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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-08-15 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa.. ' ... ---,... .... T ,..._ ' Mesa Aviator~s Last Act~ Warned Lad on Ground DAILY ,.ILOT Sl.tt ,. .. 19 PILOT KEN WAGGONER WON WINGS AS USMC AVIATOR· Veter•n Pilot Brouiht Shuddering Bi r~ Down Heroically DAILY PILOT THURSDAY Al'TERNOON, AUGUST '16, .1968 'ffL.. .... .fo. lflt. J SICTIONL M p.1.Qi q-.eJl f~!!!l!f'le~.Ltd;f Are · North Vie·ts Set for Attack? PARIS (AP) -U.S. efforts to !ind out in some official way whether the lull in C-Ommunist attacks in South Vietnam is intended by North Vietnam as a peace gesture apparently have bogged down. American officials at the Paris peace talks say that as far as they are concerned the question is still open. But they now put major emphasis on their contention that North Vietnam is preparing for an 0£fensive bf pour- ing troops and military supplies into the South at a high rate. "The disposition of the North. Viet-· namese forces indicates that major military attacks are iD preparation," - U.S. spokesman Willii.in J. ·Jorden ' told a news conrerence Wednesday after the weekly session of the talkS\ Ambassador W. Averell flarriman has ever asked Ambassador Xuan Thuy or his deputies whether the lull has slg· nificance. U.S. officials say the ques· lion has not been put directly in any of the formal seS:sions. but they decline to say whether it has bee·n · raised in.priv~te conversation with the · North Vietnamese durine: the ·coffee breaks · at the meetings. . Nguyen Thanh Le, the North Viet· namese'sPoKes'riian, declined to be' drawn int.a discussion of the issue . Wheri he was aSke·d whether it came up:in ihe 22-minut~Coftee"breiik'Wed-• nesday, he said · he onty had time to drink . tea. To anotber.1qu~r;: ,tin .. the same s.ubject · ·he · said: '1The United states continues to intensify the war .in Vietnam ." -· , · · "If North Vietnam wished to con- vey to us some meaning about the purpose of the lull, they could do so readily, directly ar indirectly, and so far we have had no indicatian what- soever." Jorden did not say whether U.S. ' U.S. Flag Wearer Pleads Innocent To Defiling Rap Le at his new:s conference . kept hammering at the point ,that "we are going to keep insisting" . that · the United St.ates must stop bombing: and "all other acts of war" · agaln'l;t the territory al North Vietnam before anything else can be accomplished in the Paris talks. He seemed intent on stressing that his government's stand on the bomb- ing issue, including its refullal to promise a parallel scale-down of mili- tary acUon , is absolutely firm. 'Best Pilot Ever' Say Friends ·and Neighbors "Innocent" pleaded Nathan P. !\.ilgore to charge• o£ defiling the . \merican nag b)' wearing it as a mod ~hirt. The youth who told the arresting of- lcer he loves the American Flag and 'hat Is why he Vt'Ol'e it, was ordered by Laguna Beach Municipal Court Judge Richard Hamilton to return Sept. 17 for a jury trial. Kilgore, 18, of Buena Park, did not \\'elt' staig on hi1 slttves or stripes on i1is chest at arraignment Wednesday . 'l'he Nehru-wt sllirt made by his mother Is being held as evidence. Kilgore was .arrested in San Juan Capistrano a week ago for assertedly, improperly combining fashion 11r'ith patriotism. His mother, Mrs. Lou1le Kilgore, later told San Juan office.rs she had consulted Ute Buena Park Police Department and tomeone told her it would be all fieht to make such a >hlrt. Ju~lamilton released Kilg~, on ~s recogrUzance wilhou~ re· quirin · to post bail. i Nixon and Agneiv To Visit Knott's In Count y Frida y· By ARTHUR R,.VINSEL Of "" 01111 ~lllt stilt lie wresUed the stricken helicopter down like a windmill caught in a tornado, but found ·time in his last seconds to yell at a youth to get ou( of the way. I !ill hand was still on the instru1ntn1t pa nel as he lay sprawled partly out df the cockpit. 'vhich lay like a crwhcd eggshell full o! wiring and wristwatch parts. "'i"le .was U'ltl· best pilot ever __. ~d Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew will you can tell people that, said Mr1. pay a visit to Orange County Jo'rlday. ...:cnneth L. Waggoner, of 3131 Plertt They'll be having dinner at Knoll's .'\ve .. Costa Mesa, as relatives began Berry Farm at 8 p.m. along with Nix-arriving today for a funeraLreuniol) .. on 'll ramily and the traveUng press-Los Angeles Airways Capt. Ken political aide entourage that 'ac-Waggoner 's children, De loa,· 14, ('{)mperties the GOP c~idates for Debra, 5, Billy. 2. were Quiel and lltlle president and vice president. Donba.. 3 months. lay nolsek?ssly A Knott's Berry Farm sJ>OkesmaTI against an. aunt's ghpulder. said the·Nixoo party wfll have dinner. Sa was the neighborhood, except for then pay a brief visit lo Ghost Town an occasional chlld11 shout at an op- aAA other 1Ur.11cUons ill the Buena po1ite end o1 ~ street (tom the 1Ueot, Parle ·amusement park. neatly kept Waggontr borne. }'io particular an-aniementl for Capt. Waggoner. a v e l c r a n meetin& Ule public .have been. made. helicopter pilot who spent eight yeAr1 but nothing ls being done to dl1COUrage on active duty ln U.S. Marine Corps a crowd, the spakesman said. aviation and had slx year1• time with l'be Nixoo party will be en route Los Angeles Airways, was a good fr°"1 San Diego to Los Angeles in an nel~bor. auto caravan. Alan Schwalbe. or 3132 Pierce Ave., Walter Knott. founder-owner of th~ told how It was today. fmn. is a longtime suPJ>Orter or tht!","\. "Thig may give you some insight former vice•prtsident. .:.--into Keo11 charact.er,~walbe llld. lie said Capt. Waggoner only Tues- day volunteered -on Ills day oU -to prevent a neighborhood tragedy, one of a dllferent nature. "A friend gave us an o I d roCrlgerator. My wife an<t 1 just had our second_ set or twins .and we needed . it ror botUes,'' Schwalbe· 1aid .. but we were wotTied about kids getting into It. •I • "Our k1dB played togetber/1 be ex· plain.,d. The ou-duty helicoptor pilot ca~• over to the Schwalbe home and drilled holes to install a lock on the old' C®ler. then re-wired tt as weU,. for betWri ef· flclency. ''I should give you a beer," · Sthwalbe. 1ald ·he t!lki his neighbor Crom lwo ·dOOrl" down the &~t. but he wvi out of brew and, anologized, "You can bke m~ out Saturday," lhe 33·year-old Wagg~ repfJtd l '1lt11 my blrlbday." "He was juM. the 1reatest neighbor," said Schwalbe, "he would 40 anyClllhg for you." Schwalbe, an Intermediate school In· structor aDd former Ciity Council can· dldate, &aid Wageone.r had done an ex· cepl.lonal job io landscaping and docoratln.4 hla northlide borne. "Ile said they wore just about to' th• •nt where they could rest, re1" and ••Y Ill< yard," Scllwalbe said. 3 Countians • '. r.; .. J 1: ; -:.'i'.·1· I : I J •. Ah· line Gives · Names of 16 Crash Victims Ofriclals of Los Angeles Airways and Los Aneeies County Coronel' Thomas Noguchi t o d a y released names of 16 Of the 21 persona killed in Wednesday'! helicopter crash. They ' are: The crew: I. Capt. Ke1aeth L. Wai:toi;ter, 3.'I, Costa M .... pilot. f. Frederick Frac kcr', 27, Redondo Beach, copilot. 3: J1mf:1 A. Black, 301 Wilm.jngton, !llgbt attendant. PaHCHlgetl. 4. J tba P. Mee"°, 76, San Rafael S. Hele• GJI Meebu~ 63, hll wire, San Rafael , 1 I. Patrlcl1 J\1arlc i\tecba1, 32, San Rafael, , I 7. Anne Marie l\1tehan1 a, Lucas I Valley ' ' s. Cllrlllepber Belinll, 14, s.J>ta I J\na. I t. Joaepb J . Kaul, Garden Orove 10. Peter C. Smllll, C...tervuio, Ohio 11. Walter L. IJlk, 72, Blebor, Clllll. 12. Wei Eldtreakamp 39, Denver, COio •• director or ac!ve;.'i/slng aod pr .. motlon !or the Mr, Steak Relta111:an1 chain. 13.~ ... Baker, 44, Dtnver. Colo .. West area coordinat« r or Mr. NAMES, Pase I) ·: .. ~~!!~L~.~~6t·~~ ~·1;.°"'-•IJ\o .-.,:in ·~Y . ~J>U>~~~lfiicl~;i&'~ .. '."-· "Fbe pJa~<j'Jlldoy ,,flu, '"°'11 ,the scars wber:e ii perJQllS:~d"B~dl a '. Los,AnJleles Aimfays h<llcopter Flll)>t 417. EVen while a team,oLair .saiety i;x· ~ts li:tarled its .. probe, deputy cor· f Qriits'. cQnttnUeG .ap • .a~tem~ -to piece " tog'et!ier -fdd identify tlie btoken abd ·burnea 00die$. ' J J ' - ! ~oiltJthoie.,. Yfc~ms-.are · at Yeast J t.Jiree. · ~qge Cburity' r.e·sidenta In· · ctuiling" .tile' pllQtl !Cop4 Kenneth 'L. • Waggoner, );J,. of 3131 ~re~e 'St.i.:Coita MW·. . • ~-:.·'I'~--.'. : ' '. .• -" ~ : . ~ 1·. l • . ! ' P.ILQT l?fl4\_191Pj 1 ' 1 : f • oav.t: \Vag"oner. was prai'I'~ . PY ; witnesses ..f9n. fast ~n~ttr efl<¢11 to . pre yon~ hi" 1114a~~ «ralt· l.!1>m · In• ! Jurlpg a11yone,09 :t~e:1t9u~d ~·'it ceu. . A 1Santa ~· ·~>"'11 1 • -.GIU'd•n · Grove fi!81\''WQJ'e. U)e. ·otbei' co~ '".;iC· tims .. ·, · • "\, · .. · . . Los Anlieles Altw•Yfi .,-.a§ sulpind.ed alt !lights· -'o01e ,llS dai11-llt· tho . waktt: oJ tJJe-:s~con¢.t<:f~str·1D ,ihz:-e• . montlls·: of the· ·S1kw!l<i : ~1:r... twto turiline •. 28..asseneeq:· heliC~r t The 1ftra~ crub, on lll•i'-12, ilrlk· ingly , limll'I' In. <''"'1<1 <!<tails ito Wedneldai' acclnent,, "" the w~ll comrn~dal li.ettoopter crash I n histd<r. l\ll 23 ~·· '~ ·th• craft pUoted ,by Oap1'. 'Jack Dupj.es of llu!fUngtolf Be8$,dJed. I : Among 1he 18 Passengers wa9 Ghi"lstopher Belin'n, "14', of Santa Ana , grandS-On 1 of , Lqs Angeles Airways OWOer CJarenoe_ 891in(h I ,. The flight began.at 10125 a.m. al Los . (See llELIOOP'r!'R, f'.•'e I) . ~ . , . ' Oranire ' , r \ I ,, I ' • -- --· ----===~--:.~=r..:-::-::-:=======::-::c:---·-~·~:c====·=::------· • % DAILY PllOT 11111~. August l.S, 1968 No I I IJ WILLIAM REED el .... .., PW Stdl We Jumped in my comper wocon nd. roared away toward Compton ·~edneaday mornin& to the scene ol pie Loi An&el11 Airways heUeopter c:raab. , · • It was the tecond time 1n 'ttiree montbs that 1 was concerned with .a Cl'a!ll o1 one ol lho big ..tilrlyl>lrdl. On May 22, my good friend Jack ~upies died as bi& Los Angeles Airways l'rotll P .. e J I HELICOPTER •• ~ Angeles lnternaUonal Airport and was ~ due at Disneyland 16 minutes later. In· ' stead, if !ell to the ground at 10:::- a.m. 1D "Pop" Ltuders Park at Bullis Road and ROtecrans Avenue in an ~ area Where scores of chUdrtn were , playJ.n& little more than 200 feet away . ; Th• park ls the only open area for • more than 2 mllea. ! WltnesHs slid the craft apparently ' lost it.I t&U rotor, part• of the tall 1ec- tion, then dropped heavily to the grow¥f ln the griassy playfield, bounc- ed slighUy and burst into names. All 21 apparently died on impact, ac- ~ cordlnl to coroner• off1clall who pro- : bed the wreckage all afternoon • Wedne1dly. Several vicUm1 will re· ' quln ldentllicatlon by flngerprintJng or dental work, accordin& to Chief Mecllcal Examiner.Coroner Thomas , Noguchi. ! Tbe helicopter apperenUy h a d _ troubles before it reached the area ' where it plunged to earth and burned. Witnesses told the DAILY PILOT they first saw the craft at abo ut 700 feet high. Alrway1 officl.all 1ald the craft should have been fly1n& at about 2,500 to 3,000 feet. A iectlon o! the rear rotor fell off the helleopter and fell to , eardl at 919 Poln1etttia Ave., 1ome 111\rM blocks from the crash scene. 'POPPING NOISES' The copter may have had an engine failure as well. Witnesses reported hearing "popping noises" from the craft as it de6cended to the park. Momentl after Compton firemen had extlngul.shed the flames the area of title crash was roped off and in· vestigators headed toward the smok· ing ruins. The National Transportation Safety Board, whtoh investigates air ac· cidents, rushed investigators to begin the search for an answer to why the craft plunged to earti. A team of in- vestigators arrived today from Wa!hlngton, D. C. ~ All records includring .a t a p e recording of the last conversations between Capt. W·aggoner and the Los Angeles Airways operatioM office was impoonded by the NTSB. As yet there hu been no answer as to why in the earlier May 22 crash, Capt. Duples' craft plunged to earth some 2'n miles eut of the Wednea4ay crash scene, CAME APAllT Tm Dizples craft .apparently came apart tn rr»d·air, the tail rotor sepaNting from th e rest of the craft. capt. Dupie1 wa1 !lyin4 east to west and was out 11 mmutes from Disneyland going toward Los Angeles Jnternatiootl. Capt. Waggoner \\'as 12 minutes oot from Lolri An geles, heading toward Disneyland when his craft apparently !eU eport. Grounding of the five remalnlng hellooptera 0( LA Airway• is the •e· ccnd for the airline Which began in 1947 and passenger service in 1952. The line carried 404,000 pasatngers last year. 'I'he May crash was the first in passenger i;ervice. Los Angeles County Supervisor Ken - neth Halm, notin& the simllarlties. hes called for an lnve1tigation by the FBI.' DAILY PILOT N_,.,..... C.n ..... H•111tlttttff leedi Let-" .._. Wntlllhlim ,... .... Yelh, CAUFOINIA OltAHOE COAST l"IJlltSH IHG COMl"ANY ftthttf N. Wetd Pr"ldlflt •lld 1"111111.iier Jt,lc It, Cutl ty Viet P'rtt~T 9M ~ti MMliltff Tko11111 )C,,.,a Editor Tht"''' ;.. Mutph;,.,. /MMolnt Editor P1ul Ni.1111 A.....,.11 ..... ........ ............... C•fo MtN: :m ~I &rt ltrwf .,..,_, "9d11 nH W•I a.llloO .....,,..,rf l..t4llMe -..:fl: m ,_, •-"~ INQI: .. .,. ''""' for ' bellcoptor dropped haavlly frccn the aides In Paramount, r couple of milts from where 1 was headed Wedoesdly morning. There wes no levity, no real sadness as yet, only an anxious feeling Ulat we might not be able to park clpse enough to the scene .and mi#lt have to walk and thus m1s1 the nooo deadline. RtpOrler saodl MeJor wu with me. We didn't exactly make ttie noon deadline. Alt.bough it may have been ' ' _,tWbat UDpro! ... IODll and c:ertalnly not totllly objectlvt, the 1Jiht of 21 dead ls enough to make even the most , seasoned repOrter retch. But there was no time Wednesday morning for 1personal expressloo, only a job to be <lobe. We arrived at Bulli1 Road and Roaecru1 Ave.nue mla.utes after the helicopter tort ltHll and 21 ptr•Olll t<> nibble. Back here the editors anx· iously awalted tbe report from the a ocene ol tra(edy. That scene waa a gtaasy pll,yfteld near a sandpit complete with fwl!!I• and all playthlngs for happy, living for youngsters. In the center ol. the field was death, the stench of burned ·human fltah and the odor Of unburned bellcopltr fuel. W)>ll6 Sandi went to llU:. to people I .went to record the acene an film . Thea I aaw tbe first of the dead. The scene was UDdeseribable and even Joh es I know I mU1t dtlcrlbe It, !felt tll and angvtd at ttle lnab!Uty of "man to be perfect and to creata the perfect. The ~enoh 'of death w'91vel')'Whm as press, police and firenien wor~ed among those dead and among the witnes6es who bad seen death descend on that Comp\Jon playfield. We went abOut our bucble11, Sa.pell ...i I, illd wtiu th' pl)one •calls w"" mode ·t!ld the story t<>ld, we looked on each olbar and MOh read tbs look of one wl19 boa looked upon borrors too . t o Do unspealrAblt to ~nd. Out of this vtow of. !Ii. unviowablt came a police off leer, &mllln&lJ ttllln1 • everyone '\\'Ot'klng that horrlble acene that the Compton Park and Recre1Uon Department had hot coffee and doughnuts ready for tho6e of us weary I.ad heartlick over what we had nen. · The atory ol bow 31 penons died on a brllht. 11111111 Wodnllday mornlag re<onJed In print, Wt !Uniod f<> 1Nlic away, sun C&lTYloe wltt> ua tl>t vivid memocy of the deaf.b fct.ne. Ni xon G a in·i~g Support Candidate, Aides Meet on Law Enforcement SAN DIEGO (UPI) -With h11 !ell flank growing pollUcally stronger, ll!cb1<d M. Nixon summoned advloers today !or a conltreDce on what may be !be laadlnl tuue of tho 11118 presi· clentlal ciunpolp -llw and order. Tom Reddlri. and ,Jame• D. Bennttt, former d1rtctw of the U.S. Bureau of Prl>ona and CW'l'tllUy t loading force behind tho drive for stuf federal gun controll. On ll>11 point ho dlsacree• with Nix· on, wbo matntatna that regiltratlon and lloenalni 11 not the an1wer to re· ducing the number o! crimes com- mittod with f1reartn1. Nixon 1ald ln a atatement released July 9 that the federal 1ovonunent and the 1tate1 1bould enact law1 that would provide mandatory and ultnd· od pdaon term• for indMduala con· vlcted of commlttlnl crlmoo with IUDS· The Republican pmldenUaJ candl· date set aside part of a day of strate- gy sessions with state and regional campaign lieutenants for a meeting with bi& advisory committee on crime ·, and law enforcement. The panel bas _, cbarged with ahaplnf a Nixon poalUOll on the Issue. B etter Law Enforcement • Major Issue , Sa ys HHH DAILY PILOT Pllllft 'r ......... ~ PRAISES PIL OT -Jonathan Dollar, eyewitness to Wednelday's craab of LA Airways helicopter in Compton, dlaplay.s two amall gears and .dime which hit him in chest as be watched helicopter break up. "God bless that man," Dollar satd of pilot. "He tried to the very end to keep that copter airborne." •Gears Hit Me" Witness Tried to Rescue Pilot By SANDI MAJOR Of "" o.ur ,ntt s1111 '"I\vo small gears and a dime hit me on the chest and fell in front or me." Jonathan Dollar, 46, one Of the first persons to reach the burnini Los Angeles Atrwaya commuter helicopter Wednesday, picked up those few uncharred remlndera of the dty death came to the crowded Compton park. Dollar ..mo llve1 at 1422 E. Rosecrans Avenue and Bullis Road was Jn his mobile home combing his haJrwhen he ''heard 1 mbsing sound.'' "I jumped to tlhe door and looked out and saw tlhe helicopter. A piece o( the rotor blade waa hanglnr !rOm 1t. The fuselage wa1 at about • 40-deiree angle," he said. He Nld he nn to the park 11 the craft began fall.In& "not nearly aa faat aa you would expect -pretty fact - but not all that fast." He wu about 100 feet from it when it hJt the ground and the gears and ooin stcuck him, then fell to h1a feel He said he pk:ked up tbe memen· toes, lbe!I Witched the hollcopter 1trike 11>1 &round and "It bounced up about 30 inches, Hilled and Instantly was in flames." "There were no screams." Dollar and a transmissio n mecha nic from nearby, Don Rosteing, 28, saw a man they presumed to be t.be pilot, hanging pirt way out of the cockpit. "He was unconsd.OUI and pinned in the wreckage at hlJ mld!ecUon wl.th an angle bar.'' Dollar told. "We tried I<> get I<> him when flames crept up hi• pant.I leg. He never changed ex· pre11lon. I gueaa he might have alreidy been dead." There was a second "varoom,'' Dollar went on, and more namea 1ud· denly rtr .. ked tbrou_, the aircraft in· I<> the cockpit. "l w .. just 20 feet from him. I tried I<> go under the flames but we couldn't do it. The other man 1a1d, "lt'a 1onna blow up in our faces'." Dollar said by the "Jntermittent flr· tng of the engine" that he heard from the Sikorsky 681-L craft, M knew the pilot wu tr)i.n& to restart the eng.tne. "God bless tba.t man," he Nid. "He tried to lht vtry end I<> keep th&t copter airborne.'' OAl\.Y 'RAT,._~ ........... EMBERS EXTINGUISHED -Compton fireman pokt1 hose Into rubble that was once LA Airwa.ys' helicopter In putUng out last of blaze when craft fell from the sky in a fireball. Marijuana Users 'Horsing Around' BLOOMINGTOf'i, Ind. (AP> -U Bloomington lrta marijuana users have been smokJng more l1tely and tnjoyin~ it less, Police have an answer. _ • City detectlvu, •ctlnf""'1 a tlp. found a cache of four pounds of marl· Juana and three pound1 or horBe manure 1n • suUcue, alone with a recipe for drying and ertndlng the manure to miJ With tbe marljua.fijll 1nd "ttretch" it. f, Nlxon turned to the aubstance o! bis compalp tfltr 1pencUng two d1y1 r•· pairing fences within his party. He persuaded a number of GOP moder· ates and Uberala to stump the country thla fall In hll behaU. Many of tbom hod fought bard for the candidacy of Gov. Nelson Rocke· feller of New York. Several had shown JitUe enthusiasm for Nixon's choice of Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew as his vice presidential runnini mate. Reporters covering Nixon here re-peatedly W<re Informed by Robert Ellsworth, a key ataff aJde, of new tele~ phone conversaUons Nixon had just held with Republican figures . "Mr. Nixon villted on the telephone with ••. " EUsworth would hegtn. By Wednetlday afternoon, Ellsworth had ticked oU 1 Uat ol names that tnclud· ed Gova. John Chafee of Rhode Island, John Love of Colorado, Harold Levan· der of Minnesota and Dan Evans o! \Vashington. Also added to the Ust Wednesday wa1 Sen. TbruJton Morton {R-Ky.), one o! the leader• of the abortive Rockefeller campaign, Morton new in to the Mi11lon Bay rtaort to peraon- ally confer with Nixon. When be came out, Nixon aaJd he was dellJh~ to announce that Morton would campaign with him in the fall . The Kentucky aenator, who .erved as Republican naUonal chairman W'ben the la~ John F. Kennedy defeated Nixon for the pAaldency Jn 1960, told newamen one of his duties would be to make aure that former Rockefeller supporters eave the eothuallltic sup· por1 I<> Nixon that lit WU '""' they would . Chalrman or the crime group 1s Evelle J. Younger, cUatrict attorney for Loe Angeles County. Other mem · bera include Loi An1eles Police Chief By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice Pre•lderrt Hubert H. Humphrey 1aid today no one wants law and order more than the nation's law ... blding Neeroes and poor -but he said better law enforcement 1hould mean libera· tion, not repression. Negroes and poor people want better en!orcement 11ain1t major crime ln· cllldlni murder, •Ill• and r<>bbtry bocauat thfy are .111 l\lOat lreq\ltllt W:ttms. tbe Democratic presldenual contender 1aJd. m1 prepared remerk1 were for a Newark, ·N. J., luncheon tbJs al· temoon. · "For all law•hldlnl Neps and poor, law enforcement 1bould not mean reprealion, but llberaUon,11 he said, "not a further cause for re sent· ment, but a new freedom from fear and the con stant threat of violence." Humphrey said law and order will be a major campaign issue th.ls year From Page 1 NAMES •.. Steak. 15. J\lrs. Kenneth J. At\\'tll, 1886 S. Jersey, Denver, Colo. 15. Mr1. Kenneth .J Atwell, 1886 · S. Jersey, Denver. Colo. 16. Earl ft. \VaUace, 614 Mulberry Lane, Be llalre, Tex. and said some, but be d1d DOt name anyone, "w!U try to UH It I<> divide America .•. to excuse their failure to deal cons.tructively with ollher uraent tocial needs." On the Dtimocrtatlc aide , Sen. George S. McGovern 1aid 1n Cherry Hill, N. J., he would accept the vice presidential nomination if lt were of .. fered at the Democratic National Con· venuoa. But be 1aid be would rather be .... -• ..... from South Dakola II ho doea not win !ht ~·, prMldtntlal nomtnMtoo. Sen. Eu1ene J. McCarthy -od a nailnnal housing policy !bat would help minority !lrOllPI rebuild thttr CID· tral city nelgbborboods, and moloa It po11lble far tbem to Uvt in ouburl>s near the oentir1 of new !obi. "Tboct who WCllld rOLy toltlly on private industry to rebuild the lnner city are perpetuating a miscon- ception," M c C a r th y aaid in \Vashington. "The fact is that private industry has .almost never built low· cost housing for low·lncome families." Hwnphrey issued a new call for an ''open convention," Wednetday ln what · aJdn -aald •ould bl tbe 1urest rwd to Democraiic unity 1Jlter. But Allard Lowenstein, a leader of a group of anti·Vletnam war po 11 c y Dem,ocrats. protelted-tbey were being denied even perlpllerll ..,Uclpation. Both Humphrey and McGovern, meanwhile, called for ellntination of traditional floor demonstl'ations at the Democratic conven,tion in Chicago starting Aug. 26. Humphrey called the demonltraUom: ''phCl'ly'': McGovern called them "boring.'' Fin a I Week Of. A MONEY SA YING EVENT al . .JJ. J .. {Jarrell All HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED PIECES in your choice of style or fabric may be purchased 11 a moot . generous saving• of ••• Truly a rare money -savi ng oppo rtunity Off Rttular Prices Over 200 Styles of Sofas -Chairs -Love Seats -Ottomans in your choice of any Heritagt Decorator fabric. HERITAGE' a living tradition In furnl1ure YOMr /a1JOritc intt-rior dtsigntr will bt happv to oaailt vou ••• PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op .. Mon., Tbun. & l'rl. EVIL Ill 2215 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA , CALIF. 6U·0275 646 176 I --------------~------~~~-----~-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... I I ' l 1 t t , I l • f ' ) 1 " I • .----· Huntington --· -Bea~h Your Bometowa Dally P aper .,, VOL '61, NO. 196, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES JHURSDA Y, AUGUST ·1 s, '1968 .TEN CENT.S No Time for Emotion; Reporter Has Joh to Do By WILLIAM REED Of 1M Dll/lf' Pllift Sl•N We Jumped Jn my camper wagon and roared away toward Compton \Vedoelday morning to the scene ol the Los Angeles Airways helicopter crash. It was the second time in tnree months that I was concerned with a crash of one of the big \\illrlybirds. On May 22, my good friend Jack Dupies died as his Los Angeles Airways helicopter dropped heavily from the skies in Paramount, a couple of miles from where I was beaded \Vednesday morning. There was no levity, no real sadness as yet, only an anxious feeling that we might not be able to park close enough to the scene and might have to walk and thus miss the noon deadline. Reporter Sandi Major was with me . We didn't exactly make the noon deadline. Although It may have been aomewhat unprofesalooN and certainly not totally objective, the sight of 21 dead is enough to make even the most seasoned reporter retch. But there was no time Wednesday morning. for personal expression, only a job to be done. \Ve arrived at Bullis Road and Rosecrans Avenue minutes after the helicopter tore it.sell and 21 persons to rubble. Back here the editors anx.· iously awaited the report from the scene ol tragedy. That scene was a grassy p~letd near a sandpit complete with swtngs and all playthings for happy, living for youngsters. In the center of the field was death. the stench of burned human flesh and the odor of unburned helicopter fuel. While· Sandi went to talk to people I went to record the St!ene on film. Then I saw the first of the dead. The scene was undescribable and even as l knew l mwt describe it, I felt ill and angered at the inability of man to be perfect and to create the perfect. The stench of death was everywhere as press, police and firemen worJsed among those dead and among the witnesses who had seen deaqt descend on that Compton playfield. We went about our business, Sandi and I, and when the phone calla '4'ere made and the story told. we looked on each other and each read the look of one who has looked upon horrors too unspeakable to comprehend. Out of this view of the unviewabJe came a police officer, smilingly tell.bu: everyone W{lrking that horrible scene that the Compton Park and Recreation Department had hot coffee and doµghnuts ready for tll06e of us weary (S.. REPORTER, Pago I) Copter Mystery Probed ' FAA Agents Sift Debris; Coroners Clieck Bodies ' Officials today began the grim business of trying to find out why death dropped from the sky into a Compton playground Wednesday. The playfield today still bears the scars "'here 21 persons died aboard a J,,os Angeles Ab·\vays helicopter Flight 417. Even while a team of air safety ex- perts started its probe, deputy cor· oners continued an attempt to piece ' new Nixon , A Slat e Co nty Visit Friday 'Rjcb~ ~b and Spiro Agn<w wm !Jl!i~, jlllY • ..a.vWt to OraupCounty'l';fdly:· They'll be having &qer at Knott's Berry Farm at 6 p.m . .aking with Nil· on's family and the ::tling pres.a:· PILOT KEN WAGGONER WON WINGS AS USMC AVIATOR V1tef1n '·Piiat .Brought Shuddering Bird Down Heroically , 'Best Pilot Ever' Sa y Friends and Neighbors By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of~ 0.1" P'lttl SHlf He wrestled the stricken helicopter down like a windmill caught in a tornado, but found time in his last seconds to yell at a youth to get out of the way. His hand was still on the instrument panel as he Jay sprawled partly out of the cockpit, which lay like a crushed eggshell full of wiring and wristwatch parts. "He was the best pilot ever -and you can tell people that, said Mrs. Kenneth L. \Vaggoner, of 3131 Pierce .'\Ve., Costa Mega, as relativt!s began arriving today for a funeral reunion. Los Angeles Airways CapL Ken \Vaggoner's children, De Ina, 14, Debra, 5, Billy, 2, were quiet and little Donna, 3 months, lay noiselessly against an aunt's shoulder. So was the neighborhood, except for an occasional child's shout at an op· posite end of the street from the silent, neatly kept Waggoner home. Capt. Waggooor, a veteran helicopter pilot who spent eight years on active duty in U.S. Marine Corps aviation and had six years' time with 400 .Jatn Meeting Los Angeles Airways, V.'&S a good neighbor. Alan Schwalbe. 0£ 3132 Pierce Ave., told how it was tod8y. "This may give you some insight into Ken's character," Schwalbe said. 11e said Capt. \Vaggoner only Tues· day volunteered -on his day off -to prevent a neighborhood. tragedy, one of a different nature. "A friend gave us an o Id refrigerator. My wife and I just had our second set of twins and we needed it for bottles," Schwalbe said, ·but ·WO were worried about kids .getting into it." "Our kids pl.ayed toge~her," he ex. plained. The off-duty hclicoptor pilot came over to the Schwalbe home and drilled holes to install a lock on the old cooler, then re-wired it as well, for better ef · !iciency. "I should give you a beer," Schwalbe said he told his neighbor from two doors down the street. but he wt6 out of brew and apologized. "Yoii can take me out Saturday," (S.. PJWT, Page %) political aide entoura that ac· companies the GOP c ·dates for president and vice president. A Knott's Berry FarnJ spokesman said the Nixon party will'.'have dinner, then pay a brief visit to Ghost Town .and other attractions in the Buena Park amusement park. No particular arrangements for meeting the public have been made. but nothing is being done to discourage .a crowd, the spokesman said. The Nlxon party will be en route {rom San Diego to Los Ana;eles in an auto caravan. \Valter Knott, founder.owner of the farm, is a longtime supporter of the former vice president. P ilot Associa tion Cancels Meeting After losing its second Orange Coun. ty member Wednesday, the Professional Helicopter Pi Io ts Association canceled its meeting scheduled for Downey today. On May 22, the association lost its founder, LA Airways Capt. Jack Dupies of Huntington Beach. \Ved· nesday, LA Airways Capt. Kenneth Waggoner of Costa Mesa died in a similar crash. Waggoner was a charter member of the as50Ciation . Ban Airport, Say Residents Fighting de•perately to delend their homes from posslble invasion by the roar of jet airplanes, more than 400 persons jammed Spring View School Wednesday night to protest the possibility of a regional airpOrt in }1untiogton Beach . The meeting was called by members of Prestige West J.I om e owners AssociaUon in an rffort to organize a large group or citizens to oppose placement of an airport on the Bolsa Cbica properties east of Warner Avenue along Coast Highway. 'Vllll.am Woltz, ~appin1 for the Jarge audlence the tnrormatlon on the proPQted Bolsa Olica site for the regiooal airport as it a.ppee.red in the DAILY PILOT. said thet "all or west Huntlpgton Beach, and all ol tho ruidents will be affected by this airport tnd au its noise. "We face the lo!1 or the beach and ' I ~ the wetlands. a serious change 'Jn our SUIToundings il the airport goes here. "Just try to ·envision the SUI· roundings of Los Angeles Airport." He pointed to jet exhaust, possible crash hazard, school dislocation and loss of political control as some of the posslble con sequences of adoption of the Bolsa Oiica site for th<: airport "I don 't know of many t>eoPle who would i;tarl looking for a home north of the runways at LAX." Woltz told the receptive crowd or homeowners. Pointing to lawsWU filed against the county by Newport Beach residents over the present Orange County Airport. Woltz asked the audience to "just C!Onslder what is happening elsewhere (over local airports)." He explained to the reL'eptive au· di..... that the COWlty Airport Com· mi18ion haa scheduled public hea.rlng5 for t.bt la.rt week nr thfs month on the airport po1dbiliUe1 and noted that f. ... -------- "they're not fooling around." ,"What do we do about It? Start pro· t'esting now rather than after the dccisiorui are made, Just as It said in the newspaper, the DAILY PILOT, "This is a demonsb'aUon tonight that shows the people do care. The time to react ts· now and the most •f· ficient way to react is through group action. "\Ve wiJI have to do our homework," Woltz said. pron11slng that committees wUl look into every factor concerned 'flth the aU,,Ort "We intend to invesUgate everything about this," he b:W:d the homeowners. The tone of the meeting was set by Joseph Haisky, president of Prestige West Homeowners, when he opened the session to the standing room only crowd and called for opposition to the Bolsa Chica 1itl "not just to an airport ... together and Jdentily the broken and burned bodies. Among those victims are at least three Orange County residents in· eluding the pilot, Capt. Kenneth L. \Vaggoner, 33, of 3131 Pierce St., Costa Mesa. Capt Waggoner was praised by witnesses for last minute efforts to prevent hia ill·fated craft from in· juring anyone on the ground as it Cell. A Santa Ana boy and· a Garden ' Grove man were the other county vie· tims. Los Angeles Alrways has suspended all flights -some 118 daily -in the wake of the second crash in three months ot the Sikorski S6l·L, twin turbine, 28 passenger helicopter. The first crash, on May 22, strik- ingly similar in most details to Wedne sday's accident, was the wor st commerclal helicopter crash i n history. All 23 persons aboard the DAILY P'ILOT P'llo .. ~r lllcllWlll KMllltr AT THE SCE NE -Sandi Major ol the DAILY PILOT (righl) and Compton policeman interview crash witness Roy Davis, 28, of Comp.- ton minutes after Wednesday's helicopter crash. Davis was in his car two blocks from the crash site when he saw LA Airways flight 417 roll over and plummet to earth. 'Gears Hit Me ~ Witness Tried to Rescue Pilo t Dy SANDI MAJOR Of IM Dtl" """ Sttff ·'Two small gears and a dlJne bJl me on the chest and !ell Jn front of me." JOOC1than Dollar, 46, one of the first persons to reach the burning Los Angeles Airways commuter helicopter Wednesday, picked , Up those (ew uncharred remJnders of the day deatt came to the crowded Compton park. Dollar who liv s .at 1422 E. Rosecrans Avenue and Bulll1 Road was in his mobile home combing h1a: hair when he "heard a missing IOUnd." ''I jumped to tlbe door :.ind looked ou t and 1aw the helicopter. A piece Of the rotor blade wa1 hanging from it. The fuselage was at about a 40-deare• angle," he said. He a.aid he r.;.n to the park 11 the craft began falling "not nearly u fast as you would ex]'.lflCt -pretty fast - but not all that fast." He wu about 100 feet lrom It whtn k hit the ,,...,00 and the gean nd coin a~t him, then fell to bi& feet.. He aald he ptcl<ed up tilt memen· toes, then watched tht. MUcopter 11Til<e U.. sround and "IL bounced up l about 30 Inches, 1cttled and instantly was in names." "There were no screams." Dollar and a. transmission mechanic from nearby, Don R0&teing, 28, saw a man they preswned to be the pilot_ hanging part way out of the cockpit ''He was unconsclous and pinned in the wreckate at his mhlse<:tion wlUl ao angle bar," Doltar told. "We trled to get to him when fimnes crept up Ms pant& leg. He never changed e:it:· pressJ.on . I gueu he migbt bave already been dead." There wias a &ee0nd 11varoom," Dollar went on. and more name1 sud· denly streaked through the aircraft in· to the cockpit "l waa just 20 feet lrorn him. I tried to go under the f!Jlmes but we couldn't do Jt. The other man 1aid, "It's gonna blow up In our faces'." , Dollar said by the "lntennltttot !ir· Inc ol the eoglne" t!\a\ be heard !tom the SikontJ S6l·L era!\, be tnew tho pilot wu \cyin& 1o;.-m the engine. "God bleu Mt man " he aald. "Ht tried to the Ver)' eiid to keep that copter airbolne." ~ craft piloted by Capt, Jack Dupies of lluntington Beach died. Among the 18 passengers wa! Christopher Bclinn, 14, of Santa Ana, grandson of Los Angeles Airways owner Clarence Bellen. The flight began at 10:25 a.m. at Los Angeles International Airport and was due at Disneyland 16 minutes later. ln· stead, if fell to the ground at 10 :37 a.m. in "Pop" Le\lders Park at Bullis (S.. HELICOPTER, Pare %) Airline Gives Names of 16 Cr ash Victims Of(iclals o[ ·Los Angele• Airway1 and 'Los Angeles County Coroner Thomas Noguchi lo day re\ea&ed names of 16 or ttie 21 persons killed in Wednesday's helicopter crash. They &re :. 'flle, crew : 1. Capt. Kenaetlt' L. Watt-t •. 33, Costa Mesa, pilot. . . · . %. FrederlU: Frader, ·rr, 'Ridcmde, Bead!, copilot. 3. J ame1 A. Black, 30, Wilmiogto1i1 rught attendant . Passengers. 4. Joha P. Meehan, 75, San Rafael .. •. 5. He.Jen G. Mee•aa, 63, his· Wile', San Rafael, I. Patricia l\larle Meebaa, 32, San Rafael: 7. Anne Marie -l'tleebaa, 8, Lucu Valley 8. Christopher Bellnn, 14, Santa Ana. . , 9. J osepb J. Kaul, Carden Grove JO. Peter C. Smith, CentervWe, Ohio II, Waller L. Ll!k, 72, Bieber, Calif. lZ. Wea Elderellk.amp; 39, Denver, Colo., director of advertising and pro· motion for the Mr. Steak Restaurant chain. IS. L. E. Baker, 44. Denver. Colo., Western area coordinator for Mr. Steak. 14. Kenneth J. Atwell, 1886 S. Jer· sey, Denver, Colo. 15. Mrs. Kennetb J. Atwell, 1886 S . Jersey 1 Denver, Colo. 16. Earl R. Wallace, 814 Mulberry Lane, Bellaire, Tex. Mar ijuana Users 'Ho rsing Around' BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -U Bloomington area marijuana users have be~n smoking more lately and crijoying it less, police have an answer. City detectives, acUng on a tip, round a cache of four pounds of mari- juana and three pounds of horse manure in a suitcMe. ' Oraltjfe Weather You won't get 1unstroke Fri· day morning 'cause Old SOI \totl't inake hl1 appearance UD· til at le&.'it 10 :30, after which clear skies should prevail over the Orange Coast I NS IDE TOD AY rourtcm Cuba" rc/11a1rt1 cup- ture o cro~du.stino pla.ne Joocf... td truth dtadlfl poiso" m&d flfl to a.sulum fn Amcricc. Page 4. c.i1t.m1e C'llltllliMI ·-·-Dtlolll Mttlm ......... ,_ ........... , ·-,.,. (alll ·-........ .. _ -" .... " " .. • l•lt ""' " .. " " .. • Mtv• '"'' --.. Of-.C..... II '""' ....... ............ ,,,, . -ft• ---, ........ ,.....,.. , .. ,, -. ~ .,,.... " --.. ' -.. I 2 DAll..Y PILOT lKursday, AU9115t 15, 1968 ::=.::::::::.:=;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;; -- ' ·BY WILLIAM REED ......... In the Wind : An all-<>ut balUe to oppose the 13otsa Chica site for a future O r a n g e County airport was promised last night by a large of Huntington Beach homeowners meeting at Spring View School. Disregarding the merits of the discussion on an airport for a m~ men!, It's great to see the homeownen abandoning the "Jt won't happen" pbllosopby and 'seriously lnvesUgating the possib- ility of an airport at the Bo Is a Chicp site. Airport Commissioner R o g e r Slates· has been running all over the area trying to convince people that the airport could become a reality and that It does m~rlt in· vestigation now before decisions are .made. * The homeowner investigation was initiated by members of Prestige West Association under the leadership of president Joe Halsky. The secretary for the homeowners association, M r s .• William Woltz, pointed out that the homeowners became aroused after reading that the military rrobably is not finished with three o the five possible alternates for the future ~unty airport. ;, That leaves two likely locations 'and the Balboa Island site emerged from the "it won't happen" category to be ranked right along with the San Jroquin Hills site on the Irvine Ranch as likely airport .spots. '' Since the Airport Commission •and the Board of Supervisors are :responding to the crisis in air transportation as listed by the •county air transportation master '.J,Ian, time for consideration and deliberation is short. :. * ~ Too often the public becomes in· ~olved in its own business too late o materially chanRe anything. A egional airport in Huntington ;Beach might be a good thing, or it !might not. Who really knows one !WHY or another right now? Cer· ·binly not the county officials who are looking into all the facts. , One of the items to be considered l>y those who will select a site is the -effect. on surroundiltg population. If 1the people living near a proposed airport site won't tell the com- mission bow they feel about the airport possibility, wbo will? You .can't blame the governing officials .If the people won't speak up before 'declalons are made. ' • ·Stater Market Holds Opening : A ~ grand O!><"ini celebra· .lion with owr 100 prizes and free bags )!>! grocoi lol will bo held today through Saturday et tbe new stater Brothers Market In Huntingtoo Beoch. Thi "8,000 aquare foot market, located at 6862 Edinger Ave., will in- clude tho llteot In equlpmant and fix· tu.res, according to Jim Jacobs, store manager. The entertainment during the three· day celebration will include Sheriff Jollll, Big Frank from Morrell plus Reginia Ll11lputuan Hones. DAILY PllOT ............... c ...... OllAff08 C'O.U1' PUILllHIHO ~AHY Reb1rt N. W11d PrK!dt!ll •nd Plltollallft' J•r.lr a. Curley Vb ""'ldltit tftf ~• Mtftlftr 1~."''11 kt••ll ..... 'no"''' A. M11rp~l11e Mt/11111119 Edlfor AllJ•rt W. ••t•• w.nr.,.. •••' ~111d1l1 tiu~!lnt1I011 l!IMat ECIOW City Ed!lot' H•tfllff" 11tec• Offk9 JOt Ith Str11t t.t,.ili111 Atltl11n1 P.O. lei 790 tl641 --.....,.,. lltdl: 221f W..t ..... ..,..,.,., CeMt Mewt )30 Wtlt &ly "'°"' • U1U!1t lt•:fti m F...i A'llftW • . • • Bolsa· ' ll'• po11lble Illa! the Boba Island nuclear power and de1aJtJn1 plane idea did not drown La th• 1eJ of mllllon1 of addldonll dollara tackad on to th• original 1414 minion cost estimate. The nuclear plant, whicb bas ~en • suggested !or an artificial island loca· Uon olf the coast oC Huntington Beach, apparently was abandoned by its private backers July 24 -when the cost estimate rose from $444 million to f/M million. Directors of tl1e Metropolltan \Yater District (MWD) were told TUesday that the Atomic Energy Commission Desalt . (AECl. one ol the parUclj)enll In Ibo po11lbi1 d•IW><t Boa• hland proJac~ IJ requestlng 1ctlon on alternaUvt 1lt11 to Ibo lll1nd. 'Ibo acUon 11 wad by atJ>t. )G. Aceordv.!g to MWO gener1l.manager Jmu'xMilll, S,ej:retory of Ille Interior Stewart Udall is insisting that an egreement on an altemraUve be readi- ed by the participating parties by the Sept. 15 date. Such agreement would be a prere- quiiite to appreval by Congress ol any change in relattonsttip between the federal government and the MWD, 1C· cording to a letter from Mill.II to the DAit. y ,,LOT , .... ~ Wnlllom .... EMBERS EXTINGUISHED -Compton fireman pokes hose Into rubble that was once LA Airway&' helicopter In putting out last of blaze when craft fell from the sky In a fireball. From .. flflfl. l HELICOPTER .• Road and Rosecrans A venue in an area where scores of cbtldren were playing little more than 200 feet away. The park is the only open area for more than 2 miles. \Vitnesses said the craft apparently lost it:s tail rotor, parts of the tall :sec· tion, then dropped heavily to the ground in the grassy playfleld, bounc- ed alightly and burst into flames. All 21 awarently died on impact, ac· cording to coroner1 oHiclala who pro- bed the wreckage all afternoon \Vednesday. Several victlm1 wlll re- quire ldentlflcatlon by flngerprii)Ung or dental work, according to Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner 'Ibom,s Noguchi. The helicopter apparently h 1 d troubles befOre it reached the uea where it plunged to earth and burned. Witnesoes told Ille DAILY PILOT they first saw the cra!t at about 700 feet high. Airwiaya otlidals said the craft shoold have been flying at about 2,500 to 3,000 feet. A section of the rear rotor fell off the hellcopter and fell to earth at 919 Po1nsettUa Ave., some three blocks from tbe crash scene. The copter may have had an engine failure a:s well. Wltmesses reported .hearing "popping noises" from th e From Pqe l REPORTER. •• and heartsick over what we had seen . The story of how 21 persons died on a bright, sunny Wednesday morning recorded in prlnt, we turned to walk away, still carrying with °' the vivid memory of the death acene. Water District Talks Delayed DislOluUon of the Talbert Water DiJtrict, propoaed by the cliy of Hun· Ungton Beach, wu delayed one month Wednelday when the matter came befort the Local Agency FormaUon Commlsaion <LAFC) . Rodgtt Howell, attorney for the di•trict, got Ille delay from the LAFC. The district, formed ln 1964.. serves only 13 landowners 1n the 1outhe11t section of Huntineton Be1ch with ir· rlgation water. -Two direct« posta on the d.11trlct'1 board were UM! 1Ubject of a contelted election last year. Home own er nisldents of the area protest that they pay tuto to Ille dl1!rict bu! ret no benefit. The city malntaiN that It can 1ervo !Ile 13 landowner1 with !n1gaUon water. The district had a 1967-64 tu rate of 23 cent.I and a.n annual budget ol f41),7'.8. £. craft as It descended to the park. Moments after Compton firemen had exti.nguisl:led the fiames the area of 1lhe crash was roped oil and in· vestigators headed toward the smok· ing ruins. The National Tran:sportatlon Safety ~. which investigates air ac· cldenta, rushed invesugators to begin the search for an answer to why tne craft plunged to earth. A team of in· vestlgators arrived today f r o m Wasllington, D. c. All records including • ta p e recol'.'ding of the last conversations between Capt. W-aggoner and the Los Angeles Airways operatlOM office wa:s impounded by \be NTSB. Aa yet there bas been no amwer as to why J.n the earlier May 22 cruh, Capt. Dupies' craft plunged to earth some 21,1 miles east of ttle Wednesday cram scene. CAME APART 'Ille Duples craft apparenUy came apart 1n mid-air, the tail rotor separating from the rest ol. the craft. Capt. Dup:ies wls flying ea•t to we st and was out 11 rnlnute1 from Disneyland goin& toward Los Angeles International. Capt. \Vaggoner was 12 minutes out from :..OS Angeles, .heading toward Disneyland when his craft apparently fell apart. Grounding ol the five remaining helicopters o{ LA Airways Is the se- cond for the airline which began In 1947 and passenger service in 1952. . The line carried 404,000 passengers last year. The May crash was the first in paHenger service. Los Angeles County Supervisor Ken- neth Hahn, noting the :similarities, has called !or an investigatioo by the FBI. From Pqe 1 PILOT .•. the 33-year.old \Yaggoner uplied, "lt's my birtbdey." "He was Just the greatest neighbor," a aid Schwlolbe, "he would do an,uung tor you ." Schwalbe, an intermediate school In· structor and former Qty Council cs.n- didate, la&d Waggoner had done an ex- ceptional Job In landscaping and decorating his northslde home. "He 11id they were just about to the point where tMf could rest, relax and enjoy 1tl• yl?d.' Schwalbe •aid. Introducing a newsman to the War· g<:a!'I' f'.mily, Who provided a ph<lto of tho vicUm , Schwalbe asked U they had a newer copy. "He brought hll unl.lonn home once hr a picture, but we were out of film," 111d Ponny Waggoner. adding, "we never taok ft." Plcrurea were taken at the end ol Clpt. Wanonor'1 1 .. t !Ugllt, but hopel\llly hiJ family will novor ,,. them. . . -I •• Plant .Sti-11 ·~Afloat? , ' ~-Parilclpont, lnctllde So u th a r n Cllllornla &dtoon Co., !be San DI•so Ou lld S:le<lrlc. Co. II Huntinr\On -·' The compn y owni:s a large tract of land near tile present facilities on PacUjc Coast;H.i&hway and has plan• for addlUooal generating lacilltie1. The new L\clllUes could include nuclear power and desalting equ.ip· menL • •• Thil aJ.Wnetl.ve could replace the first pl*< deve!Opment 'lriiicb bid been plannadJor tile ltland. accanlll>( to MWD spO~esmea. That phase wu to product IO mijllol) lalml ol ,,,..... walar per day In addftloa lo tloclrlo po\\•er. Ir the ntw first phase eN'Vtd \\'orkable and pfofitable, it's pos•ble that tbe second phase -doubling and tripling capacity -would ~ added "in much the aame manner •·earlier dlocuiled (the Bolla Island project)," the MWD directors were told. Tuesday. The federal gtivernment bas granted the Bechtel Corp., engineers tbtis fir - on all ~ses of the nuclN.r island idea, '35.000 to study alternates to IN Bolsa lll&nd alte, UM d1Nctor1 Wert . told. . ' . Club Owner'• Wife - ' BechW -.Mi's••• .. ID rtpelrj to lllo lllWD .... -.. .... -O!l•ty or ustnc the lluntlngton !each 1Jte, or poesibl,y SU Onofre n u c I e a·r generating plant, for-the desalting facilities needed b1 MWD prior to the expirattpn oC t.Q a&reem,qt b!etween the federal government and the parW:lp&tln&.a&•ncles on ~. 30. The MWO m..,..ger predlcted that "the Bol!a Ialand plant W<>uld be con.- structed withia four years." · . He warned tbe dlfectora, however, that the W•ls!lm Amelldmeot a atote property tax. reµer mNsure, would "absolutely kllI any desalting plans." C0nspiracy Trial Ordered Covell of Corona del Mar was bound ov0< for trUii In Superior Court by Mwtlcipal · .cOurt Judge 1:1 arm on Scoville, Wedllesday. She was ordered to appear in the Santa Ana court on Aug. 23. The j>laUDum blonde wile of Hun· tlngton Beach ken night club operator Gilbert Covell displayed no outward sign of emoU<ltl when Scoville reached hls decision after listening to a lengthy four hours of preliminary hearing tesUmony from Huntington Beach police officers, newspaper reporters and Mrs. Susan Amador, 20, of Anaheim. Testimony by Mrs. Amador, a onetime helper at the Covell:s' teen-age hangout, Syndicate 3<KX>, 302 Ocean Blvd., a pp ere n t l y overcame technioallty:.type argument.! of defense attorney Heney Cleary of Orange. Mr!I. Covell, looking haggard but composed in her black, sheath-type dress, 1at alone with Cleary et the defense table. She did not take the stand nor did defense cougtel call any wJ.tne1se1. Mr:s. Covell h8J. been charged with two counta of conspiracy -to slander and to libel Oftletr James Mahan <I tho HunUngton Beach Police Depart- ment and to pervert t h e ad· ministratlon of justice. The charges atem in part from a May 28 statement, wblcb was printed in the city's newspapers, ID whlch Mrs. Covell charged that Officer Mahan had thr .. lelled via telepbooo to kill her husband. ~ Police denied Mrs. CoVell'a ac· cusation. Tbe district attorney's ofiice began an 1Dvest1g1tion of the incident wllicb culminated In \be July 31 arrest of the woman. Mr:s. Amador, at the bearing, testified that oo the moming of May 28, Mrs. Covell and co-Oefendent Dan· ny Imoela decided a r o u n d ''the breakfast table" ta report a threat by Mahan. Mrs . Covell was to act "very upset," she added. "Jeanne (Covell) wanted ~ publicity. Thlngs were going pretty bad at the club ... 1ometblng to make the police look bad," R1d Mr1. Amador. 1'1e 1ttrectlve bloode wltoea liso mentioned ·one of the "four or five" discarded plans. "Danny (lmoela) was to take a ehot at Mrs. Covell and blame it on Mahan • . • to make a bullet bole 1n the ctr," the testifled. A squadron of Huntington Bet1th police officers, he1ded by C1pt. Earle Robitaille, accompM1ied 0 f f J c e r Mahan to the proceedings. The Syndieate'a operators and the ctty and police have long been at odds. Since July, 1987, when the p,re:sent name 0 Syndicate 3CXX> Club ' was adopted, charges of narcotica aales ln the area, the club being a haven for dru1: usecs, accus1Uon1 of harusment by both sldeo, marijuana "planting" have been made by both Covell and police. The penalty for conspiracy - a felony -if Mr1. Covell were· con- victed, could be ·u much 11 three years imprisonment and SS,000 fine. She is presenUy free oa '825 ball. Police Officers Escape as Beach Squad Car Hit Last Valley Sc1wol Site Selection Due Tonight lluntingtoo Beath police officers must lead charmed Uves, at lea5t sergeantl do. Sgt. Elvan A. Biddle of 1710 Pine St., Huntington Beach and Set. Jack Bullar of 1709 Lake st., Huntingtcn Beach escaped serious injury Wed· nesday when thelr black and white squad car was rammed from the rear while waiUng at a red lighL Investigating Callfarnla Highway Patrol officers who handle accident reports inv~ving city police veblcles have still ~qt determined th~ speed of the other car. Its driver, Mrs . Verna Jeanne Cam- pos, 44 , of ~5 E. I8\h St., Costa Mffa, was unhurt in the accident which oc· cWTed on Pacific Coast Highway at Main Street. Last of eight sites for future Foun· tain Valley schools are to be recom· mended to school district trustees tonight. The six sites, picked tentatively by the district's Director of Business Services Jack Mahnken, are to be purchased with · two others 1f the district11 '8 milllon bond proposal is approved by voters Sept. 17. The sites have been chosen with the help of HunUngton Beach and Foun· tain Valley city planners, Mahnken said. The eight, when schools are con· structed on them, will make Folllltain Valley nearly a "walk-in" district, with a school for almost eve.ry quarter sectloo. The six altes to be recommended are: -Behind \be Gemco department store, south of Warner and weat of Brookhurs~. -&i<lth ol Talbert and -t of Magnall ., ---&>ulh:" ol Talbert ""'1 east of Magnolia, -South Of Talbert and west oi. Ward, -SOU.th of Ellis and w!:rt of Bushard and -South of Garfield and west of Magnolia .. Tw9 sites, already .approved by trustees, are in the process Of being pw-chased, Mahnken said. They are located south of Ellis and west o! Brookhurst streets and south of the Fountain Valley City Hall. Fin a I Week OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al .JJ. J. (Jarrell ALL HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED PIECES in your choice of sty!. or fabric may be purchased at a most generous 1evin91 of •• , Truly a rare money-saving opportunity 0 Off llegular Prlc" Over 200 Styles ol Sofas -Chairs -Love Seata -Ottomans in your choice of any Heritage Decorator fabric. HERITAGE . a living tradition tn furniture , Your favorite ln"rior dtl111Mr wfU bf Mpp~ to ON ii& ~ ••• PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS OpooM•,n...•M.-•<II HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, Cl,LIF. M6-0l71 M6-0276 I r Tllursd.y, August l5, 1968 DAILY PILOT 2J • ven Baseball Men ilave Ups and Dow11s I , UP'IT~ ALL FOR NAUGHT -A Fort Worth, Texas Colt League player gives his all-even if it means standing on his head-to reach third base safely during a Wednesday game with Illinois in the Colt Leag ue World Series at Riverside. But his efforts were in vain, as Uie lad was too late to beat the throw. Senators Move In New Y anksAre Old Y anl{s When They Play Angels By EARL GUSTKEY Of rlM DellY P'll•t S!•tf Nobody confuses the New York Yankees anymore with the New York Y·ankees who terrorized ttie American League for 40 years until their recent demise. But Bill Rigney isn't so sure. "Gee, you'd think those guys were the Bronx Bombers or something the way they beat us," the Angel manager quipped late Wednesday night. He was reflecting UJXln the Angels' ~2 loss to the Yanli;s. The victm-y gave the Gotham nine a sweep of the three game series and a 104 edge over the Orange Coontians for the season. Angel Slete Aug, II Anoel1 ... W11hlnotor. 7:ll D.m. l(MPC "121... 1, A"lltlll VI W111\lne1'!!n 7:5J P.m. l(MPC {710) New York has always played well in California, and what's even more em- barrassing f01" the Angels is" the fact that the Yanks came into Anaheim Sunday night with a five-game losing streak. The Angels w111 try tlle hapless Washington Senators tonight at th e Big A. Jim McGJothlin (7-10) faces the ~nators' Frank Bertaina .~4·11 ). Tonight is Huntington Beach n1ght at the Stadium. Last night's attraction. viewed by 14 ,104, was billed as a duel between two American League youngsters, who, say their employers. will be the biggest names in pitching in a few years. For the most part, it was just that. TI1e Yankees' Stan Bahnsen en· countered no trouble until the eighth i!lning when the Angela scored twice ;:i.fter loadirig the bases with no ouu. He was lifted in favor of Steve Hamilton . The Angel starter, Tom Murphy, wasn't as sharp as he has been but -still recorded four strong innings. He had two men on with two out and had given up two runs ill the fifth when Rigney lifted him. "Murphy was OK. His control was a little off, though. He goes into the Anny for six months Sunday and l th.ink he's trying too hard to get a cou· pie of wins before he goes. His pace seems to have quickened." Rigney cracked up writers in the post game gab session with his discussion of putting Bubb&. Morton at third base in the ninth inning. He needed a third baseman for the inning and Morton was the only capable body left. what with Chuck Hinton out with a rib separation. "Had Morton ever played third before?" a writer inquired. "I don't know -I was afraid to ask." N•W YORI( CALll'OllHIA 1brllrlll 1brlltbl T~/I, U • 0 0 0 IC ltkNlrltl, U • Q 0 0 Glbb1,C •OOO ~IUln.p 0000 Ma~111, lb 2 1 O O Cott~r. Pll. I O O O While. II • 0 c 0 Frt'llCMI, II J 1 1 0 Pepl!o.w, cf • 1 1 1 Oav1lllkl. cf • 1 2 O COIAWllO, II 0 0 0 0 11.epot. rl J 0 0 0 W.llobln...,,, rf l 2 1 1 Mlncho!r. lb • O O O ICosco. rl 1 O O O kT•llno. :lb • 0 1 2 Ce>1.ltl •11 01locltt,..t lO OO CIArkt . 2b • 0 2 2 ll'ldl1rdl, ti ' 0 0 0 lth..,.,,,p l0011C,_,2b lllO S.tl1mllton, ., 1 O O O Murp!l'f, p I 0 I 0 Wr lghl, 1 O O O O McF1rl111r1 ,ii 1 0 0 0 !lut!l"'Nllr, 11 O o o o Lock1,p 0000 Morlan. II' l 0 0 0 f1>!1'5 » I 7 I To!1ll 33 2 J 2 NtwYortr. ... , UIOlmCICID -$ C11!fornll 000 CICID 020 -2 Ill N R •ll •I SO lllln..tfl !W,11-1) 7·1/l J 1 1 J l S.Hlmll lon 1·2/l I 0 I 0 1 Mur...,., ~L ..... l '-2/J • 2 1 l l Wr .. hl l/l I 0 0 0 I l urllfNltt I ll I l l 1 0 Lock• 1.111 t t o e 1 111mn 200 101 HIP -MUr...,.,. tTr11h). W,, -WrlOlll. Tl~ -2·1'. A"91'1d1nc1 -1410ol. LOllGER LEGS NEEDED -Pillsbiirgh's Maury Wills (30) gels hi s leg tangled wit.b Giants' Ron Hunt when trying to get over the latter to field an incoming throw from the outfi~ld. Umpire Ed Varga called U'IT~ Hunt safe when the toss to Wills got away. Coach Peanuts. Lowry (6) looks on. The Giants went on to score a 2-1 verdict in 10 innings. Wills and Hunt were none the worse for wear. r--~~~~~~~~~~ Negotiation Impasse Angels, Dodgers Are Even PGA-Player Rift Stalls NEW YORK (AP) -The dispute between the Professional Golfers Association and the tournament pro- fessionals appeared to be at an im- passe today, but PGA officials are keeping the door open for further negotiations. The players broke with the PGA earlier this week when they announced trhat they would form an organization independent of the PGA at the end of existing tournament contracts. The tour involves $5.6 million. Gardner Dickinson Jr., chairman of the Players Tournament Committee, said Wednesday he felt a limit had been reached in negotiations. J-Iowever, Max Elbin, PGA presi- dent, said, "I don't believe the PGA position hu been fairly presented to the players. We would like to appear before a meeting or all the men so that we can present the !acts o! the case. I don't believe -when the issues are aired -that the situation is ir· reconcilable.'' The players, thotlgh. are showing no lnclinstion to bend. They are seeking greater control o! the tour. Unof· fi cia lly. the players were reported to have told the various sponsors they would compete in the same tourneys as this year. "The PGA knows what we want and has refused to budge," Dickinson said. "I honestly wish that we could get together, but it doesn't appear possi- ble. In Wasbington, William Rogers, at· torney for the PGA, 18.id the door is open for negotiation. He 1aid his client's position consist.ed of t w o points : 1. That the PGA tour must be jointly shared by the players and the PGA. SOU TH AFRICAN UPSETS HOGAN MANCHESTER , Mass. (AP) En1ilie Burrer, the National Collegiat.t champion from San Antxlnio , Tex .. and Laura Rossouw or Durban. South Africa, both scored upset victories In the 41st Ladies Tennis Invitation at Essex Coun.try Club Wednesday. Miss Rossiouw, No. 4 In South Africa, jumped to a 3-0 l&ad en route to a 8-2, 6-2 victory over Patti Hogan of UCI. Miss Burrer 1COred an U, 6-3 vie· tory over Mrs. Joyce Williams, Great Britain's third ranking player. 2. That the tour must be ad· ministered in a gerious, businesslike way. The 16--man PGA executive com· mittee hu called an emergency Sports In Brief meeting Friday at the nationa1 head- quarters in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. Touma.moot sponsors have been sum- moned to a meeting in Houston, Sept. s.a. Montreal Finally Pays; New Swim P ool Opens MONTREAL -Montreal secured its National League baseball franchise Wednesday. Sponsors of the team beat the deadline by more than 24 hours when they turned over a check !or $1,120,000 in United States ftlllds to league presi- dent Warren Giles at a news con· ference here. At the same time, John McHale, a leading bc:seball fl gure, was named president and chief executive or the team and Jim Fanning, a close friend of McHale, was named general manager. LONG BEACH -America's newest aquatic 1ports-put.;;.c recreation facili- ty, Belr11ont Plat.a Olympic Pool, opens Its doors to the public tonight for the first Ume. A program of 1wlmmlog, diving and water polo exhibitions will publicly dedicate the 13. 7 mlUJon facility, built a1 part of the City of Long Beach's 1horeline develo!"ment program using tidelands oil fund1. There wll~ h;; no admission charge for the event, which will begin at 7 p.m. ... BERLIN -East Germany's Roland Matthes clipped four-tenths of a se· cond off his own world record with a time of 2:<17 .5 for the 200 meters backstroke Wednesday in the Leipzig swimming champiooships, AON, the official East German new1 agency reported. ... ... ... BOSTON -Tony Conigliaro took his rtr1t "llve" batttn1 drill In month• Wednesday, alto pitched ror about 15 minutes, and came away encouraged by both workouta:. BALTIMORE -The Baltimore Orioles announced Wednesday that right-·hander Roger Nelson is being recaUed from Rochester to replace in· jured catcher Andy Etcbebarren on the club's roster. Etchebarren has been put on the disai:l:ed list, with a broken bone in his right hand. He is to undergo surgery Friday. Dodgers Flee Once-friendly Shea Stadiun1 NEW YORK (UPI) -There was a time when the Los Angeles Dodgers looked forward to invading Shea Stadium but today they fled from New York with delight and will not f~ce the Mets again Utis season. The expansion club completed play with the Dodgers Wednesday night on a winning note by taking a 4-1 decision. That ended the season's competition with the Mets holding an 11-7 edge. The Dodgers had today off to '"''I '"'·I '"'· I Auf, I A.Uf. 20 ..... Dodger Slate ra 11 "lthbutlll'I J Pm I(~ 'I"' -"! Pltflburtt'I • •.m. Kl"I &Cl ftfl • ~hbural'I 10:• 1.~1 KJl't 6'Cl "'' :1 Hw:I: ,,,;; :JI,: 11 l!J2 f'll I Hou1lofl ,n •.11'1. U0 Plucked ~from pages of the random notebook : Next year's Angel-Dodger exhibition series will feature three double no-hit· ters in extra innings for both sides if their 1968 campaigns are any criteria foc judgment. · At . the moment the clubs are floundering dangerously near thelt league basements and after 119 Wts, they boast (?) identical won loi1 records of 53-86. Somewhere out of the outrageoa.1 rental fees the City of Anabetm receives for use of the Bii A, you'd think a few bucks could be 1pared &o WHITE WASH ·~1111111111111 .. GLEIOI WHIT• dye the Infield grass which was chew. ed up and killed In the recent Ram- New Orleans football game. The clumps of brown marring OJe Infield make the joint look: like 1 second-rate producl A touch of irony-the Japaneea U.t· tle League World Series entry was 1pecial guest Of tbe Angeli at Wed· nesday night's game with t h1e Yankeee. It coincidental.ly happened to be tbe 23rd anniV'ef'sary of the dropping of an atomic bomb on the Japanese city at. Nagasaki, a bombing which brought an immediate close to World War II .. A recent earthquake la Mexico ctt) &book the bulldinc of Mexican Olyn:iptc track coordinator Bill Easton to bald that It knocked the water out of ibelr bath tub. Orange County Raceway gener.i manager Mike Jones wa1 nourisbiJil his ulcers Monday night after see.int: his piclw'e Jn the DAILY ·PILO'j', where a fellow depicted with him wu identified as "an aide." The "aide" turned out to be the chairman of the board for the Raceway. Anyone with guts enough to live. ti Phoenix detervet an extra tu O · emption. And anyone roollt.b eaoap &o drive 1,00I mlle1 to see Carlsbad Caverns oaaht to have bis bead u- amlntd. U.S. Tabbed Over Santana & Co. regroup their forces before invading Pittaburgh fer Friday's rtart ol a -giame .... ieo. Rookie Jerry Koosman, who opened the season with a victory over the Dodgers at Los Angeles, recorded hi.I 16th win by beating lhem Wednesday. Mexico ii going all out for tho O~ pie1 . . • license plates Ir o m. t.llrooghout the 29 provinces all fMbJn the Olympic rings, as do IUCb com. mercial Jll'O<Wdl u Jello, broakfut cereal and even lhe lnurilt car Import 1Uclon they piaoler all over y-Cf&" windows at the border. CLEVELAND !AP) -The U. S. Davis Cup team, accustomed to pla}'ing on fast courts, will be favored to defeat Spain ill the weekend inter· zone challenge aeries starting Fridey. That ii the view of uperU who have studied the two reamc ill pradlces on the JUrold T. Clari< Macodam-typc court.I a surface comluclve to boom- ing s~rves and slamming volleys wt.k:h are tnidemarks ol t h e Americans. A pair of 1lngles matches win launch the compel!tioo Friday, follow- ed by doublff Saturday and two more slnglel Sund•Y· One pOinl ii awarded for vic\1ll'y In each matth. 11...., Spain ii llO-y--old lo!at1uol Santana. wirmer at Wimbledon In 1966 and at the nationals at Forest Hills In 1965. He Is a tactici111 wttose finesse has brought him vict"ory Oil an t)'pes of surfaces. Juan Gisbert. 