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1968-08-01 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
• ! 1 ' • , -... -• --- l • - . . Mia111i Gu·ls Swoo~ as Beagan~ Lindsay Address· Conve_n(ion ' THURSDAY, AU~UST I, 1968 VOL. U, HO. lM, I SICTIOMS, )I l"AOIS • ·Beath ·Dive '* * * * •• n ··~ .,.._.I, ' -. ' ' ' • ' . ( .1;: * * * :::itud~ • . . . . ' . -, • ·-• I * . . Gi.AMOR HAMMER HITS·GOP ·lleot•°"' LindNy-Jn ~ . I •.. '· * *· * ·1 l Uf~~ J. ~· .. ,' '· or· I .. S·tate Recall Move · I I ' . . .,PouBJ."E TRAGEDY -Crash !nvesljgators cluster' around remains .of crop dusting plane in which Costa iMesa1pilot Robert Nichols, 36, ")vairkilled when it crashed in Oceanside-area beanfield. Shroud (fore- ground} covers body of Nichols' wi!e, who · was· killed· when plane smashed into her in its death div«!. Says Reshlts ' ' Prove People's ·Crash of Crop Dus'ter Kills Me sa Pilo i, Wife -. Co1nmon : Sense ' 1~rom Wire Se;rvtces SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A six· . . . month drive aimed at1 recalling Gov. Ronald Reagan shortly before the Republican NJ.tional · Convention ap. peared today to have ended in faillft. ~ A IO.year-old Costa Mesa 'girl was orpbabed \Yednesday '"'hen a crop- dusUng plane piloted by her father and direCted visually from the ground by " her mother crashed in a lima bean field near Oceanside, killling both parent.. ' The Piper Pawnee clipped a ~wer Police Flus h 4- J!ur Jar _§_!lspects At Beach Plaza · -~ -.:,..;.L --. -An eight-mail platoon of Huntington Beich police officers !lushed four b u r g 1 a t y sus~ from Malct;mx Menswear ~ a • Five l>tilnts Sbo~pmg Center ~thing store early Thursday morning. . ,_,1_ The rour , tncludJng l~ JU"'2u.><>:1. are believed to be lmpli0<1ted In .a string of seven IJunUngton ~ach ~nd Fountain ·Valley burglarK!'S v.:hich began last Friday. . Adults anested we re Z b·1 g n i e w Da!enta. 18, and Joel Woods. 19. All four suspects reside in an apartment house at 7692 Liberty St .• Huntington Beach, according to police. . ln\•esUgator.i said 1be qu.ai:tel ~1so is suspected of ransacking th~-Chic~-ln~ CQOP rest.alh'ant, 8890 ~ .A.ieDl!f• ~ P6untalft V.Uey. sbortb' .oejOrt m14· night Wednesday. In addlUon, pollcc s aid, the~ recovered goods at the suspec.ts residencti JmPl.lcating. them in earlier burg1an..•.r Crest View School. Family BWJ..a., Talbert Avenue and Beach Boulev~: Fiberglass C?m· pany, Fiberld.ass J,toad ; Cal-Va Dairy, (Sci> ARRESTS, Pate %) • The Republican govs nor, retuning line. on its .ipproach, rlipPed over and {o the state capital " after an at splattered into the ground, careening peariance befo~e the G~ convention s 20 vards and crushing the mother, platform comnitttee, h led the d:rive's whOse body was hurled 20 feet: -failure as·~OOf of the ople'1 "_E:om· mon sense." t The dead were identified by t.he San "It confirms w ha r I've said · all Diego County Coroner's office as along," Reagan told an impromptu Robert. "Nick" Nidlols 45 and his d • • Wednesday night pla sl e news con-wil'e Ann, 36, both 'of 651 W. 18th St., ference. "It reaffilms my .faith in the Oosta Mes~. common sense of the ople." lnv~ators sald a ·teen-.Bge son of ~bulk of the rec · count made it the n;mg eontp.aQy· foe;. which Nichols, impossible to arri at precise a retired Marine C0CpS malor flew, lilml>ers, but It ap ed certain the watched the freak tragedy unfold on signature count w total far Ius Camelot Ranch , in ttle San Luis Rey tb th -'" to rce 1 ,,~11 an e 1uu.J-u., n o "'4."ey. . riCall election. .. ~ He was idenUfied as Ro.be:rt . R. Ancl the fail~ ficolleet almost Gebhart, 17, of .135 Magnolia Ave., · 800,IXX>. signatures fr eight millloo Costa Mesa. s~ of tb_e ~ner« Sky -registered votm in e nation'• .moat HaWlt, a cr(ijj!(lustffig ~ ·bead-popuJOua state bacltf op the recall quat.tered at Orange COunty ./Jrport. DPoupl primarily co itiog of political Investlgarors aaid Mrs. Nichols was novices s~anding et ooe. aide of her busbaod'.a. LL Gov, Robert F. Finch. and flight _approacll to ·mark n>w• ol al!· Secretary or Sta Frank Jbrdan dusted bean plants .as the Pawnee issued a statement houri after aircraft zoomed in on lt.s low-level run. the Wednesday dea passed caUVig After clipping the wire and tumbling the failure a.vote o~confidence for the to earth, tl)e plane bur at into flame"S govemor, . 1 and burned~ 1 • • 1 • • "Thei'e is every J:ndioation that the The crasf:\ Wed.nesdaY was the se-recall campaign isl climaxing in col· cood severe setbaCk to Robett OMal failure " the !two state olllclals . Gebh art's a\.iation service .. since one said. "The 'results . . . appear to other plane thas ·~ Jost 10 an even represent an overfhelf1)1Dg repudJa- more bizarre fash1on. tion of the movemept by the people of Il wa~ J\Qlen and later turned up ht this ' st8tC." · Mexico, where 11:uthori~es have refus-The two jqined-R!epn in calling for ed to release at to its owner, for changes in the rtt)ll law, which re. • retltOns detailed in' Mexicaq law. q~ no s~c ftasqn-1 to forct a 'Ibe Nichols CO\(i?lt are survived by Plilbll:c figure to facrE"1.be vo~to kiep a 1Q.year-<1Td03Ugh(er, wbose .. name · his ·jo~ it ~pcine11 can get 12 rcent "'as not in\mediately available, and a of the vot'firs tiJ the 'election lfgn · 22-year-0ld dpughter by a prior ,mar-petiUo.ns. • · riage. The recall bac~ ..,al.Dlt a.tan Gebhart was nol available for ad· WCH Speciflc,...,h~ ... 'I)ey dJl.i"ted ditional in!Orrnithm aOwt tbt era.sh or that Reagan was not contpeteat 'lo its victim s today and.J,tur Nichols home govemment an4.Pilbllc el'fairs and ac· Wa3 emety, the JitUC_glrJ gone to lla1 CllHd hJm of8~1Jlg 1llo llale'I with lritnds. (ll<e...,..,..... P1 .. Z) i ~-- ' . LBJ Sees Mass· Attack ' Discouraged by Red Bitildup iri . V ie.~rttJi!i · • WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre!ident Jehnson .-y ... the nation can expect a inas~ve attack ·hy' the enemy in Viet~ na mand possible "dire economic COO· seqllences" at home over a steel price bobtt. The President says he is discourag-. ed over the infiltration and troop buildup by North Vietnam In the South and lack of response, 10 fEr, to the U.S. bombing restraint.. Calling Jn ilnpromplu news CQn· then ''bring about· a ·re'~U5tm.ellt on rerence in the Cablnet Rooffi ol tho the a~tiqn the Be\;hl~Wp::C~f·b'a~ \Vhite fiouse late Wednesday af. taken." . ~1 :.r 1·-~.r, .. ' • ternoon, the President issued a bias! The. price ·boost CllJle' lJ.eff 0 r 9 at Bethlehem' Steel Corp. for Its an· representatives -or indU~ ,Md,· tbe nounced S percent across-the-board United Steelworkers t:rD.pi COUJ.d.'sl~ price incre·ase effective Aug. 8, the a new 1abor 'contract expected to'f'ais8 first such blanket price hike in the in· wages and fringe benefit• by &t·leaal dllStty since .. PresJGeot John F. ken-six percent a year o..p .thf'next three' hedy's confrootition with the steel years. tita!ns In 1962. Johnson called 'the .settlement high. But, he expressed hope the enemy will match the restraint and that the attack, which he said appears im· minent against major South Viet-namege' cttles ''could, be aborted." Pointing to the possl ble·lnllatiooary Pojnting to "' 4.1 percent fir~t half: in· consequences from pricing decision he crease Jn profits for the No. 2 said could affect the entire economy, steelmak,er, Johnson said "the public Johnson declared: interest must be recognized by the ,en-. He cautioned H&nOi..that the ·u.s. mlgflt have to act promptly with ad· dlUonal military measures if they "put ,OUr men· in danger ... " "Inflation for steel i3 lnflaUor. for tire )ndustry in its J?ri,ce 4e¢si~ at the nation." this criticaJ time." Johnson said be hoped other steel The 42-ininu'te. sess1911 w i t h companies "will not join this parade'; /... repol1t.ers, 1oqger than usubl, covered and that competitive factors would.f '·only a -few topics. • • · ~ 1 . . GOP Glamor ·Reagan, Liridsay Wow Ladies By BARRY FERGUSON nam,e was Mrs. Eve\yn Brubaker. a M!AM1 BEACH (UPI ) -The housewUc on vacation here with mcm· Republicans put on public display bers of her bridge cl"ub. Home town? tbell: two top gJarnor boys. The au-Classifted information. Just say lhe dlerq In the gallery, overwhelrilingly upper Middle West. female, almost swooned in unison. Mrs. Brubaker wore white slacks, . Contrary to Whal Rudyard ,Kipling an orange shirt. white flat sh~s , a. wrote, eaat and west do m~t. 10 an serpentine silver bracelet on her· right ovtrnow crowd assembled Wednesday arm .and a · small camera tastefully to • 'GO'v. ~Ronald Re«gan of slung from her left shoulder. Calllonla 1114 Ma)'Or John Lln\19ay of New -York IPl)eat before lhe platform Was Mrs: Brubaker faregoing a sun- - · • •.Y morning on the beec.!t lo · hear ..... 1 :rtlil was Jt! Reagan and Lindsay discuss the Wbldi ,... of these handJome pollU· polili~ar ls&ueal cienl colld.· better stir. ibe hearts and "Issues, Ussues, issues," s he l!lood of Ille lolllllo electoral&! r<plled. "I came bere ., see these '.l1all ...,..peed;tat .founcl a vacant guys in person and so did most of the. chllr In Ille p..uc 1111ery. Ha-r .. 11<1 other · girl.I lri my party. Where •I•• hlmaell lfftecl next to a channiu: can you aee Reagan and Llndsay In lady who bid .ll}ived '"'hour ud i • · lhe 1ame momtng and atill gel out ill ball earl,y. lnlnlQUCtloDI ftlUed. lier (See GLAMOR, P•I• Z) ' we ... et T~oso pesky 'lo,w clouds -will part by mtdmornln1 Fr.iday·to al· low mostly sU.no:i skJes with a coastal htgb or 78. INSJDE TOD,\'." A Callfoniian who· knew · the daus of the Wild Wes& wa1 burled today. The •1"'11 of th• tiionear who died a& 1J1 is o,. /'ag~7. ' { I •• •• ' I . f1 .t • ' I ! I \ , 2 DAILY rllOT TI.n.t.,, ....... 1, 196& .~·sister ~ ~ 1~ In Laguna SALT CREEK 'SEA' -Loojting llimost like a new Nile surounded by Egypti8nesque buildings and facilities, thil la the way artist foresees development of 35-acre seawater lake in Lag\ina Niguel de\1"1op- ment of property along coast al Salt Creek Cove In southern Orange Coast area. .Laguµa Niguel_ 'Inland ----Sea'~ue at Salt Creek An inland "sea" containing 35 acres The commission members endorsed miles or coastline. o!"ocean water coaxed 10}.and by some the a.rµbitious program, which F.erajd./ The Salt Creek property abutting grading and dam buAing at Sa}t said is expected to get under way next Monarch Bay to the south, already has ~Ir: cove along the Orange Coa!t s year. ~, one mile of ocean beach front so that southern stretcbe1 is tiij!, mzjor ~~-AA_!jn~ t!....._ ~fTp~~~.=J." _!~ .. .ii~~!.!.~"-~ ~·h~ .. .!.~~,.~~- (eatun or a ma&ter plan ror develop-development, 1n keeping W1 ilie residents will have three miles Of ment 'or the 650-acre parcel. overall plan for Laguna Niguel, which ocean and lake beaches for recrea· Artist's renderings of the develop· already boasts a champlonsh.ip 18-hole tlonal purposes: ment pro~sed by the La~u~a Niguel goy course, the El Niguel Club, a Surrounding the lake will be a varie- Corp. ~ep1ct towers, ~dings and p;iyate beach ~lub ~t Monarch B~y, t y of residential projects, ranging r~creational facilities with an Egyp-riding stables with miles of c;questr1an !rom apartment towers, beach and tian flavbr. trails, and a lake which wtll be the vacation homes, garden-type homes, The Or~ge County Planning Com-center of a 150-acre park to be together with a complete vacation missloo bu approved the master plan develo~ by the County Parks and resort area called Sea Lake Village, for the project. Recreation department. . which will contain a hotel connecting The overall plan was presented to Another lake will be the focal point the lake and the ocean beach import the commhsion by Knowlton Fernald of the Salt Creek property, this one a shops restaurants gilt sh~ps and Jr., Wee president of Laguna Niguel 35-.aqe salt water lake to be formed craft: studios , ~d entertainment Corp., and Daniel M. Branigan •. vice by ~ammln~ up Salt Creek ~yon on facillties. A boardwalk will surround president of Victor ~r:uen Associates, the inland side of~h Coast Hi ghway. the lake and there will be facilities for -pl~DJlers of the proJects, at the com· ~.lake created wl .contain about 300 boating, fishing and other watfr- mission's hearing room iD Santa ~a. million gallons of a water and two oriented sports. MJ(;ky Claims New Poll gth; Nixon Scoffs MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Nelson A. ROckefellet's managers claimed tod.:iy that a new public opinion pall favorable to him bad started an overnight swing of Republican Na· tional Convention delegates away from Richard M. Nixon. The Nixon camp scci'fed elaborately. Lt. Gov. Malcolm 'Vilson Of New York state, a Rockefeller 11trategist, gaid hll workers sent telegrams to all 1,333 delegates to the convention, which opens here next week, to inform them of the latest poll results. The poll by .Louis Ha.nil gave Rockef~r 40 percent of the \lote against 34 percent for either Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey or Sen. Eugene J. McCartby, while Nixon was lhown trailing Humphrey .U to 36 and Mccarthy 43 to 35. tlNCREDIBLE' Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's com· m1Deatioa1 director, said it was "in· credible" that Nixon CDUld lead in the Gallup Poll, published Monday and trail 1n tbe Harris Poll three days later. He said "the Rockefeller polling gam.1 ii over'' wiU. NiJ:on still winning DAILY PILOT H..,_. IHclt C••t• MeM H• ...... 1Mc• \..91111 hK• w.. l 1k~ h111ttil• Y9'1ey CAUFOlNIA OlAHGE COAST ~U8LUHING COMPANY Robert N._ Weed Praldtnt .nit PuttllMt' Jecli R. C11rl.y Vlot l'n1kMl1 •1111 0-11 Mel'll~r Tllomtf ke1vil EllllDt T~o11111 A. M11rphiN Ml-1119 Ellilor 11wl Nip111 AO..erlls)119 DlrKtor 0-°""" C05l1 M"": lJO Wnl 111~ SlfMI N-.1 8e.U.: 7211 W"t lltlOINl llouieWrd L-llHCll: m F_I ..__ MlllllllllllOl'I 8tKll; X1t jtll Slrftl "on all counts." The new poll reversed attitudes in the two c&mps. Roc~efeller people were diJcount.ing and Nixon people were exulting in ttle Gallup results showing Nixon b e a t i n g any Democratic cballeoger. Wilson said at lunchtime that he bad spent the morning taking telephone calls Crom delegates from all sections of the country, expressing new inter· est in Rockefeller. Wilson and former GOP national chairman Leonard Hall, a key figure in the Rockefeller campaign, con· tended that the delegates were becom· ing convinced Rockefeller wu a "sure wiMer" in November and that he would win the nomination fourth or fifth ballot. 'OUT IN FRONT' on the "We know Rockefeller had to come from behind," said Hall. "He bas. He is now out in front." But Klein told repcrter&: "I submit that the polls sbow conclusively that Gov. Rockefeller has failed in history's most expensive two-month campaign. Richard Nixon is the win- ner and he will be the winner in November.'' Other Nixon campaigners stood firm on their forecast of an early ballot vic- tory when the GOP national con· ventlon opens next week. Sen. Everett McKinley Dirksen of 11· llnois, a towering figure in the Republican party, said, "I don't think it (the Harris Poll) makes much dif· ference." 1-fe said he felt most of the delegates already had made up their minds. Dirksen has not endorsl!d either Nixon or Rockefeller. About a third oC the convention delegates were in town and the elated Rockefeller forces duplicated news stories of ttle HaJTJs PoU and slipped copies under the doors of their hotel rooms while they slept. ARRESTS ... Beach Boulevard;. and Dr. Robert Krough's Beach Boulevard office. Offieers estimated the value of the recovered goods at ,1,500. Included was a quantity of narcotics. and &yr· lnges allegedly stolen from Dr. Kroug)l, Dalenta and \Voods were booked inlo U1e tluntingt.on Beach jail and the luvenUes placed ln Orange County U\lt:nll1 hall. ''~m ~\ed. t.a be lrTa.igned ty M-mt~lpal ~Wtl\Orange Coun- • Fernald said a second beach club, the Laguna Niguel Beach Club, is plann~ for a stntCh of the beach to the south of the present Monarch Bay Club. This club will provide a beach recreational facility for m01t haguna Niguel residents. Apartment structures and cluster housing units are planned to be built along the bluffs overlooking thei.ocean further south towards Dana Point, and thls area, from the ocean inland would also feature other types of residential projects, including garden homes and townhouses. From Page 1 GLAMOR • • • • time for lunch?" As the boxing wrlterl say, It ap. peared to be an even match. Both men are sl.x feet or better, both have quick smiles, both have eyes which appear bright and hot across a crowded plat· Corm committee room. About the only dllference is that Lindsay part! his abundant hair on the ten and ~agan on the right, and U yqu try to read any political impllcations into that, you are being subversive and out to undermine the American way of life. Lindsay was first. Llg~ brown strlt, white shirt, blue and white tie. He hegan his speech. The loudspeaker system faltered. but it sounded as though he said something 1 l Ke Chainnan OirKsen and distinguished ,members of the platform committee. "\Vhat was it he said?" Mrs. Brubaker was asked. ''Be quiet," she replied. ''Don't listen to whot he says. Just look ." Mrs. Brubaker leaned back In her ehair and let Lindsay's ivy teaj!Ue voice engulf her like a warm bubble hath. J-ter face had the ecstatic ap. pearance of a lady at the bridge table who has just drawn 13 spades. Occasionally she sighed, but when Lindsay fini shed she was out nf her chair shouting and applauding. The Re neral applause for Lindsay lasted four minutes. Mrs. Br u b a k er' s personal demonstration lasted six minutes. Then Re agan. Blue suit. wh ite shirt. dark blue tie. Thick hair combed back to look like corduroy. Gr.eat applause. Shouts of "Ronnie, Ronnie" with Mrs. ~rubalcer's voice leading all the rest. Finally quiet and then the voiee that is heard in millions of homes on the late show beJ?an to caress our ears. Mrs. Brubaker was &taring with great concentration at the speaker, and then she &poke almost In a whisper. "Dimples," she 1 a Id . .:JOimples 1n both cheeks." All good things. tven ,,olitlcal speeches, must end sometlme, and finally Reagan 1ald "Thank you, Mr. Chairman," anclalllrtod out. The moment of truth ,had aJTtved. Mrs. Brubaker was called upon to bring In a'verdJct on the comparative sex appeal or the riva1 gladi1tor1. She gave It long, ca.teful deliberation and then rpoke In the declalve volca.of an erpert supermarket &bopper: "I'll take them both, and don't bother to wrap them." • • A Texas COWDOy wbo bocked b.lt aad~ dle to get to Loguna Beach ii OD the trail of bia younger ball ailtB. If be ti.ods ber, the reunion will be saddened by a death message. Jlrn Massey, 25, arrived in Laguna Beach Wednesday morning. But b.ir search really began June 16. It wa1 tl\ea when Ilia sider, Laura Elle!, 23, clilled from JJaguna Beech to Hou&ton, where Mueey wu living at the Ume. She said sbe w.as "okay." But the M a r i n e roommate who answered the phone knew everything wasn't okay. 'Ibe girl's mother had died Ill a car accldtot loby L Laura didn't know that. And the Marine didn't tell her. When Jim learned of the telephone call, his immediate future was cut out for him. He lo>ew he bad to find his li~ Ue slater. Although there had been· occuional contact thrr4J,gh letter11 Musey bad nowhere tO J o o k e.tcept Laguna Beach. The last time be had aeen bu waa in 1964. It was known Laura waa in New York for a wblle, but cootact was Jost in tbe past year. "I think abe Is playing hard to find, but she bas no reason to hide. That I know or." Massey arrived in Los Angeles by bus Saturday with $20 in his pocket, hlJ: saddle and bridle. He buaed and walked to Long Beactt 1bouldertng bb saddle. The cowboy's trademark went Into a Fl'Olll P .. e l SEEKS HIS SISTER J im Ma1s1y bocll: abop and tile search began in earneat u Musey walked from Long Beach to Laguna Beach. Police recJ)rdl were no help. The YMCA dldn' know of the girl either but the Y founJ the young ranch band a 1ob with a local veterinarian Wedneoday. "We're the only two left. She's my little aiater. I feel responsible for her," Maseey told the DAILY PILOT. Asked about the hippie movemtnt in coonectionp with his search, the wran- gler &aid a little sti!fly, "Where I come from they don't have them.'·' In hi! COWBOY'S QUEST Laura Effel broad Teus accent, be added, "fd like to go down the middle of the hip. pies with a l>8.ir of. &beep 1hear1." The mlsslng young woman bu worked u a waitress ant.' possibly 11 a secretary. Attractive, fi\e foot, five, she has black hair, hazel eyes and average build. Information of her may he pho!led to 4114-2996 •. In the meantime a cowboy'• search continues. "She'd do things for herself," he said. "She'd get out ancJ_ work.· Nobody's ever given either one of us anything. We're not a!raicl to work." Last Hurrah RECALL . • • Play Closed Down in Alabama ~;~;;f hea'b -;;~~ . .-~~h;g-·T~bout~iig1;~:~~~ ptai·""'.-.o~~;-;;.;;~ opinlons ran p~bUc educatlop. and ~g to further 11Amerlca HWTah" bad in Costa Mesa the critical gamut from "an elaborate his own personal ambitions. , . . · . ' The manager of-the recall cam· was • fleeting allegation that its splendidly frenzied assault on the paig'il., Edwin Koupal, an unemployed poster might have been desecrating s e n s e s" to ·:~ather .~~umptuou.s used car salesman, said he wanted to the American Flag. But not so in scalpel-sharp, ~1ting ~atire. . remove Reagan from consideration as Mobil Al But Moblle cit~ of!1clals decided the a presidential nominee by em-e, a. . show was too nch for the blood ol barrasslng him with a recall election In Mobil"e, offic1all: went after the Alabama taxpayers and ordered it at home. play itself, declarlng the production a s~ut d~wn. "It is fi\th, pure ~nd "We're going to try tQ remove him "revoltln~, obscenity festering with sunple, Mayor Lambert C. Mim.J from the convention all the way " be sacrilege. declared. Said. ' The Mobile verslqp of ''America The mayor ordered the play closed Assist.ant Secretary of State H. P. Hurrah" was closed Wednesday alter after atiending ~e second, .and Last, Sullivan said he expected 30 to 40 per· only two performances at t b..e perf~ance . with the city com· cent of the signatures to be declared University of Alabama. It ran off m.J.u10ner, cty attorney and a illegal because the signers and Broadway for two years. member of the vice squad. petition-gatherers badn't met the re· The c.o.ta Mesa version's only pro-"They came to the play and laughed qulrements of the state elecfion code. blem with authority came when one and applauded along with the rest of Russian Roulette Kills Youth, 15 SANTA CLARA (UPI) -The game was Russian roulette and 15-year·old James K. Trevino's number was up. Police said •he borrowed the .22 magnum pistol ci' hia brotber·in·law Wednesday nigbt and played Russian roulette with three other teen-agers. The gun discharged when Trevino pulled the trigger and be died of a bullet to the brain. police officer figured that a poster in the audience and then went outside the theat.er window, featuring red and and called it obscene," director Larry white stripes, white stars on a blue Moran complained. field and a bangman'1 noose, con· The version wblch · opened last stituted a law vk)latloo. as dnecration weekend at South Coast Reputory's of the American Flag. Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa All such charges, however, were fared Car better. An overflowing au- later dropped and the theater Colf' dience greeted the production wjtb removed the noose from the poster. prolonged . applause, and advance Meanwhile the production in Costa reservations are reported high for the Mesa was rft&elving good reviews. balanCe of its six-weekend run. · The DAILY PILOT called it "an For that matter, the Mobile pro. evening o( theater that shatters the duction was a howling success -while sensibilities, ~at reaches out for the it lasted. It played before packed au· heart -and ttiroat -ol the au· diences ln the city-owned Pille dience." Playhouse both night!. FINAL DAYS OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al JJ. J. (Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UP HOLSTERED PIECES in your chalet of style ~r fabric m1y b1 purchased al a moil generous savings of , •• Truly a rare money-saving opportunity 20 Off RICJ•lar Prices Over 200 Stylea rX. Sofas -Chairs -Love Seats -Ottomans in your choice of any Heritage Decorator fabric, • • 1111 HERITAGE. a living tradition in furnllure Your favoritt fnttrlor dt1foner will bf hopw to auilt vou ••• PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DES!GNUS • l, • 2215 HC.RIOR BLVD. COST A MESA, CALIF. 6'16-0275 646-0276 • '• •' ,• '• " ,, ,• ,. ' '• ., " ~ ,, ... > " .. •, ·- ,. " '• ., ., .. .. ·- .· .. I ~I I, l ' I (. ' I • • ' Bea eh Your Home town ... Dally Paper ' VOL 61, NO. '184, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES THU RSDAY, AUGUST I, '1968 TEN CENTS Reagan Lauds Failure of Recall Move RESCUED -Larry Hirschman of Westminster sur· veys Aame and smoke-blackened wreckage of camp- er truck in which.he and passenger Joe Harbil5on, 17, also of Westminster, were frapped briefly follow· OAILY ,ILOT S!tff l'Mtl" ing c:;ollisiOn today at Westminster Avenue and Beach BoUlevard. They were pulled out of flaming tntck, apparently unhurt, by crash witnesses. • 3 Escape in Fiery W reek • Victi~s Rescued by Motorist 'fllrce men escaped 5erious injury today in a fiery collision of a c~per and pickup truck at. westmiiister Avenue and Beach Boulevard, \VestmiD.ster, Larry lllrschman o! 8422. sterlblg Way, Westminster, driver of the camper and ·a passepger-.J O'e Harbison, 17, of 7822' 21~.t St .• ' \Vestminster, were pUlled from 'flames which engulf~ the smashed vehicle by .wJtnesses Bob Evans, 25, of Alhambra ~ Leonard Sacks, 47, of 1629 §andpiper Drive, Seal Beach. · · Neither Hirschman nor Harbison was hurt. Evans was treated at the scene for minor burns. Driver o( the truck, Edward Geis t, 49, of 1191 N. Lincoln Ave., Orange. was taken to Westminster Community Hospital where he was X-rayed and tben released. Cause of the accident is still under investigation. P olice Flush 4 Bur.g lar Suspects At Beach Plaza An eight-man platoon of Huntington Beach police officers flushed four b u r g l a r y suspects from Ma1ebox Menswear, a Five Points Shopping Center clothing store early Thursday morning. • in W estminste1· Campaign • Backfires On'. Novices From Wlre Services ·: SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A six. month drive aimed .it ncalling Gov. Ronald Reagan shortly be.fore the Republican National Convention ap. peared tcday to have ended in failure, The Republican governor, returning to the state capital after an .ap.. pearance before tihe GOP convention's platform committee, hailed the drive's failure .as prooC of the people's "~om· mon sense." "It confirms w hat I've said au along," Reagan told an impromptu Wednesday night planeside news con· fereoce. "It reaffirms my faith in the common sense of the people." The bulk of the recall count made tt impossible to arrive at precise numbers, but it appeared certain the signatur~ , couni would total far less than the 780,414 needed to force a recall election. And the failure to collect almost 800.000 sJgnatures from eight million registered voters in the nation's most populous state backfired on the recall group, primarily consisting of political novices. Lt. Gov. Robert F. Finch and Secrelary of State Frank Jordan issued a statement three hours after the Wednesday deadline passed calling the failure a vote of confidence for the governor. "There is every indication that the recall campaign is climaxing in col· ossal failure," the two state officials said. "The results . . . appear to represent an overwhelming repudia· tion of the movement by the people of this state." The two joined Rea an in calling for $baftgu II\' · · , wlil~ quires no sf>e . ~ to foree a ·public figure to face;lhe Voters to keep his job jl opponents OIJD &et 12 percent of the voters in the lait ef~Uon to iieo petitiona. ' ~ ~ The' ie,call backers aialnst Reagan wer,e SJ*:lfic, however. They-charged that Reagan was not competent in govermna:it"and publlc"&lfllfs and ac· cused him of underminlng the itate's mental healtn program., injuring public education and trying to further bis own personal ambJtloas. Doyle Miller Due to Return From Long R est City Administrator Doyle Miller is due back at h i s desk at 11untington Beach City llall on Aug. 19. Assistant Administrator Brander Castle said to· day. " Miller is va·cationing at Concord, Calif., with his oldest son and is ex· pected back in the city this weekend, Castle reported. MJUer-'s return will be at the end or a 90-day rest period assi~ by his doctors after he surrel'f:d what was described as a mild heart attack earlier this year. Castle's .announcement apparently quashes rumors that Miller was too ill to return to work for a few months yet and that he had been considering retir- ing for medical reasoos from the posi- tion be bas held for tever:i years. ~'" ~sport ;· DAI\. Y PILO'J SWf ,.._ Railing dust in state owned borrow pit at Talbert Avenue and Gold· . en, WA!st Slr!"'t in Hl\lltlngton Beach is Ron Bybee, 20, ot 8070 Worthy Drive, W~stinlnster. Th• liill has become a popular spot for motor- .. cjCt~· enthi.lsiasts every day and for large crowds on weekends. ~ce Chief John Seftzer recenUy commented that the fans give po•e no trouble and that even Seltzer's son runs hJs motorcycle there. Beach Park Needs Listed: 415 Acres Over 10 Years By SA~'DI MAJOR Of ,.. tl•ltr '11•1 .,.,, By 1978, Huntington Beaeh will have a total of 415 acres set aside for recreation if projections of the city's Jong range park needs are carried ou·t. RecreaUon and l'arks Director Norm Worthy, in an updated si1Jiimary of what Hun"tington Beach will need for parks and recreational facilities In the next 10 years, e!timates it will cost 115.7 million. The moneY would go for the ac· quisltion and development of 92.3 acres of community parks (those located near high schools), 26.1 acres for the. Central C'i!Y Park, including Lake Huntington and Talbert Lake, and 59.4 acres of neighborhood parks. The report, written basically to outline Immediate park needs. fo~the city council, recommends that a $6 million bond issue be pJaced on the November ballot. nlis amount would be used to develop 4S sites and two community centers. · · The city currently owns 43 acres kar Golden West and Talbert streets. ""hich eventually will become the Cen· ·tral .CHy Park. In the decade ahead, \Vort~y ·recommends tbe pW'c;hase of 213.25 more acres in .this area, in· eluding ome encyclopedia Jots. The estimated cost of acquiring the land for the Central City Park ls $3.7 million, with an average cost of $17,752 per acre. Community park ne<Js by 1178. ac· cording to Worthy: -5 acres added to the 4.7 acres at Marina High. ... -28 acres purchased and 10 more leased for Edison Park, -A JD.acre park near Huntington Beach Hi gh. -Ten acres should be leased for a Yorktown park, and another 10 acres :rhould be bought for a Bolsa Cltica (See PARKS, Page %) The four, including two juveniles. are believed to be implicated in a string of seven Huntington Beac~ and <'ountain Valley burglaries which hegan last Friday. Adults arrested were Z b I g n t e w Dalenta. 18, and Joel Woods, 19. All fo ur suspects re8ide in an apartment '1ouse at 7692 Liberty St., l-Juntington ~each, according to police. . Investigators said the quartet also 1s ~uspected of ransac(d.ng tb.e Chick-In·_ Coop restaurant, 8890 Warner Aven~e. Fountain Valley, sborUy before mid· night \Vednesday. 8-kine Launching Ramp At Sunse t Beach Open Orange C.ua We11tller In addition, police s a Id, they recovered goods · at the suspec.ts' residence implicating them in earlier burglaries of Crfllt View School, Family Billiards, Talbert Avenue and ... Beach Boulevard: Fiberglass Com- pany, Fiberg}Ms Road : Cal-Va Dairy. Beach Boulevard; and Or. Robert Krough'a Beach Boulevard o[Uce. Officers estimated the value cf the recovered goods at $1,!IOO. Included was a quantity of narcotkl an4 ffl'• Cnges aD~ed1y stolen Crom Dr. Krough. Dalenta and Woods were booked into the HunUngto• Beach Jail •nd the juveniles placed ln Orange county juvenile hall., They are expected to be arrtlg:ncd :it 2 p.m. Friday in WeaJ Orange Coun · ty Municip•l Court. RESC UERS -Bob Evans, 25, o! Alhambra shows bllnis on arm and ' . . singed hair to Leonard P. Sacks, 47 (right), 'Seal'Beach &alesman. after the pair became heroes o! fiery crash. They pulled \wo OCC:Ui>' • ants from flaming clunptt truck involved in colli~ion with pickup tnic~ w~ose driver. '!as taken to Westminster Community Hospital for X-ray examination an<! C.en released. 2 Countians Die in War "nle. eight-lane JaUnchlng ramp al Sunset Aquatic part just west of Hun- tington 8-11 IJ officially ~ today fotIOwtng ceremonies Wednesday. The park Is located on Sunset Way at the extreme western end of Edinger Avenue in Huntington Beach. It is an Orange County ltarbor District pr;,. ject. So far, $2.5 million has been spent on the facility for small boat owners. A . Parking facillUes will ...-ve 182 cars wilb trailers Uld coat cf.launching a boal i• •uo. The De£ense DeparlmeD.t 'Ved. nesday identifif!d\ two Oraitge Count)' servicemen killed 1a Vietnam, Facllltlel opened Wednesday ere the lint increment O{ devolopment that will ulUmat.Jy lochldo 1,100 boat •liJll, ccmmcdil..,..... rwlmmlng and ptc· ~DI area, -•tor•I• and HPalr They ..-. Lt Je!lrey L . l\lartJo •L/lacillU.s and a 200-unlt camplnf area. Santa Ana, and Lance Cpl. Cheater E. A contract for restroom faclUUe1 R.ctVicz Cll Aoabolm. haa betn let by the county and by January lll6il the building ol 190 boat slips, boat repair and storage area and a community center is expected io begin. Opening ot the ramps brings to four the number o! county boat launching facilities, three-of" whid.1 are in Upper Newport Bay. Ketmeth Sampson, county director of harbors, beaches and parks, esUmate1 that the need Is for faclUUe1 to launch about 2,700 boats per day. With S u n .-e t Aq_uetic Park t he total capacity comes to about 1,470. • BoaW-s traveling Jbroogh t h e Suhset Aquatic Park waterways and nearby waterways ol the Hunllngt.on Harbour marina area of J:luntington lloac bare restrlcled to 5 mlltt p e r hour and must obtain 1t the park a p1as to travel through the Naval Weapons St.Uon adjacent to the park. Those pesky low clouds will part by midmorning Frid'a,..to al· I9w mostly aunny sties With 1 COastaJ lilah o1 78. ~INSmE TODAY A' Cali/om.ion t.Dho kMw the da~t •I the Wtld Wes& ..., buried todaJI. Th• 1torv of Ill• pioneer who died oi JJJ ii on Page 7. .. • • • Jj ' • ' • J D.l!LY l'ILOT Thursday,....,..,, I, I~ • : 4,500 Fresh Gls Bolster · Defense Along DMZl • . SAIGON (AP) -'Ille dof-ol South Vietn.011 northern rrootter wu • 11 f lo •• d today by (,liOO t....b Amoric111 tzoopc !own from a Col· orado base iD an airlift oC nearly 100 pi-o;_ Tbe U. &. Command announced the arrival of part of a brigade of 1lle U. S. :!Ch Mechonlud ln!anlry DlvJalon. A gpokesman 1aid the troops were flown h'om: Ft. Carson, •Colo., to In Nang, 1htn rutbed up to ClllDPI jalt below lhe ......,, eocl..ol tho demilitarized Valley Higl1 Said Hiding Dope Users Two Fountain Valley High School of- flc i.all Wednesday told Fount a In Valley Exchange Club members the school's campua harbors a 1'har<! core" group of dope U9el'I. Pep pills are readily available or ~ampus, they claimed. Principal Paul Berger and Studen ' · A.ctivitles Director · Dave Buffington referred to the narcotics situation as a "spiraling drug problem" in thelr tandem talks in which t b e y also treated such touchy subjects as "com· munications breakdown between stu. dent and teacher" and "inherent division between the s c b o o l ' s academic and vocational programs." Berger said be felt Fountain Valley "was doing more about the problem than other schools where the drug pro- blem is possibly being mlnimlzed." Speaking on student involwmer.t, Buffington point.ed to the school's positive approach of rewarding stu- dent achievers. Buffington· supervises the school's 30 student organltations and said that the administration encourages student in· terest in campU! activities. . "By acUvely particlpaUng in th< school community, we are hoping they o will carry over Uilii participation into the community of the out.side world," he asserted. Over 75 percent of Fotmtain Valley studenta begin work after high school. About 25 pereent go on to college or junior college. "We have e comprehensive school," aald Berger, "very strong vocatlooal train.lng ~rograms as well as the academic.' Children Slate 'Treasm:.e Island' Members of the we,tminster · <ltildren's Theater class will stage Robert Lewis Stevensoo's classic, "Treasure Island," at 11 a.m. Monday at Sclimitt Elementary School. The single performance is open to the public without charge .. Schmitt School is located at 7200 Trask Ave.1 Westminster. . The Westminster ChJdren's Theater class is made up o( youngsters 8 through 12. Durin gthe summer, they have worked on all facets of stage pro-. duction, Including 4i et construction, costuming and makeup, The group 11 1poru0fi!d by tile clty'1 ReereaUon and Parks Department. Liz Repor ted 'Well' LONDON (1,'Pl) -Elhabeth Taylor, recovering from a partial hysterectomy, was reported "very well" today and nurses said she would probably leave the Fitzroy Nuffield Nursing Home sometime next week. Miss Taylor, 36, underwent the 31,2. hour operation July 21. DAILY PI LOT OllAHGI! COA.ST l"VllllSHING (OM,ANV Robori N, WttJ Prt1kltnf fl'ld Pub!!""' J1c.lc R. Curloy Vkll Praldenf llld ~I MalMte'I' Tho'"'' K••.,.if fdllor llu1m11 A, Murp~ino Mlt111ol119 Edllw Alb1ri W. 11!1• Willi•"' ll:t1d A1socl1te Hunll119tD11 flffd'I Editor C!ly Editor ,.. ... ,, .... lhac) Offke 109 Ith Slreot M1Hin11 Addr111: P.O. lo~ 790 92,41 OtMr Offk" ~ a.ctlt 27" Wl!ll 81lt1N kuMlrd COil• Mftal: m Wnt a., S1l'fft '--"'t 8""11: m f8R1f AY!llUI OAllY Pit.OT, Wllll ...,ldl 1' QIO!bfMd 1!1t .._,.,,_ .. ii ,ublilfled dl!ly .. CWOI ....... , 11'1 '°"rtlt ldlllont for H11111i..o,1M IMVt, ........... IMMtl, C..11 ,.., '---a.mi. "-ltlll Vtl.lty lf'ICI W .. tmlntttr, ...,. wttll • ,...._, '41""' "''"tint •ltoltt .. ztll ...... ._ ll'rd .. ,._, II.cf\, -Ji1f W.t ..,. ltrwl', Glltl• ,...., , ........ (7f41 ,42-4)21 "'"' w ... ......, .. c... M .. 1n1 c1.,.,... """'1M11t '42-1111 ~. 1-. er-~ P111t101'1 .... ~ ... -... , ..... ......,..,..., ~ ,,,.,,.. ., .... , llW,,..,•• ""'"" _., ... ·-....... _.....,., ..... ,..,,,....,. -~--. _..,.er.. ...... MN",......,, a..<11. CtlilOOftff. av...crt.b 1¥ (. t rl' 1 t r '1,1' ~l'/'1 w """ s:.,. '""'9lfn m11u ... w lb111'191 ...... Jl.1t ..-.N1o • -· TIM orrlval " tbe !lb Divillon tr--&ht the -cl v. s. tr'OCll>I ln -VI-to about 540,000. railed apio. -tald North V-.., troopo -J>OUriol lalo lie -IA rccm! oilmlion --.. eltimated ao,ooo in July, aDil be prtdlad tbi fil\IA ror August would be hitlJer. Tile 5th Division troops joined a defense force in the nortttern pro- vinces that includes three U. S. Army and two Marioo d.Jvialons and two South Vietnanese infantry divtslons. in tile _.,.,,, provlactl ... adjaceot to tblm tn Laos, ttie DMZ or the --eel pert of N-Vietnam. Around Saigon, meanwhile, six South Vietnamese m i J i t a r y In· 1tallations were hit by mortar fire early tod;ly, but a spokesman said casualties and damage were light. CO>NA••· border. It Included 25 l<ol of lice. • nexit two moaCbl. ' u. s. BS2 bamben have been l'OllO· ding the area steadily for the Pift week. During tile nigh< they made fi1' atttcks against enemy base camps, bunlten and troop coocentratlooa !7 miles north r{ Tay Ninh City. i_ PrWdent JOhnsoo'1 1 tale men t Wednesday that the U. S. government m i g ht have to take "additional milltary measures'' to meet the th re at of major new enemy of· fensives aroused apeculation in Saigon that the ceiling on the American troop comm.Um.eat might bt U.S. t'.lificera say North Vietnam haJ the equivalent of _eight divb:ions eltber · U. S. headquarters reported no significant actioc tor American troops but said 60ldlel'I ol tbe 181 InfantJ7 Divl.!lon had uncovered a large enemy food cache ne• Loe Nllm, clote to the Troops from 1lle woe dlvlllon found 150 tons ol rice, supPlles and 70 bicycles l85t weekend in the same area about 7S miles north of S&lgoo. lt is one of Ule chief infiltration routes for enemy troops 1httattnlng 'Saigon and bas been an area of increasing ac· tivity in recent weeks, presumably 111 preparaUon for the enemy assault on the capital wlllcb is uped<d ln Ille Five other BS2 raid! were made 'Pl targets near the A Shau Valley, tJie big enemy supply base area west JI Da Nang, end near Oak To, in the e<ntral fiigblands. .'Mommy and Me' Swimming Mrs. Everett Fuller and son Russell, 5, 15&11 Candlewood St., (left) and Mra. Keith Campbell and daughter Polly, also 5, 15692 Butter- field, enjoy "mommy and me" swim classes, summer aquatic pro- gram t3ponsored by the Westminster Recreation and Parks Depart· ment in which children are taught to swim in a two-week period. Rocky Claims New Poll Strength; Nixon Scoffs MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Nelson A. Rockefeller's managers claimed today that a new public opinion poll favorable to him had started an overnight swing of .Republican Na- tional Convention delegates away from Richard b'l. Nixon. The Nixon camp scoffed efaborately. Lt. Gov. Malc olm Wilson of New York State, a Rockefeller strategist, said his workers sent telegrams to an 1,333 delegates to the convention, which opens here next week, to inform From P age J PARKS •.. them of the late6t poll results. The poll by Louis Hanis gave Rockefeller 40 percent of the vote agairu;t 34 percent for either Vice President Hubert H. Hwnphrey or Sen. Eugene J . McCarthy, while Nixon was shown trailing Humphrey 41 to 36 and McCarthy 43 to 35. Herbert G. Kleln, Nixon'a com· munications director, &aid it was "in· credible" that Nixon could lead in the Gallup P oll, published Monday and trail in the Harris Poll three days later. lie said "the ~kefeller polling game is over" with Nixon still winning "on all counts." * * * recr..uone1 area. Nixon Statement -Murdy perk, with 14.6 acres, will be •al9fadory .. i• 1s. with the •d· o ·n War Blocked ditioo of a community center there. The city now has 8.2 acres of land leased or purchased for neighborhood B R k M parks. Only 32.5 acres currently are y oc y en developei}~ Worthy says in his report. AU of these parks, except Schroeder, MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Richard Wardlow, Perry and an area bounded M. Nixon said today that the Vietnam by Ocean Avenue, 23rd Street, Palm war could best be ended by a and Lake, are a"t their recommended Rep u b 11 c an administration unen· sizes, the report indicates. cumbered by the "mistakes of the AOOut 17 neighbornoods in the past." · Westminster aDd Ocean View school Two backers of Nelson A. RockefeJ. distrlctJ ~ without local parks, and. ler on the GOP platform conunittee according to Worthy's report, the 42.5 blocked Nixon's statement from being acres that should be set aside for read before report.era and television parks have already been developed for cameras at the bearings. other things and no land is available. Sen. John G. Tower (R·Tex.) was T h e s e include the area eround stopped from reading the statement Springdale, Stacey • Clegg, Cook, by Sen. Hu gh Scott (R-Pa.), and Gov. Robinwood, Circle View, llaven View, John Chafee of Rhode Island, Viilage View, Meadow View, Spring The plotfonn committee chairman, View, Rancho View, Westmont, Lake Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, who had View, Marine View, Lark View schools okayed Tower's appelrance earlier, and land al Pearce Street, G<>ldenwcst "'ent along With the objections. ruld Slater and the Bolsa Cllica site. Scolt and Chaffee. were said to nave Worthy summarized the ex· feared such a presentation might give pendltures on parks through 1978 Nlxon backers a· chance to pull at· thusly: $7.462,250 for acquiring land; tention away from Rockefeller, who $6,764 ,CKKI for developing land : SS00.000· was the be'"ncficiary of a new Jiarrls for community centers : $190,000 for Poll showing him running ahead of the equipment, and $521.852 for con· two. Democratic candidates for presl- tingencies. deflt and Nixon trailing both. nie total of $15,738,102 would come Nixon'• $1.atement was accepted by from subdivision fees, an increase ol the committee, which ended its publJc nine cent& in the tax inoney council hearings shortly after Tower'c bid to allots to the parks department, tbe reAd Nixon'• statement was blocked. general obligation bond issue tile coun-"The war must be ended," Nixon cil m~y put on the ballot in November said in tM statement. "It rm1st be end· and a revenue'bond election in 1972 for > ed . honoAbly, con.slstent w i th development of a public Central City America's limited alms and the long Park golf course. term requirements of peace in Asia . The November bond elecUon, if .Put "U the war ls still going on next on the ballot, would bring in $6 million January, It can best be ended by • to the park budget. new adnUnlstratlon that has gtven no \Yorthy ostimated in his report the hostages to the nu.stakes of the past; recreation Ind parks tax. will increase an adm.lnl1tnUon neJthrr defending aootblllTI 10 to 11.,c~tt to amortize the old errors nor bound by tile old record. bonds as they ar¥sold and that It will "A new RepubUClft adttilntstration _.about ~.(JOO a year Pft mill!Oll to will be pledged to conduct a thorough rMirf the bonds Jn 30 years. reeppralsal or every 1spect of the pro- The A:olf course bond elect.ion would 11ecuUon of the war and the search for amount to about $4.6 million.. peace.'' • • . - * * * * * * * * * LBJ Sees Mass Attacl{. Discouraged by Red Buildup in V ietnam • WASHINGTON (AP) -Presldenl . Johnson 1ay1 the nation can expect a massive attack by the enemy in Viet· na maod possible "dire economic cm- sequence1" at home over a &teel price boost. The President says he ls di.scourag. ed over the infiltration and troop buildup by North Vietnam in the South aod lack of response, so fer, to the U.S. bombing restraint. But, he upressed hope the enemy l........,will match the restraint and that the attack, which be said appears im- minent against major South Viet- namese cities "could be aborted." He cautioned Hanoi that the U.S. might have to act promptly with ad· ditional mflltary meaau:res if they "put our men in danger." Calling an impromptu MWS con- ference in the Cabinet Room of the White House late Wednesday af. ternoon, the· President issued a blast at Bethlehem steel corp. far: its an- nounced S percent across-the-board price increase effective Aug. 8, the flm •uch blanket pnce bike In tile In· dustry since President John F. Ken· nedy's confrontation with the steel titan• in 1962. . Polntln( to tile poollble ln!lationary , Coast on Lookout , AU Cities Watching for Missing Dog t:ANDI MAJOR dog about· 18 inches high with long, r. Dalh' l'llM sr1H silky hair, a long fluffy tail that looks Ralphi 't home yet but if he's like a plume and a fluffy ruff under his anvwhere to be found Orange Coast neck, that's Ralphie and he's missed J" '· atbome area residents will send him back to With Raiphle gone "a mood falls on his family. -·-the group that is hard for a mother to The small tan dog, believed to have describe," Mrs. Heying signed. "It been stolen from the Robert Heyings starbi in the evening and ends up with of Huntingt~n Beach, has been missing the only &irl in the family who since Friday. ordinarily has a heart like ·a rock A story in the DAILY PILOT, Tues-crying herself to sleep." day offering $.50 for his return -Mrs. Heying's only daughter, 1(). money the five Heying children had year-old Linda, saved money from her been saving for Ralphie's blind sire to babysitting fees for Georgie's eye have an eye operation -has brought operation. Linda and her younger calls of sympatty and offers of help brother, Kelly, 9, added $10 to the fund fram all of the beach cities , said Mrs . by collecting bottles on the beach. lleying, 20421 Seven Seas Lane. The other Heying cblldren, Michael, "We have had such warm-hearted 17, Terry, 16, and Kevin , 15, were sav· response." she said. "Some offered ing from their part.time earnings. help of a few dollars for Georgie's Togettier, they bad '50, half of what eyes. A doctor called offering help. the operation tba.t hopefully would "~ have declined all offers, except restore the lh-year-<lld dog's sight one. A man who called said hi& would cost. children wouldn't tab 'no'." 1ben, Ralphie di.srappeared from the The Huntington Beach dog pound lieylng'• auto repair shop, Garlleld spotted one vagrant pup resembling Foreign Car, at Garfield and Holly Ralphie and notified the family. Streets. ''He was not Ralphie but he sure Police theorize the dog was taken was a dead ringer for him," Mn. from the shop, and are questioning Heying said. people who might have seen him thti For the record, anyone seeing a tan day 'he disappeared. consequences from pricing decision -he sa'id could affect tbe entire economy, Johnson declared: "Inilation for steel is lnllatlon fOr the nation." Johnson said be h..,..i OU.et lleel companies ''Will not join this parade" and that competitive factors wouJd then "bring about a readjustment on ttle action the Bethlehem company bas taken." Council Uplwlds Alamitos Police Chief Ouster Los Alamitos citycouncllmto Wednesday night upheld the firing o! former police chief Dor.aid A. French, climaxing 15 hours ol hearings over a period o{ -· lri!ll>t.. The council, after a one-hour 4S· minute closed door session, made public the decision through M.ayor Dale Kroesen. Kroesen said reasons for tile decision will remain oon.fidential unless French chooses to make them public. • French and his attorney, Albert C. S. Ramsay of Long Beach, have hinll:d broadly that legal action will follow. Wednesday night French also said citizen groups have requested a Grand Jury investigation and a probe by the district attorney's office. French was fired by City Managfr James M. Smith on June 30 on charges of personal financial irresponsibility and poor administration of the police departrilent. The dismissed chief charged at the final hearing Monday that his op. position to gambling in the city was the real reason he was fired. French, 47, was the clty's fint polico cblel, hJred Nov. I, 1961. He iild begun hLs police career as ·a patrolman in Oulver City and Iatr joined the Orange County sheriff's '¢· fice as a deputy. He was promoted:lo sergeant four years before taldng th• poUce chlef's job in Los Alamitos. .. FINAL DAYS OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT a l .JI. J. {Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UP HOLSTERED PIECES in your choice of 1tyl1 or fabric m1y be purchased 1t 1 most 91nerou1 wvi~g1 of ••• Truly a rare money-saving opportun ity 0 OH Regular l'rlcn Over 200 Styles " Sofas -Chain -Love Seats -Ottomana in your choice of· any Heritage Decorator fabric. H ERITAG E. . • livtng tradition In furniture Your favorite Interior dt1fgur~l.U bt happ., Co a.11ilt .,ou ••• - PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS • Opoi' 11•• 1"'°"'; I Fri. 1no. , 2211 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. "46-0275 "4~0276 • l • J t.. ..... ~· :....· t • Lag·nna Beaeh - E!>II ION VOL 6f, NO. 184, 3 SECTION S, 34 PAGES ~ • \ ETHEREAL DANCERS -Members o! the Laguna Beach Ciyic Ballet Co. will perform the third an- nual dance program, "Ballet Alfresco," at Irviile Bowl in Laguna B'eacb, beginning at 8:30 p.m. Aug. 31. m Jett to right are Mary Cath'erine Kamin· sky Louise Frazer, Damara Bennett ·8nd Kathy Jo K n (partially hidden by arm). Ballet Follows Pageant Aug. 31 In Irvine Bowl . '·Ballet Alfresco" will be given by members of the Lagttn;1 Beach: Civic Ballet Aug. 31 at 8:30 p.m. The na- tional honor group will present three popular items: -"Fugitive Visions," a ballet based on color and danced to music by Pro- kofiev will be seen in Laguna for the first time. -The colorful "Enchanted Toy Shop." ·usually a favorite with youngsters and the young at heart will be shown. ' -"Moods of Ancient Rusuia" will be danced to music by Arensky. Choreography is by Li\3 Zali, artistic director of the company. Tickets are available at the Irvine Bowl box office. Sevc11 to Face Na1·co Hearing; Two Bailed 011t Seven hippie·typcs arrested in a Costa Mesa narcotics raid which net- ted $2,300 in cash and contraband \\<ere scheduled for arraignment to· day, but two girls were released on 1 bail \Vednesday. Suzanne A. Smith, 18, of 2!119 Pomona Ave., and Wendy J. Weiler, 18 aiso arrested at that address, were released on $1,875 b8.il some boW's after the ·prcdawn raid on two apartracnts. The other seven suspects -six yo uths and one girl -were sch~dul~ f o r arraignment in Harbor D1str1ct Judicia& Court tflis afternoon on a varict,y of felony narcotics charges .. Investigators today were aiso still attempting to determine the identity of a sticky, black su!Jo:stance confiscated in the raid at 20 19 Pomona Ave., at first thought to be opium. The material has been analyzed several times since turning up on the Southland turn-0n scene, but seems to contain no traceable narcotic and may not even be illegal. Tustin Detective Brent Bixler, who participated in the raid climaxing two months of investigative work, said the odd comPoWJd or1gjnates .. in the Riverside-San Bernardino area. A quantity o! other drugs and narcotics -i n c I u di n g LSD, methedrinc, a m p h et a m i n es , barbiturates a:nd marijuana -some in pharmaceutical &a:mple po.ck.ages and some home-wrapped, was also taket'I . One of the suspects, Oennu L. Lilly~ 20. of the Pomona Avenue address, was carrying $1,300 in his pockets when ta.ken into ctt.~ody by the raid tean1, which carried arrest werrants. ,. ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Sister Song Texan Follows Trail to :L A Texas COW't>OY who hocked his sa,d· dle to get to Laguna Beach is on the trail of his younger half sister. ll he finds her, the reunion will be saddened by a death message. Jim Massey, 25, arrived in Laguna Beach Wednesday m9rning. But his search really began June 16. It was then when his sister, Laura Eftel, 23, called from Laguna Beach to Houston, where Massey was living at the time. She said she w.as "okay." But the M a r i n e roommate who answered the phone knew everything wasn't okay. The girl's mother had died in a car accident May 1. • Laura didn't know that. And the Marine didn't tell her. When Jim learned of the telephone call, h.is immediate future was cut out tor him. He knew he had to find his lit· tie sister. Although there had been occasional contact through letters, Massey bad nowhi!re to J o o k except Laguna Beach. The last time he had seen her was in 1964. It was known LaW"a was· in New York for a 'vhilc, but contact was lost in the past year. "I think . she is playing hard to find, but she has no reason to hide. That I know of." Massey arrived in Los Angeles by bus Saturday with $20 in his pocket, his saddle and bridle. l1e bused and walked to Long Beach shouldering bi1 saddle. The cowboy's trademark went into a hock shop and the search began in earnest as Massey·walked [rom Long Beach to Laguna Beach. Police records were no help. The YMCA didn't know of the girl either but the Y foun..l the young ranctt hand a job with a local veterinarian Wednesday. . COWBOY'S QUEST Laura Effel r "We're the only two ten. She's my -; little sister. I feel responsible for her," MasS<y told the DAILY PIWT. Asked about the hippie movement in connectioop with his search, the wran· ~·· gier said a little stiffly, "Where I come ~ from they don't have them." ln his broad Texaa accent, he 1dded, "I'd like to go down the middle of the hip· pies with a pair of sheep 1hear1." · The missing young woman has worked as a waitress and possibly as .a secretary. Attractive, five toot, five, she has black hair, hazel eyes and average build. Information of her may he phoned to 491-2998. In the meantime a cowboy's search continues. "She'd do things tor herseU," he said. "She'd get out and · work. N.oh<¥Sy's ever given either one of us anyt.bing. We're not afraid to work." Liz R eported 'Well' LONDON (Ll'l ) -Ellzabef'h Taylor, rtcovering from a partial hysterectomy,· ·w11 reported ''very well" today and nurses 1aid she would prob8bly leave the Fitzroy Nuffield Nursing" Home 1omeUmc next week. Miss Taylor, 36, underwent the 3'h· hour operaUon July 21. " ' • ~ SEEKS HIS SISTER J im Massey _NEW YORK (AP) -A vigorous early rally petered out this afternoon. leaving the stock market mixed. A few more stocks gained than 10$1. (See quotations, Pages 18-Jll). l'he market spuOed at the start amid inflationary impllcatlons of prlce boosts for steel and other products as well as a sharp rise in the consumer· price index. • • roday's Closhig N.Y. Stocks 1HUR"SDAY, :.\UGU_ST T, 1968 TEN CENTS . ---• I s om, a • Oceunside ,Tragedy ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fflf O•llr ftlltl $!11f A J().year-old Costa Mesa girl was orphaned Wednesday wh~n a crop- dustin g plane piloted by her father and visually directed by her mother on the ground crashed in a lima bean field near Oceanside. The Piper Pawnee clipped two telephone wires as it zoomed in for a pass, flipped over, bounced once and careened into the woman, who had Planners Cool To Lagunan's Rezone · Plea Application to rezone the lower half of a block of Laguna Beach property to commercial use on the eve of a city gener~l plan study may meet planning commission resistance Monday. Applicants in the change of distric t procc<lurc are llarry \Villatts, owner of the IJnguna Riviera. 825 S. Coast Jlighway, and other owners o! pro· perty in the block. between. J>la nning commissioners Monday arc to hold a second public hearing on the application. If recommended by planners and Jaler approved by councilmen it would change the zo11ing of land below South Coast 11ighway between Tba.Ua Street -and St. A·nn's Dtive." The first 100 feet or the property carries C·l (commercial) zoning but the lower portion to mean high tide line is zoned R·3 (multiple residen- tial). A change to C· lzoning on this portion ls sought. At the first public hearin·g on the rezoning, commissioner J-1 o w a r d Holden i n q u i r e d about changing the zoning as a city general plan study was beginning and a commercial·hotel zone \\'18.s in the city hopper. Engineer Jiernard Syfan, represen· ting the property owners. said \Villatts had no Immediate plans for develop- ment. Rock y· Says New Pol l Favor able; Nixon Aides Scoff MIAMI B~A CII (UPI) -Nelson A. llockefeller's managers claimed todny tJ1at a new public opinion poll favorable to him had started an overnight swing of Republican Na· tlonal Convention delegates away from Richard M. Nixon. The Nixon camp scoffed elaborately. Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson of New York State, a Rockefeller strategist, said }\is workers sent telegrams to. all 1,333 delegates to the conv~ntion, which opens here next week, to inform them of the latest poll results. The poll by Louis Hanis gave Rockefeller 40 percent of the vote against 34 percent for either Vice President llubert H. Humphrey· or se11. Eugene J. McCarthy, while Nixo n was shown trailing Humphrey 41 to 36 and McCarthy 43 to 35. Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's com· munlcatlons director, said it was "in· credible" that Nixon could lead in the Gallup Poll, published Monday and trail in the llarris Poll three days later. He said "the R6ckefeller polling game is over" with Nixon still winning "on all counts." Trespasser Held On Dru g Charge Lewis ~f. Tarter, 26, of all Marine Ave., Balboa Island. was booked into Orange County Jail Wednesday on y.ispicloo of poss~ssing marijuana by sherirrs deputie1 who claim they found a coffee can containing mari- juana in his car. Tarter was arrested after deputies received a complaint from a resident of lhe Laguna Lldo Apartments about a trespasser. "'ccording to lhe sherlrl's report. Tarter was observed parking his car at the exclusive apartment complex. using rest room facilities and, then tak· Ing Lhe elevator to the beach. • I. been signalling with a red nag. Dead are Robert "Nick" Nichols, 45, of 651 W. 18th St., and' his wife Ann, 36, parents of a IG-year-old girl, whose name was not Immediately available. Investigators said Mrs. Nichols was struck and fatally injured by the hurtl· ing wreckage, which bur st into names, trapping the retired Marine Corps ma- jor inside. "I went out and lifted the sheet over her ... before I'd even had coffee," said a newsman at the sceen, "I didn't have any breakfast." ' Mrs. Nichols was decapitated and . one arm had been slashed oft by the propellor. The crash was witnessed by the hor· rilied ~en.aged son of the Orange County Airport·based ·crop dusting servjce which owned the ill·fated Pawnee. Robert GebOO.rt, 17, of 135 Magnolia (See DUSTER, Page %) DOUBLE TRAGEDY -CfaSh 1nvestig8io~s ~luster around , femains: of crop. dusting plane in -which Costa Mesa pi_lot Robert Nichols, 361• was killed when it crashed 1n Oceanside area beanfield. Shroud (fo~ ground ) covers body of Nichols' wife, who was killed when plane smashed into her in its death dive. Reagan Recall Drive S aid 'Collosal Failure' l·"ro1n \\'Ire Services S1\CRAMEN1'U IUPI J -A · stx· m11nth drive aimed at recalling Gov. n onald ncagiln s.hortly before the Republican National Convention ap- peared today to have ended 0 in failure. The Republican governor , returning to the state capital after an ap· pcarance before the GOP Convention's platform committee, hailed the drive's failure as proof o! the people's "com- mon sense." "It confirms w hat I've said all along," Re agan told an impromptu ' \Vedn esday night planeside news con· ference. "It reaffirms my faith in the common sense of the ·people.'' The bulk. of the recall count made it impossible to arrive al precise numbers, but it appeared certain the signature count would total far le&s than the 780,414 needed to force a recall election. . And the fal\ure to collect almost 800,000 signatures from eight million registered voters in the nation's most populous state backfired on the recall group, f>\lmarily consisting of political novices. Lt. Gov. Rober1 F. Finch and Secretary of State Frank Jordan issued a statement three hours alter the Wednesday deadline passed calling the failure a vote of confidence for the govemor. "There is every Indication that the recall campaign . is climaxing in col· ossaJ faihue," the two state officials said. "The results . . . appear to represent an overwhelming repudif.· tJon of the movf!ment by the people of this sUitc." The two Joined Reagan In calling for C'llangcs In the recall law. which ri- qWres no ipecirlc reasons to fbtce a publfc figure to face the voters t6 keep his job if opponents can get 12 percent of the voters ln the last erection to sign, petitions. The recall backers aielnst Reagan were eptcific, however. They charged that ~agan was not compet~nt in J!overnmenl anti p~blic affairs and I F· cused him of undermining the state's . mental 'healln program .. injuriru: public education aTi d trying to further his own personal ambiiions. ' The manager of the recall cam- paign, Edwin Koupa\, an unemployed used car 53lesman. said he ~nted to remove Reagan from consldercrtion as a presideiltial iwmi.nee by cm· barrassing him with a recall eleclioo at ho me. "We 're going to try to remove him from the convention all the way," be said. Assistant Secretary oC State I-t. P, Sullivan said he exp:tcted .30 to 40 per· cent of the slgnatw-es to be declared illegal because the signers and petition-gatherers l'ladn't met· the re- quirements of the stat•' election code. Orange~ :~an Weather Those pesky tow clouds will part by midmorning Friday to al- low moStly sunny sides with a coastal high of 78, INSIDE TOD,\ Y . A Californian who knew tht doys of tht Wild Wtst wa1 buried toda11. The 1t0111 of lht pion.t1r who ditd at lll ts on · Page 1. """' • ... ,,.11 ... H c •• ,.,.,... ' -• • Ci.t•HIM ..,. =·-" ,_ .. K .. --.. " ............. • _ ...... • .._...., • ·--• 'l'l'NU ... .. ... ,.,, .. ,. ... H _, ..,. , .. ,, llllf'tf1•1Mlfff .. ...... ., .. fll!IHCIJ , ..... , ... ~ '•: ftlrw 'Ctllt . .,......" -.. -.... " ......... .. w-• • .. ~ ~ • ' I • I I I I I I J Jd a .: qc --- % DAll.'f' PILOT Thu~, August l , 1968 • Defense Stiff etaed ' Hanoi Hints Bombs Per· Peace Talks PAR1S (APJ -North V ietname~e diplomats participating in the Parts peace talks are dropping hints that the talks may ran unless President Johnson ends the bombing of Nlll'th Vietnam. . U.S. officials regard the vetled threats as a part of the drive North Vietnam has made 11.oce the talks began to build up ma8Slve ~.bllc opi• nton against the U .~. position. th~t North Vietntm must give something m return. ' The drive was intensified Wed· nesday after the North Vietnamese apparently decided that statements by Secfttary of State Dean Rusk made speculation about an early cha"nge in U.S. bombing policy untenable. Rusk l!ltrid on Tuesday that the U.S. govern· ment would have to be to ld what North Vietnam wou~ do before it could end the bombing. A North Vietnamese spokesman also introduced a new element into the coo· flict by implying there might be some split over bombing policy between Rusk and Amba.Ssador W. Averell llarriman, the dtief U.S. negotiator at • the Paris talks. The spokesman said Harriman dld not speak in Rusk's defense at the meeting Wednesday. • U.S. officials said I e n g t h y statements Harriman made on the reasons or U.S. ix.nblng CJ! North Vietnamese supply lines into South Vietnam constituted a reply to the at· tack on Rusk by Ha Van Lau of North Vieblam. Lau said Rusk's statement provided evidence tbat "U.S. aggreHlve ruling circles . , . are cwtlnuing their policy ol. war and aggres·s1001 continuing to ask fO"r 'reciprocity' for ending the • bombing and for a ransom to be paid to the aggressor." It was in this conteotioo that .be 'rioted 111• talks might tail, ••:Ying, "The American side bas to t>ear full responsibility for what may arise from this attitude." 11,262 Orange Counti.ans Ask Reagan Recall Petitions reported to b e a r signatures of 11,262 Orange Countl.ans for recall of Gov. Rea goo were filed 'W-y wllh C<Nnty Clerk Vijlllam St John. The· signatures carried in 1,289 sec- tions, or booklet.., were ~ugbt into St J'ohn't ~ce by John T. Wilsoo of 7052 Maple St., Westmlmter, who served as Orange County coordinator for the Recall Rflagan Committee. St John noted that the 11,262 signatures represent little more than 2 percent of Ule 518,000 registered voters in Orange ·County. St John &aid it would take his voters registration staff five days to audit the signatures. "In ttJe past, we have found 60 to 70 percent of the signatures to be valid," the eounty clerk said. St John 68.id Wilson also filed a peti- tion for an additional period oC time to secure more signatures. The county clerk said it would be up to the secretary oC state to rule on the ad- missibility o{ additional signatures. Pahn Springs Tram Closed for Repairs PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -The Palm Springs aerial tramway will be closed Wednesday for three weeks of maintenance on the cables that haul t.he cars up and down the mountain. : Each of the wire ropes weighs 35.800 poUlldS and is 13,500 feet lon g. The tram will be open again Aug. 31. DAILY PILOI • .._ ............... OAANGI! COAST PUILl~l NG C.OMl'ANY tlaMrt N. w •• d PralcM!lt 11111 l'ublliMr J1c.l l. C11rley VIOi ,ttlldttil •NI 0--1 Mfnltet 1111111•• tc ..... 11 .... T~om•I A. Mu•p~ine MtN91ne l!llter P1ul NI'''" ,lcl~rtl1!119 Dlr«lar L...-.._.Dtnu 722 Fot11t Av•- M1llh1 9 Aclclr•t•: P.O. l ex 666 '2651 Ott.ff 0Hk11 cai. MeM: m w..t ... ., s'"" ff"""' lff<,ll: 2tl1 Wnl l11t1e11 8o.111¥1rd ~ lffcll: • $1?1 Slnlll 4,500 More Men . Sent to Vietnam SAIGON (AP) -The defense ol South Vietnam's northern frontier was stiff e n e d today by 4,500 fresh. Americmi troops lown from a Col- orado base in an airlilt of nearly 100 planes. • defense force in the northern pro- vinces that includes three U. S. Army and two Marine divisions and two South Vietnmnese infantry divisions. U.S. officers say North Vietnam bas the equivalent of eight dlvislons eltur in the northern provinces or adjacent to them in Laos, the DMZ or the southernmost part of North Vietnam. Around Saigon. meanwhile, six ·READY FOR OCCUPANCY -Finished "plug-in" house is ready for ocCupants within minutes after installation at site, 1015 Park Ave., Laguna. Founda· tion (two concrete block wallks) doubles as under- house garage. The U. S. Command announced the arrival of part of a brigade of tht U. S. 5th Mecb&nhed Infantry Divi!ion. A gpokesman said the troops were flown from Ft. Carson, Colo., to Da Nang, then rushed up to ca:mps just below the eastern end of tbe demilitarized South Vi';!tnamese m i I i t a r y. ~n· stallations were hit by mortar fire early today, but a S'J)okes~an said casualties and damage were light. • • ' NEW RESIDENT -Crane riggers guide half of prototype bolt-1<>- gether house into place in Laguna where it was set on prepar~ con·· crete foundation and bolted to its other half, also a prefabncated wooden section. - Laguna, Schools Weigh Bridging Recieation Gap Jt appears city officials and school board members will be putting their heads together to bridge the so-called "recreation gap" in Laguna Beach. At Tuesday's School Board meeting, Board President Dr. Norman Browne said he would appoint two tioard repfesentatives to meet w i t h representatives of the city council in the near future. The appointments will be announced at a study session next Tuesday. Purpose of the joint recreation com- mittee is to study the city's total pro· gram and to work out arrangements between the city and the school district for financing the program. It Mattie Harris Funeral Held - Services were held today for Mrs. Mattie Conley Harris, a long-time Laguna Beach resident who died July 29 at the Basler Rest Home in Santa Ana after an extensive illness. • Officiating at the services conducted' al Fort Rosecran~ational Cemetery in San Diego was r. Dallas Tumer, pastor of the Comm ity Presbyterian Church in Laguna B ch. Having moved to Laguna in 1941 . Mrs. Harris was actively associated with the Patience Wright Chapter of O. A. R. serving as Regent during 1944-46. Bes.ides being a 62.-year member of D. A. R .. she was active in Laguna Beach organizations including the Garden Club. the Spanish Club and the V. F. \V. Auxiliary. The widow of the late Col. W. E . Harris (retired), Mrs. Harris is survived by a niece, Mrs. Marjorie Lutterman of Laguna Beach and a cousin, Miss Isabel Connor of Long Beach. 2 Girls lnjtu·ed Crossing Street Two 15-year-old girls suttered minor injuries in Laguna Beach Wednesday afternoon when they were struck by a oar while crossing congested South Coast Highway ln a pedestrian walk. Sharon Daseler I 15 or Pomona and J"elen Craft, 15 of Claremont were given emergency treatment a t South Coast Community Hospital aDd releas· ed. Police Sgt. WeDdell Faulk &a.Id the girls were crossing Uie hl.ghway near Cleo Street w!len they were struck by a car in the center lane of traffic. It was driven by Kathlyn K. Lohr, &4 oC South Pasadena. She was not cited, Faulk said. . ' t has been suggested that the com- mittee report back to the school OOard And the city council no later than Feb. 1, 1969. From Page I DUSTER.:. Ave .• Costa Mes3., was standlng at the opposite end of the lima bean field along the lush San Luis Rey River bot- tomland. Neither he nor his distraught father was available for comment today about the tragically freak accident on Ernest \Vatson's Rancho Guajoinita. An eyewitness, however, s a i d Nichols had made one pass over the bean field but was too high for ma:x· imum effect, so he made another run, zooming in beneath a power liQe. . · He failed, however, to Seil tWo thin, ropper str&nds of telephone wire directly in his flight path. Plumbing contractor George Benner . w.as standing on a .hillside some distance away watching the crop dustin·g. which was being done while the bean plants were still covered with dew. Benner said the airer.ill flipped over as it clipped the lower-level wire and plunged to earth. Young Gebhmt, whose father owns the Skyhawk crop-dusting service, ran from his nag station at the opposite end of the bean Cield, but there was nothing he could do. Investigators said that besides the 10-year-old daughter. Nichols is survived by a 22-year-old daughter by another marriage. , The Wednesday crash in the San Luis Rey Valley east of Oceanside wa s another severe setback for the Costa Mesa cropdusting service. Spokesman for the aviation compa· ny said shortly before noon today that its hard luck-dogged owner was distraught over the latest development and unavailable for comment. "He's in no condition to talk to anyone and probably won't have anything to say for several days," oae employe &aid . Several discrepancies arose in reports of who was present at the Crash scene. ranging from a 17-year- old son of Gebhart, to a 16-year-old son of the victims, or even Gebhart himseU. Russian Roulette Kills Youth, 15 SANTA CLARA (UPI) -The gamo was RUJslao roulette and 15-year-old James K. Trevi.oo's number was up. Police a.aid he j)orrowed the .22 magnum pistol "Dls brother·ln-law WedoesdlJI night Md played Ru5'1an roulette with three olher teen-aee.rs. ' ' Lag~naMan Unveils New . Pre-fab HoJrJ,e You can truck it In or fly it in, plug it in and live in. It's a prefabricated house designed by Laguna Beach architect J. Lamont Langworthy. zone. . .. Ttie arrival of the 5th DiVlSlOD troops brought the number of U. S. troops in South Vietnam to about 540,000. President Johnson's stat t m e n t Wednesday that the U. S. government m I g ht have to take "additional rnWtarY meulll'ft" to meet the th r ·e at of major new enemy of· fensives a'.rou.sed speculation ·in SaJgon that Ule ceiling on the American troop commitment might be raised again. Johnson said North Vietnamese troops are pouring into the South in record numbers -an estimated 30,000 in July, and be predicted the figure for August would be higher. The 5th Division troops joined a U. S. headquarters reported no significant action for American tzoops but said soldlers of the 1st Infantry Division bad uncovered a large enemy food cache nem Loe Ninh, close to the Cambodian border. It included 25 tons of rice. · Troops from the same division found 150 tons of rice, supplies and 70 bicycles last weekend in thtr same area about 75 miles north of Saigon. It is one of the chief illfittration routes for enemy troops threatening Saigon and has been an area of increasing ac· tivity in recent weeks, presumably ill preparation for the enemy assault (Jr:t. the caP,tal which is expected in the next two months. A prototype s)ts at 1015 Park Ave. wt.ere the road starts up the bill again tow ard Top of the World. The structure of rough-sawn redwood was trucked into town ln two sec:t:ions, hoisted into place by a crane, bolted together and hooked to sewer, water and electrical connections. ,,Last Burrall Play Closed Down in Alabama The foundation is a pair of cement block walls which double as a two-car guage. Each section of the prototype is 12-by-68 feet and each is constructed (like a bridge) so that it can be hoisted with support ·at four points. Tom Lyster, Langworthy'! partner in the Laguna based c o m p a n y "Concept Structures", said the sturdy design can be cantilevered to one-Ulird oC its length.I Lyster said'lhe partners believe the easily fabric-a'ted structure wi'U open un 'the h i 11 s Ide s for cluster-type development eliminating c0&Uy cut and fill operations. -The concept house was to have been lifted into place at Cal-Expo in Sacramento by a giant helicopter, Lyster said, but the last "Sky Crane" had been sent to Vietnam. So, the model was trucked into the exhibition where it will be on view through Sept. 15. Lyster said tbe, creation also will be featured in the December issues of "California Home" and "American Home." Meanw&ile Lagunans can view the 1,440-square-foot local model -at its Park Avenue site. About the biggest problem the play "America Hurrah" had in Costa Mesa was a fleeting allegation that its poster mie:ht have been desecrating the Americ4n Flag. But not so in Mo)!ile,, Ala. In Mobile, officials went after the play itself, declaring the production a "revolting obscenity festering with sacrilege." The Mobile version of "America Hurrah" was closed Wednesday alter only two performances at t h e Univer sity of Alabama. It ran off Broadway for two years. The Costa Mesa version's only pro- blem with authority came when one police officer figured that a poster in the theater window, featuring red and . white stripes, white stars on a blue field and a hangman's noose, con- stituted a law violation as desecration of the Americall Flag. All such charges, however, were later dropped and the theater folk removed the noose from the poster. Meanwhile the production in Costa Mesa was receiving good reviews. The DAILY P ILOT called it "an evening of theater that shatters the sensibilities, that reaches out for the heart -and t1lroat -of the au· dience." Other area newspaper opinions ran the critical gamut from "an elaborate, splendidly (renzled aSS!lult op the sense s" to "rather presumptuous scalpel-sharp, biting satire." But Mobile city officials decided the show was ~oo rich for the blood of Alabama taxpayers and ordered it shut down. "It is filth, pure and simple," Mayor Lambert C, Mim~ declared. The mayor ordered the play closed after attending the second, and l.ast, performance with the city com· missioner, city attorney and a member of the vice squad. '1They came to the play and laughed and applauded along with the rest of the audience· and then went outside and called it obscene," director Larry Moran complained. The version whic h opened last weekend at South Coast Repertory's Third step Theater in Co!ta Mesa fared far better. An overflowing au· dience greeted the production with prolonged applause, and advance , reservations are reported· high tor the balance of its six-weekend run. For that matter, the Mobile pro· duction was a howling success -whilB it lasted. It played before packed au· dieDces in the city-owned Pixie Playhouse both nights. ----- t I FfNAL DAYS OF A EVENT MONE{ SA YING al .JJ. J. (Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UP HOLSTERED PIECES in your choice of style or fabric may be purch1secl at 1 most generous s1vin9s ef • • I 20 . 0 OH R~ular Prices • Truly a rare money-saving opportunity Over 200 Styles ot SOias -Chairs -Love Seats -Ottomam in your choice. of any Heritage Decorator fabric. HERITAGE. a living tradition In furniture Your favoriU Interior dc-1igMr will be ham to asiilt 11ou ••• H.J.GARRETf fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS • r °""' ..... ,..... .. "'· ..... 2211 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 646-0276 • • • • -. -. • • •• ~ 'Glamor Mia mi Wo men Swoo.n ai Reagan, Lindaay Speak By HARRY FERGUSON MIAMI BEAOll (UPO -' The Republlcw put on public display tlloit IW• lop IWUor boya. Tbe lU· die nee in the 1al1ery, overwhelmingly female. almo1t swooned in unison . Contrary lo '"hit JllldyWI Klpliof wrott. ea1t and w•1t do mMt, 10 an .. overflow crowd assembled Wednesday to see Gov. Ronald RM.gan of CaWornia and Maror John, L.indaay of Ntw York appear before the platform oommltt1,. \ Th.11 Wll Jtl Wbk:h 001 Of tho1e blftdlolftl pOlill· cians could better stir the hearts and blood of th• female eltttora\e? Th.11 corr11pond8nt found a vacant chair In th• publloJ•ll•ry. Ht found him••lt •••lied ftl to • charmlni lady who had arrlvtd an bout and a haJI early. lntrod.uct1on1 en!lued. Her name w11 Mr1. ll:velyn Brubaker. a housewife on vacation here witb mem. ber• of hlr brkl11 club. Home town? ' OLAMOlt HAMMiii HITS 00~ lh1g1n, Llnd11y In Ml1ml Cbalrmlll Dlrkteu Ind dlltfn1ulthod m1mbor1 of tho plaUorm commtttll. "What Wll It be sald?" Jdr1, BrubllUr w11 ukld. "Bl qulet," lhl r1pUld. 11Doo't lllton to whit bo 11y1. Juot took." Mn, Brubllcar l11n1d back Jn bor cbltr Ind lat IJlldll1'1 Ivy 1111111 vole• enl\llf bor like • w.tm bubble bath. Her lace bod tllll ·OClllU• •P- pearance of a lady at the brtdtt table who ha1 jutt drawn 13 1pade1. Occ:uionally she tl&hed, but whll'\ Lindsay f!nlthed she was out ot he~ chair ahouUng and 1ppla\ldln1. Tb• i1n1r11 1pptau11 for Ll..ndeay tastld four minutes. Mr1. Brubaker'• personal demonstration tasted Ill mlnutot. Then Reagan. Blue tuft, white thlrt, dark blue tie . Thick h1lr eombed bock to look like corduroy. Ot11t apptauae. Shoutl of "Ronnie, Ronn11·~ Wltb Mr1t I.ALT Cltll K 'II.A' -Looltln1 almo1I Ukl a n1w Nile surounded by Egyplianesque buildings and facUliies, this is the way artist foresees development ol aa.acn 111wa11r lakl th La1una Nl1u•I d1velop. ment of property along coast a1 Salt c; .. k Cove In southern Orange c_o_as_t_a_r_e•_·---,----- c11111111ci tntormauon. Juat 11y lhe uppor Ml441o· w111. Mrs. Brubak.er wore white 1lltk11 an orange shirt, white flat shoes, a serpentine silver bracelet on her rig~t arm and a 1ma11 oamtra ta•itfulfy slung ftom her left 11houlder. Al the boxtn1 wtittrl •ay. It IP· peared to be .an even match. Both men ar1 111 feet or better, both havt quJck 1mll11, both have 1ye1 which appear bright and hot 1cro1s 1 crowded. plat· form comrnlttte room . About th• only l1lff11r1nce II that 1Jnd1ay parta hll abundant hair on tht left and 1te11an on the rl1ht. and il 1ou try to read any Politlcll lmpllc:aUon1 into that, you are being subversive ai:ad ovt to undermine the American way of life. · Brubaktr'1 votce 111dln1 au thl r11L Finally quiet and tbtn tht volc1 that I• hiard in millions of.,homes on the late~ show be~an to caress our ears. Mrs. Brubaker was staring with ar••t coneentraUon at th• 1pt1k1r. and thin aht 1pok1 almo1t In a WhJlper, 0 0 Unpltl, n lhe I I l d , "Dlmpl11 In. both chu k1." Niguel Plnns fnlnnd 'Sea' For Salt Creek Project Council. Upholds Alam itos Police ·Ch ie f Ouste r Was Mrs. Brubaker forego ing a sun. ny morning oh \ht beach to bear Reagan and Llnd11y d114!u11 the political Issues! "Issues. tissues . issues ," she replied. "I Clftle here to see theH guys in peraon and 10 did moat of lht other girls in my party. Whert else can you see Reaaan and Lind.sl!Y in tho Hm• morntn1 ond 1Ull r•t out In time for June~'" Lindsay was fir~t. Light brown suit. white slllrt, blue and white tit. Ile be1on hit opeoch . TM 1oud1pHker 1y8t1m faltered, but it 1ound1d as though he 11ld · 1omethln1 • 11 k a All ljlod lhlnll, IVIO polll!cal speteb11, mutt end 1om1~~:,.; and finally Jlo1~1n 11ld "Thi nk ,.._.,Mr. Ch1lrm1n,' and 1tartad out. The moment of trulh bad orrtvld. Mr•. Brublker w11 c1Uod UpOO to brlna In a vtrdJct on tht comparaUve 11x 1pptal or tho rival 1t1dl1tor1. . , Sht save It ton11 careful dtllblraUon: ind then spoke In tho doolafve voice of An inland "sea" cont.aln1n1 36 acres • of ocean water coaxed inland by some grading and dam building at 8&11 Creek cove along the Orartge COAl!lt'~ southern stretches Is the major feature o! a master plan for develop· ment Of the 850-acre parcel. Artlst'1 r1nd1ring1 oc tht develop· ment proposed by the La1una Nl11.1el Corp. depict tow&rl , bWidln11 and r1cre1tional facilitle1 with an Egyp· tlan n1vor. The Oranae County Planning Com· mls1lon has approvtd the ma1ter plan for tha project. 'The overall plan wa1 pre1ented to the comml11lon by Knowlton Fernald Jr., vice preslde"l'Jt oC Laguna Nl&uet Corp., arttl Daniel M. Branigan, vice pre1ldent of Victor Gruen A8soclates, planners or the projects. at tht com· mission's hearing r()Otl'I in Santa Ana . The commi11lon members endorsed the ambitious program. which P'ernalct said is ex~ get undtr way next year. ReereaUon Is stre8aed in the developrnen\, In k~pln1 with the overall plan IM Laguna Nl,uel, which already l!ol!ts a ehamplontblp 18-bol• 10U courte, ti!• l!ll Nlruel Club, a private beaeh club at Monarch 81y. riding stables with miles of equesttlln tr1U11 and a Jake which 'Nill bl the Los Allmito1 city coun cilmen eenttt Ol I l&O-&ere park to be Wldnllday nilht upheld the fir ing of ' developed by the County .Parks and former pollce chief Donald A. French, RkrtaUon depll'tlftlnt. cllmaxln1 fS hours ot helt'tn&s Over a •• 1xport 1up1rmarht '"-" "l'U Ilk• lh1m botll, IOd don't bother to wrap them." Anollior lllle wUJ be lhe Ioctl point period of thn• nl(fhlo. of the Salt Creek propert)', th.la one a Thi oouncll, al~ a one•hour 411· 3.S·a~e salt water take to be formed minute closed door session , made Luhe1 Steel Bike by damming up Salt Creek Canyon on public the decision through Mayor the inland side of the CGlst H.iehway. Dale KtMsen. Tbe lake creattd will eontain about aoo Kroe11n lild re11on1 rot the million gall,ons ol sea water and two d!Cislon will r1matn con-ndentlal miles of coastline. unless French cbOOses to make Uiem plW!ic. LBJ Fears New Viet Drive The Salt Creek property, abUtting Ytench and his attorne~. Albert C. WASHINGTON {AP ) -Pr11id1nt _Monarch Say to the IOUlh, already ht! 3. Ramlly ol LOna Stach, haVI hinted Johnson 1ay.i tne n1tlon can exPMt a one mile or ocean beach front, so that broadly that U!gal action WU! follow . mu11v1 lttll:ik b)' tlit enemy In Viet· with th e addition of the lakeshore, Wednesday night French also said n1 mind posalblt! "111.rt economic OOfl· Citizen grou•ns have;Juested a Grand ll"'Uencts" At home over I 1t11l price residents will b1ve t.tu'le mlle1 Of :r 'I Jury ln""'Ul•llon a probe by the booot. ocean and lake bttchts for rterta· 4l1trlt\ 1tt0Mlty'1 office. The President say1 he i• dilCOW'li· lionat purpoie&. Frenott wa!I flrtd by City Manager ed over the Jnflltratlon and trflop Surroundi.na the lake will be a varle-,James M. Sm.1th on June 30 on Chlltl•• buildup by Norih Vietnam In the &uth ty of realdert11al projects. ranging al per8on1l ftnMClll trt1i.pon1ibUlty and 11ck of rt1pon~. so far, to tht lrDl'tl. aplrt.ment towers, MflCh and and poor administration Of the police U.S. bomb1n1 restraint. vacauon home•. gart1tn·type home•, department. but, he eipresied hope tht ~tmy together With • complete v101Uon 1'he dtamltled Chief char!led at th1 will match the restraint and thal the r11ort crea caUed Sta Lake Village, final hearing Mon41y thet-hll op. attack, which he 1ald appear• im· which will contain a hotel coMecUna POlllUon to Ratnblirll 1n t111 city we mtnent a1at.n1t ~ maJor ~th Vlet. the lak~ and the ocean boAch, Import lhe rtal re11on he wu f1r1d. n&m~tt cltles "could be aborted.11 •hops, rettaurantl, gift 1hop1 -'"d J.frlftoh, 47 , wu 1111 city'• tlrat He cautioned It~ lhot_ \)le _ U.S. or&ll llllCllO<, and enlett\lnm1nt • poU~Cl\ltf'111fid1'1CW. 1, llllt. He had nff«hl have to act proinptty lollh ld· f&clUtlt•. A boarawalk fflll aurrouna begun ·hit police car1er 11 1 diUonal mllitacy me11ure-8 ll they 11put the takl and lhlrt Will be faclUU11 for patrolm an in Oulvtl' Clt)' and llttt ' our men In danier.'' boauna. flalun1 and. other water· Jotntd tht Oran11 County tbtrltf't of. Calltng an tml)l'OiTlJ)tu ntw1 con-· oriented sports. ftot 11 a deputy. . ·ference tn the CAblnet ROM\ of the WhJ.tt Houh late Wedn11d1y af. ttrnoon, Ult .Pr11ldent ilsutd .. a blast at Bethlehem St"I Corp, for Its an. nounctd ! per.,.nt acroo s.tne.boartt price increase effective Aug. 8, the first such blanket pri~• hikl in the In· du.str)' tlnoe Prtsldtnt John 'f. Kin· nedy's con front ation with the steel titans in 1982. Potnt1n1 lo the p0ulblt tnfiationlt}' coMequences from pr1einf decillon h1 Rid could allect Ille ontfre economy, JohMon declared o · "Inflation for steel i.3 inlllUOft fOr the nation ." JoMson 1altl he hoped other 1tee1 compantu "wlll not Joli\ thll Por•dl" and that compttlUv1 fle'tora woWd then "brin& aibout a rtadJ~tnt on ttie action the BeUi.lebtm company baa &akin." Soviets Publish Book on Tracy MoecQVi !JJPll -T.hl ntWIPllllOt loV!et Clllluro 1114 IOCl&l' Ille llM ... tor &penctr Tracy wa1 "• typical Amollctn di1f,laYlnl Ibo belt lealur11 of hia people. I c omrn1mar1Un1 Ult 11r1 i an- ntvmau of 'l'uoy'1 d .. \h . th• PIP!f published excerptt from a bOok about \hi IOtOI' ooon to bl publlthld by a Mo.cow publl1hor. 11' at!Ulbr f1 YeUtaveta K&tall•••· iiiiiiiii1iiii AND MORE HAPPENING S I • Sale Starts Thurs., ~I· 1st • ligge1t Sale Of The Year · LADllS' ACCISSORllS AND LINGERIE JEWELRY, req. to 5.oo now .......................... .l/z OFF SU NGLASS ES, re9 . to 4.00 now .................. lfi OFF • Save 500/0 and More • Save In All Departments MIN'S IPOIT IHllTI r19 . 5.00 no w .......•........ 2.49 reg. 11 .00 no w ...•.•.......... 2.99 LAD111· SPORTSWEAR "9• 7 .00 no w ...... , ...•...•. 3.49 r9e . 8.00 how .••••••••••••••• 3.tt LADIES' HANOKER.CH IEVES, reg. to 1.00 now _ .... 6/2.75 SCARVES, re9. 