWARD. Lost J black &: 1 weekly work (Day or Eves) grey Cockapoo on Birch refilling and collecting mon-Near Airport. 642-9195. ' ey from coin operated dis-1 . 6590 • NO JOB TOO SMALL e Residential • Induatrial O>m- merclal. Repair Ir: remodel Reasonable. Lie, bonclH, in- '"""· • 962-1916 • 962-8371 • Carpenter, $4 per hour Remodeling • Repair 536.39((1 after 5 PM Cement, Concrefll 6600 F LOORS...Wa.Iu.PatiOI Ir. Expoaed Rocks. E x p e r t Workmanship. 642-8514 cusroM PATIOS 6 Block walls. Also ~ sawing & removal. 842-1010. CEMENT Work, all typea. No job too small. Free est. H. STUFLIO< 548-8615 Llcenaed -Qu1llty Cement work. 839-5C56 Child Coro 6610 SPECIAL Summtt program. Ages 2% to 6. 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. $18 week. CI a v I a Y..fontesorrl Schools, 1525 N. Santa Ana, C.M. 646-3706. LIC. child care fOf' 1 or 2; Paularlno. Bear St. area. Bal. IUDC'hel, an a ck z 54&-7809 Contr•ctors 6620 Licensed Contractor Residential -Commercial Main! & Repairs. Fret F.&t 613-2129 Additions * Remodelina: Fred H. Gerwick, Lit. G'?l--6041 * 549-2170 pensers in your area. !Han-'IWIN blue baby 1tro !er Vic dies Nationally Advertised Lag Bch across A r t Snacks and Candy Bani.) Festival. Reward. 837-2638 Draperies 6630 $1350 To $5390 cash requir· GREEN Sc:hwlnn 10 speed "-'===----'-=! ed. For personal interview: bicyrle. Reward. 842-2745 * ZAFFINO'S * send name, address and 25% oft -All fabrics phone number to: Pertontli 6405 1822'h Newport, Of 642-6866 TRAN~WESTERN I~'-'-.;.;.....:.., ___ .:..;.:.;; DISTRIBUTING co. FLY TO CATALINA · 590 N. AZUSA AVE. DAILY FLIGHTS FROM COVINA, CALIF. 91722 ORANGE COUNTY AfR.. BUSINESS OPPORruNITY POARTI: Cata.Ii~; ~!8°s Electrlc•I 6640 ELECTRICIAN, Llcel'll!ied & bonded . Small job1. malnten. &: repairs. 548-5203 MAN OR W01.fAN t ~=~'~r ~'"~"-·~~~~'-u'=-- Reliable person from this NERVOUS? Call't sleep? Try Floors 6665 area to sen.;Ci! and collect "Sleepers." Guar. results or '-''-'-"------'-'-"' from automatic dispensers. money back, Only 9 8 c LIN'OLEtrr.t, carpet, tile. Re- No experience nPeded. , .we Tumer Drugs model, repair. Many re.m- establish accounts for you. LOSE weight 1alely with nant1. Frre uL 839-1677, Car, references and $985 to Dex·A·Dlet Tablets. Only 5-ll-86.54 S 1 . 78 5 c a s h c a p i t a 1 98c at Turner Drug. CARPET • Lie, Contractor necesaary. 4 to U bourst-'~=~~--=---all prices • tree estim.ateg weekly nets e x c e I I e n t ALCXlHOLlCS Anonymooa 546-4478 evenings monthly income. Full time Harbor Arft, PbODe 673·m4 =========! m<n. For local interview P.O. Box U23 Costa Mesa. Girdenlng 6610 write Eagle Jndustrie1, .fl?> DYNAMIC FRIENDS ---------1 Excel~ Blvd., St. Louis Wlth sterl!nz qualities for ANTHONY'S P ark, Mmnea:>ta 554.16 those who care. 539-3341. Garden Service CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE r..1an or woman to rutock Announetmenfl 6410 646-1948 ~ type coin dispenaen LANDSCAPING with high qua.lity package Llfette He•lth Studio LA\VNS RD.fODELED candy produell without '1v· HoapltAUty 11 Our blotto Exp horticulturut. ing up present po1IUon. No FREE STEAM WITH Rea1. monthly Gardeni.1'11 aelllng. Depeodable peraon SWEDISI I MASSAGE J•p1nese G•rdener ran ne t VERY HIGH Open wkdys 10 am -11 pm Exper., complete yard EARNINGS. Requltts S900 Swidaya 10 am· 8 pm service. Free estimates to S3500 cash for lmmedlatt S19 E. Broadw1.y 548-'l!l)8 e 546-0724 51.ar!. Write f~ pt>rsonal ln-Lons BNcb (213) 437.70G9 -.,===-====I te"1ew, givtnf p h 0 n ~1========~ JAPANESE GARDENER numbtt to Inter.State Dltt. FUfMtlll 6412 Maint A rleanup. Reliable. Co., 45.5 E. 4th S. Suite 206, Reas monthly r a t e 1 . Salt Lake City, Utah 84llJ 821-5248 aft 6 pm NlJlVllLE. U.S.A. Is now WESTMINSTER Sl1JDEN'Jl< w0<ki•• ""'' """'""" •wt1catiot>1 tor MEMORIAL PARK way thru cou,... AJ1.., franchises in Orange ~ Broe. 1nd5e grdnn comp. ty. Locatm art waltfna In Mertu1ry I Cemetery lawn care. 646-4203 Anaheim, Laguna B c b • Complet• funen11 MOWING, Edging, vacalawn. Balboa bl.and I other 1.ttaa. from $245 U4.9SO cub req. Full1 Cemetery Iott Gel'! cleanup. Hauling. ltCU.red 1nw11. 1 b o u Id from $130 Odd Jobi. * f)48.-695S return lit yr. call fot appt lncludee Endowment ear. GEN'L Oean·up, tree aerv, &e-7113 or ·wr112 to 1617 Everythlnc tn one bt1.lltlful rototiJ, grading, aprlnklen, WestcUU Dr.. &lite 210 place mean11Je11 cost. lawns, haul'g. Rt>a1. $46..5848 Ne'ol.'Jl0!1 Beech, Ca.I. 92660 No l!'atftc ~ e JAPANESE GARDENING UNIQUE FRANCHISE 14801 Beach, Westminster Service Cleanup, Landsca~ For men &: v.·omm with mrt Sll-1725 193-2471 ing. 531-7034 aft 7p.m ability. ?\o exp; wt train. Cemetery Lets 6411 Cllt t. Edge Lawn Offered by International Maintenance. Llcen!ted. Ylll'd1ge Fair. $15,0XI to WILL Sacrifice f Space 548-41K18, 545-8570 &.ft 4 PM 125,000 invst opet11 reta.U Family Plot Harbor Rest Yard Cleanup Lawn I.Jawing store In assoc wltb this tam· Memorla1 Park Qd. LJ.iht ltauling Powtor Tools ous Co. Jim Owms, 546-4647 Call coll tvd (%13) 59l-20SI Exp, 548.~9&2.2272 SERVICE Fluff &: Fold Memorf I p le 642 Japanese Gardening LA.UNDROi\1AT Establlabed 1 Ir 1 l Pro!eaaional Maintenance 12 :yrs at 788 W. lMh Costa 2 DEXIRABLE Plots fn 646-655.l Mesa, netting $1300. Long Harbor ReM Memo r Ill l JAPANE.5E GARDENER least, auit CIOl.lple. Owners Park. Wlll aacrUlce. $350. EXP.ER. reliable malnt rttltltla. U ~. 1 AM 6 642-4535 call 1:30 AM to 5 Rtu. mo rates. 89'J.-3719. P.M. PM \°""""""====== ~ complete aervtce NEW PRODUCT L•I Noll-6450 Z':: = New m.a1't:t'tina PRCtam f WILL not be retpomlble tor $1100 tnven.tory. .Al Jarvis lit)' debtl odw lbtlll Ill)' m•r1tr!tlnc ~ M6-9'1m own. Atlft'll A. Baluwri REIJABLE: lteu. Orl~tal care. CleMup, odd Jobe, Vincent. M2-o326 r.:: ..... · '-. ~--.·.--~-~ ... -· --. . . . .. -• • • I TU6da1, .My 23, 1968 r::i--i:l>r:---l>r:""-~*:""-~*~--:*~·1:J!_!O!,!l!!S..!•~EM~P!'.!L:!!O~YM~E!!!Nl JOBS • I MPLOYMENT JOBS • EMPLOYMENT JOllS l I MPLOYM!NT I JOBS • I MP LOYM<tC I JOBS • iEMl'LOYMINf 1::.:=..;;...=---~-:1 Help Wanted, Men 7200 1 W .....,. ...-... Help Wanted W od Jobi Mlft, w-. He P •n~. Mon ' -Help W•ntod, !!'In TlllO Women 7400 Help Wonl!ld Help int 1•-Women 7400 __ W.:::.:o::"'".=::":---..;.-::::: Loc1I "l•nuf•clvrer hit ~·--( ...._,_,lo , ..... ~ Salt:• OIUlllRtl n lmmedl•I• openlnp f.r. W •1 COMP uiy COST 1:~'='~~~: J. c. Penney eo. • Prototype Auembler Wireman an t.. I 1,aahloo Uland wD neer A((Nnmlll! l'luUC. ........ Pumonent Nn•por1 8-Now HIRING uun nnv pooit1oo. ExeeUent won· Needs WMdcly1 Went? Whaddy1 Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Specl1l1"R1te we1re-.est11tHs'*' commercl1I firm with llber1I frl1190 benellll. Only people with •I lp1t •fx montht ex- perience t hould apply to 5 11--5 limn -5 bvcb •UL.U -AD MUil IMCLUOli 1-WMt "" -.. Ir.... 1-WMt ""' --......... J-'l'OUll .-. tl!lllJ/W ..._ 6-4 "'-" ........,.._,,., ........ onuNG FOlf U.L• -tlfAOEI OHL.YI P ARAMETRICS PHONE 642-5671 Te Pllce Y-Trider'• Parodi• M 1966 HARLEY DAVIDSON 74 Full Dttu. 16,000 miles TRADE $900 equiiy for PlCK UP. * 847·98f6 • 4 Income units on 21st St. in Costa Mesa. Trade for house or trutt deeds. ln· come $402.50, Ovmer. ·~· NEED MOTORCYCLE Have 1964 Simca, rebuUt e!liine, new tires. $450 or '!' .................. 49+7204 Trade '64 Olda Jet Star 88 New paint ii: tires. Powr str, brka, For TRUCK. STA- TION WAG. or PANEL. 548-1317 alter 6 p.m, WANT TRAil.ER PARK; Will exchange tree & clear attrQge nr. Palm Springa. Val up to $40,0CK> &: assume. 536-llJt CLEAR • 4 Units furn. ocean view, 'h blk. Npt. pier, best rental area. $58- 500 take sm, hse in trade, 2006~ Court Ave., 673-65..'>7 19 Ac orange grove, 1 % mi to new Loma Linda Hospital adj. to re'Sld. development. $11,ro:l per acre. Trade for inco me or ?. Rltr. 642~87 l BR 2 tile baths, large liv rm, din rm, closed in patio. Value $25,600. WANT nice trailer. Leon Vibert. Rltr. 548..ffiSS * * * # 62 Balboa Covn 3 BR waterfront with pier, WW consider anything ln value 929 Baker Street Cotti Mui 5-49-2221 ror dllrerence'above $35,000l--------- loan. l.J 8·7'171 SALES, 3 ONL YI Regardla of 19• or experience $975 RRST MO. ChEAR • 'f 'Units turn. ocean view, % blk. Npt. pier, best rental area. $58,· 500 take sm, hse in trade. 2006~ Court Ave., 67J.6527 Potential ii yoo sincere- LAKE Tahoe View lDt N•· 1y \vant to WQrk end eam vada side, paved $12,500 big money, can follow or- clear. Exchange Ior some--den, )'OU should writ~ bodys headache! Units, one order everyday and if TD'1, or ? Bkr. 675--5726 YoU can do that 4 Income unHs on 21st St. I can offer you in Co&ta Mesa. Trade tor • $125 wMk ly 1af1ry house or trust deeds. In-• I come $402 50 0vmer • New C1~hl11c urn. * ~ ; • Work6hn1d1y -=---"'--~-I • Your office 90 d1y1 2 Bl't ~ condo. on Bch • Executlv• tr1inin9 ~· Vernce, Italy in e.xclus-• Bonus Ian ive resort area. Trade for • No c•n~inlng local area 3 or 4 Br. borne caII Mr M hy S4().9(162 or we. lot or boat. 646-1271 9 Al\t to U = ior appt. WiU trade for house, lot, ear, trailer or '!'. Beaut!. --------- ful 3 BR 2 ba, pool, 132xl35' excl. Palm Springs. $40,000. RJtr. 67~1662 N'pt Shores 3 Br 2 Ba house Club w/pools; walk to bch. $25,0CK> Val; want like borne. in Anaheim, Fullerton, Bue- na Parle. Owner ~1676, Whal do you think of our "TRADER'S PARADISE" Drop us • can!. Oa.ssifled Dept, P.O. Box 1875, D&D,y Pilot, Npt Bch, Cl.lH. * * * Sales Men's Clothing Exctllent opportunity tor thoroughly experienced a a le s m an. Pennanent, full time. Good salary and commission. Fringe benefit!. Apply Mr. Lou Csugle, Mgr. MUWN & Bl.Um SERVICE DIRECTORY General s.,,,1_ 66112 SERVICE DIRECTORY 528 N. Euclid An1Mlm PROFESS. Wind0w, walls & Ur. cleaning: bus i n ess, resld., &: construction. Crystal Window C eaning Free Estimates MS--8737 Shopping Cenlar s.w_~l·~·'--~~~~6N0'-'-'1-~~,,.,,=-~~ Alteritions-642-5845 SALES' N t -REPRESENTATIVES ea , accurate, -yrs. exp. Leading i n depende nt TILE, Cerimfc 6974 specialists ~aling in over H•ullng 6730 --~-------1100 mutual fund.I, expanding --~------* Verne, the nle Man* \,n Orange County, Thi! iA an LnTI..E GIANT TRUCK Cust. work, Inst.all & ~•!rs. o p po r tu n it y , ta enter Hauling. 6' height, 10' bed. No job too small. Plaster dignified professional sellinl'! You name it I haul Reas. patch. Leading shower lull or part time Investment Big John 642-4030 repair. 847-19-57/846--0206 exp not necessary, we train. 547-6621. Mutual Fun d ./ HAULING Trash plckup JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Inve11on Inc. 2100 N. Main, Trimming. Anything • we do Santa Ana it all. Exper work 54:>-2792 Job W1nted, L1dy 7020,1-"'=~..c.,.