26. and Manuel Ore!Us, 19, Paw-been tr y I n g reverlshly to get their reactions geared In the couru. Another Spanial"d, LI.DB Orilla., a fine doublet playe<, ii luo.ndicopped by • pulled leg muscle !Int IUl!ered in Caillornia and aggravated now so that he requires doctor's treatment daily. Arthur AIM, Olarlle Puarell <Od hometown product. Olark Graebotr ....... molnU.5.hopot. --·-------------------- AD 1hree have been p 1 a y t n g briUiantly most of ttte season and se2m to have reached their peak. They thrive on the hard courb. Jaime Bartroli, veteran captain of the Spanish team, admits that his players Pave been involved In time cOOSwninc adjuotmflll, not only to th• fast surface, but alto to the faster ball used tn the United State1. "We cilllll(( do our best on these courts," bf: says. "The bi& MTVI and volley set the pace. Wt mUBt counter wittl more taietic1. "Frankly I would gay that th• p1'ying condid.ons pve the American• a 20 percent advda&e. We are con· dltimodtoclov""""''""'lf"'wer' on tis IUiiace t think wt could be Nlted even. And U ft play OW' belt we might even beat them. "I would like "° IN the courtt for tht Davis challenge rounds ltan· danlized, '' BarlroU coottnued. "'nlere haa _, a move for this, but •'hen i\ ., .. brought up in a mee11nj In Czechoslovakia two years ago only nine votes were for tt. 'l1W was a bil and disq>poinllng • ..,..1se to Ill<. "However 1 I am tun1 our J>oys will maI<e a good lhowlng. The) alwaya have done well tn Davia Cup com- pelltion tn tlM 1.llltt four or five yetr1 and have gained a lot Of valuable ex· ~-·" The win put Koooman Into a Ue wilh Tom Seaver who bad 16 wins list season for the MeU ' club reocrd. LOS AN•lllS ND 'l'Olltc ••r '"", ••r~nl Vtn.111•. M • I 1 I Hltt9l!lorlo • J 0 1 I W.O.v11,cl '111~,cl 'Ill Jll ... l ..... ,Jlt •llOlllhl,rf '111 1<.19o¥1t, 1b ' 0 I I C . .lontl, If J l t I Sflw1 .. ,ll 40 111Cr1~,1•J121 ii:1111v. rf ' o • 1 Mtrtlri. c ' • o o P-ldt.ai 4121conll'lt,Jb (111 Tot .... C Jllll.Jlu.itl Jilt 11-•• ll!llC-...11 Jiii C,O.twn. • I 0 I I ~""'·"' 1111 8111'""*"" • I I I • Toti• » 1 1 1 Tlllll JI ' II J LOI A.,.._ .............. C10 111 otO -I N"' Vooti ............ 110 012 IDc -• I' -Vtl'Mll•• "-"'Id!. 011 -L• AnH1M 1. LOI -Lflll ~-4. ..... 'l'ft '-t• -,!,.,. ''" tolll -~kb IUI ll11M (2J. S -1Cr111t110DD1. I' M ll Ill al IO Slfttlf !l.,_1'1 I t 4 J I ' C,Ol'9111 111111 1111"-'-111111 ~ tw.1 .. n f 7 I \ I • HAVLICEK HURT IN BENEFIT TILT BOSTON (AP) -Jobn Havllcolt, veteran Boston Ce1t1c1 ltlr, blJur• hi.I left eye In an all-ctar bend baskelball i•me Tueoday nllb~ lli-cording to 1 team spokesman. Havileek'1 eye was cut and nollta after WUlia Reed of the Now Yodc Knlckl acddentally jammed a !Jn .... In Iha eye durlnl the 1am. in -ticello, N. Y .. the tpakesmu laid. / • ' - >' ' JI DAILY l'ILDT ThurMS.y, Aligust lS, 1961 . BUD TUCKER LOS ANGELES -Roger Maria la leaving and there art th-wbo will bate to 1ee blm go. ntera are those, on the other band, who will dJs· play no l.Jliulsh at Maris' departure. In fact, many will bt pleased to drive him to the airport. Rebels Drop SA Ace By ROGER CARLSON OI Ille DlllY PMtl ttelf Ira Cage Finale • Woody's Gets Shot To Avenge Defeat Woody's Wharf wrapt up the Costa Mesa Recreation baskelball league tonight at Orange Coast College with a chance to avenge its oa1y loss of the campaign aga!Mt Johnson & SOii (Orange Coast) in the secood game of a doubleheader. Opening boltillUes feeture Jab6co Pump aOd Golden West while Ocro-7 lite out the liDal night of actJoo With a forfeit win over UC lrvil:le. Jl'or Instance, one group planning no public demon- 1trattom of grief is the Baseball Writers Association of Amercla. Maris had little time for the gentlemen of tht workinc preas and he worked at it to a point where tht fffllng became quite mutual. ~ Maris trouble1 with the press, indeed the world, ltarted that autumn day in 1961 when be deposited a bill into the right!leld seats at Yankee Stadium. II was no ordinary home run because it was Maris' 6lst of the Another blow' to t b e South'• hopes ol a victory over the Nortb in the ninth annual All.star f o o t b a 11 game w.as suffered by coach Jim Coon'a troops when tbt Rebel forces learned they would not have the tervlce1 ol Santa. Au's M • r v Whitaker for the game. ' Pro Nets Woody '1, paced by John Vallely, Dave Waxman and John Fairchclld, b re e zed through its first nine games before falling w the upoet bug in the last game of the aecond round to John&on & Son, 79. Tl wheo RJ ch Hardgrove sank two free th.rows with flve secOnds left in an overtime period. "' HalOll ancl it broke a record held for many years by th• leeendary Babe Ruth. They put a bug beside Maris' name in the record boot because he had taken 162 games to accomplish bil feat. In Ruth'• dty the schedule called for only 154 --The foregoing, however, was neither here nor there to the IU1feren of the national pastime. ~Y are for· ever Harcb.J.n& for new demigods and Maris' heroics were made to order. The man becafne a hero overnight and tlreacly an Immortal figure . Why Whit&ker failed to report the last two dayt are still unknown, but -Coon relate1 that the South will be going without him. A 6amaging blow to MY the least fOr the South, aa Whitaker possessed 1 great deal of the speed in tile South backfield. He runs tile 100 in 9.8 and is regarded as probably one of tile top two bacb in the county. Hole-in-one At CMCC Woody 's stands 13-1 lo date,, Golden West stormed back in the second half for 61 points to upend Johnson & Son , 95-76, after trailing by two at the hall Wed- nesday nigbt. Marta, from the beginning, wore hi s fame badly. In fact, It did not fit in the least. Some love public adoration and newspaper ink and :. they wallow happily in It. Maris drowned in his. · j t: There were reasons, of c:ourse, and · most of the His lo11 leaves the South &quad with 28 players in· eluding alternates for the Aug. 22 encounter with the North. A hole-in-one was record· ed by Tim Boyer, the resi· dent goU pro, on the 155- yard par three fourth hole on the Los Lagos c0urse Friday at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Boyer used a five·iron !or his fu9t hole-in-one in 41 years of goU. With Boyer was fellow pro, J o h n Mahoney. The second half explosion was underscored by Ollie Martin's 24-points, Merk Miller's 16 and Br I an Ambrozich's 12 in the finaJ half. ,.J ournall1u knew about them but it did not make their f, I job• any easier. Unhappily, lt did not ease the atrain t u of" the relatlODI. ~,. * * * Doo Filchbe<:k of Marino had broken his leg earller to pare the squad to 29. Women's club action on Friday in a low gross and low net tourney was won by Nadine Maze in the first flight with a low gross of 84. Orco-7 was the latest vie· tim of the Wharf Rats, as Waxman led all scorers with 35 counters in leading his mates to a 91-78 victory. Vallely and Fairchild fOllow· eel Waxman's act with 19 apiece. ~ M•rft wat a country boy, thy and r•tiri ng and I .. withN only to IHI I.ft alon• to pursue his trade. He • did not undtrstand the fame which had suddenly been thrust upon him. It confused him end IMwlld· ered hira, even scared him. Coon's South sqood went through another two hours of drills Thursday nl·ght at Marina with the emphasis on the defense. ~\I • ~I ·-• .. i....v...,..-..1. , I l r-t I . ' ' • ' It made him a lot of money, to IHI sure, but It also brought him great unhappiness. Probably the worst thing about Marls' 61 home runs It that they were hit when he was a member of the YankHt. New York f1 a vatt and strange city. It Is cold and warm• up only for the celebrated. When New York wlshH to take a h•ro to Its heart and the hero r1(ectt the overture, only great trouble and anguish can visit him. * * * If Mari& was to war with the writing people, he could not have been in a worse place. At the time of bis telebration there were more journalists dogging the Yankees than any other team in baseball. They hounded him in their relentless pursuit of quotes and made his life almosl Uhbearable. U Maris was to war with the writing people, it was a terrible mismatch. He was a loser going in. Maris would have quit before this had . not the Yankees traded him to the St. Louis Cardinals. He found more peace there and it p ennitted. his career to linger longer than otherwise. Without the trade Maris would have long since vanished. Of course, there was every reason Maris' life would be more restful in St. Louis. The journalists did not dog him there, mainly because be gave them no purpose. - After the Action Vi Hoskins shared low net honors with an 89-14--75 along with Hazel Webster Alttl.9\lgh not termed as the starting defense, here is what Coon revealed as the Winning teams in two-man Monarch Bay lnvi lational volleyball tournament 11 who jelled best in the over the :weekend gather fo~ victory ~ose at end of competition. Players are defensive scrimmage on (left to ngbt) Warren Watk1n.s and 81 ll Stuart, second place finishers; Bob Thursday: Leedom and Herb Kostlan, third place; Dale Shostrom and Chip Harrell first Guards -Doug .Casey of place. Seated on ladder is referee James Curtis. 1 180-14-75). Low gross title in the se· cond flight went to Peg Iten's 106 ·with Bev Bat. tistoni on top ol the low net scores with a 100-25---33. Corona del Mar and Charles --------------------------------Shirley Cummaro's 109 was good tor the third fligtJt low gross mark and Fran Lewis took low net with a l 12-3'l-3'.I. Meyerette of Westminster. T ackles Ca rl Hernandez · and s t e v e Galvan of Mater Dei. Llnebacken -Jim Berg and Eric P.atton of Mater Dei. Corner backs -M.t.ke Cor· rig.an and Rick White of Marino. Halfbacks -Bob Wickerstiam of Huntington Beach and Rlck Deckert of Santa Ana. Safety -Rod Graves ot Tustin. English Soccer North Picks Defense For County Grid Tiff Wolves· Duel To 3-3 Draw On the Mesa Linda course it was Carnelle Kennedy with a 113 for low gross and Nina Danielson's net 83 for PASADENA -Playing a low net honors. With rive days of practice Loara and Dave Maas of man short for 53 minutes, Frank Bartosh scored 72 left before kickoff, the North Anaheim. the Los Angeles Wolves bat-for low gross honors in has its defensive setup com-Alex Henderson of Brea tied back twict to earn a 3-3 men's ck.lb action over the weekend. Dan Lazovsky Jed plete according to coach and Al Sanchez of Magnoli a tie with Detroit Wednesday the way in low net action Herb Hill of Loara. oontlnue to battle it out for night in a North American with an 83·20----63. · ~ th the safety position. In preparation ,VI e Soccer League game. Following Lazovsky was ninth annual Orange County Practice continues toni~t Jack Frazier (75-11--64 ), All-Star football game, Hill at 6 at Loara with Do lD· The Wolves' inside right Dean McClanahan ( 7 8 • has ·Rt up the following juries at the North camp. Mickey Walker was thrown 13--65), Jack Reid (77. alig·nment to defense the The North made one out of the game in the 31th 12-65), F'Ted Fredensburg Rebels' razzle-dazzle double player switch, d r 0 PP in g minute after Detroit had (75-9-66), Al Bennett (77- Fulierton linebacker J ohn 11 =) N Po1 ki 176 wing offense: taken a 2.0 lead on goals by --vu ' orm e n · Tackle positions will be Miller for Valencia'• Piat g..a7), Lyle Graham (75· It was close for a half, with the winners holding a three·point edge at the end of two quarters. However, the Wharf Rats pulled away in the second half to win easily. kin .,-H ...... Wood'Y'• ~rf • U-fl Orco-1 45 ,._n ........ ('1) FO PT PP TP' ~·!bl" 1 , I , lnlOl!I 1 I • W•~m.n 13 U Felrcillld I J 1 lf Bed911 ' 2 I 10 Wln~ri1 l I 1 2 Hulcll!n1 I ! • ' VelleiY 1 ' ,, Toftll ll If 10 '1 0n:•1 !7i) " • ' .. .. ' ' J FT Pl" TP • l ~ ' , . ' ~ , . ,, : i I ' ' , 10 17 11 Score ~ Ht lv• Joll<uon & $on » 46-16 Gcl*11 West 30 6\-95 JOhn10h & SOfl fl') Mill•• ....... 11" '""'""'"' 81zil Hal>O!"'lllon FG PT Pl' TP' • J ? 11 ' 0 4 I 1 l ' 15 5 1 2 ,, a 2 t 2 1 2 0 ,, ' ! ' " 32 l 15 '' GWC ftS) FG FT Pl" TP ,{ t ~ ~ 1• 1 ' "• ' ' t • • • Since entering the National League Maris has been less than awesome. He struck no particular fear into the hearts of opposing pitchers. Entlllll le•t..,. manned by Manny Valdez of Shanley when the former Johnny Kerr and B il J 8---67) and Al Chirgwin (79· Loara and Bernie Smirnoff,-m=issed=-'-"too"'-'m=••;;,Yc..::drtll=•:.:· __ _:Ca;:s:.:•::id:;Y;_· _______ __:1::2-<;_::c7lc_· ________ ~,.,.,,..,. ___ _;~'!..,C:"'....'.''..' -":! of Magnolia. The nose man DlwlllOR l There were occasions, in fact, when managers in· structed their pitchers to walk a guy to get to Maris. For history's most celebrated home run hitter, this might have been the cardinal insult. Chel~• 1, No111"9~tm Forts! I, llt leech Unlltcl 4, 01/eeft'I P1r1I R•"9•r1 l is Anaheim's Larry Golden. Defensive ends are J ohn Russell of Garden Grove and Richard Kelley of Sun.ny Hills. M•l'CMller C!IY 3. Wolwl'flfimphln 2 Slleffl•kf WtdnHdl't' 1, Hewu1lhl I, '" SoullllmPhln 1, LlvtrpOOI I Slolce o. Wnt H•"" ' Su..O.rlllnd J, lPIW!dl t Anyway, Roger Maris now announces he will par· ticlpate in one more World Series with the Cardin als and then depart. Wnl Brom.,.lch 3, Mii<ld!nler Unit.I Servite's Jim Karch and Valencia's Pat &ilamley are set for the linebacker spots and the cornm will be guarded by Dan Taylor of It i! entirely likely Maris' departure will be quiet. There figures to be none of the noise of the time he bit 61 home runs or even when he left New York. So b e it. The man got a lot out of baseball . What he gave baseball is between Roger Maris and his conscience. c .. ,ril~t IHI. IOV Trlbllft• 1M. No Change for Rams FULLERTON -L o 1 Angeles Ram Coach George Allen &aid Wednesday the defensive unit which started most of ils National Football League games last &:eason will start met against the Dallas Cowboys Saiurday nlghl Allen said he was pleased with development of the defensive w:it and glad to get three men back as l'tarters -defensive end David "Deacon" J o n e s , li11ebacker Maxie Baughan and defensive back Clarence Williams. The three will be starting for the first time this season. The Rams waived rookie defensive end candidate Ron Berger, who played for the OrBllge County Ramblers of the Continental F o o t b a I 1 League last year. He graduated from W a y 11 e State in Detroit. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louil Chicago San Francitco Cincinnati Atlanta Pl Its burgh Pbllmelphia New York Loo Aaiele• HOUltllll W L Pct. GB 77 43 .642 64 '6 .533 13 62 56 .525 J4 59 56 .513 151h 61 59 .508 16 '6 6.1 .471 :rlll 55 62 .470 :rlll '6 66 .459 22 A M .44.1 !311 52 66 .433 25 ....... ..,. .. _ .. tt. uur. &. ~ 1 ,... v..w ...... ...,.. ' l'tllllftlpfll1 .......... . CIKllwwtl '· ... , ..... 4 s.i l""*"<IM:9 I. Plt!Mu~ I Pf 1 .... 1,..1) T~ .. ,_ It, l.Alll llrflM , .. ,, tt ClilolM CMoftvn.,, .. ll ......,, (~lllflf •ttJ al """H""'lllfll1 11',.,.-~ ··-.... ,,__.. r .... WJ 11 Plttlbul'tll fll61t .... - AMER ICAN LEAGUE Detroit Baltimore Booton Cleveland Oakland Minnesota New York Callfornll Chicago Washington WLPcLGB 76 43 .639 68 49 .581 7 65 55 .S42 It 11 64 58 .525 tall 61 S7 .Sl7 14~ 55 61 .474 1911 54 60 .474 1911 53 86 .44-1 !3 49 68 .419 2fi 44 72 .379 3011 ·~·"-"' o.tnlll J, C1'tw11enll I .. "'"' Yortt J, C1llfoml1 t Wt "'lnt'lon 4 MlftMtott I Oeltw.tl •· .. ltllnln I (Ilic.Ito J.S. 9o11'1N! ).7 T•na.-Cllk-IC•"" •Ill itt kllen ILMllort >..n N .. Y.n, (llol!ltmJ .. 1S-f) M Ofllllflllll (NII/I , .. 11. "'-"' W1llll"tl0ft i&fflt lftt 4-l) •f C1lltlln!l1 (Mc. Oltltlt!n 7•111, "'-"' 811t~ (H1rdlll ,.... •1111 l r1btftdirr WI •' M!--'e '0.111t11 11·11 Miii &tlwetr ._,,, a, .... -°"" .. ._ '°'""*'· Ontno• Co.'1 Olde1t & Most Retpected Lintoln.·Mtrcurv Dtaltr Johnson & Son ' fOO W. GOAl1' HIGHWAY, NEWPORT IEACH 642.0NI 5-45-1271 I t ' Pro Soccer Standings COUGAR #.1 CAT SlllN THE CAT Net ,i.,c.• lh •ct•eMln9, 1c.r1tch· r~, lnltocl11ct!tn 11 Cet .f th• Y••r in 1••7 h11 th••• ii.. • ., the epp•rtvnity fer tli• li1tPYin9 p11b· lie*• 11l•ct IXACTLY WHAT IT WANTS AT rlACTlc:AL rtlC· , .... CI.AW THI PRICE DOWN ON THI CAT Of' YOUR CHOICI W1 hev• fiw• Ill tll9htl'1 •••' '•7'1 ell with ce11ti .. tti"I feet.,.,. w1M'e11ty. Al'tfl •w ,..,t d11ck ef , •••.• will,,,.. ... ,.,''""• feft • elet th• •1ect co/Of' 1114 •q•lit· !'lent tlwit ht •Jtit•th tf THI NUMlll ONI CAT. Coming! In Person Jerry West Mel Counts Bill Hewitt Coach Bill van Breda Kolff -and- Rod Hundley ~­~ ~@ FREE • Laker photos • Drawing for Laker T ·shirts and tickets to Laker games Costa Mesa Presents the ~e'Basliethall Clinic SATURDAY, AUG. 17th at in the P•rkina Lot • Prof•uional polnt1rt • Special 1kllf1 Mulon • Watch your favorite L•ktn In action • One ohowlng only Sears COST A MESA-South Coast Plaza·Bristol at Sunflower , • ---.,..--...~---~· - Lag·nna Bea eh \ Today's Uatdllg N.Y. Steeb YOL. ir, NO. 196, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES rAGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA JHURSOAY, AUGUST ·1s, '1961 .TEN CENTS :•nest Pilot Ever~~ Says Widow Copter · Captain Died a Hero-Yelled at Boy By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. 0.llY P'li.t ltftt He wrestled the stricken helicopter down like a windmill caught in a tornado, but found time in his last seconds to yell at a youth to get out of the way. His hand was 1till on the instrument panel .as he lay sprawled partly out of the cockpit. which lay like a cruahed eggshell full of wiring and wristwatch parts. ••He was the best pilot ever ..... and you can tell people that, said Mrs. Kenneth L. Waggoner, of 3131 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, as relatives began arriving today tor a funeral reunion. Los Angeles Airways Cap\. Ken Waggoner's children, De Ina, 14, Debra, 5, Billy, 2, were quiet and little Donna, 3 months, lay noiselessly against an aunt's shoulder. So was the neighborhood, except for an occaaional child's shout at an op- pool"' end of the •U...I from the silent, neatly kept Waggoner home. Capt. Waggooer, a veteran helicopter pilot who spent eight ye&rl on active duty in U.S. Marine Corps aviation and. had six years' time with Los Angeles Airways, was a Cood neighbor. Alan Schwalbe, of 3132 Pierce Ave., told bow it wa! today. "'This may give you same insight into Keo's character," Schwalbe said. He said Capt. Waggoner only Tud· day volunteered -OJl his day off -ta prevent a neighborhood tragedy, one of a dJfierent nature. "A friend cave us an o 1 d relrtgerator. My wife and I jull had our second set of twins and we neede?I it for lxitUec," Schwalbe said, "hut wo w.... WUTled about kids g<tting into it." "Our kids played together," he ex· plained. --- The oil-duty helicoptor pllo! came · ovu to the Schwalbe home and drilled ' holes to install a lock on the old cooler, then re-wired it as well, for better ef- ficiency. "I should give you a beer,'1 Schwalbe said he told his neighbor from two doors down the street, but he wms out of brew and apologized. · "You can take me out Saturday," the 33-year-old Waggoner replied, "it's my birthd.ay." · ''He was jusf the r ·reate1 t neighbor," 1a4d Sdlwalbe, "he would do Mything for you." Schwalbe, an intennedlale IChooi in· struotor and former Clty Council can· didato, said Waggooer had done an n- ceptlona! jOb in landscaping and decorating his nor1h!ide home. "He said they were just about to the poiot where they could rest, nlu and (See PILOT, Pa1e Z) Watson Tax Initiative Laguna Freeway Threat? PILOT KEN WAGGONER WON WINGS AS USMC AVIATOR Vet•r•n Piiot Brought Shuckl~rlng Bird Down Heroic1lly Nixon, Agnew Plan Visit To Knott's Farm Friday Richard Nixon and Splro Agnew will pay a visit to Orange County Friday. They'll be haviDg dinner at Knotfs Marijuana Users 'Horsing Around' BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) -U Bloomington area marijuana users have been smoking more lately and enjoying it less, police have an answer. , City detectives, acting on a tip, found a cache of four pounds Of mari· juana and Uuff pounds of horse manure in a suitca.se. Berry Farm at 6 p.m. along with Nix· oo's family and the traveling press· political aide .,ntoUl'-.ge that ac• companies tbe GOP candidates for president and vice preside!lit. A Knott's Berry Farm spokesman 1aid the Nixon party will have dinner 1 then pay a briel visit to Ghost Town and other attractions in the Buena Park amusement park. No particular arrangements for meeting the public have been made, but notiling is being dorie to discourage a crowd, the spokesman said. The Nixon party will be en route from San Diego to Los An·geles in an auto caravan. Walter Knott, founder-owner or the farm, is: a longtime supporter of the former vice president. .. Block Sale Of ·Tickets Under Fire By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ... DMlr ,.,.. ..... Complaints fr<>m local folk about block ticket ralea to outs.id«s haunt Festival of ¥t& direct«s. That became appatent Tuesday when Festival board IJ1ember1 met to set ticket sales policy and prices !or ttle 1969 season. . Sellouts may be a bed of roses, but they have thorns -in this case persons who feel they were unfairly kept from seeing t.he Pageant of the Masters. '"I hear complaints that we rell ticket! to the Greyhound Bus Line, and that such and sudl a bank gets 500 tickets. This is thrown up at me every day of my lile," said Director William Martin. 'OVERPLAYED' ''The so-called block ticket situation is overplayed," he said. Board Presidmt Edward Ferruiten agreed, saying there has been ''a lot o[ loose talk and remarking that ticket~ are not reserved for buslines or travel agents." However, Paul Griem requested directors be shown a list of all com· panies or organizations buying blocks C1l tickets and h0'9/ many they buy. Rlchard Brooks asked, "Why doesn't UW come before the board every year'! I think we should make the decision on how many tickets the telephone company and others get." Putting the problem in perspective, Stuart Durkee noted, "The· Pageant has been sold out only the last !our Or live years. Historically, we en· couraged this build up of block ticket (See TICKETS, Page Z) Marines Down Center Plan Leisure World Loses Bid w Nibble at Fliglit Path By JACK BBOBACK Of tllt C*lr ,..,.. "'" Ross Cortese's Lagma Hll1a Leisure \Vorld klloit an attempt to nibble away at the El Toro fllgbt path ''Green Belt" \Vednesday. Proposed was a commercl.a.l cent.er foc ~ int.enectlon of El Toro Road and Moulton Parkway which would have included a wpermarket, bank and post olfice along with other businesses. The Marine Corps mounted full op- J>06ition to the encroachment on the agreed fiight path clear ZOii« cunplete with color slides and an appeararice ol. General W. G. Thrash before county aupervbors. Th.e Corps oPPOaed the commercial 1one because It would "enoourage further restdentill gr"'O'W(b In Leisure World encoradlilng even clo6er to the primary lnttrument ione ceriterUne. Tbe shopping ctnttr was to be placed in • hJzard,ouJ area wherSr__larg1 l•li>frinP ol people cruld ..., U· peeled, the Cor'(>o c1.wec1. The "Green Belt" is 2,IX» feet wide and i1 flanked by two soo.root-wide strips oo ea-Oh Side. In the first, no building is allowed. In the second, all buildings must be soundproofed. The El Toro presentiat:kln stresced the danger of crashes. In the period 1953-67, 25 aircraft have crashed and 15 oC those have been in or In close proximity to the 4000·£oot wide 1Uip extend.lng from the runway threshold outward 3.5 mUes. 'lbiJ 4,0QO./oot strip cut.. tllroogb tile Lelwre WOfld developmenl Spotllgl:iuct al!o waa the January 22, 198'7, cruh Into Leiaure World when 1lx per&olJs were killed. It ~• said that '63'7 .964 in claims have been paid wltll more than '300,000 1Ull •walt!ni action. The Marines Pointed out U..t becall!e the ttrrain in the Laguna Hilll ~ very nearly paralle11 J!l,e approoch &lid• slope on;Je, ail'C'.Jjll ' . are only 870 feet to 730 feet above ground over the deve.lopmenl They reported about 120 complaint call11 a month from Leisure World residents. The Marine Corp11 served notice Wednesday that the hearing was tho first 'botice that the Corpa would re· quest a cootiouance of the augmented clear zone when the Mx-year agree· ment expires next February. The l,IXX> -foot G re en Belt is permanent but the two 500-foot strips on each ride were establlrhed tor a six-year period. "When you hear the Marine Corp! Ofl-Se today in opposition to communlty oommercial area you will bear our case on the need to continue the restnct.loos a1 they now e.zist," a Marine Corps spokesman 11'.ted, 'I1he cwps malnta!ned In Ii63 -· the orlglnol hearings took place that the 2000-foot clear zone was ln· fldequate end coMinue1 to maintain that !&et, it was Nted. O:t.IL Y ,ILOT , ... ,. W lkllll"ll K•ltt PRAISES PILOT -Jonathan Dollar, eyewitness to Wednesday's crash ot LA Alrways helicopter in Compton, displays two sm<:t.II gears and dime which hit him in chest as he watche;d helicopter break up. "Go4 bless that. man," Dollar 1atd of Pilot. ".He tried to the very end to keep that copter airborne." · Hit Me!'> Witness Tried to Rescue Pilot • By SANDI MAJOR 01 Jiit Oall)r Pli.t II.it' "Two small gear11 and a dime hit me on the chest and fell in front of me." Jonathan Dollar, 46, one <i the first persons to reach the burning Los Angeles Airways commuter helicopter Wednesday, picked up those few unoharred reminders of the day death came to the crowded Compton park. Dollar who lives at 1422 E. Rosecrans Avenue and Bullis Road was Jn hil mobile home combing hJs hair when be "heard a missing sound." ''I jumped to tile door and looked out and saw tile helicopter. A piece ol the rotor blade wa1 hanging from it. The fuselage was at about a 40-degree angle," he said. He said be ran to the park as the craft began falling "not nearly as fast as you would expect -pretty fast - but not .au that fast." He was about JOO feet from it when lt h.it the ground and the gears and coin struck him. then fell to bis feet. He said be picked up tte memen· toes, .then watched. the. helicopter strike the ground and "it bounced up about 30 inches, settled and instantly was in flames." "There we.re no acreams." Dollar and a transmJssion mecharic £rom nearby, Don R01teing, "8, saw a man they presumed to be the pilot. hanging part way out ol the cockpit. "He was uncoruiclous and pinned In the wreckage at hl1 midsection with an angle bar,'' Dollar told. "We trJed to get to him when llames crept up his panta leg. He never changed ex· pres&ion. I guess b& might have already been dead." There W'll a 1eocond '4varoom,'" Dollar went on, and IJW)re flames 1ud- dtnly r!J'Oalted U..U&b the aircraft In· lo the cockpit. "[ WU lust 20 !eel from him. I tried to go llM« the flames bot we couldn't do tl TM other man aa.ld, "lt'1 ronna blow up In our faces'." , Dollar said by the "lnlenniltenl fir. ') • ing or the engine'' that he heard from the Sikorslry S6l·L craft, he knew the pilot wa11 trying to restart the engine. "God bless that man." he said. "He tried to tlle very end to keep that c0pter airborne." U.S. Flag Wearer Pleads Innocent To Defiling Rap "Innocent" pleaded Nathan P . Kilgore to charges of defiling the AmerJcan nag by wearing it as a mod ahirt. The youUt who told the arresting of· fleer he loves the American Flag and that is why he wore Jt, was ordered by Laguna Beach Municipal Court Judge Richard Hamilton to return Sept. 17 l<I" a jury trial. Kilgore, 18, o( Buena Park, did not wear stars on his sleeves or stripes on his chest at arraignment Wedne1day. The Nehru-wt shlrt ma~ by his mother is being held as evidence. Kilgore was arrested in San Juan Capistrano a week ago for assertedly improperly combining fashion with patriotism. His mother, Mrs. LouJse. Kllgore, later told San Juan officers she had consulted the Buena Park Police Department and someone told her lt would be all right to make such a ohirt. Judge ltamilton released Kllgore on hl1 own recognhance without re-- quiring him to posl bail. NEW YORK (AP) -An early llock ma-ket advance laded in 1lackenlng trading this altunoon. (Ste quota· ti°"t Pas•• 26-ZI). Rerouting Fear Voiced By Wheaton BJ THOMAS FOJiTIJNE oitk~ PW MIW ' Pacilic Coast Freeway 'tOu\d be re.. routed through downtown Laguna Beach and the city'~ ,plan for. Main Beach acquWtion miallt ~n lo be dropped if CaIUornla vo!et'I Pu• the ' Watson InJtJative Nov-. 5, Laguna Clf.1 Manager James D. Wheaton said to-day. · The city manager said thoS.e are two of the most alarming implications cf passage of the proposed constitUtional aroendment to limit property taxes. \Vheaton saJd he is sounding oU on the initiative proposal not to sea.re voters but to alert them. He said he believes the effects of the amendment would be so devastating he wants to be sure voters study it. "The practical effect would be to eliminate the ability of this city to bond itself for anv kind of im· provements." he said. One resu1t could be the forced aban. donment of the plan to acqlrlre Main Beach. Unless the bonds for the aquisition are sold prior to Nov. 5 the city would be foreclosed from selling them should the measure pass. SALE REQUEST Jn hopes of bea1ing that selC·imposed deadline. Wheaton fiew to Washington, D.C.. today to confer with the representative of the Commission of Internal Revenue. "Jt normally takes Internal Revenue three months to pro- cess a request for sale of tax free bonds," he explained. Another. even more damaging result, Wheaton saJd, could be the reopening of the Pacific Coast Freeway routing question. The bisect route through Laguna might then be adopted. He said. "The whole thing couJd tum around aj!alnst us if we don't bond tor the arterial system we promJsel:l to build . "The llighway Commission, lrom a moral standpoint if no other, would have to reconsider," he said. U Laguna couldn't buiJd arterial roads to (See FREEWAY, Page f) Orange Coat Weather You won 't get aunStroke Fri· day morning 'cause Old Sol won't make his appearance un· til at le86t 10:30, after which clear sides should prevaU over.. the Orange Coast. ! I NSIDE TODAY FourtttK Cuban re[1'getr top. Cure a CTOfHJusting plane loo<f.. rd with d•odly poison and fly to a.rulum in Amtrica. Page 4. ,. • % DAil Y PILOT DAil Y ,ILOT '1tm .., 11.ldial'f 1t•lw SCORCHED REMAINS OF LA AIRWAYS FLIGHT 41 7 LIE IN COMPTON PARK ElghtMn Pai1ung•r• •nd ThrH Crewmen Dltd In lll·F•tecl 'Copter Engineer to Get Problem Of School Split by Street • A campu1 1pllt by a street pre1entJ certain problems, namely, how do the studenta cro.ss the street without disrupting traffic? This question was brought up at Saddlehack Just Likes to Know Of Ta x Changes '' Saddleback Junlor College lrll!lees have no particular ax to grind, but do lib to be coosulted when the topic of tfxes is brought up. •That WWI the answer of Michael Collins, iresident of the Saddleback tf>ard, to James Dilley, president of Ifaguna'a CitU.ens' Town Planning Association. Dilley wrote a letter to the beard A.ying the college hu no cause to be cOOcetned because 45 percent of district laDd may soon lie in agricultural preserve. .Dollins !<>Id the DAILY PILOT trustees aren't upset because the tax base may be diminished. He said the concern is that assessed value pro- jections will be thrown off witoout the djl§trict being consulted . "We commit the dlstrict 25 years in the future," he said. Dilley'a letter nad!, in part: '"It would seem that the college's worries ~ most premature. Actually the college bas just been established, ud it was established by the citizens oo the existing tax rate. "Our COWlty i! indeed fortunate in having these large ranches (Irvine and Mission Viejo) that are Intent en oonservaticn and planning. It gives the cltizem cf this county an open space preserve immediately and allows the citizens ten yeara in whicb to think through their planninl offices the best future developmenL "The college, of COW'le, is not an economic lmperiallsm, and it need not be burdened with grandiose visions of upanding grounds and buildings." Collins saJd, "We appreciate and share Mr. Dilley's concern. We just want to know what our projected tax rate i.s. \Ve want to make sure v.·e are being consulted." DAILY PILOT l.epll'I .._, C•llfH•I• ORANGE COAST PUILIStilNG C~AN'I' Rob••t N, w,,4 ....... 1,,...., ll'ld l"llbtl"""" J1clo: 11.. C11l1y Vkf l"reillttnl 11111 ~II IMNtll ThoM•1 IC1t'l'1I Editor ThoM•• A. M~rphi110 M•,...111111 £dll« ft lch1rd '· Nill 1. ......... 9tlK~ CHY Editor 1'1111 Nii,111 "'dwf•ll1l"'1 Ol•KICll' LepM .... Offk• 22Z For••• A'l't. M1 il1119 Acfcfr11n l'.O. lo• 666 '2652 OtfMf Offk" c .... """'i JXI w,,, '" ., .... ..........., tead'I; ,n~ w,,, "lllt• ...,,..,.,. ..... "111910ll Inell: .. Jlfl '""" Tuesday night's Laguna Beach Unified School District board meeting. So perplexing is the problem, the city may be asked to join in the hiring of a traffic engineer to reach a solution. As it stands now, studei•.s who need to cross Park AVf:llue when going from the main campus to the North campus are stopping traffic on the busy street. The tunnel under Park A~ is oot of the way for many students beaded to another of campus. And, it would be impoosible !<> force the studen,. !<> we the iunnel dilling the five minute paasiDg time allowed in them. Trial runs undertaken by school ad· ministrators revealed that it takes at least four minutes and 48 seconds to pass frcm the extreme ends Of the campus, without stopping, and, golng through ttie tunnel. U a student stops at his locker, and then the restroom, the trip takes six and one hall mi.mJ.t.es. Even If the passing time were to be extended, there would still be studenta: needing . to cross the atreet to reach the parking Jot et the west eDd of cam· pus. The solution might be traffic llgtits to stop traffic on Park Avenue. Dr. Ullom suggested tfle scrambling method with cars stopped by traffic lights, student! would be allowed to cross at any point and not be confined to cross walks. Tulst.. Robert Turne< said, "I still like the Mexican idea that pedestrians are responsible for themsefves." Trustee Larry Taylor said,."We spent '3(),000 on the tunnel. More students should wie it. They should have enough pride to use it." Turner said the problems was also a city problem, and the city government should be brought int<> the plctun. It was decided that Dr. Ullom would talk to the city, and try to arr Ege for the school district and the city to jointly hire a traffic engineer to loolc into the problem. From P .. e l FREEWAY ... relieve congested traffic. He said stud.Jes show that without such an arterial system the bisect route would relieve Joe.at Laguna traf- fic conditions that the presently adopted inland route would not SEWER LINES He said the city will in the future also need to bond for enlarging sewer lines and sewage treatment facilities or it might as well forget zoning changes for more intense land use. Wheaten said Jt Is not the limiting of the property tax that has him worried. ("l don't think any government will be shut dawn.") It Is the feature cf the amendment that places a ceiling on bonded indebtedness that most shakes him. The amendment provides that no government.al entity can assume a debt of more than five percent cf asses~ valuatlon and that all local governmentJ together cannot exceed 20 percent. Others are 11chool districts. county government, f1ood control districts, special assessment districts, etc. •'There 11 no device in the amend· ment t.o show how the various revenu~ d~tricts w o u I d get together to distribulAI the money among then\," Watson noted. "But, at best, Laguna Beach couldn't eq>ect to stand very high on the priority ladder," he sug- gett~ gloomily. BARD TO BEAT Wheaton said he fe&r1 the Wat.Ion Amendment (PtopGslUon 9) Is going to be dilncult to beat. "I low wlll you vote Jf you see a billboard 1howln1 a palr cf sclssors cutting your property tlix: bUI tn balJ?'' he asked. He llld any alternative IOurets of tAcomt wouJd probably be from sales tu or income tu, either of which m!Jl>t bave c. be doubled or ~pltd. Youths Held In Tang le With Officer Two young men who toogled with Laguna Beach policemen Wednesday u•ere to be arrajgned in Laguna Municipal Coort today, one on a charge of ra5saulting an officer and the other on a charge of obstructing a policeman. Gary S. Lewis, 20, of 1198 Victory Walk, Laguna, was held on Che felony charge of assadlting Officer Jobn Sanders. 'l«nmy E. Vea Zant, 21 , of Garden Grove, was jailed for interfering with Olfloor Art DelAJca while the latter was io performance of his duty. The Lewis arrest cccurnd in tbe 500 block of South Coast Highway at 10 a.m., police said. Officer Sanders reportedly st.opped Lewis to cite him for l111YWalmg, and when the youth could not produce identification told him he would have to twee hJm in. According to police reports, Lewis re~ a cursory search for weapons end rwung at Offfcer Sanden who then wrestled h1m to the grollfld. Several citizens were credited with dissuading Lewis from f u r t h e r relllstance. Police said OO!cer Sanden SWl· tained a back injury cf undetermined seriousness. At 11 p.m. Wednesday, Van Zant was pointed oot by the manager of Taco Bell restaurant, South Coast Hlghway and Cleo Street, es creating a disturbance. Van Zant allegedly walHd away from Officer DeLuea, b e c a m e belllgtmtt and refused !<> ldentlly hJmseU. Reports 98Y he repeatedly pulled away fram the o f f i c e r , whereupon he was handcuffed end Vlaced under .urrest for cbstructing JUstice. From P .. e J TICKETS .•. sales ." Not resolving the issue, directors decided to look at the list Griem re· queMed and discuss the matter again in September after the a n n u a I membership meeting . AT ANNUAL MEETING "Jn my journe)'1 around town I have heard that this matter of block ticket sales Is going to be brought up verr, vigorously at the annual meeting,' Director Verner Beck said. The meeting will be Sept. 9. Board members did approve an In. crease in some ticket prices for 19&9, expected to bring in $53,000 in ad· dltional income it the PagHnt Ls again sold out. Price increases are for the middle •eating sectiom and amount t.o 60 cents or $1, depending upon the exact location. 'Ille city ol Laguna Beach's 17.5 per. cent sh.are of the added income would be $9,335. JO.TICKET LIMIT Board members tabled a suggestion by Martin that Festival cX Arts members be limited to purchase of 30 tickets in advance of the public sale instead of the prtsent 50 . Approved was a motion to Worm Festival members th.at their 1969 membensbfp will not enUlle them to a free Ucket to press preview night. A.lso not acted en was Mart.in'• sug· ge1Uon that preview nlgtlt seats be given !<> Sou1b Cout C-Ommunlcy Hocpllal for chlritablt 11!0. Senator Stricken EAST LIVERPOOL, Oloo (UPI) - Seo. Edward Bartlett, (D·Aluka) was in fair ccnc:Ution today Jn E•st Uvupool City Hospital altar 1u1r1r1ng • apprarent lleart attack while aboard the Delta Que<0 pleuur• boot on the Ohio Rlver. ~ Copter Wreck Probed Coro ners W ork to Identify 21 Ki lled in Crash 4 had exilngul.!bed tbe flames the ·area Tte Duplts cratt apparently came Officials today began the grim ol t.he crash Wil-S roped off and ln· apart in mid·a.ir, the tail re tor bu.sines.a cf trying to find out why vertlgator1 headed towar~ the 1mck· separating from the rest cf the crafl death dropped from tDe sky 1olo a lng ruins. . · :capt. Dupies was flying east to west CJompton playground Wednesday. The National 'fJ'ansportaUon .safety and wa1 out' ti miriutes from The ptayfleld today sUU bears the Board, which investigates aLr ac· Dlsneyland going toward !AS Angeles 1ear1 wher, 21 pereons died aboard aL. cldenta, rushed investigators to begin International. Lot AnCeJu Ainfays helicopter FUgbt'-'the search for, an answer to why the Capt. Waggoner Was 12 minutes out 417. craft plunged to earttl. A team of ln· from :..Os Angeles, heading toward Even whfie a team cf air ·safety e.z. vestlgators ·arrived today from Disneyland when hJs craft apparenUy perts started itJ probe, deputy cor-Washingtcn, D. C. fell apart. oner• conUnued an attempt tQ. piece All records including a t a p e Grounding of the five remaining together and identl!y"the broken and recording of. the last conversations helicopters of LA Airways is the &e· burned bodies. betweeia Capt. Waggo11er. and the Los • cond for tne airline which .began in Among th06e vlctlms are at least Angeles AJrways oPtraU9fM! office was 1947 And passenger aervice in 1952. three orange County. resident& Jp.. impounded ,by the ~B. The line carried 40C,OOO pessengGt eluding the pilot, Capt. Kenneth L. As yet there hits been no answer as last year. Tb.e May crash was the firs' Waggoner, 33, of 3131 Pierce St., Costa to wby in the earlier Mey 22 crash, in passenger service. Mesa. Oapt. Dupies' craft plunged to earth Los Angeles CoUntY Supervisor Ken· . Capt. Waggoner was praised by some 2\2 miles east ~ the Wednesday neth Hahn, noting the 1imilarities, bas witnessei fer last minute effcrts to crash scene. called for an investigation by the FBI. prevent his W-fated craft from in• _i._ _i._ ..A. "k tf 'fl Juring anyone on the ground •• it fell . ).( ).( >< A Santa Ana boy and a Garden Th 0 c o ~·mail were the other county vie· ree range ountians Los Angeles Airways has suspende<I all filghU -1ome 118 dally -in the wake of the second crash in three A c h v 0 0 month:s of the Sikcra.ki S61-L, twin mong ras "lct"lms turbine, 2S passenger helicopter. I< I< The first crash, on May 22, strik- ingly similar in most detaila to Wednesday's accident, was the worst commercial helicopter crash in histcry. AU ' 23 persons aboard the craft pUoled by Capt. Jack Dupies of Huntington Beach died. Among the 18 passengers was Christopher Belinn, 14, of Santa Ana, grandson of Los Angeles Airways owner Clarence Belinn. The Oight began at 10:25 a.m. at Los Angeles International Airport and was due at Disneyland 18 minutes. later. In- stead, if fell to the ground at 10 :37 a.m. in "Pop" Leuders Park at Bullis Road and Rosecrans Avenue in an area where scores cf cl).ildren were playing little more than 200 feet away. The park is the cnly open area for more than 2 miles. \Vitnesses said the craft apparently lost its tail rotor, part! of the tall sec- tion, then dropped heavily to the ground in the grassy playfield, bounc- ed slightly and burst into flames. All 21 apparently died on impact, ac- cording to coroners cfficials who pro- bed the wreckage an afternoon Wednesday. Several victims will re· quire identification by fingerprinting or dental work, according to Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner Thomas Noguchi. The helicopter apparently h a d troubles before it reached the area where it plunged to earth and burned. Witnesses told the DAILY PlLOI' they first saw the craft at about 700 feet high. Airways officials said the craft should have been flying at about 2,500 to 3,000 feet. A sectJcn of the rear rotor fell off the helicopter and fell to earllh at 919 PoinsettUa Ave., some three blocks from tte crash scene. The copter may have had an engine failure as well. Witnesses reported , hearing "popping noises" from the craft as It de«cended to the park. Moments aft.er Compton firemen Olliciall of Los· Ange1"s Alnray1 and Los Angeles County Coroner 'Thomas Noguchi today released names of 18 of the 2I persons killed in Wednesday's helicopter crash. They are: The crew: 1. Capt. Kennetb L. Wag1oner, 33, Co.ta Mesa, .pilot. i. Frederick F racter, 'rl, Redoodo Beach, copilot. !. James A. Black, 30, Wilmington, flight attendanL Passengers. 4. J ohn P. Meehan, 75, San Rafael 5. Delea G. Meehan, 63, his wife, San Rafael, 8. Patricia Rafael. Marie Mee han, 32, San From P•e l PILOT • • • enjoy the yard,'' Schwalbe said. Introducing a newsman to the Wag- goner family, who provided a photo of the violim, Schwalbe asked if they had a newei-copy. ''He brought hi! uniform home once for a picture, but we were out cf film," said Penny Waggoner, adding, "we never took it." Pictures were taken at the end of Capt. Waggoner's last flight, but hopefully his family will never see them. Sh"ik e Talks Tabled CHICAGO (UPI) -Formal lalks In the Illinois Bell Telephcne strike were deferred wblle two negotiating sub- committees tried today to draft ·a back-to-work agreement and iron out wage differen~es. 't. Aue Marte Meellu, 8, Lucas Valley 8. Chrlalopber ll<U.., 14, Santa Ana. 9. J oeepll. J. KauJ, Garden Grove 10. Peter C. Smith, c.entervrue, Ohio lL Walter L. U 1k, 72, Bieber, Calli. lZ. Wet Elderelibmp, 39, Denver, Colo., director ol advertising and pro- motion for the Mr. Steak Restairant chain. 13. L E. Bater, 44, Denver, Colo., Western area coordinator fer Mr. Steak. 14. Kennetll J. At well, 18811 S. Jf/C· sey, Denver, Colo. 15. Mrs. Kenneth J. Atwell, 1888 S. Jersey, Denver, Colo. 16. Karl R. Wallace, 614 Mulbmy. Lane, Bellaire, Tex. Junior Guards Set Swim Record In 'Marathon' How about going far a Nim! Say, from Vk:lt:oria Beach to Pearl Street Beach, tl>eo running !<> Moun· tain Road, and flnaD.y swimming to the buoy oublde al the Main Beach. Sound exhauWog? Not if ~·re a junior lifeguard, a praducl al the Liagwla Beach Lifet!usd Depa:Qnen<. '!be department held !ti aoouat long distiance swim, and the times recorded were a new record, Winner was Dirk Van Deusen, with a 40:21 time, Next was Doa. Ware, '3:29. They in both 15 y<ors old. Don's younger brother Amory, came in third with a 45:.U time. He is 13. Twenty-tw,o boy• portlcipoted. Fin a I Week OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al .JJ. J. {]arrelt ALL HERITAGE UP HOLSTERED PIECES in ywr choice of style or fabric mey bo purehasad at 1 most gellOfOUs sovin go of ••• 0 Truly a ra re money-saving opporfu ntly Over 200 Stylea ol Sofu -Chairs -Love Seat.a -ottcmans in your choice o{ any Herita~ Decorator !abr!e. H ERITAG E" a Jlvtng tradition lft furnlt•re . Yoor t-ff< l•UriM d<dg!Mr tolU IN lloppr lo 411 ill -••• H.J .GAR1\EfT fURNrpJRE ,ROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DES16NERS U tl HARIOR IL VD. COSTA MESA, CAI.IF. M6.027' M6.o276 DAILY PILOT l'l>olo llv IU c.h1rlf koellllr MUTE EVIDENCE OF TRAGEDY -Luggage, notebooks and personal belongings are strewn across playground schoolyard area in Compton as firemen an d police ·sift wreckage or LA Airways helicopter where 21 persons lost their lives~ . _ _,,.,, . . PILOT'S BODY REMOVED -Compton firemen and police officers work through a tangle oI wreck- age to remove the body of Los Angeles Airways pilot from debris that was once his Sikorsky heli- copter. The pilot later wa5 identified as Capt. Kenneth L. Waggoner, 33, of Costa Mesa. flccording to Odometers Autos ·to Start SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan has 1Lgned into law a bill allowing an automobile dealer to roll back to zero the mileage indicator of a new car. Most new can Mow a few miles from road lolling or being clrlwn to the deaier, and these miles 1how on lhe odometer. Under tile old law, the dealer eoukl neither d.i1comect the Ddometer nor turn it back. The new law, however, requires a dealer to give the purchaser a 1tate· ' ment telling him approximately how many miles U!e car ha been driven . Sen. Fred W. Marler IR·Reddingl &aid ont reason !or the measure was to be sure a new car warranty covers the miles driven by the purchaser and does nOt include the mUes ac· cumulated in testing or transporting tbe vehicle. OpponcnU charge that the bill woold permit 1a.le o! a. "new earl' that had been driven from Detroit to.San Fran- cisco and then to any other city in the at Zero state for rale. Also. they said. the bilJ would permit d.iscoonect5 when the car was be..ing used by salesmen . A 5pokesman for the California l~ighway Patrol, which enforces vehi· · cle equipment laws. 1ald the provision Would be extremely difficult to en· force. "We will . have to rely largely on buyer complaints," the spokesman ex- plained. "But if the dealer doesn't give the buyer a notice. how wilJ the buyer know Ole car was driven bc!oreh.and?'' OA!l V PILOT :J .... Copter Crash Drop~ Death on Play Spot .. • Newport Center FASHION CLEARANCE 1/3 TO 1/2 0 FF ~ DESIGNERS' CIRCLE Clearance on m111y one-ol-+kind ·.eyJed "tmnme: drenet, C09'- lumes, cocktail dre11~11 and ·IOl!le knit dre1eesj rel(. 46.00to176.00 ••• l/l !11/2 DF.f SPORTSWEAR BOUTIQUE \'oung designers' dresses, costumes and separates reduCed from regu].111 ·a tock. Many· !alxic11 and colors; re1.20.oo to 100.00, •••••• 111 OFF .. SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR Famous make_ permanent preaa wa11hable ·eeparates mix Md match. .in aqua and yellow: A·line, llim ·ak:irtl, lHntudas or capris; reg. 10.00 ea. l.!9 tldl Jackota,-_notched •tyle or aoir •\yle; reg. 13.00 ••••• , ••• I.II· A•oorled poop or T-ohirta; reg • .5.00 to 7.00 , ••••••• , l.tt COAT AND SUIT SHOP Suits and costumes .in a wide array o! styles .in ·soli ds, ·stripes and novel\y pallemR; 6-16. reg. 36.00 to 66.00 , ••• , ••• l!,OI Better coat costumes in lightweight wools and synthetics. Many •cyle• and color>; 6-16, rel(. 70,00to130.00 •••• 3!.DO II H.19 DRESS SHOP Famou11 maker knit.a .in Dacron~ polyester arid wool. All styles and colo"; 6-20, reg. 28.00 to 66.00 •• , •••• , , l1.!1 t1 ll,l9 Cocktail dre111ses 11.nd formals .in wide aelect.ion o( beauUl\J.l Cabcics and colors; 6-18, reg. 30.00 to 70.00 •••• 11.H II II.IP FUR SALON Bleacl!e<l-whit.o fox cape•, reg. 199.00 to 2ll5.00 . 19.00 11 l!l.lt DRESS AND CASUAL SHOES "''omen's dre11s shoes; reg. 26.00 to 32.00 Women'111 dress "hoesj reg. 22.00 to 25.00 ........... ........... Young Designer dress ·ehoesj reg. 17.00 to 20.00 •••••• n.n 11.11 I.IT 'Smidalsj reg. 9.00 to 11.00 ••.•••••• , •••• , ••••• , • 1.!l Sandalai reg. 17 .00 lo 21.00 •••• , ••• , • , • , ••••••• 11111 u umS' • 11 Fashim Island • 644·2200 • Mon., llnns., Fri. 10:00 till 9:30 Oiiier days 10:!!0 till sj) • . ' . ··~----~-~----------------------- • I • 4 DAllY I'll.OT Entertalller Conni• Stevens Is beinC sued lor $10,500 by a man who aald he wa&' hired to stage manage her nightclub act. Davld Wlnt•rt# of Los Angeles, said in bis Superior Court sult !bat his contract called lor /ayment of $16,500 ,by July 26, an !bat he has received only $6,000. • Two Cities- Disrupted By Violence LOU!SVll.LE. Ky. (UP!) -Grou1>1 of Negro youths looted and tossed rocks and bottles and three poliCfl cruisers were fired upon from passing cars Wednesday night as violen«i broke out in a one-square block of the city's west end. None of the police were lnjured, and offieer1 did not return the gunfire. Two ptrsoos, one a white motorist who was beaten, were injured during the disturbance. There were no ar· rests and no curfew imposed. City police, helmeted and armed with three-foot riot sticks, paifroled to- day ,u calm returned to t be predominantly Negro c!Utrlct. National Guard units were alerted in the event of further outbreaks. Policemen were ordered on 12-hour 1bifts. PITTSBURGH -F I f t y Negr ... .. ...... ., . Ul'I T•"-M19 Live Saver • ' Charged policemen trying to make an arrest early today awl gquirted the of· ficers -Wiith a disabling Chemical spray, The suspect fled, handcuffed. David Munoz, 13, of Upland, grins at sign, the pool and as 11everal adults stood"'by helplessly, bottom Jines of which could have been reversed, David applied. mouth-to-mouth ·Tea:tticitation and Six policemen were injured and 14 arrests were made. after be saved the life of a drowning soldier in a revived the soldier. David learned the rescue pro- Police in many cities have begun us· ing a chemical spmy to temporarily disable demonstrators during racial disturbances. mote! swimming pool in Salinas. Edwin MisineC; cedure by watching the Red ·emu: use a dummy 20, Ft. Ord, was pulled, unconscious, from the during school training last year.' '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~- Sevet1al officers were arresting an 'WI.identified Negro on charges of loitering and discorderly conduct when suddenly about 50 NegrOO! charged them with clubs and sprayed the cbemioal. Crop Duster Hija~k~d Officers called for reinforcements and captured the prisoner. Again the crowd beaet them, .and for a second time the ps:isoner was freed. This time he escapM. 14 Cubans Flee to U.S. in Poison-Uulen Plane Cuh, '1~ poor man'i credit card. Don't Jmock it. TM credit card is a pattnt factor in today's economic structure' .and a mainstay in the res· tauTQnt and hotel businesse.s. The 01l!MT·oJ a restaurant in downtown St. LoMiJ, dilplaying card! honored btl the "'tabli.shment, al.so made an appeal for busines.1 from those who do rn>t we the "eat now, pay later" Rlan. • Police tactical units dispersed the mob soon after the street fighting broke out. They cleared a one-block section in tt>e predominantly Negro H~ewood section of the city. HOMESTEAD, Fla. (UPI) -Four· teen Cuban men, women and children -some or them armed -escaped to the United states today in a stolen yellow biplane, loaded with deadly poison, that skipped low across the Atlantic to avoid bel.ng: detected by radar, federal officials said. Tiw: plane. described as a Russian· made AN·2 biplane, taxied up to l\le airport manager's office at 8:55 a.m. The 14 occupants of the crop-Ousting plane, reportedly stolen at 7 a .m., &cra.mbled out with their rifle and three pistols and announced excitedly they wanted asylum. One of the women on board. Mrs. Patricia Dodge Carcasses, was the on· ly refugee who speaks English. She interpreted the statement of the ' pilot, idmtified oal.Y as Angel, who s aid he went to an airport near Varadero, Cuba, early today to load the single-engine p1'.oe with parathion - a deadly insecticide. Wben the plane was loaded, the pilot heloed the other 13 pen.., on board and took .off for Florida. Mrs •. Richard Smith of Mineral Point, Wls., said that "fire washed the front of her car'' when light- ning struck the vehicle in southern New ~e1ico. She said that 18 inch- el of the-radio antenna was burn- ed off, the windshield pitted, and the hood was singed when light- ning went down the windshield, across the hood and jumped to the gr ound 1n front of the car. Mrs. Smith, her father and two small sons wer,e unhurt. Storms Stir Up Two Tornadoes In North Utah LBJ Tells Medical Group: "The parathion on the plane made us kind of sick," sak! Mrs. Carcasses, the daughter of a retired U. S. Navy lieutenant commander who lives in Kansas. "'We had to break out some of the windows in order to breathe. Mrs. Carcasse~, accompanied by her husband, J esus,· and her 18-month- old daughter, Ken!lra. sai'd the refugees spent Wednesday night hid· den in a sugar cane, field near the airport. OGDEN, Utah (UPI)-A vicious late- sununer storm spawned at least two tornadoes in North Utah and caused flooding in the southern part oC the state Wednesday. Don't Chisel on Medicare J • A "°ttng man armf!d with a lrni/t tried but failed to rob the gUus·enclosed, drive·up window of a Culver (Indiana) bank. Hf! wal ked up to the window of the State Exchange Bank, put a note demanding money rn the draw- er u.ved to transfer money and displayed a knife. T he teller, realizing t he man could do nothing but pound un the win- dow with the knife, called po· lice. The kni/e·wielder fled empt.11 handed. • "Everything we had is gone," said Cheryl Crost, 24, a bride of less than a week. She and her hus· band, Kenneth, 27, awoke to find their car, packed with all their weddiJ;ig gifts, clothes a nd other possessions had been s tolen. They had packed it and left it parked at the North Chicago home of Cheryl's mother, Mrs. Betty Peskin, where they had been staying since their weddint: Sunday. A home near here was badly damag. ed by one of the tornadoes. The twister, a rarity in Utah, also destroyed several farm buildings in the small, neighboring comtnunity of West Weber. Damage ex c e e d e d $5PJXJO. No one was injured. The storm caused minor flooding in the southern part of the state, particularly in San 'Juan c ounty, scene of earlier flooding two weeks ago. Mrs. Lyle Harper, her son Bret, 6, daughter, Leslie, 3, and s o m e neighbors and relatives were in the r ear section of the home· when the tornado touched down. The twister destroyed the front part of the house and tne garage. The roof 0( the struc· ture was blown into an open field 150 feet away. ' A second fumel cloud touched down near the North Utah city of Logan in an open wheat fiel d. Only minor damage was reported. Salt Lake City was hit by a strong wind which smashed several large plate.glass windows in tile downtown business district. Four employes of a local bank were slightly injured when a 5-by·lO·foot window Wa! shattered. Heavy rain and golf·ball-size hail stones hit near Salt Lake and in the southern part of the state. HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) -President Johnson has urged the nation's medit:al profession not to turn the Medicare program into a racket to bring doctors higher fees. At the 9'3.rne time, Johnson repeated his call for a national "Kiddycare" program. In. a campajgn-style, fiV slamm~g speech be fore the 900 delegates to the predominantly Negro N at i on a I Medical Association (NMA) Wed· nesday. the President decried the rise in doctors fees and warned them against allowing Medicare to become "a scand al and disgrace" in ,their search for money. It was the strongest speech J ohnson has ever given on the subject or medical costs before any medical group. Medicare, Johnson said, "Is ton good a thing to chisel. It is 100 good a thing to bring in scandal and disgrace. It is too good to fudge on." There have been allegations that some doctors have deliberately raised fees to get more money from the Medicare program under the clause in the law which sets fees at the prevail· ing rate in a n area. Johnson said, "I came here becanse t want your help for this good pro· Thundershowers Soak U.S: Cold Wave Sets Record Low at Devil's Lake, N.D. California PICYIP Of ISSIWllMl •lMltOllWT TO t:lt l.M. IST I ·l•·•S ... ,.:~~'1'11',,~ .... ,, ....... ~ .. •"'.~, ~. _...,..._ _,,_._ "--''\ "::.·.: .. :.:-»:::: Coastal WratHl\o winch wltll f\llh ..,. hi lS "l.•.11. !Ills t f!rr-. l't lr wllf! IOfM "-llnew IOdt Y I nd f'rldt f . TOdt f 'I Pll9h.•tto n. U.S. Summar11 S-1 Ind ""'""'~ CO'I" ttt'd ,_, of "'-nellorl ...,.V, t lMI tl<le1 ...,.. rulrldecl to tli. Soulf>. well •nd HorthM1!. T"'°'pentvrts colltlftuM t8 bl Oii 1'llt <ool 1kle lfl IN H~ •11it IM '*' _,",... lft _, " l!lit Saol!tl. , The """""' """'"*rllfWml KllYll'I t...,..,.,_ Centnl l'I•.,_ W...,..,., ftltlll '""' Co191'Ne "' l+t'I>•••• ..... T••tt 10 IC1-t. MH'(J' nlrot Wlltl'l9d out H'ffr11 CIM!fr'( ..U1 Ill ""'°lflH1i.ir11 Colo-r-_. ~ IN ..,._.,"' <fol.. "" .. -u. s. l'I ....... , •• Temperatures Albucl11er11119 AIKhorlH Allt flft ll•k~•ltld lhm1rdt .... ........ Cllluto Cl...:~H c11vel1nd -..~. ~' Molnet ...... Evret1 il'ort Wortll ·-""-H-f\l!v "-~ ~nw• Cllv L11 Vetl t Loa A.,.t11t Mltml Ml!wt tJloH" M~POlk lttw Orletnt New York 0.klel'od :="'\obi~ Mlli.it.111'111• P_.,lk P llhbl/1'1'11 l"«fltnd Jl111d Clf'I' lted lllvn ·-Sacr-~ Hl1ll Low l'rtC . .. ~ " • • " " • " " • .. " • .. • • " " " • " • • " .. " .. " • • " • .. n n " " • " .. " " • " • .. " " . • • • " " " n n • n " • ., " • " • • n • " • • .. n .. " • " -~ ... ,., ,, .u ... •• .. gram. I want you to try to help us reduce its rising costs. "So, I appeal to 1.he entire medical profession in this couDtry to exercise restraint in their fees and in their cbar'ges." "We had to do a lot of running and keep the children qui.et while the plane was being readied.J' ,Ile said. "We had to fli11~ JOw because we didn't want rad~-.,to iee us -maybe 25 meters abovc·-:je water. Three times the wh~ the water." FINA·L CLEARANCE AND MARK DOWN SAVE 1/3 . 1/2. 2/3 AND MORE LADIES JAMAICA SHORTS KNIT TOPS & BLOUSES 1 ~~to 5.00 , LADIES SHIFTS FOR 3 ...... 6.00 WARM 5 DAYS ...... 9.00 AHEAQ ~-7 l"I. to U .00 LADIES BRAS q1RDLES Y2 SLIPS 2/3.00 2/5.00 2/3.5 EARLY BIRD lPfCIALS 17 LADIES' SHIFTS .... -............. 2.00 21 LADIES' PLA 'f SHOES -2/J.oO 82 JEWELRY .... -.... ~". .. ___ ........... 67< 44 LADIES' BLOUSES __ ...... _ He· 59 LADIES' SHOATS ........ _ ......... Ho I 07 LADIES' NYLONS ...... -J/1.49 38 MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS ............ Ho ll MEN 'S STRAW HATS .... $1 l$2 74 MEN 'S HANDKERCHIEVES 2/$1 Sl MEN 'S TIES ...:..-................ Ho bl BOY'S SOCKS _ ........ _ .. 4/1.00 SWIMVIEAR • LADtES 6 9 1,1 llG. 15 '• )It •MEN'S 250 & 350 •BOY'S 2 & 250 •GIRL'S 250 & 350 . CHllJIUN'S PLAYWEAR 2 FOR . oSO GIRL'S " KNrT TOPS". SHORTS · BLOUSES -~ ' .. BOY'S SPORT SHIRTS SHORTS Slate Fall ' I Kills Three Virginians MAN, W. Va • .(UPI) -llellCl!e Worker> dug with plcka and lhov<IJ lllroul)l -tons of m:k and cool to recover 1.be boclies of three coal miners tllled ln • slate .DD. 'Ibe bodies were recovered Wed· neaday nls!>t about olne hours alter the fall nearly a mile in.aide the main tunnel ol the Amherst Coal Co. slope mine near here wtiere five men were wcrking. One miner escaped the cave-in and another was trapped n&ar the edge of the !all -his lep pinned by debrlJ - but wu dug out quietly and suffered only minor injuries. Cause of the tall wu not known. Six men were killed in a slate fall Jn 1be same mine in February, 1958 . It wae the second mine di.Niter in West Virginia this year. Four miners were killed lalt May 6 in a flood at the Saxsewell mine of tlhe Gauley c.o.i and Coke Co. at Hominy Falls. Twenty~e men were rescued in tbat incident. About 800 tons of rock and coal col· lapsed on tbe men in t!Je Amherst mine Wednesday u: tbey warted an old seam of coal. AOOut 100 men were workinf in the mine at the time of. the fall. The victims, all West Virgilli.IM, were Emmet Copley, 48, d Lundale; Charles Lowe , 4-0, cJ. Henlaw90'n, arid Enoch Tooter. 36, of Amherst.dale. Edward Merriott ol L u n d a 1 e escaped the cave-in. Irwin Roark, whose legs were pimed by tti.e flRUen debri.s, w.as rescued. He wu treated for minor oots at Appalachian Regional Hospital bere and then released. Roark Said there W4!i DO wamiDc of the f.all. He said he saw the fall begin and started nmning out of the mine. At least one m the victims was behind him, he said. Elmer C. Workman, diredlor oi tbe State Department of Mmes, said of· ficials cl his o«i.~ and tbe U.S. Bureau cJ. Mines would begin .a in· vestigation today. Man is located in Logan County, me of the leading coa.l producing II'UI' in Southern West Virginia, about 70 miles southwest of Charleston. Two Magazines Sold NEW YORK (UP!) -The finan· cially troubled Curtis Publishing Co., which. has decided to concentrate on class publicatioos, sold the mus· circulation Ladies' Home Joumal and American Home Wednelday for stock worUl $5:.4 mllllon. MEN'S SHIRTS KNITS.SPORT-DRESS ..... 1.00 .. 9.00 MEN'S Wasli n' Wear CASUAL SLACKS 4399 OR 2 '°' 950 ....... te 1D.OO MEN 'S FAMOUS NAME SPORT COATS ALL WOOL -l"l•la. 37.00 a... Colo. ••• strva: b¥ wlndl .,. I& M m11H H r llOo.rr ...... d~ II• mot't 11\ell l.J lfWl\ft .. rt lft lft • ,,,.,N>Oir• --u.. .. 1'11111 lntflft flf rtlll freM -'""""'· SI. Leiuk ........ Sell Lt~t (tty s.11 o'"' n " • .. ... ~~ NO LAY ' e All SAW FINAL ..... T_.,.,_ ~ 11 Mi ii - lom11f11" I'll! Vtftl. Tlli IWll!tn ..,,,.. I~ -•I I loulklllll• Mlllr o.dM and Wl'IHI "9i.1 -.... , ... M!Mr flelD "" IUVfftd "' ~ Vitti. ' , -... SAo'I' .. .._i.e. SM!fll l1re.tr1 "'"'---""""' Wt~ll'ltlllll • • " " • • • " • • .. n " n " n • .. Laree Parking Attll In Rf'AI .. • ,< • • • • " , . ' •• -• 1 1 , I ) I ' I r J ' • Another 'City' Construction project on hills behind Monarch Bay (upper, central in photo) foretells creation of yet another "city" in fast-growing Lagu na Niguel area of Orange Coast. Rapidly expanding residential areas, commercial development and lh4ustrtal growth are all factors in one of county's fa stest urbanizations of onetime "cow country." Tnurldly, A""ll 15, 1968 ' OAILY PILOT JJ SUMMER · HARDWARE BUYS 9e6livaf CRACK PROOF ,32 GAL. TRASH CAN GUARANTEED 7 YEARS LIGHT AND TOUGH AVOCADO GREEN WILL NOT CRACK '4" Reg. $5.99 FESTIVAL ROTARY '·' More School Strikes Due Outdoor lighting you never thought you could afford I TOOL KEEPER WASHINGTON (UPI) - School bella may go unhetd- ed by thowands of teachers and young pupils across the natJ'on next month. According to the two giant teachers uniOOfl, the Na- tiooal Education AssociaUon and the American Federa- tion of Teachers, present conditions portend as many u 400 elementary and b.lgh school teacher strikes this school year, more than three times the recwd 126 wall:outl of the last cne. Spokesmen for the two grcups said there is "a strMg possibility" of strikes at the opeqing of school next month in st. Louis, Phlla~lphla, Ea>t St. Louis, Ill., New Orleans and Wllm· ington, DeL In additi.On, the NEA Did 35 suburban area schools in Michigan, mainly ~ e a r Detroit, face the same strike threat along with isolated rural districts in Colorado, Oklahoma, Idaho, New Hampshire and South Dakota. "We anticipate there will be about 50 strikes when S'Chool starts with another 300 to 350 spread throughout the rest of the school year," the NEA spokesman said. Neither the AFT nor NEA 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS $1.00 ..,. '"'' .... May be used on envelopes as return address lobels. Also very hondy os identificotion lobels for morking pers.on1I items such os books, records, photos, etc. Lebels sti,1 on glass and moy bo used for morking home conned food items. All lobels ore printed with stylish Vogue type on fine quolity white gummed poper ond pocked in reusoble mogic .seal top container. Mn. Oristine ltown 969 Post Ro•d Corl• M111, Cer.f. 92626 r--------------- 1 Fiii lo thi""'"""' '"d moll with !LOO'" I Piiot Printing, leb1I Di.,., lo• 1171, J J Newport l••~h, C11if. t2•6J I I I I .......................................................... I I .......................................................... I I I I ·· ··· ·· ········· ···· · ··· · · ····· ·· ............................ ······ I I •· u"• ,. 