1.50 now . • ................... 75c SHIFTS & DRESSES SPl!CIAL 2/ 500 GROUP lt!OULAR $6 .00 IACH R19. 10,00 4" NOW R•t· 14.00 6" NOW t19. t6.00 799 NOW R1t· :U.00 1249 NOW Raf. )5.00 1749 NOW •••. 45.00 2248 NOW LADIES KNIT SUITS --10PS:t--- JHELU :: 2/5.00 SHIRTS :no" 1/2 OFF LONG ILE&VE BLOUSES ~:.-;." 4. 99 ROMPERS ~ .. 1i2 Off --111onOMa-l- JAMAICAJ !"' l/2 OPF 1.00 CAPRJS ~" 6.99 JKIRn ::"lo .. 3. 99 -SWIMWIAll- SWlfitSUITT ~ ..... 6. 99 BEACH COYERIPS ~ .. 1/2 Off -SWIATIRS- •ow 5.99 · NOW 13,99 .... .. 11.0I .... ..... Ot IAlLY ltRD SPICIALS U.DllS SHIFTS I.At ID KNIT TOPS ...... 6.01 NOW 2.99 2/5.00 LADIU JAMAICA$ .... "4.H L.A11n SHIRTS .......... HANDBA6S, reg. to 10.00 now ................................ 4.99 PATTERNED PANTY HOSE, reg. to 5.00 now 2.49 CANTRECE HOSIER Y, reg. to 1.51l now ............. .75c • PLAY SHOES reg . to 4.00 now ...................................... 1.99 PANTIES, re9. to I .SO now ........................................... 75c HALF SLIPS, ro9 . to 4.00 now .................................... 1.99 HOSTESS SH IRTS, reg. to 18.00 now ......... 1fi OFF GLOVES , reg. to 3.00 now .................................... 1.49 SUMMER HATS, reg. 6.00 now ............ -......... -.2.99 BRAS, reg . to b.00 now .. . . ................................ 2.'l'I GIR DLES, reg. to 8.00 nmy.. . .... -....... . ., .... KNIT SHIRTS .... 1.00 1.49 a.,. s.oo Z.49 .... "" 3.49 GllL.s SHORTS & JAMACAS .... 1.00 1.49 Z.49 3.49 GI RLI' SwimwHr ........ 1,99 • ... 1.00 2.49 IOYI SPORT IHIRTI ... , .... 1.49 ........ 1.99 • .. :·1.00 2.49 IOYI SWIMWIAll .... .... 1.49 .... .... 1.99 ..,. 1.11 Z.49 IOTI llltMUDAS .... 4,H ........ MI N'S Dllll IHllTI rt9. o.00 now .•..•• 2.99 ~tg. 8 .00 now ... 3. 99 re9 . 9 .00 now .. , 4.49 MIN'S CASUAL SLACKS A 1 1 !Hflfl•11 t 11tly ,, .... , .... f•l'1 mtchint w~;htlilt • plti11 fro11t '"otlth. ·~ re 9. to 9.00 now .. , .4.49 re g. to '10.00 now .... 4.99 DRESS Ch•••• frtf'll II'"' •••11, i•cro11 •11d Wtll I t wo•I ~l•ndt. "'' t11lfl119, of co11r1t, re 9. 16.00 now . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.99 re9. 20 .00 now ........ , . . . . . 9.99 reg . 26.00 now .............. 12.49 ""'t ll'OllTCOATS ....... ~.. 19.99 - ""'•IWIMWIAR .......... 4.49 ""'' NICK·TIH •••• IWIATllU .... ,. 1.00 Z.49 ..,. ,. 11.0t 1.H ' •AllLY ~llD ll"fCtAL •••• N l~KTllS !°'41 elOVl'I 79C !!'J· te Uo . IAI LY l lJIO t'ICIAC KNIT SHIRTS .AllLY l lJIO t'BCIAL HANDKl llCHllVH ..... 6/210 .... t.oo • BAIL't' l tlll t•I CIAL Tll, ,U,P lo PIN UT l~ICIAL 11ROUP Reg. 45.00 llTTIR OltOU~ Reg. 75.00 COITUMI OltOU, 22'° 37" NOW 99C LAii ft HALF SLIPS a..· ...... NOW FROM 45C 2/1.00 '"· '·" Z.99 .... a.et LAllD letter Jewelry ..... .... Ys PRICI 1.99 2.49 2.99 c ... t 11DU,1 -He .......... _ CORONA DIL MAii 3321 E. Cosat Hwy . Plenty of PREE PARKING .... ,,.. 1.29 NO LAYAWAYS e ALL SALIS ,IN.AL • , • 62eo I Re9. 125.00 •1•11 PANTIES 45c .... ft ... NOW - LADlft PANTIES NOW 75~ DIPAll1MINT STOlll SAN CLl!Ml!NTI 111 Ave . Del Ma r Larae Parkln& Area In Rear ·" • 'I J • • • - • • ~ .... Dlifll' ..... t-ln .Orange County'• own Dennis Cole will abare billiilg with Ricardo Montalban in a "Fashion for Dy- i.nJ" ei)isode of 20th Century Fox Teevee's "11ie felony Squad." Cole, from Orange, who appeared on stage at !be Orange County Press Club awards 'banquet Ibis past J anuazy, will appear with otb· er regulars H-ard Duff and Bon Aluaridar as the series premieres tis third 1eason Sept. 27. • • TM ez-.wife of Wilcontin Gov. War· f'en Knowles has remarried. The form- er Mrs. Knowle.s, who obtained a Mexican divorce Jul'JI 16 we& married July 1 B to Milwaukee millionaire in· dtt.!trialist FrancU Tracker in NeW York City. • Mrs. Mary Jane Black, of St. Joseph, Mo., explained to the judge after a collision that her doctor told her to drive her family car at high speeds to help her relieve her tension. Magistrate Ma rg1ret Young, after hearing witnesses testify that the woman had pulled out to pass e car in the face of on· coming traffic, fined her $50 and court costs. She also r ecommended , a change in doctors.· • • You think your wife's hand bag is cluttered? Alan Fried of Los An- geles called the Las Vegas sheriff's office this week to cancel a ·report !bat $11,000 worth of jewelry had been stolen from his hotel room during a recent visit. The gems turned up in his wife's .purse. • TM Sta~ An6m1>i1,: in Sacra- mento t)9ted .unanimouals,i thil week to correct a bill governing the selection of textboob for the University of California. Th• word "education» toa1 milspel- led. • Willard Underwood, who drives from Huntsville, Ala., to Virginia each year to go deer hunting, got a six-pc;rint buck Utls week. But it wasn't in Virginia. Underwood hit the big deer as be drove to work at the Redi'tone A{senal. Conserva- tion Department Officials took pos- session or· the animal, All Uhder- wood got; was a leaking car radia- tor and a broken headlight. 66 Arre1ted Firebombing Hits Seattle 3r~ ·Night • From Wlre Service• SEA 'M"LE -Police arrested 66 persom Wednesday night as rock throwing and firebombing broke out in the city's predominantly Negro central area for the third straight night. There were isolated reports of gun- fire, but police said Ibey had no reports oC anyone being hit Police said the fire saw>ded like it came from both small automatic weapons ad automatic rifles. Pallce Chief Frank Ramon1 who ear1ier met with Mayor J. D. Braman, at 10 :26 p.m. ordered all available units to move in and "arrest all in- dividuals causing and supporting the dJsturbanoe and unlawful usembly." Fifty adult males, twa adult females ..n.11:· 14 juveniles were arrested. The juveniles were released to their parents. A portrable unit at an elementary school, a drive-in and a drugstore were targets af firebombs. A number of grass' fires' were reparted. A civilian motorcycle and a car alsa were set afire. , Tear gas was used extoosively on groupe of 100 to 150 perso~s in Ule Garfield High area. GRAND RAP IDS, M I c h , ment block building occupied by Gibson Inc., a guitar manufacturer. GAINSVILLE, F11. -Police sealed off a 14-block area in· a Negro ghetto section here early today n roving gangs of vandals hurled rockJ at automabtles for the. 1h1rd straight . night. . City police_. sheriffs' deputies and highway patrolmen blocked traUic in the aru following a skirmish in f:rant oI the ~C ~nge and package store which.refuses.to serve Negroes. TwO persons, one a juvenile, were arr'ested OJ) disorderly c o n d u c t Charges. . · '· 1 Some 15 squad car1 and 2tl riot. equipped police. moved in to disperse the crowd and tbe rock-throwing begao. Johnson Signs Multi-billion Housing Bill ' . TEXAS EXPLOSION -This is what remains of a Kennedale, Texas gas station and gasoline truck which exploded Wednesday throwing flaming gas~ line into nearby trailer park and shooting a huge fireball hundreds of feet into Lhe air. At least 18 person& were injured, six of them critically. One woman described the holocaust "Like a scene out of hell; itseU." '"Like A s~ene From Hell'· .28 Injured in Texas Gasoline Explosion Firebomblngs were reported Wed· WASHINGTON (UPI) -President nesday night in the Negro sections af Johnson's signing today of a ~~ Rapi~~ and . Kalamazoo, tw~ multibillion dollar housing bill gave KENN£:DALE, Tex. (UPI) -Mr1. blackened highway, the melted truck tank truck Wednesday whtch lajUJ'fll ~cbigan ctti~s . bit by r a c i a 1 new di~on to government efforts ta Glynn Grune1 looked down the road tires, the charted 1ervice station. 28 persons. d1sturbances within the past week. ..Jlelp poorer Ameri@DS buy flomes. running in front of ~e and could She stared at the devastation "It looked like a scene from bell Grand Rapids pOlic_! sai~ two v.a~~~~ ~ Ui• .. , MOt,"eD.tect tc..tbe .. ,f,ief it t!ee ,!t. aµ_.;:-.~~~... . s trees, the a rou,bt by the explosian o! a gasoline itself," she said. h~·~""n-vfrtn'l:" ~':ue-"'Cl:~ uei:1t a h1aja?-1egm1m"tnlliiP'rl':· .. · -.w....:.:.JLl.:~JJ..!·..:.__...\:....:..s:l-.. ~~~·-·:.l'·'.l.!I~............_~\.\ .. _·,:·:-::...:::...::;...::.z~~! !J:.~~-~ tostolf'C b~vily Negro Southeast Side and that The $5.3 billion meast;J"e authorizes J c ·-«< ,..___ sm ire 5 ed while a tank truck a ftrebomb ~as foun~ inside on~ house . construction or rehabilitatian af about B • h ' R s t filled the overhead storage tank at the and a gasoline can 111 front. Wrndows 1.7 mJWon homes and apartments ov_er lS ops equest uppor Red Ball gas station on U.S. Highway '.Nere. brakeo on a .park~ car ~d the the next three years, a substantial . 287 just south of Kennedale. 1nter1or was set afire, police satd. first step in Johnson's goal of six . . . In Kalamazoo, 80 miles south of million new housing units aver the ~1.x of the ~~lured were reported in Grand Rapids, a 24-year-old Negro, next decade. Of p ' B • h c l critical con~t1on .at F~rt Worth and Floyd Glass, was anested and boo~ed It includes a new home ownership ope s irt . ontro Dall" hospitals, mc!uding Dallas TV on a· charge of arson af~ a firebomb program to help low income families newsman Steve. ~er1nger of KR!p· was thrown against the wall of a ce· buy modest homes with the federal 1 TV in Dallas. P1er1nger wa s st~g 7 Die in Crash As Police Chase Speeding Auto JOLIET, Ill. (UPI) -Seven persons were killed today when a epeeding car pursued by police cruhed head~n inta a stationwagon carrying six members of an Arkansas family, Will Coonty authorities said. The fiery crash occurred in the predawn darkness on Interstate 55, about 18 mile! south of here. The vie· ti.ms were not immediately identified. Lt. George Bohac a! the sheriff'g deparbnt:nt said he spotted the speeding car g·olng south in the north· bound Jane of the four .Jane divided highway. He estimated tbe car was traveling more than 100 miles an haur. He said he was not in a position to chase the car, but that he radioed to another officer, Oarl Sisinski, who us- ed his squad car as a roadblock. The speeder, he said, tried to go around Sislnski's car, whose head· lights and revolving red light were on. hit the fender of t:he deputy's car and went on. The. runaway car cootinued sauth. sideswiped a car containing three persans and ttien crashed into the sta- tionwagon. The three in the sideswiped car were shaken up but not seriaus)y injured, Bohac said. The six family members included three children, two adufts who ap- peared to be their mother and father, and an elderly man, authorities said, The speeding car had a Chicago license. government paying all of t h e less than 50 yards from. the station martgage interest except the first l WASHINGTON (UPI) The VI reflects this concern. when he was engulf~ 1n tbe huge per cent. Catholic Bishops of tbe United States "The Holy Father, speaking as a fireball. - The new law also offers subsidies to have called on members of the church supreme teacher of the church, has Kennedale volunteer fire chief Tom· some builders of low i n com e and the clergy to support and heed my Lowery said Pieringer "walked apartment!, sets up programs for riot Pape Paul's ban on artificial means of reaffirmed the principles to be follow-about 60 or 70 yards down the highway and flood insurance, and extends the birth control. ed in form in g the Christioo con-and then collapsed. He was just a program of rent gupplements for A statement issued Wednesday on sciences of married persons in car-white ash from head to toe. All bis lower income Americans. ' behalf of the awroximately 26.5 rying out their reSp0nsibilities. clothes except his undershorts were Since many of the programs pro-Bishops in the United States said: "Recognizing his unique role in the burned off." vided in the' bill contain subsidy com-"We are aware of the difficulties C. L. La n e was at h j s home. In mitments spanning 40 yeaTs, total that this teaching lays upan so many universal church, we, the Bishops ot Dalworthington Gardens, just north of federal .expenditures could exceed $50 or cur. conscientious married people. bhe ch~ch in the United States, ~le Kennedale, when h-e ,saw several fire b 111 io n if Congrees later appropri-But we must face the reality that with him on calllng""Up<>n our pnesl.& trucks roar by. He'. decided to in· ates all funds sought. struggling. to live out the will of God and people to receive witll~ritr"-"~IKatt~ -'3nd ttopped · on . a . road Existing programs of model dties, will often ent;til Sacrifices." what he, has taught, to ,9ludy it 9verlooking the scene just before the urban renewal and mass transit are A group. of 87 church thealogians carefully, and form their consciences tank blew. · continued· under the. new law. Tuesday had issued a statement in its ';gilt. , 11 "When it blew, it (the flaming s~ying Roman ~tholic couples have "We are aware. of the \tifficulties gasoline) just spread out on the group Physician Swims . Catalina Channel PALOS VERDES (UPI) -A 37. year-old physician failed by just over an hour Tuesday to break th e long. •1 distancj! swimming record between Santa Catalina Island and t h e Southern California coast. Dr. Robert Conray of Long Beach fought adverse currents and brisk winds to swim the 22-mile Catalina Channel lo 11 hours and 54 minutes . He fell short of the mark 1et in 1958 by housewife Greta Anderson who made the swim in 10 haurs and 49 minutes. She then immediately set another record by swimrnnng the other way in 15 hours, 36 minutes. Cmroy, a radiologist at Long Beach Veterans H&ipital, undertook the s~m without fanfare and only a few friends and relatives were waiting at the cove just south of the Marineland another record by swimming the the right to disobey the Pope on birth that this teaching lays upon so many and then back in. Then a big column of control. of our conscientious m_arried people black smoke went over the (Grimes') The Bishops' Statement was releas· but we must face the reality that house and flames came shooting out of ed by Archbishap John F. Dellrdetl. of struggling to live out the will of God the smoke," Lane said. Detroit, presid~nt ol the Natianal will otten entail sacrifice. Conference of Catholic Bishops. He "ln confident trust in the firmness Dick Myers said he was about five , miles north of Kennedale when he said almost all of the Bishops in the of their faith, in the loyalty to the holy nation· were contacted Wednesday for father •nd to his office , and their noticed a column of heavy black · · bef h t t · smoke coming from the south . thell' views ore t e s a ement was reliance upan divine help, we ask of written. them a true Christi an response to Utls "I saw the fireball come over the The statement 1tid: teaching." tops al the trees -it must have been ''The -sacredness of christian mar· at least 300 feet in the air." he said. riage makes it a special concern of the. The be'.at of the fire melted the twin teaching missian of the church. Its Jealous Lover air horns maunted atop the big Mack dignity must be carefully safeguarded truck's cab. The copper cable of the and its responsibl1'ties fulfilled. The powerfuie that bad run in front of the recent encyclical letter of Pope Paul SJ ff b d station was laid bare of insulation by ays us an . the flames. Several child.N!n playing near a barn about 250 yards behind the. Grimes hOme were singed by the fire and two af them were knocked from the roof to the barn by the force of the explosion. None were seriously injured. Flames Destroy Tank of Copra LONG BEACH (UPI) -A tank con· tainlng hundreds of gallons of dried coconut meat was destroyed. in a spec- tacular fire here. Wednesday night. SAN FRANCISCO (uPI) -An estranged husband wu shot and killed tOO'ay by the man living with his wile. , Police said Robert Mangs, 'Z1, who was released from jail Wednesday alter serving tour months for an assault in the love triangle, headed to a Sunnyside home occupied by his wife, Eleanor, 24, and Logan C. Mills, 24. e stevedore. The blast lifted the 6.000-gallon storage tank 30 reet in the air, spun it end over end and ~opped it on a large trailer house next to. the station. The trailer was destroyed, but na one was in it at the time of the explosion . Burrrr! 31° • Ill Butte A spokesman for Baker Com· modities Co., ow6er of the tank, estimated the loss at more than half a million dallars. o The tank contained copra -dried coconut meat from which the oil has not been removed by pressing. As Mills and Mrs. Mangs prepared an early breakfast. Mangs kicked open the door, but Mills threw him out, slamming the door shut. police said. But Marigs came lxrek, hammering at the door. Pa lice said Mills then opened 1 peephole and fi.ed a single shot tram a .32 caliber automatic. Flames spread at least 400 feet in either direction dawn the highway. Trees in the front yard of a house next to the station were reduced to gray skeletons. although the house Itself, which had been evacuated, was spared. 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M M '~ " . ,, I The blaze occurred a block from the berth of ttie farmer ocean liner Queen Mary, new undergoing conversian into a floating hotel and restaurant. The vessel was not endangtred. Marigs, bit tn tbe middle of the forehead, fell dead to the. bot.tam af the six.step st.airway that leads to the dOOI'. RELAX DURING THE PO ITICAL CONVENTIONS ... ,l .. WHEN IZt:PUBLICANG MEET · AT MIAMI BEACH AND PEMOG12AT5 MEET AT Cfl lC.A60 TO CJ.<OOG6' PIZt;GIDENTIAL NOMINEE5, WEtL HAV!: 0!112 AGGOCIATEV PRESS STAFF IZIGHT AT THE GCSN6. TllOY'LL llEPOlll' AND ANALYZGi..~IFT AND DE'CIPH612. Tll•r'l.L 8126Ak 'tlllZOUGH TME' CONFi.JGJON AND G6T TO THS FACRi. • One end of the 1torJge tank ended up in a clump of trees far from where the main body oC the tank finally came to rest. TlltY'LL P!ZOVJDEi F0/2 oul1 DAILY PAGE'$ COMPLErE:, ACCUr<ATfi AND UP.. TO· 'Tllo-MIMIJT'6' GTO!<IEG AND PICTUR66.~FOIZ YOU TO READ AT R.-. CONVoNIENCE 0 e- iiAP-IF YOLJ WI -THEi IZECO!aD OF TJ.<EGB Hi6TOl21C EVENTG. ~--i DAILY PILOT ) /I ·1 j 1 ,. .. J\ -----· . -. ---. ~~. LB Thursday, A119ust l , 1908 DAILY PILOT ]] Law Can Give ··Better 'Protection to Society Forty porcent of all male children now aUve In tbe United Stat.es wW be ar- rested at _,. polJ!t IJ1 tli•lr lives for law violations other than traffic o1fe111e1. This k one ol the ltl&!Ken· ing pred.icUoJl.$ ot t:h8 U.S. President'• Commilalon on Law Enforcemfllt tnd tbe Admlnlstration ol Justice, in a report prepared by . ex· perts Jn ~ field, Including several sdlolars at tbe University of CalifOrnia. Tbese days the law ls sub- jeoted to deep questioning. Rising crime rates, con- gested trial courts, DVerf1oWiog pri.&on1, aud & growing recognition that crime nurtures on aodal ln· juSUce lend urgency to the 1earcb for Wiser penal codes •nd more effective pro. ced ure s. And the p r • lident's Commlislon makes abundantly clear that tbe nation can oo Jooger al· ford -·v it ever could - crime resulting from weak laws. • Tbe classic 'example of a weak l\W that encouraged a A l'ELEGANT MEN'S SHOPPE . MIDSUMMEB proliferation ot crime a.ad return ror these co&U 11 corruption wu Prohlbttion. disappoint.mg, Kadlsb notes. But there are a number Of The public d r u n k 1J existing law1 afllllnlt 10----usually the alcoholic and the called "private vlce1,'' the homeless, "for whom victimless, con1entua l alcoilol, poverty , aDd crimes wh)ch, simply by rootlessness have become a being '. illegal, provide 1 way of life. . .Ule com. breeding ground . for e•· pulsive repeaters .•. who tortion, rackets, and official have be.en arrested and run corruption. through tbe process time Berkeley Law Professor and tlme again. u Deter. Sanford Kadi!h writes, '.'The rence · seldom work 1. overready usumption that Rebabtµtation 11 illusory the way to control behavior becaus~ a cor:rectlonal Ls by making it criminal regimen for these persons is may interfere With tbe largely non-existent. oper ation ol tile . crlmillal SEARCH NEEDED law and inhibit the develop-ProfeSlar Kadish believes ment of 10lutlons to un· the search for alternstives -derlylng .soclal problems." is imperative, "for it weuld Public drunkenness, for at least Identify the problem eu.mple, ls the cause for for what it really ls, a social about 1 third Of all arresU prol>leli> of alcllolollsm and -placing a str.P upon poverty, for which social courtrooms, jails, and cor-.services, not the penal-cor- rectional fa<:ilities . The rectioDal process of -tbe crlmlna1 law, 1 r • ln· cootrolllDJ tile Jl<OICflbod I-tt!minal penalties 10 canoot band!• tile problem.'! dlcakd." condu-:t. that t:tie law can be brou&bt He concludes: Gambling 11 another act IC.adUa believes crlminal to bHr more. effectively on .. Only when the load of "tbat needs better definSUon law IJllY ~ necessary to the professional g.mbUng law enforcement has been In criminal law, be says, deal with certain aspects of promoter. Ugfttened by stripping away aince the demand for It, like the problem but that the The use of narcotics and respomibilities for wticb It the 'demand for alcohol dur-blanket criminalization of dangerous drugs s b a r e s ls not suited will we begin t(> 1 , ing Proi.iibltlon, has surviv-all gambling is indefensible. many of the s am. e make the criminal law a ed the condemnation of the For example, private social obaracterl!ities as gambling, more effective instrument law. gJmbling should be relieved and "law e~ent alone of aoclal protection." On one band there are the.=============='========='======'.;:'" problei1t I'! alcoholism and ' chutcl}·sponsored bingo: on ~e othu, ~e highly organized illicit business in· volving large and some t imes national organizations dealing i n billions of dollars a year - a prime source of funds for othu crimes, and inevitably assoclated w i t b political corruption. Some IaWs -such as Uiose a g a 1 n s t disorderly conduct and vagrancy -are used f<>r purposes other than . "Arti stry in Moving" for the BEST MOVE of · YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway ~~~ MEN'S APPAREL To Jog or Not ls; Quesiion ' ********************** NEW -PERM. PRESS GRA.tl DURON SPORT SHIRTS 2 w.,, 2 Pocllet 'Slleft S..... HR411ercw.f W ... llt. .... ~:.388 LAGUNA SWIM WEAR . 88 1et.6.tSY.t•4 MOCK or TURnE SHIRTS c.,.lo -'"" ........ 1 ...... ..... -,., ..... 12.•1888 • IANUMlllCAID • ~.una CHA•M 3355 VIA UDO • NEWPORT BEACH ' SAN FRANCISCO -To jog or not to jog? '!bat's the question asked by Dr. Leo N. Liss, associate professor ol podiatry at the University of California San Francisco Medical Center. Dr. Liss notes that jogfling has become more popular than ever since an article, "Aerobics," appeared in the Reader's Digest. ''Aerobics simply means building up the body by means o£ exetcise which develops the use of oxygen. Hawever, the question arises whether jog·ei.J)g or other aerobic e x e r c i 5 e s mi~t be too severe tor the average person." There are some people who are physically able to jog or to perform any of the other Violent exercises sug. gested in the article, and others are not. "One must be careful not to overtax the body apparatus which sup- plies cxygeo-carrying blood to its many parts. "For example," says Dr. Liss, "there are some peo- ple who .have blood vessels which are clogged up with fatty substances -similar to old water pipes 'Which get rosted on the inside. When this happens the blood vessels may be unable to supply muscle3 with enougb blood necessary to perform You earn more in Newport Beach if you go to Glendale strenuous exercise." • Jogging, whether done in position vr on a track, re- quires a great deal of ex- ertion and a large supply of blood to keep muscles ac- tive. "lf the muscles~ are overtu.ed, the lack of blood may not only affect eJ:· tremlties sucb as f o o t mwcleis, but also the heart itseU. "However," concludes Dr. Lis~ "if you are physically able, jogging will h e l p develop new muscles, pro- vide m ore strength and may result in making you feel and look in tbe pink of healti1." • There are 18 "Glendales" in Sou1hem California. And a savings account at arry of Glendale Federal's conven· ient offices earns a full 25%morethan it does in a regular savings account at a bank. And Glenda le FederaI's Bonus Accounts eam even more. Safety? Your savings are prolected by nearly $1 billion in assets, making Glendale Federal the nalion's second largest Federal. Won't you wend your way to one of our doors soon? Glendale Federal I Newpor-t Beach SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION• MAIN OFFICE: GLENOALE 2333 Easl Paclftc Coast Highway at MacArthur Boulevard e FOR ·The NEW ' MODELS ARE HERE! 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W-..-try « wttl11 ef .,_.... fun, •TM IUA MIM. I....,.. Ao .... _COAT. AND SUIT SHOP. Speeie1 ·,.1. of yur around wool coots for women, tog. 60.00 lo 76.00 _____ 38.00 SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR Wida ialection of assorted sportswear in favor- ite. 11Y,lu, colors --·--·-·······--.~ to ''2 off DRESS SHOP Misses' two •nCI three piece suits, a to 20, val. from 40.00 to 60.00 --······--·········-·'···-····.....29.99 '·Misses' dr1111t by. famous mek1r1 values from 28 .00 lo 56.00 • ._ll.99 YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOPS Stretch cotton/ polyester/ nylon j11ns, sizes 5 to 15, reg. 7.00 -··-··-··--····-·········-·-··············-······-· 1.99 Wide selection of Jemeiea shorts: 5 to 13 ... 2.99 Knit tops of Ban-Lori• nylon, cotton, or Acrilane eerylie, sins 34 to 40, reg. 7.00 to 11.00 ·····-·······----···-····-·· ·················--·-····-···-3.99 to 4.99 Cardigan or pullover sweaters, sizes 34 to 40, reg. 9.00 to 17.00 ··············--····-·-·····-·-·-··············-···3.99 Cotton blouses, siies 5 to 13, rig. 11.00 to 17 .00 -·······-···-········---·-······-·········-···-····~·-··-···--··-··-· 6. 99 Cotton dirndl skirts, reg. 9.00 to 13.00 .....•..... 6.99 Pont suits: 5 to 13 , reg.)6.00 lo 40.00 ...... 19.99 Cotton sh ifts, sins 5 to I l, reg. 13 .00 to 26.00 ·························-·········· ... ············-······················· 5.99 Bikinis end metehing shifts ..................................... 8.99 Villagfr clearance of ireditional sportswear . ......................•....... ..... . ... ..... . . ...... ......... . ....... 1 /3 off Fall dresses ell from reguler stoek, reg, 17.00 lo 20.00 -·····--·-----······ ...................... -·· ............. 1],99 BUDGET DRESSES Micl-seeaon ·dresses in the new deep tones to compliment your ten. Misses' and half si1es, reg. 17.00 to 20.00 .... ·················---···-···-···13.99 MILLINERY Luxurious full akin mink hats in several styles and shedos, reg. 79.00 to 89.00 -·--···--·-59.00 ACCESSORY SHOP Excellent selection of pents in nylon or shan slreteh, 8 lo 18 , reg . 7.00 to I 0.00 .....•.......•..... 5.99 Assorted group of pent tops in colortul prints, sizes 30 to 40, reg. 7.00 •... -....•............................ 4.99 Famous maker cardi9an sweaters, sizes 34 to 40, reg. I 3.00 to 17.00 ···--·····-·······-·-····-·-············--9.99 HANDBAGS Wide ossorlmenl of handbags, reg. 6.00: 7.0d ·······································-················--·-·············--········· 3.97· Better handbags, reg . 28.00 to 40.00 ........•.. 19.97 Entire stock of 9enuine alli9ator ba9s now re- duced 25 %: Reg. 40.00 • 390.00 30.00. 335.00 Large selection of handbags in dressy and tail- ored styles, rog. 14.00 lo 20.00 ················---·.10.97 HOSIERY Proportioned seamless hosiery, 81/2 to 11 med- ium, 91/1 to 11 long •.....................•.........•..... 6 for 5.00 Support hosiery, medium length, 8'11 to 11 --····--·--···--·-·---·-··----2 for 5.oo GLOVES Fabric gloves for. summer are PK or hand•ewn in e shortie to 4-button len9th. Si1es 6 to 8, reg. 4.00 to 6.00 ·······················-······--··-····--·~·-·····2.99 FOUNDATIONS SALON C:hermfit bra hos fiberfill lined laee eup in white, sizes 32-36 A, 8, c ......................................................... 3.49 Sarong Bancfeau Bra with eriss-cross under-bust bond, sizes 34-40 B, 32-40 C, reg. 5.44 ......... 3.99 Sizes 32 to 42 0, reg. 5.95 ·······-··--·····················-4.95 Nemo panty 9irdle hes reinforced penels for exlre control, S-M·L, reg. 10.00 --·············-··--··7.99 Long leg length, reg. 11.00 -·····-·-······-·-··········•·99 Meidenform stretch bra has nylon/Lycras span- dex bands under the lace-over-cotton cups, sizes 34 to 38 s·ond 34 to 40 c. reg. 4.00 ...... 3.19 Sizes 34 lo 40 D, 5.00 value ............................•........ 3.99 Maid.enform fiberfill contour bre hes stretch streps, sizes 3 2 lo 36 A, 8, C, 4.50 velue ...... 3.49 LINGERIE Famous maker teil91.-d-briefs: 4 to 7, regular 1.50 eeeh ···············-·-······-·-·····. 99 eeeh or 6 for 5.80 Very famous maker slips: 32 lo 38 short, 32 to 42 overage, reg. 6.00 lo 25.00 ...... 3.99 to 15.99 Famous maker pettiskirts in short-short, short, •verage end even formal fashion lengths, reg. 4.00 ta I 0.00 •.......................•..............•............ 2.59 to 5.99 Famous m1ker nylon tricot pettipants in new shorter length, 4 to 7, rog . 4.00 ........................... 2.59 Famous maker "Luxe ire" sleep gowns of brushed nylon end eeetale: S-M-L, reg. 9.00 ................. 4.99 Famous maker shifts, long 9owns or pajamas. Gowns , S-M·L Pajamas 32 to 40, reg. 6.00, 7.00 end 8.00 -············································-···············-· ............ 3.99 Lorge group of flared shifts porfed for loung- ing ············-···-······ ...........................• 1/3 to 1/2 off Famous maker Perme-Press duster of polyester/ eotton: 10 to 18, rog. 15 .00 ............................... 6.99 A-line slHvoleu shifts; I 0-18: P-S-M-L.. ....... 6.99 Little care dusters of acetate sureh, 10 to 18 ········-···-··········-············-··-··············--········································ 7.99 Extr• large si1es ....... -···-·········~ .......... -.......................... 8.99 Famous maker shifts and long CJOwns for sleep· ing, reg. 9.00 to 20,00 .......................... 5.99 to 13.99 Warner's matching robe and pajameis come in several colors, siies 32.to -40 , reg. 13.00 ...... 7.99 Werner sleep shifts of fitted wolt1 gowns in 32 to 38 P-5-M-L, reg. 4.99 to 7.99 8.00 to 12.00 Warner robes ot nylon tricot; 8 to 18, reg. 20.00 --······································································12.99 Buffum's Own cold water soap1 reg. 1.50 .............................................................. 99<, 3/2.90 SHOE SALON NEW, NEW LOW PRICE De Liso Deb end other fomous name dress shoes and daytime shoes, reg. 22 .00 to 25 .00 ...... 12.97 Young Designers' dress shoes in many.colors end w'1ite with newest toe and heel shapes, reg. 18.00 to 20.00 ..................................................... 10.97 • OTHER GREAT VALUES Finest names in cfress end street shoes in a large • seledion of eolors end styles , I 1 /4" to 2" heols· Reg. 24 .00 lo 32.00 ·······-············-··········-·······-·····18.97 Ad Lib sp•eiel purehese pumps, reg. 19.00 .. ·-·······················-·-·····-··:·-······-·-················-·-···· 14.97 Casual and dressy shoes in many atyles encl eolors, reg. 13.00 to 15.00 •. _ ............................. 9.97 INFANTS' SHOP Peterson color coordinated furniture, reg. 8.00 to 29.00 --·-····--····--·-········-····-·-···-·-5.99 lo 22.99 "Hush" thermal blanket by North Star is 100% Acrilen9 acrylic. 36x50" size, re9. 8.00 ··--·····4.99 General Eleelrie feeding dishes, reg. 11.00 8.99 Standard dis~ with signal light, reg. 14.00 11.99 Dish end lrainillij set, rog. 18.00 ••. -...•........ 14.99 Bonnie Dbone laee tights for toddlers of I 00 ~. stretch nylon ere easy-care, re9. 3.00 ......... 1.99 Toddler Brother and Sister coordinates. His, reg. 12.00 ...... 7. 99. Hers, reg. 14.00 and 15.00 ...... 8.99 Permanent Press Buffums' Own play clothes for infants end toddlers. Infant si1es M, L, XL, reg. 4.00 ... 2.69. Toddlers sizes 2, 3, 4, reg . 5.00 .. ,-3.29 CHILDREN'S SHO.ES Girls' tennis shoes by B. F. Goodrich come in white end colors, some slightly irregular, sires up to girls' 8, reg . 5.00 lo 6.00 ....................... 2.99 Boys' tennis shoes by 8. F. Goodrich. Some slight irregulars, sites up to boys' 8, reg 6.00 and 7.00 ···········-····································-·····-·······-·-····3.99 GIRLS' WEAR . Fall fashion dresses for';iirls, 4 to 12, reg. 5.50 to 12.00 ·····-··········-·-·············-·················-··-3.99 to 4.99 Famous maker skirts and sweaters, color coordi- nated, 7 lo 14, reg. 6.00. 9.00 .................. 4.49-5.49 Beck to school lingerie by Her Majesty, 6 to 14 ..........................................•........................ 1.60, 2 for 3.00 Nylon tricot panties, sizes 6 to 14 ...... 3.49 to 3.99 Stretch nylon tights in seamless fishnet, reg. 3.00 ................................................................... 1.39 to 1.99 Sleeping begs in assorted prints, reg. 12.00 9.99 Dress-up jeans in cotton corduroy or cotton denim: 7. to 12, reg. 6.00 .......................................... 4.29 COSTUME JEWELRY Selection of costume jewelry ._ ..................... 1 /2 off STORE FOR MEN Shorty style permanent press pajamas of pol y· esler/eollon, A-B-C-D, reg. 6.00 ........ 2 for 9,00 Coat style permanent press pajamas of Decron8 polyester/ cotton blend fabric. Long sleeves, A-8-C-D, reg. 8.00 .. ··········-··········-···----2 for 12.50 Cotton handkerchiefs, reg . 13 for 6.50 13/4.50 Streich hose, wool /nylon blend . Anklet style, reg . 1.50 eeeh ..................................................•.. 3 for 3.00 Over-the-call hose, reg. 2.00 eaeh ...... 3 for 4.00 Euffums' Own Crest short sleeve dress shirts of permanent press Dacrons polyester/ cotton, reg . 6.00 ............................................................... 2 for 9;00 Buffums1 Own cotton knit crew neck T-shirts, sizes S-M·L, reg . 3 for 3.75 ·····'·················· 6 for 6.00 Athletic undershirts of cotton rib knit, si1es S-M·L-XL, reg. 3 for 3.00 ----·-·-················6 for 5.00 Cotton knit briefs, 30-44, reg. 3 for 3.00 6/5.00 Box•r shorts of cotton broadcloth ere fullcut, sizes 30-44, reg, 1.25 .......•..........•.............. 6 for 6.00 Permanent Press boxer shorts ol Docron• poly- esler/eotton, sizes 30-44, reg. 2.00 ___ .3 for 4.00 Buffum's Own better sport slacks, no ironing needed, 30 to 42, reg.14.00 .... : .............................. 9.99 I 00 °/, Orlon9 acrylic link stitch cardigan sweat- er, reg. 16.00 .......................................................... 10.99 Buffums' Own better full fashion knit shirts reg . I 0.00 lo 13.00 ...... . .............. 6.99 Famous maker golf jaeket, reg. 14.00 .......... 9.9·9 Famous maker all·weather jacket, rt9. 22.SO ······················ . .. . ..... . .. ················-........ 14.99 Greet saving s on our re9ular stock of fine fash- ion sport eoals reg . 45.00-145.00 39.99· 109.00 Important savings on our entire stock of fine sleeks for men , reg . 20 .00 to 30.00 15.99-24.99 Save to 22 /., ! Biggest su it sale of the year! Reg . 225.00 : ... ···································-·····-···········189.99 Reg. 210.00 to 215.00 ····-···················-·················179.99 Reg. 200 .00 ······························-···-····-···············-··169.99 Reg. 185.00 lo 195.00 -··········-·-····-···········-159.99 Reg. 150.00 lo 165 .00 ............................................. 129.99 Reg . 135.00 lo 145 .00 ·-··-··-·········-·······--·-·····119.99 Reg. 125.00-............ ··········-···················-····-··--··--····· 109.99 Reg . 110.00 to 115 .00 ········-············-········--·-·-·-··89.99 Reg. 89.95 lo 100.00 ·····························-·-··········-····79 .99 Reg . 75.00 to 85.00 ···································--···-·-··69.99 MEN'S SHOES Crosby Square's "Rane.hero" casual shoes, sizes 7 lo 13, reg, 15.00 ......................................................... 9. 99 VARSITY SHOP Entire stock natural shoulder sport coats on sale! Reg. 39.50 ......................................................................... 29.00 Reg. 50.00 ········-··········-·-····-····-············-·············-········39.00 Reg. 55.00 ·-···········-········--······-·················· ..... 49.00 Reg. 60.00 .... ·----·-------·-·--·······-···--49.00 Entire So.tock of natural shoulder suits reduced. Reg. 60.00 to 70.00 -······-·····-···············-·····-··-·-··49.00 Reg. 75 .00 ······-······-·····--··········-·············--·-·-·-···-·59.00 Reg. 80.00, 85.00, and 90 .00 -··-····---··-·-79.00 Famous maker dress sleeks, reg. 17,95 t o 30.00 now reduced lo -·····-· ... ···-···-·········· 13.00 to 22.00 Entire stock traditional sport shirts, re9. T.00 lo 8.00 -····-····-·········-···-·············5.89 or 2 for 11.00 Rog. 9.00, 10.00 or 11.00 ... 6.89 or 2 for 13,00 NEWPORT CENTER • 11 FASHION ISLAHO • 644-2200 . • llOHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 • I. I • • • ·- • STORE FOR IOYS • Entire stock of Buffums' Own short sleeve T .. shirts, 8 to 12, reg. 3 for 2.75 •••...•.•. 3 for 2.25 Sizes 14 lo 16, reg. 3 for 3.00 ...........•.... 3 for 2.50 Permanent Press short sleeve sport shirts, sites 8 to 20, reg. <lc.00-5.00 ..••.................... 2.59, 2/5.00 Entire sloek of bulky stretch hose: 8'11 to 11, reg. 1.00 peir ····-···----····-·····-······-···········6 peir 4.89 Sizes I 0 to 13, reg. 1.25 pair •................ 6 pair 5.89. Acrylic sweaters in full end mock turtl,neck styles. Washable, 8 to 20, reg. 11.00 ............ 6.99 Entire stock of boys' cotton pajamas, sites 8-20, reg. 3.50 .................. 2.59 reg. 4.00 .................. 2.99 Entire stock of Buffums1 Own briefs, 8 to 12, reg. 3 for 2.50 ....•...................•.•....................... 3 for 2.00 14 to 18, reg. 3 for 2.75 ..........................•.. 3 for 2.25 s·nort sleeve knit shirts of fine ell-cotton. full turtlenecks, completely washable: 8 lo 18, reg. 3.50 ···············--·-·····················-········-····-····················-···1.79 LmLE SHAVER SHOP Fomous maker sport shirts, Permanent Press, s_hort sleeves: 4-7, reg. 3.00-3.50 1.79 or 2/3.50 Reversible waterproof jacket of all-nylon, 4 to 7, reg . 13.00 -···-·······-····-······-·············································8.99. Entire stock of cotton pejames, 4 to 7, reg. 3.00 to 3.50 -····-·····-··················································-·····2.59. Buffums' Own T-shirts of white combed cotton, 4 to 6, reg. 3 for 2.75 .................................... 3 for 2.25 Solid color knit shirts. Turtlenecks of fine comb- ed cotton, short sleeves, 4 to 7, reg. 3.00 1.59 Pullover sweaters, 100% acrylic. Full and mock: turtleneck, 4 to 7, reg. 7.00 ..........................•....... 4.99 " STATIONERY SHOP famous melce photo albums from regular stock. Single flip, reg. 3.95 ············-···-···········--··········-····..2.80 Double flip album, reg. 5.95 -··················-·---.: ... 4.95 · Serap book, reg. 3.95 ..................................... : .....•..... 2.80 Address Book, reg. 3.95 ··········-········-······-----·-···2.80 l 9b8. selection of Christmas cards from the best makers, reg. 13.50 lo 104.00 10.80 to 83.20 Boxed stationery and notes .................. 2 boxes 1.00 Deluxe double quantity stationery .................. 1.29. Famous maker once-a-year bargains on ste- tionerY llnd notes, reg. 1.59 each -···--··2 for 1.59 Stationery, reg. 2.00 eaeh ...... ; ............... 2 for 2.9, Rose-Glo night lights, reg. 5.00 ....................... 3.99 Christmas cards, reg. 2.00 to 6.75 1.00 to 3.35 Card table covers of wipe-clean quilted plastic. 30x30" adjusts lo 32x32", reg. 3.50 ............... 2.49 33x33" adjusts lo 36x36", reg. 4.50 ............... 3.49 42" diemeler, ad justs lo 48", reg).50 ......... 4.49 GIFTS AND CHINA "Royal Albert" bone ch ina cups and saucers, rog. 3.50 ...•....................................................................... 2.79 Hand crafted cut crystal from Western Ger- many. Values from 7.00 to 12.00 4.99 and 7.99 Buenilum chafin g dish , reg . 21.00 .................. i6.99 NORITAKE CHINA REDUCED! , .... nERN 5·1"11. Pl. s.+ 41.Pc. s.1 req. 10!• rtq. 111• Whitehill 7.J O -4.49 6'9.JO 19.99 SILVERWARE Masterpiece table accessories by Webster Wil- cox 1ntern~tional Silver Co., re9. 20.00 to 45.00 ......................................................•..........•..... 14.00 lo 31.50 • Annual tray salt, ell sizes and shapes, reg. 13.50 lo 150.00 ................................................... 10.00 lo 120.00 Paul Re vert silverplated bowls, re9. 7.50 to 60.00 ·····-··········-···: •................................ 5.00 to 40.00 TABLE L!NENS Queker Laee "Seroneto" tabloeloth, reg. 13.00 to 20.00 ····'··-·····-···-·······-····--··----10.99 to 16.99 Wonder looper -met•, reg. 1.25 ........................... 99 Future tablecloth, rayon polyester permanent press. Gold, olive, white, 52x52", reg. 5.00 3.99 I 0 Y, ,savings on custom teblt pedsi leatherette or vinyli' aluminum insulation, felt backing. Free measuring service. OllfER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30' ' I • --, I • I ' . ..,..._. -.. --.. - , 'Hippies' Don '. Golf-in Garb - Groovy, hippie happenings don't just take place ·iD Laguna Beach. There 's going to be one at Irvine Coast Country Clllb. An assortment of·weiid wearing apparel including beads and blue- jeans 8J?-d old shirts will be seen on women wandering a~nd the golf course on Aug. 4. For that's the prescribed attire for participants in the Fifth Annual Florence Crittenton Sea Circle Golf Tournament. ·The women wearing the most far-out attire will be awarded a prize. . ' Set to tee off at 12: 30 will be the numerous guests invited to the golf· in which will end with a dinner dance. Numerous other prizes will be awarded there. Mrs. Ben Deane, c airman, will return from Africa_1just three days before the tournament b t has left her plans in the capatile hands of her committee, Mrs. Edina hillips, Mrs. James Perkins, Mrs. Elton Hallet, Mrs. Keith Fullenwider, Mrs. D. D. McCoy and Mrs. Clarence Graham. DRIVING THE POINT HOME -The need for a Florence Critten- ton home will be the point of the golf toi.Jrnament Aug. 4 sponsor- ed by the Florence Crittenton Sea Circle. A hippie theme has been selected for the event at Irvine Coast Country Club in which (left to right) the Mmes. Pope Hilbu~n, Orval Stewart and Douglas Mc- Coy will be participating. The b·enefit wiU raise funds for the pro- posed home for unwed mothers. The fund drive is · progress for the new Florence Crittenton Home to be built in Orange Co nty. The property for the home, which is centrally located in Orange, is 1n escrow at the present time. The home for unwed mothers, the first of ts kind in .Orange County, will provide medical care and counseling. Different Way of Life Arctic Mission ·Challenging By JOOEAN HASTINGS Of tlM Oillll' l'llOI Sti ff Blonde-and affable, June Cruse contem- plates her fiUsband's mission to the furthest portion of the Arctic Circle with faith, cour- age and unruffled cahn considering the dras- tic changes it will make in the family 's life. There are no paved streets or sidewalks in Point Hope, Alaska. No trees grow there. A few v,ihite frame hou ses contrast brightly against th e sod huts which shelter approxi- mately 1400 Eskimo and Tlingit Ind ian fam- ilies who inhabit the narrow finger of land jutling into the Chukc hi Sea. For the next three years the Rev. Fred Cruse and his family will minister to the people of the tiny community as missionaries for the Assembly of God Chu rch. NO CHRISTMAS TREE "We won't even be able to have a Chri st- mas tree -it would freeze before it could be flown in." said the youthful missionary's wife , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Floyd of Huntington Beach. The family's home will be the second floor of the neat \Vhite frame building which hous- es the Assembly of God Eskimo Church. At pre;ent there is no inside water system but the you ng minister is taking supplies necessary to install one, and al so an instant- recovery water heater. Until the new water system can be install- ed the family will use an old-fashioned. oval- shaPed galvanized tub -a gift from the Hunt- ington Beach congregation. WINTER DARK Eight months of the year te"'!peratures will range from a high of 25 degrees to 65 degrees belov~· zero in a con stant twilight gloom. and during this time the family will freeze their food in a natural freezer outside the church. Bu tane will provide fuel for cooking but oil will be used for heating since it doesn't freeze . Their principal means of transportatior over the icy terrain will be by "skidoo." a motor·driven dog sled with a top speed of 30 miles per hour. HEskimos have discovered that they have to feed the dogs all year bat they only have to feed the skidoo when they use it," Mrs. Cruse commented. The boys, used to bare feet and bathing suits, will have to become accustomed to wearing th ree sets of underclothing, regular clothing, parkas and fur mittens, and three pairs of socks under their mukluks. Formerly students at Crestview School, Huntington Beach, the boys will attend school . in Point Hope. J3elinda , the couple's daughter who will observe her 16th birthday in Alaska , will at· tend high school in Unalakleet, 500 miles from Point Hope. The fOrmer Fountain Valley High School student will be the only non-Eskimo or Indian gi rl in the dormitory. Belinda's hobby is sewing. and her mother hopes they will find a f.eather-weight sewing machine the teenager will be able to take. ACRES OF FLOWERS During the 10-week period of thaw (the ground actually never thaws more lhan two feet below the surface) temperatures will rise as hi gh as 50 degrees and for three weeks the tundra bcomes a colorful carpet of wild flow- ers - which literally becomes alive with S\varms of mosquitoes. A dentist visits the little community twice each month and a doctor calls daily. If some- one is critically ill the doctor will fly in -if it is possible for a plane to land. Since food is so-expensive (a small can of pressed ham raiiges from $1.25 to Sl .75, and a can of soda pop -when it's available - costs 25 cents) much of the family 's food supply already has been shipped. Mr s. Cruse has been experimenting with many of the fla sh-frozen, dehydrated products they will be using. She considers the celery, bell pepper and carrots quite good. Fruit cocktail, which before preparation resembles an assortment of odd-sized colored pebbles, is good but the chil dren noti ce that it lacks the color found in the canned varieties they usually were served. WHALE FAVORED Fish. seal, walrus and caribou provide The $22.50 pe person fee will include green fee, cart, snack on golf course, hors d'oeuv es, dinner and dancing . COLORED PEBBLES? -Virgil, Tom and Jimmy Ccuse {left to right) examine the contents of a can containing fla sh-frozen , dehydrated fruit cocktail held by their mother, Mrs. Fred Cruse. The Assem- the main sustenance for th e nati ve inhabi- tants. Their favorite food , "muktuk," or whale meat, is much too valuable for them to eat in large quantities and they sell the major portio~. A piece of whale meat, thawed and allowed to ''age" for three or four days is a gourmet's delight to the Eskimo1 the young minister maintained. There are five. Assembly of God missions bly of God missionary family will leave this month tQ begin a tbtee-year stay ,in Point Hope,. Alaska, some 50 miles from the.Russian border. and one Episcopal J!tj.ssion establlsh·ed _along the Arctic Circle. The protestant church, founded in 1915, maintains more foreign missions and church schools than any other denomination, according to Mrs. Gruse. The family's last rtfissionary itinerary ser· vice while on furlough will be at 7:30 p.m. Sunda'y . Aug. 11, in the Assembly of God's Glad Tidings Church, Newport Beach. Mothers Go to .Bat for Sons, Strik~ Out Daughters-in-law DE/'\R ANN LANDERS : I have two frie nds -both widows . J like these women very much -until they get on the subj ect of their families. I am sick tc. death listenin g to them brag about their sons -how smart and successrul they are. what great fathers they are to their children . Then they start in on their daughters-in-law. they ar.e dllmbbellJ -no family background, lazy, incompetent, can't do anything ri ght. From there they go on to rave about their grandchildren. They are"" the most thoughtful, considerate. most ropular kids in town . Everyone re marks on their beautiful manners. Yesterday 1 stood rt as ifl nll: a~ I could. Finally I said, "Ple ase te ll me l ANN LANDERS how come the children turned out so thoughtful , conslder•t~. w e 11 -m a n- well wh en they had suc h lazy. dumb ne red ch.tldren, It'• a pretty safe mothers?" They IU into me and in· assumfltlOn that both parents worked · sisted that the children had bten tr2i n-together to bring up those lld1 pro-- ed by their fathers. .. pcrly. The lnrlucoce of the mother Is I have six wonderful gran dchiJdrcn.· us11olly the g-reatesl, slnce she Is· the Ann, and although my son is a fine one wb.o spends mo1t of ber time person. I know his wife des".""rves· SS IHrectlng i nd dl scl pllnlng the children percent or the crMi t. Please prin t mv In their formative ye1r1. I 1ay your lett er and comment. -~·i\1R IS 1r:-'l°"R" I• mort nearly correct thAn FAIR your frlt'nds. DJ::AR 1'"1\l_R : \\'hen • l '" '" -·-· .. -~------------ DEAR ANN LANDERS : May I re- spond to "Old Starchy''-the RN who complained about the way patients treat people who staff hospitals? She said, "Illness does not give a patient the right to be abusive or downright nasty to those whose job it is to take care of them." FortunaQly, Old Starchy's viewpoint • that "genuinely nice people remain nice in spite of pain and misery·• is not shared by the majority of hospital peo- ple. Hospital adminJstrative and medical staffs }\ave long recognized that illness cah aher one's personality 1 ~1·kabl y. May I offer a par2graph from our Personnel Handbook ? "In w o r k i n g With sick and injured, remember that you are dealing with persons in exceptional circumstances. Such a person orten is upsel by acUoos and events wlhch he would not notice under normal circumstances. You will discover that many patients have fears and resentments which may manJtest themselves In irritability, un- c o opera t l v en es s and ·~ prehenslvene53. Remember Vihat is routine for you may be a grave emergency In the mind s of a patient or hls family. Courtesy, kindlless and , above all, p.1Uent understanding are the best weapons you have for cvercomlng these problems." Old Starchy seems lo have forgotten the creed of the health team . We are neither paragons of detached pr~ !1 feasionalism nor hnpel'IOnat toots of technology. We are simply people car· ing for people. -.MRS. N. L., HADLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL; HAYS . KAN. DEAR MRS. N.L: We need more people Kke you. Thanks for wriUa.f. Unsure of yourself on dates? Wb1t'r · right! What's wrong? Should yout ShQuldn't you ? Sebd for Ann Landers' booklet "Dating Dos arli Don'ta. •• enclosing with your request 35 cents coln and a I o n g 1 1e1f..addre stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be 1lad lo he · with your problems. Send the her in cAre of the DAILY PILOT losinc a Hll·addressed, otamped elope. .. • . • • • • • ' 1. -----• . . ' . --------• Horoscope Arie's: Forego Travel Plans Currently you are forced to face facts about individual who may have m a d e unsubsL&ntlated clalms. FRIDAY AUGUST 2 .BY SYDNEY OMARR ''The wise man controls hll destiny. . .Astrology points the way." ARIES (March 21-April 19): Forego tNvel plans un· W tonight. Earlier, budget dilculslon with mate or p&rmer ls indicated. Face financlal facts. Then you will be happier and able to mak.e future arNlngements. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Ue low. lliten and observe. Be willing t o gather information. Your ta.at today is to evaluate. You can successfully put ftnilhing touches on im· port.ant project. Know this -~rpood accor<llllgly. GEMINI !May 21.June Intrigue On Menu 20l : You obtaln new view co~g basic t•1k1, duties. !J'o be most 1uc- eeuful, take new view. Be exciting. Many who are con- servative m-ay lack con· fidence. Set tone, example. CANCER (.tune 21.July 22): Young persons, your chil~n -Uitse are re· quiring personal attention. Utilize iMate wisdom. Don't condemn. Key is to un· derstand. Then day oan be marked as fruitiul. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Home, property, what you have of value, are spotlighted. You will have to be flexible. Don't feel you owe anything t<J tradition. Key Is to be progressive, alert to your interests. VIRGO (Aug. 23 · S.pt. 22 ): Accent is on the way you ttii.nt, decide and -react. You may be slow to grasp fa.eta . You make progress if you know tba( first reac- tions are subject to revision. LIBRA IS.pt. 23-0ct. 22): How you evaluate your own position ii of utmost im· portance. Many w a t ch , listen for clue to your feel- ings. Today you get in· Capturing a happy time is formation which clarifies the slf.uth'1 reward for al· money position. rNdjustment are order of day. · SAGl'l'TARIUS ()'lov. 22· Dec. 21): How you confront oppcsitlon is of utmost im· portance. Jf )'OW' stance is confident, you win. Those <tn othet side Lack strength, put up bluff. Your hand is strong. Play it. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· GENERAL TEN· DENCIES: Lunar position favoi:able for fishing, plan· ting, Cycle hlgh f o r SCORPIO, SAGITl'ARIUS. CAPRICORN. Spectal word to VIRGO: center of at- J an. 19): Stress . on tiow you tention apt to be around relate . to UJOC~ates . Some . home domestic situation. may d111agree with you. Key ' is to be diplomatic. Power, ro 11m out "'"°'' tudtv flN' YDll 111 -y 11'111 1o111. w:t• S¥dMY O!oMrr't authority i! on your side. =:.; .. "=•~:t..o':1,":'t111Tc:t'! Know this and avoid panic. to orr1e'rr A11roio.y 5Kr"" :,i.r.At~Y Be mature. PILor, &Gill l:ICI, Gr,1111 Ctfl II $ .. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Premature action should be avoided, You tend to be impatient. Individual in a position to aid-cannot be pushed ot coereed. Know thl~and tread lightly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 211 ): Your personal philosophy may be ex- amined by skeptics. Have facts at hand. Key is to be ~Im under fire. If you are, the prUe is respect and ad- ded prestige. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you tend to be emotional and romantic. HB TOPS Club -~"-:::..:"~'-::_::V"'°"''"~·~V~. ~·~"·~~ tending the M.ystk:k Krewe SCORPIO (Oct. 23 ·Nov . of KomUll "International 21 ): A family concJtion f.e- lntrigue" party Saturday, quires action now. You're Allen Schoo I is the . Aug. 10. -ca 11 e d upon , by meeting place for members Mr. and Jrb'6. Mkhael circumstances or request, to o! Huntington Bead! TOPS Rapport are h 0 st arid take initiative. Change is pound Pinchers at 7 p.m. hostess for the p a r t y , n e c e ssary. Adjustment, every Monday. featuring loodl; from !weign ;::::======'======'==='===============, ' .•. We All Scream for Ice ·Cream' • Accenting the old-fashioned theme will be members of st. Andrew's Presbyterian Church when they stage an Ice Cream Soci~l from 6 to·8 p.m. Wednes- day, Aug. 7. Featured on th~ bill of fare will be a barbership quartet, banjo strumming and a three-- •· legged sack race. Getting in the first licks is Tim Campbell, 9, who is served by Mrs. Roy Ward while Kim Strutt "cranks out" the news of the family get-tqgether. Chairmen are Mrs._ Donald Langille and Mrs. James Moore. lands. Delicacies b e i n g prepared include Swedish meat·ball1, Arabic "Tabooly'", llalian Eggplant P:armigiaoo, French Bouef Bourg\1fgnon and Russian Chicken Kiev. Membel'\5 and their guests will arrive dressed as in· ternational visit<ll's in native costume or as typ ical tourists. Cocktails will be served sbarting at 8 p.m .. with dinner at 9 p.m., fullowed by entertainment. New Duties Disclosed -' . Mrs. William Hayes of Mrs . Hayes was named Fotmtain Valley has been Citizen of the Year during Damed president d Los Cer-the federation's It.ate OOD· r i t o s District, Canfornia vent:ion. Fedet"at:i.on of W o m e n ' 1 Serving wi.th her will be Clubs, Junior Membef'Shlp. the Mmes. stepben P\1$tay The motber of five and Robert Wagner,'vi~ children and founder of the presidents; Paul Sancbez. SouUl Coast Junior Woman's federation director; Fred Club has chosen Coins in a W a n k e, corresponding Fountain 81!1 her ibeme for s-ecretiary; Ricbard.Molthen, the year. t,rea1uter ; Thomas She served the · Fountain C-h f i stensen, perlillmen· V-alley club as preeident, tariaa; Dick Tr od i c i:, parliamentarian, Y o u t h publk:it)' d!irector; F r e d , Employment Service direc· Yara k, auditor-registrar; tm and fine arts cbairman. Frank ?hares, coordinator, She ial9o served Lo& Cerritos and Miss G e r a 1 d i n e District as federation ex-' Robinett, recording secre- t.ensioo director. tary. ,... COLO"' PORTRAITS ~-' * NEW PRESIDENT Mrs. Wllll•m H•y•• Bruncheon On Agenda Members of the executive board of Harbor Forum will meet for brunch Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Guy Cherry of Balboa. Reservation s are aviallable b y contacting Mike Trujillo befOre Aug. 8. A citizenship dass will be plaMed and will be the first program of· the group for [ the coming club year. At· ?. tending will be tile Mmes. .. WilUain Jones. R o bert t Nickerson, Paul Bernhart, Ralph WaUion, Lee Healy, Fletcher Stewart and Julius Christenson. § ANGEL Of A DEAL LIVING COLOR POl\i~ ~.., ~ (I) = ~ ~ 0 L ~ 0 ..I 0 0 FOR THE LITTLE ANGELSI BIG 8'' x 1 O'' LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT · NOW ONLY ~ ELECTROLYSIS Ayda L. Brn11nell, R.E. formerly of Robinson's Pesed~ & Newport ANNOUNCES Openin g of her ii'ew office 1514 North Coest Hig hway Emerald Bay Professional Building Legun• Be•ch, Celifornie Fo r Free Consultetion , , , Phone 494-2300 ,._,, .. ;~··.,,.-··-··1 I i I ·l • OUR GREAT BLONDES ENO UP WITH ROIJX , 0 · z -> We bring back the 30's blonde look of -FOR All AGES! ..I aa11E RJLL NmM. m OR FOR1RiV1S! , llat II» old ~ ..... G' .. .....,-....... & Babies, children, adults. G-pholoenphed Ill an additional 99~ per subject ~phol= IUISfilllC110ll GbARMfl£D \ « ____ ............ _ . WI RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Thl1 "'Y •r:i•cl1I offer 11 11r•t•11t1d 11 '" ••P.1"•11!111 11 1vr th1nk1 fer yo11r p•lre11•9•. _. 5 DAYS ONLY! JULY 31 THRU AUG. 4 • \~~STA MESA ~~ .. Ho-.O:> ONll\I, 3088 lristol Ave. Just Off Newport Ave. • • '· - ""' .,, WHITE FRONT OOMnY • SfJMCI • OISCO\M1 • llll'!GMJV .... ' Garbo, Lombard, Harlow-and take it right into '68 with the softest pastel toning colors. withont peroxide. Nice Change color won't rub off, lasts for weeks, can be refreshed whenever you wish. And tones your lightened hair iDjU8t 10 minute&. PLUS SHAMPOO AND SET (Mon. thru Thurs.) ~25 !After 5 p.m. $2.50) • £ Fri .• S.t .. Sun. $3.00 COST'a .• HA. CM.IP.· COSTA Mis£ CM• . ...... __ _ I ... , ... ~ llW w. a.-HOO H1rtlol' Ill .... 1r,.,..,, ""• ---w. , ... Strwt -- llMf Whtm!N- T-C...,.. """ m.,. ............ C1M9', :mt ~. F•"""- "•lrvlw ~ ~••n I -- I ' \ I ' I i J I I l I I I • ' I l I, I • '• r. . -.. Governor'~ Biggest Fan Nancy Enioys Her Role By .JOAN SWEENEY PACIFIC · PALISADES (UPI\ -CaUtornla Gov. Ronald Reasan's wife, ~an, cy, 1ay1 she ii h-er husband's great.est fan . Some Reagan watchers iay the. petite and pretty former actress i& more than that: She ls a ·great in- fluence on her husband an'd Interested in ·exchanging her role as First Lad)r of California for that of First Lady ef the United States. But it is an interest the brown-haired Mrs. Reagan denies. them; l 'm threatening to let ttle air out ol their tires so they can't leave," she laugh- ed. "'Ibey are so nice, au of them and they know their job. lt'Sfolng to 1>o tembly lonely without them.'' T w o Molotov cocktails were recently thrown at the Reagans' Sacramento home while they were there. In view of thll and the recent assassinations, what about th~ danger t h a t ac-oo panles political notabl.-s th days? 'It can't help but be in your mind, but for your own peace of mind, you have to "All I'm concerned about come to the point where you is being Ronald Reagan's say, 'Yoo have taken all the wife," sbe said during an in-precauticlns that you can terview in the Reaganfi' and go ahead and live your spacious hillside home in life and do what you h<'lve this ezperwuve, w e 11 -to." manicured Los A n I e l e s Mrs. Reagan was a suburb. Chicago debutante, t h e Well then, would she like daughter of a prominent her h u s b a n d to be neurosurgeon, before she president? came. to Hollywood and a ''I try not to think abou~ contract with a m o vie it," she said, looking fresh studio. She waS married to and cool on a hot summer Reagan in 1952, and they day In a simple pink and have two children, PQtti, 15, white checked dress wlth a and Ronald Prescott (Skir- double strand of pearls at per), 8. tbe neck. "I have very mix-Of her children, she said. ed emotions about it. "We try very, very bard to "It is kind of hard ·question keep their lives as normal to amwer. I'm sure that I as possible.'' must be his biggest fan. 1 On her role as the wife of don't think there is anything a governor and a prominent he couldn't do. But as far as political figure, she said, "I any woman wanting it for think when you ·have young the man she loved I don!t children, it's probably more think she could say that I difficuh than for Somebody think the job is 110 awesome who doesn't. I feel very and the burden 10 awesome, strongly now, because Ron- my heart goes out to any nie is as buay as he is and man holding that office." not as ~ble to .spend as Although Reagan officially much time with t h e bWs himself only as a · c~dren. I r~lly must. favorite son candidate the I have laid down some fact that he is more 'than .hard, fast rules. It's ea.sier just another favorite son is ~ you lay ther_n ~own right indicated by the fact that lD the beguuung a n d secrei• service agents now everybody knows what the guard the Reagans. guidelines ~e. I'm always "I was very happy when home at 4 m the afternoon they assigned the secret and I never accept weekend service to us," Mrs. Reagan engagements unless it's said with the whole family." "As a matter of fact I Mrs. Reagan is perhaps have said that when it's 'all the most styllsh of the wives over and we no longer have of ~e men considered the ma]Or C()ntenders for the p r ealdential nom.lnatlona. Het favorite de1l1ner1 ln· elude Oat.nor and BW Blass. "t ].ik_e liIDPll clothu, not rutfly---cIOffiil. Oiiii't llli the extreme• ID clothes. I think eome of tile 1tyle1 the last couple of yean wen very unbeoomlnc. I'll be very hl!PPY to tee a little elea:ance and form a 11 t y return to fashion. I thlqk It's gradually 1tart!n1." After Reagan was elected govemor, Mrs. Re a a: an redecorated her husband's office .. "I think I am a frustrated decorator," she said. "It started with a 1mall study and grew like topsy. The old Governor's Mansion , ( whit;ib she eventually refu,.. ed to live in) and the oili~e were .. o depressing, I couldn't stand it. J thought I have to do something for this poor man. .. There was .DothiDg in the whol,e wing that b a d anything to do with . the history of Califomja . . . I arranged With a gallery in San Fra nc isco to put some paintings or California In. At Fort Sutter, I found some really marvelous old Cw:· rier and Ives printa." She also made some changes in the home that the Reag.am rented after she insisted they move out of the GoVernor'1 Manaion, a Victorian gingerbread af. fair tnat &he considered a fire trep. ' . "It 's open for tours now," she said. "I coul$'t help but be a little amused. They won't let the1ourt up on the third floor because It's not safe, but it was supposed to be safe enough for us to sleep there." - Parents' Group Parents Without Partners meet .In Mesa Verde Coun- try Club at 8 p.rn . the first Friday. Mrs. Susie Dunaway at 545--04T1 or 544.2034 may be contacted for further in· formation. DORMEYER 3-SPEED I PORTABLE MIXER W.f. REG. 5.88 Whlps throu1t1 potatoes, whip. ped cret.m. cake batter. Has 1 speed for every job. Fingertip switch, beater eiector. Model HM7Wlf. 3 .97 "BEACON" TWIN SIZE ELECTRIC BLANKET 11u••-•••••-•••••• --·•••• .... ••-•••·-- 4-QUART ELECTRIC ~ CORN POPPER ~::r.:::\ Clear Popper dome acts as server. Cool handles: #654 :1/:. sso 7.88 c...rc,.,.-~""'~~~~, .......... .,if";;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::jAlJl;-'(c:c;~d~lt~l;;;;;-'j=;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::~lf i"i r on on-••-· .. --••••••••••···---····-·•••·-·- The Tee Tattler MESA ... l!RDI LEAST PUTTS -A Fll1hl, ttw Mm& R1111ln11d O.rVY. 211 Delmar H1mrt, 30; Slanll!Y Wood Ind Ml(h11I W11c.o, 31; I Flltlll, the Mmn. Cllllrlft Bannett, 29; Jolin Adami 11ld John O'Brien, 30; ErMSI GUI, 311 C·l'llght, Ille Mmu. JOhn DrWJne, 2ti H1rold SOiomen, :JC11 Frank F1rm1r, Jl1 Mlcll1el RIPJIOrf, 3". IEST IALL -Low Gr011, tti. Mmn. WlllT1m SdlpMe, Jerty H1yes, JClhn Vertvrth, Dlln O-, 191 Law Nrt, ttle Mmes. Jo1oe11h B1nb. K•tttl Neil, Wlllilm Frldt, DIV)d P:osrntti.I, w 1nr1m Enlrlken. w. S. Rot111d1011, Rebert C1mp, Wiibert Mllld. Prrty Clerll. DeWYne, Gordol\ cannon, '1. RANCHO 5AN JOAQUIN low P'IJTTS -lh<I Mmes. Kenneth Wiiiey, Jl: Richard Blunden. P1trtdc Wide, l'red Sclln1ld1r, C. l•rtflolomew, 32; Joe Clarkson, H1rold SProut, Jolln Boller, W1rTen Coltlns, :J:J; NtllOll Stafferd, P1ul D1 B1ch, Bern1ro E1bert, LffWIYM Ttlornl.&. WIYnr Goldlt, F. Wiiii., ll. GUiii Div -Mmn. T~1. 7l1 E. R1111v11, 71; E1rt Ptler.on, Den11G Talm1De, n1 M. L1pln1, M. Cllrkr. Rabtrt Llvtnt1tor1, 7'; D 181c11 , Woodrow LldcMr, G. sr-.i.1t1r, ..,, IRYINI! CO.UT TIN WHISTLI -Cl111 A, !ht Mmn. R1vnon Foot1, 3J; Robert Ll~cller, l•rt McHutl\, Gott.a Llfvr, l'll Ct1u B. Mn. PiJUI Rife, Mr1. T. W, L1ttlri, Mra. Htl\f'I' JohOIOn, Mr•. w. R. Mlr1m1. ll; Miu Mlrlen r1rk1, 41 1 Cl1u C, 1he M~,_ ~ITI How1rd, Jent Norrl1, JG; Tom ~raon. 321 Fred Pitt~ 3"; C1s11 D1.IN MmrJ. Stn kltaw1nk1I, Fred ..,,yar, liOldall ~;~~~?; f; s1~~y;._s. i11 Jonn MEOAL ,.ezr -CllU .... Mro T. Echltrnaeh, 1•1 Miu Dee Dlfl wt.ii., 151 Mrl. 81r1 McHuthl Mr~. FDBI•, 161 C!IH I , !ht Mmes. w lll11n Lfllrr, 701 Robert ArnolO, 7l; WJol~er Sml!h. 71; Robert Nicholson, 75; c1,11 c. "'' Mme1. Sam H-1rd, 7l; JOl\n PO'l'll, C1rl Hllltren, 10; MYran SlltWINI, Tom Htncltnon, 111 ·Cl111 D, 1119 Mmt1. R09fl" Pol>Jt, 6'; Joe M.:Cormtdc. 11; Gl'Ol'ee Gr1n1, Sim Ktyes, 11. TWO LOW MLU -Miii Maritn P1rll1. !hi Mmes. Rlch1td Stinson. Corfnn11 Frenltlln. liow1rd C•r-. Merritt H1Nn, NHI G1rw, 'Wit.er Smilh, G~ Grin!, Ill ntl1 Miii Mlrtiene MUl.,r, "'9 Mmes. Ken Wlnlrrburn, Wllll•m C 1'1 1c he111 r, Nld'lo!IOll. F<IO'le, JClhn Joh..-, Rcben McKentlt , Wlll11m 8urJlngl\lm, Ill MO. Large Sizes Go lnst•nf sk~ny, wit!; C.liforni• style slim stretch p•nts, colorful lon9 tops. Get your instant skinny •t Half-Size Shop. Capris from $8 T oP._s fronf $6 r~~ns ,-r ~ r Effa / Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP .. 1805 Newport Bl., Cost• Mesa ,.1/1 a.I.ck ltMtti .t 1 ltlfl lfrwt" HolM'I: t :JO to l :JO, frl4ey to t :llO Al• , , 124 Or.itihilf Mofl, P1!Jffto~ EVERYBODY LOVES THE WILD FLOWER AND YOU WILL TOO! YOU ARE INVITED TO OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE Startlng Today, August 1st thru August list, f :lO to 6:00 Eve r'Qhing will b1 reduced to clea_:, •t cost •nd below, to make room for our lovely New Fall & Winter Merch andi se. ~ ADAMS AVE. ti 2-SPEED ELECTRIC BLENDER Chops, liquilies, purees at 20,000 revolutions a min- ute, heavy·duty motor with push- button contml. .( steel cuttin& blades can be removed for ~--~ __.........,.cleaning. #BL 1. 12ss . ...... -· .. ·····-··· .. ········-···--·····- "PREMIER" ELECTRIC ROTISSERIE BROILER For smoktless buf· ftt cookine:. Motor· ized spit, remov-. able two position broilln1 rick, drip W!U holds gralff. IBR500. 15ss ······················--··-·-·····-- SLIMLINE 4-SLICE AUTOMATIC TOASTER Handsome, gleamina 11· 9 7 slim line toaster to asts 4 sl ices as \ yOur like !hem. Model W6940/6094. ········-·-··-···-···-··-········· ...... .. MARY PROCTOR STEAM· DRY IRON 947 • ANCHOR HO~KING OVEN GLASS ·BAKE WARE A. CRYSTAL cun, \\qt . & 2 qt. covtred casserole. 1 Qt oval cowred casse- role, 8" square and roun d cake pans, deep loaf pan. I. COPPER TINT: 1 qt cas-' serore, l 'h ql .casserole. loaf and cake pans. bake ,, pan, pie plate. c EA. ~ . ----...:~=-=·=-·-~~-~!!~!!~~!'-t> CLUB ALUMINUM TEFLON. COOKWARE ChoiCl! of 2' qt. COV· e1ed sauCl! pan or ID" covered frypan -both in 1leaming durable aluminum witil avocado T.eflon ~ never· scou1 li nings. 97 EACH ................... ·-·-·--····-··-·-----. ' 7 PC. SALAD SET MIXING BOWL, 4 SERVERS, FORK & SPOON Very a.ttractive and coloriu l for summer salads! White exte· riors with avo cado ereen interiors gives bowls an appearance of appetizing cool- ness. 97 COMPl!TE SET CO~PIRE ELSEWHERE IT 4.95 SET ·······························-············-·············- · COMFORTLINE FOLDINGr--- ·sTEP STOOL 88 , ...................... ···············-····.,.··················· LARGE PLASTIC LAZY SUSAN Seven compar~nts for serving. Rotates read· ily o.n ball -bea~ base. Attractive bright colors. l t.la. 2.97 ................................................................ ,. MARVALON PLASTl'C SHELF LINER •PERMANENT!• SElf·IDH!SIV!!; WINT!O COLORS! For drawe r and shelf lini ngs, counter and table tops, walls. OUR REG. 1.48 JI07& DAILY PILOT J7: - 3 SHELF BOOKCASE Walnut.finish Per1aneer 1 !·shelf bookcase with double sliding &lass cro ors on two lowJ!r shelves, opan upper shelf. 361h" high II'. 351h" wide II'. 12" deep. ····-·················----·-.. . .. PERVANEER REC.ORD .. Walnut finished record 1 cabinet, 16" deep x 40" wide x 25"' high, with three sliding doors, plenty of stor· age space.' CABINET 88 ················-·······--·--··-·--·· CONTEMPORARY 3-DOOR PERVANEER CREDENZA 3 sturdy carved doo1s -a solidly' built chest for foyer, dining -.i or living room. 27" high x 48" wide x 16" deep, 88 HOBNAIL AMBER GLASS SWAG OR TABLE LAMP Graceful amber 1lob; hanging lamporJS"high table lam• with 12"x14'rx16" shade. 10 97 EACH l OUR MASTER PAINTINGS 8EIUTIFULLY REPROOUC!D AND FRAMED ·Well-know n old masters in 3" and 4" !rimes. Sizes: 30!42"; 30x46" and 30!54". TERRIFIC VALUES 97 Th• Wild Flower Is l:ietween The First N•tion•I B•nk •nd Th• M••• Vordt Realty on Mesa Verda Drive just off Adami. ~ : 1 5'40-2]76 e 2150 Mesa Verdt Drive-• Suite M e Costa Mesa CHAIM IT WM.,_, •. • e tallklllllfk1rf • Wlllt.P",..ICM • ""'""" c ...... , ... COSTA MESA 30N lllSTOl .lVl. • MT Off llWPGlf lVl. 111W1111 IAJl DttGO llWY. AllD IAlll n. 11'011 HOUIS hlfy 12 .. ' s.t. 10 .. ' s...11 .. , '· \, • • • • J a DAILY PILOT • ... ~!_,Group Helps N·eg_roes Find ~Top Jobs With Retailers I ' -1 NEW YORK (AP) -A "°"" devoted to helpiog Neiroe.s move upward into mana.gemeot and executive " Joie bu been formed by 'Negroes who won top jobs in lb• retail indwtry. • "Twenty year• ago it waa ~ilsldtr«t benea1fl t h e Negro in a responsible posi- iion to extend a helping h&nd to tf'lose 1 e 1 s fOrtunate," Walter W. Bran· ford said. "Thia is no longer ,lrue. wasn't my stick.'' Branford minorities on the mtnace- il Usistant public rtlationa ment .and executive levela fo lnlUaUy and tllen working director r W.T.GraptCo., -.. to l>e m i ddle a ju.nlor deparbnent store supervisory and balk: 1ale1 chain with about I , I O O job.'I. Finding Joi> ooenlngs outlets across the nation. and finding the peopfe to fill Branford said he decided them. Interesting yo u o g to form the advisory group people in Job5 in retailing. after "Jt became obvious to Counseling retaijers on bow me that there was a need to ·develop commuoications for a line of communication with the black community 1n between the black com-which they bave a vested in· muhity and the retail in· t:e:est. And, working with dU£1ry, and t!>e best way~ hard..,... . unemployed do this was to utilize those programs to bring about an people involved in both -increase in the upgradfne Of Negroes in retailing.~· bard-core people." He said "there were three LECTURES . . ~,1 IMWll 1 , 20 10 L .. " -----------·! ~et~,~ 4i ~~ '! ,;,~-~! ""·~ 1Y: ff ~!.. 6~~ -1\t. NEW VOAIC IAPl-Tl\11ncMV'• tom•lm il111111ft r:'to. 21 :m 1'..., S6 ·•··• Mt'W Y~ $!0Ck f-dl•"" lll'ICft. !TFI~ 1.M 113 4S '°"" oQli • IT,: plS,~ t Im: 1111,J t•--1V. .... H• !tit• Svc; 2 13! !J~ 5614 j " (Wt.) Hllll t."' C• Cllt. +-t 1.... :Jiit n.l 51 4t ~ • 14 lrvlnv pf wl I ,, .SO "" ~ a rv sin t!ol # ~. 11"-"• .. ++•• --l1rlt E<t 1.20 11 21\.\ 1'\11 n '4o 11 li t!tt m -11,.1. i.rt OU = U 6W. '1 61 -~ J:w '3 .... ~ ~:;; l:'l\',7t l.'l 1~ ~ = ~ + ~ Q 41.\k d"4+ .. 1!,~PJtll 16 mi mt. +'1111 ,,~ ; Jm = tz ie~:: ~~ 2' 'iml i !.! ~ 7S fit 11ll Wt .!~ =PH .• 1= U ~ .... +!+ i Cl'llUIO I lf #ft ~ t9 -'llo 1ISIG1 ~.171 73 ff 6l;\o tru .... '9 p..-,Jl)b H lt U"' ..... -.... 11$G1 ptl.lt 22 "" 3N ... "N . ~d '4i,15 I Ill"" I Wt 111"" + "' oc• C~ 1.70 1'2 7 Jtl~ 1"" "" °'II ~ 101t11 1.SO 131" n~ !9 -V. ~tall 1.20 lCI ,,._ 2Mll ~ -'9 lldullrlet >U l!'lio 11 14 11\li -'° ol11 Pl 1.1~ 71 l714 .j6 *!.!.." + • A 1 G•1 .N 11 2G \ti,\ lt"" -~ ol! P pt).SO JIO •2 !t, 61 -+•, .. A~tiem C .20 231 :M~· tl""-...... o1 Mlk l.20 :17 35"" .-.. A cM.ilum l :a:IU tl -Ill ol l11Rld ... 137 -,,. SS -l A 1M1 Co .I~ :tS 15'Ai .t'l't U + l'I ~lolntG 11.0 20 SS wt li5 +~ •· A. Iii Wt . 4 SS~ Sl Sl -2 lo Soll" • 110 S.W. . •1J!!LUd 2. 11• ™' SJ"41 » +nli oll Ind ~ 12 ..... Iii - : i:L~ i,., toll~• P,SI~ C ='"' c°"' '1 &1.110 ill ~ .... ~ s.,, t\4 All Ind 1.40 11 Vi 14 36 + "' clJ Di I 6 2'"" 21"' ;,. l \4 A~r.:.c11 1.to 10' '"' U\\o -'4 co1uGti1 1..u 10 m;, ,,,,.. 271'1 -fl •1•1: l(lu I It J1 3.Sl'I 351'1--I'll. Col<IPld .lOll ,.. l5'ii ~ ~ + :i. -A- 'I MUls 2 2 ~ 6l ~+"'~olSoOll l.H 121 '4V. ~ 44 , . Al 911 Pd il.1 36.l .a :i. »"" -111 omOEn 2.-0 n 671% 66V. 67 -* Al JodPd l I IO IO IO ..... !!IS llfl.70 l ' Jt\.\ lt\.'J ,,V. -111) UPI 1'9119llole Al1i::s1r .40 S$ ~ "3\lo ..,-. -I"' :;..~fl 1:S7t 6#" 5~ Ul'J SM-1~ :I 1911~"'.J ~ 1~ ~ fl~=~ om r "''·50 tlJOO ,.n, ... ~. 70 -'Ao World's Largest H overeraft . The first hovercraft service across the English Channel was inaugurated Wednes- day at ceremonies presided over by Princess Margaret. The 1lovercraft will make Allll Chll l 1f'7 2"41 jllO 2t\\o -Yt ComSolv .50o 105 •• .., :m"" + ,,· •1P111 P C.m oil I~ "" 16\\ + ~ ComlSol pf.ff t l9V, 19 A 1ldol .:JO 22 17\\ 6\ii 1~ -" !EwEd 2.20 7t '814 '1111 ~ It. Alml 1.IO 111 '5"'° 6'1'1 6$\11 + 'Al om E pfJ.42 7 31"' 11 ll -'i Am•lSuo 1.. 2 l'?'A 11 l2 -~ w Oii .60 I 21 ,!$v. ~ ~ ~ _. > '··· · -Branford is ,. Negro in a .responsible position who not only decided to extend bis Own hand but to get others 10 extend theirs as well. people at our fim meeting last November. Now there are about 75. They are all Negroes aod they all are in responsible jobs in ret:ail- Branfora sail! the group a regular 35-minute run from Bologne to Dover for passengers and cars. The used word of mouth, lee-vessel, the Mountbatten Class SRN4, owned by British Rail, is the world's larg- tures, and brochures to est hoyercraft. Amtr•ct 1.20 U 35,,. lS\/o lSV. .... , Miiis 1 31 jlV. 21 71\\o .. . AMBAC .60 46 $11 '7Vo 4'V. -YI [' 105 SN ~ -... Al'Mrad• 3 134 IO 7' 1'\/o .•... -lvrn .Ill 2' It. 311'1 11111 ., ... .U.lrFlnr .IO 6 32\\o 12\\o l21'o -1.4i Ol'lr1cCp .60 l5 52'4 SI,. nv. -'lit + Am Ail'lln .IO 11' 261' 2$1.li 2S\.\ + V. Edi~ l llO U6 ll.VI :U :14\\o -b. • "It's What's ~ning to- ·day ." the tan, ~yeor-old founder and dlainn•n -0( the National Negro R e ta 11 .. Advisory Group said with an de liver iU messa-ge. , ..... 1..: .... ---'--------------------------- ''The tirocbures hi.p~t Negroes in tbeindustry," he said. Am 8Htf' 1 n 2''M a 21 -1~ fonEdri of' 11 li:t:m 102'111 lO?al -"'° Ami-Noi. I 3 2f 2t 2t -l''r onEuls. pl s\ II •11'1 *Wt llV. V. l'll Am8dat 1.M 14 6S\lo '1\4 ,,,,_ -~ Ol'll!! otc•.u t• 1s 1s 75 _. _ Am C.n 2.to 236 •¥.. ~ """ -l'J COllEIKlrid 1 59 J7'4 U"°J :u;,. -1"'1< ACM! pf 1.7J lf 31V. )1 ll\\o -\.lo Con!Oood 1.SO 3.i 601' 5'/''h stlo'i -Ya Am Cem .• 2tt 2Nt :nr. Z21'e + V. COl'IFCI 014.50 11 t7 U 961':1 -\lo ing." easy smile. A marine engineer~ who-·mo~ into busine&s after d e c i d i n g "engineering The group has several major goals. These include "getting the retail indmtry to open j~ ror qualilied Negroes .and other 8111t~~est.from the 1st of any month On funds received by the 10th. 8 1nterest from date of receipt attef the 10th. @)Interest to date of withdrawal on funds left 3 months or ..longer if account remains open until quarter's end. 5% per annum compounded daily cur· re.nt rate on passbook savi ngs. 5.25o/o ·per annum on bonus accounts. • / tc•'{ \~--------,;ti"....,r If not call or come in TODAY! ~ MUTUAL SAVINGS 2867 East Coast Highway • Coron• Del Mir, Calif. 92625 Telephone 675·5010 MU.• OfflCl • PAIAl)f.114 JI~ t . COlORADO llVO. • PA SAO[ KA. CAllr. tJ 109 ' MRS. BILLIE GOLDEN "We are saying to those who read tJiem that the6e are people wbG ha.Ye made it in the retail industry, that the companies are sincere when they say they w.ant you, and that this is the kind at money you can make." Branford said the group wanted to "develop a positive .im'3.ge ol. tbe retail industry among Negroes. 'I'be industry bas . done a poor job of projecting i<seU among c o J 1 e g e students. C&lle:ge student,, generally have little idea of what • store manaigfl-does or earns. This is especially true for black students. 'llley''ve been left out com· pletely. They don't think in terms of retailing bec·ause they've never had "'Bny-ex- posure to it. We will expose them 1!l it." PRACTICES He said the group also was working to advance Negroes already in retail· ing. "We'--:e had people ei.ll us up and tell us Uley've been assistant buyers !Or five years while white· persons move up from two years," he said. "We call manage- ment people at the company and have a talk with them about t h e i r employment prac tices. We ask them to take a look at this man because we want 00 see that he gets a chance to move. "We make no attempt to Intimidate. An enlightened management, if m ~ d e aware of the situation, will do aomething about it." ' Bill ie Golden is a well known and long 1imc resident of Cos ta Mesa. As secretary of the Downtown · Business- men's Association. :\he is a vital cog in pron1oting busi- ne.~ and industry in our area. A mother of two children. Billie is also .an active member of the Harbor Area Council of Beta Sigma Phi. Billie uy!I: .. Wt" all get .lo involved in the proble1n,f of Jay-to-day living, that it's so111tlin1ts t"asy to forget nbo11t the future //n'il il's upon 11s. SyJ.tt1no1lc .1·01•/ng il for "It n11 i11ttgrol _part of my pfa1111ing for the /uturt". At WILSHIRE FEDERAL SAVINGS 1ny "ntll egg' RrOws, t"arning /lit l1ightst ralt in the insured safety o/ a Fetltrnl Associatiofl.·· Funds rece,jved by the 9th of the month etm from the l!ot •.• arter the ,9th from the d1te of rtctipt. 5% become' 51Ai% when compounded da ily and held for a year. S.vln11 ln1url!d to $15.000 by the Federal S.vin1s and L~n Insurance Corpo111· "°"· Bonus: E•rn an ext111 'A% on 11 36·month Certificl1e Account In multiples of $1.000. 1833 Newport Boulevfrd "''' Harbof • Co9t:t Mesa, Calllorni1 • 642-4711 •. 1 Hom•Olfil:.•;Los.M1elh r J.' --. I I A (Niii I.Ml 4) 37.,., J7 J71'J + r. ConFrelllht I 2'3 JlV. ll l\V. + V. A1"Ct1111 -'SI J l&V. lt\li 11\\o .. !ENtlG 1.70 124 30\lo 2"i> 79'A -'I, A""rodlt .tt f4 15'1. ,_....,. ?•YJ -1~ IPw-r I.JO Ill 41'1'1 41 "'° + •k. A(ry$U9 ).Cl 16 Jl'loO ll 31 -l'J Ol'IP'" 1114.52 120 76 76 76 ""'!'" 1.!S US 2N ,.._ 21 . . . . . llflf'W t>I•.~ 1l10 75'1 75 1S -1 Arn;.;! > 409 S ~ J7 :V:.. -\lo ~1'1rw" b lO 2D.'I ll 37\lo 37~ -A1n OU.IV•:• :U llV. ll"'i lJV. ..... llll!Alrl ..SO 2ll 11V. 17\/o 17V. .. ADu1I pf.... S !:Mio lJ"i 11'4 ..... te~ l,lO 316 .st~ S6 $6 -1~ AmEIP"ll' J.Jt Tl.$ ~ J1!oli 3f + V. teak pf 5.50 tlO IS'h i5 m> .. , AmEnka \.JO lS 40\\ «) '°"' + 'Ai Ont Can 2 12' UV. »l4 ""' Am E•P Ind ... .... ... " _,,,,. ont Cap .11:b 63 191'1 ~ , ......... AElllfld llfA.I uo IO'.(o IO IO .... !Cort Pfl.U vno " 19 If i .. A-> " •• .. .,,_ -Con! 1115 110 22 9'14 ~ '5'111 PA& A .. ~.· •• I 11\lo 1,.,,-1141 ContM~ 132 12 741L ll! 7!"· " .......... 1.)11 " I01' St 5t -1 ,. · ... ,.. ... A Home. Pf , l '° ..... Ul'I v. .. ont MIO WI It 2S 2 2S "" Arn Holp tt 310 ll/ » 11 -1 Cont Mot .40 20 20 l"'-1t¥t -\4 I Am Intl 1 Oo 1 lh. 11, ,.,. +-,,_ Soni 811 _2,IO SOS 61'h ''\4 61'h -Vo , 0 >i ....... ont n .,.2 41 52 511" 51v.-"" m nv1 .10 <G 21>'4 20111 101'0 -\lo Cont Sii 1.IO 17 51 .ft'141 ~ -Hil Atr!MFlllY .JIO 110 10'~ 10\\o 20\.w. -\lo Conl TIM 60 ljl 2614 ..,... 25\'J + II& .. ~~ 'n\ . AMel Cl 1 tCI d ~ 4'1'0 4'"9 -~' > O o'> l ~. ~ -· .... • ... ... .. Clf>Wlld 1.61'.1.11 u :u lJ lJ\oli + """ Bacon and Eggs, We'll Miss You By SYLVIA PORTER now·1<:>11ment '-eonvem.e l Arn Moton .., M\ro 11,. ,,. + ... on ro • • 1~ 141 1•1 -3"> form'" ........ 1 '~ •14 ll'ilo 38'--1\,1, ~oil .1211 lO .n..-3tl4 ,,,,. -~ The age of ~. ~adition•J · :m~r.n 1 lll "' ~ '3141 -"' ooi>er1n 110 23 4AI. """" "'* UI I.I. "' Alles rd! ·°ct ~ ,im 1lm: 1!~ ~ v. c Tr TR" I .. ll'!I. JP/o 31>,li + ~ breakfast !lf bacon and eggs WE ARE on the ~--shold Am s..1 ·1 1• ~ ... 2111Jt ,..,., _ '" c:=11,.:1~·~ U ~ ~ ~ -1;: -UlL t: Arn 5nlp .60 2t 17'\ 111,_ )A\ + \Ii COPPR"ll .Jo J1 -4l'J J9 lt =.i pllll all Ule trimmings -Qf a revoluti'on in our eating ~ ~'7J' i 1 1~ -~ ll ~1141 =lv. ~~~Y 1ri~ ~ mt ll~ ~ ;\,4 fr·-•Jy S zed · · d An!SGAfr .711 66 SN 58\li 5''ilo + \'I Corn Pd t·.n 6"19 '11141 ~ 41 _ ,._ t::Nr quee JWce an at "ome and eating out ~sA,ir tn.10 1 SU'h sav. saVt . . . . . cor0w 2 so. 31 m* 295,,. m\4 I~ _.+I "m t11 I Ml 31"9 ~ l6''" + 14 ( ll(fi3 $0 10 fO fO -brewed coffee, toast, jam, habits, o t 0 ck a believes. AmStd pf•.11 v 1~N 111.,, J!Cl'llo +i"' c:~~ . .a z.-oil ~"" .a'llo +1 t4 Am S!erll .4 22 :»:t1i l6 ll ....II\? C-les .5tJ 25 ~~ Uflli l(V. * w:\,ntever i's drawm· g to an What you and I e-'der A S119w 1 • .0 t• 1'l<¥o 214\1 ~ ..•• cox&!lc" -,, ~,·, -" -• ~"" -· .....,.,, ASn'iipfA2.65 I 47 47 ~1 +I Cr•neCo 1'.iO 11 t;i~ :=f',_; t;;"(; .i d -r .61 , '°"' .°"' l<Mt _ v. , t:.' ,, , .. en · "convenience foods" now Am & 1.«1 1"' ,1 50.,.. 50>l't _\'a cr•r.e · • 15 1s 11 ... , Am TDb I '° l:M UV. u 34\/o + ~ romp ,80 ,,. 2-Wi Zl ~4 -.. Coming in it.s place is the will be dwarfed by What will AmWWts :56 100 1w. is 15...., +~~rouse-Hin lb 11 31~ l~v. J1"" -v. AWW5of 1.is no 20 20 20 ••.. c:c~1120 ~ ~ • .,. R +"" in5tant package breakfast: be accepted as convem·ence Aw •.1"" 1.•J uoo 2,111 u 26111 +I"' crown corlt 11 7M4 ~ 1"" ~·;,r. Am Zinc ' ZW. 2N m'o + ,,_ Crow11Ze 2 20 :JBS 4n\i ~ C'lli +, say, a glass of milk with an fo<><l6 only a decade from COUNSEL RETIRES Amei.k 1•· • Ulto oil 4w. +r~ C•11c s11 ,.;., ~ •1~ 40 ..,... _ ~ Amloc Inc I SJ SS 5'14 lA'o -~ CTS Co «! 31 •Iii 27~ ~ -•,It dd•t• t now . lei B p AMK Corp jlL ~~ . • -a l ive o p"':~u~c:•rth•:..,'.;~-~-~",;:l!ll!~~~!,J~fZ~=::.'~00~1~.,.~~-~~·~~·~·~·~:=~·~·~rr~r~:•r;:::;j~'~'J!fJ •h~ p1 2 ""' ~ """ bal•-ed -oaion· n Ampex Cor JIW~'!li 21:v._21"" -lllllll•n .. 411 ----.l.<~ 54v.. ++\t --~ d f · .....-..:ni. 11mmTiil 811 l21r' .:'.I 311' lfV. +I pare or consumption both AnM.ond :i.so 153 ~ .... ~ ~.w. -u...c.Pr .:ioe • 1~ 1~ 1~ + ~ k!ids or another juice com· ~ .. home and 1·n restaurants. AndlHG i.40 210 15>,(, s.iv. 11~ +1"" unn01'V9 10 , '\I •m 1v'h _ ._ ~ L I A~d AndCl1v 1.20 lS l!•;, llV. l! ...• Curtiss Wr 1 6' 2~ 'l5 2S --'I• b. ti" "lb I al . [ d ·-. . 0 . ega I e Anken Cllem .jJ 17'111 12\'t 12\\i .... C11rt Wf A 2 1 J.5'111 35 35" -..... 1na on WI a ower.c or1e n usi.iy can, tns1sts tocKa, AllCOOll .191 :z.i :iov. 2t'h 19v. + v. Culler H 1.10 56 41 .,.14 4'r + 014 bu th is AQ.,. cnem SG .fl'h ~11'11 ~I'll + fo Cytlops 1.llO 13 ~ 35:1>;, l6V. +'Iii count t still tasty, balanc-prepare ese mea on a ArctiOen :.60 '' ,1 60..., ~ + v. cv11rusM '·"° iot ~ 54~ 5~,,. _1,,. Wholesale bas'. bet! lh ArliPutiSvc I 2f ~ 1:11,\o 2l\ll _,,. D ed, nutritious. s er an R p Arians os .10 eo ~ 21'111 tt"" _'Iii - -the housewife Can at home. 0 eg1•am Armco S!I 3 18' SOii. '9 '9 ... O•n Riv 1.10 t! 221/o 21'rii 21"--'lo "The old breakfast a yo Armour 1.60 "° t7'/t .io!'lt tJ!h +1 01111 Co 1.70 om 49'4 ..... ~ -V. . . s u "Industry can do it more Arm Ck L40.I 11 '""" 15"" 11v. -"' o ...... coeo ,.ao 10 ,,,,. ll"" ll'r!I + '" h ArmCk P1J.7J 170 "'" 68'/o 6114 -'l4 g1v PL l S2 1 Jl'MI 31\\i 31\\o -* know it will c ange com-'!cronomically a rt d con-"'N'l\~1111 1.60 J ... .-"' " .... ..ere co~ 256 ~ """' .-v. + ,14 R t • • Aro Corp .to ! 1fl'o 1714 21'14 -V. OelPwlt 1.1).1 12 ~ 25 2S -1,\o Pletely jq the DeXt decade," ~SiStentJy, can put more , e u ·mg ',','',",'o"' >' . .2. '2 J2\4 31 1'! l2 +IV. DfllMnlt l.\Q )9 32 31 .... ll\\o-¥o " II "' 150 ~ c .Q.l,a + 'Iii OelteAlr '° rm 211'/. 21'lli ~ _ v. Confl.dently predi'cts Edward nutritioo and balance i_n th,,e AndBr .1~ ll 1~ 12v. 12•4 -,... Denn Mia··'° "4 ~ .!4Vi ~w. _ v. . Ass. OG 1 211 5tl ~ ~1~ ~ -14 OennMfg pl 1 S 4'\'r <I UV, "" A Otocka seruor vice presi-meal than any housewife . Regirrald B. Pegram of ~:Jfr:n 1 ~ J, ff~ fi ft .:!: t; ~~~r 1.;~ jot ~ ff ~~ ~.··;h. ' ' . . . The background for N AJ•ocln v i..10 lll l 7'1t J.i\li 341,1, --).\lo Oereco p(A 2 Slll'r 5'""' n"N dent of Nauon.al BLScwt Co., Otocka's predicti'on 1·s·. ob· ewport Beach, d e p u t y Alchl111n L'o 1 se Jlh J1v. 31:i. -v. Oe•eco "'fl " 56,,. s5'" S5't• +v. Alchls DI .SG 1'9t. u 114'1 H>.lo -"' 0..Sololnc llO SJ 291/o 21 2t +IV. One of the nation's largest vious. The worki·ng wi·fe-chief cou nsel in charge of A,~1,,1ve1, .1.2i ~ ~ 2*'4 21114 + :i. oetEd11 1.kl 133 ~ 2.Vili ,Sh .. . "'" ~E t z.~ I.a Ill 611 +1:i. Oet Ed 111$.SG 4 101 101 101 -"° food pro c e s so r s and mother is increasingly ask-the Southern California of-A,:,' ,\r:~ 1·~ 536 113 17Wt 18Pt. -~ °"'' s1ee1 .60 62 :iov. 194 1t•io -'"' '·" w1 S9 91~ 19V. 9M'i -!'141 Oe.ttr .l2e Jl 2tl'r 28"4 29'/o _ =111 distributors. "No longer will ing for all the ·convenience fices of the legal division of AllRCh Pll.1s 1460 66v. w1r Mv. + ,,,. 011.sn.m t.olO ''° ~ 30•1o »'",.,,.. All Rich Pl 3 197 154 151 1J33,1 -'h OlaSll pj C2 2 4 421'1 G 'n -.... the housewife have to get up ind ustry · can invent. The the California Department ::t:: ~~ii'° 1~ ~ ~ ~;-: ·+u. g1•s 1111101 .:ltl Jt. 2104 nv. 11,,. + !1 and go through all the time-harder and more expen5ive of Public Works, will retire :u,r~!!'1 ~ 111 10"1o 70'4 io.ll + ~ 01:::!t1~ .2<190 1~ ~ i!~ t~v. -! ~ • . ti" ( th" u '"'' ·""~ is 3'~ lH~ -1/o Olcllpllon • 166 26" 14 2SV. l'lw consuming prepara ons o it is to obtain household 1s month· after 22 years (If A.RA 1"' n :u 95v, 93 93 -•;, 01et1o1c1 . .ob '2 ?'ll'r 3Pil 311 .,. U . , AulSpitlr .oe. )6.S :U14 231/t 23'/o -14 OIGl<><glo 10 16 Ul4 2• 2S !'Ml M "' A d t of Sta f d Av("ll Pll .10 J I '1'4 .,. 17 -2 nersCI ~ 19 ~ ~ ;;" "\\ fee...i. her family. She' give assistance, ••e grea ter servtce tv the department. Avco Cp 1.20 i7l d~ """ "'"" -'II g111nahm M .-u•~ ,,_,,_ ,.,L 1._ them a packaged breakfast . becvmes the wife-mother's gra ua e n or AvervPa "·'' 14 42"-'1'17 .fl'ili +1\\1 g11"ev .Jbb 54 ~ 63 6' 1 with just as much oi more demand for -convenience University and USC law ~~~~l •r;, ·!l 27l ~~ ;f ~ :-;1~ ~5::: -~g lg gr; 2lt ~:t _!.,., New Director John Leland, general partner of J. Barth and Co. has been elected to the board of direc tors of National Systems Corp. Newport Beach. Leland also will ser ve as chair- man of the acquisition committee of the edu- cational firm. Servonic Sales Head Appoillted Jack C. Prebicin has 'been appointed manager of sales administration for t h e Servonic Div ision. Gulton Industries, Inc ., Co s ta Mesa. t- Prebicln will tlave fu11 sales responsibility fol'. a line or transducers al\d sWit· ches produced by t h e Servonic Division for missile. ·space, aircraft and oceanographic applicati9ns. The new sales head most recently served as manager of sales administration for the Conrac Cor:p. His background also In· eludes service as manager of marketing administration for American EhJctrol'lics. Fullerton. c on t r a c t ad· mini1trator for A r n o I d Magnetics Corp.. Lo s Angeles. con tr !l c t ad· minjstrator fru-Ar no u -x: Corp., Los Angeles. and chJflf of quality control for "'Elecb"o-Tnstruments. Inc., San OieSo. l ' ' foods. Families are using school, Pegram is a ... ._.Pa 1·60 ~~ "11 121""' +l.w. ~ 't:~ .1111·• ~ ~l't f!,,. tm:. \2 their growing leisure and member of the California flaD<:k w 1.:M 10"1 38 38 _1u, ~~·'b~T .. e~ TJ ~ ~ ·n = t vacati'on um· e lo travel State Bar and serves as a flakrOUT .60 1:w ~. 11 v. ii~+.,., Ooverco 1.20 22 u v. '5111 6S"A _ ~ • 6111 GE l.olO e2 ,. :J'l'l/4 32•;, -\Ii DowChm 2.«I 15! J't."11 14V. 7''h + "9 . together by Car. and thi's also member of its Committee of Bt1G11rB •.so r·1so ,,.,, 7•VJ 1,v. -v. or1voe11 1.20 • Jtv. 3"4 l9'-t _ v. . fl•IT G of Cl iSO 66 66 66 -1 gre11lnd· 1 . .0 1211 ln4 31Vr .tiv. \lo is swelling demand for Condemnattoo Law and B1n1Pun1 •. 