-~=-=- CLEAN Lots, garages, etc. n rc"'IWl(S TECH LADY With nun;ing •xp. will u.&; lll'l/n Tree removal, dump, skip, backhoe, !ill, grade. 962-8745 care for .lady or gent in your Versltile background In elec- home. Li.¢11 housework OK. tronlc prototype for instru- 73$ Bes! of referencea from Housecleaning 6 local 5-18-4534 menls, tt>ys, etc. re.. Opportunity for CLEANING • Inside-out. CARPET Cleaning. noor Advi ncement Painting, rug cleaning wall at.ripping. Waxing, Walls, i. 'arina Research, Inc. washing. Free est. 646-5103 Windows washed. 531..-0567 M Interior Decor1ting 6737 e Residence · Comm'I • e Painting, Int. & ext. • Custom Drapery • Olstom Carpeting 9 Well Coverings • Color Coordination FREE ESrlMA TE Licensed & Insured MODERN DECORATORS SlS-~13 l======I Ironing 6755 PRACITCAL Nurse wants 8 Huntington Beach ..... ,.., hrs daily. $2 hr. N.B., Cost.a 1 --=~'-"i'-=--Mesa area. 642-1200 BUSDRIVERS ""=============I• Pa rt Time Job Wanted Operate bus in the tntns- Men & Women 7030 poriatlon or school children ---------on daily nm and assigned TOP APT MNG'T TEAM •P'ci" 1ripo. Pay !<hedual' Dix only, N.B. area pre-S2.fi6.SJ.29 per hour. Con- ferred, exper, & rcls. Avail tact Personnel Office, 5J6. Sept. l . 536-1346 93lt Huntington Beach Un- ion High School District. oD_o;_m;...ff.;..1;...lc;...H.;.•'-'l::.p_....:.;703:.::.;5 COLLEGE STUDENT Over l! for Cook • Counter man at night. Xlnt psy, per- fect hn1 + meals for am· bltlons )'OUllg man going to Due to a planned summer expe.ndon program the Ana· heim Division of our ln- temaUooal firm now has need ol sevtral ambldou.a young men 18-26, a mlnl- mum o1 blgb IChool educa· tlon. Exciting jOb OJ'POl'- tunllles for the YoW'll m.n who wishel to be !rained in Pel'IOMel Direction, Ottb! ProceedUl"t'a and Salea ~ molkm. $540 per mo. u l1ry No e.xperlecoe ia necea.w.ry due to the on-the-job tr&in- lng at company expense. Qu&litied men will receive the.Ir tirlt promotion in August. Only apply H you can START WORK THIS WEEK. For immediate consider&· tion call 539-UBl 9 A.M. to 2 P.M. SUPERVISOR Rubber Molding & Fabricating Progressive areospace manufacturer, has a re- qoirement tor a supeIVis- Ol' to manage a rubber molding '-fabricating fa.. clllty. Applicant must be experienced in rubber chemistry and the com- pounding of rubber poly- mers to military specif!· cations. Over all know· ledge lhould include t.ech-- nlques far rubber to me- tal bonding, good know· led(e ol molds &. precis- ion molding, preparation & fuiishing operations. Mail complete resume of qualifications, experience and salary requirements to P. 0, Box 10760 Santa Ana, mu. ITT JABSCO Material Handler Prefer some experience in m•nufacturlng facility. Operates fork lift, drives company II'Uck. G o o d benefits and working ton- ditiOM. F.qual opportunity employer 1485 Dile Way, Cost1 Miu Phoneo 545-8251 (714) • 2 Chopper Oper1tors Experlt"flced wilD glass. cralt choppen. • 3 Fiberglass Rollers Experienced • 2 Bonders Experienced • Gelco1t Touchup APPLY Columbi1 Y1cht Corp. 275 McConnick Ave. Cl>Sta Mesa, calif. FOREMAN YACHTBUILDER Immediate opening in· the Orient for man wilh back· ground as foreman of large U.S. Yachtbullding com- pany, who is expert is ALL pbuec of glass tooling, die- 1el, cablntry, etc. Top ~ portunity and slary tor right man. Send reswne to Box Ml58 Orange Coast Pilot, C.Onfident1al. KEPHART'S CUstom ironing has moved to 130E 17, Suite T, CM. Open Mon-Sat LIVE INS Employer pays fee& George Byland Agency 100 B E. 16th, S.A. 547--0395 Chinese live--ins. Oteerful Permanent. Experienced, College. hnm. opening. Ap---------- Ironing Sl.00 per hr. 646-6054 Far East Agency 642-8703 J1nitorlal 6790 AllOltclff, Men ply today at The Doryrnen Fish &: Chips, noo w. Ocean Front, N.B. Dishwasher APPLY IN PERSON A qualified perom lo II< tm-1111 coodltlons llld all TIME ployed b)' • NtUonall.Y n fM tr'tnie bentfita. PART Known developer spmau~ ~ ww traln but must be over SALESLADI ES lnl bl dPVdopinl regklnal a. with iood f')'e s1ght. ltOIJteWIYet and Motbut lhoPPinl' el!lltm: 6 othtt One to two yean ~ CALIFORNIA Can you ipare a ftw houri -m--'-1 ......,t-t•, Appli-encoe, mu.st N tamWar I 1_.1on Mold lna eeeh day and add to tM .......... ~.....-. .... ¥~ ... -llh D ta --,.ln 10 n -· • l1m1•·· •--me al ,._ ··-• cant.I ahould have an eng\-w · 8 ~'""'"' i· 200 Briags Ave. ., ""'"" u., -·· neerlnl de;tee or eqUtvalent key adding ma.chine, cal-C.oata Mesa 546-4460 time? Scheduals conveni- oonstructlon experience par-culator, ll&bt typing, An equal opportwlity ent Jor you, mornings, alt- "-·'··•~ u a cemstruction pl emoons, f'Yenlngs or combl• u•-~ MASTER em ayt:r natklna of 1111. \Vork: in a ntimator. Mail resume to Wlnmar Co. Inc. 1800 Avenue tun atol't!: Wider the finest of the Stan, &li1e 40'1, Los Waftreues of condl.tloD& and top auper-_....i ... Calli. to u.. '""" SPIDALTl6 CO. -ALSO-vwoo. t1oo of J&n1oa F. Bttwor. ,. _ _...ler Hostess Apply ln ""'°" 1640 Monrovl1 Ave. ~ Penney's FaahloQ l&land Cost• Mes. Neat~. 9:30 a.m. to 9:JO p.m. Fiberglm Moulder 642·2427 .No exper. necessary. ~tonday thru Friday !No students Please) All student positions tilled Wanted' urgently 3 fully skilled flberJ,lala moulders. Hand Jay up, top pay to An equal opportunity employer Appl;; tn pmlOJl Equal oPPOrtunlty employer Bob't Big Boy 15'1: E. 17th St., C.lif. quallfttd mm. Good com-1----------1---------pany b e n e f i t s including company paid health ~ IUl'ance includin& m a j o r medkal benefU1 alter 90 days. NEWPORT BOATS 1919 Placentia, CM. 642..'i371 RRIABLE MAN For 91ner1I produc· tion •ork. Apply •• 19Bi Placentia Costa MflCI HELM'S BAKERY * BANKING * Positlona immediately available at our Harbor &. Wilson branch tor: 11' Experienced Note T1f11r , """ N1w Accounts Cle rk (1xperlenc1 preferred) J;t1 Teller (experience pNferred) Please apply in pen;on !XI: Security P•clfic N1tion1I Bink 2280 Harbor Blvd., CM Equal Oppt;y Employer EXPE~CED Commercl1I Ti ller ApP!y Security PacWc Nat'! Bank 28.11 E. 0:>e.st Hwy, Corona del Mar Radio· Telephone Dispatch Girl Z to 40 years. Must know local area. Apply in pet10n YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th SI, Costa Mesa f;I WAITRESS Experienced in Italian food. Apply Jn person 445 N. Newport Blvd, Newport Beach Interviewing f o r ROUTE 64&-4929 SALE.SMEN. Eamwhll•"'" J. W. Robinson • SECRETARY • train. Company pUd bene-Type 55 wpm, some SH. Ex· fits. 5 day wk. Call between H11 Openings for per helpful. Pleasant Insur- 6-8 am except Thurs. A SWJ. ance otc. Age 22.40. For appt =~-::._ celty Driv" • Cashier-Teller 54&-nro. Secre!ary with teletype ./YOUNG Man over 20 to d' I • experience. Shorthand re- wock 40 boun w"'k 1175 wk. e (re ff nferv1ewer '"""'· Call 673-7005. car nee. For personal int. Ask for Mrs. Alward phone ~ after 5. Experienced * THE TRIP SERVICE Station man, ex. Full Time 1714 Placentia, CM. Now b(r. per. Nlghte &: weekends. A~ Excellent Benefits ing Waitres.ses & Bar Maid!, ply Pfister Union Service 21 to 30. Open 6 PM 2248 Harbor BI., Costa Mesa Apply Personnel LADY to trork part-time in I • 1-4 ~ton thru Frt PLUMBER's He per Wedding Chapel eves as Plumber. 1)111 or part-time. FASHION ISLAND Weddlrig Director. PO Box 646-1930 after 5 PM NEWPORT BEACH 397, Westminster An equal opportunity I W 7300 employer • LITE hskpg. & supervise 2 Agenc "* omen scht, age girls 4 afternoons RHTRONIC ASSEMBLY Point to point wiring and eircult board r e w 0 r k. Night ahilt. APPLY Marshall . Communications 2230 S. Anne St, Sant• An•, C•lif. 540.2820 An equal opportunity employer AllERATION WOMAN For hl&h grnde fashion store. Experlenee in both men's and wom en's pre- ferTed but will train. Off. ers pleasant environment and good company bene- fitll. Apply : BUFFUMS' Fashion Island Newport Be1ch 6Al FRIDAY Baich Arn Opening• per week. Own trans, Lido Exec Secy ............ $61700 C kl 'I W 'f Isle·. 673-4956 Exc<!Uent opportunity for Fee paid. Lite Bkkpg QC ii ii ftSS WANTED exp er ie n c e versatile girl with growing Med Ofc Trne •••••• $325/350 chairside dental assistant. publishing company. Strong Gd cype, llOrtle olc exp Over Z1 Salary open, 54&-&%f. or general ottice background, NCR 3200 ..... , . , ...... $400 Apply in person eves. 646-2634 good typist, shorthand pre- A/R • Ali' • Payroll 9-5 p.m. NURSES aid, experienced ferred. Wrtting OT advertis- Payroll , .............. , ll18 preferred. Apply in person ing experience helpful. SaJ. Will train RfUBEff £. W Laguna Beach N u r 1 In i ary open, Phone for ap- Acctg Clks ••••• , , ,, ••••. $400 Home Phone 494-8075 pointment. ~25 M SO -'-='-"'=-"'"""----' 642-9470, Mr. Merrl•m Stal type .............. I S.. 151 E. c~.t Highw1y IDLE Jirs make Dollars! Be Pa.rt Hme.' Newport Baich a F'ulleretle S2 hr guar. We lo========= Also fee Jobs train. HB Mrs. Dre e s J R l'i A """ Jobt-M•n, Wom. 7500 . . erce ssoc. Abency lcciWrii.i:EscEiiiTAiiDii l !-~19':""'...~~----1885 Newport. C.M. 642-6720 CONVALESCENT AIDE Bii d S h O REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't For prlvale home. Full or n titc ptrs. l A '"'~. mach. garment mf"". you be selling the botte1t PBX •286 pert t me. nY age. .,.,.,,,, •· / H • HOUSEKEEPER 1580 Monrovia N.B. 642.2566 area untington Beach?' N-~ed ··"-• w·,th a . Call I t y ;n •• '"""" v01'"" Live 111 or out. Full or part PART TIME RESTAURANT !162....f4~ ~OO ._e R. E. time. No ftt! ~!.,~d1ys & eves. Phone =========== HOMEMAKERS -.r-Help W1ntacl smile. Exp or tmee Fila Clerks $311 1638 E. 17th, SA 547~ DENTAL RECEPI10NIST Women 7400 Exper only, minimum age 25 _.;.:..:;:;;::::.. ___ ..:_;:::: Earn while you learn. No exp needed. Clerk Typist $336 Nalionwide co need1 aharp )'tltmg women. e UNIQUE e PLACEMENT AGENCY 1885 Park, C.M. 646-8S31 ARGUS JOBS GALORE WORK NEAR HOME WAITRESS Experienced, over 21. SI.80 per hour, Graveyard Shilt. Contact - Mr. Zimmer 675-4004 MATURE Woman for part time cleaning in medical bldg. Tues, Wed, Fri, Sat. Start ll.'15 per hour. Call 642-0446 for appt. A/Pa, • payroll ...... !450 ...:.c:;.0:;.R:;.O.::E;.R:o:Te::A::..K_E_R_S_ Gal Fri.day • • · · · · · ·· •· · $500 Mahn"~ women • girU. Full or Exec Secy .......... to $550 •• Da part ume. YI or evening!. ARGUS EMPLOYMENT Ptcuant worl< lrom ...