111• , •• , II, c.c1. I I I PILOT PRINTING L--· - -- ---- - - ---' FREE BONUS WITH EACH ORDER OF LABELS WE WILL INCLUDE FRO SET OF PACKAGE MAILING LABELS. - Te ..... ,..,.... __ ,_. "Artistry in Moving'' could eatimate the Dumber of teachers and students af· fected except to say it would run into tbe tens o f thousands. The Education Com- mission of the States (ECS), which represents the ex· ecuUve and legU!.ative bran· ches of 39 states, reported there were 100 work stop- pages in the last school year and the NEA said there were 126. ECS figures g<>ing back to 1940 showed a total of 73 such strikes ln the entire decade ending in 1949, underscoring the marked contrast between thtn and tho greater militancy of teachera in current times. One puzzling factor In the public's mind is how teachers can strike in the face of laws of nearly every state prohibiting walkouts by-public servants. One simple answer is that practically they are unen- forceable because if you throw all the strikers in jail you atill have e m pt y classrooms. Tbe NEA, wlth its 1.2 million members, said near· ly 80 percent, or 643,iml teachers , have won bargaining recognition con- tracts from local school boards and the AFT, with 165,000 members, said Computer Is 100.000 of 11s member• ar• under a cootract arrange- ment. Excellent The AFT, whlch is af· fillated with the AFL-CIO, bas a policy of "no contract, T ff• C p no work" which touched off ra lC 0 scores of last year's •trikes. The NEA is not affl1iated SAN JOSE CAP) -This with other h1.bor group«. city of 400,000 has a traffic As r e st 1 e s s young cop who makes a half· teachers started signing up inilllon decisions every se· in growing numbers with the cond. mori' •ggressive AFT, the The cop is a computer. NEA .started taking a tough Nearly 60 signal lights in stand, calling Jts members 35· block downtown area out on strike in record have been operated slnc:e numbers last year. December, 1966 by a The NEA formerly relied $204,000 device. Officials on sancUons which merely figure tt.at in just one year urged teachers not to work the cutdown on waiting fn certain school districts or saves motorists $264 ,000 in even an entire state. travel time. --------- "It takes three.fourths of1,--------- a second for a driver to react between bis gas pedal and his brake pedal," &aid Gene Mahoney, the project's engineer. "In that time, th ls SHARP ii yo11't• • •herp fr•d•r, 111• th• DAILY PILOT'S f•mou1 Dim•·A·Lln• cl•uin•d edt S1f· 11nl•y1, Mek• • b•tt•r a •• 1 ••• wh•fh•r you'r• bYyin t ~r 11lling. A quality system you install yourself •• , in minutes, with complete safety. Mo permits. conduit• dlai111 11ecasary ,,, int plq i.1 •UL tppfO'ttd, 12-nll syslt111bsoh1t1ly lhoclproof, dlild-ufel • Tlleu Jow-wolb(t Mb IR tomp11tl wlttl 6 flrp lllltd bM11 llrflb ltcl Cllortd llllSll (2 IMbtr, lfHll, phlk, •IH, Slld wtiltl), 100 fnt of WNrtler,roof t1ble, trwfner with b1llt·lt 1.tolutit lilttr, arovH stabs snd n R br1tkm • UM tllil 1xdtiq 11W llthtlnt frola AMF 11 dozens of nys thl'D\llhOtlt 1111 JUI' for ...,r11y !ff ..-buoty, Water Heaters REPUBLIC "GEMINI" '30 GAL. M4.H 40 GAL, $49.il 50 GAL. $64,11 "TITAN" 30 GAL. $64.11 40 GAL. 72.18 INSTALLATION AYAILAIU Thl1 outlltv •u•rlnlfttl 1l1t1 rrn..i wt"r """r .. tcluipped With aat.ty fwnP. II r"IUlrtd 11\t law, WI lllYI llml d•Y lntMI· llllon •v1H1bi., If yev wllll. All llOl'll'lll lrt- 1t11!1tl0fl 01ri. lncllllled. 011 by Noon - ln1!111 11'191 cl•Y. ""'"° _,gency lntl1J11tlon IVllllble, AH wo..-. donl b'I' rNtltr ll!umbtrl. For workbench, c1blnet •r shelf, Spins litt ball belrlng baN. •179 Light to 1111. Port1ble, saves 1p•e•. o...,,._,.._ .. -......... DMi .. 240 ...... .. M:•1. t.1ttl1, .. ---••• , MNllll tf IPrl•l·tl•t tr• -$159 GARBAGE DISPOSALS IN,SINK·ERATOR MOHL NO.IJI~ s31•s J:I•. Sit.ti oua PllCI ·• ••••••••••••••• MOHL NO, 770 s5495 •••• $7t.tl OUI ,llCI • •• , • ,, •• , •••• , • ' . WASTE KING MOHL NO. 2700 s31•s •••• $4f.t5 OUl NICI •••• , ,.",, •••• ••. MOHL NO. JOOO lt4195 llG. Slt,tlj ~ OUI PllCI • , , • , • , •••• • ••••• INSTALLATION AVAltABLE machine can make 350,0001'--------- operations or declslons.l;:;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii:i;;;;;;;i There are 500,000 actions or JI operations in a second." "In a 12-hour period there are about a m.11.lkln demands of service for sig nals," Mahoney noted. "To put lt another way, every 12·hour period in· volves 10 million vehicle· aeconda. 'Th.U: bolls down to each vehicle suffering an average delay of about 10 seconds ." Mahoney repeated whein an astounded inquirer ask· ed. "did you say SUF· FERED 10. s~onds delay?" The computer ls hooked into the system from ceintral headquarters at 441 Park Ave. It not only regulates the traffic but, "·hen con· ditions change, it changes the traffic pattern. Mahoney evaluates: "One of the most lm· portant benefiU of a com- puterized system is that it brings all the da~ Into one central location 1nstead of forcing us to scatter person- nel all over to gather the same Information:" Mahoney said W J c h I t a Falls, Texas, and Toronto, canada, have such com· puterized traffic algnall at work. He knowa of no others. Sydney, Australia, haa television sets monitoring the traffic problems. for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 58Q Broadway . SARTA ARA FURRITURE • tlUll!I GniHd """ 8 ,., ···~ °"* .... -.,ollty ..... : ...... hind ...... ........ .............................. ,..., ........ ...... lltlUCtfol'I -----...,.. ..,.fort, fCN!foal ..... ., ........ .. ~I. ""-""" ...,.. tobll, • chok. ef tiet • ..-. ••11•• Ill __... o.11. A,,_.,,,.....,,... Whitt, Hwc1e ~C. I' ' tellle i.r,, l'\.US ••~ ...... '°""...a !ft ........... --.... ,..---···-·-·· ........................... ..,.1 -::..~-=.: $"88 llrl• ....... ., ' . .. -~ .. I _, I In Old Santa Ana an Echo of Old Spain llo IOllEY DOWl-PAY IR SEPT. Hours 10to9daily 12to5Sunday 10to6Sat. 5 P\OOU OP AU IP.lNISH .lND /11~.PUlHITUU A f 111111111 PRIClll .... • .. ...... ·~·----,.£..~'I;.;..~----- -~· -C.....~------~~----------"'---'-""'----------'---"'--'======~=----= ............ ________ ..... I J2 OA1LY PILOT LEGAL NO'l1CE ....... ClllTU1tuft IMI DISCOMTlltUAlftl .. USI ANCllOI AIAltDONMllfl' °" """'°us NAM• '™1! UMOllllStONlO .... Mr* Qftl"' tMI, eft9cllw AllWlf ht, lHlt, tit CMMll -... WI!'-ll9Mor .. tldl'*"5 flml -llf Ell!CTtlC Oft.GAN AllOCIATEL •I m E•tl 11'1'1 If .. co.i. .... Ctll ..... ~ IMllltM -..,.__. _..,.. f/I IN fllllowlng --...,_ -"' fltll ..... pllQ • ,.io-:t .. " ~ ........ fo.<111111 ,.ATll:ICIC J. WADE, 151 CICll P'i.ca, Cost1 MBa. C.Mlonll9, "'21 Cutltlui. tor trellMCllorl ., tillt1nnt .....,. the .....,. lklttloul Mini, Ind 11• fl•1vll GI ~blktlll .. ttMreaf, ,,. ell tllt !fl ._ tlflot of tlMo c-tv Cltr1t of 0,. •-CM!fY, 111\der .._ ,,,,.111on1 of Ste"°" MM 'Ill 1tMt Cl"11 CGIM. WITttl!SI Mr ~ thll ld dW 9' A.v.1111. '"*· PATAICI( J. WADE --..oshed °''"'' c11111t o.1tv Pilot, A-I I, I. \$, J:J, 1"' l)U-'t, LEGAL NO'l1CE ·--c1•n"l~T• OP IUSUllSS. P:ICTITIOlll KAMI TM uc1diial1"1d .,_. urtlht .... 111 eooo- ofudl"" I Mlntsl 11 1"11 lolM Cllkl llll., Huro~ a.di. ""7, CIUtornt., Vllde!' fM ftctltloUI llml Mme .t JAM'S DONUT SHOfl 1o'MI thel Mid flml h _.,.. --ef !flt tol...... --wiw:.. NIM Ill "111 111111 P .. Cll el l'ftldet!QI II M followl: Jl:'llt A. MMce, A ni.rrlM WOINl'lo 1&12 .NII-lld., U Mlr.cla. C.Uf . ...... 0.tN Jutr U, lt& J .... "" ""- "'"' of C.H"""'tl, LOI ..._lei C-t't: On Juh' 11, l"6I, Mtor. ""· , Not•rv Publk In end tor uld s111e, __.uv •-rid Jent A. Mffce knowll fe nw fe tie ""' --wt.--•• •vbK.rlb9d to ttie wlttll11 ln.t"""""' end .~.._. "" ..... ••Klltlid ""' ......... !OFFICIAL SEA.LI Merv A. Welk..,. No11rv PVbltC-C1llfoml1 Ptll'KIPl l Office Ill Lo. ,,,,.,let Cou11ty Mr CommlA!oll Eqlrn October f, 1'71 Publlt.hld Or1,., Cottt D1l9" l"llot, A1111u1t J, I, 15, 22. IHI lS314 LEGAL NOTICE ....... MOTICI: TO Cal:DtTOIS IUPl:IUO• couaT OP TN• ITATI: Ofl CALll'Oll.MIA l'OR THI: COUNTY OP OllAQI: .. ....." E1lele M JOHN EDWARD aAllTON, Dece1H'd. NOTICI!: II HEREeY GIVEN to "" altdtlwl or "" 1boYe r11tnld dec"""t tllll ell PlrMlll Mvl"' t.l1lm1 "'Inst !hi llld ~· .... •Mllfl"ld ,., flle tMm, wlltl thl ,,_.,.., YOUC:htn, r., 11'11 oflke « th• t.lerlc of !Ill 1boYe t11lltlld court, ..,. to 1rn.11t lfllm, wlltl the neceuerv YllUt.l\t>n, to the uncknl11!1td 11 !hi otfln "' hi• '"'°'""' °"""''' 0 . MoKrlp, 17,12 ... ch llMI., SUl!e I, Hutitr"'foll INch, C11t1orn11 t26-17. wtilch 11 the 1i.n or bullMU of !Ill uncM,..t1ried 111 111 rn1!kn .-1111111"'1 to TM .. 1.1e or .. 1, clececlHit, Wlltl!11 11• mo,nlh1 1tter 11'11 flrlf ftllb llu- llOll of ltll1 nolln. 01tltd A1111int u. 1"'- Jollll Wlt111m l11rton Admtn111r1tor or "" E1t1te or th1 1tww. r11....ci d.c:ldtnt DOUGLAS D. MOICRIP Altenltr Al L1w., 11in ••1t.ll •"°"" 111111 1 M1111tt111lt11 ... ._, C1llflrlll1 ""'1 TIL: 1714) .......,.,. Aftenrltr fer A*"lfllft,.._. Publl1hlld °''"" CM1! D1llV Piiot, AllfUll IJ, 22, 2t Ind ~ $, IHI UtWI LEGAL NOTICE ,_..., •All IM4 Cl!llTll'IC.t.TI: 01' aUllMl:ll. l'IC'TITIOUI NAMI: The ll'lldl,..ltMd do nrll,., fMol ,,.. ~Ill I bul lllftl ti U111Q11 811\k 5'1""rw, Nor1fl T-. 111111 112, Or1t11t. C1Ufoml1, ur!def" lhl flctltlaw firm M rM ef RISE ...... Illa! Mid firm II~ O'I the fD!lowlnt Oln.w, wllOM Mmn Ill full •nd 11-t.a or tnld«!o;e •rl 11 fllllllwl: ~ A. M9ddefl, Jr •• t.llt LMMrN W1v, Cast1 Miu, C11t1. '2•271 S11•r1I M. 1,,.r1m, 702 NDrltl l'tn'I llT'Mt, Or1"", Catll. fH'7i LIWTWICI D. Ml-IDll, 41:W Glylt 11'"1, Or1111e, CtllfDNllt '21i17. Oiled JulV I•, IM. Gear" A. Medd1t1, Jr. Sl111ford M. l111r1m LIWNllOI D, MIQ~lon Sltll O'I C1lffornl1, Ort1111 Cou<'llY: 011 Julr lt, IHI, blforw mt, • Hol1rv Pullllc 111 Ind for 11kl s1111, "r"l<lf'lltl'r n-arld 0.01"11 A. Htddotn, Jr., St1111Drd M. l•1sir1m, 1,-d LIWrlllCI D. MIQ~lon known lo ..W lo b9 tilt OIF'IClllJ w!lD$f "•m~ tl""I "'bKrlbltd fo ftll Wllhlll Jn-1tn.omitnl 1,-d •d<,_lldttd: .,..., IXICIJfld llM urn1. Jtntt M. Glrrttt Not1rv Publle • C1ltfornl1 Pr1IKIPl l Ofllee Ill °''""' County Mr Carnml11J011 1..,1,.. July 21. lfff =~HO llAU'N ANOl:lllON JI,. .t.I· Uni.it l111tr 1.u- Ct11tr1I T-, Svtle ,. Or11191, C1llf9nll1 ""' PublllMd Onnr1 COit! Deltv Pllof July 25 •l'ld A111111:1t 1, .. 11, IHI ,..,,,. LEGAL N0'11CE --· FAT OVERWEIGHT A1<•lle~ '9 rou wit'-! 1 _,,.,.., II•• ~tlorl, -~ ulltd OdrlM•. You """d kllt ug,., 11! Dr )'Ou!" m1ney llilclt. OdrW• it I tiny !Ible! l'nd NlllV .... lloWwN, '"" tld ef Grttt 111 11\d ow ......,. O.U-l11t11 c.wlt a.to ...,. 11 11111 .,. ttll• "'9t•rttw: ff ftllt Mtl1"'4! lw 9111' ,...._ 11111 r9fUnl 1M lllld<.I" .. ,_. .,,,...., ""' .. , ,_. ..... ..,..,,.,. btQ. ,._ -lllM •9'._0dtlna_ II - .... Wffrl NI _,_,.. W: Ciuw,.,l'a "9t lhN • 11M ... , .... ..,,, ..... Or-. ...... PENETRATION ... lhursday, A119usl 15, 1%8 ' SAVE NOW ON COTTON SHORTS 2.99 Rog. 5.00 and 6.00. large .,,Off· ment of cotton shorts with side or front zipper. Solids and novalty P.rints, sizes 10 to 18. ACC!SSORY SHOP LARGE ASSORTMENT OF swµ TERS, SALE-PRICED 7.99 W oshablo Orlon• acryl ic or wool sweaters in pullover end c:ardigan stylos. Novelty knits, sizes 34-40. Skirts end c:ulottes, siies 8 to I 61 reg. 8.00-13.00 .•.•..... -5.99 ACC!SSORY SHOP FAMOUs MAKER WATCHES PRICED FOR SAVINGS 9.99 Reg. 13.95 to 19.95 12.99 Reg . 20.95 lo 22.95 Foshion styled wrist and pendant watches. You'U recognite the quel· ity of this famous maker. COSTUME JEWELRY JUNIOR AND PETITE DRESSES FOR FALL 7.99 Rag. 11 .00 lo 13.00. Choose from 1 wide variety of colors end fab· rics in your favorite styles. All from re9ul1r stock. YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONL YI SANT A ANA AND NEWPORT ONLY ' MID-MONTH SPECIAL PURCHASE OF "II-TWEEN" SIZES 10.99 Wide •ssortment of dress styles in washable jersey. Great selecti on of prints include plaids, fl orals , paisleys. Sizes 121/2 to 221/2· BUDGET DRESSES BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER SKIMMERS AND SHIFTS 6.99 Reg. 13.00 to 17.00 shills, bosic step-ins or skimmer styles in short sleeve or sleeveless styles . Dae· ron® polyester/cotton; 10 lo 20. Summer .•nd fall dresses, reg. 11 .00to 13.00 ........... 7.99 BUDGET ORESS!S SAVE NOW ON OUR FASHIONABLE HANDBAGS 4.97 Reg. 10.00 to 16.00. Good ossort- m_:nt of patents, straws, novel r.hrics and leather in several styles ond colors. Shop Hrly. HANDBAGS FAMOUS MAKER BRAS REDUCED TO CLEAR 1.99 Rog . 4.00 to 6.00 lop quality ban· de1u bras from well known makers in white, pastels end prints. Not •II sizes in .. ch style. FOUNDATIONS BUFFUMS' OWN LABEL INFANTS' PLA YWEAR Infants, 1. 99 Toddlen, 2A9 leg. 4.00 leg. 5.00 Permanent Press bubbles, double. bib overalls and doub le-bib shorts made to our rigid specifications. Dacron® polyester and cotton. INFANTS' SHOP DESIGNER APPAREL REDUCED TO CLEAR 112 Price Reg. 11.00 lo 20.00 designer •p· porel for infants and toddlers by Betti Terrell and Fischel. Wida 1ssortment of dresses and sets. INFANTS' SHOP TOP MAKER JACKETS FOR BOYS , REDUCED 112 Price Reg. 8.00 lo 25.00. Wide assort· ment of jackets in many fabrics, colors ond styles . All from regular stock, sizes 8 to 20. STORE FOR BOYS PERMANENT PRESS BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS 1.99 Reg. 4.00 to 5.00 never iron f1· mous maker sport shirts ha ve short sleeves. Great 1ssortment of pat- terns end colors, sites 8 to 20. STORE FOR BOYS WHITE SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 1.99 Reg. 5.00 Docron• polyester and c:otton permanent ·press shirts have semi-spread conars. Regular stock. Most sizes 141/2 lo 17. STORE FOR MEN SHORT OR LONG SLEEVE VELOUR SPORT SHIRTS 112 OFF Reg. 13.00 to 14.00 cotton terry velour shirts in 1 selection of many solids and stripes. Our entire stock cf walk short1 , reg. I 0.00 • 14.00 .... 1 /2 off. STORE FOR MEN BUFFUMS' OWN SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 3.99 Reg. 6.00 lo I 0.00 selaction in- cludes easy care end no-iron poly· ester and cotton end polye1ter blends. Sizes S-M·L·XL STORE FOii MEN CLEARANCE ON ENTIRE STOCK OF WALK SHORTS 1/2 Off Rag. volues 6.00 to 10.00. First time reduction on in of our walk· shorts. Stoel includes solids, pl1 ids, seersuckers, perm1nent press, im· porlad cottom. AH sizn. ' VAll:SITY SHOP, "-•tfr •Y«Y•"• , •• n ,,., DAILY PILOT. "•"'"'•-".., .. .. ~ ,., .... , ..... , .... 011111• NEWPORT CENTER a 11 FASHION ISLAND • 644-220ll • ll<lHDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 " • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TIU S:30' ~ ... ~ !:====:i::======"", , ' " ' I I' ~---' -. . . v • • • . . .. . -... ......... .. .. . ~ -· ..... ~ ·'" .. .. .. • ·- •• Thursday, August. 15, 1968 DAil V PILDT p Ott t he Board Hermosa Refuge Available To Host 4 ·A Conteat. Frye Top s Carroll In Oceanside Meet For Surf Traveler S:urfers By CRAIG LOCKWOOD Of ... Df"1 Pla.t Stefl' - The wings of the big 707 jet-clipper Oei deeply , and for a moment the seat of your pants drops. There is a soft, cusbioney bwnp, and a protesting screech from the tires. You have landed. Where? Where would you like to go? Pick your spot. Hawaii? There are four magic surf-pounded islands six hours Dying time from Orange County. South Seas? Samoa, Fiji, 'tonga, Tahiti •.. the list is as long as there are islands. No surf, they tell you . . . what are those white things breaking on that hid- den reef? They're waves, and good, uncrowded ones. Perhaps you like surfing with an Orientai touch. Go to Hong Kong. Or Japan, or Ceylon, or Bangkok . You'll find the mysto flavor of the East, and all. the waves you can surf. Yen for Europe? A round trip ticket to France, Spain or Portugal is as close as the local travel agency, can be bought on time, and cost less than the down payment on a three-year-old used car. Puerto Rico's flawless coastline will be the site of November's World Surfing Contest , •. why not travel to Hawaii of the East coast for a change? * * The first thing the traveling surfer needs, If he is going anywh•r• but Mexico or Hawaii la •.pas"" po rt. They are avallabl• at the Passport Ag•ncy, in the County Administration-Bldg., 511 North Syca· more, Santa Ana. The phone number ls 134-2212. The $11 passport 11 good for thru y•ars, and r.,,ewable for another thru fo r a $5 fff, The re- newal can be obtaln9d from your local trav•I agency if you 11 re making plans to travel through th•m. * * * VISAS NEEDED TO TRAVEL Most foreign countries require a visa for entry. The visa is usually obtained either through the consulate in the United States, or at the border of the country you will be entering. ' Again, the travel office can supply any of the in- formation you will need on obtaining one. The approx- imate cost would range from $3.50 to $5 for most Eur~ pean countries. You must have at least two photos for most visas, so it is a good idea to take extra passport photos along with you, just in case. * * * Most major air carriers, as well 111 st•amship companies offer a variety of plans to travelers. During puk seasons they charge more for passage than during the off, or slow season. For a surfer in the 12 to 21 year age bracket, great savings can be made by flying student-stand· by, Standby fare to Hawaii Is $25 lower than normal economy fare, and it Is rare that the tr•veltr will actually have to wait. Standby fa re from L.A. International to New York City, where you would begin the second I .. of a European trip Is $72 plu1 tax. A return-trip 30 day excursion fare, non-stand- by would run $217. Depending an what time of day, •i1o tha amount of traffic you will be encountering, many airlines overlook the shipping fHs on surf· boards. They can range from $4 to $20 however, and it is best to check with the airline before making ar· rang ements for your particular flight. i * * * EUROPE BOUND? BEST TRAVEL BARGAINS Jcelandic Airlines offers the best travel bargain fares to surfers who wish to sample the waves of France, Spain, Portugal or Britain. A round trip ticket from New York to L<tndon and back. during the normal season is only $364, and is less during the off-season. The normal season eastbound is August 4 through May 21, and westbound it starts on September 29, and goes through July 16. Peak seasons of May through August, and July through September are best avoided due to extra ex- pense and crowded conditions. . As it W'OI'ks out for the surfer the off season is the surf season, and so he shouldn't have to worry. Airfare from London to Biarritz, the capital of French surfing is $62.80 one way, or $119.30 round trip. It is actually cheaper to travel by train in Europe, and the trains have a whole series of travel bargain tickets for the thrift-conscious surfer. The Eurail pass offers unlimited first class travel by train in 13 countries at a cost of $140.00 for a month, or $180 for two months or $210 for three months. Railroad passes in other classes offer additional savings as well. And there is always hitchhiking. This is a little more ditiicult when you carry a board, how- ever, and unless you have unlimited. time it is best to use more conventional methods. Language can be a problem in many areas, but transportation companies usually have someone who can speak English for their tourist travelers. * * * Economy m inded surfers a re advi1td to pr• vide themselves with a hard11nd hoNI, or 1IH ping b•g and air mattress, This Is a sure answer to your slHplng needs Jf you fi nd a beach you llke, but no hotel. Throughout Europe and In many other fortlgn countrle1, youth hostels art provided for traveling students et a minimal cott. T1My offer a bed, and a roof, •nd sometimes • mHI for a very low figu re. Conventional hotel1 are expensive, •nd classy; h•rdl y the kind of pl•ee you'd be welcome In In wet t runks •nd Hndy feet, but there ar. thole richer, lts1 adventurous souls who prefer this tort of .. curlty. You won't hove troubl• llndlnt th is kind of oc- commodatlon, (ust paying for It. THE BOAT BEAT i\lme11 loclr•My. 11•tle11•f •••"' wl1111tf' ftt hit 11•••r•1• •f yec.htlnt , ••"" tht .... t .... t f.t tt-1 DAILY PILOT. Ht '• the enly f11lltl 11t• lteetl11t ,.,.,...., •11 •ll'J Or•11t• Ce111ty 11ew,,1111t 1ttff. • Tbe Western. Surf in g Assoclatlon 1 a n c t I o n·ed Hermosa Belch 2 and 3-A au1m:pion1hips will be held this weekend at t b e Hermosa Beach Pier. The meet ii sPonsored by the Cities and Chambers ot Comrnen:t of Hermosa, Manhattan, and Redondo Beach, and the Los Angeles County J)epartment o f Recreation. The t w o day champ- ionship will include seven heats of men's · single-A quarter finals, 6 heats of ~ys' single-A quarter finals, five heats of men's single-A semliinal!, men's 2· A quarter finalJ and men's 2-A quartermain. Events Saturday a r e scheduled to be completed by noon. First heats start at 6:30 a .m. Mac Lands In France Well-tllapod 3 lo 4 !oot..-------- surf and hot C<lmpotiUoo made the Oce&llside Invlta- tlonai 4-A •urllflfl coolest Ja!lt weekend a memorable event. It marked the next-1o-faat 4-A meet which w 11 l determine the place Sien· ding for California's top surfers vying for a lljlOt on Surfing Scene the West Coast team whJch i..---------i wtll eventually be selected to compete in Puerto ruco th111 coming November in the World Contest. Surf gia.W' Skip Frye and Qrky Carroll battled it out for a botly-con<ested first and second place, with some controversy developing over tlle judget' decisions. Frye, however, w a s selected over Carroll for the first ploce trophy. Peter Johnson , performed consistently, and nudged out Tom Overland and David Nuuhiwa for third place. \VODll!D'I F'btaJ.t 1. Margo GodfreY. 2. Joyce Hoffman 3. Sharon w-.. 4. Joey Hamasaki 5. Linda Benson Paddle Race I. Bill Mount 2. Bob Burnside 3, Kenny Lynn 4. G<rry Bemiette • 5. Jim Mollica. ltfen'a Finals Judging: Br eifn·a n 1. Skip Frye "Hev's" McClelland. head Alter a loo& night to 2. 0.-ky Carroll judge, Marge McCl<lland, Paris, via LUJ:embour1, anQ CUTTING HARD -Surfers are getting in practice for upcoming competition 3. Pete Johnson Del Cannon, Kit H<n1., Bun a long drivoe to Blurita, ln the U.S. championships at Huntington Beach, scheduled August 28, 29. 4. Tom Overliand Schwatz, Le a Willlamr, Greg MacGUllvray, Orange ·r~ouund.1 of 1pectaton figure to be on band for the classic event. 5. David Nuuhiwa Steve Bigler, County's flll'em01t 1urf-Wm -----..:...---,-=----..:..:....:.:....:.:::.::::..::....::::..:::.:::.::..:.:.::::::._~-----.::.~.::.::=..::.:=:.::::_ __ _::::.:~:!:::.:... ___ _ maker reports: · "No surf to get excited over yet, but the conditions are f a vorable Billy Hamilton looks super, hav- ing improved enormously lilis ia.t year. "We are priming up on French, with 1 e s 1 o n 1 delivered by Martinson, our man with the French· English dictionary ... with the help of some beautiful local mademoiselles." Accordmg to MacGUliv· ray, Biarritz is a series of coves and cliffs, a tourist rnecea for Frenchmen, but very few Americans . . . Swells have been increasing due to a storm that is laying off the coast and Greg will report more later ..• Southern Cal Trout Planting This week the following Southern California waters are scheduled to be restock· ed with catchable-size rain· bow trout by the Depart- m-ent of Fish and Game. Anglers are reminded that this list ls tentative and may necessarily be changed: LOS ANGELES COUNTY -Big Rock Creek, Bouquet Canyon Creek, Crysta 1 1.Ue, Legg Lake, San Gabriel River East and West Forks. RIVERSIDE COUNTY - Fulmor Lake, Hemet Lake. SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY Arrowhead Lake, Big Bear Lake, Green Valley Lake, Gregory Lake , Lytle Creek Middle and North Forks. U.S.~!atador Vies Suncl8y • In Tijuana TIJUANA-Robert Ryan, the young American mata· dor who survived. two spec- tacular tossinp iD bis last appearance here, will re- turn Sunday to Plaza Mon· umental, the bullring-by-tbe- Sea. Mexican stars Raul Gar· cia and Gabino Aguilar will also appear on the pro- gram which features bulls from Santacllia ranch. It will start at 4 p.m. Ryan, from Inglewood, won an ear two weeks ago aft.er being caught on the horns ol his first bull and nearly gored. He was knock· ed unconscious by his sec- ond bull, bur managed to re· turn to the arena to end the performance. Eloy Cavazos, the baby· faced 17-year--0ld from Mon· terrey, redeemed hiD)self with aficionados here last Sunday, with a classy per- formance that earned him the day's only ear. Young Leonardo Man· zano, malcing his second appearance, displayed the best capework of the after- noon, but got little help from the sluggish bulls he faced. He killed his first adversary with a 1lngle thrust and drew an ovation and a vie· t.ory around the ring. how thriflY are you when you borrow money . •-' Southern California Thrift & loan .specializes in personal, business and Trust Deed loans ••• Sto p In today and see how we can solve your Imme. dlate money problems from depend. able funds.available right now. The Thrifty way can save you money, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT& LOAN 170 £1st 1'7tfl st, Coltt Mtn ••••• M8·S04$ 6351 Wllahlr1 Blvd., Los An1el•••• 653·1220 Pre labor Day with 11od1rn wr11p-aro11nd high p1rlorm1nr1 trnd Hlign TUUWS llAClWAUI TUllUll WlmW~lU "' 21111 =-11-="''-'n"111~+- '2 I. 00 '10.10 '24.21 'IZ.IZ 23.26 11.12 28.10 23.75 Additional belle •t oo 11ch 11.87 27.00 NATIONWIDE GUABANTEJI COSTA MESA. NEWPORT BEACH e HUNTINGTON BEACH 475 E. 17th St. 646-2444 16171 leach Blvd. 147-60l1 IOTH STORES MONDAY-PllDAY 8 A.M. • 9 P.M. • j -.. ·. ---.._._._...___ ----~ _____ , _______________________________________ _;:_ ___ .;.. ____________ _ 21 OAILV ~ILOT Bank Due $250,000 Facelift The Costa Mesa branch o! the United Stat.es National Bank will undergo a '250,000 facelltt in the fs.U . Tht bank, located at 1845 Newport Ave., at the in· tmectlop of N•wport and Harbor bo\llevards, also will be enlarged both in the in· terior and exterior. Remodeling, according to branch manager Frank Zrebiec, will begin within the next eight weeks mid is scheduled for completion by oorlyli611. The present structure, a modified triangular shaped building, will asswne the shape of a rectangle with an addiUon on the Harbor Boulevard I i d e which will house the new conference rooms a n d management offices. The drive-in island will have a new, higher patio roof and drive-in lanes will be altered to accommodate 13 cars on the bank parking lot. An additional lot, east of the present lot, will be con· structed to provide for overflow parking. The exterior '"of the bank will receive a new plaster coating, while the new wing will be ID brick. Exterlor ad· - Thul'tdv, August 15. 1968 --will include Snap"hot travertine marble columns 0 Satellite and e:idensive landscaping. New carpeUng ls planned for the entire lobby and of· fice area. Rohr Given Big Order LONG BEACH CAP) - McOonoell Douglu Aircraft Corp. haa selected th• Rohr Oorp. ol Cbula Vim 14 pr0o duce engine pods for the Artist's concept shows a new satellite t bat could snap photos of the sun's cor· ona from a 300-mile high earth orbit. Hughes Aircraft Co., El Segundo, ls studying such a project for the national Science Foundation. The cigar-shaped satellite would be 8 feet, 7 inches long and weigh 230 pounds. Solar panels jut- ting from the rear would draw power from the sun to operate the spacecraft's electronics and would catry a coronag raph to photograph the solar corona, which long has held mysteries for scientists. ·· proposed DC10 jetliner. U.S. Automakers Eye Small Car Market • M c Do n n e 11 Douglas By The Auociated Prn1 spokesmen Mid the contract would bring Rohr •150 U.S. automobile manufac-rnilllon over tbe nut eeven turera are reported to be , years. moving into an era of " The engino poda wt1! be smaller cars. ' . designed to muffle engine Cbalrman Roy D. Chapin r.oise and will make the 271· Jr. of the American ¥otors µassenger DClO quieter than Corp. said in Washington today's superjets, • v e n this week that his firm is thn ugh the tri-jet planes will prepared to ch a 11 en g e h:~ve twice 81 much &brust. foreign car makers for the a spokeslfll:h said. affections of America' s The OClO ii expected to economy-minded drivers. I':! in operation by 1m. Tbt New York Times said 1'111iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MERITS & BENEFITS OF LEASIN& THE FAMILY CAR lllUMll ......... el ~t11 I W ....... fc1111lfJ car, Ap. ,..."' .................................... ._. ... "'" 1s • ..-..i ht Mt. PuAJ ••" ... ......._. ... c.1 • .., PM: ............ wlrl elr .......... ca. M lw4 fw $121 1110llfW' (Hie ...... ltttlm C...., .... for non Sfl , w•lc• llKI ................. _. Mllltwnu ht 40,00D .Sift fol ........ t11111111 -.1·. n.. ._,., M,. .,.., ,...llt ..r, ,,.... ........ ,., .. u•wt .. tlle _..,. ... tllet WIC8tfoli p,.,..ty ..... ._ I.,_. I,_. l" "'• MW •· Nl'#'tlOWl....c:onA W .. Wiii' COAll' .....,,.y NIWPOIT IUOI • Mlall7a'/8tJ .... 1 •• ~~-m MERCURY -- LINCOLN -........ ---·-.... •• cit ·- CL¥e ~OU 9~ 'fhut1 t)~efifi? 0 Interest from the 1st of any month on funds received by the !Olh. 8 1nterest from date of rec•ipt after the 10th. @Jnterw:st ta date of withdrawal on funds Jett 3 months or longer if 1ccount remains open until quarter'• end. 5% per annum compounded dally current rate on passbook savings. 5.25% per 111num on bonus accounts. If no~ your •••ings •hould he with ••• MUTUAL. SAVINGS ..... -. ................. .. 2867 East Colst Hl8hway • Coron• Dtl Mar, Caflf. 92625 f_.,on• 675-5010 -.a· ...... Jlt I. c:at.OWO&a • l'IUADC~ CAUr.t llot in a story from Detroit Wed- nesday that the auto in· dustry l.s preparing a new class of cars -smaller and cheaper than any built in this country now but still bigger than the tiny im· ports. The Times said the first of these new cars is set for production by the Ford Motor Co. as a 1970 model and will go on sate in eight months. Others are in the design or tooling stage, it siaid. For Detroit, the Times said, these cars represent a major effort by the industry to combat an invasion of foreign products built by low-paid German a n d Japanese workers. Promoted Richard L. Osbahr of Westminster has been named assistant man· ager of Southern Cali- fornia First National B a n k ' s HuntingtOn Beach office. Other car makers art ----------- working to catch up with Ford; The General Motors Corp. is working on a car closer in size to the tiny European imports. T h e Chrysler Corp. is not now planning to build a smaller, cheaper car. In Washington, Chapin told newsmen at a diMer meeting and preview of his !inn's new models Monday that American Motors is developing a new car, "Not necessarily conventional in terms of today's accepted auton:ioUve configurations.'' Chapin declined to expand the 11taterneut, but he had said earlier: "J be live that the 900,000 foreign car sales this year will be a high- water mark, and one of the reasons is that we at American Motors are turn- ing more o[ our efforts toward the growing segment of the U.S. market to which the imports appeal." "The public, by its purchase of imported cars, has made it clear that the era of small cars -Of still more personal transporta· tion-is here," said Chapin. There were no compacts, however, included among the new models for public display. A spokesman said the new car won't be ready before the 1970 line. Wershow LIQUIDATION SALE BY ORDER OF OWNER 32 LAGUNA BEACH OCEAN VIEW LOTS * • BuyL1aun1 Beach ro5id•n· ti1I property et • Uqukletion price! All th••• lots er• fully improved with under· 1round utllitles. They ,,.. lotat1d Just E1st of the cen· ter of town. less thin 1 mile from Pacific Co11t Hi1hway. Mony of th11e lot• com· mind • m11niflcent vl1w of th• P1cltic Oc11n. Easyterms- ownerwill finance with releases. ,or ~dltipn•l lnlormttion, c•ll 1ny of th1 Weral'low Oceenslde Reel Estet1Teorn: C•ro1yn, Ml1111, Rick. Ken or Ed. .. LAGUNA IEACH • CltElllT. T11tl #4511, la~ l lhru 32 T1h1 C•QlSt. to Blutblrd C1nyo11 Rot d, 1~.,, cont!r1u1 fH'I to Ioli. Tht ICll ... •llu1tt'd on R•l•ll• Rd., 8lutb1rll C•nJO<I Rd, •...ii Morr1lflp!09 Orlvt, •PPf'OSi'"•t•lr I '""' ••II of Ille Co11t Hi1h••Y· oweo. AutnOHUltl • llUl,.TOM 1011 I. Hlfl I\.·~ CtUf. 92054• (714) 722·1306 • • ....... -, ... Beware New Car Bargains By SYLVIA PORTER Should you take advantage of the wlde.ly publicized, Jower prices for new can ln these late summer weeks? What are the economic pros .and cons for buying a new car now vs. waiting un. tll the 1969 modela are ln· troduced lat next month or early October? HOW GOOD a deal are the nearly-new late model car1 also being advertised now at 11below wholesale" prices?' Now ls the big bargain season for new cars. Auto manufacturers are swit· ching over to production of the 1969s ; tlle status con- scious car buyer is looking ahead eagerly to the new models; competition is keen among dealers to clear out 1968 inventories. As a result of au these facrors, dealers are offering price slashes which can mount into hun- dred& of dollars. On top of this set of con· ditiona is the certainty tJJat Finance Briefs KANSAS CITY (UPI) - C o rn mer c e Bancshares, Inc., he1 contracted to buy Mechanics Bank of St. J oseph, Mo., and Citizens Bank of Kirksville, Mo., for $3.3 million in 11tock. Comm- erce Bancshares said it also is negotlatq)g to b u y Citizens Bank of Springfield, Mo. Citizens Bank of Joplin and Charlton County-Ex· change Bank of Brunswick, Mo.. for a total on $9.1 millioo in stock. NEW YORK (UPI) - Crowell C o 11 i e r and MacMillan, Inc., has agreed to buy Heald, Hobsen and Associates, Inc., an educa· t i o n a l management con· sulting firm. Terms were not disclosed. Heald, Hobson represents a number of leading universities an d other educational in- stittltions. It is headed by Dr. Henry T. Heald, a former president of the Ford Foundation. • LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A group headed by Lewis A. Bracker, a vice president of McDonnell and Co., has bought the 103,000 share bloc of management held stock in Wells Industries, Inc.. maker of cargo con- tainers ood jet e n g i n e starting systems. The shares were bought from Robert Gageby, Theodore Sewell and David Charney. Marvin Finell, Los Angeles attorney, becomes tt.e new chairman and Dr. Myrle Cross. formerly with Brown Fintuhe Co. of Elyria, Ohio, is the new president. BOSTON (UPI) -United Fruit Co. has donated 15 tons or freeze-dried foods valued at about $135,000 to the victirQS of the volcano eruption at Mt. Arenal in Costa I{ica. The food is being rushed from New Orleans. The Mt. Arena! eruption, w h i c h stuted July 29 after tJJe volcano had been inactive for about 500 years, has kill- ed an esiimated 75 with twice as many sun misslng and thousands driven from their homes. The 15 tons of !reeze-Oried foods will ex- pand to 50 tons of table foOd when reconstituted. LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Standard Paclfic Corp., a rtsidential land developer, has agreed to buy Security F'ore Corp., also a land development firm, on a pooling-of-interests basis. NE IV Y 0 R K (UPI ) - Magnavox Co. has started marketing its telephone f;:csimile system through a new subsidiary. The low cost remote eopier makes copies on plain paper via ordinary telephooe J l n e rents for '65 mOOUlly. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Rushell Systems. tnc., bas obtained an order for 25,000 or it& Keyless Pick-Proof electronic lockiJ>i unlll for vending machine1 1 r o m Armor< Co., ol Loi An1•l1t, a t0p distributor ol 0.l)Ual Electric coin-operated laun- dry equlpnl<llL • . . . . . . -A- l -·"---'-----"-'-=--------'~-~--__:_ _________ ...... I I ,1 1, I • • ~--• • " DAILY PILOT J1 Thursday's Closing Prices -Complete New York • --------------·------~ ------------_ .. - • 1 I 11 • H Do\11.V Pl10T . GROUNDED -Sally Field, above, finds she is out of the acUon on •1The Flying Nun" tonight in color at 8 p.m. on Channel 7. The sister's plan to raise contributions for the poor brings her a floating crap game and a new quarters in the local jail. TELEVISION VIEWS Convention Blueprinted By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) -When Sander Vanocur of NBC.TV commented. at the Republican National Convention that the GOP appeared to be kissing off the Negro vote there were protests to the network that he had forced personal opinion into what should have been objective coverage. REUVEN FRANK, president of the NBC news division1 believes Vanocur, an experienced report· er, was absolutely right lo state a concluslon he had reached by adding up the facts. But this is a presidential year and with political feeling and awareness :running high Frank expects other com· plaints of partiality before a new tenant gets the White House lease. In some countries it is fairly common practice to inject personal or government bias into TV news coverage. American networks are as vigilant- ly against this as the great news agencies have al· ways been. In Frank's view, however, a qualified reporter is entitled to make an analytical comment even though there is risk some viewers might con- fuse it with an editorial observation. ''IT'S A MATTElt of professional discipline," be said in an interview. "No one on NBC is ever al- lowed to grind an axe personally. He may come to lowed to grind an ax personally. He may come to opinion based on actual events. Not everyone may see it that way. People who agree with you regard you as objective. Those who disagree with you feel you are biased." Vanocur's summation of the GOP convention setup and its small handful of Negro delegates was one of the crisp analyses by the NBC fl oor report- ers at Miami Beach that gave a sharp edge to its coverage.and helped it gather the largest audience of convention viewers. Frank said the same team would function in much the same way at the Demo- cratic National Convention at Chicago Aug. 26. CHET HUNTLEY and David Brinkley will be in the booth above the convention floor with Van· ocur, Frank McGee, Edwin Newman and John Chancellor down below as reporters. "We place big emphasis on floor men," Frank said. "Our bunch are four years older and slower than they were in 1964, but they are al so four years older and wiser. They are our best reporters and yet competent to analyze; analyst and reporter in the same person." ANOTHER PLUS for NBC in the ratings battle, according to Frank, was the positions of commen- tators and cameras so that viewers always realized they were at a convention end involved in its coverage. "Even while our reporters were simply talk- ing to each other you got the feeling something could happen," he said. FRANK SAID the Chicago convention would be a c.brand new ball game" because of the com- munications strike which, at the moment, may make it impossible to cover live the important meeting of the credentials committee at the Hilton Hotel a week from Monday. "We'll cover it some- how," he said, adding that nothing at Miami Beach had changed his belief in complete gavel to gavel coverage of the conventions. He kept careful watch on ABC-TV's experi~ ment of a 90-minute nightly wrapup of the day's events. Dennis the Menace • GORDO =th ' .. 1; I I JUDGE PAllKER MIS. P'MX!R, WILL 'Im IE TilUNG THE JllPGE WHAT I 1'0L9 'IOU A.SOI.IT ~ PKIVERl MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFf: MISS PEACH l 'M Tltu:D! 't N~D SLEEP! :t ~IMPL'/ NEED MOflE 91.EEP/ -·· NONSENSE! '™t NEEi> FOFt SLEEP IS IN ~OV!t MIND! \It I ,, .. ,, 't.' •• ~ .. , •. ,, CERTAINLY/I'M GROWING SIDE- BURNS!Tlt;YRE 'lllE LATEST! ly Ken lald By Gus Arriola By Harold Le Doux I WOllLI) ll:A™Ei 'TMAT YOU PIP'NT! lLL ilG«T •• t\L I ~OW TllAT THE lUP6E THINIC5 VERY 5AV lrK11lHNG IM- MlutlLY OF ~Yi •• A.NP I POHT WANT U¥.i SAM CDNT1Nlit 10 5f'OIL TWAT ltaATIOHSMIP! 10 ecTMEK YOll! By Ferd Johnson By Tom K. Ryan f>I:( JUST 1ll 1HINK!-I KNOWED '!OU WHENJ... Ult ... WHAT CAN I DO GOSt\,IGOT FRIGHTENED! YOUt\ADME WORRIED- FER \'OU? By Al Smltli ly Men IF IT'SNOT THEllE, IT'S IN ')'OUFt eoDY.u • TH U~\~·t., I AUGUIT 11 All lf'Dtlon1 ,...,.,. tM: right to change prograM- .... wf"-'t advance ,.._ ·tic•. 1;00."' ... -(<) (IO) DIJnph)'. II"""'"""" -l<I !3Ci n-- -l<I (IO) C--..t1 11t Jim B1t11111, IOPl"t IZll Otf·h•p: "Dllt•rt." P•al JOhlllDn •nd thtM IMO IUMWIYl •Pl•ln the hlstoly 1nd Ille function of lilt HoU}'WOOd-~ltld 0111er1 er. ''"'' Sodtty. IEIAl .. M.........,. M11ptrlt1 Pima, ~ llnpt M1rk MulJlhJ tnd tht comtdy blm of Vic Grte= 11\d F11nt Wllllfd. Alltn t:oo m 9 Cl) n....,. Ni(tlt llltwtti: l'Md1 anolhw .. Hip Fablt" In wh ''Tii1-n.1n Rid LIM" (dr1m1) 'M- Goldllotkl, wh111 conlronttcl by Ur DullM, J1cll W1rdon. thr11 bow11 .~ ~ldtt. netu11tty D lHJ ctl n.t llrl: (C) (30) "1111 dtaoMI Iii• cool one. lfNrd. ~ 1:iOn rttums lroin a llunt· ID llt Mlltnol (30) fllwut'• ""'' lll!m ....... (;)"' • ...., -(C) (30) m ...... ,..,.<,., l!!l •-· ""' (30) m Sdlltc:o ..,.,...: "t.and1111 on tllt MMn. ~ John Fltth, MIT Sciel!CI lltflQrt«, •Plll111 the oper111Gns kM>l¥td in pl1d111 !ht Apollo IPIC•· craft Dn thl lllOOIL Ill-.. (<) !;GO IJ llll ril Cll """' -(C) (lil) Wttftf Cronkilt. or r..., (l<l) m•""...., <"1 ID Sllipn'1 WIM (30) m 11cnnMMt n1t Ill• ... - 7:lll o llll CIJ a-.._,, lCi (90) Wastern •rill 11.trrlnr stu1rt Whit· m•n. JUI Tow!lllfld, Ptrq Herbert and R1ndr Boon1. stOf)'llne llCll av1ll1bJ1 11 preu tlm& 0@ !IJ DtnW loonr. (C) (60) 'The Clfde1I DI l1r1ll Boone." Boont'I IOll IWlll flnds hlmutl strindld In 1 hostile wl1dlmul with hi• fllh« crntty llcbntd bJ wkeblta, At lsml's tenffl birth· di)' party, 8oont decld• tht bOJ acts "'"' ll)fft chlldllll thin h11 )'lllrs. o.plti lilt pl11dln11 ol wlf1 Rebecca, Boont likes !tie boy trtp· pint with tllm ln th1 wildtmus to teaeh him 10mt rlMdtd llllO!ll In 1111 trip with whbkn ttllt G'Jml between hlm and Ann-p1rtlcul1rlJ whtt1 they kiu. AM ntlliftll b Wtlfilll a lhort llllrdO wfllll IMI ~ up for thelt nut date. (Rl. mr .. -<CJ !'01 m~"""""'­(C) "Tht Pill" A profile of Ilia history of Norw17 bqinntn1 around 900 A.O. Emphtllzld 11 the tlPI«• 1111 1plrft " tht Norwl(lw. .,_ .. _ .. IO II Ill ril -<Ci (!O) '1'& LlitliVICtTm." Sgt. FrhMy and or.. f!C« Gannon fnmtl11t1 a thllif. ba1Un1 CUI. Mrt. M1rV11M (lrookl Bul!lfJ) lnaltb her dllld'a tnjurlae Wlfl Clusld bJ I fa ll (R) o l!ll m -....., 1<1 !30l Dr. fcmrprobta TOl'll'I IMlln&S lor JI!!; Lnlll th111ten1 Battr. M1'1111 comforts Rossi; TOlll c.ontlnutt '111 •trdl for JUI, mr""' 1<1 !lOI fI) 111.t ,_. If Iii Dollll': "Ttch· llOIOI)' Tr11ll.'' A look at how Amtrfo ctn companies In Eun>pt hive lto!lptd th• "br1!n dr1ln" m tilt U.S. Alto a loot at Am«lclrt· Europeen competition. IO:OOBl!lril'-M•"" -tJii Coiid[Ulrl: (CJ (60) P1ul """., .... 0-,_. -<Cl <IOI D -"'"'" !Cl <OOI '1rwb:t CUp ind lip." ltfTJ' Blyden,, .bin 8lackm1n, Ethel Merman stv. An Inept art 111111)' employee plott with 1n tx·top ind hit ltnd1tdy m 1hul 1 Jeweled tctptr1. (;)""1t-(IO) m Jldl LatM• Nm (C) (60) m fnrit StMy (C) (30) til) RID Reftrr. ''G11 Bu10." Or. Albert Hibbs ind (Uests loo' 1t lttt operimental ProJM:t Gas Bu1a. 1n tttempt to dellon1t1 tlom bombs IOI economic pin. •lf·rllJ1nct. (R) lltJO ID,.._ (C) (30) 11111 Johna. IJ lat• ......... 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(R) m fl.ltlrt: ''!toryttllera tf Ra)••· tliln." D MO'litl .,.rltdl" (drtmt) '47-Divld Farrar, Glyni1 Johns. 0 ll7J!Il"" --(t) IJ:tO GI All·NIPt Dor. "T'ht Rtehtl« 0 @ (1) flJlnl Wun: (C) (30) PtrtJ.'' ''fh1 811 ~hHI," llHI ''Thi ''Siller TucQ." Sis!« Blrtrifle'• f1bulotH DorW)'s. '91rth for tonlflbutlons m •kl th• poor brlnp htr to • flGllJnr cr1p 11m1. Flnd!11,1 htflolll In Sin Ju1n'1 dock •rN with htr ch1rtty bubt still empty, 11'1• asb pr rt.ldpints 1t45 0 Mowll: "Ii~ lattlt. It Mont .. in a cr1p 11m1 for 1 contribution. rt(' (wtSttrn) 57-Sttrltnl H1yd1n. Ont of th1 plaJtr1 11 corMnCld Sister Blrlrlll1 Is his lucky ch•rm and lnslsh on lh•rlflf Ml wlnnlnp 1:00 IJ MN "Colldlllllll' (dr1m1) with lier. (R) •B-flon11d Colman, Ann H•rdlnr. m~"" (C) (30) B M..W. "l\t MJSWtl• Mr. Wlftf" (~) 'J~ela Lu10li. ., .. ,,,_ FRIDAY DAYTIME MOVIES a:JO a .,,..... "" """""' (II)· llllfttt) ,I-Vin Jotl'*' latN)'n ,.._ a ..... ..,.. (dt1ml) '41>-llo!dl NOi.ta. -wlthtll Pftr" (drama) '47 -61u1Mttt llllt.i11&. a eo.."""' l llitlf• a..ni 0-(C) ll:Oll IJ "Ahl't Jlt n .. fir Clo!J" (drt- m1) '57-tlany Su!lt.-111. "Soutll • Tallltl" (1dventur1) '41-Br111 DanltYJ. lu:I ID "lllPICf' (mysltrJ) '49-Brf11 Don1t¥J. "WIW c ... Cll1Jq" (drl- 1111) '4J-4f1111J' Fotldl. 4:.IO II., .. If Ufe" (comedy) '57 - JudJ Hollldlf, Rlchtrd Conlt. a lCi "'""' " "' ·-(td·ru '12-Gofdol Mltelltll • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS On• Of 11i.1 L..rt11t F1cillllt• 111 Or.11191 Cou11ty 1111 wm IALIOA ILYD. NIWPOIT IU.CH Newport . Harbor Today's Closing • EDITI ON VOL. 61', NO. '196, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFO RNIA JH URSOAY, AUG UST 'IS, '1968 JEN CENTS :•nest Pilot Eve1• fJfJ: Copter Cap.tain Died a Hero Yelled at Boy PILOT KEN WAGGONER WON WINGS AS µSMC AV.IATOR Veter•n Pilot Brought Shuddering Bird DOwn· Heroic.lly Nixon Forms Law, Order Panel for. 1968 Campaign SAN DIEGO (UPI) -With bis left flank growing politically stronger, Richard Ai. Nixon swnmoned advisers today for a conference on what may be the leading issue of the 1968 presi- dential campaign -law and order. The Republican presidential candi- date set aside part of a day of strate- gy sessions with state and regional campaign lieutenants for a meeting with his advisory committee on crime .and law enforcement. The panel has bee:n charged with shaping a Nixon -poe:ition on the issue. * * * Nixon and Agne·w To Visit Knott's In Count y Frida y Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew will pa-ya visit to Orange C<iunty Friday, They'll be having dinner at Knott's Berry Farm at 6 p.m. along with Nix- on's family and the traveling press· political aide entourage that ac- companies the GOP candidates for president and vioe president. A Knott's Berry Farm spokesman said the Nixon party will have dinner. then pay a brief visit to Ghost Town and other attractions iD the Buena Park amusement park. No particular arrangement• for meeting the public have been made, but nothing is b!ing done to discourage a crowd, the spokesman said. Nixon turned to the substance of hi s campaign after spending two days re· pairing fences within his party. lie persuaded a number or GOP moder· ates and liberals to stump the country titls Call in bis behall. Many or them had fought hard for the candidacy ol Gov. Nelson Rocke· feller of New York. Several had shown little enthusiasm for Nixon's choioe of Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Ag.new as his vice presidential running mate. Reporters covering Nixon here re- peatedly were informed . by Robert Ellsworth, a key staf( aide, of new tele· phone conversations Nixon had just held with Republican figures. "Mr. Nixon visited on the telephone with ... " Ellsworth would begin. By WednC6day alternoon,. Ellsworth had ticked off a list of names th.at includ- ed Govs. John Chafee of Rhode Island, John Love of Colorado, Harold Levan· der of Minnesota and DIDJ Evans of Washington. Also added to the list Wednesday was Sen. Thl1.lston Morton CR-Ky .), one of the leaders of the abortive Rockefeller campaign. Morton new in to the Mission Bay resort to person- ally confer with Nixoo. \Vhen he came out, Nixon said he was delighted to announce that Morton would campaign with him in the fall. The Kentucky senator, who served as Republican national chairman when the late John F. Kennedy defeated Nixon for the presidency in 1960. told newsmen one of hls duties would be to make sure that rormer Rockefeller supporters gave the enthusiastic sup· port to Nixon that be was sure thty would. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot trMI Delly Pli.t llltt I-le wrestled the stricken helicopter down like a windmill caught in a tornado, but found time in his last seconds to yell at a youth to get out of the \11ay. His hand was still on the instrument panel as he lay sprawled partly out of the cockpit. which lay like a crushed eggshell Cull of wiring and wristwatch parti;. * "lie was the best pilot ever ,__ and you can tell people that, said Mrs. Kenneth L. Waggoner, of 3131 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, as relatives began arriving today for a funeral reunion. Los Angeles Airways Capt. Ken \Vaggoner's children, De Ina, 14, Debra, 5, Billy, 2, were quiet and little Donna, 3 montt:., lay noiselessly against an aunt's shoulder. So was the neighborhood, except for an occasional child's shout at an op· poslte end of the sln!et from t.be &ilent, neatly kept Waggoner home. Capt. Waggoner, a veteran helicopter pilot who srnt eight years on active duty in U .. Marine Corps aviation and had six years' time with Los Angeles Airways, was a good neighbor. Alan Schwalbe, of 3132 Pierce Ave ., told how it was today. "This may give you some insight into Ken's character," Schwalbe said. * * He said Capt. Waggoner only Tues· day volunteered -on his day off -to prevent a neighborhood tragedy, one of a dil!erent nature. "A friend gave us an o 1 d refrigerator. My wile and I just had our second set of twins and we needed it for bottles," Schwalbe said, "but we were worried about kids getting into It" "Our klds played together,'' he ex- (See PILOT, Pace %) * * Copter Mystery Probed FAA Agents Silt Debris; Coroners Check Bodies Officials today began the grim business of trying to find out why death dropped from the sky fnto a Compton playground Wednesday. The plllyfield today still bears the scars where 21 persons died aboard a Los Angeles Airways helicopter Flight 417. Even while a team of air safety ex- perts started its probe, deputy cor· one.rs continued an attempt to piece Snipes Enter Sudden Death In Title Race By ALMON LOCKABEY Di iiy Pli.t le1!1 ... •1Htw It will be "sudden death" for the tta· tional Snipers seeking the Heinzer1ing Trophy at Ala.mitos Bay today. In a national regatta that has gone up and down like a yo-yo from the beginning. the new -(Ir maybe old - naUonal champion will emerge at the conclusion of the final r~e. Veteran Snipe Class fans who have been following this Heimerling Series wouldn't give you odds on any one of seven skippers who now stand at the top of the list. Let's take them one by one: The leader after \Vednesday's sixth race was Francis Seavy o f Cle a-water. Fla .. who appears to be the soul of consisteney -if such there has been in this regatta -by reaching his present status without winning a single race. Seavy, one of the nation's top Snipers, has 47 .4 points, under the Olympic scoring system, in his best five of six races. Jim Warfield, in second place with 48. 7 points, is another Snipe skipper of nation.al stature Who cannot be counted out of a yacht race until the final. would give you much for their chance!! But neither Seavy oor \Varfield at th.is point -not with the likes of twice-defending champion Earl Elms 0£ San Diego, and Dave unman of Balboa Yacht Club, Newport Beach tied for third with 52 points -less than five points out of the top spot And that only goes down to ttie num- ber four sPQt. What about such top performers as Dave Peterson (SJ) and Tom Nute (55.1) both Of San Diego, and Sh(lrty Campbell of Alamitos Bay "IC who led the regatta for the first four mces? For that matter, you cM go as low as number 10 in picking a winner-if (See SNIPES, Pa&e Z) together and identify the broken and burned bodies. Among those victims are at least three Orange County residents in· eluding the pilot, Capt. Kenneth L. \Vaggoner, 33, of 3131 Pierce St., Costa Mesa. Capt. Wag~oner was praised by "'itnesses for last minute efforts to prevent his ill-fated craft from in· . juring anyone on the ground as it fe11 . A Santa Ana boy and a Garden Grove man were the other county vie· ti ms. Los Angeles Airways has suspended all flights -some 118 daily -in the wake of the second crash in three months of the Sikorski S61-L, twin turbjne, 28 passenger helicopter. The first crash, on May 22, strik· ingly similar in most details to Wednesday's accident, was the worst commercial helicopter crash i n history. All 23 persont aboard the PRAISES PILOT -Jonathan Dollar, eyewitness to Wednesday's crash of LA Airways helicopter in Compton, displays two small gears and dime which hit him in chest as he watched helicopter break up. ';God bless that man," Dollar said of pilot. "I-le tried to the very end to keep that copter airborne." •Gears Hit Me!'· Witn ess Tri ed to Res cue Pilot By SANDI MAJOR Of llM DlllJ Plltt St~ ''Two small gears and a dime hit me on the. chest and fell in [root of me." Jonathan Dollar, 46, one ol the first persons to reach the burning Los Angeles Airways commuter helicopter Wednesday, picked up those few unoharred reminders of the day death came to the crowded Compton park. Dollar who lives at 1422 E . Rosecrans Avenue and Bullis Road was in his mobile home combing his hair when he "heard a missing sound.'' ''I jumped to tile door and looked out and saw tile helicopter. A piece of the rotor blade was hanging from it. The fuselage was at about a 40-degree angle," he said. lie s.aid be ran to the park as the craft began falling "not nearly as fast as you would expect -pretty fast - but not all that fast." He wa s about 100 feet from it when it hit the ground and the gears and coin stcuck him. then fell to his feet. He said he picked up ttie memen- toes. then watched ~ helicopter strike ttte ground and "it bounced up about 30 inches, settled and instantly was in flames." "There were no screams." craft piloted by Capt. Jack Dupies of liuntington Beach died. Among the 18 passengers was Christopher Bellnn, 14, of Santa Ana, grandson of Los Angeles Airways owner Clarence Bellon. The flight began at 10:15 a.m. at Los Angeles International Airport and was due at Disneyland ~6 minutes later. ln· stead, if fell to the ground at 10:37 a.m. in "Pop" Leuders Park at Bullis (See HELICOPTER, Pace 2) ·3 Countians Listed Amoi:ig Crash Victims Officials o( Los Angeles Airways and Los Angeles County Coroner Thomu Noguchi to d ay released names of 16 of the 21 persons killed In Wednesday's helicopter crash. They are: The crew: 1. Capt. Kenneth L. Waggoner, 3J, Costa Mesa, pllot. %. Frederick Fracker , 27, Redondo Beach. copilot. 3. James A. Black, 30, Wilmington, flight attendant. Passengers. . 4. J ohn P-l\feehan, 75, San Rafael 5. Helen G. Meehan, 63, his wife, San Rafael, 6. Patricia l\farie l\1eehan, 32, San Rafael. '1. Anne J\1arle Meehan, 8, Lucas Valley 8. Chrlatopber Bell.an, 14, Santa Aru1. 9. Joseph J. Kaul, Garden Grove 10. Peter C. Smith, Centerville Ohio 11. Walter L. IJsk, 72, Bleber.'Calll. ll. Wes Elderenkamp, 39, Denver Colo., director or advertising and pro: motion for the Mr. Steak Restaurant chain. 13. L. E. Baker, 44, Denver, Colo., \Vestern area coordinator for Mr. Steak. 14. Kenneth J. Atwell, 1886 S. Jer· sey. Denver, Colo. 15. l\lr1. Kennell J. Atwell, 1886 S. Jersey, Denver, Colo. 16. Earl R. Wallace, 814 Mulberry ~. Bellaire, Tex. Stock Market• NEW YORK (AP) -An early stock market advance faded in slackening trading this afternoon. (See quota· tions, Pages 26-27), Orange Cout The Nixon party Will be en route from San Diego to Los Angeles in an auto caravan. Walter Knott, founder-owner of the farm. is 1 loogt.ime supporter of the rormer vice president. :Say Club Ups Ante on City Lease We ather Democrats P repared For Chicago Trouble WASUINGTON (UPI) -Atty . Gen. Ramsey Clark says the Johnson ad· mlnistratlon does not expect the Democratic National Convention to be conducttd "in any atmosphere of an armed camp" when it gets under way Au,g. 26 in Chlcago. "We know enoogh rrom our e.x- perie-nce ... that we can have trou· ble." Clark told reporters Wednesday, "but there has been adequate prcpara- tloo f<r trouble so that the work + l tho convehtion will go on in an oro1?rly fuhlon •• , In the democratic pro- ces1." By BRUCE BENSON Of ,... Olltl' f'lltl .frtff The Balboa Bay Club.has extended 9nother feeler to the city of Ne-wport Beadl in bope:1 ol winning a lease ex- tension on its 13 acres of city.owned waterfront ~My. Club Vice President Richard S. Stevens ,aid the private soctal group is wUUng to hike it1 guaranteed m.immum annual payment to the dty to $150,000. The booft means the city would stand to gain 1ome $1.5 million more than what It now expects to receive for the 30 yean remaining on Vie cur· rent lea&e, according to Stevens' figures. .,. The club'11 minimum guaranteed rental payment to the d l.y at present is '4S ,OOJ a year. 1bt minimum ha1 been regularly txceeded. however, and the city lately has been getting nearly $100,000 a year in rental money based on a percentage basis of UM' club's gross business. In return for the extca $1.5 mlllion. Stever.s has asked the city to extend the lease beyond its 1988 explraUon date to ttie "maximum aUow111ble by law." Stevens, in a memorandum to city councilmen &ett.ing forUl the proposed deal, avolded mentioning whether Ile was talking about a 25-year or SO.year extension. Either one I.a pouible, depending on how one interprets t.tle laws. City Atty. Tully S.ymour poin!l!d out that t.he Bay Club's flrst leese was writ1en in 1943 to L.ist. 50 yeJrl!. l-lowever, the City Charter adopted in 1955 lintils the length of city leases to 25 years, "unless put to the vote or the ~le." --irile Bay Club offer is the second one within a year In which club officials have BOUght to extend the lile ol Ulelr SIO million hwestment. In November, 1967, Sttve.ns pro- posed a ~year lease extension ln f'X· change for prepayment lo the city of the 50-year lttase. The payment would have bten fl ml!Uon plus, which Stevens noted ooold help pay for a new civlc center. Tbe offer was rejected hand& down, with Councilman Robert She Ito n noting at U>e time, '"While we ap- indate Mr. Stevens' interest in our Clvic center need&, we don't need giln· mlck1 to finance the deve.lopmcmt." Stevens, ln bls latest proposal, pointedly said nothing about the ri.nan· c:ing of a new Civic Center. The city council has schedultd tbe new Day Club olfer for Its upcoming me>Ung Monday nlgbt. Two altermt.lve1 to the council .are to re(er U1t Stevens deal to city staff for study. or to turn It over to the new· ly Cl'!ated Goals and ObjecUves Com- mittee. Club offlclals don't ;ppe.ar eaecr to cee the future of Ulelr lease turned over to Goal.I and Objectives com- mlttemen. The group, CGmposed of a wide range o( private dUzens and planning experts, ls Just 1tartJng lo work up a comp1Jhen1lve master plan for NewpcJrt Beach up to 1985. Stevens aaJd tJJe complextt.ie.a or the (Sot LEASE, P11e %) You won't &et IUDStroke Fri• day morning 'cause Old Sol won't make his appearance un· UI at least 10:~. after which clear s~les should prevail over the Orange Coast. I NSIDE T ODA 1! FovrlttR Cub<m refugtt1 ca~ ture a CT(lp.du.stina plane load· td wllh dtadlV pobon and /Iv to ar11lum '" Amtrlca. Paa• 4. • ... • .. " • ,." ...,, " ,, " • " \ \ • 2 DAILY PILOT 'lllund•>', ·~ 15, 1961 Balboa Man Over Draft Willard SchwlllU Jr., 23, of - Balboa Blvd., Ne'W!'(rl Beadl, was ar· rested at bis lK>me by the FBI Wednesday oo a chargo of reluslng induction jnto the armed forcec . 'Wesley G. Grapp, special agent In cj>argo of the FBI In Los An~1 ,.Jd ~wartl refused induction on March a.. 1967. The federal warrant war; 1'sued for the arrest Of the Newport Beadl man .after an indictment was _ returned by the federal Grand Jury in ~ Ang<les on Nov. 11, 1967. · Grapp saJd Schwartz surrendered to the U.S. marshal in Lo! Angeles on Dec. 27, 1967. He was to appear in U.S. District C.ourt oo May 20, 1967 for arraignment and plea. When he failed to appear, a bench warrant was issued f~ his arrest. ! Schwartz, aingle and unemployed. t'aJ aTaigned before tbe U.S. Com- missioner in Santa Ana on Wednesday. He ii in the county jail in lieu ol $15,000 bail bond. U found guilty be could be eeatmoed to • muimmn of five years in federal priaolL Boy's Luck R11n s Out- All at Once The motorist made an improper left turn onto 32Dd Street about 12:30 a.m. today and got flustered when he saw a string of potice cars. So he attempted a U-turn, ap- parently in the hope s of makin~ amends for hil mistake, and a11 bad luck would have it, his car rtalled. He was right in !root o{ tile Newport Beadl Police Department. Officer William Jessee was just knocking off work and heading home on hil motorcycle. He got off, and Strode over to ·help the mot.ori1t push the c.ar to the side of. the street. "Aren't you a little young to be driv· ing?" the officer said. Tm hapless motorist, it turned out, was 13 years old. His luck aoured even more when police learned 111at the ClaT he had 4a1led tn front of police headquarters was stolen a haH hour earlier in Santa ;\na. 'The youth wu turned over to Santa Ana police in connection with a charce ol crand tlleft auto. • LEASE ••• Bay Club lease would "make it very difficult" to explain thoroughly to a pert· time cGrnm.ittee. Secondly, e.n extension or the lease "would require approval of the citizeor by vote. This in iblelf pull the Ji'oposal into the hands of the widest J!ooaiblo committ.. . . . all of the Voters." Judging from this comment, Stevens ii hoping to get the full SO-year max· Unum lease extension allowable by CalifOl'Dia law. Stevens was out of tpwn today and cooJd not be reached ~r Confirmation. •'Thirdly, Stevens noted that an American Leeton lease on city-owned property already bas been turned over to the Goah: e.nd Objectives Com - mittee. b He noted that Legionnaires have ~ for an elteDlion Without a l)>eclllc project In mtod for the alte, Wberem the Balboa Bay Club has a detlBiled plan for lb property . ' Also, Stevens pointed out that the Legion lease will expire in six years, ~s the 30 years still left on the club lease. DAILY PILOT __ _... D"ANGI! COAST l"Ull.llHIHO CQM,ANY Robert N. We1J. ,,..'""' I nd htlll~ J1ck R. Curlty Viet P'raldlnt Mid a-11 Mtntotr Tho""' Kttvil .... Tho,,,tt A. M•rplrii"' Mtl'Ml"I Editor J1toJJ1e F. C.lli11t PoMI Nlt1111 P<f...,erf 8todl ,..,.,..-Ille CltJ' l!~Htw Dlroc:t-r ,.....,... heel Offkeo 2211 Wttt l 1/ff1 lo1lt v1rd Mi l/Int AJ.dr111: P,O. low 1115 92641 OIWOfftuo 00.hl "'-t1 DI Wftt hi' 'trM ~a.di: tn ~A­~4la1 lliecJI: Jiit ""''""' NON-FLYING SAUCER -"Top Secrel," 40-foot diameter boat, was Jaunched at a parking lot near the Arches Marina in Newport Beach. It will take its owner-designer around the world -he hopes. Built at a Costa Mesa fence factory, the boat rides on foils. Top Se~ret Floating Sauce r Hits New port Bay By EVELYN SHERWOOD 01 tMi Clll" Pflol Sidi "You probably think I'm dnmk," said the caller. "But I just drove across the bridge and saw something in the bay that looked like a flying saucer. I swear I just tiad one bloody Mary." The caller to the DAILY Pll.-OT was not drunk. What he saw near the Arches Marina was indeed like a flying saucer. It was "T~ Secret." That'1 its name. The strange looking craft, 40 feet, beam and Ieogtih, was laundled Wednesday at a parking lot adjacent to the marina. It rides on foils and weighs five tons, according to the owner-designer, .,.,:hose friends call him Chris, but ~·ho refused to identify himself. "That's top secret, too." he said. "If you use my name, I'll sue," he added. But t:he DAILY PILOT later learned his name is C. E. Ohri1Stensen. Admitting the design for ttie saucer '\WIS inspired by a friend who was there for the launching, Chris said it would be his home. "I will live aboard, cruise tile world and follow tihe sun," he said. "I will return only for business reasons." A woman ~company.ing tbe owner- deslgner to the launchillg said 1he wllt!ed she cooJd go with him. The boat, built at a local fe.n<'e com- pany in Costa Mesa took about six months to build, a company official 1 said today. The vessel has no bow or stern. "Chrl.'5 " explained its cockpit is aft. "It has 20 times the space of a 40. foot boat," be said. FrO... POffe 1 SNIPES ••. the topflighters continue their yo-yo antics. Then!: is Marty Gleich of San Diego (59) who won a race Wed· nesday, and Buzz Levinsoo. of In- d:imapoll1 who chased him a cloJe se· cood. Everywbere in the U.S. where Sotpet are railed you'll likely find tile name or LevinsOn near the top of the list. He not only sail1 Snipes but builds &aHs for them as well. Looking at it realistically, Seavy and/or Warfield would have to win today's race to pick up t-he Heinzerl· ing. Neither is entirely out of the ques- tion unless you figure tbat awesome pressure from below. ERRATIC RACE Old timers can't remember wtien a national Snipe Regatta has been as er· ratn: as this ooe. Usually, Qne or more on the hot skippers get out in froot ear- ly and stay there. But the hol:6hots were way down the list in the opener of this ooe while such names as Shorty Campbell -who seldom wins in his own local lleet - tops the list for four straight r~s. Or Norman 'J'ow!le, of Winchester, Mass. who was tied with Campbell for one moment of gtory after the first two races. Campbell blew a crucial one Wednesday and placed 20th. Throwing th.is one out still left him with a 15th as a keeper. Towle went down the tank steadily after the first day and is now 15th. The Olympic scoring system alone will favor someone in the top 10 today -or more explicitly in the top six. The system lends a lot of muscle to the top slx skippers in any race with scores going from zero for first to 11. 7 for sixth. After that you get your place plus six, a not too desirable handicap. WEATHER PROBLEM The weather in this regatta has beer a contributing factor in the ups and downs. With few exceptions, the first race, starUng about noon , has been light, and the second race brings the wind howling in from the southwest or '"'est with seas that guarantee a thorough drenching. And whether the \\'Inds are light or strong. they seem r r.luctant to settle down to a steady direction, forcin~ race com mittee chairman S te v e T a y t o r o! Oklahoma to signal pottponements for rearrangement of tile marks. Taylor had his share of troubles Wedneaday. Al1e' delaying the seoond race nearly an hour waiting for the wind to make up lts mind, he finally got oU a start only to have a roar go up from the fleet: "You are one minute early." General recall. On the second start so many were crowding the leeward end of the line tM.t Taylor couldn't "read" the over-earlies, and again signaled a general recall. And so goes Sniping 1n this bamer year of 19611. From Page l PILOT ... plained. The otf-Outy helicoptor pilot came over to the Schwalbe home and drilled holes to install a lock on the old cooler, then r e-wired it as well, for better ef· ficiency. "[ should give you a beer," Schwalbe said he told his neighbor from two doors down the street, but he wMi out of brew and apologized. "You can take me wt Saturday," the 33-year-old Wa ggOflef replied, "it's my birthday." "He was just the g r e a t e s t neighbor," said Schwalbe, "he would do anyth..ing for you." Scllll'albe, an lntermedi<rte school in· structor and former City CouncU C2n· didate, said wa.ggoner had done an ex· ceptional job in 18.IKlscaping and decorating his northslde home. "He said they were just about to the point where thef ('ould rest, relax and enjoy the yard,' Schwalbe said. Introducing a newsman to the Wag- r:oner family, who provided a photo of the victim, Schwalbe asked lf they had a newer copy. "He brought his uniform home once for a picture, but we w~e out of film," said Penny \Vaggoner, adding, ·'we never took it." Pictures ll'ere taken at the end of Capt. Waggoner's last flight, but hopefully his family wlll never see them. From P111e 1 HELI COPTER .