60 112 •1 ¥1 w11 l'I>~ -"' ressr Pn.20 · i o "'-" •tit. = v. P ed B1n1P 1>11.15 J '2 4l 4l +11111 Ort1sr pf fl2 16 ~ 4)i,r., 40'/.i + v. prepared foods which can be roe ure. fl•rb011 1.u1 • m. 42Vr ~ -"' o...v1u1 ·'° lll11 211 21v. 21'/t , . Other affiliates include B:~ltJ:'2.: ,~Bu, ~l ~"' t1'" &::~~fil".~e !: ~i: ~ ~=,~ :~::dwi'\~~k~he a;:r ~=nw::: the Los Angeles County Bar l:\~ 1~·10D 11 ~"" !i:'lo ~r. =i:Z ~uu~~~~ t~ 1:b 1~ 1W-1~~ :+':' as at the roadside. The com-Association, Orange County ::;::..~: :r: TI m; ~ ~~ .... -:-:-~~ ::::::: ~:jg B ::;; n !'7'17 ~~ Bar Assoc·atioo a d the flaY~kc11 so 700•• u"' 1• u Ouq L1 1.66 41 31\\o JCMl JI _ 14 bination service station. 1 n Be1rln1• .io 30Vo :iov. 30v, +·1,4 0<i t.20p12.10 1120 3''1t 3'Vr :ii•1t + ~ restaurant is commonplace Amer~ca_n Right of Way =~~~~ 1,;,1 29 7' 13'° .!:\\ +·;,,, 2~~1 .:'.~ ~~ ff'"' ID'; ~ = ~ but I.ts greatest era lies Association fleetonok .JO 'l W{i; j1 SJ -n·, OY11• Am . .oo •2 :iov. 19,. 1.,. _,,. ' l..ed! Air .IS t.l "2 401/11 40v. + V. E F -·• d Belco Pll 50 • 5''/o u v, S)!,;, _ 1,1, -• -W1ea . Bel Htm .too u 37'!.i 311'> llVr -v. E~1ePch .IG JO ~ 30 :io _ Ch g • t' flell How .60 21S 7J 6'1146'1"7 --l E1s1 Air .50 lM :1:1\\i 29>4 2914 -1~ an es ID our ea ing PS G &ell llllerco~ 69 U'i\ 13"' 13>,1, --'1 E1•t G•• F 1•7 41 401/t 4(1\ft -.\> ha.bi~ that @tocka foresees A · i'ves 1em11c1 1.60 1 51 ~ 51~ -v. e1115511 .llO 31 22•1o n"' ~ + ,,, &~di• 1...0 U 311'111 31.\oli :.\lo + 14 Eesl UtO 1.40 21 29'/r 21>,4 :zt _ 'I< are; fiend I• pt J 2 61.\oli 63\11 61.\oi . . , E Kodak .111!1 )92 ""' 751\ii 76 + ,,. Be~!'!Fln 1.60 13' ,1.,, . ..,"" ~ ... -""' E1""'1V1 l.«1 63 loAlo 3'\\o ~ + v.. -WIDE ACCEPTANCE . of the semi-moist food in new packaging and with new preservatives ' to prevent spoilage. You wHl take home a semi-moist meat package, pop it into the toaster to become a meat sandwich or pop it into the oven to become a meat pie. Greater use o I microwave heati'n·g an d high-frequency ovens t o speed the transformation of frozen food s into delicious ready-to-eat meals in a mat· ter of seconds. Indicative of what is ahead is frozen Danish .pQstry for vending machines which can be turned in seven seconds iI"to "the nicest. plump, heated Danish pastry you can im- agine." -Development of spun protein. tailor-made protein food which can be designed and developed to look and taste like meat loaf, ham, bacon, chicker. etc. "You 'll actually 'make' a chicken through processing a strand of protein." -VAST IMPROVE MENT of freeze-dried foods. grow- ing out of the needs of the military services and the space program for concen· trated. nutritions. long.last- ing foods. You'll just mix th e treeze,-dried food with a de signpted Uquid and out will come a product you can't distinguiS'h Crom the original. Freeze-dried foods \A.11! make shipping and storage much cheaper, "will be one of the biggest developments in the next decade." -Real "QOrtion control" so the housewife will get what she wants j:>re·cut. pre- sized and pre·balancM. I wouldn't bt!l so willing to swallow these predictions if I didn't see how And W'tlat today's 'youngsters like to eat. I'm rebelling agalost it all : rm learning to bake from scratch. Repo11 for 2nd Quarter Btn!ll" ptS.50 4 l?l"" lll'h l?lVr -IV. El:t~co llld 1 4 SI~ Sl '1 _'It BMllF P".50 ?70 71)~ m• 10\lo ' EcllllnMI .j.I 10 17 16"" 16~ + \\ =~~" 5r;J;~o zJ1~ ~~: ~,·~ ~:! :+1~~ ~~:~~:" ;:f 11 ~~ ~~ 16'1t -l>lr 8P~11uet 701 IHO 1111:> 111/i -"' Edis fl•C• .15 14 .w:. 4( ~ +·~ g:~m•:n i~~. 1:~ ll:::: ~'Ii ~!:Z tJ~ ~~~~1..;,101 150 56"4 1n1 54 -!~ ' ,,,. 15656~. ffVlllum ,llO l3 ?'lt/o 78~ 19 + 'I• EIMvslc .0\'9 12 "'° Siio S'" + ''° fltlll Sii 1.llD 6M ~ 11~ 29,., + "' Elect AliKM: n 11~ TIV. 11\\i -"' Bl11 Tllfet .<IO 10 l1'4 ll J~ -l'o EIKfS!I I.OH SSl «>711 )9•;, ew, .. fll1cOOk 1.0S S3 51"" Sl'/r 51 + '\Ii Elaln W11Ch l 1, l~ 15'4 _ ~ l!llH Ltu; 1 u 25'" 1•V. l~'lt -'It EIP•saNG r U3 !9 181'1 lllolo .. Pac.,f,·c Southwest Airlines Blue Be11 1.sa 11 ''v. •MO ti + io e11re corp 1 91 40'tli 39 l9'1t -l'll Bobb~ 8r'<s 101 2111'. 19 19 -1~ Ellr• l)fl.40 1 3''h 3'Vr UV. today Teported earnings for ~:~~.ic~u ~~ Ut~ f,~ · fi~ =1~ ~~~~'1>1\".it "'I ~.4 ~~~ ~~ •. ~ ±1~ the second quarter, ended 1:~~51~~1.~ ~ ~(Z ~i . .., ~~:Z = ~ ~::;i:,.~f'~ .Jio ~~ ~ ~"" ~v, -" June 30 of $1 276 000 on BkMnth 1.roa s "1 AB.., •1~ . emp0111 ·1.611 1 J1v. 31.,.. 31.,.. · · ' ' ' 'B~n 1.20 659 ~ ?IV. ?l\1 -2~ E"""'3rt'.: 15 J 37\\o 31 lt1/o -1;, total revenues of $14,037,000 sc'<IW•r 1.1s " 291~ 1111,:, "'''• -'"End J~n·'°" 10 J1>i1. Jiu, J7'h _ ~ ed t $f ~s OOO • flormenF .IO 1.u-2~ 22;.. lJ.\4i + 'l>O En11.rtM .600 m (i1 4JlA 6l'A +i'lil compar 0 .~, ' JR BM E<llS 2.ot 2" «'1o .. «~ -"' Eng M pU,15 3 105 2!M 10ol +lS' .. 1967 On total revenue' Of A est Me CP 37 2lU, 221'. ZIV. + "" E11utG11 2. lO 1l 31"-3714 lAlo ·~ Bourns 1nc 18 'l5'l't 'l5 15'4 + \lo ES8 l»e 1.20 S1 u>,li 16 1~ _ ~ $12.180,ooo. :~:;:~l' 2:!g· 1~ ~~ W' 1m +11:: ~!~~~ ·r20 ~ 11: 11"" ~ +~: Earnings per share in the Br111Mv•r 11 133 1111o 1s:w; 76v. +1v. Elfwl c11 .60 10 12 11"" 32 +i· Brh!MY pf 2 ( Sl'h 13\'t 51\\o + 1.\ Ethyl pff.40 1 •9 4'111 o19 second quarter of 1968 fl<MY liflle 1 ' JJ\11 :Mu. J1 + ~ e11ro1n11 .:io1 n lf'lli 11 IMO +·iAI S~IYnUG 1.611 11 JtV. 1'I'\\ 29'11. . Ev1nsP .60b to l V. ~ Jl·\li + ~ a mounted to 43 cents com-ewn co .ISP 22 !&llo 1s'!r is11t -"4i Evo:rsnerp SD 15'" 1.flli 1~ _ '"' ed t 46 lb BwnC~ llf1.JO a 22•\(i 111'11 11~·-~ E~C•llO 1.lO 1)9 lS'lli l:5 l5'lo +o,; par 0 Cents for e Bwn ~h•rP 1 Si 111/t 21,,_ 1\'lr -"' F1clo<A 90b ,.,n 16~ ... 55 11.,_ -1 .... · Th · f flw"Sl>oe I 40 9 !-flit s.iy.. 1.41'> . F1lrd!C .»o ...,.._ ......., ~ prior year. e earnings or flrvnswtck · Jll7 iw. 15 is _.,,. F•irH111 .t6e 119 ,, 1w. lS\\-l<ili the second quarter of 1968 BucJ<n~~ 1.10 a 2t:wi " ''"' + "" ",",rmon1 ' 1 so 21v. 21.._ zzi,;, + 1M ftuc.vEr 1.211 '6 ll'V:i V 111/o + * • N'llnt 1>1 S ?ol :U U ..... include gains ·net of ap-flvt:td eo .tt 1M »l't 11:w. 31'4 .... . '· &uddCoP15dCl767670 plicable income tax, on Bua. " Pl.60 2 1·1t 1\'t 1111 .•.. sales of airer t of 11 cents =~~J~.:61 ~ ~n: ~ ~"' +·;,. h flU IOVI .IOb lt l:l'Mi> lll'o 31\\i -"" per s are flunk Re..,. •1) 161'. 1•11i i••1o -"' Earn· s f-or the s i x B"'1kA 1>11.JO u so"' .ce .ce -1 flurl IM l.«I 166 40 39Vt 391':1 -Yo mo s erPded June 30 were g~~~tni'°1 ~ 1irn 1~ 1:~ + ~ $2,1 ,000 on total revenues fllMUnv .:ior 21 ,,,,. 11v. 21 -l'I f ~• 600 OOO ed ._ flwtlf\'1Sh .llO i t :n~ ~ 1N -v. o "'""' . c-ompar w -C- earnings .of $2.2.89,000 on c11 Finan• 3: lWi 11~ 11v. -"" revenues of $22.926,000 for ~:i1~~Q_a1 -~ ,1 i':io. 2ll'h,"",• ~ ~'~ the first half of ·1967. Earn-c1mPRL .& • »"41 l2"1i + - ings per share for the six l::::'ti~v ~ ~~ r Pi Ir' t .... months were 72 cents which ~g;: 8P~ 340 ~ :"' SI~ .,,m =1,. C1n1I RlflCI 1 l 2llllo 11'4 21~ -'Ii included 26 cents per share can1..en .IO lll 1s"' 2'V. "'"' -"' from extraordinary gains on ~:11~n ''r:l l4 uv. :t " -" aircraft sales compared to c1r1111e ·'° ~ ~ ,...H ~ :!:.\,... C•r•PLI l .lf -191.\ )9 + Vi 85 . cen.ts per share in the ~!~1fJ i~:O ~ ~"' ;::z ~\.\ + v. prior year. c.,,,., CP 1 ti:, mi. 11 ,. +114 C1rrGen «II JlV. J1\li ':!11~ Earnings per share are C1111!rW :"°"' 611 u\O ,,"" ;,...., -.,.. based on the average shares ~c:: ~ Al.44 ~ HE ~ ns ~ ~ outs.landing during ea c b :r~~~c~'° 1 ~' fr' ~14 f.v. = ~ period. The 1967 average ll ,,,M•:i,~s ,.. • 4 +1 shares outstanding has been Ko c,. .10 • ~ ~ ~ -_,:! . · Cei.neltCP 1 "47 _,. ..... ,.., .., adjusted for the 1.967 three ~:~ t:,A•:: :"•', :%14 !J tf .:!:.,~ for two stock split and to Ct11 Avuir "'° lil.,. u~ ti:¥t -v. rellect retroactively th e l!C~F~~ ·~ 1 Im nt r~ -.... shares isgued UPoTI COQ,· er;1/r/-1.,~'.~ ,i,g ~a ~v. If"' =1~ Version Of the 5lf.t pe.r~nt ::~I:! \:ta ;f 1flli li-.. n~.: ~ c o n vertl~e subordinated l::I ~"(• ':l: fl g~ t~ ~~ = ~ debentures. ~:::1::':'° l* ~ n~ s~ 1,: ~rion;: . .:' 2:T n ... ~ ~~t:-':: Olsen Joins Dean Willer Kenneth Karl Olsen, Jr .• 25. of Costa Mesa has been ap.pointl'd as an account ex- ecutive with ihe. NewJ)Ort Beach office of Doan Witter and Co. Cll10bn Golf! l2 1.S\.'i 1)V. 1~ _,,.., c•11mpS 1,10 "' 211'4 ""' ~ + v. CllmPHll .&O "5 .S.,, 44\1 ~ -'-" ~.:;~ J.: l~ :m ~ ~,-11ti ~;;~""' 1.ao 54 '1 .i'4 •nr -~ Cllrtnw*" ,20 n, 15"' 141,ii !l\lo -'4 fl>es .... 1.60 ""' 3$\41 lf\j, -w. ~ Olllo • li ~"' 651/li ··:i. -"" ... rt •lu. .1 .. + 14 h It h1 l~ \J ,, ~~~~':1'; 'J ?:~ ~ H~ 1,~ ~IP~'~-~ !l ?~ 1~~ 1•"' "" ... II! A:I ~~ 1,,0 24\lo 11 ?t'4 'Ai '4 llll i~ ,1 llP ~ ' , ~l"Fu,r'":''° J"2'J°'°'"' ,.._, 1s.,, + "1 P>rl.Crtll 1• II Sfi. l6"" ~ + \Ii CCtl CYl'tll."40 I M :MW. J.tlli -1 Trudeau Leaves Gulf Retired LI. Gen. Arthur G.-. Trudeau has been named assi~t.ant to Will"ard F. Rockwell Jr., Chairman o{ the board of North American Rockwell Corp. In announcing the ap· pointrnent, Rockwell said Gen. Trudeau will work on special projects, assist in the company's acquisitions .and expansion progr.am in foreign countries and advise the c ompany on technological transfer and research and development. Gen. Trud~u joins N"orth American Rockwell from Gulf Research & Develop- ment Co., where he served. as president for the last six years. He is a trustee of Norwich uruversity and is a member of the Board of Regents of Georgetown Univesrity . He s e r v ~ s on G e or ~e W a s hington Universit \·\'s Ad visory Council ror the Pa- tent. Trad e m a r k and Copy r i g h t Re ~earch In stitute and is a member of n u .m e r o u s t e c h nicat sooeties and other associa· livns. -·-/_ ------~---=-~ ~ ~~.........___· -_ ...... " ........ -.. .... _ ........ __ .._ .............. _""""'.---------------.i.- '· I ,. I ~ I ,1 . . ' • \ DAILY IJLOT J. Thursday's Oosing Prices - ' Complete New York Stook Exchange List Oosing , I I I ,, ,\ •, ' ~ . _______ ..._.. __ ' --,,. . \ DAILY ·pu,oT EDITORIAL PAGE A.~ the GOP Convenes As the opening day of the Republican national con- vention draws near, the nation's voters of all parties can view the scene. with amazemect. Four years ago the GOP put prac~cal politics a.side while it banled over ideology. At the same time, Lyndon Johnson put l<Jgether a coalition which might have been envied even by Franklin 0. Roosevelt. The result waa a shattering of the Republican Party a1 Barry Goldwater lost by a record 15,851,088 votes. Now the Johnson consensus is gone, with the man himself out of the race. And the Republicans have, thus far at least, shown a pragmatic desire to h,ave a winner while at the .same time backing Richard Nixon, despite bis 1960 and 1G62 jrbage as "a loser." Thia contradiction will lend unusual interest to events at Miami 'Beach next week. Nixon has been the hard-working party wheelhorse. If the presidency were a reward for long and -diligent training for the job, it would have to go to Nixon as the man best trained for tt in all hlsoory. But Big Politics isn't like Big Busin~ss. John Q. Public looks for something more tban training for the job. Charisma, for one thing. Indefinable charm, ability to relate almost divinely to the desires of diverse groups -these weigh more with the voter than service as an understudy to the top man. Representing only 'l:l percent of the electorate, the GOP has to face up to its minority status and nominate a man who can attract substantial nwnbers of Demo- crats and Independerrts if it hopes to win in November. This fact of life is what gnaws at this year's Repub-- ~ lican conv~ntion delegates. Their hearts, what tbey can give to him, belong to Richard Nixon. And they can point to his hair-breadth Joss to John F. Kennedy as evidence that he can attract non-GOP votes. On the other hand, they realize that in a more mod· ern context Nelson Rockefeller has demonstrated out.: standing ability to attract Democratic and Independent voters. He bu the 11winner" image that Nlxoo ,tacks. Rockefeller's urban voter appeal appear> oo stem from his well articullted recogrut1on of America's changed and changing situation. But he lacks Nixon'slappeal in the South and with the Hhard line" conservatives. California's Governor Reagan will go lnto the con· ven_lion with minority delegate power of unusual pot· erlcy. That the convention might turn to him in event of a Nixon-Rockefeller impasse is unlikely in view of his lack o! qualifications for the job. But it could happen. Nixon's generally favorable image with the conserv· alive wing of the party probably will r;revail at Miami Beach. He will come off as the "middle road Republi· can" -more conservative than Rockefeller and mo liberal than Reagan. . --- The mood for change and new answers that is on the country should provide a real opportunity for the Repub- lican Party this year. But very much will depend on the tone of the convention. If the Miami convention proj· ects anything like the arrogant hard-line conservative atmosphere and attitude that branded the 1964 affair in San Francisco, no Republican candidate, whoever he is •. will be able to win. Worse Than Being Shot Younksters, and some persons ,not so young, have been tempted into using LSD. And sOme of them have ignored, as talk of "squares." warnings that LSD can induce brain damage, malformed babies, derangement and suicide. Now a doctor has reported a l~year-old girl un- knowingly ate a cookie containing LSD. Her whole genetic structure was reorganized; she will never be able to have a normal child. These are effects worse than being shot. Penalties for selling LSD should be at least as g'reat as for aggravated assault. .. ........ , • COLI::> ~ONT Politics Not for Language of Real W orl.d: New Red Attacks Politically Motivated _A ··Special Elite 'Aita Peapea' Although t am a& much against .onald Reagan d a man can be -for J'resident, for Governor, and t:speclally for head of the school board -I still think it is an unfair criticism to pOint to hi& M:tiog career u a dis· qualification for public office. There is no valid reason f« believ- ing that a profeasional politician makes the best office·bolder, or that lawyers (which mod political leaders be~n as) are particularly better qualified 00 -any ,......,.en! than laymen are. An act.cir CID be flll Jnformed .ad in· telligent man; in fact, many of the new breed are exadtly that -more humane, more t:ro.t.-gauged, and cer- tainly better-ednoated bm most of tbe old fogies who control the essential committees in our presmt depkmable COngiess. THE WHOLE POINT ol t b e American system, indeed, the philosoJity on which U was based, is that politics is not the province of a F.pecial elite, or professional cadre, but should offer equal cpportunity to men of au ranks and occupatiOr11 in our so-:iety. It is worth recalling that Washington was a surveyor, FNmklin a printer, Jefferson a farmer, P~ a irnll'Pdfht, Hancock a mercttant -and Hamilton an illegitimate child! Just imagine what a modern politioal campaign could make Of bbat. IN A PURE DEP.10CRACY, such as ancient Athens, all free men were held ... .__ equaily capable of holding any public offiee, and drew lots for the rotation of )rt. Is tncuirobent on us ace newsmen ~Yi' · ~~r to climb down from our ivory towers W }\ \It · • ;'} :~~'I? ' once a year aind journey abroad -the :' "h 4iit.:.1~ n.mri.: t better to grasp what's going on in the ~1' +. 1: ~ ~ real world. '1 · Mr. WaMer Lippmann makes an an· nual pilgrimage to Europe to chat with heads ol State. Mr. Joseph Alsop com· mutes to Vietnam to tell the geneTals how to run the war. And, after con- gjdering c a r .e f u l I y al\ such alternatives. J went off to an island in the South Seas. offices. And even"'today, in sonutJ;an- tons of Switzerland, .all the electorate participate persona1Iy in an n u a I legislative actions, which are not dominated by a professional clique of politicians. But such democracy presumes two things -. first, a relatively Smell society. in ~ich men oan intereact personally and evaiuate each other on the basis of char.act.er :rather th.an of "ima@t"; a n d, secondly a uniform detrei-'of eduoation, so that a stooe- mason or a sheep-berder would be as knowledgeable as eny other citizen. WE LACK BOTH these requisites Jn American society: We neither know our candidates persot1ally, nor are all of. us equally well-informed on the . ba'Sic issues of our time. Because of these two grave defects, o u r "democratic republic" often finds one kind oC phony pitted against another kind of phooy, each exploiting the pro- =sm and prejudices of a ·cular segment Of the populetlon. There is abS'Olutely nothing wrong with an actor entering politics ; indeed, it is heartening that noo-politicians are wiiling to devote themselves to public affairs. But, then, they must sho at ttiey have prepared themse es as thoroughly, and ets deepl for the obligations Of office as they have. in the past, f'OT ttle performance or roles. TIIE REAL WORLD I chose to grasp wats the island of Moorea. which lies about two Dramamine pills west ' ' of Tahiti in French Polynesia. The real world iS composed of ha4f a dozen towering. lush-green m,ountains, a fringe of white beaches, an en· circling turquoise lagoon and the coconWi grow on trees. It is populated by maybe 4000 Polyntsians, 5000 6ogs and several million rues. All of them are incred- ibly friendly. There are n<> newspapers, no television and, at lea~t on my part of the isiland, no radios. The language of t.he real world, as far as can be determined, is limited to one shrug and two words, "aita peapea," pro- nounced ''eye-ta pay·ah·pay-ati." T.BIS l\tA Y BE liberally tran51ated as "Who gives a damn?" Back to Pony Express!, This rich and a'll·purpose language is extraordinarily weful in explairting ...my ttiere are no eggs for breakfast. the Pnris riot6, the whereabouts of one's laundry, the American gold crisis, oc now coone the boot that was to take you to Tahiti to calch a plane left 30 minutes early. To the Editor: In 1948, ooe of our Orange Coast p05t offices commenced its first home delivery route in ooe area. True, it wag to curbside boxes, but there were two deliveries per day -ooe in the morning and one in the afternoon. No longer were these residenbi required to persona.Uy pick up their maril at the post ofllc;e. Several areas now ha'(e direct.-to- the-door service. True. tft..cily has grown. but there a:re also more post oftice buildings. branches, vehicles. employes etc. But what do we have? One delivery per day and Uie service is slower than ever. AS A HOUSEWIFE, molhor an.1 bWilness partner, may I of.fer a few 1ua:gestion1: I. Require all employes to work a full score of hours for a full day's pey. Dear Gloomy Gus: What's all this controversy about the length ol hair? People should be JudJed f0r what they are. not for the. length of thelrthalr. Some of my best friend• have short hair. -A. E. I ' ·' • Letter! from readers are welcome. Normally writers should conve11 their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is re served. AU let· ters ml.L!t include signature and mail· ing addresJ, but nameJ will bt with- lield on requtst.. (Recently I ob&erved a mail carrier sleeping on Ufe steering wheel of his little ,truck. Maybe if they were all back walking the route again, tiley could manage to stoy awake durlng working boors.) 2. Start using the viario1~ mOOern new automated methods which the post.al employe unions have fought against over tile years. 3. USE PLASTIC bags or bins in deposit boxe&. which can be quickly and easily exchaflged. r&>ther than having a man personaUy handle each and every article. (I have watched them droppi_ng letten; in the wind and rain at m<>re than one box. I We h£\'e gladly cooperated with the zip code to speed up the mails, paid. higher postage ~argts through the several rate changes. put up with fewer deposit boxes. etc. Now to add insult to injury, ttiere are rumors or a four.<fa.y week. closlng hundreds or branch offices ond no S.turday service$. How's U11t far progte5s .. (Private business would bite lhe dust using these tactics.} 1 say. back tn the Pony Expres5. MRS. R. M. WILSON t Of course, a great many major events are transpiring these do.ys in the real world. Mrs. Afiru's oldest son has started kindergarten. Mr. Orana caught two mahi mahi in one day. And young Mr . Rafatea, having earned enough money to buy a bicycle by fill- ing potholes in the · one 35-mile dirt road encircling the island. has un· derstaodably retired. GENERALLY SPEA_KING . the real world Is pro-American. "Americans," said one well-informed young lady. "are very funny ," But it is doubtful they will send troops to back up our commitment in Vietnam. For oqe thing. Lhey don't have any. And for arn::ither they are very pro· everybody else. But mostly they a-re pro-dancing -dancing. eating, swim· ming, flowers. children. pretty colors. laughing, ta\kjng and making love. So tht Teal world, I'm glad to report, Is a very real world. richly alive and achingly 1ovtly. BUT BACK TO tht old iVO>ry tower. After all ttlese weeks w I I h o u t newspapfll'S, television or radio. you C£'n imagine how difficult it is to catch up . Let's see. There's peace negotla- ti'()ll'WJ In Paris, an ambush In Vietnam, riots ln the ghettos, trouble in f-Tance. revotution in China, a sex murder in the suburb& and Humphrey, Nixon, McCarthy. RocktftiUer. Wallace and RN!p att running for Prtsidcnt. Th6t'1 the nice th.in&: about Ivory tower1: you hardly know you've bten awey. Except that every once Wi a while , I catch myself .speaking Tahitian. AU two words of it. t • \ Good Reason to Keep Coo· ' WASHINGTON -tJ.S. armed forces ire ready. The army and government of the Republic of Vietnam are ready. But is the American public ready if the expected Communist offensives materialize at the time of the national political conventions? This is the question which concerns top level strategi!rts in the Johnson Administration. They fear that opinion will skyrocke.t in apprehension as it did. and ~ith about ci much cause, during"tne Tet offenslve and the seige of Khe Sanh. • There is ·tue doubt at these. high levels that oncentration of forces in I Cor nd around Saigon. with a t 60.000 new North Vietnamese troops. is directly rela.rted to coming military operations timed tcJ take pl<:<::e durin.g the national political con- ventions and the ensuing presidential campaign. THE OPPOSITE VIEW that this niinforce·ment and positioning of troops is to reinforce a strong bargaining positjon at the Paris peace t a I k s i.s credited by few Amel'.icans and by nooe ot the South Vietnamese who ?Jlet with the presi- dential party in Honolulu. The South Vietnamese told the Americans they were foolish not to expect that the Saigon and I Corps concentrations would be committed to action. Public apprehension on the seige . of Khe Sanh and the Tet Offentsive was not justified in eitt~ case. Both cam- paigns failed as triilit<:ry operations with very heavy casualties on the rommunist side. In the case of the Tet of'fensive on the citiets the government of South Vietnam emerged s-tronger than it was before; At Khe Santi the Communists suffered thousands oi casualties without gaining any kind of military ·objective. YET A~1ERICAN opinion is so vol~tile and ttie war opposition so vocal that virtually any military ac· tion is called a defeat and anottier reason for winding up the war at any cost. Boi.h political p1'ties O!re vulnerab!e 00 this pressure. Large scale military operations at the time or the con4 ventions-particularly tile Democratic conventi~would heat up the at· mosphere, heighten tensions, and un· doubtedly affect candidacies and the dr<:.•fting of the platrorm. The same is true. probably 'to a lesser degree. in the Republican party where ttle issue between Nelson A. Rockefeller and Richaro M. Nixon is not markedly different Ulan between Hubert H. Humphrey and Eugene McCarthy. If PRESIDENT JOHNSON 'S associates accurate1y reflect hlm, however, he is detenninei:I oot ta be influenced by public pressure on this matter. President Johnson could h<:."Ve returned from Honolulu and an- nounced tilat the prospect was fo. the withdrawal of orie American division in 1969 and anQther in 1970 even if the w·ar continued unabated. He resisted tempt·aNon to arouse hopes and ex- pectations O£ to hold Pres'ident Thieu tio aony such commitment. On the contrary, the president's emphasis was against a fuH cessation of bombing and the "tommy-roC and fiction" of a unilateral American pull· 4 out. This emphasis' tended to divert public attentioo from several im· portant points in Ule joint communique Qf Presiden-ts Thieu and Johnson whic~ were specifically designed to meet certain requirements o( the Na- tional Liberation FrOnt and the North Vietnamese. THEY OPENED the dOOT to participation by the National Libera- tion Front in !he political life of South Vietnam, including running for office -so long as vi o:ence anj Com munist affiliation were renounced. Such re· nunciation. it is recognized, could be a thin pretext. Thieu recognized the principle of one man, one vofe. thus not excluding voters because of their past connection with the Viet Cong. The two presidents also. in effect, oo~ified North Vietnam th a t s.afeguarded c:rrangements for a general cessaticn of hostllities could be made in a way to guarantee the security of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces. HANOI'S RESPONSE has thus far been sufficiently measured to cause some hope that it percelves in the foregoing a workC'.lble formula for a cease.fire. In general. and in spite of expected renewal or big-scale fighting, the highest o!ficia-ls here have what they call "visceral" feelings that ttie C<>mmuni~e is slowly moving away from stU'bborn intransigence. If this is so, it is all the more reason for the American pubLic to keep cool tmd£r the stress of the predjcted of. fensives just ahead. If those offensives are no more successful than those earlier this year. and if Americans can keep their heads, tile Communist-- side may be compelled to move faster boward a settlement. Background of Recall Law • A small cliff-hanger has been developing In California without much national attention. A used c a r salesman of Roseville claims to have 800,000 petition signatures to have Gov. Ronald Reagan recaUed. Ac- cording to state Jaw. a recall election petition requires the signatures of 780,413 qualified voters. Th i s represents 12 percent of the 1966 vote for governor. Sec. of State Frank M. Jordan, like Reagan a Republican will have the duty of deciding the !validity of the signatures. .Jordan has threatened leaders of the recall drive with criminal prosecution lf signatures have been obtained untler false pretenses. Jordan on July 3 said this campaign was "the fir st time In 'Il years I've had so many questions about the propriety of a pelition·s circulation.·· MISREPRESENTATION or a petl· Uon in California is a f e 1 o n y punishable by a fine of up to $5.000 and a prison tertn of up to t.wo years. The !!lame sentence can apply to anyone who knOwingl.y files a petition w_ith forged signatures. The recall la a special election to B11 Geor11e Dear ~rge : T read your column about bow to be flrm Dnd be the boa with a wife. She has locked me out of U!e house. What do I do nowt Dear Sam : S.nd fO< my -Tree·llous~ Bullding Limited Budgel SAM B. leAon: on • " Editorial ~, (. ~ " t • " Jlesearc:fi' • ' ,, determine whether a public official shall be superseded before the ex- piration of his terni. In recent ti1nes the device was introduced in the Los Angeles charter of 1903. It subse- quently found wide acceptance in municipal charters. chiefly of the home rule. commissioo, and city manager types. Interest in Ule recall. the Initiative. and the referendum was awakened in the 20th century by study o f Switzerland's use Of them. However, the recall is nothing new in American political machinery. PENNSVLVAMA r'ecalled and replaced her de.legates to the Second Continental Coogress when they refus- ed to sign the Declaration of Independence. And Article V of the Articles of ConfederatJon provided that any state legislature might recall any or •U of the delegates which Jt had appointed to the national ~ngresa. The recall has been ·used less e1· teosively in the United SOoloa tl>u had been -clpated by 11& lll'IJllClllOll. For one thJng, the mere thriat o( lt oPet"ates to cb.ect f I a g r a a t mlafeasance in off.ice. W o o d r o w Wilson called It "a gun behind tllo door." For another, the machlnery for u&1ng lt l&: t1eces11rily cumberaome. Ae<m!Jne w tile Council of Stole Governments, U states provide for tht recoll o( lll elected -cflldall, ' ,\ with the exception of the ju<ticiary In some states. Hawaii is considering ad· ding tile recall provision to its con· stitution. THE ATTEMPT to recall Ronald Reagan cOmes at a time "'hen he is making a tour of eight or more states as a ''non-candidate" ror the Presiden· cy. ReagaT\ told newspapermen on Ju- ly 2 that the drive could be "em4 barr-assing'' to him at the Republican convention, wh.ich opet1s in Miami Beach next Monday. If the petition stands up, Reagan would be the first Cali!ornia governor to have to undergo a recall election. However, according to Secretary of Sta~ Jordan, recall petitions have been circulated in the state nine times, including one earlier to recall Reagan, --llWJ'·li Thursday, August l, 1968 The editorlol page of the Dnily Pilot Itek.a to inform and atim- vlatc rtodtn bu prc11nting thi.s MWfPOpcr'1 optniom and com-mntatv Oft. topics of intereit cmd dgnifiocmce, bv prouidino a forum fOf Ult t:prmicm of our rtoders• opiniom, and by JJ"'tamdno thl <Uversc vie~ pointr of inf011Md ob.servcn and ~ktlmt'll on topic.s of tht day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher I I \ l I I \. -- ~· • Newp~rt . Harbor EDITION N.Y. Steeb VOL 61, NO. 184, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST I', '1968 TEN CENTS ' . \ Reagan Lauds Failure of R~all Move \ ( I " • View 111-om sea Looking inland from point offshore near Salt Creek cove, this artist's version of Lagu~a Niguel Corp. 's proposed development shows sweep of 850-acre area proposed as future resort, office, commercial and residential area surrounding salt water lake. Tower apartments dominate scene (center) as they rise high above beach. (See story, Page 3) Alley Bill to Owners? By JEROME F. COLLINS Of fM D•HY ,.lMI lt•tf iJundreds of West Newport property owners may soon be assessed for the paving of more than a mile of now unimproved alleys. · Municipal aides are preparing a recommendation for initial City Coun- cil action on the improvement pro- gram, which would be financed through an assessment district. The city engineering staf! began Hunt for New NB Assistant Cl1ief moving on the alley pavlrla project at the urging of the West Newport Improvement Association. Association's president John \V. Shea. in a letter to the city, sa'id 100 members of . the homeowners' group recently voted unanimously ''to peti· tion the city Council to take immediate necessary action to establish assess· ment districts consisting of all pro- perty owners whose property abuts on existing unimproved alleys in the west.em end of \he city." Shea said the letter represents a petitlon for the association for "such action to begin." Public Works, De pa rt m e n t spokes1nen s-aid the association's re· quest wiJI be formally pre-Minted to the CO!JnCil Au~u'st 12; and, in anticipation, preliminary gtudies already have begun. · The studies show that· a total of 395 (See W, NEWPORT, Page%) Newport Goes to Court · Soon Under Way· On First 'Illegal Rental' -A recruiting announc.ement "'.ill be By BRUCE BENSON · But landlord~ P~e Baun of Ornn~~(~a.t circulated shorUy seeking candidates 01 1111 0111Y r1i.1 s 1111 2508 E Bl d c d I M N 2 t · th N wport Th h ' 'd .. 1 tr 1 1 . ean v ., orona e ar, !or the o. spa tn e e e c armmg res1 entla 1 ee s o is bristlin t the charges. Jle replies Beach Police Department. Corona del Mar are starting to bulge that the apparently can't count. Chie! B. James Gl.avas said toduy he at Ule . seams with more apartment At issue interpr:etation of a ci· expects to look for a potential assistant tenants. so the city of Newport Beach ty code regu ng the number or peo- police chief .both within the Newport is moving to halt what it !ears is a pl~~ot~n l~ga~:a~~t;:~ ~l~~~Jl !orce and without. . . trend toward "tenement-style rental be o~cupi:J ~; one family defined "Depending on ~ho applies, if "''e units." two ways : ' can get good c~1dates to ?PPlY, we In the first action of its kind, the city -Any number o! related persons shoul~ have a final selection mad~ this week filed a Superior Court civil livini! together as a single housekeep· someti~e IM:fore the end of October ' suit charging a·tandlord with violating ing unit. the chief send. . zoning laws !or two-unit apartment'!. -Five or fewer unrelated or re- The posi.tion beca!!1e vac~nt in Ju!y City Atty. Tully Seymour contends lated p?rsons living together as a when Assistant Police Chief Merrill the owner is renting out duplexes as single housekeeping unit. Duncan left to assume th.e top spot five-unit apartments. The ttiree ex· "My properties are rented accord· with the city of Orange Police Depart• amples cited in the brief are units at ing to.the city's code," says De Baun. ment. . . . 401 Femleaf Ave ., 4-03 Fernlea! Ave., "And to prove It, I've had my units G\avas said the Job openmg pays and 2304 Pacific Drive. inspected twice by the city Building $16.200 a year. Prerequisites geperally Department, and my rental agree· include a minimum two years of COi· ~nta inspected. twice by the city lege, plus a.dministrati· I• experience L' R d 'W ])' attorney's office." at the rank of captain or t.igher within IZ eporte C Alt that inspection, however, appar· a medium to large police department. ently was done be!ore the city decided LQNDON (l,"PJ) -E 11 z abet h on its crackdown. Ta;lfor, recovering from a partial De Baun says he has rewritten his hysterectomy, was reported "very rental agreements on duplexes so that 'vel\" today and nurses said she would roomn1ates now sharing a unit agree probably leave the Fitzroy Nu£field to pay the rent collectively, instead of Nursing Home sometime next week. singly. ~1iss Taylor, 36, underwent the 3'h· Thal apparently would meet tht hour operatlon July 21 . (Stt RENTALS, Pa1e %) . Weather 'Attierica Ht1rrala' Petition Signatures Fall Far Short SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A six· month drive aimed at recalling Gov. Ronald Reagan shortly be!ore the Republican National Conftntion ap- peaffil today to haft ended in failure. Tbe Republican governor, returrung to the state capital after an •e· pearance before ~e GOP ~vention s platform committee, hailed the drlve's failure as proo! o! the people's "com· mon sense." * * * 2 Percent Of County Backs Move Petitions reported to b e n r signatures of 11,262 Orange CounUans for recall of Gov. Reag&on were filed \Vednesday with County Clerk \Villiam St John. The signatures carried in 1,289 sec- tions, or booklets, were brought into St John's office by John T. Wilson of 7052 ?vtaple St., Westminster, who served as Orange Cour.ty coordinator for the Recall Reagan Committee. St John noted that the 11,262 signatures represent little more than 2 percent of lhe 518,000 registered voters in Orange County. St John said it would tuke his voters registration staff rive days to audit the signatures. _ "In the past, we have found 60 to 70 . percent o{ the·slgnatures to be valid," th~ county clerk said. st John said Wilson also filed a pell· tion f-or an additional period of time to secure more signatures. The county clerk said it would be up to the secretary of stale lo rule on the ad·· missibi\ity of additional signatures. Rocky Says New Poll Favorable; Nixon Aides Scoff MIAl\fl BEACH fUPI ) -Nelson A. Rockefeller's managers claimed tOday that a new public opinion poJI favorable lo him had started an overnight swing of Republican Na· ~iooal Convention delegates away from Richard M. •Nixon. The Nixon camp 1cof!ed elaborately. -Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson of New York Stale, a Rockefeller strategist, said his workers sent telegrams to· all 1,333 delegates to the convention, which opens here next week. to inform them of the latest poll results. The poll by Louis Harris gave Rockefeller 4(.1 percent of the VQte against 34 percent for either Vice President Hubert J-L J-lumphrcy or Sen . Eugene J . McCarthy. while Nixon was shown trailing Humphrey 41 lo 36 and McCarthy 43 to 35. Herbert G. Klein, Nixon's com- munications director, saJd it was "in· credible" that Nixon couki lead in the GaUup Poll, published Monday and trail in the l!anls Poll three days 'later. He said "the Rockefeller polling game is over" with Nixon still winning "on all counts." Stork Market• NE\V YORK (AP) -A vigorous early rally petered out this alternoon, leaving the slock market mixed. A !ew more-locks gained than ~ (Sec quotations, Pagea 18-19). > • ''It confirms what 'I've said all along," Reagan told an impromptu Wednesday night planeside news con· ference. "It rea!firms my faith in the common sense of the people." Tt)e bulk of the recQll count made it impossible to arrive at precise numbers, but it appeared certain the signature count would total !ar less than the 780,414 needed to force a recall election. And the !allure to collect almost 800,000 signatures !rom eight million registered voters· in the nation's most populous state backfired on the recall group, primarily consisting of political novices. LL Gov. Robert F. Finch and Secretary of State Frank Jordan issued a statement three hours a!ter the Wednesday deadline passed calling the failure a V()te of confidence for the !See JlECALL, Page !I Crop-Plane Crash Kills Mesa Pair By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1ftt O.llY .... ti '''" A 10-year-old Costa Mesa girl was ·orphaned Wednesday when a crop- dusting plane piloted by her father and visually directed by her mother on the ground crashed in a llma bean field near Oc~nside. The Piper Pawnee clipped two telephone wires as it zoomed in for a pass, flipped over, bounce~ once and careened into the woman, who had been signalling with a red flag. Dead are Robert "Nick" Nichols , 45, of 651 W. 18th St., and his wi!e An.n, 36, parents of a ll}year-old girl. whose name was not immediately available. CdMRobberv • Suspeet Held In· LA County The suspected dapper gunman who robbed a Corona de! Mar liquor store over the weekend and 11ntiled to the frightened clerk, "Y0u're a good guy," today was among the bad guys at Los Angeles County S_heriff's Maih Jail. Newport Beach poll.ce said the suspect. Donal~ Thomas Conger, 36, of Long Beach. was arrested in Redondo Beach for allegedly pulling off a liquor store robbery similar to one staged Saturday aJ La Cantina Liquors, 3244 E . Coast lllghway. The La Cantina thief, natUly dressed in a green plaid. sports jacket,. black ue, and blac;k trousers. got away with handluls of biUs and told .the clerk as he parted, "You're a good guy." Police said COnger's arrest in Redondo Beach has cleared J.IP !our or live liquor store h.oldups, Asked how Conger was dressed, Newpol't police said. "When we 1aw him, he was in prison drab." \ Investigators said Mrs. Nichols was struck and C<1:tally injured by the hurti· ing wreckage, which burst into flames, trapping the retired Marine C9rps ma- jor inside. "I went out and lifted the sheet over her ... before I'd even bad coffee," sald a ne•man at the sceen, "I didn't have any breakfast." Mrs. Nichols was decaPitated and one arm had been sl~shed o{f by the propellor. The crash w~s witness~d by ijle hor· rified teen-aged son of the Orange County Airport.based crop dusting serVice which . owned the ill-!ated Pawnee. Robert Gebhart, 17, of 135 Magnopa Ave., Costa Mesa, was standing at the opposite end of the um.a bean field along the luilrtan Luis Ref River bot. tomland. Neither he nor his distraught father was available for. comment today about the tragically freak.accident ·on Ernest \Vatson's Rani:ho Guajolnlta. An . eyewitness. however, 11 'a l d Nichols had made one pass o\rer the bean field but was toO high for max· Jmum effect; so he made another run, zooming in beneath a power Urie. He !ailed,' however, tO see tWo thin, copper strwds of telephone wire directly in his flight path. Plumbing contractor George ·Benner was standing on a hillside some distance away watching the cro11 dusting, wtllch was being done while I he ~an plants were still covered with dt'\V. Bt'nner said the aircraft !lipped over as it.clipped the lower-level wire and plunged to earth. . ' Young GebhDrt,-whose father owns the Skyhawk crop-dustin'g _s~rvice, ran from his nag .station at ~he opposite end or the bean field ,· but there was nothing he could-do: - Investigators said that besides the 10-year-old daughter, Nichols i s survived by a 22·year-01d daughter by another marriage. Those pesky low clouds will part by midmorning Friday to al· low mostly sunny skiei; with a coastal high o! 78. INSIDE TODA. Y Play Closed • Ill Alabama A Californian who knew tht days of th.t Wild \Vest was furled toda11. Tht storv o( t~ pioneer who died at 111 u on Page 7. ..... • MlllM.~ H c1111w11i. ' -•w • c .......... .... ..... " CM1lc1 " Mwlllll ,.,,_, .. CrM•-• " "'"""" -• 0.lfl , .. fl«• • 0r1 ... c_,., ' Dl••rct• • ,.,........, ,.,,...r .. 1411,...IM "" H ~191 ,....., ,,.,, l11lotrlll1!"'911f " $-1• ll·H l'lr!IMI! , .. ,, Sr«k M-tt• , ... ,. -W. Ctll• • Tttewltlefl H -" -~ " .l.1111 '-•""t:.-.. W•tlltt!' • I :,' • About the biggest problem the play "America Hurrah" had in Costa Me sa was a fleeting allegation that Its poster might have been desecr1Ung the American Flag. But not l!O in Mobile, Ala. In Mobile . officials went after lhe play itself. ®clarlng the production (\ "revolting obscenity festering with. sacrilege." . The Mobile vtrslon of "America Jturrah"' was closed \Vednesday arter only two performances at t h e • University of Alabama. It ran off Broa,:l)vay for two years. The' Costa Mesa version's only pro- blem w1th auUiority came when ohe police officer figured that a poster ln the theater window, featuring red and v.•hite stripes, white stars on a blue field and a hangman's noose, con· ~tltutcd a law violation as desecration ot the American F1ag. All such charges, however, were later dropped and the thtater folk removed the noose from the po1ter. • Meanwhile the production ln Costa Mesa was receiving good review&. The DAILY PILOT called it "an evening o! theater that she.tte:r1 the sensibilities, that reaches ou t for the hea.J1. -a:nd throat -of the .au· dience.'' But Mobile city oCUc lal1 decided UM! show waa too rich for th& blood of Alabama taxpayers . aDd .ordered It shut down. "It ii filth, -pure and simplt,1' ~faYt>r Lambert C. Mlm:; declared .. ~ r --...... ~ • -DOUBLE TRAGEDY -Crash lnvestigatora cluster around· remaill. of crop duslin1 p!ane in which Costa Mesa pUol Robert Nichols, 36, was ktlled when ll qfashed In Oceanside area beanfield. Shroud (fore- ground) covers body of Nichols'· wile, who was l!illed when plane smashed into J>er ID" Its death dive. } j l l I · f • • • .. • ' •. • .. • • Mrs. Tucker Sought In Court On Birthday A TUM COWllOy wh• hocked hit std• dle to get to Laguna Beach Ls on the lrall of his younger ball sister. If he Cinda her, the reunion will •be saddened by a death message. Jim Massey, 25, arrived in Laguna Beach Wednesday morning. But his ' Jall ts a grim place to spend your search really bj!gan June ·1&. • :;&th birthday, but the wile of Cost.a It was then \hen his st!ter, Laura Mesa Councilman George A. Tucker Effel, 23, called Crom Laguna Beach to Houston, where Masliey was living al 'WA! to leave her querters briefly \\ro the time. She said sbe was "okay," / day -for arralgmnent on a Grand But lb& Marine roommate who .. Jury murder indictment. .answered the ·Ph.one knew everything Frogmen's Last Chance Swimming instructor Tom Coxwell, 22, helps Henry Blackham 11 adjust his mask and snorkel while young frogmen (left to right) Bill Schraegle, 15, Brtan West, 14, Roger Light, 13, ,Robby Rosburg, IS and David Blackham, all of Newport Beach, wait to enter the water. This week will be the last chance for all Harbor Area young frogmen to sign up for classes either at the Parks, Beaches and Recrea· tion Department, 1714 W. Balboa Blvd. or the New- port' Harbor Community Youth Center, Fifth and Iris, Corona del Mar. Mail Deliveries To Canada End Due tQ Walkout The mail to Canada has stopped. Intrigued by inquiries of Orange Coast residenis, the DAILY PILOT took the matter up with U.S. Postal authorities. No mail fori Canada is being ac. cepted in U.S. ?ost Offices, confirmed Hector G. Gocilnez. He's postmaster in charge ol the section center in Santa Ana. The aituation ls national. · The reuon ls a strike of Canadian postal emp!Oyes. lt has been going on ~ diys and has recently worsened, said Godinez. U the U.S. did accept the mail, it would have to be stored . There's nobody' working on the other end to accept and deliver it. Earlier in the strike, Godinez said. U.S. Postal authorities were accepting certain classes of mail but now they aren't having any. In Orange County, Godinez estimated, ttie Canadian mail not being accepted amounts to about l,200 letters daily. Not much admittedly compared to · eight million or so letters weekly handled at the Santa Ana massing center. All Orange County mail goes through there. It's more o{ a problem the official said in northeastern and northwestern portions of the country. In states such as Michigan a great deal ot business m a i l oonna.lly goes back and forth betweenttie U.S. and Canada. Now, Godlnu 1aid, lt must be hand.I· eel by pboDe or win!, The strike aga1mt the Canadian government is for higher wages. Godinez noted that U.S. Port.al employes would not be allowed to sbi.ke foc higher wages. Sweeper Broom Takei'i A Newport Beach city st.reetsweep· ing machine was partially disarmed when thieves swiped a bi g push broom from it, municipal employe Richard HoBand told police. DAILY PILOT ....,,,..,, ...... c.nt.nJ. OltAHGE COAST l'UILtSttlNG COMPAHY Rolotrf N. Wtt4 f'rtsldfnl tlld ~utlll~ J •ck R. Cwrlov Viet p,..ldW MIO 11....nl MilllttU' Tho111tt lCe tvil ..... Tllo1110• A. Mwl'Jllrlint ,.,,_nMlftl EClllw' JeroM• F. Colllnt Pov! Nino1 ~ INdt .MYlrllll119 CllY E.dlllt l>l,_tw ~-·Olfk• 2ll l Woit 111"1• l ovlov1ul M1IU111 Acfd,..11: P.O. lo• 1175 ,l,l) .,_ ....... Cati• Malt: -Wtll .. y SttM'f L._ ltoci'I: 2tt l'orftl Aw....,. """llllllton ktal: M Mb $1Yftt Wrench Attack Suspect Plea Date Set; Bail Cut A Costa Mesa man accused of club- bing a teen-aged Newport Bea~h waitress with a Coot-long wrench w11l appear in Superior Court Aug. 9 to enter pleas on two felony counts of assault with a deadly weapon. The defendant; Richard L 1 o y d Rhodes, 29, waiv~ preliminary hear- ing Wednesday in Newport Harbor Municipal Court. , Judge William Christenseri nduced bail on the suspect lrom $31 ,250 to $12.500. He denied a defense attorney request to lower bail to $2,500. ac- cording to Deputy District Attorney Jay Moseley. Rhodes has remained In Orange County Jail since his arrest the nlgtit nr the attack. He is expected to remain th ere until his next court appearance. Investigators said the attack on the girl and arrest of the suapect occurred like this: Rhodes ·was found sitting stunned behind the steering \Vheel oC a car when police arrived at the scene. The father of the beaten 18-year-old girl was pounding on the suspect's vehicle furiously with an axe. The attractive Waitress had gotten olf work a short time before. She had driven to her Newport Heights ho1ne. As she stepped from her car. an assailant appeared wielding a wrench. From Page l W.NEWPORT .. · properties would be involved in the program, wb.ich would provide for the improvement oC 6,000 feet of alleys , or slightly more than a mile. The cost of the project and the ·amount of each assessment would be determined following formal council action, This action would include the adop · tion of a resolution of intent to form the assessment district "{or the public necessity and convenience." A public hearing date would also be set. If the ownen d. more than half the properties protest the formation of the district, the plan wil lautomatically be killed. Otherwise, the council can decide as it wishes . Improvement Association president Shea also advised the' city that the organir.atioo is opposed to the fonna· tion of Msessment districts for the pev· ing of street ends to the beach. "This should be handled at the expense a11d at the "lndividual option of those pro- 'perty owners whose property abuts the street ends," he $8.ld. ~ additiorwilly emphasiud the homeowners•• •continuing and overwhelmjng opposition" to con· stntction o( beachfront aldewallts in West Newport. This position had been made clear two weeks ago during a meeting with city offlciaJ.s on the fin · dings of a $30,0IX) eDglneerlng stud y ror the area. Public Work! Director Joseph T. Devlin assured the assocla· tion at the time that the city had no In· tent.kin of forcing a sidewalk oa West Newport. Newport Police Hunting Pistol Newport Beaoh poUce today wore questloninf a croup of Youn.a boya in search of a .22 cat alltomaUc Italian Beretta piltol which disappeared trom the headboard ol a bed at the! Gordon Elmore residence on Balboa Island. Elmore told oflicffa he discovered tlle weapon gone Crom a bedcoom llll<l<tl)' after a groop Of hl1 ,. •• , friend• bad beea playing at tile bouae., r I -. ·~ The girt was beaten. She suffered a concussion, and required several facial stitches at Hoag-Memorial Hospttat. She was taken to Hoag by am - bulance, unconscious. The victim now has apparently fully recovered, and appeared at Wednesday's court hear- ing with her father. Deputy District Attorney Moseley said the girl's attacker was a stranger to her. When she was beaten the night of July 9. she screamed. and her rather daughter lying in blood. Someone in a car tried to back over the father. He hurled a log at th e driver. hilting him on the head. , , \Vhen police arrived. the y found th e outraged Cather slamming at the car with an axe, and arrested Rhodes for felony assault. From Page l RENTALS ••• code's requirements for :a single, housekeeping unit, De Baun says. He also says he has no more than three persons Jiving together as room · mates in any of his unJts. Seymour's brief charges that as many as five rental units are being rented out at each duplex. One good question, apparently, is v.·hether a person can be considered a rental unit. City officials said their inve&tigation into Cocona del Mar rental practices have disclosed that some duplexes are stuffed with several persons, llv~ ing in private cubicles within the apartments and pretending they're a single hoosekeeping unit. The officials didn't say whether De Baun's units fell into this category. Investigators said they found one case of a :family with a grandmother. 40, her daughter, 30, and a r lk!gii · age grandson. "You just wouldn't believe some. or these famllie11 ," one official rem~ked. Seymour in a report to city council· men said that recent practice has seen developers build large apartment duplexes, then subdivide them up into as many as live or six tiny units. UNITS CREA TED "These Units are created. by provid - ing outside access to bedrooms, bar- ricading coMecting doors, and install· Ing extra kitchen facilities such as wet bars. refrigerators, and hot plates," Se~'lTl our said. In short. they become "benement - style rent.al units" and have "aroused considerable resenbnent" am on g neighbors. But De Baun , the object of the city's civil action, claims his openitioos are totally unlike those descri~ by Seymour. "My tenants are all professional. respectable people. 1've nf'ver had a dime's wortl1 of trou bl e with any of them. and in duplexes with roommate· like arrangements, I have no more th an th ree persons in eadi. unit." 1-te added, "I have nine pieces of property in Corona del Mar, worth nearly $1 millJon, I'd be tho last one 1• . want to do anything to downgrade the neighborhood." Russian Roulette • Kills Youth, 15 SANTA CLARA (UPI) -The game was Russian roulette and 15-year-old James K. Trevino's number was up. Police saJd he borrowed the .22 magnum plstol al. his brother·ln·law Wednesday night and )>layed RuHlan roulette with. three other teen·aaers. ' .. Mrs. Irene ll. Tucker, of 1M2 wasn't okay. The girl's mother bad Mlnorca Drive, Was due to appear cUed in a car accident May 1. Laura didn't know that And the before Judge Howard C. Cameron at Marine didn 't tell her. 1 :45 p.m. in Division One, Superior When Jim learned 0£ the telephone Court for the hearing. call, his immediate future was cut out Chances appeared good Wedriesday, for him. He knew he had to find his lit· tle sister. howev~, that her deiense attorney Although there bad been occ~onaI hut Augustine Jr., would seek a con· contact throu.gh letters, Massey had tl.nuance in order to review evidence nowher! to 1 o o k except Laguna now in the bands Of the prosecution. Beach. The last time he had seen her This procedure is granted in a was in 1964. . . It was known Laura was in New criminal discovery clause_Jln state York for a while, but Contact was lost lawbooks, because the Grand Jury in-in the pa1t year. "I thipk she is dictment irecludes preliminary hear· playing bard to find, but she bu no Jng and ill chance for defense cross· ... reason to hide. That I know of." examination. Maisey arrived in ~s Angeles by · · Ull bus Saturday with '20 m hit pocket, AugusUne, however, said he 1S s his saddle and bridle. He b~ed and . ready to proceed with the case at this walk~ to Long Beach shouldering his ~el; d t le I o p•-.. " saddle. m rea y o en r a Pea r .iii:: • The cowboy's trademark went into a he told the DAILY PILOT Wednelldoy. hock shop and tile oearch •began In Mrs. Tucker is accused of the June earnest as Massey walked from Long 2.8 carvlng·knlfe death d Mrs. HarJ:iett Beach to Laguna Beach. Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, Police records were no help. The over some rort of backyel'd dispute YMCA didn't know of the girl either which ended in mutual combat. . but the y founJ the young rand! band , She had already beec arr8lgn~. a job with a local veterlnarlan undergone psydiiatric evaluation ln-Wednesday. · dicating she is now s.ane and able to "We're the only two lefl She's my stand trial, and was sch~uled for an liWe sister. I feel responsible for her,'' :-\Ug. 8 preliminary hearmg when the Massey told the DAILY PILOT. mdictment came. Asked about the hippie movement in George Lowden Dies in Spain; Rites Thursday Services for George M. Pullman Lowden II. a member of the railroad company family, were held today at 'Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel. Park Chapel. connec:tiolip witb his aearch, the wran· gler said a llWe 1titfly, "Where I come from they don't have them." In bis broad Texas accen~ he added, "I'd llke to go down tho middle Of !be hip. pies with a pair of sheep shears." The ml!smg young woman bas \Vorked as a waitress a11d possibly as a secretary. Attractive, five foot, five, she has black hair, hazel eyes and avera.ge build. Information of her may be phoned to 494-2998. In the meantime a cowboy's Search continues. "She'd do things for herseli," he said. "She'd get out and work. Nobody's ever given either one of us anythin g. We're not afraid to work." COWBOY'S QUEST · L•ur• Eff1l SEEKS HIS SISTER Jim Ma111y 'Mr. Pullman. great-grandson of George Pullman, founder of the Pullman Co. and grandson of the former governor of Illinois, Frank O. Lowden, died suddeniy last Thursday of an apparent heart attack at his home in Majorca, Spain. He was 2$. From Page l A res ident of Newport Beach for years, he had attended Menlo .P,fl"k Sch.ool and the University of Arizona . lie recently sold his business. the Lowden VenQing Machine Co., and had move~ to Spa\·n four mbnths ago. SUriivors include his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Lowden Of the family home, 710 S. Bay Front, Balboa; two brothers, Philip of Rome, Italy, and Frank of Newport Beach. Interment will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park. RECALL ... governor. "There is every indi cation that the recall campaign is climaxing in col- ossal failure," the two state officials said. "The results . , . appear .to represent an overwhelming repudia- tion of the movement by the people of this state." The two joined Reagan in calling for changes in the recall law, which re· quires no 8peclfic reasons to force a public figure to face the voters to keep his job if opponents can get 12 percent "-If the voters in the last election to sign petitions. The recall backers against Reagan were specific, however. Tl:)ey charged. that Reagan was not competent i n government and publlc affairs and ac~ cused him of undermining tte state's mental bealtn. progratn, injuring public education mid trying to further his own personal ambitions. FINAL DAYS OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al :JJ. (}. (Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED PIECES in your choice of style or fabric may be purchased at 1 most 9enerous savin9s of .• , Off Regular Prices • Truly a rare money-saving opportunity _) Over 200 Styles rL Sofas -Chairs -Love Seal! -Ottomans in your choice or any Heritage Decorator fabric. HERITAGE. a living tradition In furniture Your favoritf fnttri<W dtligntr wiU be happ~ to cwiit 11ou , •• PROFESSiONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS 0,.. M•., n.... & Fri. 1¥11. •215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646·0275 6<;.0!76 ~ --~·------- .. , ( l . I I \ I I \ ·' " I ( l, t I \ --......... ---___ ,.. ---. ·-••• ·-------. -- • • Costa Mesa Today's Closing . .., VOL. 61', NO. 18{ 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES 'COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY, AUGU~T T, ·1968 TEN CENTS ' • ane • I s om, a - l f.eagan Lauds Loss Recall Campaign ' Tragedy Orphans Costa Mesa Girl ·Falls Far Short SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A six· month drive aimed at recalling Gov . Ronald Reagan shortly before the IU!publican National Convention ap- peared today to have ended in failure. The Republican governor, returning to the state capital after an ap- pearance before the GOP convention's plaUorm committee, hailed the drive's * * * 2% of County Voters Back Recall Drive Petitions r epor\cd to b t-a r signatures of 11.262 Orange Countians fetr recall of Gov. Reag~'" were filed \Vednesday with County Clerk \Vitlia1n St John. The signatures carried in 1,289 sec- tions. or booklets. were brought into St John's ornce by John T. Wilson of 7052 f\1aple St., Westminster. who served as Orange County coordinator ror the Recall Reagan Committee. Sl John noted that the 11,262 signatures represent 1ittle more than 2 percent of the 518,000 registered vote rs in Orange County. St J ohn said it would tnke his voters r egistraliou staff five days to audit the signatures. "In the past, we have found 60 to 70 percent 0£.the signatures to be valid," the county clerk said. St John said Wilson also filed a peti- tion for an additional period of time to secure more signatures. The county clerk said it would be up to the secretary of state to rule on the ad- missibility of additional signatures. Sevc11 to Face Na rco Hearing; T,vo Bailed Out Seven hippiC-types arrested in a Costa Mesa narcotics raid which net- ted ·$2,300 in cash and contraband wCre schedu led for arraignment to- day, but two girl~ were released on. bail \Vednesday. Suzanne A. Smith, 18, or 2019 Pomona Ave .. and \Vendy J. \Veiler. 18, also arrested at that address, were released on $1,875 bail some hours alter the predawn raid on two apartments. The other seven suspects -six youths and one giri -were scheduled f or arraignment ln llarbor District • Judicial Court this afternoon on a variety of felony narcotics charges. Investigators toda~ were . also. still attempting to determine the identity of a sticky, black substance confiscated in the raid at 2019 Pomona Ave., at first thought to be opium. 'fhe 1naterial has been analyzed several times since turning up on the Southland turn-on scene, but seems to contain no traceable narcotic and may not even be illegal. Tustin Detective Brent BixJer, who participated in the raid climaxin~ twl' n'nnths of investigative work, sa1d the odd con1pound originates in the lll\'ersi de.San Bernardino area. A quan tity or other drugs and n<ircotici. -i n c I u d i n g . LSD, methedrinc. a m p ~ e ta m 1 n e ~ . barbiturates and·rnarl1 uana-some 1n pharmaceutical sample packagP.s and zsome home-wrapped, was also taken. One of the suspects, Dennis L. Lilly, 20. of \he Pomona ~venue address. was tarrying $1.300 in his pockets when ta.ken into custotly by the raid team, which carried arrest warrants. Stock Jtlar k eu NEW YORK (APl -A vigorous early rally petered out this afternoon.· leaving the stock market mixed. A rcw mort!I stocks gained than lost. (See quotations, Pages 18·19). failure as proof of the people's "com• mon sense.'' "It confirms what I've saJd a\1 along," Reagan told an impromptu \Vednesday night planeside news con- ference. "lt reafQ/ms my faith in the common sense of the people." The bulk of the recall count made tt impossible to arrive at precise numbers, but it appeared certain the signature count would total far. less than. the 780.414 needed to force a recall election. And the failure to collect almost 800,000 signatures from eight million registered voters in the nation's mos t populous state backfired on the recall group, primarily consisting or political novices. UPI Tll"'IHt!G Lt. Gov. Robert F. Finch and Secretary of State Frank Jordan issued a statement three hours after the Wednesday deadline passed calling the failure a vote of confidence for the governor. "There is every indication that the recall campaign is climaxing in col- ossal failure," the two st.ate officials said. "Tbe results . . . appear to represent an overwht:.ming repud.ia· DOUBLE TRAGEDY -Crash investigators cluster around remains of crop dusting plane in \vhich Costa Mesa pilot Robert Nichols, 38. \Vas killed v.•hen it crashed in Oceanside area beanfield. Shroud (fore- ground) covers body of Nichols' \Vife, \\'ho was killed when plane smashed into her in its death dive. lion o( the movement by the people of lh~h:'f;:~·;.ined Reagan In calling !or ' Mrs Tuck er Arr a1· g" rn ·ent changes in the recall law, which re· • •.LI..l:.IJ quires no ·specific reasons to force a public figure to face the voters to keep . his job if opponents can get 12 percent of the vtilers in the last election to·sign petitions. The recall backers against ,Reagan were specific, however. They charged that Reagan 'Was not competent in government and public affairs and ac- cused him of undermining the state's mental healtb program, injuring public education and trying to further his own perSonal ambitions. Helli 011 38tl1 Birthday Jail is a grim p1ace· to spend your 38th birthday, but the wife of Costa Mesa Councilman George A. Tucker ~s ro leave her quarters brieny l'-'" day -for arraignment on a Grand Wrench Attack Suspect Plea Date Set; Bail C ~t A Costa Mesa man accused or club· father of the beaten lB·year-old girl bing a teen-aged Newport Beach was pounding on the suspect's vehicle waitress with a foot-long wrench will furiously with an axe. appear in Superior Court Aug. 9 to 'l'he attractive waitress had gotten enter pleas on two felony counts of off work a short time before. She had assault with a deadl:v weapon. driven to her Newport Heights ho1nc . The defendant. Richard L 1 o y d As she stepped from her car. an Rhodes. 29. waived preliminary hear-assailant appeared wielding a wrench. ing \Vednesday in Newport 11arbor The girl was beaten. She suffered a Municipal Court. concussion, and required severiil Judge \Villiam Christensen reduced facial stitches •at l~oag l\1emorial bail on the suspect from $31,250 to llospltal. $12,500. lie denied a defense attorney She was taken. to lloag by a1n· request to lower bail to $2,500. ac-bulance, unconscious. The victim now cording to Deputy District Attorney has apparentlv fully recovered, and Jay Moseley. appeared at 'Vednesday's court hear· Rhodes has remained in Orange ing with her fa ther. County Jail since his arrest the night Deputy District Attorney l\1oseley of the attack. He is expected to remain said U1e girl's attacker was a stranger there unW his next court appearance. to her. Investigators said th~ attack on the \Vhen she was beaten the ni~h l of l!irl and arrest of the suspect occurred July 9. she screamed, and her father like this : # daughter lying in blood. Rhodes lvas found sitting stunned Someone in a car tried to back over behind the steering wheel of a car the father, lie hurled a Jog at the when police arrived at the scene. Thedriver , hl.tting him on the he~d. Jury murder indictment. l\1rs. Jrene ll. Tucker, ol 1642 Mlnorca Drive, was due to appear before Judge Howard C. Cameron at I :45 p.m. in Division One, Superior Court for the hearing. Chances appeared good Wedllesday, however, that her defense attorney I'aul Augustine Jr., wonld seek a con- tinuance in order to review evidence now in the hands o[ the prosecution. This procedure is granted in a i:r imlnal di scove ry clause on stale lSce TUCKER, Page 2) Letter Lamhasts Luncl1er s' Litter 1\ llol\yv.'ood attorney who owns in· dustrial property in Costa rytesa ~as asked the city to order a ·ne 1ghbor1ng boatbuilder to come about .and stop leaving :unch hour litter in its wake. George L. Woods charges in a lettC'r to the City Council that many cmployes of McGregor Yacht Co .. Ji;iG:i Babcock St., scatter cups and papers. even eating over on his landscaped property. \Voods also said the firm across from his building at 1664-66 Babcock St ., has insufficient parking and sug- gested the city order µie number of employe spaces increased . The complainant notes that he Wj)S forced to meet city parking and landscape rfGuirements when he-built at that locallon -and he thinks ,othrr busi nesses should also meet them. 'Last Hurrah'. in Alabama ConJrqversial Play Faring B etter at Mes a T1teater About the biggest problem the play "America Hurrah'' had in C.Osta Mesa "'as a fleeting allegation that Its poster might ha ve been desecrating the Americ an 1'~1ag. But not so in Mobile, Ala. In Mobile, officials went after the play itseU, declaring the production a "revolting obscenity festering with sacrilege." The Mobile version or ••America Hurrah" was closed ·Wednesday after only two performances ·at th e University of Alabama. It ran off Broadway tor two years. The Costa Mes, version's only pro- blem with authority came when one police orficer figured that a poster in the theater window, featuring red and white stri~s. white lilars on a blue field and J hangman's noose, con- \ stituted a law violation as desecration of the American Flag. All such charges, however, "'ere later dropped and the theater folk removed the noose from the poster. Meanwhile the production in Costa Mesa was receiving good reviews. The DAILY PILOT called it "an e'vening of theater that shatters the sensibilities, tbat reaches out for the heart -and throat -of the au- dience." But Mob'ne city officials decided the show was too rich for the blood of Alabama taipayers and ordered It shut down. "It is fllth. pure and simple," Mayor Lambert C. Miml declared. · The mayor ordered the play c~d after attending 1he second, and Last. performance with the city com· m1ss1oncr, city attoi-ney and a member of the vice squad. "They came to the play and laughed and apphruded along with the rest of the audience and. then went outside and called 'It obscene," director Larry Moran complain(;l.i. The vcrslon which-opened last weekend .at South Collst Repertory's 'I'h.lrd Step Theater in Costa Mesa' · fared far better. An overnowtne au- dience greeted the prOOuction with prolonged applause. and advance reservation! are reported high for the balance or its six-weekend ruo. For that matter , the Mobile pro. ducUon was a bowling success -while Jt lasted. It played before packed au· dlences In the city-owned Pixje Playhou se both nJghts. \ • By ART HUR R. VINSEL 01 1111 OallY Pllel Slaff - A lO·year--0ld C0$1a Mesa girl \\"SS orphaned \Vednesday lVhen a crop- dusting plane piloted by her father and visually directed by her mother on the ground crashed in a lima bean field near Oceanside. The Piper Pawnee clipped two telephone wires as it zoomed in for a pass, rupped over, bounced once and careened into the woman, wbo had been signalling with a red flag. Dead are Robert "Nlck" Nichols, 45, of 65i W. 18th SL , and his wife Ann, 36, ~ parent<; of a 10-year-old girl, whose name was not irrimediately available. rn vestigators said l\-1rs. Nichols was struck and fatally injured by the hurtl- ing wreckage. which burst into names, trapping the retired Marine Corps ma- jor inside. ' ·'I went out and lifted the sheet over her ... before I'd even had coffee," said a newsman at the sceen, ''I didn't have any break.last" Mrs. Nichols was decapitated . and one ttr ad been slashed o(f by the pro or. c crash was witnessed by the hor- rified teen-aged son of ~e Orange County Airport·based crop dusting service which owned the ill-fated Pawnee. Robert Gebhart, 17, of 135 Magnolia Ave .• Costa Mesa. was 1tand,lng at the opposite end of the llma lkan field along the lush San Luis Rey River bot· tom land. Neither he nor .his distrau~ht father was available fo r comment today <ibout the tragically freak accident on Ernest Wa~u'1 Rancho Guajdinita. An eyewitness. · however, said Nichols had made one pass over the bean field but was too high for max- imum effect, so he made another run, zooming in beneath a power line. He failed, however, to Set! two thin, copper-strUlds of telephone wire directly in his flight path. ..... Plumbiqs contractor George Benner was standing on a hillside some distance away watching the crop dusting, which was being done while the bean plants were still covered with dew. " Benner said the aircraft flipped over as it clipped the lower-level wire and plunged to earth. Young Gebhart, whose father owns the Skyhawk crop-dusting service, ran from his flag station at the opposite end of. the bean field, but there was nothing he could do. lnvestigators said that besides the 10-year-old da ughter. Nichols ..... i s survived by a 22-year-old daughter by another marriage. ..,. The \Vednesd&y crash in the San Luis Rey Valley ust of Oce-anside was another severe setback for the Costa Mesa cropdusting service. · Spokesman for the aviation compa- ny said shortly before noon today that its hard luck-dogged owner wa11 distraught over the latest developmen't and unavailable for comment. "lle's in no condition to talk to anyone and probably won 't have anything to say for several days." one employe said. Several discrepancies arose in reports or who was present at tha crash scene, ranging from a 17-year- old son of Gebhart, to a 16-year-<>ld ion of the victims, or even Gebhart himself. The Wednesday crash near Mission San Luis Rey was the second severe loss to Gebhart's flying service and friends said today it could posslbly wipe him out. ln a bizarre eitample of south-of-the· border jurisprudence, the Mexican government is holding Gebhart's only other plane. The aircraft was stole•. some time ago and turned up later In Meitico, but authorities there have impounded the plane .Bnd refuse to hand it over to Jts legal oWner. Mesan Asks Co-op Plan To Bury U iility Lines A bitter foe of overhead utility lines In Costa Mesa wants to form a removal district In which he and his neighbors will pay to bury the v.·ires and clear the air. Mes a Burg lary Losses Total $800 Wednesday A smaU arsehal of firearms, an elec· trlc guitar, mini-bike .and automobile sound equipment, totaling nearly $800 in value, wqe reported stolen Wednes- day in Costa Mesa. Biggest loss was that su!fered by vacationing Robert R. Stites, of 278 llanover Drive. where burglars broke in and took $660 in loot, including two rines and a shotgun. --. Patrolman Wayne llarber said Stites'" son Randall. 17, discovered E0meone had pried open the reaf door and found the itt!lms missing from in- . side the home. Ofncer David Hayes said Jack R. Van Beek, II , or Tl& Allegheny .o\ve., lost his SIOO mini-bike to a thief who spotted it sitting inside the open garage door . Orange Coast College student James R. l\1artin, oC Arcadia, also lost $90 in stereo tapes and a radio when &ome· one broke into hls veblcle parked on the OCC campus. Liz Reported 'Well' LONDON (Ll'I) - E 11 z ab ti h T4ylor, recovering· from a partial hysterectomy, was reported "vuy well" today and nurses sald she would p<obably leave the Fitzroy Nulflold Nursing 1~ome someUme next Week. Mlos Taylor, 36, underwent the 31» hour operallon Jilly 21. .... , " Verlyn G. Marth, of 3197 Cape Verde Drive, ahnounced the plan in a Jetter to tlie City. Council, received \Ved· ncsday by the City Clerk's office. ,ii£ suggests 1970 for a target.date in laying the underground lines in the l\1 esa Verde area. specifically that bounded by Baker Stteet, the Sa n Diego Freeway. !-!arbor Boulevard and the Santa Ana River. "The suggested area d is p 1 a :y s singularly offensive overhead utilities, is partially converted to underground. and is a nei s::hborhood of.recognizable identity," Marth wrote. lie said the majority of residents is willing to contribute to the coll, thereby reducing what he termed: widespread visual pollutlon. Marth has been an occasional vi sitor to the Costa Mesa City Council, bit- terly attacking overhead utilities. often in effusive and semi-elegant rhetoric. Orange ~ Coas& '~~, Weatber Tho1e pesky low clouds will part by midmorning Friday to al- low mostly su"nny skies with. a ·coastal high of 78. \ INSIDE TOO/\ 'l' A Californicn who kMW the dous of the Wild West wos buried todau. Th1: story of tht pfoMt,. who ditd at J 11 ii on Pagt 7. .... • ...... M Cf!.flf'lll'-' --• . -.... ...... u ,_ .. • MlflMl '-* .. .......... " ............... • Dun. ""''"' • Orltfl• c .. .., • "'""" • Srt<ri. ~ .. ··~ .... • s.c:1 .. ""' 1t-U lfl!IHUlflflltflf " .._ "'" ·-~ 1•1t \*'Ma't.m ... , .. , ... C.11• • _ ... • -" --" """""" " w...,. • . • J .. ·, I r. ..r f•U..---·- ' '.% ~LY PILOT ..,ef etase Stiffened 4,500· More Men· '' Sent to Vi.etnam· SAIGON !AP) -The delense ol South Vietnam'• northern frontier wu g l i f f e n e d today by 4,500 fresh A111eriC"1 troops !own frwu & Col· orado base in an airtlft of ne111J 100 pl111e1 . Tb• u; s. C4>o\maod 10nounctd the arTlval ol part ol 1 brlpde o1 Ult u. s. sth MecharuMd 11111111r7 Divlll,.. A opoktimln Hid tbl lrOOlll W'1'1 Rown from Ft. Carson, Colo., to Da Nang, then rushed up to camps just below the eastern end of the demilitarized zone. \ The arrival o( the 5th Divilion troop1 bOOll«ht Ult number ol U. S. troops bl Sovtb Vit\qn to obout Sl0,000. President Johnson's 1 t" t em en t Wednesday that the U. S. government m i I ht have to take "adclltional military meatunK"' to meet the t h r 1 a t of major new •netnY of· fen1lve1 Al'OQMCI speculaUon Jn Saigon that the ceiling on tlie American troop commitment might be· raised aeaio. significant ac4_on for American troop• but 11ld IOMtet1 ol the 11t Infantry · Dlvtsloo bad uncovered a large enemy food cache near Loe Ninh, cloae to Ute Cambodian border. It included 28 tou of rice. Troopt lrOlll tilt 111111 dMalon ~ 150 IOlll 0( riot Ollpl>titl u4 'IO bleyolH IHI -~ in U,e tlDle . .,,. lllout Tl m11" nort1i ol a.1,.., lt 11 one of the chief infUtration;,.route1 tor · enemy troops threatening SaJ1on and has been an ar:ea of increasing ac· tivity in recent weeks. presumably in preparation for Utt! enemy qaault <>D the copi!al which is •XJ>tctad bl the ntltl two monau. Nixon Statement On War. Blocked By Rocky Men -Johnson said North Vietnamese troop0 are pourinJ into the South in MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Richard record number• -an 11ttmated 30,COO M. Nlxon uJd today that the Vietnam tn July. and ho predictod tht li1uro !or wer could be1t be ended by a Auguit would be bi&her. R e p u b 11 c • n admlnlstraUoa unen· The 5th Division troops jolqed a cumbertd by the "mlatake1 of the defense force in the northern pro-put." Yincea that include• thrH U. S. Army Two backers of Nelson A. Rockefel. and two Marini divJslODI and two ler on the GOP plaUonn committee South Vietnmnese infantry divilions. blocked Nixon'• Ntement from being U. S. officers 11y Norttl Vietnam has r<ead before reporters and telrvfslon the equivalent of eta:ht dlvlilon1 eJther cameras 1t the bet.rings. in the northern province• or adjacent -Sen. John G. Tower CR·Te'l.) was to them in J..aos, the DMZ or the stopped from readinc the statement southernmost part of North Vietnam. by Sen . HuJh Scott (R·Pa.). and Gov. Around Saigon, meanwhile, si x John Chlfee of Rhode Island. South VJetname1e . mi 1 J tar Y .in· The platform coll)mlttee chainnan, atallaUonJ were hit by mortar fire Sen. Everett M. Dirlcun, who had early ~~ay, but a 1poke6~an Kid ott,w Tower'• appearance earlier, casualtie1 and d~alt were liibt. went along with the objectJon1. V. S. he.adquuter1 reported no Scott and Chaffee were said to have Police Flush 4 Burglar Suspects At Beach Plaza An •ilht-mu platoon of Huntlaglon Beach pellet 1tttcer1 flushed four b u r c I a r y 1U1pectl from Malebox: Menswear, a Five . J'olnt. Shopping Center clothing store early Thurad•Y momln&. The !our, includinc two juveniles. •re believed to be lmptlcat1d In a string or seven Huntington Beach and Fountain Volley burclarl., wll!ch beaan tut Friday. feared aucb a pr11entation mlcht give Nixon backers a· chanct to pull •t· tentlon n..,. from Rockefeller, who w.a1 the beneficiary of a new Harris Poll showing him runnJn1 ahead at the two Democratic candid1te1 for presi· deot and Nixon trailin1 both. Nixon's statement was a;cctpted by the committee, which ended ill public hearings 1hortly 1fter Tower'c bid to read Nhcon's statement w•1 blocked, "The war mult be ended," Nb:olt 1aid Jn the stat.mtnt. urt mu1t be eiid· ed honorably1 • consistent w Ith America.'• llmitea atm• and the Jong term requirement& or peace In A11la. "If the war la sUU gotnc on next January, It can bett be ended by f new administration that ha1 1tven n'o hosta1t1 to the mJ.stalce1 of the past; an adminl1tration neither defending old errors "or bound by the old record. "A new RapubUoan adminl•tratlon wilt be pledged to conduct • ttioroua:h l'f!\11)pra111l-of every ~J!.lct Of the pro· ncutlon ol tht war .and lht 1earch for Pflet." . . Adult. moated Wtro z b I c n t • w Daleota, 18, and Joel Woodl, 19 • .+JI four auapectl reside in an apart:rDent hoUH at 7812 Liberty St., Huntlnlto• Beach, accordfnC to pollco. Inve1Ugator1 .aid the quartet ..al.lo is swipected of ransacking the Chlck·ln· Coop restaurant, 8890 Warner Aven~e, . Fountain Valley, shortly before mid· night Wednesday. In addition, police said, they recovM'ed 1ood1 at the suspects' residence implicating them in earlier burglaries oC Crest View School, Family Billiards, Talbert A venue. and Beach Boulevard; Flberglau Com· pany, Fi-.i-Road; Cal·Vo Dairy, Beach Boulevard; and Dr. Robert Krough's Beach Boulevard office. F..-P .. e J TUCKER ... • • OUU;era estimated the value of the ncovei'ed foodl at •1,ilOO. Included wu a quantity of narcoUc1 and syr· fnges aDectdJ.y stolen from Dr. J{roUJh. Dalenta and Woods were booked into the Huntington Beach jail and the juveniles placed in Orange County juvenile hall. The1 are expected to be arraigned at 2 p.m. Friday in West Orange Coun· ty Municipal Court. • DAILY PILOT OlAlrtGE COAST PUIM.ISHIMGo COMP'AJfY ltebe•t N, W•etl Pretldloll _. l>Wllthft' J•t~ It. Cv,\•y Vice l'mldlftt end C0.-11 MINW n • ..,.i k ..... a Editor Tho..,•• A. "-'v•phi111 ~n11!n• Edlltlr P1ul Ni'''" .......,hln• ()lrMIOI' C.... Mne Offlc• .~JO W•1t 11)' Slt••f t-41ifi"f A~d'''': P.O. 11• °1560 t262l • .,_ °""" Htw-1 ltKll: 7211 ~-I 81lbDll Be..1l1v1rd l._,. C...C..: 221 Pettit A-. lW!olln9iwl a..th: M )Ill Slrttt liwbooks, be<:au11 the Grand Jury in- dictment. precludes preliminary hear· ing and its chance for defense cross- examination. Aueustine, however, 11aid he la still ready to proceed with the caae at this ttme. "I'm ready to enter a plea or pleas .. " he told the DAILY PILCYI' Wednesday, Mra. Tucker ii accu•ed or the June 28 carvinc knll• death ol Mro. Harriett W11tphal, ea, of 1648 Mioorca Drive, over 1ome sort of bactylf'd dJIJ'Ute which ended in mutual combat. She had already been arraigned, undergone psychiatric evalu-aUon in· dicatin1 she is now sane and able to stand trial, and was acheduled for an Aug . 8 preliminary hearing when the indictment came. StI·eet Extension Work Continues Work is progressing rapidly on the IB0,419 1xten1h•1 of Placentia Avenue, from Estancia High Scbool to tbe ex· isting Eatancia Drive io Coata Mesa "'1d sbould be linlshed by the lime school opens. The half.mJle stretch of roadway Will provide much better 1cces1 to the campus for motorists, lnEUulinr two lane• and a temporary w•Itway. John B. Ewlea In<:., GMeral En&lneertn, Contractor, 11 alm1or•~r a Sept. 9 completion date. barimg delays caused by rain or other com· plication!. 'Ille project ts financed on a half· and-half ha.sis by Orana:e COunty Arterial Highway Financing Program and g11olinl tax f\mds returned by the State of Californh1. Woman Shot, Mate Conimits Suicide 1 OAKLAND (AP) -A housewife wa1 in aerloUJ condition wtlh two bulleta In her head, lnfilcted In what poli« called a murdflr-sulcld• att.mpt Wednesday by her husband. The woman, Gladys Swanson 49, WU lhot with I .2Z,c.Uber plltol iJ. the back of the neck and the ten j aw. .Pollce 11id Weston SW.anson , a 46· year-old aalumu, ns fouod dead o( I bulli!t wound hi the heod. • ' I • ' \ ' Paris Propaganda \· COWBOY'S QUIST Louro Ifft! Sister SllKI Hll lllTIR Jim MHNY Sought Texan Fallows T_rail to Laguna A Texu cowooy who hocked hit oad· hi• nddlt and brtdle. Ho bu1ed and dlo to 1et to Llsuna Bt&ch 11 on tho walked to ilo•C Buch 1hould1rl111 his trail of hi• youn1er half 1l1ter. saddle. U b1 ands htr, the reunion will bt Thi cowboy'• trademark went Into a nddened by a death m•••••·· vhock ahop and the ataroh btllD in Jim Ma1uy, 25, aJTlvtd in LI a earne1t &1 Mane)' walked from Long Beach Wednesday mornin1. But 1 Neb to Laauna Beach. 11arch really be1an June 18. · Polle• record• were no help, Tpe lt wa• then whe n h1I 11rter1 Laura YMCA didn't know of tho 11rl tither Elle!, 23, c.Ued lrOlll LllUD• BHch to but tht Y lounJ tht YOWll ranch hand Houston, where M111ey was Uvln1 at a· job with a local wttrlnarian the Ume. She aald 1h1 wu "okay." Wednelday. But the M a r Jn e roommate who "We'rt the only tW<> ltft. Sbt'a my an1wered.1 the phone kr>ew everything little allter. I feel respon1lbl1 !or her," wa1n't ok'iy. The &lrl'1 mother had Ma1Hy told the DAILY P ILOT. died In a car .accident May 1. Asked about the hippie movement in Laura didn't know that. And the connectlonp with bl• aearch, the wr an- Marhlo dldn't tell her. gler 1ald 'a little 1tilfly, "~I come Whtn Jim learned of the telephone from they don't have them ." ID his call, h11 lmmedJate future was cut out broad Tex11 accent, he added, ''I'd for ll!m. He knew ho had to !ind hl1 lit· like to 10 down the middle o1 the hip· tJ.1 iltttr. plea wllh a pair of sheep 1heu1." Althou1h there had been occuiooal Thlt ml111D1 younc woman has oontact tbroulh letter1, M1111y had worked 11 a wattre11 and po11lbly JS a nowhere to 1 o o k except Laguna s1cretary. Attractive, five foot, five, Beach. The Jut time he had 1e•o her she -ha1 black hair, hazel eyes and wu ln 1964. -' averace build. Jntormatlon of ber may It wa1 known Laura was In New be phoned to 494-2993. York for a while, but contact was lo5t Jn the meantime a cowboy's 1earch in the paat year. "J think ahe i1 continu11. "She'd do thlng1 for playing herd to find , but iht ha.ii no her111U," he said. "She'd &et out and reaton to hide. That I know of." work. Nobody's ever given either one Massey arrived In Los Angeles by ot us anythinc. We're not afr11ld to bus Saturdoy with $20 in ru.. pocke~ work ." Rocky Claims New Poll Strength; Nixon Scoffs Reds Hint. Raids l _,, May K~ll Ta·lks PARIS (Al'J -North Vlotiiameso diplomat.s partlcJp.a.Ung Jn the Paris geace talks are dropping hints that the talks ma1 fltl unless President Johnson eQds the bombing ol North Vietnam. u.s. officials rocard tho volltd tllreall OS a part 0( lhe drtvo N'artll. Vietnam. has madt since the ta1ka begoo to build up massive pubJio opl. nion against the U.S. position that North Viet.Tiam must give something in return. The drive w•s intensifie4 Weil· , ne.sday after the North Vietname1e apparently decided that statements by Secretary of St.ate Dean Rusk Jilad1 speculation about an early change In U.S. bombing policy unt~nable. l'i.usk 6ai.d on Tuesday that t:he U.S. govern· ment would have to bo told wbatNorth Vtetnom would do. boforo it could tod tho bomblnf. A North Vietname1e spokesman also jntroduced a new element into the con· flict by implying there might be some splU over bombing policy between Ruak aM Ambaaaldor W. Averett Hmi~~. the ohief U.S. negotiator at the Paris ·talks. The spokesman said H&.rriman did not speak in Rusk's delen .. at the meetinr-Wedoelday. U.S. official!: said 11 n 1th y statomeot1 Harriman made on the reasons or U.S. bambinc of North VJetname1e liUpply lines into South Vietnam con1UfU:ted a reply to tht it· tack on Ru1k by Ha Van Lau of North Garden Grove Man Succiimbs At Flea Circus Vie11!m. Lau said Rusk'11 J tiatement prov~ed evidence that u~,s. aagre11.iv1 nijin.g circleo ••• are conllaulAI U>~·Jlollcy ol war and a1greuliio, continuing to aok !or ~lit !or ondlq the bombin1 Ud tor a ransom to bo paid to tllt ,._,., ... It was in this contentiOn tha~e '3inted the talks might fail , saying, ''The American side bas to bear full responsibility !or what may arile lrQlll this attitude." Mash on Freeway; Triggers Freak Crash; Six Hul't A fiery. lreak •cc1dent on a Los Anaeles freeway tranJJtlon road today camed injury to six persons, including three from the Orange Coast area, and ti~ up traffic for rnore than four hour,, The st.ranae, chaln°re1ction crNh occurred after atlc:ky u&ln ma.sh poured out of a truck and trailer rig for 150 yards down the tran11lt1on ro1d biggerlnc a sfiries ot craahtt. Police said a Maywood woman S\Verved her car out of control on the link between the Santa Ana and Golden State Freeways after another · auto sprayed the woman'11 windshield with mash, obstructing her vision. A La Mh'ada man's vehicle then struck a car which &towed to avoid the fir st auto, hung up ~ then on the ANDERSON (APJ - A Garden center divider and was hit in turn by Grove znan who clalmed to be the na· another car. .. tion's last flea circus operator col· A Kan1as City man riclinC in tM: lat· lapsed and died Wedlle11dilY. 1h9rtly ter car was seriously injured when before he was to put on his 1ho..4t the hurled through the windshield by the Shasta Dt1trict Fair Wednesday. trnpact. Ronald \V. J.Iorrman, 63. a retired The :second car involved in the elec~nJc1 technician, ran the Coyote cha.111-reactJon crash then alammed in· Gulch Flea Clrcua, whose tiny to a pedestrian from Maywood, who performer• dJd such trlckt as to pull a_ suffered multiple fracture:s of the hips minlaturg liW'TtlY a11d run a ~s and lees. wheel welghi!tg two oun~. A titth car driven by Robert E. HJ• act included at least a dozen Uncapher, 49, of Fountain Valley then fleas wltich he bathed carefully twice alowed to a'\lold the pileup and was hit a week with medicated 11oap. by a sixth car, driven by Robert Sher· Before buying the flea ctrC"US five raU, 24, of Orange. years ago, HoUman was a freelance Uncapher suffered possible broken write r In addition to h.l.s electronics ribs and a fl'actuHd skull, wbl.le ,his \vork. He told an interviewer earlier passenger. Mrs. Mae Rank, 701 of Wednesday he started wrltinc a book Huntineton BeJ.th, Wf.I Uo burt. · involving a flea circus. . A weU-mea.nin&" passerby then "set The only way to research the :sub-out fl.ares, wll.lcb exploded into an in· jeet was to get • circus ot ht• own, he femo when they touch~ off gaaollne MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Nelo on A. Other Nixon campalaner• stood lirm Jald. from Sherratt's wrecked car. Rockdeller'• man11en claimed today on their forecHt o1 on oarly bollot Vic· He became embroiled In l'lllUl1ni Ole Sherratt aull<red !jrlt, l«<lnd and that a new public opinion p0ll tory when the GOP national con· clrcu and never did finish the novel, Wrd degree burns when he was fJvorabl• to him had ltarted an 1_v_m;_·o_n_ope~n_•_ne_xt_W<_e_k_. ______ H_ottm __ an_s_al_d_. _________ partlally ___ e_•ve_loped __ b_y_th_e_fl_ame __ ,_. _ overnight •willl of Republican Na· tional Convention delegates away from Richard M. Nixon. The Nixon camp .acolled elaborately . Lt Gov . .Malcolm Wilson or New York State, a Rockefeller 1trategjst, said bJs workers sent telegram• to all l,S33 deleeates to the conv~tion, which opens here next week, to inform them of the latest poll results. The poll by Louis Harris ga ve Rockefeller 40 percent of the vote against 34 percent !or either Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey or Sen. Eugene J, McCarthy, while Nixon was shown traillng Humphrey 41 to 36 and McCarthy 43 to JS. Herbert G. Klein, Nixon'• com· munications director, said it was ''In· credible" that Nixon could lead in the Gallup Poll, published Monday and trail in the Harris Poll three days later. He said "the Rockefeller polling game is over" with Nixon still winning "on all counts." The new poll reversed attitudes in the two C&Jlll'IS. Rockefeller people were discounting and Nixon people were exulting in the Gallu5' resul~ showing Nixon beat in g any DemocraUc challenger. Wilson s&id at lunebtime that he had spent -the mbrning taking telephone calls Crom delegates from all stttions of the country. expressing new inter· est in Rocke.feller. Willlon and former GOP national chairman Leonard Hall, a key figure in the Rockefeller campaign, c<>n· tended that the delegate11 were becom· ing convinced Rocteteller w:a1 a "sure winner" in November and that he would win the nominatioo on the fourth or fifth baUot. "We know Rockefeller had lo come from behind," said l~all . "He ha s. He is now out in Cront." But Klein told ,eportcrs : "I submit that the polls shbw conclusively that Gov. Rockefeller Ms failed i n hiatory'• moat expensive two-month Mpalin. R1chard Nixon is the win~ oer and ho will be the winner In November." 