-ott- CONSULTANTS AGENCY Ice. SaJary $1.65 hr. Call ::1>43 Wt'Slcltff, NB 548-7796 ,K~l~7~·l:J:2J:bo~lo~"'~5 ~P::;·m;:. __ 1624 E. 17th. S.A. 547-6336 SECRETARY-LEGAL with Probate experience for See Betty Bruce mt Inheritance Tax Div, of Cr- inge County Appraisal Firm. m• fl Shorthand nol nee. Xlnt pot· £jj C xec ential! Salary open. 547-0038 yrs, 847-4,;77 Dial 642-.5678 for RESULTS OFFICE ATLANTIC RESEARCH in Costa Mesa bas the followiftg immediate administrative openings: Security Assistant (Clerical) Mwt be experienced in DOD industrial security procedures including do cument control, personnel security, and ven- dor I subcontractor liaison. Must be able to accurately type P.S.Q. forms. BRIGHTER SIDE Jan Ser Crpt cleaning, firs, wndows lndust'I, Resid'I. 548-4134 7100 newport . personnel BOAT MECHANIC ExperlenC1!d with diesel and other marine installa· tions. Cocols Agency for C•reer Girls 0PPORTI1NITY To earn S200 UO W. Coast Hwy., N.B. lo $300 • month and more Repro Typist (on call) Varied hours. Publication typ- ing requires 60 w.p.m. on IBM executive, ability to work fro m handwritten copy plus under· standing of editing marks and line justification. One year experience in Repro typing preferred. Landsc1ping 6810 CORRAL'S Lndscpg & Rototilling Sen'-Free est. (!£ave own equipment 962"""4764 Paperh1nging P1intlng 6150 PAINTING And Papering. U you call me we both benefit Exclusive buy not expensive Tl'l' me and SH· 541-3151 e Schwartz Wall O;tvertngs • &: lnstal "Paper BuaY" {paper sto~) 847-1659 ___ agency Jensen Marini Corp. 235 Ficher. Cotta Mesa By appoinL 646-3939 part time with chance for Famous Hamburgers ••v'"'''"'"" eau ..,...,., to see if you can quailly. STAFF ACCT ...... lO $9.roo 1555 w. Ad1m& Help W1nted After 3:30 Unusually progrt>S&ive STOC"K CLERK $450 per Costa Ma. Wom.n 7400 I =ST=AR=T~Y~""-'---,-wn_bus_lneu __ " finn oUen rapid advanc-month to etart, 5 Day week. ---------·I Public Steno. Will tum. of- ment &. independence lo a Will train. No e>eper1ence ---------·I 3 GIRLS flee free for 2 mos. and degrttd man with 1·3 yn necK58I'Y· Write qualifica· Easy pleuant t et e phon e some acctA. Call Mr . of CPA exp, Fastest tione, welght A height to CAREER ~ for penonablc girl.I A Hickman, 87S-3793 grov.·lng firm in Ameri· P.O. Box 145. Co5ta Mesa, OPl'ORTUNITYI women. 5 day ~1k. 32~ hrs. -"'==::...::::..:::.:::_ __ can Jnstitule. Emplover California. 9:2b::.7 DRAPERY Workr oom , J 1 od 1 $1 .70 to start. t.fust start im· t&blers • power mach. pays tee MEN o n I •YI astest growing 1 1Y g..2 657 DRAM'SMAN ...• , • to Si' ,200 YOU NG profe8'1on-MutuaJ Fund sales ~:1~:~ :~t:~ O>sta .Mesa ~rawtors. 18'7 ,•chs Drapery, Ovll engrg drafl.lni. Good No experience neces1ary. """ · t t., C.M. ink exposure. A1nt bene--Over JB. Full or pt time. \\'etraln ·f\!Dor p•rttlme STENO. Ch•l l e ngi n g l,C,......,;;_:,;:.•:_ _____ _ f:lls. Ideal location. Fee Take I deliver aales orden Mutu•I fund AdvltorJ, opportunlly in advertising WOMEN Telep h o a e in. relmbuncd. h'om boltesl •ppta. Car nee. Inc. agency. Must be aceurate tervlewen to l\'Of'k from Aho f~ position Sa.Lary only. No eanYU51n&. Npt 8. 1603 Westcliff 64U4l2 typist 5 day week. The home for fine Ce.JU. Dept. 833 Dover Dr., N.8. ~ a1t l p.m. S.A 1212 N. Broadwa, Lanadale eo.. 6i;)-3390 Store. call 8t2-840'J betw 642-3870 5-49-2743 M-hanlc 547-8331 AID worlrin• 1mthor 5 da wk.I ~.0,0-;,2 ==~----.... 9.S. 2 chldrn, Ute housework. iABYsl'ITER. My borne. Own trans. M•ture woman. 7:'5 AM HI 4:'5. Mon thni 839-1759 aft 5 pm. Fri. s mo old &irl $25 wetk. PAINTING lnlerior/Exterior. f'ree Estimatn! Help Want9d Men 7200 Tor-pay, full co. benefitl, ---------* ..,..... • 54U712 • -~--· ---1 ..,.. w""'"" """"'"'"" Clay Shop Tr11'nee ~""==-o--====-1 Fry Cook E-RAY VINES INTERIOR i: EXTERIOR BOB'S COFFEE -SHO,..P. • Clu°)'aier Plymouth lle•vy work. Permanent position. Starting wage $2. per hour. Apply Palnllfll. Ftte estimate. an Willow Lie. it Ins. arucx 548-5314 1400 s. El C.mino ReBJ. Long Beach S.n Oemente 492-1.353 * Paperhanging • f\fECHANlC _ Exptt Costa Ovtalde Sal•m1n Expert 1'ftM Auto Work~ 2098 For large Service C~pal'I)'. lndustri&l 0.y Praducu 18766 Fhrgt.au Rd , lluntlngton Beach, Ca.lit. ~1"4. eves. P1aCt'fltl CM. Sal&ry plu1 commia!ion. Car a. neceaary. Apply 9 am 12790 Plumlllrtt PUJMBING U Hr. l6V. Work auat'· Lie.. bur.; rtmodd, repair, rooter .erv. 531-7566 e U HOUR SERVICE e Plumbing • ttpalrt, mnodel· tna. Electrtc ..,er dean- ing. All wartc CUU'· &t6-lt0'7 SERVICE Stat. AtttndanL Wt'ltern A\lt., G~ Gro\le ---~F\ill~-.-,,,.-- Exper., full time. 1897 or~ 397.1093 i:-~ l'tacentll (ror w. !7) CM. BOYS WANTED Melntenan .. Men BOYS wanted lC.17 )TL PlU't for Good company beneft thne. WW ~tn for ntwspa· outside o les in att"moon C.11 ror •ppotntrnen per a:tutftng. 540G1T ud evening for newspaper. 540-5Cri0, ext. 30 "· t DI.AL dbwct Kl-5611. °"'1e Pleo,. coll 8936m. JoMph Mqnln ,_Id( -... -... DollJ Pllol ..... _, An .................... llstm to .. ,_ ..... Al..,. a Go-Go! -... Doout Shop nlte &ill. No 962.B!m after 5 PM exp nee. 25-45. Apply Mr. LlVE In babyaltier wanttd. 1 Doout 135 E. 17th St. CM child • '"' """''"'· $20. • SEAMSTRESS. dry cleM-fntervlew btwn 2-t pm at 301 Ing expmima!d. Permanent 15th St. Apt 1 Hntg Bch Call ~l-9550 before noon D R A p E RY workrtxmi HskP-eoolc it child Cl~· mM:hlne open.tor, Good JMlJ' Own room. 'IV. Refs. Perm. and w or kl n 1 CUldltionl. 536-124! Huntington Beach JIAlls o1 Hununatoi. 536-Sm BAR MAIDS it DANCERS BAIIYmTER WANl'EI> Top wqu. Quttn Bee, Lin in or Cllt. $25 • $3G O.t& Mesa 640-9935 * 54&-1009 ., t'OUNTER Waltrns for boat, UVE In ll&keeper 2 cbildnn. av~ 2L Mult be stwp..will Salary ~. SP&ft)ah apeak. tnln. 642..39Sl (7-9 pm) 10(-1 dllld OK. ~ Dime ••• l.IDe atARGI: m Senior Purchasing Clerk Requires two years clerical ex· perience in Purchasing field plus typing speed of 50 w.p.m. Shorthand is desirable. Will be responsiblo for establlsh- Jng and maintaining purchas. ing files and records and sup- pcrtlng Purchulng Supervi· s1on as required. Contact J.im Zampelh (714) 546-8030 MluUe Syste1111 Division Atlantic Research . Corporation. A Div. of The Susquthenn• Corp. 3333 .Horbor .Bl•d., Cool1 .-. • A" •111111 •ppltf'hl11ll'J '"'Pl..,1r l. ,. ' - °""' Optr--: . S&lar)' $4584551. ... Pooltlon to be ftDed ........ tatcl.1. /l,ppUcaDtl m •• t have one year ~ on otfalt duplicatvr. ~,tf. do tlaht-t•ble ml - room woric. ·~ Audio VlaUll Oper- Sal""' $436-$530 •• Position to be filled trnni9J. to.t.ely. Duties lnclode ~op­ eratlnl Yll'iou A.V. equtp. ment aJto perform.Ina: llpt maintenance and m:ordl Ot\ A.V. and oUice «#> ment. Appllc&ntl aboukl have audio Yilll&l er efec. tronlCI ~ . APPLY OrlnflO C011t Col .. 27ol Fairvlew Roacl • - Costa Me•& ~ .. RfSTAllRAIT HELP .. ~· .. Quallfted to worl< In blib grade Dining room. MqQ. day, Th..-.day ml ·J'llr· day nights, all da,y Sltu:r- day. • 2nd Cook • W1itren • Dl1hw1aher ,. • Otters pleasant ~· ment and eood com~·. benefits. Apply: BUFFUMS' . Fashion Island Newport 8e1ch ... •Tool Maker .. e Spray Painter .. • Assembly ()'pent (factory experience r.qulml) COLUNS RADIO CO. 3324 W. Warnet • S1nt1 An1, C11ff.• All •pplict.nts reviewed~on merit with no bias towVd Race, Color, O'eed or Sex. GARTH S. BERGESON 1720 TRAOE WIND LANE . NEWPORT BEACH You .re the winner of 2 t1ckrta to the LIDO THEATRE ._.., THOROUGHLY : MODERN MILLll.-· Juat clip thll ad and take il to the Lido Theatre ill Newport Beach with iderl li· , fica tlon. Offer good threup July 30th. MOLDING Mlchlne Oper1tor1 Plastlc, inJecticm. Perm.' nent position. ~ll«tt work conditiooa:. Orfr. time and all fringe bene- flll. Must be experlenc-• ed. ~o phone calls afteC' l P.M. CALIFORNIA Infection Moldlftf 200 Briggs Ave. Costa Mesa M8-HllO An """' -,. emplayer ... Police Dlopllclter Cllrk Male or female (Open A In- ternal) $474-$575 per month. : lUgb &ehool graduate, one , year clerical experieace, type 40 w.p.m. RoU:dng . shifts. excellent fringe bene- fits, residence not requlr@d. Apply Westmlnlter Qty Hell, 14381 Olive Street bdre Augwit 7, 1968. Written team AU&ttst 17, 1968. 893-«ill• Now Hiring - • Fry Coo .. !24 hro) • Broiler Men .. • W1ltl'ftlel Golden 1u11 ·• El Toro 830-0440 1lfE famous Ben Blown'• openlna •wrvx l m o , loca.ted •t LAl'lft.I Beeeh C.C. Now lntervlewin1 tor cooks, w..l~. widbr111!1, bus boyt. 1rttchen help. A~ ply in pel'llOll cmly, ·Mr. MOM, 2 pm • 5 pm dai171 31106 S. Coast Hwy, S:111D t.a,clma BROILER M.n; , park1nc atlendant; 2 -la &IN .... 21. ApplJ "" . 90l1 2-5. , ... "nie Pirett'• Inn 4-40 Hellotropt, ~ ~ DlSI'RIBUTORS W a D t t 4. N1turo1...--·No lnvettment car when qualllled. -..... Full or put ttme. c.n -lect 213 Wl'·M:I BAKER -EulJ -..... • nl.te lhiftt.. No pbcme caJlil, plnae. Wlnchell'• Dmal Shop. 2911 H.&rbar, CM :.L" • e F<yc.olt e WolU.. QF!. .... 1 e-e ~ "'-'or's ........ --- -: -~ ' I ' J I ,, • . I -- , .. OAllV "LOT Tuttc!•f, J1.111 Zl.1968 JP9S " EMPLOYMENl I ME RCHANDISE FOR MERCHA NDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOii SALE AND TR.ADI TRANSPORT ATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION •~ SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TR.ADE SALE AND TRADE ...,.nc1e1, Mon a • -SALE AND TRADE S1llboob • 9010 Moforcycl" 9300 lm portld Auto• 9600 -'-------1 %1' MOLDED African Mabot;. F. HOCKLER ; M'°"*' 75 50 -Fumltu,. IOOO Furnltur~ IOOOFurnfture IOOO ... 1 ~1 -1210 Hl·FI & Sl1reo M lscell1neout 1600 KARMANN GHIA ----'---- }(J remier Decorator Spaal1h I Meclitt • Showroom Samples 8' Wood carved arm dlvan, Jg. man's chair; beaut fabrics. 5 Pc hexagon dark oak din. set W/blac~ or avocado tramed chairs; 5 Pc BR set, ~ Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 commodes, paneled headboard. STEREO 1968 solid 1tsta, console model. Uke MW. Balance f19,3S or 1mall pu.ymentt. Oedlt Dept. Sl>-1289 H ENRY CLARK 1515 . P LACENTIA COSTA MES-" You art the wiMtr of 2 tickett: IO the: P.llboat. Sl?• 4, ractn1 aail•, 1753 SANTA ANA head, ~aey, Mtrc. Motor, COSTA MESA Exceptional value! (114) OV. 5-eill3 after 6, or can be teen weekendl:, Georp 8. fl.1cAlllster. Seawall No. 13 Udo PeM. Yacht Anchorage 28' sotOONER, 1900; gaff rig, fully eqUi.p., all new nil•: Must tet. to apPrtt . Wiii sell or trade for other boat or ttaJ estate. &lS-90J Ol' S32-2068 (eves.) You are the wlnnu of J tk:keU to the l9Q.. KARMEN GHlA. Im. mac, cond low mUe&gc. $1850. 6'f5.55n MERCEDES IENZ .. • r ,. •• • • -• • • PUSONNEL AfHNCY 445 L 17ttl It. :,. 1104 L 17th St. • -~ ~ • • • • • • ' MALE STRIPl'ER ·TO $4 HR. ~·d camera man nqu.Uve stripper. ' CLHKS .. ..., $2 HR. • and Y~ng men. High school ~. military complete are neotded 85 shipplng & te· c:d"vlng &: stock men tor ~enl po61lion. r • : YOUNfi MEN · • START TO $575 2 : yn; college courses tn chemistry, math or physics I\~ for salaried ftt and tree posltlol\5.. • • • . ' • EL ECTRONIC REPAIRMAN $2.50 HR. ,.,;;ubleshoot & repair ma- r~ e communications e~pment & various tronic d~ires. •• l!llSPECTOR TRAINEE • FROM $1.65 • Virsatile HS grad with mWtary complete to in· sJleet and package for st(fm t'IL ~ ;! MECHANICAL ~ROUILESHOOTIR ·: TO $4 HR. Fci an experienced marine mfchanic. ~ ii •· MECHANICAL • Dl!AFTSMAN :.' FEE PAID :'. FROM $525 ~ 2 ~ mechanical engineer- in~ math thru trig. For- !llfCI physics study. Int op- ~unity to advance. .. , fiENERAL . : ACCOUNTANT . ~ $550 .. 