• Road and Rosecrans A venue in an U'N where acores of children were play in& UtUe more than 1.0C> feet away. The park is the only open •rea for more than 2 miles. Wlb:!.esses said the craft apparently 1 .. t lls tall rotor. parts of the toll &e<· tion, then dropptd hHvtly lo the ground In the crauy playfleld, bounc· ed slightly and burst lnlo names. All 21 apparently died on Impact, ac· cording to coroners ofllclal1 who pro- bed ttie wreckage an IAm!OOo WednesdlJ'. Several victim• wlll re· quire Jdrntillcatlon by flllierprlnUnJ or dental work, according to Chief ~1edical Examlntr·Coroner Thomas No~chl. The helicopter apparently ha d troubles before it readied the area Where It plunged tc eartll and burned. Wltnes.., Jold the DAILY PILOT the y first 1aw the craft at about 700 feet high. Airways offidala said the craft should have bt<n flying at about 2,IOO Jo S,000 feel A aectlon of the '°" rotor fell off tbe heUeopter and fell 'll' earth at 919 Poinsetttia Ave ., some tine blocb from ttie crash tc.tne. County Says T ax Sch emp 'S ugar Cooted' By JACK DROBACK Of 191• 0.11•· l'll1U Sl'lfl The proposed Watson amendment to the Calif<>rnia con1titution was the subject of a bllslerlni attack by Orange Coonty supervl&ors Tuesday. The amendment, named for Its p_rin· cipal proponent, Los Angeles County Alse11or Phillip Watson, was .called "one of the most dangerou& pro- pod:ltions. e_ver put on tile ballot," by Supervisor Altoo Allen of Laguna Beach. Allen said lt would jeopardize the Metropolitan Water District's ability to br:lng Northern Calilornia water to this area. Supervisor David L. Baker of ~Garden Grove said it would "cripple scllool district&." A letter. to the supervisors urging opposlti<>n to the ballot measure by County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas triggered the attack. The amendment is "sugar coated" with a promise to reduce property tax· es, "a laudable purpose and certain to carry much voter appeal," but offers no substitute to raise tbe revenue it cuts off, said lbomas. . weUare. so ca.lied "people related services." After July 1, 1973 no .pro- perty tax funds could be u5ed tor these functi<1ns. :: -Limiting, after July 1, 1 , ol p~ perty taxes rDr "proJ)e rela'~ services" to one percent o maritet value. r ~ The amendment wou.ld permit these llm.ltationt to .be exceeded only for t~ purpose of fun.dlng bonds or retlri g out.8tandlng bonds provided: 1) To bonding for each revenue distrlct dQts not exceed fiVe percent or the asses•d valuation witbln eacll such dJstrict aDd 2) that the total bonding · for 1.U revenue districts does not e,xceed 20 percent of the asse.ss~ valu~ or five percent of the market value Of all tax· able property. Thomas said thet In biJ opinion !he measure would threaten the yery ex· istence of home rule and wovid cost the average property taxpayer tar more dollars than would be saved. 1 "Under existing Law p r i m a r y b<neliclarte• w<Mlld undoubtedly be tbe large landholders and commercial or industrial property owners," Thomas said. ..The thousands or 'm a 11 • • homeowners would be hit with vastly locreased sale& end income taxes to produce essential revenues." ALTERNATE SOURCES Thomas said tbe amendment removes property tax support without reducing services or providing for alternate revenue sources. "Under ex· is ting law, local government does not have replacement revenue sources available to it. The funding o! these programs, and therefore e<>ntrol, will pass to the !State. "How ·mudi sales tax and income tax taken from Orange County would return to the e<>UDty?" Tb<>maa asked. "What would prevent these funds from being d.lverted to· other purposes by the state?'' Thomas said tbe provisions limiting debt and long term obligations are such u to effectively stop any develop- ment requiring these fund1 regardle1s of the need or wishes of the people. "The inability of a region to bontifor the esseniti.al development of sewer and water facilities, acbooll, etc. would be ?'B:teatly disastrous," the county Official argued. • In summary, the amendment pro- vides for the following ; in the amount of property taxes that could be levi ed for educaidon and Tliese Cigarettes W ere Hazardous Heights Water Hearing Delayed for One Month Caution : cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your healUJ. That w& the warning on a package of ci.prettes which slipped of the seat \Vedne sday of a car driven by Tiwmas F. Sheehan, 25, of 849 Darrell St., Costa Mesa. Sheehan wes taken to H o a g Memorial Hospital shortly thereafter for a treatment instead of a treat - for e cut instead of a coogb. Police said be was driving west on Congress Street near P I a c e n t 1 a Avenue when he bent to pick up the Ml'Okes, veered off tile roadway and rammed a parked car. Mes a Police Nab Immigrant Police called to the scene of what finally was Jogged as unknown trouble in the 700 block of Baker Street in Costa Mesa Wednesday arrested a Mexican immigrant for illegal entry. Francisco L. Yallaodo, 26, ol Ocallan, state of Jali.sco, Mexico, pro· duced identification papers f o r Salvador Oastillan. P olice said the physical description oo the paper• did not match Yallaodo. Investigaton alleged Yallando was carrying false papers, advised him of his rights under the U.S. Constitution, then turned over immigration authorities to be deported. An attorney for the proposed Santa Ana Heights Water District got a se- cond me mooth delay in a bearing before the Local Agency Formation Commission {LAFC) Wednesday. At the same ti.me George G. Logan hinted that the matter may be resolv- ed before the Sept 10 hearing date. "We may be near a solution of this problem," Logan told the LAFC. Funeral Rites Planned Friday Fo1· Dr. Smith Funeral services will be held for Dr. Robert Lee Smith, who drowned of[ Catalina Island Monday, at 1 p.m. Fri- day at Pacific View Memorial Park. Dr. Smith, 39, apparently drowned while diving in the vicinity of the Island, the Coast Guard reported. He is survived by his w:\{e, Dorothy of the home, 1150 Polaris Drive, Newport Beach; a daughter, Di~e ; mother, Mrs. Lenore Smith of Laguna Hills and a &ister Ruth LOrenzen of 1¥1ontana. 1 The family suggest that those lliio wish may make a memorial con· tribution to the Loma Linda University School of Medicine. Intennent will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park. The Costa Mesa County Water District has offered to buy the Santa Ana Heights Waler Co. for ISOl,000 and ooosummation of this deal may be what Logan was indicating. The new district is proposed by the shareholders of the water company in an .avowed effort to forestall con· denmation by the Costa Mesa district. Petitions ·signed by 1,652 persons backed the formation of the new district. It would cover about 1,200 acres between Upper Newport Bay and the Orange County Airport. Boll! the Costa Meoa disbict and the city of Newport Beach are protesting formation of the new diatrlct. The move is also protested by the Irvine Company, holder of a large number of &hares in the' water company. Newport Realtor Sel'Vices Slated Services for Benjamin F o r t I 11 • Newport Beach realtor. will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel, Mrs. Fortin, a resident of the area for the past nine years, died Wed· nesd.ay at Hoag Memorial Hospltal. He is survived by his wife, Hazel of the home, 2311 Fairhill Drive , Newport Beach and a stepson, Charles Sutherland of Costa.Mesa. Interment at Paoific View Memorial Park wlll follow services. Fin a I Week OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al _J.J. J. {}arrell ALL HERITAGE UPHOLSnRED PIECES in your choice of s!ylo or fabric may be pureh...CI et • most generous HYings •1 • • • Truly a ra re money·saving opportunity 0 OVer 200 Styles ol SOias -Chai.rt -Love Seata -Ottomans in your choice of any Heritage Decorator fabric. H ERITAGE° a llvtng tradition In furn 11a re . Your favorlte interior deri"1'f:r wiU bt hoppr kl Oii UC WOK • • • H.J.GARRETf fURNITtJRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNUS • ' . •21 5 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 646-0275 646-027~ I • Costa Mesa Today's CloStng EDIIION VOL 6f, NO. 196, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES COSTA MESA, C)IJFORNL(-THURSD.AY, AUGUST TS-, T968 TEN CENTS Pilot Ever,'· Says .Widow. Copter Captain Died a Hero Yelled at Boy J ' • , PILOT KEN WAGGONER WON WINGS AS USMC AVIATOR Vet1r1n Pilot Brought Shuddering Bird Down Heroically Nixon Forms I:aw, Or4cr • • Panel for ,1968 Campaign SAN DIEGO (UPI) -With his left flank growing politic;i.lly stronger, Richard M. Nixon summoned advisers today for a conference on what may be the leading issue ol the 1968 presi· den ti al campaign -law and order. The Republican presidential candi- date set aside part of a day of strate· gy ~ssions with state and regional can1paign lieutenants for a meetini; with his advisory committee on crimt· and law enforcement. The panel has been charged with shaping a Nixon position on the issue. * * * Nixon and Agnew To Visit Knott's In County Friday Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew will pay a visit to Orange County Friday. They'll be having dinner at Knott's Berry Farm at 6 p.m. along with Ni:i:· on's family and the traveling rress· political aide entourage tha ac· companies the GOP candidates for president and vice president. A Knott's Berry Farm spokesman said the Nlxoo party will have .dinner, then pay a brier visit to Ghost Town and other attractions in tbe Buena Park amugement park. Net particular arrangements (or meeting the public have been made. but netthlng Is tr!ing done to discourage a crowd, the spokesman said. Nixon turned to the substanct of his campaign after spending two days re- pairing fences within his party. He persuaded a number o[ COP moder· ates and liberals to stump the Ci>untry this fall in his behalf. Many of them had fought hard for U1e candidacy o( Gov. Nelson Rocke· feller of New York. Several had shown little enthusiasm for Nixon's choice of Maryland Gov. Spiro ·r. Agnew as hi ~ vice presidential running mate. Reporters covering Nixon here re- peatedly were informed by Robert Ellsworth, a key staff aide, of new telc· phone conversations Nixon had jus: held with Republican figures. "Mr. Nixon visited on the telephone with ... " Ellsworth would begin. By \Vednesday afternoon, Ell~worth had ticked oil a list of names that includ· ed Govs. John Chafee of Rhode Island, .John Love of Colorado, J-tarold Levan· der of Minnesota and Dan Evans of Washington. AJso added to the list \Vednesday was Sen. Thruston Mort.oo (R-Ky.). one of the leaders or the abortive Rockefeller campaign. Morton fle w in to the Mission Bay resort to person· aUy confer with Nixon. When he came out, Nixon said he wa s delighted to announce that Morton would campaign with him in the fall. The Kentucky senator, who served as Republican national chairman when the late John F. Kennedy defeated Nixon for the presidency in 1960, told newsmen one of his duties would be to make sure that tormt!r R~kefeller supporters gave the enthusiastic sup- port to Nixon that he wa.s sure they would. lly ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "" DllllJ' "llM .,.., l-le wrestled the stricken helicopter down Uke a windmill caught in a tornado, but found time in his last seconds to yell at a youth to get out or the way. His hand was still on the instrument panel as he lay sprawled partly out of the cockpit. which lay like a crushed eggsheU Cull of wiring and wristwatch parts. ''lie was the best .pilot ever .... and you can tell people Uiat. said Mrs. Kenneth L. Waggoner, or 3131 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, as relatives began arriving today for a funeral reunion . Los Angeles Airways Capt Ken \Vaggo ner's children, De Ina , 14, Debra, 5. BiJly, 2, were quiet and little Donna, 3 months, lay noiselessly against an aunt's shoulder. So was the neighborhood. except for an occasional child's shout at an op- posite end of the street from" the silent, neatly kept \Vaggoner home. Capt. Waggoner, a vetera n helicopter pilot who spent eight years on active duty in U.S. Marine Corps aviation and had six years' time with Los Aflgeles Airways, was a good neighbor. Alan Sch\\·alhe. of 3132 Pierce Ave., told how it was today. '"111.ls may give you some insight into Ken's character," SchwaJbe said. He said Capt. Waggoner only Tues· day volunteered -on his day off -to prevent a neighborhood tragedy, one of a dillerent nature, "A !rlend gave us an o l d refrigerator. My wife and I just had our second set ot twins and we needed it for bottles," Schwalbe said, "but we were worried about kids getting into it." "Our kids played to gether," he ex· (See PILOT, Page 2) Copter Mystery Probed FAA Agents Sift Debris; Coroners Check Bodies Officials today began the grin1 business of trying to find out why death dropped from the sky into a Compton playground Wednesday. The playfield tetday still bears the 'Scars where 21 persons died aboard a Los Angeles Airways helicopter Flight 417. Even while a team of air safety ex- perts started its probe, deputy cor- oners continued an attempt to piece Ora11ge County Fair Board Meets Tonight Topics r-anging from the rectnt Newport Pop F8stival to an upcom· ing J ehovah's Witnesses rally will be covered by the Or'ange County Fair Board, which meets tonight in lair· grounds offices. A preliminary report on the con· !rovcrsial pop music festival of Aug. 3-4 is scheduled late on the 8 o'clock agenda and is expected to receive ~ome discussion. Orange County Fairgrounds Man· ager Alfred Lutjeans said, however. that all findings and information are not yet complete. so no lo-depth talks un the festival are likely. Other items due for consideration tonight are a preliminary report on the 1968 Orange County Fair and Ex· position, but parking and attendance figures are not yet final. Directors or the Fair Board will also discuss arrangements for a Jehovah's Witnesses rally scheduled at the fairgrounds Oct. 18·20, as we ll as an upcoming sports car slalom event planned on the grounds. Lutjeans said tonight's agenda in· eludes setting a schedule for next summer's .Orange County Fair and Exposition, but that the directors might not get around to it. Most public interest will focu s on discussion of the music festival, which drew an estimated 110,000 persons to Costa Mesa two weeks ago, along with scores of top name pop entertainers. Public opinion in the wake of the show has been almost u."liversally divided, ~ith many angry citizens de· crying the (act that the Fair Board rented property to the promoters. Others, who attended the festival . say charges by police and city offic· ials that the Aug. 4 crowd was on the brink of a riot, are ridiculous. * * * tGgether and identify the broken and burn~d bodies. Among those victims are at least three Orange County residents in· cludilig the pilot, Capt. Kenneth L. Waggoner, 33, of 3131 Pierce St., Costa Mesa. Capt. \Vaggoner was praised by witnesses for last minute efforts to (>revent his ill·fated craft from in· Juring anyone on the ground as it fell. A Santa Ana boy and a Garden Grove man were the other county vie· ti ms. Los Angeles Airways has suspended all flights -some 118 daily -in the \Vake of the second crash in three months of the Si.korski S6l·L, twin turbine, 28 passenger helicopter. 'The first crash, on May 22, strik· ingly si milar in most details to Wednesday's accident, was the worst commercial helicopter crash i n history. AU 23 persons aboard the PRAISES PILOT -Jonathan Dollar, eyewitness to \Vednesday's c rash of LA Air\vays helicopter in Compton, d isplays two small gears and dime which hit him in chest as he watched helicopter break up. "God bless th"'~ man," DoUar said of pilot. "He tried to the very end to keep that copter airborne." llit Me~ Witness Tried to Rescue Pilot By SANDI MAJOR 01 '"" O.it, ,.llet Stllfl "Tu•o small gears and a dime hit me on the chest and fell in front of me." Jonathan Dollar, 46, one oC the first persons to reach the burning Los Angeles Airways commuter helicopter Wednesday, picked up those few unobarred reminders of the day death came to the cro\V'ded Compton park. Dollar wbo lives at 1422 E. Rosecrans A venue and Bullis Road was in his mobile home combing his hair when he "heard a missing seund.'' ''I jumped to the door and looked out and saw tihe helicopter. A piece o! the rotor blade was hanging from it. The fu selage was at about a 4~egree angle," he said. He said he ran to the park a s the craft began falling "not nearly as fa st as you 111ould expect -pretty fast - but not all that fa st." He was about 100 feet from it when it hit the ground and the gears and coin st.ruck him, then fell to his feet. He said he picked up the memen· toes, then watched the helicopter strike the ground and ''it bounced up about 30 lnche!, settled and instantly was in flames." "There were no screams." craft piloted by C.apt. Jack Dupies of Huntington Beach died. Among the 18 passengers was Christopher Belinn, 14, of Santa Ana, grandson or Los Angeles Airways owner Clarence Bellnn. The flight began at 10 :25 a.m. at Los Angeles International Airport and was due at Disneyland 16 minutes later. ln· stead, if fell to the ground at 10:37 a.m. in ''Pop" Leuders Park at Bullis (See HELICOPTER, Page Z) 3 Countians Listed Among Crash Victims OfflcJals of Los Angeles Airways and Los Angeles County Coroner 'Thomas Noguchi to d a y released names of 16 of the 21 persons killed Jn \Vednesday's helicopter crash. They are: ~The crew: 1. Capt Kenoeth L. Waigooer, 33. Costa Mesa, pilot. %. Frederlek Frackcr, 27, Redondo Beach. copilot. 3. James A. Black, JO, Wilmington, flight attendant. Passengers. 4. John P. l\teehan, 75, San Rafael 5. Helen G. l\leeban, 63, his wife, San Rafael, 6. Patricia l\1arte l\leeban, 32, San Rafael. 7. Anoe l\farie Meehan, a, Lucas Valley 8. Christopher Bellnn, 14, Santa Ana. 9. Joseph J . Kaul, Garden Grove 10. Peter C. Smltb, Centerville, Ohio 11 . Walter L. Lisk, 72, Bieber, Calif. 1%. Wes Elderenkamp, 39, Denver, Colo., director of advertising and pro- motion for the Mr. Steak Restaurant chain. 13. L. E. Baker, 44, Denver, Colo., \Vestern area coordinator for Mr. Steak. 14. Kenneth J. Atwell, 1886 S. Jer· sey, Denver, Colo. IS. Mrs. Kerme&b J. Atwell, 1886 S. Jersey, Denver, Colo. 16. Earl R. Wallace, 614 Mulberry Lane, Bellaire, Tex. Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP) -An early stock: market advance faded in slackening trading this afternoon . (See quota· lions. Pages 26-27). Orange Coast The Nixon party will be en route from San Diego to Los Angeles in an auto caravan. \Vatter Knott, rounder-owner of the farm, is a longtime supporter of the former vice president. Pop Festival Ups Mesa Crime Rate Weather Democrats Prepared For Chicago Trouble WASHINGTON (UP[) -Atty . Gen. Ramsey Clark says the Johnson ad· ministration does not expect the Democratic National Convention to be conducted "in any atmosphere of an armed camp" when lf'get.5 under way Aug. 26 In Chicago. "We know enough lrom our ex· ptrtcnce •.. that we can have trou· ble," Clark told rtporler1 Wednesday, "but thtre has been adequate prepara- tion (or trouble so thal the work of the convention will go on in an orderly fashJon •.. in the democratic pro- cess." I By PAMELA POWELL Of t1M 0.llY '°Utt Stiff While the Newport Pop Festival may have been the largest musical event in the United States, the crime rate in Costa Mesa for the two days also set a record. Accordi.ng to Police Chief Roger Neth, the docwnented rate rose 20 percent. "liowever, he said, "the total in· crease was about 100 percent." Individual Tates showed a u t o btu'glaries up 550 percent; grant theft up 500 percent; shoP lifting up 300 per· cent; medical aid up 350 percent: sex offenses up 200 percent: residence burglaries up 28 percent; and petty theft up 14 percent. Although the undocuml!nted rate:ii: skyrocketed, total arrests Increased by 69 percent. According to Neth. the difference was made up by the fact that not all crime was documented. The Costa Mesa police force spent a total of 1.413 hours over the weekend. About 821 of the hours, or $3,:aJO worth. is paid for by the promoters. The additional 582 hours. or $2,736 will have to be picked up by Ute city. In addition. the city will pay the tab on S296 worth of miscellaneous ltem1 such as food , medJcal aid and mJs1lng road barricades. Police from the seven surrounding citi~s whlch were called in on Aug. 4 under the mutual aid pact la.Wed up a tollJ bill of approximately Sl0,805, Neth s.aJd. Each city will pay Its own tab. According to Capl Robert Moody, promoters ot the festlval, Wesco Productions, took in $310,000 in ticket sales. "I received the Hgure from 1 pretty reliable source,'" the captain of the patrol division told the Board of Direc- tors of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. At that m~eting last week, Moody related to the board members the se· quence of events leading up to the festival and the police activity during the two-day pop concert. •11 can go back to the 15th ol July when Gary Schmidt, vice prmdtnt of Wesco Production,, ,weM befOTe the Cily Council to get the pttmit." he ..ald. "At ttiat ttme, he was told he needed to provide the police and 1eeurlty .and estimated that there wou!d be bet~een 10,000 and 12,CXX> people and received tihe permlt." The captiain said he spoke with tbe vice presklent the next dey who told him he was cmtracting securtty with the °""'C• County Sherill'• Office. "That wu when I told him he would need one deputy officer for every $00 people in attendaoce," Moody said, On July:.>, only four day& befort the festival. Moody a.al.d he talked With a rMmber of the SherUf's Of.fice Wh(.) said they had been contacted only the day before and would not take the job. The Sberlff'1 OfJlce, because of a limited nwnbor ol peroonnel, dotl not normally handle an)'tbklg outlilde its jurlldlctlon eicept the OrMge County Fair. Moody Hid the Costa Mesa Police Department •treed to handle tbt (S.. FESTIVAL, P110 !) You won't get sunstroke Fri· day morning 'cause Old Sol won't make his appearance un· U1 at least 10:30, after which clear skies should prevail over the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY Fourteen Cuban re/ugets cap- ture a crop-dustmo plane load- ed with deadly poi.Ion ond flu to tuylum in Amerlco. Poot 4. (.lllw.i. • , ... .,_ JNI ._ .. ,,.......,, '' ~· ... -,. .............. • ...,.., __ , 1•1• llifl•ct •n llirf Cttl• ll -" -.....,.. ,. Mil..... )t ~-,, " I , ' , 'I ' I • 2 DAil Y PllDT Allies Find Viet Cong Arms Cache Ml()ON (AP) -In operallona to • upset • new entmy offenstve, Allied troops uncovered a Viet Cong arms· making complex in the Mekong Delta, tile U.S. Comm-and reported Thursday. More weapons were found nearby jn abandoned fortifications pounded by eight-engine B 521. U.S. reconnaiarance planes &p0tted • the Viet COili complex Wednesday 73 mtles southwest Of Saigon. U.S. hellcopten lllllded South Vle-.iese troops who found a booby trap plant, • t'A-'O metal shops arid a black.smith • Qlop. 1 5earc11iJ>i throu'1 the buildings. ' they found 4,800 band grenades and · 400 grenade molds, • large stock of ' ammunition-making and coastruction material and stores of metal. 'llley .also seized l ,IXXl pounds ol. rice. . ~ to feod two battalions ol about ~ 300 men fOr a day. ' Neutliy other South Vietnamese worked through an area whilln B52 raids Tuelday toumed oft large ex- plosions. 'Ibey found fortifications, bunkers e.nd 48 umpans destroyed by llhe bombing. 'Ibey killed 18 enemy soldiers, the U.S. Command said. The South Vietnamese found in the ruins VT AK 47s, the standard enemy assault rifles, 50 mortar l'OWldS, 60 hand grenadea and 87 mines. Cuualty flfl1U'OI releaaed by the U.S. Command today showed the num· ber ot enemy reported killed last week increased by nearly 200, the number of South Vietnamese de&tbs dropped, while Americans killed lncre;ased by two over tile previous week. The commaod &aid 173 Americans were killed in action last week com· pared with 171 the previous week, but the number of wounded dropped to 788 from 1,050 the week before. Saddlehack Just Likes to Know Of Tax Changes Sadd.leback Junior College trustees have no particular ax to grind, but do like to be consulted when the topic of taxes ts brought up. That was the answer of Michael Collins, president of the Saddleback board, to James Dilley, president of Laguna's Citiz.ens' Town Plannin'g Association. Dilley wrote a letter to the board sayJng the college has no cause to be concerned because 45 percent of di5trlct land may soon lie in agricultural preserve. Collins told the DAILY PILOT trustees .aren't upset because the ta:< bue may be diminished. He said the concern is that assessed value pro· jections will be thrown of! without the : district being consulted. "We commit the district 25 years in the future," he said. Dilley'1 letter reads. in part: ''It would seem that ttie college's wtn'iu are moet premature. Actually the college has just been established. .and it was established by the citiiens on thl existing tax rate. "Our comity 15 indeed fortunate in having these large ranches (Irvine and Mi11ion Viejo) that are intent on cooserva.Uon and planning. It gives the cltizem of thl1 county an open space preserve immediately and allows the 1 citizens ten years in v.irtch to think through their planning offices the best future development "The college, of course, is not an · economic imperialism, ud it need not f be burdened with grandiose visions of i expanding grounds and buildings." Collins said, "We appreciate and • t!ihare Mr. Dilley's concern. We just • waJJt to know what our projected tax ' rate b. We want to make sure we are being consu.ltal.." DAILY PILOT ORINGE COAST PUILUHING COMPANY Rob1tt N. W11d Prelldlo!t tnd P11blllhw J 1cl.: R, Curl1y \/let l"rrtlde!ll Mid ~--•I ,..,.IWltet ' ' • " Tho11111 K11•il Ecllllor Tho11111 A. Murpliin1 M1n19inf EdllO' P1ul Niutft Adv•H1ln1 Olr1<1or Co1 .. MOM Offlco 3JO W11t l1y St111t M11ti119 Addr111: ,,0, lox ISlO 9261, OtMf Offic" "''..,ie1't l•ICll~ nn Wnl ••~ toullv1rd lJttulWI EIMctl; 1U '"-ti AYllllNI ~lln!inlltolt Itta!: ;aot .Siii Sttttl DAILY PILOT 11111 PMtl NON-Fl YING SAUCER -"Top Secret," 40-foot diameter boat, was launched at~ parking lot near the Arches Marina in Newport Beach. It will take its owner-designer around the world -be hopes. Built at a Costa Mesa fence factory, the boat rides on foils. Top Se~ret Floating Sauce r Hits Newport Bay B1 EVELYN SHERWOOD 01 ftll DlllY l"t11t ltlft "You probably think I'm drunk." said the caller. "But I just drove across the bridge and saw something in the bay that looked like a flying saucer. I swear I just had one bloody Mary." The caller to the DAILY PILOT was not drunk. What he saw near the Arche.s Marina was indeed like a flying saucer. It was "Top Secret." That's its name. The strange looking craft, 40 feet, beam and leDgt;h, was launched Wednesday at a parking lot adjacent to the marina. It rides on foils and weJ.ghs five Wns , according to the owner-designer. wh0&e frtends oall him Chris, but who refused to identify himself. "That's tap secret, too," he said. "If you use my name, I'll sue," he added. But the DAILY PILOT later learned his name is C. E. Christensen. Admitting the design f-0r bhe saucer was inspired by a friend who was there !or the launching, Chris said it would be his home. "I will live aboard. cruise the world and follow the sun," he said. "I will return only foe business reasons." A wom·an accompanying ttie owner- designer to the launching said she wighed she could go with him. The boat, built at a local fence com· pany in Costa Mesa took abOut six months to build, a com~y official said today. The vessel has no bow or stern. "Chris" explained its cockpit is aft. "It has 20 times the space of a 40. foot boot," he said. From Page J FESTIVAL ... event on Aug. 1, when advance ticket sales had gone up to 30,000. "By Aug. 2, I realized how unorg.aniied it was. They were three young men who had never put a show like this on be!ore. They overlooked a few Ching&. For instance, tihey didn't provide (« an ar®ulance on the grounds. We had tW'O both d~is. One of them was running all the time," he said. At 9 a.m. on Saturday, Moody held a brieling session !oc the officers and told them what was expected ol them. "Our motto during the briefing was t.o get through tbe weekend, and we knew we couldn't make mass arrests." According to Moody tile crowd was lively and happy Saturday. "They han· ded. tbe police officers flowere and the officers handed them to someone who didn't have flowers," he said. ''They found out we ~n't there to harass them." Inside the grounds 19 intelligence men were stationed among the blp- pies. "They looked like hippie5 ." Moody said. "About the only trouble they had Saturday was the lack of water." "Late in the afternoon we got wor· ricd about when!: all these people \V'ef'8 going to ok!ep. Alfred Lutjeans, the manager of the fairgrounds, called Sacramento and received permission for them to sleep in the field west o( the grounds. Somehow it got mixed up and they sleyt east of city ball. We named It R~urrection City. It looked like it," he said. The 55,000 paiple cleared out quick- ly at 6:45 Saturday. Another briefinl! session was held SUnday at 9 a.m. anJ by 10 a.m. the crowd had changed. "I noticed a cmtrast in mood ." Moody said. "There was complete silence. It was almost eerie. There mwt have been 45 lo 50,001 of them at 10 a.m. and no one was happy." About an hour later, the captaitl said. groups of ~ or two hundred people would rush the fence. "That's when we told the promoters we weren't there to keep their policies. We were there to keep the peace and enforce the law." Professional agitators he said were responsible for takin g the iroups through the ft"nce. "One man would take about 100 through the fence and then ~e back and get another 100. \Ve estimated there were about six of them but we couldn't get to them." By noon, UleTe were 70,<XXI, he esli· mated. "The crowd was like a pc>weH:r keg, it wouldn't have taken much to aet It of/. Thon the intelligence units contacted us and told us they (the crowd) wore going to blow the lid <ii between 12:30 and 1 p.m. At that time the decision wu made to caU in officers from the aeven 1ur· roonding cities and tho Highway Pa- ro! and Sheri/f'o Departmtot. "We c.lled tn all the oil duty om . ctr1 on Code Charlie (the mutual aid pact) u the reports got -... In the chie('1 words, 'it'• lib buying an lnirur~ ance polJcy befcn you run off the road',;' he said. At approximately 5 p.m., accord· ing to Moody, the grounds became unruly again and the additional o{fi· oen were sent over. Eighty.five of them walked four abreast acrogs Fair Drive and ont.9 the grounds," he said. "It must have looked like 1!'llCf'! be· cause immediately they cooled, and soon after that the agitators stopped." The pop cmcert, which was sched- uled to end et 6 p.m., was concluded soon after 8 p.m. "We didn't p1an on tile darkness and none of the officers had fi.ashligbts. Now they'll always be provided with them," Moody said. The grounds were cleared shortly after the last perfonnance be &aid. From Page 1 PILOT ... plained. The oil-duty hellcoptor pilot came over to the Schwalbe home and drilled holes to install a lock on the old coole1·, then re-wired it as well , for better e!· ficiency. ''I should give you a beer.'' Schwalbe said he told his neighbor from two doors down the street, but he wus out of brew and apologized. "You can take me out Saturday,'' the-33-year-old Waggoner replied, "it's my birthday." "He was just the gr ea lest neighbor," said Schwalbe, "he would do anything for you." Schwalbe, an intermediate school in· .c;tructor and former City Council can· didate, said Waggoner bad done u ex- ceptional job in landscaping and decorating his northside home. "He said they were just about to the point where ther could rest relu aDd enjoy the yard,' Schwalbe iaJd. Introducing a newsman to the Wac· goner family, who provided a ph~o of the victim, Schwalbe asked If they had a newer copy. "He brought his uniform home once for a picture, but we were out of film," said Penny Waggoner adding "we never took jt." ' ' Pictures were taken at tiJe end of Capt. Waggoner's last flight, but hopefully his family will never see them. These Cigarettes Were Hazardous CauUon: cigarette smoking me,y be hazardous to your bealtll. That was the warnina: on a package o{ cigarettes which &lil>P*d of. the seat Wednesday of a car drlven by Thomas F'. Sheehan, 25. o1 849 f>m'ell St., Costa Me<1. Sheehan WIS taken to H 0. g Memorial Hotpltal lhortly tllerea1ter for a treatment ln1tead of a tre1t - ror • cut ln&tNd ol • """"'· At approxtm11tely 2 p.m. all penona were allowed Inside the grounds. with or without tJckets. '"That'• whe!i the proleorionol agltotort 1torud worklnc Police said h1 was drlvtnr we1t on Congress Street near P I a c 1 n t I • Avenue when be bent to pick up the smol:ea, .. ered olf tho roadway and rammed a puked car. oo people lmlde the crowd." ,, Marines Down C_enter Plan I . Leuure W orld Loses Bid . w Nibble ai Flight Pa#i By JACK BROBACK Of .... ...,, '""' .... Bou Cortese'• La.gun• Hills 1£iawe World 10.t an attempt to nlbble away aflhe.El Toro fllpt path "Green Belt" Wedneoday. J?opoged was a commeN:LaJ center 10< the lntersec)lon :o1 El Toro Road _, I ,. < • Police Officers Escape as Beach Sqilad C8 i· Hit HunliJJgtoa Btacll J?Olice officers must lead, charmed llvea, at least sergeants do. Sgt. El van. A. Biddle of 1710 Pine St., Huntington Beach and Sgt. Jack Bullar of 1709 Lake st., Huntington Beach escaped serious injury }V.ed· nesday when their black aiid white squad car was ramJilie<i from the r ear while wal~ng at a red light. . Investlgating Calllornia · Highway Patrol officers who handle accident reports involving city police vehicles have still· not determined the speed of the other car. Its driver, Mrs. Verna Jeanne Cam· pos, !4, of HS E. 18th St., CO.to Mesa was unhdrt in the accident which oc'. curred on Pacific Coast Highway at Main Street Mexican N ahhed By Mesa Police Police called to the s'cene of what finally was logged as unknown trouble in the 700 block-of Baker Street in Costa Mesa Wednesday arrested a Mexican immigrant for illegal entry. Francisco L. Yallando, 26, of Ocallan, state of Jalisco, Mexico, pro- duced identification papers r o r Salvador Oastillan. P olice said the physical "description on the papers did not match Yallando. Investigators alk!ged Yallando was carrying false papers, advised him of hiJ rights under the U.S. COnstitution, then turned over immigration authorities to be deported. Newport Realtor Services Slated Services for Benjamin F o r t i n • Newport Beach realtor, will be held at ti a.m. Friday at Bell Broadway Mortuary ChapeJ. Mrs. Fortin, a resident of the area for the past nine years, died Wed- nesday at Hoag Memorial.Hospital He is survived by his wilt:, Hazel of the home, 2311 Fairhill ti r 1 v e , ·Newport Beach and a stepson, Charles Sutherland of Costa Mesa. Interment at PacifiC View Memorial Park will follow services, and Moulton Parkw1y which would have incl~dld a supermarket., bank. and post office along with other businesses. The Marlne Corps mounted lull op. position to the encroachment on the agreed nlg!lt path clear oooe emiplete with color 1Ude1 and an appearance Of Genttal IV. G. Thruh before c:OOnty / F~ Page J HELICOPTER •• ru,ad and Rosecrans Avenue in an area w!lere 1core1 of children were playlug little mor~ Uuln 200 feet away . The park is the only open area for more than 2 miles. .Wllneuea did the crlfl apparenUy lost tu tall rolol', parts of the tall aec· tlon, then dropped heavily to Ute &round in the grassy playfield, bounc· ed sllgbtly and burri Into names. All 21 ippareotly died on impact, ac- cordlng to coroners officlall who pro- bed t'he wreckage an afternoon Wednesday. Several vtcums will re· quire ldentwcation by fingerprinting or dental work, according to Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner Thomas· Nogucbl. The hellcopler apparenUy h a d 1roubles befOre it readied the area -re It plunged to earth and burned. Wltnesoea told the OAIL Y PILOT they first saw the craft at about 700 feet high. Airw.aya official! ~ the craft should have been flying at about 2,500 to 3,00> feet. A section of the rear rotor fell off the helicopter and fell to earth at 919 Poinsetttla Ave., some tlhree blocka 1rom the crash scene. The copter may have bad an engine failure as well. Witnesses reported hearing "popping noises" from the craft as it de6cended to the park. Moments after Compton firemen had extingu.lshed the flames the area o! the crash was roped off and in· vestiga.tors headed toward the smok· Ing ruJns. The National Transportation Safety Boord, whloh investigates air ac· cidents, rushed invesUgators to begin the search for an answer to why the craft plunged to earllh. A team of in· vestigators arrived today ! r o m Wasii.Jngton, D. C. All records including a ta p e recording of ttie lart conversations between Capt. Waggoner and the Los Angeles Airways operatlOOI office Wai impounded by the NTSB. As yet there has been no answer as to why in the earlier May 22 crash, Capt. Dupies' craft plunged to earth some 2'12 miles east of !!le Wednesday crash scene. The Dupies c:ra!t apparently came apart in mJd.eJr, the tail rotor separating from .the rest of the craft. Capt. Dupies was flJ'ini east to west and was out 11 mmutes from Disneyland going toward Los Angeles International. Capt. Waggoner was 12 minutes out from ~ Angeles, beading toward Disneyland when h11 craft ap'parently fell apart. supervisor•. The Corp1 opposed the commercial zone because ft would 0 encourage , fmiher resi<l,enu.aJ, gr9Wth In Leilure World eneorachlnl even cle1er to tho primary instrument ione oeaterU.ne. 'flhe shopping center was to be placed lh a hamrdou1 area where large gatherings of people could be ex· . peeled, the Corpo claimed. The ''Green Belt" is 2,000 feet wide aDd is flanked by two 500-foot·wide strips OD ta¢ t!iide. In the !lr1t, no building Is a1lowed. In the ,..,.nd, all ~dings must be aoundproofed. The El TOt'O presentation stre&6ed the danger of er.a.shes. Jn the period 195.'J..67, 25 aircra1t have crashed and 15 of thole have been in or in clo.se proximll)' to the fOOO.foot wide •trip e:ii:teDding &om the runway threabold outward 3.5 miles. . 'l'hla <,000-foot strip ~through the Leisure World develop ent. SpoWChted allJo waa th ,January 22, 1967, crash into Leisure World when 1.lx persona were killed. It wa1 Kid that $637,964 llf claims hove bean paid with more than $300,000 sun awa1t1ng action. 'The Marines pointed out that becauae U!.e tierraln in the Laguna Hills area very nearly parallels the approach glide slope aogle, alrcrafl are only 670 feet to 730 feet above ground over the development. They reported .about U.O complaint calls a month from Leiture World residents. The Marine Corps served notice Wednesday that the hearing was the first notice that t.be Corps would re· quest a continuance m the augmented clear zone when the &ix-year agree· ment expires nert February. The 1,001 • foot Green Belt is permanent but the two 500-foot strips on each side were established for a six.year period. "When you hear the Marine Corps case today in opposltion to community commercial area you will hear our case on the need" to continue the restrictions as they now exist," a Marine Corps spokesman stated . The corps maintained Jn 1963 wtien the original hearings took place that the 200().foot clear zone was in· adequate· and cootinues to maintain that !act, it was .tt.ated. Marijua1ia Users 'Horsing Around' BLOOMINGTON, Ind. IAP) -If Bloomington area marijuana users have been smoking more lately and enjoying it less, police have an amiwer. City detectives, acting on a tlp, found a cache of four pounda: Of marl· juana and three. PQUod!: of horse manure in a suitcase. Police ' said ttie m.arijuana QJ.on~ would ·be lfOrtll about $11600 OD the Bloomington..,m.arket. The mixed pro- duct woUld blve brought about $2,800, police rafd. · Fin a I Week OF A MONEY SAVING EVENT al .JJ. J. garrelt . . . All HERITAGE UPHOLSTERED PIECES in '""'' cholc:• of 1tyfe or f1bric moy b. pure11 .. tc1 •t • 'most 90Jll<OU• Hvift91 . •1 • • • Truly a rare money~sa~ing ~p~r1unity 0 Over 200 Stylea ot Sofu -Chalr1 -Love Stata -Ottomans 1n ,your choice of 1ny Heritage Decorator fabric. HERITAGE. • JI Ttng tradttt~ tn (111,.."lt•r•, Y .. , faoori" 1.1.nor t1crig!l<r ..u "" 11oppv ,. .,, 111 wo• ••• H.J.GAl\l\ETf fURNr[URE PROFESS IONAi. INTERIOR DUl&NERS °""_,,,...., ........ 22 11 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. "4f>.0275 64f>.027l ! I • I I I l ) I • l I I • • I ' • I ' t I ' ' I s ' ' • 1 r • • l I l I 1 s d • .. ;. • e • .. '· ·-~ ,.; DAILY ,ILOT Pl'lol• ~' 1.lclltl'll kMlllel' MUTE EVIDENCE OF TRAGEDY -Luggage, firemen and police silt wreckage of LA Airways notebooks and personal belongings are strewn helicopter where 21 persons lost their lives. across playgro\llld schoolyard area in Compton as PILOT'S BODY REMOVED -Compton firemen and police officers work through a tangle of wreck- age to remove the body of Los Angeles Airways pilot from debris that was once his Sikorsky heli· copter. The pilot later was identified as Capt. Kenneth L. Waggoner, 33, of Costa Mesa. GWC Advlee Enroll Now, Worry Later Students considering a l ten d i n g Golden West O>llege -but who are putting off registering because of in· decision about the m..ft and job op- portunities -shouldn't hold off any Jooger, warns a GWC dean. "They're going to race a lot or decliions in a short period of time" if they do, cautions John Bu 11 e r, •ssociate dean oC admissions and records for Golden West. And the lndech1lon is making enrol]· ment c1lculation1 Jess t~1 .. ~n educ~ guess for college ~s. Bu116t estimates, cautlou&ly, tit.at ttll enrollment will be between 3000 and 3,300 tl\U faU. The college ls taking registrations beginrung Aug. 22 for ltudents who did not make up their minda to enroll in May. ' Buller says be expec:tl another l ,<:m students to enroll by Sept. 13, the end or the flrst week of school. Last year. all but 600 of the college'• 2,600 student& were already registered at the beginning of the 1ummer. he aald. The admJtslons director e1rplainftd I.ht drop In early tnr0llmenta wa.y; "Last year, young people liigned up early because they felt il they didn 't, they wouldn 't get in." He referred to a "panic that didn't materialize" when .state colleges reared a budget cut aDd considered UmJting enrollments. "The scare drove kids Into school much faster," be added. Male students don't understand draft deferments , either, he uld, and many decide to take .11 job when they gr.aduate Crom hlgb school bec.Ju1e they th.ink they'll be drafted soon anyway. Thursd.ly, August l!, 1968 DAILY PILOT 1J Copter Crash Drops Death on Play Spot ' ,Newport Ceater ~ BUFFUM§? FASHION CLEARANCE 1/3 TO 1/2 0 FF DESIGNERS' CffiCLE Clemance m many one-o!·a-ki.nd ·.eyled ·aummer drenes, cfMoo tumes, cocktail dresses and ·some knit dre11e1; rer. 46.00to176.00 ••• 1/1111/2 OF.F SPORTSWEAR BOUTIQUE Young designers' dresse11, cost.umes and separates feduCed from regular ·atock. Many·falrica and colors; 101-20.00to100.00 ...... , 11.I OFF SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR famWI make.permanent pre11 washable ·separates llli.x and match Jn aqua and yellow: A-lile, Blim·.~kirta, bemiudAs or capri>; reg.10.00 eL I.I! Hell Jackets1 ·:not.ched style or ioif·style; :reg.13.00 ••••••••• I.If Assorted group o!T•shirta; rer. 5.00 to 7.00 , .. , ..... 1,19 COAT AND SUIT SHOP Snits and costumes .in a wide array of st\Yles .in ·solids, ·st.ripes and novell;y pattems; 6-16, reg, 36.00 to 66.00 , , , , , •• , 19,DI Better coal costumes in lightweight wools and ·11ynthetics. Many ot;yles end colors; 8-16, reg, 70.00 to 130.00 , • , .19.00 II 19.09 DRESS SHOP .. . Famous maker knits Jn Dacron polyester and wool. All st.ylel and colors; 8-20, reg. 28.00 to 66.00 , • , , , , , , , ll.99 It H.99 Cocktail dresses and formals .in wide selection of beautiful fa\rica and colors; 6-18, reg. 30.00 to 70.00, , , , 11,99 to H.9' FUR SALON Bleached-whi~ fox capes, 101. 199.00 to 295.00 , 99 .00 It 199,00 DRESS AND CASUAL SHOES Women'·s clni111 !hoes; reg. 26.00 to 32.00 •••• , •••••• 15,91 Women's dreaa shoes; reg. 22.00 to 25.00 •••••••• , •• 10.11 Young Designer c1ro .. ·shoes; ror.17.00 to 20.00 ... , .. I.IT ·Sandals; re1. 9.00 to 11.00 , •.••• , •••• , ••••• , , • • • 5.9T Sandals; ree-17.00 lo21.00 •• , ••• , , , •• , •••• •• •• lZ.91 : u umS' . , I ,. I 4 DAILY. PD.OT Entertainer Conni• Steven• is being sued for $10,500 by a man who said he was hired to atage manage her nightclub act. Davld Winters, of Los Angeles, said in h1s Superior Court suit that bis contract called for ·/ayment of $18,500 by July ~1.an that 11~ bas received oJily $&,ouu. • C~, .the poor man's CTtdit card. Doi;i't knock it. Th.t credit con! ii a potffif factor in today's economic stnacture and a mainstay in the res- taurant and hot.ti bu.iinesses. The ovmc:r of a re.stourant in downtown St. · LouU, displaying cartis honored bl/ the-eit.ablishment, also made a11 appt:ISl. for busi?llu from those who do not u.tt the "t"at now, pay later" pl<m. • Mrs. Ridtard Smith of Mineral Point, Wis., said that "fire washed the front of her car" when light- ning struck the vehicle in southern New Mexico. She said that 18 inch- es of the iadio antenna was burn- ed off; the windshield pitted, and the · hood was singed when light- ning went down the windshield, acro.ss the hood and jumped to the gr0itn4 in front of the car. Mrs. Smith, her father and two small sons w.ere unhurt. • ~ 11oung man arnitd with a lrnift tried but failed to rob the glo.t&·enclo.!td, drive-up window of a Culver (Indiana) bank. He ·walked up to the window of the State Exchange Bonk, put a note .demanding money tn the draw· er used to tram/er money and dilplayed a knife. The teller, realizing the man could do nothing but pound an the win· dow with tile knift, cal!td po- lice. The knife·wielder fled empty handed. • ''Everything we had is gone," said Cheryl Croat, 24, a bride of Jess· than a week. She and her hus- band, Kenneth, 27, awoke to find their car, packed with all their \vedding gifts, clothes and other posse5sions had been stolen. They had packed it and left it parked at the North Chicago home of Cheryl's mother, Mrs. Betty Peskin, where they had been staying since their wedding Sunday. • Disrupted By Violence LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI) -Groups of Negro youths looted and tossed rocks and bottles and three police cruisers were flred upon from passing caris Wednesday night as violence broke out in e one-square block of the city's west end. None of the police were injured, and olf!Cfll'S did not rtturn the fUnfitt'. Two persons, one a white motorist who was beaten, were injured duriDg the disturbance. There were no ar· reets-and no curfew imposed.. City police, helmeted and armed with three·loot riot 11lclu, poiI<>lecl'to· day as ce1m returned to t h e predomioanUy Negro diatrlct. . National GUard uruta were alerted m the event of further outbreaks. PolietWen were ordered on 12-bour shifts. PITTSBURGH - F lf t y Nesr<>H cb•red policemen trying to make 1n arrest early today and squirted the of· flcers with a disabling chemical spray. The suspect fled, handcuffed. Sjx poUcemen were injured and 14 arrtsbl were made. Police.In many cities have begun us· ing a cbemlca1 llJJNY to temporarily disable demonstrators during racial disturbances. SeveNll oUicers were arresting an unidentili.ed Negro on charges of loitering and discorderly conduct when suddenly about 50 Negroes c:har&ed them with clubs and spr1.yed the chemical .. Officers called for reinforcements and .captured the prisoner. Again the crowd beset them, and for a second tiine.tbe prisoner was freed. This time ht escaped. Police tactical units dispersed the mob soon after the street fighting broke out. They cleared a one·block section in the predominantly Negro Homewood section of the city. Storms Stir Up Two Tornadoes In North Utah OGDEN, Utah (UPJ)-A vicious late. summer storm spawned at lea.st two .. tornadoes in North UtaJ:t and caused flooding jn the southerrr part of the state Wednesday. A home near here was badly damag- ed by one of the tornadoes, Tbe twister, a i'arity in' Utah, Blio destroyed several farm buildings in the small, neighboring community of )Yest Weber. Damage , exceeded $50,000. No one was injured. The storm caused minor flooding in th!!: southern part of the state, particularly in San J uan County, scene ol. earlier flooding two weeks ago. Mrs. Lyle llarper, l"Hlt son Bret, 6, daughter, Leslie, 3, and some neighbors and relatives were in the rear section of the home when the tornado touched down, The twister destroyed the front part of the house and the garage. The TOQf of the litruc- ture was blown into an open field 150 feet away. A second fwmel cloud touched down near the North Utah city of Logan in an open wheat field. Only minor damage was reported. Salt Lake City was hit by a strong wind which smastied several large plate.glass windows in the downtown business disbict. Four employes or a local bank were slightly injured when a 5-by·lO-foot window was shattered. Heavy rain and goU-ball-size hail stonM 'hlt' 11e"'IU' Salt Lake and In the southern part of the state. - Ul'ITtllHletl .•. David Munoz, 13, of Upland, grins at . sign, Ille pool and as several adults stOOd by helplessly, bottom lines of which could have been reversed, David ~pplied mouth-tc>moutJi.. TUuscitation and after he saved the life of a drowning soldier in a revived th·e· soldier. David learned the rescue pro-- motel swimming pool in Salinas. E dwin Misinec, cedure by watchin$ the Red Crolf use a dummy 20, Ft. Ord, was pulled, unconscious, from the during school trairung last year. ~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~-'-~~~~-"-~-'-~~~~~~~- Crop Duster Hija~ked 14 Cubans Flee to V;S. • in Poison-I.a.den Plane HOl\.fESTEAD, Fla. (UPI) -Four· teen Cuban men, women and children -some of them armed -escaped to the United States today In a stolen yellow biplane. loaded with deadly poison. that skipped low across the Atlantic to avoid behlg detected by radar, federai officials said. The plane, described as a Russi111- made AN-2 biplane, taxie d up to the airport manager's office at 8 :~ a.m. The 14. occupants of the crop-dwting plane, reportedly stolen at 7 a.m .. scrambled out with their rifle and three pistols and announced excitedly they wanted asylum. One of the women on board, Mrs. Patricia Dodge Carcasses, waa the on- ly refugee who speaks English. She inteii>reted the statement of the pilot, identified 1~ly as Angel, who said he went to an airport near Varadero, Cuba, ·early today to load the single-en gine plane with parathion -a deadly inseCUcide. When the plane was loaded, the pilot helped the other 13 per10D8 on board and took off for Florida. LBJ Tells Medical Group: ''The parathion on the plane made us kind of sick," said Mrs. Carcasses. the daugbter of .a-retired U. S. Navy ll.eutenant cotiim&nder who lives in Kansa.s . ''We had•to break out some of the windows in' order to breathe. Mrs. Carcas9es, accompanied by her husband, Jesus, and her l8-m-0nth· old daughter, Kendra, said the refugees spent ·Wednesday night hid· den in a sugar cane field near the airport . Don't Chisel on Medica1·e HOUSTON, Tex. (UPI) -Presi dent , Johnson has urged the natio·n·s medic.al profession not to turn the MedicaJ.e program into a racket 'to ' bring doctars higher fee s. At the same time, Johnson repeated his call for a national "Kidd ycare" program. In a campaign.style. fist slamming speech before the 900 delegates to the predominantly Negro N a ti o n a l Medical Association (NMA) Wed· nesday, the Presiden t decried the rise in doctors ree·s and warned them against allowing Medicare to becon1e "a scandal and disgrace" in their search for money. It was the strongest speech Johnson has ever given on the su bject of medical costs before any medical group. Medicare. Johnson said, "is too good a thing to chisel. It is too good a thing to bring in scandal and di sgrace. It is too good to fudge on ." There have been allegations that some doctors have delibe rately raised fees to get more money from the Medicare program under the clause in the ·Jaw "Which sets fees at the prevail· ing rate in an area. Johnson said, "I came here beca115e I want your help for this good pro· gram. I want you to try to help us reduce its rising e-0sts. "So, I appeal to the entire medical ,profession in thta-couotry W. exercise-.. restraint in their fees and in their ,charges." "We had to do a lot -0f running and keep the children quiet while tbe plane was being rea.died.A' she said. "We had to. 'flj\'io low because we .dida't -waut radat to see us -maybe 2.5 meters abOve . tbe water. Three times the wheels·toucbed the Water.'' FINAL CLEARANCE AND MARK DOWN SAVE 1f3.t/2-2/3 AND MORE LADIE·S JAMAICA SHORTS KNIT TOPS & BLOUSES 1 ~!to 5.00 EARLY -'RD SPE<IAIS 17 LADlES' SHIFTS ...................... 2.00 21 LADIES' Pl.A Y SHOES -2/J.00 82 JEWELRY ................................... '7c 44 LADIES' BLOUSES -······--··-t9c 59 LADIES' SHORTS ...................... He 107 LADIES ' NYLONS ·--···-J/!.4t 38 MEN'S KNIT' SHIRTS ............ ·He 13 MEN'S STRAW HATS .... $11.$2 74 MEN'S HANDKERCHIEVES 2/$1 53 MEN'S TIE$ .............................. t9c 61 BOY 'S SQCKS ................ 4/1.00 Thundershowers Soal{ U.S. LADIES SHIFTS SWlr.\WEAR . - FOR 3 •LADIES 6 9 11 Rot. to 6.00 ltlG. ,, ,. ,. Cold Wave Sets Record Low at Devil's Lake, N.D. Slate Fall , -.., Kills Three ' Virginiane · · ' MAN. W. Va. (UPI) -!lo..U• Workers du1 wlth picks and thoi0.11 ' throulh ton1 of rock ond cool 'lo recover -tbe bodiU Of three eoa1 mlnen killed 1n a l!<lte IJU. • 11be bocliea were recovered w~. nelday nigl)t about nine hours after tbe fall nearly a mile .inside the main tunnel of the Amherst Coal Co. slope n::Wle near here where five men were wcrking. · One miner escaped the cave-in and another was trapped near the edge of tbe f-all -his legs pinned by debris - but was d'Llg out quickly .and 1uffeud only minor lnjuries .. Cause of the fall was not known. SJ; men were killed in a 11.a.te: fall in tile same mlne in February, 1958. It wu the second mine disaster 1rt West Virginia this year. Four miners were k.llled Jut May 6 iD • flood at tbe Saxsewell mine of the Gauley Coal and Cok.e Co. at Hominy Falls. Twenty-one men were rescued in that incident. About 800 tons of rock and c:oal Ct'.11· lapsed on the men in the Amherst mine Wednesday u they worked an old seam of coal About 100 men were working in the mine at the time of the fall. Tbe victirnJ, all West Vir&lnian«, were Emmet Cap}ey, i&, of Lundale; Charles Lowe, 40, ol. Henlawson, mi.d Enoch Tooter, 38, of Amberstdale. Edward M-erriott ol. L u n d a I e escaped the cave-in. Irwin Roark, whose legs were pinned by the t.allen debris, was rescued. He wu treated for minor cuts a'.t Appalachian Regional Hoepital here and then released. Roark said there was no waming of the !all. He said he sa.w t.tle fall begin and started running out of the mine. At least one ol. the victims was behind him, he said. Elmer C. Workman, d1re<.W-of the Sta°' Department of Mines, sa.ld of. ficials of his office and thfi U.S. Bureau ol. Mines would begin In in· vestigation today. Man is located in Logan County, one of the leading coal producing areu in Southern West Virginia, about 70 miles southwest of Charleston. Two . Magazines Sold NEW YORK (~I) -Tbo finan. cially troubled Curtia PubUhing Co., which has decided to concentrate on class publicaUona, sold the mass· circulation Ladles' Home Joumat'and American Home Wedneaday for stock \YOr1h SS.4 rnilllon. MEN'S SHIRTS KNITS-SPORT ·DRESS lO'Ju1-I .GO to f.00 MEN'S Wash n' w-r CASUAL SLACKS California Pll"fllW OfUIAWIATMll .. ll'fOllWT TO J:H l.M. llT I ·I•·•• Temperat11re1 WARM 5 •MEN'S 2so & 3so 4399 HI•~ Low l'ttt. ' IJ.S. Summarv "-" W ltlvndtr'1\0Wen UI"' ''"' ,..._, ol llM M t"" todtr. du r Wiiii "" .. ,,,1ctt4 N ,,. loulfl· ~ -Nor"""'t. T.mwr1t11•1t cOMi....tl '-"' "" ~ a.I Miit I!> "" Nll'ft'I.. .... Ill "" llH1 ......... -· ., ..... s.utll. "" ....,...., """"*""'"" 11Ct1¥1ty ..... lfi. C..lt'll l'leW. WHflnd1¥ "'''" ,,_ ~ te Hftf1tll.1 •l'ld , .... ,.~. """" ,.... ........ ..,, -·· ~ """' a.. ...,,..,.., .. ,.. Colo- ... .,,. ,,.,Clllll ttoe ,._,,., <101· ..,.._, t-U. I . lll9!\w1y-. (ads. (')! ... Wi t ttnld; llr winds U. lo 1111 mlln "' '-' 1M d~ .., .,... 1111111 " '"°'" " ,,... "' • _..._ M•lod, U. 10 ..... ll'ldlet d r1lft ~II ""' Sltrlll'll. T~.,..,,,.,,"""-IMI fl lftltl two -••e,tll. flit. twlUtn -~ ,..,. ......,,, •!N .... 1 ,..., ~ i nd wflffl ti.Mh r l"'" Mlftor Hoed· '"' twHrtr'i ..Slflffll Uttl'I. .t.100.V. ........ A..ehortM "'" .... '' ll1k1rl!lfl(I ll!•m1rt~ llolH 11 ... 1 .... C~lu<r0 Clnclnn1!1 Clevelt nd ... w. Dt• Molnu °"''°'' l:vrek• FM! Wortt- l=rei nO He lent Hollll)lvlU """"' "•""'" (!Iv Ltt "'""' LM Anttlu Ml•ml " Mllwtut.ff Mlnncl..,lk new Orlf!1nJ Hew Yort. Otkla"° °""" Pti.o It~ l'lllltdotllll'llt ......... Plltlbl.I ..... Porllt lld l.t•kl Cltv RMI l lun ·-SK,.,ntnllt 51, L!!OUll '•lln11 S.lr t.tl• C'lt¥ S.n Oiffe k~ ,.rtMl&(I h~lt lt ... 11 '"'ti• IHlltl'HI --· Wt lJllntlon u " " • • • • " .. " ~ .~ .. " •• • • " .. " .. " • " " ~ " • •• • .. .. " ... .. " ·" .. " " " •• • " ~ " • • • " .. • .. " .. " " .. • .. " "' " • " .. .. " • • • " • • • " .. " • ·" n " • .. ·" " " • ~ " n " .. .. " ·* " " • • • p •• • " n i" .. n " ' " DAYS -.11. to t.oo AHEAD 7 Ro11. to 16.00 LADIES BRAS 2/3.0 GIRDLES 2/5.00 Y2 SLIPS 2/3.SG •BOY'S 2 & 2so 2 for 950 OR . " 2so & 3so ..... to 1 o.oo •GIRL'S CHILDREN'S MEN 'S FAMOUS NAME PLAYWEAR SPORT COATS 2 FOR 3o50 All WOOL -lttu1-. 17.00 GIRL'S I BOY'S $25 KNIT TOPS SPORT SHORTS · SHIRTS ILOUSU SHORTS NO 1.:i.T·AWAT c-... 4el lol• ll2l L C-t Hwy. e ALL SALES ,.NAL Son Cltmeftte PltntJ of FREE PARKING 111 A•e. Del Mar L&r1e Parklna ~ ln Reai • ••ll v PILOT IS . . QUEENIE lly Phn lnterlanclr Bahia Nixon Headquarters Monsieur M11 the T anor From Hillgron S<f., Costa Mesa "Make it good. I've had L rotten day.• Army to Utilize Spy Gliders in Vietnam SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Richard Nixon ls mappinC hll presidential e I e c t 1 o n strategy in a motel complex dotted witt palm trees. A contingent of some 75 &tall aides and advisers and 65 , news persoMel have moved in on the Bahia Motor Hotel, a California vacation spot. Made up of pastel colored cinder-blocked cottages and two-and three-story garden style apartment buildin1s, the Bahia sit& on a spit of filled In land astrlde Mi&slon Bay, ..... about flvfl ml Jes from downtown San Diego. Nixon callii the ctl.mate here "glorious" and he 'hasn't been .Proven wrong since his party arrived Saturday. Each day has been bathed in sunshine. Each day tbe breeies come o(f tbe nearby Pacific Ocean. Temperatur~ fluc- tuate in the 70s and 80s. The candidate, or "RN'', as he is known to his staff, sleeps in a .private home on nedy Point Loma. He WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 •• works at the botel · in· a specially outfitted office (a wall was knocked down between two rooms to prG- vide more space) on the third Ooor of the building perched on the farthermost point. From his desk, he can see small sailboats with blue and white sails skimming over the waters of the bay. A paddlewheel steamer car· ries passengers between the Bahia and the Catamaran Motel across the bay, where some of the press are living. Of the 53 rooms available a( II>• Bahia and tbe Catamaran, which Js owned by the same corporatioo, 170 have been set aside for those traveling with Nixon. Of the 536 rooms available at the Bahia and the Catamaran, which is, owned by the same corporation, 170 have been set aside (or those traveling with Nixon. Along the beach arie strip joints and go.go clubs, patronized at night b y sailors and marines from surrounding bases. I SATURDAY 9 to_ 5130 -MOVING..., To 1 n1w loc:•tlon i nd wit~ 'I n.w·n•l'h .. , MAX'S TAILORING • Lido Building-Adjol~irl~ '· A L'elegant Men?i Shopr 3355 Vii lido, Newpoc;t l•ec:h .IN•xt to Blu1 Dolphin R•1t•ur1ntJ' SU.NDAY. 10 to S . WASHINGTON (UPI) - Soaring gliders piloted by modern day ''batmen" may soon be making stealthy reconnaisance sorties over C o m m u n i s t infiltration routes in Vietnam. the fact they will operate at low altitude -not more than 20,000 feet and usually well under 5,000 -they will somewhat resemble th e high-flying U2 spy planes. The U2s have enormous wings to keep them aloft during long periods Of un- powe'red fight. IT'S HATS OFF TO The army has awarded a $2 million contract for pro· ductioo of the gliders. U early experiments are suc· ces.sful, a small number of the light aluminum craft may be brought into service within a year. Known as the QT3, the surveillance gliders w i 11 bear little resemblance to the U. S. troop-carrying gliders that were towed in the sky Crom England to land inrantry forces in Fran· ce during World War II. Pentagon sources say the new gliders will have a 1Jmall engine to power their own take-orfs. Except, for John Bailey Will Wield Demo Gavel CHICAGO (UPI) -John M. Bailey, a battle-scarred veteran of political warfare, will swing the gavel to open the Democratic N ation£1 Convention Aug. 26. He will be one o£ the few who ever have had that assignment tv.ice. When be retires from the nationel party chairmanship after the convention. he will have held the post longer than anyone since James A. Furley, who served from 1932 to 1940. Bailey never intended it.to be that way. He was in· stalled as chairman Of the Democratic National Com- mittee in January. 1961, as the personal choice of Presi- dent John F. Kennedy. Bailey wooted to stay only four years, but President Joh~1 asked him to re- main ~ter Kennedy 's assassination. And he has continued through most of two presidential terms. Like his Republican counterpart, Ray C .. Bliss, Bailey shuns the public eye and prefers the smoke.filled room. He contributes to the murkiness of th e at· mosphere by smoking l~ge cigars and talking or listen· ing with his glasses pushed almost to the top of his bald bead. Now 63, Bailey was born at Hartford. Conn., where he still is a member of a law firm. He is a graduste of Catholic University • n d Harvard Law School. starting in politics as a precinct worker, he has served as a delegate to every national convention since 1932. He became Con· necticut Democratic party chairman. a post he still tiotds while serving as na· tional chairman, In 1946. Over hostile territory, the QT3's engines will be sbut off and the craft will dip low and glide over infiltration ro~tes in almost ·complete silence. A special paint will bt used to make them dif. ficult to detect by radar. Beneath their aluminum skins the gliders are to be equipped with miniaturited infrared sensors to uamine the trails and cameras to photograph the movement of men and supplies. According to s o m e sw.rces, the development of the gliders is tied in with the construction of the so-called "McNamara Line" of barb- ed wire and electronic sensors across the narrow waist of Vietnam below the Demilitarized Zone. U so, they would communicate ,electronically with ground. devices installed to detect movements in the dark. For the protection of their pilots as well as to achieve their mission, the gliders presumably would be used only at night. An unpowered glider, built like a kite !or light weight and movmg slow speeds, would be an easy mark at low altit\lde and in daylight for l!"'und antiaircraft gunners. The Army officially has revealed only that the con- tract for the gliders was awarded July 11 to Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., Sunnyvale, Calif., with Schweizer Aircraft Corp., Elmira, N. Y., and Con· tinental Motors Corp . , Muskegon , Mich, as sub- contractors. It is believed the glider olanes will be modified Versions of Schweizer's moden 232 sailplane. The frame and engines are to be put together by Lockheed at Menlo Park, Call;. Union Aids Hospital The new Teen-a&e Lounge on the newly·remodeled se- cond floor or Childrens Hospital or Orange County. Orange has been dedicated by members or the Retail Clerlui Union Local 324. The union donated more than S8 500 worth o f rurnlshinis and equipment for the new recreation ar.ea, considered vital by hospital autllorities to patients aJ a therapeutic aid. . included in tbe donations were such Items as csrpets, draperies, furniture, a color television set. stereo, plano. arts and crafts. young adult books and a billiard table. 'Ja zz at Josef's' fa1turin9 Ans•ll Hill COCKTAIL DANCING EVERY FRIDAY 5:00-8:00 p.m. Hors-d'o•uvr•s JOSEF'S 2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY ~rono dol Mar • I 673·1180 "'""''""' ..-c.Ml1 99M1 .. A ..... 