2 County Servicemen Lose Lives in Vietna'n1 The Defenu Dcp•rtment \Vtd· nesd,ay ldentllled two Orange County aervictmen killed ln Vietnam . They I.rt Lt. Jeffrey L. M.arUn of Santa Alla, and Lance Cpl. Chester E. ReaceViCI ol Allllbelm. I • FINAL DAYS OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al ..JI. <}. (Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UP HOLSTERED PIECES i11 your choice of style or ftbric mty be purchas.d at a most generous stvings of . , , 20 0 Off Regular Prices Truly a rare money-saving opportunity Over 200 Styles ol Sofas -Chairs -Love Seats -Ottomans in your choice of any Heritage Decorator !•bric. ' HERITAGE~ a Jtvtng tradition In fU'rn-lttJre ; Your /otlOritc Interior dcsiQ11<r will II< lloppv to GUisl I/OU ••• - H.J.GAI\l\ETf fURNll1JRE PROFESSION,Al INTERIOR DESIGNERS '· 0,.Moo.Tmt.lMlftt. l l215 HJ.RIOR BLVD. COST;. MESA. CALIF. K6-027S 646-0276 . I ' . I I '' ' \ ' i ' .. • . Reeds BY WILLIAM REED • • • In the Wlncl I drove out Edinger AVenue the· ... other day to th~ new Sunset Aquatic Park" and after SO!Jle searching, found the new launching ramps which ·are to cure a part of the hunger of the-small boatman. fo r a place to droP hb craft into the "Sea. / Driving west on Edinger, one passes the new islands a n d shoreline of the Huntington Harbour development and crosses a bridge over what appears to be a drainage ditch with about three or fo ur times the amount of water contained by the Los Angeles River. Then, there you are. The first view is one of disap- pointment because there is ~oth~ng except a sign. Closer exanunat1on shows the sign which proudly pro-- claims that this indeed is the aquatic park of Orange County. * Someday (like tomorrow) the park will be bustling with the sounds of boaters launching their craft and heading either out to open sea or into the waterways of Hun- tinl:!ton Harbour. Either direction is fine and each has its own special problems. I en- vision some complaint from Ute harbor patrol of boaters roaring throu~h the channels at faster than the allowed 5 miles per hour. Co untless. sailboats dottin~ the channels on weeken.ds may be in some jeopardy until the . power boaters learn about the special pro- blems of the harbor. * Heading to the bri dge i~ Anaheim Bay means the boa ' must go ~hrough µie naval weapo. station. This means that stnct adherence to special ordinanCes in paSsing through the breakwaters will be enforced. Before enterin g the naval area, a special pass will have to be ob- tained from the launching area. The pass has the ordinances printed on it. . ,._ -~ -·-..... ....._ r • • .• r l ' • Here's Facts About Figures Summer matrix algebra students from Marina High School inspect electronic data ptocessing and electronic accounting machine operations during a tour of a computer rqom at McDonnell Douglas As- trQDautics Corp. in Hunijp_gton Beach. First shift - supervi,sor Gary R. Stead Sbows students how the machine works. ( Na rcotics Oass • 'For P ar ents Set At Valley School An adults only, six-week series on the narcatlcs problem in the Hun- tington Beach and Fo1:1.ntain Valley areas -begins Aug. 6 at McDowell School , 17210 Oak St., Fountain Valley, at 8 p.m. ' The series is part of the South Coast Junior Women'J; Club Parent Awake Program. . . . ~ . Dlauman Mrs. Carl Cleary an- nounced scheduled presentations: -Aug. 6, Michael S i n g e r , psychiatrist, general narcotics' lecture with question and answer period. -Aug. 13, Detective Fred Norris, Fountain Val.ley police departmenl, display and film on narcotics. -Aug., 20, Narcotics' Division of Orange County Sheriff's Department, heroin film . -Aug. 27, Detective Norris . LSD film. " -Sept. 3, Orange County Sheriff's Department, marijuana film n~atcd by singers Sonny and Cher. -Sept . 10, psychiatrist gu.est speaker. OV Little League Picks ' .Champs for '68 Se ason Fifty-five Huntington Beach boys have been selected Ocean View Little League champs for the 1968 seaso.n . From the "Angels" major league team. the c.hamps are Andrew Alderette, Clark BranifL B a r t Dickson, iohn F ischer, Tony and Vic· tor Lucchesi, Joseph Nelson, Jim Rock , Clay Southerland, J a m e s Straube. Brian Tann}(>; and Mark Tucker. The White Sox Minor A team champs are John Cochtan, Ron Rose Planting Set for Center Hy)>rid Teas and Grandi Floras rose varieties will be planted Saturday at the new WeStminster ~civic center. Donated by the Orange County Rose Society. the 450 plants compliment t:lle modified English design of the center located on Westminster Avenue east of Beach BouleV"aTd. . Easter, Steve Farrah, Craig Frolich, Mike Gardner . Donald Gillespie, Robert Jeanes, Gary M at th e w 1 , William Paradis. Clarence Renfrow. Brian Schlosser, Don Tilly and Travis Vincent. Raymond Davies. Daniel and Roger Hankey, Paul Luebke, J . Mallinson, Greg Mathews, Ricky Steinbach, Richard Matteson, Rodney McCray, Mike McKin ney, P. McLaughlin, Shaun Mehaffey, F.. Pirreault and Peter Thommes are champions on the Athletics Minor B team. TQp players on the Jets farm team are R. Bieniak, D. Bills, C. Busch, A, · Chersin. B. Cottington , J . Davies, J. Evans. L. Faulkner. J. Grahma, M. 1-larris, R. Kropp, D. Lisenby, G. Meyer, T. Prickett and D. Miller. The OVLL tournament team is made up of Jeffery Carroll, Bart Dickson. Ray Eckles. Gregg Foster, John Goodspeed, Pat Johnso~ John Lindquist, Robert Lopez, Anthony Luc· chesi. Robert Ludwig, James Meade, James Straube, Drian Tannler and Daniel Wells. -Thursd1y, August l, 1968 ~ DAILY "PILOT 3 ' Can't Please All ' Decisionl Knotty Problem ~ By SANDI MAJOR Of ~ o.i,, ,..., Sttlf "No matter wbicb way the future J!untingt.on Beach freeway i1 routed, not everybody is going tO be happy." So claims Samuel a. Nelson, state director of public works. And, as he predicts, whichever way the freeway is built it will cause families to ~ve up their homes , cities wilt lose land planned for additional home-s and industry and some existing facilities may be affected. As State District 7 Deputy Engineer Route, the majority ol peoplo at the Friday beAring. araue thla in !ti favor: -It displaces the fewest ~umber of people. -It provtdes a "decent access" te Huntington Beach's industrial acrea1e, according to the director o f Developmental Research AssociaUoo. ! -It would attract more industry to vacant land in West Orange County. -In Fountain Valley, children would not have to cross a freeway to get to school. i11 opposition to th.is r o u t • ~ Westlninster officials say their unl.11 triangle of industrJal land, just be,U.. ning to be ·developed, would ·be taken by the Red Route. WESTMINSTER EFFECT --T. · R. t.ammers . summarized at the Friday hearing on the freeway routing, the freeway may affect HUD- lington "Center, the Christian Scientist retirement village, Westminster High, Golden West College, Pacifjc Electric Railway, Westminster Civic Center, Southern C a I i f o r n i a Edison "Westminster does stand to lose a · transmission lines, plu1 nwnerous -much larger percentage of itl .aasess- schools, churches, homes and parks .. ~ valuation than other cities," said city public works director David KNO'M'Y PROBLEM Baron. "lt"s a knotty problem ," Nelson said Stariton oll.icials pot the most at Friday's hearing. • emphasil OD the freeway's df~ta on -As the most westerly (Gieen-Red) its industrial, uie main hope ot. line progresses from the proposed . 1maller citle1 in raising revenue. _ Route I Freeway~ it would cross va-Stanton Public Work! Director E. L. cant land, resideni:es north of Warner, He1Tell 1akl the effects of the freeway come close to the new Fed-Mart taking its limited land for industry Center and jGin the Red (Central) line would be "disastrous." north of Botsa. In favor of the Green·Red (most The Red Route (betwee11 Gold en westerly) route is that it will allow for \Vest and Beach Blvd.) would pass an interchange with Edinger Avenue, through scattered industrial land, ............-one of this area'• main ~ials. drive-in, a "few" residences, a piet1 · R;obert W. a-ommelin, a plannlng of unused land on the east side of consultant of Encino, speaking for the Golden West College and the Pacific Concerned Citizens Councll, pointed Electric Railway. ()Ut that this route would do the most The Orange (most easterly) line good in speeding traffic along to the begins south of Yorktown and would beach an?as, instead of dropping them pus through a "transitional" oU a mile ot two south of them. neighborhood, two churches and one church site, vacant land· in Fountain CENTER BENEFIT Valley, the Christian Scientist village . And Consultant· Donald Frischer, and a number of family units. representing the Broadway store at Huntington Center. said the sbopping COST COMPARISONS center generates 15,000 trips to and The state engineers, who are re com-from it each day. In tenn1 of thiJ mending the State Highway Com· amount of traffic, he said the Orange mission select the Orange alignment (eastern) line, "would not provide as for the freeway, make these com-much service.'' parisons as to cost aOO effects: The center, he said, would benefit The Eastern line would be 7.4 miles more from the freeway following the long, would cost more than the other most westerly line. two ($84.3 million) and would displace Thi! Orange ROute would not cause the most homes (1458). Westminster to lose the small amount The Central alignment (Red Route) of industrial land it has. It would would cost S83 million, would displace follow a line where people are needing the fewest number of families (Tn) it now, not along side vacant land. ~ and would be 6.6 miles long. The Westminster's Baron say1 of this Green-Red line, the most western one. route : would be 6.4 miles long. cost $82.l "It will not adversely affect in· The tournament team is managed million and would displace 1073 dustrial areas of any or these citie.s. by Ray Johnson, and Les Eckles is families. "It may not help but , it will not Boaters \vill have to hold-the pass up to be seen by the naval security guard as the boat goes through the Navy property. A permanent pass may· be obtained through , the security office of the N a v a I \Veavons Station. Mrs. Cleary said Ulat no children will be admitted. For more in· formation call 968-4180. Anyooe interested in a'Ssisting with the plant•ng of the roses il}oll;IC:. be at center·afte 8 a .m. -AND MoRE-HA'PP~·iNGs ~ LADIES' SHIFTS & DRESSES SPECIAL GROUP 2/500 REGULAR $6.00 EACH Reg. 10.00 NOW Reg. 14.00 . NOW • tog. 16:00 NOW Reg. 25.00 Now·· Reg. 35.00 NOW Reg. •5.00 NOW LADIES KNIT SUITS SPECI AL GROUP Reg. 45.00. BETTER GROUP~ Reg. 75.00 COSTUME GROU P Reg. 125.00 21° 37'° 62111 4ss 699 t" 1249 1749 2249 LADIES' SPORTSWIAR ---TOPSo--- SHEllS ;~ 2/5.00 SHIRTS :;';," 1/2 OFF LONG SLEEVE . BLOUSES ~;~;· 4. 99 ROMPERS :;•;;• lf 2 Off --iBOTIOM>-S-- JAMAICAS :." 1/2 OFF 7.00 CAPRIS ~:'Go'' 6.99 3.99 SKIRTS :£>" -SWIMWEAR- SWIMSUIJS ~;;~ 6. 99 BEACH COVERIFS ~;';o" 1/2 Off .... ,. 12.00 .... •• l0.00 -SWEA TElfS::-- •ow 5.99 NOW 13,99 EARLY BIRD SPECIALS U.DllS SHIFTS 111 ... te •.•• • NOW 2.99 U.DllS JAMAICAS .... ,. 4.01 NOW 99C lADllS HALF SLIPS • ...... 4.00 NOW FROM 45C GllLJ PANTIES .......... 45 NOW , C t UDIU KNIT TOPS 2/5.00 LADllS SHIRTS l ... ,. 1.00 215.00 U.0111 Better Jewelry hf. N 1.00 V2 PRICE IAJllU PANTIES NOW 75C ., • Sale Starts Thurs., Aug. ls+ • Biggest Sale Of The Year LADIES' ACCESSORIES AND LINGERIE ' . J EWELRY, req. to S.00 now . . ............. ..l/i OFF SUNGLASSES, reg. to 4.00 now . . ............. ..l/i OFF HANDKERCHIEV ES, reg. to 1.00 now ···-6/2.75 SCARVES, reg. I .SO now ... . ··········--·······-75c HANDBAGS, reg. to I 0.00 now. ··-··· ...... 4.99 PATIERNED PANTYHOSE, reg. to S.00 now 2.49 CANTRECE HOSIERY, reg. to I .SO now.......... 75c PLAY SHOES reg. to 4.00 now .................................... 1.99 PANTIES, reg. to 1.50 now . . ····················-·······-··· . 75c HALF SLIPS, reg. to 4 .00 now .. . .. 1.99 HOSTESS SHIRTS, reg. lo 18.00 now ........ 'Ii OFF GLOVES, reg. to 3.00 now .. ....................... 1.49 SUMMER HATS, reg. 6.00 now ··············-··············· 2.99 ' BRAS, reg. to 6.00 now _ ··········--················ 2.99 GIRDLES , reg. to 8.00 .now 3.99 GIRLS KNIT SHIRTS •••. J.00 1.49 .... s.oo 2.49 •••. 1.00 3.49 GIRLS SHORTS & JAMACAS .... J.00 1.49 2.49 3.49 GIRLS' Swi mweor .... 4.00 1.99 R•t· 5.00 2.49 •••. ,,oo 2.99 IOYS SPORT SH IR-TS _. ... J.00 1.49 ........ 1.99 ........ 2.49 IOYI l •/ h.. SWIMWEAR .... .... 1.4V .... .... 1.99 R ... 1.00 2. IOYS I BERMUDAS .... 4.00 1.H R ... 1.00 2.49 .... ,,oo 2.99 ~ . DEl'ARTMINT STORE • Sa.ve SO°/o and More • Save In All Departments MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS reg. 5.00 now .••••••...• , •... 2.49 reg . b.00 now .••••• , •..••.... 2. 99 re g. 7 .00 now .••••••••••••••• 3.49 rg e. 8.00 now .•••.•.. , •••••.. 3.99 MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS reg. b.00 now ...... 2. 99 reg. 8.00 now ... 3.99 reg. 9.00 now ... 4.49 MEN'S CASUAL SLACKS A 11 perm1,.1ft!ly ' pr•11•tl '"" f111ly mtchl,,1 wt 1h•bl1 • pltin fro,.f motl1l1. re g . to re g. to 9 .00 now .... 4.49 I 0.00 now .•.. 4. 99 DRESS Cheo11 from p11rt wool•,·••croft •"d wool or wool bl•,.d•.-Fr•o c11ffl119, of co11rr• re g. I b.00 now .. .. .. . .. . .. .. 1. 99 re g. 20.00 now .............. 9.99 reg. 25.00 now .............. 1 Z.49 Mllf'J SPORTCOATS .... .. ..... 19.99 M11t•1 SWIMW EAR .... .. .... 4.49 titllf'l NECKTIES M11t•1 SWEATERS ...... 1.00 2.49 .... .. ..... 8.99 IAllLY 11110 Sfl'ICIAL. U.ltLY llllO l'ICIAL Mllt't NECKTIES HANDKERCHllVES C<Nfl .. OUll'I 79 ...... 2.10 c M:: 1.00 6/2.SO IAllLY 1110 S,1(1,t.L IAltL'f' lllD lfl'ICIAL KNIT SHIRTS TIE, PUFP & PIN SIT fOltl •llOUll') 99C ...... 1.11 CORONA DEL MAR 3321 E. Cosat Hwy. Plenty of FREE PA~G SAN CLEMENTE 111 Ave. Del Mar Lorge Parking Area In Rear .... .... 1.29 NO LAYAWAYS e ALL SALIS FINAL •• - • • • ' I ' OAJLY PILOT (c:-ltil llW ,. Cdr """ • ...,, Orange County's own D9nnl1 Cole will share billing with Rlc1rdo Montelb•n in a "Fashion for Dy· ing" episode of 20th Century Fqx Teevee's "The Felony Squad." Cole, from Orange, who appeared on stage at the Orange County Press Club awards l;)anquet this past January, ll'.iU appear with o~ er regulars Howard Duff and Ben Alex:•rtd•r ·as the 1eries pren}ieres it. third season Sept. 27. • The e"vtoife of Wisconsin Gov. War· Ttn Knowles ha.! remarried. The fcmn.- er Mr1. Knowles, who obtained a Mexican divorce July 16 Was married July 18 to Milwaukee mitliunaire in· dustrialist Francis TrackeT in New York City. • Mrs. Mary Jan• Black, of St. Joseph, Mo., explained to the judge after a collision that her doctor told her to drive her family car at high speeds to help her relieve her tension. Magistrate Margaret Young, after hearing witnesses testify that the woman had pulled out to pass a car in the face of on- coming traffic, fined her $50 and .. -court costs. She also recommended -8. cbahge in doctors. • You think your wife's handbag is cluttered! Alan Fried of Los An- geles called the Las Vegas sheriff's office this week to cancel a report that $9,000 worth o! jewelry had b een stolen from his hotel room during a recent visit. The gems turned up in his wife's purse. • TM Stott Assembly in Sacra.. mento voted unanimously this week to correct a bill governipg the :ii:election of textbook.s for the Uniwrsit11 of California. Thi word ,.~ducation" wa.s mi&spel- led. • Willard Underwood, who drives from Huntsville, Ala., to Virginia each year to go deer hunting, got a six-point buck thi"s week. But it wasn't in Virginia. Underwood hit the big deer as he drove to work at the Redstone Arsenal. Conserva- tion Department officials took pos- session of the animal. All Under- wood got was a leaking car radia· tor and 2. broken beadlighL ' ., - 66 ·Arreste d ' Firebombing H~ts Seattle 3rd Night ·- fo'rom Wlre Servlet:1 • SEATTLE -Police arrested· 66 persons Wednesd~ night a1 rock throwing and firebombing broke out in the city's predominantly Negro central area for the third straight night. There were isolated report,, of gun- fire, but police said they bad no reports Of anyone being hit. Police said the fire 1ounded like it came from both small automatic weapons and automatic rifles. Police Chief Frank Ramon, ~ho ·earlier met with.Mayor J. D.'Bramaq. at 10:26 p.m. ordered all availab1' unit! to move in and "arrest all in· dividuals causing and supporting the dJsturbanoe and Wllawful a.sembly." ' FiftY adult males, two adult -female! 4.Dd 14 juvmile1 were arre!ted. 1be Juvenile.! .weie· released ·tO Uieir parenta. A Poriable unit at an elementary school, a drive-in and a drugstore were targets or fi rebombs. A number of grass fires were reported. A civilian motorcycle and a car also were set afire. Tear gas: was used extensjvely on groups ol' 100 to 150 persons' in the Garfield High area. GRANO RAPIDS, M I c h • Firebombings were reporteci Wed · nesd.ay night in the Negro sections of Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, two Michigan cities hit by r a c i a I disturbanci!s within the past week. Grand Rapids police said two vacant howes were set on fire in the city's heavily Negro Southeast Side and thft a firebomb was found inside one house and a gasoline can in frout. Windows were broken on a parked car and the interior was set afire, police said. In Kalamazoo, 60 miles south of Grand Rapids , a 24-year-old Negro, Floyd Glass, was arrested and booked on a· charge of arson after a firebomb was thrown against the wall of a ce- 7 Die in Crash As Police Chase Speeding Auto JOLIET, IU. (UPI) -SeV<ll persons were killed today when a speeding car pursued by police crashed head-on into a stationwagon carrying six member1 of an Arkansas family, Will County authorities said. The fiery crash occurred in lbe predawn darkness on Interstate 55, about 18 mile! south of here. The vie· tims ·were not immediately identified. Lt. George Bohac of the . 1beriU"1 department said he spotted the speeding car going south in the north· bound lane of the four.Jane divided highway. He estimated the car was traveling more than 100 miles an hour. He said he was not in a position to chase the car. but that he radioed to another officer, Carl Si sin ski, who us- ed his squad car as a roadblock. The speeder. he said, tried to go around Sisinslti's car, whose head· lights and revolving red light were on, hit the fender of the deputy's car and went on. The runaway car continued south, sideswiped a car containing three persons and then crashed into the sta· tionwagon. The three in the sideswiped car were shaken up but not seriously injured, Bohac said. ~ The si:r family members included three children, two adults who ap- peared to be their mother and father, and an elderly man, authorities said. The speeding car had a Chicago llctMe. m.enl block ~ding occupied by Gibson Inc .. a ,Wtar manufacturer . GAINSVJLLE, Fii:. -Police sealed oU a 14-block area in a Negro l'.hetto section here early today n roving gangs of vandala hurled rocks at automobile• for the third 1tr.Jgbt nighl City police, 1beriff'1 depuliis and1 highway patrolmen blocked traUic in ' the area follQWin& a ak:lrmbb in front ot .tbO ,uic Lounae and package 1tore which refuses to 1erve Negroes. TWo pen:OOI, one a juvenile, were arrested ·OQ . disorderly .c o n d u c t ohar:e-es .. Some ·'15 squad ca.rs and 3) riot.- equipped p0Uce moved in to dilperu the crowd and the .rock·throwi.Dg bepn.· Johnson Signs Multi-billion Housing Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -President ,Johnson's . signing today of a , multibillion dollar ~:ting bill gave new dirtctlon to' gov ent efforta to ·help poorer Americans' buy hofl\es. The law represe~ for the presi· dent a major l~gislature trumph. The $5.3 billion me.sure authorizes construction or rehabilitation of about 1. 7 million homes and apartments over the next three years, a substantial first step . in Johnton'• goal of six million new housing units over the next decade. It includes a new home ownership program to help low income families buy modest homes with the federal government paying all of t h e mortgage interest except the first 1 per cent. The new 1ilw also offers subsidies to some bwlder.1 of low i n c o m e apartment&·, 1eta up programs for riot and flood i{taurance, and extends the program of rent 1upplemenU for lower lncome Americans. s~ many of the programs pro- vided in the ·bill contain subsidy com- mitme.nta spanning 40 years, total f~ll: ~~tures could exceed ~ b i t fl n ft . Cangrees later apiropri. ate. all fuftds aought. Existing program1 of model cities, urban renewal and mass transit are continued under the new law. Physician Swims Catalina Channel PALOS VERDES (UP I) - A 37. year-old physician failed by just over a~ hour Tuesday to break the long· distance swimming record between Santa Catalina Island and t h e Southern Calitornia coast. Dr. Robert Conroy of ·Long Beach fougtit adverse cwnnts and brisk winds to swim the 22-mile Catalina ChanneJ in 11 hours and M minutes . He fell short of the mark set in 1958 by housewife Greta Anderson who made the swim in 10 hours and 49 minlites. She then immediately set another record by swimmnng the other way in 15 hours, 36 minutes. Conroy, a radiologist at Long Beach Veterans Hospital, undertook the swim without fanfare and only a few friends and relatives were waiting at the cove just south of the Marineland another record by swimming the Burrrr! 31° • Ill Butte R ecord Lows From Rockies to Great Lakes TEXAS l!XPLOS!6N -This is what remains of a Kennedale, Texas i as-:station ,:i.nd gasoline truck which exploded Wednesday throwing flaming gaso- line into nearby trailer park and •hooting a huge fireball hundreds of feet into the air. At least 28 persons were injured, six pf them ,<::ritica!Jy. One woman described the holocaust ''Like a scene out of bell, it.elf." A s~ene From Hell'· • in Te xas Gasoline Ex plosion 28 Injured KENNEDALE, Tex. (UPI) -Mrs. GlyM Grimes looked down the road running in front of her house and could see it all -the bark.less trees, the blackened highway, the melted truck tires, the charred service. station: She stared at the devastation brought by the explosion .of a gasoline Bishops Request Support ·Qf Pope's Birth .Control WASHINGTON (UPI) The Catholic Bishops of the United States have called on members of the church and the clergy to support and heed Pope Paul's ban on artificial means of birth control. A statement issued Wednesday on behalf of the approximately 265 Bishops in the United States a aid: "We are aware of the difficulties that this teaching lays upon so many of our conscientious married people. But we must face the reality that struggling to live out the will of God will often entail sacri.ficet." A group of 87 church theologiam Tues.day : had U:sued a statement s;;ying Roman Catholic couples bave the right Ito ·disobey the Pope on birth control. The Bishops' statement was releas- ed by Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. He said almost all of the Bishops in the nation w4'1"e contacted Wednesday" for their vie*s before the statement was written. The statement said: "The sacredness of christian mar· riage makes it a special concern ol the teaching ' mission of the church. Its dignity must be carefully safeguarded and it! responsibilities fuUilled. The recent encyclic al letter of Pope Paul Flames Destroy Tank of Copra LONG BEACH (UPI) -A tank con· taining hundreds of galloru; of dried coconut meat was destroyed in a spec· tacular fire here Wednesday night. , A spqkesman for Baker Com- modities' Co.. owner of the lank, estimated the loss at more than half a million dollar.s. The tank contained copra -dried coconut meat from which the oil has not been removed by pressing. The blaie occurred A block from the berth of #le former ocean liner Queen Mary. now uqdergoing conversion into a floating ho\el and restaurant. The VJ renects this concern. "The Holy Father, speaking as a supreme teacher of the church, has reaffirmed the principles to be follow· ' eel in f o r m i n g the Christion con- sciences of married persons in car· rying out their responsibilities. "Recognizing his unique role in the universal church, we .. the Bishops ot the church in the United States, unite with him on calling upon our priests and people to receive widi siiicerit1 wtiat he has taught, to study it carefully, and fonn their consciences in its light. "We are aware of the difficulties that this teaching lays upon so many of our conscientious married people but we must face ·the reality that struggling to live out the will of God wiU often entail sacrifice. "Jn confident trust in the iirmness or their faith, in the loyalty to the holy father and to his office, and their reliance upon divine help. we ask of them a true Christian response to this teaching." Jealous Lover Slays Husband SAN F RANCISCO !UPI) -An estranged husband was shot and killed today by the man living with his wife. Police said Robert Mangs. 'Z1, who was released from jail Wednesday after serving four months for an assault in the love triangle, headed to a' Sunnyside home occupied by his wife, Eleanor. 24, and Logan C. Mills, 24, e stevedore. As Mills and Mrs. Mangs prepared an early breakfast. Mangs kicked open ttie door , but Mills threw him out, slamming the door shut, police said. But Mangs came baock, hammering at the door. Police said Mills then opened a peephole and fired a single shot from a .32 caliber automatic. tank truck \Vednesday v"hlch injured 28 persons. "1t looked like a scene from hell itself," she said. The explosion came minutes after a small fire started while a tank truck filled the overhead storage tank at the Red BaU gas station on U.S. Highway 287 just south of Kennedale. Six of the injured were reported in critical condition at Fort Worth and Dallas hospitals, including Dallas TV newsman Steve Picringer of KRLD· TV in Dallas. Pieringer was standing less than 50 yards from the sttion whe n he was engulfed in the uge fireball. KenMdale volunteer fire chief t om- my Lowery said Pieringer ''wjlked about 60 or 70 yards down the hig.way and then collapsed. I-le was jlJSt a white ash from head to toe. A4 his clothes except his undecshorts ~ere burne<! off." I C. L. L a n e was at h i s hon-! in Dalworthington Gardens, just n~fi.h o( Kennedale, when he saw several fire I trucks roar by. He decided lf in- Testigate. atid .sfOJ)l'V!d on a roa!'.f • overlooking the scene just bd'ot the /' U01k b1ew. 1 "When it blew, it (the flahting gasoline ) just spread out on the group and then back in. Then a big coluiin of black smoke wertt over the fGriihes') house and flames came shooting' Out of the smoke," Lane said. I Dick Myers said he was abooi five miles north of Kennedale" whep. he noticed a column of heavy •lack smoke coming from the south .-I "t saw the fireball come ovef the tops or the trees -it n1ust have1,>een .at least300 feet in the air,'' he saii. The heat of the fire melted thi1twin air horns mounted atop the big ack truck's cab. The copper cable the powerline that had run in £ront the station was laid bare of insulati by the flames. Several children playing near a~arn about 250 yards behind the Grfmes home were singed by the fire and t\vo of them were knocked from the rdof to the barn by the force of the expltion. None were seriously injured. -The blast lifted the 6,00J. lion storage tank 30 feet in the air, s nit end over end and dropped it on a arge trailer house next to the station The trailer was destroyed, but no on was in it al the time of the explosion. Flames spread at least 400 f t in either diN!ction dawn the hi ay. Trees in the front yard of a hous next lo the station were reduced to gray skeletons. although the house self. which had been evacuated, was spared. Callfomla Marigs, hit in the middle of the forehead. fell dead to the bottom of the six-step stairway that leads to the door. One end of the storage tank nded up in a clump of trees far from here the main body of the tank finally ame to rest. renaperatures vessel was not endangered. 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Lttf1-..,,._,afvr9 CfltMI, Hlift • " a 1..-...., . .. "· ca .. tal W"lerly wl"llt, lltltl 11'11 Ylrl1b~, 11 ff lt r11.1.ll. fttfl 1fltmoon. L1t11 "'*""-<1111111-. t~•""' by erttr· -ledty tllll Frfd.t,, l°"'Y'I llltl'r, ,. .... Yftl'l'flll\"I '-"-''""-rt ...... fPOrll I ltlf~ fl n f9 I .... (II ... 111- 111'111 "-"-,.."'"' r•"" ""' 11 Ito llO Tiii WllW ,..,_lhlrt •U '1.• ft. ,,_ . Sun, Moon, J'IH• THUlllDAY ~ ltlfl\ , ' ):U l ,fll, •.J ilc!woll """' lt:U •·"'· 1,1 l'lril ....... •• . 4~.W ...... 1• fllrat tow ..... , . . .. t:'1 1.r11. 1.4 l«Mf "1111 ... . . . • •:1'0 ....... s.• h<IM .......... , .•. U:U 1,111. O.~ M.-11111' l :U •·'"· '4h S. llltt1 t :N •·"'· Ith 1;M .,,.., ,.,... •· ~"" L•tt .. ..., Aw. I Avt e A.111. IS A.w. 1' v.s. s .. -• .,, Tiit ""'"'"'I ~ ,. r'IC*'ll ,_ kl '"" nerttt tM <111lr11 lltO.ltl l f'd Ir> ttlit -~ 0tMt L-. 11 "'"''"' lfllend wl!ll • lltfl1 -™ .. for l'l'I~ kl ttlit '"' et -.nwr. T"" lo'flt ...n kl fllt ,• tllOf '°' loi ~ ltodlla ..... °"'' i..ff:ft. ~ llld ,.....,.,. ............ ,,.,,_,, ,..,.... ''-Tflio ..... 8' cttl 1lr lrlMll 1M '-r GrMt Lil" te N .. IN•kt. lo\of't tttower1 i.11 •IOlll l'lor- !d1'1 "" tottf 11'111 !fr HtY ... I 11111 , ....., .......... ~. l'oltr t lr tfllt ._._ tlf rt<Dl"tl r1lft 11o ""'-W..-...il•Y--1""-l• "" ... ""<II • "' """"'' J111Y *'-... .._... ,,.,. .,..,.IWI ~ flt )I 11,..::i:...:· ,._ .,, •-""" ,_ 111...W JI' ~. 11'111 l'wble. • !Ml""' dty If! """""' c.w ...... """ • 1t111Nlll'Y ,." ._ "' "· It 'flll M 11 "llltllln. Mlcll, btlnr<t ""' -,... '°°''" t1111 n 11 l l'tfPIL '41111 • L ,,_ Al!dtert" l\H1nt1 1&1kenfltlll ......... ..... ..... c11ic. .. Clnc:lrll\111 Gltwl•llf °'""' DR Mol,,.1 """'' £11ret:1 ,~ ...... ·-~ ........ -· _.., <a11111 City L11 Vftll LOI l\1'19tle1 Mltflll ... di M-M M~ll w-°''""' Htw Ylt\ .,,. ... ........ "'" llellle1 1'~11 ........ lt ·-· Plttttiu"" ......... 1111111 City lltll 111111 ·-~.- St. LAllll '"""' Ult LMt Cltv .... _ Sal\ l'nMfl<t $911!1 ..... ,. ....... -·~ -· Wulltftt!Oll • " " "" .. ... •1 '' J(I •w n " . -.. • • IO 16 Tr rt '1 ... ., " ,tt .. " " ll " .. ,OI .. " . .. ... .. " " " " " " 12 ,, ... 11 1l .OI " .. .. " ·" te tO ... " " ~ " " " .. " " ~ M ll .. " " " u '' ... " .. M .. .. .. ~ .ti " . .. " ... , ., ,, " .. " " " " " " .. ... ... " . " R.ElAX DURING THE POllTICAl CONVENTIONS ... J, WHoN rz£PUBLICANG MEoT AT MIAMI BEAC!l AND POMOCrzAT5 MEET AT QllCA60 TO CH006E' Pl21'51D5NTIAL NOMINEo6, W£t t µAVE 0!112 A6GOCIATEL> Pl2E65 STAFF l216HT AT TilE EK:bNS. Tf.l~iL ilEPalf AND ANALYZE-, 6(FT AND DE"CfPµEiz. THEY'LL BREAK THJlOUGH nu;: C.ONFUGION AND 6ET ID 71<5 FACTI>. DAILY PILOT L. ;, I I I ' red lell ra JCk the ,.y I in and TV LD· !ing ti on uge om· ked Nay t a his 1ere in ' • h o[ fire in· ·oad the if 1ing ·oup in o{ .es') Jt of five he lack the :>een I. twin lack the : the '.I by barn .mes tv,ro of ta sion. I ' a lion un it arge The was 1 at in way. next gray lself. was inded rh ere ;amo . , u I --------' ---..,__ .-. . -• . ' • Th11r5day, Augusa. l, 1'68 DAil Y PILOT /i ~ Disgruntled. Taxpayer& t~ Get <Their Day ai SACRAMENTO • (AP) , -acUon ' ~ ~ ·,:c.-.• t~: j;,.,,,.,.ent ts a ,mat~r 01 • payer. ~U.:, Jack ed ral>ttomhlp ~~ I!..·' p~ ~es can and d; ;f Nov-. 5 is the date for a leglalature to move toward pure 1peculatlot1. , Rees of the Ca l it• r n i a ownerahlp of property and discourage the attroaction of ~revp}t by _4l1&..r.u~tle.d anoverhauloftbetotaltax Rejection of Q)e 11!6 Teachers ~ and financing of education anCI new capital to California,'' ~, C&lllornia taxpayers if m. sy~tem there Js.never golng ·million propety ,reµet plaq. ~oseph Dl~ of t·b e weUare. the governor said. ·•";deed they are 'rffdy to to be an; propei:ty ~x pledged by ~e legislature .Inter~atlonal ~bOOd of Wbep ht: proposed ·a tot_,. Qut a• sudden massive .,... h!volt. relleJ." . · and Reagan in P.41Sfge of Team!tera.. · · , tax reform atu4J,, Reagal shift ol the tax to Ule ~ales On that da).; the st.ate'• NO PROriru::ALS ,the $1 billion tai. hike 'm The pr;;, tu bU been said,,..."ODI .~utrea:ient ts 'or_.lncome tax cotlld have 6-. voters will .ha Ve an op-• ""' x967, was cerlain to add fuel the baok Gf I o c a l careful stµdy ol whether the same effect, if the c:;.• por~nltY: to clamp 1 strict ~::a hoafs ... ~0 0rewncem0•• .to the Wat.9ori ·drlVe. government fiqanctng in real property sbould con-Watson proposal wins, notes limit on property taxes uJO ' But already, a hlgbiy California. !f'}lU. .Rest year's tinue to be the principal tax the Finance Department's .w wti.ich raile p.q ettlmated $4. where the l2 billion or so· in tirpnized opposition is bat. rates ranged !fbm',tl,92 for supporfin& 1 o c al J6v.trn· . DiXon. .:. billloo i. year· fon oPeratioa . Joit tax revenue should Wng for defeat.., each $100 of a~ pro-ment. Ide81ly, ·taxes shOUltf · The only way s.ignifi~ant ". of J.ooal governmen!'. . Z~~~~~~ee":te'°w!'!~ The group is c a 11 e d petty. valuation til 'Plumas be based upon beJ\tfits tax reform can be ac- ::i.., The g_ e.neral, elacUon ballot ed . his arm towA-' tho l•Californians Against the Coll~ tt·a hJgti.'of ~1.15 in received as well as upon complLshed Hali.stic.ally, he ...-ti alled th . aiv Tax Trap Initiative" and 1t.i Alameda County.. abWty tO pay. added, is on a piecemeal ... P,1'0J>OSI ~n .. 11· c . . 8 seated legiillators and said, slogan is ''don't walk inlo · In Prtvioul:.,. .1tatements, "Heavy tax-aUon of real · basls. Otheswise, special in- .,.. 'Yatson mi~tive" since its "That's ttieir problem." tile tax trap." . Re.agan has ,.agreed With the property frequently violates ·terest gr~ps would team up ,. pnme mover LS Loi ·A~geles Problem indeed. says the Coobairmen are Robert C.. Watadn · "cootention th at both or these ·objectives. to defeait a comprebensive County Asseslfor Philip E. As I e Iil bly 's Republican Brown of the California Tu-there is no clearly establish; . Even too hlgb real reform program. Watson. leader. Robert T. Monagan worse, t It's a way for the property (R-Tracy) . . ~ taxpayer to Yote a 50 per~ "l shudder to think ol the • .-, . ' cent cut in his tax bill, reaction to a state income Watson supporters say. tax bill that W&.!I three time11 Legislator11, state finance the amount paid this year," tifficials and other cringe at Monagan said in a stat• the financ ial pr p b 1 em s ment. passage of the proposition Nobody has reached the could create. ' point of drafting a n The initiatl1~e has two alternate financing plan. basic features : They cross their fingers the 1. Beginning July 1, 1969, plan will lose. But most ft WQU}d limit the property ftsc!al exwts agree the tax impOsed for government •sales tax afld the income services, other than educa-taxes are the moist likely tion and 1\'eUare, to one per-sources of revenue to make cent of market value 9f the up for the property tax tos~., property. The s.ales tax could be 2. It would' phase out en-boos~ed ,from the p~sent 5 tirely the levying of pro· percent to 11 cents on the perty taxes for support of dollar "and that st i 11 ~ation and weUare by w o u 1 d n ' t cover the mid·1973. minimum $2 billion required Everyone agrees the pro-in the initial phase of the perty tax bas become too Walson plan/' Monagan ad· burdensome, says Deputy ded . ~ • I WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 ' PRETTY, BUT _ IS IT A 1 KNOW IT'~ ,_ Finaf)Ce Director Charles "For the sales tax to Dixo.n, but the Watson ap-make up thi11 loss it would proach creates more pro-have to be applied to items f ~ blems than it would solve. whlch are nnw exempt·. I · ·-I OR.l US BOT, 010 Y~ HAl!6 TO &JV ,So MANY? DEDUCTIBLE Watson's rea11oning behind possibly even fOOd and 1-- h.ls plan: medicine. 11 "'Ibe people of California Gov. Reagan pressed t.11e have been promised pro-legislature this year for ap. perty tax relief by every ·proval of a bill to give coun· candidate, every member of ties $155 million in property the legislature, and the tax relief · funds, but the ·gQVernor for the last five measure was rejected by ears, b~t &11 they've gotten the Senate last Monday .. pronuses. W·he tber any alternate plan "It seems apparent that can get through th e unless the people take direct legislature be fore ad· PORT~BLE! •.·I HERE IT IS ••• 816 SCREEN PORTABLE COLOR! 11, •• "'"" am for hrtUfe c.i., ". Powerful 21,100.welt SpertoM1t Ci....IL Mod1I El 442-11" di1,., $359 95 110 1q. in . p;c1u,1 I r" ) ' ' ' ••• RIMA TEARDROP SWAG LAMP 111 ''''" o, 1M1,, a loV1ly tddition for li .. in9 ,oom.-dion, b1droom, or gu•1I room. Comrl1t1 wilk 1w 19 ch'ti", '"''II kook, 1ild co,d. !Th, 11,ht bulb it o" yotit. I K1thy 11y1 Iha I'''" on1 look1 j111I lik1 1 lim1 tnow con1, m1k•1 you w1nl to c,unch ri11ht into it. IJutt m1k1 tur1 your d•11lal bilh a11 11_1 pti~ up. I ·88 1 Adw1~tii1d tp1ci1l1 good th,u A119u1f 7, 1961, i nd did yow h11 r about lht ~ ~·• hippi1who 1i11 -..ith the fl ower pulling p1tal1 ind 11yin9, "I !urn h1, on, I fu,n h1r oH, I lu'n h1r on ." COMPLm !'IXTURE , -l ' I GLIDDEN Panel Adhesive for 111y insl1ll11ion of p1111lin9. Gi .. 11 1rnooth n1il:l1n fini1h in l1u • t im1 th1" w1 c1" ••Y "S1ti1f1cti•n . i G111r1nt11d or your Mon1y l11k," 99~ Avocado, Mediterranean or Walnut PANELING l"n thinkint thut -;;;;,,,,..._doing it1 Go •h•1d, ="'' yo u'U n1't1r 91t • ')':i:.:::;-b,1tta' pr ic:1 or de•I. Choi<::1 of thr•• lowtly finhk11. 3994.a c:::-:n::r.!llllnmmm-'·~:·!.~--.i:io~=--IQ!!Jilll'Z'"l==~...:n, Dripless Latex · l_ PLASTIC PAINT · PAIL' WALL PAINT f: Anod11r good product frorn Glidd1n, the hi-hitlin9 anti ..11h1bl1 fini1h on thi1 co"'pl1t1!y d,ipl111 paint m••• · out of 1l9kl. (S1y whit''''" 1r1 you pl1n11in9 lo paint 1nyw1y7 l I i' buc••• hold\ pl111!y p1int •• ''"'''I 1111111 cr1b1, turtl11, i nd oth1r 11•lif1 '" ea1• th1 ltid1 b,ou9ht hom1 1¥t 'Vfh tn9 but th1 Ntwpo,t Pi1, thi• p11! -··••11.d. 'Jazz at Josef's' COCKTAIL DANCING EVERY FRIDAY 5:00 • 8:00 p.m. JOSEF'S 2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY Coron• del Mer "" 673°1180 SUNDAY 10 to 5 .Plastic Decorator PANELS Juil id11I for ho1111 o, offic1 11 l'•om di .. id1,., foldi119 '''••n1, c1bi11oh, or door d1cor, 111 eolor1, oh y11, c~oo11 from ambtr, blu1, II'''"• o, 111i1t, Wid1 "''it ly of p1lltl'"J ~o compl•flltnt IYl'V d1co•alint 1ch11111. 2x4 2x6 2.49 3.99 Complete PANEL KIT Thi •a h11 1111h•t•ny fr1m.1 with bra11 •pri11t t1111io!I 1d1plors t• 1diu1t f•r c1ilin11 h1i1ht llliff1,•"c11. 5am1 c•lort tnd 1ttl•• ~1 1b•"•· ·Y2. PRICE SALE Hardwood Shutter Clearance Gol 1 wh•l1 m111 of th111 out In tht b1ck of th1 1toro 1ci1111wh•r1, Do"'t h1¥1 all 1i111 but at thi1 •i"d of a prie1 it would bt worth youl' lim1 lo com1 look th1m owt ' '"d 11• wh.11'1 whit, Could b1 you'll find ju1t what you n11d , Fin i d1t1ili"9, l'llO\ltbl1 louY1rt. 1m1olh '"d r•1dy to fi11i1h. R111ul1r P'ic1 ''"'' wt t from $1.0~ to $2.15 • A WINNER ON THE FIRST BALLOT! 36G~. ' 34c l .. ulor Prices N from 1.os .. z.as OW Off I ·- Bar gain Priced Fcimily·Size Portable Color TV! ICA Hft Yhte® CetH wfftl Wt "'"" pk,.. hl\lie-21,000 -rolt ctt-11 fer -rilUeitt, .. rHttlhlll.1111 .... ,, Th, l•rri 1, Mod1l fl·500 20" di19. 217 1q . i11. p!cfu'• ~ • ©DAVIS -BROWN l • TllLllVISION •A .... LIANCES . 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa Dilly 9.9 -$1turd1y 9-6 (Closed Sunday) . (511 .. ) 6-46-1614 -JS.rvlc1) 5>48-3437 . F1clory Authorlnd Strvin __ .... __________________ ....__., -' ·' ·~'11'11"""17'"..,_-::11._~nMI,·-.._,,.,..<r.'l1lo:i-.t!1ll!!lll_._...,,=i.i ... ...,mz~~ .. -. ~7' • .... -. . . ____ .__.. 1 F!NISHING RESIN WITH CATALYST Kii;h ut• thi1 Junk .fo, m1•in1 th• • u1'rl'bo1,d mo'' t11tfy, I 111•11. Alic :"u11d fo, boitdlnt fib1r1l•u cloth, ·• · m•I, t ic. lo wood i nd •lh1r 111,f1c•1. Apply with b,11th, ,.11,,, •qu••9••· 499 ' PLASTIC ELECTRICAL TAPE l11y tw1, thi1 h th1 llulf V•• c1!1 "'"'' fi11til in ANY tll'•w•, in I th1 hou11 wh•-~ you n11d it. A"d you'll th111li: UJ fo''"'~· f 'f4"x 30 Ft, 29c i; -CREEPY CREEPER ). ••••• • r r th. Joll., Gr1111 Cll•iri M1yhl j4.,1, 1!'1 fo, th m1cha11lc ••roll untln-th1 car...,.lth ~""•••• •114 comfo r' ' ,\ Harcraft Deluxe FAUCET , . .--:-=--.. R1•tly d1lwx1 deco••lo' 1tyl1d [•titc.l with luclt• h1itdl11 that i1ok Uk• c11! 9l1t1; fih 1l111d1 rd 4 inch op1ni"'' E11y lo i"1!1ll, 1199 TAPE TOOL ftr l1 btli11t lttfllt th1t 90 lt tumm11' cl ml' fhat you ju.t might w1nt bock I Ii~• your kid fft1yb11 1 It'll COfftl i" rial h1ndy wh111 1chool t11rh for 11ot1book1 •nd 1ueh. 299 ' ' ' \ Adlustable SHOWER HEAD • ' •. #'" ....... ~ • - 1 Jut! tu''! 1, .. ,, lo adju1! from 1oft lo r11ul1r to 11 11dl1 flow. Will fit mo1f tht wo,. (11111111 your co11lractor had 1motional P'obl1m1.I 299 :." .... ~ . ~· -. -....... ·. -·-·. -·~ ... ... . . . . ....... ~..., ........................ ~ ,, Pour-A·Fl.-r Seamless GARllAGE DliPOSAL . ~ . . llfit\1111 l11~lt1t1d. ,., 1111111 "o,..-r•ti•11. IWhli.1oml•!I• w1ultl f11r~ ,th•t ''''" 11111 •" . 111y rnoth._r.111.l9w.I T~'1fty p1it1 m1•11 thlt ll'lodtl •n• •f ••' lt•i.f •• 11.,.~ ,.. - 1999 FLOOR COVIRING ' . . . y,y .. , ho•ul •f ir111tl X .. , w•ll thl1 1i11'! If. Thl1 11 l r1ncf &r11t, • 11•w l11~•••tiO!I ;,. fl •• , 1..,1rlntt. Jut! ,•titr ff e11, tl1I•• t• o lfll .. th thl"Y fl11lrt.. Cli•i11 ef IOIM r1ally 9100..., paH1r111 •IHI colon. H ..... I il11vtlf11I lilt n •• , th1t ...... •111!11 waxl119 In lvtl 1111!111!11, 999 COVERS 35 SQ, FT. ,(. ' ' ~--"' --·--~-----~ -!!lto..~-·~-=-·.3.A.Ao..·-~----------- I I I I -. • I G DAILY PILOT ~ .-.._ ThoM\y, All91"t I, 1968 Summit Ends Today . . MOSCOW (UPI) -Su • adely." donly, It stopped. · Soviet 'Other major S o v 1 e I neW1ipapers today published publications followed suit. •o crjtlcl&m ol t b ,e Czech The 1udd<n halt o f Commuftista. • · crltlclsm lent welght to Pravda, prime oria.n · o! predictions by observers 1tho Kremlin, shed the daily · and sources here and in .attacks on the CHCb ,P•ity Pr.ague that the Soviet reformers it hat been nm· Union Bad its defiant former Ding !or weeks. satellite had moved back Mentioning· the S 6 'l J ' t-from the briftk ol possible Czodl summit talks winding anned coollict. up today, the official Soviet In Cterna Nad Tisou, tbe (;om mun is t pa r ty Cuch towp ·Where the sum· newspaper said the at· mit was under way, m01t o! mo.sphere was "frank and tbe ~viet PoMtbu:r<I and the Mexican Students Plan More Demonstrations · MEXICO CITY (AP) - 'nlouaandl of ~ are pl'f!PIU'lnl: demonltntiont in the Meakan capital to_. their charge• ol police brutality and vioatton of their tradltlCllll ri&bt ol autooomy. A 1polteunan aald plaos were going ahead for a joint demonstration by tt.udeots of the Uniwnity of Mexico Costa Rica ' Death Toll Reaches 78 ond tile PolyTecilnlc In· ltitute, W h 0 I e builcttng1 ...,. mvaded Monday n!jht by onny alld police force• alter hours of Youthful Violence. 11le Un.i.versi-ty of Mex- ico'• recUr, Javier Barros Sierra, declined to lead t · o d a y • s demonstl'&~ons although on Wedneaday he cona.,n"!d,repres•ion ol the riots early 'lhi1 week and <>nlered the Me.Jean flag ~flown at half staff in mourn· Ing for unlverslly freedom. He aaid autonomy ' • l n al.molt 40 yeara hal never been 10 seriou1ly menaced." 1be 851000·1tudent llDiver&ity and lU dflllated preperatory JChooil have SAN JOSE, Cool& !Ilea been free from lnterveotioo (AP) -An e-ated po by federal and lo< a I persons were •WI. misaing ln authorities since the riots: of the shadow " erupting Mt. 1928. · Arenal today u the kDown A~ least one perlOG was deatll toll r-to 78. killed, more titan too injured The latett reported vie-and at least 1,200 anest9d in Ums in the volcano diflaster the aaligovemmoot rJ,oting that bepn Monday were that beg"1 last Friday witll" eight reacuo wort .... wllo~ pro-Caltro an...U-ll!oD were caught by a fresh er-marJd.nc tbl aoiver1ary oC ploslon oC the v o Jc an o e QlbM . 26th of July Wednesday, evolution. Czechs mu1tered today to write a final communique on their !our days of talU line~ . Monday. Inlormed aourcea httt and In Prague udd both aides appatently reJched a comprom.Lse betwffft Soviet demands the C..Cba ball thtlr rerorma and t h e Czedloliovakian i.o6iatenc, 1lil continuing tllelr policy <t 1011ening party c o 11 tr o 11 over the nation. The Russians had beeJI threatening to use armed force if necess&ey to pre· vtnt what the Soviets aaid ~. waa a dlnCer the Czechl were 11ipphle o\lt of ttle east ~ blocalllD:e. The toU?CCI bad predicted \ both sides had agreed to UH • later, lower level a n d ~ 1mnUer rneetinl• to thruh oot the difiereoctl between them. The basic dllference lay between the Kremlin m. 1tstence on "orthodox" ~ Communism -full allegian-~ ce to Moscow -and "na- tional" CommuniJm , 5\1.Ch as that practlced i n Yugoslavia which broke with Moscow 20 years ago. Arabs Kill 6 Israelis AMMAN, -<UPI) -Arab Commandoa :kllled the atx-man crew ol. an Israeli armored vehicle ill a dawn rocket JttJck n e a r Madz Hlyeem on the Israel-oc- cupied Jordan River west bank todar, flit Pale•tine Lib er aUoo orpni.iation (PLO) said. PLO communique said today's attack avenged the death of two Arab guerrillas in a bat.tie with Israeli forces near Madz Hayeem Wednesday. ---------------------------------------------.J:.L1J~...l.....LL.t~~J SYLVANIA'S NEWS TEAM FOR BEmR POLITICAL COYERAIE. ___ ...., ______________________________________ _ ..9.LL.LLJ....L.LLJI_ ............. L.LL.t..L.LJl...a..LL.J-• PORTABLE COLOR! 11'' cli•t•"•I ll'•rf•blt TV - .,..jtfi c•"'''' "'"'''"'"c', I" fr•"f 1peek1r. ltell1~011t c1rf '"cl clock-timtr, ,,.t1e111I e•• tr1t. SYLYAHIA MODEL CDIOl'l s34915 Sylvania console color TV Lolded With High Perf0rm1nct Feature& - SYLVANIA MODEL CEllW -l ig f1mily·ti11 v1lue , • • •ith f•mu., .. 1 •• z20 111• i", plct1tr•. 111 ll'OPule• conle111. p1r1ry 1tyi"t · V1 rf1bl1 to"• co"trol. l i9 6" 1p11k1r. •New Color l rl ght 15® picfur1 tubt. 2l'f.. e Color l1v1I 111e"ifor !Chrel'll AGC) e Pred tio" copper circuitry brighter the" ei\y oth1r c1lor tube • Fu ll Po.,..1r tr1"1form•• e Pre-1et ¥ol1tm1 control e Pr1-1et fine f1t11in,9 e l l9htecl chennel i11ditetor ·" e J·tle9t l.f. e111plifier e Glen fiber·reiriforc1d circ1til p111e lt e Delu11 DC re1l1r1tion circ1tltry e Tr1111l1forl1ed ri1i11 '"Pll'•eulon circu itry e Awtom1tlc d19e1t11fri9 e Circuit bre1ker rt11t llutto" 411' East 17th St., Costa Mesa Dally 9·9-Sat. 9·6 • \ 646-1684 lf'fTE5RITY & .. DEPENDABILITY SINCE 1947 ----------------------------------------------···-· ... _ • ..L • -·. ,_ t •• _._._._..........._,_, ' I· • • • • • r . Ul'ITt,_... 'John(_ny) on the Spot The height of ingenuify is djsplayed by a farmer near Qerne, Ind., as he gives you an idea what to do with your 'old fixtures when you remodel your baUt· room. The farrrier, who wished to remain anony. mous, made up this somewha~ spectacular combina· • ' • t lion planter and mail ho~ bolder and placed it at · . ' I the side of the road. Note the array of toilef...trained naaturtiums. • , Just Goed Offieer ' . ' That's Marine's. Y'iew of Capt. Robb oVERLANi> PAJ\K, Kan. -re lie bod 1ened more tllea oo duty was fOlnl lo be (UPI) -!Della ~ thon 71 lllO!ltlil. the last 'l'Optaced by one commlllded ''llJ!(ler till>. command ;f <lrff ol'lbem -Robb. A by Robb, .tt>ero -some :?.Wine Capt. Cllar!e• ~ abort, m u 1 c u t a r man, addod tni...ot In t b i 1NI convoying auPPUe1 to CavJgnot w a 1 the com-replacement.. '8n artillery lmpllcement mandin& o«lcer of tbe "Weibld beard be was a atop lllU 65, moe mileo -arUllery batt<tj< posltlooed -gooc1 ofllcer and I w .. ted to southwest ofl>a Nang, #g on Hill;m. · meet. h1m just 11 k.e the Viet Cong struck frOJil India -.Compeny,'T h Ir d ev~ etae. I found blm ambum. . .Qatta)loa Sewelb M.arines, v•~ ~ to talk to. We bad The Marines fought tllem ~ bf Rclll>, pro-.-~ niai>ecl and ! oU but tlie Vie! COn& return-vidod oecwitY for both the found that he was a good o!· ed -a(laln and ag"111. Each hill '!I'd supply 0011\'"l'• to firer. time the leathernecks beat 1be firti 1upport 1teUon, .iAtter a :Mllle you just batk the atta<:k a n d • cavacnot tald Robb, who forgot "ilo be was married ultimately supplies I o t met Lynda Bird Jobmon to and he W.fS jurt another througb to the men oil Hill wbDe be was assigned to good officer. "I'hat'a the way 65, in<luding Capt. Richard Wblle Houae dufy, "leads a I feel he wants It and tllofs Cavagool of Overland Park. tactically proficient CO\Jl· wn.t he deserves." The story ol India Com· pany." F='::=======; paoy waa forgotten , if ever "'Ibey did a good job of it wu told, until Cavagnol protecting the perimeter recounted it today, more and performed well in ac- tban two moa1:ha later, lien," CavJgnoJ said. "l'v Oav.agnol delCribed Robb, heard his men have bigb. 1 Pi'Miident Johnson'• ll>n·in-regard for bim." law, a.a "a real fine oUicer." Robb' a three rifle platoons "He doesn't try to be and one weapons platoon enytrung special , .. . jult 1bared a makeshift mess trtes to do hi.a job llkt the hall and abowers w i t h rest of u1 . A reel' sharp in· Ca vagnol's artillerymen. <Uvidual." Cavagnol conceded t .h at C a v a g n o l r e turned wt>ea wm1 came to Hill 65 from V 1 e t n & m Uiat tbe infantry company A colorful, fact-filled booll lllloul 11\o 195& PreSidential Otctlcll prOClll, ••• tally sheets for horM ., •Jal watch the R11>ublican ond D,_ltlc - COIWtntiOIS,,,blly_for_ Day ••• ~, flcts, ft-- charts , •. wery family lllaa1d hm DM tfll11lection year. $~ ~ 111 JHr lrtl CIPJ aow wl)Hll obllpUon.• •.o.tuJb, ~ ..... :L MERCU~!!:!!.! •111ou1 otllc" 7112 £dln1tr Ave. HunUniton Stach On Edlnpr, near Be1eh --Ul4 Knot! Avt. Buena Park On Krlott, llllf Uncal1 Tho Ortng• Coast's Mod Complete PRINTING SERVICE -WWW. Phone 642-4321 PRE-CHRISTMAS ' CLEARANCE ALL ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS AND FOLIAGE UNEQUALLED IN BEAUTY AND DISTINCTION. TREMENDOUS SELECTION OF MANY COLORS AND TYPES ••••• WORLD'S FINEST! SAVE SO BEAUTIFULLY MADE 0 ARRANGEMENTS FRUIT TREES Hfte trnll fruit 111 ye•r 1w11 bod )'9'111, PMclles, .,rtceh, ,. .... ,, .... , .............. ,. ...... A TRUE STOCK REDUCTION TO MAKE R 0 0 M FOR OUR SHIPMENTS OF FANTASTIC CHRISTM,AS ORNA· MENTS AND NOVELTIES. .. PICKLE BARRELS MEYER LEMONS WEEPllG WILLOW Economy Plant1rs °""'9IMP119 '" ,.. ..... ..... --.. :::: F~OWER SHOP TRHS .......... lentlhl ..... fl••· 20" trio..-. ,.... ~bl ., , .... '"'...... . SPECIAL .... Melt .,,. .... LMp 7' .. ...... ftriw Hf141 N4 ..,. .. , clen fnlt M ,,... ,..., ,...,......, ...... .......__ r-. ...... , Mixed Bouquet l•eryfilHy .......... cMltrJ 5 (;AL. 31s -· 98~ REG. effMt ............. 2'' 149 S GAL. 31s SIZE 1.75 SIZE REG. 5.95 I Gal Sbo Rog. 5.95 . HOURS: MON. THRl>SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M., SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. • ' J SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, AUGUST 4 2640 Harbor Blvd. 1946" COSTA MESA CALL 54&-5525 • ·• • . • • a SQk&QI Q . £.&a = -.. ---> • • • • Hll-1 DAILY PILOT > ' MEDITATI Ot~ .DRESS · 7 A. Go Eastern in o prelly print meditation d re11 of easy-core 50% Avri l' rayon and 50% cotton blend Button-front, 11ep-ln 1tyle with key- hole neck. long 1l1 e11e1. Blue, red or green print. Petite 1i1es 3 to 11. .• STRIPED KNIT SHIRT I . $a¥• 40%1 Striped cottor'I ltnlt 2.29 votue 1hirt with 1olld color tailor collor 137 an·d ~ow ti• trim, Cool and 11•..,•· le·u . Nary, orange, mint, lurl"'J ois e ' or pink. Si 1•1. S, M, L., WEAR·DATED" SLACKS C. Two-woy Weor·Dot1d• stretch •.tt v•lue 1Jo.ck1 double knit of 100% ny lon 3· 67 by Mon1onto with one year wear guorontee. Tapered leg with stitched crease. Block, brown, lo· den, purple, brick. Si111 8 to 18 . MIN'S MOCK TURTLE NICK SHIRT •.99 value · 277 , Sa\'9 ""%1 Mock ti.rrtl e eek 1tyt1 1hirf ln a fine ;hevette knit blend of ray• -,n and cotton. Striped Oody with aol id color in· HIRRINGBONI SHIFT D. So¥1 2.5% on fa1hio.,'1 newe1t 1.99 volue nehru·ltyl e culotte 1hift. Bonded 677 wool .~lend, beO w.tifully ·tollored , • In 11•"'•1111 1tyl e with fi..,. bl'GM buttol\ clo1lng, Herringbone pat- tern;., brown or grey. Size• I fo 16. BONDID_SKIRT SIT ' I .. SoveJ3%J Bonded 70% oce· 7.tt value tofe and 30% nylen 1port set with Ye1t-blo1.11• effecf, top 1howing 5 .3 7 print-collar and ilee~1. flastlc wai1tbond 1kirt. h1 royal, brow" or grey. Si1118 to 16. .. - -1 FASlllON ~ . ' ' ""'-.. .. . ZIPPERED, SNAP·•RONT COLORFUL COTTON SUMMER SHIFTS Save 37% on th is 1pecial voluel Choose from the bri9hte1t, coolest, moat comfort- able cotton 1hift1 everl Snap·front coatr; A-line tent1, semi a-line 1kimmer1, zipper front and back clo1lng1, collar and collarle11 styles. In 01,1orted pr}nts, !tripes and solid colors. Sires S, M, and l. 2.99 value 87 · ~ 1er1 for the layered-look.I Bli.re, gold or green in si1e1 S, M ond L. -. -. •• . . fi MIN'S NO·IRON .· ~ DRISS SLACKS l!~ ii•' I . Save 33%1 Permanent pre11 1lock1 In Ivy 1tyl 1 Wilh top1red 11im fit. Hand50rne 011.ford _o.,• in royon • ocetofe • nyl on blend. &lock, blue, oli.,. or gr1y. Si1 e1 29 to 31. . GIRL'S OUIL Tiit DUSTER A. SOve 28 %1 Print cc1tote qvllt1d d1.11t1r with J .tt ••lue polye1ter flll for wormth without weight. Lcce 2'' trimmed Peter Pon co llar ond 1l1eve1, Side poc· kit. Do inty fl oral print in prettilllT' po1tel1 of- Jnoi1e, pink ond blv•. Si1e1 .4 to 12. 1 BOY'S KNIT SHIRT!.. I . SaY1 35'41 T1.1rtl1n1ck sh irt in fin e Ch1.,e tt1 knit royon·cotton.blen4 Comfortobl1 1horf sleeve •tyl• .. In n1w bh11, gold or white, Si111 6 to 11. • BOY'S NO·IRON JEANS '·'' ....... Cl Sov• 42%1 Pennon1nt pr111 dreu-up i•ant ln 22J d iogonol. twill of 50% poly11ter-50% cotton to n1 ver need Ironing! Yoke back, pop pock111. 6ron1e, bl"'!• wtli1k1y or loden. Si111 6 to 16. 1 . LITTLI BOY'S SLACK SET D. T.;,o·p<. 1laclt 111 in pemonent pre11 poly1s-2JJ t.r-cotton blend. Short 1letve 1hirt In bright -"'" pla id1 ond ch9Ck1. lh11, gold, oliYe, whit-· key corn binotionL Si111 3 to 7. J.tt va1ti1• . . NORTHllDGI •-&¥11,Af DIYONSHIU BUI BANK SAN .. llANDO II.YD.AT IUllAlll INFANT'I 2·PllCI KNIT PAJAMAS • • HeoyYWeight cotton knlt po jo1no1 for boby'1 warmth and comfort on cool 11igltt1. Gripper wol1t, plo1tic non-1kld 10111. In pi11k, blu e or mo i1e. 51111 1, 2. 3, 4. St0<k up o t this low price. ' llDONDO BUCH HAWTHOlNI ILYD.ATSO.IAYCDITIR CANOGA PAllK TOPAN•A CAllYON 11.¥11.AT ROICOI SHOP & SAVE AT :ZODYS MON. THRU SAT. 10 TO 9 P .M ., SUN. 10 TO 7 ••. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! ~ . ' • ~ \ ' I • .. .1 • • 1 . I \ I -. --"r -r ~ , 88•1 DAILY OILOT Thufsday,. Ap911st 1, lo/,:iS . StiU Planning to Fl9 " • i _,_ • • • • •• •• ., • Oµtstanding Lockheed Te,st ·Pi1~t -H-angs--·Up ·Helmet ~ • • , ' . ' BURBANK (UPI) -Her· man Richard 1'Fish'' Sal- mon, who was encouraged lo l>egln (lying at the age of 14 by his two Sunday available for special flying assignments for the com- pany and other Southern California aircraft firms. aerial circus for SIOO a week for two paractwte jumps, plus $35 a week as a me- chanic and .a five percent comrwssion on passenger ticke1 sales. well to nyµig. The second jet power-in a modified F80 conditions of yes~ear., ridge wit.h his wile, a for- was during a gun-firing test..,. Shooting Star, first to ny ,Salmon said tOOay i..s 'eas· mer, 'a 1 r 1 i n e itewardess. on the Lockheed F'l04 Star-the FIQ4A. Starfighter, first ier:0 -They have four children, fighter. . ~. to fly Lockheed's type of the "We have precise navlga-two J>oys and two girls .. this job long enough. Some· one else deserves i.t now.'' .. ' • achool teachers and contin- ued to become one of Ule coUntry's outstanding .test pilots, hung up his helmet today at Lockheed Aircratt Cm:p. • Prior to joining Lockheed in 194-0 "Fish" worked as a racing pilot, barn'stormer and parachute stunt man. Salmon jolned I),ckheed Navy's experimental vert· tion aids, better aircraft. We The two older children are as a pilot to ferry 1Hudson ical takeoff· and ~landing can finish a series of tests married and. Fish ts the bombers to Englan~ prior fighter, first rught of the in one day -by-telemeter.-pi-oud--grandtattrer-orthree. to th~ United States' entry Lockheed Electra passenger in g data-where it used to~ . NoW wrinkle-browed with into World War' ?I. He soon . transport and Ute first fllgh.t · take rnaybe weeks. We're ·his crewcut hair and mus- How-did this living bit of aviation spend the day be• • fore his reUrement? Par• 111 ties? No1 Flyfng? Yes. . ... "During the depression of the 1930s. I thought I had 1-he key to the mint," Sal- mon recalls. ~-· ~ ~ :ll!I. But re:Urement does not mean the end of flying or testing Cor the 5.>year-old "Fish." Although he no longer will be the full-time chief engineering test pilot for Lockheed, be will still be The Sunday school teach- ers who started his career also owned one of the first flying schools in Salmon's n a t I v e Wisconsin, taught bin,, to fly and he received his first ticket at the age of 16. in 1929. During the 1930s "Fish" worked with a barnstorming -j ---- S i n c e his parachuting days Salmon has used-a 'chute only twice in emer- gencies. The first was early in his career when he was £lying a homemade plane bltilt by a friend that didn't take too BEST graduated into the te'st pilot ·of the P3 Orion anti-subma-more thorough in testing, tacbe showing signs of gray· Thi DAILY PILOT offw• •0 m• field. . rine plane. yet it's more easily accom-ing, Salmon does not look f' the bed f11tur1•, bv •e+u•l Since then Salmon has In recent monQts Salmon plished." forward with pleasure to utv•r 'of 1••cl.•'1r eve ilibl• 111 had many "firsts'' ito .his has made six trips .to Viet-Fish plays as hard as retiring. •11Y 11~w1p•p•t In the nition. credit and no man• has nam to observe flying condi· he works and loves bear , "I'm not ready to quit'--"--------'! Oown more types of1 air·. lions there. hunting in Alaska, fishing ,yet," Fish said. "I don 't 1 Ask Andv', craft. . ~ Asked to compare test in Mexico and flying all feel like it. And I'd raUter His ''firsts" include ,beipg flying today-with the ultra· over the world just fOr fun. fly for Lockheed than any Kids Like to the first man to fly Otn ram· fast planes available -to lle lives in nearby North· • other outfit. But I've held BltOXODINT AUTOMATIC . . · ., . TOOTHBllUSH 19.95 •1-:i lue ,._, I Approved by (..ounc:il a.I Dental Theropeutia of the American Dental A1.ociatlon •Uni.I contaln1 plastic case with wall bracket and 4 bru•h heads • .. MASTIR BY PRIST SMOKILISS ROTIS .. IRI ~5.95 value 18 52' QUANTITIES LIMITED, HURRYI •The flavor of cxitdo cooking with lnd09 cooking convenle ' •Cook a dor:ei;a_burg or o lo.tb, roa1t,, -smoke fr•• I Use 01 a rotluerlti or a broiler I" · ' IJ.yr. unconditional guarantee Hl•INTINSITY LAMP· MIRROR ·FOSTORIA 3•1PEID MIXER WISTINGlliOUSI EYAPORATI PORTABLI FAN PORTABLE, COOLE ' 12.95 4'' -value -. 16"duplex mirror •Glar•f,.e light • Storage com· part'll'lenb • 1 ·y·r; uncondltfottW .• guorantH. MMelUClOI ' 5'4 12.9S value •For beauty treatmenh, focial1 and · general body 8!~i!!1611 !:i!! 184 ·. •Heavy duty two-. speed motor I Revenible for intake or exhou1t •Motor lubricated for life INoredio orTV interference I No instoll~t necessary I Single sp:s motor t3 gallon capacity I Efficient, economical SI BIJYS A FVLL l YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL PARTS&: ALL IABOR ON ANY PORTABLE R~DIO, PHONE OR RADIO.PBONO COMBINATION! LOW PRICIDI FULL llZI GUITAR OllAT fOI THI llGINNlll ,., •White 1pruce top •Reinforced neck tROMwood flnger- boo•d •Mo1t of the feature• of profeuiona l clauic guitars AMAZING LOW PllCll 16 TRA .. SISTOR ENCORE RADIO 10.9 5 :393 valu·e •Big 1ound radio •Complete with occe11arie1 including co1e, earphone and . bottery •Plays anywhere!' M .. elN16 G.E.AM·FM SOLID STATI RADIO fl ,., •91ronlistor101id stole portable radio •.With bottery saver built·lft •1nc'lude1 battery, earphone and carrying thong •Tele1eopic antenna WISTINGHOUSI CLOCK RADIO •Clock radio wokM you to music! t Automatic volume control •Wide range front 1peciker SAVI 10.01 19.95 value 9•3 G.L SOLID STA WALKll TALKIE 2:9• •Solid sfote ci cuitry •48-inch wh ip onten1101 • Operofel on citi 1en1 bon Channel 141 •for fishing trf 1 co11oing,ott r beach, at Disneyland FABULOUS SAVINGS ON ZOBl!S TOl!S & SPORTING GOODS! BOYi' OR GIRLS' 20'' BICYCLI !:i!! ·24•3 •Safety coo1ter bra~e •Deluxe chainguard, pedoh •Chrome plated rims, handlebar •6-i nch training wheels •Boy•' or girls' co nverti ble model DOUGHBOY 8 FT.x20'' •EEP STEIL WALL SWIM POOL CHILD'S AMF TRICYCLE 9.95 value ,,. •Bright plated hec fitting• •Bright plated hubcaps •Steel gothlc fender with white tip trim AMAZING LOW PllCll fAIULOUS IAYINOlf COLIMAN 2 BURNIR COLEMAN .3•LB. DACRON® 17.95 CAMP STOYI ILllPING BAG IAVll 9'x9' SQUAR UMBRILLA TEN 49.9$ value 34'· •Spring loaded ol1o1minvm fro •Sewed in duck floor •lipper 011 door • C•nler ~eight 7 ft;· 5'x7' TROOPI CAMP PUP TEN • ,. • • < > ,,. , • • • ' 17.95 1-0 •• value I. 0•2 •Nylontop,bottom,linin9 2 ,. •Oota<hablo <0oopy 19.95 I · . •All·ataung zipper •Air mattr••s pockets value IY CAMIL 7.95 value 4'' fABULOUS DISCOUNT• •Great fun for the fomilyt •Baked enamel corrugated 1ide1 •Steel rim encircle• entire uni t •Heavy duty vinyl llner fABULOUS SAYINGS! -GYM DANDY 7•PLAY SIT WITH 7' ALUMINUM SLIDE 25.95 value_,, 1984· •Topbor2"tubing _ • 7.foot overall lenglh •Safety sky 1hooter • 2 chinning bars •• • 2·1eot Dura-Kool all plastic Hoh •Ideal for . comping or famil y picnks •21hpinl capacity M..-114'J:J COLEMAN #200 LANT I RN 15.9S 9'4 valu• •Lightweight •Wln cl,,torm and bU,g re1l1tont proof •a to 10 houn of Ilg ht without refllling l •Completely woshoble 28"x72" SIZI CAMPIR' •AIRMATTR .. S PORTABLI JOH • 313 4.95 2' , 5.95 value value • M.ultl-plyvinyl coating • Con..,.nle1tt and •f'beon1 centtNctlon san itary .. •COJ1tpl ... with repoir kitl •Ideal for hunters ond campert TIMILY VALUll ' H-YI SOMI QUANTITIES LIMITID I USI ZODYS NIW, SIMPl.l,llD INST ANT CRIDIT OR YOUR aANKAMIRICAR • UO• & SAVI AT ·ZODYS MON. THRU SAT. IO ·TO 9 P.M., IUfl. 10 TO J , ••• IAlllFACTION OUARANTllDALWAY ' . . , l .. '" • ' " ' • • • . ~ , 27 L • ' _. • • •• •• • ' . ,, • -•• ,..., • • • < I . ' ! ' I i ' ' ' • • ' • ' ' ' ' I k ' ' '. ' . . • • • • • ·------· .. ' T/Tur~c August. l, 1968. Le&al for Religious Rites • • • Peyote No Drli:g in New Mexico BELEN, 'N, M. (UPI) -le&i>~f<lr end aulhor: expartmony types ol cactus The owner of New Mexico's "I have ttle Pe o PI e plants f21; over the world. He only cactus farm does a purctiaslng the peyote sign saia--t he "fascinating'' an affidavit that it i6 for business was -r~ about steady bu.sineH in selling religious purposes. but it's 2 .. ,, wl peyote -a hallucination· just ror my protection. 'Sl0,000-o,~ a year . producing drug v • .-tiich is There's no law requirlnt it. Cowper. a Republican banned in many•c;tates . There's no law requiring it. state legislator from 1955-56, "I'd say we sell about license fur peyote dealers. said the peyote is used in a eittier. Of course, you must wide number of Indian 1,500 or 2,000 heads (but-~·>ve a license 615 a nurser,.. religions, from the Nawjos ; f. tons ) or peyote a year -QPerator to handle plants and o the r southwestern about $500 worth,'' said c:ummerciaUy. tribes to the Osages and New Professional Plaza J Belen attorney Denni s "I import them (peyote others from Oklahoma and ' Cowper. cacti) from San Luis Potosi the Plains .states. Architect's drawing show s $400,000 building to house 1'0 an enclosed mall. Architects are Cross and Vide-"So tong as the peyote is in Mexico and . pess them "Of course there's no law doctors and dentists, slated for opening in December riksen of Huntington Beach and contractor is 0. L . used in rehgiious purposes, it through customs ." saying it can be used only in ln favor of one religiou1 group. Anybody who wont. it /tor religious purposes can get it," the native Briton said . at 20933 Brookhurst St. in Huntington Beach. The Dahl of Long Beach. is legal in New Mexico." Cow·per said he and his certain church services. It ....:t:.:w.:_"'.:_'l:.:o:.;ry:.:b.:_u:.:il:.:di:.:' n"'g:.:w:.:i:.:11:.:h:.:a_ve:_l:.:2:.:s:.:u:.:i l:.:e'::_• :.:•:.:ll _o,_pe_n_in_,g:_oc_n_-------=''""-/ _"'._-_-_--~--' _________ __:':.:"':.:' d:.:C:.:o:.:w.c.pe:.:':.:· •::..:.:fo:.:rm:::.::er:.:•:.:ta:.:te:....__:•::ss::_oci:.:· •::•:.:• •_:H:.:o':.:':.:l _:K:.:":.:':.:"':.:l•::_':_• _:would be illegal to legislate He sraid tile New MexJco Legislature passed a Jaw in. the late 1950s pennitUng use of the ballucinogenlc drug peyute in religi.006 prac· ~es. While it has bee~ declared illegal in many states, tlle Californ ia Supreme Court upheld the Validity of its religious use and a test caee is pending in Texas following the arreat of a Navajo leader in the native American church. • •, B. VERSA TIL. ITRErcH WIGS ' , A. • Reo~y mo~e, yet comforta ble 01 9. 8 7 o cuft'om frt. •Stretch cop fits •~ryon•I · • •In alt the popular 1hode1. ContpaN •Great for ofter 1howen or 1wim1I •t 25.00 100% HUMAN HAIR PONY CURLi I. • EXtr~·beavy curls up to 16-inches long Compare at 9.95 -•·V6t.i~atlt•, J>l'e-cui'lecl, reaely to wear 5 8J •Wear sing!'( to add elegance to the " back of your ~oiffure e 30 shades . •Wear a pair or more for added glamour ••ch HUMAN HAIR EYELASHES , • • • • • • ; • • • • ff• ROGER 1flLLIAMI .NEW LP ALBUM . ' WOMIN'I CANVAI CASUAL IHOll "MORE THAN A MIRACLE" SPECIAL SAVINGS! WOMIN'I & TllNI'.' -, THONG ILIDI IANDAL 3.99 value ·~1000's"'' ... __ ~- OF FABULOUS ___ ,,,,, YALUESI MIN'S CAIUAL OXPORD SHOES 3•1 4.87 value 4.79 value 2'7 147 •Special selection of canvas co1uali O In bloclc. and 011orted colon 244 •White lu1t•r patent 1lide thong aondol •Softwipe 'n wear with the look of leather! •tong wearing, crepe rubber sole A1 ployed by Roger in the motion picture, "Mare Thon a Miracle"! Plu1 other movi• ttt.mes including "The lmpouibl• Dream", "Alfie", ''To Sir With lo'le" and hit aongs Including "'Ode ta Billie Joe" and "Th• Spinning Song". ZODYS RECORD DEPT.I • Extra·ltrength pain reliever •Bottle of •Spray ~•odoront •for •11tra all day prat•cfion SUAVE RINSE OR SHAMPOO 99c1i1e 41C . ea. 9 Egg shampoo. co1t ile shampoo or creme rins e· •16·0l . shatterproof bottle :i~~47c •New 13·orll tonvenie11t "" •For regular, dry or for · · 100 tablets PACQUIN EXTRA DRY FORMULA 1.oos1ze 4 4c •lotion for chopped & 1unburned skin • 10-01. di1pen1er bottle •-4·az. siz• PACKOF50 PICNIC CUPS i.oovalue 49c •Styrofoam hat and cold cups •Pack of $0 110 IAVINGI 100 COUNT LISTIRINI PAPER PLATES TOOTHPAITI 1.00 volue 49c. •Fin'• quality pla1e1 . •9·inch tile ~9• 17c .. ,. bleached hair===::;; •Far whiter teeth, 1weel· er tmilel •large 3V2·01 tize. • Safe! taRe the plunge with our 11all·sport" SURFER·. WATCH A Wi\th th1t !elli the second and hour , .. pressu1e le$led. Swiis mf4.e with s!ainlesi sletl Ntk , .. unbreaklb1e mtinsprinl . , ,'J!fd lumlnous so )'OU c1n timt your 1rrival 1! the se1-b!d! • l.1111p111at 12.15 887 USE YOUR CR£DIT OF FINEST OU4LITY PROFESS IONAL TYPE 7 x 35 PRISMATIC BINOCULAR~ 1487 "·" . ¥Al.UL ·• Severol 1tyle1 ava ilable •Siz•15 to 10 0 Padded lnsQ!e for M1mmer walking comfort •Made in U.S.A . . ,,,.,, ··t.··~====~~~ A •Comfortable trlcot lining 0 Spanish mo11 color. •Sizes 7to 12 4.17 287 30 GALLON TRASH CAN AND COVIR value ' •Comfortobl• new chai1• laung• pod, cotton filredl fiAvil L!Ll GALLON PLUS POLY PITCHER •Giant 1erver, bigger than a gollonl •Graduated quart mark.1 •Sllde 'seal pour •pout ~ 'DRIVIWAY ' COATING 4.91value 2 87 5 GALLONS •Heavy duty driveway coating f Pralarrgs life of driveway 1urfoce WINDSOR CASTLE MARMALADES 49c values 29.C IA. •6·aunce jon 1,...,,-.-., • I rnport1d from 5'otland •Scotch or 1hr1tdd1d IPONGI MOP & HANDLI 1.41 ·value 97c •Excl uiive off1et handle can't pinch fingers! STllL HANDTRUCl(l ~.19 volue 187 • •New "U" frame can· slruction •Fih mot! 1i1e gor• bage co nt •tdeol far moving fur n• ltvr• tao RllSl PANCY ~TU.FFED OLIVES 83c 59c valu• . •6·aunce ior •Stuffed with tender·choic e pimentos •Make1 every martin• bitter •A treat at ony m•ol 3.17 247 value • 30 gallon •Sturdy gofYGnirtd 1tM,I • Leakpraof and rvst·pra'af PLASTIC ICI CUBITRAYS 39cvaluH 17C •BuyMYtral c t thl1 \'ae~ 1owpr1c.1 1 •Handy Pop-up •tyl• PATIO BUTT BUCK IT 3.87 volue I' 7 •Deluxe wrought iron tan1truc· ti an •Decorator leg• •Safe depo1it cigarettes around the patio or pool! RllSIS FANCY KOSHIR DILL 69c PICKLES \'alue 49c PULL QUA.It, :12~oz. JAR •Save 20c •A deliciou• treat • •New pack •A tremendo1,11 va lue ~ICHANICS AUTO ADDITIVES 1.00 value1 choice · your 19C ~i;"ifJ~·' IA. t: •ANTI RUST r•tards ru1t, 12 or, con ' •STOP lEAK preven11 and .tops radiator l•ak1, 12 or.con •FAST FLUSH liquld radiator clean•r, Pint con. PMMOTOROIL •20 or 30 55c value weight ' Ofomo"' Delo 2 'C brand RPM tnotar eil t •Stock up now I 11 ' S GALLON ITllL GAi C:AN i.91 value 4 87 • Heory duty Arrny atyle •Deluxe red enamel OJeep ... Con •Use for any liq uid JOHNSON l WAX KIT 8 2.27,,C :value . -~ • Cor wa with applicator IPICI ISLANDS Compore IAUCI MIXll at 2Sc INCRIDllLY LOW PRICIDI AND RICE SEASONINGS FOIL;APPID 11~. RICE SEASONINGS: •Beef .• Spq,nialt •Chicken •Herb •Curry Orange •A re f'I favorite( •A,ri O\lfllandln g \ flavor ' GOIJR/lfEI' f'OODS UEl'T. IN ALLZODYS STOR ES SAUCE MIXES1· •Holla"daitt •Sour Crtcim •Cheet• MARINAOE1 • Meat .Tenderit~r . ANAHllM·BUINA PARK ANAHEIM·PULLIRTON WEST COVINA NORTllRIDGE REDONDO BIACH . -llACH-11.n. I · UllCOl.lt OlAliciitHOIPI AT 1.iMOIC LONG BIACA LOS COTOIU,Sl'llNG AND WDODIUFf HUNTINGTON BIACH . · .ell.DIN WIST I IDINea • • ... "' -. .. AZUSA AYL Af'1UINll GARDEN GROVI CHAPMAN lo llDOKHUll1 . ' USlllA II.VD. AT DIVONIHIU HA.WTHOln 11.VD.ATSO.IATCllll'lll BURBANK SAii NiNANDO II.VD.AT IUllANIC CANOGA PARK TorANGA CAHTON II.VD. AT IOICOI ..r I I " • • I < • • :· I -------"'""'---~-.. ----.... --1 __ _ • I If I FAITHFUL AS ••• • \ Okay, so it's corny. But it's also true, the DAILY PILOT is as faithful to its r&oders as this famous old geyser is t0 the hundreds of thousands of tourists who trek from across the nation to see it each year. There's something else to keep in mind this summer while you're en vocation -wheth...- you go to Yellowstone Notional Pork to see Old Faithful or not -the DAILY PILOT doesn't toke o vacation. We'll still be here keeping public issues "hot" afld provid- • ' I I ' ing the best way yet invented for folks1to let off steam - -communication. We communicate with readers and poli. ticions; they communicate with us. The result is o ve~itoble "geyser" of information. You think about that and about where you 're going to find out most about loco! school•, lo- cal sports and local politics when you get back from v'aca- tion next fall. When you do get bock, ''Old' Faithful" will be here waiting for you. • ,. • ' . ---- ·------h -~' ----~~~~~·;.:·_.;_..__ ____ ..... _______________ ............ _________ _ 1 j I ------.... ---~,---------------.... ---------------.-.,.._,,...,.,.,.,""""""""O"~--.,----.,--.. ~. -----· • • . . 1Wandering Ends at Ill HeKneUi Wild West" FERNDALE (UP!) -Sam T. Kelsey, who c:aroe to Calilornla when lt was still the Wild Weit and wu a small boy when Preli· dent Uncoln wu aasass.l.nated, was buried to- day after a lifetime of wandering. Kelley, only three months stiort of the age .. of 112 wh~n he died Monda,y night, wu 1ald to be the olde1t Californian on the Social Security rolll. It was easy, he once said: "All you have to do 1J keep on living.". Kelley wu born on Oct. 26, 1856, in Vir· gl.nia's James River Valley and was orphan- ed at the age of 11. He started West -but he w11s 22J;ielore-he arrived in San Francisco. Along the way, he herded cattle in Kansas .~ along the old Chisholm Trail, drove stage- ., coaches, and helped rescue a white girl from a band of Indians at Wagon Wheel, Kan. But he didn't stay in San.Francisco loni. He headed north and worked as a mule&kln· n~r on construction of the Oregon Short Line and later wocked at a lumbermill He mar· ried in 1884, seUled in Humboldt County and began to raise a family. At the age.of 57, in 1913, be went wander· ing again and for the next 10 years mined in Alaska and the Philippines and bec&me a game hunter: · Kelsey retired in 1943 at the age of rt, but three years later was seized once more by wanderlust. He built a camping truck and ""-'ent on a 10.~mile tour. At 109, Kelsey was still mentally alert, and could read a newspape rs without gtaases. Ufll T.-hm SAM KELSEY AT END OF TRAIL. ••aw Bill to Up Imitation Milk Prices SACRAMENTO (AP) - Howewives .in California probably will find themselve! paying more for popular imitation milk pro- ducts under dairy·&pOMOl'ed legislat.i"on on ttie v~rge of final approval · by lawmakers today. Only Assembly approval of Senate changes in the measure barred its way from Gov. Reagan'1 desk . A 27-4 vote stamp ed Senate approval of the biiJ Wednesday, and both sup· porters and opponents agreed some rise in prices for such products is in- evitable if the law is enacted. Basically, ·the bill by Assemblyman Alan G. Pat· tee (R·Salinaa), brings pro- ducts wbCch are not made comp!etely from cow's milk under the same s t a t e regulation and control •• e•rm,.rze State S&L Chief Hi11-ts 10% Loan Rates Due LOS ANGELES (UPI) -cent, State Savings and ca.J.ifornia home buyers may Loan Commissioner Preston face the prospect o( paying Martin said \Ve<lnesday. mortgage Interest rates as He said witltdrawal of high as nine or even 10 per· eastern money from savings and loan finns in California • 'is confronting Ute building Signal Buys industry here with •. pole•- ~ tial Shortage of capital. Radi·o Stock M"tin avoided a r 1 a t predk:tion of a rise to nine HOU. YWOOD (UPI) - Signal Companies, Inc. has -re'ached agreement with Golden West Broadcasters to purchase a 49.9 percent interest from m i n o r l t y stodtholden for $25 million . Ferm.er wettern movie star Gene Autry will retain control of GWB as long a1 he lives, under the agree- ment. "nli! .iilcludes GWB interests in radio, television, th~ , California Angels and ~~ corporations. ., or 10 percent in mortgage interest here, but said it is a possibility u n l e s s Ute outllow of money is revers- ed. For the time bei11g, tie said, interest rates probably will. rem.a.in at their present levels of 7~ to 7¥.a perc~t. Martir\ said saving and loari institutions in th East now are matohing t2le in· terest rates ofiered by their California competitors. In the past, California thrift in- stitutions have o f f e r e d premium rates. Granny,-3 Small Boys Die in Fire HAYWARD (AP) -Spill· ed gasoline lgirited from a water heater Wednesday, causing an explosion which fstally burned tllree little boys and their grandmother who tried to save them. Their mothers and an uncle escaped with minor burns. Russell and Randy Helton, aged 2 and 3, died Lm· mediately in the garage cf their grandmother, Mrs . Frances Fearing, 53. Their cousin, Daniel Feu- ing, 18 inonths, d led Wednesday night at St. Francis Memorial Hospital in San Franclsco, and the -grandmother died t h e r e about midnight. Their mothers, Mrs, Linda Hi!lton, 21, and Mrs. Jud ith Fearing, 181 and their uncle , Brent Fearing, 16, were less severely burned and were relet<Sed after treatment at St. Rose HO&pital here. Fire Chief Matthew Jim.inei said he found two uncapped five-gallon 1 gasoline cans in the burned out garage. He said it ap- peared Ule grandmother was in the adjacent kitchen when the\ exp lo Ison t o o k ptace, grabbed the Fearing ioflplt, and tried to go through the garage to a:et the two liltle boys. Jiminez said a bystander, Gary Cose, 18, saw Mrs. Fearing r u n from t h e garage carrying the baby, their clothing on fire, and ('()llapse on the lawn, Cose pulltd a bedspread from a clothesline Md smothered the flames. No U.N.Day For State SAN FRANCI SCO (UPI) -A United N a ti on s Association official today urged Gov. Ronald Reagan to reconsider his refusal to issue a proclamation for U .N. Day in Oalilornia. Urban \Vhitaker, a member of the association's national board and a San Francisco State College pro· fessor, termed Reagan's decision • ' a tremendous political mistake ." ~hli.w.,, A"""l I. 1968 DAil V PILOT. SUMMER Barbecues WEBER KETTLE BARBECUES start where others leave oHI WEiii K•ttl•s cook with reflected heet to combin• the •conomy of 1n oven with the 1e1t of • barb1cu1. EXCLUSIVE WEl!R cover •n1ble1 food to cook i" its own juice ••. Stay fl1vorful, juicy ind tinder ev•n wh.en "well done," UNIQUl DAMPER system controls h•1t to s.uit · you • , , 8rin91 out the m1tchle11 flavor of the finest cuts , , • Even less ex- pensive m ..... are tr1n1form•d into gour .. '!'l•t do/ights. CARIBBEAN h4. ......... Cllpplf llfflllM ,.,... .... flAbll. Al1f111111f!I ... clf'CW, ""'N ftmlres. UttUty dteff. Wlltt.w.11. rM1Mr ttr.4 wWla. JJf..-" trfll dlolllltlf, 29" Mlglll. Water Heaters REPUBLIC "GEMINI" 30 GAL. $44.88 40 GAL. $49.88 50 GAL $64.88 "TITAN" 30 GAL . $6<1.88 40 GAL. 72.88 INSTAUATION AYAIU.IL.1 SALE • -- WEIER Smokey-Joe 131h:" 01 •• GRl~L BLACK s151s WEBER ACCESSORIES FIRE U.OWER .......,o,.......$549 11111• Hot PINS --KEnLE CO~YER '°' s411a fAMILY MODIL CORN 'N TATOR GRILL . GRILL s495 SHISH KABOB SET . s109s SICIWll MODEL GARBAGE DISPOSALS WAS'l'.E KING llODIL NO. 2700 SJ 19" II•. S4t.95 :J 9Ul PRICE , .•••••• , ,,,, ••• llODIL NO. IOOO ~4195 •••• $59.95 ~ OUI PllCI .: •••...•••. ; .•• IN-SINK-ERA TOR MOHL NO.'"· SJ195 llti. SS9.95 OUl PllCE •••. , ,, ,, ,, ••••• "'ODIL NO. 77, $5495 IEG. $79.95 OUR PRICE ••• , ..••••.•.••• Thl1 qu1lllY tuar•ntM<d .i... lln-6 w•fiir hellff Is e<!UIPped wllh Uh!!y !ltmll. 11 ._ilr..S bv llw. Wt Mv. Mme dlJ' IMll l· lltlon IV .. 11~, II )'OU whoh. A.11 norrNI I~ 1t1ll1!lon P&l1$ 1nc1Udld. C1ll by NOOft - lnsl1ll th-' NV. Atoa -VffCY' IMlllllllOl'I I Vllleblt. All -w .,.... bv INlllw Plumbers. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE ...;;~i"E~r··· .. :-__...,........:.,._±.;:..;._,,_, .... -· ,,..,.. . ..... -~ .. --~:l\"IO'l!-..,,.;:.,<o:' .......... --... ~.~--. ~.~.J' .,,.. "-iii'•. -, • . ,. • • · · • .. · ···--~···· -.· ·r·.o-,.-..., •• , • T • \ " SINCE 1929 WHITE FRON I CHARGl IT • IAlllUllllCAlli • Wiim flOllT • MASTll CllAlll CllDIT CAIDS -..... i t ~. E~cept1onally fine sofa styled . with three reversible cushions ~f the back, and-three reversi- b ~!seat cushions. Decorative s .a . casters on legs. Ma ni- ficently upholstered. 9 COMPARE AT 249.99 JUST ONE OF DOZENS A.T INCREDIBLE SAVINGS' SO HURRY QOWN AND SAVE NOW! .• S·PIECE · MAPLE BEDROOM GROUP ' Wor1n·t•n•d rn•plo bed'l'90nt f'OUlf fe•• hir•• twin 9ffull 1!1M lted, two nisiht stonch. drnHr baw •Ml mir- ror. All ot on. low pri<el FAMOUS QUALITY MATIRESSES OR BOX SPRINGS Ockk Iii~ In TWIN 0" KING SIZES dairllblt 1il•L FULL SIZES $88 M.,,., whn he· $24 '°"' ..... ..,~. Hi9h q111li1v WOfk • m.t•ill. £A. P'C. SOLID MAPLE OCCASIONAL TABLES Your choice of cocktail ti~ I•, step t.lblu, round limp • squaro lamp tibia in 1 Sllem maple ti~ith. · 88 l FULL SIZE SLEEPER·SOFA CoM111Jtd doubf• bid. ld11f for overnight .,..u. Carllfr.._...,,,I up- holswy 11 tiuilttd fOf "''" m«• luxurioo.11 •ting. $158 All 5 PIECES ' REG. 29.95 EA. EA. CHARMING CRICKET ROCKER • Ou1lntlv lltyled rod<w In popultr provbicill style. Solid Nrdwood fr1m1, covtred in 1 coJol'ful print. s22 34.95 - VALUE 3088 BRISTOL AVENUE * STORE HOURS * SHOP DAILY 12 TO 9 SAT. 10 TO 9 SUN. 11 TO 7 JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD. BETWEEN S.D. FWY. & BAKER ST. .• f • , I I' ,, I \ ) I - l l \ I ' • 26-d~ Benrlng Teache r-Firing lnSA Upheld SANTA ANA -Firing of, a Santa Ana Mexican- American teacher w a s upheld · Wednesday o-n e ' month after the end of a rel.'Ord 26-day hearing dur· ing which she was charged with insubordination. P. J. Doyle of the State Office' of Administrative Piocedu.re -who presided over the marathon hearing which. ended in June also said charges by M r s. Ysaura Romo of discrimina- tion were without foun · dation. Z • Ch Doyle's report upheld con-onu1g ange tentions or ·the Santa An:i W .-' Unified School District that ins A pprpval Mrs. Romo failed to }>rompt-·SANTA ANA _ A zon.ilig In Safe Bands • T"•elve-year-old Art Torres, o! Santa Ana, gets a helping hand Crom BaJboa resident Marj Carver as he gets used tO water in Newport Harbor. Mrs. Carver is a volunteer water safety instructor wilh Red Cross and works with minority race students brought to the bay as part of summer "War on Poverty"· pro- gram. Jy implement directives change in Cap i. s tr an 0 from supervisory personnel, Highlands made . by the \ exercised poor judgment in Orllflge -County JJ,oard :of j relationship with o t h e r SuperviSors bas removed teachers, failed to develop the possibility tpat resideiit~ Convention Center Plan Given Okay ANAHEl!\1 -Cit}.'. coun- cilmen have unanimously approved an agreement for a nationwade campaign to increase use of the Anaheim ConventJon Center and pro· vide specialized services to o r g a n i z a t i on s and in- dividuals renting the facili· ty. 'I'he agreement, w i th George Colouris Produc· tions, calls for an outlay of nearly $92,000 over the next 11 ' months for general pro· n1otion of the $15 million center \\'hich opened in 1967. The progra1n \vii\ run through fiscal 1968-69. Colouris Productions will recejv~ slightly m ore than $18,oOO for creating and directional promotional and advertising activities. DEATH NOTICES BAL'l'll MORTUARIES Corona del ~1ar OR 3-945ft Costa flfesa 1\11 6-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Flood Control Work Approved by County organizatlonal skills i n on La Paz Road will ha'v<' lesson presentation and fail· the view .from their homes ed to use proper teaching blocked by a proposed shop- techniques. ping center. The ad min i stration The zoning change places emphasized that Mrs. Romo the shopping center ·on a bill had persisted in these acts at the corner of La Paz and after repeated w a r n i n g s Mackenzie Streets. The new from Principal T h o m a s site faces as y e t un· SANTA ANA -Authority to proceed with planning and execution of $5.1 million in flood control projects was 1_La_g_ano __ •_f_Fr~ee_m_on_t_Sc_h_oo_L __ d_e_ve_J_oped'--Jand--. ---- approved by Orange County Supervisors this wt!k. Flood Cootr01 D i s t r i c t Pollutl• On engineer H. tr. Osborne said the 29 projects could be bet· ter expedited by blanket ap- TI'l•O G1"ven ; proval at this time. ·Au pCO· jects are included in tile 1968-69 county budget. _ P R • Two Orange Coast pro-ay a1se jects were included; the \Vestn1inster Ch a Tl n e·1 . SANTA ANA -The three $50,000 and the \Vestcliff menil)ers of Orange Coun-Storm Drain .in 'Newport iy's Air Pollution liearing Beach. $100,000. The la tter Board -yet to be named by two will be done in coopera- county s up er visors -lion wllh the cities involved. already have received a pay Right of way acquisitions I raise, from zero to $25 per only included the Huntington meeting. Beach Channel, $150,000 ~nd It's unlikely anyone will th e Barranca Cb a n n e J, I get rich in the job, however. $70,000. · 0 OMEGA ServiceCenter Your Sales and • DIAMOND SPECIALISTS e REMOUNTING' & DESIGNING Complete Gift Department 90 Day Accounts -No Carrying Charge Bankamericard or Take a Year To Pay Now 2 GNGt Stom Tt Sffl.• To11 HAllOI SHOPPING HUNTINGTON CENTER Cl!NTEI IEACH Ii EDINGER 2100 HARIOI ILVD. HUNTINGTON IEAC:H COSTA MESA -545.-9415 lf2-5501 ~ Opff Men., ftM'Lo Fri. TII f p .... County supervisors, in ap-Biggest single project is proving pay for the services the Placentia Storm Channel of hearing board members. at $435,000. Others: Narco limited the coi'npensation to Channel, $350,000; State Col- 25 meetings per year, or lege Storm Drain, $260,000 ; $625 annually. Ne11•hope Storm Channel. The three-man board. if -$4-0~~,000~;~a~n~d~~S~an~t~a~An~a~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~== and when it is awointed, River Ohannel, $55,000. wiU hear complaints on alleged violations of tlle county's anti-smog ordinance. County Corn Fiesta Set LA HABRA -More Ulan 40,000 people will attend the annual C-Om Festival and Parade Aug. 3, according to Lee Rivera, president of the Lions Club here. The festival. sponsored by the Lions, will include the 20th annual parade at 10:30 a.m. and a horse show at 8:30 p.m. The weekend's events will open Friday at 6 p.m. in El Centro Park where there \\'ill be carnival r i d e s , games. refreshments .and entertainment. A 1968 Thunderbird will be the first prize in the C o r n Festival's list of prizes to be awarded Saturday. .~----- .- •, ' .. ·. 110 Broadway, Costa 111es1 ll.-- Ll 8-3433 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetez:y e fltortuary Chapel 3SOO Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, CalUorula 644-!700 PEEK FMULY COWNIAL FUNERAL • lIOME' 7801 iftl1@ Ave. Wc1tmln1ter 893-35%5 SMim'S MORTUARY 627 Main St. Ountlngton Beacb LE M539 WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17~ SL, Costa ~le11 ··- LET'S BE' FRIEMDLY Huntinaton Beach Visitor 642-6014 Costa Mesa Visitor 642-6014 So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 Harbor Visitor 644-0133 U you have new neighbors or know cf anyone moving 1 to our area, please tell us so that we may extend a Criendl1 welcome and help them to become acquainted in their new surraundtngs. Complete Printin9 .Ser~ice Top Quality -Fast Service .,,,., .. ,, 642-4321 --< 2211 Wott Bilbo. Blvd. N.-.port Bu<h ,._ .......... --· ' Saving $100 a month can bring you back $100 a month in extra earnings sooner than you think. In fourteen years, at Laguna Federal Savings' high current rate, your savings account begins to return $100 in additional income, month after month. This additional income goes on, Whether or-n6t you add any more savings to your account and it does not reduce your p(incipal and dividends accrued through the fourteen yeo.rs. During this period of $100-a-month savings, you have actually .inYcstod $16,800 or your own jncomc, but your savings have grown to $24,022.07, at lhe cwrent dividend rate of 5 %1 For more details on a second income-via many savings plans- come in to Laguna Federal Savings today. \Vhett you save dots make a difference. lAQVN A N1GU[l llllANCH 3 M~l•'l'Pl•r• SOllth ~11111. Cllllomla 92411 l',0, IOJ1•81-T~411·1 201 ANO LOAN AS90CtATION HOMI. O,,,ICI 2900-A-lli!llM IMdl, c.!llcmli 121~2 ,,O.,iox 1CM7-Ttittlll0nt 4'4-1541 • .. SAM ClEMEHlt llllANCH 901 N. fl C•llllno lllMI St11 ~ c.tlfofnlt 12172 r.o. aox u1-r•p11on4 412·1111 -, -------- • Frlgldeire ~pliMces sawi 'yow 'witt liiMe; workal'ld.troul}le ! ii And our Wife·Saver·Sale will Sl\'e you mooey-if yo,;u buy ~··Fttny_:limjted q~ntitles at these low, low prices! Frost Proof Frigidaire SIDE-BY-SIDE SPACE SAVER! '· _WITH 198 LB. SIZE VERTICAL FREEZER! e You'll n•v•r dtf•o1t •9ainl e Flip·Quick Jc1 Ei•cto, fr111 cub•1 in1ltnlly! e 21.8 lb. 1i11 full width Mt1t Tend•r! e 17.S qi. 1i11 full width Hyd,ttor! e Door Stor1191 for •991, b11tl1r, 1111ck1 WIFE $388 ~:,~~-.. ASK ABOUJ QUR • • BUDGET PRICED JET ACTION WASHER e Hts DPC for no-iron ftbric1 e Jtt Actio11 Agittlorl e 2 Jtt-t w1y rin1•1 I e Cold w1t1r wt1li 1•ttin9! MATCHING DURABLE PRESS CARE DRYER e 2 Cycl• Tilntr-Stl•ch •x•cl drying tim•! e No stoop lint 1tr••n!. e Durtbl• Pr111 C•r•I . for built-in Convenience! GETS DISHES & GLASSWARE SPARKLING CLEAN! e 2 W11li Cyc:l11 e Sup•r Surg• Wt1hin9 Aclionl e No hand rin,int r•qui•adl e 011itt Opar1tion e I 5 T •ill. S1ttin11 f AHAM I WIFE $148 SAVER SPECIAL ••• SERVING THE HARBOR . AREA SINCE 19471 011r flnt of Neffe tll.,etc.""'4 Mn"lca ~ .... Y..•r 91111('9_. ef pRfflpt, *'""•bit .. me. br fKt9ry t..tH4 ..Utilc~ll't. s.rftc'e. ,.._ -541•)4J7. TELEVISION •APPLIANCES 411 East 17t~ St .