2 "')'rs college ac;,counting wQrking towards degree. $qme exp. CEMENT FINISHER TO $tf HR. Elq>erienced finisher. .. FEMALE . )/C IOOKKEEPH ~ $l HR. ~~anent part time. Able to:t.Bke over thru TB, Will be' "'orking with pub!Jc ac-rioiuttant. Approx 24 hour \lo'~k. VARITYPIST FEE PAID $375/400 1· 1ear exp as paste-up & layout & varitypist. Xlnt qpportunity to advance. ;ACCOUNTINfi CLERK : • $411 ' . ~ 45, Prefer 1 yr. col- l~';! acctg. Thru TB, know Ge!U.t & credlL ::t-/C BOOKKEEPER ' ~FFICE MANAfiER • $4SO Seavy exp on A/Payable, A ~Receivable, Insurance !.om1s. Accurate typist. ' -·-, . , DMV CLERK $500 E~rlenced ne"' & us('d can:. 111ust be able to take o\A!!t, Will train in PBX re-licC ·~ PQONE RECEPTIONIST .. $346.'7 ~ win spend majority of UllJl' on phones Plnd di 11- pak.hlng calls. Ty(X' 45 m@ual. -:lSST IOOKKEEPER :; $100 WK. ~ D<C journals and receipts. Rc.ponslble yo ung girl. • • • . '• -. .. • IROKERAfiE TRAINEE $350 . -Acwrate typi ng. Will be ta~ht cru;hle.rtng and all phatea of brokerage busl · .... :. lflslDI COLLECTOR c : $346.67 ~ N'a~g or skills necM"-~. • !;Orileon" who i.s not ab1Dd to uk for money. .... blve food cre<liL ~ ;;i rANOGllAPtf :t Ol'UATOI • • $1.71 HL > traln to operate en· ~..I machine Uled tar ;;.,c:-,....,...,. Ale 20 or . •• :J&o • Receives ' Cancellation VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE $429.95 or terrris a low I S $3.00-wffk Items Sold Individually -No Down - Use Our: Store Charge -No Fancy Front but -'Quality Values Inside! Sportlnt Good• ISDO SURFBOARD 9'8" Jacobs, 3 mahog 1trlngen, mahog tall block, siml.speed Skai:. Xlnt oond. 830-1954 SURFBOARD. Ruuell 9'7" Speed Shape!, like new. • 6r;>-27JO * LIDO THEATRE Showing THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE LIDO THEATRE Showing THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE Just clip tblS ad and take it to the Lido Tbt>atre ln Sailboat Ballast Newport Beach with identi· ' • • of $22,000.00 Spanish & Mediter- Approved Furniture· 2159 HarbOr, CM Dilly 9.9, 10-5 Sund1 y e 54a.9UO SURFBOARD 10' U6ed twice Llke new, $50. 6"2-t283 aft 5:30 Just cllp lbis ad and take It lO the Lldo Theatre In Newport Beat.'h with identi· ticatlon. OUer gOOd through J uly 30th. 20,000 lb h•1d shot fi cation. Offer good tb.roulh July 30th. Cheap! 67 KAWASAKI Scrambler 120 DIRECT from Genn811Y 1964 * 548-3074 * cc 2,IXXI ml. Lesa than I year 230 SL convertible, p/s p/b, SOfOCK EndeaYor 26• sloop old. Lots_~ chrome, street A: side facing rear seat, radio, r•ce eq. Cruise. Terms trial eqwpmi!nt. $325 or Be!il mint t.-ondltion, all service avall. 834-2037 days, Oller. 962-7639 proYen. Call coll. 494-0002 SWIMMING POOL any ti me. 541~157 eves. '68 YAMAHA 305. Big Bear 1..:=...=c,-c.,-~---0 I Scrambler Perfect cond. 1960 GRAY Mercedes 190. S550. 548-74n Good coodltlon. $650 962-IID6 ranean Furniture All New Top Quality Brand Names! A Decorator's Dream Home is on Display Over $100,000 worth of ~· Spanish & Mediterran- ean furn. to choose from. (EXAMPLE> Sout ... rn Californi1'1 Lr.1r9"t Modern w:1:~·1t··1u cf iois Op.n Da lly 9 Im to 9 pm for lnsp•ctlon conveni•nce -•-.-.-*-* * ~ *-*-•-.. Always 300-400-500 lots of top quality n•w & uw d br1nd na me f urnishing to choose from * Complet• houstful -living room H ts -d in ing room H ts -b.droom sets - ma ttr•11 nt1 -limps -t1bl•s -d•cora· tiv• pi•ces -d ish•s, £tc., •tc • Coming in d1ily -reposs•ssions -est•t•• -s1mpl•s -consignmt1nt1 -household - d1maged freight -van & stor•ge lots - trade-in s & ban kruptcy. Mor• thin 200.300 r•frlg•rators, wash•r1, dry•rs, fr•ezers, ironers. stoves, Maple Color Combo TV's Buy one pi•ce or 1 complete hounful 18 Ft Pool, Filter, Surface Skimmer, Maintenance Kil FREE Ground Pad. $149.18 SECARD POOL 323 S. Main, Orange 5J2.1992 NAPLE.5 Sabot fiberi:lass Complete $150 Oceanic Yachl: Sales • 642-5151 • 20' Clipper class sloop Just painted. $600. * 675-2176 * SNOWBIRD No. 561. Motorscoot•rs 9350 Allstate Motor~r "Cruisaire" Almost new Sacrifice $210. 833-2079 Xlntl========== Tr1il•r, Tr•vel 9425 New & used $97.50 up. Table Misc. Wint.d 1610 cond. Well equip. S400 tennis, Poker tbles, ban & ii~~---·-iiiiiiiiiiiio--__ _:*..:'::7:1-31:...:::":_*c___ u _ STORAGE, Tra ers, boata, stools, indoor games, etc. RHODES 33. Many Salli etc. $7.50 per mo. Work Discount prices! BADGER c A s H. Good Cond. $3,750 .space. 642-2601 & 548-3261 SALES, 409 S. ·Main, Orange * 543.3531 * C ll ~ k o::~D n'>11 n..__ '66 NIMROD Tent trailer-. or a "~an ......,...,,.u, '-'!"'='' -!IOURL YRENTAIS 12-8 p.m. except Wt'd. Have everything. Mint cond. Paid tor; * RHODES 19'8 * $995. * 549-0938 * AUCTION * I Furniture I Appliances Fun zone Boat Co., Balboal========= U ~ will sell or buy I Antiques I Tools -Trucka 9500 give Windy 11 try I Color TV's I Stereos Power Cruinrt 902011 ;.:.:;.::::: ____ _.:= Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. One Item or S """" --58 P.U. ~Ton, 8 cyl. 8' bed W" d , A Complete Housefu1 OYIEN 30' "'"".,reu cruiser Top o:>nd Best of f e r • in Y s uction Barn Call 517-6748 or 827-Bm twin JTt. Double planked 546-2178, 2723 Glenwood Pl, Behind Tony·, Bldg. Mal'l hull, teaked decka, 200 s.A. 2075% Ne~rt. CM 646.s686 w A N T E D hours. Monet gas tanlul, r.o l,ro"=RD~-v~AN--bou-.,--.,.-, FOAM RUBBER gals. fresh water. 65 watt . ' , cut to size. s/s. n...-.th finder bait cabmetry, 90% complete, Uph supplies, fabrics, "';'"" • xlnt 6 cyl w/stand trans. naugahyde . Fact, outlet. WE need quality (no Junk tank, winch & roll~r. Teak S750. or small boat foe part . Low pre. A·l Foam Fabric pl easel • Furniture, Color swim step, cockpit cover, ~5289 & Upholstery Supply Co., JU TV 's, stereos, appliances, nylon lines. Sleeps 6. $12,5001,;::;::;::=='°",---,,-- E. 5th St., s.A. 835-1181 tools & office equipment. by owner. 546-1200 '65 ECONOLINE Van. Heavy AUCTION WED BOUND ,.,-tin. g b . TOP CASH IN JO Minutes 25, OWENS Cab. cruiser; duty, Xlnt cond U450. Call I SAT I SUN '" .,.... · e 1 g e 531·1112 * 893--0555 642-26116 SOI nylon. I2 x 18, 91~ x 10. & xlnt cond., loaded; sac! 1.:.::....:==-----,. EDULE 1 pm 7 pm l pm 2\i x 10. Xlnl! Cost $600. WANT Dynatone fa cial ex 547-TIOJ; 67f>.S008 eves. '57 CHEV .Y,i ton pickup ~"l!"~"S"r:~~~~~-;..-J Sac! sm. s drawer walnut erciser in good condition. $325. Fair condition 1 block Open 9 to~-tor Inspection chest $40. 642-5845 Reas. $16-2551. ext. 202 days Spffd-Ski 8o1t1 9030 • 847·5892 • AOK FR G or 962-8434 e11es -· --·· '66 DODGE Van. V-8, Auto. W, of Be1ch I IDAIRE Refri~.. like 14' SKI Boat w I 35 HP R/H, All window. Lo mi. Hwy 39 Commission G•ll•ries new, breakfast set, (wrough PETS ind LIVESTOCK Evinrude comp. re b 1 t · n100 •499-4<65 7722 G1rd•n Grove Blvd.~ ~7Both xlnt co nd · motor, A·l shape! $500 . .;;:======== Items as follows: Gor-~ -~~~==---1 Cits 8820 642-0427 Eve CamP9n 9520 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ' e VACUUMS e 2 BLUEPOINT Siamese, 4 SSS Taperflex water ski. Ex- aft 5:30 '68 t.1ERCED~Benz Z20S 26,000 Olig mi. Lthr int. Su· per cood, $2800 54$.5't59 aft 6 MG -------'68 MG GET OUR LEADERSHIP SAVINGS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! ~eMLlmU • IMPORTS 1966 ti arbor, C.M. 616-9))3 FOR Sale '66 MGB Rdstr. Zl,000 mi. Xlnt cond. Radio, wire whls, wsw, o'drive. 52000, Call 545-2045 aft 6 Daily '58 MGA, mech n e w . Rebored. pistons, r i o g s , valYes, bearings, clutch, brakes, seals. 547-33n Mike 1960 MG Wire wheel.s, new tires, disc brakes. All good cond. Best offer. 962~813 PORSCHE '66 PORSCHE -912; immac. cond. Loaded! Mu.st sell! 548-9534 After 6 PM SPRITE -------1 geous 8 ft. custom Quilt· j . $10 up, Repairs I: parts. mos old. Shots &. hsebrkn, 1 ceUent slalom ski $35. 40 FT. ACF BRILL Anhqueis 1110 Rt'asonable. Coe.st Vacu um Converted Continental Trail- ed sofa with sepa.rate --333 E 17 h CM femle, 1 mle. 4M-6327 -====-='='="=*=== b All w wer '66 Sprite Convert. . . School .. lnstructlon 7600 * FINE SELECTION · t , , &t2-1560 '==°'======= .;; way us. ne po I II th h UPHO' <"'l'r" ... ,...,G -B SI" M • 9036 train, engine, trans, etc. Near new, white leather top, oose pt ows WI eavy SOIOOL Otildren's vacati OF OVER 75 ...., ... ; .• n.i.H -$79.50, 2 Dogs 8825 oat ·~-.. ~!'~'-·-Fully self contained, many exotic blue bottom. $200 Cash on ANTIQUE CU'.X"l\S pc. (European craftsmen) and make low payments of oak trim decor and rates. Chilcoat 10-Lesson k Sch 1 d t Free est, del, pickup, 215 ITALIAN GREYHOUND pup-IT'S SMARTER custom features, including Typing School. 548-2859. 173 now In stoc . , oo, cpo , Main, HB "Bemy'' 5J6..6405 pies. A.KC reg. Otampion TO CHARTER ceramic tile in baths & ki.ch $36. month. Will guarantee matching chair, 3 match· oak occasional tables, {2) Del Mar, C.M. Grandfathers, calendar!li, c-• 25 . Rawson JO • Albero en, fully carpeted through: for 6 months. After 12, . many Vienna regulators, 62 MATCHLESS motorcycle breed. Ideal pet.I. 1 male, 1 tu '" 494-9773 or 639-3617 Pupil ~ Seg I f I IJ.25 00 ,-• · I d ,?<:: • o -·-tv 40 • Newporter out, etc., $9500. will consider l =========I '" ova m8 ntie clocks. LOW PRIC· Sl'iO. 64 Opel $700. '28 Mail ema e. · e =· 11lC u -'"' UV<U••3 Teaches cla&Sical guitar ES t k ·~ k ing shots and papers. Call ketch • Mariner 40 • Scoon· trades. Prefer JO to 40 ft TOYOTA 58" tan decorator lamps, Pete.r Thompson 548-2652 LA~RY MORGAN Antiques ~~557tt·5 Des S 2 0 • 64&-1481. ers. 2'1' Fairliner -JO' Tro-boat. Bus. phone 892-6655. 7-'.C.-c--.~--~-jan • 38' Spt Fisher . numer-lfome phone 5JO.m96 Al Long 1----------1 hanging chain s w a g MERCHANDISE FOR 2-128 Newport Blvd. ?.1ade to order -any color, GORGEOUS Olocolatt' Male ous others. '62 ECONOLINE c~ ...... ""'' '68 TOYOTA Costa Mesa * 548-73RJ ""' t toy poodle AKC 6 wks. $100. ... .. ,,~ lamps l·n wrought 1·ron, -'\LE ANO TRADE Vl'"et1ra or grapes, candles & CALIFORNIA CRUISES Rebuilt engine, stove, sink, other ac~es . ..,_,.38 * 536-7017 * F I From I 20 ye;trs in Newport ice box, closet, carpet & GE'T OUR LEADERSHIP SA VIN GS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! an 8-piece king size mas-urn ture 1_000 Alromotlv• Co. l ,000 WATT Sears portable AKC Sable Col ie pups, 548-4191 double bed. $850. 546-9657 alternator. Good condition. 