21, 1961. •Ml WM! ..., ••••n1.i te ell tile.._. ,..t ...... tiler ntrdl te us• ...... .,.yt,e7 7 INCH PAN & ROLLER PAINT SET He11dy 11f, •"' h1r1'1 1 tip. When thro119h with p1lntin9, fill •mpty fin9ern1U poll1h bottle witlt uni11cl pei11t. Greil for · touch11p1 let1r en ere1111cl li9ht , .... ;.,,,. j 'j< TOGGLE QUIET SWITCH lt'1 10 1impl1, j111! t1k1 011! th1 old, r1pl1c1 with on1 of th111 nico quiet on11 i nd no more 1n1p lo dill11rb !ht b1by'1 "'P· 111 j.,ory, 3i88c HOSE REMNANTS Shorly hoto i1 icl11I for 1m1ll 91rd111 1r11 or 91! 11w1r1I for th1 •id1 to 1hower e1ch other with: It'll 9iY1 your r1911!1r ho11 1 r11! ind k11p ii llr1i9ht, 10 to 66C 15 Ft. oa ROTARY MOWER '•w1rful 111ot1r •"Iii ftctorv 1harp hied•• 91ve thi1 b11d91t prlc1d niower 1 c1rt1!11 1om1thl119 111 ih owll, !Lilco 1 1up11io•ily complo•?I 3911 LONG HANDLED SHOVEL Greil fer 91tti119 11p the pot1te11, b11rl1d tr11wr1, 1r if yeu w1111 to h11lld 1n 111tlortro11ncl clt11 111 y•ur •try IWll. t•9 - GLIDDEN Closeout on Gliclclen Spred Satin-Discontinued Colors • Limited Stock w.11. fol\1, here'1 the w•y ii i1. w. loo• • loo\ •round end 11w thi1 fi111 Glidden Spred S1ti11 j111t 1itlin9 there te\in9 up ¥1l11 1bl1 1p1ce end tlecid1d we'd better mowe ii out ef hire. We 1l11hed the pric1 1lmoil in h11f for the bi9 clo11oul; ju1t whit 111 the color• ••• w11 110! r1w11l1tl to m1, but you c1n j111t bet 1om1 1r1 9orju1. !Oh yeeh, if lh1y'r1 10 pretty, how com• Glitlde11 diiconlinued them71 c Qt~ 77 Gal. Soft, fu11y 1ittl1 dewi11 lh1I re1lly hold I lot of p1int IH1w1 lo 11y nico lhin91, or thoy'H m1k1 m1 t11r11 i11 my Rin11 Putty K11i11.) PAINT THINNER Tho r11l 1luf1, b<i119 yo11r own n11!1I conl1in1r 111d 11we l11m1 P111I 1u9911!1d th1t tho c11!1011'llPI bri"t lk1ir own c••dbe1rd box i nd if they m11.1 it to tlio chec•1t1ftcl. thoy 9el th• lhi11111r 9r1ti1, J111! kiddi119. folk1I, 22c Gal. In Your Own Metal Container SHERMAN OSCILLATING SPRINKLER Efficient, you c1" di1I four diff1r1nl w1ltrin9 p1tter111, c0Yer1 up to 2200 1q111r1 l11i. 1nd'it'1· 9u1r1nt1od f.,, I y11r. No 911•1 le breelo: or clo9. !Ju1t • di•I lo 91t 1luck.) 399 ANVIL HAND PRUNIRS Cllromo pl1t1cl lo pr1we11! r111t, pl•itic 9rip1 fer 9re1ter conifort, 99c FAUCO AERATOR Chrenit, wilh ln1icl1 •' ouhldo lhr11d. T11r111 tl1ncl1rcl 1pi91t h1rcl w1!11 1tr11n1 111!• 1oft SENTINE" AUTOMATtC M19ic 1l1clric eye ic:rew1 lftlO l fty 1oc••t, l11r111 li9ht1 911 et d111k, off 11 d1w11 111ten111ic11ly. H1lp1 pr1¥111t eccide11h., b11t9l1rie1, Y1nd1li1n1, ide1I fot liomo, llot1, effico, feclOfY, 1114 11 •11. Cordl111, !11.1 1!111d1rd er fleod1i9ht \i11\b1, w11tli1r r11i1l1nl, &ompect, ond porte\ile. It'll t1k1 • d1nt1, f.l••M·l 99 PAnO LIOtn WllH RFLICTOR AND Co.D 1 Cemplehi witt. 20 ~. cenf, ce1t lte T111telled fW"tkell<y ! 1flywhe,.., w11th1r ,..1i1te11t, .cljv1t1•I• l'e 111 1M.i'H~1.. M .. lt , up 1 ceuplo •' th1M1 111cl e11jey eur w11111 11141 b•l"'Y Celif...,.ie 11i9hf1 up iftle cooler Octob•r, ew111 ffi..,th l'he Wit,... 4••• 1 little 11rli1r, 99 U11f11l for tho h1f1'11 h111Jym1n ror fixif I ncl tep1ir !ob1 wflere 1t111cl1rd> hr1clr1h or 1he1t fl'l etel pll'h will 1101 -rk. Vt"1lil.. 1 ''" be (Ill .. tl11ired, ti10. 10 YEAR GUARANTliD Mal or Brand WATIR HEATERS 30 GAL. 449s 40 GAL. 499s Fully 911•• li111d lwhel yeu •~p1ctln9, rn111\7 I, 1utom1tic 11!111 eff, r1plcl r1c1p, 1ntl0 corro1le11 reel, t1mp1r1hir1 <enlr•I. 11'1 1 9e1cl on•. Amerlcen rn1tlt, ''' top 11Uw. • -I I ' ' ' ' I '. I ' I ': ' I D.lll. V l'ILOT Fallen Ladg The Statue.of Libert~ flat on her bacltT Never! It's ju.rt a movie replica ar· r!Ving in New Yorl< from Europe Wednesday aboard Ille SS France. Con- structed of poly&lter over Iron framework and base, tbe two and one-hall ton, 40-foot high copy was shipped on the bow deck of tbe luxury liner for a scene in Paramount's new production, 41Tb.e Brain." Malari Violence 'Threatens Hanging of 11 Chine se Men K U ALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) -The threat ol racial violence between Malaysia's Malay and Chinese communities hune over the natic:m.'1 capital tonight as ~h • government gave no jn. dication of clemency for 11 yomg a:.tnese men tchedul· ed to bang Friday. The 11 Cbinese 'ftrt con· vided of c-wlCh the lndlOllesians in 1964, during lndooesian President Sukarno's undeclared war en Maia.yaia. Two young Malaya also are awaiting encutlon on the 1ame charge, but no date bae been sel lliot police fired five tear 1u .grenades tDday llt a crowd o! more than 200 per•-prol<sting I h e IM!lltencel in troot of Pudu prisoo. No one was burl. n.t caae has evoked ap· J19U tor pardons from around tt>.e world . Pope Paul Vl mode an appeal tllrough the pepe.1 emh..ury a t Greek Bomb Suspect R eveals S ecret Cache ATIIENS IAPI A ~. Alexamler's brother. The govemmeot issued a state· ment Wednesday n i g h t 5aYillC Alexander misled his intierrogators for 24 hours. tihfln admitted his identity wheo his political con· victikml were probed. retiable police source said today the man accused of trying to as5as1inate strong.man Premier George Pap00opou1os with a bomb hai revealed where he had hidden aootber 15 bombs on the rood. The source said Alexander Panagoulis, 29, told police the location of the bombs shortly after they caught him trying to nee from th'e- acene of an explosion aloog the coast road to Athens. 1be explosion n a r r o w I y missed Papadopoulos' car u t."le Jftmier was being • driven from bis seaside villa to a CebiDet meeting in tile '!al. "f anagoulls had r; e t d}'DQm.ite charges about sjx· tenths of a mile apart along the road, the source said. The man at first was iden· Ufled as George Panagoulis, ~e de6erted in Augusl 1967 while serving as a lletltenant in the Greek com· mandos and fled to Israel. He WU deported i II November aboard a Greelc liner but disappeared. Officials said Alexander has a police record dating :o 1959 for robbery a r. d deserted fr«n tbe army last year, going to Cyprus, Italy and other Euroi>ean coun- tries. He was a member of An· dreas Papandnou's lefti.R Center Union youth croup, which took a major pert in riots and demonstration~ that shodk Athem in the Bangkok to a lop aovern· ment official here. It was later learned that all 11 men had become con· verts to the Roman Catholic Church while in prlson . Prime Mlnhter Tunku Ab· dul Rahman has asked the sultan of Jobore-tl)e south Malaysian ltate in which the 11 men were arrested -to issue a royal pardon. The sultan has refused. Strike Averted OAKLAND (UPI) -A &trike set for today et seven major East Bay hospitals has eppe.rently been averted with 661 members of the Hospital \Yorkers Un lo n votinc to accept a new two· year contract. LErS BE FRIEHDL Y Huntinaton Beach Visllor 642-601 4 Coste Mesa Visitor 642-6014 So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 Harbor Visitor 644-0133 If you have new neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area, pleut tell us so that we may extend a frleod11 wel<om• and help them to become acquainted In their new surroundings. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT! :~ If our new accounts depart - -cannol ope!I yoor new, inmred M~rcury Saving• accoant In lea i;m. than it taka yoo to drink the cup of coffee a prooldc to nJl of our 1aoer1 .•• WE WILL GIVE YOU: Aoe<M...,.r ..... 1 Metcuty wants to -keep all of our • _.,r.ppy, • FREE SAFE DEl'OSIT IOXI ror M•rcury Sav•rs m1lntalnln1 minimum balance of $2.000. • M•n:vl"I Shtnp' Et! ••• policy •uum you the h t "8:•1 rate or lnt•mt for lnaur.d MYinc•- • funds ltrn lnt•,.•t from dtte of r.ceipt. runds rtctiYtd by the t.ntf'I of the month ••rn lntemt from the fir5t. Interest compo1.1nded dllly- bonus 90C0Unts evailable. MERCURY SAVINGS Mid-•··~·., •. .... em. 8114 Knott""" """' ,., .. °"Knott, .... Unco111 --- Nort'lt Kf>t'ea Says: ·Pue blo· Crew As ks ·Release Aid · TOKYO (AP) -North Bucher ol Li11«>ln, Neb., Korea said today tho 82 inued the appeal Tuesday crewmen of the u.s: in-·at a news conference at· ttl[gmce ship Pueblo have tended llf 24 o t h e r issued a second joint appeal crewmeh. . for help to obtain their . Ttie Puebto•s crew has release. ·been· in Captivity since Jan. The Nortb Korean Central _23, WheJI. the North Korean1 New1 Agency 1a1d the ship's ·seized the ship o!f Wonsan, ·captain, Cmdr. Lloyd M. ~ North Korean port. North Korea claimed th,e Pueblo The North Korean aaency conference Tueedl.y: vi'olated its terr J tor I a I said Bucher ' explained the The Americans assured waters and Uid the crew crew requested the news their families t hat they Would be released after the • coofereoce to "appeal to the wen belna: Wtill treated, and United Stale apolo~s and p<Qple of th• Unltod Slate• several gave detalla of their promises to guard against to .urae pur a:overnment to daily rouUDe. au ch ·incidents. ta~e appropriate actlon to p.,. .. rvn l c La "Ille United .states denies enable Us to return home .i ' ""Y !"!":~er · · wren• \he ed 1_ ce W. Mack, 34, of Detroit, that •hip . trespass w The agency. ia.t March M;cti., said lhla wu their NorC! Korea waters. reported the crew had ap. daJly schedule -exercl1e p&aled Jointly to President · And a wa.sh b e f o r e Food Ai r lift Hop e Seen Fo r Starv ing Biatrn ns ·, Johnaon to applo&tze to win breakfast, free dlacus1ions their ..release. Slnbe then or reading before lunch. out· ' North Korea hai broadcast door sports, a nap and scores of ltatements at· another wash before dJnner, trlbuted to the crewmen ad· and cards, chess or table miutns that the Pueblo tennis after dinner. ·On Sun· violated Noz1h Kore an days, the crewmen have the waters. . entire day to themselves The Nortb Korean news and once a week they are agency gave th.is additional shown a North Korean infcrmation on the news documentary or f e at u r e film. WASHINGTO N (UPI) - DlplomaUc reports indicate there may be new hope for alrWlin( food lo starving Bi· atr1111, state Department spokee:men1 i;aid to$y. But the officials said coo· diUon.I in the secessicnist !l'~Mf ~..f!.t~~U:l~~t meet the full requirements. Tbey saJd the establl!hment of a land COITidor lor contin· UQUS tru<::k shi~nts ever the next 12 to 18 IQODths may w.U be needed. 11lt hopeful reports came from Gene va, Switzerland . where speeial U.S. Envoy C. Robert Moore has been discussing the problem with Auguste R. Lindt, the '.Red Cross coordinator of Inter· nation•l Relief for Nigeria, and other relief ofiiclals. Simultaneously. u n con· firmed I! e p o r t s reached Wasbingt.on taht Nlgerla and Biafra baye reached a ten· ~~~! rirfir~liin~I A= on conditions lor the ship· ment of food to the ~aka· way state. Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie was reported en· couraged by conf«tnces wlth the Nigerian and Biaf · ran delegations en the relief issue, although the two sides have been unable to reach an understanding oo other Issues and 111<1!' cJvil war continues. Ofliciall here .. ll!n41e that about 200 tona al foOd .mwt ruch Blafra ~Y to cope with the dlsqter ajtua· Uon. . It is estima\eef S millfon ~·91" <!Ill IJf 1,800,000 be· lillUI llie lilalran rebel Une1 are in urgent need of hJgJ\ protein supplement and tl:Jat 200 14 400 perish daily. Moore, a former U.S. ant· bassador to Mali and a dep· uty assistant Secretary of State for African affairs, was expected to fl y back ta Washington this weekend. with a first hand report on -nµet attqements. Delegate Came Off the Street CillCAGO (UPI) -When tile DemO;CNts met i n Baltimore for their nati onal conventiOn of 1835, n o delegation had BITived lrom Tennessee. A Tennessee businessman named Rucker was found lo be visiting the city. He was asked wtiether he would vote !Or Martin Van Buren. He said Yes, so Rucker cast Tenne!lsee'1 15 votes at the convention. Seaman Edward S. Russell, 25, of · Gklndale, Calif., described the meala as "abundant." He said they consisted cf breatJ, rice, "red meat" and fish. Fireman Stevtn U. Woelk. 20, of Alta Vista, Kan., said he was wounded when he Pueblo was 1eized but that he is well now after an operati'on. Woelk reported he had a second operation to remove his tonsils and o th e r crewmen had been treated for athlete's loot, bolls, d!ar· rhea and various a k I n rashes. World's first.· .. from Sylvania •• In .color aHlll 'Dl'OllCIOr C1118118 llD81'8COl'd1r· 1naron1 color TV ntelcettr11r IJIY•ni. CfNP20IT Butternut v1nHrs and solld• In classic atyling. Av•llabl• In walnut In conlemporaiy atyllng. Blg acretn. ~sq. In. vlew1bl• picture area. Sylvania Scanner Color Slide Thaetre with Direct Channel for Family Slides . . . \ Now-world's new11t moat exciting home entertainment from Sylvania. In one superb eonaole, today's sharpnt color TV picture, Plus a slide prof1ctor that alectronlcally dl1play1 your picture• on tht TV acreen. You see them on your direct family channel. Plus a built·ln cauett1 tapt recorder ••• you can record your own slide commentary. come In ••• see and hear th1 Scanner Color Slide Theatre today! Better still ••. bring In your own slfdes ... see yourself on color TV. -_New EXcltlng Products tor Homa Entartalnmant- llEW SJIVaDIB 1868 Color TV Sharpest or an VMd-N•lural n1111-. 2 Year Warranty• on picture tube plus full y.ar on all other parts. REW SJllBOla 1888 Slarao Hl·FI makes 1111an1na ... Ilka balna Ibara '•9'\.nll!A ~. S1'moi1 "Wllflllt th ttlet t.1'" '11911o ......... " IM wlllMI rellll ,.m..r 11 1'!1-; ~·· Ii "' --· wlll ....... -" " ...,ii ... ..._ """' ,., ..,. '"'"· """' kttllln .. --..... 1 .. llllltlrl 11!11 .. 1 -11 ti I """ Ill 111tttrl1I ,,.. Sylvsnla CFS22K-E•rly Amerlcart. Maplli vtnHrs and 90lld1. Glbral· tat Cha11J1. Automltlo Fine tuning Control, .295 tq, In. vltnt>I• pio- turt. Rernott Control $59995 09llon1'1. s,.V.,,11 IC201W--SOlid Slat• FM Stereo FM/AM Tuner. 25 wttb EIA Powtr. Oarrerd Custom Autometlo Tumtt.blt. lrwisslmo sealed air susptnsion speakw ~tem1. ~ t1mpo~ty styling. r'249•s l)1vanl1 CD11W-com.nrenl Roll· 1bout. Vinyl olfd metal oablnet.180 •Cl· In. vl•W•bl• plo1urt. Clock timer. roll cut anti earphon• 0p- tlon1I extru. '36995 .. Iii irtv-la caw:-aond Stet• FM Sl•rtO FM/AM T\lner. 80 Wlttl EIA. Power. Otn1rd Pro,...,on9f Tum· tab It. Mtgnetlo Ctrlrldge. d'Ar• •onVll T\mlng Mlttr. Du•I cowr and choice of Bravls•lmo SNltd Air Bulpenllon 1PMklr ayat.ms ... op11onol extru. '2,,1995 Walnut flnllh. IT Sylvanl• FMnW-FM Radio 12.5 • Wiit!! EIA. BrlVls•lmo Staled Alt Suspsnslon speaker ay•t•m. fly .. whffl tuning. Walnut VtnHt1 and 1orrd1. '79'5 - I I lylvanla IJ:p, 4/211K~ w11ts EIA Pawer. Oarrard Custom Pro- le•slot'ltl Turnt1bl•. Br1vl11lmo S1altd All' SU•Ptn1lon Spnktr Systtm. Choice ol Walnut or Bl1ek fl,llh. '14995 Come in today •.. make your home the most exciting place in town! 411 East 17th St. •• Costa Me sa Daily 9.9, Sat. 9·6 -646·1684 FOR PROMPT SEllYICI IY FACTORY TRAINED TECHNICIANS IN llADIO. DISPATCHED TRUCKS, CALL 548·3437 ] - QUEENIE 8y Phil lnterlancll "Could :fOll get him to It.op pobltlng at me!" U.N. Fears Hidden Sea Floor. N-hases UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP! -A U.N. study spotlights th e possibility that the big powers some day may hide nuclear missile base! on the bottom ol the ocean unle111 something is done to stop them. "The ocean is opaque," it says. "the sub.surface ocean and the ocean floor offer one specific advantage in com· parison with land-based in· staHations -that of im· proved c oncealment. Satellite surveillance is less effective. "Nuclear-weapon powers might, it is thought, find it desirable to replace land- based missiles with sea-bed bases or silos." Besides making for better concealment, "such a &hilt might decrease the con- sequences to a nation and it1 population of a nuclear strike against the mi,ssile forc e,'' the document says. The sbµly ia tiUed ,!'T)le Military Uses of the See Bed and the Ocean F1oor!' The U.N. secretariat prepared it on the basis of published material on the subject. · The U.N. Special Com- mittee on the Peaceful Uses of the Sea Bed and the Ocean Floor 11 taking up the paper at an 11-day session in Rio de Janeiro. The committee ls con· cerMd only with the bottom · of the meas and oceans beyond the llmlla ol national Carnival Set Friday The odors of dtlc1ten din· ners· or hotdogs cooked out· of-doors and the a ppearance or ice cream sundaes or cider and doughnuts will blend with the cries ol the barkers, the sotlllds <If the wheels of fortune and the enthusiasm of the crowd as the second annual Leisure Work! Summer Carnival ~ets under way Friday, in Laguna Hills. Decorated boOths will line the bandstand area of Clubhouse 1. Costumed et· tendant.s will make the at· mosphere more festive, and members of 15 or more clubl will be on hand to assure the sucxess for a se- cond year. The carnival will run from 4 to 10 p.m. Friday and the same hours on Saturday. All Leisure \Vorld residents and their guest! are being in· vlted. jurisdiction. The S"eCTet"ariat study in· dlcates that not even that deep-down iarea is likely to remain inmlm• from the arms race u n 1 e 1 a. In· ternatl<Dal actlo~ is taken to make it so. "The old idea of un- derwater cities is no longer considered u mere science- fiction," it says, "al.Utough lt i.s recognized that con- siderable development will be needed for its im· plementatlon. "A logistic posathility • , . sometimes discussed ••• Is that ol seMed bues 10< nuclear submarines. Such 'bases could extend the tirpe that a submarine may spend under water, and thus im· prove the possibilities of concealed operation." Stanford Club Ho11ors Hornbeak Tcm Hornbeak. student body preside~ at Corcca Clel Mar High School, has been awarded the Orange County Stianford Club scholar&hip fU' Uie -,.ar at Slanford. . He is tbe 10n of Mr. and Mrs. Jact C. Hornbeak, 2401 Blacktom St., Ne w p o r t Beach. In addition to his S.97 grade point average, Hombeok earned loiters in footbell, baaelJell "'1CI traclt and lllriidl>atod in a wide range ot llfudool aclivtti ... He was president of the junio< class and wu given the E. I. Moore Maaonic .award as ttie outst:mding boy in the junior class. He has served as Key Club treasurer, delegate to tb e C.a.llfcmia Association of Student Councils and as a delegate to tihe Superin· tende!R.'s District Advisory Council. Announcement of t b e Stanford llChollnhip award was ·made by Richard H. Pauley of Newport Beach, ochola<1hip chairman of the Stan(ord Club, which Is headed. by Pre1tdent Chwles Ii;. Hlncb of Laguna -· l'rolelllatloll Wal made by Dr. Jolm L. lUcbardlOll of °""11!• at Uie club's annual meeting in the Saddleback IM, Santa Ana. The Stan- ford Club is the alumni o r.gaDizaU.on representin g some 2,IXX> alumni .and parents in OrB.Dge COW1ty, I See by Today's Want Ads • People are •till clnnina at rtwvtng; nwtY prqt 58.les, with milcellaneoul gpodles, • n d houlebold Hems •. • A priwte party will sac- rifice $.lXl mJder blue book on a '68 Mustang stidt llhift, Air I low mil~ age or may consider trade on small rtation wagon. e A '61 Yamaha 180 hardly used, in eJlicell~t condi· ·Uon muat be Dd! e Haw about thll? Darling miniature female Schntu.. rer puppy, AKC. R>ta and f'llrl cropped. All rndy for ~ new home. e want• custom mid' Sand BUGY! Contact ··BUU)' Bullden'', bu complete parts and IC· ce...ne.. DAIL V PILOT 7 • . . ' • • (EXECUTIVE MODELS) ' (DEMONSTRATOR MODELS) ·At your Chevrolet Dealer . . . ... LFO • , ' I .I I II i t 'I \' ' -----.,. .. ,..__ .... ----..-. ~:::-...11 d wkl.l't fltl01 -Tax Relief Coming? State Rests Case State May Give B ack Surplus In Newton Trial SACRAMENTO (AP) -tu reduction lban the and olber lawmaken just • OAKLAND (UPI) _ Tb• IUlplng Dell Ross. :io,' In his Tbe Reagan admlnlstratioo governor asked. few weeks agO. prosecution hoped to rest its escape from a predawn gun 10ok. a pleased look at Democratic Assemblyman But the finance director's .cue today against Black battle last Oct. 2a. He will Cautoroia's souod tinanc\al Bob Moretti of Vari Nuys 1tatement conterided sucb a .Panthers foonder Huey P. testify in his own defense. ecindition today aad pro. asked j~whep will th.ls ad· t\UJ\ll:IS would , be "no more Newton, charged with the Davis gave the Jury a ,pOted that a cash surplus be m1lllstrat1on learn that the tb&n a aafe"'IO~gin" in a first degree murder of an course in · adv an e e d ..,.i for a tu cu!, not !or Assembly 'simply w11l bot budget ot·~.llll billion. Oµlan4 poll<tman. · ballistic• while cjl3c1Wlng , AHt. Dill, Atty. Lowell three slUI! from tile gun lp¢reasfil 1apendJni. 1'0U over and Pla1 , dead An other .alsembl,yman, Jensen said, he would call fray. One oi the slurs was Not long after a Sl67 every time some phony Rep u b JI can John ·G. "about thtte" final wit· found in the body of Frey, million cash surplu1 was an· figure is given ul? Wby dld Venerhaa of Modesto, said school aid passed in the last nesses after the defense one in the knee of Keanes , nounced Wednesday, Gov. the Department or f'in!l,nce announcement of the bigger hours or the genera 1 completed c r o s a ex· and the thlrd i"n the r ight Reagan's top fiicai aide once again lie wben·1 asked th&l\ expected cash surplus amination ol. John E. Davis, hand door of the declared: "Surpluses lbou.ld tbem l'hat the .JUTPlu'.s at .at .the eod of the last fiscal legislative session earlier c rt m in al o g 1st for the Volkswagen. be returned to lbi tu· the e.nd of this fiscal year year "proves that the this month. but killed in the Oakland Police Departrltenl ~vls explained that all payers." would be?" Assembly was right again senate. When the prosecution tine sluga: appeared to And, added State Finance He referred to Wein· on its estimates of the fiscal The same package Is ex· rests, it will give Newton a have been flred from a Director ca s par Wein· berger's s e Pa rate· an· position of the state." pected to be up for consici· chance to tell his story to bullet containing b a 11 berger, anyone who wants nouncement Wednesday that He sald it show1 ample eratJon &Jain if Reagan the jury. Newton, 26, plead· Powder, which di'mples the the state to spend more the cash surplus expected to funding is available for the grants legislative demands ed innocent to charges of flat face of the slug. Flake money should be aware of be oo band next June 30 will f289 milllon bi partisan to put the matter before a killing patrolman John powder, he said, leaves this the administration's "'idea be $85 million -tar above Assembly package of pro· special session in Septem-Frey, 23, wounding officer face relatively smooth or that the first priority is to r-tl:he~!~igur~e~he~g~a~ve~M~o~r~et;;U;;;;pe;;;;rt~y;;;;tax;;;;;;';;;elii:;'e;;f;;;;an;;d;;;;n;;e;;w~be~r;;. ;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;~~H~er~be~rt~H;;•;;•~ne~s;. 25;;;, ;;and~ki;;· d~·~~di~sc;;o;;lor~s ;;it;;s~lig~h~tl~y, ii--return excess state moneys -· ---··-----· · - to the taxpayers." llis comments came af.ter Nixon Relaxes another Republican, Stat~ Controller H o u 1 t o n L Flournoy, reported that the stoite ended the fiscal year last June 30 w It h Sl67 million more in its checking .account than it spent. GOP presidential candidate Richard Nixon waves to a passing sailboat at Mission Bay as a pot of boiling lobsters bubbles in the foreground. Nixon took time oil from political meetings to relax at a be:lcb party. Ever since Reagan was inaugurated, he hlis insisted the state was in dire finan- cial straits, and · said that wn one reason he cut almost $60 million from state budgets which bad been approved by legislators in the last two years. LA Ghettos Termed Assembly tax experts took the occasion to chide the governor about bis gloomy pred.ictloos and the op- position o! his staff to legislative proposals this: year for increased aid to Concentration Camps local education and a bigger LOS ANGELES (AP) - As a City Council committee listened for six h o u rs , Negroes and Mex i ca n · Americans called their com- m unities "cbncentration State Dems R e maini1ig Inde pendent LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The chairman of Ca I ifornj;l's 174-mcmbcr D e m ocratic presidential dele gation said Wednesday he does not know what the delegation will do on the first bullot at the Chicago convention. Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh said, "They were elected as a group pledged to support Bob Kennedy and Bob Keofledy is dead. The cohesive force that held that delegation togettter is gone and C aliforn ians are notoriously independent." lie said 5':i. Geor;::: McGovern renected th e ideals and positions of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and "'as a close friend Of tile slain senator. Unruh added. however, that he did not know Vl'hat McGovern would "be able to coagulate in the \\'aY of suppoM." There has been s o m e d i s c u s s ion that the California deleg<Alon might cast its votes on the first ballot in memory of Ken- nedy. but Unruh said he had not discussed the possibility with members. ''I bave questions as to \\'hether the memorial vote would serve the purposes," he said. Hike in Food Cos ts Fo1·ecasl 1 .. os ANGELES (UPI) - A panel of super market C:<· e c u ti v e s predicted \Ved· nesday that food prices throughout the nation \\'ill rise as much as 2.5 percent by U1e November general cle<:tion. The executives blamt>d declines in production of certain food items and ris· ing labor costs. ' camps" and accused police of terrorism. After the marathon session Wednesday th e Police, Fire and C i v i l . . * * * Unruh Hits Defense Comnllttee decided R T "' boil two more public eagan ax hearings into the charges brought by members of the R }i £ L newly formed "Crisis Coali· e C ag tion" of Negroes and Mex· ican-Americans. LOS ANGELES (AP) - At first it was indicated Assembly Speaker Jesse M. the next hearings would be Unruh blames Gov. Reagan delayed. Walter Bremond, for the failure of tax relief chairman of the Black bills in the legislature this Congress, snapped: year. "People of tlle black and "I'm not saying the brown community are out governor is against it," he oo tbe street trying to save told newsmen Wednesday, your rotten city. If it's not "I'm saying he ian't using imporU.11t to you, you ought the power he pOssesses to to be removed from office." get it through." Councilman Tom Bradley The Inglewood Democrat and Gilbert Lindsay argued said the Assembly passed for the new hearings, claim· three tax relief bills this ing: "U one-tenth of what year but all were defeated has been charged is true, iii. the Senate. there is a need for serious One of them, he . said, remedial action." \\"OUld have provided SlOO More than 500 persons million in tax relief for Los jammed the council 1 I chambers <md another 150 Ange es County a one. crowded outside the doors . "This was killed in the last night," Unruh said. Inside, 20 witnesses made "The · governor's finance claims of police brutatity director ( ca.spar Wein· and demanded the removal berger) waa malting an ac· of white policemen in tbeir tive fight against it in the communities. Senate while the governor ·'We're n o t protected, was in Miami Beach." we're persecuted," said Unruh charged State Sen . Bremond. ~rge Miller Jr. ( D. Some of the key testimony ~fartinez), chairman of the centered on a charge that Senate Finance Committee, police used automatic ''has a mental block against weapons during last Sun· rt tu day's distur'-ce in \Vatts, any kind of prope Y ,,_., relief." which left three Negroes But he added: "If the dead and more than 40 governor really wants to persons, including five muscle the Senate, he can. policemen, injured. t h "If this is true." replied Hes' got everything e se e Councilman Arthur K . wanted out of the Senate this year." Snyder, "this is the most Unruh said he will urge important testimony. To my l · knowledge the City of Los Ulat a special legis ative Angeles owns no automatic se<ssion be called next month weapons." for property tax relie'f. Harold Tedford, a Black "There's just no use at all Congress member scoffed at ln oot giving Ulla money the reply, caUing it a "farce , ,....:b.::•.::ck::,_".::h.::e..:•.::•;.;id_. __ _ one big joke." ''I· m surprised thr.t men or your s u p p 0 s e d in· lelligencc would pretend you didn 't know au t o m a tic weapons \\'ere used," he said. Bremond and Carl Vas· quez, chairman of the UC LA chapter or the United Mex- ican-American Studenh. led the attack and ofter{ were cheered~ Bremond said he didn't expect the council to ~ on the charges. Take Ii Ba~k RENTAL CENTER lOW USE RATES Sol.on Won't Accept P ay SAN MARCOS (AP)-Ci· Buelow. a barber, has ty Count:ilman W i l 11 a m served five )'ears on the BueJow is squabbling with council ll'ithout accepting fellow councilmen over his the $25-a-month sc:!ary. But salary. He d~n'l want it -the council voted I a s t they say he 's got to taXe ii. month. in Buelo~"s absence, "They can send m t to require all city employes check.I undl tbey're blue in to accept pay to avoid possl· the r«e," Buelow said Wed· ble fut u r e compensation nesday. "I'm not going to suits. ~sh th om. 1 don't need the Buelow told lhe council hls money and J just woo 't ac· salary sOOuld be used for ,....._It." the be .. flt of th• city. Jn --r.You don't have to cash 1966 he ran for re-election them," Councilman Bruce on the platform Ulat coun· RupPenthal repUed. "It's a.U cilmtn in the ci ty , popula- right Jf you paper your tJon 3,600, don't deserve house wl em." -~ay. Davis and Henredon combine to bring you "True Luxury at Budget Prices ." You select your f avorife style, size and f ab'- ·ric-Henredon custom makes it in their traditionally superior) manner. NOW! AND UNTIL AUGUST 31 ST ONLY. any item in this . ~'!markable c"ollection~:~ oe~yours at I S 0/o''~ff r~~lar'P~i~;~, . ,.{ ... ~:·.'to" ...... ff '~~ . ••• • • • • ••• •• upholstered furniture custom ' made to the exact size and style you prefer. unbolevlbletY-. titll ne. t lllliedun's 5' HWitntl ~ ftlroolftn II tmde br sldllocl 'f Cllftsmen ID your~ Wholher)'Oll desift! a SllalghUofa,aned sofa, tc-1, chair, OltomaJ1.or ased!onalstb, )'OU deloermine tl>o ~ lltt, choale dit11111 llXI boctsi,lt, leg and 11ounce-.~cmlolOllanangtUiilllalfabolc '-~· • btllillJIOUl'decar. lnllldidoalDlhiJ ' renmbble fledbilityyou ""assured of Ille superlor-.Cllon lilcl aaftsmlNhip 11111.,. ·' 1ladl1iomllytlendot•Sh0wn'*"n)ult · '~ aflwof!hemany .......... Oxneln and getditfuU doll!lsori""' llmlnggiouplJrl~ SHOP ALL 3 HUGE FLOORS .. of well stocked-well displayed Home Furnishings. Wh'e- ther you are in need of 0 sofa or 0 sofa ~illow, we think you ore in for o most pleasant experience~ FINE FURNITURE ·~ sin ce 1916 1975 LONCi IEACH ILYD;, LONCi IEACH • PHON E 591:1347 Terms •.. Free Parkin9 .,. Designer Assist•nce STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 5:30 DAILY-FRIDAY 12:30 to 9 , ., , ·------------------------------------------~-----------·--- ... I Thursday, Au9ust 151 1968 DAILY PILOT 9 • • Always 1 at -Sears .~\ •. ~ $atj,sfaction \ , J \. . Guqran:tee~ or Your Money -Back! · Now AvaUUlli ...... STEEL CoRD RADIAL TIRES A*Yovlews ~-!l·'r••· ...... , .._, ,. • • , . • r ' ' · 36 Months Ne:itio.nwtd~ Ouaratitee ALLSTATE Passien1et Tire 'Guarantee Tread Life Guarani.. ·' Tread Wear.Qui Guarantee ... ~teed Apla1t: J.n.faJlures ot th·•'tlN re.hilting' from normal road buard! or defe<:lJll in· material or wOrknlAN:hip,' ·r"olo How Lonr: J'or the llfe of th• ~IU..d. . , 1"Mt. 8mn WUJ DQ,: Repair nan· r j;Wi.cturtS at no eharre; In the caae -ot• fal,llif't. 1n ~chanf• for th• ttt., nplace it. cna.qlnr Ol\ly th• proportion: Of OU1Ttnt'reg\llll1' Mil• ins pr1c1 pfu11F:8d'Wd !fxclu Tax~ that npreaent1 tread u..,_. otiarit.Ateed ~t: Tread wear- out. -• For HCJIW Lour: ·The number ot month• l})ecilled. ' W.t a.ti Will Do : In exchlLn(t · tofthe Ure, replace It charginJ th1 curl"ftlt rer.itar 1elllng price prtce pl~i'~•l. ~ Tax 1"I th1 tollawiJl.C .nowanca •.. Menu..~ All....C. . . i2 ..... 10% 21 \o 39 20% ... Express Nylon TrJck ~ ~~ ~__;_ · · · For Campers.,Panels or Pick-Ups ... _ 6.70x15 J411 . ·Tube .. Type ,, •• !.4, ... 1 .T. .. ~. 1• •• ....... 1·" •• Tllbe-TJpe; ..... Tv.•Type .... . obi• I.IT ..... T. -1•• '·" r .•. T • . 7.00x15 _ ............. 20.88 plus 2.89 F;E.T. NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED • . ' All•tale Tire Mountln&" FREE Allltate Tire R<ttaUon ·rv..,. 5,000 Mlle1 FREE Check of Your Wheel Allpment Buy 1st Tire ai Regular low Tra:d~;fu~ Pricl; · of $2Z.95 and Get Second Tire for Only Patented Inter-·Patented. l!lllen- lockJnr Tread eer Button. be- exert. vise · like tween rtbl 1lop rrtP M road fof th• squealing Mtter tracUon, around turn• lt&rt and ltop Ud wbea brak• quickly. Inf. 6.50x13 ' .TubeleM Blackwall Pl1ll 1.81 Fed. Exe. Tu and old tire ht.enW Safety &-plJ'N,,..CmC SboaWw1 he Ip 'l'trel mean It&-you r 1 d • bl.ck Jnto tile read blltty and IUJ*' wttbout • hltch, sf.NnJth frw·tha ti )'OU ltray ofi, road hasatdl. TUBELESS BLACKWALL I TUBELESS WHITEWALLS SIZET1~1 · '4¥.'lfi'-~ I SIZE J 11:!.! I iw I I '9~ Price l'.R.T, eq 2nd frl~f: :..1.T, Prlct 1.. ~rlcto 8.50x13 .,,,91 11.48 11.47 1.81 6.50xl3 $25.95 12.98 12.97 '~.ih 6.95xl4 123.95 U .98 ll.97 1.95 7.00d3 i27.95 13.98 13.97 1.92 ,.ssxu U5.95 U.98 12.97 2.06 6.95xl4 $26.95 13.48 13.47 i.H 7., .. 14 $27.95 13.98 13.97 2.19 7.35d4 $28.95 u .i8 14,47 2.06 8.25xl4 f29.b 14.98 14.97 2.35 7.75d4 i30.95 15,is 15.i7 2:!§ 1i.55d4 132.95 16.48 16.47 2.56 8.25xl4 $32.95 16.48 16.47 2:35 5.80xl5 '$21.95 10.98 li!.H 1.74 8.55xl4 $35.95 17.~8 i7.97 !5i 7.7.5x15 $27.95 13.98 13.97 2.21 9.50xli lil.95 20.98 20.97 2.H 1i.15xi5 $29.95 14.98 li.97 2.36 5.60xl5 $24.95 d.48 d.47 i.74 7.75xl5 isi!.95 15.48 u:u !U 8.15d5 iH.95 H.48 u.u m il.l!.i5 i~S.95 1,.95 U.9'i !Ji . NO MONEY DOWN on Anythinr You Buy at Sean on Credit! 11roac1· , Shouldered .. Wide Tread 6 ~~~ ·.t:=. l'!u J,11 ,..._ &A. lu .., ON m.. • New ContoUr Safety Shoulder • New 7-rib tread desirn for .n,-ther · traction . • New-6/lO·ln. white sidewall to match tb<I width of the white 11idewall on man7 new cars . ·~ ' · Tubeless Blac~ . : SIZE WhlteWillll Ss Moro Per'Tii<! '~ l ' .., t.' . ' (... ' ... . ' . . . ~ \ No Mone~ Down When You Buy Your AutOm .. ti\re Neeu:: at Sears / • on tredlt ' . Santa Ana In7 S. Main St. JU7-33?:1 . f •• • _, i I l I • I I I ' II 1 ., \ r. I \I 'I , • ' JO OAJl.Y P'l\OT . ,. • • For The Record -----Meetings Seaman Killed In Crash TUSTIN -A S.n Dieeo- based t1Uor"w11 killed and one of ht1~mpanloRs 11 ln 1 aerioua condltioft 11 tbe.. result of 1 two-car cruh on the Santa Ana Freeway ~;:. A, .. T ... ,.,.. ... i.r. cll/9 1u.i. south of Laguna Road early . .._, v..-.. C-1~ Cl\ltl, GlllM .v.. ... 1 '·"'· this J"Orning., ~ ~ u.~.,:_IV,r~s.~-:'~",.~ ••r· Dead ls William Harrison, H~~-~ t~ ~l'4'f 20, statio-ned abivd the USS ~"'w1111t111t1C111 MICfl. 1 11·"'· Herbert J. Thomas. In ~~i.,.~,,_,'f:~r!'~ surgery at Orange County ' ; • ' lli.c.itta st .. eaq Mtt.I. 1'" ...... ldedlcal Center suffering In-~ Ud,., 100F Hill, w..m.rn.tw A"ffM •I onw s''"'' westrnlllltlr. 1::11 ._"'· 1968 County Traffic 1967 en~~.f.o.: • .:.n-t..::.~ 1.:rsrs;; 130 De•t11 Toll 117 ir.lw""'°" ...,., 7:JO ,..m. -------------M~~~=•~hm_~u: ternal lnjlD'ies is John M. 11n.""· ... en. 1 '.111. De Lacy, 21, o f the same N~~~lki~lll·.lt:,"i ship. ...::-1ar1 L"'°" ,., .es. Affllrkin A c c o r d i n C to the L•lolo Hatt. su w. 111t1 5t .. c.11 California Highwav Patrol, ........._ I '·"'· dri b '·1 J • - ,....._.__ • -------------------~-------- Airport Revamp Co st Slashes Due .. : SANTA A!IA -Proposed improveme.nta at Orange County Airport will be trim· med from a 1uggested. $139,500 to $100,000.. the Board ol S~rvilora learn·. ed Tutaday. County Admlnlatradve Of· fleer Robert E. Thoma.a said aome of the proposed pro- jects were not urgent and could be delayed. . Before the 1upervlson was the selection of an eniineer to design· t h e changes. Suggested b y Jo,.ph J , Smluk. county director of bulldlng services, we.re James M. Montgomery of Costa Mesa , Salkia Engineers, Orange, and Hall and Foreman, San- ta Ana. La Paz Road · Contract Given Pool Co-op Plan OK'd By LAFC SANTA ANA -Forma· LEGAL NOTICE CllllT'll'IC4TI 0, IUllNI JI. lllCITIOVS kAMI Tile ~tl•MO oon (tr!llY wt t•• Clll'Cll,l(tl"" • """'""" .. JI ,.,~~ .. lowlra, \.I Htbrt , C•ltl1m11. 11"""' "'• flct111Mn Nm1 ....... of WIOI IV VANCE· 11!,1 Miii Jhtt .. ltl firm 11 ~ fl// ...,._.,_ --. WflM4 ...,_ In t11ll ... ,llctit If mNwln ........ , ...... , V1iw:a l.. ""°"""' llt lt11hM: Drive, Ntw'Pllrl ~ c .. 1HwN1. 0h1-Slllf-lft, Sib WhlltOllt A-. El'd-C•~•· D1Nlt Allt\111 14 1 .... GI.,._. 5111..-m tion of file Los Alamitos· Sl•te "'v~~~.::,:r::-c-tv: Ro8SmoM' County 5ervJCe Oii Allt""t 14 '"'' llttOrf ...,., • Nel•t'I' Area for tbe n11~ -.1 l"ulJlk: '" W tw Ml4 Sttlt. """"'11" ...... n.1.:-... r-r....v v1 ..-rtoct V•-\., Andt~ ll'ld On.>~ ............. 6 a commumty 1winl-"""-"' .,...., 111 -" 1tt 1111 ,.,_.. mior PoOl was approved::::,:..-~,.. :==.;:-;.:11:~~ Wednesday by Utt Local 1e11w 1111 .. -. A1ency Formation Com· IOF,ic~~E~'o.vie mission (LAFC). Nofl ty Pl/btlc . C1llfornl1 .,.. . ed I Id f'rlnc:lNI Office In •µe pt9pOS poo WO\! °''"" couni... be built at' a Cort of •12Q ()()() Mv C11mml11lon Eulru • • ·Ju.,. 21, lt1'0 at the Los Alamitos High l"llllUthM °'"*' c ... , 011i... 1>11ot School. The new service :,:r1 u. "· lt Mid ""'""~;,.1; aJ'"ea would asse1s • onel------------ Wn< property tu of JO LEGAI; NOTICE ceots per flOO assessed "4"1s valuation to finance the C•I Tl,ICAT• 01' •USINISS. pool. • Tht lllld1i:;~!!!1:! ~!~~ hi 11 co,.. The Service are.a wouJd d11C11.., 1 11u11rwu 11 P.O. aa~ .. ,.. cost• th be di l ed ~-Mlr.1, C1lllorn11, t:H2,, ul\der the lie• en sso v . .lU'l:'.le are tllleu• tlrm name ef P'AT WADE OltGAN 3,660 aa'e:! in the proposed Sl!!ltVICE •1111 11'111 11ld flrrn It comltCIWd • af ..... lollo\1111119 ffl'IOfl. wlloM n1rM 111 area and 21,90() per5006. fl/ti 11\d alK• of rulOfftet 1111 follows' Robert Russell of the f'AT WADE. 1s1 cec:u 11i.c1, co11, ""'-.,, _...__,_........._ , ' ffi Mei.a. C1lllw'11!1. tn27. ......... ~.,, -.u11J.Ua>u-dtive o ce DllH Jl July tNI '"·I._,. 1nc1 Jude M911'' c111t1. !"1ritn a car ven y sai or erry H.11, n1 10111 s1 .. H11t111111ton SHc11. A H--4-1-2.0 of N rw 1k --------------------------• ''"'' l'•IDAY ' . Cl.I ucy. • 0 a • Smisek aaid 1even pro- jects were inc luded in the original proposal including additional parking Jot pav· ing, paving o f a one-acre run.up area, paving of a two-acre north parking lot and improvell)Mts to tie. down area number one. SA!ITA ANA -A ~.526 contract for construction qt La P.az Road be t we e'n Mou1too Parkway a n· d Rickenbacker Road a n d Pa.seo de Valencia from ~ Paz to a point 740 feet eatt in I:.aguna Hills was award- ed Tuesday to the Sully Miller Co. ol Orange . · ght d I · J PAT WADE sou a e ay tn approva s111w Ill' c.111or1111, or1r,.1 Counl't: u n11..i1 · FVl!d FIMN:l•I M&n1111.,.,.~1 was southbOund in the • eouncu, J.'l"~ Fu"t ettic... J11 w. cent.er lane of the freeway P • w::11l:lo.. l.~11• •o1•";.; c 1u1t . at 65 miles an hour when ,• • $hojrt tofl &•M:h 11111, Hunt!noton ,. • BHc11. 11:10 '·"'· William R. lJilllngham, 2.0, 6' • ~.'"r.c:.,~~~~~ ~1"~ of South. P a 1 a d e n a at- . " • 12:u '""" tempted to pass. Fire Calls Pilot Visitor- rours •r. ~ ~ •11 • F~ 9dwiol Clas• d flt111 :n~ J":t = ~.o:: i:: r-.:~&1.1t'V Cf.!it~: DEATH NOTICES FORTIN, JR. BeftJ-h1 I', FOl"tlfl. Jr. tlll F•lrhlll Dt1 ..... ,......... -...di. o.-. -delth. ._......,., 1'-lul'Ylv.d t1¥ Wit., H1ah -~ Oii..... l~nd, Cotti Metit. Senrlaa, l'l'idfY, 11 A.M., 8111 &r~ a..,.t, l..._1, Pacific vi... MtmoNr Pert. Vltli.tkwl fodto,, 8.W a~ a.. ... 1, 11 AM le f PM, Ol'9dM by kU lrwdlft'f Mtr-tu1ry, Ill ~Mdwty, CClllS. MIQ. VOGEL C'1-tt1tt Hwm.11 \'eeel. mt M..,..r Pi.<-. Colle ,,,..... Sllrvrv.d bY wlft, J1ni. a. \I-II &an, C•rl COIJ.Oll, Co.II IMH1 twe bretlw!'$. WtJMr, OlllOI Ind tt.rold, lndllMI fW1I llf. '-"• Ci......n"M Ltwrenct, Fr!MO- MI ... lncfleMI 1NI Hiida H-. F1lr· POr'I, New Yorlt. lln<lcn. Friday, 2 PM, hll lrwdw9V CMINL ln"""*1t, PKlflc: Vllw MM!er\ltl 1'1t11;, Dlrectold t1¥ 8 .. 1 8roed'Wlly Martl,ltry, 110 lrotd- ...,, Colli M-. WHITEHEAD 14inuel J. WM'9hefld. 1!1 C A"'"ldl MtlOl'Q, Lt tuN Hiik. CM'9 ef dffltl, A\ttl,ltl 14. Survl* bv wlf1, R1clMll, d ""9 tlclnwl Ind two trtnddllldl'efl, s.rvlc.a. FrlClav. 11 AN., Ir• rti. CJlll)el II l"Kltic: View. lntertN!fll, P1clllc. View MemCM'lel 1'1rk. OlredM by I'• tlfk View Mor'h.Jerv. SMITH Dr. Rllbfft L" lmlth. 11!0 l'<Nr~ • Drift, N-1 l .. ch. D9tlt d dilllll, AllO\ltt l:l SVrYIYM llY Wih:. Oerelhy, Ill fllt Mmt1 d..,.hl'tr, Diane ; mother, Mrs.. 1-enofa M. lmlth, L•-Hltls1 1l&tW. M~ lltulh L«ennn. f/lf ~ ..... $91Vlca. frl!WI, I PM. 1111 1'M C1'11Hl 11 l"eclflc View. El'I~. Mau.olaum f/lf h ,eclfk.. Dlr.c:IM bY PKltle vi.w Mon.No.,,.. F1ml11' • ..,.. Pih l'llole W\11'11119 te IMk• -1411 (:lltlfl'lbvllorll, pi&,IM Clll'fl'lllu19 te "'a Lafl'lll Lindi U11!.....,ll't kl'lool 'Ill MM- k:I .... GRITMAN The Billingham car went into the dirt divider strip struck a guard rail and wen t out of control, colliding witb tbe other car. Both cars were spun around. 'I11e dead sailor was using a seat belt but DeLacy was not and was thrown clear of t h e wreckage. Neither driver was injured. ' New Look F or Newhart Comedian Bob Newhart, who makes his ttte•r·in· the·round d e b u t tltis weeken4 at Meiodyland, has been having d r y · r u 1i rebearsall all week in the a.£11erooon1 in order to "con- quer" the theater-in-tbe· round technique. He will be seen Friday and S:aturdey evenings. PHILODENDRON ol. the district for study but On J111Y JI, 1fft, befor1 me, • Nota.., Court A gain Delays County Beating Trial Sm1sek added that airport terminal building alteration s wouJd cost about $25,000. Su~·~ Da Id L Bak f'~1t11, 111 11\d tor 111d s111w. ""°"111v !."~~ •io'UI V , tr •-M PAT W"DE known lo me hi lte Said the matter WOIJld have Iha Pfl'IOll whost M/Tll 11 wbocrllted '" ~ bef t h 11\t wttlll!I ln$tr1,1me"I I nd id.nowledte(f w came ore e 111 axacui.1 the ....... •upervisors and the office 10fF1CIAL SEAL) •-lie c. kl!Ot! could report their findings Mot•rv f'ub11c.ce•11:w11•• ~ that ti f'rlfl(JHf Otllc1 •~ c.:i. me. "'" Comlfllulon ExJilru Or•llM c .. lftty $258,207 Jutv 1. 1'n Anottier delay has been granted in the cue in· volving Robert E. Lee, 46, of Mmtebello, Accused o f brutally beating a La Habra woman five months ago. Lee Baby Drowns In Swim Pool ANAHEIM -A two-year- old Anaheim girl w a s drowned W ednesday when she found her way through a back kitchen door to the f amily •wi.mming pool. The coroner's office aeid Patricia Marie R a m i c h , daughter of Mrs. Virginia Ramich, was dead on ar· rival at Anaheim Memorial Hospital . SELLOUM w..aa to have faced trial Wed· nesday. The 30-day delay r esulted wbe11 the di&trict attorney stated that Mrs. Marie Siuro was showing signs of return· ing to consciousness after being in a coma since Mareb 9, The case so far has resulted i'n ttie citing for contempt of court ol several court officers after the district attorney raided a municipal court j u d g e ~ s chambers to cqnfisc.ate a pair of bloody shoes fowKI by Lee's public defender. ~ty District Attorney Ed Freeman hopes that the won\a:n's memory w i 11 return a nd that she will be able to describe the details oI the beating which n early resulted in death. P arking Lot Work Started Pact P'ultllshld Ol'tnilf Coii1I D1llY '!loo!I, Au9Uat 1, I. 15. 2J, lfft l!Jl,6&. LEGAL NOTICE The Board 'of Supervi sor s ORANGE -A $258,207 a ction f o llowed the opening contract to landscape. 3.8 "-lfft2 of seven bids last week. nle. miles oC the Garden Grove ci11:TI:;~~rou0t N1AU,:~Ntss, engineer's estimate for tt\e Freeway ha3 been awarded ,.,.. uftlllf'sr,_. doe. t•rll1Y i.. 1, a .... d k "'" = •-C · y C E · dw.llnt I IM.lllllUI 1t 4'11 E11t 1711'1 Slrffl. roa wor was ~ ......... Tll'e to urtis- . . nt.erpr1se1 of co.11 Miii, C.flfNfll•. urw:1er IM 11c-MGrif~~ Co., of Costa job will include the i.h~ Garden Grove by the S~te ~~~~'1.. 1:,m."'•' ~eid ·~1Jr"' ~ esa U-&:> begun work on an · stallation of c urbs, gu~s Departmen t of P u b 11 c co..._~ °' fM fol1cw1~0 ~er.on. whtio" urgently needed parking lot and sidewalks. • Works. :'t,j:::!s1," 1u111nc1 Pl•(.I et re•ldenct 11 •s at the California Statejji .. .., .... ., ............ i!iji .. iiOiiO;ii; .................. I JOHPll c. Lem.rd, 4'17 E111 111t1 CoUege at Fullerton. The str••· eo.11 .v..11. c1111orn11. Dalad Juty 31, INI. S2&4.~ facility will a c -J111niri c. l..eo!llrd commoda•-1,347 cars when sr111 et c.111om11. °"-• C011111V! u:; On J\ll't 31, IHI, befell me, I N~ltl'o' completed in about five Pvb•1c 111 11111 111r .. 1d ''•~. '''"'°"'11" th •-~_,j JOHl>h C. L10111rd known It! m! mon s. I t is the largest hi 1t1 111e ""''"wt.a n•.,.,. 11 1utiscr11>- undertaken at the college. lld to "'' ... 11111n 1n1tru"''"' 1n11 .,..&., .I'. 1cknowl""9ed 1'lfl 1iac1.1!9d th• ""''· single parking project ever y y (OFFICIAL SEAL) undertaken at the college. HARBOR AREA REFORM TEMPLE I::.:'; i;,~~""'"''" Work will be financed by "rlMINI Olfka 111 revenue t>onds repaid b y SABBATH SERVICE ~:~ea;::. Ellplrn Ju,..., ,1, parking fees ranging from FRIDAY, AUG. 16 -8:30 P.M. ""~n!: Or•11t• Cot•t 0111, Piiot, 25 cents per day to $13 per l 2ot Viti U4h, N_,_,. IHU A"""" 1, •· u. n. '"' 1m61 semester. C o m p I e t i o n Sf • .,. ..... "*.,.. Cl111rch 6hould be in~-·:bo:;u~t ~fi~·~·~~·~-~·-~-~·~i..~c.~11~·~·~·~··~, .. ~, ;'.'.'.~~·!·~ ... ~·~-~ ... ~~-~-~~··~~r::LE~G~A~L~N~O~Tl~C~E:::: monttis. LEG" NOTICE Cl!llllTl'ICAT• o, 1us1N1ss. Ai.. PICTITIOUS NAMI! • •:Jiih Tha -*1l1wt doll ctrlllv l1'll 11 ~ CllllTIPICA.TI 0, aUllNDS. dudll!I e buslllffl al 1l51D 8e1ch l tvd., PICTITIOUS N.&MI Mt,lft!lniillln lffdl, C•llfllr11l1. lllldf:r th" TROPICAL SPLENDOR!! tld!lloul firm -of JEANINE'S Tiii \lndw.t,...., dllel ClftHY "-Is -M>UTIQUI! 1nd 11111 ulcl firm i. com-~"' I bvllnus I I I". 0 . !lox tfl, C.11 _. ol tlll fo11Dw11" P1r10n Wl>os1 Ml$1, C1Hfornl1, UllfMr lllt fldl!lllUI firm llllTll In fUll Ind 'll CI o1 rulde..:C. II Is n 1 rn • of VqGff COMllAHY 111d 11111 loliow.· u ld tlrm II corn_.,, Ill' "" lo!low!M I Aii&AttA ANN TIPTON, ',I ' "'IOI!, who:l1 n•mt In fvll Md 'I~ et T•lltlrl Av•nvt Fovnttln Ve!ley rtslclenct 11 11 follllwl' Ci lllornl• ' ' En joy the richneu of the full color of HIBISCUS Wonde rfu l shrub for landscape use in our Coast· al Area. Colors ranging through shades of red, yellow, gold , orange and wh ite. Excellent 1 Gal. Plants c Regular 1.75 BIRD OF PARADISE GEORGE W. COFFEY, 410 &roadw1y, Di ltoct Auiuit 12, lNI. Cotl1 MH.1, C.llter11l1. &A•IAlllA ANN TIPTON D11ttt Jul't 2'-lNI. Gl!OlllGE w co,:P"f:y 1111w et c.u1orn11, or1noe ceun1Y: s11r. et c1 1Jfor11r1. or1n.1 Co<.m1Y : ,..t1c~us~,.:.i. .!i."";.':"';1~1':.e,.:,~:r,: On JulY' '"' IHI, .....,, ...... Nolll'Y td •AR• • ' P'ubllc In ll'ld fer llld Sfl'9 llf -·· I-Ir A A ANN IP'TON t no.,.n -o<o•G• o ' r fe IM te 1t1 ll'le Pl'10tl ........ ,.,...,, I• I PH•·..., W. C FFE'I' tnDWft Ill wt>K•llted Ill the wllhln lnstrumetlf 1.-.d ITll lo ltl lllt l"ll'IOll wMH ... IT!I II 1dlM1Wledtled SHE l llKUltcl 11'11 Urn1 IUbKrllted te 11'11 .,.ltlllft IMIM.lmftll •nd !OFFICIAL SEAL! , I Ckl!OWled,ed ~. e~IC\lted fill .. m.. JO'i'C• Mlntlnt lll (OfPICIAL Sl!All Not1ry Publlc·C1ll!ornt1 J~E.D1vl1 •<<<-Nel•rv ""bllc<.111""1111 O::!,:' c~: lft PrlMlN I Otl!c1 In M, Commlulon Exp!ret Orlnte ClllllllV Me' U, 1'71'.1 :jlw:. c;;"f,;:"" ~.... f'ult"$1>1d Or•nt• Co11I D111y Plkl'. P'ubtlsheol 0r1,.M Coeit "•ll't P'llot. Ju-Au11111 U, 22, 2' I nd S....tembe' .\, l'1' tf Incl A~t 1, 1. IS. lffl 1,,..., 1NI 1411·61 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE """" CllTll'ICATI 0 , IUSINlll, ClllTl'IC.\TI 0, I UllHISI, PICTITIOUS No\MI l'ICTIT10US NAME TIM \lllltlnl11!td doMI al'll1Y hi 11 atn-Tiii 11nc11r11111111 lie cerllf~ lhel' t •& d11Ct1111 1 111111.,.., 11 '421 Edlnter. Huri-CClnd!.tctlnt • bu1l11Hl ti S21 s. Ll'on No, 11..,ton 11 .. d'I, C11!fornl1, Uflder 1119 flt-33A, knt1 AM, C1lltornl1, under IM Hc- 111'-firm "'""" Ill' AUTO k1NG AUTO llllou:s firm . Ml'M of SWEETFUH PAltTS I nd 11'111 11lcl tlrm 11 -ed ef UNLIMITEI) I ncl 11'111 Y fd firm Is corr" 1111 1o11ow1.., Ml'Mll. Wf\ou 111mt In fllll '811c1 el fM lollowlnt Pf•10111. ...~os~ 11\d •laCtl Ill',..~ t1 I I fllllllw:I: Mina In fllll Incl Plltu of r11ldtfl(t ··~ Joe Your111. 5612 l'•rl'llllU No. '· H1111-11 1o,1~~ flniflln l each, C1llfllml1 L..,,.... HUFll', J11 I. l von- D•t..ii July 24, lfa iy. SlA, SIMI olnt, Joe Y1111nl1 JAMES E. WHITLDCk, U41 S. H1s1er SYATE o~ CA.LIFDltMIA, Ho. 16, An111tlm OlllANGE COUNTY: Oi led JulY 1'. 1961. On JulY ''· IHI, ._,.,,.. ,...., 1 Net1..,, CLDM" HUFI" Putillc lfl •l'ld for $11d St1i.. ilMlf'IOllllll< J.i..MES E. WHITLOCI( ·-•rM JM Younl• .,_,. lo .... Ill ... STATE OF CALIFOltHI" ) 11'11 PftlOll w1'loH ftlme 11 ..-Ulbld te COUNTY OF Oll:A"IGE J 11 111t W111'1l11 IMI"""""' •l'Mll acknewledtH 0.. JulY !'. l NI befor• 1"1t. fl>! u~ • 111 •~~ 11'11 -· d1,.,l1ned, I No!lrv Putl!lc In t '!d for 11,.1 (Oflklll S..11 Stilt, ff"lo111llY IPl'etrtcl CLOMA 1-!UFF Vlder J. ll:u'llll' I nd JAMES E. WHITLOCK llnow" 111 .,., Nati~ f'ubll' • Ctlllornl• lo be bolrl of Ille P•rlntfl et 1~~ Prh1clN I Ofl'lc1 In P1rlr1ers~lp 1~11 tlltculed the wlll'l!n 1": Or111t1 County llrumt nl, 1.-.d ttknowled~ to fl'll fhll Ml' c.,,..ml11kln Explru W(h p1rtnersMp executed tt>t 11me Se11twmltlr 11, Jtn WITHES! "'~ hlncl I nd eltlcl•I u . I Frtl'IC l . GrU""'n. A .. 11, d 111 »n1 !.I., N.-t IHCh. Survived bY ..,,,, RobH'I F. Grtlm111, Sr .• of fM t111mt1 two er1ncklllldre<1 Ind fWo .... ,. •rtrwldllldl'9fl. Slnllml. •Ill bl htld Frld11', 10 AM. Wnttlltf (.l\ll"tl, Wllh ltlV. \.°""' Fllcltlnliflr d ~ Unity CN.lrdl .. N-1 offl$tllt, lnft,.. mtnt, Gnnlll 1..-cemtterv. 1>o1troi1, Mlchlpn. W•ICllft Cl'MIM'I Morfl/1,..,, ~. Dl,.ct11n. A n1lur•I f•r • h11pic1I 1•ttlnt• Li tt • l1nh 1 •• ,,., '' to J" 11 l•t19th. Sult· •bit for 1un or ih•cl•. PICKLE BARRELS 'vbH11\td Ori..-C1111t D1llY Pllet, Ju, (D,.FICIAL SE.i..Ll 1 ' Ii< 2S 11111 AU.usl I, I, 15, I~ 11f0.4,I DtYld K. EM LEGAL NOTICE Ncterv "ull!lc.C1ll!orn1t PrlndNI Ottlcl In IAit'iit Or11111 Count'1' NOTICI TO CltlDIT'ORS Ml' C011"1mlulc11 l:x•lrtl IU,.IRIOlll COUlllT OP TN• June I, l~t STAT!!: 01' CALIP'OI NIA l'OR llubllthtd 0•1"9t Cot1! D1llY Pll~t. THI COUNTY 01' 0111.\Nel A11tu11 15, 21. n 11111 Seeltmb'' 5. BAL'l'll MORnJAIUES Corua del Mar OR U4H <:-.Mesa Mii-Wi BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY UO Broadway, Costa Meta uwm DILDAY BROTHERS Bantlnflon VaDey Mortuary 11111 Beach Bi.ti. Bundnston Beach Mt-7'111 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C.•lltrY • Momiary Chapel .,. P..we Vlew Drlv• Nrwport Budl, <:allfonila -PEEi: FAMILY COLONIAL FllNZllAL DOME 'lltl Bolu .... "'_,_... 1111 ms Slll'l1l'S MOR11JARY tr/ llWl 15&. ........ Baa LEMm war<uFI' 110.R'IUARY Ill &. 17111 It., c-. -.... R19. 1.60 CARNATIONS Flower Shop Spec:iall Tak• home • do11n b eauti rul long 1temmed u rnation1. Freshly Cut ALL COLORS l.erfl I .. I. Sin 98L ECONOMY PLANTERS 20" di•m•ter. For shrubs or tre•1, firm bends i nd 1tro ng wood. 299 ' DECORATIVE BARK All 9r•d•1 -small, medi um, l1r9e. 6r11t ly •nh1nce1 th e beauty of flower bed1 and sht dt gardens. 3 Cu. Ft. la9 1~ LAST OF SEASON CLOSEOUT! ,.ruit Tr111 - Appl11 l'lurn1 Y2 PRICE ••.•.. Rog. SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, AUGUST 18 HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. SUNDAYS I 0 A.M. TO 5 P.M. "QUALITY ANO SERVICE SINCE 19"6" 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CALL 546-5525 HI. A-ff311 1961 UlQ.69, E,11tw Ill 'ftOBEll:T IE. SMAll:P, 11!.o ~~='"~· •O&EltT EDWIN SH ... ll:P', LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS Ml!lt~&Y GIVEH to ,.,_\---c;;;;;o;;;:':::-CC0-7",.-' __ crectl.,.1 el 1ti1 i ltliw ,..,,..., flc•nt ClltlT,ICATI 01' IUSINIJS, 11'11t 111 Ht'IOllt "'9¥1flt clll"" atlhisl 11'11 FICTITIOUS NAMI llltl decf'detlt ,,, '""'"*' to ftlll! them T1'e lll!dt .. ltllfd do Cft'lltr I Im (1) ... Wiii! 11\t !lteetSt~ -..ctltl~ In .... offlc~ ductlnt . butllM!lt •f P'.O . ..,.. 16'!. Cos!• et 11'11 clertr. ., the •ltliw •l'IFllll!d COlll'I Mt ... C1Ufornl1, undtr the ffclltllllls 11,,., fl' te P,....11111 "'""' With tr .. M (IUlr,: lllme DI !II GOLDEN YI! A I! 5 'lllt>el>tr1, to llll llndt'"l'llfll II IM oltlct CO-OPE'ftATtVE Cio!INCHILL.\ ltANCio! of hl1 Atfernly1 Htrmon lrw:I Jtftle!I .. !fl AAltDVA'ft lC INSUl!AN(E $El!VICE North M1Jn Str~I. Suitt JOGS, knit 'A111, 11\d lh1t 11fd firm 11 Cllfl'IPOled cf IM C1!lfllf'nl1 n 1111, wh!c.h 11 11'11 ,.llc• et lollowln1 Person. w11ot1 n1m, 1~ lull i nd blt1fnt11 of ll'lt llftder1l111ed 111 I ll rnilttn Plitt et t'l!lldotntf It 11 IO!!owt· 1>er11ll'tl111 le 1111 nt1i. DI 11ld *<"'11111, ROIEll:T F. I USK. tJa c~~nn' .,.1!1'1111 air 1n01111'11 l l'llr 11'11 first lt\lt!Uu-Slrttl, Co1hi Miu. C1lltornlt "'U. !Ion of !hit nottc1. 01!9d A11t11SI U, IHI Dal'td JvlY 14, lfa 'ft081!111T F. BUSI( D1v1t1 l. J1""'1 Stitt .. C11/torrt1,, Ort"9e Co11t11Y· E•ecufllr of the Wm of On A11t111I u. 1'61, ~rft mt 1. No!•"" Ho\ltMOM A°'..~::rt,..""INJd G«Menl :=~...::' 11'07E':; ~1'1:tu~:~ 'Dtrsonally • ""'"" Mein JITtel '"Ila -.. · -" !a "'~ Suri. .... • ..... ftrl(lf'I ..moot"'""' Is IUltlCrlbe-d "11f1 Ant. c1.....,..1 tl7ll :, ~ :;r;:~i;.,~11::;,ui:,•nl 11111 •tknowled~, T'1h M7·1JQ (0f'FICIAL $EolL) mt. A~ ltr l'ncllfll' Jo ... h E. D1v!1 IY ~.:':.,.°'"'':": ~111,~ ,0111Y f'li.t. Ju-No11rv P'ubl!c.Ci ltloml• "" • .. "" "' lft'4 '°'•IN:INI Offitt In LEGAL NonCE o., ... , c........, Ml' Coon"'IMIOll E11lru NOT1ci to CitiOrtOll JUflt 11, 1'7' IS!u, Utl<llt 7 U.C.C,l A •Wllthld 0•1 ... 1 Cots! 01111< ,.11,1, 1-Cttw NI. tb417.. llt""I lS. :ll, 2t I N! ltl>ltrn.,_.r 3 (11 A bull. lrtllllt'!' ti •llllul Ill bf,.... 1"' 141)1""61' !It) TM ,..,..., ,.,. llllllnau ffd•111u · 11 • 1111 tr•Mt1r111' ,,., LEGAL NOTICE 0. I", Vin L•""' ~ ~C·~~..... Cl l.IT'PIC.\TI 01' IUSINISS. I 1, l •.......,11, f'ICTITIOUS MAMI TM """"' 111111 bvlftltN ldd ..... If Tiii lnfw•ltlllllll Item twfl,., "' I Iha hftller91 l tt: -...ctl11t I 'vtlrleti 9' 2KI F I I _. Mllllll'I "· H1rtJtr lulltl 1. C0111 Mm. cetttw.:'1~';"~~ US lcillllfl Milite Aw., ~ nrm """°' .. HELGA 'S 1111'9 AM, C•l"-lt , SICltlT•1tto\L SE'ftYtCI 1/ld 11111 11111 A" °"""' MIMU lltrne1 '"" Hdrtt111 flnl'I ho ~ el' "" fllllowl.., Pft'lll~ lnllll 1t1' "" lrl lll"'fl' •lll'lln tllrn n••• ~ 11~-Ill hll! I nd 111Kt of rnl0.11(; lalf ,,.,, to l1r 11 kl!OWll 111 Ille l ti loltow1: 1,.111ltf'M .,., -io!ILGA M. JORSTAD 25,) y IC) "" IOC1llwo .... _,,, dftc.rt11io.. f'llu, Cot•• Mu~. C111ie..n11 llllr .. Iha 11rtPtri'1' le Ila ,,....,lffrae 1,.1 01i.. AIJel/at II, I ... , . Stodl Ill lrlldl, flrNrft., Miii'"'"" H£1.G• M, JOltST olD """ 9ood •Ill .. lflel «,,11" lltw!l.>I ..... II: .. Ctllternlt. 0!'1.,.. Ceuf!IV· 11v11-t-.. •• Jff'I COlflt u. ,.llbl1tA':11'' n. ""· 11etot1 """· •· Not~"Y IKlt.11 ft l1t7 N...._, h\litv•rf ea.'. I nd tor &lld Sltte ""°" I •• Mlttl. C•~flrlll•. ' -•.rtd MflGA M, JOltST.•o ._::: !~I Tiit 1t1Kt. .,-. 1111 .. i. _. tr •ffw ,.,. bl lht Nrton ""'- wtlldl, Iha hit tr.I'll"" II Ill M c:eri. ~rllttd-111 11\t Wllhlll "'*"'-"*":" ,,: __. .. _, ... ~-.... ·~k\llM' Illa •1191Jff ., ltlt •I t1ftl Ill 4-let COl'l"ICIAL SEAL! Mme.. NT•M, l.u Via Lldrl, ~I IMCll, 'ftotie,, I . 1tutll1t1hlln C•lllor'nl•. No11..,, ...... bHc.C t llfllml• 011W AWWI lf, lttt. '•Inc.IHI Otllct lft D, f', VIII l.1 ... 11 Or1,... Coul\1y T...W.1'11' M¥ ("""'"'"" l.>:11Jr1., Ml,_ ... H•rtv JVl!f 4. 1m T~ ,.. "ullW,N!r 0.1,..• CM'I Otl,11< ,.,111, ~....., °''"" (.,. .. &eit.o ,'&, ~.':"'' IJ. tl, " •nil S.•llfrlbe-• ,: • ..., ..... ,s. ,.., uW 1«11'-.M • I I . • s • • • " • • " • • " " • • '· " ,. " • " • ' ,, " ,. " " " •• •· " m s " ' • • " ' " " • .. '" " •• ' •• " ·s " "• " " ~ " •• ,, ~ '" " •• -~-----------------------------------------·-------~ ----- ' . .. . . . ,. .. Another 'City' . Construction project on hills behind Monarch Bay (upper, central in photo) foretells creation of yet another "city" in fast-groWing Laguna Niguel area 1 of Orange Coast. R apidly upending residential areas, commercial deve.Iopme.nt and lndusirtal growth are all factors in one ,of county's fastest urbanizations of onetime ''cow country.'1 More School Strikes Due WASHINGTON (UPI) Scllool bells may 10 unh•ed· ed by thouaands of Jeachers and younc· pup{l1 acrosa the natfon next month. Acoording ,to the two giant teachers uniona, the Na· tionoal Education Auoclatioa and the American F.edera· tlon of Teacbera, preaent conditionai "portend aa man1 as 400 elemen11acy and high school teacher 1trlkt1 thia school year1• -.more than three times me record 128 walkouta of the last one .. ·spokeamen for the two groups said there ig "a strong poelibllity" of strikes at the openinC of ICbool nezt moath In St. L o u ii , llhlladelphla, Eal! St. LoUil, Ill., New Orle1111 and Wilm· lnllOD, Del. In add!UOll, Ille NEA Hid S6 suburban area schools in Mlcbi&an, mabily n e a r Detroit, face the same llrlke threat along with llolatad rural di1tri"" 1n Col~, Oklahoma, Idaho, New Hemptblre and South Dakola. . "W• llticipale there will be about IO llriltes when ocilocl ltarta with another 800 lo 3IO spread tl>rOICh<Jut the rett of tht tahool year t'' the NEA 1pok._,, said. Neilher the AFT nor NEA could eetimat. lhl number of teachers and lhldenta af· lected ucept to 11y It would run into tlbe tens o f ttlouaand1. . The Education Com· mialion ol lbe States (ECS), whicb rep-Ille ex· ecutive and lePttatlve bran· ohts ol 89 IUltM, reported there were 100 work atop-· pagea in the lut achoot year and the NEA 1ald llere were m . ECS filurH aoli>ll bock to 1940 lhowed i ~ of ?3 aucb aitrlkea in the entire decade endinf In 00, und<rl<Orlni the marked colllrut betwt•n then and Traffic Cop's a Computer 111• sreater milllaney of teacben in current Umes. One puulln1 factor 1n the publlc'a mind 11 b o w teachers can strike in the face of lawa of nearly every alal• pr~ walkout> bypubllc_,,t .. One simple anawer ta that practically they are unen· torceable bec&Ule U you throw au 111• llrlbr1 in Jail you stUl have • m pt y cllaarooms. The NEA, With ill 1.2 million members, aald near· ly 80 pmont, or 1111,288 teac·be?s , haye won barealnlng recogn!Uon con· tractl from local achool boordl ond Ille A."'f' with lM,000 members, 1 a i d 100,000 of tta member• are under a contract arranae· ment. The AFT, which is If· !Wat.d with the AFL-CIO, SAN JOSE (AP) -Thia the cutdowb on watUna There are 500,000 actions or has a policy of "no contract, city of 400,000 baa a traffic savff motorllta -$264,000 in operationa in a second." no work" which touched off cop who makes a half. travel Ume. "ln a 12-hour period there trlk million decisions . every ae· "It t.akei three·!Ourths pf ar1 about a mllllon dempds tcorea of lalt year's 1 es . cond. a second for a driver to of service for alanala, 11 ·The NEA la not afftliated · The cop la a COlJ\Pllter. react bttween 'bis ges ~ Mahoney noted. with other labor groupt1. Nearly 80 signal llghta Jn and his brak.e pedal.'' a-14 "To put Jt another way, As re 1t 1e 111 younc 35·· block dawn.town area Gene Mahnney, the projeefS ' every 12-hour period in· teechera started signing up have bee~ ·oP91'ated l!ince engineer. . ':: volves 10 million vehicle· in ifO\ving numbers with the December, 1966 by a "·Jn ~t time, th ls seconds. This boll!! down to more aggreae:lve AFT, the $204,000 device,· Officials machine can make· 350,QOO each vehicle suffering an NEA started takiJ1g,.a tough figure that in jUst o~e year operation, or decislDAS. averaJe delay of' ab6ut 10 at.and, callinC it! members __....._~--''----'-.-..:.---=---'------"'-seconOs." out on strike in retord M h t d _... numben laat year. 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS ·s1.oo ....... - a oney repea 1 wuen The NEA formerly relied an astounded inquirer ask-ed, "did you s1y SUF· on sanctions which merely FE RED 10 aeconds delay?" ur~d teachers oot to work The computer is hooked 11l certain school district& or into the system from central _•_v_en_en_en_tir_•_•ta_t_•·-- headquartera at 441 Park Ave. It not only reguJatt;lr---- 5 -H-A_R_P __ _ lh• trlfllc bu~ when COD· ditions chanae. it chances the traffic pattern. · Mahoney evaluates-: If yeu'rt • 1ft1rp tr1cl1r, 111• th• DAILY P1LOrs f1111out Olm1·A·Lln1 d 11dfi1d 1d1 S1t0 1,ir·•1y1.·M1k1 1 b1tttr d11I ••.• wh1ttiir you're lrluyi11g or 11lli119. Thundat, A.,usl 15, 1968 DAILY flLDT JJ_ SUMMER HARDWAR.E ·auys ~ 5ejtiV;af CRACK 'PROOF !32 GAL. TRASH CAN GUARANTEED 7 YEARS LIGHT AND TOUGH AVOCADO 'GREEN WILL NOT CRACK '4'' Outdoor lighting you never thought you could afford I A quality systtm you inltlll yourself ... in minutes, with compltll 11f11y, Ho ptrmlb, ... duR II llal'I ....... ~ .•• lint plq IAI • UL '""'"· 12 ... 1t l)lll• 1Mli.t1~ oltclprool, ch lld ... 111 • TllUt ltw· .. ltlp llfl ire complete 'lltll I. llrtt tulid bum l!Pta 111d tolorM ""-(21mhr, rmn. pink, bin, 11d wtllt1), 100 IMt ot •tllttproof eablt, tnlllftn'lllf wlttl b11llt·ll 1uto1Mtl; U!Mr, ·lfOlnd ltak• and nll bracbtt • UM ltlb ucltln1 ,,. llPil!l I"" Alf 11 -o1..,. lll"'ll>tll lilt "" hi -rtty 111 0ltdoor Mlllfy. MODEL #11&1 $59 •• 8-Ught systtm IN with outomatlc-Hmtr . Water Hea.ters · . ~ . REPUBLIC "GEMINI" ' 30 GAL. $44.H .40 GAL. $49.ll' 50 GAL. ~II "TITAN" 30 GAL. $64.11 40 GAL. 72.81 INSTALLATION AYAILAl&;I Tiii• 'IUllltv -r•nlt:td ...... l!Mr w1hr, 11111tr II equljlped · wllfl kfety tlll'lfl, 11 rtQUlrff bV llW. WI l'll ff Mmt dll' lftthll· tatlon 1Ytll1bte, If YOU wll!I. All normel '.,._ 1t1ll1!IOl'I Pll'ts lf'IChHled. CtH by ,._ -lnJl1ll tllll dtY. Al!O tmtrgtneY IMfllM!lorl 1v11111111, All wor11 dont bV rll"l•ltt lllun'lbtrt. Re4J. $5.99 FESTIVAL ROTARY TOOL KEEPER Por workbench, c1blnet or shelf. Spins .., boll boorlnt buo. •179 -Llpt to lift. ' Port1bte, II"*' apace. GARBAGE DISPOSALS · IN·SINK-ERATOR MODIL NO."" •$3J95 ..•..... ,. OUI PllCI '. ••• •, ••• ,, •• • • •· · ' MODIL NO.' 77, s54ts .... '"·'' Ill oua PllCIWASn"i<iNG MODIL NO. 1700 s31ts itr•. Mt.ti . OUl PllCI ••••••••• •••• ••. . MODI~ NO. IOOO $4195 . llG. $1f.tJ OUI Pltcl • , , , , ,, , •• , •••• , ' INSTALLATION AVAILABLE . Moy be used on envelopes es return oddress lobels. Also very hondy es identificolion lobels· for marking personol items such os books, records, photos, etc; Lobels stick on gloss ond· "One of the moat im· portant benefits of a com· puterlzed sy•lem ts 111at 1111~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:;;iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:iiiii:~5~iiiii:iiiii:~~~~~~ brings all the dat.a into one central location inltead of moy be used for morking home conned food items. All lobels era printed with stylish Vogue type on fine quolity white gummed po per end poded in · reusoble mogic seal top container. Mri. ChrktfM Brown 969 Post Road Cost._ M•s•, C.Jif. '2626 ' forcing us to scatter petaon· nel all over to father tht same informatioo." , Mahoney said Wichita Falls, Texas,. and Toronto, Canada, have such com· puterized traffic signals at work. He knowa of no others. Sydney, Australia, has television HU rnonttortna the traffic problems. "But humans make the decisions in Sydney,'.' Mah oney pointed out. · -. ,-- --~ -"".'"-- -- -- - --1 . 1 Fiii in thh c:o11p'o11, clip •nd '!'•JI wltti $1.00 le: I "While the humans are making a few, our computer. is ma·klng hundrf!ds o! thousands of decisions . "You can't' run a ayatem like thit with people. They can't niact fut enouch." Pilot Printin9, '-'~•I DI¥., I•• 1171, I Ntwport lttc:h, C.lif, 9266J . ·I I . . I I ·--···················································· I I . . . I •................••.....•..•.•.....••••.•...•.........• I l I ················································-·-····· I I 11 111r• ft llMI yo11r It, CHt I I I PILOT PRINTING L _ - - - -- -- --·-- -..J . . . FREE BONUS WI.TH EACH ORDER OF LAIELS WE Will INCLUDE FIB· SET OF PACKAl9E MAILIN6 LABELS. - To ......_, .......... ... Husband Had Law On His .S;i®. CHATHAM, En1land (UPI) -A 'sblpely ~year· old brunette said she wore a see'-1tlroulfl . blouse a n d paraded outside her home as a protest agatMt her hu.a- band wto thou&ht tht blouse was too risque. "He said he did not want eviryooe looking at me and I thought he was beln& rather prudish," Mrs. Janet Dempsey explained. Authorities agreed with the husband, Kevln1 a '11· ye-ar~ld policeman. The story had a happy en· ding, Dell1PffY reported . "I WM ~ 1t'Mn I heard what bad happened," he aafd. "But all is forglven now. I am quite looting lonrord to m~ll• WOlr!ni the blouse ·-indoor• ad for m1 t." 1._ ________ .. ___ ._ _____ _. __ ...., I r I I I Hours 10to9dally 12to5Sunday 10to6Sat. I l'IOOllS OP' ~L IPAN1SH AND MIDITIUANIAN l'UlNITUll AT llNSllll t'alCISI ' " I I I I ' I . I I ., " I ·I r I I, • J I l % DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE •. ..,,, ce•Tt,ICATf 01' OISCONTIMUANC• °' us• a.NDIO• A•AMOOIOo\•MT O• PICTITIOUI MAM• THI UHOEl.SIGNED .... ~ c.nttY ttlet. tlltdl .... ,._, "'· , .... llt cteted lo .. °""-...,.... .... tldll'- lln'll ,..ml o1 ELECT•IC OltOAl<I ASSOCIATt:S. •t ilS E1.i 11111 $1,. C•lt ~. C•M~ wflldl boAlnKI WH ~ _....... Clf ""' folklwllll ~..tiow-l11 Nll1ftd~"" ,.lclenc:. lo .. tol!Owl. to-wit: PATlllCI( J. WAOE, tJ7 Cedl .. IKt, C:e1111 ,,,._,., c .. uor1111, ,,.,J c ... 1111u" tor 1r111uc11ot1 "' 11o111-und9• "'-abo¥t lktlllous ,..,...., 1nd 11- llllavll of ~lk:lt1°'1 tr1er.ol, •~ °" Ille 111 the atfQ 9' lht C-tr C~rll ol Or· '"" COIHllY, ..,..,-the -l1lonl ol $KITOll 2_. ol !l'le Cl¥il CGde. Wll'Nl!SS M~ lltl'ld tllll ld H t of A.utus!, lNI. P .. TRl(I( J. WAD£ "WU""" Of•-C0o01! Dtll'f Pllol, Aut"'I 1. t. l!, Z2, IHI 1m.a. LEGAL NOTICE ·-CfRTll"IU.Tf 01' •USINESS. l'ICTITIOUS MAMIE ~ u....s.rsltMd -• «rllh' ll>e Is eofl<-<1Uclll'9 t M int» ti ltt1'0 8ollt CMct ltd., Hu11!1 ... I011 a.tell. J26A7, CtUIG!"nlt , r.ll'ftr me llctlllow tlrm 11em1 ol JAM'S DONUT SHOP t!