• Costa Mesa Daily 9.9 -~rday 9·6 646°1684 INTEGRITY AND DEPENDABILITY SINCE 19~7 ; •· • ' • I ' ' ' ' t ' ! ' ' r ! f ' ' ' • ' ' ' I • ! • • • I • ! • ' -. t<Jfe's not _Jlwa.ys 'all business'-50metimes he's 'monkey business' •• ," For the Record .[ .· '·""-====-m:=--z:i-----1 Meetings THUIUOAY Mv<1tlngl1111 lleacll Lion• Club, S1>eralo<1 8e.ocll I""' Hunll"9ton 8tad'i. 6:311 D m. G111d (o.t$1 Shrl~ Club. mPeh v•rl<>1r.1 pi.c6. contatl Jud9• Wm. (llrllltnHn, ,S.13.5.5(11, •:30 P.m. M•-IC Lodlle. IOOF MI I 1 , westmlntl•r AY9 .• w ... 1m1,,,..ttr 1:30 p.m. COflt! Camera Club. ~e.:re1ll0t0 81c19., 171• w. Balboa fllvd, N"'"°"' Beech, 1;30 p.m. Pacific Co>lat Archaeology So.:letv, Bowe.,, Mu:1eum. $anla ....,,., 1:311 1>.m. Orange Coasl Royal Mason•, Seafaring Ma,.,lnc Temple, 1'01 15th Sl•ttl, NewPO rt 8eacll, 7:30 P.m. Harbor 1re1 To.stm11t1r Club, M"" Verde Counlrv Club, COl11 Me,.., 1:30 p.m. NtWPOrt Hartlor l!:l~s Club, flkt Lodve, 3'.54 V\I 0POf'fO. Newpgrt IHKh, 1:00 P.m. Am1rTc1n L111lon Po•t •SS, A.,,erlcan Leolon Hill, 565 w, 18th $1•~!, Cos!• Mei.a. l :DO p,m, Amerlcen Lei.Ion PC1t Ill cf Hun· 1111111011 Beecl'I, Ame•lcen Lei.ion Hall. Civic C&nh!r, Hun!lnglon Be1cl! 1:00 p.m. Hunllnttton lleedi Junior Chamber cf Commerce, $1\erllon lltach Inn, Hun· 111111ton lleecl'I, I P.m. Hun!lntton ~•ch Barracks 'No. 13611. v eter1n1 cf World W1r I V.F.W. Hell, 319 Yorktown Ave .. Hun!11111ton !leach, 1:30 P.m. IMiOlllc Golden Harbor Wl'lll• Shr1M No. f9, IMM1nlt Ttmo\e, UCl U!,, Str"t, New-1 Bt•<"• l;al.,i.m. U.S. N1v11 Sea Cadet COf"PS.'-,;~J. 81r-I r1nc:1 Road, 5t11t1 AM, 7 o.m. · Fountain Vt llorv Klw1nl1 Club. Fr~,._ <;Git", JIU! llNtl! lltvd., Hunll1111lon Betd'I, 11:1~ P.m. Hunfl"91on lltKl'I Norlll l ions Clul>, --••rk CounITT Club. 16n2 Grtl\em, Hu11tl1111ton lleld'I, 1 p.m. F•IDAY Hunt11111ton 811ch 11.olarv C I u b, Sl'le•~lon 8ttcl! Inn, Huntln9ron Beach, •I Ii " .. , \5 11:10 p.m. M1r!1>tl'1 Lkm. CIUb, stun 1111rt. n~1 W. Coaot Hl91!w1y, Ne"""611 8t1<h. 11:15 p.m. ' Births LDNG •EACH COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Juty 16 Mr. 1"11 M ... Edw.lrd P. l1Y1lle, 17'11 Oak 51 .. F01111tlllnV111er. t lrl. J11" 1• Mr. 1NI Mrs. v ... non L. "1¥11111, 6012 Mal!a!IOllY AYI .. WeslmlNt.f", boY Jul"t n Mr. '"" Mrs. Ptul A. 11.tllly, W!tl .kill W1v. W1!$lml..s!tr, 111rl HOAG MEMO•tAL HO$l'ITAl. J11/r IS Mr. and Mrs. I r.Id Wtbber, JOe.I Moun· llln View Drive, L-VUM 8t1cll, bey ST. JOSfl'H HOSPITAL Ju/r 11 Mr, •Nii Mri. T1d11hl !lllftVI, 1~592 Bowll"9 Grttn St .. w11tmln1ter, 11r1 Jutv 1S Mr. Ind Mro. Don.aid Mlndfrotl!e!d, ffS Min ion Drive, ADI. 2, Coste MHt "" Jutv ll Mr. 1nd Mt1. J•v W. M1rtl", lll71 Dl'fmpU1, W11t!mln11t'r, be1 Fire Calls ~Wftt•lll Val!W ''"' 0.111. Wednndly, rncue, f1M L• C111!1 6:S6 P.m., rHC:ue, 8u1h1rd south ef Talbert +twllllfttMll ... di 12:'2 o.m, Wedntidav, 1rau tlrt, Mun!111911111 AVtlll.le ..... Cl•v 1:1'0 11.m .. tll lllk, 21l Jrd II. •:21 "·"'"' 1tnl(tvr1 tlrt. J11 17ttl 51. 6:5' D.111., tin LnVC1fit1ll011, 1(11SI Yo..t.r....n Ave. •:3' 1.m. Tl'lu,...•v. oil le1k, w11..vt 1"11 Ollv1 D111 1tlh SITMI 7:S2 1.m., 1mokl1111 oll wetl, 2nd Street .Ind W1l11UI w ... tm1 .. 11 ... •:!-' I.I'll. Wednesday, 1tnlk1 ,,..,_...., Hon. 15'12 v ...... 11111 11:711 11.m .. uni*• ln¥e1!'9atlon, H• Wr nartl! pf 8olu l:!J P.I)> .. ••1CU1, 1500 lead! 8 hld, l :ll 11.m .. 1tructur. l!rt, nn G1rden GrOYe Slvd, l;U 1.m. Tl!ursd•v. Ur fire. 8t1cll 80<.Jlev1rd •ml Westmlnlltr Ave.,.,. Ntwt>Orl S11cll 9,21 1.m. WednKd1v. 11,. lnvetllll · lion, 2612 W. COl•I Hl~hWIV J:J9 P.m., service call, UolO V11 ""'"' l :!J o.m., service call. 2621 A!l1 Vllll Drive 11:li! 1.m. Tl'lu•ut1v. 1r1lh tire, 2110 w. Ocetn Ave. 1:22 1.m .. 1ervlc:t c1\1, 1'30 leewtnl '·~ l :U 1.m., cir llrt. 111 21111 SI. C•I• Mftt 11 :10 1.m. Wednfl'l•Y· rHCUI , 11'' G~!el Ttrrtce Pil.Ot Visitors how thriltY are you when you borrow money _ . ' • . Southern Californi~ Thrift & loan specializes In personal, business and Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme- diate money problems 1rom depend- able funds available right now. The Thrifty way can save you money • SO~THERN CALIFO_RNIA THRIFT & LOAN I 70 £1st 17tl'I St.. Cost1 Mes• ••••• 646·5045 6359 WJ11hlr1 Blvd., Los An11111 •• , 6"-8220 • ·-------' ~-----~-'· --~ . • " , • I .. ., .. , -' L. • • . . ' • ',' I. ' .. - • •.• Once-a-year sale 911 every '68 Chevrolet· in _stock t r. , \ • • I I • ... ~ ·1 ·I l r ' • • .. 1 \ --.. -.• ...... . -' ... . . . . . . . . . . .. ' OAllY°Pn.OT • ---L-~-------·----··-·-------·----·---. one affr -G~Uig ' Long Beach Gives ~ ay to Queen Mary LONG BEACH . (APJ - TM Cy< lode Racer, a S 04Jthern Calirornia landmark proclaimed by It.I ownen u the world's greatest ride. has a date with destruction by sum- , mer's end. Regarded in LOng Beach as the largest, steepest and speediest roller coaster ln existence, tile coaster will be torn down lo make way !dr a shoreline roadway to ' newer attraction in the arta -the Queen Mary -being convrrted to a museum-con· vention center. And When the Cyclone Racer goes, then wlU be no replarly running co.wters In the Loi Angeles area. ln Callfornla, coasters will re· main regularly scheduled only at San Diego, Santa Cru and San franl:i>co. _ ''We riallu the great amount of emotion attached to the racer," says Dr. Frank StaDtort Jr., president of Long Beach Amusement Co., operatorJ of the Nu· Pike amusement ctnter. "But a move to retain tbe Cyclone Racer at its present slte t.iould be contrary to the progress of o u r com - munity," he adds. I See by Today's Want Ads Last year, 610,()Cl) persons took the plummeting dips ot the coaster and amusement park officials estimate mort than 2S million persons havt ridden tM Cyclone Raei!1 slnce it operied, in 1930. The racer is a double track co.aster. It bas four trains and can handle 1,600 peraons &n hour. tta: ~ginning) were In the Oreg<,D forest.I during the winfer of 19'29. More than l million board "' feet of lumber was 1hlpped to Portland, Ore., a n d floated down the coast to Long Beach. Until then, the L o n I Beach amusement park was called the Pike and had operated only a small roller coost.er, the "Jack Rabbit," since 1914. ,...,..__,, .. MR.MUM Airport Study Fuml,s OK'd The U. S. Department of The federal share will be Local eontrlbutklns will be Ho u s i n g and Urban two-thirds or $466,668 with supplemented by state tund s Development has awarded the balance being contribut· if · AB 1166, now before the ed by local age-M•• se1U1'·, Is pissed. an initial grant of *233.334 to 1--:====='~=~=· =====~'======:-the Southern CaWornla Association of Governinenta I SCAG) to assist in the preparation of a regional airport system plan. The study will result In a plan of development for a system of airports to serve ~ commercial. general, and military aviation needs in· eluding the movement of all passenger s and com. modities within the ten. county Southern California area for the year 1985. The study plan will com· pare the effectiveness of alternative airport systems and their social a n d economic impact on the communities within the . region • · The two-year study wiU cost an estimated $700,00J. • • Thal a "Mary Poppins" type Babylitter is needed f~ a 1 year ok1 girl in CotoM deJ Mar vk:in.ity. • An Apeco Qipier (dial-a- copy) with metal roll· away stand h tor sa.le. Great for the small buai-,,.., e 01eck thh one. , .A " '59 Ncm Sequitur," cleverb muizuenwlirc u • Hill- man :M i n x Olnvfttible needl new~. 1'1le lumber, costing rn ,OOJ, was mixed with 50 kegs of nails, more than 1 million bolts and t h e "world's greatest r id e ' ' opened on Memorial Day the following year. Park lttendance soared immediately and the owners boasted the ride was one full mile long, more than 100 feet high. Girl's ·Stay in U.S. Upsets S. Africans • """ ........... D>-ctarllmanship c • n be yuun fir • "paltry" sum. • Another very rood &elec- tion in homes an offe:red ln toda¥'1 Re9l Estate llt'd:ion. W1teh tor the "Open House" directory in Thunday and Friday'! ipa- per. So handy for hoUM! hunting. e Someone is selling their entire ccntents of furniture and appliances. Must have bm a furnish~ apart· """''· IT'S MAGIC ... DIAL BUTTON HOLES WITH DIAL-A-STITCH ug. 199.00 98.00 WES1' PRICE EVER MORE 1HAN A ZIG-ZAG OW D.!Af..A-STITOI FOR ALL YOUR SEWING The cost to rebuild the ride would be more than a half a million dollars, says Stanton, adding "There will never be another coaster to equal the Cyclone Racer." But through the long. warm summer nights of .Augllsr, the racer will con- tinue to provide tbe ex- citement iJ. has these past years. Visitors are 'tk>uring into the amusement p.ar.k to· en· joy that Last ride, the final thrill of those plunging drops and twisting curves. PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) -The white South African girl whose visit with a Negro family in . New Jersey touched off a furor in her homeland returned from ttie United States today. Nineteen·year-old Melanie Hope smiled as shf! kissed her mother and tben asked nervously. "Where are the reporters?" But her parents rushed her into a car for the drive to their home in Pretoria. "No comment. We have nothing to say," said Mrs. Charles Hope. KNOW NOTHING "We have come here to find out what all this is -about," said Melanie's father, a jeweler. "We don't know anything." Melanie arrived on a chartered flight with about 70 other exchange students. Newspaper reports of her vislt ln Paramus, N.J., with the family of James Brown~ uched off new attacks by m )ant segregationists ori the exchange program;-. Pictures of Melanie . holding the hand of Mrs. Brown were rpread across the front pages of the newspapers. Melanie's stay with the l Browns had caused "great : concern'' in church and I education circles here. : .. , ' PARENTS 'fOLD Mrs. Hillary Marshall, head o{ the American Field I Service in South Africa, told ~ a reporter: "I feel Melanie musi have asked to stay with a Negro family. No South Africans are ever placed with Negro families. All family placements are submitted to the South African parents before the children are placed with American families." Prior to leaving Paramus. Melanie told a reporter: "I shall-111iss the Browns. It's been a wonderful ex- perience." She was later quoted as saying, "I am really scared what will come of this." Vaderland said s c h o o I principals are now warning white parents against allow· ing their children to go to America under the ex· changi: program. Melanie spent l"'-"O weeks with the Browns. During that time she attended parties anc! church with the family. James Brown. 60. is a property 5upervisor with a veterans hospital. ~Before going to Paramus, Melanie spent a year at- tending high school in Glen· dale, C-alif. H.Saltof · Skegness, England likes everything about America ' -except domestic fish and chips. SO HE DID SOMETHING DELICIOUS ABOUT IT He has Introd uced authentic English fish 1nd chips to America. He has created and zeal· ously guarded the recipe fOr tht authentic batter that has come from his experience in the fish and chips profession white a resident of the Old Country. It Imparts 1 flavour that can only be described as 'eavenly. Pop in, and take out an order of authentic fistl and chips. One taste and.you'll discover why this nourishing and utterly delightful tr•at has been Great Britain's ;reat national dish since 1866. British, and American Curr1ncy ChHrlully Acr:.pt1d H. SA.LT,esq. AUTHENTIC ENGLISH PFAFF SELECT·A·STITOi PORTABLE "No warning s I r o n g enough can be given against methods like these which undermine the accepted way of lile Of our young people and of racUi.l relations,".===========.! Pisfi&Clf!ps tcg. 99.00 59.00 model,!, not shown Can't come in! .••• Call your nwest Broadway foe a no obligation Heme Domomtration said Professor G. Viljoen, chairman of the South African Bureau of Racial Affairs. The exchange program is sponsored by the American Field Service, which has been repeatedly condemned ~ the extreme right wing of r '-~~~~~~~~~--'· ----- ~ ---. • Football Shoes Tennis Shoes Running Shoes ,, Basket Ball Shoes Deck Shoes Wrestling Shoes Soccer Shoes Browning Leather Boots Duck Feet Fins-8.95 Masks-2.95to11.95' Snorkles-95¢ to 2.95 Frisbees-Skate Boards • Sleeping Bags-Back Packs Chest Pulls-Jump Ropes- V oleyballs-Basketballs Soccer Balls-Footballs P J. *' will be closed for 11utio1 A•r~ 12 to 11 ' I • South Africa's ruling Na- tiooalld party. T h e Afrikaans-language newspaper Vaderland said . ' Men's Shorts Men's Shirts Ladies' l>resses Men's Tennis Shoes Ladles' Tennis Shoes Tennis Sox Tennis Hats and Visors TENNIS BALL.S Ponn1ylv1ni1 3/1.76 TENNIS BALLS Wll1on 3/1.89 .Wilson-Dunlop-Bancroft- Davis-Cragin Tennis Rackets ... Racket Stringing Raleigh Bikes Tires·· Tubes ·· Parts Bike Repairing .. PENETRATION N1~rly •~•ryon1 r11d1 1111 DAILY PILOT, llom1fown 111w1· p1p1r for lh1 F1bulow1 Or1n91 Co1d . 20th ANNIVERSARY COLLEGE CENTER HARBOR & ADAMS COSTA MESA DOOR BUSTER SALE • GENERAL ELECTRIC SIDE BY SIDE Model Tl'F·21A 20.:S C'I. tt.. 1Foodcenter 21' LESS THAN 36" WIDE SERVING COSTA MESA FOR OVER 20 YEARS Cottie i11 Today.~. Buy Now and Seve ' •Freezer sto•es up to 274 lbs, of frozen foods! • 1 adjustable, 2 slide- on t shelves in fresh : food section! •Porcelain -on-steel · vegetable bin holi.s 3/5 · bushel! •Wire fruit basket! •Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning! SAVE $100.00 THE FRIENDLY STORE SALES. AND sERYICE 1815 Newpart llvd. -548·7788 • . ' , ' - ' .. •• J •• • • •• I~ :... •• •• • • lf t ·~ ~ .. • ' t " l l • I I I I • " • • ThiMdlY, AU9Ull I, 1968 . DAILY ~!LOT JJ . , . er Prorecfion ··10 Sociefy- Forty pm:ent ol Ill malt children now alivt la the United Stalel will lit er· re5ted et 8CIDll pOint In tbeJr lives for law ~tlo!ll other tha n traU'1c otfense1. ' Rising crime ratot, c1il-prollferalloo ol dlme ..oa4 return for the'.\ t'osll 11 aesttd tr i a l c o u rt 1, corruption wu Pn:ibJbtloa. disappointing, Xadllh note1. over&wing prtsona, ad a But there are a nwnber of. The public d r u D k lJ growing recognition t>at exlsijng law1 .,_ ... usually the al<dw>llc -llo criime nW'tures on IOdal Jn. c Ued "private victa," tbe homeless, "b' w b o ID Justice lend urgency to tbe victimless, c o ft 1 e n tu a 1 alcohol, p o v e t t Y , Qd aeardl for wiser penal codes crimes which, simply by rcotlessne11 have become a and more eflecttvo pr<>-J>eing ill~gal, dt a WfllY of Hie. • .tilt· c<>m· c e du r • 1 • A n d i"h e ~~ for ex· puleive repe&Wt:. , . who Pr•.._,, CommJMoa. torlton, r eta, and official have been arretted and run malteubllllllantly clear ttyo( corruption, through Ille proceu Ume aimlnal laW', a r I in· diicated. tt Gamblln1 la another act !bat ....i. better delln!Uon kl crWnliial law, be !iays, 1loce the demand for It, like h demand for alcohol dur- ln&· ProbibitlOD, has surviv· ed Ult condtmnetloo of lb• law. 0n·one hand 1here are the problem o! alcobollsm and cmtrolllng the prwcrlbed conduct. Kadl:sb believes criminal law may be necessary to deal with cutain aspects of 1llle~ pfoble-m but that tti.e b\anket crlminalliat1on of all gambling is indefensible. F"()[' example, private eoclal gamDUng should be relieved from criminal peoeltlet so that Ille law coo be brougllt t.o bear more e«ectj.vely on the proleNloual Pml>linl promoter. 'n\e use of nareotics aod da@geroU! drugs a h a r e s many ot the same cbaracteriatica as p.mtiµng, and "l&w enforeement alone ., .. -bendlethtproblem.~ • He C9QChtdes: "Only when Ille load ol law enfor<:ement bu beell Kglllened by otrlpplng away responsibWtiea for which lt is not stlited will we begin to make the cri.mimll law a ' more effective imtrument of soclal protectJon." This io .... ol the~· ;ng pr<dlcllon1 ol tl>e U.S. President's Commllalon on Law-and ... Adminls1ra&n ol JU111co, In a report p._-.d 117 IX• peru in lie field, lncllldlnl several !dK>larw at the Unlver<lty of Calitomla. the net.Ion ean no longer if. Berkeley Law Professor and time al&iD.'' Deter-. bd -if it ever ~ -Sanford K.adWJ. write•, '"The rtnet aetdom w o rt 1 • ctjfne resulUng frop1 weak overready arswnption tbat Rebablllt.atioo is illusory laws. • the VilaY to control behavior &ecause a correctlonal churdl·11><n>>Ored bingo ; 00 . s ddl b cl tile other, the h.1gb1.Y . a e a . T organlud llllclt -...,. In· :t.. Schedules Test s These.Jlay• the law 1:1 sub-- jected to deep qu..UOnlng, The clas~e example o1 a is by mak!ng it criminal regimen tor these pereons la volvlng la rge and • w~ la' ht encoura&ed a may interfere with the larp),y DOD-existent. A l'~lE ANT MEN'S SHOPPE !'l"ratim ol 1llo crimlaa1 SEARCH NEEDED law Olld -the develop-Pro!....,. ~b believes ment of 10lutlons to un-the searcb for altematlves derl,ying social problems." ta lmperaUve, .. f« Jt would Public drunkenness, for at lee.st identify the problem eumple, ii: the cause f<r for 1lhat it really b, a IOcial about a thlrd ol all orr<sta probj<m ol alcbolollrm and -placing a a!Nin upoo poverty, tw wlllch aoclal cour1rocma, jalll, ond cor· aervloeo, not lie penal-CO<· ....:tlonal lacllitin. Th • rectloDal proceu of Ille I sometime1 natk>Aal organlr.ations ~ i n billioo• of dollars s year -a prSne source of. funds for· other crimes, and inevttably uooclote<! w I t b pollUcal comq>Uon. Some l1.w1 -loch as thoae a & a i n a t disorderly conduct and w.grancy,-are used fOr purpo5el o$el' than MEN'S APPAREL To Jog or Not ls Question NEW -PERM. PRESS GRAN DURON SPORT SHIRTS I w.,, 1 hclltt ........... HoMl.....W W..,.., """3aa .... , .. LAGUNA SWIM WEAR ............. 488 MOCK or TURTU SHIRTS '"''" .. u ... 888 e IANIAMlllCAID e MASTll CHAIM 3355 VIA UDO • NEWPORT BEACH SAN FRANCISCO - To jog« not to jog! 'l!>al'a tile queotlon a.keel 117 Dr. Leo N: Lisi, eseocLate profellOI' Of podiatry al the Univenlly ol Calilomi:a San Francisco Medlcal Center. Dr. U.S notes that jogpng has beocme more popular 1han ever since en article, "AerobJ.os," appeared ill the Reader's Digest. "Aerobk:a siruply means bulldlng up 1he body by. means of exercise whicb develoP& tlbe UH: ol. my~. However, the question arises -jogging or other aerobk: ex er c 1 a e s might be too severe for the avetage person." 'lbere are 10me people ..tio ore ~cally able to Joe o< to perform any of the other -........ 1111g· gested 1n the artide1 and otberl are not. ..One mud be careful not to overtu lie body -arllua -·~ pijee ~,..._.,.,. blood to ill -parts. ''PW a.ample," saya Dr. Ul1, "there are scme peo· ple wbo baff blood vessels --•lofted up with tatty wl>l\anoee -sm\ar to old water pipes wl9cb get rusted ori the lnride. When this happens 1he blood ve.wels may be unable to supply muscles wiih enough blood necellSU)' to perform You earn more in Newport Beach if you go to Glendale • .. , .. - 1trenuoua eurtUe." Jogging, whother done kl poslboo or co a tN<:t, r•· qukee a great deal of ex- ertion and a large NPPlY Of blood to keep muactis -ac- tM. "Uthe muactes ere ovortu.od, ... lid< o( blood may nc! onlJ affect ex- ·tremitie1 IUCb u 1 o o t mu.teles, but ello the beart lllei!. "Howevu ," ooncl~s Dr. lbs, "if l'O\l ere pbylic~ able, Joa1D1 will b e I p develop new muscles, pro- Wie mon dNnCth and may result In making Y"" feel and look in 1be plnlc ol health." There are 18"Glenda1es•1n Southern Californla. And a savings account et 8r"f ol Glendale Federal's eonven- ienr offices earns a full 25% more than It does In a regular savings account et a bank. And Glendale Federal's Bonus Aecounrs earn even more. Safety? Your savings are protected by nearly $1 billion in assets, making Glendale Federal the na!ion's second largest Federal. Won't you wend your way to one of our doors soon? , Glendale Federal/Newport Beach < • SAYINIS~ LOA)I ASs0CIATION •MAIN OFACE: GLENOALE · 1333 Eat Paclflc Coast Hlghwoy at MacArthur BoulaYard The American C o 11 e g e Teat (ACT) will be given to pro a pective Saddleback College students Aug. 3 and Sept. 7, M. Bud Weber, associate dean of students, ennoun<edtoday. Students have b' e en assigned for the Aug. 3 test, to be given at Santa Ana College, but registrati<1n is , et:lll open for the Sept. 7 test, to be given at Saddlebeck. 'llle tell determllle1 place· Dean Weber aald students ment of student. and aidl ln wishing to take the test selection cf cout11e1 so Sept. 7 should contact him students will be more auc- at the college office, 25001 cessl\ll in thetr endeavors, La Pai Road, Mission Viejo, _o_ean __ w_e_ber_aal_d_. _· __ or call 837-9700. The 3-hour, l~minute test is divided into categories of English' grammar, mathematics, social science and natural 1clence. Th e DAILY PILOT Covers Boating Best in West ********************** The NEW MODELS . " ARE HERE! e FOR SAW PHOllE 646-WI e FOR GOLD SEAL SERVICE PHONE 673-5477 !We Srevlce All Makes) Buy Where Service Makes It A Better Buy! 1714 NEWPORT BL VD., COSTA MESA ' OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 8:30 °10:00-SUN. 12·6 ********************** . SEEIT . . .. BEST! Magn.~~o.X. 15'' COLOR: .. Portable· When you ele~tMagnavox ... ~ou'll be the winner! 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' . ----- • ____ .._,,.....------------~--•• -~ ·•------~-~~~---~~~~-~---~-----------~~~~~--~~~~~~~- ,_ I Jg ~LY .PILOT . • u um ,.64TB A LAST 2 DAYS COSM£TICS Mu Factor Moisturidng l iquid Cleensor, 12 oz. reg. 3.00i Skin Freshener, 12 01. 1i11, reg. 2.75: Astringent, 12 oz., reg. 2.75 ................... 1.75 uch T 1bu, from Dene, perfume beth oil •nd cologne, uch reg. 3.00 _ .................. -.. 3.50 boxed together Endocreme non·9rtesy creem, reg. 5.00 each ·-·--·-····-······--·--·········-----.......................................... 2.50 ••ch FlowiR9 Yet.et Moisture lotion, 8 oz., reg. 9 .50 --···-··---·----······-···-····-··-·--···----·---5.75 Supor rich night cream, 4 oz., reg. 9.50 ____ 5,75 Body Emollient, 12 oz., reg. 5.00 ................ -..... 3.50 Nine Ricci M1demois11l1 spray in L'Air du Temps and Coeur Joie fr19r1nce1 -···-·······-···················-··4.00 · Nina Ricci Mademoiselle spray, Capricci fra· granc• ....................................................................................... 4.50 Schiap•r•lli Gilt of regular 2.SO Dressmaker parfom with 2 oz. of regular 2.7S cologne .. --2.75 Mary Chea bath or hend so•ps, reg. S.Ob 4.00: Guest so•ps, reg. 3.00 _____ .. .2.00 Dorothy Grey cleansing cream, 6 oL re.g. 3.oo: ~:!: b~.:1~','ff~.!;~0s.ki·;··f;;~·h·;~;·;:···4··~;:-~i~.~ with V2 oz. gilt of Extra Rich Dorothy Gray Night Crum, a 2.7S value ---·--·------··--····-·--1.75 Ondine Spray Mates, 2 01. Pure Mist and free 5 oz. Spray Tale -··----------------·-----·--··---................... -.... 6.00 John Robert Powen Fluid Gold Skin Balance Lotion, reg. 12.SO --···-····-·--·--·--·······-···--··----··--7.50 Fluid Gold Emulsion, reg, 7 .SO ···-·---····--··5.00 Ory Skin Cleanur, 16 01., reg. S.00 -··-··--··-3.50 Fluid Freshnar, 16 01., rog. 4.00 ........................ 3.00 Enriched Cloenser, 16 oz., reg. 8.50 .................. 5.00 ' ) FUR SALON Natur•I mink 3/4 stroller coot ....................... 777.00 Natur•I mink boes in/estel, dark ranch, d.yed black, Tourmaline' an Cerulean• shedes ... 33.00 N•lur•I mink stoles with double for collars in long or short fronts ................................................. 377.00 Dyed black bro•dtail processed lamb 3/4 coals, . mink collar ond culls ------------·---·· ..................... 477.00 Ble•ched whit• beover i•ckets, mink trim 477.00 N•tur•I mink l•ckeh ·----··---------.................. 477.00 Naturol mink j•ckets in good lengths with varied N~~~',.i~\:~s1i4~~;•;·wi1h·b;;;i·;;··:~:;;;:: N•lur•I full skin mink h•ts in Hv•r•I styles •nd sh•dM -····-···-----·-····--·--·--55,00 On•·of·•·kind design•• furs now 1/3 to 1/2 off Fur b•gs for home and trovel ••• lightweight, w•l•r t•p•ll•nl, &old/black, 33" reg. 7.91 6.49 Fvr b•g, 50", reg. 11.95 ····-·--··-·-········--·-······--'·50 All fw ,........ ........ ,. '""" -*'Y ef «lfl~ .t ~ f\ir1, "TM lllltlr.t. Ml .. INMA' Ann. .COAT AND SUIT SHOP Specl•I ul• of yeor •round wool ... ts for wom•n, rev. 60.00 to 76.00 ................................. 38.00 SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR Widt selection of assortacl sportswear in favor· it• sty_los, colors ··-------·--·---·--····--··--··-If.a to 11z off DRESS SHOP Missas'--twO and three piece suits, I to 20, val. from 40.00 to 60.00 ----------·---·-···-·--··----.29.99 Mi11a1' tira1111 by famoua mak1r1 values from 21.00 to 56.00 -··----11.99 YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOPS Stretch cotton/polyMler/nylon juns, sizes 5 to IS, reg. 7.00 ·-·-··---·····-·······-···----··--·-----------··----·1.99 Wide ulection of Jomeica shorts; 5 to I 3...2.99 Knit tops of Ban·Lon• nylon, cotton, or Acrilan• •crylic, sins 34 to 40, reg. 7.00 to 11 .00 ..................... -......................... -.. --...................... 3. 99 to 4. 99 Cardigan or pullover sw1at1r1, 1i19s 34 to 40, reg. 9.00 to 17.00 ........................................................... 3.99 Cotton blouses, sizes S tO 13, reg. I I.DO to 17 .00 _ ....................... ·---······--·· ............................................. 6. 99 Cotton dirndl skirts, reg. 9.00 to 13.00 ............ 6.99 P•nl suits: S to 13, reg, 36.00 .to 40.00 ...... 19.99 Cotton shifts, sizes S to 13, reg'. 13.00 to 26.00 ····--·--·--·-···----·-----··--··--··---·--·-··--··-··-----------·--·-5.99 Bikinis •nd matching shifts ....................................... 1.99 Villager cl1er1nca of traditional sportswear ................................................. ---.. -......................... ..... 113 off F•ll dressH all from regular stock, rog. 17.00 IO 20.00 ..... -......................................... ___ ................ 13. 99 IUDGET DRESSES Mid1e••on Grass•• in the new · deep tones .to compliment your ten. Mis ••s' end half site11 r•t· 17.00 fo 20.00 ........................................... -... .lJ.99 MIWNEIY Luxvrlous full skin mink heh in uver•l styles ••d ,r..dH, r•1· 79.00 to 89 .00 ......... ·--··-···-·····19.00 • • ACCESSORY SHOP Excelltnt •election of pants in nyfon or 1hen stretch, 8 lo 18, rog. 7.00 to 10.00 .................... 5.99 A••orted group of pent tops in colorful prints, sius 30 to 40, reg. 7.00 ... ·-·-·-·--·····-----···--····-··4.99 Famous meker cardigan •weeten, •iie• 34 to 40, reg. 13,00 to 17.00 .......................................... -..... 9.99 HANDBAGS Wide •nortment of hendb•gs, rog. 6.00, 7.00 ·····-···----···-···-·-·-··--·--------··-··---·······--·-----·--3.97 letter handb•gs, reg. 28.00 to 40.00 _19.97 Entire stock of 9tnuina 1lli91tor be9~ n.ow re':. duced 25%. Reg. 40.00 -390.00. 30.00. a3S.OO • Lerge 1•l1ction of h1ndb19s in dr•s•y.flnd tail- ored styles, reg. 14.00 to 20.00 ··--'---10.97 HOSIERY Proportioned seemles• hosiery, 8V1 to 11 med- ium, 91/J to 11 long .............................. _ .. 6 for S.00 Support hosiery, medium length, 81/2 to 11 ........... ·-·-·-·-·-········-··-·---· .. -··-·-···-·····-----2 for 5.00 GLOVES Fabric gloves for summer ere PK Or h.ndtewn in a shorlie to 4-button longth. Siu• 6 to 8, reg. 4.00 to 6.00 ............ -'---···-··-··-·····-· .. ····-····2.99 FOUNDATIONS SALON Charmlit br• h•s fiberlill linod lec• cup in white, sizos 12-36 A, 8, C ............................... : ......................... 3.49 Se~ong lendteu Bra with criss-cross undtr-busl band, sius 34-40 B, 32-40 C, reg. 5.44 ......... 3.99 Sius 32 to 42 D, reg. 5.9S ............................. -....... 4.95 -N1mo penty girdle he1 reinforced penels for extra control, S·M·L, reg. 10.00 ........................... 7.99 Long leg length, rog. 11 .00 .................................. B.99 Meidenform stretch br1 hes nylon/Lycras span- dex bends under the lice-over-cotton cups, sizes 34 to 38 B •nd 34 to 40 C, reg. 4.00 ...... 3.19 Sius 34 to 40 D; S.00 value ............................ : ........ 3.99 Meidenform fiberfill ,contour bra has stretch slr•p•, sizes 32 to 36 A, B, C , 4.SO value ...... 3.49 '· I ""LINGERIE F1mous maker tailored briefs: 4 to 7, rtgular 1.50 uch ···--·--·-----------· .99 uch or 6 for 5.80 Very famous maker slips; 32 to 38 short1 32 to 42 •vor•g•, reg. 6.00 to 2S.OO ...... J.99 to 15.99 Famous maker pettiskirts in short-short, short, average end even formel fashion lengths, reg. 4.00 to I 0.00 -····-·-···-................................ 2.59 t.o 5.99 Famous maker nylo:n tricot pettipants in new shortor length, 4 to 7, reg. 4.00 ........................... 2.59 Famous maker "Luxeire" lleeP gowns of brushed nylon ond •cetate; S-M·L, reg. 9.00 .................. 4.99 Famous maker shifts, long gowns or pajamas. Gowns, S·M·L Pejom·ii 32 to 40, reg. 6.00, 7.00 end a.oo ·----··--···--····-·----···-----··---·-----·--·--·--···----·--··--·--3.99 Large 9royp of .flued shilh perloct for loung· ing ................... _ ............................ : ................. 1/3 to 1/2 off Famous mektr Perme-Pre11 duster of polyester/ cotton; I 0 to 11, re9, 15.00 ................................ , ... 6.99 A-line slHveleu shilh; I 0-18; P·S·M·L ...... 6.99 Lilli• c•r• dusters of •c•l•I• 1ur•h, I 0 to 18 --··--·-···········-·····------....... -................................................... 7.99 Exlr• large sins ·-·-·················---···-·-··---····--............. 8.99 Famous maker shifts end lon9 gowns for sleep· inq, reg. 9.00 to 20.00 .......................... 5.99 '10 13.99 w •rner's matching robe and pajamas come in nv•r•I colors, sins 32 to 40, reg. 13.00 ...... 7.99 Werner sleep shifts of fitted waltz 9owns in 32 lo 38 P-S-M-L, reg. 4.99 to 7.99 8.00 lo 12.00 Wern er robes of nylon tricot; 8 to 18, rog. 20.00 --------··· .. -----·---... -....................................... 12.99 Buffum'• Own cold water so4p, reg. I.SO .............................................................. 99c, 3/2.90 1SHOE SALON NEW, NE}Y LOW PRll;E De Liso Dtb and other famous name dress shoes and daytime shoes, reg. 22.00 to 25.0<k,.12.97 Young Designers' dre11 shoes in many colors and white with newest tot end heel shapes, reg. 11.00 lo 20.00 ............. : ............................................ 10.97 OTHER &REAT VALUES Finest names in dre1s end strtet shots in e large nlection of color& •nd styles. I l f 4" to 2" hHls· Rog. 24.00 to 32.00 ": .. -......................................... .11.97 Ad Lib speciel purch .. e pumps, reg, 19.00 --·-·-···-·-···-··········-·-······-···-···----·--···-·-----------···· 14.97 Casual end dressy 1hoe1 in many styles and colors, rog, 13 .00 to 15.00 .................................... 9.97 INFANTS' SHOP Peterson color coordina:ted furniture, reg. 1.00 lo 29.00 ---·-·········-----.. ···-·--5.99 to 22.99 "Hush" 'lherm•I blonket by North Star ii I 00% Acrilon• acrylic. 36x50,,.siu , reg. 8.00 ______ 4,99 Gen•r•I Electnc feeding dishes, reg. 11.00 1.99 st.ndard dish with signal light, reg. 14.00 11.99 Dish 'an'd lrolning set, reg. 18.00 ..... : ................. 14.99 Bonnie Doone lace tighh for toddlers -of I 00 ";'. stretch nylon ere easy-care, reg. 3.00 ~·--1 .99 Toddler Brother end Sister coordinates. His , reg. .. 1_2.00 ...... 7.99. Hers, reg. 14.00 and 15.00 __ a.99 Permanent Pre·s1 Buffums' Own play clofhts fo·r infants and toddlers. Infant sizH M, L, XL, reg. . 4.00 .. .2.69. Toddlers· sizes 2, 3, <4, rag. s.00 .. :3.29 CHILDREN'S SHOES Girl11 ttttnis sh~es by B. F. Goodrich come in white and colors. some slightly irregular, sizes u~ lo girls'· I, reg. 5.00 lo 6.00 ................... _ .. 2.99 Boy11 tennis shoes by B. F. Goodrich. Som• alig'ht irre9ul1rs, sizes up to boys1 8, reg 6.00 and 7 .00 ...................... , ....................................................... 3. 99 GIRLS' WEAR Fill {ashion dreuos for girls, 4 to 12, reg. 5.SO to 12.00 ............................................................. 3. 99 to 4. 99 Famous maker skirts and sweaters, color coordi- nated, 7 to 14, reg. 6.00 • 9.00 ................. 4.49-5.49 Back to school lingerie -by Hor Maje&ty, 6 to 14 ..................................................................... 1.60, 2 for 3.00 Nylon tricot panliH, sizes 6 to 14 ...... 3.49 to 3.99 Stretch nylon tights in seamless fishnet, reg. 3.00 ........................................................... 1.39 to 1.99 Sleeping bags in assorted prinh, reg. 12 .00 9.99 D~ess-up jeans in cotton corduroy or cotton c!'enim; 7 to 12, reg. 6.00 -------·-····------··-········4.29 COSTUME JEWELRY Selection of costume jewelry ........................ 1 /2 off STORE FOR MEN Shorty style permanent press pajamas of poly- ester/cotton, A·B-C-D, reg. 6.00 ......... 2 for 9.00 Coat style permanent press pajamas of Dacron• polyester/ cotton blend fabric. Long sleeves, ~!ti;~oha~01k.~~i~.1;: ;~9 ~ ii 1~; 6.~cii~'3) ~:~~ Streich hose, wool/nylon blend. Anklet style, reg. I.SO each ..................................................... 3 for 3.00 Over-tho-call hose, rag. 2.00 oach ...... 3 for 4.00 Bllffums' Own Crest short sleeve dress shirts of permanent 'press Dacron• polyester/ cotton, reg. 6.00 .................................................................. 2 for 9.00 Buffums' Own cotton knit crew neck T-shirts, sizes S-M·L, reg. 3 for 3.75 ........................ 6 for 6.00 Athletic undershirts of cotton rib knit, siies S-M·L·XL, rog. 3 for 3.00 ---····-----·--··-·-··6 for 5.00 Cotton knit briefs, 30-44, reg. 3 for 3.00 6/S.00 Boxor shorts of cotton broadcloth ere foll cul, sins 30-44, reg. I .2S ········---·------........... 6 for 6.00 Permanent Press boxer shorts of Dacron• poly- ester/cotton, sizes 30-44, reg. 2.00 ...... 3 for 4.00 Buffum's Own better sport slacks, no ironing needed, 30 to 42, rog.14.00 .................................... 9.99 I 00 '/. Orlon19 acrylic ltnk stitch cardi9an sweat- er, reg. 16.00 .............................................................. 10.99 Bulfunis' Own bettor lull f11hion knit shirts reg, 10.00 to 13.00 ......................................................... 6.99 F•mous maker golf jacket, rog. 14.00 ............ 9.99 Famous ,maker all·weather jacket, reg. 22 .50 ..................................... -----· ................................ 14.99 Great savings on our regular stock of fine fash- ion sport coah rog. 45.00-145.00 39.99.109.00 Important savings on our en tire stock of fine slacks for men , reg. 20.00 to 30.00 15.99-24.99 Save to 22 '/. ! Biggest su it sale of the year! Reg . 22S.OO ...... _____ ..................................... 189.99 Rog. 210.00 lo 2 IS.00 ............................................. 179.99 Rog. 200.00 ........................................................ 169.99 Rog. 185.00 to 19S.OO -----··--·---··-·------------.... 1S9.99 Rog. 150.00 to 16S .OO ................................ -... -. .129.99 Reg. I 3S,OO to 145 .00 ····----··-·--·-.-···-·---·-.119. 99 Reg. 12S.OO .............................................. _ ........ -... 109.9g Rog . .I I 0.00 lo I 15.00 ...................................... __ .... 89. 99 Rog. 89.95 to, I 00.00 ........................................... -.... 79.99 Reg. 75.00 to 85.00 ................................ --····-·69.99 MEN'S SHOES Crosby Sq uare's "Ranchero" casual shoes, sites 7 lo 13, reg. IS.00 .......................................................... 9.99 VARSITY SHOP Entire stock natural shoulder sport coats on sale! Reg. 39.50 ........................... r .. -...................................... 29.00 Reg, S0.00 ---------·---··--·----·--···--·----······-----···---· ..... 39.00 Reg. SS.00 ----··-······------··-·-··---···-······-···---··49.00 Rog. 60.00 -·-----···-····--··---·---·-····-··-----······--49.00 Entire stock of natural shoulder suits reduced. Rog. 60.00 to 70.00 ........................... _ .......... _.49.00 Reg. 75.00 .............................................. ________ 59.00 Rog. 80.00, lS.00, and 90.00 -··---········-···--·79.00 Famous maker drou slacks, reg. 17 .95 to 30.00 now reduced to --··---····-··········· .... 13.00 to 22.00 Entir• stock troditional sport shirts, reg. 7.00 to a.oo ···----·---··--···············---···.5.89 or 2 for 11.00 Re9. 9.00, 10.00 or 11.00 ... 6.89 or 2 for 13.00 NEWPORT CENTER • 11 FASHION ISLAND • 6~4-2200 . • Ji()IDAY, ntURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 ' I • f ~--... ·- . . I Sl~RE FOR IOYS ' Entire stock of Buffum•' Own short sloove T. 1hirts, I to 12, reg. 3 for 2.7S ............... 3 for 2.25 Sizes 14 to 16, reg. 3 for 3.00 .... _ ........... 3 for 2.50 Permanent Press short sleeve .sport shi rts, sites a to 20, ••9. 4.00-S.OO .............. --.. --2.59, 2/5.00 Entire stock of bulky stretch hon; &Vi to 11, reg. 1.00 pair -··-·--··-----·····---·········-----·--·' pair 4.89 Sizes I 0 to 13, reg. 1.25 pair -··-··-------' pair 5.89. Acrylic sweaters in full and mock turtleneck styles. Washable, 8 to 20, reg . 11 .00 ............ 6.99 Entire stock of boys ' cotton pajamas, sites 8-20, rog. 3.SO , _______ _z.59 reg. 4.00 .................. 2.99 Entire ·stock of Buffum&' Own briefs, 8 19 12, reg. 3 ior 2.50 ...................................................... ] for 2.00 14 to 18, reg. 3 for 2.75 --··--·--·-·-···-·-3 for 2.25 Short sleeve knit shirts of fine all-cotton1 full turtlenecks, completely wtishable; 8 to 18, reg. 3 . 5 0 .............. ·--··-···-····--------·-----····----·--··--·--·· ................. 1. 79 LITTLE SHAVER SHOP Famous maker sport shirts, Permanent Press, short sleeves; 4-7, reg. 3.00-3.50 1.79 or 2/3.50 R3versible waterproof jacket of lill-nylon, 4 to 71 reg. 13 .00 .............................................................................. 8. 99. Entire stock of cotton pajamas, "4 to 7, reg. 3.00 to 3.50 ·--·-·-------------··-----------------...... 2.S9. Buffums' Own T-shirts of white combed cotton, 4 to 6, reg. 3 for 2.75 .................................... 3 for 2.25· ~olid color knit shirts. Turtlenecks of fine comb- ed cotton, short sleeves, 4 lo 7, ceg. 3.00 1.59 Pullover sweaters, I oo cyo acrylic. Full and mock turtleneck, 4 to 7, reg, 7.00._ .............................. ..4.99 STATIONERY SHOP Famous make photo albums from regular stock. Single I~, reg. 3.9S ---·-----------·--· ....... : ...... _ ......... 2.80 Double ip album, reg. S.95 ....... -.............. : .. -.... 4.95 Scrap book, reg, 3.9.S_ .................... -....................... ~.80 Address Book, reg. 3.95'. ................................... -..... 2.80 1968 selttc_tion of Christmas cards from the best makors, reg. 13.SO to I 04.00 10.80 lo 83.20 Boxed stationery end notes .................. 2 boxes J.00 Deluxe double quantity stationery .................. 1.29. Famous maker once-a-year bargains on sta- tionery and "'t•1, reg. 1.59 oach ..... -... 2 for 1.S9 Stationery, feg. 2.00 aach ....................... 2 for 2.99. Rose-Glo night lights, reg. S.00 ........................ 3.99 Christmas cards, reg . 2.00 to 6.75 1.00 lo 3.35 Cll!ird table covers of wipe-clean quilted pltistic. 30x30" adjush to 32x32", reg. 3.50 ............... 2.49 33x33" adjusts lo 36x36", reg. 4.SO ............... 3.49 42" diameter, adjusts to 48", reg. 5.50 ......... 4.49 ' GIFTS AND CHINA "Royal Albert11 bone china cups and saucers, rog. 3.50 ................................................................................ 2.79 Hand crafted cut crystal from Western Ger• many. Yalu .. from 7.00 lo 12.00 4.99 and 7.99 Buenil um chafing dish, rog. 21.00 ................ ..16.99 • NORIT AKE CHINA REDUCED I - P'ATTEll.N S·P'c. P'J. St! <fl ·Pc. Set r19. 1111 ,,,. 1111 Wllit1h1ll 7.10 <t.4t 69.10 lf.9t SILVERWARE Mesterpiece table accessories by ·Webster Wil- cox lnternetional Silver Co., reg. 20 .0Q 1to '45.00 ··----------------·---··-····--·--·······-·--··----·------··--.~ ... 14.00 to 31.SO Annual tray sale, 111 sizes and shapes, reg. 11 .50 lo IS0.00 .................................................. 10.00 to 120.00 Pa ul Revere silverplated bowls, reg. 7.50 to 60.00 ·-··-·---···--······--·····-·--··--·--··---......... S.00 lo 40.00 TAILE LINENS · Quaker Lace "Soron•!•" tablecloth, rog. 13.00 • to 20.00 ....................................................... 10.99 to 16.99 Wonder looper mah, rog. 1.25 ............................... 99 Future tablecloth, rayo n polyester permanent press. Gold, olive, white, 52x52", reg. 5.00 3.99 10"/. ••vings on custom table pads; l .. jherotte or vinyli •luminum insuletion 1 felt backing. Frte ' . mee1ur1ft9 nrv1ce. OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30' • ~!:" • • r r .. .. ~. ----~-----•:-- ' , .. •• • ' . . . . JOOIAN HASTINGS, ~-4321 TMl~.AWwlf I, I* •• M• , ... II • School Bells Ring 'In Show Looking toward th, start of school while still enjoying summer acti'Vities are members of 'the newly-fomled Jiinior AUJiliary of the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. ·Combining the two inoods will 6'e their first philanthropic pro- ject, a poolilde fashion show featuring back-to-;cnool styles scheduled for Friday, Sept. 6. The benllfit is .open to the public and will take place at 2 p.m. in the bomt of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turnbull in Hunt- ington Beach. Proceeds will be donated to the Nuesti'os Pequenos' Hermanos Y Hermanas, which transJatM means Our· Little Brothers and Sisters, an orphanage in .Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico. The orphange cares for 800 children of all ages. · - GOOO-BY SUMMER, HELLO FALL -Summer's almost qver and it's time to be thinking about school clothes so members of the Junior Auxiliary of the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club are provid- ing the opportunity to do just that at their Poolside Fashion Show Friday, Sept. 6, at 2 p;n.i. in the Hunt· ington Beach home· of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Turnbull. Waving good-by to .summer and greeting fall with tearful faces ate {left to right) the Misses Jane Sey- mour, Cindy. Turnbull, Sherri Jensen and Suzanne Pucula. Entertainment for. the benefit will be provided by Junior Auxil· iary: members. Miss Cindy Turnbull will do a Hawaiian dance and Miss Gayle Dabney ~~ Miss Suzi Herrera Mµ entertcµn with a water ballet duet. The back-t~school flishions are being arranged by ccr chairmen, Miss Sherri .;Jensen and Miss Suzann~ Pucyl:a with modeling done by club members. Miss Toni Amann is in charge of refreshments. Tickets for the afternoon event may be purchased by Junior . A.uxiliary members or by calling Miss Ann Dillon, ticket chairman, at ~ia. Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club ~advisors for the n.W group are Mrs. Dale Bush and Mrs. Maurice Wells. Diffe;ent Way of Life ' Arctic Mission By JOOEAN .HASTINGS ot .... °""" .. , .. , 511ff Blonde and affable, June Cruse contem- plates her husband's mission to the furthest portion of the Arctic Circle with faith, cour- age and unruffled calm considering the dras- tic changes it will make in the family's life. There are no pave.d streets or sidewalks in Point Hope, Alaska. No trees grow there. A few white frame houses contrast brightly against the sod huts which shelter approxi- mately 1400 Eskimo and Tlingit Indian fam- Ules who inhabit the narrow finger of land jutting into the Chukchi Sea. For the next three fears the Rev. Fred Cruse and his family will minister to the people of the tiny community as missionaries for the Assembly of God Church. NO CHRISTMAS TREE "We won't even be able to have a Christ- mas tree -it would freeze before it could be flown in,'' said the youthful missionary's wife, daughter of Mf. and Mrs. Virgil Floyd of Huntington Beach. The family's home will be the second floor of the neat white frame building which hous- es the Assembly of God Eskimo Church. Challenging ' .. ,, "Eskimos have discovered'.ulat they have to feed the dogs all year bUi ttiey only have to feed the skidoo when th@J'•use it," Mrs. Cruse commented. ·, .1" : The .boys, used to bare feet :and bathing ~ suits, will have to become ... accustomed to wearing three sets of undercl~ng, regular clothing, parkas and fur mitt!'1s, and three pairs of socks under their mq)ijuks. Formerly students at cl-eSt\tiew School, Huntington Beach, the boys will''( attend school in Point Hope. '; Belinda, the couple's d·aughter who will observe bet 16th birthday in· )tJ~ska, will at- tend high school in Unalaklee.t.~ miles from •Point Hope. The former Fountai.tl'-Valley High School student will be the only.nop-Eskimo or Indian girl in the dormitory. '?-.' Belinda's hobby is sewing, and her mother hopes they will find a feather.-weight sewing machine the teena~ will be ~able to take. •, ACRES OF FLOWERS During the 10-week period. of thaw {the ground actually never thaws tmor~ than two feet below the surface) temperf(t~res will rise as high as 50 degrees and for:thr~e weeks the tundra bcomes a colorful car:p~t of wild flow· ers -which literally becairi'es alive with At present there is no inside water system but the young minister is taking supplies necessary to install one, and also an instant· recovery wa1.er heater. swarms-of m<tJyiJoes . ·;~ .. 1 ..... A dentist visits the httle community twice . each month and a doctoF'calls aaily. If some- one is critically ill the docto.r\Wifi fly in -if it is possible for a plane to land.·~·· Until the new water system can be install- ed the family will use an old-fashioned,.oval· shaped galvanized tub -a gift from the Hunt- ington Beach congregation. WINTER OARK Eight months of ihe year temperatures will range from a high of 25 degrees to 65 degrees below zero in a constant twilight gloom , and during this time the family will freeze their food in a n~tural freezer outside the church. Butane will provide fuel for cooking but oil will be used for heating since it doesn't freeze. Their principal means of transportation over the icy terrain will be by "skidoo," a ' motor.driven dog sled with a top speed of 30 miles per hour .. Since food is so expensive (cl.small can of pressed ham ranges from $1.25 to $1. 75, and a can of soda pop -when 'if,~ .available - costs 25 cents) muclt of the :family's food supply already has been ship~ .. Mrs. Cruse has been exp~(ibienting with many of the flash-frozen, dehydrRted·produCts they will be using. She con5'4.e_ts· the celery. bell pepper and carrots qui~. good. Fruit cocktail, which before preparaij9n resembles an assortment of odd-sized cofored pebbles, is good but the children notice that it lacks the color found in the canned ;varieties they usually were served. ,.. ' ' '1 • \ WHALE FAVORE'i); Fish, seal, walrus· and ci ribou provide COLORED PEBBLES? -Virllil, Tom nd Jimmy Cruse {left to right) examine the .conten of ·a can containing flash-frozen, dehydrated fruit cocktail held by.their mother, Mrs. Fred Cruse. The sem- the main sustenance for the native inhabi- tants. Their favorite food, "muktuk, •i or whale meat, is much too valuable for thtim to eat in large quantities and Uley sell the major ,portion. A piece of. whale meat, thawed and allowed to "age" for three or four days is a gourmet's delight to the Eskimo, the young minister maintained. There are five Assembly of God missions . ' • bly of God missionary fami/Y will leave this month to begin 4 three-.year stay in Point Hope, Alaska. some 50 miles from the Russian··border. and one Episcopal mission established along the Arctic Circle. The protestant chu~h, founded in 1915, maintains more foreign missions and church schools than any other denomination, accor'dilig to Mrs. Cruse. ~ly's last missionary itinerary ser· vice while on furlough will be at 7:30 p .m . Sunday, Aug. 11, in the Assembly of God's Glad Tidings Church, Newport Beach. . . Moth~rs ·Go to Bat for : Sons, Strike Out Daughters-in-law DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have two (rjeods -both widows. I like these women very much -until they get on the subject of their families. I am sick to death Usteninf to tflem brag about their sons -how smart and successful they are, what great fathers they .are to their children. Tb~n they start. in oa 1heir daughters·Jo.law. they are dumbbeU.. -no femlll, background, lazy, incompetent. can t do anything right. From there they go on to rave about tnelr grandchJldrea . They are· the most thoughtful, considerate, most popular kids in town. Everyooe re1J1ark1 on their beat•tiIUl ma nners. Yesterday I stood it as long as T ~utd. f',.,ty I said, "'Please tell me ,. ANN LANDERS ~ how come the children turned out so well wtien tb.ey had such lazy, dumb mothers?" They lit io::to me and in· 1J1ted that ttie children had bee'n train· ed by their fathers. . I have six wonderful gra11dchi'dren. Ann, and although my son Is a fine person, I k.now hi s wJfe des rvt>s 85 percer.t of the credit. Plz::'I'! p .. int r·y letter and comment. -f'Al;.1 IS FAIR DEAR FAIR: \Vh en you see , thoughtful, contJ\f~rate, w e 11 J m a D· ncred c}!.Udrt11 , It'• a prett1 . safe assumption that. botb pa.rents worked together to t:1&J up thOse kids pro- perly. Tbe lnfhltnce ef the mother ls ur.uaily the grellfest, since she 11 the one who speDdt most of her Ume LVrectlng° and .dlsclpllnln & the children In lh:lr formallVt years. f say your lt''-?:1ri~ Is more nearly rorrect·tban your frlend1. •, 1 .. • ,. DEAR ANN LANJ>ERS' May I re- spond to "Pld. Starchy'.'-ttle RN ~ho complained about the' way patients treat people who staff hospitals? she said, "Illne55 does not give. a patient ·the right lo be ·abusJve or downright nasty to those wftose job it Is to take cme of them." F&rtttnately, Old Starchy's viewpoint that "genuinely nice people remain nice ki spite of pain and misery" is not shared by the majority of hos pital peo- ple. Hospitlal administrative a n d medical staffs have long recognized that illness can alter one's personality remarkably. May I offer a paragraph from our · Personnel H-andbook? "In w o r k i n g with sick and injured, remember that you are dealing wUD fe~!ooallsm nor impen;onai tools of persoll8 in exceptional cics:umstan~s. teebnoloey. We are 1imply people c~ Such a person often is 11pset tiy aCtioot tng fOr people .• -MRS. N. L .• and ev..U which ·h< would not notice HADLEY . M!l:MORIAL HOSPITAL; under normal circumstances. You will HAYS, KAN. discover that many patients have DEAi MRS. N.i..: We need mwe fears and resenbnents which may ·-people lte you. Tbanta for wrtttN. · nlanlfest them selves in irrltabiUty. un· c o ope rat iv en e s s and ap--Unsure or yourself .on dates? What's prehtnslveness. Remember Whal is right? What's wrona? 9\0u1d yout rout.Ille ror you may be a grave Shouldn't Y.Ou7 Send for Am. Landen' emergency In the minds of a patient or booklet "Dating Dos and Don'ts, •• tm famUy. Courtesy, kindness and, enclosing with your request 35 cents in above all, p;itient understanding are coin and a 1 o n g , aelf.eddnu.d. the best weapons you have for stamped envelope. • overcoming these problems." Ann Landers will be glad to help you Old Sllarchy seems to have forgotten with your problems. send them to her the crted of the he.8ltl1 team. V(e are. in care of the ·DAU..Y RILOT encloNn& neither paraaoos of detached pro-a self-addresHd, at.amped eaV.lope. ( I ~ ' -. I I I I • . -• • ,: • " • .. • • . • . ,. '· . • • • '· . i • • ' ' • • . .. - . . ' . . . • • . . . . ~ . . . . -• • BAILY PILOT \ " " . . . . ..... .. . ~ • .• iJ -. ,• ~.-... \. • Horoscope Aries: ·Forego T r·avel Plaits FRIDAY AU&US.T 2 By SYDNEY OMAllR "1be wtae man control•• hit de1Uny. . .A1trol"I)' points the way." ARiEs (March 21-AP!'il lt): Forea:o travel plan1 UD· W tonll\>t. Earlier, budJ•t diicuulo'n with mate or partner II Indicated. Face flnanclal fact.. Then you will be ~oppler and able to make tuture urangements. TAURUS (April 2().May 20): Lie low. Lilien and observe. Be willing t o gather information. Your taak today la to evaluate • You can tOOCffafully put llnloblng touches on Im· portant project. Know this -reopond accordlft'1Y· , GEMINI (May 2i.June Intr igue On Menu 20): You · obtain new view N&djuatmt!K are order of Currently you are forced to conct~I baslc t 11k1, day. face facts about individual dutie1, To be mo1t 1uc· SAGt'l.'TARlUS (,N9v. 22· who may' have made ceuf~ take new view. Be Dtc. 21): HO'tf you confront wuvbltantlated claims. .exclUn1. Many who are con· ' oppo111loo II of utmo1t Im· G ENE RA L TEN· nrvMJve !MY lack con· portanoe. If )'OW' •tance it fideDce. Set t6ne, example. confident. you win. 'Thoie on DENCIES: Lunar position CANCEJl (June 21.July other •ide lack atrtnlth. put fayorable for fishing, plan· -) v bl If y •--• I · tlnf. Cyole high Io r -: -•OllDI per.om, your up u . our ~ s SCORPIO, SAGITTARIUS, ~hlld?en -tbe11 are ,.. ttront: Plai it. • · qulrlnl peroooal attenilon. CAPRICORN (Dec. 2'l· CAPRICORN. Special word UWlze innate wlldom. Don't Jan·. 19): Stress on bow you to VIRGO : center of at- condemn. ·Key ·11 to un· relate to aatoclatei. ·Some tenUon apt to bt around der1tand. Thtn day ea be may dl.ligiee with you. Key borne, domestic situation. marked aa fnd.Uul. ii to be1dJplomaUc. Power, Te find...,, who'I lvck"f tor "fOU In Ll!:O (JUly 23-Au1. 22): authority it on your· aide. ~.!. ·~~·, ~~. s~ntYM~~~ Hom · I h I /, Kn thl nd Id ~" leN l>lrll\cUllf •llCI .SO c1nb e, proper f., W I J"OU OW a I a VO panJC, to Olnflrr A1l!'O~Y Secrels, the OA11..Y have of value, are Be mature. l"tlOT. •• l'Ull, G••lld Ctntr11 st .. jpatllghted. You will have to AQUARIUS ,ef'an. 20-Feb. 1-';:;:'~:::..:;;•-:;:..:.v"'=· "'"·.;_v·cc'c.~'2'·- be flexible. '·Don't teer you 18): Premature act ton owe· anything to tradition. ahould be avoided. You tend Key II to be proireu.lve, to be Impatient. Individual alert to your lnteresta. in a position to aid cannot be VIRGO (Au1. 23 • sept. pushed or coerced. Know 22): Acton! ta on Ill< wwy this-and tread lilhtly. you 1hlnlt, deolde and react. PISCES (Feb. 19·March You may be 1krw' to &rasP.: 20): Your per a on al hcta. You make progress tf philosophy may be u· you know that first reac· amlned by rkeptic.t. Have tJona are aubJect to revlalon. facts at hand. Key ii to be LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): calm Wider !lre. If you are, l;low you evaluate your own the prl&e 11 re1pect and ad· poaltton .. of utmost im· d~ weatla:e. portance. Many w a t c b , IF TODAY IS YOUR ll8ten f« clllfl t.o your feel-11JRTHDAY you tend to be inga. Today you get in· emotional .and romantic. Capturln·g a happy time la formaUon which clarifies ttle sleuth'• reward for at· money polition. / HB TOPS Club tend!ni 1l>e My.tick Krewe SCORPIO (Oct. 23 ·Nov. of Komue: "Interna_Uorial 21): A family cort<iitlon re. Intrigue" party saturday: quires action now. You're Allen Schoo 1 Is the Aug. 10. cal Jed upon . by meettnc place for members Wntcliff Pl111 New,.rt hoclt o,.. IYff. I S•114cly Mr. and Mre. Mlcbaiel circumstances or request, to of HunUnaton Beiac:h TOPS Rapport are h o 1 t and take initiative. Chan1e is pound Pilders at 7 p.m. hostess f<Jt the party , -=·=•=c=e=':;':;"'::Y::· =::Ad:=l•;:•tm=:e:;nt;:·:::::e::v•;:r:y:::Moncla;;=:Y::· =============, !eaturlog foods from forel111 1r ' •. We All .Scream for Ice Cream' land!h Delicacies b e i n I pl"flpared include Swediah meatballs, Ara b le "Tabooly", !Illian Eni>lant Plarmlfiana, Fr<nch Bouer BourguiJl'IOn and Russian ELECTROLYSIS Accenting the old-fashioned theme will be members of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church when they stage an Jee Cream Social from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednes- day, ·Aug. 7. Featured on the bill of fare will be a barbership quart~. banjo strumming. and a three- New Duties Disclosed Mrs . William Hayes of Fountai:n Valley ha'S been named president of Los Cer- r i to s Di"Str)cl. Calirornia Federation of W om en 's Clubs, Junior Membership. The mother of f i v e children and founder of the South Coast Junior Woman's Club has obosen Coins in .a Fountairn a5 her ttleme for the year. , She served t!he Foontain V-alley cl. · ag-pr.esident, parliamentarian, . Y o u t h Employment: Service direc- tor and fin.e art! cha .. irmen. She also served Los Cf:rritos District as federation ex- tension director. Mrs. Hayes w·as named Citizen of the Year during the federatioo's state CQD-' vention. " Serving with her will be the Mmes . Stephen Pustay and Robert Wagner, vice presidents ; Paul Sanchez, federation director; Fred Wanke, corresponding . secretary; Rich·ard Molhn. treasurer; Thoma's C h r i stensen, })Qf'Uamen· tarian: Diclt:. Trod t.c k. public it)' director; F r e d Yara k, auditor-registrar ; Frank Plhares, coordinator. and Miss Geraldine Robinett, recording secre- tary. legged sack r.ace. Gettiqg Vi the first licks is Tim Campbell, 9, who is served by Mrs. Roy Ward while Kim Strutt "cranks out," the news ·or the family get-together. Chairmen are Mrs. Donald Langille and Mrs . James Moore. ClUcken Kiev. MemPe~ and their guests will arrive dressed 86 in· ternational visit-Ora in native· costume or as typical tourists. Cocktails .. will be served sbarting at 8 p.m., with dinner at 9 p.m., followed by entertailUlteflt. NEW PRESIDENT M.rs. William .Heyes Bru nclieon On Agenda Members of the executive board of Herbor Forum will meet for brunch Tuesd·ay at Reservations are available b y contaoting Mike Trujillo before A . 8. lO :Xt a.m . in the home of rJY'", . .,._. ..... , ... !."'1'-~~-?;;~1 .•. ~·ci'!:~;r:l:sB:i~~o:~ r":,·. . ·: .. ~.; ~:;ifi,. ·-.. plann·ed and will be the first p ·. ., "" t program of~up for f the coming u y ar. At· ('~-, tending will Mmes. ~-. ~ William Jones. R o b e r t Nickerson, Paul Bernha(f., Ralph Wat.lion. Lee Healy, ,_ Fletcher Stewart and Julius ! Christenson. O COLOR PORTRAITS ~ * LIVING COLOR POft~ > -.J iC = -~ ... a: 0 a. a: 0 .J 0 0 0 z - ANGEL OF A DEAL FOR THE LITTLE ANGELSI BIG 8'' x 1 O'' LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT NOW ONLY 9 Plus ·~ Handffng ~ ... -I Cl> * }f * r' -< -z C) (') 0 r- 0 :u "II 0 ·:I -I :u > i I ' ' ;:-."))\. ¥,":J 1·' , .. ,.,, I ;- Ayda L. BT11•ntll, R.E. formerly of R.obi nson;s Pat•d•n• & Newpotf ANNOUNCES Openi~t of h-., new office 1514 North Coast Highway fmerald Ba y Prof•ss ional Building L1guna 8•1ch, C11iforni1 For Fr•• Co11au~afio!'I ••• Phon• 49•-2100 OUR GREAT BLONDES ENCUPWITH ROIJX l -> --I We bring back the 30's blonde look of Garbo, Lombard, Harlow-and take it right . . ' .... ... •• -.J -Jc * .. GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! llfot Ibo old ~ tinted or pal11t.d hlock & white Photos. SftllSfACTION GU~: or .,,_ .l»CIWI refunded._ WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. 5 DAYS ONLY! Babies, children, adults. Groups pboklaraphed at an additional 99¢ per subject, SlllU 1929 JULY31THRU WHITE AUG . 4 ~COSTA MESA 3088 Bristol Ave. FRONT Just Off Newport Ave . ~~~ .. MOW:> O NIAI, -¥-• 1120$ ' / ' . " \ Ill * ~ inro '68 ~th the softest pastel roningcolors. without peroxide. Nice Change color won't rub off, lastsforweeks, can be refreshed whenever you wish. And rones your lightenedhairinjuatlO minutu. PLUS SHAMPOO AND SET (Mon. thru Thurs.) M25 (After S p.m. $2.50) • 1, &i.·S.t.-Sun. $3.00 ---· ---· ---.......... In E. 17111 ii•_. Diii Hlrllw IMI. -·c.. I(~ ...... ----NIWPOlt aUCK, CMIP. IOWlfTMll YAUil'I,. CMIP • ,.,, ........., ........ 17G ""'--"' ~ ........... vtl ... c...tw '"""" 61$>1'1t -- • ' ,. .......... --SAlft'A AtM. CM.IJ. MtRA ,..... Clillllf, I .. Wtstr.11....., 'T_,.....,. ........ ,. Jlltfllt.F~ _....,.. c.w.r -- . . ' '/l::.:·.Jfl:ff- l'OUNIAAN MU.If, ~ Jm ...... hdW V•l!lr ~ -·-~ . . .. -.. -.. ,. -·~·~·~·-~---~....-................. ~ ........ ~--~-....... ---------...... --------~----~-~ --~· .. ~ ----.... ----- • -·- -• . . . ..day, lugust ~. 1%8 Double Ring Rites !,.----------.... ...-====----.----------.... • Mesan Claims B·ride After honeymooning ·in Puerto Vallarta, Wayne lCent Stanfield' end his bride, 1he former Theresa El a in e W_,ilson wW make their bome in Costa Mesa. '!be daugbler of Mr. and Mn. O; Kennetit Wiloon ol Garden Grove and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Dee Stanfield of Costa Mesa ex· cbaniged vows and tjngs before tile Rev. Ml<hael Samsvlck in Calva r y Church, Santa Ana. Given in marriage by her father, the bl'ide wore an A· line gown ol silk orgama will! chimtilly la<:e and seed pe_arl trim. A cluster ol floW~ Jleld her illU&ion veil which flowed over .a lace catitedral1rain. Forming her b o u.q u et wen · pbalaenopsis orchids and .,e-Uow baby roses on a white Bible, a gift from her la~ gr~dploth~L !-liss ·£allly Stanfield, Ille bridegroom's sWr; served as· maid. o.( booor, while bridesmaids weie M 1 s s Patrici& Hamer of Los Angeles, tile bride's cousin, ll!iss Marcie Mi1b of Palos Verdes Estate and Miss Anita Parnakian of Hun· lingtml Beach. They wore A-line"gown6 of antique gold and carried lavender chrylan1!Jemums and baby. yellow. roses. T001 Parn-akian of Hun- tington Beach attended as , best man. Guests ·were ushered to their seats by !IOb Johmon of Huntillgtan Beach; Keith Perry, West Covina, and Dan Downing, F1agstaff. Ring b e a r e r s were Willard Wilson of Con- cord and David Wilson ·of Palos Verdes Peninsula, brothers of the bride. Assisting at the reception in ttle church hall were Mrs. George Short of Claremont and Mrs. Walter Hemer Jr. of Los Ang~es, the bride's aunts, and Mrs. Ra'Y Ottoson of Gas:den Grove . Following MRS. WAYNE K. STANFIELD t Puerto Vallarta HoneymoOn the bride's parents hosted a buffet dinner in their home for close r elatives and triend'S. · Special g\!est was Mrs. Della A:tlley of· Orange, tte bride's great-aunt. The bride is a graduate of. Brethren High School-in Paramount a n d attended , San Diego State College. 1 Her husband is an alumnus 0£ Costa Mesa High School and attended Northern Ari- zona UniVersity and Orange 1 Coast College. ~"'°~~ ANNUAL AUGUST ALL CllEOIT SALE! .· Famous Brand Names-You All Know. Bargains After Bargains! Prices $lashed to Exciting New ~ Lows! 33 I /3 .. 50°/o OFF on Shifts . - Skirts Sun Dresses Cotton Dresses Cocktait Dresses Capris Blouses Lingerie -. Sweaters Swim Suits Swim Suits -Prices Slashed 300/o to SOo/o off ($wh11 l11fh Hlf -Shirts A•t· II 3424 Via Udo • Newpon Beach - " , NEW SOCIAL MOIRES. fashion has rediscovered moire and made it one -" .. .. of fall's leading social graces. with e\lef!iags no longer stiff, this rich, swir~ogly patterned fabric is a natural. it shapes beautifully and its ingrained eleganee ·has a penchant for subtle shadings. jm yourig connoisseur collec- tions have fall under its sway. the white decollete-topped, brown·skirted one is belted high in black,sizes 6to14, 52.00. the shoe-buttoned white shirt-topped one ·has a ruching.embellisne grey skirt and a hot pink belt, irE~~1s.oo MAG NIN • • 't>'U. • i." .... :! \\ . • • . "\! f , •• f:I ,, . ... 'i: :.fJ,'fi: .... ,, .. .-:;.," ..-.. ,, . -..t. ~ t'. • . ,,;.,~ . ·t <ii .... ' . , it!-.. " -rl' •. , • •·I' • It . .... ·!· . ..... ·'·' " .- , . • • • .. CA.ROS also Di1neyl1nd Hotel \ I """' ________ ...,,.._ _____ .._ ..... -. __ _,,thop im at touth eo11t pl1u, bristol at ••n ditto fruw1y, cost• mt11:l monday, thur1d1y, friday 10 to 9:30; tuMday, wtelMl_'lay~ Mfunlty lN ! • I I ' ' ----~~---"'---- ' ! . I . I , • -'J! caJLY PILOT I Costa Mesa , , • ,. ,. .,..,..,..'7'".,,.., :-,,. . . . --• •• Home .. ,,......, .... ....--. ... ~ •• r • • ..--,,....,....,,....,r • . --• ~---·-------• Bride Claimed -Nuptial -Vows , Recited . In July Rites • • Ext'banJlne wedding vows durin.& a ceremony con· due~ In our Lady or Ml. rt-"!-~11!on:ntt1lliirch were Linda Lee Cusumano and Gary C. Kelder. I 'Ibe bride is the daughte?: of Mrs. Vincent O. !Cusumano of Newport Beach and the late Mr. Cusumano. Given in marriage by her cousin and godfather Vin· cent Pernici, she selected an A-line semifitted peau de toie gown designed with a lace yoke ed. elbow-length ._bell sleeves 'lbe· tace was • repeaibed in her chapel train pd ,appliqued on h e r .. j houlder-length illusion veil Their gowns. •tyled llU S<h9ol &nd Ora°'' CoaM the honor attendant's,, were. Coll•&• and 1 t tended orange crtipe and Cll&nlt California St ate Colle&e, bows h•lct1h•lnl•lls. Tllay '1:ollf' 8efth.--;- carried b o u q u e t 1 ol. The bridegroom, wbo was daQies. · gnMluated from Monrovia. Mias Sheri Schmoytr, tht llilb ~. aerved wttb the bride's cousin and 1odehUd, U.S. Navy. ser\led as flower gir1, wear· Special guest.a at the wed· ing a turquoise gowa •U dl.ag and reception wen Mr. Identical to that of the maid and Mrs. -Rod MacDonald ol honor. a.nd family, Walla Walla, The bridegroom. son of Wuh., Mr. and Mra. B11il Mr. aod Mrs . Raymond Ro'se and family from Kelder of Newport Beach. Martcaibo1 Venuutla and asked his eot.1sin, Paul Mrs. Ruay Bauman of Zehner oC Laguna Beach, to Portland, Ore. ser\le as best man, Seating Veterans CAROLEE PETERMAN Betrothed · Betrothal Touring the H-a w a Ii 1 n lalands on .tilei.r ~ymoon ~ .... -Mr.• and Mrs. Klpf Fitch. 1be former Pam Ware ii 1!ie doulbl« ol Mr. and Mr1. James Ware of Costa Mesa and ·her husband, who resided on Balboa Island, ii th_e son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Filch ol Franlclln, N.C. . The·Rev. Rich"}ond Johnson performed (b e single ring nuptials in Mesa Verde M~ Church. brJdesroom•1 brother and Kini Ware, 1lbe bride's ~wu-tht utM . White-tJadloll ltld yellow pomp0ns deconted I h e alllr. The home of tbe bride'• pa:rtnts w11 the Jettlna tor the a.mall farillly r&ception, Amonc apeclal iuesta were Mr. and Mrs. Geo<1e Ayer• of Lago, Fla., the brld611 crandparenta. . ' ! which waa held by a crown of satin rosebuds. She car• ' ried a bouquet of white daisies and orchids. Miss Priacilla Cusumano was her 1iater's maid of honor and she selected a full-length gown of turquoise crepe. Turquoise bows held Mr small veil and she car· ried a bouquet ol yellow daisies. · g uests w~re Grant Cusumano of Rosemead, St.e\len Rose, Madrid, Spain. and Buzzy Ho<11aon o I Garden Gro\le. Following the ceremony. conducted by the Rev. Fran· cis Kelly, 200 guest.a wert entertained at a champaane Head Year Revealed For the morning · rites the bride wore a fioor leogtb . ~ empire styled gown with a detachable tace chapel length trail\. Lace adorned her neck.Uhe• ·aq<t slee\les and a roffbud hta;d. piece lined with pear la · and sequins held a . shot.llder length veil. The new bride The 1l e w Mra. Fitch and her husband a r e both cradualft al Coota MeH High School aad .ace Hnlora at UCJ. 'lbe'trlde, an alum· na Of Orange Collt Collfie, is maJortnt in education and ta a Jnemlier of. Phi Beta KAppa. Her huaband Is •Ill· dyinc psychology and wu -body vlC1! preeldenl at CM!fli; • . , , I I I ( I I j I • Bridesmaids were Mis! Helen Evers of Costa Mesa, Miss SUsan Ayres ol Alham· bra and Mias Kathy Kelder, 1 the bridegroom's sister, of Costa Mesa. buffet dinner in the Zonll Club of Newport Beach. Assisting at 4be re<:eptlon were Miss Cheryl EM• ol Temple Ciiy and Mias Emlly Giancola of Alhambra , cousins of the tl'ide. Following a weddint trip · t.o Las Vegas tbe couple will reside in O:l6ta Mest. The brick 11 • &raduate of Newport Harbor H I f h All National Brands At GREAT S:A YINGS August CL,EARA·NCE He1dlq into • new year with double bcreltd power ·will be the hulblnd and wife team cholen to lead tht Veteram of Foreijtl Wars Coletline Post 3538 as com· minder and eudtiary presi· dellt. Mr. and Mra. Vernon Mattw.¥1 each found tne ~·· lint mHlinf Ol*>al in--· 'ftrlt yNr will be ttM It· cond term aa commander lu' lllathlwc. while tile in· ltlal1-mee11n1 W u a birthday party for Mra. ,Matll1w1 . She WM presented with an orcbld ......... by Mn. J...., Tor· rem, who •tone with Mra. Fknnce Jtirdinv served birthday .cake and coffee to menara pret<ftl. c.ommuder M •thew 1 Pl'91ented the !Adies Aux· iliary with a check few their IM!lp in atalftnl I h t ftrtW\:lrk• atand durlna July. All Ille mc>ney will be used for rellel wort fGr' veteNn1 and llMir fomillff. At Brunch . carried a colonial noliegay ol yellow chrysanthemums and white pompons. Tht eng·agement of Carolee Peterman to ~raid • Lee Brant ha3 been an· nounced by her parenu, Dr. and Mrs. Loren E a r I Peterman of Tujunga. Mrs. Meers Rork., the bride's sister fro111-··Hun· tington Beach, was the matron or honor. She dormed a yellow lace empire J htath with bell slet\le-s and held a nosegay of yellow pomJ>9fls. Best m a n was David Fitch of ·•Costa Mesa, the Tlii -1"'edt! will make 1liOir tlrlt liome on 1lle Cllll• pul ol UC!. Overeaters E\lery Monday at 8 p.m. membels eatber in An· derson Sdlool auditorhHll, Wertmir.ter, for meeti.np of O\lereaten AftOllymOUI. Gue3ts M-e Welcome to at· letid. The announcement was made at a brunch for family and close friend8 in the home of the bride-to·be's parents. ~~~ Miss Peterman i1 a sractuate of Verdugo HillJ lfi&h School and attended Pepperdine College a n d Heide)berg University. Her lll'ICt, son of Ralph G. Bnnt of Newport Beach and the latt Mrs. Dorothy Brant, iJ a graduate of Wa.sbington Hi(h Sc:hool and -nded El camino College. 'l1le ftdding will take place next March. d9fS your bra give you any of . these problems? t RIDE UP IN BACK e STRAPS CUT SHOULDER e GAP AT CLEAVAGE • PINCH, CUT O" BIND • UNDERARM GAP t GIVE U.PLlrf DESTREO SALE Harbor Area Couple At fa.shlons for LA FEMME proper fourn:lat!On · fitting is 2. !ttirnu. Experltncrd corw:Ueres ptrsonally flt wiry foun~ation unUl...~ltlprs you btauUfullr. Take advantage: of this expert flttl119 senlcr whrn you buy your bra and gltdte. Our trained stiff will ht1p you flnJiht fuhJon way 1ou want to look. And · rrmfmber ... you can I buy it from us unless ii fits yQu! fashions for SWJMWIAR ••• SPORTSWEAR ••• ' LINGERIE· ETC. SAYE 1/3TO 1/2 Married • 1n ~ttlt will be tht MW home of 11..r. and Mn. . Judsoo R. Sha\ler, fOllowinl a honeymocm up the coast. ALL MERCHANDISE FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK The. f<ftMr s h 1 r o n Galbraith and Shaver were wed ' in Cal\11ry Baptist Cllurch, W1hittier, with the Rev. W 11 Robert,, presidinl. The couple are the daughter ot Mr. and N.n. R-. G1lhrlith ol Newport Beach and the son. of Mrs. Carol Sha¥er of CbM.a Mes.a and the late ReV. Robert Sha\lfll', Her facber elCOl'ted the bride -. an altle covered with e white runner to a white lmeelinl altor and Doral decontkw. Boys Wear-Girls Wear Her enttmble wu formed from wlllte or-with • full lenith lace overl•Y, em· pire bodice and a aweeplng all·laee train. Her veil WIS held by • poui-9tudded """"'· "11ile 1ladioli joined atepl\lnOlil In her bouquet • Ladies Sportswear 3404 VIA UDO ONE Of' THE LIDO SH°'S Park in Rtv •. Atundlllls Mill Becky Moose Group Women Of the Moose, 115'8. assemble ti\e first and tb&rd Thursday of each month for meetings in Moose Hall, Cos.ta Mesa . T h e programs be&in at a p.m.. and Mnl. William Calloway. "6-4241 , may be called I« further ht· fOrmaUon. HAVE YOU SEEN THE LATEST? Our new "Enchentro" rings fit together to 111y bt1utifully in pt1co. Isn't this tho kind of -ing •t 1ht deurvt17 M1rquise eet, $495. Pear cut .set. $495. Unusual design with four Marquise diamonds, one briUi1nt. $120. ... Brilliant &el, $250. Emer1td cut 11t. $250. IANKAUER.ICAltD ii MASTER CHAR~E. TOO I }; ' 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH •H·lllO . ·- Whittier Galbraith, tile -·· """r and m~d of honor, · and bridesmaid& th• mi 1 a e 1 Olthy and Donna Cass of Sierra Madre, w'ere all aow;ntd in e~y yellow and carri'ed white a n d yellow daisies. Best man wu Brent snaver, tht bebed1 ct'1 b""1ler. wllllo Ron Pet..aon o( San Joae, Lee SwaDSOD o( Santa Borbora, Wally and Danny W.Uace tlf f:.l"ewport Beach were U$:hers. Assisting at the reception were Mrs. Roberts, cousins Miss Jaque CampbeH, Miss Dehbit: Richter, Mrs. Harry LundeU, Mrs. Elton Barnett and Mra. Walter Galbraith. All four grandmothers and one grandfather of the cou· pie were preeient at the ceremonie!. The new Mra,'Shaver, a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, ha< •!tended Orange O>est CoUtge. Her husband is a.ii. a\umnus of Corona del Mar Higb ' SChOol and is now attending SHttle Pacific Colege. h•'t Give Up DAVIS Proltaltlr Has It }1t.1I ,. l ifll ]OJI •It iJ11 t1f 1j1 17p1 ofJmoNJ lu·n11J1 'Ult tlllffJ, WI Alll /JJltl. I /IW ., , .. ,,, '''""· HtH•EDOH Hl•tTAGl D•txEL · JOHH 'WIOOICOUI DIJON IOWDE•MAt<E• Hiii.MAH J •AAHOT 11.IHOEL OArts CAtlHn ... OOOM'A•.< .C'AIASTAH AM_...,_,. y,,.,, f«11oriu m1rrior J11ig11· tr will IJt hpp7 Jo ~1iJ1 )Oii. 1'i11• ,,,.;,,, • .;,. •• ,,,, I t75 Le119 IM~h l lvcl. Carnor of 20th StrlOI and Lont S..ch llvd., LONG llACH 5'1·1347 ~mmt Fashion Island, NEWPORT BEACH ·."' }phone b44·0170 O"" 11.•·"'· to I•·"'· d•li.,; MO/fl. •lld Fri. lo f:lD p.m . . LA FEMMI CHARGE, l~NKAMERICARD OR MA.STIElt CHAii.GE -!. AST PARKING IN REA .Bo .. B'S .~.~!,., MON. • FRI. t :JO fll ,,. 5ATUROAY f :XI lo S;OO CLOSED SUNDAY IARCOAIN CINTIR '··----1812 Newport Bl., Costa Mesa .. lolephotte: 646-7167 SU.MMlR LOWER THAN DISCOUNT SAVE!!! SAVE!fl SALE 0fttOM• ou• llEAUTY SUPPLY DEPT •• RUlllNG ALCOHOL 19 fli1111it 21 ................................... c ~~:~~1"~.'~ .. ~~~-~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 68c WIG HIAD FORMS 39C ......................•••••••.•••• R•9. Sl .00 HAIR CONDITIONER 39 Pe11ti111 arwelle',,,.,,.,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. C ~;'!,1.~.~L~~d~ ... ' •.• '' ...... ':.· 11.,. SI.OD 25c FROM OUR JEWELRY Dll'l. PINDANTS, l~K Y .. l•W •r White Ge'l4 S 17" with tli 1m111d e111t.r. h9. $15.00 ............. . PIAIL RINGS, l•tt• O.I• $915 S 12" wlttit cultur.4 ,.,,j,, R•t· to $29.•5 . . . . · to LAOtES' ORUIN •r WALHAM'WATCHES •22so 17 Jtwel "''"•111111h, R19. $79.951 · · .... · · · · ... · FROM OUR SPORTIN6 COOODS Dll'T. ,_NN JIOMAITll OHL ' S 11 " Will t.•,,dl. m•1t tetn•fi1li. let. t 11.so ........ . PINN SU•PMAITIR REIL '11 " Very po;ul•r with Moil fi1her"'•n., Ret. Sl•.•·1 , . . - PINN RHL • sr Fer Hie 11th! tec•1e 1polh"''"· R•t. Stl .SO ......•.. OLAll •OD w/C'LOIED PACI REEL, $31t llne 1n4 c•li11t ·itl•t fer fi1hint lt14. S•.15 "' Die•..,,,., p•1clic1 . RODDT LINI (1·10·12 llK.. T•t) on 200 y1rd 1pool. Sw,.•r tr1n1p1rent. R•t· Sl .50 . (Fr11fi1h1c1l•1 wit h •"'f 1f th• el>••e l W.ILSON GOLi' SET f• LadlcJ '30" Wen,., Cup. ! iron1 '"" 2 WIO .. I wit~ 9olf b19 ... Rig; SS•.tS SARDINI$ IN TOMA.TOI SAUCI IUPl'IT CANS .•. YOUR CHOICE 111ch11 • '••u . "pricol1 • ,.i111eppl1 • Mvit C•ckt1il or Fig1. lll"'lt I c1111I CLOSE-OUT EXTRA SPECIAL UNBEtlEYAILE LIGHT PIX'tURll Pet HANGING LAMl'I l"'ptrt.4 M11r1n• &1111 fr-k1ly. !Ne ch4!11 tr •cc111or111I l •t· $25.00 . . . SCHICK ·SUPER STAINLESS ·srn~ -~·£00£0 Bl.4DES let YOiK httH'oom 11ur1or rt- flect 1 l111111ther llCI af1tt a .Clo.MJ C6mfortablc al'llve wiltr. lh.111 su11r 1•11rJ • Schit' ~l1d15.1 A pacbp of 1illl stlli fol aneltrtmely hti-dfwft ,,c. at Wllitt ffo"t! Price lnclutlll 2tt ttf "''~'-· Normal or extra hold formulas to disci pline a II types of hair. JJ oz. aero'sol cans. ggc HASK TALC Deodorant Starts dry to keep • you dry! Will not stain. 4 oz. 88 ~ ... lT .... .. -·~ BEAUTEE F.OLDING :J~-SYRINGE & CASE , , ii · Compactly d<signed Sy· -JfJ, ringe .folds neat!Y into at· I "' tractive tra veling case. / Complete with 14 9 all atta ch· - ments. c.11,. at· . ' 2.51 TH~RAGRAN M VITAMINS TlrulAP£UTIC FDRMULI WITH MINEIWS From the trusted pharma· ceut ical house of Squibb -5 g g the , potent food supplement · formtlla which sells for so ' •. much more elsewhere. Bot· tleS of JOO capsules. cw. •r 1.11 SHOE ,REPAIR . SPECl~L . MENS RUBBER HEELS ' . REGULAR 1.50 WHILE YOU WAil 99c COSTA MISA 3088 Bristol ,.... . Juit ·Off. ·Newport Jiye; • ·. -,,. -.,.--,..- • • Governor's ~igg•Jf Fan. ~~~~~ .......... ~~~~~ ' ' N~ne:y · En-joys Her Role ' . . B7'JO.t.!f.SWllNEY Clllml'm _...,.lo let pr~ llOlllln;llom. tho olrioll'elll*r *"" " llw fa-~ In· PACIP'IC PAUSADl!S Ibey w't Ua.0 " 1be lalllb-elude ~ ud Bill !UPI) -C.llfom!a Gov. ed. '"lboy .... nl<t··llllof - RooaJd Re11an'1 wife, Nu~ tbttn. tD;!i U..! tnoW tM1r "1 w.. llllQOle clotblt, not cy, I. y I ... II ~-·' : JOb. tt•a.ioill i»'lll terrlbl7 nllllJ .-.. 1 ... 't lib husband'•,.... .. fu., i,oa.11 wlU>out lbom." the u-In .-. J Some Reqaa w~err T w 0 ' t.c~ coc.tiall• tblM: .... ,Gf .. "1"11 tM say the petilo .. d lltettY "'" ..<.nu,. thfol.n 11 lhl 1111 ....;i. of_ JUr1 .,,.. to11mer actre11 lll ·mn tbu -...• Saenmlf1'0 bome WJr1 ........ I'll he th1t: She II I ..... t Jn. Wlllit t11ei ...,. uitH la _,. llappJ lo ... • lltlit nuence oe hlr blllbaod 11111 ..tW el lhit UI tho ~ ·-aed form a II t 1 ln~ul<d ln excblnCln& her aiwalllftioel, wli&t ~ .,.1un1-1o falbloo. I tll!U tt'a role aa i1"11'1t Illllll tf t111t dlnPr 't ha t ac. , ..... illll1 ttartlnc." Callfornla for tbat ot First compenlel Jiolltlcal notab•P1 Attlr :a.aau wai eltcted Lady of the United States. tbelt: la)'lf > iovun'Or. Mn. R 1 a 11 n Bul Jt 11 an illtmm tbe "It can't bllp but be in. r6dec«ated her husband's br"'.!"n-bairld Mn. llullD your "'1!14. )lat for,.,.. own office. denies. . peace of Dllnd, you b••• to '.'J 1th1nk I am• trustraU:d ~All I'm concerHd •bout' come. to tbe point where yo\I decor.tor,'~ 11M said. Is ~ing' ROnald Reagan'• say, •y~ ba.ve takft all thi! · ''It 1tmtec1 with ·a small wilt," •ho said durlnC an In· preeMillaei tlolt YN . CID ' study and ..... like topsy, ti!rvitw in the Reatanl' an4 IO ahead dd tUft 'JOUr ~ The ·old Govtmor'1 Mansion sp1dou1 tdllaide home ill lift and do iwMt You hRve · (wbJctt 1be t:ftntuallJ refui· thll upflllltve, ,.. t 11 • to." ' · ed to live in) and the office marileUrecl LOt A n 1 • l e • Mn. Reagan wu a were so depres•lftl. · I •u-. ClllUfo ·-. th e coubln't ttand it. I !hou&bt I Well then, would me like dauihW' of. ·• pnmlneat ho.. IO do -thlnl for her h u 1 b a n d to be ntUl'OIUJ'leOll; blfOre. •be tbla _. Jlllll. president? 6alne to Hollywood and a • '"l'Jteft wu natbJnC in the "I try .ut to th1nl: 'abollt coatnlct with a m.o v le . whol• wlllc that bad it," sh• said, 1oottn1 /rHh 1tudlt. •Siie wu mamld lo· lft1l!lnl to do 'with the and eool on ' hot .Ummar lteopn In 11&2; and • thty,'\ hiat«y ol Calllomla • • . _I day Jn a atmple plJjlt aod . h-l"9 dllldren, htti, 15, arrtnltd Wl1ll a pnary in w!Ult checbd dtOSI 'wltb a and Ronald Praocolt (Skir· S&n Francll<o to put some doublt 'ltrlad ol -'11 at pet), L · · Nlntlnll of Olll!ornia In. At the neck. ''I bt:vt Vefy mlz· Of her ch.lldnai, 1be ·1aid, )'ort Mt.r, I fOund aome Id ..-... -.t It. "Wt try vtl')', vtJ')' bard to A11!7 morwlou old Cur-· "It II k&td "llard qunUon keep their Uvt:t 11 normal rltr_ ud Iv11 priatl." • • SINC6 llZ9 . . WHITE FRONT lltJIUlY • SllMtl • ,91SCOUMJ • INTI~ DORM EYER 3 ·SPEED ·PORTABLE M_IXER ~ Wh ips tttrou1h "'""" wh•P. ped cr11m. calll bitter. H11 1 •Pold 1tr Mr'/ job. Finatrtip swltcll, bester ejector. Model HM7Wll WJ.Rft. 3s1 5.81 . ' .... ____. .. " .. _,, ...... _ .. ~ ... ~ "BEACON" TWIN SIZE · ELECTRIC BLANKET to answer. I'm sure that I u posaible.'" a. allo made some mu! bo bla blflft{ ha. I On hor role• tlJ• wife of chlllpo· la tllo home that Z. ·:-: Maohlno -; don't 1111nt -• 1' anytbiDJ a -IDd • prpmhieat Ila --,.._ alle /~. . ablt, ftttad '°" · ho couldii't do. 'ht If far at poUllcal fisur~, aM Kid, "I llbe lnaillod thoJ mo .. out • ......... l"" M(l for <Ontoor llfJ -w.iotlni It tor . th_lnlt wbea 1'l'1 have JOldl el tllo Oom_.1 M.,..ian, --"': ._,,. --o ·. ...,. \. •se. D1llt1l1 tho -lbll Iovld I don't clilldrln, it'! probably m°"' a Vlctorlu cta...-lll'lad If· '"(· .,,. · "· 111slllcolo11o t111nt .... oould 117 tbet.. I dilljcolt .tl>an for aomebad7 fair !Mt oho -. a . . • •'-#E-610. tlllnl: 1111·1"' II io-aniome who doesn'l. I loel VerJ ON trap. , · • .• ':J!"' . 7 97 and the "burden '° aweeome, 1troogly naw, be<:aute Ron· .. lt'1 opu for toun aow, b •"'" ...-. . mJ hurt IOll out to any nie .b • balJ •be ii and sbe said. "I couldn't help ~· fn..!f::· . man holding -olllct." aot U al>lo t. -d II but be a lttlt -UMd. ·Th1y ...,. WJ. Althou&h Reitan otnclally much time with t b e won't let the t°'1rt up on ttie ~ IEC. ldlll N-.Jf Only 'U • cbildru. I really murt. th1rd floor btcauae It's not IJI favorite I«& caodlcMte, the "I have lakl ~ ·some safe, but" lt wa1 IU))POsed to -·-••••• ==··-•••·--··· .. ·-···-- fact !bat ho 11 men the bard, fut rulu. Ito easier be slfe e"?"gh fbr us IO 4 •QUART ELECTRIC Jlllt anot11ar favorite aon b if you lay tham clown right 1ltep there. ' lndlc-by Ille fact that tn tbe be...,.., • • d . COR secret ltrVice •Clltll now everybody Imow1, whit the N POPPER cuard tho lltagana. autdellntl a<e. Im alwayo Perenh' Group (_..,...A "I ,,.. very happy when home at 4 in the afternoon Clear papper dome ac:ls as they assigned the 1ecrtt and I ntve.r eccept _week~~d Panntt Without Partneri , •t,$0"' SllWf. Cool handles: 1654 service t4) u1" Mrs. Reagan en.aaaementa unltl1 it s meet in Me11 Verde Coutl-\"-;!O;:·•;r,:i::::i said ' wltb tb• wbolt family." try Club at I p.m. tho firat 6 0 ··~ a matter of. fict. I Mra. 'Reagan ts perhaps Friday. Mr·•. Sulle Dunaway . 5 have Uid that when tt's all the most lt)'lish o1 tbt wives at 545-04:77 or :J«-20.14 may OUR · over and we no Jonpr bave of the mea conlldertd tlle be contacted for furUler ._. REI. ml)or ccnltnder1 for the formation. J.19 -. Afr Ca••tlNflll •••·-··-·-·--·•••••••••••-"' The Tee Large Sizes 2-SPEED ELECTRIC Tattler &o 1 ........ ••ittny, witfl Celifornio style sliM strotdi p•nh, colorful lef'lt teps. $et yollr in1toftt 1~il'lny •t H.tf .. Si10 Shep. C.1tri• f,.rn $1 . T op_s from $6 r!~n~,,· ~ . ~~'sHALF0 SIZE SHOP · • ' 1'°5 Newport II., C"'/a Miu •1fa ..... Mfttl.,1M..,.-.. .. 1Mo.n: tile .. l :lt. ....., .. t :OO All9 •• 1149'x;a,. ........... , EVERYBODY LOVEsl, THE Ill ~ WILD FLOWER >.ND YOU WILL TOO! YOU ARE INVITED TO OUR SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE St•rtint 1'o4'•y, Au9vs+ lit thtv Autu•t t·t1t, t :JO t• 4:00 Everything wlff Iii• rttluct4 te, clt•r et cest efll4 liielow, ft 11'11ko ,..... f9' .ur ~ ... .a, New F•R I Wirit1r Merchenlll••· -0' BLENDER Chops, liqu lfles, purees 11 20,DDO revolutions a min· ule, hoavy'.duty motor with push· butlon conlrol. 4 slotlcutti•c blodis can bt fltlltMld for · \:::::=:::~O::-.--...,cltaninr. Ill I. .12ss. "PREMIER" ELECTRIC ROTISSERIE BROILER for smolclou bot· 111 <0Nln1. Mota<· iUd spit. ""'°"'". 11blt two ptsiUon br1 ill n1 ra ck, drip well htllds tr1...y. t1R500. 15ss --••&eo100-·---· I I--·-- SLIMLINE 4-SLICE AU'fOMATIC TOASTER Han~some, &leamint slim line toa ster toasts ' slices as jl)llr likt lhtm. Madel W6!140/6094. 1197 ........ · ··········-··-······-·········- 947 ---.... ' 1 A. C!TSIAl CLEAi, 11 qt & 2 qt. covered casserole, I qt. ova l covered casse· role, &" square and round cake pans, deep loaf pen • I. COPPO llNf, I qt.cas- serole, l Y.z qi. casserole, 1011 1nd cake pans, baht pan, pit plate. · Choi ce of 2 qt, cov- ered sauce pan or 10" covered frypan -both in ale~ming durable aluminum with avocado Te fl on '" never· ,!.cour lininas. 97 EACH ' 7. PC. SALAD SET MIXING BOWL. 4 SERVERS, FORK r. SPOON Very attractive and coloriul for summer sat ads! White exte· riors with avocado 1reen interiors aives bowls an appearance of appetizing ._,cool· ntSS. 97 · COMPLm SET COMPARE ElSEWHEIE al 4.15 SET ""'·-····················-·-.. ······· .. ··········· COMFORTLINE FOLDING-- STEP STOOL 88 ·-·························----···-· .. ·•······· .. ·- LARGE PLASTIC LAZY SUSAi seven compartments for seivinf. Rotates read· ilyo_n ba ll-bearing base. Attractive bright colors. 1 ~.?G. 2.97 MARVALON PLASTIC SHELF LINER • PERMANENT! • Sllf-ADHESIVE! • WANTED COLORS! for drawer and shelf linlngs , counter and · 11b~ lops, walls. OUR RU. 1.41 1107I DAILY PJLOT 'J1r • 3 SHELF BOOKCASE· l , Walnut finished record 1 cabinet, 16" deep x. 40" wide ' 25" high, .. with three sliding doo rs, plenty of stor· ""age space: .. · ... ••••••-•••-•••--•H••M•••-••••••Hl-•-• .. I• ~ • CONTEMPORARY 3-DO(ll PERVANEER CREDENZA 3 sturdy caived doors -a solidly built chest for foyer, dining room or living room. 27" high x 48" wide x 16" deep. · · 88 HOBNAll AMBER GLASS SWAG DR TABLE LAM'P Griceful amber globe hanging lamp or 35" high table lamo wilh l 2"x 141'x1 6" shade. 10!! . I OUR MASTER PAINTINGS IUUTIFUllY REP11DDUC£D AND FRAMED Well-known old m1steis In 3" and 4'' frames. Sizes: 30!.42"; 30x46" and 30x5'"· TERRIFIC VALUES 97 11i. wn• "'-" i. ....,._ The Rnt Natientl lank anti Tlie M••• Vet4t lltatty ... Mete VorJ• Drive fwd 9ff A4em1. 140.Un e 200 M•11 V1r4e Drive e Sult• M ~ C..11 M111 CMA IT ... ,.. ... !~. ·--""" . COST-A MESA IOll IMl10l AW. • JUST 'If'. llw.olT AVI. , IJIWllll IAN otlGO J'IWf. lll Ultll ST. STO•l ·HOUU hlty 11 .. t ht. 10 .. ' ln.11 .. J \ • . I \ I l ·-' . I . - .. --· • -- '"Group --·Helps Negroes Find . ' Top ]obs With Retailers NEW YORK (AP) -A Cl"!'P devoted )O_~el[linc Negroes move upward into management and executive Jobi bas been formed by Negroes who won top jobs in lhe retail industry. "Twenty years ago it was considered beneath t h e Negro m a l'tSP9Dsible post. tion to extend a helping hand to those I e s s fortunate," W&ter W. Bran- ford said. '"Ibis is no longer true. BranfOl'd is a Negro in a responsible position who not only decided to extend his own band but to get others to extend theirs as well. wasn't my stick, 0 Branford is a..isc.nt J!Ul>li< relallons director for W. T. G:raDt Co., a junior departm...t store chain wltll -.1 I , I 0'0 outtets acrosi the natlon. Branford said he decided , to form the advisory group after "it became obvious to me that there was a need for a line ot·communicltion between the black com- munity and the retail in· dustry, and the best way to do UliJ was to utilize those people involved in both - Negroes in retailing." minoriUe1 OG the manage. ment and executive levels lnltlally llld !lien wor!OOg -• to l1e ·mid die mpervis«y an4 -...... Jobi. Finding Joi> Ol>lllilla• and finding the ptoPfe to fill them. Interesting y o u n g people in job& in retailirlg. Oottn1ellng retailers oa bow to develop communications with tile black community In which they hive a vested in- terest. And, wort:ing with tbe hard.-. unemployed programs tlo bri"I oboul an increase In tile upgradiJ!c Cf bard-core people ... LECTURES Branfdttl ~ the group used word of mouth. lee· tures, and brochures to • • v .. ·...--.................. . • ' I •• ~ .. . . ..... • ! •• • • -- ' World'• Largest Hovercraft UPIT ..... The first hov~t -:Vice •~l"OA the .Enclish Channel wu inaugurated Wednes- day at ceremoruea prestded over by Princess Margaret. The hovercraft will make a regular 35-minute run from Bologne to Dover for passengers and cars. The vessel, the Mountbatten Class SRN4, owned by British Rail is th~ world's larg- est hovercraft. 1 . -. 2-Man Team • I ' Raises Steam ,. B1 CABL W. IUTl'ER . " ~ATRIA (AP) - The 'lllJ'slery ot 'wllal to do witll the boiJlng, niuddled, cbemloal·rlc:h and mlDeral·. ricb brine tllat u., unci.r tbe. earth's <?Wit in Imperial Valley seem. to be oo tbe way toward aolutkm. A li'ttle calclum dlloride extraction company le.11 tllan 21!. years old iJ cominl up with aome anawer1. in the aeothermal are• npprozlmat<i, 110 m 11 • • eut of San Diego. They have bten tetted off abd on u 1ource1 of power, minerals .and chemicala, but only the tl>loride Producll well known as Sinclair No. 3, producing from 5,321 fee4 b a SUOCUI '10!')' to date, IJQIJID8, SOLIDS "It's what's happening to- day," the tall, 4()..year-0!.d founder and dlairman ol the National Negro R e t a i I Advisory Group SGlid. with an easy smile. He said :'there were three people 'at Our fN'st meeting last November. Now there are about 75. They are all Negroes aod they all are in responsible jobs in retail- ing." deliver its message. ------------------------------ HaU 1 dor.en major <OrporatiOPI had fiddled around wi,th steam wells and cbe.mkal extraction tests for nearly two deeldes -to the tune of milliou Of dollars -without a n y auatained com mercial production. The well ii capable of gushing •P to II!. million &allons of steaming liquids and solida per day. It has operated in 39-day stretches without .aoy indication of lessening flow or preuurt. ' ' r A marine engineer wtio moved into busineY after d e c i d i n g "engineering The ~ bas several major goals. These include "getting the retail indU1Sby to open jobs fur qua.lifted Negroes and other 0 Interest from the 1st of ilMY month on funds recei~ by the loth .. @ interest from date of receipt after' the 10th. t @)Interest to date of withdrawal on funds left 3 months or longer if account remains open until qua,rter's end. 5% per annum compounded daily cur· rent rate on passbook savings. 5.25% per annum on bonus accounts. ' I .,t<c; ,1t_!..-··~-------- .~~r If no! ca ll or come in TODAY! ~ MUTUAL SAVINGS ,,.. ~ ...... &•••Cl•T ..... 2867 East Coast Highway • Coron1 Def 'Mar, Calrt. 92625 Telephone 675·5010 NUD OfTIQ'.·~ 31~ £.. ctllOAADO llvtl. • ~ASAOOIA. CAI.Ir. 91109 . . .. • Portrait '"lbe brochures highlight Negroes in the industry," be said. "We are saying to thcw;e who read ttiem that these are people who baive made it in the retail imustry, that the companies are sincere when they say they want you, end that this ia the kind or inooey you' can make." Branford said the group wanted to "develoP a positi'Ve image ol. tne retail imustry among N-. The industry "" done • poor job ol projeding iUel!. among co 11 e g e students. College student.s generallJ have little idea Of what a store manager does or earns. This is especially true fur black students. 