6 wks., champ. sired. ter bedroom suite in pe· Fu 1 mi!ured•,eturned trom dis-J11500us~ ~t~l & wood50d•0•1ks, SS5. 540-S2S9 $SO & Up. 1142-7318 W0AN1T t22o, renil\ .. ~itp 64or2 2~i!!,e ~t1AKEC oiler? Kt ~J~slp"i De-ejeQJl Lemu• pay stu os, model homes, u,,......, ,_,,airs, over es, e or sa uua . -""'• wee amper a LJ<N acen· can paneled mediter-decorators cancellation. misc. safes & fire fil es. EL Erl'RONJC Equipment S55· Weimaraner ''gr e Y ext 341 (8-SJ or 541·5'r.iJ after tia. Newpt. Space C-11 . Spt1nish & MeditciTan('an clc 1830 So. Anaheim Blvd. and parts. Oscilloscopes + ghOst", puppies, t e r m 5 5:30. IMPORTS ranean style with top RD FURNITURE Anahei m, Calif. T7Z.S450 o resistors.µ 8-2937 available 839-1746 l ·CAL=-.,,~--NS=EDS=-s-L_l_P Dun• Buggies 9525 quality 15 r t Alongside S.A. Freeway tJ I ---------Irish Setter Puppil'fl starting Sept. 1. -·-----y . warran y 1844 Newport Blvd., CM Kolella FREE TO YO AKC Reg. Male11 & females • (714) 675-4639 * BAJA BUGGY BUILDERS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 king size mattress & box every night til 9 ~~~,,,.~~~!!!!!!!!!!!! U • 546-4789 • Completed Buggies & Acces- springs. Spanish decor, _w_ .. _ .• _s._t_. _•_s"_"_· _·"_·1_'_ ~usi~:I -,~~-t. ·9·125 0 ·-R-G_A_N-IC_F_•_ru_·1-;,-,.-.-ho-,-se POODLE pUppies. wh i te Bo1t·Y1cht sorks. Used vw Parts TOYOTA •· manure & wood shavings. female, black male. $25 ea. Ch1rt•rs 9039 201i:;::wie:.~~~~~ad HEADQUARTERS dining set , e tc. etc. A ny DBL mall.N!ss &. box spr!ng. RICKENBACKER D e I u x e Combined mulch & c!l6:::_2-.:21::!16;:___=~~=-' Twn mattress & box spring. h 1 ·~ El 2 . 1 AKC BASSET PUPS BLUEWATER CHARTERS · be h d Br SS 1 1 bk f1 1 al ow uuuY ec 1 string ferti izer. 546-49JI aft 2T'40' U·DriYe Skip. Av-" Import.ct Autos 9600 piece. can pure ase ~':e~k=k lamp.a~~l guitar. Cost $600, .sell $400. 5:30 8/15 Tri.colored. ReA!tOn. 54(}.8638 Day/wk. 646-!llXXI 24 hr:" individually. _Drop by offer. 962'4384 S4S-74n COLLIE 2 yr. male. Very af. e CHARTER THE FINEST and see our selection o( 50" ROUND maple table, no ELECTRIC guitar, coil hcord fectionate. To good home. Hors-_s_, ____ 8830 WE BUY ANY CLEAN LATE MODEL SPORTS CARS. New 40' KE"tch 673-2517 • 675.2400 chairs. P('rf games or din-S~5: amplifier S25. Sol A-1" t.1usl baye fenced yrd. AOHA Reg istered top quality Spanish and ing. Cost $1 75. Sac. $50. condition. 54&--l3S5· 546-9965 723 Quarter Horses! Mediterranean fUmi·l-962_-0!_TT_.______ EXCELSJOR Accordian, like FR EE Dirt -loose on Beautiful bay yearling fiUie. Sailing lessons, 40' sloop Reasonable rates: avail for charter 64&9550 548--2592 t u re. SOF ~"-1 new, full keyboard; with parkway. 3501 Surf v i e w Excellent breeding. Top & A ••uvUicia type, beige, case. Sacrifice $50. 548-8502 Lane, Corona del Mar. Fantastically good oondltion. $50 or best __ __ 644-1523 11'25 bottom. Show prospect. Ask· offer. 546-3003 Ing $600. Also, 3 yr. old geld· Top Dollar To You Golden West _Mo_b_;i_,_H_•"'".......: __ 92;.:.:.:001 AUTO CENTER Inc priced!! Complete houseful ' ONE piece dining room lab];: 3 x 6', Light wood. 8 ch rs. Good cond. $110. 54S-2042 Pianos & Or~~s__.!130 FREE dirt • Loose on ing classy looking chestnut. parkway. 3501 Su r f Yi e w Started in hackamore. Ex-! Special Sale ! Lane, Corooa de! Mar. cellent for show or pleasure. e WE offer our greatest 644-1523 Call 642-09Sl days. 54().95Zi }!ARLEY Davidson t 9 6 3 . 1984 Newport Blvd. Fully equip. Sell outfight or Costa r.-lesa 642-8460 trade foc smlr bike. For sale '66 Datsun Sport T\VIN beds, new, with pads. $152800 Frames have casters $35 wen ,., .•••. , , , • each. 968-2325 stock of new & used pianos I ·A~oo=RAB~~L~E7.~f-,~;-.-.~d-l-y , Eves. & organs • st Special Sum· IOYable &mall 9 rooe. old mer Sale prices! black dog. Housebroken , all e WHATEVER you are look· stx>11: .546-6697 7/2S TRANSPORTATION 1966 Crown I m p e r i a 1 Roadster 1600 Oirysler $3,600. Wurlitzer GoddeS!I bronze, plush black piano like new $400. 546-2376 interior. Low, Low miles. 1100 S.F. 2 BR w/ .,Ice, Take older trade or $175 unobstructed s w e e p i n dels. Call afler l PM, ocean view. 30802 S. Coast 49'1·9773 or 6J9.J617 MUST SACRIFICE! 2 BLUE VelYet chairs & OI· toman. Reg size Ma ple bed (near new.) 546-8879 GRE\' Formil'a top table, 2 leaves, 6 chairs. Xlnt cnod. Call aft 6 Fri. 5-I0-118ll CASH for furn & appliances. ing for -we haYe it & at a prict' you will pay. F,ftEE kittens. Tiger strip. WA RD'S BALDWIN STIJDIO ped. F'ree c!E>livery. 673-1347 1801 Newport , CM 6'12.&48-l or 546-9206 R.!ik IO t' Gale. • 7/25 Boats & Y1chts 9000 WE MUST MOVE THE FOLLOWING BOATSI 1958 15· Century Inboard $1:195 1963 18' Crestliner Inboard Hwy., L ag una Beach, e Spot Cash for Imporls 400-3195 We pay more for any impo11 1966 Pacemaker IOJil56' :t regan:llesa of year, make Br. Expando living room. or condition. Try us before 569800 w, "" gocd ""' fum.1m FOR NpL Bl. 0.1 642-7015 ONLY RCA Portable TV SSO. Salin· brocade lov(' srat $50. 646-9027 eYr.nings. Decorator's Delight Stoclarl 5' Grand $699. \\'e did the inside · you do ihe outside. Mayer Baby • we did the in· side & outside, ebony. $849. Many other Grand specials! J ~fO. old • part German s:~rpherd f('male puppy . Frt'e to good home · 546--0789 7125 4 YR. Old male. Shetland Sheep dog. Champion stock, AKC, Gentle"& iif!cctionale. 673-1074 7115 $1795 1%0 20' 1-lollywoodcraJt Out· board ................ S1995 1966 16' Otrysler outboard $1695 $100 & take 011er payments. you sell. ELM 0 RE Call Dick 540-4113 J\.tOTORS, 15300 Beach Blvd. Westminster. 894-3322. 2 BR., laundry rm .. scmd. I========= patio; lge, !iv. rm.. IM!W ALFA ROMEO cpt.s. 4;'.e kitch . w/bar. Terms Available Garage s.i. 8022 WALLlCHS-MANNING 'S MUSIC CITY So. Coast Plam • 54().2165 Hammond & Lesli9 Antique ~·hilc and gold Hamn1ond M-3 with finished FREE cats • Russlar: blue m o th er. Weane d . Housebroken. 1986 Fullerton. CM 7/'J:f, 1952 16' McCullough , , . S149a WEST COAST YACHTS 333.1 \Y. Coast 11wy. Newport Archea Marin~ 15,00J Or be6t otter ' 1--------- 893-7874 After 4 PM '57 Alfa Spyder, custom 63 PANORAMA 10 x 55 1 hardtop. $350. Jerry Newcomen to California Credit Approved Immediately We carry our own accounts Pllll Furniture ONLY AT Decorative Bl-FOLD interior doors (4 panl'ls\ each panel 11\i." x 6' 6'•" Quality hurdwood. antiqu<' white with gold trim; a 11 hardware, 499 -2152 or 837~791 ALL Kinds ol Goodies! ~1on lhru \\'ed. !H:30. 1521 Priscilla Ln, N.B. J-lruixir Highlands 646-~Ba Appll1nces 8100 Npt. Sch. 642-7711 JULY special. Boals haulPd. b.'lck. plus $495 Leslil", 40 1 ==~-~~~~-­F1lEE pupplc11! Part Germ. huUom sr-rubbcd & pa in!~. Shepherd, pi!M Co1lie. 7 $1.90 prr ft. -· paint & zinc. wau speakl'r. &th for $Ul95. Fully gu,,rantl'M. Trrms. Gould Mu,ic Comp1ny 2045 N. Main. S,A. S.17-0SSl weeks old . 548-GIJ)'l 7125 All r>lher maintenance •• rnEE dirt, Loose 0 n engine work, see us. driveway, 1622 Pondo rOl5a Newport Dry Docks 675-1505 St. Cosla fl.1esa T /'13 On the Bay at 20th St . NOW HERE -lhe new P.IAI NTENANCE Supers01mdlng T-200 FREE to good home bl. and STORAGE H ·-• s 1 t wh. kitten, ho1JSebroken, h>d amm<J(l\I p nt organ Paint. Varnish, Fibrgelass -the finest )'et' shots, 962-2l!l6 7123 Fen~ Yard. Reu. rates SCHP.fIDT-PHILLTPS CO. P.flXED Golden Retriever & 642-8062 (if no ans. call) Bedroom unfum, 2 7 6 61===·=53&'338===·=== Brts101 st. C.M. 549-4037 <U 1 sn. 100 ft to Boy. AUSTIN HEALEY_ B~lboR J_>enn. Be au t if u 1 lsERVICE MECHANIC for View $8500. * 6'73-M78 small foreign service k ·--·---·· repair i;a rage. Shou ld have Mini Bikes 9275 gerieral kn o w I edge ol MESA MJNI BIKE Sales • Parts • Repairs 2267 Harbor CM • a.s.3007 popula.r imports. S a I a r 1 &/or comm open. Perm position with advancement assurfll. Send re11.1me to Motorcycle1 930!, 7652 Garfield Ave, No. 38, JIB. Or call 897-4285, 10 to 4 WHOLESALE To Dealers, 1907 N. Main O 20th Gt'rman Shepherd puppie.s. 6 &46-7524 5'l8-87l6 FOR Sale 1908 Honda 450 Apt Ol''l"ln & public, re(rig· Sanla Ana wkll old. 646-1432 7/23 18. LY~fAN 1•1 and et', Sc r 1 m b I er _ 1400 mi. DATSUN era tors guar S1 5 + Cross •op l ~~~~~!!"'l"'""'""'' J s:HE'PiiiER:O-:c&,i'1i<~ u Pu h·--• A ·1 "68 Uk '---------SHEPHERD ~ lie. A ~pstrake, inboard, Bartrl re 11.eu pn · '-1 $25. Sq top S50. Obie dr. SG5. \VURLITZER Studio piano wht, to good h 0 m e . uni!. bilge/bait pump Inst. new JHOJ. C•ll Sf5-rot5 aft '66 D1taun St• W i g Frost free X top SSS. Obie dr $300, good condition. Phone &U-3294 7 /23 6 PM Dail)' Deluxe. Pearl gJ"tY v.·lth Frost Fret> SlOO. Also Wa!lih· 5U-3200 aft s Last hauled 7 fll. Hun-1 _::..:..::::..:='-~~---I l'rs/dP>'er•/frt't'T.ers/r•ngo.. l ~i YR.. Old male hamster tingtOt'I HArl>our TI4 • '68 HONDA 160, IOI mllu. matching Interior. E'xttl· '3 " I KIMBALL SPINT PIANO XI 847 7m< p lent cbnd. Under guarulte. \Ve v.-ill never be undrri1a\d. wi1 h cage. • nt P e t -......, $450. 2700 etenon Plac<' A-OK WarehOOse, 772'2 Gar-x"'°lnt. -odM·.~~~rgan $50. 67~2315 7/24 I -N-EW--,.~.-5-.,-,~tll-,-... ,-.e;-s· Apt fiO o . Ollla Mf',3 $175 Clish dels or trndt:. 18 J '"" "" -..... -Pymntl, $33. mo. Call alter 4 4 Newport Blvd deo Grove Blvd. 1 Bick\\'. oJ t.fALE German Shepherd 2 bit. oom: v.·/ galley & ead. 68 YAMAHA, Xlnt eond. $200 ll. 494-9773 or 6.19-J6IT •, B<'ach al G.G. FN·y, Radio 8200 yrs old. f)'iendly with An1plt fu el capacity for &. la ke OY'!r small pymtl. I ========~ NOW'S THE children. IW2-615.5 7/23 Albacore 2002 Ba,yvlew SA a.0-4865 aft 6. JOHNSON 2 •·ay rftdlo. DARLING ntt k1tteiw. 5<'6-3Sl7 ~6':...:.BS.,:A:...:.350.=-a:-.'-Good~~--~l~ti-on TIME FOR Messmger712 I 11tesenaer 673--0629 17' OtrrBOARD wltb 40 hf! $100. 1963 Januir Mi~'kil "UICK CASH JOO, .... ,. 1"" .... ,. molor • tnUu. Good 615-114' • ..,. -___ ...:..:::..:;.:.:.. ___ , 4 dr, black le•lhi!r uphols- THROUGH A Tel•vlslo n 1205 FREE Kittens to irood home. ·cood.==1<=25=.=.......,====~ '61llONDA160 Scrambler: ttt)', autom11Ut transmission ;.:.;.:.:.;.:;.:.::.. ___ ...::::: 646-4918. 7124 ~ ~---aood cmd. $295 A~1/FM r1'dio. 1st Cass con- DAILY PILOT TV """"I•. '1" ''"" Good WHITE kilten """""'1-2 mo. :.S•;..l;;;lbo=•h.:_ __ _:.90 10 • "2-1319 • dlUon . WANT AD Condition. S26. old. Call M&-7349 7(15 11' FlBERGLASS, ne w I y 1 .Y"A~MA=l!A=~ .. ~.-M~"IY-=E<-t-ns ONLY $1,950 673-49511 5J0.2TTO. •Vot. ,,,...;~ JOIN dirt ••NCW• m the pai nted new uils. $125. Ex. cand. for 1trttl or trail. -=.::;;:-"'~,:..:::;:.=::....:::'"::...._ OlARGE m Dial 642-56'lB fur RESULTS t'All.Y PILOT WAN'T IJ)S• 673.(Jl83 Beoll Oller. LI S-2937 nally Pllnt WM! •da'! al Harbor Blvd. Cosla Mesa Ev•ry nlte 'tll 9 Wed., Sit., Su n. 