>d t!Mll Mltl fl"" 11 com-_. o1 l'l>t follow!nt ,..._, wlloff -111 11111 •1'111 pi.QI ol rtikllnce 11 11 1911CIW$: Jane A. Mete•, A m.rtlM Won,.n, 1411 J1llsai lttl., LA Mlraci.. Clllf ""'· D11e<1 July 11, 1"'- Jane A. MH<;e $l1h o1 C1lltomla, Los A-lff County: On JulY 11, 19'1, befor• me, • 1«<.ot1rv Public Ito end IOI Hid 5t1"', P>erl111'1111Y 1-red Jtne A. Me«t. h.own 19 mt "' M fPH! per""" _,, 11amt 11 1ubKrlbed IO "'"' within ln1lrvrMnt 11ld Kknowlldll· od IM "x...;uted l'l>t same. :OfFICIAL SEAL! Marv A. Welker Not•rv Publlc.C1llfornt1 Prl1',CIPll Otllct In Los Anll•'" c-IY My CommlstlOl'I E»ll"ft Oc:lober f, lf1l Publl!Md Or111111 Co11t 0111'1 Pllol, AU1111ll 1. I, U, :11, 19'1 UJI"°" LEGAL NOTICE .,.. '°5 NOTICE TO fN.OITOltl IUl'l!ltlOll COU 01" THI! STATE OF CALIF ltNIA "Oil THI! COUNTY OF OR.ANOE NI. A""571 E1l1le Df JOHN EOWAAD IAATON, DKtlHd. NOTICE 1S HE AEl'I' GIVEN lo tM c.redlforo of 11\t 1bove MmM clecedltll 11111 •II 111rson1 h1vl119 cl1lms 11111tn1t the .. 1c1 decedtnl 1rt r.ciulrec! ta ftl9 flllm, wrtll the l'l«nurv VU>d'llro, i11 the offlca ol tM clerk ol l'l>t 1bove er.tilled court, ot ta prei.tnl thlm, wH'h the Mellal.ar't VWCMr1. to l'l>t undf!nlonecl •I the flfllc• ol hil 1ttorn1r Doutlll o. Ma1CT111, 17'12 llutri llMI., S.Ullt I, Hunfl"'lorl INdl, ClllPornl1 '26.47, which II 1M Placl of bu1ineu ol lllf underslenecl ln 111 ..,.",,.. Jlerf1/nlrt11 ta the altle of .. Id deaden!, wll!lln 11• monll'I$ 1ttw lhl tint oubllc.1· lion of 11111 110llce. Dl led AUl<nl 14, 1'61. John Wlllltm 81rlon Admlnl1tr1lor of the E1l1!? ol lht tbG"' named dto:edtnl DOUOUS D. MOSCllll' Altemtr Al law, 1161! llK~ •1¥!11 .. S<flfl I H1111llftSIH ltacll, C.IHw11l1 nwr Tl!L; fn•I Mf.S7M Atl'WMY fw A*"l11ldretw Publllhed Or•"" Cols! Daill' Pilot, Autull lS. :11, 2f •fllll '9G!lfnll« S. !NI J)tUI LEGAL NOTICE ~-IAll 144 CflltTll'lCATE 01' IUSiNlll. l'ICTITIOUS NAMI! Tiie undersign"' do ct.r1lf¥ tflev 11n1 f'.ondUdlnt I business II Utilon Btnk Soqu•rt, Nor'll> Tower, S.Ulte 112, Or1111t, Catlfornl1, undfi' tM lldllloOI firm n1me of RISE Md Thtl Hid firm ls wm-.d ol tM followlno Jll!nOnl, ~ -.. ln full •1¥f P1ICll ol ...s!detlcl 11'11 11 foitow.: ~ A. Heddtfl, Jr., 7•lt l.t-rre Way, C•I• ~. C11111. tM27i s11 M. lnortr'I. 102 Horth F.,,., llf'HI, Or-. Cliff. '*71 Lt....,,.,. 0 . Ml-lori, 034 Gayle SlrNI, Ort /ll'r, C1t1fortil1 92667. 0111!'11' JulY If, lHI. GIOrOI ll. Ht.dffn, Jr, StJnfonf M. l119r1m l..1wr111C1 D. Ml•Wlan Stitt of C11lfornl1, O••"!I'• cw~IY: o,. Jutr IJ, lHt, Nfort ·..,., 1 N.ittrv Pub!rt In Ind for N ld State, persont l1F '°"'red G--.e ll. Hedden, Jr., Sllnford M. lrt11r1m, Ind LIWITflCI D. Mllll>lklf!. k11t1wn to me to be the· ,.,rt.Oftt who11 111mn •re wti.crlbed to tM wlflllti l1'- 11rvm1111 1nd ld:,_llid!rlild ll'IW eMCUftd ll>t MIM. .i.n11 M. Gffrett f«<lltrv ~bile • Ctlllvmle Prl1',CIN I OffiQ lfl Or1""t Count\I ' Mw Commlalo!I Euires Julr 71, IHt fDMOND UL.PH ANOlltSON JI .. Al· ......, • \llllM 111111 ku- Cll!lr1I T,_, S91h • Onnte, C1Mflnll1 '2UI Pubtli.hed Or1rt111 Co.1! Otltr l'llof, J utr 15 "nd A111ulf l, 1, U, '"' 1211-411 . LEGAL NOTICE FAT OVERWEIGHT AMlltble It YaU wlltlooilt 1 dlloc:IOr't Pfft- eer~loft, -Pt"Ddutl citied Od•IN1. Yeu 1'llllf 1111 ""'' r11 or -,eur -• 11«11. Ollrlnt1 It • liflt' l1blf1 9<1CI 1;9111~ .tWlllOWllll. Gft rid flf t•a.t 1'1 •nd I!"° '°"'*'· Odrl11111 C91t. U,00 """ 11 tel4 _, lflls _r.,,tee: II .r M rltllH for atll' fUIM, llllf ,...,,,. "" ""'*'" -~ ifrWtilll w ... ,..,.. ....,. -~ Meir. lff 4Wtllo111 .-. ... , OWIM• 11 .... ... .. ~ lwl o •• , .......... .,.,.._ , ... ................. ~ .... PENETRATION Nearly •••')'•II• ,..,, ffl• Thursday, August 15, 1968 SAVE NOW ON COTTON SHORTS 2.99 Reg. 5.00 ind 6.00. large 1norf· rnent of cotton shorts with side or front zipper. Solids ind noveJty P."ints , sizes I 0 to 11. ACCESSORY SHOP LARGE ASSORTMENT OF SWEATERS, SALE-PRICED 7.99 ' Washable Orlon~ acrylic or wool sweaters in pullover and cardigan styl01. Novelty knits, si1es 3+40. Skirts ind culottes, si1es 8 to 16, reg. 8.00-13.00 .......... 5.9j ACCESSOR Y SHOP FAMOUS MAKER WATCHES PRICED FOR SAVINGS 9.99 Reg. 13.95 to 19.95 12.99 Reg. 20.95 to 22.95 Fashion styled wrist ind pendent watches. You'll reco9n ize the qual- ity of this famous maker. COSTUME JEWElRY JUNIOR AND PETITE DRESSES FOR FALL 7.99 Reg. 11.00 lo 13.00. Choose from a wide variety of colors enc> fab- rics in your favorite styles. All from re9ular stoe;k. YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHO• -·--- I FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONL YI ' SANTAANA AND NEWPORT ONLY ' MID-MONTH SPECIAL PURCHASE OF "JI. TWEEN" SIZES 10.99 Wide 1ssortment of dress styles in washable jersey. Great selection of prints include plaids, florals, paisleys. Sizes 121/2 to 221/,. BUDGET DRESSES BIG SAVINGS ON SUMMER SKIMMERS AND SHIFTS 6.99 Reg. 13.00 to 17.00 shifts, basic step-ins or skimmer styles in short sleeve or sleeveleH styles. Dac· ron® polyester/cotton; 10 to 20. Summer ind fall dresses, re9. 11.00to 13.00 ........... 7,99 BUDGET DRESSES SAVE NOW ON OUR FASHIONABLE HANDBAGS 4.97 Reg. I 0.00 to 16.00. Good assort· ment of patents, straws, novel fabrics and leather in several styles ind colors. Shop Hrly. HANDBAGS FAMOUS MAKER BRAS REDUCED TO CLEAR 1.99 Reg. 4.00 to 6.00 toe quality ban· deau bras from weU ~nown meken in white, pastels and prints. Not all sizes in each style. FOUNDATIONS BUFFUMS' OWN LABEL INFANTS' PLA YWEAR Infants, 1. 99 Rog. 4.00 Toddlers, 2.49 Rog. 5.00 Permanent Pren bubbles, do uble· bib overalls and doub le-bib shorts made to our rigid specifications . Dacron® polyester and cotton. INFANTS' SHOP DESIGNER APPAREL REDUCED TO CLEAR 112 Price Reg. 11.00 to 20.00 designer ep· perel for infants end toddlers by Betti Terrell end Fischel. Wide assortment of dresses end sets. INFANTS' SHO P TOP MAKER JACKETS FOR BOYS, REDUCED 112 Price Reg. 8.00 to 25.00, Wide assort· ment of jackets in many fabrics, colors and styles. All from re9ular stock, sizes 8 to 20. STORE FOR BOYS PERMANENT PRESS BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS 1.99 Reg. 4.00 to 5.00 nover iron 11· mou5 maker sport shirts ha ve short sloeves. Great assortment of pat· terns and colors, sites 8 to 20 • STORE FOR BOYS WHITE SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 1.99 Reg. 5.00 Dacron°' polyoster ind cotton permanent press shirts have semi-spread collars. Regular stock. M~st sizes 141/2 to 17. STORE FOR MEN SHORT OR LONG SLEEVE VELOUR SPORT SHIRTS 112 OFF Reg. 13.00 to 14.00 cotton terry velour shirts in 1 selection of many solids and stripes. Our entire stock of well shorts, re g. 10.00 • 14.00 .... 1/2 off. STORE FOR MEN BUFFUMS' OWN SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 3.99 Reg. 6.00 to I 0.00 selection in- eludes easy care and no--iron poly- ester and co.tton end polyester blends. Si1es S-M·L-XL STORE FOR MEN CLEARANCE ON ENTIRE STOCK OF WALK SHORTS 1/2 Off Rog. values 6.00 to I 0.00, First time reduction on all of our w1lk· shorts. Stock includes solids, pl1ids, seersuckers, perm1nent press, im- ported cottons. All sizes. VARSITY SHO• il"•,.r fw tho F•Lvlon Or•• .. I"' OAILY •JLOT, •• M ........... i H""",-ORT CENTER e 11 FASHION ISLAND • 6H-2200 • llONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30 "· • OTHER DAYS lO :OG TILL 5:30' C.a1t. [\ " ~ ~ r--~------,------------------.... -------------------~------.. -~-----------~-------,._.,..,, Magicians Turn Money Into Music BENEFIT WHIRL -Philharmonic members are always caught up in a wlµrl· of benefit4 iriaise money for ·the general Phil· harmonic Society budget € ling obstacles to bring better con· certs to the people of Grange · lmiity are ~left to right) the Mmes . . .,, .. William T. Campbell, William IL Ekll"No ITR SwJi!i 8')d John T. 1 Harding, The benefits raise ,~my-one ttilrd of tl!e en· tire Philharmonic budget for the year. SOUND OF MUSIC! -11 ... ause they enjQY the sound of music and would like Q\lleri w get similar enjoyinent, women join the Pliilbarmonfc committees. Mrs. Charles E. ,Wen looks al 'oJlle of her favorite r .. ords, while the Mmes. Richard JI. Fl'anklin (Center) and H. R. Brown test their musical talent. Remember the song that starts, -11Pusb the little valve do~n and the music goes round and round, <>-0-0-0-<M> and it comes out here? In a sense, the work of the <?range County Philharmonic Society Women's Committee operates.in a similar cycle . You put .your moi;iey down for a ticket to one of their numerous benefits and the money goes round and round until it comes out as music in one of the many tine con· certs arranged. by the Philharmonic Society. How does this work? There are 19 separate groups in the Harbor Area who sponsor benefits, either separately· or combined with other groups, the proceeds of which are donated to the P~hannonic ~udget. Money raised provides a third of the entire budget while the rest ts pro- vided by ,ticket sales and the Continuance Fund drive. ' Each group in Philharmonic generally meets monthly to bav~ a p~ gram presented that deals with music or the arf:s. Yet each &flbup is qutte -individual in character and this variety contnbutes to the strength of Philharmonic. Benefits have been diverse, includt.ne several Christmas parties, cocktail parties, post-concert and pre·theater parties, a ;ovine-tast~ng party, a dance, progressive dinner, flea market, glamour aucti?n, cooltj.~ tea ~nd fashiOn show. One group provided volunteers for the Ph1lharmoruc. office; another introd.ilced taped music to students. One group p~esents its own musical programs with members participating. The Huntington H~rbour groups , combined under one board, jointly sponsor the Annual Cbnstmas Boat Parade and the Spring Commodore Ball. Leading the several groups Uris year will be: Alta Bahia Co~t­ tee the Mmes. Richard H. Franklin, chairman; John W. Donaldson, vice ch~an; Perry G. Gill, recording secretary; Ted F. Martin, ~rrespon~­ ing secretary, and Che;lrles E . Kelley, treasurer; Balboa Philharmo~e Group, the Mmes. Henry R. Brown, chairma~; Miles Larson, co-charr- ·nuln; Jon Visel, secretary and Frank Hutc:hison Jr., tr~aaurer; Bay- shores Philharmonic, the Mmes. Sanford M. D1ckey III, chairman; Robert P. Isbell, secretary and Del F . Kahan, treasurer. Also, Beacon Bay, the Mmes. J . R. Gage, chai~an ; A. ~ailey Pot- ter, co-chairman; Warren Gibbons, secretary and ruchard ,Elliott, treas- urer· Cameo Philharmonic Associates the-Mmes. J . Leshe Stefiensen, chaimian; Ma son SiJer, vice chairman; 'Homer T. Knight, treasurer; David Lang, recording secretary; Charles Peyton, corresponding secretary and John F. Porter, parliamentarian. Others are Costa Mesa, the Mmes. John R. Betson Jr., chairman; James Gorman and Earl Trechel, vice chairmen; Frank Rowland Jr., and (Su Page f6, GROUPS MAKE MU SIC ) OIAL A DATE -Reminding members to keep dates circled on their calendars is one job Philharmonic groups do. Mrs. Robert Vordale (.Jell) and Mrs. Sanford M. Dickey III do their share of dialing for the sake of music. CLIMBI NG TOWARD UNDERSTANDI NG -The study of music, lta history and functions , Ila components and goals, is part of the Philhar- monic committees programs for members. Perusing books that might malr.e good discussion topics are (left to right) the Mmes. C. Robert Hubbard, Ocee Rltcb and Lloyd L. Aubert. -------------------------------------------·------~----~----------------------------------· ...... ! J!ml .................... ____________ .,__... .... _..._.,_.,...., ________ ~~~~-------- . • DAILY PILOT Couple Tours Hawaiian Isles Honeymooning on the Ha· line Wrt. She carried a walian _II.lands are Mr . ~ bouquet of white daisies. . Mrs. Richard Lobdell Berk· , Bridesmaidl dressed Iden· son ll who were married ~ ticaly to the maid of honor the Church of Our Savior m were Mra. Richard Rogers, San Gabriel. Miss Margaret Donoghue, The Rev. George W. Cum· Miss Barbara Hlllman and mings presided at the late Mrs. Alexander Poiter. a f t e r n o o n double rlng Servini as best man was ceremony. Terrill Morgan Gloege. U1b· The bride, the former erlng guests to their pla<:ea Joan von Schlegell, is the were Paul John Uvadary, daugbl« ol Mr. and MrL Darrell Hugh John ~ o 01 Frederick von SchJegell Jr. Zachery Wayne GriffiJll. Jr., of Pasadena. Her husband Frederick voo Schlegel JJJ, ia the son of Mr . and Mrs. the bride's · brother, and Richatd Lobdell Berkson of John Gregory McDonald. South Laguna. The church was decorated Escorted to the altar by w i t h bouquet.! of whUe her father, the bride was flowers as waa the Valley attired in a white empire A· Hunt Club, the set.ting for line gown fashioned of silk the reception in Pasadena .. organza over peau de soie Tables were deecrated with with a portrait neckline multicolored tuberous be· and puff sleeves of import· gonias. PICTURING THE PAST Showing Costa Mesa Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley an old picture and some old greeting cards are (left to right) Mrs. Lucy Marty, Mrs. Lucy Waterman and Mrs. Maude Fer- rel. The women were guests of honor at a lunch- eon in the home of Mn. Neal J . Martin in Costa Meoa. Theii agea add up to 278 years. ed venise lace. Motifs of The bride is a graduate of lace flowers were gcattered Westridge School for Girls over the skirt and heavily and .the University of Call· bordered the hemline. The fornia, Berkeley. She is appllqued detachable train affiliated with Kappa Kap-· swept gracefully from the pa Gamma and the Los empire waist. Her veil of Angeles Spinsters. illusion was caught to a lace Her husband is a grad· headpiece. She carried a i.;ate of the J:lpvard School, n,.,segay of whUe 1tephano-Stanford University and at· tis and baby's breath. tended Stanford's Graduate Active Trio Prove Age Best Judged by Spirit By PAMELA HALLAN Of 1tM 01Uy "Mot Stiff It was a typical luncheon. Women gathered in groups to chat about their families, their homes, c u r r e n t fashions. Three of ttie women were particularly animated. They were the guests of honor, Mrs. Lucy Waterman of Oakland and Mrs. Maude Ferrel and Mrs . Lucy Marty of Costa Mesa. Their conversation proved tlhat some topics a r e ageless. The guests were 88, 89 and 101. purse and produced a clip. "People line up to see the ping about her lOOth birth-hippies in San Francisco," day party which she passed said Mrs. Waterman, who around. lives in Oakland. "l baked my own birthday "SOmewhere there's a cake," she said proudly. cause for it," said Mrs. Fer· "There were 40 guests rel. "I don 't know what it is present at my party." but I think young people Mrs. Waterman was im· should be given a chance. pressed by her friend 's ac· Maybe if they weren't given tivity. Mrs. Marty sews. so much publicity." grows her own fruits and Mrs. Ferrel remembered vegetables and cans for the something in the past that winter. She even made .a caused similar comment. It wooden sidewalk so sh~ .,was the bloomer girls. wouldn't have to walk on the ~Y wo're black sateen wet grass et her house. But bloomers. Tt caused quite a Mrs. Waterman marveled stir," she' said. when Mrs. Marty told her Romance usl.l'a\ly comes she gave up her car only a. , up Kl any gathering in· few years ago. eluding females. Mrs. Marty Elegance · 11:uss Patricia von Schie· School of Business Admin· gell was asked to be her istration. He is affiliated &ister's maid of honor. She with Delta Kappa Epsilon was gowned in yellow cot· fraternity and tile Los An· ton ottoman fatiric featuring geles Bachelors. an empire bodice banded The newlyweds will reside with white satin with an A· in Los Angeles. Peering Around ACAPULCO and Mexico City were the destination of Dr. and Mrs. Steve Koffler, who visited the national palace, Mayan and Aztec ruins, toured the market places and dined at exotic restaurants. One of the highlights war the evening of Ballet de Folklorico, the national ballet of Mexico, which presents dances from the different national states. The Kofflers were guests of Mrs. Birnell Forgey, who The announcement coin- cided with a party given by Mrs. Valerie Kaoogas in her Costa Mesa home. Miss Shaw is executive secretary to 35th District Assemblyman J ohn V . Briggs. Her fiance is vice· president of a national advertising agency with his office in the Los Angeles branch. , The weddlllg is being plan- ned for December. They were seated around a sma11 table, looking at some old pictures a n d greeting cards the hostess, Mrs. Neal J. Martin of Cos· ta Mesa·, had brought out Mn. Marty asked for her "Why, I gave up driving had been engaged ~ee I 2D years ago," said Mn. years before she mari1ed Waterman. , T h e conversaUon in· her husband. ..1 ~ . with her husband Dr . ELEVEN women have Forgey are residents of completed nurses aide Newport Beach and Mex.ico training at Park Lido Con· City. The Fcrgeys also will valescem. Hospital. They are host the visit of Mr. and the Mmes. Geneva Lyons, Mrs. Donald Perkat of Edward Story, Larr Y Newport Beaeh when they Cowan, Sarah Hanvey, Don- evit.ably centered on the "Some of the girls iotd me 1 past which all three agreed il I quJt going with him /-6, A6.c,. '13~ bad been rich and they'd like to ," she laughed. vy rewarding. Mrs. Ferret Mr1. Waterman's ~usband remembered Christmas on a had been a S p a n l s h • bllzzardy South D a k o t a American war v e t e r a n . farm when her father, a "Fred was on 'San Juan Hill Civil War veteran, had built with Teddy Roosevelt and a Christmas tree from twigs his Rough Riders," she saJd. and blts of sticks and the "At night the general would decorations were bows of walk around the campfires ribbon, popccrn and tin foil and talk with his men. My from gum wrappers. Fred thought Teddy was the "We liked it because we greatest so he built the m a d e e v e r y t h i n g Roosevelt Memorial Park in ourselves.'' she smiled. Gardena. It has the greatest Mrs. Marty remembered outdoor pipe organ In the a trip from Ohio to Kansas world.'' in a covered wagon with her When the Watermans solrl brother, sister and mother. the park they toured the "The only time I was world for eight months. sc.red was when there were visiting parts of China coyotes hollering and my where tourists are no longer brother put me up on a permitted. horse I was afraid o(,'' she "We live and learn." said said. Mrs . Wa·termen , Crochet th i 1 elegantly attend the Olympics in Oc· na Davis, Tauro Koivisto, tober, and Miklos Munkacsi and designed jacket to wear on the Mlsses Debra Price, cool fall days and evenings. · ··• -\1'10 1\1RS. Dudley Julia Fabre, Carol Coon and Light. laoy, e I e g ant ! Shaw of Greenwich, Conn ., Sue· Koehler. Pine<:'!lples slMd out against '· <..i .. u ... nccd the engage. Mrs. Carl Deming was shellstitch. Vecy ea&y to rnent of their daughter Julie named employe · of the Shaw to Norman Danoff of month at a tea in her honor crochet with 3-ply fingering Marina del Rey. at the convalescent hospital. yarn. Pattern 7082 : sizes 32l--:;::::::::=::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:::::::-C"" to 46 incl. FIFTY CENTS (coin'.~) for e-ach pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for first- cla,ss 1nailing and special handling: otherwise third· cla ss delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Allee Brooks . the DAILY PILOT. 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station. New York N. Y. 10011. Print Name, Addre11, Zip, Pattern Number. Book or J6 Jiffy Rugs - complete pa.titems -inex- pensive , easy to meke. 50 cent5 Stewardess "I remember the horse philosophically. "t 1 earn and buggy days too," saJd every day. It has been a Mrs. Waterman, who was good life. I've loved it and I raJ.sed in Chicago. "We used want to cireulate and be a to rlde out to a farm on part of it as long as I am swnmer vacations. I still able." !;::==========.! Earning the wings of a TWA stewardess was Miu Sandra Tompkins In Kansas City, Mo. She 11 the daughter or Mr. and Mn. Eric C. Tomp- kin• or Mission Viejo. The new "stew" will be Dying out of Los Ang· eles. like farms. I love pig6. "My philosophy of life is They're dirty but I don 't to reach ahea'd, to look care.'' forward," sald Mrs. Ferrel. But. the past wasn't the "If we do that the good sum of their conversation. Lord will take care of us. They were well up oo cue-People gel old when they rent events, revealed who loae interest in t h l n g g they would vote for in the around them.'' presidential election, and Mrs. Marty agreed, ad· had some comments on hip-ding, "I guess that's why pie1. I'm still a kid." WONDERFUL TIME n-hondooc111 Aelr -. ore parfect for bsu1I•• end ltly4t~ .... o.lt or boudoir ll'IOdol, $16.96. Rectangular trwol dodc. •18.96 . . Round -dodc. 813.95. l.+.NKAMllUCJ.ltD I M.+.STlR CHAR•l, TOO S ~c·K'S II FAS.HION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH Mees.,. 644-1310 Don't Give Up DAVIS Probably Has It / 11Jt lb gi111 yo• .,, itl1• of 1A1 ''P' "'L•mo11s a,.,,,s ""' ,_,,,, WI tit/I /iJl1J 11 flUI of 1htm bi/ow. HEHREDON HERITAGf DREXEL JOHN WIDDICOUI OIXON fOWDlRMAKU HEKMAN IRANOT KIHOEL DArlS CAI/HIT WOODM'AllK KAii AST AH "'"' 111•11r "'.,. Y1J11r f•v1Jri11 int,,ior J1sip· tr u1i/ )1 h11~p7 ID '1JiJI 'flJll. ,,.. ,,,,,;,,,.. ll•C• ltlil 1975 Long leach llvcf. Corner of 20th Str"t ind Long BMch llvd., LONG BEACH 591·1347 • Crepelon• Demi-Bra curves you in softness! Todays fashion look is soft ••. and Vossol'- ette shapes )'O<I in sheer flattery for the "irHook. • Th;s underwired demi-bra Is fiberfill lined and mode ol soft Enka Crepeset'I nylon with a rich aepe texture. Has low scooped bade of Lycra" spandex power-net Completely edged In lace all uound. lo fashion's softest oolors. Slyle '""· ~ $5.00 --~ MRS. RICHARD LOBDELL BERKSON II S•n G1brlel Ceremony Pizza Man "'~e '[)e{/Qelu,, 642-9452 OPEN 4 PM till AM -- 1920 H1rller llvd. Coota Mou, C1llf. son nner BO!'lded Orton• Shirt Shift St~! NOw YoY hew .. , mott vetatllt of llt 1 M11kl: 1111 . Don• In'°"°" --· _ ... , -.---------------------------·~~--~--------~~-------~------------.. ---~-.-~-.. . • Long Beach Rites ~:Vows Spoken in Naval Chapel MRS. €ARLETON J, BROWN Late After.noon Wedding A corridor of arched swords guided the steps of Ens. Carleton 'Justus Brown Jr. and his bride, the former Betty Jane Brown, at the conclusion of their military wedding in the U. S. Naval Station Chapel, Long Beach. Ushers and the t w o fathers, who are both Naval Captains, crossed swords af. ter Cmdr. Dell Stewart of the U. S. S. Yorktown perfQrmed the ritual uniting in marriage the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Brown of Newport Beach and Dr. and Mrs. Carleton Brown of Florida. Her father escorted Miss Brown to an altar flanked by baskets of chrysan· themums and gladioli. White streamers and old fashioned bouquets of yellow and white daisies swagged the aisles. Daisies or swiss appliqued lace were scattered over the bodice of her textured linen empire gown, w h i c h featured a bateau neckline, cap sleeves and a chapel train. A three-tiered shoulder length silk illusion veil was caught to an open crown pill box appliqued with matching lace. Her bridal bouquet was a colonial mix.ture of white swnmer flowers scattered with y e 11 o w sweetheart roses. The bride was attended by Miss Judith V. Frost, the bride's sorority sisrer as maid of ·honor; and her two sisters, Miss Dale Brown of Arlington, Texas and Miss Deborah Brown of Newport Beach, bridesmaids. The trio donned matching yellow full length sleeveless gowns with white cotton lace trim around the neck and down the bodice. They carried bouquets of summer flowers in yellow and white. Altar boys were Stephen and Jeffrey Brown, the bride's brothers. Standing as best man was the bridegroom's brother, Philip Lawrence Brown. He was assisted by ushers LCmdr. Richard Anderson of Seal Beach; Lt. William Kloepfer of Ontario; Lt. (jg) John l!:ricson, Long Beach; and Lt. (jg) Leonard Santoro, also of Long Beach. Wedding selections were played by Earl H. Lamkin. The bride's cousin Miss Jo Ann Kelley and Miss Kelly Davies passed baskets of rose ·petals among the 225 guests attending the recep- tion in the Officers Club. Yello.w a~ white flowers were scattered profusely through the club, w i t h flowers gracing the can· delabras and buffet table and each of the five tiers of the wedding cake. Guests danced to the music of Marsh Bonar and h i s orchestra. Miss Stephany Daniels, sorority sister of the bride, circulated the guest book. Well wishers included Mr. and Mrs. Frank J , Kelley III of Lake Forest, Ill., and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kelley of Dallas, Texas, the bride's a unts and uncles; Mr. and Mrs . Allen Tracy Bird III of Tucson, Ariz., the bridegroom's aunt and un c le ; Mr s. H e nry Hederman of La Jolla, the bridegroom's great-aunt; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Davies of Tacoma, Wash.; Mrs. Margaret Gibson, the bride's sorority ho use mother; Mrs. Robert Aikins of Provo, Utah; Cmdr. and Mrs . Charles Knutson of Santa Clara; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stewart of Oakland, and Cmdr. and Mrs. Walter Treexler of Oxnard, the bride's godparents. The couple are on a tour through San Francisco, Van- couver, Banlf and Lake Louise before returning to Long Beach, where they will make their first home. The brid~ was graduated from Newport Harbor High School and the University of California at Santa Barbara with BA degrees in economics and p o I i1t i c a l science. A charter member of Alpha Chi Omega, she was active on the El Gaucho ed.Jtorial board and the Associated Students Legislative Council. Her husband received his BS degree in journalism from the University of Florida after his graduation from Central High School, Manchester, N. H. At the U of F he affiliated with Delta Chi fraternity and earned the fraternity's na· tional E key award. He was also elected to the pro- fessional journalism fraternity Sigma Delta Chi. After his graduation from Officers Candidate School, the benedict was awarded ensign status in the Naval Reserve and is attached to the flagstaff of ASW group one. He recently returned from a West Pac cru.ise aboard the U. S. S. Yorktown. MRS. LEO A. V. NYHOLM Homt in Orang• Turvlll9 PMlo Engagement Revealed At Family Gathering .•. ... Sally Scofield 'The engagement of Mary Crystat Kesler and Richard ... Marries Mesan ... • ... Sally Nanette Scofieki and Leo A. V. Nyholm ex- changed vows and rings in an afternoon ceremony fn Garden Grove Community Ohurch. The Rev. Harold Leestma officiated at the double ring ceremony, 'Die bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford O. Scofield of Costa Me6a. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Sulo N)'llolrn ol eo.<a M:esa. Given in marriage by her father ttie bride wore a Swiss embroidered organza gown with a long veil of silk net ~ complemented the gown's train. Her headpiece was fashioned from ,· _ handmade silk roses. She carried her mother's prayer boOk w l I b !lfAltlllanotis, baby'<! breath and baby pink roses. .. Miss Mary Lou Scofield, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a pink Vfctorian styled gown with k>ng sleeves and ruffles. The fitted bodice was of 6ilJc organza and the s k i r t featured net and lace trim. She carried a nosegay of baby's breath and roses. Bridesmaids, dre ss ed ld.,.;cal!y in pink frocks, were Miss Polly Scofield, the bride's stster, Miss J anice Farrar o( Glendale and Mra . Donald McCauglJey of Hu-gtoo .. •.· Beach. .. Best man was William Eckblad of Anaheim . Ushers were G e r a I d DeBelui• of Duarte, Donald McCaugbey of HUll~nrt;~ !leach, David lv.cCaug~ Pacilic Grove, Clifford C. Scofield of Long Beach, the bride's brother and Paul McCormack of Long Beacti. The church was decorated with a large altar spray of white gladioli, stock and chrysanthemums with a touch of pink, and pew bows. Mrs. William Rogers was roloist. The recepbon which tool; place after the ceremony ii· the home of the bride'~ parent&· was attended by 10 guests. Cake aDd a butte was served in the patio an yard whi'ch were adorne with white doves and fern~ The guest book w a ~ cir<ulated by Mrs. Gi l Weyer of Santa Ana. Others as&isting were Mrs. Glif[ord C. Scofield ol Long Beach, sisterib!·law of the bride and Mi58 J Suzanne Scheid of Orange, the bride's cousin. The bride ls a graduate of Newport Harbor H I g h School and the University of California, santa Barbara. She will be teaching i n Orange. Her husband is a graduate of Oalifornia State College at Long Beach where he studied medical MARY KESLER Betrothed September Wedding Plans Told technology· Mr d Mr A W S . ~d .ans ... pec1al guesl.'l at u1e we · Averyt Jr. of San Clemente ding were Mrs. Meri' Sep· !lave announced the engage. pala of Canada, aunt of the ment ol their daughter, bridegroom, W.rs . Ann a Alyson Averyt to Patrick Rumbun of Ca n ad a. Maddux. son of Mrs. Robert grandmother of lbe bride, Mitchell of San Diego. &ridegroOm, Mrs. M a r Y The bride-to-be is a Scheid of Jackson, Mich.. graduate of Corona del Mar grandmoth<r of the bride High School and Orange Miss Maria Gutiet'J'U of Coast College. Her Oance 11 Hayward, and Mrs. Helen a graduate of California Kalehmainen of P a l m State O>Uege at L o .n g Springs. Beach. After a wedding trip to The wedding will take New Orleans and Jamaica · place. SeJ>\JI._ in Capistrano tt>e newlyweds will reside fn CommunJff""M e tho d l 1 t OrlUJie. Cliurcb. N. Holmer has been an- nounced by the bride-elect's parents, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis V. Kesler of Costa Mesa . The allll'OUncement was made during a champagne toast at a p&tio buffet for the immediate families and close friends of the couple. FNmled and garlanded childhood phot.os of the honored couple were the focal points or the buffet table. Miss Kesler is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her fiance is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, attended Orange Coast College and will attend California State College at Fullerton in the ran. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip F. Holmer of Newport Beach. The wedding will take place Nov. 9 in St. John the Baptist Church or Costa Mesa. ALYSON AVERYT E1191ged Thursday, August 15, 1968 DAILY PILOT J 5 MRS. STEPHEN F. McCORMICK Evening Ce remony Costa Mesa Bride Newlywed McCormicks Honeymoon St. Michael and All Angels Ep!Jcopal Church in Corona del Mar 'vas the sett.Ing for nuptials Wliting in~maniaige Vplerie Erica Marjoram and Stephen F. McCormick. 'l1le Rev. Douglas Stuart officiated at the evening double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of W.u. and MI-6. Stanley E. Marjoram of Costa Mesa. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Dick McCormick of El Segundo. Escorted to the altar by her father, the bride wore a floor length gown of ivory peau d' aunge and chantilly lace over peau de soie. Her floor length mantill~ flowed above her train of appliqued &ilk illusion. She carried a cascade of c.arnations and roses centered by a gardenia. Matron of honor was Mrs. Robert Watt of Costa M:esa, sister of the bride. She wore a floor length peau de soie gown of deep rose with matching pink lace mantilla headpiece. She carried a bouquet of light pink carna· • Hawa ii tions and roses. Bridesmaids dressed iden· tically in deep rose .gowns were Mis s Susan Harshbarger of Corona del Mar, Miss Darlene Fear of Newport Beach, Mrs, Mike Smith of Corona del Mar and Miss Linda Adams of Phoenix. They carried bou· quets of light pink carna· tion!. L, Serving his brother as best man was M:ichael McCormick of S a n t a Barbara. Ushers were Gary Rodrigue, BW· Ward, J ames McCampbell and M i k e O'Connor. Flower girl ·was Sheri Tellez ot Pasadena, wearing a floor length deep rooe par- ty dress and carrying a light pink basket of pink carna. tions. Ringbearer was Jim· my Watt, the bride's nephew from. Costa Mesa. Organist was Mrs. Alice Allen. A reception took place after the ceremony fu the Palisades restaurant. Catholic Church Setting For Double Ring Rites The bride graduated from high schooa in South Africa and is a graduate of Orange C.oast Cbllege and California state College at Fullerton. She affiliated with Zeta Phi Lambda sorority. Her husband is a graduate of Taft High School and San Diego State College where he affiliated wit.ti Alpha Tau Omega. He received his masters degree from the University of Sout h ern California where he is cur- rently enrolled in a PhD program in mathematiC6. The wedding of Kathleen Susan Dunne and Allan Lee Abati in St. Anne's Catholic Church, Seal Beach, was solemnized by the Rev. John J. Healy of San P'rancisco, cousin of the bride. The double ring nuptial mass ceremony linked in marriage the daughter of Mr. iand Mrs. Thomas E. Dunne of Huntington Beach and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Abati of Cypress. MRS. ALLAN LEE ABATI Seil a .. ch Home Nuptials Planned Making wedding plans are Stephanie Gilgoff and Rich* ard Melville Morris, both of San Diego. Morris. the son ol Mrs. Harold R. Morris of New- port Beach and the late Dr. Morris, is attending Mesa College and has graduated !fom Redlands Higb School. He has served three years wlttl the U.S. Anny in Ger· many. His fiancee Js a graduate of Mary Washington CoUege of the University of Vlr· glnia , where she majored in English. The daughter of Mrs. Leon GUgoff of FJir· [ax, Va , and the late Mr. Gilgoff it a' teacher with the San Diego city schools. 'Mle couple plan a Decem· btr wedding. STE PHANflE GI LOOFF S.n DI~ Weddln9 Jim and Tommy Dunne, brothers of the bride, served as altar boys. The bride, a third genera· lion Californian, was given in marriage by her father. She selected a floor length old·fashioned g o w n of organza over peau de soie trimmed in lace. Her floor length veil of silk illusion cascaded from a sweetheart bow, and her grandmother's garden bouquet of roses, carnations and d ais i e 1 rested on a mother of pearl prayer book carried by her mother 25 years ago. Attending the bride were her two sisters, Marleen Dunne of San Francisco as maid of honor and Denise Dunne of Huntington Beach, bridesmaid. The Misses Donna Lee and Maureen O'Callagban, cousins of the bride, served as flower girls. The at; tend:ants ~re gowned in periwinkle blue o r g a n z a over peau de sole. The white lace trim was repeated in head pieces and they car- ried white baskets filled with roses, carnations and daisies . The bridegroom asked hll brother John AbaU to serve as best man and seating guests was Frank Gutierrez of Long Beach. A buffet luncheon was served to 100 guest during a reception in the Meadowlark Country Club. Miss Jeannine Farrar of Long Beach assisted with the guest book and Miss Debbie Diehl of Seal Beach was at the gilt table. Special guest was Mrs. Denis C. O'Connor of San Francisco, the bride's grandlnother. The bride is .a graduate of Marina High School and will be graduated in January from Calllornia State Col- lege at Long Beach, where she is a French, major. Her husband is an alumnus of Banning High School -and is a graduate of CSCLB where he ls working toward his masters degree in biology. After a northern catifomia honeymoon the ne.wlyweds wW reside in Sea.I Beach. After a wedding trip to Hawaii the newlyweds w 11 1 reside i'n Long Beach. PAMElA LAMPERT 1'o Wed Betrothal Revealed By Couple Mr. and Mrs, Robert Wil· liam Lampert of Santa Ana announce the engagement of their daughter, Pamela Jean Lampert to R onald Carl Brostedt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Bernard Brostedt of Newport Beach. The bride-to-be is a grad· uate of Tustin Union High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her fiance is a graduate of Newport Har~ bor lllgb School and attend• ed Calilornia State Poly• technic College at Pomona. He has just completed. his military service ln the U.S. Anny. September wedding plans have been made. Weddings, Troths Pilot's Deadlines To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy pboto- grapbs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart• ment prior to or within one week alter the wedding. For engagement announcements II lJ suggested that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy p I c t u r e, be submitted early, U the betrothal annollllCl\o ment and wedding ~ta are six weeks or Jes1 apart, only the wedl!ing photo will be a .. cepted. To help fill requirements on both wod· ding and engagement stories, forms are avail· able in all ol the DAILY PILOT oUicM. Further questions will be answe...i by Social Notes stall mt!lllbers at M.2-432lj r t94-94e8. -----------·~---- 11 DAILY PILOT Horoscope Cancer : Act ion Based on Rumor FRIDAY AUGUST 16 By SYDNEY OMARR 22): ·Good lunar as Peet .to- day coincides with com· munlcation from one at a distance. Be open to chance for greater edu ca tion . 1'The wise man controls Enlarge horizons . Check his destiny. . .Astrology s ummer study , op- points the way ·" par.t4nities. , ARIES <March 1t-Aprll SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 19): Patiell<.'f: is your ally. 21 ):' Avoid overexertion. Temut.ation is to act on im· Stress moderation. Some ,,ul.se -overcome lt. Study· around you appear ex- metbods. procedures. Ac· travagant, impatient. Don 't cent on dealing w 1 t h compound er ror. Heed your relatives, visits. Call or own counsel. Improve .rela· message cbangll!s tempo of · lions wttb neighbors, co- day. workers. TAURUS (April W.May SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Tl· 20): Accent on money, Dae._ 21):. EmpbaSI~ . on possessions. Profitable idea public relatian.s, advert1s1n g. could come to tight. Be will· lm~t t~at you make ing to experiment. Keynote your intentions c 1 e a r . is gain. Be aware of assets, Consult expe~ . .then resources. Genuine bargain follow advice lfl intelligent Ls available -look. manner. Be IW'fl of legal Cos ta Mesa Librar y 'Do lls Up' Ex hibit Costa Mesa Ubrary will be "all dolled up" the month of August. Part of the doll collection owned by Mrs. Robert Haizlip of Fluntington Beach will be exhibited. The collection has won many blue ribbon1 at fairs all over the county. Some of the dolls featured will be Applehead, whose face and hands are real dried apples; Hickory Nut Head, whose nose is the little point on the nut; Dough Head, whose head is real bread dough mixed with glue. · Others are an early American doll with wired hinges for bend· Ing, popular during covered wagon days; a clothes pin doll, whose arms are split clothes pins of the old·fashioned variety, and a Dres- den draped figure which looks like papier mache but is instead real cloth which has been sprayed. Also shown will be a real Bisque Head doll and a China Head doll which is an antique "Ginnie June" doll. Not only is it rare but its painted blond hair makes it even more. ~usu.al. . One doll is dressed in a copy of the onglnal "Abee blue gown" only in pink . Other dolls have their own dolls. One is mac\e of a husk of corn. Mr . and Mrs. Santa will be seen in the library during the holi· day season alone with more dolls from Mrs. Haizlip'1 collection. , From Page 13 • • • Groups Make Music ' Myrle Barber. Secretaries and Norman E gli , treasurer; Eastbluff, the Mmes. John T. Harding, chairman; Nicholaa Kfaury. vice chairman; Thomas T. Rousselot and David Ji. Dull. secretaries and Carl Mullen J r . , parliamen· tarian; the Highlanders, the Mmes. Alan V. Andrews, chairman; John C. Wyman. vice chairman; Ch a r I e s Findlay. secretary a n d Ralph Conn, treasurer. Others are Laguna PhUhannoflic, the Mmes. M. Paul Stiker, c b a lrm an ; Fred Hllpert, and C. R. Payne, vice chairmen; JollJI H. Lowry, tf'easurer ; Frederick J. Richman and Sidney F. Ma s hbir. secretaries; Udo Friends of the Philhannonlc. the Mmes. Joseph M. Ferguson, chairman; Herman R , Johnson, secretary, a n d Kenneth Snoke. treasurer; Lido Isle Working Oom· miUee , the Mmes. Robe-:/: Vordale, chairman: Dana Latham, ca-chairman: John Scruggs and John Farrer. secretaries, and Richard Mmes . William T. Campbell. chairman; Richard JohmDn and Thomas Doyle, vice chairmen: Jule C. Marshall, seeretary; Douglas W. Burgess. treuurer, and Curtis Heaton, parllamen· tarian; Newport Shores, the Mmes . Ocee Ritch , chairman ; Robert McGinley, and George Gl,ss, vice chairmen: In addition· are Huntington HarboW" Philharmanic Com· mittee. Board of Directors, the Mmes. C. Robert Hub- bard, chairman; D a 11 as McClure. treasurer. Moran Ill, vice chairman: Also are Mesa Verde , the James Reid, secretarr. and Francia M1rlmon, treasurer : Upper B a y Associates. the M m e i • Joseph S. Pike J r . • chairman ; Robt rt S. Leith, vice chairman; R a I p b Deaver 8'1d Robert B • Smith, secretaries, and C. T. Mc.Kinnie, treasurer. George Schlagel, secrttary; iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ahop at home fo r custom reupholaterinq aave 20 % on fabrics • •• GEMINI (May 21.June ground. 20 ); Stress op bow you look, CAPR~CORN . (Dec .. 22· '-----------------------------~ your personality. Be direct,. J•n. 19): Day when minor Robert ·Kerr, treasurer and Jack Edgerton, parliamen· tarian: Admiralty Group, the Mmes. Arthur Knox , president; Charles Allen, vice president; J a m e s Bentson, secretary and Stanley Smith, treasurer; Islander Group, the Mmes. William Ekberg, president; J . L. Masan, vlce ·president; Chris Conway, secretary and , George T. Hers h treasurer; Marina Graup, the Mmes. Jack Swain, president; William Shubin, vice president; K e n n e t h Saunders,.secretary; Arthur de Heras, treasurer and Stephen Dikeman . parliamentarian. 3.99 lo 6.99 ,.... -.,....,. fl.dent Encourage new chores may, setm to multi· con · . n ply. Maintain steady pace. con~c~s . Fint f 0 r e ~ Be aware of details. Check te~ta1~ng at. ~ome. Yo fine print. 'Don'.t overlook shine. m familiar •~r· the ob vl ou 11. Eccentric roun~mgs. Day for ma.king friend should be humared. special requests. AQUARtuS. (Jan. 20-Feb. CANCER (June 21.July· 18): Greater freedom of 22 ): Much of what occurs thought, action indicated. today could be ckluded in Day for changes -be mystery. Means many Ac· creatiVe .·Per&onal tions are based on r umor· rilagnetism SGatS. People Not wise to commit youne~ are attlllcted . to yoo, and until complete story .1s element af I u c k rides by a vailable. Best to remain tn your side. background. PISCES (Feb. 19-March LEO (JuJy 23-Aug. 22): 20): AttentiOn centers Accent on social activity; be around home, need far with ·those who share your security. DJscussion con· interests. Be aware o{ your cerning residence, passible O\vn worth. You may be ask· change in sµrraundings is ed to tackJe special assign· indicated. Be considerate menl Be agreeable, but be tow.an!. family member. sure to receive credit. IF TODAY JS YOUR Stewardesses Ea rn Wings Having completed 1 l x weeks or classroom and in· ll,lght ll>aining at TWA's training center in Kansas City, Mo: ~ Misa Jac- queline Smith and Miss Cheryl Bellinfante, both of Costa Mesa. . Miss Smith is l h e daughter of Mr. and Mn;. John E. Smith and Miss Bellinf<ante's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Bellinfante. . Mare are Irvine Terrace Philharmonic Associatl!s, ·Mrs. Lloyd L. Aubert . chairman; Miss . M a r y Graham and Mrs. Fredrick Prescott, vice ... chairmen: the Mmes . Thamas Allinson and George F arm er . secretaries, and Robert P. Miller. treasurer; Irvine T e r r a c e Philharmonic Group, the Mmes. Allen Katz, chairmian; L I o y d G. reg a r y : co-chairman: Robll!rt Hinrichs and John oqr owa l andeD ·New Caatle pebdl of ~ 55% cotton and 45% linen. H~. noted with Scotchqord® brand £abric protector. 8 patteJ'Tll, 31 colon to choose from. reqular!y 6.00 yd, .. ,, ,, ....... , "" yd. lookinq rayon and cotton Weav9 in nine wondorlul _. and thirty-eiohl lmblcn colon , nqular!y 4.99-8.99 yd. t.IM.• yd. cal your -Moy Co and s .i.e..... tor c:oneultanl will brlnq you aample1 of thes. 1ala .fabde1 . Thtre'1 no charqe. tnay eo CUiiom fabrie1 11 M .A.Y co may co 1out.h coalt. plaza, 1an clie10 freeway at bristol. costa mesa; 546-9321, 675-3411-shop mon. thru sat. 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): BIRTHDAY you are a com· Review ambitions. Know bination of ian introspective when to start, when to and autgoing personality. finUh . Means sharpen sense Often you cont r ~di ct of timing. Individual with yourself. You .are curious authority takes a liking to about life and would make a you. Be alert ta opportunity. fine writer. Social life im· Jacqueline will ~ serving passengers on board TWA 's domestic flights from Ken· nedy International Airport while the other Mesan will bt flying out of Los Angeles International. ~LYING HIGH J,!cqueline Smith IN THE SKY Crimp, secretaries. and l -~-c_h_•r_y_1_a_._1_11_n_l•_•_•_•~~~R_i_ch_ar~d_C_•_r_ne_u_,_tr_•_•_•_ur_•~'· !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ LIBRA (Sept. 23 • Oct. prove&. The Tee Tattler Surgery Bene/ ited Award winning Eta Alpha begin .at 7:30 p.m. Assisting chapter of Epsilon Sigma her will be Mrs. 'Fred Ken· Alpha sorority is making a yon, soc i a 1 and rushing big splash in the Dennis Cot· chairman. IRVIMI COAST noir surgical fund with its Eta Alpha c h a p t e r benll!fit swim party and box garnered first place for social scheduled for Satur-out.standing chapter 1 1 MoiT ••t• _ c11u "· ,11, M""''· day, Aug. 17. years and older, arid first J f'rofM ~'-In, ,,, Jo11n o. Jolln'°". The fund-raiser in the place for philanthropic ac· ODD HOLIS -Cla11 A. 1ne Mm11. Wiiiiam Hobie!,,, J.11'11 IC.111 Win< terburn, :UI Ed N1wl11!d, :U\41! l1rt MeHu1h, ltobe,, LlmKIHlr. l!!llon H11i.tt, Great L!fur, 3'1 Clau 8 , l~I Mmtl. J1111 Cowlff, lJ\11; Htba~ Er1dl&1111, Jo-h $t&mba119h, UV11 W. It. Mlr1m•, 3'1'11 Jtm11 Taylor, l11'>1 Clau C, tht MfM1. DOI' Al'lderi.on, lS; Gtorwt Hulk. Tom HtnOtrllOfl, E~ MorrlL H. J, Sw1ni.on, J11 Clau O, I~ Mma. lltldltrd Ntilo!I. .U; ~rl 9,.,,1, .lS1>11 Geal'lt Sl1$allll. M; l'rltd Mwttr, 17,,.u ltrt ltoettl"'er. Johll Htmel, 1t11pti l uldltr, 31. U ; HDIS191'1> Mirto Anidi, Miu 0.MI h f Mr 0 t t ti ·u ' t "ts lat Li1111, Mr•. Gr"' Lflur. 13; c1n1 8, ome o s. o VI e a 1 s e con· the Mmes. E. 01c1< e1cit11m. E•lek.on. Ryssman, president. will vention in Sacramento. 13; 1tldl1rd P19f9r, H1rrv BroWl'I. T. ;;;;;;:;;;;::;::;;;;;;;:;;::;:;;::;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;::;;;:;;;;::;::;:;;::;;:;;::;::; w. L1tlln, 111 Clln c , fl'll NvM1. e1r111 Gu.tf::t1" 1•1 km 1Ct~e1, ll1 Hin- de,._, • .,.,..,, Mrron ~h1w1rd •. 11; CllH O. t~e Mm••· H1r1wlnt11, M111r. 1llc~1rd Nellon, 101 Nm1I•-·, ltobert H1rtle1, Jehn J1cobl, f , ~llSA Vl lt09 , ClllU CltOSS -Cltll A, IM MIMS, Wl!ll1m Lt1f'ltr, lt\'U Nnl G1rw, 33; Llfur, J IM ltld\ey, 3A1 ci.u •• Miii con..... FraMlln. llh Mri. Cowles, :iavu Mr1. lnll1 Tarr. M.,. Rotll!rt MCICerult. 311 Clan c,"" Mma. J. l.. Pov11, 27"1; Swan'°"' Sam Howtrd, Rao.rt WHd. 111 ci.n o. ""' Mm11. llo.t .t.rmilront, lO; 81<1 H111wlt1ktl, 31; O. M. Hummel, 311111 llO'I' E. Smllt., Rotollln;iltl", 32. LO'# NIT -A fl11ht, fl'll.Mmu. W. .A. Ol\tnOl'I, 1$; ;!otin Vlffurtti,· 1'1 W!Mlam Entrlk'"" ErnHt GJl1, JJ; 9 Fiit h!, h Mrnu. Jo._,,. ltnlr.1, Wllll1m Adtms. C.tl ~ 15; John ,DIW1111, 7'ij I'll.It ,0 ltS -A .,Uthl, fflt Mm11. Mlcll11d W-tc11. 3M; P1ul StlClltl"mln. ltl'l1 O.Jm1r l't•mn. lt.,11111111 Dtrb'I', 3'1 • FHtht, TM Mfnri. M1r1r. Good'l'Hr, n ; Gill, Wlltllrt .... llck, 3'1 Jolln Ad1ins., Jli C "Jlthl, ltle Mmes. L .. ttr OJMo-. )""; H1r1"1' WHtl1m1, JI; 1(11111 HMJ, f . Fr1nc1Kanl, TllOo tr>11 L1•M. .Hl'I. ..J:!>.- MOVADO 'Thia facll! looldni; out at you belonp to ane af the most unique watchet Movado has ever presented. But the beauty of thia watch tsn't only skin deep, Deep down Inside it thert beats a proud and ste•d.Y t}eart, the pro- duc t of foo.r renerations of Swlu watchmaklng. The Movado Museum pitce Tlmeplect in 14.K yellow 01· \1-'hltf' r aid 1175. L&dJe1 1lze $12S. CHARL ES H. BARR • SPECIALS! Discontinued Lines of Eclwarcls Gerllerich & Weller FOOTWEAR 251: 50°'0 REDUCTIONS! Speclal Group of Knee Sox .... 1.50 '2.00 221 •• 17th St. ,.. ____ ,.._ WE TURN YOUR HEAD with a qu ick flip and the Instant color of ' ,ROUX lMf 7Sc PLUS SHAMPOO (M•n. ''"" thu,.,l $2 J5 AND SIT (A,... I ,.m, SUOJ Frl.·S•t.-Sun. -·-··-········-······· .. ·········--······· $3.00 Cleverfingenshapeyournewdo.,, and • clever Roux Fanci-full colors it while we set your hair! Fanci-fu]l needs no peroxide, no after· rinse. It •hampooe out when you want. And it colors gray hair, refreshes dull hair, tones blea ched hair. Unbelievable1 It sounds so, but see inr is believing, eo -come-! No charge for consultation, of course. COSTA llUA, CAl,IP, ,,, •. 1rtll ltreil Mnfllr Ctrttlr --conA ...... CAUP. not H•~ II~. 1(-Mlrl •••• ' ·--NIWNIT IU.CK. CAUi, MUNTAIM YAWT1 CAI.I'- con• MUA..C.WP. ,.. w. lttll , • ..., ·--l•NTA ANA. CALllll. UMtA ANA. CALIP. ,.,. Wblmlnllw ztn ~ lf4lrvffw ""'"' Ctntw lflll"ll• (tfltw "'*" .ii-• ..... Qt.Jilt -IMl,CALl'- uu w, Cltl'"'"' ""'°"' m.u.u ._ ........ ""°I'°'"" ................ ~ .................. ""'···========,.,.....,========== .... ====================•.========"""'~ \ ----------·----- • • • • ' .. .,,......-~~ -· • ' •• • • lone/ Memories of GOP Whir/wine/ I "'~ (Coast Women Recall ·Miami . ' By KAY LARSON ! OI ltlt 0.llY Plllf lkitf ...... .l'hrillinl ••• a .great e:r:· pe.rience • • , wundertul hl!!IPl!lt!ley ••• ~· 11 111e Republican Cilveation aa teen In the f<fil, inemoriea of exht11.1sted. ~ 11110 exdted, !larboriles w!; have just .,rived home Crom their Grand 0 1 d Plfty'a crowning event. "Miami just really rolled out the red oarpet for us," marveled ltfn, Jack ~·n•. Jooc-4m• P8<V WiilnaD.. "Even tbe tui drl'Vers Did • wnn ami1e .aOa a good word. I have never 1een 1ucb bospitali· ty." She W.aa amazed at the "rriflc )ob of 'plaming. "All the arrangements w e r e worked out W perfection. Each fiessi.on started right on time, a shuttle bus service escorted us from our hotels right to the coo- vention's door. and there were even hosts to help us oat.ch cabs." She termed the whole week, 11very successful.0 All actommodations were cool mid comfortable, even though Mia.mi showed off aome of its warmea:t weather. "Every now and then the clouds would gather and it would start to pour." she recalled. "You would juJt staJ)d under cover and in 10 minutes it would be all over. Then you cOuld be on your way again." The glittering evening of the N a ti o n a l Committee Gala Ball was the -peak of social ei:citement for Mr. am Mrs. Charles Thomas ot Orona del Mar. ''The ·gala was a terrific success and limply lovely," rec a 11 e d Mn:. 'lbomas, whose bus· band.is oo the Joint Finance and Nciiooal Committee and a former Secretary of the Navy. "Everyone was beautiful· ly dressed -in short gowns -and most men wore black tie . It was a gay, happy crowd. "The deoorations were rJtrilcing. At each place was Marilyn Lewis Weds • In Double Ring Rite -j,.,11yn Lewll and Robut E?Jeffrie1 were marr~d in a aouble rbll ceremony. The .~v. Robert Vidal officiated 1t the afternoon rite in st. Bonaventure C a t b o l l c Church in Huntin1ton Beach. Parents of tht bride are Mr. and Mr1. John F. Lewis of Huntington Beach. The bridegroom 11 the IOll of Mr. and Mr1. Robert E . Jeffries of Midlothian, m. who came to California for th e ceremony. Escorted to the altar by hei' father, the bride wore a flMr length gown of lace with scalloped neckllDe and Ione sleeves. Her three. tieced illu.sion veil was at- tached to a pearl and lace crown. She carried a bou- quet of cucading white roses centered by an orchid. Maid of honor was Mias Judy Hoops of Huntington Beach. Matron of bonOI" was the bride's sister, Mrs. David ToWson of Huntington Beach. The attendanll were gowned in yellow cotton with floor length skirt. and srilall hat.I of bows with lilies· of -the ·valley in be- tween. They carried colonial botiquets of carnations. . MRS. JEFFRIES Cathollc. Ceremony Bridesmaids i n c l u d e d Miss Susan Lewis and Miss Kathleen I.iewls, sisters of the bride. Miss v I c k y the bride's home after the Oo?'cey. MJss M a r i c, e · ceremOny. Alsi1Ung were Recupido and Miss Karen Mrs. Martin Van Wyck of Recupldo, all from Hun-Huntington Beach and Mrs. tinrton Beach. Bridesmaids -G 11 G r o s 1 m a .n o f wue attired in blue frocks. Westminster. Miss Annette Lewis of Th~ bride is a r:raduate of HUntington Beach, another Marina High School. Her sister, wa1 flower girl wear-husband is an alumnus of in( a floor length yellow Bremen High School in drt1s with white daisy tdm Midlothian. Aftv a wedding 4nd carrying a colonial bou-trip tci catifomia City the qutt of carnations. newlyweds will reside in Jack Clyne of Camp Huntington Beach. Pendleton was asked to be Special guests at ·the wed· best man. Ushering guests ding in additien to the ta . tbeir places were bridegroom's parents were Tolli!on, Curtis Fatheree, hil aist.er and brother, Bud Drake, Larry Stovell, Barbara and Ricky Jeffries, and LeRoy Brack, all of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mor· Long Beach and Richard rison and sons from Santa Jeffries of Illinoi.J. G 11 Clara and Mr. and Mrs. Doicey WU ringbearer. Richard Darval from San A reception took place in Diego. a hollowed out cantaloupe filled with fruit and toPped by a sin&le c~dle, so that lltUe lights danced all over the room. It was very al· tractive. "We saw the Rockefellers at llhe cocktail party and the :teagans at dinner, and of course we were thrilled to greet again an our friends from Washington, D. C." The Thomases f)so met Harborltes Judge and Mrs. Thurmond Clarke, Keith and Linda Gade and Laguna delegate Ed Mills during the week, while Udo Islander Mrs. John Davies ac- companied Mrs. Scruggs. "It was terribly e:r.citing,'' cootinued Mrs. T h o m a s . "We stayed at the head· quarters hotel, and the press WEIS constantly interviewing in the lobby. They had cor· nered Nixon, Rockefeller and other dignttaries and the bright ligh'ls w e r e everywhere. '"Ours wa:: ttle box Mxt to the Nixons, so when Pat and the girls -.,d D a v i d Eisenhower came tne last day we met them. There was quite a time with the tee:ret eervice checking over everyone in Ile vicinity. Bilty Graham lllso at with the Ni:r.oris before he gave the final benediction, so I coogratulated him on hia fine WOJ.k.." '!be pre11 oo the floor looked like men from Man WILth their ADtemae 'atick- ine' from their heeds, com- mented Mra. Thomas. When Ni:r.on entered the crush was so bid that one com· mentatOI" was knocked down md arose fumk>g. Everyone on the floor car- tainbleau Hotel's G r 1 n d Ballroom, paoeled In white and fold, to view the V6Y latest creations from Saks Fifth Avenue. Vocalist Anita Bryan( provided delightful en.tertaimne:nt accompanied by Lester Lavine's orchestra. 'Mle Host Com- mittee from Florida sponsored the afternoon. The following day Mrs . Mary Brooks, as sis tan t chairman of tbe National Committee, reciprocated for the Sunday brunch given in her honor by spon50ri.DC a leading Ladies B r u 11 c h, honoring I ad I e s of the press. Such guests as Ivy Baker Priest sat m a panel moderated by Lawrence Spivak. Mrs. Scruggs ca.me home with her hands laden with samples and her thoughts packed with reminiscences. Though exhaustion had set in long ago ("l was con- vinced I'd never get enough sleep again,'' laughed Mrs. THomas) the two women were sWI practically danc· ing with the excitement yet to come.for all Republicans. ,P AAsl91tS ~t-, Newport ~HOE REPAIR SPECIAU:· FRIDAY & SATURDA'Y ried 00 1fle aura of goodwill, W 0 m e n I$ acC<ll'diog to Mrs. Scruggs. "Everyooe ...... kind -toe pieces there was no ri'r'lil'y, even d t I t though the PtoPI• in the next a n 0 e p a e S bo:r. were for Rockefeller -LONG WEAl'tlNG and they knew I wun't. As a PRIME LEATHEft matter of fact, theirs was a R I 5 O •·u-'ti I Of. · U"C.....a pos1 oo o wave my NiJ:on paste!' from, so they 1 2 7 &aid, 'Sure, come on over.'" , Women were well~ared 1--------- for in tbe "lulls" before sessions. Fashion mows and SPECIAL brunches appeared prac-R • 00 ~-" -·~ ., .... 1110..:CLUY aruuuu evtty e<rner. Leading rure1 like Saks Fif. Men Is th Avenue and Jordan MIHh setit out 1beir top H A L f J 2 7 models lo plll'8de tile newest • in fall fashtoni evecy mom· S O L·E 5 ing, 1erving or-juice, '----· ---..., rolls a>d coffee to hungry 1- audiiences. On M o n d a y Governor Claude Kirk of F1crida join· ed the wcmen for a break- fast at ta\)lea decorated with the tiny band-tied orange bushes .that became one of the aymbolJ of the conven- tion for Mia. Scrugg1. ~Y m elerant falhion luncbeon, Fame and Fantasy, brought ltyle-con· 1clous women to the Foo· Sales Aids Scholarship Looking ahead to grad••· tion, 1989, are members of Las P'lort1.Women's Club of Huntington Be.ach. Tbe tirlt fund-rala:ing ven- ture for the recently formed club will be a rummage sale taking place between 9 a.m . and 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 17, in the Odd Fello't'l's H&ll, 231 Maln St. Ladies' DOwels and Robinson'• Heel Lifts ,.,. 1.50 1.00 SERVICE WHILE YOU WAIT OR SHOP. MAIL. OftD!RS PROMPT\.Y PTLLEO • USE YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT ~ ROBJNSON 11i NEWPOftT CENTER ,. ASH I OH ISLAND PHONE 144-2800 14TH ANNIVERSARY STOREWIDE SALE! PICK ·.A· PAIR COLONIAL SPECIAL . ' -Swivel Rocker This amllin& ''MmtfJ" swivel base rock· • Joob Db a chalr. Reeb and 1wlvel1 and alway1 retuma to carrect poeiUoo. Ptmct matn for nlulnt or 'r.V. vi1win1. !land-rublled maple flnllh with opbolllered ... 1 ......... l'er die Pelr •100°0 C..111 ....... ow.. Hellll Owned · mltll't St.rel 1165 HAAIOlt ILYD: °'*•'"" C.... MN Pll. U a.Sill e llG SAVINGS ON CHAIRS DURING THIS SALE e LAZY-BOY e BEIUWNE RECLINER e LEATHER CILWIS e LOUNGE .cHAlllS e SWIVEL CILUllS. • L..;t-~~~~...:.;...~~~--~~~~-z--~,_.; ......... ;..;,.~~~-"} --------------- •--___ F ____ -·---------;-----·----~ ' • .oold, plucky shoes for haberdashery looks Ibis is the hoberduliety loolc ••• cowin lo the brop 111~ jwi ".bold and spirited. Spiuce, ioung !hoes, dappled with peiforatiOOJ, 'b\>dd.ed"With rustic monk llraps or frinpl ""'* the tx>p,Well.Jieeled Oii fum drunlci .. lt'• the look lo_, ,.ith n'bbed st>:icldngc, vests and swingy plaid·lkirts. S.. 'them 'at M'!' Co-·now! a. BUSKINS. )'erfs oncl·triple atnp. Anti'J"ed in datk brown or~g<?\d. 1:1.00 (112) ~. COBBIE. ~sh rite vamp 111d pe<f1. lleddish brown. 16.00 (129)' ~ COBBIE. BudcI.cl ;trap .and top ltiip;;.g. lleddi!h ~.::t:i.oo i129) ' ' . . d. COBBIE. Frinpl, vamp wit!i nail heads. Greyed greon.17.00 (129)' · · 1. COBBIE.-lludde tx>pped with nail heodt. Blade or dulc '";"d. lS!OO (11'. lioulentd lboa 112, wual !hoes 129 - lVJ: · .A. v · c -d,1. ,, ••• . ., M.y ce IMlll •-t !*!•· ... ell• fr-.y 9' llii...,, ._.. w; .146-tJZi~· . . _., .... ~., "'"''"' .... ,.,. 10:00 ........ •:JO ,... :; -: . .. :: ,. . ' ~~ DA!LV PILOT • ;:.2a Gardeners Thursday, August 15, 1%8 Pour Tea ' South Cou t Gerden Club's club as a past president and -· - .. , board o( directors and tp-program chair man, ••. pointlve ch&J.rmen were Guests a.lSO viewed art ob-DEAR ANN LANDERS: Drunk ·~ honored with a tta hosted by ject.s gathered during Mr. drivers get fined, speeders get fined, ' ~lrs. Ctorge Cun11ingham. and Mrs. Cunnin-gham's six· people who drive Y.r?Jiout a license get 'S e;:: f! :. !!I". ::!' e: ~ "f! ....-;r -I; 'b• 1 -·· --.. . . -. --~-----.~~~·~~~-~--- ' ' Curves Dangerous Night ~wls Entertain The Nlght Owls, Hoot 'n tloller Roe.st branch of NeWJ:?rt Beach will emerge i'_ jmmedlate past president , week stay at the Unlversily fined, but nothing is done about ..• with the assistance of Mrs. of Sou the r n oaurornia's teenage sexpot.I who can't leave each ', George R1wtins., presl.dent. Jdyllwild Summ~r ~hool . other alone long enough to let a fellow \ • During the gather111g m Women attending included drive a car. 18 to greet a well-known into daylight Sunday, Aug.l)=;~~~~;;~~i'l~~I ' I ' • ' • • tbe hillside South Laguna the Mmes, Vera Allen, Jean J·am not a Cl'lll>by old lady. I am 24 home of Mrs. Cunningham, Atkinson, Vernon Gibbs, W. years of age. J Jove my husbanj vcl'y a special tributt was given W. Hamilton,. Tho~a~ Har-niuctt, but I wouldn't dream ol. kissing to Mrs. J. Parley Smith rl~, Dora HUis. W1lliam S. him or running my hands through his marking the termination of Philp, W. A. Schoeppe and hair when he is at the '1'beel. two years of servlce to the Harry L. Thompson. Last nlght we were on the highway -'--'--'-------------------and noticed the car ahead was weav· ing from one side of the rotd to the other. My' husband said, "That guy must be drunk." As we got closer ""'e seW the driver was a boy of about 18. At first it looked as if he were alone in the car. Then anoUler head appeared. Ann, the girl was sitting on the boy's lap kissing his neck. Why is there no lew against this sort of thing' -FUMING thoughtful and considerate. I never recall my husband losing his temper with me, alt.hough 1 am sure I deserv· ed it. The problem is that our darling daughter is married to a man who is so mean a'nd abusive it breaks our hearts to be 8T'Ound them. Our son-in. law takes sadjstic delight in insulting and hurting this poor girl. She keeps a nea. and comrortable hOU6e aod has raised two fine children. Everyone loves her. knocking fortune tellers and calling them f'akers. I can attest to the fact that a tea leaf reader has added years to my life by wtrning me to stay out ot planes, he Ii copters and motorcycles. In the last five years I have lost two fr iends iq_ plane ac- cidents, a cousln in a helicopter crash and my neighbor was killed last week in a motorcycle accldent. If it hadn't been for the fortune teller I hC)Ve have beeo wili1 them. -SIGN OF THE SAPPRIRE entertainer IJ'Qm KFI'1 The Other Side of the Day radio program. W-alter J. Daugherty will be honored guest when Roost members, who are 1 participants on the pro- gram, meet at 2 p.m. in the Senior Citizen's Recreation Center. THE LUX URl1X!S NEW 1All9A . THEATRE'' ••• • -.OMI or toa1tt• owt ~ I 71t EAST IALIOA llVD. l ~MllOA KlllRSUU• 17l-4M$"~ Child v. th Parents Qn1r 1 e Qpe11 Nightly 6:45 "9 e NOW-ENDS TUIS. e JULIE • : Sample OUT DEAR FUMING: According to Chief Nicholas Furl1 o( the Illinois Secretary of State'& orace, there IS a law against reckless or negligen& driv- ing. There also Is a Jaw against in- terfering with a driver's ablllty to con- lTol a ve'1lf'!e. Chier Fe1ri said a stag- gering number of accidents occur beeause k' ll Insist on r.i r.laing out at high speed. He asked nte to suggest that kids fr om coatt to coast cool it. So do like the man says. What mystifies us is that she takes this punishMent and never opens her mouth to defend herseU. Yesterday we were there for dinner and he let fly some foul lan·guage tor no reason whatever. What is the matter with him anyway? -WE NEED AN ANSWER DE AR SIGN: Did lhe tea leaf reat:er v.arn you ag: · st takil'g a bath? Thousands of people are Jnjured every year getting lo and out of bathtubs. Daugberty Ls an authority on tropical fish , photography , the archaeology of Mexico and Egypt, and is r e t i red world's tango champion of 1942. He wW demonstrate the form that won him aU- over ballroom championship in 1946 when he dances wi th Miss Elaine Ellsworth of Los Angeles. AS YOU 'LOVE HER ... Singing, _;-c!::~~ _ sharp chedd&r cheeee and sprinkled with nutl. A treat for family a~ gueeb:. WESTCUFF PLAZA 17th & Irvine, Newport Beach Also TOWN & COUNTRY in Orange Open Eves. and Sunday DEAR ANN LANDERS: How long does a mother have to keep 6tlll? Forever? ' My husband is a kind and ge ntle man. We rimed OW' children to ~ DEAR NEED: Your son-lo-law Js obviously Jmmature, 1bort-lu1ed, and he probably feels woefully inadequate for reasons which go a long way back. The real question, however, 11 what's the matter with your daughter? Why does she tolerate thl1 1bameful abuse? Wben 1be 11 able to face up to the an1wer to thl1 que1tlon she nllght find a soluilon. "The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers' booklet, answers some of the most fre- quently asked que1tJon1 about wed- dings. To receive your copy of this comprehensive guide, wrlle to Ann Lander,s, in care of this newspaper, eucloslog a long, self.addressed, stam· ped envelope and 35 cents in coin. Ann Landers wtU be glad to help you wUb your problems. Send them to her in care of the DAll.Y PILOT, enclosing a stamped, self-addressed enve~pe. RefreS'hmenls will be served. Further information may be obtained from the president , Mrs. George L. Stewart, 673-7386. School Duo .JUUi!: ANlll>l!:Wi MADY Tl'Ll!:I> MClCll>I CAl>Cll U14NNING .JAMl:i l'OX ~IE --llCTlll~-111 11111,llllll 181WIWll!' ...... 'I OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK --........... Toy & Hobbfi DON"T FOR&ET -SCHOOL Fashions For School Scheduled SALE TOYS--ffOlllES-STA TIONERS Prices Effective Aug. 15-Aug. 22 SUPPLY SALE COMING SEPT. 1 VALUES 10 !Jc c 1000'S TO CHOOSI NOM PAITY FAYOIS ffWH, ITC. ~UZZl.ES CAIS R.UTES PHONES WHISlUS TOY SALE MA Ci Nm HOINS CANVAS SURFER ' 28x45'" kiflated. Sturdy can· va• ribbed constructlefl with ufety ropes. List 4 99 prloe, $8.00. Only • ~~!erod boat with gli nt 10 ·Inch r1dar light- ~ houH.R<g. 3.29 ~ 15.00. List OMy ~Type Handeuff1 for tt.ose who llked the be1L Strong, forged 1teer, n I c k e r plated .nd highly 2.99 poll1t..ci. 2 kl')'I. Slredlddle Kiddle 4 • klch doll walks, "'"' and even 1it1. He.td tUITI&. arm1 and ltg1 move. 1 97 13.50 value. Only • LIMfl ON1: mM I'll COUPON KENNER SPIROGRAPH OltU $199 AS SEEN ON TV HCi. $4.00 YALUE c..,.. •o11t1 """ -.... ZJ 4 'lrmlistor-set of 2 Walde Talde Range ttp to 21 mlln. Quality Im- ported wa lkle talkh!.talow price! Battery. Fully guarantetd 9 99 Reg. l20.00 Value, • Telherbal I Pole Set by Jolt 9ncludel tetherball A po&. aet l>y Volt. lnciiudel tetherball, cotton rope and 3-pc. 8' &" gatvanilt d 6 66 pote. Reg, 11.00. °"tf • Nosn HASllO Ice Creamer or Sno-Cone Machine C o .. e e with 10 •llclow flavors. Slmple to operate. Now every day II party d•y with ..,,.eo,. 3.94 TNata 0rtty WALT IHSNIT'S • Zorro Play Set C-,ilet1 w r t h building•, flgurc1, men and 1cceuorle1. Houni of play fun at 2.99 a big uvlng1. Reg. $(i l91tning Bug Glo-juice I• a paint th•t gto...,. In the dillrk. Kids e•n paint them•elves or any 1urface. Paint come• with 67C broth. Reg, f1.20. Only Growing Sally 8y Romeo. The doll that "really grow•!'' First, •he'• a 1w1et, yOt1ng thing then •h• change1 Into a ''Little Min." You won't bel ieve your eyMt 3 97 Ll1t price 17.00 Only • •Foam Machine by Wham-t Make• mountain• of bub b I e fnm. Fun for 111 age1. 