'lbey've been left out com· pletely. They don't think in terms ol retailing because they've never had any ex. posure to it. We will expose them to it." PRACTICES He said the group also Vr'laS working to advance Negroes already in retail· ing . "We've had people call us up and tell us they've been .assistant buyers for five years while white persons move up from two years," "' said .. "We call manage· ment people at the <.'Om.pany and have a talk with them about t b e i r employment practices. We ask them to take a look al this man beca•1se we want to see \hat he gets a chance to move. '·'We make no attempt to intimidate. An enlightened management, if m a d e aware a/ the situation, will do &omething about it." of a happy saver. MRS. BILLIE GOLDEN Bjllie Golden is a well known and Jori.g 1ime resident or Cos ta Mesa. As secretary of the Downtown Busincs.'I· men'5 A~~iation: she i~ a vital cog in promoting bu~i· nes.' and 1ndus1ry 1n our area. A mo1her of two children Billie i~ also ·an active member of 1hc Harbor Are~ Council of Beta Sigma Phi. Billie ~y.\: •·wr all IJt'I ~o i11vo/vtd ;,, tlrt prohlt111., of day-to.Jay living, thnl it's ,,011u·ti1nts t'asy to forgtt abo111 tht: /l.lture 1111til if°.f upon us. S)'slr11u11/r. .1·(J1•ing i.1· /or /tit an urtrgral par/ of 111y p/a1111i11g for tht futurt. At WILSHIRE FEDERAL SAVINGS 1111 'ntJ't tgg' grows, tarning tht' hightst ralr in tht insurtd Jll/tty of a Ftdrral Association." Funds received by the 9th of the month ••m from the 1st ••. atter tht 9th from the date of rec.tpt. 5% becomes 51,.ii o/0 when compounded dai,Y 1nd held for • year. Slvln1s Insured to $15,000 by the federal Savln1s •nd lo.n Insurance Corpor•· .... Bonus: E•m 1n extn 1A % on • 36·month Certific1te Account ln muttiplts ot' tl,000. c g·r···- 1833 NfWP(lf't Boulev•rd ne11r H•rbor • Cosla M~ Calltornla • 642-4711 Hom• Offlc•: LM Ans••es • Bacon and Eggs, We'll Miss You By SYLVIA PORTER 11te age of the traditional breakfast of becon and eggs plus all the trimmtno - freshly 1queezed juice and brewed colfee, toast, jam, wbaUver -is drawing to an end. Corning in it. place is the imtant package breakfast: say, a glass oi nulk with an additive to pn>dU<:e a balanced 300 calories for the kids or aooUler juice com- bination with a lower calorie count ~t still tasty, balanc- ed, nutritious. "The Old breakfast as you know it will change com· pletely in the next decad~ confidently pred.ic\5 Edward A. Otocka, senior vice presi- dent of National Biscuit Co., one of the nation's largest food processor s and distributors. "No longer will the housewife have to get up and go througit all the time· consuming preparations to feed her family. She'll give them a packaged breakfast with ju.at as much or more Nev> Direrter John Leland, general partner of J. Barth and Co. has been elected to the board of directors of National Systems Corp. Newport Beach. Leland also will serve as chair- man of the acquisition committee of the edu- cational firm. Servonic Sales Head Appointed Jack Cl, Prebicln bas been appointed\ managu Of sales 1dminlstratlon for the Servonlc Division, Gulton Industries, Inc.. Cos t a Mesa. Prebicin will have full sales responsibility for a line of transducers and swlt· ches produced by t h e Servonic Division for missile, space, aircraft and oceanographic applications. The new sales head most recently served as manager ol sales administration for the Conrac Corp. His background Jlso in· cludts service 8.!I manager of m11rketing administration for Amerlcan Electronics, Fullerton, con tr a ct ad· mlni1trator for Arn o Id MaaneUc1 Corp., Los Angeles, contract ad· minlatrator for Arnoux Corp.1 Los Angeles, and chief of quality control for Elecfro-lnstruments, Inc., San Diego. I nouri8hment kl -en! '1' form." "" ,.~, WE ABE oo the tl>resbold > of a revdution in our eating at home and eating out ha bi.ta, O to c t a beilieves. What you and I consider "convenience foods" now will be clwarled by vlhat will be accepted a1 convenience foods only a decade trom now. Entire meals will be pre· pared for comumption both at home and in restaurants. Industry can, insists Otocka, prepare these meals on a wholesale basis better than the· housewife can at home. "Industry can do it more economi'cally a n d con. istenUy, can put In.ore ,...ition and balance in the COUNSEL RETIRES RUlnald 8. Pear•m Legal Aide R. Pegram Retiring meal than any housewife." Reginald B. Pegram of \ The background f. o r { Otocka's pnd.Jction i.s ob-Newport Beach, de p u y vi.ous. The working wife· chief counsel in charge of mOther is increasingly ask· the Southern Calirornia of. ing for all the convenience fices of the legal division of industry can frivent. The the California Department harder and moce expensive of Public Works, will retire it is to obtain household this month after 22 years of 8.Sl!listance, ttie g r e a t e r service to the department. becomes the wife.mother's A graduate of Stanford demand for convenience University and USC law roods. Families are using .school, Pegram is a their growing leisure ar:id member of the California vacation time to travel ~.State Bar, and serves as a together by car and this also member of its Committee of is swelling demand for Condemnation Law a n d prepared foods which can be Procedure. . &erved quickly and can be Other .afftllates include eaten within the car as well the Los Angeles Colm.ty Bat as at the roadside. The com· Association, Orange County bin.ation service sh ti 0 n . Bar Association and tlle restaurant is comnl"Onj>lace Amer~ca.n Right of Way but. it..s greatest era lies Association. ahead. Change• in our eating habit~ that Otocka foresees are: -WIDE ACCEPTANCE • of the semi·moist food in new packaging and with new preservatives to prevent spoilaige. You will take home a semi-moist meat package, pop it into the toaster to become a meat sandwic~ or pop lt into the oven to become a meat pie. Greater use o f microwave heati'ng an d high-frequency ovens t o speed the transformation of frozen foods into delicious ready·tO·eat meals in a mat. Ur of second.I. Indicative of what i5 ahead is frozen Danish pastry for vending machines which can be turned in seven seconds into "the nicest, plump, heated Danish pastry you can im- agine." -Development or spun protein, tailor·made protein food which can be designed and. developed to look and taste like meat }Oaf, ham, bacon, chicken, etc. "You'll actually 'make' a chicken through pcocessing a litrand of protein." -VAST IMPROVEMENT of freeze-dried foods, grow- ing out of the needs of the military services and the ~ space program for concen· trated. nutritions, tong.last- ing foods. You 'll just mix the freeze-dried food with a designated liquid and out will come a product you can't dUtingui9h from the original. Freeze-dried foods will make shipping and st'orage much cheaper, "will be one of the biggest developments in the next decade ." -Real "port.ion cortrol" so tl'le housewife ~111 gel what she wants pre-cut, P'e· sil.tt and pre-balanced. "'1' Wouldn't be so willing to swallow these predictions if J didn't see how and what today's youngsters Uk' to eat. I'm rebelling qaiD9t ft aTI : I'm learning to bake from scratdl. PSA Gives Report for 2nd Quarter Pacific Southwest Airlines today reported earnings for the second quarter, ended June 30, of $1,276,000 on tota l revenues or $14,037,000 compared to $1 ,275,000 in 1967 on total revenues of 112,180,000. Earnings per share in the second quarter of 1968 amounted to 43 cenU com- pared to 46 cent,, for the prior year. The earnings for the second quarter of 1968 include gains, net of ap- plicable income tax, on sales of aircraft Of 11 cenU per share. Earnings k>r . the 1 i x montbs ended June 30 were $2,13:2,000 on total revenues of S'lS,600,000 compared to earnings of $2,289,000 on revenues of $22,9'l6,000 for the first half of 1967. Earn· ings per shan for the six months were 72 cents which includ~ 26 cents per share from extraordinary gains on aircraft sales compared to 85 cents per share in the prior year. Earnings per share are based on the average shares outstanding during ea c b period. The 1967 average shares outstanding his been adjusted for the 1967 lhree for two stock spllt and to rerlect retroactively the shares isS'lled upon con- version of the 5'1) percent c on vertible subordinated debentures. . Olsen Joins Dean Witter Kenneth Karl Olien, Jr., 25. of Costa Mesa has been appointed as an accourK ex· ecutive with the Newport Btae!h office of Delt'I wtUer and Co. Tbe'.n a two.man operation calling i'tlelf Cb Io ride Product. Co. hit the scene and there was. a significant change. A Jteam well began making money for i ts operators! The two -11nllkely cand.Jdiates for success in this kind of venture -were Fletcher L. Pullman, 1 San Diegan who bad become a Los Angele&-bued chemical Ml•man and William G. Marshall. a former Su DJego atock broker. Also Investing ..., William A. stephens, aecretary- trtasurer. NOT SURPRISING Everything about ~ wells in the valley had been very bush-hush do w ·n through the years with the major companies involved. And it. still is, which is not surprising in vlew of the fact a Callfornia st ate Senate f 'aCt·fin d i'ng comm.Jttee reported th e desert brine contained gold, silver, lithium, strontium, lead, zinc, cesium and other solids. There are barbed·Wire fences and padlocked gates around pilot operations and the area abounds with such signs as "Keep Out - Authorized Personnel Only," "Danger" and ''Abso lutely No Trespassing." But Chloride Products passed up the glamour possibilities to succeed with calcium and is willing to talk of a future which could have glamour products in it. Vice Preside!¥ Marshall says it is m the way to grossing $700,000 this year. M e a n while, President.. Pullman is directing an expa.w:ion program which will take the company into . highly refined dry calcium with a new plant capable of producing 50,000 tons a year. 36 ACRES "We have a $4 million expansion in the blueprint stage," Pullman said when he and Marshall took a newsman through Chklride Products' 36-acre chemical processing layout. Pullman 1a7s it flows 38. 7 parts of sollda in each 100 parts on average, exerting 1,200 pounds of pressure per oquare ipcb. Another well -on Union Oil property -iJ S&id lo .. so ·powerful from some 8,!IJ feet that "nobody wanb to fool around with it." Chloride Products lteers the bot liquid flow ill.to a series of ponda separated by dikes. Re!lnlng requirel that h brine ~efrom pond to pond while responding to chemical -wUeaticm before the end product iJ pumped into 1 large storace tank. A new 22-acre pond .almost triples the area covered periodically by liquids in various 1tace1 ef pn>cesslni. 1be caldum chloride liquid is Valuable aa a dust cootrol acent, which is one reuon high hopff are held for 1 Mexican subsidiary, Shipments to parking areas and drives near the Olympic Stad.Jum are likely t h i 1 summer, Pullman 1ay!I'. DRlLIJNG But cAlcium chloride is more valuable" now as a fluid wed in drilling, flushing .and revitalizing oil and gas wells. From the Calipatria plant, the calcium chloride produced there is finding its way to :iuch oil companies u Humble, Texaco, Mobil and Union, largely for offshore use. ~e highly refined dry calcium chloride, be i ng added to the company's liquid line after installation of a centrituge machine, has a number of uses in the food ilKl.ustry, including the brine media.. The product a blghly moisture absorbent and can be wed in temperatures down to 60 degree:i below zero. Chloride Producta C o . made its origfnal operating agreement with Western Geothermal Co. a aubsidiary of Natomas Corp., but Natomas i1 expected to withdraw from the picture in favor of realty investors Mr. and Mrs. Thom as Denman in what is reported to be a $111. million option transaction. BRIGHT FUTURE The visitor saw a roaring The D e n m a n s and steam well opened on Pullman believe the future nearby land and w a s is bright. anything but relaxed to "I feel that uJtimately the learn that everything in. the process of reverse osmosis area sits on desert floor rather than c hem i ca 1 atop an inferno that reaction or other meam is produces the bubbling hot going to be the b i g brine Utrougb the notorious breakthrough in ~Paration San Andreas fault o f of saturated .a o 1 i d , , ' • e-arlhquake fame. Pullman says in reference Extint volcanoes w e r e to the rich desert brine. viSible in the distance. He say' he visualizes The visitor was forced to membranes tailored to the wonder if one day the fault molecular sfze of t h e will open up and swallow chemicals ·anc:J. minerals to men and machine, 1 thought be separated from one that cause.a the v a I I e ·y another. · He feel.a th a t people to smile and shrui. eventually it may b e They like it bere. . possible to separate them A dozen steam wtlls have all. State General Fund Ends Year in Black SACRAMENTO -The State':i general fund ende<I the 1967-68 fl.seal year on June 30, 1968, with 1 cash balance of '137 .3 million , State Controller Houston ]. Flournoy reported today. The co ntroller's preliminary annual report wblch Is on a cash basis, thow1 that during the 1967· ea fiscal year. nceipt.s total· td $3,657,007.224 and ex- ceeded dlsbursementa of 1 3,S!l,173,943 b y '2!)5,133,281. Tht l~ fiscal year'• ending casb bala.nce was $.15,505,442 but there w1.a 1 •194 mUUon unpaid balance of temporary borrowings by the general fund. Primarily because of the re.,venue program enacted" Id i957, the a:enual fund was able to repay this carryover balance by May 1968 and end the year with a subsbn· til.l cah balaace, Flournoy reported. Flournoy 11.id : ' ' T h i a report i• on 1 cash basis and should not be undentooct to portray • complete picture of the :itate's financial posl· tion . The cash bala.nc. should not be confused with the unappropriated surplus of the gtneraJ fund, which presenta a truer picture of the at.ate'• financial position The determlna~ of th~ amount of Ullfijipioprlated surplu.a will be completed about mld~ugust when we will Issue financial 1tatementg on an fCCrual basis ~or the general fund and all other government cost funds. I I l I l •• ,. ,, ty "' r , <II •t.t lo. ·~ of "' ct. as .. of " 1.7 00 ,, er ,. I to rs • iy at to to re !d A ct !d in If •• st ,. Id y. .. ·ic I 1' a 1. >ii ,. m is 1il ! • n, 'Y g .. , ,. .. ld "" ly an •• oW " 1g rn ry ut to re rs " !d ,. ,. :is II is g Jn .. .. ,. • to ,. 't • m !!' •d •· •Y I <I to •• i· "' :h .. •h >I n. •• <I <I •• I II .d \I 1 I ....... ..----.. ..-. . -'"I' -..-,.. __ ___..,....._~--~·-•-•+-•-.p.-.=-•-=-.w,.....0-0 ..... +.-..•,....w~++-•-•-•U=•.-•--·-·-•-o.-.,• ..... +...,; ... a,...o-W.-o--o--.u-.o--=--•-=-•.-.=~•.-.o ..... .-.-~w-~w~=~=-= ..... =~·~·~=~= -~~----. --------. --------.. ---- Wi<IOf\dlY. Jui, 31, 1968 OJJLY~PllOT -27:--- , ··: Big Brother · . The 11T·Bird" theoretically could land on the Gal- axy's t:aU T-tail which is 89 feet long. Housing Hikes Defy U.S. By SYLVIA PoRTEll raiseJ hourly wag., by $1.115 fl!llldl>ox . you are Ille victim. The ur~ plel. for ''the and adds 35 -cents to So wl\at do we do? /.. utmoM restraint" in price· employer hoW'ly fr I n g e One pos$ible anBWet SllC· wage increases issued last l."06't6. Within 18 montns, a gested at a national con· weei: ··by a ·rughet-level joumey1'1l&o plumber in thll ference called by th • Qibinet CUnrn11iee will be aree will be •arnlni $7.15 1111 AHOClaled G-ral Coo· just one big yawn, if tbe hour. 1rac0.'n of America "ould ~on indu.stn' .i.s a ... y 1'tls ts wildly inllatiooary. be doser cocrdfnatioo of yardltict. For your own By themBelves tbe wage in-bagatoinf amona employeT fin&DCial future, hope tha~ crea5es s p r e a d inf\aUon grOUJ)I aJoog with customer thls industry isn't at all throughout ttie econom.y. IUPPOrl-for • hat de r tn>cal; vow to Icy to belR They allO Invite o th• r bargalnln« line. 'YI"""° H. compel more dikspline. uniooa to try Clo match the Bloud:, pre&ldeot ol. the U.S. For what is eoing on In gainfl. And f! collfM, If you Chamber of Commerce, constfucUpn Is a hoITifying are buying houaDg, you're 1ay1 be deltects among llll;istration QJ, trresponsibie using a dOUar which is busiDel8IZ'Hln a I r o w i n g abuSe ~ power, arrogant ·shrinking in value ~ the a.wareoess ol the "terrific disregard for the national week. impact b!gti coostrucUon ;ntereft. both by employers Who Is to b1ame? Both ttie costs are haring on their and employes. speedup: an average rise at unions and the contractor&. oiperationls" and believea HERE· ARE a few facts, haU:·year in 1963 of 14.8 The unJons deserve con· they ~ ready to back the put together by tile Bureau cents; ln 1964, of 15.3 cents; ·demnation for 'their almost contractors in ha rder of National Affairs. Jn 1965, or 15.5 cents: in -prohjbitive entrance and ap-bargaining. -Wage setit'lements in the 1966. or 19.8 cents; in 1967, prenticeship rfq~ments But the basic 8Dll'Wer must Lockheed's C-5 Galuy, the world's largest winged aii'craft makes its fourth test flight from Marietta, Ga., and dWarfs its chase pl~e, a tiny T-33 jet. ·.· -:-----~--~-------------------- first half of 1968, w-ben most of 33 cents; and ttlis year, Of roles which ere.ate artificlai be y-OUr own revolt, your oC the year's contract are 38.3 cent5. Not in ·any year shortages of workers and own ~-to force concluded, show an average h.as the aver&<ge in any other give the unions tremendoua modemiiation ol. lo c • 1 (median) wage increase or industry even approached bargaining &trengtt.. The building codel, methods, 38.3 cents an hour. This is that in construction, and the contractora deserve censure materials, techniques and 21.9 cents above the median gap has been widening.each for their peraistoot refusal your own boycott (to the for all industr.ie1, 23 .4 cents year. (In 1963, construction to permit modernization of best ol your abtl:tty) of those above the median f o r topped all llx:lustry by 6.8 construction m e t h o d s , resporuiibte h the &IWful m a nufaotwi.ng industries cents; this year, it tops all materials, techniques and erosioo of your bousiDg .. ._. A11btant ManflfJer Donald von Geldern of Corona del Mar has been promoted to as· sista'nt manager of U n i t e d California Bank's Corona del Mar office, succeeding-Wil· liam L. Somers, who has been assigned to the bank'& 0 r a n g e County. Airport office. Two Mesans Promoted . . By Atlantic . T'Wo ·Costa Mesa men have been promoted to directors · of Atlantic Re s ea r ch Corporation's Missile Division in Costa Mesa. A. J. Goe hie has been ap- pointed director of the ATHENA Systems Depart- ment and D. E. Thompson to director of engineering; both will report to E. Newton, assistant general manager for s y s t e m s engineering and manage. rnent. Goehle joined the division In February 1963 as chief of test integration and has held positions of base manager, Green River, Utah, launch site, and manager of the Athena program office. Thompson joined Atlantic Resean::h, Missile Systems Oivison in August 1962 as a project engineer. He was promoted to senior project engineer and later to chief project engineer. N.American Earnings Rise 33% North America'O Rockwell Corporatim's earnings Uter all taxes incttased 3.1 per· cent 4'I $19,190,000 in the third qum1er ended June ~. it WU UDOlaleed. Salel roH 10 percent to $639 ,920,000 ·from '582.320,000. Before reduction · for the receotly enacted federal in· come tu IUtCblrge, eam· ln&• per common share "'ere 11 cent&_ in the third Neal q1J81l'ter this year, oompll"ed with li6 cent.I in the like 1967 quarter. The tu surcharge reduced earn· lngs for the tMrd quarter of 11118 to 71 C<Ull per lllare. Salee for tile lint nlne mill1tb1 al the drrent fiscal yew lncr•••~d ro s1 ,tso ,s20,ooo from $1,8Sfl,060,000 for the com· porwl>Ie period of last yur. -P after .n taxea went IGl.930.000. comparod with W/,170,000 for th• first nine momtia ot JJS7. Gold Pripe Change Pays Off alone. industry by 21.9 cents.) codes , even though they doller. \ Since 1963, the size of -WHEN YOU DIG into know modernization would THERE MUST be an the wigi, hikes in con· specific settlements, the be safe, sound and help con· answeT' outJ}de ol d~ble struction has been ac-gains become even more ar· trol the wage-price spiral. government corUols. 'lbat'1 NEW YORK {AP-) -The· fO'r the two-price system, of having gold excllangeable celerating at a spectacular resting: In the Dayton, Ohio THIS JS a classlc eeee of what'1 at the heart of the TrtMury Deputment'1 an· saying member countries of at a stabilized price of $35 paC41 and wage gains have area, for instance. t.he plum-defiance of tne · nacion'1 in· cabinet Oommittee'1 plea nouncemeqt that the u:s. tJ:le International Monetary an ounce f"Or monetary far outrun Inc re as es bers recentiy WM a 2.8· terests. And even it yoo've for voluntary price-wage 1upply of gq}d increased by Fl,l.l}4 tealize tbe importance reserves. ekewhere. COMlder this month 1&rgreement w h I ch no Intention d. building a restraim . '213 milliob Jn June in-1 ;;,:;!i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ dic:atel that the gamble the II United states and its allies IQ.ade in. eetting up a tw<1,- price gold system is paying off. · The s<Kalled two-tier gold price system _was establish- ed by central bankers of leading nations last March to shore up U'le official price of gold at $l'l5 an ounce after a· run on ·gold by private speculat:or1. The -u n t t e d States was faced with a dwindling gold supply and the threat that it would have to raise the price of gold, an action that would be equal to deYaluing the dollar and setting . off a world.wide econonilc crisis. 'l'tle central b a n k e r s agreed to retain the official price of gold at ~ an ounce for monetary purposes and let the .market for gold for otner uses set its own level on a supply and demat1d basis. 'A FLUKE' South Africa, the world's leading gold p r o d u c er , would like to see the official price of gold raised. Of- ficials there have privately ~rroed the two-tier pricing sfstem "a: fluke." lti an apparent attempt to drive gold prices up , Finance Minister Nkholaas Die9erichs reported last week' that. Soll'th Afrtca bad secretly tested tl)e new free market ·with a "substantial amount" of gold sales. l;le further said South Africa Would not begin official sales "for a considerable time to come ." '-- U.S .. f i nan c i a I and marketing eXperts do not believe the South Abican announcement will h a v e substantial effect on the free market It oame after the price of gold on the world markets dropped to its lowest level in t h r e e months, hi tttng a tow of $37.75 on the London ex. dtange. After rising to 139.10 at the Friday morning fixing on the · London ex- change, the price slipped to $38.70 at the afternoon fixing on moderate trading. Some European sources were skepticaf of the South A f r i c a n announcement. The}' could not see how South Africa's test sales could have been substantial witbout more gold showing up in majoOr central bank holdings . A source close to the Federal Re1erve Bank in New York said the monetary system can live comfcrtable with a '6 to $7 spread betwMn the free market price and t h e monetary price. He predicted a long life Gains Told ByW~o Wesco F"inanciai Corp., which owns Mutual Savings and Loan Association of Pasadena, reported secobd quarter ne.t earnings of 1866.m or 47 .,..i. per share comparett · w i t h $293,271 ... 16 cents per llhare in 1967. Gross revenues were $5,895,8$7 c'ompared with 911,292,7f7. For the\balf Wesco earned $1.577,11111 ',or 85 c:enU per share on -ol $13,514,578 agalnsi $449,IMIS or :II coots per share on pWs of $12,lr.!2, 7311 . ' • ng . . One of the biggest stories of the year is about to break and we don't intend to let a single detail of our own state's role get lost ;,, that crowd of delegates. Around the dock, from tne •caucus ' tok in Miami rooms to the conv•ntion ~loor, we'll follow e'l'ef'Y' historic move for you. Whether it's national, regional or local coverage, We've got what it takes to do the job. That's because our own seasoned -. ' ' . staffl is' backed by fJlOt'e than 150 Associated • Presspiiliticafnews editors,-phofuipapliers and cm.tbec§Q2bW'k'ss W·'tm,·2zr; m ... -- • Tb• new 10 percent tn- conie tar 1...-ch•1• amoun- Ung to 2 c:enU per 11iare for thebalf year -ohargedj otfmt11elOCOlld qoaner, · .................................................................................................................................... .-...... J \ I I • ' • ~· ' l . ' • ------------- DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • . . • ., ..... ~ .............. -· ......... -.. -#."".,. ................. -., ..... -•• As the GOP Convenes As the openlng day o! lb! Republican national con- vention draws near, the nation's voters of all parties can view the scene with amazement. Four yeafs ago tbe GOP put practical politics aside while it batUed over ideology. Al the sanie time, Lyndon Johnson put together a coalition which might have been envied even by Franklin D. Roos·eveJt. The resul t was a shatteril)g of the Republican Party as Barry Goldwater lost by a record l&,l!U,088 votes. Now the Johnson consensus ls gone, with the man himself out of the race. And the Republicans' have, thus far at least, shown a pragmatic desire to have a winner while at the same time backing Richard Nixon, despite bis 1960 and 1962 i~age as "a loser." This contradiction will lend unusual interest to events at Miami Beach next week. Nixon h.as been the bard·working party wheelhorse. U the preliidency were a reward for long and diligent training. for the job, it would have to go to Nixon as· the man _best trained for it in all hi•lory. But Big Politics isn't like Big Business. John Q. Public looks for something more than training for the job. Charism,, for one thing. Indefinable charm, ability to relate almost divinely to ·the desires of diverse groups -these weigh more with the voter than service as an understudy to the top man. Representing only 27 percent of the electorate, the ·GOP has to face up to its minority status and nominate a man who can attract substantial numbers of Demo- crats and Independents if it hopes. to win in November. This fact of life is what gnaws at this year's Repub-- lican convention d~egates. Their hearts, what they can give to him, belong to Richard Nixon. And they can point to his hair-breadth loss to John F. Kennedy as evidence that he can attract non·GOP votes. On the other hand, they realize that in a more mod~ em context Nelson Rockefeller has demonstrated out~ standing ability to attract Democratic and Independent Politics Not for A Special Elite Although. I am as much .against onald Reagan as a man can be -for ,Jt"esident, for Governor, and l'specially for head of the schoorboard -I still think it is en unfair criticism to point to his acting career as a dis- qualification for public office. Th~ ils no valid re3500 fOf' believ- ing that a profe.ssional politician makes the best office-holder, or that lawyers (which most pOlitical leaders began as) are particularly better qualified to nm any government·U:ian laymen are. An actor can be ian informed .and in- telligent man; in fact, many of the new breed are exactly that -more humane, more broad-gauged, and cer- tainly better-educated than most of the old fogies who control the essential committees in our present deplorable Congress. THE WHOLE POINT of th e American system, indeed, the philosopby on which is was based, is that politics is not Ult! province of a i;~>ccia\ elite, or professional cadre, but should offer equal opportunity to men or all ranks and occupations in our SO!:!iety. It is worth recalling that Washington 'vac; a surveyor, Franklin a printer, Jefferson a farmer, 'Paine a journalist, J lancock a merCllant -and Hamilton an iUegitimat-e chlld! Just imagine v.·hat a modern political campaign could make of that. lN A PURE DEfl.tOCRACY, such as ancient Athens. all free men were held equally capable of holding any public office. and drew lots for the rotation of off1ees. And even today, in some can· tons of Switzerland, all the electorate participate personally in a 11 n u a 1 legislative actions, which are not dominated by a professioDal clique of politicians. But such democracy presumes two things -first. a relatively smell society, in which men can intereact personally and evaluate each other on the buis of character :rather than of "image"; and, aecondly a uniform degree of education, so that a stooe- mason or a· sheep-herder would be as knowledgeable .as eny other ci~zen. WE LACK BOTH these requisites in American society: We neither know our candidates personally, nor are all of us equally well-informed on the basic iswes of our time. Because of these two grave defects, o u r "democratic republic" often finds one kind of phony pitted against another kind of phooy, each exploltlng the pre· vincialism and prejudices of a particular segment Of the population. There is absolutely nothing wrong with an actor entering poUtics; indeed, it is heartening that noa-politiclans are willing to devote themselves to public aifairs. But, then, they must show that U'ley have prepared themselves as thoroughly, .and ac deeply, for the obligations of office as they have. in the past, fOr the performance ol roles. Back to Pony Express! · To the Editor: In 1948. ooe. of our Orange Coast post offices commenced its first home delivery route in one. area. True. it w86 to curbside boxes. but there were two deliveries per day -one in the morning and one in the afternoon. No longer were these residents required to personally pick up their m.c:iil at the post office. Several areas now have direct·to. the-door service. True. the city has grown. but there are also more post office buildings. branches. vehicles. employes etc. But wh at do we have? One delivery per day and the service is slower than ever. AS A HOUSE \VIFE, mother and business partner. ma~ I offer a few suggestions: I. Require all employes to work a rull score of hours for a fun day's pay. Dear 'Gloom y Gus: What'' .JU thi' controversy about the Je.ngth of haft( People should be Jud&'ed for w1t91 tboy are , not for tbe l<llllb of their hair. Some o( my be!! friends have oh°'1 hair. -A.&. I 4 Letter& from readerr art welcomi. Normo.ll11 writer& should convt11 tMtr messages in 300 words or le is. The right to condense letters to fit .space f/r eliminate libel i.s reserved. All lt"t- iers mu.st inchi<U signature and maiZ.. i11g address, but namt"s will be with- held on reqtl(!st. (Recently I ohierved a mail carrier sleeping on the steering wheel of his little truck. Maybe if they were .all back walking the route again, tlley could manage to st.oy awake during working hours.) .. , 2. Start using the verious modern new automa~ met.hods which the postal employe unions ha ve fought against over tile years. 3. USE PLASTIC bags or bins In deposit boxes. which can bt quickly and easiJy exchanged. rm.her than having a ma* personatly handle each and every article. (I have watched them dropping Jetten; in the wind and rain at mart than one box .) We h&Ye gladly cooperated wlU'l the zip code to speed up the mails, paid higher post.age charges through the several rate changes. put up wltti. fe-.ver depc»it boxes, ttc.. New to add• insuJt t-o Injury, there are rumors or a f<>ur-day week. closing hundreds of branch otficts and ne Saturday aervices. How'a Ulat for progress'? !Private t>uslness would bite the du.rt using these t.actica.) I say, back to the Pony Exprt!&s. MRS. R. M. WILSON voters. lie ,tw Iba "winner" Image that 'Nixon lacks. Rocke.feller s urban voter appeal appears to stem !rom bis well articulated reco_gnltlon of America's changed and cb40ging situation. flut he lacks Nixon's appeal in the.South and w!Ul tb·e j'bard line" conservatives,. California's Governor Reagan Will go into the con~ vention with minority delegate power of unusual pot· ency. That the conventio~ might turn to him In event or a Nixon·Rockefeller impasse ls unlikely in vJew ot his Jack or qualifications for the job. But It could happen. Nixon'$ generally favorable image with the conserv. alive wing or the party probably will prevati at Miami Beach. He will come oH as the "middle road Republi- can" -more conservative than Rockefeller and more llberal than Reagan. . The mood for change and new answers that ls on the• country should provide a real opportunity for the Repub- lican Party th1s year. But very much will depend on the tone of the conyentio~. If the Miami convention proj· ects anything like the arrogant hard-line Conservative atmosphere and attitude that branded the 1964 affair in San Francisco, no Republican candidate, whoever he is, will be able to wjn . Worse Than Being Shot Youngsters, and some persons not so young, have been tempted into using LSD. And som e of them have ignored. as talk of "squares," warnings th.at· LSD can induce brain damage,c malformed babies, derangement and suicide. Now a doctor. has reported a l&.year--old girl un- knowingly ate a cookie containing LSD. Her whole genetic structure was reorganized ; she will never be able to have a normal child. These are effects worse than being shot. Penalties for selling LSD should be at least as gr eat as for aggravated assault. COl..D fRoNT Language of Real World: 'Aita Peapea' · rt i11 incumbent. on us ace newsmen to climb down from our ivory towers once a year c:'fl<l journey abroad -the better to gra.sp what's going on in the real world. Mr. W~ter Lippman{! makes an an- nual pilgrimage to.Europe to chat with heads of State: Mr. Joseph Al.sop CQm- mutes to Vietnam to tell the generals how to run the wrtr. And , afJ.er con- sidering c a r e f u I.I y all such ahernativ~. I went off to an island in the South Seas. THE REAL WORLD ~ to grasp wa5 the island of Moore.a. which lies about two Dramamine pills west of Tahiti in French Polynesia. The real world is composed of half a dozen towering. lush·green mountains. .a fringe of white beaches, an en- circling turquoise la-goon and the coconut! grow oo trees. It is populated by maybe 4000 Polynesians, 5000 dogs and several million flies. All of them are incred- ibly friendly. There are no newspapers, no television and, at let~ on my part of the island, no radios. The language of tile real world, & far as can be detennined, is limited to one ihrug and two words, "aita peapea," pro- nounced "eye-ta pay-ah-pay-ah.'' THIS MAY BE liberally translated as "Wbo gives a damn·?" This rich and all-purpose language is extraordinarily useful in explaining why there are no eggs foc breakfast. the P£1tis riot.s, the whereabouts of one's laundry, the American gold crisis, or how come the boat that was to take you to Tahiti to catch a plane left 30 minutes early. Of course, a great many major events are transpiring these daiys in the real world. Mrs. Afiru's oldest son has started kindergarten. Mr. Oran a caught two mahi mahi in one day. And young Mr. Rafatea, having earned enough money to buy a bicycle by fill- ing potholes in the one 3S-mile dirt road encircling tbe isl'a~. has un - derltandebly retired. I GENERALLY SPEAKING, the real world Is pro-American. ''Americans," said one wel1-informed young lady, "are very funny ." But It is doubtful they will send troops to back up our commitment in Vietnam. For one thing, they don't have any. And for anottier they are very pro- everybody else. But mostly tlley a..·e pro·dancing -dancing, eating, swint· ming, flowers, children. pretty color~. h1ughiJig, talking and making love. So the real world, J'm glad to report, Is a very real world, richly alive and achingly lovely. BUT BACK TO the okl Ivory tower. After all these weeks w l t h o u t newspapers, television or radio. you c t'n imagine bow difficult it is to catch up. Ltt's see. there's peace negotia- tions in Paris. &n ambush ln Vietnam, riot,, in the ghettos. trouble In France. revolution In Cblna, a sex murder in the suburbs and Humphrey. Nixon, McCarth')', Rockefeller. Wallace 11nd Reagen are running for President. Thtif.'s the nice thing ~OOut Ivory tow&rs : you hardly know you 've betn •way. Eicept tbat gvery once in a w~te . I ~atch myitlf speaking Tahitian. All two words of tt. ·New .Red Attacks Politically Motivated ' ' Go~d Reason to l(eep Cool WASHINGTON -U.S. armed forces a.re ready. The army and government of the Republic or Vietnam tre ready. But is the American public ready if the expected Communist offensives materialize at the time of the national poliUcal conventions? This is the question which concerns top level strategists in the Johnson Ad.ministre.tion. They fear that opinion will skyrocket in apprehension as it did, and ·with about ~ much cause, during tile Tet of(ensive and the Seige of Khe Sanh. There is little doubt at these high levels that the concentration of forces in I Corps and around Saigon, with a U>tal of 60 .000 new North Vietnamese troops, is directly rel8!led to co-ming military operations timed to· take #pltce during the natiOnal political con- vention5 and the ensuing presidential campaign. THE OPPOSITE VIEW th<l't. this reinforcement and positioning of liroops i.s to reY\force a strong bargaining positioO at the Paris peace t a 1 k s is credited by tew Am ericans afld by nooe of the Sout h Vietnamese who met with the presi- dential party in Honolulu. The South Vietnamese told the Americans they wer.e fooli sh not to expect that the Saigon and I Corps concentrations would be committed to action. Public awehension on the seige of Kbe Sanh and the Tet offen.sive was not justified in enher case. Both cam- paigns failed as military operations wi.tti very heavy casualties on the commum.st side. In the case of tbe Tet olfenslve on tbe citie6 the government of South Vietnam eme!'ged stronger than it was before. At Kbe Sann the Communists-suffered thousands of casualties without gaining any kind of military objective. YET AMERICAN op1ruon is so vol.t•tile and ttle war opJ)9siti9p so vocal that vir1tually any military ac- tion is caUed a defeat and another. reason for winding up the war at any cost. Both pol:itical parties t'l'e vulJ'Jerable to this pre55ure. Large scale m ilitary operations at the time of the con- ventions-particularly the Democratic· convention-would heat up the at- mosphere, heighten tensions, and un· do-ul1t:edly affect candidacies and the dr.t{ting of the platform. The same is true, probably to a les;ser degree , in the Republican party wtkire the issue between Nelson A. Rockefeller and Richard M. Nixon is not markedly dUferent than between Hubert H. Humphrey and Eugene McCarthy. IF PRESIDENT J 0 H N S 0 N'S associates accurately reflect him, however, he is determined not to be influenced by public pre$$ure on this matter. President JohnsOn could ht"Ve returned from Honolulu and an· nounced that the prospect wa.s for the withdrawal Of one American division in 1969 and another in 1970 even ii the war continued unabated. He resisted temptaNon tc arouse hopes and ex· pectations or to hold P~ldent ·Thieu to rmy :1ucb comm.ibnent. On the contiary, the president's emphasis was against a !uH cessation of bombing and the "tommy-rot and fiction" of a unilateral AmeriCan pull- out. This emphasls tended to divert public atte'n,t1on from several im· port.ant pointS' in the ~Clint communique of Presideots Thieu. and Johnson which wei'e specilically designed to meet certain requirements of the Na- tional Liberation Front and tte North Vietnamese. THEY OPENE D the door to participation by the ·National Libera- tion' Front in the political life of South VJetnam, including running for office -so long as vio'.-er.ce anj Communist affiliation were renounced. Such re· nunciation, it is recognized, could be a thin pretext. Thieu recognized the principle of 'one man. one vole , thus not excluding voters because of their p3.st connection wlttt the Viet Cong. The two presidents also, in effect, notified ,. North Viefnam th a t Safeguarded ~.Rrange.ments fo r a general cessation of hostilities could be made in a way to guarantee the security of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces. HANOI'S RESPONSE has thus far been sufficiently measured to cause some hope that it perceives in the foregoing a workable formula for a cea.se-flre. In general. anp in spite o! expected N!flewal of big-scale fighting, the highest officials here have what they calf "visceral" feelings that tile Communist side is slowly moving away from stubborn intransigence. If this is so , it is all the more reason for the American public to keep cool under the stress of the precltcted o-f- fensives just ahead. If those offensives are no more successful than those earlier this year. and if Americans can keep their heads, the Communist side may be compeUed to move faster tlOward a settlement, Background of Recall Law A small cliff-hanger has been developing in Callfornia without much naUonal attention. A used c a r salesman of Roseville claims to have 800,000 petition signatures to have Gov. Rona1d Reagan recalled. Ac- cordtng to state 'aw, a recall election petition requires the signatures of 780,413 qualified voters, Th i s represents 12-percent of the 1966 vote for governor. See. of ~tate F'rank M. Jordan. Uke Reagan a Rt:!publican, will have the du ty of deciding the validity of the signatures. Jordan has threatened leaders of the recall 'drive with criminal prosecution if · signatures have been obtained under fa lse pretenses. Jordan on July 3 said this campaign was ''the first time in 'r1 years I've had so many questions about the propriety of a petition's circulation." Tt1ISREPRESENTATION o( a peti- ti on in CaUfornia is a f c I o r1 y punishable by a fine of up to $5.000 and • prison term of up to two years. Thie same sentence C'n apply to anyone who knowingly files a peUtJon with forged signatures. The recall is a special election to B11 GeOTl/f! Dear Geo rge: I read your column about how to be firm and be the boss with.a wife. She has locked me out of the house. What do J do now? Dear Sain : Send for my second 'T'ree.,-House Building Limited Budget. SAMB. les!on: on • • _, .• (l ~ ' E·U ..1.:.:1 ·i ~ ' ,.;., ~to~~pu .. ~~ Res~.~!~ ,, !t !! i ~..-....., .... ~. determJne whether a public official shaU be superseded before the ex- piration of his tern1. In recen..t times the device was introduced in the Los Angeles charter of i903. , It subse-· quently found wide acceptance in municipal charters, chiefly of the home rule, commisslon. and city manager types. Interest in the recall. the initiative. and the referendum wa'S awakened in i:.he ~th century\ by study o f Switzerland 's use o( them . 11ow:ever. the recall is nothing new in American polltical machinery. PENNSYLVANIA recalled and replaced her delegates to thr Stcond Continental Coogress when they rerus- ed to sign the DeclaraUon of Independence. And ArUcle V of the Articles of Confederation provided that any atate legislature might recall any or all Of the deleeatea which it hid appointed to the national Cc.ngre11. The recall haa been used less ex· trMively in the UDited Statea than had been ontlclpated by .. inflOl*U. For one thing. the mere threat of it aperates lo check r I a C r a n t miafeuance in office. Wood row Wilson called It "• l(l.n behind the door." For another, tile machinery for ualng It Is necesNrlb' cwnbersomt. Accordlog to Ille Cquncil or St.I• _ Governmenll, 12 statu provide fOr the recall of all olected -tlllnlall, I with the exception of the judiciary in sGme states. Ha'IWILi is co nsidering ad- ding Ute recall provision to its con· stitution. THE ATTEMPT to recall Ronald Reagan comes at a time when he is making a tour of eig!lt or more states as a "non·candidate" for the Presiden· cy. Reagan told newspapermen on Ju- ly 2 th'at the drlve could be "em- barrassiJ?g'' to him at the Republican convention, which opens in Miami Beach next Monday. If the petition stands up, Reagan would be the first California governor to have to undergo a recall election. However, according to Secretary of State Jordan, recall petitions ha ve been circulated in the state nine times, including one earlier to recall R'agan. Thu~~day , August1 t. 1968 The editorial page o~ the Da:ll11 Pilot 11i k.s to inform and itim. 1'lak readnt by presenting thil MW$JM1Pfr'I optnlon.s and com- mc-ntmy on topiCJ of interest and ti.gnifioanct, bt1 providing a forum for Uu txprusion of ovr nodcn' C)frlntom, and by prtseruino CM diver&t view- point&: of b.forJMd ob1erver: and. tp0kfrmcn on topics of the do~. Robe.rt N. Weed. Publisher ' . ,' -~--. __.., ... .-TT.,-T ~ .... ...-•• -,.....,-,.....,....,.....,....., .... ,..-~ .... ..-T-:..-.-.-~ .... ..,. ........................................... ,.. .................................................... ..., .... ~~~ .... ...,.,....., ....................... -.,.....~~"'."',...,...,...'P"".,..."!:..,..'.""'.l""ll • • .. T.al ent·-laden · .Rams ·Biattle· \ . ' . ' Saints . . ,_ Los A ngele~ Con tinge nt · ~bed as 1 4-p~int Pick • . BJ ROGER CAlll$N , ' • Of lllt o.llY ,Ult Steff Anolhv Nati011al Football League pre-MUc:m commences tonight at the Anllhillni Stadium when the Los ·:An.plea Rams, Coutal D t Y l 1 ion ·Qlamplona:, host the New Orleans .saint& .•. Kickoff is slated for 8:05 and if pre. SNIOll prognications come true, Jt mooid bl o Ram stampede. T!Je Ram1 are I'1Xiint favorites. 'l'be tlle:nt-Llden Ramt are coming ofrtbelrbel~eraa 1eason in bi5tory Wltb an 18-mart. including six straight Vidor ea durinJ last year's pre·aeuon lehedule. Tom Fears, head coach ol the Saints, calls this year's edition of the Ram J"W!maut the team to beat and ,_ !Ii foittate that they will wind up in the Super Bowl come January. However, it wu these same Saints who came within a whisker of upset- ting the Los Angeles eleven last year, only to fall bY'a 16-7 count. 'l1le New Orleam entry wasted several cbancea to SCU"e, one sure touchdown failing when Jlm Taylor drowed a pass in the end une that originated on the Rams' two-yard line. New Orleans trailed by a 13-7 count in the fourth quarter when Taylor lizzled. Starting • , LOI AN8•l•S IAMS Only 2:41 remained in the game when Bruce Gossett kicked a 45-yard field goal to clinch the nine-point vie· tory. A crowd of 26,364 watched the first. eVer game by. the Saints. Tonight's encounter ia the second time around for the two club& ln season openers at the Big A and it'a expected to draw a crowd exceedin& 25,000. As for individuals, take. your pick .. Dk:k 8885 and Tomm-y MasOn will bi In their usual pooiUoo for opening exhibition games · ... on tlle si<lellnet. Scartlng running bacb for the Rams will be Willie Ellison and Les Jospebpson. And Roman Gabriel will be in t h e opening backfJeld at t b e quartertack position. Kevin Hardy, commissioner Pete Rozelle's gift to San Francisco is gone, but his replacement, end Dave Parks. will be in there to test Irv Cross, the defensive secondary gem for the Rams. . Parks will be under ~iderable pressure after Rozellelitiiled him as a superstar, forcing the Saints tO give up Hardy, a first·round draft choice, and next year's first-round choice. Monty Stickles will be at the other end of the line to test the Reml' secon- dary. Lineups NP ORL•ANI IAINT1 ... ..... WGT. ... WGT. ..,. . ... 1• w.no.n Tucllff' •U " "' Dl'Yt ~1r1l1 • .i Joe C.rflllll ·~ " "' '~ """' n '2 Tom Midi .. LG "' JIU K-• ~ I(.., lrMn ,. ' "' '°' w....i...,.._r u 7l .to.. SdbelH "' •• "' CMl Wiiii."" " n Chlr!il Cow111 "' " ·~ '~-n 0 11111 Tru.x "' Tl "' ""'" Stldilu 0 " Rom111 ~l:lritl "' •• "' 1111 Kllrntl' " u LH JGlePl'lton ., .. '" Chlrll9 llrcrwn n • lhnl!t c .. ., "' " '" Dann, Abr1mowlct • 3) Wlllll EllllOA "' .. "' Jim TtytGr " ,l&IUI LI t1•l"•NSIV• ITAltTIN8 LIN•UPI " ·--,. " .. lrt1n k~• ~ 14 M«ll11 OIMn •• " ,., Miki TH1tm1n " " ltotll" lrtlWll "' " "' t11"'1d ·-" 11.S L1m1r LUl'ld't "' .. "' Dout Alk lnt " .JZ Jld< ''"' .. "' "' "' Slt'Yt SIOl!lbrelktr " " Ml'f'IHI Folllol ,. "" ,. l"red Whlttlllthll'I ~ • TanY Gvlllory "' "' "' Tt>d 01vl1 » 4 Wflllt Otnlll '" " "' J""" Dout111 " DAILY PILO~ z1· at MAN ON THE SPOT • , • ENO DAVE PARK.S OF 'NEW ORLEANS " Ir¥· Cra11 '" " '" D•VI WhltHll n • Chi/Ck Ltmton '" LI '" l g l urrl1 .. SAINTS' MONTY STICKLES WILL START AT TIGHT END Juan Eye s 20th Win, Vs. Big D LOS ANGELES IAPl -· This Is becoming a season the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers would just as soon forget. Still, p.ulses quicken whenever the Giants match Juan Marichal against Don Drysdale. That's the attraction expected to Jure a big crowd to Dodger Stadium tooight. Marlchal, 19-4, w h o has gone th e route in hls last 15 st.arts, will try to become the National League's first 20- game winner when he goes against Drysdale, 12-8, who set a major league record with 58 consecutive scoreless innings earlier this year. The Giants skidded into fifth place and fell 17 games behind front.running Dodger Slate ...... 1 Ood"l'I .... ..,, l"rMKl10ll 7:55 ,,rn. kFI 1':J, J Doftwl vs IMw Yori! 7:R P.rn. Kf"l I"'~ A~1: 3 Oodtetl "1 M .. Yort:; 5i •.rn, ICI" UI I Alli . ( Doltffrl vs Mew Yort. I ll:J,S •·"'· I' , .. , SL Louis Wednesday night whEfl the Dodgers rallied for five runs in a wild eighth inning and a 6-3 victory. "We were disgraceful, ws gave the game away," sighed Giants general manager Oharles "Chub" Feeney after watching the Dodgen win for the sixth time in 10 meetings with San Francisco this year. San Francisco right-hander Bob Bolin 'had a 3-1 lead when WilUe Crawford started the eighth inning for the Dodgers with a sing1e. Willie Davis coaxed a walk off Bolin ar:d Ted Savage' drew one oU reliever Jee Gibbon, loading the basE!fi. One run then scored on a wild pitch r nd anotlier followed when catcher Dick Dietz retrieved the ball and ,,ade a high throw to Gibbon covering the plate. Tom Haller drew a 'walk off Gibbon and Ron Fairly greeted reliever F'fank Linzy -with a single, Bob ~alley th~n "·a*ed to force home the game-win- ning run. S.11 ,,_._ lll ......... .. rll M ' t 1 • s • 0 1 •• 0 • ••• 0 ' 1 ' • ' ' 0 • l •11;..,. .. Cline "' loli11 • Glbbiin p l llll'Y p Mar11'1tll .ti -rl Sc~rodtr ell Hvnl tb MeCll\l't 'f lb M•v• er Dlttt t ... ' ,_,. Mr II lif StOIDIYltd 1 t o e ~b•lt'-II )IOIS.¥1Rel'fl ::::=~~ 1110.._uert Fil~ rf , l • • '''""" lb tO OI P1rt;erlb l I I 0 YerMlllJ ... t tOt1'1lrt"l'p1i I I 0 l $1\lr~, H tf l10s1"!1P t 0 I I Gr111t11 ,,,,c, ......... 11111"""*" ,. Purdlll ill Atvlrn • ' l ' • 1 •• , • 0 ' , ' 0 0 • , 0 •• 0 0 0 1 ' •. • 0 •• 0 ' I I I 0 •••• I I I 0 Teti! 2' J I 1 Tftll I 0 I I • ' 1 • 000 Ill GI.,__, 000"' 05ll'-t t: :::el\.'- • " Ed MMder '" .. ,. Elblrt Klmbroulh • Rojas' Ghost Spooking , Angel Bullpen By.EARL GUSTKEY Of Ille DlllY l'lllt stiff BOSTQN -The ghoat of Minnie Ro- jas i.s hovering about the bedraggled California Angels today as they ar- rived in New England. Last year, the Angels had baseball's best relief pitcher in Rojas. Now, because Rojas is On the dlaab!- ed list with a sore arm, the Angels' relief corps may bt the worst in baseball. This abortcominf w a s em- barrassingly apparent in Oakland Wednesday night. The Angels came out of their double· header losa flO the A'a feeling like the guy who discovers he doesn't have cm matdting 1DCks et a cocktail party. They lost the fir&t one, 4-1, on a BACKFIRE -Sal Dando, third baseman for the Oakland Athletic1, applies the tag to sliding Bobby Knoop of the California Angels on Wed· nesday night after_sacrifice attempt by rookie pitcher Ken Harrelson in first game of twin bill. Angels dropped both lilts, f.l, and 4-3. homer Off rookie starter Bill Har- relson. The second defeat, (4-.3) WIBS borne out of the ineptitude of three relief Pitchers. The final one was Jim McGlothlin who made oot pitch -a ninth-inning delivery that somebody named Ted Kubiak smacked for a game-winning, two-nm triple to center. The Angela tOOk a 3-1 lead in tbe seventh on run-scoring singles by Tom Satriano and Jim Fregosi. Fortunately, the relief pitchers and the rest of the Angels can rest tonight. The ball club was up .at 6 a.m. today in Oakland, took · the bus to San Fran- cisco Internatlonal--AirpO~ an·d climb- ed aboard its chartered TWA jet. The probable pitchers for Friday Ul"IT ........ Angels take the day off today and come back with another double- header .Friday, with the defending American League champions, Bos· ton Red Sox. · U.S. Diving Mentor Heeds W ar~ing LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -"I think we'H win the Olympics again, but the foreign divers are improving more rapidly than we ~e." aaya veteran Dick Smith of Phoenix, Ariz., coach of the U.S. Men's Olympic divlag team. Bernie Wrightson, one of Smith's top pupils, won t.be men's 3-meter spring· board' d Iv J·n & crown Wednesday, opening the 18th National AAU Out· door SW1mm1D1 a n d Divine Cham· pions'blps. · I Cynthia Potter,.J7, • llghtly·regard· ed tittle blondt 'from Houston, Tex., was a surprise winner in women's S. meter ~priq_g~d. Five 'N'Ol'ld.reconl boldt.r1 will com· pete ln eight swimming event.a today, opening a four-day, »event swimming cord. In addition, linal1 will be held In men's 1-meter and women's S.meter oprlngbolrd diving. "Divine ID !ht Untt.d Stat.it II mu• I Ing progreu," Smith ~. "Thia div- ing today was the beat I've seen in 25 years a a diving coach." "But other countrlea think nothing of sending th""elr coaches everywhere, to learn ever~a:." Smith said. ''They know •ll our secret., but wt don 't know their secrets ." The 2"·Yt1t-<1ld Wrl.ghtaon, 1 naUve of Dtn•er ind craduate of Aritona State, iJ • N1vy 1eaman O'Utad INve . - June 1 to wDrk under Smith. Wright.son awtpt all three NaUonal AAU outdoor crowns in 1965, won two In 196& and won the Pan American springboard crown Vi 1967. He had 11&2.lill " points Wednesday. Next were three pupils of lndWK.'1 Hobie . Blhincsltj'-l\lcl< Gilbert at Ml.66. Jim Henry .at 530.85, and Win Young •I &211.16. DaendlDg champ Keith Ruuell ol Pboenll< wu filth. night's twin bill at Fenway Park are Tom Murphy (2-4) and Rick Clark (1· 10) for the Angels and Jim Lonborg (1·3) and Ray Culp (7-4) for the Red Sox, * * * Rigney was very impressed with Harrelson's m·ajor league debut in the first game -so much so that lm· mediately afterward he told the Bakersfield product he'd be a start.er in one of Sunday's games in BostOn. The 22-year-old hard-thrower lost it in the eighth when he got too careful with Mike Hershberger. With two me.n on, Hershberger drilled a 350-footer in· to the seats. , Harrelson admitted he was nervous prior to his first appearance. Southern California writers watched irl dismay as he. uncorked three Straight wild Ange l Slate Au1.1A111111 111:.ton (:U 11.m. KMl"C (Jill Autl. A11 .. l1 !' ton lO:J.S 1.1'1. ICMl"C ( I) Aut. Anttll t ton 10:55 1.m. KMPC 0) pitches while warming up and they immediately· organized a pool -the idea being to bab the inning when the rookie would be KO'd. But Harrelson weot the distacce and all beta were off. * * * Aurelio Rodriguez continues to be irhe Angels' best hitter. He ls on·e 13- gamo hitUng "ar. * .. * * S a n Francisco writers apparenUy don't put much stock in the often·iro- mulgaled rumor that Rigney wlll manage the Giants next year. Nary~• one Of 'em conta"Cted Rig about the story while the Angels were .JP Oaltland. * * * . The split-day double-header ached~· ed ftll" Saturday in Boston baa been revised. The first game starts at 2 p.m., the second 15 minutes after tb• first one ends. Originally, it wu •:2 p.m. -7:30 p.m. arrangement. ~u:::,i• ''"' ..... ll l:'At::l ""i" -A. ltodrltl.lfl t. DP-Ctllfw?lll 1, Otll1"111 l, LOB -Ctl!'°"1kl J, 0.111..w:f J. 21 -R..,_. Mil -Hfrtht:Mttr (I). Sl-C1mNl'lffl•• K-. CALl,OANlfCOND .eAMI OAIC.U.ND .. r llM ••r llM Dt¥•111111cf !llOC,,,_ri.• lltl "'-'II •011 Klltll•ll2b 51J2 11.-11 • t I I C.rttr 111 1 I I • RlllcNntl If • o 0 0 ll111do lb 4 t 0 I Ml!ld'ltr lb 1 I I t Henl\lltr l'f l I \ I -,t,,R..,. a • I 2 t P1t"ll'l'll c: • I 11 1 .. fl'l¥1na2' StllMendlYd 4111 .~ .. ~ 1110Jtlildllf "''' KnoatJll l tOOKrllh"' I Ott Rodtf1'1 c: ' 0 0 0 lotlt t t I I I 1"'"91• )OIODGr-th ,OO't MstWlllfh 11 I t t 0 Dorltldaft th I t f 1 F1ltl1'1 I I 0 I 0 lt.Jld<Mn ,, 0 I 0 I MGltll!lfl ' t t I 0 5"111 • I 0 t I ' --Goltwr 1111 I I ' t Toho! :N 1 7.1 _ .. -. Ttttl i"tll ~ -_,,, ~ ..-. 11\'1 Ill~ :x~~·..£!~ftlf11, Molldt\', 9!'!:·"'l -~~. r...;r:! la'! i.C.:::"r~. - --------------------------------~-~- I I I I .I --• • ( • -.-1,lt!I .. Edwards Warns 'Chaos' May ~ be Boycott ,Plan SAN JOI&, Cllll. !AP) -11*"1 lllud Ud depend on that H ll>ey waol Mwwdl,lu~lbeNqroOIJmplc Bui 11 I wai lo P131411 Jorda!l'a or ' . "I.I'• nn11n live Ibo~ pktlnc '""'" ..._ ~ .... , aood.lllat not the 1 .. m a lute ol what we go only Lee Evam, l!ut J<illh Carloc and Lake Tahoe, caw., wwre atymled bf. JlllWb' tmpowl rule aa lntervlns. I ..-_......, ladicated Wed-llilmw Lodi•'• p1aeo I ....ido'I put llLJ--_., lilalcpri*'.lM Evaw' otate-:.~-r-mlld> atoct In -~·•body --lbehwouJdlMIDObo,..U ~ through Uvtn& in thls country. 'lbere'a Tonm;tle Smith wlll be m1t1nr only one thin.I more CODfuofug thJil rumor .oa--u;.il's a muuoo rum_ors.~--tet&enu-:-'nMn are-r1at ol--,.ple ~--'* w~ lbal nq-lo liO< Wllb alhlelel mull ho mode :M lloon la advaoce. Sl Tylor, OIYmPI< CGmmltlM ~tellve flU:a. 1'ulue. Celli., who 11 manager oC tbe Cl!Op, aal4 the athletes bad utad lllal Ille rule lie lll!pooed becaUll quu· Uonera wen lnterruptlq t b e I r , trallllll&. and field cammltlM, . -I 1 1-llblo for Ille preparallon, Iba ~ tellln( ud tho llnal ..- "' the u. s. team • ._,.... -the ma1A mi<licm II lo frOYldo an op- portunll7 for any qua111'1d albltle lo eva a podtlon on the U. S. meo'a I I I • JlolPt 111 pert o1 a plan to ...... chlol ..,.. " -lbe ~ mo..,,,ent. • Jordan 11 hud cnacb Of tile Olympic -11114 ~ In Spokane, ·lfO<k and field team and Loclgo i. Wull., tllol black albloloO bad voted In chAlrman ol Ille U~S. Olympic Track •• to ... -In Mulco a111n Oc· and Field Commlliee. -Ud llafl IOlllO form Of protest "Al lllil plrtlcul.v point." Hld I lbtn .-llwl borcotl Ille 1unu Edwu<ll, wbo racelltly llnisb<d the "Don't be sUrprlsed U you have mtlrt11-tcbool year u a sociology instructor , many 1tatemeot1 --eomin1 out tomor- .. U LM 1aid. that, then that's what at SU JOH State College, "our row and the next day and the oert day be llld," Edfl•da uld. "nity can co lllrtte(1 i. cbw. 1 ranging from tataJ boycott lo proteal Involved Iii tllla lblq. We can1 ~ tbem qalel We can't 1ay notlltili- We're going to s&y f;verythi!IC," • Evana, Carloa aod Smiltl have been lnV<>lvecl In the boy..U.!l"'lael plam with EdwlQ'\ll lrom Ille .l!"CJl!nllil- Attempta to _obtain com.meat ' u Evans' and Edtrlnh' 1tatetn1Dt1 ftom the Necro athletes . now wor8Da out lw il>e 111111 Olymplc triall at Solllb Lodll• • ...-b7 leleph-In Ibo Loe Aiicoleo are1, had flits comment : "OUr mamhen ol 11\1 Olymplc tract teani. . "We wi!! (0 In Mulco CllJ. 'lrilll Ibo bell team avallable. I'm 1un the American !)OOllle feel llroa&IY that Ibo u. s. Ol,ymplc C<lllmtttei lo tatln( ltept to lnaure that we prueat our -tract and llUI ...... " Connell In Weste1•11 Open _ Trims SC 'Shy' N:icklaus, Palmer For 20th Seek End to Golf.·Woes · 87 ROGER CARLSON .... .,..., .......... Cmnell C>evrolet put tho lid on Ille Oranp County veralon cf Coonle Mack buellall Wedneaday ollhl wifll a H trimmla( o1 boot SID Clamente, completlnc Ill n(lllar ......, wifll a l0-1 record. 'lbe victcry ov• San Clemente wu some me.,.. of nvence u the Orqo Cculll1 cblmpi«w loot their only encounter of the yur to tbe ume San Clemente dub earlier by • 4-2 count It imopped a 15-aam• win streak. HunllDlfA>n Harllour (10·12 ) , melDWti.11, trUtecl to Brea and came home on. the abort end o fa 10-3 count. Brea portayod four bill -all doubles -alooa wllb olx walb and two blt.l>ollmen for the 10 nme. · Weet.G"'" ..... forced In ton.It It final ........... wilb Tllllln and •od• up tho .....,.. wifll a t-U ncord. Kanffnw1 • Brood Marina llnllh~ Monday wllh a U-10 1laln. c-11 ocorad lbreo tlme1 In tho lo! of Ille !lfth ...... to -a 2-2 deadlock _,_ the SID Clemante club. Hits the Dirt r UPIT ...... • CIUCAGO (AP) -llefendlnf ctwn .. pion Jack NickllUI and Arnold Palmer,.wlnner Jn 1961 aod 196S, try In overcome tbelt victory lhynes1 of this year in the f]!l),000 Western Open Goll Toumameot llar1lng today. NlctlaUJ bu. not been In the win· . ner'1 circle on the ltea PGA tour but still ii ninth on the money list with '511,4211. Palmot, trylng lo Uck putting woe1, tuu1 won ·only the Hope Cluslc while holding lotb place with 168,883. Nicklaus, competing in only 14 of 31 PGA tourneys tht1 year, i1 in his longest drought Hla last victcry was in the Sahara Invitational 1 a 1 t -October. But the Big Bear may be ready to cut looae in the Western, which pro- vides a $26,000 lop prize. Io Wect- nesd.ay's pro-am be matched par 71 over the. heavily wooded Olympia Fields course. Palmer, meanwhile, struggled in with a Tl . Burt Yancey, also seeking bll first vic;tory this season ~irdied the last two. hofes in the dldk to take the pro-am with a sparkling 66, only a stroke «I the olfldal course record aet by the Late Lawson Little. Wlnnlnl pltdler Wayu Schrader llarled It ell with a llneJ> -two were out and Gary Slmpe:on'a single and Tam Wallh'a wait looded tile bases. Bob Warb~ took the cue and tripled to right-center to clear the bases. Curt Blefary of Baltimore slides home on sacrifice fly in third inning action against the Cleveland Indians Wednesday night, pacing Orioles to 4-2 win over Cleveland. The credit sign enabled Birds to hold on lo second place in the American League. Catcher Joe Azcue of Cleveland waits for ball as umpire Ed Runge looks on. Tommy Aaron, with birdies on three' of the final four boles, posted a 87. Dick Crawford WU next with 88 while R. H. Sikes aDd Clluct eo.-y bad 611. One of the favorites · is leading money winner Tom Weiskopf, who has captured· titles this year at San Diego and Flint, Mich., finished aecood twice, third three times and fourth once In pocketing '137 ,561. Connell bad drawn llrll blood In Ille third when it teared twice on a couple of stngleo, a wallt and Wallb'1 double. Schrader ttrucl: out five ln the five inning game while allowtna: four biU ... two or them home nmJ to account for three ot the San Clemente talliff. ............... ""1 LT!'= c•l s. c!!tc.1 .. ,..... .., .. "" •· L1"""'1, rt I 1 t I o.tnbeutl'I. 2b J t t I Sl-d 111tMCOMwll.cftltl W•lth. c ! 1 1 1 llnd'o9nd. .. 1 1 1 1 W1tt1111911Df1.•1111T_,..,,., 1111 Wlc:ktnN!n. 1111 t t t Oi.mtns, Ill 1 t 1 t "'"9r, • I I I I ,,,_, I I I I 1 J, LJ~ .. I I I I ,,,..,_ Ir ! ' ' ' ._...., a 1 t I I ..,,., Jtl I I I c:-MIL c:f 1 1 1 I Alllll. r1 1 I I I ~.l'f 1.,. WllbrKM. • • ••• lctw'...,, • 1 1 I I T.t.11 ltlJS T•ll ,, ' .. * * * ~ ......... H1111""9tMI Ill .,, ..... t : I • ...,........... (I) M\.: ~ifl1 4 I -·· ltwlr. d -· -· _ ... ,.,.,..,., ,. 0...N -·" ...,,,.,, " ..... " To ... .. ,.,.... .. ,.,.. I 1 I I T"°"'"°"' 111 S I t I Jtll.....,_,, 4111 J I 1 I lllllorMll. a I I I I J I I t Tlf'P'tfl. ' I I I I ,,.,,..,,_cl' 1111 Jllt J ....... 211t JltlJ-!11 f''' : : ·~ : ~~·,." 1 : : : 1 1 t I n J 4 l Tot.ls ,. 11 • ' RAMS TAKE BACON FROM DALLAS CLUB FULLERTON (AP) -The Los Angeles Rams have traded an un- disclosed draft choice to the Dallas Cowboy• for defensive tackle Coy Bacon. Bacon, 25, is a 6-foot-4, 26S--pounder from ·Jackson State $.Dd played on the Cowboys' taxi squad last yp.r after being signed u a fret agent. The RaJM announced the trade Wed- oesday. lt wu the second trade this week for the~Rams, who acquired defensive end Jim Garcia from the New Orleans Saints Monday for an undisclosed drllft c.holce. The Ram defensive unit, one ot the strongest In football, hi.I b t: e n hampered by injurie1 and the ablence of All-Pro defenlivt end Deacon Jones, a holdout lD a contract dispute. ,,,. .. P -ro GriaJiSlates National Football League * * * * * * American F ootbal,l League ...... 1~·-~ .-.. '=== .. , ....... • -- Sports in Brief Lions' Gordy Gives Up Weiskopf a effort ln the pro-am was a 73. Also included in this bracket were Julius Boros, winner of the recent PGA at a g e 48; Doug Sanders, Western runner-up last year; U.S. Open champion Lee Trevino, Bob Charles and Bob Lunn. ' On Idea of Civilian Life "If the weather bolds, the winner could come in Sunday with a 72-hole total of from 275. .. to 278," predicted Weiskopf. This course ls a true te!lt and challenges all shots in the bag. 1DETROIT -Veteran guard John Gordy returned to the Detroit Lions' training camp Wednesday after a brief stray to consider several lucrative job offers. . Gordy •till hasn't signed a contract, but decided he didn't want to qult foot- ball because "we've· got a real good chance to go all the way." Gordy, 33, left the Lions' camp last week .• He reportedly bad an offer to become executive secretary of the NFL Players Association. as well as an offer of an executive poslUon with a food franchising firm ln hiJ hometown of Nashville, Tenn. He is currently president of the NFL Playen: Association and recently led the successful p1ayer11 cont. r act rebellion. ..... ...... ..... LOS ANGELES -'I'll< q ... tloa of wbo Cot hit flnt WIS arped Wed· aesday u the UM•H trl•I of a former eoecll and a star playet of Ute Moo- trea1 Caaadleu of tbe Nadonal Hockey .Leape opened la Sapertor Court. O.paty Diii. Ally. Bart Goldman kAd die Jory In his openln« statement that ex-coach Hector •1Toe" Blake hl& Bernlt: Wel1maa, a fa1, wltll a bockey atlck. • The defenae claimed tha{ Wel!lmlll, :n. Jumped tote lbe playen' bo• ud htt Blake 01 tbt head wtUI bis flit. ... CWCAGO -Johnny Morris. 32. the Chicago Bears all-time pass receiving leader."announced his retirement fr om the National Football League club Wednesday. Morris. a 10.vear Bear player . told nwner G~rF.e Halas he was retirin.S:-to devote full time to his job as sports announcer for a Chicago TV station IWMAQ). .... NEW YORI( -A 11me Maga1tne 1ports wrlttT filed suit for $310,000 dama(el Wednesday, thar«fnt that Joe NamaU., quarterback of the New York Jets, -•ad two other men 111111tted btm In a Manhattan bar last Aat. 4. The writer, Qarlel Pannlter, a1-ed S4t.• from tM ()pea End Bar ond Ila cnmer, MarTaJ St:ll.aaf, allerta1 &bat tetUnr NamaO. drlnb wbOe he wu dnmk contrfbattd i. the •11aaU. ... ., ... LOS ANGELES -Fr1nkle Crawford of Loa Anceles, who has :.> victories in 36 st.arts. meets veteran Pete Gooule1 of PorUaDd, In a 10. ~ round f'eatherwelgbt fight at the Olym· pie Auditorium tonight . Crawford rates aa a ft..5 favorite. Middleweights Ron Wilson of Lis Vegas and Rudy Rodriquez of Min- neapolis are scheduled to batUe in a companion 10.rounder. REDLANDS -Two former Ullfvenlty of Redlaeda a t • 1 e t e 1 , Clayto1 Broob aad st.eve Wyper, laave beea named eo1dte1 at tH tclttol ...Btoob was appolated u udltut football ceacb aH Wyper wu picked a1 croa1 eoutry eeaeh. ' ... ... ... ORANGE -Mort than 55 players wt11 bl on hand tontsht u the Orange County Ramblen bold pbyalcal u- aminatiom at Chapman College. Jack Stovall, cenerll martg.er of the Ramblers, 1a1d be , expected "our greatest te~ ever•• thU: H8IOO. The Conllnelllal Football Lea(Ue club'• !hp playen bact are lulllJact Bob Jackson, Ugbt end Rhome NlJ:on and defensive back Bernard Corbin. Tb.e Ramblen won the learue'• Paclflc DI vial on llist year. "It doesn't favor anyone. By that, I mean you don't have to be a big hitter to have an advantage. One thing you must do is to master the greens. "They hold exceptionally well and BA~Y'S ST ATVS STILL· VP IN AIR SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -The San Fraocllco Warrion and Ibo Oakland Oakl WW have to wa.lt at least a mootb to find out which team Rick Barry will play basketball for th.ls year. · Final argument.a: were h e a r d Wedneaday In flle sult b<Oughl by the Warriors al. the National Butetball A11oclltioo lo keep Bany from playing for the Oaks ol lbe Amorlcao Basketball Anodation. ~ Court JudlO Waller Carpeoetl p<oml10d a nilln( by the end of Augwt and aakecl the Warriors to submit a ~ oft related c11e1 that will back up their argument.a. The Oakl will got a chance lo reply. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NA110NAL LEAGUE " L Pct. Gii w L Pct. GB Detroit 85 : ,825 st. Louil 70 36 .eeo Baltimor~ 57 .551 7 Cincinnati 53 48 .525 141) Cleveland 58 43 .547 I Atlanta 5S SI .519 15 Boston 53 43 .525 10\) Chloago 54 52 .509 16 Oakland 53 51 .510 12 San Francisco 52 52 .500 17 New York 43 52 .480 15 Pittsburgh 51 54 .486 181) Minnesota 43 54 .471 16 Phlladelphla 43 5S .486 21.>1> CallfOrala " SS .411 111) New York 49 58 .458 211) Chicago 45 SS .450 18 . Le1 Ancele1 ., II ..... !%1) Washington 36 64 .360 'ti Houston 49 llO .429 211> . .........,. .. _.... -~· .... Ntw Ytft 7, lolM J CMc ... 4, W.W... I e>.!191t .. W•Mlllf"*I t M. \Mii 1. l'lll..._19ft .. J .. """"'"' .. 0..0.Wlol ! """""" l. N«w Y«t ! CPlic... 11. M~I t lM """"' " -s... l"raMttm J Oelli.M M. C1lllWftl1 14 (lftc. ...... •1, '""llufW .. ,. T..,.,._ T...,.,._ Al1111!1t (ltrlttofl 4-J'I t i N«w YMI. !C1/'dw9tt J.tl CPllc:-(l'ltller Ml .t M~ Cl"""" 7"l How"" (m.rtltt .. ,.. w <Huell ... 10) 11 Cllb W•"''"''°" cco""".,. .. u ,, o.m.tt ci..t11ct1 7-11, att (Nltlll'I lMI 1119111 a.11 l"r~ (f.WrlcMI 1 .... 1 I t la """'" ltlt'"'-"' (MtN1ll'I IM) It < ..... '-.... (Tit"' ID,.,.,.1" lt41, 11llllt u .. or W111111'11 H I, 1119111 51, UI* (C"""" IN) .. l"tlllliftll!MI !Jedi-"-vtrtt 11n ...... n ,, ....._.. ,,...,.,.,.... -1 .. 11), "'-"' '"'\:'"' PlnMwfll IMthM M1 "' Clncl!IMll (IN.._, "' .-MtWulM. M l. fW!llfM Onmgc Co.'1 Okl«t .. M .. c Rtsp<Cltd Lffocol•·lrflTCUfl/ Dtoltr Johnson & Son -~-1 .. , I 'J ( l 1 I r ~ 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NIWl'OltT llACH 642.oMI W-1271 ,• . \ you can 10 rlsllt for Ibo nq but the grain of tht graas makes them tricky. And they are fe.1L 'lbere will be a lot of three'-putt p-eena." The lllld of lM will be. reduced alltt 36 bole1 In playen wllbln 10 -.. ol tile leader. cuum1 It about In half, -• HB, Estancia Share Laurels In Water Polo Huntington Beach met F.ltancla eon- llnu<d on the trail of Bolla Grando In Costa Mesa Recreatim water polo ac- tion Wedneaday olihl at Ellaoda Hip School, while loop-leadinc Bolla wu Idle. Huntington's Oilen ripped Colla Mesa 7-4, while the Eaglea ol Estancia -were keeping in atep wUb a M win over Newport Harbor. Other action aaw Weatminlter fall~ ing from immediate_ title · contenti• with a narrow 1-7 loss to Rancbo Alamllol. The 1C111 dr.,....i lbe LloDI to a 3-2 record. Garden Grove adVanced wit.h a 1~ forfeit decision over Santa Ana. Huntington came from behind alter trailing Costa Mesa by a 3-2 score at • .... ~ '"r. 'fi •• I H • lllnll ! ' I ~ l1 I! 1 u u IJ l l1U the half. Three goalJ in the third period did ~e trick with Jim King garnering two Of the scores and Jobn Battis accounting for the third. King finished. the evening?· three tallies while Lance Non-is u chip- ping in two for the "Winnen. Costa Mesa High was led by Dave Whitaker's two points. Estancia stormed Newport Harbor in t!ie initial stan'ia, acoriiig four times to wrap up the contest early. Leading the acoring pa<ade lw Estancia was Greg Goodyear with three points and Bruce Utt.ell with two tallies . Westminster's 8-7 r eversal came about when the Rancho crew struck for four gools lo the third period lo bike its advantage to 7-5 . Al DeBacker scored' five times ta a losing cause fOf' the l.J.ODI with Steve Kube! and Gary O.lllse backln( blm up with one apiece. Big event of the evening next week will be the opening coolest belwoeo Bolsa GTande and Estancia at &. Pugilist Corner lAH IEHEOETIO Dl!l Tll:ONTO, It.Ty -~ tllr9 .. rrvnl, "'"'· """"°'"""' ,,_ twit, n11y\. lS. bin!•""""""-llnV'll m.IMll I..-...... ttrnw.lllhl ""·· TOKVO -,,..qltM T•t'I'-. 11$. hHll. ..... ""'"'Id 111'1' Mllltr, ID. P'l\111"""'", 1 .. LAI VIGAS, N"'..-1'1"1111 •111111tft 11.M" L-. "'''""'' C:1lll., oulMlnttd ...... C-, L" ,._ i..10.-1 ........... l'ltli. COUGAR #1 CAT SKIN THI CAT Hot 1IMt It. 1Ct91"'i"t, tu1Mllht9 M· fro.lirtflon 11 Cir of tfr11 Y11r 111 1967 1111 tti1r1 b1111 ffrlt ,,,.rt1111lty f• ttt. b11yl119 ,1rllllc •• ••ltd DACR.Y WHAT IT WANTS -AT l'UCTICAL PllCINe. CLAW THI .. ICI DOWN ON THI CAT OP TOUR CHOICL Wt ••" fl" fl) 1ll9lltfy ttM 6T1 .u witfl t011Kriol11t f1dety •• ,, • ..,. ,."" •11t. "•If 1fMl •f ltl&:t w18 fl" •••ry f•lrtt1 f111Ct• tt.. ••••• ·• en4 •q1rlpm•11t tt.1t ho ..P..h .,f ftll NUMlll ONI CAT, t --- , ' . Alway$ at Sears. -. ' ' I Every Sean Tire , Includes ~.FREE .. FREE Ohedl: et y_. ....... .._. FREE ...... "" ----~ ..... --W...A......._at ...... . Steel Cord Radial Tire8 .&.1111: YIMlr A.mRate Ttn ~ AU4,........ fer Oal7 2888* All Amiri ... c.. ... ,, __ •chryaler product. havina' I wheel cylinden and can with diae brakff allghtly higher. Any necessary additional pario. llld kbot-~vall&bl1 at So&ra low, !"" price I .................... ................. -.-..................... ......... i.w.r .... w• ·-.................. OJ•I I ............... O)'lbid• ...r......,...._.._ur • .. ,,.,... "'a.trpettw ... --... An ........... ............ .,... -. " -' • • Thursday, August I, 1968 DAILY PILOT 23 ' • Satisfacti9!1-GuaraJtteed 1 _or Your Money Back!· -. ' ·• 36·Month Guarantee Buy lit Tin at Replar Low Trad•ln PriM of $22.95 ••• Get the :Ind The for onl7 ... • SIZE ,._ --- 47 un .. .... ... 8.501'.13 Tabelom -PIWI 1.&1 P.E.T. ,_. Old~ ...... ~-r::~~W.&T. Big Patented Features ptu1 Deep· Tread 4-Ply Nylon · TUBELESS BLACKWALLS _ ... ....,.H .. , ............ -lllf' .... on l'M4 for Mtter trae- .......... -·-Ntween rt'b. •top' tti. aquee.l around tum.a and tton, at.art and when brakinf. .... ...-.. Pai.mW W. 4-flb' KJ1o• lJ lhomden <Md 'J'll'M h•lp you ri& Jft.U. stability b&ck into th• and Wpm' road wtl:tlout 1tnn&'th tor a lurch, lt more protec- yuu llf.n.y off. Uon aptn1t road hazardl . . t.abll m ,115 ... ..,. ·-~ 1'.SWf. $!5.95 '·' f. fZ7.9G A.Z5xl' t29.95 8.Mz..lf. SSZ.95 5.60xll5 $21.915 7.75xl6 $21.95 l.15xl5 S29.95 11.'3 lUT Lil ..... :: ~ .. 11 •• 1 lill-I ~!!, ..... ••• 10.81' 1.'l'f. 13.98 1SJl1 l..z1 · lf..98 t•.tn I T.ii"' TUBELESS WHITEWALLS 4-Ply Nylon Tires are 4 Ways Better: 1.00x1s 6.95xlt 1.Mxt• '1.71Sllf f!'J.95 SZl.95 S!S.95 iiOl5 . ii IS.ti 11.91 ts.ta Ia.iT ~ lf..48 14...17 .... ·~ L ...,... I. Moi.tur. I. Tlr .. ltalns '· B•t l.JISxlf.· .. ~ .. """ ta.•1 ~ JlnMI •• , o.mas-tum. and aid-o..m..,.. ..... u U5 1'1.91 " ....,... Im· p&Ot protec\11 ........ bn>b· ""' ... ............. . , • repel• dea 1loptl a" molaU-fTom ftnnly sup- raift or lftOW, ported wtth · ..recuardl rurred nylon. your Ure cord. Allst&te 11,YIOD ............ Dun.bl• nylon rwui eooler lit hlfh IJ)eeda. •-"""' 1.8& .,. u.v5 T.75xl5 ~0.96 E .11J1Ja %.95 ..!:,__~6 ...... ••• ... ..... u . , L1' 1 lUT ~ ..... 14.f.1 ., ... 11Jl1' ALLSTATE Pueenpr Tire Guarantee TNMI Late Guarant.ee Guaranleed. A&"Mn1t: All ta.l.lur!fl ol. the Ure r.alitinl' from normal road ha.arda or defect• In mat.pal or workmanlhJp. ·For Bow 1-1': For the lit• .t tlM oril'iflal ...... . wi.t a.rs Will Dcn·Repatt nail puncturM at Guan.nt.eed AgalnR: Tnad wu.r-oot. For How Lo"r: The number at ll'lOrltha specltled. WA& Sean WW Do: In exchange tor th• UN, replace it charginf the current regular Mlllnf pric• plu1 J'ederal lbl:cl11e Tax leu the follow• lllf allowacu: I no cCarJe. In th• -ot fa.llun, ill excbanl'• Moatb• Guanatee.1 for tbl tire, rtpl&ol tt, eb&JTinJ Clbly t.h• pro- ...... _ .... '°" = :X:.:? ~~~r=-.. '~"!~!l=!llpri'.J!.,.!lWWW!!'.:..,,!111.,!l!!'!IS'lll!.Jilr,l!!!-!ll*!l•!!~!ll*!:!:!Z:ll~ll!'!'llll!-'ll&"' Sean Truck Tires for Your Camper, Panel, Pick-up Expreu Nylon Trnek Tires 1,ttdJ T1M-tr,_ •I• I.It F.t:.T. t .Mall 'h.,._.,,. '1u't,11 P,E.T, ..... 11.U 1488 Pl• .. ~.~\ . • All ~J'IOn coo.bwllloa SAVE f20! Why ~er Thru Smoggy Summer Regular 1797M~ '199.95 - 1m WO llOiHltY DOWN • Alt,ytlllq Y .. 8-r et .... • CNdlL e~Thermottat automatic&lly maintaln1 ~. tempvatwt 108 Hlect .•. perfect air-f!ow with kpMd control • Two -4-way adju11t.Able louver1 for dr!dtfret circulation • ChrorD.1 plated die-cut bezel front •.. mount.a' neatly and hand11omely under your duhboard • o.t.tondlnr nlu• 1t S.on low, low pr1 .. 1 . Faat Low Colt Expert wtaJJatior ATaUable ,, . -. • I ' . t I • ' ----=~~~~-~-~-~---~·---___,_ ___ _.__ _____ __,_ __ _ ' ' •' •• ·- • , , \ • \ .. • r ·- " I " ~ I \ I ,I I I I " ' I I J4 DAILY I'll.GT OH the Board Surf Population I - Beconws Probl,em ly CRAIG LOCKWOOD .... 0.....,......,-r -- ' EDITOR'S NOTE: This I.I the llnl of a tw~J>llt 1eriel. Drew Kamplon of SUr!er Magulne noted In )ut week'• column tbal l1llf access I.I one of the major pro- ble!DI facing our fut-e:q>andlng sport. As old briial are obliterated by harbotl, private beach development, beach enlllon and over-cro'llidlng, the IUJfer I.I !Qi'ced to aeelt new, dynamic approacbea to oolvlng tbll problem. "Aw you old lUYI are always talking about bow good it was back In '02 •.• All you did was go straight ott old plank&. Big Deal." , The young IUrfer wu acottlng at the old-timers misty nostalgia, the days of Iron men and wooden boards _ •. but while the young generation of today m:J'. lau,_i> at the model-T teclmlques and e<JU!pment of au • ing s pioneers one thing they can't laugh at is the freedom that wu the trademark o! the IUrfer of the 30'• and 40's. 'Ibey had all the waves they wanted. uncrowded and any time of the year. Not so today. Let's examine the reasons. Peptdatlotl E:cpledelt AHecu Spert The single biggest problem attectlng surfers In- itially, is more surfers. Population expfosion on the West Coast has resulted in more surfers per wave per Jpot. Even U the breab weren't being depleted by a variety of factors, all caused by man, we would finally crowd ourselves out of the ocean when there Is one· giant metroP-"lll from San Diego to San Francisco. It I a simple formula . More ~ple equal less waves. If you don't believe tt jult p&ddle out to the Boneyard at Doheny some Sa!urdlly or Sunday af- ternoon. U you fall to count less than SOil people In tho water from jetty to jetty then you not Olly can1 count, you can't see the trend those 300 represent. Surfing I.I growing. It gel.I bigger and better every year. More boards, more ideas, more technique, more concepts, more experimentation, more surfers ... and leas breakl. Gefllfl, Gefllfl, Getlf! Del Mar Racing Results DILMU WIDM•SOAY, JULY 1'1. ,_ CL•Al ANO ,.UT -.IWT uc• -' ......._ 1 tMI • YMt ..,. _..._ c~ ,_ ...... Mtlt T• 1'•111• 041'*"1 n• w ut Vind Jr. <Cl "'Ill 11.W I.• •or•I •,._CJ,......,., n• Ylrnl 1.11 Al.SO ltAN -Mill TM .Mtrtlfll, Tit C&rllt!DL JMNr ...... K•"" M .... "'*"' ·-.. ,,,._ Wldr. Maf# 11\111'1--. C.lh. $CltAT(Ml!O -•WI• 01111. Hlllllu cr.rnwr. Fl'flN Kwlri. o.11¥ hk•• ™-'" ......... JllCOMO llAC• -6 ~ 1 ,_ ... ~ Clllh .,.. '"" ..... C.lbrW. Clllmlnt. ,_ U.-. Jeroe tA 1"1-*t) l'Jt I ,• 1.• T• Effie (V•llMwllJ ... l .61 Fwnienct (II llltf\Q) 14.N TIMI -1l1·2S. Al.SO llAN -Wllldelr Gtrn. T-Ptl'lt, CNhln T1111, Ill,,.,. KIN, l'ekltt, lliM'I Prl~. o.1i.httul Sl#lln'lf:r, .....,,., lffotf. •trlk• ...... t(ll.ATtHlO -Hell'Vftllr1tllo WM wtlllt Wlf!Oult, 1111 Cllfhl C-.ll*d, OflMll. ltlfl'lllow ....... ,DAILY DOUILll, ). ...... Tl ,_ .. ............. 111 ... TMlllO llAC• -' fvrlMp. l ..... , "* w ..... ci.11111,... '"-~.-. AM l'lfW CJ S.1"'11 uo •.10 SA °"9n'll1*f L9d IJ """rtiurnJ7.21 4.20 IQllnl Fool (W Mef'lwfWY) '·" TIM -no l/J, . Al$0 llAM -... ~ 111\'er. K-r Gudlillor, Mlln City, NO SCltATCHl!:I. l"C)lllTN lAC• -' ftlr1Dn11. 1 ve•• flWI. Clllml,... ,.,,.,,,_ U,600. ,tlllC:I J11ll •n (II (I~ _, J.llO (,ft 3.00 lelld flldla (A l'lllllle) 4,21 1.11 Tlllr'I KIN U lemkrt) J.IO TtMll -1104.'S. . ALSO llAM -Ne.W. lllNI llu .... °""'""' llult Coll11I, MI 1I1 r ~~llAT04EI. PtJ•TM lACI -' fvr ..... 1. :I '''' llkh erM:I ...,, flln• •f!d nMir•. ci.1""""' ........ 91,111. ~ Shr (A Ot1d 1 ... J .• I.ell ~ ,,.,_ (J Slllln)) ... ,.. FIYl111 0. <W ~I t.• TIMl-1 ..... IS. HO SCRATCHES. Pm' l'rMlft .... ... ,.. cw ......... '"' .... i '"' .. .,. ..... ..,. .......... .... •n m ~· '" tlCDMO UCI. ' "'"°""' t .,.., .... -'""' CDlft end .......... (lellno 11111 •rlc.I S1SOO. ,.u,_ ...... · Abol.lt11lo 0 M V111Q) llf l'•lkld•lf '" l'lnld•l n• ••• ,.,. .• Ill (W He-.ta) 1i. 0. Dolftl•• IS Tr1Ylnt) 11• ._.. ·-(J Stlltn1 11f 0,..... ,_ (J A"'""""") 11• CMdl I~ H1rtadl.) n• Gnni• Amleo n t: MllllMI n• SIMI GllMlf' 1G u-v1 n• Trvdcer eov (J M V1illlrllltll n• Gello"t ~ollcY (0 "9111 11f '"'" °'""' tt w Hlntll n• TMlllO JtACi.'"Th.rto1111. I .,.., eld C.lb<Wt. Clolmll'lt •rtcit .... Purw suoe. Did'• Allbl fl Klll'lltlke) 11111 LMllll• (J letlanl lndl•ll R11il (A l 0111) ~ll9n11t1111 (W Hert.di! Go6111Mll If: Mtd!MI Dorffft'f KIN CW 0.1111 Mitt ll-IM'l1...._..I HI C.nl (J Tntllllo) ... HY'J lllDt 111• '" 1112 "' '" 1111 '" ... .. .. 1'04.lllTN UCL ' NNNI. 2 ,,_, old 1n1lclln COit& lfllfl Miii""'-,_ a.ooo. . T_,ty Kin 0 J lamblrt) 0.. Strl1t IS TN"Wlnel WoodV Jl:"Tlblw II W HtlrtrMI) Hlkarl (l W Hlrrltl Chi.I 11.ullr 1• Mllllll91 ONwtn IJ Slllll'IJ • Del Mar ·Entries NHITM llACL 1 1/M 111ftll .. Mf. ,_..._1nd-.Cllltlllll9Mb ---.,.... ........ ,, .. n.tl Tiii ..... HWI (W H.rTtl) ... rc:ll Peto! IJ llml:lertl · left '""' 10 PlltaJ SIXTN UCI -Abel.It 1VI f\t"9!lel The recent construction of the Dana Polnt Harbor en 11111. 1 ,. ... •* 11111 1111 fl"I" .,,. eliminated several good breaks. Gone are Meel)ee's, ;;::·T:~·1!';r,,.:·1000· Aschauser, Fisherman's and the Cove, along with the s.ncKTMd""' IL•mwli21 l: l: 11'1r T1 Jl:Mdl 10 Hiii) £"'"""' Smttll IM YI-) Doubt1 Mlsk 0 0 Pltral Wlndll1V (II V.tr;I ....... Stlel IA ,..,_.., C-fll911C't Jp, (A '11~) •l"M IAC& OM 1111111. I YMF ·-ll 1(1,11111.all:I) ,._,...._IA ........ , cM ...,_ IJI: Yftl ... _ ....... ~ ll c.-1 11:-..iic.n Wty (W H•r1n1h:I fabled "Killer Dana." M• t..1111 1M v 1nt1.1 , .. Tbls year will witness the final closing of Salt Creek ~M:Ci ... ~HEs. to the public, while in the last 10 years Oranl!e County sr11teTM uc;-: ' "'"°""' 1 D s F • h R t surfers have lost more than a dozen good surfing areas . r:~.::w. ·~ .... "" ..,~~ -' _,.!. eep ea is epo r either by beach erosion, harbor construction, private J<r.nc1ne M.. to ~i.rn> beach development or legal action by city councils Prino:11t ""' 1, a.119,.. ~.• ~:: ::: i.1.1t cL•M•MTS _ 1,. •Nlll'li • c.Me1 .,. ... 1 .. ,. ....., * ....._ "d.iscriminaUDg" against surfers. L11 cw Mlhol'Tll'rJ s.21 u... ._ blmcudt. 1.a ~tt. , 11111.MOU. -11 -1en1 '' allOI How many surfing ~·-will we lose in the next 10 T•Mll!! -,., tw.ubut. .. .. » "°"'"'• ' r.A11vr. • llltl'KlllM. -r-"' 1(11.ATCHlfO -l'orttvl111.· IANTA MONICA -IJ .,....,.., llJ 1 nllfWtllL years? · A -11: • Coftr·tr1rri-d '"'" ..... n1"""'""1 ,.....,., ••DO•oo _ 111 .,....,., ,, ... MTM IU.C• -• fvfionti. t ,,_ OC•AllSIOa -• ""'-"J 11 •~• J1 .. ~ IMt allolo Surfer• Buie? 'l' eala Sure I ..., "ma. TIN ......-M.. ,,..... ''"°°"· Uf .,.,,. ..... m "'"· m ..... 111 llillllltlD. • 1vi11tM. ,.. ..,..... • • • ' """' sio.oot lddlod. 1111ntto. 1 'llftlt. ,.. -... t n•llWhrr; 1' 1tt .,....,.1 111 MM ....._ 111 fllllnrte. t ..,1,..,. Covrt cw " ""'' Mnllvl. J • 1' """"""· a ~. nl r.o: cod. Let'• not kid ourselves. Not only do the surfers no • LO ... •1.u11~ ,.., -• 1u&. ••.t.c:M -" .... 1an1 A 1111n1tre, rule, they don't even begin to count Thtni we're kid· ,_ 11 Girt 10 H1111 "" ::: t.: ::1:S111:_, .. ,. .,..11;../~ :: ,,~ =~';'., ·~1.: i. 11 111.it· .. ,.., 61 ding! Ask your JocaJ City Councilman, State Bl!IStmbly ~~~,.,11~1r11·r1i) t.• =''~~II~-=~-~~ 1,:=°J!~lf~.Ju;.', m reprel!lentative, state or U. S. senator. Ask him how Ho SCJtATCHta. .a. ii..., ,., 11on1""' 1n r.o: ""'· t llon1t9. :us--. 11n1111w11n,'1\111M. much mail he receives from surf en interested in JulfTM iu.c• ~" '"'"''" ""'· :.~·, 1::;-:-c~·.::~11."~ !=...~:?..;;.1~11,..·~~ d ! ,.,., el* •nf ...,,, Clllml"'. ,,,... M preserving old surfing spots, an perhaps creating new tl.lot. ~:O.f;'IM, • 11911but. n alkl ..... " , ... '::"':.= ~...._... ._0 ._11; ones. He'll ~veJ.ou a long, bard, bl--"' l!ltare and pn>a wi" 1111...,. (L•mb9rtl '·°' 5·• 1·• ,,.,. .. 10110 1a... 11. ~HJ .,..ier.:, '' n1111w1111. 111 i..rraeuM. Ill.II.JI. ..... lrlWI IV111!1t111ll) l .M I.ell bably l!lay: 'Su ers?" ,.,,1." 11ue 1~ s.• ;.~=:.,.~Jo~ :..!'9~-o;:~t...,~ :!...~ : f:-....,• :,~~· TIM! -1.U.f/J, ''"' " But thil!I doesn't have to be the case. There are, ac. acitATCH_•• _ .,._ ··-· 220 11o1111e. t........,. LIMllllJ -1N t• . .._.. bllllfl11 """" 1• ...,... ....... _ .. .. _..,., " 1111c1n, " ""'Kllltl. m ncut11. ' llonlflt. n a-Ila ...._ cording to Newsweek Magazine's recent estimate, well l----'---------":;:;:;.::....::.:::=.::....::..;:::.:::::;~_:;=::..:.:;:::.,::..;:=.='-- over a million surfers in the U. S. -· iiilll" This corner thinks that this estimate might be a lit-i11• ro "" "" ...... Ue in the light ride. But whatever the unspeci.11.ed number, there are enouJt:h surfers to begin to exert ix,>litical pressure ... and u anY-,.ctivlst can tell you, it's the only way to get things done. Surlfllfl Stud" Needed For years the editorial pages of Surfer, and some of the other surfing magazines, have carried the torch alone. SUrfer, consistently a pioneer in the fight to make the surfing public recognize the need for organization to fight for beach access, has already turned its guns on ~e target. Still there is no reason that they should go it alone. After all, more people can make more waves. In the meantime we need facts, figures and 1ome solid groundwork to help cryslalize and polarize some of the many ideas, views. and concepts that surround the solution to thi§ problem. Beach access is only one phase of the fight, and right now the most important initial stase. However, there is a second part to the battle and this is creating new breaks to replace the breaks that have been eliminated. Next week we'll examine the two-world solution to this aspect of the problem , artificial reef&. .Surf Clubs To Compete In Contest ,,,.. Fifteen of caUfornia's ma- jor surf clubs will compete in this weekend's annual Be· ja IDvttational surfing .On- test. wUb 54 heot.s 1cbeduled to accommodate 1be 406 competltor1. kl tbe A Club Oiviaioo, IOI our(era from Loa 01"', Long Beoob, Malibu, Newport and Wlodlnaeo Surf clujlo will compele. The B diviJiOn Includes turfing pnffrs represented by tbe No111l Cout. UCLA, Steamer Lant, L a g u n I -ond Pleoaure Point Surtillg clubs. The c diviam Jncludea Blda. boct ol 1he meet, M8Debunl Ka Kai, Sunset Clll&, White Sandi ond Win· -· Stfndings CIMTA ld'IA ............... _ ·--MSP-~ w • • • • tw.., .... MMCO ......._ ---10.000 ... _ ....... ,.,........ Yo.-19tfll99......_•,.._ ..... lflitdl. hit. eflki..t Hffloe i ;A ti-M )wt -ill')'. AM with MMCO, ,._ tr.-ls•ICll'I -M ~-b)' _, 900 AAllllCO C-._,. _. .. _.. c_, INl!ut• .... I Ml, .,_.. ----··· ---c.wn • fa ... "· ......,_ ........... t=:'-: 1141 .......... """'"' ~. c. (WW" ... --DwW. ...... --............ •ldW!f'ft u. ....... --·-,........, YecM ~ =· ··-_, : G1rden o,... ......... .._ .......... ... :' ~ S.nta Ana I l .. L ,.... , ........... ..,...,. . ' . ' • • ' . J : ' .. ' : :.r:c;;_ .,,. , ·, "": l~)P•~·t. -.. -¥··- ........ II.OWi -:;:r•--.. ........ .... ........ ., .,.., ..... -"'I -• 181111 llW .... 1 •• , .... '"" .. .............. 179 ..,_.,,_ ..... ..... ·=--'"':: 1995 Artli N1 1& auriilR CAmEMAN COATS --...... 4500 ••• tk• •• ,,. ---_ ..... IRIY--U.TT--- llACK PACKIRS IACIC TAID FAMILY GAMES .,.., ,.., 0-,.., ..... IACI PACltlNG SPllllAR-MOllDAY M. AUG. 5111. i:JtO PJL Sltloo tf M1ftU1olh Loh Cal for ..... , ...... -644-2121 GOLFERS ................ .. tteck .... • • ,_..., _ 19.95 •hff- "" -...... i9.9S • IOll IM SAU -• II --- TOP SIDERS ............... -----,...._..,. ..... • C..• ~, ... ~· ..•••••.. · 1Q.t5 • ..,..., ........................ 12.00 • ..... a M111r1 .............. 2J.fS NEAL'S · SPORTING GOODS FISllllMlll'S (lllNCll llUDQIAITEIS---1 9241 ·~ ........... _ • ........... uo • ....... ..,. .. __ .... •lcc11 lit-.._ ... ................. --· ·-... -.............. 9;95 • hrdo 1110 11111 ....... 29.00 .. 17.'5 SKIEllS . ..,,... ... .....,_ ----19Mllldi ' ~ .. _ ... __ _ .... •Wt•P---- hlltWl-S.. ~. ... , 'Top Talent Counters Deficit Lack of Surf No Problem Final Week! Sale E'nds 8-7-68 LOllr! ALL SIZES LISTED . . RAYCO CUSTOM u .... 4 PLY NYLON WHITEWALLS .... .... , .. I TIRE FOR $20 2 TIRES FOR $36 ·--· ,..., IAhll 1.t0.:11 •.to.1.s ....... ....... 1.H m t.U•l• 7.ll/ .. MJ1l• 1.11 .. 11 I.....,,,, ....... ()"M/""'°"1') 1 ... "" 11.10.11) ,,,. ... --- ,.,,.,.,, !7.J0.1•1 2.19 RT Y.7S/7.1.SJ1ll 1•.1a1uo.1s1 1.21 "' 2 YEAR OR 24,000 MILE WEAROUT GUARANm NU-TREDS e WHtTlW ALLS e PIEMIUM TUAD DEPTH 995 "'" lllJC#,..,._ TIN Ph11 Tu AMY 11%1 UITD ,,...,. "'"11 ,., .. ,. ,. ..... ,. 11J.11 _ .. _ .. _,. 4 Wlteel OVERHAUL --....... . ..,_ S,sc ...... WIHt ............ otft W'EIK ---•Att4'Mlfth ONLY ;~'" 2688 ·--" .. 'tr .. S:lllM ... "'"' -., ........ -• =.::r--- • -....TatC.. ...... 700..11 .... 1. _,, _,, , ... 1. ,., ... , .. _,. .... , .. ,.,_,, Jso-1• ISS-14 ns.I• IS0-1• 1ss.1• , .... ,, lllallllla.!11 ........ M ... ... ~-·· •• Illa ............ c..... ,.. ....... _ .... ....... "''" ... ............... -to-flt. ,... ··--- SHOCKS 2:$16~~ AU. MA.IOI OIL COMPAtfT ANO DIPAITMINT STOii CllDrT CARDS HONOllD TO GnN A lAYCO CHAIM ACCOUNT 11 28'0 H1rbor Boul111nl, Cotto Moso -S4CM>l70 BE ~ ........ Mimi ANAHllMl l .. W, LINCOLH AVI. ,.,....,, • ..._ °"" I 1.m. f9 , ""'-~ ll'lf "~ t Oft!er Din 'ltll ' .. fl'\. (l11tMlll'll le!Uf'dly), NO DOWN PAYMENT ... MANY MONTHS TO PAY • ' . . DAllY PILOT U · Area Golfing Notes Fro1n tlie ·19~h •Ho~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Smith Wins Santa Ana £xclusiv.e ""'"" ,...,, C.•Tl .. ICAT• Ofl •UllHllS. •·•7M ClllTll'ICATI O" IUSINISS. PICTITIOUJ NAM• C•flTll'ICAT• O• IUSIHISI, •1CTITIGUS tt:AMI TM ..,.,fltMd dioft ttf111Y hi II eotl• •1CTITIOUI tt:AMI Thi !Jfld9f\I,,,., -cwtlf'lo Ill it ~ OUC:n,.. • llul.IMU If .f,IJ 1111 11111 lltlttl, '"" ""'°"""'""' dcel Olf1tff hi It -dud"-• bull-•I I'. 0. lo'I IP!, (otff Cotlt .¥n.. C•lllor!I'-. IH!Orr IN tie-clul;Htw II ~ ., ., .Qrd Iii .• ,,.,_,_ t.tlfonil•. """" .. fld(ftlw """ lllloul flt"fl'I -ot M J c .._, ._ ... c.~"°"''--~ 1114 lie> n • ..., I of VtlO. COM .. ANY ""' IMI AUTONIOTIVI." ll'td 11111 Mid llr"1 i. ttll-firm -of DRAKE Dl!'SIQN ...,.. Mid flrfl'I i. comiio...i of ...,_ lollowl,.. ~ of "" l(lllOwl"' Plr10fl ..._ fllll Mid """ 11 ~ °' IN fol-· --· """--In fvll •fld •Ila Ill ~-ill "'" ~ 11.tce of r•I~ I • [fltl ""°"' ...._ nll!MI In 1\111 •NI PIK.I '1ttldorl!Ctl II •• fonoft1 fotlOwl l 1 1 ot rtll!IMcl 11 .. '911owt; OE'OflQ• W. eotrl'E"r, .QI llr~. George Smit.b captured the Santa Ana Exclusives Tour· ney with a one.up triumph over Jack Triplett Saturday at the Santa Ana Country Club. best-ball of Partners match play tourney. bole. Robinson used a nine· iron for tbe feat. fifth, 'l'ilk•o Kawahara and Jim Aren in the sixth and Matsuo lnouye and Carroll Hood In die seventh. 18th hole a& Mesa Verdci Saturday. J~ C' LICl1ffll "' e.11 11111 Ltort• .. c. IC•ror. JOS E .. 1 AIOll•. Coll• Mtw. Clll"""''· s1r .. 1, c:o.it .....,.,., cflitornli, Gltl'IOO••• C•llfon111. O.ttd JulY 24-INI, Oiled Julw )1 1fr6t Ollld J111)o .. lttl. COtOflGI! w. COf .. E'I' )OMOll C L.Gi..rd LMMtf C. IC•W ll1r. of Ctllfoml•. Ot-C.OVON! A hole-in-one was record· ed by John Griffith on the 178-yard pat three sixth bole Saturday. GrlUith used a three-iron while Bill Brown, Dave Shaw and Homer Cur· ley looked on. Seaelltl An a!ternoon .1011 1and dinner special ls belng-fea- tured at Huntington Beach Seacliff on Fridays after 2 p.m. JiunUngton Beach men's club championship Is at stake Sunday when Bill Perry and Randy Kartber square off at 10 a.m. Ranehe Competing wllb Godinez were Ed "Lake, Richard Murtaugh and Junloc GJI>- son. lr1>lne C'oaat Jlir. fl Cllltrorrii °''"" Courl!Y• $tilt OI C.hlot'lll•. Ot11111 c-!Y1 On J611\1' 24 , .... btJort -• HollN' .,. ,1 •· • Oft J111y t. '"'· ltetofe ""'' • Not1rr ~c In •NI ror w ld s11i.. ~ltv Jlt'°' ' 1'61. lltlof'I !flt, I Nolll'I' .. llt>lk Jn -"" tor Mid 1111 .. Hr-li'I' -••Id GEO•QI! w. COl'F!V k-II) l'ublk Ill •lld tor .. 111 !II,., --lly -r• L-fll c. 1(1icr --,. -""' to bit ""' --.. •-rtd ~ C. L-.1 ~ l'O .,... to l)t ti. l'f'Wft W110M Mf¥ll II IUti.ct1o. ..,.._ nllftf '° "' tM lllt'IOn ...._ "'"" II 1utlscrll). Id IO ,,,. 111\la ""'""""*'' nllj tublulbH '° 1119 wt1flln lrllW-f Kid Id to Ille W!ltlln 1"11,_I •nd l~llll MY!tXf/CUt'HJ !tit umt. • ~F:e~~:.:L~•tclrhtd 1fll ...,.,.._ =~J:L~itc1111d ll'le M/Tl4, !O,,l"ICl•L SE,liLI ~ E. Otwlt JOllllll £ O.wl• C>o'mth v, Ult ~ ..... Pvblle>C1tllorni. NoltrY Pi.bt11;.(1ttfgr"I• ~r,:c7,:i"::f~:~fon\l.e Pr1¥I011 Okie. '" At $18 per couple , it in· eludes golf, electric cart and dinner for two. Howard Estep and Billy Creswell will vie in the first night. while John llOJren and Ray Jordan go at 1t in lhe second flight. Robert Timme fired a nel 31 to capture the blind nlnf!t event at Rancho San Joa· quln on Saturday. · Prt11CIP1I Offict In or,_ ~i., Or•~-~ly Of-11'\M Cwnl"I Mv COrr\mlulon &ti!"" • MY ""'"""'II'°" ... PlrH Fred Cunard and R. W. Mv eom ... i..1on Ex!Krft Ju1141 21 . Mlt'dl n 1tn -. l'ub J11111 21,·1m S l I!-. lt)O .. vbl!Sh!OCI Of•iW. (oft! 0.ltr l'llof. J~ llM\9d Or•llOll C..I 0.Jly l'llof, J~ m th teamed up· to iu~ a l'Vblll!lfd °'''"" coesi o.11, "110,, ,., 1.; • •nd ....._, 1, 1. 1"' ins.a l'1 u..,.. A-1 1. t. u. '"" ,,.._ nifty SB for better ball of AwU1t 1• " 11. n. 1N1 11»41 LEGAL NOTICE The 20th annual Santa Ana Men's Invitational will start Aug. 6 through 11. De-. fending champions are J ay and Grant flornbeak in the lluntlngton Beach C. A. Robinson, of Costa Mesa, picked up a hole-in- one at 1-JunUngton Beach on the 130-yard psr·three ninth 0th~ flight finalists are Lloyd Morgan anc! Tracy Kelly In the third. Clyde F'rlshholz and Don Vinton on th e rour.tll, Lee Casey and Ellis Johnston in th e Tied for second with 3ls were Gil Ide and Bob Mar· tin. Way.le-Goldie tintsbed ln third place )Vith a 33 and four wer~ knotted at fourUt with net 34.r. Those were Pat Wade, Warren Gibbons. Hal Smith' and Fran Clblan partners Saturday to take LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,_,,.,_ top honors in the men's club •.JeJt? CIERT~k':.~o:: : .. u~~li1ss, event. "·'"'I ~JtTllllCAT• 01< &UUNISS. Tiie Uncltf\ltMd do <Olrtlll' IMv .,.. I ,, Cl,J:T~~c,.~~~u°: : .. u~~HISS, T"-.. nc:r~~:r:!:o~ ~.~m~ !hey ••• r uetrnt 1 bla1nftl 11 1'1t1 11trr• ·St., Second place wen to Thi unc1tr11tn1111 does c1r11f't s111 11 -COftdvctrne , buJJ11tn, ., u.11 Lortt 11';;1~:~ 'h1\~· c:~n.._ JfWiflrl( ~ Clark Somers. ··and Chick' ctuc.11111 • 11u11111a1 •t 16910 Boru. Ch.IQ Clrcie, H11ntlllf10n B••Cfl· c1111orn1•, 1''100VCTIDNs ,..., .,._, u te """ 1, Higb <e W;u. •'-•i• 61, Wbile R4., M11t1t!neloft llffcll, ~ .. 7, C1 llklrtll1, .,,., IN f\(llllollS tlrm nwnt of A.NOOE ~of the lollOwf CdMAce Oaims T9p Spot Cllris Tilompson of Corona del M.ar captured the top apot. in tlhe final Statistit:s of tfie Huntington Beach Sum- nier basketball league for Orange Coast area players, Tliµt 251 points in 11 games fur a 22.8 per game a"Verage. . Titompsoo had high game 1 of 36, as and 32 in the 11· 11=e span. C'O•ONA -,_ ... ,_ On w ... O'LHry """ Flnle'I WU!f•m• McW!lll•ms DliL MAR 17-<I) FG FT T' 18 JS ?SI 69 '5 lll 21 1l 45 20 17 57 11 17 SJ lS l :a ' ,, :n 1 ' 11 1 l 15 s 2 n GOSTA MESA (1-ll .. GOLFING.A r.> WITH ,.{lfMld ,_'~ GROOVING YOUR STROKE Takei ~ tip from the men who putt for a living; keep your b·tade low and straight through· out your stroke. When you swing the putter· head back and th rough low to the ground (illustration # 1 ), as oppcsed to down and up (ii· lustration #2), you set the ball in motion properly. It rolls for- 0 ward instead of skidding and hopping. This forward roll with a minimum ot bouncing is especially vital on bumpy greens. · To keep your blade straight ·on your backstroke and through· stroke, practice moving the blade back and forth along the base of a wall (illustratipn #3). This movement will help you _develop the proper arm and hand motion you need to keep the face of the putter looking 0 E™"I.,. y""" $PellrMyer W•llln FG l'T ~ " ~ " " 119 ·down the target line throughout ''" Kllilly Cortes D•Vls Din Addle JOI! ·~" AU'Sflrl -· " " " . 16 l] 15 10 " ' " ' " ' " . . ' ' . . ' ~ your stroke. .. ~5 7-3/ ®. c \Kl Nol.I'\. -L S,... Ille. ~ ·~~~~~~~~~~~~....J "·---=---...... ..,. ________ _ ~ . " • •. ' Los Alamitos •• "OUNTAIN VALLEY fl"4) Entries • , a•;i fQ..;,.., ... ~ FG "T Tl' S8 ll U9 3S :n ltl .., 17 101 21 27 SJ ll 6 12 Jl 6 68 """' y""' ..... W•lkfi' M••I ""''w .,_, 10 11 SI • ._ ... .__~---~...1•U:. ........................... ... 13 I J , A•ltd9t Zem.der MUNTIMOTON Contrerou Miiier """" ·-W1_nen W/lltflelcl 8 0llWllll Sl'IYder .Neri W>H ~rrlnthlll W•lller MOS!,_. Baird .... IVll Stratford ·~~ D•v14--" ·~"" "'""' .... N"'"'1nn Gltlof1V MA1UN.4 11 9 J I s l 11 . ' . . 'tr IEACM 111-11 FCO FT Tl' 93 511 736 6.j Sol 19' s:i 19 ns 27 17 11 'l.S lS 65 71 12 ~ 19 10 38 ' 3 ?1 , 1 n 6 l l] . ' ' ' ' . f .. JJ '° ~ M ~ " " " " " " ' ' • • l'T Tl' .u 171 71 UJ • u 1] 75 " ~ U D ' ~ ~ " • • • ' ' " • ' ' ' Nl!W~llT ...... HAllOll l .. J) Hevt>.n Mlllnoff '" .. ·-· '~' Webstfr Llf'(l1!~I MtAnll•I '"" Sft.ttl'lt y- WESTMlNITEll: Powe,.. B.-oderldl: ,_,. Sm1llwood .... --" Hao1n .. ~ M<:Clendltt """"" M<~ld '"""' FG l'T Tl' 71 26 161 46 jt 151 :n 21 ,, " " . l't 21 llD ti 1 30 1 $ ,, 5 .. l• 5 J 1J ' ' ' ' . . . . ' 17~) FG l'T T,. S6 37 Ht SJ 11 11.C )7 .t(I ... 23 » 11 211 10 u M II 6J ' J ,, ' ' ,, 6 1 " 1 7 11 . ' ' ' I I For ThUt'ldlf, ""· I, 1~ D•r1 Clffr & F•1t-l'lr•I "°'' 7:U P.M.· FIRST RA CE. 3!oCI v1rd1. M.tlden 1 rear oldt. Cl1lml1111. Pune 11700 . Cl.tlmi119 Pr!~ 12500. Prowierou1 Darin !D Morrl1) Mr. Klltnelli MtCue IH P•gel 0.tnfll Yankie {R Ad1lr) Bull Reigh M•n IN Ptrtlo) l l'I ~ndv Bar Hidalgo llt• (( Smllhl 5tnOr Surfer (I P CroHlv) Rock A BuA (E TllOf'l'lpson) Grand (hit: {Z Cotlln1) Don Ksar Als.o EHtlltle '" '" '" '" "' '" '" '" '" '" Elvbob (S Forlhl 111 Mislo(luff v O P Cro.bv) 111 Surt 'N 81t1or• fW M.llienbacll) !:10 MIH C•l.!lr Bar CH Cl'Olbv) HJ 5ECONO llACE. *I v1r<11. l ve1r olds 11\d UP Jn Gr~ B PIU1, Pur ... 11500. E•Pl'H• Man lS l'orthl Mantf Bar (W Slr•uH) Gurumake Doc (H Patt) Super ll:O'Vlll CO '-Wrrl1J GOtlrme! IL WtltMl Jackie High (J BtODktlelcll Request Jene (2 R Adair) A»Ctlor e.,.., (It BIMI) F•rtap CZ Collln'I Bit Rod.0!1 IC Smltf>) Abo Elltibki Ul!dtorstudv IT LIP'Ym) Tlnv Light CW M.!ltiin!Hchl ll:Ollda Parr (1 R Adair) Trv Mine CH Crosby) '" "' "' "' '" '" m '" "' "' "' "' "' "' THIRO RACE. l50 Ylnls. MllllM 2 V'•r ollls. Cl•lmlng. Pur" $1100. Cl1lmll'tt 1>ri<:e 17500. Ml Prottlo (J K•nls l Of! My Oarlln1 (0 Morrl'l DH.Kho Rft'd (J Wlli.on) W1lltl un,r rw Str•ussJ Modal! Miu fl R B.JMtl Bruct't Jet Bar tJ 8rod!Ueldl Sib !A Ar1l1a) (h11;il1 Wlr (l 0 Tyr!I Miner L•d Jr IH P•HI Smor;ee Miu (W si.11el Aho Elltlblt Clrtumn1vlsl1tor !1 D T~r<i'l Threo:1 C.lls CE Tho!TwOll! TIPesl..-.-l1 II: Bink') Dr. Mll~r Cl Wrl9hlj "' "' "' "' "' '" '" "' '" "' '" '" "' '" "OURTH RACE. *I v•nl1. J ve,,r Dllb Ind up In Gr..S. A Minus b"" In Cel!f. Pu~ Sl l'DO. Bro BrvtTl<nel IN P1!llol Sorlnt'l Prcmls. True V1ndy {8 llrlnkltyl Honev Al\d S.lf !R Rln11dlJ Mr. J•nt (2 A Ar1!11J 5-18 tT L!Dl\tlm) Dlr<i'd Mooi.11 11111> T~ MU'SIC (0 TYr.) NH1r• COtlSe-nllde IJ WllSOlll Ct1bbi::r'1 En ID Mor•ltl .... l!lltlblt T-IH• II ... Ar1l1•) Shudl 'Em Ill ll1nkaJ "' ' " "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" H•I Trk:ll; IZ Collins) Genie'• 11:..,,_, (W Slr1u11) "' ,,. Fll'TH lllACE, lSO r1rd1. J Vffr ol~ •tld U11 In Grade A Pk/1. PUrH 11900. Mlrif!ll T"'o (W Sl•Pf) Wiiiow Gokl (T llllhaml Ol!IM/I (D Morris) llU'9!1ndr Row Cl J Br0011;U1ld) Tippen·. Money (L Wrlv!ll) Frankie Free (R B•nk•) 8111 GrtMl•ddr (C 5mlltl) Su•le G1lor1 IA Ar•IZ•) M111 Lorn1 Bir IW Slr1uu) P•ltv Blue B.il IR Fltueroe) AIM SHt1lble Breeze A.CCIII.In! (J M•lli>d1J Rule.II (N Pall!o) Ster Btr Tam fl CotUnJ) Telr1dlat'Mr /2 J Brd.t~ld) "' "' "' '" "' "' "' "' '" '" '" "' '" "' llXTH llACE. :ISO l'lrd$. A.llOWIMeL Pu~ 11100. M-v Mill tW s1r-u111 Tni11t1 {.4 Ar1la J1 M•tJIOll& E•tle (QI Morrl1J Go Hombre CZ Collini) Mv K111lc1 CR Adelr) lm1 ll:ocket IP Crmbvl Cll1rw Fortnrl!9 iT LIPNim! H1v1 Bid !C Sm!t'hl Gold Time Cr..rw fH Crosby) Dertlv's R-1 tR F19ueroel •• '" '" ,,. '" "' "' •• ,. "' SEVENTH llACE. 150 y1rd1. ) Wlr otd1 •lld uP In Grflde AA Mh'IU:t. l'u'"' 12100. Pllgrlm BftU (T Lipham) Tiie MlrQI W!nd (1 D Tvre) Mr. Bar.,.11 Loll• Bull.,, R Ad1lrJ I'm B1rlo tJ Wiison! ~lllOUt"I' 15 Forltll Rft'd O..r1111 ll•r CW Str1UHI R-.in Dobin A.ttl<lle R1JV•I 10 Mortl1J Do Miii ~ CZ Collin$) AISO E"tlblt Olel Br..-.dv (2 0 Tvr!) Gold 1"90! /B llrlnkln-l V•n 8•r Bit! (I R Adair) trrwt su ... rlae fH P1HJ "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' "' l!IGHTH RACE . .oe v1rd1. J YHr old$ •nd Ull In Gt.ot AA Plul. PUtsl!! tt300. Flr1t M1"1N Dlv11i--w .. 1 Cot11I Rl!'Ufllon, Ofct. Noi. CT L~.m) 011.....nd M11~r ID Morrt1) IC~eled Dedi: fl WrJgll!J Tm1'11 J-(( Smllll) Ett1bo (R ll1nltsl Ro.n l(!nlck fJ Kanis! Oftlila S. QOOd 15. FOl1hl '" "' "' '" ,. '" '" NINTH llACI!'. Sft y1rds. I vetr' "'°' •'Id UI . Alt-~ncn. PUl'lof Ul'OO. Oii Go Go Ill B1nk1) 114 OldiY Ow Tl,_ Ill Ad11rJ 111 a.v 91111\tr IJ Wlloon) 11• tw. l"wn«Ml!lty (S l"IWTll) 11' TI!!v B-t 111 Arfl'l!tl CJ M9tlud.ll 121 T<:W> I~ IT Lltllltml 11, In' Costa Mesa All-comers· Splkefest life•• .Verde Frank Godinez used a four-wood in sinking a :?0.5- yard ace on .the par-three Alamitos Racinng Results W..,,,.sdlt, J1t... Jl. lM Clair 11111 l'IH • •UI Ul...u ullNr ti. flctllloul !!rm 111rnt ii JAM'S DRILL IMO CDM .. ANY •lld 11111 .. Id flrm lllmtt r11 Ml lllll plKfl .,.of ___ _ Chuck Mootgom·ery .an.<l Bill OONVT iH<l,. ,,,., "'•' Hkt 11-h _..... 1s c_..i of t11t tonowtnt ... .._. •• i.i1ow.1· '" ••• M t all "'-d .... "" IN¥H OI "" 1o1iow;.., per-, ....._ wftoo,a ........ .,. fun •1111 P!Kei ol K•ll'll;lflt L YOll-··-· • ,, e c were uUL Wtu1 \Mo. 1111M 111 fl.Ill •lld 111ce o1 1WkltllC1 11 11 rttldtn« ire .. to11o~: l"OUottiln vii1e~· c.tii•' ...... tf'r• .. George and Babs He.a.: 191'""7.' • Anode Servkl Conrtor•tlon. 74SI L.orgt ' · ui. J-A. ¥Hee, A frllrTlld W-n. C!rc;le, HUflllnghMI llt&d\, Calltoo"ft , A'ldrrw II: Y111,1,,., 1'1(0 SMrT• St., along with 0-0Ug aqd Marjo. ,..., J•llld Rd., LI Ml••d•. C•IJI. W1llltn O'Htll Lotllt. 116Sl PtllO Faunl1ln Vallev. C•llf. rie Stearn compiled a' net f06JI'. eon111, Los At1mllos, c111forni•. Dated Jutv 10. IHI. Oth!d JulY 11, !Na. D1te'll JUly/_J, IHI. 1Ca!herl11e L. You119 125 in two low-t>allS' of four-J•N A Meta At100E SERVICE Alldrtw R. You,,g Some Sunday •-Cop !Op S!~tt ot C1 11f<l.rT.11 Lot An"IH Count~· CORPORATION Slote ol Ctlllornl•, Or~119e CoiJnty: w ..... ' '· • · 0 On Ju!v TG, 1961, btlort ml, a Not1rv honor.. ""' Julv' 11. 19", before mt, I Noll"' Bl' Robert L. IPIM. Public In anct for Mid Sl•lt Hf-11'1 Public In •lld tor ••Id Sle,., PtnonlllY S«rtl•,., ,_.,ed Katherine L Youno '...i And ._, In cond was the quar •-•·1111 J-A ~ known 1g -to w. O'N•ll Lo1111 R y · • r Se • be ll'le per-whose n.tme 15 tubso;<lbtd 11•tt ol C1lllornl•, Or1ng.e Counl"I: wi.cse°"':'m~rio:':'e 1:.,::;.,1t., btto ~= tet of Ben and F•y Chap· to IN within ln1lnimen1 •nd .c:k-ltOI· On J<iotv '· 1'611, bttort me. I Nol1rv In"""""'' '"" •ck-ltclffd Ill I' d Ch"l.s and Dee-ed l!lt tKtcu!Mt tne Mme P~bl!t In •"" tor .. 1., St•~. Pl'<SOllftly e l1!d flle 1 man an (OFFIC,lAU 5U.L) . ·-·eel ll:Qt>ert L. OW:;la' •ncl w. O'· cO~ICIAL sE~i Dee Masters with lZl. ,....l"I' A.. w,11i.... neu Loftis known 1o me lo be tt.e i>t'"'"' .io->h E 0 .,.11 In men's club action Wed· 11101• .... Publlc-C•l!lornl• WhOW name& ••• tubsctlbed to'"' wl!l!ln NollrY P~b!ll;·C•lifornl• , Pr!(IClpal Off{c• tn ln1trurntnl lnll 1cknowltdged I n e Y PrlntlHI Ol!lct In nesday' Bob Commagere LO$ All!ltlt1 County n ..aited lh• ••me. Ore~tt Count... and Mel Keane combined M,Y CQl!lmls..I°" W lrn (OFFICIAL SEAL) Ml' Comm!ulon Explrtl Oi:•otier t. i.n V!dOr J. Ruldv June 11 l'7'D (or 8 net 65 in a l)eUer ball Publlthed Orange (<1111 DlllV Pll()I, ttollrY PubUc-Ctlltgtnl• Publl1h"11 0:-•n!Jt Coll! O•llY '°llof, of partners etent. • Aueu1t 1• 1• u, n. 1961 IJ)l-6f ~~:~t=• In Jutv 11, 11. 1s •"" A1111111 1, '"' 1112~ Emil Sorenson and bi ck LEG" NOTICE MY comm!Hlon E""1res LEGAL N011CE nu kPttmber u. 1t11 Myers were second with 68. PubUJl'!d °'•"" ca.st D•llY P11o1. PR-lu~ The '"FJ-ence f"ritten· NOTICE TO CR l!DITOfll J~l~ 11. 1n. 25 -AutU'S! 1, 1961 1111•1 H071CE TCF CRl!.D•Ttl•.s .,. Y SUPl!lllOll COURT 01' Ttj~ den•• charity shot-gun tour-STATE ol' cAL1Fo1N1A FOR LEGAL NOTICE suPER1011. coo1T oF THI! TH E COU 01' 0 ST,li7E OF CALIFOINIA nameot for r:{l embers of.. ' -N:.T:-40144 llANGli l'OR THE COUNTY 01' ORA.NCO• Irvine Coast . willt be held• k!:.'~~1o/E~~~~i:~~R~t~c:ec,•1so CEllTIFICA~t0~~ IUSINESS EstJtt of ET~E'L "v:OP~LVER. Dec.e•t-Sunday starting a noon . NOTICE IS H£RE8Y GIVE N tc '111e FICTITIOUS NAME l'd. Aug 18 has been set aside cn>dl!0<1 ol Ille •bave ""med dtcede-nl Tiit unctt r$l9Md doll certllv lie I• con-NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN lo "" • . tt11t I ll Pf!'IOIU 11.ev! ... cL.lfm, INlMI '"" dllcilnt • but lneu •I llt Whl ltlll •lrft'I, Ctfdllors of Ille •bowe nlmed clMeOetll for the annual Jack and J 1ll Mid <ltadent ,,.. rt<1uln·ll to 1111 .,...,,, Ccsla Mew, c111tor"I•. uflder Ille 11<· 1r..1 111 i:ier.ons h1vtnt c1.1m1 •NIM! 111e M be r t Tournament .... 11111111 nece.u.., "llUCMo, In !tit olflce !ltlovs l!rm ,...,.,. ol MARKING SUPPLV !.Aid dKl<lln! 1n re<iYfred 111 1111 """'' em r-uues. . ' Of !tit clerk of Ille tboY• ent!tlld court, er COMPANY ¥1d "'" Mid llrm I• cam-wl!h the ntl;f»llY """"f\ers. In Ille olllce Ralph Evans, club pro, 1S lo Pl'twflt thtm, w1111 the ntcesurv POSld a1 '"' lo11ow1.,, !><!•SOI'. ~l'IMf ot 111e clerk or 11>e •bove 1nt111ec1 mu11,..,.. I led t J·ourney ·to Santa vouc11tr1 1o 111e u'lders19~ 11 L•w Of-""me In 11111 •'l<I pllct of resloena 1 11 10 prH1:nt 111em, .... 1111 111« ~,.,, S a 0 • !lees o1 'Frtnklln tnd Frtnklln. 101 E•sl lollo.,..s: • ~hcu, lo Ille u'l<le"IVlllll 11 Ille oftlce Maria to compete m the up-11111 srrHt. Co111 MeH, c1111ornl• run. Nlthol•• c. crumPtGn, '°'11 Fri•,., cl ~r1 Anorne.,, Seth 1. colvef, 121 · Cal'£ · St te ""'Ith Is the Pit~ al bu1!nes1 al !ht Rotd, San Diego, Call!. Ve!encl• Piece, Covtn1. C1t1tornl1 t1"2 FlflST ttACE. 350 v•rdi. Mi lden 2 coming I c;irrua a u~fllt<>td In 111 m""'" cert11nr"' 10 oated Julv 16. 1'61. w111c11 11 the Pl•ce cf bu1lnen o1 1i.. Id p 11700 Open Aug 21 lht ttlalt cf wld decedf!nl .,..11"1n 11• Nlcl•ollls C. CrofmptOfl undersl9P'M!d In all m11ters lllflflnlnt to YHr 0 1· UrJI! · • • months •Ner tht 11r1r public~tlon ot 11111 $fltl 11 C1llfcr"I•. Or1"9t Countv: the nlltt al said dec~nt, .... 11111n li• Cit Quid!; CPtllloJ l.tt l.10 2·'° LEG., NOTICE not le• On July u , 1'61, bdore me, • Nollll'I' monlll1 1tter 111e tlrsl 1>11bllt1lle<1 ot lflls Ve-n1'1Jrou1 l'ly (A.r•la ) 2t.OO'H.OO tu.. 01tfci July' l6, l'61. Publlc In ind for w ld Stete, O<!•SOll•fl"I ...,11ce l.e•P P1rr ICotll111J l.IO Selim H. Franltll" IPl>t•ted Nlcl>Dlal (. CrumPton known hi Ditld Julio a, !Hf Time-II 4'lO. tt:OTtCE Of' l'UBLIC S•LIE 01' E~ICVl'or ot Ille Liii WIH l'ld mt to be 1111 Pt<IOft WllOSe name II w m11m c . Cotver .. ~,'~.·. ·,~.":""', ••-°""I-. ' ~::.,r;-e II~. SOAT ANO TRAILlll •Y TH llmtnl o1 Emm1 L . 111t>Krlbell hi the wlltl>',.' 1,~!'~~':.:"t lr><I E•eculor ' -~· "" LIEN HOLOSR Anderberg decttse<I lcknowledte<I fie ••KU , .. -.. ~. Of the El!I!! ol Ille Tn.ick!e Ron, Ludr."t llebelettt, M-. NOTICE 1$ Hl!REllY GIVEN !tie!, Jrr1tll!I" 111111 l'r1tit"" . !OFFICIAL SEALI Allove nlmld o!Kfdlnl !.Iii~ B•r, llU-.uinl to the i..,.. mlde •lld orovlded, 107 I. ltlh $1rHI Ro'll!le C. K"9• Sttll I. Colver Scr•klled-Mlrllee M.11t•rtl, Sweet 11'11 undlnlgnld, NEWPORT DUNES, (lot• ~. Cin .. ,1111 tuU -Notary Publ!c-C1lllornl1 125 V1l1ncl1 PlaO. Chirlot. Mlp W•rnwm. Tripping INC .. wlll IMlll 1t PUbllc •uc11on. 11 Ille ol· T1I : 541-2H1 Prine/pal Oltlce In Covln1, C1llfornl1 tlnJ Ll9!1Uy, !ICH ot NEWPORT OUNES, INC., WllOlt .411Gr1'1YI 1111' e:JN<ulor Orante County Ttl C11ll ll'l-1110 POii ofllu ldllres1 II SlO 1!111 Co.t,1t Publllhed Ore""" C.,.11 Dilly Pllol, Ju-MY Comml11lon E•PlrH ,litlorMY kif" E•tculot $1iCONU tltACL .. l'l tdl. J .,.,. Mlthw•v. NllWOOrf 8Hdl. C1lllornl•, •'Id Iv 11. 1S Ind ""'"'' 1, •• 1'6& 1734-411 Jutr J, ttn c l 0 llv llllol Ju Publli.hed Orang.e C011I O•llV Piiot, Didi •rod UP Ill Gr•dt II Phil bred In wllldl II loeated oft llf PKtnC c ... ,, Publlsl>ed Or•ll9' .~.· 1t!. ,n .. Julv H, 11, l5 Ind Autult 1, 1'61 111)-61 • C1UI. Pv"' 11lGP. Hlt111w1v Mir J•mbone R...ci. MtwPOrf LEGAL NOTICE tr 11, JS ar>d AutU\I ' • D1f'Hh''s HYtrct Be.c:h. C.Mlomlt, •I lO:OI A.M. °" Mor>-.l --------~~~C-CCC-!F19ueroe! lot.Ml » . .O !'.20 di\', IN 19111 d•"t ol A11tu1t, l,.., Ille NO'flCI! Of' SALE OI' REAL •NO LEGAL NOTICE Mr. Nlthl W•tdl (Morrill 11.• LIO 1g11ow1 ... dtscrlbed ,,_m, to Wit: l'IERSONAL l'ROl'EllTY AT PRIVATE l'·JOt21 LEGAL NOTICE 811ll.11Hr (Smith) l .60 A boat IC.lltorn11 te9\llr1tl011 No. l ,lill: AS A UNIT l'·!OtH llAlt M4 T~21 2110. CF-7761 AJO Ind I triller fC .. lfornla No. NI! " sin CERTIFICATE 01' BUSINESS, CERTIFICATE OF 9U$1MESS. Also R•n -Quid! Tt\ldtlt, ll•llt Uc.nH No. CE U40 SUl'ERIOlt COUllT o .. THI! l'tCflTIOUS NAME . FICTITIOUS NAMIE Tone •• Mg:OY'I 11•1», M.IC'I storm.,. Slld ..... I• for,.... PU•P.0'11 ot ft!hfl'IM ST•TI! Ofl CALll'OltNIA l'OR T~ unclertlllf'ed doe1 i;ertl!v lie 11 COii• Tiii unllers!,ned do cerlllY lhev Ire ~~ g~~l~HCIH, Atomic Chlf91 1,1~'.'!t IM. ~::.;:~o;::.:;, '!>t~g~~s~': 'THI! COUNTY OF LOS ,liNGELES duc:l\,..q • buslMH al 603 Edll'ttt<. Hf,•, a>nducllnt a bu'lf\111 et Union B•n~ .. ~.. · In the M~r cl Ille E1lllle ot fll'!!llcn Be•ct>, C1lllornla, uMer Ille ~u•r•, North To.,..er. Suite 11', Drang.e, Scr1lclled .-O.bb'f'1 a.b'r, Brill .clvtf'fblnt and tKOlll-of Mii. • HE,R8ERT R, PACKARD. Oec,elfd. l!llPWI t!<m ""f""! ct AUTO l(!NG AU TO Cetlklrnlf, under 1M llcilllou1 fl"" n1me Lind, My l"•lr Sl11er. Clllc.tro'I HI D11ed: J~ly lCI, 1'6&. Ncttte II llertllf gi~l1I that 1111 under· PARTS tlld lh•I Mid llrm 11 coml><IHd ol ot RJSE •nd l'tlet said flrm 11 compese<I ol Bir, NEWPORT DVNES. INC. \IOned will ,..,11 •' prfvltc ult. on or •lier the tollowlnu cerlOfl . .,..llole n1me In full !he to!towlng '"'non1, whole n.tmn 111 tu• DAILY DOUSLl'-CM Otlldl & 1· Olllh'I Hy-l'loltl tm.•. av Cllrl1tol>hl:r H1 H 1 lollolols· • I AltorntY Ille 19111 .S.y ol A.119U11, !Me. 10:00 ··"'· •I •nd Platt ot resl""nce l •• i H •ncl Placn ol ,..,ldtMI .... , 1o1-.: llub!J~ OflMe COllt Dillv Piiot, llw olllce ol Ernttl L. Ma.1Mr, S41t Joe Y-t l\, S6U FerMlll NO. • un• Gtttroe .4. Hedden. Jr., 2'12 LH"'9r111 Auvust \, 1, 19" 131t-a Crensll•w Bt'ld., Los A1111e!H, Countv cl ll"'llcn Be•ch, Celllorn!1 W•v. Co1t1 ,...,.,.., Cl!ll. tu17; Stanford l~:::.:_.:..;:;_ ___ ~~~~--1 Los .-."911t1, Sl•te cl Catuor11l1, lo the Dated Jul'r 2'· 1'61 M, l,,gr1m, 1'D'l Nori/I Fer~ Street, THIRD llACIE. »o v1rd1. M.14en t LEGAL NOTICE h!,htst 1r>d llnf bidder, •NI 1ublecl to Joe Yoursls Or1nee, (all!, 9'/6e7; y.,..flnct O. ve•r Ckls. Cl1lm!m1. Pur,.., $1700. corollrm1tlcn b'f' t.eld Superior Court. Ill STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Ml<l\ll!Oll, 'l:J.I Gayle Str11t, Orinl"• W •-O '--... Ille rl91\I, title ·•lld ln!erell ol 1eld ORANGE COUNTY; Cillfornl• "1667. 1"' e ... I !Morrill lt.w 9•20 '·'° SUl'l•ta• COURT Oil' 'fttE dt<e.lfd 11 thou""' of deiltl ind 111 !tit On Jul., 2', ltt.I, before m.e, • No1irv Dated July 1,, 1%1. F0it1' ~ (WlllOl'll ll.?d 1'·'° STATI! 01' CALll'OllNJ.4 .. o)t rlthl, II"-tlld Interest Ill.JI the nllle ot Pubtrc In Ind tor lllkl St1,., perwn1llv George A. Heddtn, J, • R'ti~i l'',A:~' '·20 TH• co~:rr_::s1011•Mor :1111.1::·!i~~1e~C:i:~tti.~i~'';o; ::,..e:;::onJ~r~m~""1;n,irn~ii: i: ~~·;~:;~.MO. •:;,~=ion ~:::.. R~tl:u, ~~~ =v. ~~ NOTl(lf Of' Hl!ARINQ OF dlllon 'ill tllilt of wtd 111Ct1MC, et Ille 1111 W!l~ln lnstrulTMl"I and atk-ltdgld Sl1te ot C•lil9rn11, OrlfflOI COU111\1! Sw.er, Ll!tle llnd:, Did 511u,., l'l'TITION l'OR l'ltOIATI! 0" llml• of llfflll, In •lld to •It lhe urte(nlhe_ •Keculfd IMM/THI'. o,, Juty ,,, IHI, btlort mt, 1 Nol•f'I' Scrfklled-llutl .ll.el9h Min, ~ NOLGGRAl'tt:IC WILL ANO llOll rtll 1nd l>8f10ftll p.._.iv 1llu•lt Jn Ille COIOcll l Se•yl,> •· J •.. ~. P~bllc In •NI for s.ld Slltt, i>t'10nll/'I' Ll'TTERS TESTAMINTARY B•lbOI til•nd. Counl'I' o1 Or.,1111, Stell ot ""' · ~ •-•rid Georte A. Hedden. Jt., Sl•nlord Rft'd, Wondl'• ftog;tt, C-r ••rt E1t1tt ol Gledn II. $d>lll1, ~---C•lllonll•, pirtlcul.rly Clescrllltd 11 Noll,., Public · Ca~!twlll• M. lntr~m. 1rid L1Wrence o. M/Qvtlofl NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N Thi! Jack fellows lo-""ll' P rlni;lp•I Oltlce I" known lo ""' lo k lllt per-Wfloo.e FOUllTH RACI. 3SO nrtll. l VHt A. Birnell fl.&t filed ller11rl • 11tlltle<1 fOf' R~I •ProPertv localed al lU Op1L O•ent« CPUnlV namn 8rt 1ub>erlbed !o Ille Within tn- O!dl tnd up In Gre<111 A Plus. Puril Prol>I'-Ill hologril>hlc . will •nd tor !•lboA h!and. CellfCrnla de1albld •s: My Commlnlon EJcplres 1lrum1n1 •nd •c~no.,..ledgfd t~1v l•Kuled 11900 IHuenu ol Lettlrt T-mtnlaN lo P.i~ Lei 3' In lllock 11 Ol 11'111 "Resubcllvl1fon Stl>ltmbtr II, ~II lhe wme. !:111d~ ~.J:crr~~rt) lJ . ..O ::: ::: ::= ~~~;~'n,'°ir~:. :~ ":1:! 11: !',_,~: ,onz..: r~~ 1i~1i:;;k •:, 1y ~~b!f~'!!~!i~~ ~o~;.' 1.U 1 " Pl~~ ~~;:::., Mp~ri~'~'~illlwnli Hen..-.-.W:Clut"I: (H Cro1byJ $ ~ Plec• "' lleirlM Ill• Mrnt hli been 111 Pete lD of M!lt.t!laneous M.rt1>1, rtconls LEGAL NOTICE PrlntlPll Ol!lct In Tl,,_..11 ol/1 0. ' for AL18'Ull n. lNI, •1 t ::l!I 1.m., In llM: ol Or1nee CPUnlY, (llllPfnl•. Or&nqe Cou"l'f' A.lso Ren-MIH Oli l Tl...,., C•ll<kl COii.,..._., of l>lplrlml'fll No. 1 of .-Id And turlll!Urt •r><I furnlslll1>111 locllld l'·Jtnt My Cornmlstlon E•plre1 B•Y llar, DoubllHl Oed:. M.etby ""'1• al .. l NIWTll Bro&OW•~, In 1fll Ctf'r •t JU Ol'1!, B1jbo1 l1llnd, C1Hfonlt•. CEflTIFICATI! QI' BUSINESS, Juty 11, 1969 Delli. Vt lllY '°"'' Olio Luckr, Seven f1I ""'' ""'" C•!ltornl•. Te•-ol Solle casll I" lawful mctlllY "' l't(TITIOUS NAME l!'DMONO lllALl"H ANOl!RSON Jlt., At. D•led Jul"I lD, l'61. the Vt1lltd Sl•te1 Oii conll•niatlcn Pl wle, Tiie underslt1ned does c'rlftv l'le !1 lor11er _ St,..ws. w, E. ST JOHN, Cow""" Cieri: Of PO•I CISh •"" 11-.ltnce tvldll'n<*I l>Y t onclucilnt • busl.-1 •I M7'1 Kl!'ftll"910ft Ulllo" B•llk S<t11•r• kr1ttlled -Alt Slrlo, 81r Tondl, IHfff A. E•1tlnlll. ·~ IKl/rell b'r Mot1g1ge or Truef Detd Dr Hllllll"91on BHc~, Cilllc•n!a. under Ct"lr•I Ttwtr, SuUe >02 Jet Fuel, R,,.!11 Quick, 27" H•"'°r s ... 1tY1rd, en tne of1111tr1'1' so IOld. Ttn ..er ctn! al lh~· llcll"ou' firm n 1 ,.,.. e of Or•ntt, C•llfo1"1• nut C11I• Miu, C.lffOl1tl• nni amPUn l bid to bl! dfl>Ollled wllll bid, CCNTRA.CTORS GENERAL COMPANY Publ!1hed Or11>11e c ... ,, D•lly Piiot, l'IFTH RACI. 1.50 vird1. ' Yffr T••• J.41.tllO ~•t1ti-Bld1 or o!ltn 10 1» In wrllfng •nd .... 111 •NI th1t 11ld 11rm h comPOled o1 t/le -'°-'-'."-,'"':-::c'w;;.,"c"_'c·c'c' c":·c"="-~"::::" ... : olcli. (lllml,,., Purst '2000. Afttllll' for Ju. bl' received 11 !he 1fores.ld olllc1 1t anv tollowlfl'l' ii.r1on, whOll "8n>e In lull al\d Jelf1lre /Adilr) r.00 '·ID l.CIO Published 0 ••"9fl COlll D•ll't Pllol, 41 ltm1 1t~r ll'le flrsl PUbllC•tlon l'lerect 11\d place ol ''•lde-nc• 11 as follow1; LEGAL NOTICE Al""'l!os K•v (Morrli) 4.20 J.00 tr 31 •r><I Aututl 1' I, 1"' 1311 before dllte ol wit. Rcl1r>d Rouw, ff7t l(ens1"9ton Or., I ___ _:::.:_~~~:.:.:.:.:_ __ _ Allrll Rectuesl (KenhJ 1.IO LEG" NOTICE D•lld Jul"t 7i, 1%1. HU11ll110I011 ll<l:•cll, C1llfcrnl•. BAll-7" Tlme-11 7/1~. '"" Mtrbtfl R. P•c:lcard Jr. O•led Jutv '· '"'· NOTICE TO CREDIToas AISO 11:111-ltuMlfltl (rM, C1liflllllll EXt<ulOI' ol Ille will ol ll:Olancl Roux .._ SUPERIOR COURT OI' THI Smog, 5cooP O' TrPtJbll:, Blrred Tep BAR Nol Hid dl!'c:t'derll Sllle ot C.llfotnl•, Dr•-County: STATE OF CAL l,,ORNIA • .''' SUl'•lllOll COURT 01' TH• STATE l!mtsl L. ,,..II,,., On Jul't •• lffll, belort me •• Noterv l'OR THE COUNTY D R!lll M•k,.., MIM Vllrldt •r, "i OF CALIFOllNl.4 .. OR 1-42' Crtlli.lllW 11\od. Public I" Ind '°' H id State, l>tt'lcn•llY NI A-au2" OltANCO• Re<iuesl. THE COUNTY OF ORAHGI! Los Al!Mltt. C•fflot'ltl•......, appe•rld Rot1nd Roux kllOWn le me le bl! Eilflt of NORA. e MINADEO No 1cr1lcllel. Ml. A-41UJ A"lf1llY tor l!x.c:utor Int perSOI' who .. n1ma 11 1~blcrllleod to t1I • ' Dece1._ NDTICI 01' HEAlllNO -'°IETITION $017·0C the within ln1trument t'ld •ckno.,..1'°8ed Non SIXTH RACI!. '°° Yl fdL l Vt•r 'OR PROBATE 01' WILL ANO FOR Publf1/lld 0•1"81 C:>ill D1ilv Pllol. lie executed Ille ......... crtdlfor~E oflst!:E~BY GIVEN ta tlle Oldl l 'ld ut> In GrtOe AA MIMll LITTliRS TESTAMENTAllY Aut1tlf I, 2, I, lHI 1J1MI (OFFICIAL SEAL) Ille! Ill l>tr110nl !l:vl VI lllirned chtceOetit E1t1te ol GRACE (. TRE5$U.R. M De•n Wllal• I "' t I m1 a1•ln1t ""' Purle 11100, Dtc:Hsed. LEGAL NOTICE NOttlY Publtc-C1llfornl• ~~ decedenl •~ rf<IUlred to flla "'-'• Dirt<! Sl>ol IArilttl l?.00 ,_ .. s.oa NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Th•t Prtncl,.I Dfllc• !n w Ille ncte•MrY VOUCl\tt's, In "" otllct Mr. Olo Toro (Klnhl I.Oii S.20 CHAflLES w. TRESSL>.R Ills !lied ller"fln Or•ll9t Cou~ly ot !he cllrk Pl lhl •~t111ltltd owrt, o,. J•ck A. Mlllll" (M4otsud•l 7.60 I Pftlllcn '°" P.tobltt ol WUI I r><! tor su .. ••IOR COURT OF THE STATS MY Comm!Hlorl Eulttl to eres111t 11\em, "'fl" ""' ntttul•'I' Time-20 6/10.. I • Lelm T I mtnt l'O "" 01' CALll'GRNIA l"OI THI! Mtrcll JS, Im """"™'" to "" undtr'l.lgllld •I "" ollre. Als.o R•n -KlplY'I C•boolt, Llcll' lllllntt 1 ff 1 l l'I' COUNTY OF ORAtt:O I! OoOll•"" O••~ C<11tl 01lly Dito!, ol hf1 Attor......,, DOll9la1 0 . Moscrip. ''''' Pl'flll-. reltrffltt lo whldl 11 IM<H fer Nt A~IU4 ' ,.,.. l (0.-611 Bt•dl 11 llY d lie Sure, Mv Wiiia, 0.. OI Tllr .. , lurlhlr Pirtl(Ullti, ind !hit !ti. time Ind •OT>C• 0, ••'• 0 , ••AL Julv' 11;11, 25 Ind AUlllU11\,19'1 1 H > OU 1r' Sull1 Number 1, .' • > -·· DI " 1--· -·11 I•• .. PRO. un fll91Pn lie.di, Clllllornll .,..~,,. '' --H rl' ......,, ,.,,,..~-·'-"' '"PIK11othHrlnell'leufflllle1bHn1et l'ElllTYATl'RIVATISALE. CE ctlett ofbo.til u 111io "" ""' Scrtldled -Llltle Emmv. •O'l'•I for AUGVST 23, 196&, 1f t :JO 1.m., In !he In"'' M•!l•r • '"' Ei!~tr ot AONDLD LEGAL NOTI malteri 11trt:r111~ ... .!'~~•'•'',,""•1" •• '1~ Tl-I. W•r GoddtS~ Mf. B111Wlt. .. ' ........ __ , ••• ' • aid '"' ... ""' •• -" cou .. room 0 .,.,........... .. • I E. WILICINSON, 1lso tr>OW11 •1 ARNOLO dect'dtnl, Wllhln llX mon1~1 •fltr !tit !Int SEVl!NTH RACI'. 3SO Vlnh. ) 'Y"I• old• •r><I LIP In Gr.ot AA PIUI. l"llrM courl. •I 1111 N. Br<11dW1J, 111 Ille (lly of WILKINSON, Drcqi.fd. •AR44t • PUbllC•!lo!I Ill lht1 flO!lcr. Slnt1 NMI. Cellloml1. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N 11111 the tt:OTICI TO ClllOITORS D1fed July 10, IHI Dlr.d July 31, IHI ul'<ler1te~, 11 Extcutrlx of Ille L•1I WU! SUl'ERIOll COURT OF · TMI! Cl\.JrlH P. MlnldlO W. E. ST JOHN 11\d T11l•menl ot ARNOLD E , IT,liTE 0,, CALll'OllNt.4 l'Otl Actmfnlilr•lor 1.IO 4.20 J.ID CounlY C~rt. WILKINSOt.t C•lso t-•• A.llNOLO THI! COUNTY 01' ORANGE Of Ille E1!1te Ill lhl 0... W, R..:hllllr WILKINSON) o!Ktased, .,.Ill MU 11 NI. _.4...-S AOO'Ve ""med deceotnt ··'° J.lill Ill '#, Li H1W• 91¥1., prlv•le Hlf to Ille h!thfll Ir><! best bidder E1t1le Cit ROBERT ~-SHAllP, •liO 0....11• 0 . Mtsct11 '"''· Go Al Go IColllM) Plfll Pet1u1N cTvttl '·OO U )!Mrf, CIRl9rlll• UPOn 1111 ~rm1 lrod l'Ondllle<15 ller<i'lnltltr kflOWll 11 e ROBERT· ll:DWI N SHARP, llfl1 81~11 llfultvi1'11 Tit: 011) 6t1-1125 mrnllcned Ind II/bled lo eot1flrm1llon b'r Ot!cc!lfd. Sutll Numl!lr f TOP Ellmln.t•or IH CfOlb'r) Tlmt--11 l/ ... A.li.o R111-011\dv Moolall, Plunder. Cltbber't Rotk1!, M"trnb Gvll'lv, Or. Hank. Salldy ChJC, Pfn Pt l'1 01ndv Scra!Gh~Y• M.rl1. Altln!IY fer l'llltl-1•ld Su1>1rlor CCMtrt, °" A.ugust Ut/I 19'1 NOTICE IS HElleBY GIVEN lo llle Hunll11tton B1~1t, Ci~ftr"ll Pub!11hed OfUlflt C<111f D1fly Piiot, it Ille llour of tin o'(la(k A.#.. 0~ credllon OI 1flt •bolll n'1Md dt<ede<ot Tt,t: 0 14J UO-J724 Autu1t I, 2, I. 106t ll:U-61. tl'lere1fter within Ille time atlowld bv I•"'· 11111 ell oer'°"' h•Vlfltl clalfois "9l)MI lht Aftw11tv for Admlllll••ttr LEG 'L NOTICE •I Ille ol1lce1 at l"rtnklln Ind Fr•flkH11, Mid dl<;alettl ltl rt<lll_I ... ~, 1;: ::::: Publltlle<;t Hunllll910ll lltich 0.lly Piiot n Allorlll'(I, 1GI E11t ltlh SlrMI, Coit• wllh lhl ~Hl'I' 'n H11111!ntton Be.di, C•llfornl• ' EIGHTH RA.Cl!. "6 Ylroh. ' J'flf ~' CeUICr"!•• •II rlthl, 11111, ln!,,,.MI ol Ille del1r. .ot lttt ,...,.,.. f"l!lled court, JUl"t 11, JI, 2S & A.1111/SI I !NII lll7.a olds 1•1'11 Ill> In Gr.ot AM Ml!M. TIM ClflTll'ICATl 01' DIKONTINU,1iNCI 1rod tslllt of Mid Amolcl E. Wlllclntori, cw to 11ment lhtftl, -"'~ Ille nea::ii ' C~PffflflO, Purw UIOt. ... GI' USI AND/0~ A•ANOOl'OIMSN'T dece1Md, 11111e tlrnt ol Ills <111111. 111d •II \/Olldlen, lo 1111 undt.--.'l«I •I Ille ,.• LEG'' NOTICE H•rte<tutn (H Crcoby\ It.to t .60 6.-0 1" FfCTITIOUS "AMI' rl911!, 11111 •'Id fn/rlt'flt lhll Slld ftlllt o1 /Ill Allcrnevs lftr'n*! •1\11 ~. n,i, Exl>t'dlll0\11 Cllcllem) t .00 a.DO THE UNOERSIGNEO Goel herfbf "'-• •C'tlllrld ll'r -•!!Oii ot Ii'# or Morlll M.lln J!teel, lulf'll lOOS. S.nt.11 AN, Slltf'I' B•r fForllll I~--certlly IMI .rff(!lve A119u1t 111 1NI flt Oltlt,.,..IM, ol!ler 111111 or In lddlflon lo C•lllomll l't"ll, wtlldl ,, lht llKll of NOTICE Of< TllU5T•EJ IAL•\ Tlnw-11 2/10. CHlfd re de IM.!11111 under fl'le0 Ottlt\OUI fl'lef OI Wld Arnald E. Wlhtlnson 'II "" IM/ntM °' fl'le Ulllffl'l(11r*f In •II "''"e" .... '"' No ICr•ltllft. nrm n1me ol ELECTRIC OROAN """ ot hi• detlh, In •no''° the ........... 111rtl!fllf19 to 1111 ••1•11 ot w ld decfdtn1, A°" Aug111t 1•, 19'8, •I 11 ,00 O'Clock ASKIC IATES •I »J E1111n11 SI Cos!• pef1Y In It'll CounlY ot Or•net. Ifill of wlflll" •I~"'°"'"'•""'"" ltf'fl PUtltl~ c .M., 1t ,,,. f•onl '2'r•nao of 11111-Sh•W NINTH RACE. ;jfo ~lnlt, I '11!1f Mew Cio!Orn1s wl\lth biltl,..;:. wH C.l!lorn!1. de.crlbld •1 hlllowtl tlPn ol thl• llOllCt. '1 6(11«11'r• 1~ $ ''' Marl•lr Aw., ~. •nd lilt In Gr•cll A ... us. ~ lW!'rl"°"" COll'I-ol "" tollowl!'lfl P•rttl ,, Ille SO...tlle11terty JU IHI Oiied July,,.,,,.. • • ·;o-· e~torn. 110-Shliw Co/'l'Oflflof\o flt'Qll, 11tri.on. ~ "'"" !n tult •lld •lli(e f11 OI Ille Soulllwesltrly U IHI of Lei 23' Di"td L. J1':1 Wlll llf .,: R~,l~~R~S~ OI T'Ull mldt Wlnl<e"'oeed f.4Htrl '7.60 J.IO JM tftlcllr>ee II ti tel ........ fo-wtl · Mtllfll011 Htlth1$, •s Pl'f M.11 lhtf'IOf ExKUfot ~I 11'«1 dl!'c:ldfont flOYJtER fiu lwtnd ER ANO MARY I • v1,,.,., 0111 tH Ct•b•) J.20 l .00 !'A.TRICK J, WAOE, • rteorded lrl Boe* 4, P•ee U ol Ml.eel-HARMOtt: ::..~llNl•N.... • ,,_dtd .Y..iv : •• lftll,1";! 11"::; lJ~ P•lll'lfl tWlllofll ""' ,J7 (1(11 l"IKt, lanroui Mwi, record! DI Or-• NOrt!I M.i~ Sll'ttll. P-441, ol Ortlt!1t Reo:wn ot Ortnoe n,,.,._u J/11, Colli """'' C•Fltenll1, '2627 County, C.1Uornl1. Slfltt 1.., Counf'I C•llfornlt l ll'lfl 1g SCr1~ ltllo.s., Cllk. fle<Ne1I, Cl'rflflc•M' "'' tr.-dlln Ill 1111""'"4 P1rtet '; ll:t1Nlndt:r lnltrftl In 1111 llllll A....;, Ci fftttrill f21tl lndf:t.1HntH In fiYOr Ill HATot'~ ~ti V111 l!l.llr Bell, Mlttfltl T-l'rlllen.I w.dlr ""ffo¥I fktlfllM 1111114, Ind tf. Slll.lthet11trty llS feel Ill Ille ff«lfl. Tth S4'·7SU SNYDEfl ANO RUTH A. SNYDER• 0 1.1, SI.lilt o.lort. lldlVll ol l\lllllc1!tol'I lhtrfOf ........ "'-t hflrl¥ ... f .. I OI Lett :tu Hew"'1 ... tltltflt'I• lw l!•IWI... llu11Hnd •nd wilt ., Joint T-nb ..,.; t~ "" "'1JQ ol "" (Ollftly Cltril rJf Or· Hllthl,, I I ""' map !hereof r'ICOfded Pvttntllld Or11111t Cot" Dtlly Piiot, Ju· GWNd Ind lleld ll'r HA.ROLO R. S~YDER ..,.. COllnty, 11nder 1111 frovlllOl'll ot In look 4. P•M U ot MllOlll1,,_1 l't '' •lld Autlllf 1. I, IS, Ifft 179•~ AND rtUT H A SNYDER, l!ut!Hnll •I'd Section ''*" of flit Clvll CCIII. M.1111, rt<ordl OI 0r111M Countv, Cit· Wiit 11 JO!nt T1"8nl1, bv rt•IO!I of 1n. WITNESS MY llll!ld ii.11 111 NY of lfcwnl•. LEGAL NOTICE brflch ot ctrl1ln obl!Nllorii M(Urld A1t111tt, IHI. • lllOS or offffl •rt l11VUld fol' .. Id -lhffttrr, flOlf<» ot '°"lcll .,.. .. ,_.....,. flAT'ltlCIC J. \1111.t,O~ lltrlY' t1'ld lnUll I» I" writing •llCI' wit! bl! l'·Jll4I Apf'lt t, lNt, In Sook 1567, l'•N t)S, f11 1"11111"'*9 Or11111 C..f 0.llY flUot, '"'r""' ,, "" ~ rJ l'•e'*Rn -Mid Otfld.I Rtcord1, s I.". s ~. w State Champ Clears 14-6 in Vault ~I \, .. IS. n. 1... 1Ul4... Fr1Ml!1t, ~tor Mid E•t<Vtrtlt, or ClltTJ"ICAt• 01' 9UllNSS$ (Ol"-•tlOll will HI! ., fllltlHc ONCltori • l ~~c;__;_:;_;.;;_c__;;__ ___ .;c;__.lrnt¥ I» IJllfd Wllti IN Cllrk f1I Mid '-i(:?ITIDUS NA.NII t "'9 llltlltlt blddtr lor <•Ill, "Y•ble In LEGAL NQTICE S.-lor C'ourt or dthltld to lllt wld Thi l/fldlr1I""'"' does m•llh' ht 1 '*" ll'Wh,ol "10lll'I' OI lllt Vnti.o stttn •I Ille l--==::,:,,,,,::.c~c:_;.:,::.---1 Ell:fWfrle; """"''"' •I ..,y !lmt ..,... 1f11 OUC!t .. • M IMll •I 1• U.•n Aw.., flmt ol Mif, wt111o1rt Wl"fnty ,1 lo 11111, C•lllTll'ICAT• °' &IJ'IUIDI flnl IMlt!llceltori rJ 11111 l'IO!lte •nd btforot "", • ..'!-~n,;-111ot11,.,::i "':.,., :i::.. ~"'?. -Ion or •llCllrllOr•llCtt. "" lnterftl '' ' • f!l.ekfllt Mid wit. ..,_,,, con\'lnd to Ind -htkl trr Ml4 T'u1IM ftl I IOUI, tt:AM• $111:1 wit win br m.a. -lfll folltw-#.ANVFACTURfNO COMPANY •nd 11'11! uncW Mid Died o1 Ttuit. In •1111 fo lllt Steve Smittl of Sou!f\ Tor· ranee, state meet dlampion with a 15-2'n mark, won the pole v-ault event Wednesday night witl'I a 14-6 effort In the open division et Cost.a Mesa High SChool In the All· come.rs track and field meet. I~. ~ (~ 2. O'Dell {l'ldflc:lel 1 .: ..... coc l T!mt~ ·-·· ' 220-4. I 7, ,.., ' K~• ~I lrnt; 1l.~I -..v> • .... ,_ '-.!.'!t t ~~ ......... V~ •:.:iw.i.rt=: tCN.--1 l ~ I I Tffllt~ , . .,,, Jt~.'9-'· Hllll!I. !C!11P1'1'1111) ?,.)l•IOll ln,U..J:..t'."1" IOC() TtrMt_14. · Fiii! IGW<) • «JnWc\~, "" I TIWI ..,..,.1,flld --l*'llly "' I\ Ql!'t-"" ltrtn1· c • .,, ' ••Id "'"' II com~ ot Ille followlnD !'llowt"• dncrlbld ••asttty fo.wll· duellnt • bullntM iit 1'.0. l'oii't•7A."Ccsti Oiltd iu!Y ll' ltfot P9tllOl'I> wtlolt "lmt In tvll •NI Iii.et ol A IMMl\old !tl•te Ill ,,,d to Loi lD ltf CNHJ J. ll:•!t... I~) T1m1· n.s MtM. C.l!lorftll. PHH.•"""°' ...._ 11" MAIEL EitlECA~TI f'Hl~ 11 •• tono.,,.., TrKt Ho ooo. •• "'""'• ,_,,.., 1 120-1. Tli;tr &.1•11(.C.} t K911y llllCM firm -Ill l'AT WADIE ORGAN ll!.x111:utrl• Ill fN L.1'1 Wiii il'ft11k M,' ~rnbllitt 97' MfSllC<I Booll 1', 'p .... 7 I nd IOI Ml1C9lla,_,; {CM) f. MWl'fh ( lllf'M:la1 T""J::__tl.1 ll!!RVICI Mii 11'1111 ..... llrfl'I ~ ~ •lld Tfflltlltftl of ' 0r1 ..... COii• Mts.t, C1Ulonll• m• ,..,.... ._.. ol Or._ c-ty 1J:.;;'·0e1\<f. ~~~~~II Tim.~~, C..':.1:C":' ,:..-:::: .._'j'.;:. In -'•NOLD E, WILKIMSON D.ttd F~ I~ I~-CtM...;...i., for lllt llllf"IOM OI Nvlrlll' NO -I. Biter (Or111MI t. Murr1y • T AOI H1 Clcll l'ttet coit Aho c-.i ~ · . olllltfilloflt M(VO'fd .... Mid DeN ll"ootnlMJ :t. MurrtY !FOotl!IHI T-; A W • ' 1 MtHOl.D W1LKIN$0N Sfll1 llf C.lltorl'!!t . Of'._ C-IY~ IMlulltll lltt. dllrwt ...r "'"°"" I/ft ''!iir:· ->. ' '"r , ..... "·' Mtu, C.llfcrlU, f'Ht1. DKHMd Oii Jul'f' ti, ltM, lllfore ,,., • Ho11rv 11\t Trv1'", ltdv•tic., It -· llftdlf ni. ·~ Dlltd 11 Jllff 19'1 l'rHlllltl Mil ,...,.llJtl l'WNc hi Md fW' Hid lt•tt, Pfl'llGlllll't """" Of ukl e>e.d, lrlltt•t """-.,,.. 1 ~ii'!! ~· ( t'I) 2, M111tnt1 l'AT WAGS Alltnttn •I LI• -•td Fri .. M. L1rr•tlll k-lo IJ,00000 !fl 11-ld !ll'l!!clNl OI 1111 llllft 1't:.1~:J· l't.td.i.1 jNHJ 2. r,:1111 Stitt -' C.HIOt'll_l~1 or-Covnty; IW kl •1"" llr'Mto c..t ....... , 11')'1 to lit lhl • Hl'tofl ~ltou 1'14"'41 l1 llCllt~ llY Mid Otld Wllft lnte r ~ ' ' '' >> -.· On JUiy )I, I .... ...,, ""' 1 l\lrolll'Y • -14ibkr!btd l'O !tit wllllll'I "-ltUl'llll!O\t tlld n. I J > .~, -\~;" ,o • Murri, CIOltl ,.,,.. l'ubnc In •nd fCI' uld 11.,., ",_ny C.P,..,.'8 nn• '"' Ml.WI •dt-ltdtld 111 exlClll•"" Ml'l\9. nott':cr :"~.., uo;.,..1;,..,. • *' 1" Nld il.-t, .f!H IMDl _..2\..l.• Ftl'llltY •-red ll'AT WAD& k-fro"" II be A1tW1111• lw 1~9tltrl~ !Of l'tCIAL SIALI Dtlld· July IO. 1961 • '1t,,!.f. Kl'ne ~~Di 'A~C:'°ic• "" ._ WllQtt "''"' ,, 1u11Kr"lbtd " l'uvtllllld Df-•nM• i;,.11 o.1iv ,.11o1, e. "· Hltb1• · 1,1~Sh•• Cin«itlol'!, ' .. ,r. "'~ '"!11.t: 1~, I IN Wltlll" lnll"-f •nd Kil_...,... Al'Wlf 1, t. L ltilt 1.U. Nofltl' •llbllC • C•Htonill A ccr'l>orillon " -A • , > K'-t<M) ht txec\Md 11'111 ..,._, • l'rlM'CHI Offlq ln Tnitl" -• )" • ..,. !Ol"PICIAL SEAL! or ..... C'ounl"I By C, '· St ........... 1.~ ~1a 'f'l \ \:' SCl\oenltr R-11• C. iw, PENETRATfON M~ C6rnml"lon lnh'~ l'ralllln! 1~1.~"t:'To.£:.: icMl 1. ArtMldllt :=.~=·:::om" ..._.. :,..UfVI..:.:._ ~ ~' .:"!11~"1t181ttcL 1clir'&T."i."V; 12'-' Or•• '°"""' N••r/y •vt l'f'Ont r11cli. tM nt Mirlltt • m>I '4-1. W'lrd ~~C"'ilil'I i '"-r M'I' Clnwn!ttlon t.lr9 DAILY PILOT, llomtto""" ~•••· ..... *'""" c..•...,... '*2 ,111111"*1 ~ Htrllor NMn ftf'tM 1:n.1 July 1• im O.llY ,.11.,., l"•p•r f., tit. F1b11lo1u 0 (t llt• Tit1 ,,,_,.,,, . COl'fltll'l«I w1111 Dell\' Pltot 1f...-t ;r,;>\Mttu!I t. '-'ton 'fll'!\t: 2r4'~1 A=:';"t 1t~1Mc.tt Co.it, l"Ubl!llltd or._ eo..t O.!IY Pllilf, Jll' SMCll, Cill!onill Jul't ft. Iii fncj ~Ult wm.,-rufi.l~ if'!IH a. Mtfalf ,, • ' 1n:Mt. • w u •1111Aututt 1. r. ,., ,.. '1'MI 1. 1,. ,..,. ' • .. I • ' •. --------·· -----·--------- ·- I ·I • . -ff-OAILY-!ll:OT • ~ PIRATE .STATION -Patrick McGooban, above, stars in '1S~ret Agent,. tonight at 10 on Channel 9. McGoohflll becomes a disc jockey on one of the "pirate" radio stations outside of England as part of bis secret assignment. 1, TELEVISION VIEWS Kiddie Shows . Need Change By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) .,.-Despite all the fancy talk and the breast-beating self-recriminations, most ·of the so-called children's' shows on television are going to stay every bit as bad as they are now. MOST OF THESE SHOWS are'of the moronic cartoon variety. They get good ratings, especially those that play to the baser instincts of youngsters. And the reason most of them are not about to re- form is that in the ice cold world of ratings, the statistics are more important than the children themselves. They are, after all, merely an audience of potential consumers. Here and there, howevir, a children's show in- 'dicates a sign of change. Over at-N~C-TV, ~er~ are claims that the new Saturday morning series, The Banana Bunch Adventure Hour,'' will be much more civilized and gentle in its approach than --some of its competing video monstrosities. AND THIS WEEK, CBS.TV and ABC-TV offer· eel announcements about children's shows that war- rant attention. CBS-TV's announcement referred to one of the few really responsible children's series on th~ net- work air, "Captain Kangaroo." The series, said the network, 1~s collaborating with the leading profes- sional iDstitution for early childhood educatiop, the Bank Street College of Education in Ne.w York ~ity, in a major television effort to broaden the honzons of children's attitudes and knowledge. 0 The net- work added: "BEGINNING IN OCTOBER, a carefully form· u1ated broadcast curriculum designed to help chil- dren understand their world, providing deliberate- ly sequenced educational information within the e~ tertairunent, will be presented daily on 'Captain Kangaroo'." The Bank Street College, 51 years old, provides graduate courses for more than 1,000 working teach- ers and for candidates for master's degrees. Its program is built around discovering how youngsters ' ·learn, and how best to teach them and their teach- ers. In a joint statement, Bob Keeshan, creator and portrayor of 1Captain Kangaroo,' and John Nie- meyer, president of the Bank Street College, Said: "(WE) ARE PLANNING a curriculum in Which every segment is designed to encourage the child to become an active participant in the viewing process, with an ongoing feeling of discovery through enjoy- able learning. Material which is primarily informa· tional and educational has to be presented in such a manner that large numbers of young people will 'view, understand and relate to the presentation .•• . ' "The techniques, lesson sequences and ap-- proaches used by 'Captain Kangaroo' will be avail- able for the guidance of local workshops and of teachers and others working with pre-school chil- dren and young school children as well." ABC-TV, meanwhile, an nounced the starting in September, 1969, of Smokey the Bear, "The chief animal ranger for the United States." Srilokey will be featured in a balf·hour Saturday cartoon series that will promote co nservation. The announcement was made jointly by Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman and ABC·TV president Elton Rule. Dennis the Menace -- , ' PEANUTS ~1-· •-......:. '1---.__ 1~ •. - 'nl! LMT·-SO FAR, 'DR. klLt:IAtt. HOW MAH'f '!aJ FIGURE m•ve. ~!efil? GORDO JUDGE PARKER TI{.\T WA.S A lOW6 !'MONE CAU. YOtl IAAPE, SHEIL"! I WAS 8E- 61NNIN6 TO l'MINK 'IOll'P ltllN OUT ON ME:! MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS U>OK, POC! I GOT A ARROW IN -•.v I ,.. , 1¥rCK •.•• IT SMARTS! WHAT SHOUl.DI PO? (;/- MUTI AND JEff ·MISS PEACH • T --- - <lMA;! Y.JJ3~ I r2 1T~3Q lRA, I'M 60/N/il' "1t) 7AICE AN X-RAY ANO SEE IF WllR TEenl ARIO Rl!:AU.Y AS G0C0 INSIDE AS 7"1!Y ARE 0UT510E ••• .____ IJ-~- • W!LUAt.\-?i' = = • -r ly Clicules M. Scliuls · ly Ken lald ly Gus Arriola By Harold Le Douic By Ferd Johnson '"TIH.L Mk. V. Jll) L.IKf! "To see HIM ,A.BouT A l.DNG-Te:RM CONTRACT. By Tom K. Ryan I SOGGEST 'IO() su;EP ON 'IOOF\TUWM ly Al ' Smith ly Mel ' . . T~iURSOt.'I' AUQust l . Dlr""""'M ... :(C)"l eTFW(' (ttt.nturt} '56-0alti Rob- don, M1111 Cordq, ·-... (C). (!O) .. 111111-(!0) 111-.-·-- 1:1G a we --tcl · 110J a"' ._ -tcl 130) ·-·-~O) ·-""' (IO) Ill....,_: "T1rt Mlnlttur1 W1r," lll-14 (C) ·- 7:00 I CIS --(C) (30) lltlf Cronkite. fJf '"" (!O) m1 """"' (30) OJ lllPI'• 1111... (30) 1111 --· ,. (C) m-- 1"" u a Cll ~--. (C) (901 Wuter11 1trlls atlrrit11 SW.rt Whit· 111111, Jill Tow1111nd, hrty H"'1«t arid Rtndy !oont. Sto!Jf1111' not 1vall1bla at ,,.. tlm" !11'.llJ(i)Do'"' -(C) (IO) ht lmpolt«.'' (R) B .,LET'S GO TO THE * RACES!" WIN CASHI pr11. by VON'S MARKETS 81.et'• ....... (CJ (30) D ll7J ~ "'"" -Tun: (C) (JO) 'lucQ L11N." Luke Bltcli Birt In • ect-for·broM 11m1 at 1h• poker p1l1ce. Aaflll Hiide· brtnd, I riel(hbor, ... fol.Jl1!p 1fter lht pmbl111 away htr mu.. hold money and IDIT11 of hf ~111- b1nd'1. Luke b oubllehrtd by .tit pll It by mlatlM ttld I It If to S111t to .top £Mori troll -" '71111 • clltllt "' 0.rrln'• nn.. (I) m ""' -tcl (ta) __ .... (C) (IO) .. .,, • ._ "Dnft ... _. fio cl•r&JlllM •nd • t1111fi11J "' vftot o.plthl Ult draft -.. •lttmltlvtl to • ua.A ...... .,w. .. - Ill, .. -(C) (!/)) ,,,_ (C) "llltlt ,_ -"(R) m-•- t:IG a u £-l"I 110 ""' ..... .. (R) =-·-·(IOI lll!JllY II perfronned ti Radney; Tom da.. SUM'I drlrtkllll with Dr. KOii!; st.. Clff 1nd !Mlle Htrrlft&lolll Ult I ... -· at ,..,IQ llOJ •"',_ .. ,._ ...... apmtnt Mlfttrs." HllMllf!tl rl I 1111111swftl .......... It 1iMdt" Anltriclfll .. £11n11111• ---•o:aoe5--(C) (IO -Ctll M1rtln n1 frtllk ~ It. ,,,. h~.~ ·---(C)t10J ,_ -(C) (10! •Pturt at T..,..forty." 11tn k• ura, MlctlMI Rtnnlt aJld Kith«• i111 Crnford lbr. A )'!)URI ..,_., dJllll of Ill lncunible d .... dto cides to •nd his wt t. .....,.. ' with ltll Jet s.t Oft thl flllltll RIYl1r1, Thtf• hi lllllb I lllMtlful &irf bllrt on tnPlllll ii .....,_ -a-1too1<10l m""' ...... -tcl <IOJ 111 •-.., (C) (30) Bl1dl: Birt In thtir flnl meetlnc. but retur111 Wttfl 1 pl1n to IMU tht 10:30 m Nin: (C) (30) l id Jofla 11mbttr btet hlmtelf. (R) fJ M•"' I -(C) ......., ti 11:00 D""" l'Clltll -(C) (1( • Pl.,.... (drtm1) '55--Rlch1rd Bur· Jmy DunphJ. ton, Mtall McN11n1r1, John Oeret. R1ymand Muuy, Chafin llckford. B 1111 119 "-"'-CC) ~ 'Tiit lllofr1ph' of ttie ICtlf Ed'W!n Georp Skln11tt. ' Boolft. m '""" .. .....,_ <Cl c3o> Ill ""' M-(IO) . f.D ftltm: "Trftltlw to l(urf11· tan." l:OO 8 hlhlr. (C) (f hr) Frinkie Cr1wford -n. Ptt1; t::onz1les In 1 __ ,, .. _(!/)) D-. (C) (30) B-W1ll. a--.--·14-J1m11 Whitmore, Jol11 Wtldall. ........ (C) (IO) Ill __ ..., .. _ (""""') '57~nc H- lO·~nd fflttlll'Wlllllt match. 11:JOllMM: "'Dlltll el 1 1111111 • (Tr1m1} '5Z-Ftldric M#dl, MU. D !HJ IIJ ""'' N•: (C) (lO) "" ""'""-•1Ji IM; Could lou 11111 I Con· iplrt.n Sllttrl Btrtrl11t Ind Jlcqu• 8 9 (I) Thi TlllJtM ... (Cf lint find 1 stowtny in ttitlf ttt- tion Wll'Oll whtn they rltum ID tht convent aftlr 1 allopplnc a:pedltlon. 8obbJt St1tr hldll In !ht bKk of th1 ctr Whtn ft IMYll tier boy· friend'1 )'lcllt eft• I '\ltJAI. MIU· rMn Art!lw, HO Edllm11 aMIL (ff) m-tc1 t•Dl 11!1 PllJlar 11111 ..... , ill"- ·-~-...... {COmldy) '55--Clllrt Bloom, C.-. D1ophln. D 112> Cll"" - -llJ •~aom ... ...,. _, ·-1111t.• •lf1ppy Lind," '1111 Litt .... "91ey," Ind ''M)' LutQ Stir."' 111--"T-· l 1'30 C!l llJ Cil ,_, (C) (IOI "111<- 111r1 "Who"l"' A nuras' lid• known .• IS 81rb1r1 W .. llllrntd to lnm-12:50 a--lo f-aidt'I ct• wheft flt W11 WDUnd· ,,.,. -Id. Shi ttlli him tt11t D'fllOlll hts (fll)'ll:tl'J) "" -* • Celit tried to kill lier. Sht 1111 lltln 1n Tipl17'. •mntlll Yletlm lillCI aufttrhll • ll'l'WI btltln1 b)' unknown PtrlOnt and tht lllOttYt for "tllt m11nle1 ti· l :Dll 11 Mtwlt: '1111 1'1111 ....... ttr11pl is dlffloult to fllld. Vtrt Mii {ndlfn) '56 -Dwld llian, Ml! 111.m. (R) W)'nll, FRIDAY DAYTIME MOVIES ~IOD(C) "l>I l>t ........ (r> 11t1nct) '53 -Jlilnt H,.., Dtn C!l--T1WC-lt1J) '40-loril Kltlofl, Mlltorll ,.,..... ·----·-(C) 11:00a-..,.... .. - (coMtdJ) '4.S -.l!Mr ..,.,., -... _.(_) ·u- horp lrmt. U:JOm-t1--( .... ma).'36 -W•rllll" a.t.. -Jlll _ ........... ( ....... '47~ hi& ...... 4:J08-lllo" (-'15-- 0.n"' """-Vlrclnll MtJ9. a-. • .....,.. td• .. > ·51 ........, •-• -ti G ~ "U .... T1 W ld•""1 (d-) • .._. ..... -'" ,,.... '"" --·. • • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS HIWPOlf HACH . .. .. -~ ••• -m ............. .........,,.._ ........ _....,_..,...,._~......,.......,..~~7"':'_~~,_,,_,~2 ~--.. ~ ; W -4Sf4l»S'Ftf 4 °' ""' ,. -• ., ..... -T ,.. 'I'" ,... -...--'¥' • 'f" W § ¥ .W U # # Q • ...----.,.. T --, -,,_ ~ ,,.-._, .___- 0 ,--... !I • ; -·· -~ange c6ut Coll,ege · ·' 'S()uth.Pacific' Lavis.h Show By TOM TITUS 01 r11t O.llY ''"' lltft I " Orege Coast College's encorti production of "South. Paoiilc" opened a lout·nl#t{ enpgement We<fuesday as a laviltl 20th· aoniwrory present to a highly ap. preciative audience which filled to near c•pocity 1be huge OCC eudltttluin. · This most notallle -and most famlllar -of. all Rodgers and Hammerstein mUsical htt.s ls given a pleasant interpretation by "SO\fTM ,ACl,I<,. : A mu1IUI llY Roffe,.. end Hel'flo m~teln, dlr'fCtwd lrt' Lucien SCott, ~nlul dlnct.f Cf'l.ltlt& Mitchell, GrChestr• dl~or P•ul~ COii. vocal d!rldor Wetter Oltdl:ltr. dlor~ °"r•llhel' l.Ynd1 0.VIS, MU!lll end uvhll1'4 Irr htl!r kl'"llo, Mt dtll1n by Ratio.rt $ln11u1', pr9M!'lllCI by Or•r11• R~rt $1rf141d, Pl'IUl'lltcl by Or11111 CNtl COii"• Jhl'Ol/ffl S.luf'dey In llM o.:c elldtfl:lrtum. Coll• Mell. nta CAST ' Nllllt Forbulh ............ Rufh Menl.., Em Ito di 11~ .••. Jlfl'lfl CNlllNl't Lt. Joi C.blt ............. T1r,.,,01n111 .. Lul!Mr emi. ••••••••. St1n Tn~rrv Bloo<W Mert ............... Chris S.lelt Liii ...................... ,,Kenlfl P11111 $ttwllot ............ , ..... Gre11 OIWSQn OCC 'SOUTH PACIFIC' LOVERS Ruth M1nley, J1m1s Chapman in Fin1I• Cei!ot11n Brecll•K .... Kermit Chrf1tm•n (:Olflmltu.r' HerbltOl't ... R•Yll'IOl'ld ... , .. N1111'Mi . , •.• , ............. sn.wn Innes J1rom• :.:, .......... , ... Ch1rla cun11 lt. Bi.m: AAMI ...... J-h 8f'Odtrlcll; MP otll~tr .............. Jldt Ct111"'-n one of the largest easts yet seen oo bl OCC stage. But its dramatk momente must play aieoond fiddle to the ou1standi!lll techni<:al effects wbicb add fresh sparkle and luster to l!iis World War II classic. a00 ·uwest Side Story," it is a joy to the eye and ear atld ea.Uy the hi~ point of the evenmg. VARIED TALENTS Director Lucian Scott has aseembled a cast of varied talents whl.di makes up in enthusiasm wbat it lacks in balance. Solo performan<:es ran-ge from t!he excellent to the mediocre, but t h e overall effort is musically and teclinically, if not always dramatically, sound. Playing t2le key role of N•avy nurse Nellie Forbush, HO~ Of l!)(llNS CIWI lOOU I 701 UST IAllOA llvtl, \ i/,,IALIOA PCNlllSUU.• '7340tl ~ • CHllD WITH rAl:ENf ONlY • Pt8I'am0unt emong these is. the original dream ballet, written by ordhestra direc· tor Paul Cox and clloreographed by Lynda Davts especially for the Otiange Coast productdon. Pettemed after the m-...m sequences of "Oklahoma" Tryouts Set For Comedy Ruth Maliley overcomes an -early stiffness to bring a vibrating sense of naturalness to her role. ~.'l'.. . However, she is vocally ~ , unsure and requires stron g FIRST lllN Chlld WI ... fwreitt 011fy e o,_ Nftlltty 6:45 e NOW-INDS TUt:SDA. Y 5 ACADEMY AWARDS IKl•dl•t choral backing in t h e Dtrl• '"' • RoHrt Mo,,. • BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR numbers Which should be "When w-Y11• Whtn her peak moments. .YM Utlm~:"" Oit1" James Chapmsn presents "Now., To Traot A LMlr," AudiUons for the comedy "Under the Yum Yum Tree," which opens th~ new season for the Westminster Community Theater, will be heid ne:rt Tuesday and Thuroday Aug, 6 and 8 .• a strong Emlle de Becque,1'==w="='='="='="='"='='='·=,._=,.=='ll both drani·atioally and -1: especi·ally -musically. His CORMI Chapman Play ,_ Joan H8gerty is directing the pn>cluction, wbicb calls for a cast of two men and two women in majQr roles. Opens Tonight The tryouti ,.;n. be held at 7 p.m~ both nights In the theater group's new playhouse in the We5tnl1.nster Center mall at the corner of W est?tlimter Avenue and Golden West Street. The French comedy "Ring Round the Moon" opens ton{jlit . fO< fOW; days at Chapman College under ttie direction of Henry Kemp- Blait. Perfo~ances will b e given tonight tbroug~ Sun· day at 8:30 p.m. in the Shady Quad . Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 41 ~educed In strength l Sllllng 43 Split open 1111chlnery 44 Criminal plete 46 Hold firmly 4 Winds togrther • Tl11eofrnr 47 Not up . 14 Bravol 49 Ottiate • 1S It Is said: from a 2 words standard 16 lnstru111ent -50 Bird 17 Ch•racter 111 51. Ser 43. 1852. novel: Across z words 52 Breakfast. llt Rfttort Item polnttr 54 Public laws • to prior SB Walter's poslUon ' concrm. 3 Dealt Cltit zo Not con.· 60 Parth;:lplet 4 llale 1nlinal cealed Abbr, • 5 Number 11 Atlllospf'ltrr. 61 Accrue: Vat. 6 Goal Comb. for11 62 01'11on's 7 N. A•tr• 2Z Grass used relative btt: 1s grain 64 Sultabhr 2 words 13 Make O'ltt for 11sr as I Roused '1 1galn dusting sudden Z4 Fltttof 66 "c wdor 11 alatlll Soan11h ommt 9 Continent: shits cakes Comb. fon1 26 Pinball 67 Modify lD Fold• Jn 1111Cf'1ln1 sl9' 68 AdJectlve cloth ZI E1tlblllhtd . suffl1t 11 Go Into the 31 High Ngged 69 Of Enolllfl . country 111ountlln origin: lZ Follower: 3Z lll't rtsullo Co111b. form Suffl1e Ing fr'Dlll 7D AdJusts tnto 13 PHmlt d-.1g1 protectlv. 18 On1 of two 33 l~lklng ,_ Dlact latitudes 36 Wrdth of n l puttcular 2:4 Overflowing saw cut thing of a .sttram 38 ftrllg!OUI 25 Fruit leader OOIN z~ Relative of ":r~n:,, 1 rhtnCN111non 2i S1~::1on drvl.. of llght 1 30 Mine shaft " " ,. " " I " • tlon 2 I• 33 S.•11 fish ' ' 5 • ' 7 • ' . .. .. 1/1/68 34 The Crre9, e.g. 35 Rtlterating 37 !Pring 40 Pert. to 1 continent 42 Laricers 45 Come to grips 48 Nonsense 53 Skirt tea.turn SS Mort 1ttr1cUv• 5' Threefold 57 Rellglous bodies 59 Coln of Chile 0 FrviUng heads of a cereal 62. Business consult.ant: · 'Abbr. · 6JT'::!ent 65 ~ .. •lflold .ril11t1I '"fte ..... iltfect 1$ lferostGth1t , • • llOt fO M 111hlff'' --c.dl Smftll, TllMI "AMERICA HURRAH" 21H11 Sttt, TlteotN, NhfPOn hac• Ne_,.rt MW T,.., ... ''WART" Lent Tl111n Tbn. t11r11 hlldllY C.111tNI lo• Offlca -RnervGtl•111 Ml·t36J fHE MOST l!AUTIFUL THEATRE IN AMERICI EDWARDS' R at ADAMS, COSTA MESA. PHONE 546•31() tB STARTS WEDNESDAY, AUG. 7 ' ACADEMY AWARD : WINNER tB BUT -CTOR~MIKE ~ICHOl.S ANNE BANCROFT and DUSTIN HOfFMAN KATHARINE ROSS . . DAILY 1-J I 7-:f-11 P.W:. ' .................. IU-4117 Wirf' W1r II COl'l'l1QI P111I Ntwmlft e Coler "THE '-ECRET WAR OF HARRY FRIGG-" Clllrtlo11 Ht1'9ft e COLOll "WILL PINNY" fll<,'\ Mf ~ll PAULO Whll!I Ntw Y•rtc 81e11t11 "l'UH CITY" 0ortt 011 Roblff Mol'M ''Wllffe Wer. Yo• Wlleft The U9ht1 Wtftt O.t'' "' ...... Corl! • CO~Oll "A MINUTI TO PlAY, A SICOND TO Dll" The L•u1h ti Thi YMr1 .l1tk l.fmll10ft W1ll1r MltttlM "1HI ODD COUPLI" Colsr llod tttila•r • COLOR "NO WAY TO TRU.T A I.A.DY'' hel"9p-4:41 MltlnH Sat; & Sun. 2:30 P.M. l;Ol.OR . by Delun -.. .. "Young Americans" Sterrin9 The Yoa119 Amerknt . YOU'LL I QUAKE AT HIS EVERY SHAKE! Always Frff Parking Weekdeys-41:45 P.M. Conl. Sun.-2 P.M. -···v·~·-..11'.M."··••••·"W , DAILY PltOT Bullfights now •at BULLRING-BY: THE-SEA. COOLI COMFORTAJ3L.EI Jut.t 10 m1n. Mm doWnwn TUuaiw by moct1rn, p111«1 hl•hw1y,. ·, ~ 1•0•~-sxPi!• ... '··~ ............... 541·2711 \81 Now IOX OotCI OPIN WHl DAYS 611J U.lUlDAY •flil SUNDAY 12~0 Abe Hoity Miiii 111 \) ''THE FAMILY WAY" In Color Rod Steiger a lee Remick · . ' • STARTS ~ \ WEDNESDAY, \,,, , AUGUST 7 • ........ \ . .. """ '\ rwwa.r ' ~·~~ l • . ;; ST.I.ITS WU .• AU•. 1 • ··lbur.~.l'\lin l• aud OlJJl.4' .. LAST 7 DAYS Aho Dff kilettt Iii "TH n.t.ld ... 11 TN Wllittt , I STARTS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 , ' WALT DISNEY'S . . . "NEYER A .DULL · MOMEN "' .. ·.,. .. SPICIAL IATUIDAY P.T.A. MA'11W1111rit1A:M. "rHI CLOWN AND ntl iiD"-AU'sUlS Uo ' For Top .Sports Coverage Read The Daily Pilot . J.he . Great Orange 'Coasrs1 • No. 1 Paper! I -- • ... I j 1, __ . -~ --·------~•£•M_L __ ..._. .... ,_ ~ -• --··-------~ --------·----·--~----·---~----------------...... • • I ' . \ l I • • .,,._• .~~"'---=---------...,.--,-;;---, ... OA.l .. lLCll . EveryOM Has Something Thot ' . 0 1\ILY PILOT \VANT ADS You Can Son It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad Some~ Ebe Wont.-TBE flGGEST SINGU1 M~Pl.ACE ON TOE ORANGE OOAST..!.PBONE DIRECT 842-5878 ~~~S~ES~FO~ll~S.~~~I~ HOU~ES FOR SALE UIOO 0-rol 1000 LUXURIOUS I FARROW H•~U~=!. I ""'...,modem.!-· 'r REALTY qutet. me • ltory dut*'lt ..... , w. ·1....i It lor ,.., : Yw will eaJoy Cbe-firtpl&ce • in the large living room, the '1 PRESBfTS beautiful kilchen Witb built· ins, two big bedrooms wl\I). Th·1s . '°"" ol .. o ..... Both uni" woo.Id bring $260 per month. '1bis is the ultimate in pride 1 Week's leEST BUYS. I l $19,670 1 Excellent adult occup. I pled family home -3 bed· rooms. fruit trees, beau- ' tlful Interior. F94 s19.610 ! 2 FOR ONE 1 Home plus income offer- ! ed in this well located home. Live in one, rent the other. ~6-4494 $19,500 COL.LEGE PARK NE OF THE CLEAi"· EST 3 bedroom, plus family with 2 very fine p lace in Costa Mesa. Beautlful back yard, cov- ered tio. 1~6-4494 $27,500 ' l COOL-POOL NESTLED ON A TREE t LINED STREET. This 3 ! bedroom beauty with ' covered a n d enclosed ~ petio, overlooks a family size yard and pool. ~6-4494 $26,800 , MESA DEL MAR HERE JS A CLE.AN 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath home 1 -PLUS swimming pool & well landscaped yard ; Near shopping & stores. 646-4494 $32,200 bLD CALIFORNIA ; SPANISH 5 BEDROOM I-Sunken living room, 2 !baths, large formal en- try. We JI landscaped 1 yard, play house. r.94 $35,950 j E:E~~~~E "FORMAL DINING f ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS, !Formal entry way, beau~ • tlful electric kitchens : with breakfast nook. •Large family room with ; W I B fireplace, utility •room, and •p&cious rear :.>:.•.rrl:. ~tio. p<6-44V4 $39,950 . 5 UNITS i oN THE BEACH ! Balboa Pennisula -3 •block& from beach. Good ~for winter, summer rent· 'al. &46-4494 $49,500 BAY AND OCEAN VIEW Prest19e Location , FOR THE DISCR.IMlN· : A'l'lNG BUYER.--0.tstom t built -3 bedroom, lanai dining room and large 'with wet bars, formal :well planned outdoor liv- 'ing room with room for 1boat and trailer. Trade ~6-4494 $65,000 16 UNITS I, ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 93 E. 17th St. 646-4494 FORECLOSURE"- REPOSSESSION??? -ranch style 4 bedroom home has 2 specious balh5. sbakl'! roof, lush t_ropical landscaping, built-in and a country wpe ~lace. VA- ~:6~.ot~~ jFllA. J I 1682 EDINGER or 5'J0.5140 ol. ownership incm'le prop- erty. May trade for local 2 or 3 bedroom home. 2013 WESI'CLIFF DRIVE 646-mt Open Eves. john macnab 'DOVER SHORES Immaculate home with, an outstanding view ol the Back Bay. 3 bedrooms and maids room, 3% baths, ov- er <!!XX> square feel. Beau- tifully decorated. For 'aale furnished or unfurnished. Call for appointment $115,00J untumishi:"d. Call for appointment. (714) 642-8235 881 Dover Drive Newport Beach can be taken over at no cost to ""?er $25,500 full price. O:ille ark location near scboo . Immaculate 3 & t.amily room 2 baths, w/w carpets & drapes, fireplace, lush lawns & planting & oov· ered patio. Monthly pay- ment of $159 month includes all. I'll 1..1111111. ~C\H\1111\ Rl \11\(!I 1093 Baker, C.M. PRIDE OF PERFECTION 4 BDRM "0" DOWN PAYMENT Isloated rear living room ov· ertooks a picturesque yard, neatly manicured lawns • well gromed shrubs." 2 baths. Dream kitchen with @II the 20th centw-y built·io featur- es for your convenience & comfort. Priced to sell at $24,950 -No down GJ . or low dooNn FHA! 8:16-0604 TARBELL 5824 Edinger HORSEY AREA Immaculate doll house on huge A·l lot. Newly carpeted with cftanning swedish fire. place. Combine a country at· mosphere l!llld an ootstand· ing pride ot ownership heme. Only $.21,250. Mt1y consider Ol :enns. 2043 WESTCLIFF DRivE 646-ml Open Eves. Harbor View Hills Corona del Ma r Lusk "built hOmes locattd in the Southland's most de- sirable & fascinating area, Schools & Calif. Irvine Campus just: m o m e n t s away. Sensibly priced from S34,900 to $48,900 LUSK HOME$ Dirt>ctions: MacArthur Blvd. from Pacilic Coast Hwy. or Newport Frwy. Turn on San Joaquin Hill.!1 Rd., t h e n follow signs to model area. WOW! $45,IXX> buys this deluxe Du- plex. Bit-ins. fireplatts, sun- decks. Call Balboa Bay ~ Properties 673-7420 Eves: 673-9187 GOif Course Cot 158 f o o t frontage on the t'OUrse overlooking 1 u s h greens p..nd fairways, num- erous lakes and the Club HOU&e. Surrounded by lux- urious homes. One-of-11·kind 81 $25,0CIO. COLLEGE REALTY 34&5880 WCOOW HAS HOUSE WANTS TRAILER HOME &a111. 3 BR. +; incl. patio. 2 till'! be., lge. liv. nn. & din. rm , All r ms. cp«I. $25,500. WAnt nice lrailtt in jood location. Leon Vibert, Realtor ~8-<6118 anyll~ Exciting 2 Story Jvan WtUs' ' modtJ home with vitW. 2 • St.ory living . HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Nowpart Beach 1200 l ido Isl• 1351 -----·----·- TRADER'S PARADISE J/B SCHOOL BR! TROP:CAL 1 0~~::~~TNT !~J~R~~!. ~u;~E:,, R-2 ACRE 13''x);J;' wit•'""' Newport l•land SPECIAL PA·RADl'E l BR horn• '''"""'""cd 1902 F ..... , • .,.., 1111.000. old hon Can bf dcvel· Best io... .. uon for year round J 21,S baths. completel)' furn-W a lker Realty ~ to ·~units. EaslsWe living ln th18 ~pe Cod 2 NewJ>C?rl Beach quiet corner ished. A rare bUy al is1,;.oo 3336 Via Udo tl'r:i-5100 Co&ta P.'lesa d oSe to schools bt>droo~ hOmc ued !or an-locaoon. 3 Br 2 OOU1, bltn with beautiful ocea'.n view • only SS,OOO On. and ....,,_ , .... •-·-, ... other wut over g . Spot· kitchen. Near new carpets. in exclusive Cameo Shores Shore Proporti'es h 1400 __.p .... ..,,,,., ... e .. N Cp • VACANT R .... 1o 0r· •-'b 'd l:t~.ntington Beac proximately $3.540 annuRlly lt'sll condition. . ts.-e._, r your oc-enter over ien.........-n ge ~ G'ffi.?52S '-;;,:;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _ EquJty $1? 200 Orps: Bit/in Kitchen. Try cupancy, crossing rock pool • ticall.Y priced a't J41,500 for 15.®00wntoqualiliedbuy• VETS NO DOWN to-l.ixurious4BRbome Berth Your Yacht er wllh sunken Jiving roo1n PIER & FLOAT at YQUr own cash or will trade for wtlts sn.'.MM. Evesf 673-8086 $32 500 elaborate li1~1ing system h'Ont door. Easy access to or acreag~ with gf'OVI'! ln .,....,., · 1 e Fallbrook or Valley Center F•-. ished open beam ceiling the Big Bay Lrom this Chan· .... •• Newport Excellent \'Blue at $92,500 nel location, tgc Apt over 8.N'a. leach House it gar. -ronm to buHd. , 3 bedroom older house close Cootuct Wally 1-!alll>crg Burr White, Realtor to Markets and Oceein, Ideal Victori1 Eves: 641-4190 67j..4&1.'.l r._.I tor second home or rentals. 646-8811 HARBOR BY Owner; 4 yrs. old: trans., Zoned for additional apart-O must seU! 3 BR-2 Ba .. 1850 ment on large ktt. Try $4,IXX> ( pen sq. ft:; rump'lfs rm. 300 sq. down to qualified buyer. Evenings) COM,.ANY ft.; 3 car gar.: all blt-ins, S29.950. incl. vacuum. $39,00IJ. Open 1)73.9200 Eves: 673-llCWISj:;:=====~== REAL TORS House daily I-5; 4 4 3 Bay & Beach Traditional Elegance !!!!!'!!!!''!'!!6!!7!!3'!!-44!!i00i!!!'~!!!!J! Fullerton 54&--3188 Eves. call 646-t<M Realty, Inc. A,:a;et.: :~u":J. or~~:i~~.e i,_ 1¢~_EJ ,s v Bd' ,'m·h-'rni.•· baAthll. A~~!sD!;o~e=k~ 2J{::;~~s 4 t ~ "'25 W. Balboo·-· Bi•d., NB b k " spaciGus~ \Varm red r1c . built-ins, carpeted throu h Br. 2 ba-din rn,, crpts, gleaming whi.te shutteN_. for-out. DrapeS. Approx 2300 ~q drps, kil-Wtns. Tree sbaded ma! walks, Ln _a bcauif~Uy ft living area. Land.1caped & back patio Xlnt storage. landsca~. setting. Gracious fenced. Walking di~tance to Close to all schls. Fine avail realty &s t !;{(' formal d1nmg ~m, powder grammar & high school & $43,500. 642.5843 2414. Vista Del Oro . ( room. party -iuzed game shopping. Close to freeway. 1--;·<·sO.wii1'-M't"N"'TI1""E's'-UN= .. c- Newpo11 Beach room with wet bar, lovely 326.500. 842-2342 \VESTCLIFF AREA 4 BEDROOMS . rea ty marble firt>place. Children·s I==========-3 Huge Bedrooms. 2 Baths wing with ilS own play yard. Costa Mesa 1100 Fenced off Pool. On!y $31 ,750 A beautifully ·planned family hcirne with ·lovely entry, near new, and many f'xtras, Flttplace, patio, maintenance frff. Next ro pool, near CdM High and Catholic school 644-1133 644-2626 HUGE LOT 2414 Vista Del Dru Newport Beach Custom -designed around a ---------H0!\-1E 642-11090 marvelous large patio for BY OWNER 3 Br. l~ ba. BAYCREST B O entertaining! Choice New-Stove, drapt"s & water Y \VNER "The Mostest'' port area & NCYI' LEASED softener. Lrg. cov. patio. 5 Large Bdrms. 3,250 sq. ft. Ivan \Veils built. Fee land. 912 BELLIS LAND, Only $67,500. Wide lot. Reduced price 2100 \Vindward Line Ruth Pardoll, Realtor $20.500. 265 Came!Lia Ln l;-:;;;;.,,-;;--==c-=c--, Lusk Built -Eastblufl 1605 WeslcHU Dr. 642-5200 642--0668 LARGE Mobile !Tome. 2 Plan "E"-2-story. 5 BR I~========~ I ~ --Baths, patio. c I u b h 0 use 3 Baths -Family rm I' BROADWAY DUPLEX! pool. private beach. 675--1672 Football field size Rockledge 2 BR ea. Firpi. \V/W carpet ' rear yard-Ex·Model Home in front unit. Asking only 1812 Highland Dr., Harbor on low S'.lli year leasehold-By the Sea $25,500. Jo Hansen, Brier Highlands; 4 BR. 2 Ba. "'"" 0....., S32,950 548--2847; 1-729-2908 upgraded carpets, wallpaper· Eight Mediterranean Villas, '"""""u Owner TRANSFERRED' OWNER steps to priva~ sandy cove FOR Sale by 01vner. save!!? .--;;;=-:-'7."C'7._7"'_ 146 ~ 3 bd 1 u 5 ROOM !\-1obile Home. 60' X 200· nea.r ocean. ·""" midst craggy rocks and r, u cpts/drys, nice 3 bedrooms . 2 baths. Ph. 644-1133 splashing waves. Rare beau-yard. Xlnt location near Private park beach. 30 '---' hl / h 22 M" ' · s Beach Or. Lido Park. New luxury Buccola • built ty, u;uu to tind .••• $375,00) sc s s ops. OS 1ner L home (lee simple). S34,550 • O:iarlotte Long C.M. 548-7313, 642-0721 $14,000 or submit. tl,14--0241 HUGE LOT 60' x.·200· near ocean . 4 bedroom~ -2 baths. NC\v luxury Buccola • built home {fee slmplel. $36,250 - $3,JOO do-,v n to vets, $6.&50 down F .H.A. 21531 ArchC"r Circle, near Brookhurst and Huhi!ltori, J-funtington Be11ch. (1st signal North Of Coast lligh1va.v.) SHERWOOD ESTATES by the Sea Tel. 968-3036 Open 10:00 to 7:00 daily 4 BEDRM. 2 BATH $24,950! NO DOWN PAYMENT! Most inspiring grounds -a tropical paradise! !iO JI . cov- ered patio surrounded by lush landscaping -cascading waterfall, fish pond & ador- uble elcvatl'.'d bamboo hut playhouse. Every room is an invitation to spacious living! Delightful fan1ily room. To sec i! is to 11·ant it~ No.down G.!. or low do1vn to others! 842-6691 TARBELL 16111 Beach LOW DOWN 3 oversized BRs, extra clos- ets. Large ranch style kitch- en, built-in range & oven, dishwasher. w/w carpets & drapcs, largc oversizC"d lot on cul-de-s:ic. covered pa- tio. completely landscaprd. Slli.1 month. HOUSES FOR SALE Huntington Be1ch 1400 JR. "ITALIAN VILLA" POOLll $22,950 '$0' DOWN PAYMENT You worft believe it 'tU you &ee It -most gorgeoU! rear yard -golf course grass • never needs mowing • sunk· ('J'l pooi, foontalns ~ truly a beauty! King sized bed- roQna, q11allty new carpet- hig. custom drapes. Most convenirnt loc11tion. !W6-0001 TARBELL 5824 Edinger POOL 15x35 • Price S2J,750 • }lardwood Ooors e W /w carpets e Covered cabana • \V et bar • Excel cond thruout e Terms GI or Fl-lA Never again will you find a ' home like this at this price. Paul Jones Realty 847-1266 Eves. 842"'584.4 DOWNTOWN CUSTOM BUILT 3 Br. lrg !am rm with stone fireplace. Hd floors. Elegant crpts, drps. Walk to schls & park. 50:tl27' lot, alley l'!n- trance. BRASHEAR REALTY 847-8531 Eves. 968-1178 NE\VLY decor. 3 BR.: lge. family rm. !19x22), bltns, carp., jjra~s, Nr. school&. 16311 Nassau Ln. 846-9447 Huntington Harbour 1405 YOU'LL BE SORRYI U you miss best buy ln I-lal'bor. 3350 sq, ft. 4 + maids + studio + view. Near beach & dock. Rm for pool. BEST OFFER Sl,850 dOYm to vets, SS.350 1 MESA Verde Home. Xlnt LUXURY 3 br. 2 bath condo,' down F.H.A. 21541 Archer Hu~• LOJ •!~-=:. cond, 3 !3r. ~en . 2 ba il•plc, frpl, pool, golf, fee land. ffl OR TRADE ~!Mitf'lljM" c;~ner~~~86 Sac. $67.0CKJ Circle, near Brookhurst and '1t --m!!!l!!tM new pam\ m & out. New en.oner transferred. $32,500 Hamilton, Huntington Beach. . , , ( I crpts, & drps. Sprinkler By Owner. 642-3371 Clst signal North or· coast 60 x 200 nillll' ocean. 0 dwell, Banker & Co. system. $25,000 642--4518 BAY VlE'\V Lux condo 3 br·:! Highway.) 4 bedrooms 2 baths. 2100 E. COilll Hl11hw&y · --ba home. 2000' 2 sly 346-8103 962-4471 ========= --------Out of County 1605 16x36' POOL SALE Or trade 2 Br. mod. SHERWOOD ESTATES New luxury Buccol.a . built Ne:r~J:4>11c~~:~1• $21 •950 -OWNER w/pools. golf etc. Vacant, by th. S.. homl'I (fee simp!('J. SJ6.~ _ -3 Br. 11.ili ba. bl1J1s, frplc. Pa- " 575 d " I $6 27. W l'ff C 11· tio. dbl gac, fncl. GI or FHA Sac $35,900 673-4356 Tel. 968-3036 ' own ve s, • :i estc I a 1ng ;;-=c-:=ccc~== Open 10 00 t 7 OO d "I down F.H.A. • 2'1561 Archer A . ,._.,, "' 1.11 2'220 Maple St. 646-2309 2 BR: Cabana. BAYSIDE : o : I I Y Circle, near Brookhurst and motivat~-... ncslc I cw:ner MESA DEL MAR 3 Br., lam VlLLAGE Bay view, slips Luxurious 3 BR home. dining hse Yucca Valley priced roorn. den & garden kitcht>n. Sl0,500 eq. $4300. 499-4ln Fully carpeted & draped. eves. Hamilton, Huntington Beach. w~ts action and has pricrd $2S 000 O\VNER Ope avail. 548--0773 COLLEGE PARK llst signal North"or Coast this popular 4 bedroom 2* ~:. 9&o. Presidio. Dr~ So bright & clean .• 3 bed· Highway.) ·bath home. at a roe-~ bonom S45--S4S7 Newport Heigh!s~!!~ Blue Ocean View Professionally landscaped. ========= \Viii trade for Wlits near the Westminster 1612 beach or submit oiler to pur---------- rooms 2 baths· Large tam-SHERWOOD ESTATES $40,.,,~~~ Br~~.,1 ,.~~ill1 .. ~·1 -,,-;B;;;R"' .. "'2"s.,.,...,°'h_o_rn_o_·, "'<d'o".i"1•oc ily room with 11.......:iaet? & b '-'"'"· ove ,,.,,,,. g .... ._ge, ~ ~ y the Sea 1 " · T all schools. By owner $23,500 chase. LISTER REALTY 16612 Bc<ich BL. HB 8-12-6633 built in BBQ. Excellent land-c0t1cre e ur1ve. erms • , . -"P'"g&lrui't •--.1_995 Tel. 968-3036 try,'<,OOO dol\'ll. Or make o[fer. See 318 ~ .,..... u• u=."' L.> ~ E and Sea Brecses go v»ilh this ~ 646-7171 546-2313 Open IO:OO to 7:oo daily (oleSWOrhy & (O slher. 646-1952 prestige home. 3 Br. 2 baths Working Man's Oishi OPEN EV~. • M 0 I M 1105 plus many fine features. ·s1J,OOO Full price for a JJeat Country Uyt•ng 642-7777 en e a_r_ .... _ .... __ "BR h ~--Tas!efully decorated. Gar. -· omc, only 5 yrs. o!d THE~EAL ESTATERS Here's a spa ·o 3 bedroom COOL SEA BREEZES sundC'Ck also has vie11'. A & prlce includes nice land-ci us 19().11.Jarbor Blvd .. C.M. · I · h rome on a large wooded Open Eves. Peacef~ garden surrounded bargain at $34,750. scaping, re r1gcrator. \Vas - lot. Isn't it time to get away by decking, ajoincd a beau tj. GR1\l{AM REALTY 646-2414 er & dryer! Tcrn1s & hurry! from that busy clly life and OPEN HOUSE fully <"arpetcd 3 br, 2, ba, (near N.B, Post Office) Pacific Shores Rl'alty relax~ $21,900 t'°fHVRSDAY I -4 home. Newly painted ext. SAVE 7%-$2£,750 A'ITRAC. 847-S.i86 897-4191 EVES 4 BEDROOM · • ' ··1t1t'llu-2331 Heather Lane walking distance to ' all 3 Br. 1 ba. MAKE OFFER ~~~SPRING Back Bay Executive 4 bed-schools, incL occ._ Extra 400 Pirate Rd . 646--3079 MESA VERDE ..-'-. .._. room • 21,~ ba!hs $49.~ _ bonus for the family or pro-=°""======= •••• ~.ANYEALTIMETY,, 10% down. fessionaJ man is the 22'x20' University Park 1237 •• 546-2313 646-7171 recr. rm, or priv. off. com-Open Eves: pit. w/pool table. Org. own· VILLAGE 2 Lux ext. 3 Br. 2 er 545-1909 Ba. Ab•ium. 10 ft ceilings. 3 Completely new & lush car· peting. Large family room • 2629 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. all blt·ins, over sized bed- rooms, 2 baths. Owner 2 ON A LOT bought new home • asking 2 separate houses on a large only $27,950 with 10% down. Jot • O ose lo transportation Call 540-1151 !open eves) and shopping, 2 garages · -- :THE ~EAL ·; I ESTATERS i ---- Heritage Real Estate. S24 ,950 · 10% down. --~~~---~- CUSTOM 3 BR & fam rm, llf.i ba, W/W carpeting, drapes, frplc, shakero:Jf. newly decorated large cul d lush gardens. m i r r o r e d closets, glarn. spac. en- tertaining. $27,000. Exe. in- vest. Nr UCI 833--0304 or 833--5507 Owner. iii"!iiiiiiii!iliiiiiit/646-7171 546-23 I 3 Ocean Front OPEN EVES. First time offered. Corner l'>t, large living rm, very best location, $47,500. -- A CHARMER t. sac lot. Block wall, extras. $30,500. By Owner. 546--72'24 Immaculate -Early Ameri-alter 6 p.m. Principals. _E;a;;sl;b~lu;;f~f;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;l;;4;;2 can. 3 Bedrooms, Family ======="=== • Room, Double Fireplace, Mesa Ve rde 1110 OPEN HOUSE THE fl/EAL . E STATERS I Double garage, Work Shop. SUN 1 • 5 Boat Yard. Call for appoint-3032 CAPRI LANE '2854 Carob Bead! Home 3 BR, 2 baths. $23,900. ment to see this spacious SAT-SUN PM COOL POOL bu h designed by Kaltenbach AIA 400 E. 17th St ., C.M. 643-3255 custom ilt ome. 374·500· (or prof. or bus. executives. HOME ASSUME 5V2% LOAN JEAN SMITH, Oo 15th fai~•Y M V.C.C. CU.Stem 3 Bdrm. plus huge REALTOR See the many fea tures • in t:astblulf. 4 BR, 2 ba. George W1ll1amson. RJtr. paneled family room with gi· 400 E. 17th St .. C.M. 6<16-32S5 Pango Pango wood floe-rs in ~~t'a~;r~Ri;~·1 S-~1~~e 673-1350 OPEN EVES. gantic _f~oeplace .. plus: for-SO FT PAT O hall and D.R. Spec i a I 2S2S E. Coaq Hwy .. Cd~1 ~. mal din111g rootn. Large ' • I drapes, 1)1.·o frpl.. real 673.3770 $14,000 breakfast room. Owner 'TA TITIAN " BEAUTY 11•ormy cedar paneling in 2 BR, 60x100 fenced Jot, dou-tran.'ifem!d. Baycrest. $24,950 ·No Down G.I. family room. Four BR ble garage, new carpets & $54,5;00. or low down to others. 4 spac· drapt>s, elrctric range & rN· JEAN SMITH ious tK>drooms. 2 baths. ThC" en, landscaping & sprinklers. • -Ydrd is a tropical paradise-- Ready to move into. Vacant, REALTOR Elevated bamboo hut, water $134 month mcludmg taxes rall , fish pond -50 ~·covered BUILDERS MODEL polio. Ali h"iit • '" luxury Professionally landscaped. kitchen. See it You·u love 1/lage Real Estate drapes, carpeting, betlutiftil it; 540·1720 view Irom back patio. 4 BR, TARBELL 2955 Harbor Oir Brookhurst & Garfield 1 ~-• --~2-44n a.16-SlOJ ..... .,e basement tam i I y 4 BEDRM . P,OOL 'FUN' room. Call 646--1414. $23,5001 200 FT. DEEP T"':'--""---tlND DOWN PAYMENT! GROUNDS • $17,9501 .Dill• Hialfstolt Vacationhn.e-allyearround Builder's Attention! I ~:;:;:::;;;:::::;;;:;;:;:::;~1 Generous sized bcdroon1s, 2 Very valuab!~ land n"ar11 pullman baths. f\1any added Broadway Shopping Center Vacint Lot luxuries for your pleasure & San Diego freeway -ex-Corona HI hlands CdM & convenience. 15 x 30 pool. tensive commercial bid gs. In 9'I 1930 ill Oc Price includes washer & dry- upstairs Formal L.R. Extra thick carpets. St-On(' planters -Fire ring, ere. 3 car gµage, playhouse and MORE. Close to schools, churches and---.Xl.Ji't lo.au and Tt>rms. Schworer, Bkr. 673-2654 eve. By OWner 3 B R& Fam 1 ~ BA. CarpC"ts, drapes Healed lfix36 PoDI. 2 pHtio Beaut landscapc>d l;::C' Jot Sprinklers. front & back Family fruit trePIS'" 51t.i'h.i F"HA Loan $31,950 with 10'µ dn. 549·3165 . -BLUFFS. Rare "G" PI a n: Spacious 4 hr, 3 ha. By Chvner. $37.950 64il--07~0 Corona del Mar 1250 -Open D aily I to S 219 JASMINE, CdM View home. steps)o beach. 3 BR 2 baths, living room + family, fireplace'. bl! -ins. Sep. dinin.i;:-area. service porch. curpets & drapes. 3 car ~aragc on alley. Large lot. Vacant. 10~;;-do1vn. Rlir. G-16·39:!8 Ev<'s. 642·0185 *LACHENMYER VIEW OF HARBOR LARGE 5 Bdrm, 2~ bath . Tri-l eve l hon1e. All huil! • ins. c11r pete<l l.hroughout. DrapC"s. Approx 2300 SQ ft living area. Landscaped & fenced. \Valk- ing distance to gran1mar & high school & i;hDpping Clo.se to freeway, $26.500. 842-23-12 RETIRE & INVEST ONLY $19,000 Lovely 2 BR & dcn. cloSt' to Golf CourS(> \V/R-4 wning. HAFFOAL REAL TY "Hon1C' 10 Match InromC'" 84i0 \V11rncr 812-44(}:-i $49.50 DOWN To quali!ird vets. 3 homes to choose lron1, all full y car- peted with built-ins, close to schools. Call for inform11tion LISTER REAL TY 16612 BC"ach Bl .. HB S42-66:i3 -.-BY OWNER Trans .. niust 51'.!ll! 4 BR . :i B11. hornc in beaut. !\-trrc- rHth Gardens. 24.'Xl Sq. ft. lri- lc\'cl. NC'n r school. S.17 .500 !Xi2-13.'lS 2 ON 1 Large 3 Br 1\·ith rental unit on rear. Good loca!ion in rio1\"J1I01vn H,,,,,, __ ,,,'I Beach. $19 .. )111) .• Ted Way Rily 536-2579 2 BDRil-1. Walk to schools. churcht:'s, shopping & Dr's. Slll.500. 20052 Port Circle, H.B. 9fi2-3919 e BY O\VNER e area. There's a 3· bedroom approx x ·part :ean e-r. 540.1720 home loo! Great potential View, $11 ,50() -lQ'M Down. TARBELL 2955 Horbor ---------FITZMORRIS Quaint home. Large liv-tng b(-re -hve In home now bu1ld ' - 4 BR, den. 21~ ba, sep. dining rm, sprinklt>r •YStem newly rt>painted. $38.500. 2 0 0 8 Balearic Or. ~:f.! 4 BR. 2 Bn . $23.500 or best offer, 4!U-9~32 unill! for the future~ 842-6691 R.eftttor . 673-9010 5 BEDROOM-POOL ASSUME 6\S,% loon. $3,000 mo1n & lirep!ace. Reduced TARBELL 16111 Bea ch 3l:fi E. Coast HW), CdM REPOSSESSION ~~;~·3 T~~ 2$~:.5'Jbit~;s~~ 10 t1t>:rN-MARTIN 3 BR ho , SWIM . FISH . BOAT Immaculate forrncr niodel Owner. Mf>..-7822 REALTORS 675-1662 me, 2 full baths, fire-sn 2 home -9 1'0o1'11s 3 baths ========= Beautiful 3 'Br. So. of plac(', carpets, drapes PLUS Almost new! 3 · ltBA, Heatro & filtered.pool with Colloge Park 1115 2 BR ho d channel mt home epo highway. By owncr only. cute me (I eal for On! $39500 · · board& lndder. & get this ---~------Rensonablc. 1t 673-6636 mom or dad or Aunt M11tllda cl.. vw'oo'o REAL TY only 10'7o down with 00% O\VNER 3 Br. 2 ba au ('X· ========= etc, e1c.) All in A·l condl· , loan at 6.6% Interest -"re-tr11s. Bea111 de<:'(lr. panC"lini:. tion. bettutilully landscaped, 6306 w. Cout Hwy,,......., JK'&t. 6.6% interest .. $35,IXX>. 297 Hanover Dr. C !\-1 $32.500. Best of ti;rm~. N. B. 548-.... ;ru ('01.LECE REALTY 546-5880 3 BR 1" b 1 t Well M C di RI! TRY OFFERI ' , '· '"" 'm ""· g.. < Ir . e rs. Screened-lo pat10. 1810 NPWport Bi•d .. C.M. Bosch h'"" oear Bay, 2 BR DAVIDSON Realty 124.500 * M5-4713 ~lS.7729 Evea 6«--0684 & guest rm. A bath. Must •~~~~""!'!!""!!!!!!~I sell! $30 <n> :Z STORY -$30,500 lt'a Beach bouu time. Big· "NEWPORT 'BEACH" &Jboe' ~al E state Co. Bl'!auUtully decorated 3 BR ittlst selection evu ! See. ~ho Lido Isle 1351 NOW'S THE TI ME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A GI RESALE Anyone may assume this GI 5'-A % loan, payable $108'hio.' 3 Bedroom on a big corner lot. Room for boat & trailer parking. Sparkling new paint job inside & outside, plus new wall to wall carpels Vacant and immediate pos· S(>SSion at only $18,950. STEWART REALTY 530-2770 Laguna Beach 1705 145.'l Terrace Way, Temple Hills. 3 BR, 2 BA, dinette, large living rm .. [rp\c, beam- ed ceilings thru-out. Elec-. kitchen w/blt-in range & dishwasher large comer Jot, 155· front Landscaped, shrubs. Ocean View, Priced right. P.O. Box 914, Laguna Beach. Owner. 714: 494-4726 EXTRA ORDINARY SACRIFICE~ New Homes Vie~·s. 3 BR, 2 ba, custom· Spanish styling, deluxe a.pp~ S:l3.500 OPEN HOUSE SUN. Call for location & terms . 494-&'!33 LOS PADRES REALTY LI'ITLE DOUGH Lars·o House 2 story with wood clapboard siding, rustic shingle. Few blocks from beilch. 3 br & den, could be 4 br, t.1is-~ion Riiy, 985 S. Cst Hwy. 494--07:11 * TOP of lhe World, ocean view, 3 BR l~ Ba & fam rm, frpl , blt·ins, beaut lndscpd. Wa lk to schools $35.500. By O\l'ller. 5~% lst~ \\'ill tradC" C.D.fl-f·. 49-l-5187 eve. MAGNIFICENT OCEAN VIEW LOT $5,950 -small . but level S750 down. bal $53 mo. Laguna Bch. 17141 497-1210 e NEW 4 BR VIE\V, cptd, rlrps. frpl. shH_ke roof, many $31,IXXI. 0\VN ER, 49-l-i68.l San Juan Capistrano 1720 'CHARM ING 3 BR z BA home. fireplace. 11• a I I e d yard. double 1::arai;e. $27,0IX) ~thke Really, 494--28.:,S RENTALS Houses Furnished "5, DEN . .( BATHS" 700 E . Balbofl Bl\fd., Balbotl fam nn, dln nn. dcl pbo tile DAILY PD.fl' Oassiltfd Library, 6 yra new 3 673-4140 & mirrored entry. 8Pdion NOW. Car bit Int ••9-~~--~..,....--·IR!tr. 2750 Harbor5B, CM DAIL\' PILOT D™E-A· 75 FT. OF BAYFRONT 2 SC/l('l'itll.' lots • t'ach hall p!f'r & sUp, 3 Bd home on 45·. Guc!lt hou~ J)()()\ on :m rt. sz-.o.ooo -subn11t R. C. CREER, Rt>illty Rentals to Share 200S GIRL Over 25 In .sha rr ilpt Newport Beach. 518-1298 DAILY PILOT 1=.a11="'P=M =~ Newport Beach 2200 ' --.... ,_.. Brokers. Salesmen 546-S4$J EvM. 5'45.SU2 LINE$. You can use them nn, dlnln& 11rc-3, la m rm , 4 "OCEAN VIEW .. $25,900'. BR 3 bA. Buy now &: move Huge 2 B<irms. 2 ba. 60XU1 In before .chool start•. Flrt>plact. Btlow market! 3116 Via Lldo Gtf.9300 \VAT0-1 your 1V shows an the set you find in the Clas.sified A&. O\et.lt-them F...am lOO'fii comm, Low THE SUN NEVER SETS on for Juit pennfM a a.,. D1aJ monthly de5k ltt mu!nplc Cl.uslfJed's t cUon power. _,&<,,2-S67,,_,,a,_-,--...,..-,,-c"°"~~' =====~= office For an ad to sell around JOIN tt1e nrtuprl ta the DAILY PlLOT WANT ADS . HO~IE 6424000 the clock. dlll ~. ~All.Y PILOT WANT ADS! BRING RESULTS! WANT AD A'ITRACT1VE wntrrfroot 4 Br. home, boat dock, winter lease. 400 3Sth St.. r-.·s 12131 cnv 7-6087 , .!::.:=::;.:::::.;;;:=;;...-J J!oy J, Ward Cb. ...__ __H_Oc;.Mc;E;..64;,.;,...,,.,_,;__ ' • ' '· -·-.. ........ . ' ---~.------ Daily Pilot Clauified CLASSIFIED INDEX -~- RENTALI B1lboo oa:AN •BAY 4 Br. 2 b1. hOmt, avau 911. 301 Alvarado PL Call ~· "R"OJll1 AdVfrt'"" fl}Ould c""k their acll CllllJ and Nport lmmtdl1hlJ •trort 1ect 1·21S: OX-6--0'll! or mlacla"lflcatlonL TH& DAILY PILOT ,...,m .. Uablllty for or,..,. only to YEARL 'f iiNfll tno oxttnt of publl1hlng tho 1dvtrtl1tment eor...etl1 one time. , or winlu; 4 Bll, 2 a. horM. Houn-Regulation1-Daad1lns1 DIEADLINI ,011 OOPV ANO KILL&: l :SO P.M, U.1 dlJ bdt;tt p&1bllOltlon, ucept tor Av1U. 911. 301 Alvarado PL W"ktnd Edltton and Mondly MCtlo~ when clotlng tlrM to 1190 P.M, P'tlday. cau coll. l·2ll: OX ""214 YOU ICUIT HAVa KILL NUMIElll Whon kllllng 1n ad llKuYM et 41ulck ruultt, Lido ltle ~ 2351 .- IN au,.. to mtk• o record of th• kill numlNr glvon yeu bJ your ad tokor 11 '" voriflcatlon of )'~Ur e11JI. , '"" 2 Ba . ·-" I _..., .,IVIMI, lvery offort lo :r.•CI• to klll or cornet a new 1d th1t h11 botn erdored, but wo oan· after Labor Day thru _N_ • .,...;,._.,_a._.ch __ noo_ I O.nwol - , not gu1r1n oo to do•• until th• •d h~I -pp1artd In th• piper. Jut1e. S325 Mo.. 615--011' BLUFFS L!ASES LIDO BAY VIEW 2 Bdrm Furn Spaciau1 1 BR Apt in ·bi-riM DIME·A·LINI Adi.art 1trldl1 ca•h In. advanoe oy mall or at any on• or our officu. Huntln.....,n Beach 2400 ND phono ord•~ •'" 1300/mo. I.&• 3 Bdrm Unf\lm 13Z/mo. DAILV PILOT rutl'\'U the r!ollt to cl•lfy, tdlt. 0tn10r or rtfUM any adv•r-rurut dUl'lex. 1 BR .• aar. tlMmtnt. and to cll•ngt It• rat" and regulatloii• without prtor not'"-frplc prlv patio 1 Bl.It. ~ Adv1rtlur1 may [t!llOO tlltlr ad• b)' t1l1pllont. beach. $l40: 53&-ri.46 6t4-all8 Jna. ==========i:=::=:::li3~~;;74EB~D~RMMiN<.e~wpon;;;;;~ .. i;:;;.;:i;ch DIAL DIRECT 6'42 -5 678 . Summer R1nt1l1 2910 on QWet CUI de S.c. Ovu WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540· I 2 2 0 NPf Bch I BR, sleeps 4. I 2100 "I· ft Gatdeoer • water bJk to ,..____ lnclud. 1.325 per mo. •on Huntington B11ch 540.1220 L1gun1 BHch 494-9466 Phona1 Are Open 8:00 a.m. -5:30 p.m. 9 lo Noon S1!urday-Closed Sunday \J\.~•. $60 per wk. 2 1 J\lly. AvaU Aug. 642--1272. year ease 64$.43.lG. Lai\ltl& at Victoria Beb. ~ • BR, 2· be., pool, w/yat'd i BR house, sleeps 4, Sl(!O pn pool maintenance. $350. 369 wk or moothl,y rate~6'2--lm Vista Ba.ya Cll't'le, NJI. 11: 2 Br. Furn Apb. Hi 642-.33i9 or 542-5514 · • blk to ~M. 1209 W. 3 BR, 2 BA duplex, bit.ins, •' Balboa Blvd. Balboa. $15 Cl'l)tl, drpl, Near bNcll,No CLASSIFIED COUNTERS IN loc1ttd •• foh•wt: wk-Jl5Qwk.49'1-5189 pets. Avil AUg 15, $250. 2J11 West lo~ ... ,.._,,, Mtw!Mrt IMdi. JJO Wftt ky Sffftt, C.mi M.._ Jot 642-386S aft 4 PM fffttl lh'Wt, Hfttf""" 1Hc•. llJ Forest Ann•, &..p11e1 lffdi, l:JO-l:lO bcept. Sert.• S•11. NPT _Bch. Large Upper 3 bedroom • .2 block to ocean. Mall Addre11: lox 1875, Newport ltacll, C1llf. Aug 1 to Aug 17. $125 per Newport Sho,.. HOUSES FOR SALE NIWl'OlllT •l.lCN tnt D•MOLITIOH ... week. ~9754 , ... HIWl'OlllT HllGHTt 4111 OlllAFTINO 11111\llCI ~ ""'°"""""="'.,-,-=-,-I NEWPORT SHORES GINllUL n• NIWPClaT IH(lllS rue l!LICTltlCAL "" 1 BR. furn. Apt. slpB. 4 .2 iBR I: Den 00 years leue Blda:. CultOnl Furn. Yrb $35Q/mo • ..,....,. Rltr. I CMto -4100 $25 Wk. Up ·-·-.,.... • 1Dc:1 uw. • ftoila ..... • Maid lw'flcl 4 'l'Y evall. e New Cdt I 8ar 231' Nowport Blvd. 141-17116 E>srsmE 'i BR., alee. bltnl; patio. A4ultl only 361·8 OOLE 142-1.298 $90 FOR Atq'Ult. Vuy nice 1 Br·. trailer. :W E. 16th SL, Colla MM&. 64)..U65 $m. MAN aver XI. No peta. UUl pd. Near Back Bay. 545-ls:il art 8 PM DUPLEX 2 hdr ,adult,~ wuh- 8'1• P.0o, .Ott water Uoo: _alt.,30. ~".'i.A =.:~·~. lltS Wl!STCLtPI' 4nt 1ou111M1NT •IHTAU UM 1 Block to beach. Weekly $190 mo. 6'2-MJO ••• • ••••• 1111 uN1v1111.s1TY PAil• u11 l'l!NCING "" .. oo: N rt •-• ... ~a ,========= 2 BR apt. Adultl only, no ,. IACIC IAY U41 l'LOOlll "611 ·~:::;:·.,;;,~·wpo~:;.:.~~:;=.~~:;..:::':;..1 .. Walk ID -_, COLL••• l'AtUC 1111 ··•T ••• ,, •••• ,, ••• I •• B • pe • """"'• • .,..,, N•Wl'OllT 11...cM n• .. .. 4241 0.,•0·,.,,0 "111. •i.. .. _,. LAGUNA Beach, slps. 6; •ck Bay 3240 H'-'--~--"'1• iU.-1219 .w"O•T H••oH•t '''' COllOHA Dl!L MAii 4U1 .. IUl<&J'" ~ ~ • IALIOA qt OllNlllAL SlllVIClS "" "''alk to beach. Xlnt location IALIOA COVIS UU •AY ISU.NDI ust llUOIN .. DllCINI "6tl $l50 W··• l""" ="" 31.ARGEBr, 2b&cui-de.qc SMALL 2 ~R. apt., tum. ==~::::T SNOlllSS :: LIDO ISLE ml •u.ss .. ,. ~· -NB crptt, drpl. Refs r-. Utll. r\id. Freshly decor. 1A'l'1Hoa111 ~= =~~~~:ei~'it~:AcN :!:: =~=•:HoT,.MVMI :': RENTALS $215 MS-3012, evu. ~ ~"'=M=on::::th~·~M:.::8-"623..:..:::,...c~ :;-:::L~::•n IUI POUNTAIN VALLI'!' +111 NIEALTN CLUll .,,. HouSH Unfurnished 1.tra. Marvin i BR apartment, fw'n S95 MAlllOlll HltNLANDS II» St:AL laACM +IH NAULlfrlG lntl_..;..:::;::.:;;_;;;,:;.:.;;,;:::;:::;:_.1 ·========= UfrltV•llStT'I' l'AlllC 1t:l1 LOMO ll!ACH 4Stt HOUSl!CLaAfrllfrll '•"'m General 3000 • month. Garare. Utilltlea 111.VINI 1111 OllANOI! COUNTY .... lfrlT•lllOI DICOllATIN• 1----------1 University Park a237 paid. 220 Slerka. 548-3347 IACK •~'I' 1141 GAlllDIN GllOV• 4611 INCOMI TAX ., .. ~::~;~~uc• irJ :r:~~i1r1~~;: ::: ::g:;,,.:U......._ 11• :: Jiii Available Now LOVELY &11ac1ous 3 Br. tam 1fE m~ n~=·:P' co11101r1A DIL MAii ',"' .... •,::~: ::: H•IGHT• :: :::~i!~•,•,• ~,,,.'41 MESA DEL MAR rm, fp, le: patio, bltns, pool, • u • .,.... nr en-•AL10A .. INIMSUU. N maJ t Ill' 1CbJs •· .-.. .. 1ft... dou Dr. i\PL A llACOM IAT ,,., TUSTIN 4'41 lfrl\lln10ATIN•, Def«tlw ,,. 5 BR -3 Baths •••••••• $270 0 n. .. _ ..... 1UI COAST#L 41tl JANITORIAL "" 2 o_ 1195 L$e $250 mo 833-035f, aft 6 '"00 NICE l BR, util ...i l~Y ISL.ANDI l>OI LAGUNA llACH 471$ JIWl!LllY Rl!l'Allll. at~ ._ 4 BR• Dd ••• ••••••••' ' ' .,.. • P"' LIDO ISLI 3 BR 2 Ba 1185 Adults, no pets 1961 .... LICA ISU.frl'D IUS LAGUNA NIGUl!L 4117 U.frlOSCAPINe 6111 • • •••• ., ••••, HUNTINGTON ••ACM 14M SAN CL•MENTI 411t LOCKSMITH ..,. Owner/Bkr 615-3131 Coron• tlel Mir i250 Fullerton, Apt 1. 642-4112 NUNTlfrlGTOH ll~Jl•OUll l4M DANA l'OINT 41• MASONRY, lllJCK .ut ' •l140. tJTIL. PAID• POUNT ... IN VALLl!Y 1411 Tllll'LIX, 9fc. 4"t MOVING & nOllACll '41411 bdr ••-.&.. ••AcN ,.,. coHDOM11r11uM ..,.,. ""1NT11r10 .... _.....,111, ~Cost• M... 3100 LUX. 11,t . patio, nf. in-Lovely 2 Br. Blk to K·Mart. 5uNsaT ••ACM 1us ReNTALS 11AJNT1No, 111a -trcom, a:ftr., twf., beam., liv. eAlllDl!N 01110¥• U7S 1'ATIOS "6t Bch ..A.... ~n J~ 54g..om LONO llACN utt · Apts. Unfurnished l'NOTOOllAl'Nv "7t FOR Leue. 3 Br, 2 BA rm. nr. ·• wtr, ., ....... r , I~========= U.Kl!WOOD UH OEHl!llAL .... PU.STl"llllNO, l'sfd, •• ,.Ir :: family/lanai rm, Lge fenc-furn, $200. 2910 Third Ave. Oii.ANO• COUNTY Uot COSTA Ml!SA Jltl PLUMllNO _. yd f'~o-•• and CdM. OUT 01' COUNTY UOS Ml!SA VElllDI! lllf l'OOOLI CIROOMINe '"' ""' • ""'l"' .. ,., cp..., OUT 01' ITATI lMll NIWl'OllT ··~.CH HM :=~:l!:.;~~~lfrl• ~,\~ drps. Avail Sept 1. $250 mo • BR. 3 ba., range, rdlig. STANTON 1,11 Nl!WPORT HEIGHTS Stll 1'UMI' Sl!llVICI '"' includes Gardener & water. dshwahr. Adulll, no ..... WISTMIHST•ll 141t NIWl'OllT SHORIS Int MIDWAY CITY 1411 Wl!STCLll'" Jut llOQl'ING ,,,. Lt Col. Robert B. Moore ' p;p. 424 Poinsettia 675-5.218 SANTA ANA 16H UNIVliltSITY l'AJIX nn ltADIO, 111pel,.., lilt(. ::: 646-4m SAfrlTA ANA NITJ. lAI IACI( IAY SUI llllMODl!LING & llll'Atll --=='"'-'_;:,.. ___ 12 BR, 1 bath, carpetJ, OllANOI l•H l!AST ILUPI' 5241 •,.',':'_°!1,.'°,"-·· ICtTtNINI #41'"' I-MM EDIATE Occnna..,.., TUSTIN 164' COllONA D•L MAiit Jut -• ...,.......~., drapel, $170 lftO, DeJ..utcy :~:~:1JUSTIH ::: ::;·~t..frlDS :: :::1:: MACHINI l1!1'AillS :: ~~ac. d 3 bedrm ~.