'til 6 JAGUAR J . ELMORE 15300 Beach BIYd., Wstmnstr Phone 894-3322 TRIUMPH e 1960 TR3A $695 Excellent oondition Private Owner. 499-2957 VOLVO '68 VOLVO GET OUR LEADERSHIP SAVINGS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! ~eM Llmia • IMPORTS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64f>.9J0.1 VOLKSWAGEN '66 VW DELUXE LOADED! 26,00J miles on speedometer. Belonged to little ·01e school teacher in San Clemente. Take $175 cash dels, dlr, or trade. Pymts S36.86. Call after ll, 49-t-9773 nr 639-3617. '61 Yolkswo9en Deluxe • Just llJl('nt SIW!, on engine at Oitck Iverson's. S75 dcls, will fine, private party. $29.86 per mo. After 10 A~f. 4™-9773 '67 BLACK Bug, mag wheels ta dial tries: Em pi crank' c11.m & blg bore kif; Ram m: duction: tuned exhsu.~t; lots of extru. Cost SJ,100 new; sell lor $2100. 962-ti591 -*-'64 VW V1ri1n'* S!l'li Xlnt cond. Kosta Kosturn R1rs 1980 Harbor, C.M. 1966 V,\\I, Fastbftck. Radio, sunroof, A-I condition! SIOOO. 968·1~8. '61 V\\I. r.!My Exit'&!! Very CleM. S895 ~>4617 1r1 6 pm '64 VW, perfecl cond, many many extr11a, 8"e to ap- Pt"tei11lt. 546-{,0;,5 '62 vw Sednn,-new·°"'-,,-1..,-,~.-1 mufne r. AYall 1st ""'k Aue . Bt.sl offer-962-·1.lSI TllE QUICKER \'OU CA~ THE QUTO\ER YOU Sl:J.L ti 0 Q t?if •w b f'p)f )CUa+rt 5 ··Q 3 # $'$ 9 SQ +p 2 • tr tr I ttbz\,, t -ez-• ------ - -------------·-----~----------- TRANSPORTATION Psssst ! ! IT'S NO SECRET THAT Ai:,· ROBERTS Cbrpler-Pfymoutli IS READY TO DEAL!! '68 BARRACUDA '68 PLYMOUTH Spicial Fury Ill '68 CHRYSLER Hardtop "0.W ,_ TMoyf'• COMI IN TODAY! AL ROBERTS Clirysler-Pf,........ 10080 Gird•• Gntvt ll Ill .... "· "·- Garden Grove JE. 7-7800 -------· ,, . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 2828 """" Blvd. Costa Mesa 546-1203 COMET Autos Wanted 9700 ---------'60 COMET Station Wagon, in WE PAY • • . very good cond, good 2nd CASH car. $250. 646--8402 '61 Comet Wagon. '"''· ,, •• $350. • 541).5289 • ' lor wed can Ir trucks Just I::::="'======= call "'fur ..,. o>rtlmat•. CONTINENTAL GROIH CHEYROlR ""' '"' Sal" ......,.. '64 Continental l.82U llHcb Bl.. 'st LiocX>Jn Continental 4 Dr Hunti..,,ton Beacll Town Sedan. Has full pow- --=Kl= .. ~==~--I er with factory air. lmmac-WE BUY w•te t11ru '"' with "'"' metallc finish. Now this ANY CLEAN $1000.00 "'' n•w .,.,. ... LATE MODEL bought for $18$.00. 1't w lot oa Hubo' Blvd. SPORTS CARS. JOHNSON & SON Top Dollar To You Lincoln-Mercury Gol41en West Costa Meu. Branch AUTO CENTER Inc 19<1. H.-Blvd. .... ... 1984 N •"I"" Blvd. '63 CONTINENT AL Coita Mella 642-Mfll Sew looking sedan with alr TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 9900 AIR CONDITIONED . ., MUSTANG VS RAMBLER Frost white all original with I --------- power steering & braket1, console auto. shift, 1'9.dlo, heater. $1150. HOLIDAY RAMBLER 1969 Ha.rl:ior Bl., Costa t.fesa Drive in or phone 642-6<12J OLDSMOBILE '66 OLDS Delta 4 door with air conditioning. D Ir • 548-Tl51 '61 OLDS CUtlasa Cbnvi-t. Very Shafp! 21,000. ori. nl.i. $2250 still u/wmty. 673--0217 '65 OLDS 2 Dr. Hardtop, full power, alr. r.nJST SELU Best otter. 546--387'1 PLYMOUTH '66 AMBASSADOR V8 Gleaming all o!'lginal 990 Se- dar1. Auto. shlft, power steer- ing ·&: brakn:, tinted glass, tilt steering wheel, radio, ventilated vbcyt b.a::ket .eats Low miles. Big • Big Buy $111SO. HOLIDAY RAMBLER 1969 Harbor Bl., Costa r.1esa Drive in or phone 642.6023 '65 RAMBLER American 3ll deluxe, auto, power steer· Ing, r lh. Looks like new, runs like new -$150. cash dela or trade. Make pymnb: $36.86. Will tine. private par- ty. Call after 10:30 AM 494-9773 or 6JS.3611 '63 -4. Dr., custom 110 Rambler. Must sell! '63 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex. $55ll. or best ofter. Cmd. Orig owner $900 or I :;::;En:=""":=::='""':::·;o54<J.-0964=== best offer! 49S-2481 aft 5. T-BIRD W'D Bu """'""°""'•·"'th" ""kl• PONTIAC I J Big -Big Bargain at $15.50. --------KIRBY S. SELBY 2235 MEYER PL. HOLIOA Y RAMBLER ROY CARVER Y-vo-.... er,..,..,,. 1"" Harl>or Bl., eoota M•oa COSTA MESA I: pay top dollan. Pa.id for Drive in or phone 642-6023 PONTIAC or not. Call Ralph 'SS LINCOLN. PCM·er all' -Hamar 81., CQna N• You are the. winner of 2 tickets to the . 673-1190 oon<1, '"""· """" .,;1. .,.. Kl 6 4444 AUTOS WANTED "'1"'00·121100· Jl3>.IS30 <>rup °""">'• -- Will pay cash for imported CORVETTE Dealer fer Rolla -~ and autos. Up to $500. Try us. Ben=-tl""y". ===~-~ LIDO THEATRE Showing THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE ELMORE f·.--------'6' BONNEVILLE 4 <loo< 9611 Garden Grove Blvd. 63 CORVETI'E 2 TOPS. '66 hard top. Fully equipped ========~I eng. & body. Many Xtra.s! and with air, $1900. Dir. Just dip this ad and take Auto Leising 9810 Muat aell. Bed: 0 ff er· 548-1751 It to the Lido Theatre in _ 774-4110 or 675-130? ask for =====,---~ FOR Lease to qualiti!d Cluck. '65 BONNEVD..LE, air cond, Newport Broch with idtnti- leasee; 1967 Falcon Futurai========"' all power. PERFECT. $1800. 1 ..,"~'•~tl~'"~·=~~--- 2 Dr., 6 oyl. doh _... COUGAR "....,."""'"'12=-~~---''5 LANDAU -by""""· Radio, O"uisomatic tr11N1., -·-_ '65 PONT. G.P.: air; pwr air, duk blue, nu tires. 2/2 t.i.tts, at $49.50 per mo. CX>UGAR -The Number One strg/brkl Bucket seats. Exceptional. f1895. 642-9C64 for 24 months. call: C.t. Not since !ta &cre8.m-Exe. cond. 673-8882 Cort Fox Auto Leasing ing, snatching introduction '68 VENTIJRA Conv. Blk &: e '62 T-BIRD e Xlnt cond 642-3440 Bel. 10 am & 3 pm as car cl 'the year in 1967 wht, loaded, xlnt emd, $3000 M~Fri., or 1-496-5695 after ha.a there been the ·op-pvt pty 529-2582 Fullrtn • 614-1584 • J. 30 pm portunlty for the buying VALIANT UHd Cll's 9900 1961 Sl'AR CHIEF roNTIAC public to aelect EXACTLY Good cond. Must sell. WHAT IT WANTS AT '65 VALIANT $970 NEED A CAR? PRACTICAL PRICING. The 546-8332 No extras but exceedingly factory finally caught Up. DIAL direct 642-S678, charge good condition. Big Buy. NOW rrs YOUR OP· -ad, -•• bacl< aod HOLIDAY RAMBLER CAN'T BE FINANCED? eBankrvpt? e Repoaeaaton! •Bad Credit! • Dtvorced1 e MWtary e New in Arn? PORTUNITY. Valt Johnson listen to the phone ring! 1969 Harbor Bl., Co!ta· Mesa il Son, Orange Cl:>unty's SOCK rr TO 'EM! Drive in or phone &t2-6023 Make P•ydll.)' Payments MoCARTHY MOTORS 1420 So. Main I Edtnaer (2 blocka N. al Sean) Santa Ana Pb 5G-350'l o ld eat Lincoln-Mercury I=========-====='===== I Cougar dealer. Oaw the UMd Cars price down on tbe cat of your choke. We even have five C5) alightly used 1967's - all with cootirJUiog Jactory warranty. Our vut &tock al. 1968'a will Cive every, feline J&ncier the exact color and equlpment that he expects ol the Number One cat. 900 W. C:OUI Hwy., Newport Beach, acrou from the Bay Club 642--0981 -======"'":-;-::-;1 '68 COUGAR. Our Mesa -Verde repN!sentative Dean BUICK Burgin mmt now dispose of ---------1 his meticulously cared for Must aell! '66 Buick Special demonstrator. Call Dean at convert· low mileage· Orange County's oldest Un- V-8 auto, extru •. Owner coin Mercury dealers!lip, leaving for Edrope. Private Johruon .t Son r:1. Newport • ="pan,='=· =Of!=';'=· ="'"="="=;( Cmta Mesa 642-0981 '68 COUGAR Brand new . $2740, VS and hMlc eafely --------·! equipment. No high C06t ac· SACRIFICE! '68 Cad. 2 Dr. cessoriea; Orange County's Cpe. De Ville. Full power, 0 1 d e a t Lincoln • Mercury fully equip, ''Factory new''. Coua:ar dealership, Newport. $6,250. 213: 592-5863 aft. 5:30 Costa Mesa 642--0981 PM wkdya:; anytime wknd. I="=======; CADILLAC '67 CADILLAC El Dorado, DODGE air rond. Loaded with xtrasr--------- .$6200. Call OR 3-7692, 6 to 9 1965 DODGE Coronet 500. Eves. Yellow w/white vinyl top. $2200 'st CAD Ccmvt. Every conaole, bucket aeeta. Extra! 6 • way seat. tilt GU-1530 -~--~~-~ wheel. One owner. 43,000 '64 Dan 2 dr,R/H, good en- mllea. 642-1247 gine. Needs body wonc:. Best '63 CAD ~ '6.1 CHEV offer. 499-1693 Super Spor'f.' many xtras $900. Mako ott" 5.16-2'127 FORD CADILLAC Sedan DeVille 1960 F\111 power .l air. $:iOO YEU..0W Foni SIA w;tl, '57 . mwn or ~ V-3, R&H, Ex cond. New •62 mn 4 dr -~ Ill battery. Lota ol go left. $150 ~ ..,an, cash. See al '132 Bison Ave, power, leather int. ONE NB (top of the hill entrance OWNER. S950 fi73..6932 • Eaatbhrlf • Jamboree Rd, 'eT EL Dorado. Perfttt.! '65 FORD LTD AM I FM ~! Fact. ,warn.nty; lo htr, air, vinyl ~p. auto, :xlnt m1. Make offer. 613-6635 cond, low miles, Slim 9900UHd C•ro 9900 icLi·i;~·.;·it~: • • ! '68 ! • 200 .NEW '68 FORDS NOW • • AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNTS • • LOWER THAN EVER BEFOREI • • '65 MUSTANG> $1095 • • F•c:lory equipp1d. R1d io, h11t1r. IO'f, • down or tr1dt $45 p1r mo. 30 mo, • IPCC951 I • • 'U COUNTtY SEDAN $1695 • • Wtgo11. Vt, f1i1ll pow1r. 20'1. down or • lr1"cl1 $45 per mo. 30 mo. (V,]J911 • 'IO FORD $199 •• • % ton pickup. VB 1n9int. T1• & lictn11 • down $1) ptr mo. 24 mo. llZl20J) • '64 FORD CUSTOM $595 • • VI, 1utom1tic:. 20 '1. dow11 or tr1d1 125 • p1r mo. 24 mo. NOY70<4 • • J • ''7 FORD CUSTOMS • I $1495 • I l to ch11011 fro111. 4 Or. VI, 1uto .. R&H . 20 '1. I dow11 or tr1d1 $.(5 per mo. b1mp11 No. P7717 • TRANSPOllATION SNCIALS • Now 1•1r1ginl 15 c:1rs p1r w1tk th1f SAVE • c1n b1 rt t1il•d 11 whol1 11l1 to th1 • • public. 111! !ht d11l1r1 on tht1t oldtr c1r1. • • '"FORD LTD $1995 • • H.T. A1tlo., RI H. f11U pow1r. No. 7551A. • 20 % down or tr1d1 $56 per mo. 16 mo. • '64 FORD H.T. STICK $995 • • G1lt1l1 2 Or. YI, O•trdri¥1, 20% dow11 • • or tr1d1 142 ptr 1111, 24 mo. IOSICl07) • • 22 WAGONS "SALE" 22 e . ,,,. ___ ........ .,,..._ . • I ,. If ,. .... -w wftll • c1"4ttf.... • PLYMOUTH -'" MHC COMMUTH -• • ICONO IUS'S -POIDS -PALCONS - • PAllLANU -COUNTIT SIDA.NS -CHIYT • 673--lsf9 aft 5:30 .l wke'nda. • II WAGON -COUNTlY S9UlllS • CHEVROLET IXAMPLl1 -------'67 FORD Fml"" 500 4 <k • '65 COUNTRY SEOAN WAGON • '55 CHEV 265 Thom Wa&Oll· Auto Vt. Lo mi. Abo • Aulofl'l•fie. llH, f11U pow•r. 20'% down 01' lrtdo • eng, ans VW parts. 507 Tustin, NB $-i5 per mo. JO"''· IPCC'fSll ;;;.~;;· -INu'I, 642-9!8T • •, $1495 • ,66 SS 3'96 Oievelle; 4 A 8 65 FORD Galaxle soo.XL Air. • i. • :o~.$:., ... ~~ ... ., ~".;,:.:.~:wi:'ii: •• THEODORE •• · · Book at $1475. 962-'1~ MOVINGJ Mo" S.IH 63 g eyl ,60 FORD G laxy Hanltop • • Chev Impala. SIS Auto RE~NABLE PS 646-1975 e W-3621 e • • 53 CHEV aedan delivery. • ROBINS • Runo aood. $200. '66 FORD C.loxlo 500 ooopo • • :;45.-9777 FactorJ air, must aaeriftce, 'f.,.~, rm,:i,: ~~ sro:;, D". 54-7151 • I ;;·:,:Stab~ ==~N!....y, ••• FORD ~~~6~NG : ._ n1'0. WU! talce trade PS/PB, air o>nd., now "'' • 1921 • ,Dir. 548-7151 COVttl.. pwr eettt, ndio 61i=.!r!:;..'.'!:!: ~'°'!.it=:: ~i e 2060 HARBOR, COSTA MESA.