99C Pleg. 11.21 value. Only LIMIT OHi mM l'H COUPON MATCHBOX CARS 11c1ach HCi. 55c EACH Frisbee Al S... •• TY 8klp1, Curve1, Lota of Funl Reg. 98c ll1t. Boomeran111. o,,, 67c LIMIT ONE ITEM l'H COUPON MATIB. Doll Clothes Sale a.di• •-.......erk lwtl--Sc11twC..-y .., __ .Fim"._ ..... COW0111 YMJO THI• AM. JJ DOLL SALE SAYE s200 Sl.M OH ON ANY DOU r•ICID on• M.tJ c .. ,.. '•"" ""' .... JJ: 1968 PLASnc CAR MODELS BUY ONE-fil ONE FREE! ,.EE MODll M 19UAL YALUI 6 fe.t long, 5 feet tall. M•kt your own mon1ter. Fun for all ag" to bvlld. 7 87 112.00 value. Only • Wild West House W e 11 built. colorful. Strong, tubular framh ea•)" to a ... mbl• and ooveNd wfth a illl'OftD ''"1'· 4 82 Reg. 10.00 • HOf'f'ln HOP BolllCing Ball Ealy gr'9 hand... "'gged wall oon•tructlon, hl·bounce action, relnflat.ble .,. a I 11 e . Large 11'" ch-cum-5.97 fe~noe. Only Your choice. Bike • ecooter • wagon. For the 4.97 little: tot. OMr Footsee TM offlclal TV toy. Ameri- ca'• 1wlnglng 11en••· 67C tton. S1.20 1111111 only Voit Volley Ban Offlclal 1lle and weight - RV4 -15.50 11.t 2.99 only Slightly Imperfect .leweby Kidlles VOW" ~-. Jltft • It ... ;."_;:;"'va1.99C ~! 1.99 DISCOUNTED TOPPER TOYS ::: ... :.:.· :·,~~~ ····· . . 6. '11 JOHNNY TOYMAIU SIT. ..... lht "." ···--·--······ JOHNNY ASTltO Dl'LOllD. Rog. 1;11 $5.00 RS 6.'11 3.47 Three fashion shows will ring in back to school days. Klothes Kraze for School Daze is the thimie of the ShoW"S according to Mrs. Harlan Williams, fashion coordinator. They will take place Aug. 20, 21 and 22 at 2 p.m. at South Coast Plaza. The Pacific Jazz group will provide music for the one-hour shOws which will be presented in the Carousel Court. Hi~light of the shows will be a dance contest to take place daily at the conclusion of the style parade . Youngsters and teens are eligible with prizes to be awarded ea.ch day. F inalists will compete on the third day for a complete· back to school wardrobe . Dancing partners will not be necessary to enter the con· test. Kiwis Select Western Theme 9169. SIZES 2.S i ,,,, 11f...,;..., 11f .... 1".... : Sparkling, joyful.as 9 A.M. sunshine, the jumper goes t.o school in heni.ngbone or plaid ootton wittl its own demure, cuffed s I e e v e blouse. Easy. Printed Pattern 9 1 6 9 : NEW Ohildren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 jumper 1 yard 45- inch; blouse 1 yard 35-inch. SIXTY ·FIVE CENTS In .. ·ins for each pattern - d 15 ce nt& for each pat- .en for lint-class mailing CONTINUOUS SHOW Wed., Tll•n., Frl., Sot., s.11 . Stcirtt 1 p.m. Mo". & 1 .... The Newport B ea c h Chapter of the JGwi C1ub is planning a Western Chuck Wagon Party for Saturday. Aug. 17 at 8 r ~· flusbands and wives w;· er in ttie home of &.. . • nd Mrs. GeQrge Yablonsky in Costa Mesa . =;• ~ir~cl~~ ;.l:J!i J jl [ and opecial handling; Rill weeks or more. Send to WAl.K-IN TllUlllES Marian Martin, The DAILY Ill PILOT, 422, Patrtem Dept., , , .. :i 19¢ Kids Like to 232 Wes t 18th St .. New York, • I 1 I • •'AID 'I 'Ask Andy' N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRE,SS with ZIP, SIZE aJJd STYLE NUMBER. AIR CONDITIONEO Large Sizes The new crop of knit 1uit1 11 in -and ' ~~:'sHALF ·SIZE 1805 Newport Blvd. Costa Meli "'V1 W.C:k """ ef 1M "'-t" Houri: 9:30 to 5:30, Friday lo 9:00 ............ , .. _ ... _ 11 -20 SHOP • 813 JIK11n'1m•ndn tor Adlltlll D!IM Mc8eln • COLOlt "THE MINI-SKIRT MOI" Scott lr1.dy • COLOlt "ROAD HUSTLERS" llK'tfll"""'" Ill" A411\llf\J ; Mi. ,_ e COLOlt ! -----.... fw ""''"~'] a-. .. """" e COl.Otr- "'Tttl 6UDUATI" .j llllwll •I 11• •11~ Ur~ --------....... ~-----------------------------"'~~--------~ -- DAILY PILOT stiff l"llttl 'Oh, Brother%' Valaree How takes a dim view of Michelle Groom's . terest in Norman Reveal in this scene from "Bro- -;l.ber Goose," a comedy to be staged Friday and ;iSi\turday by the teen division of the Costa Mesa :~Civic Playhouse at the Community Center auditor-iuli1; on the Orange County Fai~grounds. ;-w esting1wuse ·Gets -. -~~~CA Tawnt Agency ~ By BOB THOMAS percent of the MCA stOck. _-···.HOLLYWOOD (AP) Trade sources indicated that • -d he announcement 1 a s t the two inen would not be : ~...-eelt that Wfistlnghouse was required to ~Y capital gain ? !'absorbin'g MCA struck· the , tax!!' wbe~ they exchange : :.r.pm industry with thun-their. MCA stock for ~-bolt surprise. . Westinghouse. :«RTbere had been · rumors "stein and Wasserman ~'$11.t ~other prodycing com-didn't make the ~.eaJ just to ......._panies would be taken over get a tax break, says one by giant corporation&, but industry oblierver. "They . ·~CA was expected to con-~ow~ adW1111tages of hav-3.~,ue a:Oing it' alone . MCA, mg a ~ent. company that ~Mlich controls Univ~rsal can provide financing at any . i.;; ~Jcttires · -features and time." ~teVision series -and·Dec-Two other film companies :.; "Records, hM betn in have followed the same ~...Ound financial' ·condition, course. United Artists was :.ith 'profits rof •iS.5· million absorbed by Uie huge 1967, . · California -based financial .. The two mentors_ofMCA-corporation, Transamerica. ~3 ules Stein, :bo:ard Par.amount waS taken over ~:h a· i r fu 8 n ; and ' Lew bY the · congIOmerate, Gulf ~as~erman, ptesident. -and western. ~:~ to be· gO r it -alone Such : affiliations o f f e r ~~Ypes. Before a c q u I r i n g dittinct· advantlages for the : :~verw •StUdi05, -t-b e y film companies, most of ~ eperated MCA. !' a ~t which ·have follow~ in- . _ . .agency . in ar:i independeni dependent courses s 1 n c e ' ~anner. their beginnings. Movie pro--Ti!' But the logic of merging duction requires b e a v y ;... : Mth tbe immense -· 1967 capitalization, and t h e • ~~income: t122.5 million - studios have had to rely on ......;:.:lVe.stingbouse· Electric Corp. financing from 1 e ad in g -;-;~t'i..::WU · everw:helnling. The banks. With a huge cor- -JJ1.ove· offered a great finan. poration standing behind a -'Cial a<tva:ritage to Stein and studio, the financing of films Wassennan, who conttol 41 becomes much easier. Crossword P11zzle ··~,..-..~ ~· ACROSS 45 Made a dttp ~ ; :_}·Leaflet 49 ~r~:n~~~ :~': .. ~.:,, Feminine garment .; .. .,. nanle 50 Bey window :· .. lt Reteptac le 51 Htvt.feetlng .,-·for sacred of security -9 ··)~ utensils 53 Contlltlon: >' ? }4 Gocid rflme Suffix • 'l_S '(oun; . 51 U11usual rlsf ~~ animal of wattr: ~ i6 Rival : z words !i' Comb. fonn 59 Lariat ::-17 Abrasive 60 Ulll1111lt :t 111aterial : buyer •"'.. ll -_;. ahtad: 61 Moldln1 z words '2 Genian ;:r.a-20 Ta,,et city ·~4-21 Anclent 63 Nuisance .or;; ""'r Persian 64 Dep.Vd ·~ Denti~'s 65 Pllt right ':: cone em ~ Z3 Famous DOWN Restauratv ••• "'!5 BPCame .-• -separated -'-26 Eng10ed x v .. In Olympic i _ sport . ..J '2' Disfigure ;..~ Jl Signal of -;.: danger C :)2: Certain ?. WlYI$ 37 Enr,ve111tnt ~ 38 Mae r '--dlscord•t -.• sound i .,. Busy IS .. -: ---2 wonts R •o Av111ncb1 r 42 Mm's nmt t! •3 Assocl1te ~ .-.4 Give ~ " pleasure tt .. !' • ~ • . -; . r; ., ·: H. ' r " r: " ,, ;~ . r-~ i '!. • • • ,. • .. ti ... ~~ 1 Pronoun 2 European! eapftal ) Male Insect 4 Bartender's fitt.islty SEnoJ" Judicially 6 lender , 7 Clamorous I Strong air current 9 The wholt 1111ourit 10 Curlclous . "tseJlll,de 11 Not •0Ylftf U ltan's nlckn•t lJ SurgeC to and" fro 19 Surgical ~nstrument 21 llall-order c1tpartmonl: Abbr. 24 Edge or cloth-Jng article 2S Crown of the head 26 Rages 27 Enthusiasm 28 Treaty '""'' Abbr. 2' Household furnishing Item 30 Quote by way of evidence 32 Legal document D Theologlcal syslem 34 Fit for: Suffix 35 Ftull 1' forwardtd 38 Happy -~ ------...-~---™"'"' --------..-·-------~........--.--..----....-...---------..-----..--._-.....-----~ ----~--•• ------·--·----.....--~ ------------ rhur!day, Au,,st 15, 19611 DAILY PILDr.Jf 'Wild in Streets' Propels Chris Jones Into S(ftrd"hm The ne~t production of Neil Simon's popular com- edy "The Odd Couple" will be given this month by the Santa Ana Community Players. The play opens Aug. 30 for three weekends Of Friday and Saturday production ;t the Players Theater, 1020 W. 8th St, Santa Ana. Ross Corbin is directing the comedy, which stars Allen Baker and Ru ssell Martin in the title roles. Others in the cast are Ray Macinnis, Gary Wallbridge, Frank BaMotta, Rich a rd Fauske, Smidra Clark and Peggy Gabler. Techrrlcal director for the show is Lee Howington, assisted by Doug Hays and Alice Walker. IA..UO "Tht total tfftct is devastating .•• not to bt misstd" -Cecil Smith, Times II AMERICA HURRAH" Nlw-1 ltKll Tlltlltt -NtWP<lrl Mind y,._ -Th11r) th tu Sun. l :lO Wtr111 bit •~bl & Joltfl Linnan Inger NOW SHOWING Exclusive 1st Run Showing HARBOR at ADAMS, COSTA MESA; PHONE 546-3102 I Now Daily-1st Area Ru9~ t8 ACADEMY AvutU9 un:::: .. : WINNER .. -:: "HAii' G ••• ! UM -c;TOR-111!<1 iltc- w e Perf9rm1nces e· · · HIGH]· 1B 1.3.5.7.9.11 p.m. ~ -. a Deily a;i..lll!!ICOLDl~-il-% Steven..,_Ed Begley W JOSrPH E. LEVINE . . (t :-" & MIKE NICHOL.8 l!1 LAWRENCE~ SECOND BIG FEATURE SELMUR PICTURES _, . 'a minute top~. a second to diel · --W111111-COlDI i -1/ tB (8 I tB \ · THE COWMBM. Pl:TUJIES with Alex Cord and Arthur Kennedy f.8 ·~&RIDUll! ~l llMHG~~;;; llF==_=_==_=_=_=_==_=_=_=_==_=_=_======,,=,=Offl== .. =o=,.== .. =====ill~ iiflUJICllfT-llliTll,-.U· ....... i=• "*'ion The lui:urious New D•llv-1 J NM• 111,CE IWARDS Vnfted Artisu '"· 0 •1..-1"" •••• nChatlnHood · 11'1 W. "17ttl, S.11'9 AH JUDY eu.ftll Ha11ar Pi-141•9217 'ROCKING CHAIR" L•ta SMJI UlWUn .... ...,_._ __ .._.__ U11lhnltff frft Parkl119 "'°'*'Of 'T~ S;.ir With ~") 'AIM II ; .·~"'' •. -.. -........ w.. ....... llloert Mllcb• · Peter Fiii: Wu loa"1 -Wort 1ia ., P.WflSIOll ·1ttHll~ I 1¥• Shaw Storts 6:.45 Cont, S1t1Hy fre111 2 p.111. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER HIT -CTOll-MIKI NicHoLI '. Bullfiahts now at BULLRING· BY· THE ·SEA hllday .. "'"' 1 :OO•l:00.5:00-7:00 t:00-11 :00' , ••• ********************************** ROSEMARY'S BABY IVERY EVENING AT ••• 8:00and 10:30 PM I SUND:t.Y WHKDAYS 2:40. 5:15. 1:00 • 1011' SATURDAY 12 :25-2 :55-5:25.a:OO. l 0:10 12: l0·2 :55·5 :20-7 :U·f :10 I OPftOllTI CAL ITATI • @UAL Of!O!fiHJ IMfi'AYllS ltiii#j SpKhil Ml4Al9ht Sltaw SATURDAT ONLT 12·2·4+1·10..12 •.•• lnd Hit •.t HUNTINGTON EVERY EVENING AT ••• 8:00 and 10:00·.PM AT Hl•WAY 39 DRiVE-tN THE GRADUATE· ---------------------------------- -···-----... ----... -------.... ----......... --...................................... ~ ...... --~--~ ..... -----------~ ---·-----------.--- DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • 'Conning' A deceptive game with simplistic appeal lo the un- wary ls under way throughout the state. lt's the campaign to get voters to approve the '1WatsOn Amendment" to limit property taxes for prop. erty-related services to l percent of market value after July 1, 1969. The trap used in thi6 game has other bait. It would reduce by 20 percent .a year the amount of property tues that could be levied for education and welfare. After July I, 1973, no property tax funds could be used for these functions. The voter appeal in this is obvious. The property taxpayer has been carrying more and more tax burden as the federal and state governments haVe pre-empted more and more of the revenues formerly available to county and municipal governments. Property taxpay- ers und_erstandably are seekirig -even demanding - relief .. Hence the attractiveness of the "Watson Amend .. ment." But, alas, it'& all a de1usion. It is also so dangerous _ttJat its passage could produce fiscal chaos in every e<>unty, citY and' hamlet in the state. Items: -The amendment makes no provision for either reducing education and welfare services or providing alternate revenue sources. This could mean a huge boost in both sales and income taxes, with the average property owner paying a far heavier tax bill -via arr other method-than he does now. -Priinary beneficiaries under existing Jaw would be large landholders and owners of com.mercial-indus· trial property. -It would weaken home rule. With schools unable to expand without approval at the state level, the state .would necessatj.ly involve itself ever more deeply in local affairs. The state would have to appeal for more federal aid with controls even farther removed from local government. -The 1 percent property tax limit is equivalent to U.S. W ast,es Its Politically Ta'lented Men When Wendell Willkie lost the 1940 presidential election to F r a n k 1 i n Roosevelt, a great meny Americans (my .. H included) felt It wu •pity for the obvio1.11 public tale.ota of this man to go to waste. A dozen years later, the 1ame was true of Adlai Stevemon, wt en he lost to Eiselilower. Partisan politics aside, most reuonable citizens would agree that both these men were int.elligeot and hig~-Jrincipled figures with a real con· !11butlon to make toward clarifying the irave issues io the world. Yet bofn Wllltie and Stevenson -among others -found themaelvea without a public platform when the electioD1 were <rver. THIS SEEMS A sbort-<ight.ed and shameful squandering of our human resources. More than 20 years ago, I recommended that the Senate of the United States be expanded to include defeated presidential candidates as 1 e n a to r ' • at-lm'ge, who would represent 11ot their states, but their parties, and the interests of the coun- try aa • Vrilole. fbese defeated candidates (as Is done. in muy other nations) could then take their rightful places as the recopized leaders Of their party, with a nati<mal voice and enough power commensunte with 1beir previous pos.itioni as presidential nominees. OVER THE YEARS, 1 have talked Dear Gloomy Gus: There seem to be a lot of people who would like to say to the conventions, along with the young man who seconded the stassen nomination: "Thank you for your kind inattention." -W. G. T1111 katu1'9 ""9dfi ~ """' ""' ....... ,.,. 1'lltM If tlM --· ,... ,...,, "' -.. o ..... , ·-DlllJ P'Ji.1. with both Republican and Democratic friends, who are more conversant with politics than I am, about this proposal. To all of them, it seems simple, sensi· ble and fair -but legislative inertia is so great that it would take a genera- ti.on or more before our system could or would accommodate tttis change. This plan, however, would fill two needs that are lacking at present. The first is for an adequate :sounding board for men like Willkie ood Stevenson, who should not be dependent upon the regular party organization ; and the second is for a group of senators who are not forced to res pond to the sec- tional needs of their states, but can in· troduce and support I e g i s I a t i o n without regard for their special in· terests at home. We desperately need more first-rate tnen in public office, and in public service. We simpl y cannot afford to retire a good man to private life because be is defeated in a presiden· tial contest. lf the Republicans or Democrats think a man is good enoueb to nominate for President, he ought to be good enough to deserve a r;eat, and a voice, in the Congress. Cleaning Fee-a Racket? To the EditlOr: 11 It ~e around Orange County that •p~rtment owner1 .are legally and without resistance picking $20-$35 cleaning f e e s from unsuspecting renters' pockets? We encountered this racket twice in one year while our daughters were attending college in Co*ta Mesa. Lest summer my husband and I were vifitlng our daughters after &&hoot. Before returning to Sacramen· to we decided to clean their apartment !n the Newport Vista Apartments and gel back the $35 cleaning fee they paid. WE DID A FIRST class Job a& "Jrlfied and signed by the apartment D)llD&ger, but were told we had to get the S3S from the owners. Unable timewi&e to mah the trip to Anaheim, I trustingly wrote them. Receiving no .aswer I wrote the second letter, rtPlced.Noen ....... ---•• Geer9e --..., .D<ar S.S.: Ootl do. t U'OWlnr, I tbJot the U· _..i.. -la rNeal'cll Wa-"""1el .,.,... • .mice ""' pilcl<d in ,,,_ IJld -!oolr:, ii II* lht-p<11blom yoo've sot! 'ff• -Abbr and Ann are more 'lridel7 i,-lod. Go ,.1 II lnluble. M"'"L-a.uou,x L•tt.n l!Wn rMMn ,,. --· NonJ19!lY wrl~ "'°"Id Olin.,.., "'11lr mtiut• In :JOO wu~1 or ltss. TIM rlthl fO all!dtnM lelltn lo Ill 1119U or ellmll'Mlht !Fbel 11 r.Mrv«I . .till ltlltr1 mu1t lnclU<M 1lgn11\J,. Md n1'111"8 Mldrtlt. but Mmn wUI be wll!lhtld on r-..est, When we roturned this summer, my husband called the Anaheim owners about the matter, and was curtly told that for $3S he couldn't be boU,ered, and then hung U!l on my husband. THIS GOT J\>1E. Two days cleanin g stove, refrigerator. oven. cupboards, fk>orlJ, and rug, and not worth the owner·s time? t called him. and gave my name. He lt'>ld me he couldn't be botQered, and hung up. At t.h.l.s same Ume we were at. tempting to get the return of a cleS;n· up fee of an apartment our daughter rented this past school year. It was the same maneuver. She was falthfully promised the tee's return by a manager who \Wis insulted when asked for a written contracl TIIE FEE WAS NOT returned after repeated requests by her. My husband threatt1ned public exposure, ind got the lee returned. I found there are no city ordlnaJ"K.'es protecting renter1. We have placed a formal proteR with the Costa Mesa CJ. \y Council and <Jlle! Deputy Jobn Lazur of the Division of Real Estate. ·Are there other renters '° taken who wlJb to join their eomplaint with oun? L!t u1 hear from yuu, care of tbe DAI· LY PILOT. MR. AND MRS. PAUL BUTLER SocrTto the· Voters a $4 tax rate. Most Orange County property taxpayers now pay from '8 to Ill for each $100 o! assessed vjllu,.. tion. The amendment would therefore slash the' revenue yield by more than 50 percent. The effect on county and municipal govemme.n~ and the schools would be cata· strophic, nothing less. Jn these circumstances, it is no wonder that the Orange County Board of Supervisors voted unanimous· ly this week to oppose. the amendment, as .have other county and local governments. And the alarm express~ ed is understandable, as well. Los Angeles County's controversial Assessor Philip E. Watson has done his fellow Californians a great dis- service by sponsoring a measure which could only bene- fit a few who don't need tax relief at the expense of the many who do. 'Poisoning' the Retarded Feed strychnine to the mentally retarded? Gen~ cide? Not at all. Doses so minute as to be harmless have been taken by students in France to boost their learning ability while cramming for examinations. From this clue, a team of specialists from UCI and Fairview State Hos. pita! will move to test six young patients with Metra· zol, a long-known drug which induces learning and memory increases in mice, rats, rabbits and monkeys. Safety in use of the drug is no longer in doubt1 it appears. The experiment at Fairview is believed to be the first of its kind ever tried with human subjects. Chemistry may once more produce a miracle for afflicted lnankind. And if any are alanned by the con- trolled use of poison, let them remember that common table salt is a poison, too, when taken in large enough quantity. I -------~ Agnew Was Only Moderate South Could Swallow Behind the Scenes at Miami Beach WASHINGTON -It is perhaps in· dicative Of the state of mind of the na- tion's opinion makers that an obscure governor of Maryland was regarded as a man of foresight and liberality when he urged Nelson A. Rocke(eller to run for President. But when the same governor shifted for good political cause to Nixon, and foUfld himself "stunned'' by receiving the vice-presidential nomination, there were boots of derision, disbelief and anger. Aside from his obscurity, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew's greatest sin was to adopt views on racial unrest which pro- bably correspond to the overwhelming opinion of the nation. He castigated moderate Negro leaders in Baltimore for not taking action to restrain H. Rap Brown and Stokeley Cannic~ael following rioting in Maryland. He also had the temerity to say, 1n effect, that Resunection City was a pointless blot on Washington's landscape. THESE VIEWS WERE not ex· pressed against a iegregationist background. Agnew won election as governor of Maryland against a white backlash for a Democratic candidate who proclaimed that a man's borne is 'i\ k.'"l ll1ehard Wilson . ,, his castle -keep it that way . He put through the Maryland legislature the first state fair housing law south of the Mason·Dixon line. He tried t o liberalize laws against abortion and adopted othe!' positions favored by liberals. But Agnew "balked on the law and order question. He balked also at being led down the garden path by R o ck e feller's on·again-off.again posture toward the pre s ide n ti a I nomination. \Vhen Agnew looked favorably toward Nixon, the presiden· tial candidate obligingly said on May 16 that he regarded the ?\{aryland g o v e r n o r as vice·presidential material. Agnew was quite frank. He scrid his attitude toward Nixon had been changed by a reaction in this country since the riots which followed the assassination of Martin Luther King. AND SO IT WAS , when everything shook down in Miami Beach, that Agnew was about the only northerner with a fairly moderate record whom the southerners could swallow. The political realities were, as the Rev. Dr. Ralph Abernathy so pungently suggested, that no vice·presidential nominee, even Sen. Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, could take the black curse of£ Nixon . The token revolt, in the n a m e of George Romney, against Nixon's choice was a travesty, and Mayor John Lindsay Of New York would have nothing to do with it. The mayor is farsighted -into 1972, and not tending at the moment toward political ir- regularity. It cannot be demonstrated with any great conviction that Agnew is less qualilied for the vice-presidency than was Nixon when General Eisenhower chose the young California senator in 1952. All the same there was a sense of let-down, not to say disaster, in the selection of Agnew, but it should not be lost sight of also that the choice. of this nonentity brought a sense of relie[ in Republican quarten; who thought Nixon could do worse than an iden- ti.liable liberal. THE LATTER, OF COURSE, in- cluded Sen. Strom Thurmood of South Carolin& an·d Sen. John Tower of Tex- as who played such an important part in bulwarking the South against the m.. cursion of Gov. Rcnald Reagan. One can sigh and say these art the realities of politic&. Hubert Humphrey observed, rather wistfully it seemed, that it aweared Nixon had to make a compromise. So it may be with Humphrey and he was not to be the first to cast a stone. The real question, of course, is not Whether Agnew flip-flopped on the race question, not whether he sup- porU!d Nixon or Rockeleller, not whether the true Nixon emerged in bis compromise with the South, but is Ted Agnew qualified to be president? A few years ago that question would not have been regarded as very pertinent, as it was not pertinent for so many decades before. In the present atmosphere, Nixon will be on the defensive in his choice of Agnew. The Maryland governor has the very difficult assignment of convincing a majority in the nation that Nixon's judgment was not bad. Fashion Today-It's an Explosion A $10,000 necklace of baroque pearls suspending a medallion of black opal surrounded by diamonds sounds like a nice present for, say, lier an· niversary. Actually right now it's for Him, and it's on sale in New York Ci· ty . On the Via Borgognona in Rome they're selling gold or silver anchor chain belts fur women and men. Also cuff links and buttons. They are to be worn with blue corduroys and voile shirts in abstract patterns. He and She can wear matching shirt ruffles, Nehru shirts. turUe and mock- turtle neck sweaters, and s I I k kerchiefs. The coming shirt for bot h sexes, according to the astute Eugenia Sheppard, is made of the finest em· broidered Swiss batiste. "It has a .small standing collar.'' she wri tes, "but not a Nehru and instead of a necktie a pair of diamond buttons just slightly off center.'' Figurez·vous? AT LAST MONTH 'S openings in Paris. the big news was pants for women. The style is catching on like sin in suburbia. Most of the wont.ens· pants, like those of the raddy men, have bell·boltoms. The other New Look in Paris. to rev:ve an ancient cliche, is the Custer style -suede jackets with fringe run- ning down the sides of the sleeves. The American Indian-Buffalo Bill look also is popular with th e klds. 1'he New York Times reports : "Business at Tepee Town ... Is booming." Beads, wampum. buckskin. fringed of course, braids, and forehead bands are mak· ing the scene at most of the summer parties. The style scoop today is as volatile as it's ever been. The Nehru jacket Is ou t In hnute CQuture1 but It's getting a great play on the l()Wtr level. lt seems to be a rule of fashion that when a style appears ln the big department storts -and the discount houses -it immediately I05eS JLs attractiveness fw-the fast.ion.makers. CN'lo Palazzi of Rome. who gave the turtleneck its real start, says: "It iJ dead now.'' TWIGGY, FASHION star ol tho miniskirt and tM boy's haircut, is Jet. ting her hair go and adopting the now Vlelorlan look lD dN!sse&. !Jl• Mag•· •, - l~ Editorial Research --- zine reports "There is a wild and woolly fall on the way.11 New Yqrk im· porters will feature "splendidly shag- gy, richly barbaric embroidered goat· skin jackets straight out of Afghani- stan." The magazine says the gar- ments lack nothing in authenticity but the smell -"they are deodorized on arrival in the U. S." Norman Noren is featuring Atlantic City styles of the Diamond Jim Brady era for the young. Some of the numbers look to be cl06er to the old Cape May. THE BEATLES on July 30 threw open their hippie store -the Apple in fashionable Baker :stxeet -giving away all their stock. Hundreds of peo- ple walked out with everything from flowing oriental robes to inflatable furniture. Paul McCartney intimated that the store was on the verge of going square. He said the giveaway was decided on because "we dldn •t want people to think we had become mercenary." Actually, what is happening in fasllion today is not mocl nor pop nor anclen regime. It's an explosion. But there's money in it, oodles of moola. As a Seventh Avenue banker puts it: "The clothing industry still repmentg one of the few remaining pbases of American business in which an am- bitious man can make ft big and rather quickly." The very latest thing is the man's handbag -or Male Bag, as it is called in the garment district. Mondays Are Most Dangerous Things a columnist might never know if he didn't open his mail : Mondays are not only a bore - they're also dangerous. An insurance company has round that more at· cidents on the job occur on Monday than any other day. The second most dangerous work day Is Fridny. To cut down on the cost of cowboys, Japanese ranchers Jn mmmtainous areas aTe experimenting with sound waves to control their cattle herds. So fa.r the high frequency sounds. which to the human ear resemble U1e echo of church bells, have boon used to lure the cattle to feeding statioDS . But if they don't get fed. the cattle quit responding to the sounds Are you over 40. overweight and related t.o a diabe:lic? Then perhaps you should follow medical urging and take a simple te st for diabetes yourse lf. It is estimated that some 1.6 milUon Americans probably a.re sur. ferlng from undi.agnosed diabetes and by going without IJ'ealmMt may shorten their Uves or rlsk blindnes:s. THE 8001'1 IN women's wigs has been followed by a om ln the men's hairpiece industry. 1..irst year 100,00l balding U .s. men bought toupees or other forms of hirsute craruat adorn· meat. and some 125,<KX> are expected to follow suit this year. Industry sources cliiim lhty make men look younger and restore self-confidenct. Latest gimmick in the trade: Air-con- ditioned hairpieces that don't Itch In hot weather. Quotable notables: "Life is not so bad U you have plenty of luck, a good physique. and not too much im- agination.·· -Chri.atopber Isherwood. Menace on wheels: Some 53.000 persons died in traffic accidents tn this country during 1967, notes the Automobile Legal Association, or about the total number of American lives 1061 ln combat during World War I. SLEEP TlP: Firm mattresses are resUul. but not l! they are too firm. A study found that sleepers on unduly bard mattresses changed posltiona eV«')' eight minutes. compared to a normal turnover r:ate of once every 12 minutes. What Is tbe belt time of year for a dhild lo btgln ~ piODO ioNool? ' WeH, for one reason or another, most parents launch the musical career of their offspring in September, when school opens again. Like clockwOrk: Biologists at Texas A&.M University have found that they can either stop or start plant growth by the use of small quantities of synthesized honnones . It is hoped the discovery mey lead to the develop- ment of bett.er crops and tbe control of plant pests. -----Thursday, August IS, 1968 The: editorial pnge of the Doilfl Pilot feek1 to inform aM stim. ulotc rta<Ur1 by prt.stntlno tMI 1u1w.rpaper'1 opi1lion. and com- mentarJI on toPics of fntert•t and signifioance, b;o providing o forum f or tM t%'prtlrion of ou.r ttadcri' opinions, and bif presenting ~ diverst ~ J>Ohttl of in/armed obHnJtrl olld ipokt"'1<11 an topia of th< doy. Robert N, Weed, Publllbor , - - --------_-4o. ________ _ l Thursday, August 15, 1961 DAILY PILOT Z{ Even Baseball Men L Dave Ups and Dow11s ALL FOR NAUGHT - A Fort Worth, Texas Colt League player gives his all-even 1( it means standing on his bead-to reach third base safely during Ja Wednesday game with Illinois in the Colt League World Series at Riverside. But his efforts were in vain, as the lad was too late to beat the throw. Senators Move 111 NewYanksAreOldYanks When They Play Angels By EARL GUSTK EY 0 1 IM OfllY ~Hot 11111 Nobody confuses the New York Yankees anymore with llie New York Yankees who terrorized the American League for 40 years until their recent demise. But Bill Rigney isn't so aure. ''Gee, you'd think those guys were the Bronx Bombers or sometbing the way they beat us ." the Angel manager quipped late Wednesd ay night. He was reflecting upon the Angels' 5-2 loss to the Yanks. The victory gave the G<rtham nine a sweep of the three game series and a 10-4 edge over the Orange Countians for the season. Angel Slate "M'' lS A11gel1 va W1thlnt1<m 7:55 P.m. KMPC {J~Ut. 1, Ang1l11 Vt WllM"91on 1:ll p.m. kMl'C 1710) New York has always played well in California, and what's even more em· barrassing for the Angels is the fact that the Yanks came into Anaheim Sunday night with a five-game losing sb'eak. The Angels will try the hapless Washin~n Senators toni ght at the Big A. Jim McGlothlin (7-10) faces the Senators' Frank Bertaina (4-ll \. TM.ight is Huntington Beach night at the Stadiwn. Last night's attraction, viewed by 14,104, was bllled as a duel between two American League youngsters, who. say their employers, will be the biggest names in pitching in a few years. For the most part. it was just that. 'J1he Yankees' Stan Bahnsen en· countered no . trouble until the eighth inning when the Angels scored twice after loading the bases with no out.!i . He was lifted in favor of Steve llamilton. The Angel starter. Tom Murphy, wasn't as sharp as he has been bu\ still recorded foW' strong innin1s. He had two men on with two out and had given up two runs .in the fifth when Rigney lifted him. "Murphy was OK. His control was a little off, though. He goes into the .>\rmy for six months Sunday and I think he's trying too hard to get a cou· pie or wins before he goes. His pace seems to have quickened." Rigney cracked up writers in the post game gab session with his discussion of putting Bubba Morton al third base in the ninth inning. He needed a third baseman for the inning and Morton was the only capable body left, what with Oluck Hinton out with a rib separation. "Had Morton ever played third before?" a writer inquired. "I don 't know -I was afraid to ask.'' H•W YORK CALIPOltMtA 1brllrflol 1brlltlll Trfih, U 4 0 0 0 l(lrltHlrldl;, U • 0 O O Gi~.t 40 00P1llln,P 0000 Mft"lle. lb 1 I 0 0 Cottier, Ph I 0 0 0 White, II •OCOF'""51.ss ll!O P"'Uone, cf • 1 1 1 01v111110, d ' I 2 O Collvira, If O O O O illefJOl, rt J O O W.Robinson, rt ? 2 2 I Ml11dler, lb ' O I l(<Ma, ,, 1 0 0 0 Sl"'llnD. lb • 0 2 co~. lb ' 1 1 o illod'!Mr" c l O o Clarl<e , 2tt • O 2 2 Relch1rctt, II I O O 68hn..,n, p l O o 1 K/IClall, 2tt J t I ~ HalTlilton, p 1 O O O Murl>IW, • I O O Wrl•hl, p I 0 f M(FarllM, .., l O O llUrVffl"ltf, p 0 0 0 Lodi, p 0 ' 0 Morf'Oll, If 1 0 0 Tot1b » J 1 I Tol1ll JJ 1 5 I New VOl'lt • COO OD OOll -5 C1llfon'il1 000 DOD ll10 -2 IP H It Ill Sa SO a.~ .. en (W,11·1) 7·1/3 .s 2 2 .s J S.H1mlllon l·lll o o o o J MUn>hY {1.,.(-4) '-2/l 4 2 2 I l WrloM IJJ 0 0 0 0 0 !IUfD!Nler 1/J 1 l l 1 0 lotkl 1-J/J 1 0 0 0 2 P11tln 200001 HBP -Mur,iiy fTttW!l. WP -Wtlthl Ttmt -l :.ll. Atlfr.d1nc:t -14,l!M. UPI, ... ,.... LONGER LEGS NEEDED -Pittsburgh's Maury Wills (30) gets his leg tangled with Giants' Ron Hunt when trying to get over the latter to field an incoming throw from the outfield. Umpire Ed Varga called Hunt safe when the toss to Wills got away. Coach Pean uts Lowry (6) looks on. The Giants went on to score a Z.l verdict in 10 innings. Will s and Hunt were none the worse for wear . ·;:=:......~~~~~~--. Negotiation Impasse PGA-Player Rift Stalls NEW YORK (AP) -The dispute between the Professional Golfers Association and the tournament pro- fessionals appeared to be at an im- passe t.oday, but PGA officials are keeping the door open for further negotiations. The players broke with the PGA earlier this week when they annouoced that they would form ao organization independent of the PGA at the end of existing t.oumament contracts. Th• tour involves $5.6 million. Gardner Dickinson J r., chairman of the Players Tournament Committee, said Wednesday he felt a limit had been reached in negotiatioos. However, Max Elbin, PGA presi- dent, said, "I don't believe the PGA position has been fairly presented to the playms. We would like to appear before a meeting of all the men so that we can present the facts of the case. I don't believe -when the issues a re aired -that the situation i1 ir- reconcilable." The players, though, are showin g no inclination to bend. They are seeking greater control of the tour. Unof. ficiaUy, the players were reported to have told the various sponsors they would compete hi the same tourneys as this year. "The PGA knows what we want and has refused to budge," Dickinson said. ''I honestly wish that we couJd get together, but it doesn't appear poss!· hie. In Washington, William Rogers, at· torney for the PGA, aaid the door is open ·for negotiation. He said his client's position consisted of two points: 1. That the PGA tour must be jointly shared by ttie players and the PGA. SOUTH AFRICAN UPSETS HOGA N MANCHESTER, Mass. CAP) Emilie Burrer. the National Collegiate champion from San Antonio, Tex .. and I.aura Rossouw or Durban, South :\frica, both scored upset victories In tlie 4Ist Ladies Tennis Invitation at Essex Country Club Wednesday. Miss Rossouw, No. 4 in South Africa, jumped to a 3--0 lead en route to a 6-2, 6·2 victory over Patti Hogan of UC!. Miss Burrer scored an 8-6, 6-3 vic- tory over Mrs. Joyce Willia.ms , Great Britain's third ranking player. 2. That the tour must be ad· ministered in a serious, businesslike way. The 16-man PGA executive com- mittee has called an emergency Sports In Brief meeting Friday at the national head· quarters in Palm BeaC'h Gardens, Fla. Tournament sponsors have been sum- moned to a meeting in Houston. Sept . :;.&, Montreal Finally Pays; New $3.7 Pool Opens MONTREAL -Montreal secured its National League baseball franchise Wednesday. Sponsors of the team beat the deadline by more than 24 hours when they turned over a check for $1,120,000 ill United States funds to league presi· dent Warren Giles at a news con- ference here. At the same time. John McHale, a leading baseball figure, was named president and chief executive or the team and Jim Fanning, a close friend Of McHale, was . named general manager. LONG BEACH -America'& newest aqll8tlc apol1a-pubUc recreation faclll· ty, Belmont Plaza Olympic P ool, opens lta doors to the publlc tonight for the first time. A program of 1wlmmlng, dJvtng and water polo exblbltlona wUI publicly dedicate the $3.'7 million faclllty, bullt as part of the City of Long Beach's shoreline development program using tidelands oil funds. There will be no admission charge for the event, which will begin at 7 p.m. BERLIN -East Germany's Roland Matthes clipped four·tenths of a se· cond orr his own world record with a lime or 2:117.5 for the 200 meters backstroke Wednesday in the Leipzig swimming championships, AON, the official East German news agency re!>orted. BOSTON -Tony Conigliaro took hi1 flr1t 11Uve'' batting drtll In months Wednesday, also pitched for about 15 mln.ute1, and came away encoura1ed by both workouts. BALTIMORE -The Baltimore Orioles announced Wednesday that right-hander Roger Nelson is being recalled from Rochester to replace in· jured catcher Andy Etchebarren on the club's roster. Etchebarren h.as been put on the disabled list, with a broken bone in his right hand. He is to undergo surgery Friday. Dodgers Flee Once-friendly Shea Stadium NEW YORK (UPI) -There was a time when the Los Angeles Dodgers looked rocward to invading Shea St.adiwn but today they fled from New York with delight and will not fa ce the Mets again this season. The expansion club completed play with the Dodgers Wednesday night on a winning note by taking a 4-1 decision. , That ended the season's competition with the Mets holdJng an 11-7 edge. The Dodgers had today off to Dodger Slau "'"'~· I ters 1! l'lltiburtih \O :XI 1.m. l(,i 6'1Cl ,liu1 1• ~., 11 Ptllabu•llll J pm KF 11 .. 1 ,liup, I' •r• 11 PUl1buroti • 11.m, kPI 'UI "'"''· 1' "" •1 HOu•~ l'n Pf"!. !" l"'I ,liu1. 20 od0tr1 11 Hou•J°" ::t!I '·"'· 'I "' ,1iu1. 11 lll!rl 11 H0111 on :tJ 1.m. f' UI Angels, Dodgers Are Even Plucked from pages of t*1e random notebook: Next year's Angel-000.ger exhibition series will feature three double no-hit~ ter.s in extra innings for both sides If their 1968 campaigns are any criteria for judgment. At the moment the clubs are floundering dangerously near their league basements and after 119 Wt.I, they boast f?) identical won los1 r e·cords or 53-66. Somewhere out of the outraceon rental fees the ctty of Anaheim receives .for use of the Bit A, you'd lhtnk a few bucks could be 1pared to WHITE WASH GLINN WHITt dye the Infield grass which wa s chew~ ed up and killed ln lhe recent Ram. New Orleans football game. The dumps or brown marring tb lnfteld make the jobit look llke • 1econd-rate product. A touch of irony-the Japanese IJt~ tie League World Series entry wai special guest Of the Angels at We$ nesday night's game witil t h~f Yankees. . It coincidentally happened to be the 23rd anniversary of the dropping of aJl a i,mic bomb on the J apanese clty Of N8gasaki, a bombing which brought an immediate close to World War u .. · A recent earthquake Jb Me:ilco caij shook the bulldlng of Mex.lean Olympic track coordinator BUI Easton 10 bar• that il knocked the water out of tbeti bath tub. ' Orange County Raceway general manager Mike Jones was nourishinl his ulcers Monday night after seeln& his picture in the DA ILY PlLOT1 where a fellow depicted with him w .. identified as "an aide." The "aldti" turned out to be the chairman of th' board fct" the Raceway. Anyone with gut1 enough to Uve la Phoenix deserves an extra tax e(: emption. And anyone foollah enoa«b tt drive 1,000 mlle1 to 1ee Carlabt• Cavernt ougb& kl have bis bead fii. a mined. U.S. ·Tabbed Over Santana & Co. regroup their forces before lnvadlng Pittsburgh for Friday's start of a three-game series. Roolcl.e Jerry Koosman, who opened the season with a victory over the Dodgers at Los Angeles, recorded his 16~h win by beating them Wednesday. Mexico is going all out for the O~ pies .. , license plates f r o ii throughout the 29 provinces all feattri the Olympjc rings, as do 1ucb c• mercial products as Jello, ~ak!ut cereal and even 'the tourist car imped stick.en they plait.er all over your _. windows at the border. CLEVELAND (AP) The U. S. Davia Cup team, accustomed to playing on fast courts, will be favcred to defeat Spain In 1he weekend Inter· zone cballenge eeries st.artlllfl Friday. That is the view of e~rts who have studied the two tQrn1 in pract.icecs on Ille Harold T. Clarlt Macadam-type courta, a aurlliOe conducive to boom· ing &erves and slamming volleys vttrlch are trademarks of t h e Amerlc11111. A pair ol tingles mat.dies will h1unch tbe competition Friday. follow· ed by doubles Saturday and two more 1lngl<s Sund•Y. 0,,. point Is awarded for victOry ln each match. Htfdjoc Spoin ii 11)-ye.v-dd IJanuel Santana. wimer at Wimbledon In 1966 and at the nationals at Forest Hills ln 196.I. He Is a tactician wtKJse finesse has brougtrt him victory oo all types of surfaces. Juan Gisbert. 26, and Manuel Orentes , 19, have been try I n g feverishly to get their reactions geared to the courts. Amtller SparUrd, Lui6 Orilla, a fine dooble1 playe<, is handicapped by a pulled leg muscle fult '-!tiered In California and aggravated now 10 that he requires doctor's treatment daily. Arthur Ashe, Qtarlle PMSJ'ell £nd hometown product, Clark Graebntr .,. ... main u. s. "-· ' All three have been p l a y I n g brilliantly mo.st of the seasoo aiid seem to have reached ttieir peak. They thrive on the hard courtl. Jaime BartroU, veteran captain ol the Spanish team, admits that his players have been tnvolved in time COOlunUntl adj~ not only to !he rast surface, but also to tile faster ball used In the United state•. "We cannot do our best on these courtl, 11 he 1ay1. "The big terVe and volley tet the pace. We must counter with more tactics. "Frimkly I wou1d say that ttie p\ayinc condition1 give the Americans a 20 percent advantage. We are con· -lo cloy -llDd If ... ""' on ttJs surface I think we could be rated even. ADd if we play our best we mi.ght even beat them. "J would like to see the courtA ror the Dllvis challenge rounds stan- dardiz.ed,'' Bart.roll continued. "There baa been a move for this, but when It was brought up in a meeting in Ciecboa.lovalda two years ago only nine votes were for It. 'Ibis was a big and di~g •IJll>riao to m•. "However, I am 1ure our boys will make a good showing. 'Ibey a-lwa)"I Mve dooe well ln DavJs Cup COM· pMJtlon tn tM last four or five years and have gained a lot Of valuabJe ex· perlence." ~ , The win put KOOiman Into a Ue with Tom Seaver who had 16 wins last season for the Mets' club record. I.OS ANGll.•S NlW YOIUt .., llrtil l tfkrtil ll'eotllts, u ' I 1 t H1N1....,, .. I O I I W.0.Y~ ct 4 0 I 0 A_, d 4 t I t 11. ... U~. )Ii 4 t 1 t $tlfll, rt ' 1 1 I k.eo,er, 111 ' 0 t I C.Jonlt. 11 ) I t t 5lv1,., If 4 I 1 t ICrll'ltPOOI, Ill l I 1 O F1lrty, rt ' I I I Mltrtl!I, c 4 I 0 0 '"-lch. _. ' 1 I 1 Coll!,., a. • 1 I l Torbely, c 2 0 0 t Llllt, 2ll I 0 l I Sl~,1 ll!IK_,,_11,11 1110 C.OtlNn, p I G I t Grtl'll, "" I 0 t t llllll'ltllltl\, ' 0 ••• Tot1l1 » 1 1 I Tol1l1 JI 4 11 J Lot Al'l .. lft , .... ., • ". CliO '10 IDI -1 Ntw York ... ., .... ,. . , f lO 112 00..-4 I -Vtn1lln, ~lcll. OP -LOI ... , ... l. LQe -LOI ""'"'-•• Mtw Yortl f. 11 -I* •· Hit -.._....k:h UJI 511111 (IJ, I -K•1l'lffllllll. PH ltll StlO lll'IW (l>ltl I I 4 I 2 t C.0."911 1 I t t I I tllllMl!tm I I I I I 1 J(W,1'"1lf PI I I I HA VLICEK HURT IN BENEFIT TILT BOSTON (AP) -John llavllcet, veteran BO&ton CelUcs star 1 tnju:rtd. hll left 1ye In an •U-star benelil baskeil>all game Tuesday nlahl, ... cord.in& to a team rpokeaman. Havlicek'• eye wu cut and awo~ alter Willia Reed ol the New Yorli Knlcb accidentally jammed • lingllt in the eye during 11>e came In M°"" tlcello, N.Y., the spakerman 1ald. L. ----· ----. ---.. ----. ---- ---~ -----------------~-· --.• -• •+•••Ww•w+••••••w•+•=•••=•=•••••"' ' I> • ' .~ BUD~UCKER .. • • "' ' ,. " .. t ., .. LOS ANGELES -Roger Maris is leaving and there are those who will bate to see him go. , .. ' There are those, on the other hand, who will dis-~ ..-play no anguish al Maris' departure. In fact, many will · be pleased to drive him to tile airport t: For ihstance, one-group planning no publlc demon .. 1tration1 of grief is the Baseball Writers A5sociation of Amercia. Maris had little time for the gentlemen of Ol the working press and he worked at it to a point where the feeling became quite mutual. l b Maris troubles with the press, indeed the world, •tarted that autumn day in 1961 when he deposited a ball Into the rigbtlield seals at Yankee Stadium. II was no ordinary borne run because it was Maris' 61st of the ; aeason and it broke a record held for many years by tile legendary Babe Ruth. ,, They put a bug beside Maris' name in the record 1 book because he had taken 162 games to accomplish his feat. Jn Rutll's day tile schedule called !or only 154 games. ~, The foregoing, however, was neither here nor there f ~o the sufferers of the national pastime. They are for- ' ever searching for new demigods and Maris' heroics ! were made to order. The man became a hero overnight and already an immortal figure. Maris, from the beginning, wore his fame badly. In fact, It did not fit in the least. .J ~ Some love public adoration and newspaper ink and ~ they wallow happily in it. Maris drowned in his. • There were reasons, of course, and most of the t, l journalists knew about them but it did not make their :. iJ jobs any ea!ier. Unhappily, it did not ease the strain ~ U of the relations. ;~ * * * £ . ~ , ' . r i AWris w•s • country boy, shy and retiring •nd wished only to be left alone to pursue hi s trade. H• did not understand the fame which had suddenly bHn thrust upon him. It confused him and bewlld· er.cl him, even scared him. It made him a lot of money, to be sure, but It also brought him great unhappiness. Probably the worst thing •bout Maris' 61 home runs Is that they were hit when he was a member of the Yankffs. New York is • vast and strang• city. It Is cold and warms up only for the c•lebrated. Wh•n New York wishes to tak• a hero to Its heart and the hero rejects the overture, only great trouble and anguish can visit him. * * * If Maris was to war with the writing people, he could not have been in a worse place. At the time of his celebration there were more journalists dogging the Yankees than any other team in baseball. They bounded him in their relentless pursuit of quotes and made his life almost unbearable. U Maris was to war with the writing people, it was a terrible mismatch. He was a loser going in. Maris would have quit before this had not the Yankees traded him to the St. Louis Cardinals. He found more peace there and it permitted his career to linger longer than otherwise. Without the trade Maris would have long since vanished. Of course, there was every reason Maris' life would be more restful in St. Louis. The journalists did not dog him there, mainly because he gave them no purpose. Since entering the National League Maris has been less than awesome. He struck no particuJar fear into the hearts of opposing pitchers. -----.. ·---------. -.. ------------ Rebels In Cage Finale Drop SA Ace Woody's Gets Shot To Avenge Defeat By ROGER CARLSON OI 1111 DellJ' ,llOI $lift Another blow' to t h e South'I! hopes ol a victory over the North in the ninth annual All.star f o o t b a 11 game was suffered by coach Jim Coon'11 troops when the Rebel forces learned they would not have the services of Santa Ana's M a r v Whitaker for the game. Why Whitaker failed to repoct the last two daya are still µnknown, but Coon relates that ttie South will be going without bim. A damaging blow to say the least for the South, as Whitaker possessed e great deal of the S\)eed in the South backfield. He runs ttie 100 in 9.8 end is regarded as probably one of the top two backs in the county. His loss leaves the South squad with 28 players in· eluding alternates for the Aug. 22 encounter with the North. Don F:ischbeck of Marina bad broken his leg earlier to pare the squad to 29. Coon's South squad went through aoother two hours of drills Thursday night at Marina with the emphasis on the defense. ., -~ ., •• ( • f;... -... After the Action '" J ~. Woody'• Wharf wr.aps up the Costa Mesa Recreation basketball league tonight at Orange Coast College with a chance to ave.nge ifs only loss of the campaign agairi'st John&on & SOn (Orange Coast) 1n the second game Pro Nets Hole-in.one At CMCC A hole-in.one was record· ed by Tim Boyer, the resi· dent golf pro, on the 155- yacd par three fourth hole on the Los Lagos c<Jurse· Friday at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. Boyer used a five·iron for his first hole-in-one in 41 years of golf. With Boyer was fellow pro, J o h n Mahoney. Women's club action on Friday in a low gross and low net tourney was won by Nadine Maze in the first Hight with a low gross of 84. Vi Hoskins shared low net honors with an 89-14----75 Although not t.ermed as the starting defense, here is what Coon revealed as the Winning teams in two-man Monarch Bay Invitational volleyball tournament 11 who jelled be5t in the over the .weekend gather fo~ victory ~ose at end of competition. Players are defensive scrimmage on (left to nght) Warren Watkins and 8111 Stuart, second place finishers · Bob Thursday : Leedom and Herb Kostlan, third place; Dale Shostrom and Chip Harrell' first Guards -Doug Casey of place. Seated on ladder is referee James Curtis. · 1 along with Hazel Webster (89-14-75 ). Low gross title in the se- cond flight went to Peg Jten's 106 with Bev Bat- tistoni on top or the low net scores with a 108-25----83. Corona ck!I Mar and Charles ~'------------------------------- 1'-feyerette of Westminfiter. Shirley Cummaro's 109 was good for ttte third flight low gross mark and Fran Lewis took low net with a 112.az-ao. Ta ckles Car l Hernandez and S t e v e Galvan of Mater Dei. Linebackers -Jbn Berg and Eric P.atton of. Mater Dei. Corner backs -Mlke Cor· rigiali and ruck White of Marina. Halfback& -Bob Wickersllam of Huntington Beach and Rick Deckert of Santa Ana . Safety -ROO Gr.aves ol. Tustin. English Soccer North Picks Defense For County Grid Tiff Wolves Duel To 3-3 Draw On the Mesa Lindl3 course It was Oamelle Kennedy with a 113 for low gross and Nina Danielson's net 83 for PASADENA -Playing a low net honors. With five days of practice L<lara a.nd Dave Maas of man short for 53 minutes, Frank BartoEh ICOt'ed 72 left before kickoff, the North Anaheim. the Los Angeles Wolves bat. for low gross bonws in has Its defensive setup com Alex Henderson of Brea tied back twice to earn a 3-3 men's club action over the ~· weekend . Dan Lazovsky led plete according to coach and Al Sanchez of Magnolia tie with Detroit Wednesday the way in low net action Herb Hill o( Loara. continue t.o battle It out for night in a North American with an 83-20--63. fo the safety position. In preparation r the Soccer League game. Following Lazovsky was ninth annual Orange County Practice coMinues tonight Jack Frazier (75·11-M), All-Star football game, Hill at 6 at Loara with no in-The Wolves' inside right Dean McClanahan ( 7 8 _ has &et up the following juries at the North camp. Mickey Walker was thrown 13----65), Jack Reid (77. aligrunent to defense the The North made one out or the game in the 37th 12----65), Fred Fredensburg Rebels' razzle.dazzle double player switch, d r 0 PP in g minute after Detroit had (75·~). Al Bennett (77-Fullerton linebacker John 11 "") N Pot k. (76 wing offense: taken a 2-0 lead on goals by -vu • orm e 10 -Tackle positions will be Miller for Valencia'11 Pat 9~7), Lyle Graham (75- of a doubleheader. Opening hostilities feature Jabsco Pump and Golden West while Ocro-7 sita out ttie final night of action with a forfeit win over UC Irvine. Woody's, pacod by John Vallely, Dave Waxman and John Faircbc)ld, breeze d through Its first nine games before falllng to the UPfiet bug in the last game of the second round to Johnson & Son, 79 ·TT when Rich liardgrove sank two free throws with five seconds left in an overtime period. Woody's stands 13-1 to date. Golden Y{est & t o r m e d back in the second half for 61 points to upend Johnson & Son, 95-76, after trailing by two at the half Wed· nesday night. The second half explosion was underscored by Ollie Martin's 24-pointa, Miark Miller'& 16 and Br I an Ambrozich 's 12 in the final half. Orco-7 was the latest vie· tim of the Wharf Rats, as Waxman led all scorers with 35 counters in leading hi• mates to a 91·78 victory. Vallely and Fairchild follow· ed Waxman's act with 19 apiece. It was close for a half, with the winners holding a thrt>e-point edge at the end of two quarters. However, the Wharf Rat! pulled away in the second half to win easily. Sco'9 Irr H1IY• WoodY'I Wlllrf .. .U-tl Orco-1 W....,., ltl) .U J.f--71 Ntibltt l11!0H W1•men F1lrchlld l~I! Wlnterbum HU'lchln1 V1lltly Toll ls Jlrn Haictll'tl .... Pa! Granr Jl'llr~s ,_,, Garnil!r ,_ To!llt 1<0 " I'll' Tl' l • ' 2 1~ ' i 3} • 3 l lt • 1 • 10 1 0 1 2 1 0 • 2 7 5 l ,, l6 ,, 10 tl Orc:~f 11•1 FO l<T I'll' Tl' • ' s l'D l I 2 J jg ; ~ ~ J ~ i ' ,: ,J l~ 712 Scort by Hthrft Jo!!f190n .. """ J5 .._,, GolOtn Wnr J.t •1-t5 J OhMOll & SOii f70 Miiier ,,.,_,Hn Amb,,,zlch B1zll Habblneklll FG FT ,., Tl' ' 3 ' 11 ' • • I 1 1 l 1 5 I 2 ,, 6 1 t 2 1 1 • 16 ' l ' " n I IS 16 GWC (HJ FG l'T "' Tl' 1 1 J n l1S 1 'n 14 l 4 " • ' t • • • • E"'M1lo ltft\11 manned by Maooy Valdez of Shanley when the former Johnny Kerr and Bi I I 8----67) and Al Chirgwin (79_ [.(Iara and Bernie Smirnoff1_m=i.ssed=:....:;too::..m=an:.:Y<....:drill!'-=:.:..· __ ..:Ca:::ss=i::dYc:· ________ l::~::.:::.71!:.. ________ _'!'•~·~"----'"'.-''..'.'-'":....::" of Magnolia. Tiie nose man Dl\'lllOll ·1 C~elKI I, Nol!ln~htm 'orttl I, !If Lffd1 Unlteo 4, Ollltl!n'I Pert: ll:aftlltr1 I M11'1Chnltt' Cllv 3, Wohrt rtla ...... t ~ltkl Wfll'nnclt"f 1, N11"W..-1llt 1, is Anaheim's Larry Golden. ' There were occasions, in fact, w~en managers in· structed their pitchers to walk a guy to get to Maris. For history's most celebrated home run hitter, this might have been the cardinal insult. '" Soufhlmpl!Jn 7, l !vMDl!IOI I Defensive ends are John Russell of Garden Grove and Richard Kelley ol Sunny Hills. Coming! ' • . •• • ~ Slllke 0, Wesl Hftm • Suncltrl .. 111 3, IP$Wldl I Anyway, Roger Maris now announces he will par- ticipate in one more World Series with tbe Cardinals and then depart. West Brom.,.,lch J. Mtrn:heder U~ll!d Seivite's Jim Karch and Valencia's Pat Shamley are set for the linebacker spots and ttie corners will be guarded by Dan Taylor of It is entirely likely Maris' departure will be quiet. There figures to be none of the noise of the time he hit 61 home runs or even when he left New York. So be it. The man got a lot out of baseball. What he gave baseball is between Roger Maris and his coni;cience. c....,r1e111 1Nl, •O\I Trlllunt Inc. Dlvl1l111 2 C•rtllfl O, Clltrl""1 I Crvlltl Ptl•u J, Hl1ddtl'sfl•kl t Norwich o, Mlddlftbrwsll 1 •11tt 1ll Lt"UI Fl~I ll:<H1nd A.lder)!>ol 2, BrtnHord 4 Bredlord CllY 3, H•rtlaopooh I 8r!ohlon 1. O~ford Unl!ed 0 llrl1lol C!lv !, NtWPOrl 0 Chesler O, Trt"m"• O, Ill Colc:h"!•r 2, R1ad1.,. o ~rbY J, Cl'llllrrflr'd O Ck>nc••trr 0, P.,erboro\1911 0, tit Pro Soccer Standings No Change for Rams Gl11!119lo1m 2, Orlffl J Gr!rmbY I), Notti County O, tit H1n11~ o, Hult s Lln<oln J, ~n"ltkl I Luton 3, Wllfortl O c~ 1. Hort1111m1ton 1. "' """"'°""' 0, E~eter O, tit l'reston I, Oldh•m J, lie Soulhllort 2, 81rl"O'# 2, Ill Worklngtvn 1, R~lt I Wl'nllllm t, Jlort V11t I Vorto: Cl"" ), 81111111¥ 4 FULLERTON - L o s Angeles Ram Coach George Allen said Wednesday ~e defensive unit which started most of ita Natlooal Football League games last L!ieason will ltart intact against the Dallas Cowboys Saturday Dighl Dav:id "Deacon" J o n e s , linebacker Maxie Baughan and defensive back Clarence \Villiams. The three will be starting for tile first time th.is season. k91tttlo L ... oe c~ Aberdten 1, Ounfermllnt I Albion l , Q11&1n'1 Pert: J Br..:Mn 2, A!IN 3 C11flc 4 Morfon 1 CIYdflblllll; 7, krwklt • Cawd-ef!Del!h 1, Attltoelll I DunclH United J. CIV.S. I Forfa• I, O\lmber!on O Hrarh J, °"'""" l Kllmtrnodl O, Alrd•lt J Mo!he~ll 1. Montrow t P1rt!tk TM1li. 1, illa"'ll•" J R1!1'1 0. Hlbttllllft l SI. Jotlrnll>M 1, F1lklr\ ! $1. Mir"'" l. H1mltton O St1"11'1ou.-mulr 1, Str1nrttr J Allen said he was pleased witil development oi the defensive unit and glad to a:et three men back as starters -dd'ensive end The Rams waived rooki e defensive end candidate Ron Berger, who played for the Orange County Ramblers of the Continental F o o t b a I I ~ague last y e a r, lie graduated from W a y n e State in Detroit. St1rH.,. Albkin J, Ar r 4 ---'---' Baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE w L st. Louil 71 43 Chicago "' 56 San Frand11co 62 56 Cincinnati 59 56 Atlanta 61 59 Pittsburgh 56 63 Philadelphia 5.1 62 New York 58 66 Loi A..1ele1 53 .. Housl«I 52 68 ............... "" It. \Miit a. Cllic.. I ,.._ Y..-t. LOI Al>ot1" l ~l1Ml1IPlllll 4, Mo\lt""' I C!MtM9fl T, A~t 4 Pct. GB .642 .533 13 .525 14 .513 1 51.~ .508 16 .471 a:l't.! .470 ~II .459 22 .445 U\I .433 2S Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Detroit 76 43 Baltimore 68 49 Boston 65 55 Cleveland "' 58 Oakland 61 57 Minnesota 5.1 61 New York 54 60 California 53 68 Chicago 49 68 Washington 44 7'l w ...... .., •• •t111lh Dtmolt 1. C:lilwlM:I • Htw Yor11 $, (•llfof"ll t W1.i.lntlon I, MlllflflOll 2 Ot~llfld 4. lalll"""' I c11ic..o w. ... .., ,., T""f't G1,,,.1 Pt:t. .639 .581 .542 .52S ,517 .474 .474 .445 .419 .379 GB 7 11 1,; 13 11 141\ 1911 191\ %3 26 3011 ...... l<rMCbce t. l'!l'l.OU"'ll t Ill 1 .... 1..,11 Cllk-fCl tllt 11.10) It lol"'°' (Lonll&rt W1 Ntw YI<'\ 15Ntl.....,.,.. 11-t) If 0.1-CHtlll 10.7). "'""'' ---W1'111>\tlOll !l ... !fln• .-.11 11 C1llfontl1 CMc· Ololflllft 1.101, ni<tlll ~IHmo~ CH1rd111 1.., tnd l••bondlr ~ll 1t Mlf\Mwtt (0....a 11·10 t11C1 llol""ll 1-fJ, li , ... 1 l'llth! Ot>/'I' ""'" 'Cl'lfdulN. Onmot Co.11 Olde1t & Most Rtspected Ltn.coLn·i\ftrcurv Dttdtr Johnson & Son fOO W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BUCH ~l 545-8271 Iii Mort~ Amtrlc.., Socct~ Lt11111 ....... , tonftrtMI Alll11I e OlwltlOll W LTSl'l'h.Ol'OA All.nit II I 4 .fl Ut •3 "2 Wt$1\1""11n U t 4 °" 1~ m U N""'Yctr'll t 61141 '140 Btrtll'l'IOl'I 11 1• J ti l 15 3' Botton 1 lJ 5 4 100 415 11 Ltkn Ol'f'ltlell Clev111nd 10 • 11 46 1J9 • 39 ChleMto 10 t t oil 1J5 5li J4 Torool'o 11 11 ' 4 176 ..i 5' Detroit s '' , ll n 41 n Wftt9nl Ct"*-<:t Gvff DlvklOll 1>:1....,.. Cl,., 1) I I 41 13"1 !.5 J1 St. Loult 11 11 l Jf 1:10 4' $l Hou.flWI 11 ~ .)J 111 ~1 )6 091111 J l » " ,, " l't<lllt Olv •llfl Siii DIHO 16 1 4 SO 151 M JI Oal\111\d 16 I 5 .U l-M 53 :JO Vl l>CWVfr 1111 4 •\ 11' 4J 41' Los Anlelts ' 9 t tO 111 4' J? WMMMl•V'• Anultt Houston 4, Otll11 b Oehl! 3. Los "'~'" J, tit T~~ Ot mn Vtl!CUUVW ti W1.,.ln1ton COUGAR #.1 CAT SKIN THI CAT Net 1ine1 ih 1er11ml119. 1c11tt h· 1119 lftlroduclio" 11 C11 of tfi1 y,,, i11 l t•7 '"' th1t1 bttll th• opportu11ity for !ht bvyi119 pub• Ii, ta 1111,1 llACTLY WHAT rT WANTS AT ,IACTICAL Pl;IC· ..... CL.AW THE ,RICE DOWN ON THE CAT OF YOUR CHOICI W1 h1v1 fi,., Ill 1ll9htly u114 '41't 1U with <•11linuin9 ft el1ry ••tranty. A~d •ut Yltl .+ocli; ,r 1941'1 wlll 91•1 l <rl ty fttl n1 f111• 1.!" fl,,. •••eel 1.ol1r 0114 1111lp· M111t #i1t II. 11111eh 1( THI NUMlll ONI CAT. In Person Jerry West Mel Counts Bill Hewitt Coach Bill - Costa Mesa Presents the van Breda lolff -and- i; •• "~A Basl{ethall Rod Hundley ~ i?@ FREE • Laker photos • Drawin9 for Loker T ·shim ond tickets to Loker 90mes Clinic SATURDAY, AUG. 17th at in the Parking Loi • Professlon1I pointers • Speciol skllls Muion • W•tch your fevorite l1ker1 In 1dion • One showing only Sears COST A MESA-South Coast Plaza·Brlstol at ~nflower ' • ,.. .............................. ~ . . . . . . ... -~----------------"-'=.:C . __ ._~ __ .. - Los Alamitos ...... , ....... ,.,. .. w. ltu-tlllf o., CIHr a , .. ,, ,lnl .._. l 1Cf ,.M. P 11,ST IAC•. .00 v•rd1. l .,..r old5 Ind 1111 ITT Gredl 8 p11,o,, l"vrM suoo. 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Pyrs.. 11700. l50 v1rd1, Bud l!r1 CC Smlrh) 120 \len1vrou1 Fly CA Ar1\11I 117 1\101rtuwn CJ DrwerJ 120 Jvl,1 ltcNln (J Wllillnl 120 Lltllt Braok ~W Sl1pe) 120 Swint /Nn (T Llph1ml 110 LIKkY Rl'Mletl• (0 Morrl1) 117 ,.OUllTH llACI!. Ult yards. 3 ve1r olds Ind UP "' Gr•de A Mlnu1. PUl'H 11100. MIH TOP Peco 111 Prlflc. Voo Doo IZ Collln1) 116 lNr OrOP Kid (C Smllhl 111 FrlU,y Fr1ull!'ln (J Robl11""'l 111 Con111e'1 RIQllftl CA Ar1lu ) 111 A..,.,,11 Tltml>o CJ i<.nbl 111 P1tlfo'1 Cherry (0 TYrt) lU Chtdc•r ScaOP 111 A..,.,,11 Hot~ (W ll-J 111 S-1 (W Str1vs1) 111 F!nH llAC•. 350 Yl rds. t Yftf okl1. Clllmlnt. ,.urv 11900. Cl1lmlng orlu t.IOOO. ,. .. l'rldef, A111. 1•. lfft CINr '"" 11'111. ll'lnt ,., 2 P.M. 011tr ooubl-ll'lr1t •Ml JKolld 1t1ces PIA.ST IACI:. I furlon11, 3 n1r Oki llllles. Cl1lmlnt Pfkt M,CIOO, PUl'll 12,200. Ml11 R-IL J Duroo""ul 113 Mellow Ml1t tR M-11) 113 Wlltl Giimour (S T1'11~1MI) lll R1tnow C2 E Mlldl111) 111 Communi1! Queen (J P1lom!noJ 111 G1l1r1MWn (I A L 0111) x11] Tonv•'I LH tF G,n:11 J xlOI Miu HI F1T (W Horrltl 111 Do 11 Do (R C1bellero) lll SwlH Dish IW H1rm1!r) lll Abiltte (A PlnedeJ 113 I'm lles.Hd (W H1rt1diJ lU AllO EH1llll• ~I Dl1moM IA L 0111) Xlll Vt11ev Ml11 n E ~1111) lll Mr1. Mvllr1 (A Herrer1) lll Ad11m1 Eve 10 Pltr«) 111 ll!COHO ltACI!. 0.... m1l1 1111 lurt. 3 Yeer olds 11!d Up. Cl1lml1111 prlc• U.OQO.SJ,600. PUl'll $2,600. 0on flob John (0 MIU) 11A 5"rch Piich CD Pltmi) lU Tit! Oukt (M v 11 ... 111el1l 114 Sliver Seort (E Mldlrvt) 114 159~'1 Red Tit (A Plnedl) 114 Prown IR lllYJ xlCHI Po.1Clltr'• Poxlcel' {M YIMI) 114 DMklY Bob ($ TrtV1Nll 114 lltPUbllu" W1v (W H1rm1nl 112 P1roglM1 (W MlllomtY) 114 Abo lflltlbi. Old f11d1er I ll York > 114 Entries Dan It.Mr (J WU'°") 111 Maolell Miu (ll knbl 117 HW'llell•'• Chic tO Mon1.1) 111 lt11MI,,. (low IS 8rlMi.wJ 11IO Al...,llot Kev IJ W11tsot1J 111 Jtlfllr. Ill Ac11!tl 1n 5.l11Y Mllrkett. (J °""'''J 117 an1e1 Dooile cc 5mlltll 1n SIXTH It.Ace. ~ y1rdl. I ..... r Dldt enll 11t 111 Gr.a AA Mlnu .. Pvnt-S21DD. Cllbbtr'1 llodi:tt llt lllnlul 11J flpfof •• , (J 8roakfltldl }17 Roclcet Link (J We'-IJ 11' P11tdlff DlndY CJ Robl,_l 111 lleldy Jlodl:.t tJ 1(11111) 11• Jd A Mutfln IJ Mlltwdl) 11' Robin DDb1r1 (Z ColH111l 11' lhlTll TiP!lff (! w SfTeu11) lit Olli 8r1111d't' ID T.,...I Uf Van 81r Bell Ill Adelrl 1• Allelhllllrl Gold ll\90t (8 lrlrlll...,I 129 Miu PltT hr (J WlllCWI) 11! Ml• Pest Clue [W Sle~J 111 PrOYOCellYe II W Str11.111J 111 SEVENTH llA(lf, lil y 1 rd t. 3 Yeollr ollh llld UP. Cl1lm1nt, ftllrSI S20I». c111m1,. IM'ke DIOO. Lu""'llW (H Cl'Sby) 12:t Llrtt Grind IT Llphlm) 11J IUllllY'I &ell 170 °°"bl• Dort 18 llrlnklt-y) lit Soulltwettem (H Pl!ilt) 11' ll:Cllln RUllner tJ Robln!WlllJ 115 Tiit Mllrdl WlllCI tit Ad1lr) lit Tonto J-s (C Smllhl II• EIGHTH ltACE. a Ylrdi., J Ylllr olds and up. All-I M>a. Pur11 uooo. Th• TrlPl• Ladv. Pool lier IC 5mlltll 117 E!lebo (R 8111\ksl 111 "°bovt Perr t (J W11tsonl 122 Mr. llod<tl Ber (Z co111111) 12$ Joe Sllerrv !J lloblnsonl 111 Tov SPllr (R Ad1lr) 111 Go Dtrumo Go fJ o ... nr) Ill NINTH llAClf. ~ Yerd1. J v .. r olds end uP In Gr.oe A Plut. Purse SltoO. Llnle Obie (H Cr•tr\11 Ul llulMll IH Pelllo) lU T n.o. can FIY 10 Morrl1l n• ClndY'1 ll-1 (R Adalr1 111 Dustw ler l<JY CC Smlltll 120 Mllklen llodlet (J Robl'9on) 111 El G•vllen (J Orrrer) 111 V111dy Elleetl (A Ar1laJ 111 Miit T1" 811 n. (It 811\k1l lU Del Mar Entries Boudoir Prlnce {J A,.,.rt>urn) 111 All1t Elltlblft Hu>:ll-Y (It C1mp11\ 116 Kobuk Kint (1 w H1rm111) 11, a-Slrlp CS T,..vlnoJ 1" lloberl H1ll ('I W H1rrl1) 111 Fer To llMdl (l W MehorMy) 11, Chief Ruler (A L 0111) Mlll SIXTH llACE. 6 lurlont1. Two war olcl1. C11 lml119 Prlct IU,QOO.S\l,500. Punt S3.IDI. S. S. se11snar IR C1m11o11! 117 Gtltt1>11 Elflll fW H1rm1f1) lU Lord Atlle (L Glllltlll) lU Eu~ al Tlmt (0 Pierce) 114 Cellfornla E1tle (It Yorlr.l 11$ RKkleu Gtmbler CM V1k'n1u.l1J 115 O..ntsun llun (0 Hill) 111 Noorllshek fJ Arlertlum) 111 Shlnil'lll BuSll IJ L1mbfftl 117 Batlt Rov1I IW H1rt11ck) 117 H1mmur11bl (E MedlnaJ lU Oyn1mlc W1Y (A Pineda! 111 Allo Ellt !llln Wi tch Mio """ CL J Ourou""U) 117 H•SfY Ruler (M YIMI) l it ll!V,ENTH llACll. 1 1'11' mllt1. I Year old$ Ind uo. Cl•lmlnt prla $15,Q00.$1~..SOO. Punt U,DDO. Crost Ann CA Plned1J 11' 8113r Storv CM Yene1) 111 ATl..,llon lrd 10 Plerc1I 1U Mllnsl\eel tL J Duroune1ul 11o1 County Alh:lmev IA Herr1r1) 112 Aerotom. (M V1lentu1l1J 117 Cuslrero (J P11om!110) n~ Rum h'>SI WOl"d1 (W H1rm1tl) 111 EIGHTH ltACE. I lur!ontl. l Ytlt olds 1nd 1111 flll les 1nd m1rn. Altow-THIRO ltACE. 6 turl-. J n 1r •nets. Punt 1$,CIOO. olds. C1lbrech. Cl1!ml1111 Pt"ICI '"°°· COl!ftctb:wolti (0 H•lll 111 Pur11 12,200. My Lllll {W H11rm•hl 11' Ede!'l'I 81!'1111 tW H1rt1tk) lU L•tun1 Rovtle IA L 0 111) XIU T!nT'I 1(1119 (J L1mberll 111 Sllve"11dts (M YIMJ) IU fllue1 C1111nt (A L Ol1Jl xlU Prlntts• Pft !W MlharNy) 12'1 Ge11weT Min CW H1rm1tr) 11' $pl..,lnt A1'11Und (0 Pierce) 111 'Tr1dclnt (It Mlinelll lot LU! Del Sol (W Hlrtldr.) IU k lnt JClllQU!n IF G1n11) xl12 l tue Ll!'llther IA Plntd•l lU NtHTH I.ACE. About 7Ui lurk1n91 M11tll Ground (W M1hal'nevl 1u "" 111r1. 3 ve1r olds, Allow•l!Cft. 01(1'1 Alibi (J P1lom!no) 117 Punt-M,CIOO. ChDa Son 12 A L 0 !11) ll'OUltTH lt.t.CI. Ont m\11. J Yll r Comose tW H1rt1dtJ olds. Cl1Jmlnt prke S5000-Msatl. Purte H"""'lbH Llld{y tJ Pl....:ll ) l2.60tl. W1rm Colon fM Viner) ll.'1<111111• lled {J Arterbur"l 11• Wlneo LH (2 D H1lll K16cler'1 Lire (W Mthornlv) lU Our 8uddv (W H1rm1:11 l!>lil11n A.Uk' !A L 0111) lll09 Hiil Sting (W Harrill Mr . .Kit fl /rt! CW H1rm41fz) 117 He .. comes Troublt fA PlneM! Le ~r1MI Ch.11 IJ Trul!llol 109 Niclmlenlo {1 o Pltrttl Denll A Men1u (0 Pltrcel 111 Full OI Trouble CJ L1mbtrl) Ve1111 lkl (J h.,111 )1101 AllO llltlblel POl"lrelt IJ L DurCJU11M U) l09 lll'l>ullbi., (I O H•lll T. Hlrrl IA Ht'l'r1r1) l l2 Bo>: llGT (2 0 Pll!'fctl Ster SYJ!tm (I A L 0111) ll'lll'TH ltACI. ' furlonM. Two YHr CCllll Del Sci (W Mothornev) old milden colll 1nd ttldlnt1. PUl'll ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ u ... Ctnd-,.o IJ Glbbontl 116 Mtkew' (L Glllle1nl 116 Mr, ll'lnltv ID P!erctl 116 Conal1ttncv Jr. (A Plnedtl) 116 °"""r Dlnce< (E M..:llnl ) 11• El For111! 