· ·~· 1.:;;"~\t=y=. ~673-J==T!=0=:=":=":''.7- •tLVEllADO C .... YON 1'51 LIDO ISLI! JUI Sll'TIC T~.Nkl. ........ II~ llHS 1-UI .w., WW • c p ·~· tln•ton BNch ··-LAGUNA HILLS 17" HUNTINGTON ll!ACH S4lt TAILO•IHG ffH thru-<l\I\, l 'h BA, nr • - LAGUNA ll!ACH 170$ l'OUNTAIH VALLIY 141t ~~~r"', 1~:...~o:TlllOL ~i " tchools. $170 mo. call LAGUNA frltGUIL 17'1 11.t.ICA ISLAND "" EE RENTAL BOOK SAN CLl!MINT• 1n1 Sl!AL Bl!ACH UJI TILa, Ll1191""'" a Ml..... •t15 548-3351 s .... JUAN CAl'ISTilANO 11H LONO ll!ACN not TllEI SElllVICI '"' ..:..::...==-------Drop In and Browse CAl'ISTllANO IUCH 11ll ORANG& COUNTY SUI TELIVlllON, ll1Hir. •tc. •IU 4 BR, blt-ina galore. WE HAVE SOME DANA l'OINT Int G.llllOl!N OllOV• NU ~~~i'i:~lllY :: crpll, drps, near echool!, <..\11.LSIAD 1111 wesTMINSTElt u11 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ah-, frwy, water paid. ocaANflD• 17St MIDWAY CITY '"' ...... SAN 011!00 17H SANTA ANA hH JOI WANTl!D, Mfll Jttl $250. mo. Refs. Write lllVlllllDI! COUNTY , .. SANTA AHA H•IGKTS h• JOI WANTED, Wtmlll ,.,. Box M 100 Daily Pilot NOUSl!I TO •• MOVID ,... TUSTIN .... Joa WMTID, ~~:~~~~~·uP~• SAL• ~t5J ~!tTNA; ••ACM :;: =~•~T~g':~~ :: VERY CLEAl"i 3 B. R., """llTMl!Nn '011 SAL• It• LAGUNA NIGUEL .,., AGENCIES. M•• "" carpel!, drape•, fireplace, RENTALS UM cLEMINTI int HELP WANTED. -.. mi large patio. OuUtandlng. SAN JUAN CAl'llTlllAfrlO IJU AGIMC:llil, W-Jltl th HouMt Furnished DANA 1101NT sr• HELi' wAHTED. w""" ,.., $210 per mon • Vacant OINl!llAL ,_ REAL ESTATE, JOI~ a • ...,.. ,,.. Broker, 5'16-4141 11.•NTALS TO SHA•• nos G I AG1Nc11s. Mli!I a w-HM CDSTA Ml!SA tltl •nlir• SCHOOLS a lfrlSTIUCTIOfW ,.. ATI'R. 2 BR., carp., drapes; Ml!SA Dt:L MAii 2111 Tllll'Ll!X. stc. I ... JOI P'ltll'AllATION "" . ti Joe $160 Mo Ml!SA Vl!RDI! nu CONDOMINIUM ,,,. THl!ATllllCAL .,,.. cooYenien y . ' • coLLloa l'Altc 1111 1111HTALS WANT•O 1,,. MERCHANDISE FOR No pets, no children. Hl!Wl'OlllT ll!ACN :nOI lllOOMS POii )ll!NT lttS s•LE AND TRADE Call after 6 PM 642-2689 Nl!W1'0RT NOTS. HU llOOM & IOAllD Im ~ NIWl'Oll.T IHOlllS mt MOTILS. TRAIL.II COVllT1 "'' 1'UlllNITUltl .-•• FOR Lee.Re: 3 Br, 2 Ba, IAYIHOll.1!$ 2lll OUIST HCMl!S Im O,l'ICI l'UllNtTUll• 7682 EOINGER 842-4455 Ol' 54(l!s\40 3 BDR., 2 BATH 60 X 100 feoctd lot. Electric built In ranae & oven. CU. pet1, dmpes. $170. mo. V.111a~e Real Estate OOVEI: SHOJll!I mJ MISC. llllNTALS t"t Ol'l'ICI aQUll'MINT •n fam. rm. home, bltna, carp., Wl!ITCLll'I' tllt INCOME 1'1lOPl!RTY 400t STOllll IQUll'MlfrlT •11 drapes. $210. Month water Cor Brookhurst ' Garfield UNIVl!llltTY l'ARIC ttJJ IUSINl!SS l'llOPlllTY 4fft CAl'I, lll!STAURANT ..,••,• -·•d, •>< _, 111.Vlfrll 2Uf TIU,Ll!ll l'AlllKS 615S IAll aQUll'Ml!NT ....... ....,.....,.,.,~~===--962-44n 546-8103 IACK IAT 1241 IUSIHl!SS lll!NTAI. ffiM HOUSEHOLD GOODS --.-:,.,.,,VA~"-IMT aLUl'fl lt42 Ol'FICE lllHTAL 6111 GAllAGI! SALi NH Nv... .. • .., .. n I 2 Bedroom 2 a.th llt\llNI T•llllACI! n41 INDUSTll.IAL .. ROl'lllTY .... 1'UllNITVlll AIKTIOfrl lnS _5 br 3 ba. $285/mo r.. ... dr buil . I bJk COllONA DEL MAI nst COMMEllCIAL ,... Al'l'LIANCll "" 646-9683 ........... apei, t·m•. IALIOA not INDUSTRLl.L lllllfTAL "" A.HTIQUIS ':Ii'' to 5 pta ltot'e'S, theater, etc. IAY ISLANDS nH LOTS 41• llWING MACHINIS 3 BDRM H IMl\IEDIATE ~" LIDO llLI t lJI llANCMIS llM MUSICAL INSTlllUMlfrlT OUM: OCC\I, ........ •ALIOA ISL>MD 1151 CITllUI OlllOVIS U1J PIANOS .. 011.GAfrlS 11• ~Santa Ana A Ye owner 642-2835 or key at Tr01 HUNTINGTON llACN t4M AClllAG• '* llADIO • ... • Reasonable! 5f6..9050 Ellis Apt D 84U303 f'OUNTAIN VALUY 1411 LM<I! l!"LSINOlll: 6H2 Tl!LIVlllOM . • 11AL •l!ACN 1ue 1111so11.r 1'1lOPlltT'I' •tDS ~u.,1 & sTrlao !!!! 2 BR. unf. house in court FOR Leaae Attractive 3 Bl". 2 LDHG l lA(H uot OllANG• co. 1'111CPl!llTY 6207 TAl'I 11aco110lllS .... OllANOI CDUNTY 140t OUT 01' STAT• PllOI'. ,,., CAMlllAS .. ECIUll'Ml!N"r .,.. Mgr. on premise& alt. 6 ba fncd yard, bltnB, crptl, ·~"TA ANA 1'11 MOUNTAIN a DISlllT 411t MOllY SU1'1'Lll!S .... 98).D w. 17th st., CM dble ce.r gar. $155 Call Wl!STMINSTalt UU SUIDtVISION LAND ~111 111011.Tlfrl'O CIOODI ... _:.:.;..:.,.-c-..:.,.;;;,.:_:_c:_~-ho MIDWAY c1n M16 RIAL l!STATI! s11av1c1 •tu 11NOCULA11s, scopas -&SH 2 BR. $120 mo. nr IChoo\s. l=='w="=~='=""'=·=962-=2=\11=S==o I SANTA AHA Hll•NTS U• 11.t". IXCMA.NCll! 6ut MISCILU.Ml!OUS 18th ... ~ co ... sTAL 17't II ••• WAMTIO IMt MISC. WAl\ITID Mlt 941 w. . Ref, reqllU~. LAGUNA tUCH m11 BUSINESS and MACHINlll'I', •t~ ,,.. 646-9578 after 4 LAGUNA NltUll. mr LUMt•ll t1JI s.lH CLIMINTI 1111 FINANCJAL STOllAGI! tm Blue Lagoon Villa U3 sut ru.i.1r1 CA1'1sttANo nu 1u11Nass oP1'011tTUNtT111 ,,.. eu1LDlfrlt MAT•11t1Au 11'41 VISIT on beach, iurf 'fiew, on CAl'ISTllAHO 1•ACN t7M IUSINl!SS WANTED 4MI SWAPS l7N DANA l'OtMT n41 1Nv11TMENT o""°"""""' "'' PETS ind LIVESTOCK elec. Furnllhed, pool, TV RIVllSIDI COtlfrlT'I' H• INVlnMllNT WAfrlTID llll VACATIOfrl lll!NTAU """ MONl!'I' TO LO»I •nt l'ITL ••N•aJ.1. ... tennli, guard. Winter $250 CONDOMINIUM me l'l!lllONAL LOAMS ms CATS 1t7t OUR Schworer. Bkr. ~2654 DUl'LllllCIS ,UlllN. .,. JawaLll.'I' LOANS mt DOGS •U MON··~· BAY ARE A RENTALS COLLATl!lllAL LOAMI ms HOlllSll IUt IUIA.n 11.IAL a1TATI! LOAMI 041 LIVl!ITOCIC ... DIME A LINE LOVELY OCEAN VIEW 3 HoUHS Unfurnished M01tTe.1.Grs. Trwt DM* '34s CALIFORNIA LIVING • • · OINlllAL J10t MON•Y WANTID 6* NIJl:llRlll tflt BR I den, 2 BA, cptl, Drpl, cosTA M•IA 11• ANNOUNCEMENTS sw1MM11r1e HOU ... trpl, pool. $300 mo. :::! ::~o':"• :::: and NOTICES ::,~1::.•01 :! COUNTER adultt 496-1243 betw 10-6 pm coLLtG• l'AltlC 1111 •ouHD ,,.,.. _, ..., v~ATIOHI em 2 BR VIEW HOME NIWl'OllT llACM SM LOST 6411 TRANSPORTATION NIWl"OlllT NGTI. *211 l'lilllSONAU .. 642 5678 on 2 loll, fenced yard, car-NaWl"OlllT SHOlllll mt ANNOUNCIMaHTI 6'11 IDATI • 'l'ACNTI Mfl l 1ef.R ppliff Lagun1 Beach 3705 4200 STEPS to ocean lux 2 BR, 2 BA, patio. $200 wk. $700 mo. Wlntr. $300 mo. 5119 River Ave. &U-30'J5 or 838-5112 2 BR. b1ck duplex. Cpts. $140 Yrly. furn. or unfurn. 46th St. neat oceM, gar. Avail. Sept lit. 548-3379 YRLY or Winter rentals. '4th St. 2 Br. & 4 BT'I. Jnd¥, end gar, Adult!. 642-922' TEACHERS • DELUXE 3 br 2 ba Winter ot yrfy lie. l.2'l 48tll St. , 6'5-2587 YEARLY; furn. bach. apt. Nr. ocean • 1hDppine are•. $80 M .. tlt. ~ ··•, OCEANFRONT Atttac. 2 Br. furn. Apt Winter at )Tly. Avail 9/15, 6f6-S832 This Page REACJIES- 68,97t HOMES EACH WEEK ~~i~":::~... : :~·:::..u :~! ~~~:r~~u1s••• :: • ~.:-$175 mo~ «n-121': WUH•IVIT•C•C1"1TTP •all• :: =~:.o.::~T~~::CTOllll ~:: :::~°TI:!'i~t:l::TI :l-==========J..~;;;;:;~~=~~~:;_!_:========:::;11 iaviNI .. ,. '"' l'Lo111sn "'s :g:~ ~J=~~::c• :,..;.H;.;0;..U;.S;..E:.S:....:F_O;..R;;;...S:;Ac;.::L:;E_..;H;.;0;:,;;U;;:S;;:E;;:S;...;.Fc;.0;.;R:...:S:::A:.:L:;l;_...;.;H;;:OU:::;S:;E::.S:.:.l'c:,O:;R.:.:S::A::L::I!;__ IACK IAT IUI CAJID OP THANKS "16 MUIMI •OOll', MIS l- lllMT 1Lv,111 nu IN MIMO~IAM "11 •••T '"'· MOO""o NH Oran-County 16000ran11e County 16000r1n ... Ceunty .'. 11• CIM•Yl!lllY LOTS IMlt ~"'-'""•o.:;_•..;.,;;;,;.~_f-_..:..:;;:;:.:.;.:;;~•:::..;.:;:;,::i,._...,:;:: ~ 1111\llNI T•lllll :ttst CIMITlaY Cll'l'l'TI '4lt IO•T llaVtcl!S ten - COlllONA DIL MAil -Cll•MATOlllll 4UI IOAT lllNTAU tell IALIOA •••• •••Kl ••11 IOAT CHAlllTlll "'9 IAY ISU.HDt »M MaMO .. '" l'ISNINO IDATI ..... LIDO ISLI '111 AUCTIONS '4ll IO"T MOVINO rt4J IALIOA ISLAND U1I AVIATION S•llVICI "9SJ IOAT ITOUGlll "4t • ' .T .T "" TllAVllL '4H IW 0 W• J4ltl Allll TllANll"OlllTA.TIOM 4Mf 10.ITS WANTID MM "!'(TIHGTON l•AC" -AUTO TllAfrllll'OlllTATION ...U AllllCU" n• HUNTJNeTOfl HAlllOUlt It LaGAL MOTKIS 1411 l'LYlfrlt LllSONS •1.541 ~TAIN VALLIY ,..11 OllllllMAJll ... TUTOllllNe "" MOllL• NOM•S '"' s1AL 1uc11 1 CTORY MOT011. NOMIS nu C.lllDl!N CllllOVI ,..,. SERVICE 0 RE llCYCLIS ""' LOMG lllACN Ute ACCOUHTINll 4ltl IL•CTlllC CAlllS fl.II Oll.IHGI COUMT'I' Mel ANIW11llfrl9 •••VICI "" MIMI llKIS .................. nn SA1'1Till AHA Mlt A .. l'Lt•Hrl! lllll'AlllS. Plrtl 4Sll MOTOllCYCLll • ntt Wl!STMIHSTllt ant A1'1'111AISINO .. n MOTOlllK:OOTllU t)H MIDWAY CITY i414 ASl'HALT , OUt •Ut AUTO Slll.VtCll a P'.\llTI , .. SANT" ANA M•IGMTS P AUTO lll!l'AllllS Wt AUTO TOOU a •GUii'. tOI CO#o.STAl ' 1'tl AUTO. 5M' lllt• T'"' •tc. lol4t TllAILlll, TUVliL t4U 1.AOUNA a•ACN I* IAIYllTTIHO dlt TllAILllll, UttllfY t~I LAGUNA frllOIJll *"7 .o.\T MAINTlllM~MCI '5U CAMl'•IU 1121 SAN CL•M••T• .,. 111.ICIC. MAIONll'I', II~ "" TauCKS .,.. CA,.ltTlllANO ans •u111r1ass s•1tv1c•• '"' JIE•l'S ,,,. CAf'tlTll#l(.0 laACll .. IUILD•llS #11 DUNlll IUOOl•S nu DANA l'OIMT 11• CATlll.INO "" IMl'OllTID a-.rTOS fftl COHOOMlfrllUM -CA•INl!TMAICIMO 4IM Sl'OllT CAllll Hit OUl'LIJICll u1u•ua11. "" CARl'•NTllllM• "" AHTIOUIS. CUlllCS Hll RENTALS CIMIMT, C-..-.... RAC• CJ.Ill, 111001 HM CHll.O CAllll, ~ Mlt AUTO IVl!lfTI HU Apts.. Fumfthed coNTllACTott• "" AuTos wA1m1• ,,. eaNaftAL " -C.llll'IT Ci.&.UllNe Mtt fill'# C.UI ttlll COSTA MUA It• CAlllP'IT LAYING • llllPAll .. H MJTO L•ASIHe fflt MIU VllH 411tO ...... •lll•t .at USA c.Alll fM 1600 I N I N 0 U I Mafia gos1ip: "My btoihor , I I r r woo WC<king on o dlol 0019 '::'.·'.=~-=-=~-::lt!,. when tho policeman arrlwd. r &-I Ho didn't know which way • IRATTliG 1-·· 1 l I I l'~u~~~= HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR • THE HIDDEN DOLLARS ·~ PR~s'ES®~i°ES LfITTIS ~ I' r I' )' I' r I • ~.,_G ... u1& ..... r:ii:t1s:i::wi~'··~--10..1.I _,I._. · I · I I t IN YOUR .HOME LATELY? SCRAM·LETS. ANSWER IN CLASSIFICAnON 1610 • DAILYP ILDT a I'm · The · ·Kind Of . - Woman Who Gets -----W,at She Wano , • • • Because l 1m The ~. Kind Of Woman Who's Smart Enough To Use DAILY PILOT Classified Advertising Boliovo me, there's nothing lrounil our homo 1nymoro that isn't being used -boc1u11 tho minute I discover something i1 no longer nHdod, 1_..n it, while it 1tiR h11 muimum v1luo, through 1n Inexpensive DAILY Plt:OT ClaHified Ad. That way, ins!Hd of 1 clutter of things we don't u11, I hove tho extra c11h that lots mo have tlie newer things ••• tho "oxtr1" things my whole family enjoys. Her•'• whtit I mean. · Tho c11h I got for tho good cloth11 ind t.<y1 tho children hid outgrown bought mo !ho d~1tor limp I'd boon w1n!ing. The mtni .. I instrument no one played p1ld for 1 big p1rt of our por!1bla stereo unit. Tho power tools redecorated our d1ughtor'1 room. And, just for the fun of It, tho good choir !hot just didn't match anything 1nymere toolr my husb1nd end me out for 1 f1bulous dinner 1t tho fancied rott1ur1nt in town. Go through your home. Mike 1 Gs! of II tho worthwhile things you find t~1t oron't being u1od. (Y ou'D be surprised et the number you +um up the first time.) Thon; di1I • 6'42·5671 1ny time botw10tt I 1.m. ind 5 p.m •. ind give your list to 1 friendly, expori-.d Ad Writer. Tl111f'1 d there h to It. It's inexpensive tool It .. n cod you 11 Ditto 11 PENNIES A DA YI . Wei, now that you know my IOCrot -isn't it time you got st1rted tow1rd better, H1ior, heppior Gving with DAILY PILOT 01Hilied Acls7 St1rt being tho kind of womon who got. what she w1nfs ted1)'.I . • ' • 1 Call Now 642-5678 • • .• l j -- I I • -~--......... -...,.,. -..... -• -.. --... -- -.. - - -- = • --.. ~ -------~-------------~~~-~---~~-------------------..... - r / • • • -:Jt OAJlV PILOT Thursday, AU9'1sl 1, 1%8 ~ RENTALS ~<N l'ALS REAL. ESTATE BUSINESS •nd ~1 Apt1. Fumt1hed Apt1. Un tumlshed G•neral FINANCIAL J:r~;;;.=;;;;;;Buch;~;;;;;;;;;;;4;2;00;. I E11t Bluff 5242 Businou Rontll 6060 ~ .... Opf'O'!"nltlM 6300 t I• PRESTIGE Town HomM *PRESTIGE STOR~ ASSOCIATES I ~,-.• ,· * Chi11nel Reel * F ......... '., • •"' • 3 .. i. ,..,., '""'"""' MAN/WOMAN • with 2 "' 211 ba!N. Gold 2500 Sq. h. A~ OR BOTH 1 • ~ APARTMENTS MedlUJOl:l al.I elec. Yaur own COl\d. See at 1801 j. SPECl'ACULAR VlEW ke-y to pool. 2-ca.r 1ar. Rent Newport Blvd., Costa l ;j.,• • Waterfront/Loe • Bo&t IJlnrts at $250 mo. Mesa or Call Mr. Ward Sllpt Available 845 Amigo Way, Npt. lkh. ~ 642-84&4 I ~'-2 BR - 2 Salb Apts, LEASE -or· BUY I . • • $145 Mo, & U.P • ~.500 up ' · 2525 Ocean Blvd .• CdM I . ..... m1T88 -ror further wo Herman Trott, ~fgr. I . •,. BEAUTIFUL waterfront apl 2 BR., patio, boat dock, Winter lease. l403 Fin1o-• "'"""" . 4300 OCEAllFRONT Coron.a del M.r 5250 ~~ rSlz~r.: .... ON TEN ACRES 1 I: 2 BR, Fum & Unfu.m from $150 mo. Frplca I Pril Patios I Pools. Tennis • C.on- tnt'I Bk!st. 9 hole PutV c ...... 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26U {MacArthur r.r. Const H111'Y) Summ•r Rental 2 Br. Deluxe Apt No pe1s or children 3o.l Marguerite Cd~! 1-.-1125. w"'k CLOSE TO OCEAN!! • ;.; . .; 1 "=""~~E=._B7al~boa,,...,,Bl=v=d~·-.,. S175 nio. ! -.-PENN Nice I Br. $130 mo. ~7 ' ' Util paJd. Yearly. 1550 A'ITRACTIVE 3 br. 2 ba. all TllRJ:."E room 11Ulte + relit room and lobby, desks. racks. and tables, ground floor at 1736 A.nalieim CM $140 FOR LEASE -Auto Repair Shop in Huntington Beach. 2642 sq. ft. $300 per mo. Ted Way Rily 536-2579 Storap Garage 20 x 2'5' x IO'h. $45. Schworer. 673-2654 Offic• Rental 6070 LAGUNA BEACH Air Condition.cl ON FORES'i' AVENUE Desk spaces available 1n newest olfice building Bt prime location in down!O\\'n Laguna Beach. Air condi- tioned, carpeted. beautiful paneled partitioning. T w o Brand n~ oppor, ava.11. now lot ri&bt parties to own an cn1y to <rperatc, pleaSMt suvice business. We train quaUf\ed people selected. No selling. .folks we seek nual bave some· bw.ineu expcr., be sell.starters anct- be willing to work If! tarn big money. • QI.sh lnve11t. of $6500 Is uq. for a completely set-up &ttv· ice business of your own: u- llOCiated with our big p,lant facility. Xlnt operatk>n ror man & wife. Investment sbould be remmed within 6 rnOnths + gOOd earninp & growth potential WRITE Glve all info. re yoorsell, phone numt>O, etC., for per- sonal interview. , AMERICAN MARKETWAYS •- BUSINESS \nd FINANCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS ond NOTICES 641l . Morteaie•. T.D/1 6345 Funerlf1 '5,000 tat TO on tpKtlcW&r "'-vi.w lot Sold 1ar WESTMINSTER !7.9.IO. p,.,.,, '" "" MEMORIAL PARl< moalh lncllJd!n&: 8%. All duo 3 yrs 10"-' dilcowi! ufl'.ty MorNary & Cemetery 'retUC'nl approx 12% per yr. Com'f,ltte fut1eral1 494-1137 ,..., $245 $1100 Znd TD p&)'Able 1 ~ per Ctmt-tery lots mmi.th indudlrta: 10% all due from $130 5 yrs. Covel'J exceth:nt Includes Endowment Care Oceanvlew lot, 20% dis-Everything 1n OM beaulitul count. 494.113'1 place meruu leu cost. No tr.rue. problems. ANNOUNCEMENTS 14801 lleach, Wcolminsts and NOTIOE"S 531-1725 893.2471 F!u".~'" Adi!_ 6400 CemtflfY Lots 6418 FOUND: Tabby fe1n.ale kit· z DESIRABLE Plots in Har-- ten, long-ba.lr; • vie. of bor Rest ¥emoriaJ Park. Wallace & -20th, Costa J\1esa. Will sacrifice $l'lO IH2453.5 cau & Identify. 64&-4318 eall 8:30 AM ·10 5 M.1. • ·* * * I . ... 'f: Pon • z Wh•cldya Wanl'I Whaddy• Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATlON·FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPE°'-- . Spoclal, Rote 5 lln9J -5 times .:... 5 bucks , IWLf.I -40 MUil IHct.UOf; • 1-Whfl ""' hew 19 tr.a. ... Wlwlt fOll ... In ff.._ ...,..You• ,,... Miiiier aodNM. ~ ilne1 O'I 1111v1nlllftl,. ...... OTMIHG l'O• U.Lt: -UtAOES OHLYI 'HONE 642·5678 To Pl•ct Your Tr1der'a P1r1dlie Ad 2 PARAKEETS • Found 1WO CEMETERY LOTS SaUU'day 7-'27, Vic In I ty HARBOR REST 1966 HARLEY DAVIDS:ON Beacon Bay N e w p 0 r I • ~ Pvl 74 Full Dress. 16,0XI miles # 62 ·Balboa C.Oves 3• BR waterfront with Itier. Will consider anything in vaJue klr difference above $35,000 loan. l.J 8-7m Beach. 67~ Pty Moving from area TRADE $900 equity for "FOUND" Siamese cat, vie. SERVICE OIRECIORY PICK ~P-847_9805 • of Bol.6a Chica and F.dinger. Ap 1• R , • Call area cod6 213: 596-6024 P 1anct tp•1rs 4 Income units on 21st SL a1\d identify • P•rtt 6510 In C06t11 Mesa. Trade. for house or trust deeds. ln· lenses iD ij~DY ¥an~pceialize in all come $40'l.50, Owner. SERVICE DIRECTilltY Paporho"Vl"lf P11n1lng ~6UO • PA!NT!NG And Popmng. U you call me w• bolb. beoefit Eltcluive bey not: expenllve Try me and aee. ~-3151 PAIN'l:.INGJ:nterlor/~. Free ~test * 00-46ti9 * 54&8712 * * Papet~· """"' 548--1444, e\•es. e Schwarti Wall Cl:rvt~P • & instal. "Paper Bum" I pa pet' store) 847-16$ INT · ext. Averftl:e 1 BR apt, labor & mat' ts $ 'l 4 . 5 0. 642-7528. MS-t911 Plumbing * z.t"HOUR SEIRVICE * Plumbb\1, repair, remodel Elec · sewM cleaning Guaranteed * 646-1407 PLUMBING 24 Hr. Rl'V. Work .. guar. Llc., tnsur.; remodel. repair, rooter aerv. 531-7566 Marv's Plumbing Service Repair -Remodel ·-· I ' Miramar Or. 615-5aO 1-1 •· d f •-·, ,' !"-'========= I c "'" . cp ... , rps, fl'K-", nr ocean. 673-3324 Huntington Beach 4400 entrances: Frontage on P.O. Box 1322, Warner Ave., Focest Ave., rear leads to1 __ H_...,_lrn_gt~""-&h __ . _9264 __ 1_ f.1uncipal parking lots. $50 per month for apace. Desk and chairs available for $5. Business hours answerln&" service available for $10. All utilities paid e.xcept telephone. NOT ONE PAIR of contact case. Newport ~9-2571 Be a c. h . kind or ,repa1rs. Ele<:tronics, * 51!s.<ml * electric.al, plumbing, etc. I----':.::_.:::;:_.:_ __ -~~~~~~~1 ~8-'J#I NEED MOTORCYCLE FOUND; BaaebaU rtiltt, vie.. LAKE Tahoe View Lot Na- vada side, paved $12,500 clear. Exchange for some.- bodys headache! Units, TD's, or ? Bkr. GT":i-5726 I '==========•I 2 BR furn condo. on Bch Sewing 6960 nr. Venice, ItaJy in exclui;.1 :AL.:.;;TEc;.:.RA..,_Tl_O_N_S_,_R<aoon ___ &ble"'.'"I e NEW e LUXURIOUS e 1 ' RESORT LIVING I 4 NATIVE GARDENS Balboa lsfind 535S \VATE."RFRONT dlx. 2 BR. apt. wlboat tie-up privil. Yrly lse. $2'25 mo. Adults on. ly,' no · "pcis or children 673--0'l07 Adams school July 21st. Call Jiave 1964 Simca, rebuilt Of our distributors has hls & identify 546-l3Sl Auto Repairs 6530 engine, new tires. $450 or teITiiory for sale, 12 Yea.rs ·---·1 4W. 72(>.1 of performance~ C!1cck any MAN 'S Wlttne.uer wr ist Garage stalls for rent. · '''' · · · ·''' ·' ·· ·'' ive resort area. Trade for priCet!i on better dresaet. local a.Tea 3 or 4 Br. home Call for appt. 847-3968 ~ 6 POOLS-SAUNAS.JACUZZI I __ _' HUNTINGTON GARDENS and all of our references and 'fatch, ln&c.ription on back Hoisls, air compressor & WANT: Land, rewrt, home distributoI'S. Not vending, no of case. Ed Mitrani, 494-7184 '-=='="='="=·="='='·="=';"'°'°°""==I or Income ··Trade?? or vac. lot er boat. 646-1277 ~~-""'--,"'"°"" Honalulu Hawaii hon1e with Alteraflons--642·5945 Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. exp. income, University are a. ·-· . . DAILY PILOT ll. $3 500 f 1 • R. Ross Myeni, Jr, se "'g. , Investment or FOUND A "'ti-a-rox · 3 "' ....... ,.., . Babysitting • 6550 S.10 AM * 7-9 PM $26,000 equity. TRADE for vacant lot, home or ? • • 222 FOREST AVENUE LAGUNA BEACH 494-9466 pan-time, and build to full· mo. ginger colored. with 673-67S6 Te:nnl1 • Entertainment Huntington BHch 5400 494-8437 or 6Th-4646 : • BOLSA-CHICA & HEIL 2 BDRM· 2 BATH Air-Conditioned Offices & Desk Space \\•ith central secretarial, zer· ox end telephone answering servi~. up to 2.000 sq, ft . 1~~ t~ri'F,~~~~~S white vie. Thurin. 646-8416 BABYSIT my home, play TRADE ·~ Cad. F1eetwood PROVE IT! Call Mr. Allen 10 SPD _Bic~cle fot.md vie of equip. fe~ced yard, close to full pwr., & Npt. Bch. Ten- roUect m 4f772-9100oi-write «:.slancia Hi School call & school Vic of.No. H.B. area nis Clb membership fur 4 lnt"Ome units on 21st St. in Costa f.1esa. Trade for house or trust deeds. In· came $40'1.50, Owner. : ADULTS 847-8414 HEATED FOOL • $12> mo. carpets, drapes, blt·ins, Patio P .O. Box 178, San Carl06, identify. 546-2455 • close to Edwards & Edinger dinghy ~/o'bn:l or ? 897-0311 I ruRN D·uplcx 1 Br. & gar. 1 ~-"' block to beach. $145 mo- • > : 536--7146 I ~. Deleware Studio Apts. 2620 Delt"'\l.•are. Ht Bch 536.1816 The J\.1utual Bldg. Oi.lif. 94070 givi.Qg phone Reasonable 897-8452 Ext. 4403 Days number. Lost 6401 CHILD Care, n:1Y Corona de! 10 Acres VaJenciai;;, 4 BR ?.far home: children 3 yrs & house nr Escondido. For D SEXC::LUSIVE ' e $500 REWARD over. Hour. day, weekly Comm'l income Orange Co. • '49-0833 • 20 AC. level: val SlO,<XM>: tree & clear, Close to Yucca Valley & Pioneer To\vn, higb desert. Will trade tor units. 646-1675 ' t:L::ag;.::u:.:n:.• .;B:.:•.::••;;;h'---4-70~S f,;. -1 BR Apts Near ocean--~$~130~ I Ready 8ept I, 202 \Valnut Singles or couples. LEASE! Reservation~ taken. 673-1784 2863 E. Coast Hwy, CdM Call 8 AM to 5 PJ\1 6'1S4070 SECRETARIAL I TRIBUTORSHIP for information leading to rates. 673-7737 DAYS or No. San Diego Co. For- NationaJ C.O. will appoint dis-recovery of heirloom an. BABYSl'ITING In my homo. tin Ritts. "~2-5000 Westminster DELUXE North end bachelor '·: 2nd Or, pvt entr. garage, ~:if" deck, 0<.-ean VW, 1 bl·bch· j· ~!;-shopping. 494-9982 f ,,. /\UGUST Rental: Deluxe 5612 , OCEANFRONT apt with ---------- • -· ·"""=':..· •_::94-.:..:_72ffi:__:...c''-''-'-'.cPc.m_._ 2 BEDROOMS ;"', ·: -\\'lth garage. $120 month. Bit- RENT ALS ins., carpets~-disposal, water ·-. Apts. Unfurnished paid. 13836 Locust St. ,.. • Call between 2 & 5 , r ~General 5000 • 636-4120 e . . RENT SERVICE J\.1odem offices, carpets, air conditioning, parking. From $65 per month. Orange Coun· ty Bank Bldg. 230 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. 642·1485 Newport Beach ExC!cutive offices 432 lo 565 sq. ft . each, near post olfice. Thri\'ing business a r ea. Parking. Utilitles paid. Division of Highways 213: 62{).3.'114 \Vet>kdaya tributor to serVice local '" stores ~/fast moVing house· tique gold jewelry l!itolen any age, days Mon. thru 'ffi ECONOLINE HEAVY hold prod\K'l. No selling as =~Ii: ~k~st Blvd. No Fri. $l5/wk. ~s.7097 DUTY Sl,IXXI eq. or TR.ADE accounts established by Co. 494.1355 or 4M.J62G CHILD Care my home. Lrg ror older car or motorcycle Requires 4 brs wkly to start. fncd yrd. G o o d lunches. plus cash. & cash investment ot $l500. BROWN Al~ator billfold in Refs. 646-4318 &!2-4826 F.or interview call 827-9'S15 phone bobth next to 1 . or write White Cn:iss Indus. ·Al bertson's mkt, 19th & Brick, Masonry, etc. ~Br, den, 2 ~ ha, sep .. din- 2825 W, Lincoln Av.•., A·a· Harb. Rew. 642-7890 6560 Ing rm, newly rcpamtel. • " ----------1 ________ .:;:~ Trade for smlr hse or condo helm. P~RT_-Irish settor found in BRICK, Concrete, Carpentry in Mesa Verde. 20CWI Baler- NUTVTLLE, U.S.A. is now vie. Santa Ana Ave, and Custom Cabinets s ·a11 · b aric Dr. 546-0932 Mes.a Dr. Flea coller and · m JO s1::::..::.:...:::::.::=:_ __ _ accepting applicatior.s for leather collar. 642_1816 OK. Free Est. 962-6945 42 unit J-lywd, older. Bread franchises in Orange Coun-& buttrr incomt'. Trade ty. locations are wailing in LOST Vic Santa Ana Ave & Carpentering 6590 $60,(XX) eq. / \\"aterfront hm, Sale or Trade for large Trailer 20' Trailer. Self cont. combination Ref. Sleeps 5, ne1v tires. Top cond Butane hot \\"ater. 548·7550 2·STY VtEW r.1odern So. Pasa. Hills 3 Br. · 3 Ba · tam rm • study · air cond. for FASHION Island area Owner (213J 255-0455 " 3 Rooms Furniture 2 BR, crpts, drps, gar. $115 mo. Avail Aug. 6 83!).50'18 or 839-35Cfl Anaheim, Laguna Sch., San. Mesa Dr. Blk w/brown land or com! property s ta Ana , Orange, Hunting1on mrklng5. Dachshund. Ans to CARPENTRY Calif. lhrnrr ·(213\ 523.120~ 6 Nice 2 BR 2 BA rented $745 mo should be $800. 6.6 Jn1. P&J $373 mo ta.'< & ins $134 mo. $2[T,lnJ eq for home or ? &1&-3389 . ' $25 Month F1JLL OPTION TO BUY No deposit o.a.c. Lagun• Beach S705 DELUXE office, 800 sq. ft . Air.eond., carpeted & draped. 8732 Westminster Ave., Westminsll.T: walking dist. to W. Orange County Courthouse. 894-1337 Bch. & other areas. $14,950 Frrddi. 646-530!! MINOR REPAIRS. No Job (9-5! Cash req. Fully secured in-Lrg Tu•quoise Broich-Too Small. Cabinet in gar·f~-~------- H.F.R.C. 100 CLIFF DRIVE LUXURY F1JRN/UNFURN Ye.arly Lease. 1 bedroom steps to Shore & Shopi! Oceanview from every Apt. vest. shou1d return ls! yr. ages & o t be r cabinets. HAVE 14' ski boat, 35 HP Lost Sat. nite Vic Berkshires' S45--117S E'O'es 640-2372 Day• Evintude t:n.g.: .A·l shape. 2 BR 2 BA Twnhse Brook- hurst Adams 5% 'h int $3700 eq. + $11X)J Fum? Vac. P&I S62 Tax, ins & main!. $-13 lot home or ? 64&-3389 " . Furniture Rentals Call for appt. '642-2713 or Restaurant or Cabanas Ma· · 1v·11 -"-f write fo 1617 •W,.t"lilf D< . , , H. 0. Anderson. I ... _..,, · or camping 517 W. 19th, C.lt1. 548-3481 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 " ·• nnas. REWARD .. 673-2245. trailer in like l'Ond Suite 210, Newport Beach, . e NO JOB TOO SMALL e · STORES FOR LEASE Beach & Slater Hntg Bch. llliO sq . n . .aoo sq, tt. {n3> 382-2397 Cal. 92660 LOST 2 Toy Poolle.s. Silve~. Residential . IndLtStrial Com-642-0427 Evenings Vic Cedanv~, Midway Ci-mereiaJ. Repair & remodel. '67 . Cad El Dorado, fully ty. REWARD . 89l-l948 Reasonable. Lie. bonded, in. equipped, leather int. ·& This one! Food-to.go, xlnt BLACK & white ma.le cat. l1Ured. stereo. Under rectory w.ar- ' Costa Mesa 5100 from $1.50 mo up. lease 494-2449 DON'T MISS ... HARBOR GREENS LUXURIOUS view apt, 3 BR, 2 Ba, elec blt-ins & dishwasher, frpl. 494-9843 512-29th NEWPORT Beuh Small grd floor office in Graphic Arts Bldg near be,y. Schworer 673-2654 $60 loc. Grosses $4500 mo, Own· Vic. ~Iyer Pl. & Beach e 962-1916 e 962-8371 e ranty, Pa.id $8400. Trade toe \\'hat do you think of our "TRADER'S PARADISE" Drop us a card. Cl.assifieO D~pt, P.O. Box 1875, Daily Pilot, Npt Bch, Calif. er will train. * 64.2-9453 * MASTER Carpenter new and TD's or what ? 67~35 Ted McArdl• Rllr 6405 ,. .. ,.... 14 P'" h 0 " " * e DELUXE 2 BR Wlfurn apl close to ocean. ~TEDICAL Suite, 1,000 sq. ft. Attr., air·cond.: good ]pc. ~, • . Personals 536-3900 an"' p.m. * * * * • BACHELOR • UNFURN. e FURN. studio. 497-1056 Z2'l W, Wilson, CM 642-6817 1'J Faund My Lav• REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS l ~!'!!'!!!!~~~!'!!!!l!!'!!""'!!!!!!'!!!!f!!!'fl!!'!i"1'!Jlll!!l!!!!!!!! SIDEUNE In Av1lon'; CABINETS. A""'" job. SERVICE DIRECTORY-SERVICE DIRECTORY · · from $100 aboard the schooner "Kelpie'' 23 yrs exper. 548-t713 Boat Dealerships USCG licenied. Single guys Electrical 6640 Housecleaning 6135 Are-extremely profitable and & gals 2540 week . end Cement, Cancrete 6600 Rentals Wanted 5990 Reas. rent. 548-6761 Lncl ti! ----------C I fl'ITORNEY'S of f ice: 1500 , 1 . 2 &: 03 ~D·RM. BUSINESS Woman needs 1 sq. ft.; ettr., air-cond., good • . ~-------.. ELECl'RICIAN, Licensed & CLEANING • inside-'out: atn be set Up on a bot.It $1200 cruise. Depart sun~t Fn· EXPERT CEMENT \VORK bonded. Small jobs, "Painting, rug cleaning wruf working capitol. Call Mr. day. ~ per person ~ncludes Reasonable Prices. Specializ. mainten. & repairs. ·548-5203 ruRN. &: UNFURN. Br unfurn Apt, CM . Joe. Reas. rent. 54s-fil61 H.a'·" Pool•. ~"d Cft.... Ne\\'POrt, CorOna del Mar, "'"' • .. u.u """' J1 B h SEPARATE Office. Furnish- Nelson (213) 461-3267 everything. First cl'Ulse Aug-ing in custom patios. Free• I~=======~~ washing. Free est. 64&-5103 UNIQUE FRANCHISE ust 9, ID, 11. Hurry! First 10 est Cal! anytime642-9496 Floors 6665 APT. CLEANING Center, Adj. to Shopping -unt c or Laguna, To ed. 1860 B Newpt Blvd C.M. No -i. oflow-... $100 mo, Gar or carp;>rl ,,.. "" ., • ., """"' $&5. Broker 646-39'18 -2700 Peler90n Way, at Har-necessary, IN......,.,.,., after 5 =========='I bar & Adams, Costa Mesa. I cp~m= .. =-;o=-~--~ Commercial 6085 For men & women with mgt .. 546--0370 NATIVE Californian wants 2 ability. No exp: we train. -1---or 3 Br. house. Desire BEST Buy on Bristol, 1 acre OUered by lnternationaJ I~ privacy, 2 children/to 1160 in CM. All ulil .. in. 2 lg o!-Yardage Fair. $15,000 to ·~ Exeellent. park · like sur· mo. Local area. P.O. Box fices, Owner 548-5187 $25,000 invst opens retail rowidings for adults requir-1924 CM store in assoc with this Jam· ing peace & quiet. ;;-====~~~-~ ous Co. Jim Owens, 546-4647 Discriminative Tenants l\1ATIJRE Cple wishes to rent lndusfri1I Rental 6090 · t l 3 bdr SERVICE Fluff & Fokl 1, 2 & 3 BDR.i\1. APrS. wln rr or yr y. ms. No 4200 sQ. Fl. in modem cm· LAUNDROJ\1'.AT Est. 12 y" ·--; POOL. NO CHILDREN children or pets. Corona del MARTINl9 UE ?.1ar area ooly. 61'S.-4698 cretc building l\t-2 zone S300 at 788 w. 19th Costa J\1esa, -mo. {213) 434-5082 netting $1300. Long Jets .. , > a,, 3 ha, pref. CdM High • GARDEN APTS. suit.couple. ~ers retiring. ~' ~·!!is7 t. Rca.'5, rates. Ref. Loti 6100 LI 8-$K!, T A~ 6 P.M. • . 18th & Santa Ana, C.~1. ....~""' • ' Call Mrs. Hendrrson 646.55~2 I ~R~E~S~PON=~s~fB~L~E"""~E;,~,-,.,,.-1~ive 2 LOTS on Santiago, NB TV STORE , • ~ 1777 Santa Ana , Apt 113, C.tll. \\"anls comfortable 1 Br. cash. \lrms or ti-ode, Fee Good location, opportunity for -,, Bayfront Apt. 646-5755 ('Vt.~. simple. 64&-8565 two people. $2500 s!ock & ·.:. (2) DLX large apts. 3 BR 2 PRIME CorOlla Del Ma.r equipment. Also has flooring • BA. bit-ins, quiet area. Rooms for Rent 5995 Ocean view lot. Fee plan. Phone 54&-529-\ -,,. Adults. $180. 2285 Fordham -siniple. Owner 675-4750 AUTO Repair space for lease Or. :i-18-9417 LOVELY Room & priva te in auto center, complete • " 2 BR, frplc, crpts. drps, • ' b!t1n11, pri p::itio. po o I , Adulcs, no pets. $1 4 5 Bath KilchE>n privl. Pool. Acre•ge 6'200 w/hoist. SJ.25 mo. 13072 ·"'~"';'.ng•~•gl~t6~p~m~. ==== 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;; Century Bl, Garden Grove. , .; 5.'H-692{1, Eves 54~73.ll Guest Homes 5998 APPROXIMATELY 73 Acres >16-5163 :--;--,·i -A-V-A-lL-.-A-,-,-.-,,-,-,~,~B~R~.-.-,,-. -----''--·---' in \Vest Riverside; beautiful cpts., drapes, bltns. Adults, I -. no pets. Sl.25. ~s.6769 ... ' I=~_,.-=-,-,--,~ PRNATE Room for am· bulatory lady. Good food. Nice surroundings, 543-4753 REAL ESTATE , , QUIE.1 2 BR., bltns, lndry. r·-" avail. i\dults. No rc!rig. General 6000 : -$130 ~1ontb. 546-7285 Eves. ~ ... 2 Br. 11., ba. Orps/crpts. Income Property ' .-Bltns, pri gar/patio. Adults oiiiiiii!iiiiiiii!iii:iil~iiijiiijiiii I : • $l40 mo. M~ll3 1'6 Furnished Unils VERY choice. 1250 sq, ft . 2 BR . 11, BA immac, pool: _. .• j SI61)..$l70. ~lQ.6001 Dys. 1~~-,~--'C..,.-1 BR., w/\\' carp., frplc. Beams; 1 adults, no pets. Sl lJ5 Yearly. 673-7629 Pool. NMr Disneyland 7 .24x gross. Pele Barrell & Co. lake '•\'ithin the property Covers approlC. 20 acres. Shopping cenler HCross the street trom on<' ,end of lhe parttl. Ideal lor trail<'r park site. Price $450.00o. Will cuisider lease. For more in· formation please call Ernest f..c::khofr Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. 1818 \V. Chapn1an Ave. Orange, Cali!. 541 -2621, Eves-wkncts GJ3-697~ 2-1 /3 ACRB VACANT LAND Zonl.'d C·2, \\'est Bolsa Ave. In Sonia Ana. St1Hable for n101el. apts., comn1l!l'cial, CQnvalrscent hospila.J, l\nd many other U!IC9. Phone 542·9S33 for more delails. 21.i LEVEL Ae, L.A. Co. ou.tsklrt5 660' comtr fron- 1age. Nr fr\\')'. $3000 FP. SJ(I dn. $30 mo. 962-375.2 MUFn..ER Shop for lease, complete w/hoist. $150 mo. 13072 Century Bl, Garden Grove. 534-6920. E v es 545--733l FOR Sale or Trade. Pa.int & Body Shop. Good Business. Perf!'('! Location. Retiring. 546-41~. 546-7~57 Costa r>tesa Health Club, equipment & sauna for salt. 113: 437-7069 POWER Sweeping Service. Approx $1000 per nio in- come. Equip incl. M0-478.' Investment Oppor. 6310 U.S. Govl'rnment Le a a e d Bldgs. Nenl Jl a "t t n e rs . Return 10%. (n4) 642-2395 Real Estate Loans 6340 BORROW on Your Equity Private 2nd Mortg. money guys and first 10 ga ls. . Fast & Thorough. I furnish CALIFORNIA CRUISES CUSTOM PATIOS & LINOLEUM, carpet, tile. Re· Everything. 642-8164 Capt. Ernie 548-4191 Bloc~ -w:ns· ~ ':~etoe model, repair. Many rem-=="==''====== --'---------sawing remov · -1 · nana. Free est. 839ol6n, Inferior Decorating6737 To NANCY CEl\tEi'IT Work, all lypes. 5'11-8654 Bela~ed Happy No job too small. Free est. .::.:.:.:=:_______ • Residence· Comm'I e Birthday Sweetheart Ji. STUFLJCK 548--fl615 CARPET • Lie. Contractor e Painting, int. & ext. So,.,... J couldn't be with all prices · free estimates • Wall C yo~· Jon.......,, .. ""th. BEST In concrete. Walks, ,,.,._.,=="='=v:';:"'~"~"'~=== overings JV-.. ;/ pool decki, floors, patios. • • Color Coordination Love, 642-8514 Gard•ning 6680 FREE ESTIJ\tATE Al U censed & Insured AS'l'R.OLOGY . Fall Classes Licensed -Quality ANTHONY'S MODERN now forming. Beginners . Ccnient work, SJ9·5C66 Garden Service DECORATORS Adv8:"ced · Introductory Child Care 6610 646-1948 536-9'5l3 Meelmg, Tuesday, Aug. 6, I c_..;..-....;. ___ _:::..;c LANDSCAPING Ironing 6755 8:30 PM. Balboa Pavilion, SPECIAL Summer program. LA\VNS REMODELED upstairs. For furthf'r in-Ages 2% to 6. S a.m. to 5:30 Exp hort!culturisl. KEPHART'S C · · formation. 6Th-2140 af_l6__ p.m. $18 \\'eek. Cl a vis Reas. monthly Gardening has moved to i"::~ml;~~~~~ GROOVE with Montesorri Schools, 1525 N. JAPANESE GARDENER T, 0.1. Open l\1on-Sat THE GROUP Santa Ana, C.M. 64&-3706. !==~=,~~~= Malnt & cleanup. Reliable. - Parties & Trips for Couples 6620 Rens nionthly r a 1 es. Detective 6780 & Singles~ Meet ol!~rs 1 _C_o_n_r_,.~c-t_o_rs _____ 827-5248 aft 6 pm Investigating, w/same interests? ------·----776-694.1 3.9 P .M. Don't Buhgle this Job Japanese Gardener The mooey you"re S(X'ndln g Exper.. con1plete yard FLY TO CATALINA is your own. Free est. 15 S('rvice. Free estimates ONLY FLIGHTS FROM yrs. Xlnt service. NC\\• con· 5~S.7958 e S.16-0724 ORANGE ('QUNTY AlR· · Add • R od 1 PORT. Catalina • Vegas strucT """c · "81~·~ ~!1100 1'v· MO\VTNG. Edi::ing, vacalawn. om arney .............. G 'fl If r Airlines. e 546--6612 673.2473 en c eanup. acing. Lovely Longing? 0 & r I I n g Licensed Contractor 0 ream l n g? S weetie Residential -Commercial Searching? Maint & Repairs. Free Est DIAL·A-DATE 673-2129 635-:iGSl 3-9 P M ----------· _. Addilions * Remodeling: Odd Jobs. • 54s.6955 RELIABLE: Rcu. OrientaJ care. Cleanup, odd jobs. Vincent. 642-0326 Japanese Gardening ·J>rotessionnl Maintenllllee &16~3 ATTENTION!! • CAR DRIVERS e \Van! oomplrte Calif. drivea"s r<>wrd? tickets. accidents, etc~ See if they are still a mat1er of record. Send full name. address, driver's lic- ense nQ. & birthdate with $5 check or m.o. to Orange Coast Detectives 2909 Alta Laguna Laguna Beach 926.'il -Landscaping 6810 EX·ACTRF.SS/ arti'lt look-Fred ii. Gerwick, Lie. Ing for write.r, art Is t 673-60tl * 549-2170 !behl"ern 35-50\ to share lg. PATIOS e Patio Cover& Cut & F.dge Lawn \VEEDING hacienda, Rosarlta Beach, r>lail'lterian~. Licensed · hauling, land. for $l:l5 per month. 5'18-975.5 Room Additions, Lie. ~g.4008, 54:;..8570 aft • PM scaping: It. construct.; reli· 642""5952 Oays-Eve-\Vknds able work. Frt-e Estimates ALCOHOLICS Anonymous ,_ -~--·---e JAPANESE.'"GARDENTNG cull 847-2009 Before.! PM Harbor Area. Phone 673·81'2'4 Car .... t Cleaning 6625 Service Cleanup, Landscap. P .O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. -~ in;t, 5.1l-7034 art 7p.m ./ 1-IEAVY yard work & soil R • lut'on 'Y Host preparation. i\.fcCann & Son AUTO INSURANCE ffI? e o 1 a LO\V COST Mninll.•nance Refused7 OMV Filing! Dry Cleaning Method MO\V -EOCE _SPRAY * 49~697 * Ph Valda * 839-1123 Rugs. Drape!!, Upholstery FERTILIZ'E. 962-7349 CORRAL'S lndsop & rototill Can be used lmm('(H<llt'IY scrv. Free est, have own 1 \VILL pla,y piano for your after \\"Ork is compleled G S " equiprnent. 962-4764 parties gtven at your home. eneral ervlcet, ~I.: -="=='=="=:;;.'=== F I I f .. m. Sal~. Se?'\Ti('(' . ' • or nom na ee. 1-llnd lnslallt1lion PROFESS. \Yindow, watla &. P•perh1n9ing JIOLIDAY 1-IEALTii SPA e M~tcrOlarJ;r flr. clean\~: busln"i.as. Painting 6850 MD1BERSlttP FOR SALE. e &n''2'n1rricsrd resid., & construction... ;._;~~!._ ___ _::;:,:: 675-Sl32 Modern Rug & Carpet CryslaJ Wiftdow Oeanlfli PmlesSionaJ Painting •L••rn Self Hypnosi1• '3.15 Cr«lsha"'· Los Angcle·s Free E!:Hm:tt!':I MS-1737 Spr.Y • Srush • Roller TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, the Tile Man* Cu.st. work. Install .I: repairs. No jtlb too small. Plaster patch. Le8.ding shower repair. 847-19'57/M6-0206 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job Wanted, Ledy 7020 LADY With nursing exp. wru care for lady or gent in your h~e. Light hoosewOrk OK. Be. of references from lo re!. 548-4534 Job Wanted M!ln & Wom•n 7030 ---~ COUPLE Want& to mllllage apl. ln exchange for' apt & salary. Age 40. Ref, 213: 868-IB48 Dom•stic Help 2035 No Fee. El]lploy'1t pieys Om1panion, drive .. , •:. $280 Companion P/Nur .. to $350 Nur Aide, pri . . • . . • . . $1.66 Sitters home-hosp , . $1.00 up Housekpr. for cpl .••••. 1300 Conve\ Aide ••..•.•• pxl up HO~EM.AKERS, ~C. 1638 E. 17h St., Santa Ana. LlVE INS Employer pays fees George Byland Apncy 106 B E. 16th. S.A. 547-0395 Chinese live-ins. Cheerful Perma.oe"nt. Experienced. Fa.r EB.it Ag~nc.y 00-8703 Agencies •. M~n 7100 ARGUS Work Near Home Cook .. • .. • .. .. .. • .. • $22 clay Chef ....•.• , .. . .. • $600 mo Cht:!f/mgr .•.••.•••• $130 wk Disti"'•asller , .•••.••.. $90 wk Waiter ............ $1.65 hr Bus boy • . • • . . . • • . $1.50 hr ARGUS EMPLOYMENT CONSULTANTS AGENCY 2'M3 WestcliU, N.B. 548-7'796 1624 E. 17th St., S.A. 547"336 Help W•nfed, Men 72,00 ATIENTION YOUNG Met ff you've been refu~ em- ployment because you were loo young, or have had to settle for a position that does not pay well, consider this rare opportunily, $3.22 H" This week our corporation will employ a consclenc. ious yo1.mg man to help out on a full time basis in our mercbandiaing department. "'ork where youth is an nd- vantnge. Receive complete training and top pay \\ith no problems of strikts, lay. offs etc. Excellent ovtr· lime opportunity with un· limllcd advancement. For appointment call 539-1183 betw 9·2 P.M, Fry Cook " -Kitchen Trainee Permanent job. Chance for ad\'ancement. INo student~ Pl('aS('l A.l>Pb In Persol"I Bob'1 Big Boy 154 E. l71b ~t Co.la 1'1esa, Cal. Mount. & Desert 6210 FREE APPRAISAL A PROMPT SERVlCE Reputable Company s<:rvln~ Orange County 18 Years. Satlll'r l>fortpgc Co .• Inc. 3.16 ):;. 17th SL. Costa Mesa 642-217\ 545-0611. Niitht• &. "1.·kends 673--7865 642.1157 PRIVATE pl\J1)' will buy your equity or '!'rust Deeds. EY"t~ 642-7,11 544-971' e.-e cl11u 833-1174 213 • 29&.5100 Co1IM'1 H I' 6730 776-S61J 776-34l7 ========== lsPRING Spt'cial! 5c 11 r1. _•_u_•_n~g'-------Paperhanging & Painting. I S'sE;;RRiiviiicr'<~"~'""=""~"~"-,~.,-,-1, AnnounC9menfl 6410 Advanced Carpel -Uphol,.. LITE HAULING Ir CLEAN clKn Ir re.as. 20 Yrs. ex. E.x1>-nec. Full & part tlme. ,; S ud tery. SU.USS Tull tree UP Loe ref, ~·13:22 aft 5 p.m. Inqul~ O!t'VT'on Sllltion ' ,_ SEPT. 1.t; leue, $159 uril pd. 2 BR., cpla, drpl., beom ce(I,, trplc. Nr. bftch. Adu! ... 61J.,l!S2 l lfette nl•lth . t lo PREE ESTll\tATF.S. INTERIOR &. EXTERIOR Sprl~--d:tll' at Ei:llni::~r. 118 ' Hospilnllty 1• Ollr Motlo Draperiu 6630 * 5'1&-78-19 * PaiQlina. Free tit. COOK-MENU~ FREE STEAM W1TH SWEDISH MASSAGE * ZAFFlNO'S * CLEAN Lots, gorage1, tic, Llc. & Ins. Ou1ek ~14 fifaeri only, 6 da~s. Call Open lvkdys 10 am. 11 pro 25%, en -All fabrits Tree ttG•I\ dump, ~kip, Painting, exterior, illterlor or flP.PI. 67l.6S80 ~ndays 10 am . 8 pm 1822~ Newport, C~f &i2-6866 backhoe, ft I, ,ltilde. 962-8'1"45 Uc. Ins. 11 yrs exp. F'ree est. &:x:PER Upho!~terer & Ctn-: 519 E. Broadway DON'T give .1 1 I HAUti"'IG Trash plc~ 5..,_5325. Acoustical ceU. vn 'Man. Boa1 background l ' NEW Soundprool J•Bft. 2 Be, ACl'Qlt fm. Coco's. 1665 1mn. 118'1S200. w-<>239 OfARGE )llOll!' want ad now. EAsrslDE Co&ta Me;a: 2 BR Trfplu; lge patio. -$371500 2158 Cabrillo. 673-8861 DON'T 1UST WISH tor some- thilll to fW"Dl&b your home • .. ftnd .,..., blJ>I i. ... ""'1 0aai&d Ad~ OWNER MUST SELL! 5 ncres In subdiviisioo, Nr'A'• hen')'. allf. 18 ml. test of Barstow. "Land ·of Lakes" •rca • 90 mRn·made i.kcs Ui attn. MU('b dcvt:lopmt:nt ~ ing on. Le-vtl land, water undf'rtround, Will 11acrilk.'¥! Call O\\'l'lf:r 347--0040 1111 6 wk· df!lya. MY Tltne weekends. Allk for l.J.?e. Mortga99s1_ T.O.'• 6345 MUST SeU to clOle estate well )(!C\lred 1st T . O . $24,000, 6'1(. pl,)'lng fll fJSO mont:h, 847-5955 Eves Long Beach (213) 437-7069 quJclt eoab 1~ ~:~itb ge, 'l'rimmlng._A.nythinR ·wt-do l =D~IA~L-odit.c=. ~1 ~6ITT6=~78~. -.,.,.,..;,.-,-l betft.SAry. 642.37~ For Dally· PUot Want Ads. Daily Pilat want Adi it a ll. ~r •ol'k S45-J797 )'Ol.lr 11d, then ~ii b<.lck and 'DIE QUJCKF:R-\'O'~U"CAU.=~I Ola1 &U$7t. 642-5678 Dial ~78 for RESULTS llaten ti> the phone rtzt&! n!F; QtnO<ER YOU SEU,: ' I •• ;. , I ' ' i ' , ' -l - " .. ,. 0 ~ •• ,. 4 - I. " r T !O ill .. <. m = :o " & ,, ,, 80 50 66 >P 00 ,. I. D3 lO "' 00 vk vk ., "' T • Ml •· ., 0 •I ,, n ,, , (. l· • h ,. ·. ,. ' ' '· " 1, •• j ... • -. --------------~~.,.....~-----------------------·---~~----~ ..... ~~~.,,_,,._,,....,.,,.....";'1 • ,' -.,, A-1, IM IOU I llMPLOYMINT IOll 1 .llMl'LOYMINT IOll I IMPLOYMINT JOIS I IMl'l.OYAGNT JOIS I IMPLOYMINT I IMPLOYMINT MlllCHANDISI I ~ w......, -7200 Heir w-. Mio 7200 '!'IP w...,.., Min 7200 ""'-.::'"" Ho~!,i.?!w~·~·1_""..;._.....!!!j:::!~~,--..2!!!.l~·~SA1.~1;;AHDb;;;r;;;11AD~1~. ~IAL~l~AHD~;;;nAD;;;;;;~"~ I l-W=·='----'7-'4CIO""' *-. 7400 ,_,...,. -PV11tllurt IOOO -. .. rliiit. fllD n-, .. 111n D' h h lELllCTftlC -· ..., card """""'' -11 was er Wu le,11'1 6111.fllDAY nYPllCH ..,,,,......~'-'·-::.=-..:-... 1 llU ... C ,, .... .-'mW &Id ...... r..,m.d tor ......,_°'---n....i • -....Am.t'- MrilH C01111Uniullons 2230 S. Anno St, Santa AM, C.111. 540-2'20 "" ...... -tw41Y _....,. 1BEIYPE OPERATOR MUil be UM to Mn U:J olllft, AWY Pat FollOlft ~ut.2229 COUIS RADIO CO. 19700 ,...,..._ llOld '""'""" ...... AD ..,ikanta miiewed • mllit wldri no Mu to- _.,. l*:e. Colar, o.d .. - LEAD COOK DISHWASHER ...... lap....,. l·JP.K. RBIBI l lH MACHllSlS APPLY Ill PER!ON Newport klch's AA -d>·"-WIU'JOR EXCE!j!UOR -., Jib &1111-*',..it!oo-· vruua MEDITERRANEAN ""'' ""' ~' -l'"tNlll\"I IMftuf... COCO'S newest end mod ills b our PllDt x.. eu1. s.tiM • 5tM5CO lurint -ny-la erciting c..ton-...,...ia.w-·or. !'Nor -lndlllldll Sl'ANISH ELECTRIC -·-· s.nte Ana h• .,_.. ~tbl wU mtmtt.. dpUilDOt AlJba Numcr-Near new. Z.U" .,...... 1"" .., "'" _, """ ftmoll Hlllbargers • • • ,.,,.,,ant -""" ---1co1 ~ -., t::'7 <:7. Q1A su...-...... - torlho1e11ow1,._ -.-ptlng•p--·------· -:lurnilun Jie~ta-_'l•' ELre....,.. ...... 125 -. ltlOftll . ISSS W. ~.. _,,_,.Ion f wt11...i-.-"-'Y Pit Foloom P-cao41950.Sbowotry • Hind Screw c..ta -,........ ' or: -wtth ...-~. oxt. 2229 New Sho-m Samples &11Pleb-t!W240 M··"' n.... Toyota Salesmen e Cocktlll Wlilress ~ ....':: :,-,:v;;.: COUllS w111 s.11 Any ,. ... 1nd1vw~.11, ,.,_ a ~"' 1130 ..... ne "'"'r. 2 ........... (Cl...., lmmed (•~•need) ......... """' --8' Carved arm div1n, lg m•tcblnc chair with Selsoll Siie! with °"""' °""'IY" ,.,... ,..... "' ond """' -., -RADIO CO belutltul hbrlci; 3 pc hexagQD dirk oak din-• Precision lathe ... A ....... T-. ........ coll MR. H. c. ROSS ... • Inc Ht with blacl< or IVOCado frJllled ch•iro Fall ... _.. " - • Comb. New A UIOd .. _....... 1'700 Ja-llOld & vinyl CUlhiODI; 3 pc bedroom HI, 9'dr Mr . Pl..... A °""" .. the ""-.._• • """'""'" e KHdlen Help iw--h & Mn tlteaer with 11 1t1med mirror, 2 le ""'" °"' 11qor • a-...,...IVI • v....,. Plan IJll6EYll wo-' e<>mmod .. & matchlnc hHdbo""1 modeu nl"" ... Price• • Demo Plan alub.dl Doem't it make • Turret lalht Set • Bao-(dlys or eyes.) l>Mlloocollclmtlllc :::.::!~ ONLY $42t.95 .............. -. ... • IAlautS!ackcol-~./ buy! I. · !IOI 1. Cor ,...,;.., -.... "-,Ootor,a...ci..-1$895 Value) WAAD'SBALDWIN =o Ip Ind Opefllor ~~L ~EBIY~TOYOHT~ •-ly In _...., '·nt1 •-· 1Ml1 N"""°"' C.M., tlO-MM -~ ~ ·~ .....,._, r· r1 .. -or TERMS 11 low" $3 W•k • Auto-..:· Screw ~-~~~! 333 .,.,.de Dye -"'M"i"'T"'l"'R""MA=t"'D--1 Nodawft-U10..,r1h>Ncho-pl1n Or-Co'sLa,....t llllllK. -·-• ~ Newport .... Aa ~~llY l'OR WATER DlSTRICT • ~ 0...Sh>p Mus!c Sh>N 147"5" ~·· No -....,_,,,. A d F 't Wurll-·-A ........ Mich. (Traub) SALES --"""'-"""• pprove urn1 ire Fltd1'r, -.1 ••••• REPRESD<TATIVD ud --"" al 1'11,yw .,.._ ....,., ,_., set up & oper. ~ to••• .. •••t (ockllll Wilfress -.. -...1 -INoF1ncyFront-BUTQu1l1tyV1IUMln11d1J GrandL -delllas to .,.. WANTED oandlliau. Clll ... ...._ 1 2159 Horbor Blvd. Cotto Mota 541-9660 WALLIOISMANNING'I bcollont ._., benoflls ond workl,. conditions.· 100 """"" lundt, --• sl Lm. .• 5 p.m. -,.. Opon 9.9 Dolly-Sundoy 11-5 MUSIC cnY ln0rqe0xmty.'lb1'11u Ho ess a»mm.. 12 v .. r. a.tme locatlon-1ame owner1 Mm So. Brlllrll opportantt1 to mtltl' e llM c.mp111r • .a,. Cbltf.·~ * 5to.2te5 A-ooty Appljl ......... ==~~ ~~ !!-Oporoten Jo~o -. Wom. 7500 .... ~. r ' "j!"J, JtOW HERE-the - up DOI_,..,., W< tnllt. $$PM e Cem-r S~ ..,..__ T-.. Mam.,, tbnl J'rido,y 511-Cl. ¥1111111 Fund lml881 l ltt Oporolen Him--.._ lnvaton Inc. 2100 N. Kain. nUD Lll -tilt flD9t "Id 1300 E. Normandy Place, Santa Ana a 1*dc N. or McFadden 1: ..... ..... • MTsT ,,__,.,.,. Decorator llCllll1DT-PllILLIPS co. u I 1. c-· Hl1hwoy ....... lN uar N. -• IGtb • 2 Chopper Oper1ter1 ---eratt chopperw. tw..,.,t llNch -i•N uncelllll0n of 122,000.Qf -Ala l'ull °' "to':. "me NIWPOllT BEACH Sponllh ond Mocllterronean furntturo pedti4 M Newt.,.-, .... N.... BLOND WW'libs' Spine t 11-W.".Gnodl • a flbo<1l111 ltollon ---------le 2 Boncl1n I OPENINGll ~ J, W. Roblnsoa Hu-tr Siik l'nuer • Got-y-.. .• L.. Mulf: ... ~ • PAllTS MAN APPUP Full -- Must lie--. 546-4670 e Cofumltl1 Yocht Corp. Aff'l.Y PmSONNZL IODY & FINDER :ns -Aw. I>-< --l'rt J, W. Rollltl-e Chila-· Calli. fashion lllond Hu -!or SERVICE WlllTIR N..._ Beocll l'art ti-e SAILBOATS An -_.IY ,,_ Full ... bmelltl, -· --'"' --~ waddns ~ ft. JD&INf9cttnr. Must haft Expcimot lftfefnd MW'/95 --.. col -Exoell<at _ .. bo&b: be ...... , ol _,.. luck f'reHllllJ APPLY Pl!IUICllNEL vllll>a: 10 em-A IDftl· A HAND PRES8JNG. Im-l<M Moo -1'rt tor t>n>ductlon ....... ""' modi.I• -la -'""'°" lsllnd FRY COOK H11 oponl,.a for: Janitorial MaflltellClllCI & . .....,. ---.... 1a111--... ~·-""'· __ .. _ -·-.JdNlwuit0 too-- APPLY IN PERSON ---10 Lm. IO 9: SO p.m. 19 or cwv resume A Ury expected ·~ 111.ctary, ~ No~ Btilch Appty la penon ta Vlcto< --rm ........... APPIYJAY·MAR. AA --ildl1 J (. PEllllEY CO, •• -~. ~BlYd.,N.U..U,.. INC, 2907 S. OU,..... ~ • -p.m. ~ wood ..... u. _. __ •• Sna-L Shop N 1 ' ..-... _,. 11'-.J p.m. N~ Center ""' o. 11111 Ettoto ORDER TAK 24 Polhlon lslond A .... !._rwter'I .... H ... h 0. ......, piano I: bmeh. ~ oond, Items u followa: Gorgeous 8 n . cu.slom quilted 1'ec -"· fl 50 . llOfa with 1epar1te loose pillowa with heavy oat. 17M391 alter 5 i:a. trim decor and matching chair, 3 matching oak SCHAAS BABY GRAND ..,....,.,al tablea, (2) 58 ' tall decorator lamps, P1ANO IWlhmtl. r~ NE banging chain· IWlg lampa In wrought Iron, on OOND11 ISO<I • l7SU>! 8-plece ting size muter bedroom suite In pecan ~ -p..o poneled Mediternnun style with top quality l!IOO. "'°" --""-15 yr. warranty ting size mattreaa & box 1prlnp. 541-m all 5 Splnllh decor dining set, etc. SPlNEr ~ piano A vrw. .._,.. .. ,......, Sl ID.M bench, pod c:cod; $«11. ::'0~~~1.~~---···············-··:.~698.00 =-""1='"'=====1 T9t1111 ~v•1l•W-Newc•111•r• •• C11if.,.11i1 Telnt1lon l20S Cr•dlt ..,,,, • .,, .. 1m-•li•t•lv ---u.;.sE'"'o""'"c-OL-0-1-TV;...;;.; ...... ...... .......... Furniture :...&.• I 144 Nowpoit Boulovord, C..to -(onlyJ IYOry nlghl 'Ill 9 -Wed., Sot. & SUn, 'Ill ' ----· ------------ • $1811.Ut * HENDERSON'S 1111 Harbor Blvd., c.M. 548-0155 HI.fl IS-1210 2305 E Coolf "-•-1es Po----1 ERS Typlot •-··• C llf Cor..;o del ~;" .. ,_,,_ Mahlnt· ............... l'\tll Nowpert ~, o • JOBS & EMPLOYMENl Gor-Salo mm 19&1 IOlld state CAREER • in.,,.,. • lnduotrlal ,. ,,.,. lime. n.,. or -Swltdlboor<I Opor, 1 ;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IC!;;;22; I • Commercial ninp. Pltuant Mll'k hn ~ I: sand a y L An eq\lll opportunty School..tnttrvctlon 7600 I~ eoruii:IW model wit\ AN/FM Ol'PORTUNITYI !moJl lft'UP our ....... Saluy SI."' "'· AVllllble other d.,. whm -• SQIOOL Ollldreo'• ...,....., c.,... Sile: Sal A Sun ....,,., 4 1P4 .....,_, TaU lc8 toda¥t tutest S'O'rinl SAILIOA n l5'T w. 19th, c.o.ta Mesa Call Kl 7.1323 be.fore 5 p.m. needed. Mature woman. rates. Oillooat 10 • Ltuor1 Ausuat 3 I: 4 aYW mmll ~ or l-M"""1 --• nla lnll*tor needed for ..Oboll.t Rltr1. 642-9730 Eve1. 543-0720 THE MESA VERDE .. _1R_ "-'---• .._. • ._,. 18231 M•Jawle Way . $83JO ~~t ,Dept. pro .,..... manufacturer MUil have Vemillesiil_,,,taJdns COUNTRYC1.UB •1.-.. ,. '3rnUUI • .,_._..,, 173 llla& 1 Park ::!'.:'_, No~ nl!eHAl)'-lchowiedge of ".ntioau a: bt • KBlllDY •PPHcatlona I« ~ DIO OUNw R09d AnNlllYe PIM'll11t Dt1 Mar, C.M. V e i.umv~ Wo lrllnl • tan or pvt time capable at a••rntrw full m. tun I pilrt time. J:Qer. -.. O:IRa ::.. Mln~rlnt Pltnt PIANO ~for beairmmi. Ile~ 5c ~ SS. Srrtl"I Good. 1500 Mutuo Fund Adv._., -u--L-I I)'. •fl . ..-,t '"' '" Adulta0<clllldNn..,.....,.. .... ,--~~ Inc. · Seid bdet NMD:De I: IAlu7 .......aft C APPb' ta Ptl'IDD ' * '1 1UMJ: ....-a1ttt .. _."" "' ... 'f. wn..sciil l(lrl1 dubl: 1: t.,. Npt B. HOS Westdlfl: to4m ... ••la! ID V'--Top JQ, f'llll co. bmttlbi, 1617 Westdlft' Dr., NB e Aqt1.t.aat Superintendtnt after f pm. $65. f Dnwtt matchms· Uled ! timu, Sam Sbead ~ --· .......... __. -.. -m Im POSIJIAll cheat $«i. S.2 d r a we r Bl ...... • T ...... I.A. 1212 N. ,,_ -rm~ Bhd., -·llA··-y~ VcondllNESllooo. SA LES Sect'71hc-IUl.Ul -col M-. MERCHANDISE POR .,.tdllnr modffl24 ue """"' •~. • A sn.a:m No. Holl7wood. cant. Qryaler Plymouth tor cuigeni&I, .mall marine ~ 111...,... SALi AND TRADI Blue : Spu1* ,;k C'ic.1 1 ~ ;_ =~ ""1 Willow ~ -· Im-Appty ~. ll&1lar........ e ........... al·ll<lld Shop fumltuN IOOO chair 145. 3 Olk nitvd Rd. NB. Bot Giiiy • .,,.,_ooiouKNOWmtsMAN? Dishwa1her , __ 8 ch rntd.9Pmlnf;«lhr.week. -'~-cbai?I at $10 el., G.E. --~--'-----1 Qrbdan in.med mu, 10m1 Mlllt be over u ==-=~~:..::. .. ==---Start $390 Month. 142-1634, lank of Amerlc. • 1'l:Jiramn el --1Ubb" QUALITY Rattan 3 pc:. Md., port•ble 1V $25. Antique (?) SlJRl'BOAJU> r,.. J.:obf. J eollese. ltrana: Wmperance Nlabtt PART 'nme crew maDlltr, NB !186 Admirftt)' Dr. i d)aite, ne••r·mar 2 end I: Underwood typewriter $10, mabos ltrlzwen. IDlkls tan caa'fledonl, IDJoJ'• IDfftilW Apply in peraon only eu:y work, 3 or 4 hcx&n PBX 0 p •rat or atock Hta. Bch.· (213) C»lOll • Altlatut Purcht.ttnl colfee tble., 2 ata tlip Twin box IPrlnl I: mattttu blodr, liml-.peed Dq, Xlnt • • 4 It. e lp In 1 o t b art, Surf & Sirloin :;:inpba~ ~ = brobrap ottlct. U., Call Equal opp:ll'tw'rlty .tpnt coven, $300; c!Me. book.cate $40. Stauffer reducing mach. ciond. '30-1954 •1P1tltll1 cburc11 -· 5930 Pac. Cot H~ ,,,._ ,.... ·~-~ Dtrectar -ctlllce ,.. WAITRISSIS e an Typttt ........,, c1nuer A inlmx-, ~. SURP!IOAllD Now ~ emplo)led -I ....... .._.._. b:ates 1n Newport Cent.er in Ezpa1enced on1;y ... matt. I: box lpl'P,. All $100, sm babY IUD I'S" lat facet: Hmlted future. 1 _ _.:.N:.:•.cw-"po'-'rt-'....:8-h=::.:...-:! -..&:!'15 and alll: tr fall Some fWDa, Min. ace eppq. No p b 0 n e caDt Send NIUl'M fn con-anMque, bud carwd Jtl.llan GARAGE Sale, JDOYinc to MH715 . · * S'2!. Could m.t cm tl)O.$'lUI) --=====~-25. $37S. Call MJ.«llO For pleue. fide nee to lox M 165 chairs U» ea,, wall pl.acque Oiicqo. Furn.., Honda XE 1URJ110.ARO 10' Uetd itwk:e -a<ttlna -. Call e Bulcher DISHWASHIR ._....... OINNY'S D lly Piiot ISO, bffdbaanl, 175: "'°"'' Scnmbler, Ill" rd.tr ., Uk•-· $$0. ao.cu If! Mr. Dldn. 5'112.11 e Produce Min SM Tt:fTY. ! days· l nite T.f BAR MAID _ lbs. Cout 'ffwJ, • • Bumpo game, like Dfl'W $5(1. dithe1, tllTer,~ a~ 5:30 Small market netdl 2 re:U-d1y g.12 1 nite Starting Go.GO DANCER Lquna &.ch 5f0...005e 't'tia', liDena, ....,....., .. .,.... I 'SURl'BOARD====~.=~=I Mall Custodian ..,.. men. -mi• 11.15."' E. 17th St. Apply In penon. "9111 O!M'AL ASSISTANT IXPl!R. WAITRESSES FRIG!DAlllE, GE TV,,,,,. ;;,"~'·CM~19911 9'9" iurfb:!,l,\"1~.!:; _, lt PM In 1 AM Moo ooty. c.!l for ,,.,...llnenl C.M. * 543-9314 H.-. Sally Luty, Over 25. -· --u• COCKT1A151L '°"'· twtn bidl, vanity A ., $35 • ..,.2145 lhnl'l'llon.•PMtaldldnl~ 494-IDU REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't 545--9913 * -· .,..,.,.. •. -WAITll ES '-lablel,Kzoohlerdlvtn, ApplloftCM llool======== Fri. Slartlaa ...,, $'41 • .,. --------"'°" be .. lllng the """" FEMALE CLIRK .... man dtla -,.... a-& WAITERS 2 md tableo. colfee ltbl" MloMll-NGO IDO. ~ am.e Out area I Hunttnrton BeaO! ApPly in penon prsimce In .s.ta.1 olftet. Now hlrlna: for tbe Olleninc In redlner chair, 1 w Iv e I WHOLESALE To Dealera, PLANTS Wbola.le· l5 _, a.a.. 2101 F-Rd., IUSIOY Call !or appt. Villi•• ... & Drive-In 1Jquon --,,., ...... " the -""' .-ocbr, l<anr'<>-l&wn ...... Apt ...... A publlt, --·-Colt& X.. ~ 962-fm, 54M103 7tm Ocean Ave. LA U ND Ry Help 0 • Brown'• ilbubll reN.urant All In lood CUMi. "'8-2776 era.ton~ $15 + Croll top Yuccu I: ....io.a. $15. 7 llOI' O't'ef SER.VICE StMion ult:na11, H•-tinM-n .. ~. ~"'. .,. __ __.. _,..,..._ I: nieh-t dub k>cated at BEAU ,.._ --'--$25. Sq \op $50. Dble dr. sm. pl Yoc:cu I:~ $T. 5 PllY COOK Experitiieed AJ'P17 at THI RIGGEll No. 11 Fuhlion Itland Nowpart Otn1.r If.II. Cook DON JOSE -· 6 ...... oeaai uuu petwuceu, -· lhirt W,-S..cb ~ Club vc rm an ™~ Frolt trM X top $15. Dblt dr pl Yuccu I: tonlmu S3. . ....... over 21, nwrt<d. FULL a.q.· --llrl-A ......... Coll SCI-A Vlllla< moo • Cout .......... lbull<t). Ht polJob. ........... $100. .... ...... U' s... ..... 135 r Star 9093 E. Adami S1Z WU.+ comm. OwYnlft for public ICd. clc. !::Ip. on. before nooe HwJ, ~a BMch: PboM ed flnJsh. Xlnt cond $1,D). en/drYen/frffma/nnan. plne $25. Varic:Jul «her' HundDatan Beacb !tadon, Harbor I: San Dlqo l;y. Trial bal thra pn. &\BYsrrrat • bllqw. 2 for appt bet 2 pm I I pm 548-02 W• will naver be undenold. plant.I. 468 E. l8tb St. Qd Fwy .. c.o.ta Me.II.. )edpr, J*Yf'Oll. pl.Ynll1 A c:bldm ct teacbtr. D~ CllllJ. Mr. Mc. GREY Formica top table, 2 A·OK Warehouse, m:J ~ BLONDE eabinet "IN, delk, :z SERVICE Sta ..s.man, ExJ RI• taxes. Penn. Call: Own tnm. Vie Adan A * t99·2'Tl. * love•, fl cbatra. Xlnt cnod. den Grove mvd.1 Bick W. d. chtst ct drawers, two 12'' tune Ull I: bril:s. ade:r ~ .. IMlll, w....... nG0 5'M544, 1~ PM only Mapol.la 162--1503 EX p ER l EN CED DeU. Call aft I Fri. 540-llM Beach at G.G. Fi"wy. btftt, ane 18" b I It• with ni.. Top Wlfel I: comm. HOUS!:KEEPEJl,maturt,to UV&-In hou1ekeeper wwtr;er. C.ook pret. Beach 3 PC. Sectianal, brown SEARS~ RdrJc wht tnln1ne Wbteil, lampa, CbeYron Station Adi.ma • See BettJ Bnlce at live-in; Pitt home for ao. ID ot be r I ••a borne. ..... Write flt pxine com-med, rood eond. S'1D Or WI blqe iatetior. Very sood irlac. ltema. 320 ltamcma MapriiaHB tlvt•Jderb'.Goodwortcms Cldldr'tll,.,. 5 • 1. pMte cualttl eattoaa makeofter.6C-t4'16 eond.•$60 or beat Gltu. 1'-,CJL5'1-9lmafter5 BUS BOY m fl cond. Far ln-ew coll °"""' del .... mm1 114-T<D, 5IO lladm<l1. au.-CASH t..-fUnl A appllsncn. "5-2115 FOAM RUBBER. cut ta tbo. u Jn or older. Gnveyard lf&t Wee MWUO or ISWNT CASHIER With 1tt.e book· mant, CA. 9-1111 We tell aood u8td furn. 1712 DLX. •ttto elfe. l'U'Wf', med 3 Upb -.ppai., ta\ rte• , onb'. APfM:1 tar Caretr Girla NtmSE'S AID. EJtperltnce keeper exp. lnta ........ I am MATURE man I: wife to Npt Bl. CM ~'7015 au m me r 1 anly; Sep. DI.~. Fact. ov.a.t. OOITAGE OOITE SHOP 410 W. Coast JIW)'., N.B. dtlln.ble. AJJPbt ill pence. to5pm.1221 W. CbUt:HW)', JDUlllllft' tmaD motel , MOVING MUST SELL: rd.a rot:ta./(fft!IJ; fully OJV. by ~_E~~~~ 562 W. 19th St., Cll BJ appalnt, ..._.. ~ Beach Nu r 1Ia1 NB O:ftnado, 00!.f, Apt + 1°" $25. detk/tbl ~ TV $3>. Set:1 contNct:, 115. m.mt E. ~'S~u~llll·· IALEDIAN, ap. W~ to GEN maintenance p1 c1Q Home, 450 Gltnn1yn Strtd FULL 'nine maich for Koklr !JI sro-. No e K per. other fllm. 6'l5-Q531aft.1:31 WASHERS $29 ti· dryers -,:-'~··.:;i=,-r"'=--I ~::.:: :i.. ~-= ~ -!umb~ ex1>1,, _ _,, ...... ':: Itel, Wontoll ......,, llolol la 1-Beocll. __..,., M111t be ban-MAPLE T-hmcll l!S• ,_ fr;'. ll<fl:la e VACUUMS e ..... ·~ N-•--~ "" P ·~, -• W-7400 a.ERK, lYPfnC 6 lllbl --· ~-125 IVUnd colfM table 115 -· • A.;_. ~· SIO qp, "-9. A -m .... .,..... ""'"'--. ·~ ••~ ·~-1• = -' - -' • · ·· · Re...aaoble. eout Vacuum 111 111311 -· .. ~--~· -· ~ ~ t.mA,L ..uu;rAllT, BllOILIER Mu: d • .....,., -tor-·,..__ ll«>-1085 :m z. l'111, CM. fO.lJIO SJ:RVICEStatloilAttend.f\11J BABYSITTER I: lite ·M&cGreror Yadlta, 1915 Minimum 1 yr Cll!t. oper',.. attlDdant, t bol FRIGIDAIRE ~-- l>AIL'f PILOI' WA!fl' ADI time. E>cporiencid. Over Z1. -· "7 -. I llab<ock. 0....11-Salr, ..... 1i .. me lldo .,.. ZI. App'1 bl .... om .. E'ul-nt IOI I °'"""' 14 .;,. ;; ~ mmo:tn' .,..;.I -.,, lllllNGR!SIJ!."' aoE.llthSLC.M. cllild.l4Mlll0111Tpin. COCKTAIL WAITlllSS Blind StltchOpon. -~ PllW'1 Jlln ELEC Typewritor tliT.50, IU"z:ll''.1155.-=-.:..=:~.!!!: ~tn= Spec. maclt. prmmt mflr. 440 ~ ODl ttandard twewrita, J35. 10 18lli BRCJWN G.E. ~1 ,;:;m:::·c.:IG-61;::,::::a=-----t '103 supmor CM. 1580 Monrovia H.B. IG-85 HAIRDR!SSER WANI'ED by addin& machine, maka ltOYt! BM otter. 71f St. Jam. MAN'S .......... liill. I 1 ' . GmERA.L otnce wwti ID wttb aome followlnl. oft.r. "2-6143 •Rd,. N.B. 5tl-3075 S -I PD 4Huncndl, llat iCIPbtrt. IDLE Hrs make Dollanl Bl AccouziUnc <iftce, fD.53f2 A.lk for Tora. APEXX> CXWIDt (dlt.J,.A. REFR1G •. f'rlPlutel llrlfllt Heavy load ~ SllO m o,.~•llBttte ~-hr iuarD r . We * ~ * copy) with metal J'OU.awq l'l'Olt ~. Uibt ,,.ucw, I belt oa.r. 6CM93t ;"°im .-.. ••• UVE tn bt.bJsitttt for Aftncl-. M. W. ,.7550 ltaad. $!1.5. Gd eoad. rnold,'100.m..a.:2!U 13 ~ 50. -... 1'C.A WOMAN 21 t!l'u fO, Alll o. ~ borne. and olr. ARGUS ,,.,_. Oande TV, JI", '71. Dec -·iO••""·-ln eau.-1»-u15 WorkNelrH-O.r.,.S.lo I022 Ant13-· llJO ~"""'· lioll> -,.... 10n Jewtltn. m Wanted womaa to o.. ll&1lar .,._om M--· F.V. l 1UI. II'& _ ~-to lllOO LOl'8" A '* col -....., LAROE tel-col -Mini boat w/-'1111 ' Cd titer C, llt-ll'M ;:::::'.,::'" ...... ---·A -"""' ..-... -, delb, • ---... U.'85 MAAY -IYPo-.U· ....., •-............ -bowl. bill, -"""'4 tabln, ~ !lb Siii ter nMded b 1 '¥r old PL Nrl:DD>: Bil'*"'.! _, Ti , flt, .. •••••" • ·' PM ~ ni:.cb.. 10-I Lois t1b1tt, bl»· tnn, bat ·~ :.,. .. 1~ m-1111 CdM-11.eono111,.. -· o." •--AOte .......... lllOO '"'°"' ..;. Sot. 'uoai .-. ....-"' _.1=~,;:;;::;;....:.:;;..:;.;~~ .,..,,,,. -oll t -.............. 14.15 Cltallaa Q.118. -..... ---... UPllOUTER1NG • 111.50. ' HOUSEKEEPER o====-&Uh»liwt .. 111•• ...... -·······• $2.00 t.TllF ~ fllnllNl't pc. (!\npem Ci1lftJlbwl) · ........--°"" • 1,.-. GARAGE Sall: ....,., a ""..., dllJ, -... :m loo. Uve .,, No --..... -AAQUSIMl'LOYMINT -~ beddlns -1n.-. Mlln,llB._._ Far further Info, call o:MUJ,TAllTS AGE!ICY --. -1212 LlrrJ M ...... Aatlqua -D""" -St().tm POWaa lewla1 ...._ ___ 11• ·-o.amiJitDr HB--U KJI Nwpart. CM Ml-'131! .. ,.__,. . •tt · Opin4m9•...,· 111.... "" ·-.,... · . matttt•. 'UUUli ~vm ~~.r~ ---•E.l'lllk,S.A.IAf4DlpATIO Ille. bo,llt-~ !!'f'.t!f-hlW 1120 $50.- """' ........ Poet -PllX ~. -.... ilJllWPDlt. . = ~ l:."' 111 T SINO El\ c ... 'I NOW-S 1HI .. -.-mi · --· .,.,,.., . ...1 ·--· -nMI FOi c;ffM ShOP Wol-11111 ... a Oii Hm f*10lil'I CARACE s.u.E ... lea .... loreel ._ Am .. P.-· llii1a~ _.. agency 2:.i, ~-..1r1. -11<, -11s-. 'ilUICK CASH 1T01=..~c.M. :::.i::..u::. -m .,_,Dr .. N... ~r.,.llllLta.s ~~= THROUaH A LT. -"""'tr Do1111i OlfiCt Mon•r '4Nl70 54f.274J 111 """" st., Oolta -N' -$JI.ft ar -DAILY PILOT ·-IOdr, ll¥o-ln: -· E>p..... -"""W• -· na: Q\llCllEI\ JOU CAU. UJAI -CID -w·-AD ..,,.. '125 Mo. l1Hllll * -• ._ o a.Go1 1111: QUIOCER TQll IEIL ~-==·'-----·' ----"V'.:...-•--- I • _._._. __ ._. __ -.,. ,.._ ... ·• .!.. •••• a a .... • I 1 I l • ' I . ' ' ; •' .... . • ' 31 DAILV PILOT _...,, A-1l.1.9611 • D Mlllc;HANDtik rOll -p ..... LIVESTOCK ~SPORTATION , Tll.ANSl'Gll'PATION -TRANSl'O'Rl'ATION · -TRANSl'ORTATION . TRANSPORTATION .--TRANSl'OltTATION- I.Al:! ~D TllADI ''LI AHD TR.ADI -.... '°"'"°" 9010 S.l!llNlt • 9010 llMl·Yffhl Ml'nj Blkos 9275 f Mhaf .... lltll l600Ml:tMlliMMM l600 AQHA R ... tteretl Z' JOU.Y RQpr: tloofl\i Yt NAPLE Saboli. "Chtrtel'$ 903t MESA MINI BIKE '5S CHL'V. ~ toa plCkup. --Quan11r Hdnn! old. Perftd -oa4 it l 011. ~ holl. IT'S SMAltTER._ _ Sain • Parts • Repatn "Good C<lld., rJitttl &-hexes. Ti'llcko 9500 CAMPIRS '520 AVE ' • • " ' I I • ! I i ' ' I, SPECIAL AUCTION! THURSDAY -AUGUST t FRIDAY -AUGUST 2 7:30 PM Lota of new Mediterranean f~i· lure in lop names. Bedroo~, living room & dining room set!. China cab. inets occasional cbaira, comm®es, cockiail tables decorative lamps, swag lamps & picture6. Stwing machines bunk beds, dinettes. chests of drawers, 5 metal office desks &: office chain, mattresses. twin C(ll'11er units, rMple bar &: 2 stool!, refrigerator'!, stoves, wash· en, & MUCH MOR•! .,., ........ """"" ftllle. Sle<po 4. w/h .. a, a'lle7. 646-m3 TO CHARTER :i!l67 H1rbo< ca<,• S4S-:ml awn ... 61&11935 Excellent bftdnc. Top 6 DI!'# llO'lt, Brand DtW c.i 25 • ftawlOl'l ,;i • Albera '68 QDUS C)lt!le 50oc, 7 H.P. '54 QJ}.V, w/ndio i htr. bottom. Show proqled. A*-~ mow:s • c r I tic P.wer CruiMn 9020 ~ • Bount;y 40 .. Newporter 4 apd. root lh!tt . rood cond. Reblt. q .: camper lhell. inc1600.Al9o,lyr.oktadd-$.f.500 flnn, Cl.II for ap-BY ~--"' Cl ,_ ket c h .. Marmtt to . UtQ.961-1369 s,m. ~ ~ di.Ip lookin1 che•tnut. pointolen.I, 61'3-6492 Or vwnier, -111"' ' SchooDmi. %7' Faitllner . 30' :=======:::= Started bl backamon. Ex· tit-7"5 G,.~· ~ ~~ ~ Tro~ · 39' Spl Fisher • nu-Motorcydet 9300 s::..: = =·: eellent for &bow or plealW'e. Private Sailing ~llQl'lt Y ' -' ' rnetoo1 others. .. -_,....,_,;....r---' N"" 8\1 Open Rood Ade 6'· ~ model ro·taaet. plUI IDll\Y txtraa I •• OMW HD equ!pc bwnper, m1mn. ~Now. $2914 OPBf ROAD can "2<>181 dAY• _,, Your ... ,.,. Mine S5 h<. loc Newport .'IUOO. 5'!-<219 CALIFORNIA·CRUISES '67 YAMAH.\ Ill FllU ,.,. l ::'::·'='""=·=·=~==Ul=== Eve1. Will Ttach Btcu,,nen 25• OWENS CAB O\UISER 20 Y" rs in Newport $200. 9510 830 S. HAltlOR 8,1. VD • 4 YEAR ok1 GelcHna. Xlnl or Ractnr Tactics Xnlt C09d. ~l Sic! Ernie Minney S4Mltl J.46.t26 .JHpt SANTA ANA 531-4655 tor ho'ne lbow. SOOD. Call Taught by All·American 54T-n03, 675-0008 eves. ""iiUJEWATE';RCHARttiis-'66 BSA .!"JO.CC FREE LAS ~AS --i:tOUSECAR 6'13-G629. Sailor&: Olymp~ ~u! $' .d Ski -~-'°30 27'-40' U-Drlve Skip. Av.ail Good end., S«xt VACATION Wrht A New ~ Road ll' Hoo1e BAY Mart. Xlnt cond, 1entle &n.oo2'l or t73 4S :f.1.~. -, Day/wk. 646-9000 24 his. 312~ 36th st., N.8. 1964 JEEP WACONEER. 4 Car. t..uxurioui ()p@n Rold but lldMt!'d. En1ll1h-SNOW' bird No. 326. New FAMILY Ski boat, 16' ALBACORE &: marl In ·57 Yamaha IOO ec, excellent dt,6pa:sa .. 4wbLdnl'.WAG· de~ ~binc. -W91er We11em. 16.2 $275. S48-3S65 dac.ron aaQ. Tr1!.l.ler w/new Crui:r:IJl'l: gla!ltd fY'lt't wood, Charter on !he· "Gilda 8 ". condition.,. UiOO' Mllea.. ON, Complete with lock out PfeMW""e &: td.let, ClleY. pow· Jtei. Mustang ma.re Ure& I: Sc Price $295. trailer. 75 HP Evtnrude 673--tQiO or eves, 673-9131 $300. * 847..&488 hub1. Blue wl~ a beeutiful ered 0¥ too, dua\I 4, all T yean. $fT5 w/tkk MS-5658 mtr., bah ta.nk, akh · the Sallin& leitons, 40, sloop 1967 TRIIJMPH 650 Bon-ma.tching interior. and only H.i>. etu.lpt1 SQ..461) * RHOD~ U tibreglus keel works! fJSQ. 646-21652 Reasoriable rates: ava.Jl for nevtlle 2.IXXI ml. Best offer 2S,QQO m!les. Take. it to the . $3975 ,,T~llA=N~S"l'O=R~fAT1~ aloop, .1· beam: xlnt famlly NEAR oew 16' GlalSp&t, 90 charter 64C-!l>50 548-2592 takes. 6~2617 eve1 675-2492 =~~= w~::: on;llh opt11' ""AD •--------orracm1boat.M~extru. HP Mercury: b,.. wheebtilt $1595 '"11'11 ,. llOO '66 lli HONDA Scrambler. lolts & Yichts 9000 $1 . 544-1924 trlt., all ulra&. Must aell! Mobile HOl'IMI 9200 Ver; clean. $450 or otter. EIMORE for Sale ly Induct_;-· UDO 14, dacron aail1, pad-Offer. Ml-8809 EXCEl..LENI' From Owner. f>44.0857. ... _ WINDY'S AUCTION , MUST SACRlFICE! :!t. ~rlc~~~ ~ Bolt Trallera 9032 Reu..10 x 55 Untyersat Roe-65 HONDA 150 for sale $350 r.tOTORS 14 Custom Ski A Sport Out· Gffer. 8"2-Z14.l :;..:.;;...______ pando. Alum awnings. Adult or trade for P.U. of ume TOYOTA 207S\'J4 NEW~4RT t.Al~1VO. board bol.t A trailer. New lT SLCXlP new standina ri&· '46 AU.OL! Y, Like 71 ~trey Pk. Low 1pace rental. No.~ value 642-3216 . Ph. &9-W32o khi11 T•11y'1 t · •I 1. paint I upbohtery. Controls . ...._ I • . G "'"--to '; apmp.. 11 • • 1535 SUperior, N.B. Harbor 1969 90CC $249-15300 Beach Blvd .. Wstmnstr COSTA MESA -'4 ... IU6 3 engines. 1l cal fuel tank. •":I ~gme. ~at ..,.., wench. Sac. 1145. 549--0119 Mobile Hornes OPEN OAIL Y 9 te 4 $1500. Can be Reri at 2810 ~IA"" $4'r.t, 642-3192 or 903 1r BAYFR""'""' * * lt3IJ..260C * JEf,P \\'agoneet Deluxe 4 N -w• •--t SI' M ri 6 v•~• whl dr. Air eond. R/H. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ~tte Ave., ewport -1P 00 "I Fu-""'' ..... ailor. 12 x 2 5 T 'I T I 9425 •--~ 26' ATKINS .....,,;.;n., ·•-'" -•• ra1 er, rave Like new w/ many extras! ~ --... .......,p "" cabana room. Private beach ---------l600 Misc. Wantetl 1610 1960 'l.'1 Hollywood Craft, bit. '64: inboard engine; BOAT alip for rent; uptbto 1-) flQ,.., F. Pymt. Terms BAJA BUGGY BUILDERS Sl950. 675-2526. 67:>-4747 Udo 13,000. ...••"'· y, 0 ht , Ft boat. $35 Per mon · l ... ~ . Co 1 ~ 8 . & Isle. i Ml1cell1neous 130 S. HARBOR BLVD. SANTA ANA 531-4655 ~ FT. ACFBRILL- Converted Continental Trail· way bus. All new powtr train, eneW. trana. etc. Fully 1elt contained, ma.it). cur l "ll fe•IUT'f'~. includin&' ceramic We in"-!ths & ldtcb en, futiY an·pe\ed throup: out. elc .. $9300. will consider trades. Prefer JO to «I ft boat. Bua. phone 892-6656. Hom!! p~ne ~ A1 Long e S•• Th• F•b11lo1ot N•w e cabin cruiser •.• , tl!l!B ......... "'"" .,..,....., Ev,. 615-5743. mp et.,., ugg1es Acee&-:========:: I • WANTED • Sales. 54&-2592 ""T'ol'"" · · u ~ VW p "· SWIMMING POOL 196.118' Crfftliner tnboan:I !;;;;-===;;--,;=:-:: sories. s"" a, uo L! Ft ~•. Ftltor, Surface Garae:.,~~~oraae • 100 hp. GrMt bay or ski 19' WESIWIND. Co m p •-·t R nt Is 9038 MOTOR HOMES 921 S 207~ Laguna Canyon Road r"""' ~•"3 w/sails &: trail-. Ex. Cond. -1 • ----Laguna Beach 494-8100 !ldmmer, Mainttnance Kit. -========:".':" boat! · · · · ·. · ·• · SJ795 "" -e S•• Thi F•blllout Niw e VW Camp('.r SUN DIAL 9S20 FREE Ground P'lld. M.chlnery, etc. 1700 WEST OlASl' YACHTS Best reasonable o I I et· SKI BO~ T * Dodge Motor Hom• * '67 NOMAD 16', fully self· Model . Xlnt Cond. Must ace! • $149.11 1-----"----3333 W. Cot1t Hwy 735-0093 A.!k tor Glen Will pay teenager w/ski boat Now At · contained: low mi., beaut. Awning ; stereo, etc. $17&1. SECARD POOL 10''2" ATLAS Metal cutting Newport Arches Marina 40' SPRUCE Box section to take my teenagers aiding. *BEACH CITY DODGE inter., very clean 644-1409 642-1 999 * DODGE CAMPERS * Now At * BEACH CITY DODGE 16555 l11 ~h llvcl. (Hwy Jtl H11ntinglon .lch. 540-2610 323 s. Mlin, ()nnp lathe. Good cond. $215. N"""PQtt Betlch. &42·7711 mast. Near new, a II W!D pay for ga• +·daily 16555 a .... c.h 11¥cl.( Hwy l9J DIAL direct 642-R, chari:e 196\ VW Camper. Rebuilt 1•. 532-1992 Before S pm 548-9617. aft S 31' LAPSTRAKE Quiacraft bardwart. S'roO 642-f96l ot rate. Al!O will l"ffll Lido 14, H11ntlntt•11 Ith. 540-2660 your ad, ·.hen sit back and <'ng. new ,tires. Ten\ canopy, l .. '!!''."'!~!l!!!~~~~~I ~13.52 flyin1 bri~. duel control, 12131 ~1889 mo. of Aug. Udo ?ale. Call SOCK rr TO 'EM! • listt'n to the phone rinG! Go:>d cond. f1 300. 64~9131 Dial 642-5678 b REmlLTS !. l6CU'-Philmrefri1eratorl: twin screw, Fine ahape,1---------Mr. Robert 'E. Aulh <:113) =======-:-:-:-:I---· ----.-.---.-... -- :. top freezer. Xlnt cond. fl5. Swaps 1790 ready to go! Steal ru.soo. SOCK lT TO 'EM! 749-2331 collect. lmport9'1 Autos 9600 11 .orted t ... UI. 96<10 lmportect•Autoa 9600 Irr ... •. '.-id AutOI ' ln-.et practically MW llm Dr. Edward C. Paliette lnli:'•~===;'===='-.:.;;"i';:;.;;:;;;;:, ::..---..J.."'°:;.;.;""":'::-::-'--'----'r'ri! .,.,..,.t ""'' u11>. ""'rili"' "!'.!:'.",c,,-~~-nXlnoo.'-~.· wlbflltt mv• .. r.o. ""'""' · · " , ·.-.G MG MG MG MG -$0)."3~.y ..... Gmn>~ •~ ~~ -•~ ~3:HU ''"3434 ___ _:.:"':.,:: ______ ;:;,;_.=_ _____________ ~---------~-------:::--::::-:-~ I,.! herhed wattle e&rlJl!:l pad-for dishwasher. 21 " TV,l'nn;:.-==C>n:="C"= ~ ...... t swap for Ham &'fiar or tape JUI,.Y special. Boata hauled, MG l ~. MW, never UM:Q. Cos recorder. 54M385 after I bottom .crubbed I S*inted. :~ n .50 Jrd will lell $1.~ • pm. $1..90 per ft. •• paint • line. , ,.,.i . ....,.,. -'=======! All °""' moinUnonee .• :~ SHal1WAVE ham. radio -enP. work, aee Uf- ., nceiv<r, H......,.lund HQ FREE TO YOU N .. On~-"Z.?"<,,"'-m.Stisa;. -. j i.x::. Wu $490-new, row on-u"' ~ - -ly S2SO. 01romt dinette $20. ORGANIC Frilizl!r, hone 1967 GLASSPAR Avllml II' ! 1 :!,, Refri&erator $25. ~~bk• manure I: wood aharinp. Runabout, 50 . hp Me~ $2 each. T.V.'a $25 ..-$30. Combined mulch a: Thunderbolt, top, mde cur-Ltd • • 517 ~ Normandy Pl, Santa fertiliur. 546-49.tl. a f 1 tain1, cockplt eovtr, other Ana. S43-&415 5:30 B/15 extra1, n&SO. Call to -in " POOL TABLES . water &U-1349 , AGO> fertilizer, ready forl,;...-;,.,,.;;;-;=7;:;-,;-.-New &: wed $97.50 up. 'hble lawn I Jarden. Jnr from MA INT EN AN CE (~ teMls, Poker tble1, ban I nutriml, abaorbing fresh , stORAGE , • stoola, indoor pmea, etc. wood ahavinp. Sun-Thun. Pamt, Varnish, Flbrgelus ~· Dilc.oUnt prices.! BADGER 546-9963 • 3/2 Fence(! Yt.rd. Reu. rates SALF.S, t09 S. Main, Onnip ''YOU' ._,, . ,_ .... 00-&2 (If no ans. call) at Call Frank 538-0311. Open IL ,.., in .,.,.. WlLll M&-1524 548-8716 ' ••• '"Wed me. Im'• haU Sptu fHD&le. --- '" .u-o p.m. uct • Free to adult home." Call 9-21' FAIRLINER ·• Put youndl' in our Pl9et Ii p.m. (3ll) 183-1193 8/1 Fl.YING BRIDGE. V rry .;, Harbor Blvd D-1 Theatn I,;;.;.;;-::::;:--=,.-= clean I: fully equipped. Must ;~ SW""'AMP~M·f·fy ::£:!:!~~ ~~:~e.~~il19D•J• :, crukno>. "'7·2882 8/li-..,-=,,,..-, =CHRIS=-=SEASKIFF="'1 .. ·" StartJ; Aue 17 POODLE Miniature Lav F/b '&4 lmmac! Quick al.le ·' 531-12?2 aft 7 chiJdrtll Mal l · ;; $15,750 Sip No. M Bal Y&cht " • ,• " .. " ,. ·' • ·' " " " • •' " ,. " ,. ·'· ,, ·' " " " " ' ,• •I !~ 1i 11 '~ Jr 1: I~ ;t ,I '\ ' ' r I ' ' ' I ' ' ll ! 3' SQ YARDS hei .. e __ ...._ · e yr. · Basin. Prl prty 2l3-463-4Sll .. "7"""' ~M Milano bound carpetln1 WIPll.d, -===-c;;-.,-.,;."~'lii!WiiDN;iW"'A;;;;n•;;;I COit $15 per yard, 9Raifl.ce T' BRAND New Avon Red 12xl&, $115; ~ x JO, $ei ' ICITI"ENS, blk I: tiler Q'e1t 1ltf l'$ft I. Sn Gull runner 2'11 x JO .. $40: !I atr:!ped, weued. 1 wkl ~ outboard motor w/&CttUOl'- drawer walnut chest ti S43-60IS --iea. Cbmplfte $365. Mt. Key dn.Wft'I $tO. MHiM5 DOUBLE laundry sink. Good 6'15--0100 ALMOST MW bolipital b@d. cmditlOrt. lT9'1' Oranae •ve.· 1'1"'r"'CENnJ=="11."'Y"'200=-: .. --o..,.0"'7. .. R.eu. Odd Frt.nclaean war•, fK2..Jm 811 mph Just h•uled out. Prd stem 1laaware, 'milk pau BLAQC I: beautiful 1 yr old cond thru Olli:. Priced for ,\ Maple dWnney chan· ct.la:, J spayed females, 2 qulc sale n6!i0 firm. Call delitr, 3 lightl. !tmbeam malea. tM-8373 811 ~1355 mixmuter, wllltt1e ir•n, FREE Kitten.1; 6 week1. ''"°''"°"MERID==IAN=""'.,,.,.="."""XnI""t bookcase, aola. 642-Mll ernT mnd: Loaded! Teak decks, KNITTfD FABRICS "'FOR SALE Remnant&:, ampln a: MID end.a Sat OnJ;y I a.m. ~ I p.m. 929 Bilker, Costa Me11 DUAL KING SIZE BED 1 pia-e mattreu • 2 box apr!np . metal frame torJ>. plete . custom made • only 2 yesrs okl. Sacrifice for only $115. Call 642-«>82 ELFrl'RlC Lawn Mower 13" Rotu'J', lll' eon!. Orie. price SSO. Will aend1 $50. min 546-7954 or ca.II M Apt 22, 2320 Florida H.B. ANWlJAL FLEA MARKEJ' YWCA Santa Ana, ]4ll N. Broadway Aug. 1. 2, 3 12 noon -9 p.m. books, dolls, coins. jeweiry, tumiture, clothin1. Snack bar. KIRBY vacuum cleaner a: attachments. Take c v e r small payments or $57.20 cash. Credit dept. KE >T.289 MEN'S quality 1uitJ almost 311 RDF, trim taba. Sff at CARP==El';--;A--::ood= .... o:· =.--=,.i:;:;d Swales Anch NB 6f6-6TS9 eolcJted , 10'10" 11 10'10". AVON Redcrect: 6 man in- 548-8579 I/! fl.atable dinfhy, 2 hp Brllllh FREE Male Bf&ale, 1 year Seagull, 3 mo.. S 2 9 S . old, to lnJOM with eood m-1151 home. 89'l-9ll7 l/S 1n''~~AMER=~-~M~ ... ~-..,~,.-nl~A 4 KrrI'ENS Taby, Alice, sleerine, $500. TS hp Johneon Tiger I: Bl&cll. 2133 Orange I: cmtrols. $300 615-4214 Ave, CM. Ill 13'3 BOSTON Whaler with CH I LDR EN Bo red. eoftK>le. 40 hp engine. C&ll Fucinl.tinc hobby, free after 5 673-1281 pi1eons. IZ8-4319 8/3 16' OWENS 80 Hp volvo, with LOVELY t wi old PIJPPY· top ' other •xtraa, 11560. Part Ldlrador i Boxer. 64&-7808 or 146-2135 fl'l!>...1416 l/ll 12' RUN-About with 3 H.P. FREE Whit. Persian kitten 4 Evinrude. Good cond. n60. rno8. okl. ~e. M&-2476 8/3 1631 W.BalboeBlvd. 1 MALE cock~r blk A tan to 16' UTILITY 40 H.P. Mere. good home. tm.-1669 ll/l FJec. Trlr. halt tank, co•er. ' GERM. Shep. Samoan puppy SS!IS. 573-l7l1 5 wks old 96'2-115& 8/3 STORAGE, Tra,llen, boatll, etc. i1.so per mo. Work MANX mother cat 2 yN old. ..,.2_,,,,,,. .._ 548-3261 Needs n.c. 548-4740 3/1 =i'P''°"'""'·"'~,_..,•w.,•·===•I PETS and LIVESTOCK FIBER*GL~~ RE ... AIRS C1h __ 1!201 •. ------=:: Sollboolt 9010 ""'· ,;,. 38. Slti.U '"'°"' BURMESE KITTENS 14"'2. Sacrifice! S•t orilY 500 642-611Yi' 9t.. Andrews Rd NB , Near new ErlcllOft 32. full crlfl n.... 1125 nee. Leu than 1 yr. rJ500. llJ.. Sa ~ 4 Space -.... Oceanic Y1chl Stiles Family Plot. Harbor Real Irr=-.. ~ .. -"G-.---~=-o:-UND=--_-_ I e &42'5151 e Memorial Park CM. IU,,ULL~ a.i:..a.n .. y..- Call coll. evee (213) S9J.20I) pies. ARC fel. <hmplon 1935 14' SAIL 8 0 AT. 4 TIE.RED Oiantilly lace hrffd. Ideal~. 1 ma.le, 1 Oaracter. DQ Sailor, trlr, female. Sll5.00 e-.acb. includ-cover. main, $475, 642-3123. weddin1 IV"""· ai:r:e io.u, ina: ahots lll!d papers. Cail 613-Qi.53 fft)' lowl,y. &JO, 54S..101'1 ~r l--~~~~~--...-1"81. Kite Sailboat lt KARAT Sold watch band, YELLOW Labrador, ARC 12 It No. 137 w/TnllH eoet. S450· Sacrifice $1~. ttl. male. 2 yn old. 1600 • 545-3103 r, 1.:*==12'0=====°"':' I Handsome, gentle. obedient. WOODDJ Soowblrd No. 141, Mftc. W1nted 1610 Have 2 dop. Must aell one. 18il1, trlt. Good win. record I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1\Dlldo -Vapor" -Unkln - '1'lrp< -TO nJRN --:"My-W www:ldna om • dlia.I ule .. _... ......... dido'I know wtUdl W9,)' TO ..... ..,. .. 543-5103 • noo. A aood trnt. 6'73-6521 MlN Scbnl.uztt pup&. AKC LIDO 14, xlnt cand, flyway tt(. Ean ..cropped. Shot1. 1. tniler, 2 1eta: .. ita. $U1S. 6l6-356l 642-7610 M&-m9 SIT.KEY Tm"ier m1lf' pups. SABOT type wf dol\y Good · · · • ARC 0.alJ\pim 111'.ldc Sl25. Ail. New paint. SlliO. · 115--00 * 549-7151 * DOBERMAN Plnscher P'IP• HOURL YREm'ALS ARC, xlnt bl'ffdq:. Reu. • RHODES lt'S * to right home. !162..a206 Fun !One Bost Co., 0Balbas G~ Shep~ AKC MUST lel1 now! Excalibur Flashy· hffltny.:...Guar. Sil.Id 36. full rac., bolt batll. let. 826-m59 1M6(1 .• 644-1554 A II T E D AKC MIN POooLE DRAFl'ED! Muot ffll L!' n . Apricot, M&F, 54(l.IJ63I evn. 1loop w I all extru! '660 or -bt1I offer. 8T~ -.-i11 (no Junk HO<MI IUO uoo 14 II'"" wtth _, l ~J ..;..:-~ BAY Ma.re. X1nl tond. senile tralJtr. Good mnd. 11200 lioll I alb'....,...., wll!ltem 1addle .t.11df, 642:6rf, ~1!1 -CfRI IN•-• '"""' • Sabot & rord clelly $22S Ui-UIJ *' -OW1G& m • "~ • - ' • ORANGE co·u·NTY'S NEWEST• LARGEST - A""'lll FEATURING 1961 MGI GT 1961 MGB 1968 AUSTIN · AMERICA IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1968 AUSTIN HEALEY SPRJT,. SPARKLING USED SPOit CARS 1966 Corvette "427" 1965 Mercedes Beni l111W11W. ~~., wit• nery Cllfl· .. tll lltl~ llM Mft I A t. = i:= llicl1odl11t ., • ._. fN11t111l1ilH, AM;F!:"'...,,,~ = ...... hKl .. ff ~.::i .. s. .. , .... ,, ....... " "' •!Ml .,.. ..... ...,...., b1te•· ... . .,,_.. ...... c;.Grf9"• i. _.: JMI .,.... c.11., M NM "-111 ..... .. "'-tk.f 1,-:;"M~ .._.hi clleete, 1967 Cortina 0.T Cei,.: l rftWi '9d11t t'Mfl wltll Cl11fhpt{19: hc•ttt Mab. C·lfllWCf frUI., redl1, ~. Ttih cw h for ""' ..,.. .,.,,~. 1967 Jaguar XKE .1+2, .. , .. ., ,,.,. bloc• l•terler AM/FM, dint.,. • .,._; .rt...... • ....... ,. M1.t M Ifft! ,. be .,,._letff. 2 .... ····~ .. tt.c•. 1966 MGB Roadst•r ~67 Porsche 912 5-..-4, AM/FM, Jetlew wfttl iteel ""-:".,· A ,.,._. ,..._ .. t. ft9'J ""'°"· 4 ....... "·~ ......... ..... NEWPORT IMPORTS Ltd~ 3100 WEST COAST HWY. . ..... '. -~--------. NEWPORT BEACH 642-9405 540-1764 • . T-. A-·l , 1%11 DAILY "LOT TRANSPORTAT T N PORT • Compon 9520 lm,..md Auteo 9600 lm-'911 Auteo 9600 ,..u* __ c_.,...;.. ___ '900;.;..;.; 1_u_Hd._c_._,. ___ ,_'900..,;..; U... C1"' . ffOO UHd Con ,,. 111111 C.. ,,.. !!Md Ciri , . • I IMMACU~Atl I ... • VOLKSWAGEN CHMOLIT ..aCUIY • ; ·MUSTANG . OLDSMOIU PON'llAC IAMILU TuNSPORTATION TRANSPORTA110N • TRAN5PORTA'l'ION T-RANSPOR-TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 19&6 F...S Ill HD""' coll· --------1---~-----1--------·1-----~--~1--------CLUSICVIWACON l d--......... 1' 1J$. ... MG '66 vw .... CHEVY s, "'· ... CXlLClflC Polk StalOm .. MUSTANG, ·VI, -OUll.•--I.Al-.. -Al:--. • cw-..r-..dimlllf'... s.daa, ..,..._,,.. &~ RIR. .. =WllD1Wts9bet ltlllrflD&, a.utom•ttc .. WUb PoW'l'f llllletrlnC. 'VACU'ION'flTIJA '· tf.t c:raw1-.-..,...., 14:5~ 112" SUit.,, CU 1111 'rs' .&I 1c 'essd1& .,_. ... ttr.• WW •1C·•Bla:,bla:•alue&t$5EIO. top~.MNtpopul&rmodtl trc.Huhlaicenek. luxe moM& • -.. • JlicD '. Gl:T G0a ~ btaW. .... .. tDBd. odl -· _, .U. I 111W1:11Dr. a,,-mt 111 ,,_,...,_ two lf1dram,atlc, ndio, bNltf, 1981 PONTIAC G.T.0. bard-·.:'=~ ~·:r· -·-. l lllil r::I:-w~ =I=~ a,"*.. II ,·... '*' HOLIDAY RAMBLEI\ -· Sl1¥er ~tlllc .,.... .., $IMO I WOW I 1..: I Cll -• 119 Katbor 0.ta Mta with black ~ 1111111 A HOLIOAY RAJmLP J ""' UlllO ""-'::'~ -.: C •17 :.. ....... ~ -_._ ... ~ ... ~ DriW In. Open landau kip, 4 d tnu.,, J.19 l:lubor, ~1~ OPll·llOAD , liOO'S -.-.. ., 0..,. . -·· ...-. p(uo Ill Ille -Pb. -°"" Stm. llllf llO S. MA._ ILV'D. IAHTA ~ Al-4651 YTOGO 1116,....._olllt ..... ... ...,_, s9t ""1Q.. ... -... ·-. loe. ... -· 'II' ..... HD, -··-Otrt1 • -· . NtNI $U7• OPlll IOAD =---Ill .. -'sidi '"' "'""""°""'·----_llMIO T.O.P. -ctm.ASS ~ --~:.-:.::.: ..:'"~,rn=;;;;===-~'f--• --' • Pwr ...... -. 21,000 ml, -.. = + --· CJ!(, ---· CM. 'ii diliY. 1 ...... "'· ' -...... ,. Biilt 11•'7• • .... otlll .. ......... ...... Clol1 • • TEMPEST 1 * ... MGA * 'IT FASl'Ma< vw. Ulo .... --..... -.... -ollllt. s ..... -11115· m-allT ' ' -_ .,.. • ::-"'!'~ P'lllO. ·."::.:'!~:' ;;::--..,..::::i:r, --.. XIDt ..... Ill.I Pl.YMOUTH · ELMORf ~~:..m::,.i;:t. . OPIL LIKE NEW .... dew! ..... .. CORVAIR' ' .. lidil = = ~:;..: OLDSMOlllLI· MOTORS .... i.r. Pl/Pll m-mr : 'IT~ 11a ·~ bolp lnl. nd. pop. ao1 -.Da-•cor.Auto lhwptrl·C¥1• 11-~n'f:~ TOYOTA y•,.,. -......, -$!,... -tr; Ml, --.. Good -, '64 OLDS t• PLYMOOnl -Pb. -· --....;.:~~':>.Tiii 19111 VW Soclu. IS,OOO Diiie&. om, GOOD PllJCE, -STA.not< W-1ll3 1'15 STATION .!~GO!<. VI, -Qle, bbunl &old l5300--··If-!ANDAtfTlllN> ~· """'· Sl!ODllllD. .:=.:;.;.~:,_, ~ ... · . ~~ a.IMr, ~; •:::::,-....,.':':;.::,-wi ........... ~ •..!!,k•lll• 4 SPEED. "' -....,. _,.,,. -HI -. . . ,. • ,..,_,..., ... _ •1295 . -. • . -...., .. SPEClaus-• ., -1-. AU..,.,.. --'-'-""'""--.:........:'-''--'65 Volksw ... en Sedan . tnllll '* « belt er. nck. new tm-. Xlnt eOnd. • h ~ Abeoh*l.Y. "' '" · txtru. Wbk• wltb blem FOR s.r. _........., m. 1 Xlnl ....r. Slll!O :;:-a: L ... lhrtUlll --l•-=• :::=-"-~ Prloed to Hlotf· PllPOllMANCI -1op. l!ladt ....,.. NO t MAUoa ILV'D. ll>d 11r . ....r. abrouu can llW ! p.m. SC.'1351 ··-,. MERCURY -.,,, UlllO -· ~ • CUSTOM c;AltS . _,. loot bnnd "'"' SANTA ANA Al...,. bwiipen.. ·luaa&e .. ski '58 vw BUS 't5 ....... blpala Sqper PS/PB, alr cand., nw .. $1.B. LARGEST a:t.EC'nON 1K TodaT• lptdll at nm I • . -nck. AMfnl,tldio. Lo mi. Rebuilt motor, aaocl tittl 5t;. he air. ' 19d. R/H. cown. pwr ••& t I, ndkl, E"LMORE 'ORANGE COUNTY HOLIDAY R'MBIE\ °""" ....... tns eau6464iJll • • ~ ~-• • ....... • --· ..i -·-• ' Selected AlllO l9iltH.-o.oa"!" till Alb: lhmt blc '65 "C' coupe;~t cond. • dJtklll! Beltctlhrl MT_..,. 1181 Hwbar C.Y Ml430.\ MO'I'ORS' '&4 T·BIRD, full power, *· a:: ~ ..,: w/I.; 812·1163 k _,_ VOLVO = ;.t ::. Pl, I'll, 'ii Ol>DS. 0:.,.1 ~k why ,.. TOYOTA . 1 Center !:: ~ ~Sa:-~ eam • lif'ten; balue;ed: Alter S: SO s wee e...... •"'53 ._...O • · ba'ft th1f wtll Ph. BM-mo , 13032 Hubor Blv4 5374111 .... •--•;2 '61 VOLVO CHZV, ~ sta. _,,. ._.. .-~ ~ ~BeachBl\'d.;1!otinnatr ROY C:ARYEI 1-=°!;.;'.,::;-,:;.~·1n1,~·~tb11-=-,..~·-.,...,,.-1 "ti tine: u· iand -on TOYOTA. GEi' OUR LEADERSHIP w...,., ,'RJff. PIS. v-1 METRO Vm .,.._, -... .._ "'" -·1~ a -th~,. w ... Ez. . PONwac . " ....; .... wb..i. SAVINGS BEFORE Trailer hi ......... ......,.. '· ......... -· .i.e. mew I -,.. • Cood. °"" owner 1900 ... .... .... ~ --flM\ w/wide ovala; 10W bat; FREE lAS VEGAS YOU BUY!!! • .. .. 12'1 Uta $18 181~ tatoQ1 tleyer •. It bu pow. be9t ofter!-~ aft S. -fllibqo SI., CDIUi .C.. ~· """"' T top; ·-""' to VACAnON WITH A " ~ ·~ .. c:: :r.:;,.-""" ~ c.M. --.'Ink-. fie ....... 65 BARRACUDA. ""' tift~ . kl 6-4444 .• 'G T·BIRD •, ...... , ..__· $1985 .... ~ at._~ 1967 TOYOTA Sport crown a..11 Be.t Duer ~ dt I pm '51 ro;I'R9, bd tp, R/H, ,.S. lnventorJ •criflct• .Dlr. xlnt ODl'ld $1395 or $2lO A Oranp i:oumy1 ~ Xlnt cond t'ftlO ta ....... , cor. --~ • ....,.. Sedan. Min p-een with eon-All' QDM, $7J5 ~Tiil .. --. T.o. $61 mo. Jl2.-9T'l'6 Dtaler tnr ~. Rarol. and =-=-·~ITo;~;.;™'=-•;;;__.' -I aeey, HB 8l2-Cll ' -In-. O'"""' "" ll1PORTS 53 QIEV. R/H, Very IOOd • · 6111-l'IG , ' 'II, ()ll),S., outo.· pj)pb r/b, '11 Bl'AnON w...,., auto ti. Ben=tl:o>e,· ~=~~~~ '" ·T -lllD T·BUG, slul pklnrp ~~ ..m. pluS' all the 9L"C'tilOJ' ' _:;a-M&.~ ~t&on . tMd a Gut 1r1•t ab'~. Vf!I"/ ·~· .alt cOftd. n.dio/beater. For DllJ1y Pilot Want Ada. $IDO VW.. New, complete. ~ ieL A luxury ai.Uomcl:IUe. · -.,;,l'lad:;,;;ft,;wl;;;th:=•:;•;;lll;;,;;lllll,..,,.:..;G!l"'='or;;:;oller;;;.,;-=::==~-?:;;:i*::l215=:;*::;'"';1161~=::J==,;D;;ia~l =..,_=;;;,=='..==:i*=:•=::mJ=:::::·*:::e~ till M4-010I after S PM .Priced to 1&ve ~ $lim.OO U61 Harbor, C.M. M6-1!0S .. MALIBU Sport CQillpl· . nto w""~ Ou1y '62 VOLVO 544 s,..t. =.~Ml.,~ ~ Auteo HOO 1! . l6'0--•-•· • "'°' cm "'" 1mpor11 ELMORE ~T ~ '!::...,211 v.a "';.,, -... -llDport ~.,,.. w.-t700 1111-2111 ,.pro!-ol ,_, ..... .MOTORS -I====-,-..,.-=== .. """11-Tl7 .. -. TOYOTA WE PAY . 'ST CllJ'i'Y,. cir, R/H, .. raQ. leli ELM 0 RE Phone 89W32Q « '*t ofter. Ml-ml, • Mot'ORS, .15300 Beacll Blvd. 15.D> Bncb-Blvd., W1tnwtr 3llJ3 Eden Aw. CM. .. "-"· IM-3322. FREE LAS . vm•s TOP DOLLAR ·~ ai .. EVY 11 '7" .~ · AUTQS WANTED VACATION WITH A " ' !115. wlll P9Y oub Jor imported 1966 roYarA Sedan. The ~ FOR Pb. &42-3SIM·aamr ·'=• CLEAN-UP , autot.'Up to '500. Tey u. · moat !IOUgbt alter economy · · ILMORE .., built todoy. Artie"'"" ,; USED CARS CHIYSLEl 1 .13&-14«1 wl.th coatrutlng interior, 9611 GINm Grove Blvd. auto. tre.ns., radio, heater, 'SI NEW Ycftt1~ Rm aw., · '"'· Up to :.> m."" with !II (ONlfB.I. QIYROl.fT ~:!!'.,o~~i\"';,!"~· DATSUN h.p. doing the job. nve to ----. chooM from. As law u 21128 Harbor Blvd. l'REl:1LAS VEGAS V~TION WITH A 1164 DA'l'suN PICK UP TRtJCK. ... Tbll.la tbe moit SJU1bt: .a. aille•a• maker ....... ' ,pi ......... bright red with a Db eontrutin; -Interior. ,Only Gilt! and it'• -....... Only $1095 $1491S • Cblta Meu. ~1203 ELMORE W& PAY . -• CASH MOTORS TOYOTA Pb. 89'-lm 1SD> Beach Blvd., Wltmnltr lnr -.d can A trudtl Jule CORVAll :65 cofts.A. l«I Hp 4 • IPC1. Canu7 .. -. 1111< Int. M .............. -. .... line nylon lino, u.ooo ml. More S:30 p . m. ~-call DI l:Jr fr'ff estimate. FREE LAS VEGAS In I==;=;:;;;;;;;:== VACATION WITH A GROTH CHEVROu;1 I 1911iTOYC1I'A Pld< Up. °"'1· AJ11 ror Sain Mona.,. COIVEI IE p~e with twin bed camper. -11211 Beach BL, ,63 OORVETTE J TOPS ... E~MORE Famou1 for !ta 9 hp, JJ Hwitqton Bu.ch MOTORS m.p.r . .naine and 4-lpf. De-KI 1--33!1 Must Mil. Best 0 ff. r . TOYOTA """"""''°'·a.au .,,. ...,. -------.... 6 body. M~ Xlrlll Ph -... • .,,.,, · Tl+.4110 er 615-1301' Uk tar • -Th1I Weekend: Only WDI ..... I l5lOO Beach Blvd, W--" ; $1«11.' . _, • '':,..11"~ ...:" ~· <!ii!i • ' l:MOll "·" n.f~ ;;1 _____ _;.;;-._ .r.i.. dlr, • lrlde • .,,,... ll(O'l'ORS • .... can RoJpb 141.18 """After 11• .....,.,; .• . TOYOT~ 673-1190 . 'G Air caudttbOa --· 'fTDATSUNNwac,loaded, 'PbJIM-.mo , All PDWft' extra. loft. auto. dlr, n, tak• older .1.5ll) Bee.ch Bltd., WlbMltr WJlL. Trad• '°' inbrd with ~ leatbtr interior. lrode, ,,...,. $19& Pa~ '68 TOYOTA -'•lely roblt eag & other All llnt<d oloa. Plwo "'1le 13MQT or.....-rll equip. Value, $1,000-548-1131 at Sl8t FIAT . G!.T OUR LEAl/EltSlllP HCLmAY RAMBLER SA VIN GS BEFORE Used Cars 9900 lll69 Hubor a:.ta Meta YOU BUY!!! NEED A CAR? 6(HiQ23OpenSun.tDrtve1n ..J)flll Llmi4 • IMPORTS 1168 Harbor, C.M. M&-9303 TOYOTA HEADQµARTERS ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd., Wttmnm Phooe ,,..._ CAN'T BE FmANCEDT ss· CONI'lmNI'Alit Mapltl. eBanlaupl:? eRepcmelllon? cent me OWJ'M!r' llilu. ~ eBad QeclitT e om:.rc.:IT que Sold. AM h( rad&o, eMiUtarJ •New In .V.t •pee4 control, wi,ateer. AU Make P1yday Payments dehD:e CCl'lvenlence1. Air; McCARTHY MOTORS Factoey wanau'1· "*'!·..,17 la! So. Main A Ed.lnpr 11 700 appreciate the ftnett. (2 blocb N. cl Sean) no dealers, pleue-Dir. Santa Ana Pb 5G-350'I' M~77Sl -_ujw PRICED CARS 1960 THR.U Ud. Alwayl a '«> Rambler I sedan •••• $296 mqniftctnt ~ al pre- '11 .,_tan ........,. l380 -.,,. brlnd .... eon. '59 Oldl; led. e.ir cond. •• S440 ttnentall at Johrlal A Son '63 Rambler Rdan • • • • $ Oranre Caw:lti• 0 l d e I t '62 Ford sedan pr steer. $470 • It. bl 11 h. d LID. oln '00 Cad. De-Ville air ccnd $890 Mercury...('.oupz~.--..... HOLll>AY RAMBLER Newport • c.o.ta M-I0- 1981 ffill1)ar, <hlta Mell (1111 '6! TOYOTA Kdlp., ' wbl. drive: w~ bubl.: Ja.295 m..-m-41;1 ~ _ 196' ~-Marti 11 • cir, blade -....... 1oey.--.J TRIUMPH AM/1'11 ndlo. lot a..- ~ ----t;1:;;; .. .,n;;;;;;-m;;-;ea<:::pr1:;-:;2"'.11r.:, ' Goo4 crlltw. $Zl5. Clll ... clltlm. . Ull TIUullPK TR 4. 1'b1" ONL:r $1,950 w/blll _ iop, --. COUC.Al 5:J0.2'MO, evu. !53Ml38 AMll'lil ndio. p·• r l • c t ·a JAGUAl\ xKz ~2; 14,000 eoad. -· ollor I pm. 'If IXJUGA1t Olll-T) I ----· J-.... °'-ICtual mllea.. 1..o.rn.r. Mmt ......., ' eoad. ll>-1253 DIJ• '18 SPrlTIRE, mtO. Ori&· owner. Low mUe11e, lib KARMANN GHIA new. •9"3336 Countloo -•· -respected lJncoln ~ Mercur)'" -~="---~~ roR Salt or Trade. Good OJupr dea}enblp Newport. • l90l TIU,\ '""' '62 •KARMANN GHIA Exoell<nt ~den Tl'anlport1don cu.. 1D . Singtr, 1959 Pontiac Bm-~ Me. 541-1'151. nevllle. 1958 Pontie.c Stir Coupe. turquol.le I white, n.· Private Owner. 499-295? Olio! w ..... HS-'131, ·DODGE . dlo. bet.ta, white .an tb'o- $119S l""1d IHf'ORTS VOLKSWAGEN '63 VW • loaded, Jdnt cond, $165 ceah dell, dlr, win fine 546-7457 1--------========I'" DART Station W1p Ex- IUICK «lknt cmd. Private Puir $8!0 ..... ,,... FALCON bal. $750. Aft U : 30, 494-9773 '62 BUIO< Slcylm, one cm11. owner, attnmey. I eyl, SO,<XXI nU. f73..«8), t to 5. Alie f" l·,--F-.. ----.---~--v-111 VW • hi perfect runnhia Tina. S6E ..,. JUA.vn n-..i"'""ro -I Ul&S Harbor, CM. &tl.QlS cond., dlr. 1'1.n trade or '80. HI. P 0 Cobra lOt S850. m., JtARMEN GHIA, Im.., $1QD cub. 'P)'mll '29.11., '61 BUIO< Electra convt all KI 5-'1323 mac. cond liowi m.Utap. '9f-9'77l. or 139-Mlt pwr., good 11111., body, tlre1; 1·;======== ll8IO. m.sm . · ~ Mun ..n. d"fod sc.nn FORD 'rT VW FutfMck, lo ., xlnt 65 RIVIERA, prfv1le party.1-------- ES INZ ..... 11895: . ., ""'· ll ·--·-·~ ~ MDCED I Ilot coad., mUll ,.. 1895 A PWT ~-1 llr ~ '65 LTD. Bilnd ..,. Whl,. stl-6964 f'Vt!I. $2,050. 96M5'71 wal~f'lalld7 wttb bl1clr IS YOUR &I> in a.\SSI nmt .,....... ..m. 1> k>oidJw !or It. Dlol Kl·IS', fm quick, att1cteni result"' B~EA=u" ... =-O>n=.::..,::::--,s'"1<11'"'m::;-I. '56 BUKX Sta Warm Good v1ny • Full power • flo- IJke ~. $2Z'JO, Save $1(11). C!Cnd. llr{t!'llt cu.tom upbab_ tor')' air. oru, 25,(QI orillna1 --._ al lllfO, b PlS. MMIG alt I pm. , mlleo. !II ... MA-· lllr. auto drift ear-f1l--Dlt 'f3 LE &ABRE. Arw _., ,._m --.....,_11111 CALAXIE !11111 ""· I -1 31 V,Wc Elln-cloo•» lltm .._ SIR Dir wt-ftll _.. .... Air coad. ror -. -tu ,...L a-"'======::====""'I ••-tht. ~ 81 .. • Boo• HQ115. .. ,.---,..., ........ _, ~ Ca ..U1 .,_,. tlllp .... ..,, .., - ,,,.. .. .._.. --.. -.. lttlll •a VW MUil .eD immed. 'S6 ~ eoacti. Good -=rtflct. Dir. ~T151 ~-ml Many utru. $1895 OODd. ~ w/ IUdboart .. J'ORD Fairl.ant, 1tut Col'BID -alt • ----· -. I .,i. Ex<ollert -'IT VW C..-delu.,, 'fuiiY =="'--=="°""· ==-1 di-$lit), m#le ecruipped. tape 1 t t r • o., 131.1139 .. -rw '61 Qten R I b. ~lo boOk· $175. Pt1\ll.t8 Patti 3rd etir. '15-1!07 CHAR.Ii.£ n'I CA MARO -------11 CAMARO RI AM/Fr. rod)O.Xlntcoud. . '00 1'73-9168 eYf' .I.I 142-5671 tcr RE!UL, , . ............................ 1111~!'!!"'!:"'·~':'.:~~~·~--~~-~···.__.::.~.:-- DOWN Pl.US TAX & LICENSE PUTS YOU IN A NEW BUICK ' ' WITH APPROVED CRIDIT , • 1 .. TIME:! I 1 . . BRAND .NEW :·. :-' 68 BUICK- . CALIFORNIA GRAN SPORT 00 WOULD YOU B'~IEVE?? ' . BRAND NEW '67 JAGUAR XKE· tDSTR~ A llAUTIPUL· BEIGE EXTERIOR, WIRI WHll!-S, .ITC. THIS JS· ALMOST UNBELIEVABLE JAG.UAR s4995· ALSO A 1i7 JAGJAR 4·.2 SE.AN · s5.495oo · · FOR ONL y.;, , ' · ' THIS WllKIND A lllAUTll!UL, JIEO EXTERIOR WITH BL.ACK LIATHlll INTIRIOll. ALL THI GOODIES; 'l'OOI ' I • . ' '• .. ,,. °'"" Mottday th~ io.w.y 'tll ' ,.;... 0,... 'Ill 6 ., ~LOSID SUN, I • ' I ' I I ·' t~ I • .......... -1,lM • . ... Dl'f.N .. $JUt01JS ' •ifldff •ta 10 ,,,,,, ' ·-·~'"· .. ) .. .' .. • ._ .'68 .ROAD~·UNN~R. ' V8, 4 , speed, radio, he•t•r, exclUent condition. Les·, thtlJ I 0,000 niile~ .. No. 6624 . • • I szs,s .... , '63 CHEVROLET lmptle 2 Door herdtop,. l27V8, auto- matic, re~i•, heater, · poww 1te·erin9. No. 655<1. ,,095 r '&&PONTIAC ' G!9.· : 4 speed, VI, tri-power1 heater. No. 6550. ~ \ . ·• _ .. ' ~295·' ' . .. radio, '64 CHRYSLER N•Wport. va engine, eutometic tren1- mi11iOn, ra~io end he.fer, po~er ·1tur- ·iftg. NQ. 6507. · $1333 . -. . ' • ! " ... ·-