· ... ,., "'"'· 14f>M9 "911 i.1>8 • ..,.-e 6•2-00 IO , Wblta-tlT'iJio 1 ea.. -tlT DbDo &lino •••••••••••••••••• I -------~~-·-----~----~------- Tuesd.U', JUI) 23, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT .al , Brand New 1968 VALIANT 2 door Sloe:• No. I 022 Stoc:.k No. •71 Brand New Town & Country Wa9on c · Autometic Alt the extr11 -Big V8 ~n91n1, . · • · Rad'•o H••t•r • Transm1ss1on, ' Tinted windshield, Whit• wall tires, Power steering, Power brakes, \..i9ht pac:ka9e and muc:h more. A truly fine luxury c:1r - Brend New 1968 Imperia l Crown 4 dr , herd top. Completely loaded with evary c:on- c:eiveble a11tr1. Sav• 1347 on this baeut. Stock No. 922 ChooH from• bit ulectlon of lmperlal1 all at cine-out prlcta. '6B COUGAR Under J,000 ml.... VI. M11om1!k, radio, ltnltr, -1tMrl119, A 11MI. No. "10 $2995 '66 CHRYSLER H-1 2 Ooof H.T. VI. 1111o!MllC. rldlo, he.llfr, power ""rlrog, IOOd c-ltlon. l'ZlCI $1895 '64 CHRYSLER H-9. VI 1"9lnt, a111o1Ntk tr11111J1lulon, radio a'ld 11M11tr. POMr ""''"'· fMIC. $1333 '64 PLYMOUTH FUI"'/" 2 0-Mrdlop. VI 1ntlr.t, .111tom11ic tr1namllllon, ndlo, Mtt!TI", _, llfff"lfto. "2:M • $1299 '66 PONTIAC GTO. 'll>ffd. Vt. ttl--r. r811Jo. hultr. HO. 4!60 $2295 '63 VOLVO 2 Door. 4 IPted. '111'1111 well tlru. ,.., $999 $ ONl.r s2so ... .... 8••ect on ~ . c1o..., •nd 36 mo. Fln1nc1,,. '63 CHEVROLET ._,. 2 Door ,..,..,,.,,,_ :lrl:1Vt tub m111c, radio, he•Rr, -1lwr1111" Ho. 6$Sol $1095 '68 CHEVROLET Nov_-.._, Ocof, f cyllndtl'", 111~t1G. r.u111 and II••••· Low mli.1 ... ""' $2295 '68 FURY Ill Convtrl. VI. 111tomllic, radio. llff~. _, tleofrfl>f .. brtltt1, WSW, FAC· TOJlY AIA C~OITtOtONG. No. '6U $3095 All odYOrlised cars are plus tax and license Prices good 'Iii I 0 PM, Thur., July 25 L ' . . ·i ·, " . I ·I I .J 1 I- ·DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE --------=---• A Refor m Long Neede.d A long-standing injustice to home huyen has been corrected. Or it will be when a new law becomes efiec- tive nu.t January l. A purchaser of a home under a contract of sale thereafter may prepay his loan at anytime. (Thts type of transaction permits a low down payment, with the seUer holding liUe and allowing occupancy under the contract.) State Sen. James E. Whetmore, R-Fullerton, de- serves credit for taking the initiative and following through. A hearing he arranged in Westminster last January elicited testimony that some subdividers, after selling a home to an individual , would refuse to accept prepay~ ment from the purchaser. This worked an obvious hardship on the homeowner who wa s forced to leave the area. For the man being transferred in his job, or divorced, or suffering a fam- ily rupture because of a death, prepayment of the sales contract represented relief of the most urgent kind. Wbetmore's bill, when it becomes effective in law, will remedy this situation while at the same time not upsetting contracts for commercial and certain other types of property where absence of prepayment is a tax factor .. It ts noteworthy that, in achieving this reform, Senator Wbetmore and bis fellow committee members bad the cooperation (which he termed excellent) of the California Real Estate Association, the Real E st a t e Commissioner, the California Savings and Loan League and the office of the Attorney General. The delay in the Jaw's effective date perhaps was necessary, but reform is so greatly needed that it should be in effect now. Home buyers in the remaining months of 1968 The Enemies of Great Thinkers In their own lime, the enemies of great thinkers are those who disagree with them. After their death, howeyer, their worst enemies often become those wh o follow them. Both Marx and Freud understood this sad f a t e that befalb: seminal ideas. Marx is supposed to have said. "l am not a Marxist," and Freud is supposed to have echoed it with "! am not a Freudian." What happens to such systems o~ thought -and to the institutions thaf embody them -la that their founderi: become distorted, vulgarized and uaei· for purposes that are not their own. MARX, FOR EXAMPLE, was a il'eat, it confused, thinker. Several dif- ferent consequences flow from his body of thought, depending on which aspect of his writing you wish to con· sider canonical, and which part you care to slur. Lenin took one aspect of Marx and created a hybrid called "Marxist. Leninist" thought, which emphasized one part of Marx's Ideas at the ex- pense of another part. Likewise, all Communist factions ignore those elements in Mars: which do not fit into their own private ideology. FREUD, IN TURN, was out.Freud· ~ by some of his disciplines. Whereas he per110nally was modest, tentative, and unafraid of contradictions, they \lave felt the need to tum him Into a "pan-sexual" theorist, which he never •as, or to go along with early con- cepts that he Wtluld have discarded in time. In our own country, John Dewey's ideas on education were never as ex· treme and one-sided as those of his followers, who took the phrase "life. adjustment" much more seriously than he did. And, of course, William James was not the s I mp I e "pragmatist" his devotees took hlm to be: while Russian psychologists, on the contrary, stress the "conditioned refiex" of Pavlov far more strenuous· ly than he himself did. IT OCCURS TO ME that the man with the greatest idea of all would be tempted to say "I am not a Christian," if he could come back, look around, and see what has been promulgated in the name of Christianity. It is doubtful, from my assiduous reading of the gospels, if·Jesus meant to start a new religion, still less a new church; doubtful if he believed in in· stitutionali.zation of any sort; and almost certain that he was some kind of anarchist, some kind of pacifist. some kind of mystic (like the Essenes to which he belonged) who would be amazed and appalled to see what hai: been perpetrated -and perpetuated -in his name. Sock-mending: Lost A rt mping to conclusions: Eight out ol 10 wives under 40 no longer are able to mend holes in their husbands' sockl. They simply don't know the art. You can go through life without ever meeting a left-handed surgeon. Few things make a middle·aged man more aware of tile breadth of the generation gap than the realization that probably four out of five of today's youngster• have never ridden in a buggy or aeen a blacbm.lth at work. Bikinis are getting smaller than that black eye patch worn by the fellow in the shirt ads. Show me a business es:ecutive who boast.I he regularly pull in a lS·to 16· hour work day and I'll 1how you a fellow who won't stand up too well in a Ue detector tfft. SINCE EVERYBODY 11 oow wear- ing stay-pressed clothing, how is it that so many t.een·agera It.ill manage to look 10 mussed up1 One of the nice thing.a about hiltory j1 that some people seem to have been born al euct11 U.. right time IOI' their lff.)111 to flower. Charles Dicteru, for eumple, was quite at home Im tbe lel111rely lllth .. nwry. lf be,,_ alive •• 6-... Dear George: M,!' hu1baod 1ubsorit>M to -· mquiDH which run pln-up1. rm almoct conviJJcld be --jult to look II plctur-• al D1lllo women. I lhlnlt lie .,,. • ,.,. ltJ M11$. T. Dur Mrt. T.f · Pooplo 1'llp jump to hasty COG• · -d11.tcw Ub that caUH: mOlt o1. lllO lnubll la b warld todl11 ' f Shami • 1CIU • toclay, however, he might have to earn his living writing wisecracks for the Chinese fortune cookie industry. An ideal host is one who doesn't in· sist on inflicting his home mOvies on you until he bas at least passed the martini pitcher around three times. Husbands jest at their wives for wasting their time watching televised soap operas. but actually these sudsy epics can have a real educatJonal value. A woman becomes so familiar with ttie fictitiona1 ordeals of her heroes and heroines that when an emergency occurs in her own famil y life she knows just what steps to take to cope with it. T h e r e are fe w disasters in real life that don't happen ove!" and over again in soap operas. IT SURE RAS been a long time. hasn't it, since you last saw a fireman wearing red suspenders? No woman ever goes truly content to her grave unJe.ss at least, once 1n her career she ha1 found out wt.at it ts like to be kissed by 1 man witb a beard. When you get more than one post card from friends during their stay at a vacation resort, )'OU can bl sure they're havinc a rain)' time. You can generally win money by betting thlt th• first girl to take oU btr Shoel at I coctt.ail party will be one of the Jut to It.ave. One ct tht lhi"'1 th1t punle1 mo II wttot hatdlect 11<11 live on durtni tho nm.mer month.I. 'Ibey don't earn enouP In tips to knp 1 pt1cock lnlm anemia. U that racehorst Dam.Mcus an earn a mlllloo dollars, why don'l the not of ut iet paid men IOI' fllllDljl1 •ouod In clreles7 J, should, ln prudence, retu.se lo enter lnlo any purchase contract which does not provide the same prepayment 0 out" they will have next January 1 and thereafter. Interest is interesting -to uie recipient thereof. But the buyer should be 1entlUed, In a free economy, to end his payments whenever he chooses, and for any reason or no reason. Most Satisfying Osculation RipUde season is here again. So -beachgoers beware. If you can't swim, don't venture into the waves. If you can swim, don't be cocky about it. Riptides have cleime:c! the lives ot strong swimmers who panick· ed. and tried to overpower their awesome adversary in a struggle straight for shore. They forgot, if they knew, that their main chance rests in calmJy swimming parallel to the beach until they've left the riptide area behind before striking out for shore. _ In addition to learning to swim, everyone should know the few simple rules of mouth·to-mouth resuscita- tion. This is the modern lifesaving method which has proved much more effective than the old roll·'em:On·a· barrel or pressing down on the rib cage while the drowning victim is face down -the methods of our forbears. ~f you don't know the mouth-to-mouth method, ask a lifeguard for a demonstration. You may then be able to save the life of someone near and dear -or a stranger -when no lifeguard is on the scene. It's the "kiss of life," the most satisfying oscula· tion of them all. 'Birch Society l s No t Really Patriotic' From Europe and Elsewhere To the Edit.or : Jn regard to Mr. Vo&S' letters (Mailbox, July 9 and 16). 8?ld various dissenUng replies: I don't think the Birch Society la patriotic. Not really. Perhaps one could say that they are patriotic in the USSR festtion: if you agree with them you're a patriot and if Y<>U don't you're a danger to the country. In true USSR fu;hion, they appear to be ma:;ters of propaganda, even to the paint of using the names of our honored war dead to imply that these brave men died solely for the Birch cause. . OUR BRA VE soldiers died in Viet· Dam. and anyplace else, because they loved our country and respected the law of the land, even in some cases when they disagreed with the palicy of the war in Vietnam. They died really for democrac)', for the right of people of different backgrounds, opinions, political and religious beliefs to live together in harmony. They did not die solely and exclusively for the Birch Society; who "honored" them by displaying their names under Nazi. type insignia in the Huntingtoa Beach Fourth of July parade. YES, THE Birch Society reminds me of the Russians and the Narjs - the two extremes. They marched and are marching in "broad daylight" too , and they also have their own brand of propaganda -patriotism. One Birch float would have been enough to express their ideas. Jt's a free country and they have a right to be m the parade (established by the American Civil Liberties Uni-On) - but, there's got to be room for the rest of us not.so-conservatives who love our country also, to express ourselves, and I think that 1,200 Birchers dominating the parade was just too "pushy." .. MARY KING '.JBS Is r .. se' 'l'o the Editor: Thia constant attack oo Birchers is really unnecessary. Most political scientists will agree that the Birch Society is passe. A fact which can be attributed to a liberal press and a lack of critical reading by subscribers. The reply to my last letter was satisfactory with the exception that it inferred ttM.t Weleh cbarSed. ln his "Blue Book" that Eisenhower was a cOMcious tool of the Communists. Ac· tually these charges were implied in his book "The Politiciltln." From the first p-lnting of this book Welch has disassoclJted it with the Birch Society. These charges wer,1 made by Welch. not by th• John Birch Society. C .R. LYNCH B°"' te s-• Lite To the Editor: Before another am.all child 11uf- focate1 ln the trap of an empty icebox , why do not mothers think of keeping such a one filled with canned goods , spare jars, old botUes, etc. and so full that not the tinlett child could squeeie In! If not, hand.le ina,y be removed and a rope thrown around the bos: to kee:p door cloud. So simple, and the chlld'1 Ule you 11ve may be your own. MRS. MAGNY L. JENSEN l"""" ._ ,.....,. -........... foliM"!!lalh' Wl'lterl "'°"" ~ ""'"" _,... ..... _... ., .... 1"tM rllflt " _... .. ""'" " fl! ~ ., •ll11111Ytot II"" M _....,, All lltfWI -~ tltMtuflo 9!M1 -lllM ... ,__ .._. 1W1Mt win 11t wlthMN .. -. I Yankees Are Coming Home WASHINGTON -Definition of long· term troods is presumptuous and more Jn the province of historians but perhaps this one can be risked : Yankee is in the process of coming home. Not all at once. Not alWgether. But Americans are coming home just the same. George F. Kennan, former am- bassador to Russia and Yugoslavia, states it better: "At many points in Europe and elsewhere, where we have become accustomed. to regarding our own presence and attention as essen- tial to stability, others can now do without us. "Not all of them are going to find it as pleasant as they thought they would when Yankee really goes home; but Yankee, as I 1ee it, has no choice; and many of them may gain from the denial of America's favors and at- tentions as respect for what America bas to offer whi ch the extravagant ex- tension of those favors was never able to produce." TmS ASSESSMENT has Its refiec· tion in the Johnson Administration , in Congress and in public opinion generally. Congress is refusing to sus· pend the foreign aid program but it is reducing funds below the curtailed proposals of President Johnson. A high Johnson Administration official says that the next president of the United States will be ... unatle to avoid coming to grips with substantially reducing American armed forces in Europe. The Johnson Administration, in its closing months, is trying· by one method or ariother. to become less en· tangled in Vietnam. There is no pretense whatsoever that we would in· tervene in any substantial way against Russia's pressure on Czechoslovakia. We are doing nothirlg, and can do nothing, to halt Russia's growing presence in the Mediterranean. THIS MAY VERY well signify the final turning away from the thinking of the 1940s and Che 1950s when the United States acted, or threatened to act, wherever stability was en- dangered. In fact, the process of withdrawal is now fairly well ad· vanced. We are out of Japan, out of France, though we are heavily in· vested in Southeast Asia and in West Germany. When we finally do become disen- t an g led in Vietnam future in· volvement.s, certainly to the ex!ent of Vietnam, we are likely to be far more selective and more easily identifiable with our specific national interei;ts. That has been the trouble in Vietnam. The reasons for our being there, however valid, are so general. n~ to say theoretical, that the average person finds difficulty in justifying Ile loss of 25,000 lives . RUSSIA 'S REASONS f o r in· volvement in Vietnam are just as general and remote as ours, even more so. The reasons the super states confroot each other on these far away battlefields have to do with world balances of power, the alignment of smatJ nations, ideological coneepts, rather than the easily identifiable na· tional security of either power. But Russia loses few lives. Its palicies are not exposed to scathing public opinion. Russia is backing the stronger of the two governments in Vietnam ; we back the weaker, and we yet may have a measure of success. There is no sign that our slow disen· tanglement will be permitted. to mean that we are abandoning South Vietnam to the mercies cif the North. Our com· mitment bas been too great for thal SOME CALL THE trend which is developing in the United States "new isolationism." It is hardly that. When We are finally out of Vietnam, we will not be able to shake o u r responsibilities in Europe. in Germany, the Middle East, or even in Southeast Asia. But we are more like- ly than before to recognize the limlta· tions of our power. Or . at least, to recogni.te that the limited exercise af force, as in Vietnam, can have only limited results . Anollher limitation which will have to be recognized is that the drawing in and the selectivity of our future foreien commitments will not be a cure.all. Too many people, including former ambassador Kennan, seem to feel tQat once our foreign com· mitments are reduced we will have the resources, energy and will to solve our domestic problems. This simply does not follow. The two iroi>lems may prove to be unrelated. It is not, in fact, a Jack of funds due to the Vietnam war which delays the reconstruction of the cities. The reconst!'uction of the cities is recognized as a project so vast in scoi>e that it only Cml be accompll!hed by a combination of private and public funds. with private funds paying the greater share. Disturbing Report Persists WASHINGTON -Military and diplomatic circles in the capital are buzzing with a sensational report about Commander Lloyd Buch.er, skip· per of the USS Pueblo, seized by North Korea in January of this year. E x t e n s I v e inquiries have pro· duced no confirmation of any kind of this disturbing report. In fact, after persistent querying, an anonymous State Department source finally stated that "official" word has been received categorically denying the Bucher story. No further enlightenment could be gained from this informant. He flatly declined to comment on the identity and nature of the "official" disclaimer. Despite this denial, the report pe:rsirts . 1T IS CREDITED to various sources, chief &100ng them France Dear Gloomy Gus: Is the John Birch Society a Communist Front? After all. the Bircher• are sowing the seeds of distrust in the Presidency. the Supreme Court and Congress, arttl .. t they? So What does that leavt, after these three institu- tions come crashing down? It leavea the country wide open for a Commie takfl<tver, that11 wh>l -R. J.B. T\lt frMlwN """""" ~ .,,..,. - -•1Mll¥ .... ., ... ··-·· .... ,_ "' ........ •i.nr ..... ...., ....... and Japan. Both have diplomatic missions in North Korea; also large Communist parties with es:tensive ties in Red quarters. A fact unquestionably playing a role In lending substance to the disquieting report is th e Administration's repeated statements, both P!'ivate and public, that it has no knowledge of the whereabouts and treatment ol Ole 82 Pueblo crewmen. Their Communist captors have stated they are receiving "huniane treatment." The White House, Stat.e Department and Pen- tagon admit they know nothing as to jUJt what that constitutes. As a result, there are growing ap- prehtnsions over the fate ct the Im· prisC>ned crewmen. As this colUmn recenUy reported, "No one goes so far as to 'ay there Is a possibility that casualties may have occurred among them. But ttUs dire likelihood iJ left dangling." AUiO POINTED out In that column was a. highly significant comm,nt by Sen. Robert Byrd, W. Va., deputy OemocraUc floor leader, in a broad· ca.st to hi' state. Following was his reply to a question .about the Puebto: "l know of nothing new. The Joint Chiefs of Stall bave tUTned thumbs down OB any military moves because in their opJnion these would result Jn the death ot the men Md the opening ol. a second front in Asia. Our govern· ment ts contlr11W11 eUorts to bring about the nleue of the men through direct negotllliou and dlplmuUc chanli.els. I imagine the North Koreans will hold the men until such time as they feel they have milked all of the propaganda value out of this affair," "Do we know anything about the present health of the men?" "I cannot say that we do." .. Are they an living, do we maw that?" "I cannot sey that they are. with cer· tainty," nplied Byrd obviously choos· ing his words with care, "and l doubt that anyone knows for sure that they are." A recent intelligence repart in· dicated the 82 crewmen have been split up into groups and are held tn dif- ferent prison camp1 . Also that .om, mail is getting to them through the Ina ternational Red Cross. By Robert S. Allen and John A. Gold1mJtb --WWW- Tues d ey, July 23, 1968 The editorial page of the Daflv Pilot seek! kl inform and ttim- vla.t• reader1 by presenting thil newspa.per'i ophlion.s and com-- '71tntary 0t1 to¢u of interest ond lignificcnu, bv providtno a forom for the uprtsrion of our reetdert' opinion.t, and. bit presenting the diverse view- pointl of fn/o?'1Md ob1nwrs ond spoketmen. on topici of th.I doy. Robert N. Weed, Puhllaher •\ •