12 W Mll\clrM'I') 111 Tr!1•«>-Ln 12 W H1rrl1J 116 V1llldor !R C1belltro1 111 1...:11en Sllcle ~M v11enru1l1) 111 Wl...:llOf Gtm (0 H1llJ 1\6 Mo:rttClrkM (J W H1rmtlt) 11' PENETRATION N N rfy 1veryon1 r11d1 th1 DAILY PILOT, hometow" new•- p•p•r for th1 Feb11fe1u1 Oren91 Co••*· Rancho Sin Joaquin Golf Course Golf Special WMkll•'(I After 2 p.m. 2 Grttn Fees Plus Electric c.art $10 WMkMll1 Aftw I P.M. 1 3 Gr"ffn Fen Pua; Eltt:trtc C&rt $12 CAllTINA OPIN DAILY -........ , ...... 11 ... 833-1253 Rancho Sen Joaquin Golf Course 1102 1 Culver Rd., Irvin • Ranch, N.wport IMch _. Miles South of Santa Ana Freewey • Flight Winners, Runnersup These nine women finished one.t wo through four flights o! gol! at Co•ta Mesa Goll and Country Club in the inaugural Women's Invitational over the weekend. Standing (1-r) Adrianna Coote, Irma Havens (second flight winner), Marty Schneider and Jody Woodward (first fli.ght wiMer.. Sitting (1-r) Dorothy Jo Swanson (third flight win ner), Bea Cave, Millie Pedersen, Buffie Reno and Fran Lewis (fourth flight winner). Nadine Maze fi red an 83 for overall Jow gross honors while Mary Bo rden came up with a 94-~9 to captude low net honors over the field. Los Alamitos Results WllOHESOAY. AUG. H, IHI CIMr 111'11 ll'nl iJlll T llACI!. :U0 yerd•. Miid"' ve1r old1. Cl1lmlng. Purse 11100. Mlur 81r Flf fS1r11u11) 7.IO 4 . .io 100 W11cll Me Tr1vtl !Ortrtr) $,«l •.DD Ml Protelo Ck1nlf) l.«l Tlme-11 7110. Scr1lched--Ton.,'1 SPttda.11, .Fle<:h•, lle'f's SUnsel, LllU1 8rOOll. IECOHO llACI!. «Ml y1rd1. J Ttlr olds Ind uP In Grade 8 Plu1. Purte 11500. llr-.. Joct.1., ISlr1uu) 14.60 7.60 J . .O $<imp 'N E!11 IWllaon) 5.40 l.00 Arrae1nt S!r (BrlnkllYI 2.MI Tlme-21 1/10. Strttched -TOP Frlltle, Mr, High Glo, Chlcket!Mdeedee, Bell1 T1111t. 1'·'° •. .a $.«I 7.20 S.«l •• NtNTK IACI!. Sit y1rdl. I Vt!lr Gldl Ind UP. AUow•l'ICtl . Purae JlllOO. S.nd Rlvtr Win !W•llOlll 11.60 6.olO • . .a P1rker's hn111t !Ad1lr) ll . ..O 5,60 A.on Sickle (M1!1ud1j ).CIO Tl,,_71 ]/JD. Ho 1cr1!che1. [wwy WHll MlitC() utisflM 11t0111 tflell 10.000 tf9Mmlt.tiotl probMm&. You l lt ff"M klwlnc. • '""' fOIMI. dMek, fest, trll'icl....C ....... 1e........mon tim• If! Jv•t -di)'. And .Cth MMCO, yoltf' t~nsmlnlon -M prOtKted ~ OYet 500 AAMCO C...• ~ COltt to cont. [\191)' ""nut9 ... I lillllf, .... --··· COSTA MESA 1141 .....,.., "· '44-116' G1rdtn Grove ,,., ..,... .,..... t l'tf. ........ Santa Ana ftl I. 1'4"t I I. .. . . . . NJ.M1'I ' • Del Mar Race Results Ol!L MAit ltl!SULTS WllDNESOAY, AUG. 14. IHI (!Hr -,.,,, FlllST JIAC!. One ml~. 3 lo ~ Vllr Old -ldens. Clllmln9. Pur111 12.JllO. Ttn'IPO!llUCJUS Llnlr.1 Ul Bl1ncol McV11l IW Herm1t1\ H1ll1we CA MllH) Tlme-1.37 llS. "·'° 2•.IO l,IO •. ~ j·~ .~ Scr1tchtd -Mellow Miii. VtO<ll lkt, King ol llH! Wind, Dur HtlrtU, SUMMER SPECIALS 4 WHEEL BRAKE PACKAGE 13 JOBS II ONE JUST 85 1.4.YCO IXPIRTS WILL: I. 1"1toll MW X-20 lining on oll 4 w~elt. 2. MochlM re-illrfoce oil drum•. J. Arc grind om! flt on $hoes. 4. Repack front wheel bearings. 5. Check oll refum iprings. 6. c""'k oil wheel cyl· lnders. 7. Chieck mo'l•r cylinder. 8. lnlPKf oU hoses ond lines. 9. Check oil odjusteis ond COFN. 10. Cleon entire broke ouembly. 11. Cleon and lube bock plates. 12. Replace front ...m..I pinl. 13 . Rood Tffi ond opprove ear. lXTlA IONUS DUllMG THIS SALi OMLY. FAST • II. BRAKE SIRVKE DISCOUNT OM AMY ADDITIONAL e OVll 100,000 SITS INSTAUID 1H 1967 ,AllTS AND SERVICI THAT • Fl• Ufl'TIME IU.KI ADJUITMIMTS:__2 =====M=A=Y=l=l=R=IQ:U:l:R:l:D:. ====· RAYCO SEAT COVERS CUSTOM FITTED FOR BEAUTY A.JilllY' SfT YOU CHOOSE 500 1'9 W-.:ti•• Co'°", Stylet llrr ,,.. Jo ""'"· 111 ....... rieft wr RA YOO EXPERT Wheel Align•anl 0. ..... We hie.. U .IS "'-fti9' • $12.tS ..._.,_ FULL SET TIRE SALE RAYCO CUSTOM LINE 100% Myloo C..d -••fl 4 r1y -l'oncl Maw ••ctOlf freth 4 85 FOR ......... '" ,,,,_ • .... _ AMY SIZE LISTED 7.IOt•.toxlll' l.tl/1.4'•1•1 7.11/7.00.14 Y.S4h14· .71•14• I .Oh 41 1.1:1•1' 1.10..1•,· a.s1.1~ V.1sn .11x111 ,.11111 1.101•. 0..11; 7.1hll1 ....... , .thll (WMh .......... '"" llHfi A''"*"""' .... I D.-4 ................ $J4.ts \ Fill I J MIM. INSTllUTK>N SUMMD Sl'ICIAL LUBE PACU8E 5" 2860 H1rbor loultv1rd;Cost1 M...-5404170 ..,._ ... , ..... """'"' Ba AHAHl!IM: 1"5 W. LlHCOlN A\'I . 17Ull' stor• ONn 1 11.m. to t ,,l'l'I, Mondlv lf'ICI f'•IOtr e Ollltr De'fl 1111 ' ''"" (lnctulll~ Slhird•Yl -M PAYlollKI" ••• -~111 lO IAY ___ .. \ • ) DAILY '!LOT flJ Deep Sea Fish Report ''ERNIE'' JONES Tire Service -When You Buy The 1st Tir1 et Our Low Price- ILACKWALL WHnlWALL A Tlrt SIZES T11Mla1 ,......_ for VOi.if l.r TIRE 21111 TllE llt TIRI 111114 TllE '" --Fl Icon • 7.30 17.SS 650/700-ll 14.60 1.78 '""" ·~· 7.75-1 4 8.20 19.3S f .68 CMvrGttt 16.40 ... ~ 7.75-15 ,......,. 1.25-14 ,,_ 18.BS 9.43 21.80 10.90 Mi.ti nt I .I &-I 5 ""'" F1lrl1ne 1.55·1 4 21.9S 10.98 23.SS 11.78 1ttvl1r1 1.45-15 POl'lllK ST AND ARD SHOCKS '"" s; .. --0,,,,.,, ,,,,,.... ~ 2 '" $13~~.,,.. w ...... * JONES TIRE * BRAKE RELINE 30,000 Mil•• or 3 Yr. Gu1r1nfff NEW TIRE GUARANTEED RETREADS ANY SIZE WHITEWALL 4 ' 0 • ·--Pllll Sit Pill. l xc"' Ta Wheel 99~ Balance WHEEL ALIGNMENT .... 19.fl INCLUDIN5 Wll6KTS CA.Miil e C.utll e TOl·IN 'TRUCK TIRES .... ~ '•'Into lluftf(f fr'l!ld, nylon t'Ol'd lllbl "" -•lfll'CflGn, IFll ..... !( 1 , .... 1'111,. 1495 189S EX. llX. TAX TAI( U1 t.Q OUAIU,.Tlfl. £verv new I . F. Goodrkh N Htn•w Ur !Ire not ......... Id "llCGllll" !• r;iu1rii"" for fllt nr. Pl' IM ott11,..1 tl"lld, '"'rdt- OI' 111 or mil•-· ttelnll tltHll:;ll In m1llrlll •I'd -'r.rn1'"1llll, lr'lf In ~I non-<On'll'l'WCllll PllH11911' u r 11rv1ce, H lllllt fell~rt• c-.d "" to1td h•11rdl (nal lnctui:llnt rtN1r1bi. llU!IC'hll'lll. If 9Udl II,. 11111 uno ... lhl• tuer1nl1t 111>11 II IO d1m1111d tllfllll!d "'"Ir, "-- w111 rot(tll"' II.Ill 11iow11nc1 '°'" rlfNlnlne trfflf tvwlrd ""' ~ Ill I MW llrt ot -rTll""l•C'IVl'9 II ti. CUrl'tftt "'"" "fTtdf.ln" erlce, NO MONEY DOWN e USE OUR OWN CHOICE CHARGE e BANKAMERICARD e MASTER CHARGI I,..,. Houn: I a.M. to t ,...,, ~, thni Prhtey lttvrd•Y I •.m. t. S p.11t. Phone 540-4343 • 646-4421 . -------------------------~ --. ~ -.. -... -........... -......... -......... -... ......... -.. ... i~ JA1L 1 llOi •uF.11':.J..y, l.u11u~~ .1..J, •NI.I 1 ~~or Top _Quillty at-Low.Prices -. -. ":"You··can't-DoBetter Than Searsf Sears Keep• Ont Dust. Dirt. Pollen, Smog Expert lnatallation Available More New Parts In Every Remanufac· tured Complete Engine •All New Water Tubes e AU"New Rocker.Sbafll • AD New TimJn1 Chain• •All New Timing Wan e All New Main Bearinp •All New RodBeartnga •All New Hydnalio Lir1en e All New Buahinp e All New Seal Ga1kell •All New E,haa1l Valvn •All New lnlake Val•es · e All New Valve Sprinp • All New PillGna e All New Chro8" Type Jlinp ALL.5TATE Car and Truck ngine1 -Exch1ngt1 aY11ilable (or over 950 maket and model1 Remanufactured to more exacting slandardt thin ire uwd in new en1ine1. Compare ALLSTATE Rem1nufactured Engine Quality. Bloelu ind Heads. · -Resurfaced Magnaflux inspected and pnissure teated. Cnnltthaft. Camshaft. Connecting Roda -Reground complete and polithed. Oil Pump, Oil Pan, Front Cover and Rocker Coven i'\'talled on all OHV engine•. 24 Month or 24.000 Mile Rem.anufaclured Engine GUARANTEE • ..,. '"' '"'" ....... ,_, i• -.n.1 ... _._w, .•. ftrl,. n .... ,..,..,. ... ..- .ii.. .. ~ .. n .. 11n1. .. -.111 ntoa1r w ~ ....... ,_ "' di-. ...-1111 .. -..... ~ ......... ,........i__.. .. .. .....--411"'-Af\n ..... ,. ...... •""' _,.,. .... ._ .. -M.1181 ml1-""' ....... _ llM. l'ft" ......... .._ ..m ............. _._ ..... .t .. __. _ .. .,. .,;;t.., •M•._,r It ...-w .,._....._,,,l'M4MM _... ... _...... ... ...,. .......... 1 ....... CLIP THIS COUPON T!Uo Coupon Worth ... •25 0. Pwrehatt ef A•J 6or1-Cyli.diir Com pf$ R••na(ldlmd EnFn• l111hllW Offer !llplrv 8/17/68 OM Coupon Per C•9'0Mff T I Keep Cool and Relaxed! Regular '199.95 • :rhennoeiat antomatlcally maintains the temperature that you aelect ••• with two 4-way a<ijustable louven that allow for dnifl.freo cir• culation at all times~ • Chrome plated die-eat bntl front enbincea your ear's Interior • Mounll band.omely and 111ily nnder the dashboard Model5772 · Expert Installation AT811able Tune;up Inclu~: e Rotor e Points e Spark Plng1 •Condenser e Labor To Inatall Above Part• 6-Cylinder Can 13ss 8-Cyllnder Cara ' 1688 Fits these can: '54.'64 Cbny; '62·'67 Cbn. II, Chevelle; '6().'66 Dodge. Valiant; '62.'6S Plymouth '60-'63 Falcon, Comet; '66-'6S Ford. Men::ary, F1irl1nei '61.•62 Ponlite NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Ea•:r Payment Plan s. •• ,. A••••••lve C••ter I t•lt•t:r:111l1 lltl. ••••ti (';11·111t•11if:1 \\t•. NO MONEY DOWN When You Buy Your Automotive Needs at Sears on Credit .':Sears Cares About Your Driving Safety on Any Road, Anywhere. .. .. -. ----"~---• Santa Ana 1717 S. Ma;n SL II7-3371 Bristol at Sanft°"er in South C.O..t flam 540&33 -~-----...... ---··-· Thatin at Meaia Orange County • -~ • - Thund1y, A11911sl 1.5, 1968 OAJLY PILOT 25 Ott t'lae Board Hermosa 4·A Contest Refuge Availnb"le To Host Frye Tops Carroll In Oceanside Meet For Surf Traveler By CRAIG; LOC~D ot IM Dlltt P1611 .... The wings of the big 107 jet-dipper flex deeply,. and for a moment the seat of your pants drops. There is a soft, cushioney -bump, and a protesting screech from !lie tires. You have landed. Where? Where would you like to go? Pick you~ spot. Hawaii? There are four magic surf-pounded islands six hours flying time from Orange County. . South Seas? Samoa, Fiji, 'tongs, Tahiti ... the list is as long as 1here are islands. No surf, they tell y_ou ..• what are those white things breaking on that bid- den reef? They're waves, and good, uncrowded ones. Perhaps you like surfing with an Oriental touch. Go to Hong Kong. Or Japan, or Ceylon, or Bangkok. You'll find the mysto flavor of the East, and all th~ waves you can surf. · Yen for Europe? A rou nd trip ticket to France, Spain or Portugal is as close as the local travel agency, can be bought on time, and cost less than the down payment on a three-year-old used car. Puerto Rico's flawless coastline will be the site of November's World Surfing Contest •.. why not travel to Hawaii of the Eas.t coast for a change? * * The first thing the traveling surfer needs, if he is going anywhere but Mexico or Hawaii i1 • PfllS· port. They are aveilable at the Pa11port Agency, in the County Admini1tration Bldg., 511 North Syca· more, Sant• An•. The phone number is 8~2212. The $11 pas1port is good for thrH years, and renewable for another thrH for a $S fff. The r• newal can be obtained from your local travel agency If you are making plans to travel through them. * * * VISAS NEEDED TO TRAVEL Most foreign countries require-a visa for entry. The visa is usually obtained. either through the consulate in the United States, or at the border of the country you will be entering. . Again, the travel office can supply any of the in· formation you will need on obtaining one. The approx· imate cost would range from $3.50 to $5 for most Euro-- pean countries. You must have at least two photos for most visas, so it is a good idea to take extra passport photos along with you, just in case. * * * Most major air carriers, 111 well as steamship companie1 offer a variety of plan1 to travelers. During peak sea1ons they charge more for passage than during the off, or slow season. For a surfer in the 12 to 21 year age bracket, great savings cin be made by flying student-stand· by. Standby fare to Hawaii Is $25 lower than normal economy fare, and it is rare that the traveler will actually have to wait. . Standby fare from L.A. International to New York City, where you would begin the second leg of a European trip is $72 plus tax. A retur.,..trip 30 day excursion fare, non-stand· by would run $217. Depending on what time of day, and the amount of traffic you wlll be encountering, many airlines overlook the shipping fffs on surf- boards. Thay can range from $4 to $20 however, and it is best to check with the airline before making ar· rangements for your particular flight. * * * EUROPE BOUND? BEST TRAVEL BARGAINS Icelandic Airlines offers the best travel bargain fares to surfers who wish to sample the waves of France, Spain, Portugal or Britain. • A round trip ticket from New York to London and back during the normal season is only $364, and is less during the off-season. The normal season eastbound is August 4 through May 21, and westbound it starts on September 29, and goes through July 16. Peak seasons of May through August, and July through September are best avoided due to extra ex· pense and crowded conditions. . As it works out for the surfer the off season IS the surf season, and so he shotildn't have to worry. Airfare from London to Biarritz, the capital of French surfing is $62.80 one way, or ~ll~.30 round trip. It is actually cheaper to travel by tram m E~op~, and tile trains have a whole series of travel bargain tickets for the thrift-conscious surfer. The Eurail pass offers unlimited first class travel by train in 13 countries at a cost of $140.00 for a month, or $180 for two months or $210 for three months ... Railroad passes in other classes ?ffer. a.ddition'.11 savings as well. And there is always hitchhiking. This is a little more difficult when you carry a board, how· ever and unless you have unlimited time it is best to use ffiore conventional methods. Language can be a problem in many areas, but transportation companies usually have someone who can speak English for their tourist travelers. * * * Economy minded surfers are advised to pro- vide themselves with a hardsand hotel, or slHplng bag and air mattress. This Is a sure answer to your slffplng needs If you find a beach you Ilka, but no hotel. Throughout Europa and in many other foreign countries, youth hostels are provided for traveling students at 11 mlnlmal COit. They offer e bed, and a roof, and sometimes 11 meal fo r a vary low figure. Conventlon1I hotels art expansive, and classy; hardly the kind of place you'd be welcome fn In wet trunks and nndy feet, but there are those rlchtr, la11 adventurous souls who prefer this sort of s• curity. You won't have trouble finding this kind of 110- commodatlon, just paying for It. THE BOAT BEAT 1J'"•" leckel..y, 111tfe11al 1wet4 wl1111tf fet hl1 ... .,.,,, el y1chtl111, ce"'" the Met beat for Hrie DAILY PILOT. tte'• ffta only fulltlm• boatl119 reporfar e11 •ll'f Or1111e Ce1111ty 11ewtp•p•r 1teff. Surfers The Western Surfin g Association s a n c t I o n ed Hermosa Beach ·2 and 3-A Oiamplonships will be held tbJs weekend at t h e Hermosa Beech Pier. The meet is sponsored by the Cities and Cltambers oJ Commerce ofH er mos a . Manhattan, and Redondo Beach, and the Los Angeles C.ounty Department o f Recreation. Th.e t w o day chamP- ionship will include seven h~ts of men's single-A quarter fi.nah, 6 heats of Boys' single-A q u a r t e r finals, five beats of men's single-A semifinals, men's 2· A quarter finals and men's 2-A quartermllin. Events saturday a r e scheduled to be completed by noon. First heats start at 6: 30 a.m. Mac Lands In France iVell..Oaped 3 lo 4 foot .---------.. surf and hot competltioo made the Oceanside lnvita· tlonal 4-A surfing contest last weekend a memorable event. It marked the next-to-tast 4-A meet which w i 11 detennine the place stan- ding for Cslifornia's top surfers v.ying for a spot on Surfing Scene t!VI West Olast team which i:..--------J will eventually be selected to compete in Puerto Rico this coming November in Women'• Flllall the World Contest. Surf giants Skip Frye and 1. Margo Godfrey Corky Carroll battled it aut 2. Joyce Hoi&nan for a hotly-contested first 3. Sharon Webber and second place, with some 4. Joey HainMald controversy developing over the judges' decisions. 6. Linda Benson Frye, however, was Paddle Rae• selected over Can-oil for the lint ploce lr<>phy. I. Bill Mount Peter Johnson. performed 2. Bob Burnside consistently, and nudged out 3. Kermy L)'llD Tom Overland and David 4, Gerry Bemi.ette Nuuhiwa for third place. 5 J'-Molli . ...... ca. r.ten's Finals Judging : Brennen 1. Skip Frye ''Hev's" McClellend bead After a long !llght to 2. Corky Carroll judge, Marge McClelland, Paris, via Luxembourg, and CUTTING HARD -Surfers are getting in practice for upcoming competition 3. Pete Johnson Del Oannoo , Kit HC111·, Buu a long drive to Biarritz, in the U.S. championship~ at Huntington Beach, scht¥!uled August 28, 29. 4. Tom Overland Schwutz:, Les William1, Greg MacGillivray, Orange Thousands of spectators figure to be on hand for the classic event. 5. David Nuuhiwa Steve Bigler. County's ft4"emost surf-film -------'---_,..:::.._:_ ___ _:_.....:.=:..:::..:::::....==:..::.:.=:::_ ______ ~·-=.:.::.:.::==----=:.:.:-=::::::.:... ___ _ maker reports: "No surf to get excited over yet, but 'the conditions are fa vor able Billy Hamilton looks super, bav4 ing improved enormously this last year. "We are priming up on French, with I es sons delivered by Martimon. our man with the Fr e n c h • English dictionary ... with the help of some beautiful local mademoiselles.'' Accord!ng to MacGilliv- ray, Biarritz is a series or coves and cliffs, a tourist mecca for Frenchmen, but very few Americans . . . Swells have been Increasing due to a storm that is laying off the coast and Greg will report more later . , . Southern Cal Trout Planting This week the following Southern California waters are scheduled to be restock· ed with catchable-size rain- bow trout by the Depart· ment of Fish and Game. Anglers are reminded that this list is tentative and may necessarily be changed : LOS ANGELES COUNTY -BJg Rock Creek, Bouquet Canyon Creek, Cry st a 1 Lake, Legg Lake, S an Gabriel River East and West Forks. RIVERSIDE COUNTY - Fulmer Lake, Hemet Lake . SANBERNARDINO COUNTY Arrowhead Lake, Big Bear Lake, Green Valley Lake, Gregory Lake. Lytle Creek Middle and North Forks. U.S.Matador Vies Sunday In Tijuana TIJUANA-Robert Ryan, the yoWig American mata- dor who survived two spec· tacular tossings in his last appearance here, will re- turn Sunday to Plaza Mon· umental, the bullring-by·the- Sea. Mexican stars Raul Gar· cia and Gabino Aguilar will also appear on the pro- gram which features bulls from Santacilia ranch. It will start at 4 p.m. Ryan, from Inglewood, won an ear two weeks ago after being caught on the horns of his first bull and nearly gored. He was knock· ed. unconscious by his sec- ond bull; but managed to re- turn to the arena to end the performance. Eloy· Cavazos, the baby· faced 17-year-old from Mon· t.errey, redeemed himseli with aficionados here last Sunday.I with a classy per· formance that earned him the day's only ear. Young Leonardo Man- zano, making his second appearance, displayed the best capework of the after· noon, but got little help from the sluggish bulls he faced. He killed his first adversary with a single thrust and drew an ovation and a vie· .tory around the ring. how thriltY are you when you borrow money • Southern California Thrift & loan specializes in pe rsonal, bu siness and Trust Deed loans ••• Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme. diate money problems from depend· able funds available right now. The Thrifty way can u ve you money, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT& LOAN 170 E1U 17th St., Costa Mts1 ••••• 641·5G$S 6359 Wilahlrt Blwd., Los An11r11 ••• 6M·l220 • Pre labor Day fl!ith 1t1od1r11 wr1p-1ro11nd high p1rform1nc1 tflad dnign NATIONWIDE GUARANTEE llZE TUllWS 11.ACltWAW Ill TIRE po"• ,()0.13 '21.00 1.11-14 23.26 T,3g.11 7.71-14 23.76 7.76-15 27.26 30.00 ·-· Additional balls '1.00 oach WTIIE '10.60 11.12 11.87 13.82 1• . 0 ••• ....,_ 1• ...... '24.26 '1 .81 1.12 26.60 2.00 2.00 27.00 13.10 30.60 11.ZI . 33.00 18.10 36.!10 18.215 NO MONEY DOWN ·=·199 •&,[OJ.,..' IMl- •lm -UMIT I f<rlllllldbo COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH e HUNTINGTON BEACH 475 E. 17th St. 646-2444 16171 Beach llvd. 847-6081 BOTH STORES MONDAY·AllDAY 8 A.M.·9 P.M. .. -------------------- .. a '+ • t • ' • • • :· ,, $ • , • r I r • • . • • • • -• • • • ~ • 4 • = • - Bank Due $250,000 Facelift The Costa Mesa branch of Lhe United States National Bank will undergo a $250,000 facelift in the ran. The bank, located at 1645 Newport Ave., at the in· tersection of Newp0rt and Harbor boulevards. also will ~ enlarged both in the in- terior and exterior. Remodeling. Jiccording lo branch manager F r a n k Zrflbiec. will begin within the next eight y.·eeks t.'fld is scheduled for completion by early 1969. The present struct\lttl, a modified triangular shaped building, will assume the shape or a rectangle \Vith an addition on the !·!arbor Boulevard s i d t which will house the new conference r ooms a n d management offices. The drive-in island will have • new, higher patio roof and drive-in lanes will be altered to accommodate 13 cars on the bank parking lot. An additional lot, east ol die present lot , will be con· structed t.o provide for o verflow parking. The exterior of the bank will receive a new plaster coating, while the new wing will be in brick. Exterior ad- • ... - - dWom . wo wm 1nc1u<1e S1aapslaot travertine marble columns - Satellite and ex:teosive. l~scaping. Artist's concept sbows a riew Satellite t hat could snap photos of the sun's cor- New c~ting LS planned ona from a 300-mile high earth orbit. Hughes Aircraft Co., El S e gun do, is f?'" the entire lobby and o(· studying such a project for the n ational Science Foundation. The cigar-shaped hei! area. satellite would be 8 feet, 7 inches long and weigh 230 pounds. Solar panels jut- Rohr Given Big Order ting from the rear would dra\v power from the sun to operate the spacecraft's electronics and would carry a coronag raph to photograph the solar corona, which long has held mysteries for scientists. LONG BEACH (AP) McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Corp. has selected the Rohr Corp. of Chula Vlsla to pro- duce engine pods for the proposed DC10 jetliner. U.S. Automakers Eye Small Car Market M c D o n n e 11 Douglas By The Assod-1ed Pres1 spokesmen said the contract would bring Rohr $150 U.S. automoblle manufac- million over tbe next seven turers are ~Ported to be years. moving into an era of The engine pods will be smaller cars. designed to muffle engine Chairman Roy D. Chapin noise and will make the 271-Jr. of the American Motors passenger DClO quieter than Corp. said in Washington today's 1uperjets, even this week that his firm is though the tri-jet planes will prepared to ch a I Jen g e have twice ae much thrust, foreign car makers for the a spokesman said. affections of A m e r i c a ' 5 in a· story from Detroit Wed- nesday that-the auto in- dustry is preparing a new class of cars -smaller and cheaper than any built in this country now but still bigger than the tiny im- ports. The DClO is expected to economy-minded drivers. ~ i.'!lbeiiiiiinioperiiiaitlioinibiyilll7iili.iiiiiiiThiieiNieiwiiYioirkiiTiimieisi siaiiiid The Times said the first of these new cars is set for production by the Ford Motor Co. as a 1970 mOd cl and wi ll go on sale in eight months. Others are in the design or tooling stage, it said. Promoted Richard L. Osbahr of Westminster has been named a ssistant man- ager qf Southern Cali- fornia First National B a n k 1 s Huntington Beach office. • c ' • ~ ' I I t • • • • • ~ • • • • ! ~ ~ • ' • • t • , • ! • • ' i • • • t • : . • • t I I MERrrS Ir BENEFITS OF LEASING iHE FAMILY CAR ..,....... ...... ef A....._ llOW ..._ tM f•lllty car. Ap. ,.ntff tt. W.. ht • ._.... tood for cost-co1t1Cla•1 b11slllftl ... It .... tM4 hr Mr. ,_.,.f> ..... " bnipi.-. -Col•llY ,_. ....C.. ._.,.. wtt11 tilt CH!ltlotlitt ca IMt ,....,. for Sl25 .. lttlily ltt. ,..... ltttt. C...., tMI f9f obo1t Sfl , whk• '-1 ............. .ma_, ~for 40,0DD Mlln (aft ................. etc.I, 'he..,., Mys ya11r ...-11t CClf, '"81 ......... f.w lli1wtwt I• tile ...net er tllat Meoti•11 ,,.,..,., " tt. m. • ....,, 2 ,..,, ro• "' • new cor. '"""'°"'~" --.., WllT co.uT MteMWAT MIWNIT IUOI • 141-1271 / .. t..,.I MERCURY LINCOLN 0 Interest from the 1st of any month on funds received by the 10th. @interest from date of receipt after 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 current r1t• on passbook savings. -5.25% per an num on bonus occoun ts. 1£ not1 your t-avings 5hould be with ••• MUTUAL SAVINGS ~-1. ................ .. !867 East CCIII Hflhwoy • Cotono Del Mar, C.lif. 92625 Tes.phone 675-5010 -inc • "'*"' .llS I. cotOMDO II.ft.• rlSAOlM, (.Allt. t i lot ; • For Detroi t, the Times said, these cars represent a · major effort by the industry to combat an invasion of foreign products built by low-paid German a n d J ·apanese workers. Other car makers are working to catch up with Ford; The General MGtors Corp. is working on a car closer in size to the tiny European imports. T he Chrysler Corp. is not now planning to build a smaller, cheaper car. Jn Washington, Chapin told newsmen at a dinner meeting and preview of his firn1's new models r-.1onday that American Motors is developing a new car, "Not necessarily conventional in terms of today's accepted automotive configurations.'' Chapin declined to expand the staten1ent, but he had &aid earlier: "I belive that the 900.000 foreign car sales this year will be a high- \Vater mark, and one of the reasons is that we at American Motors are turn- ing more of our efforts toward the growing segment of the U.S. market to which the ithports appeal." "The public. by I t s purchase of imported cars, has made it clear that the era of small cars -of still more personal transporta- tion -is here," said Chapin. There were no compacts, however, included amon111 the new models for public display. A spokesman said the new car won't be ready before the 1970 line. Wershow LIQUIDATION SALE BY ORD ER OF OWNER 32 LAGUNA BEACH OCEAN VIEW LOTS* • Buyl11un1 Be ach residen· tial property 1t 1 liquidation price! Alt these lot& art fu lly improved with under· ground utll!tles. They are la<:ated Just East of the cen· lef ol town, less than i mile lrom Pacific Coast Highway, Many ol th1se lots com· mand a magnificent view of ttie Pacific Ocean. Easy terms- owner will finance with releases. ror add1tion1t lnlorm1t1on, c1ll 1ny ol the Wershow Oc.e1nsld1 Reil Elt1t1 Team: C1rolyn, Miiiie, Rick. Ken or Ed. .. LAGUNA BEACH • e " 1r._.c g /'""'::::..:::: ~ 11:: ... ;;;: .. :..~, ...... ,}!::: !net #4514, lots I tin• 32 r1~1 Ctt••St. to lllutblrd C1nyol'! Ro1d, 01t11 cont1n111 on to lo,•. Tlllio IOI• , .. 1l1111ted 111'1 llq•tt1 lld.. 81ueblrd C•rl)"Oft ltd. 1nd Worr11t11•!CMI Orivl, epproiilm.l1et1 \ m•I• 11st or t"'9 Coa•l Hiaflw•~· Milton 1. Wershow eo. AUCT10'411:Eltl • ltULTOltl 1012 S. Hiii St.•Ot11nlld•, Clllf. 92054 •(714) 7?2·1SOI :.... ' l Beware New Car Bargains 87 SYLVIA PORTER Should you take advantage ol the widelT publlclzed, lower prlcea for new car1 in these late aummer weeks? What are the economic pros and com for buying a new car now v1. waiting UD· UI the 1969 modfils are in· troduced lat nelt month or early October? BOW GOOD a deal are the nearly-new late model cara also being advertised now at "below wholesale" prices? Now ii the big bargain season for new cars. Auto manufacturers are swit- ching over to production of the J969s ; me status con- scious car buyer ii looking ahead eagerly t.o the new mod.ell; competition ii keen among dealers to clear out 1968 inventories. As a result of all these factors, dealers are offering price slashes which can mount into hun- dred• of dollars. On top of this 1et of con- ditions la the certainty that Finance Briefs KANSAS CITY (UPI) - C o m m e r c e Banc1hares, Inc., hH cootracted to buy Mechanics Bank of st. Joseph, Mo., and Citizens Bank of Kirksville, Mo., for $3.3 million in stock. Comm· erce Bancshares said it also Is.. negotiating to b u y Citizens Bank of Springfield, Mo. Citizens Bank of Joplin and Charlton County-Ex· chanie Bank of Brunswick, Mo., for a total on $9.1 millloo in stock. NEW YORK (UPI) - Crowell Collier and MacMillan, Inc., has &greed to buy Heald,, Hobsen and A.!sociates, Inc., an educa· ti on a 1 management con- sulting firm. Terms were not disclosed. Heald; Hobson represerrts a number or leading universities an d other educationl'l in- stitutions. It is beaded by Dr. Henry T. Heald, a former president of the Ford Foundation. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A group headed by Lewis A. Bracker, a vice president of McDonDell and Co., has bought the 103,000 share bloc of management held stock in Wells Industries, Inc., maker of cargo con· tainers c.nd jet e n g i n e startmg systems. The shares were bought from Robert Ga geby, 'llleodore Sewell and David Charney. Marvin Finell, Los Angeles attorney, becomes the new chairman and Dr. Myrle Cross. formerly with Brown FiJrtube Co. o f Elyria, Ohio, ls the new presick!nt. · BOSTON (UPI) -United Fruit Co. has donated 15 tons of freeze.dri~d foods valued at about $135,000 to the victims of the volcano eruption at Mt. Arenal in Costa ruca. n1e food is being rushed from New Orleans. The Mt. Arenal eruption, which started July 29 after tbe volcano had been inactive for about 500 years, has kill· ed an estimated 75 with twice as many still missing and thousands driven from their homes. The IS tons of. freeze-dried foods will ex· pand to 50 tons of table food when reconstituted. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Standard Pacific Corp., a residential land developer, has agreed to buy Security Fore Corp., also a land de\•elopment firm. on a pooling--0f-interest.s basis. NEW YORK (UPI) - ~fagnavox Co. has started marketing its telephone fSiCsimile system thrOugh a new subsidiary. The low cost remote copier makes copies on plain paper via ordinary telephone l l n e rents for '66 monthly. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Rushell Syst!M\s, toe., has obtained an order for 25,IXXI ot' it& Keyless Pick-Proof electronic locking units for vending machlnM f r o m Armor• Co .• ol Loi Ant•les . a top dlotrib-ol General Eleclrl~ col.n-operated laun· dry equipmtd. prices on the next models willl be up substantially, reflecting climbing labor and materials (including steel) costs and a variety of higher safety standards. What's more, it's possible that the warranties on the 1969s may not stretch as long as the warranties on 1968 models. Apollo Reatf•• to Go : But there are drawbacks, 1' /f ,, too: The Apollo 7 moonship sits atop its Saturn lE ,. THE NEW 1968 car you rocket at Cape Kennedy after being moved to tht # buy trus month will be one pad for its scheduled October launching. The 1pace-! year old by the end of next craft is expected to take Walter Schirra, Donn ~ nionth. This means its Eisele and Walter Cunningham on an 11-day orbi· ~ trade-in value may drop 10 ta! flight. ;~ to 25 percent in just the next--------------------!' few weeks. ,, By buying a }g&a this IUITI• 1' mer, you'll forfeit 1969 1afe· lnfl o E h :i!~~·y~.~~~ m"!~ at1on: noug ! not be able t.o get your preferred options or car col-l or. You may find that you T M k M w , have to take and pay for ex-0 a e en eep' pensive options you don't J, need or really want. And if you're looking for a _ ! used instead of a new car, NEW YORK (AP) -more of it is going to pay !S summer is not necessarily Nothing is more certain to what the man of l~ the bargain season. The cause normally calm men to couldn't aspire to: mor~' reason is the greatly in· education better healt lose their breath, their ra-· ' · creased demand for used care, perwons, a aecon cars by summer travelers tionality and control of their car, television, hi-fi. and vacationers. blood pre.11sure than the sub· In other words, deprecta1 ject of inflation or, as some tion of currency doem'l1 WHAT ABOUT the ads for say, the debasement of cur-always: mean a reduction iQ1 late model, almo1t new cars rency. tak·e-home pay, not if t1* . .at "below who le 1 a le '' Tell a man ·with two take-home pay is risindll prices? ~ children that today he must faster than inflation, as i~ Beware! A 1967 car, for , "82 al ,_ u In "· u ·1e instance. advertised a t earn .14~ a year to equ u..as receti y u11:: ru the purchasing power of Ststes. 1 ulider $900 is quite possibly $5,000 tn 1939 and the animal Still the figures do loolC an ex-taxi cab or an ex-ren-· lin r e s p 9 n s e is 1 !'Jl· pu~ · g, and so First Na~' tal car or an ex-sales fleet car. It may turn out that the mediate, ranging in pitch ttonal City was queried. An advertised car baa already from a bleat to a roar. from there it was determifli been driven IOO,OOO miles or This quivering victim of ed -that the statistics are, a' 1 al inflation might a c t u a 11.y best, the only f l g u r e • more. not untyp e over a become irrational to learn, available of a rather bad 111 year's time for a taxi work· tng three shifts a day or a as the First National Cify NOT COJ\.1PARABLE rental car. Bank reported last week, that the annual rate or For one thing, th Beware also of wholesale . dollar depreciation 'last year statistics on cost of living l.tf. automobile "clubs" in which was 2.7 percent, a rate industrial countrie·s and Ies4 you are supposed to pay 8 greater than that of Bri.tain, well developed nations ar( nominal membership fee to France and Germany, and hardly comparable at al1' become eligible to buy, Iran and Greece as well. The figure fur Saudi Arabia( usually sight unseen, a year-To strike thiJ man dumb, in fact, looked too good to bf@ old car for $800-$900. however, one need only in-true. First National Ci~ In these deals, the Better fOrm hlm that the. currency tossed it out. ! Business Bureau reports, showing the least deprecia-It seems that the most ac~ you frequently have to wait tion in the past 10 years, ac-curate statistics generallj months for delivery (if it's cording to First National Ci-are maintained. 1 by the int &!livered at all), and you ty, ls not the dollar but the dustrial nations. In 1omf may dlscover that the car quetzal of Guatemala. small countries, for ex~ for which you have mailed Since 1957 the quetzal ample, cost qf living in~ in a substantial deposit is reportedly has dropped in dezes are rea:lly based on actually a reconditioned value just one-tenth of one survey1 made years ago a'!4 taxi. percent a year, or in dollar not updated for changes i1t THE CODE of automobile equlvalent, just one penny in living habits. They coul4 advertising stand a rd s 10 years. The dollar has have more inflation tha.1' drawn up by the National shrunk l& cents in that time. they admit. ~ Association of Automobile The figures also might be'. Dealers in Washington and STATISTICS distorted by the simplicitt; the Association or Better And, dlfficult u it is to of the standard of livin~ Business Bureaus in New believe, the First National which admits of no change~ York, states that any City charts also show that or by the fixing of priCes OD' former taxicab, police car, the El Salvador c O 1° D • the one major crop, ot rental car and the like must Venezuela Bolivar and simply, by stagnation of th4 be identified in dealers' a~s Thailand both have main-economy at a low standar( as such. Aren't there real tained their values better of living. ~ bargains available. then, in than the dollar. An absence of inflation ill nearly new as well as new Such statistics as these a country with a bogge~ cars? Of course, there are. give fits to inflation-frantic down economy is nothing t~ But you must make cer-people. And even Dr. Farnz brag about. And though thtt tain you know just how the Pick, a m<>My and gold ex-depreciation of money and· car was used before, how pert whose continental ac-inflation are 1omethlng t• many miles It was driven, cent becomes heavy with holler about, it's nice to how much of the warranty denunciation w be n he know that the noise is muf.: is left. The amount of the speaks of the subject, refers fled a bit by the sound ol ~ warranty left win be a to the U .s. dollarette. boOming economy. ~ crucial disclosure of the ex-Somehow, though, t b t tent to which the car bas figures just don't add up. been used. Seeking comfort, some slight relief was found in TO PROTECT yourseU: looking at the very worst, Do business only with a even tbougb s o m e b o d y reputable dealer in your else's headache doesn't own area, recommended by necessarily cure the pain ln friends if possible. another man'1 head. Double~heck the dealer's In Brazil, to illustrate, 100 reputatJon for servicing a centavos of the year 1957 car and fulf1.:ling warranty are now worth two centavos. obligations. This is an ex-In Argentina, 100 centavos cellent : reason ror restric-in 10 year1 have been reduc- ting yourselr to dealers ln ed to die pW'chasing power your own neighborhood. You of six. And in Chile, 100 can reach them easily and centesimog naw get you only they can't duck you easlly. 11. Get an your terms in But it still doesn't 1eem writing before you hand right. Raw figures can lie, over any money. If you have especially when the raw any d o u b t 1 whatsoever. figures themselves are little ha" your lawyer read the more than Ues to begin with. contract before you sign It, B:E.TJ'ER OFF and have the dealer sign the papers too 80 he cannot The $5,000-a-year man of claim .a dlffuent agreement 1939 isn't nearly three times was made. u badly off today, even though be mll6t earn $14,282. RECOGNIZE that when The fact is, be ii earning It YOU 10 1bopp1n1 for summer -and mor•. He'1 mucb bet· car barpina. you mu1t take ter off. wttb you a large dose of In addlttorn, all that extra "show me" 1tepUcl1m aDd money lm't gotn1 into thl common aenu. ftllinl ol bulc neods. A lot • • Becera B•ldcer I Peter J . Bradley baa l been appointed assist. ant manager or Secur-! lty Pacific National ~ Bank's Huntington Har- bour branch In Huot· lngtoo Beach. •• • • • I ! •• ( .. ~:. :: . .. • ~ • , .- . -·--· • .-- YOU'RE NOBODY'S PIGEO I . If you'v• Cllseov1reCI Hie DAILY'P~OT, you'r• as worldly wise ln tli111 birds on St •. Mark's Square in Ve~ic:'I.,_ They know where to find food for . . . the body. A~cl-you have founCI the . placrio-find food for the mind. Thie DAILY. PIL~ctoesn't spoon feed you with pap, either. The brightesf liernels of netlona1 -•nCI l~ca! newa are mixed with the meatiest edi- i• - +oriel pa9es-llllitd 'topp1d ·by an exciting mixture of features, funnies and e.hotoa .f.or d111er+; Se.ark Uf> )'.OU~. reading diet with the best. I ----~--- I • -. ' ------. -. __:.----·---• On The Square Jusf like the pigeons enjoying a summer holiday with tli• attractive tourist who brought the DAILY PILOT to Venice, you'll find you're In good company if you take l~to your home alld on your own vacation "the newspaper Marly 1veryon• reads alon.g the Orange Coast.'' DAILY PILOT • • ----...-------------·-----·--- ' I - 4 ~I I I GROUNDED -Sally Field, above, finds she is out of the action on "The Flying Nun" tonight in color at 8 p.m. on Channel 7. The sister's plan to raise contributions for the poor brings her a floating crap game and a new quarters in the local jail. TELEVISION VIEWS Convention Blueprinted By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) -When Sander Vanocur of NBC-TV commented at the Republican National Convention that the GOP appeared to be kissing off the Negro vote there were protests to the network that be had forced personal opinion into what should have been objective coverage. REUVEN FRANK, president of the NBC news division, believes Vanocur, an experienced report· er, was absolutely right to state a conclusion he had reached by adding up the facts. But this is a presidential year and with political feeling and awareness running high Frank expects other com- plaints of partiality before a new tenant gets lhe White House lease. In .some countries it is fairly common practice to inject personal or government bias into TV news coverage. American network• are as vigilant· ly against this as the great news agencle1 have al· ways been. In Frank's view, however, a qualified reporter is entitled to make an analytical comment even though there is risk some viewers might con· fuse it with an editorial observation. ''IT'S A MATTElt of professional discipline," he said in an interview. "No one on NBC is ever al- lowed. to grind an axe personally. He may come to lowed to grind an ax personally. He may come to opinion based on actual events. Not everyone may see it that way. People who agree with you regard you as objective. Those who disagree with you feel you are biased." Vanocur's summation of the GOP convention setup and its small handful of Negro delegates was one of the crisp analyses by the NBC floor report- ers at Miami Be11ch !hat gave a sharp edge to its coverage and helped it gather the largest audience of convention viewers. Frank said the same team would function in much the same way at the Demer cratic National Convention at Chicago Aug. 26. CHET HUNTLEY and David Brinkley will be in the booth above the convention floor with Van- ocur, Frank McGee, Edwin Newman and John Chancellor down below as reporters. "We place big emphasis on floor men," Frank said. "Our bunch are four years older and slower than they were in 1964, but they are also four years older and wiser. They are our best reporters and yet competent to anaJyze; analyst and reporter in the same person." ANOTHER PLUS for NBC in the ratings battle, according to Frank, was the positions of commen- tators and cameras so that viewers always realized they were at a convention and involved in its coverage. "Even while our reporters were simply talk- ing to each other you got the feeling 1omething could happen," he said. FRANK SAID the Chicago convention would be a j'brand new ball g,ame" because of th'e com- munications strike which, at the moment, may make it impossible to cover live the important meeting of the credentials committee at the Hilton Hotel a week from Monday. "We'll cover it some- how," he said, adding that nothing at Miami Beach had changed bis belief in complete gavel to gavel coverage of the conventions. He kept careful watch on ABC-TV's ex peri- ment of a 96-mi.nute nighUy wrapup of the day's events. . Dennis the ltlenflt!e • ' " GORDO JUDCWE PARKER MOON MUWNS TUMBLEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF MU'l'r, YOU JUST DON'T BE SITSTILLIILL. FUNNY! CALL. AN EAR DI DN"T )t)U SPECIALIST! .. EVERSEE MISS PEACH l\1111RED! 'l Nf.E.D SLEEP/ :t 'S/MPL.'I NEED MOrZE. 51.EIWI ,.OEBURNS BEFORE? NONSE:NSE! °™E NEEi> FOR 5LRP IS IN 'IOl!lt MIND! -------~-~----~------ By Gus Arriola By Harold Le Don t WCIUJ IATMBTMAT YOU PIPMT! W. ll6MT •• I\L I KMOW nUJ n4E JUPfiE THINKS VBY !AV NOrMING llM- H16Hl.Y a: SAM •• AJIP I PONT WANT LESS SAM CDNTIWll "ltl SPOIL ~AT IEUTIOWSHIP! 10 BOTMSC KJll! By Tom K. Ryan P!PUTY, MV SC1(! ... I JJST Hl:ARl7 AN' JUST101lUNK!-I A50UT'l\:R RECENi APF.l?INTMENT '10lJ l 10 ACTING SHERIFf1 'rl?O LU:KY ~Tc:IE~ .• DOG! •• .coN6RA1UUll'.ot§fEUA.I.. F~ WU? KEEP: TAI.KIN'! NO ONE au.D BE MORE V!:!>ERVIN I · LIKE I ~ SAIP:"nm's A LAD I !il:T- Wllll A FIJTIJREl •• ~e:RES A i<117 WHAT'S GOIN' PlJC!iSJ~ .. tt li 6-15 CERTAINLY!I'M GROWING SIDE· BURNS!iHEYRE ~ELATESTI ' , GOSH,IGOT FRIGHTENED! YOU f.IAD ME WORRIED· ly Al Smith I ~OUGHT '/OUR EARS WERE MOVING UPTOTHETOP ,..-1~ OF YOUR HEAD! By M•R IF /T!SNOT" THEl<E, IT'S IN YOUlt eopy •• ' • • • t 1 l'>lj Tt-~L,r ... c:.1 AUOUST 11 "'°C .... -1111 ,<.,, ""' DH•t11.-. ...... (C)(30) 11-.... -(Ci (30) _..,,,,, ............ M1rrllllitt Pl'.aaa, Jla llnatr Mark Muf9hy al\d th• comedy team ci' VIG GtKCO and Fran II Wltr•rd. Allin l."00 llJ 9 (f) TliurtdQ lfl&ht Mn r•d• 1notfler "H1p F•bl1" In whlcll '1Th1Th!n Red lint" (d11m1) '64-Coldll~a. when conrronted by Keir DulLM, Jack Werdtn. thrtt bowl•,'?' ~11, 11t1.ur1ll)' O @(l)Tllatlirl: (() (30) "rM dlooiMs th1 cool ont. litrd.'' ]On rtturns from 1 hunt· IJ • G'Clta Mtvlt: "Stlll•" (a;.ml,) '50-Alln Shtrid1n, Victor M1turt. GI -1or <Ci 1301 m .... ...., ,,., on.'""' -<Ci <30> GI.,_,_ 1301 ID llldlalr'1 llWJ (30) fD Sci11tm hportlr: ''-andlna Ofl the Moon." John Fitch, MIT Science Reparttr, aplalns the operation• lll'IO!wd In pladng tht Apollo splct· craft on tht ll'IOOll. 7:GO II !Iii tJl CIS "°'"' ._ <Ci <li>> Waiii Cronkite. II f ,,.., CIO) GI I LM ...., (30) m-•-<30> ID 11cn ... fill .,,..,._ 1"' 11 a rn-......,. (C) 110> W1111m i111-111rr1na Stuart Whit· 1111\. Jm TOW!llll'ld. hrcr Htrktt Ind R1ndf 8oont. storylll'll 11111 wallalllt 11 ,,_ tlmt. 11111m--<Ci <OJI ''Tilt ciittl " l•atl hone." Boont'a '°" Intl flndl hlmulf atr•ndtd In • hottll• wlldtmM with hla flthtr lfl'lllrr **1lfttd ;y nkebltt. At lftlf'a ltntll b1rtll· dly p1rty, loDnt dlCW. 1ht bar acts Wiii moni chlldbh than hit ,..,., Dtlpltt 1ht pl•dlftP cf wlft ReblCCI, IOOlll t1ic. th• bar lrlp- pfnl with hl111 111 th• wlldtotess to tlldl hilll IOl'ftl ..... ltllORI In I• trip with whia-m tMt COIN between him 1fld An~p1rtlcul•'1; when they klu. Ann ret.Utla lJ' wearlna: • short htlrdo wtlen Ill 1howa up for tl!tlr 11ext dlt1. (If) ID TM Advllltun (t) (30) m.....,, """""' ~· .... (C) "Tiit Past." A profi1t llf f~t history of Norw11 bqlnnin1 1rou~ 900 A.O. Emph11irtd la th1 aplor•~ Ina ap!rll of th• Norwea:l1n1. m-•- ~30 D Ill i!J -' <Cl (!O) 'Tho Little Victim." 5(1:. Friday ind °"- fleer Gannon lnvest11111 1 chlldo- bNlina caw. Mrs. Marshtll (Brookt Bundy) Insist& her chl!d't lnjurl• were caused by 1 fill. (R) D IHI m""" ''"" (Ci <30! Or;" ROssfl>rob11 Tom'• fMllnp for Jiii; L1sll1 threatens Bttty; M1r1hf c.omforts Rossi; Tom corrtinu• hit Mirth for Jill. m '""' (C) <"> fD Thi """" cf tht Dollar: ''Tldl· noloe Trill." A look 11 how Amiri• can comjMnin Jn Europe lllYI stopptd !111 "bniln drain" to tht U.S. AllO I look It Amwic1n· [11roJ*n competition. 1a:ao11111 m ........ -tii ._...... (C) (60) ··~ l.yndt pests. e ........... -(Cl 160! 0-.....,, <Ci <601 ''Twixt Cup tnd Lip." Lucy Blyilen,, Join Bltcbntn, Ethet Merman attr. M IMPt 1rt 1111111 tmpl~" plotl with 111 •·!:OP and his l1ndl1d1, tD DI I JIWtled Kflllrt, o,.,,. .... ,60> m Jadl LllllM H ... (C) (60) I ,_ ..., (Ci (30) llD lhvltw: "Gas Buggy." Dr. trt Hibbs ind guests loolf 11 lh1 txpttlmental Proj1ct Gas Bus1Y. an attempt to deton1t1 1tom bombs fol tcOl'IDmlc gain. tttf·rtfllnot. CR) tl:IO 8) NM: (C) (30) 8111 John1. • Lii'• .. " .... (C) (SO) I 'Wo~~~p~ J•: ll:IO fJ £lwtn O'tlodl JtpOrt: (t) (301, Soll.'" Job.hunter luM Cll'Jllftttr Jerry Dunphy. IUbmlb ID PIJ'Choforlca1 lab tD D Tht 11th Htur ffm: (C) t30J dtterml111 how hla ltitla 1111t11t bt G!IOl'a:a Sklnntr, uM 111 tht 20lti ctntury. Tiit tllta 1J Storlll If ... c.ntury (30)" lhOw that ht II 1111pfQl}'tbll U a ltlp coecll lirMr • I kf111o ICOul (R) lllalt f MIN: (C,) -..oulln (drama) '52-D Ferrtr, Mltl'dltfld, Z.. Z. Gabor. 0 NtwS: (C) (30) Siller War«. O Movie: "Al tapolll" (drtma) '59 -Rod Staiger, Fay Spain. m IM er.111 (C) (60) GJ MM"ll: "IM v.,.. Mll•lllown" (mystery) '55 -Denni• O'Kltft,, mTlllll • c 111,u1::1• (() (30) m ll!Bllll -...,, ..,,. 61: (C) A-Mw look at tilt pata· ll:SO 1J MCl'llt: ''Wah lll•nd" (1dvtn- ~ltt cf tDdty with tht rouna Tthl· ture) '42-Robert Pr.ton, William ti1n dlnc111. tilt SlmMfll with Bendix. thtlr tllfOtd rftutll, llM Fljl1 n lk· 1111 throurft fl11 tlld tht 111thanl· Cl @ (i) Thi T111Irht Show (C) Ina IOUnlb ti lti• New Zealand ·-(R) n Moril: "'Frllld•" (drama) '47- Dlvld F1rr1r, Glynlt Johns. !n~~ "!totytllln llf R1j1.. 0 ~fl) Jot, IWlop lllow (I)'. ·-··-12'00 m"' ,,,,. 1ci 1:1118 ..... , (C) (2 '"' 12:30 m All·Nfg1tt Show: "Thi Bach1lot D @ m n,ln1 Nun: (t) (30) P1rty.'' "lhe 812 ~h1tl,'' 1nd ''Thi ''Sitttr Tucky." Sill:•r 81rt1ille's Fabulo~s DorH)'s.' •rch for oonlrlblltions to ald the pool brlnp her l1l • flG1Ung cr1p 11n11. Flndin1 hmetf In Sin Juan's m Action n-trl: "C·Mtn," dock •r• with her chirlty ballltt still •mpty, ltlt 1sb pirt!cJpants 1%:45 fJ Movie: "C~n l1tt11 tl Mont .. in 1 cr1p 11m1 for 1 cont1ibutlon. rlf" (we1ltrn) 57-St~ln1 Hayden., Ona of !ht pl1ytra la convlnetd Sister Bertrill1 Is his luc~ chirm and Jnlis11 on 1t11rl111 hi• wlnnlnp ltOO II Mow* ''Condtftlned" (dra1111) with het. (R) '2i-Ron1 ld Colman, Ann Hardina. GIH"" (C) <30> fRIOAY DAYTIME MOVIES 1:300"1,.... ,... ~ (,.· llllllCI) '51-Vtn Johl\IOll, Klthryn CirJ)10ll, a "hi ..,.. (dr11111) '49--UoJd "ola11. "Wttllolt "'1" (dr1ml} '47 -Glullfllt1 Muina. 0 Movie: "Tiit IQltlrio111 Mr. Won(' (mystery) '35-Btlt LulOIL D Co111111un1tr lullttln INN D-1'1 11:00 9 "'Ain't Nt TIM r.r Clory" (dra- ma) '57-81rry Sulli'nn, "Sod' .r Tlflitl" (1dv1ntun.) '41-9111• Ool'llevy. U:JO m "l•ptd" (mplllfY) '4~rlal Donl,,.,. "Wiid .... Cllllnl" (drto m1) '41-Menry fond•. 4:JO fJ "f.tt tf lift" (comtctf) '51 - Judy Hottidty, lllch1rd Conte. IJ(C) ......... -"" (ld·fi) '62~doll MHdlell, • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPER.S 0111 Of Tii1 L1,rg1rl F1cillti11 tn Or1n11 Counfy PILOT PRINTING 221 I wm IAUOA ILfD. NIWPOIT HACH .......................... , " ~-~ DAILY PILOT Thv.,.t11, Au,iill HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE eunOr•I IM -•I 1000 0-r•I I I GLODEJ<t M. ,., I OUR NEWPORT llEACH OFFICE 20 yeors in tho Harbor Aroo 2 offices to serve you Bay & Beach Really, Inc. 2026 West Balboa Blvd, Newport Beach 673·9200 Country Atmosphere T o...:ering trees and lush land1capin9 sur- round this delightful l BR home in a quiet Newport neighborhood. living room opens to sun deck overlooking a terraced back yard. Priced to sell at $25,750-10•/. dn. LAD REAL EST ATE 320 W. Coast Hiway, NB 642.0344 . , NEWPORT HEIGHTS OCEAN VIEW -Convenient to schools and shopping, attractive 3 bdrm. fam . room, 2 baths, large master M-rm .. ~th fireplace, 17 x 34 beamed ceiling_ living room, electric kitchen -ONLY $39,500. HARBOR HIGHLANDS OPEN DAILY -I· 5, 1940 Highland Drive -Vacant, 4 bdrm. 3 bath, fam . room, gas blt-in 's;.. electric garage door opener -ASK!Nu $36,950. "C" THOMAS, REALTOR 224 W. c-t Hwy. 541-5527 Newpon llMch be. 545°5643 -· Walkin9 Dhtanct to Harbor View Hills Graiiimar School lligh In Harbor View Hills tills home «· fers an unsurpassed View both Day and Night. Very separate J.Jvlng room, formal dininJ rm, family rm with firepla ce, beautiful master bedroom suite opens on· to sheltered pool tastefully decorated. CaD now• at only $49,950 Contact: Beverly Pavlovich . · · Eves: 673-8316 • • HOUUS '°It SALi HOUSIS 'Oii SALi HOUlll l'Olt SALi HOUSl!S FOii SALi! HOUSl!S FOii SALi HOU9ll M 'uil, I IDOll o.nor•I 1000 Genorol 1000 Ganarol 1000 -·· !DOii -·· 11111 . . • . Now is the limo to find that homo near school for your family. To make your job oa•iar, your leading ,.a( os!al• broktn offer you this SP.Kial •olec:tion of fine family homos, each loc.tod noar school.. I \ -· KING SIZED LOTS 1 todOO' I . , WS THAtl 1 MILi ~ ... SIA -41 ... • - 3 New Luxury Buccola·Built Homes w/lmmediate Occupancy Two4 IR,2 botlos-O.o3·11t.3- $34,550 "' $36,275 EXCELLENT VA & FHA TIRMS lrookll.,. ... Hawltr ... H.I. Cflnt u,.19Nft • C::.... ..,,,.,) SHllW009 BrAm lof lllo loo Toi. 961°3036 J. LEONMD .WITH o,.. 10 "' 7 Dally B/B OUR CORONA DEL MAR OFFICE 20 yaars in tho Harbor Aroo 2 offices to serve you Bay & Beach Really, lac. 2407 E. Coast Highw•y, Corona d1I Mer 675-3000 Confucius say ••• see D.V.F. for Good Deal! VIEW HOME 5 Bedroom • Family • 3 !laths. Will lease option at $350 per month with more than half ap- plying to purchase price. Im· mediate occupancy. Don V. FrankDn, Rtoltor. 3250 E. CoHI Hiw1y COfOn•dolMor OR 3·2222 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY IN HUNTINGTON HARBOUR Close To AD Schools Your choice of several dramatic homes - 3 & 4 BRs, 2000 to 2650 1q ft ., near boat slips, beach & tennis club. from $46,000 to $51, 700 Huntington Horbour S•las Corp. (You Own The Land) 7141847·2531 ' 213/430-3571 Evea. 7141847·8646 Ask for Mr. Logan or Mn. Buccola I :J);.~~· Como True ••• in this fenced •. tr••· shaded play yard. Located ·on e quiot corner lot. Just stops from Kinybiooko Khool, this ettractive,. convenient / home provides a secure haven for the school ago child. 3 Bedre;,;,;;~ 2 baths, spreod over a largo 1500 sq. #. 5'14 '/. loan lran•lerrablo, and low. mo.nthly Pmts of $169 includes taxes· $24,950. BURR WHITE, IUllOI 2901 Newport Blvd., Newport Be1ch 675-4630 EvH 673.6069 HARBOR VIEW HILLS Next to community . swimming poOl1 wolk to Harbor View Elemon!ary, or Lincoln Jr, High School. New 4 Bdrm, 2~ BaRt; $52,000 DeLANCY Rill ESTATE 2828 E111t Co1st Highway, Corona d1! Mer 673-3770 3 Bdrms • $21,500 I Vi baths, larg• yard. Woodland Grammar, Kaiser Junior High, H4rbor Hi, St. Joachims Parochial. "The Red Carpet Treatrn~_r· GEORGE WILLIAMSON, REALTOR 3109 Newport Blvd., Newport Bti1ch Phone 673-4350 !Market Basket Plaza) Exclusive • Nr. Harbor Hi Newport Heights 3 BR, 2 bath, newly listed, carpeted, shake roof, $29,500. Block from Ensign & Harbor Hi· 2 Bdrm, 2 bath + family .rm . 2-lllory with large fenced yvd in quiet Newport Heights, f25,000. . PETE BARRm And Company 642-4353 ' ' I I ~ • J I • f 1..---------------,_;.;H,;.OU:.S:.;E::Sc..F:..;O:,:R:..::SA:::L::E~..:.H:;:O:;:U,;.Sl::;S:..:..FO::;R:_:S::A::Ll:_..:.H::O:.:U::S::ES:...:..f;::Olt::_::S::A::Ll:__I HOUSES FOR SALi Dli:EOORY OF SCHOOLS 1o.n.:.:=':.::.•1 _ __;;1 000~ Go••••I 1000 Gonor•I HOUSES fOR SAL E HOOSES FOR SALi H00SES FOR SALi -MESA DEL MAR 10000....rol NEWPORT -MESA UN IRED SCHOOl "DISTRICT C•t•"• cl•I Mi r Hl9h School •.••.•••• , 2101 f1llbl11ff Ori•• Coro111 l!lol M•t Codo M1,a High School • , • , , , , , , • , , , . 2450 Foi,...iow ltd., Cotto Me•• 110f Gonorol lo POOL HOME One ol the molt popWar mo- d.ell ln thit fine arttl. ' bedroom• • den. New ey· 1M carpeb. Just ndeconLt· ed l.nlid• &nc1 out H • r pool "'"' '°""' "' decldn(. -$31,1'0, (1t1nci1 High School • , , •• , , • , •••• , • 212) l'l1c111tl1, CJr.4. N1wpori Harbor Hlth School • , • , , • , • 600 lrvi111 Avo,, N.I. laloeric School .•••• ,,, , ... , , ••• , 1•1S l1l11rlc Dr., C.M. liar Str11t School , , •• , , , ••.••.••••.• J 100 l11r St., C.M. l'r111dlo Scliool ,.,,, .• , .•• , ,, •••. , 1001 Pr11idio Sq~ C.M. Adomt Scloool ... , • , , , • , , , . , .... JISO ClMbhouio Ref., CJ-4 . la•f Vi1w S,liool ••. , , , , , • , , , 2SJ I Orthard Dr., S1nt1 A111 C1lifor11l1 School , , ,. , •• , , ••• , , J131 C1l1fornl1 A¥1., C.M. Cany•n Sch•ol ....••• , ••••••••• , .... 2150 C•nyo•, C.M. M•ud• I. O•vi1 School , ••••••• , . , 1050 Adln9"1011 Dr., C.M. Coll•;• P•rk School , , • , •• , , 2ll0 Notr• D•m• Ro1d, C.M. Harp•r School ....• , •• , ••, •• , .. , , 425 Eid 11th St., C.M. H1in1 K•h•t School, ••••••••• ,, 1110 S•nta Ana AY•., C.M. Killybrool1 School ,., •••••• ,, lt51i Killybrook1 L1n1, C.M. McN1tly School·•·••·••••••••• 1901 N1wpori llwd ,, C.M. Lindb•r9h School , .•• , •• , ••.....• llO Ealf llrd St., C.M. M••• V1rd1 Sclriool :. , • , , 1990 North M111 V1rd1 Dr., C.M. Monti Ville School , • , , •••• , , • , • , , • )90 Monie Vidt , C.M. P1ul1i1l110 School , , , , , ,, ,,, ,, •• 1060 P1ul1rino Aw•., C.M. Pomo111i School ,,, ••• , ,,, •••••••• 2051 Pomon1 Aw1., C.M. Sonora School •• , ••• , , , , , , , ••• , , •• , , , , 966 Sonora, C.M. EIGHT SCHOOLS * * * * NEWPORT BEACH POOL HOME llG 5 BEDROOM I PRE-SCHOOL T·HROUGH JR. COLLEGE I I Large family room with fireplace and forJhal dining room. Large lot nicely land· scaped. Owner must seJl quickly. Priced $2000 under market at $32,950. Btt.utltul 3 bedroom, 2 beth -All new Iha&: carpeU - Tastefully landscaped. Stt thil pe'fect I re e formed pool wlttl waterfall and IC&da of decking. -$29,900. 5~2313 646-7171 are within walking distance of MESA VERDE. It 's a family Community. $2500 BELOW FHA APPRAISAL Newport Heifbts view home. 2 Bdrms, 2 baths plus amily room. Extra guest house with bath. Out or town owner says selL FHA appraised for $26,500. oPEN EVES. THE ~EAL E .STATERS THE RE~L ESTATERS B/B Finl Time Usled E. A. R11 School • , , , .. , , •••••• , ••• 601 Hamilto11 St., C.M. Ch1irl•1 W. T1Winkl1 School , • , , ,, 1224 CaHfor11ia St., C.M. t \'ictori• School • , , , ••••••• , , , , , • , , I 025 Victori• St., C.M. Whltti1r School , • , •• ,, • ,, ••• , , 1100 North Whitti1r, C.M. • l'tiolle 546-SHO 1700 Nowport 646-7171 2790 Horbor S~2313 4 !bedroom, 3 bath borne on Balboa Peninsula Point. ClO&e to Ocean. Bay, 00.t Wilton School , , , ••••• , , , , ••••• , , • , , SOI Wibo11 SI., C.M. ------------~­ Woodland Scltool , , , •• , , , , • , , • , , , • 2025 Tu1tin Aw1., C.M. Corona d1I Mir School ••••••••••••• 610 C1irn1tion, CdM Htrbor Vi1w School , , • , , ,, , , • , , , , , 900 Gok11nrod, CdM Hor•c1 En1i9n School , , , , , , , , , , , , , , • 200 Cliff Driv1, N.8. Lincoln School ,., •. •••••••• 3101 P1cific Vi1w Driv1, CdM M1r in•r1 Sch•ol ,,, • ,,. ,, ,, ••• , • 2100 Ma rin1r1 Ori~•. N.I. N•wport School , • , , , , , • , , • , , , , , 14th I l•lbo• Blvd., N,I. Newport H1ight1 School • , ,, , •••• , , JOO E•it 15th St., N.8. ----------1 1TriH:ii1iis""wiiliE:iEiiiK'CS~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim"rn;....:o;w.w.:;;-I = ::ii;":'......°':; 10 ClllTOM • QUAUTY Dlnlna .,... "'°"""""· ...... College Park john macnab MONTEREY RANCH STYLE """ °"'· """"· .,,. ,..,, BEST BUYS homo looalod. "'"' DOVER o.d< ott ...,,.,. bodroom. BAYCREST Owner --•-•-anotbu SHOR.f:S -~OT LEASE· ,,.. .... _,...'t!I TOWN HOUSES HOLD Cu•-~"'t 3100 •• home. Shown by appt, ooly. An exceptionally fine buy. 3 · """'" llU.LI $66,SOJ Terms. $17,500 BR, lamilY rm, dinlllg rm, It. Foor bedrooms, three 673-9'200 Eves. 54S-6966 {)')STA MESA -HUNTING-pool size yar_d with bath en-baths, Family room, large B & Bea h University of Californi1 lrvint 1rvl"'' C•Htonol• Very 1herp, l bedroom, 2 bath, with 9ood term1 e vailable. Walk to ell 1c;hool1I TON BEACH • 2, 3 and 4 trance. Flood lighting· front rumpus room and electric OJ C becbooou, 2 balhl, one and & rear. Wool carpeting, Ht ki~hen with built-in retri&:· Realty, Inc. 2 story. PRICED lMM Fi piped thru-oot, blt-in vac· tntor, freezer, dishwuher, 2025 W. Balboa. Blvd., NB $25,000 $17 500 ~--• t t O:M.ible ovm1 and warmlng , uuuu enn.s. uum sys em, garage door opener. Immaculate home, ovens. Carpeta, Drapes and Priced Right $20,950 e FHA VA Orange Co1st Junior College District Or1n91 Co,,,t Cotl19• , , , ••• , , , , , 2701 F1 irvi1w Rd ., C.M. Gotd1nw1d Cotl1g1 . , ,, •••••• , • 7112 McF•dd•n Av1., H.I. Harbor High & Ensi9n Jr. Hi9h $19,670 .$59,950. 1huttert thru--OUI. 18' x 38' Call For Appt. heated an d filtered pool Good locetlon in Newport Beach, 3 bad- rtlom + Lanei, gold ca rpet, brick fire. plac e, detached 011r19e in rear. Beautiful condition. $ll5 per month foc this 3 bed- room, 2 bath adult home with )'OW' own private fruit grove a n d maintainence (714} 642-8235 with electric cover. T w 0 881 DOVER DR. rear yards.slumpstone i:lant· • 3 BR + fam rm w/frplc • Cpl.l/drps, stove & refrig. Rltn. 642-9730 Eves. 54S.(112U Huntington Beech C ity School District NEWPORT BEACH en and many extras, Truly a que.l..lty borne -shown by appolntment on!y. PRICED TO SELL AT $69,950. • KfJllffDY A9ne 1 L Smith School , . , . , , , , , •• , , • 1502 Pelm Av1., H,I. Eth1 I Owy1r lnt•rm1di1it1 School , , , , 1502 Ptlm A~•., H.S. Jo11ph P1rry School,,,,,, •• ,,,,, 19211 Harding L11., H.I. John P1t1r1on School •• , ••••••• 20&61 FarnJworth Ln., H.8. John H. E1id•r School .••••••• ,, •••••• 92'1 l1nnlng, H.I. Loi' I H1i r,., L181ird Schaol .,,,,, ,,, 20451 Cr1iim1r, H.I. Huntingto n Beach High School District $27,950 Colesworthy & Co. 642-7777 1904 free yard. Near new shop.. J ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! \'i."~ ~.';'.;;-E~ OUTsrANJ). $158 PER MONTH $19,950 2 ·HOUSES Owner transferred -says sell NOW1? Three bedrooms, 2 baths, large fireplace, built- ln kitchen, 13' X al' covered and enclosed patio, brand new wall to wall carpetine. Excellent location, ne8.r ele- Costa Mts-1100 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION- Fou~t•in V1tl1 y High School . , • , • , , , , , , 1711 6 8u1h1rd, F.V. Hunlingtori Bt1ch High Sch•ol •••• , ••• 1905 M1i" St., H.I. M•rin1 High Scho•I , . , , , • , , . , •• Sptln9d1l1 •I Ed ing•r, H.8. W11tm irid1r High S,hool , , 1412 5 Gold•n w.,1, W1dmlnd1r Harbor Blvd., Cotti Men Open E ... 1 .. $127 PER MONTH 2-houses on one lot • Top Costa Meu. area. BE A LANDLORD afld live In other. $26,900 ='"' I FOUR BEDROOMS. Im· maculate home with Jots of trees, shirring bu i l t -i n 1, oversized family room on traffic·lree street. Large oovered patio &: huge lot. Existing loan at 5~%-un total or .F1i.A t e r m 1 available. CALL &1()...USl (open eve1) Heritage Real Estate. mentary school, churdles, iiiiEvii.;e~n~lng~•~Calliiii~fi46.iii,~45~1';..ii I and shopping. Low Interest. College Park l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;"iii ...... "':~'.'°' ...... ii'j ............ -._. ........ ,ACR.OSS FR 0 M GRADE Andr1' Artv1lot School , •••• ,, , 19&92 L1•ington Lri., H.1.)1 SCHOOL • One of a kind B1nh11d Schoot ,,,, ..••••••••• 19699 Ed uc1tion L•n•, H.I. 4 STARS B/B $60,00Q HOUSE clean, 3 bedroom 2 bath fountain Valley School District Founttin v.11.y School •••••••••••• 179 11 l u1h1rd St., F.V. w Id y B 1· 1 family home. Huge family • " l s . h Bluff ho OU OU e 1eve. room with eating ...... •'"' Witlit m O. L1imb School , • , •• ,, , ••• , 1025t Yorktown, H.I , ....,ve Y pan1s s me $40 OOQ AREA Arthur O. Ni1bl1i1 School • , , ,, , ,, • ,, , , 9J0o 6 1rd•ni1, F.V. 4 BR, 3 ba, View trom eveey 1 all electric built-in kitchen, Hi1•m•t1u Tamur• Sch•ol •••••• 17140 S1int1 Su11nn1, F.V. Llving rm. Priced under $20,000.00t ASSUME 670 fliA LOAN. Rob1rt I . W1rdlow School•••••••• •• 919 1 Pi•1111r Or., H,I, $40,000. C $34,500 (E11t1lde ost1 Me11} J•m•1 0 . H•rp1r s,ho•I •••••••••• I S685 S1nt1 Yri11, F.V. ELEGANT LIVING PATIO KITCHEN $30,500 Foc this "comfy-cozy" home. Wm. T. N1wl1ind School , , • , •• , , • , , , , , • S78 7 Dolphin, H.8. 2 •-~-l H ~ ....... us p us large Jam· John C. McOow1ll School ,,,,,., ••••• 17210 O•k St., F.\', Custom ome with panoram-11., B/l H1irry C. Fultori Scho•I , • ,, , , , •• , , , , , , 8771 El L•9o, f .V. ic View of Bay & Ocean. 4 ~ room, gas kitchen. BR, 4 be • 4600 tt of Living Remod bath. Large yard. space. More o! everything. OR 3-9'l00 or eve. U 8-0715 ms.ooo Bay & Beach Westmin1ter School Dtitrict Ad• E. Cl19g School , ••.•• , , •• , •• , • , 6311 L1rchwo•d. H.I. Htl•n S. St1c•y l~~ll'l!di1t• School , . 6] 11 L1rchwood, H.I. HARBOR LIGHTS N1omi• Willmor• • ,, . , •• , . , , , 71Z2 M1pf1 St., W1 1trnin,t1r ' S h I ,,0, H •tt Pl G d G Adult occupied • one of a -An '"on c 00 • • • • • • • • •WI •c•, t r •n fO¥• k' d D • N. v· 2 . . . 8 S h I 1 l l90 H Pl W . in . ay 1ght I~. , \'1tg1n11 K. oo' c oo • , • • tmmori ., 11tm1nlt1r l BR 2 both D · kS 44 I W ll L HI arge • !I, reSS1ng Cl••• Coo chool • • • • • • • • • · · · • • I 0 i ow "11'· · · l'oom, elegant kitchen. Try C1cil 8. D1Mill• School,.,, 15400 V1in l ur•"· Midw.•v City $39,000. Frank N. E1,twood School,, •• 13552 Univtriity, W1ttrnif11t1r To see any of the above: Finlty School , , 1 •• ,,,.,,.,,, 11521 Edw1itd•, W•dmln1tir CORBIN-MARTIN 1 Gill School , , . , ..• , ,, • ••• ••• ••• 15252 Vicfori• Lani, H.S. REAL TORS G•ldtnwtd School •••• , , • , , , •• , , • 6952 Hood, W•dmind1r 3036 E C t H CdM H•yd•n School ... , • ,, , ••••••• ,, 147S2 Edi n, Midw•y City 675_j662,a~NYii'ME Midw1iy City Scho•I •••••••••••• S521 H1i•rd, W11tmin 1l•rl !!l!!!l!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!:i:~I lw1 Mt1i" School•··•·•··••••• S441 Tr1i1k, 61rd1n Grov•I·--------- R1iy M. Schmitt School , , •••••••.. 7200 Tr11k, w.,tminit•r Bayshores Relilty, Inc. 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB Corona del Mar Walk to Beach & Shop1, 2 BR home South of Hwy oo choice 45 ti lot at lot value ~;,:: 3411 Ea.st Coost llwy, Split level delight on a quiet cul-de-sac .-treet. 2 patios A DREAi"\1 COME TilU·E on two levels, easy to main· when you view thia model tain yard with gprinklera home clean 4. bedroom home frollt & rear. Special furn!· with master bedroom dress. tun that lit! only t!Us bouae Ing room and 2 full baths. will remain. Panelled family A park likl' aetting rear room with fireplace. So yard that will amaze you. m 11 n y beautiful appoint- mentJ you must see! Please call: Newport et Victoria 646-1811 !Opon Evenings) COSTA MESA 1/3 Acre 4. BEDROOMS in a rural set· ting with city conveniences J"l{'Qrby. Over 2600 feet of Jiving area, wth plenity of out doon hobby areas, and dark room in 2 car garage. MIGHT TRADE. COOL· POOL $26,800 5\4% FHA loan may be as- sumed and $158 per month include taxes! Try $1500 Down. 2013 WESTC!JFF DRIVE 646-m1 Open Eves. HUGE LOT 60' x 200· near ocean. 3 bedrooms· 3 baths. New luxury Buccola • built home (fee simple). $34,550 - n .850 down lo vets, $5,350 down F .H.A. Z!Ml Archer Circle, near Brookhurst and Hamilton, Huntington Bctlch. (1st signal North of Coast Highway.I SHERWOOD ESTATES br. the Sea Te . 968·3036 o,,.n 10:00 to 7:00 daily HUGE L-OT $167/MONTH PAYS All S~ % inlcrest. H e a v y shake roof, fireplace. Ex· cellent area. Walk to parks, shopping & . a 11 schools. Only $24.900 & it's yours. ,/O;,,.. COATS ~WA~CE REALTORS --546-4141- (0pon EV9nlngl) IMMED. occ. Attr, 2 story. rnA aPPr $30,200. Conaider much less. 3 BR, 2BA, ate~ dn. llv. rm, 19x2l' lam. rm, blt·in stereo, intercom. IOI! water plu. 41:. cul-de-sac lot Nr. So. Coast Pl, schla & freeways. 3105 Roosevelt way, Owner. 546-3430 FOR Sale by owner, 1ave! ! ! 3 bdr, full cpts/drpe, nice yard. Xlot location near 5Chls/shops. 22cw:I Miner St. C.M. 548-7313, 642--0721 $21,9511-0WNER 3 Br. l~ ha. bi.tns, rrplc. Pa-~-=-==· ~-=~-~-:::::-:=·:-:-~~~1 tio, dbl gar, fncl. GI or FHA iii zr..x> 1'.laple St. 646-2309 81ycre1t'1 Bet ti A most impressive S BR. 3'1' 4 BR., 2 Ba., home; kleal for bath beautifully decorated all schools. By owner $23,500 near-new home for the ex-Or make offer. See 3:18 ecutive! Ideally designed for J:"'="':':'·:""'=:'"='====: J formal or informal enter- taining with an enormous Mes• Verde 1110 living room, large dining room & hospitlble game room. Light & spacious In Save -By Owner 4 BR. 2 Ba. Assume S"-% FltJ\. Beautiful comer lot $25,500. SJl-7636. 54s.680'1 Sc.h1o1d1r School , ,, ·•··••• ,,. 15151 Columbi1i L•n •, H.8, B B S1~uoi • Scho ol .. , .. , • , •. , , •. , 5'00 lro9uoi1, W1,lmin1t1r est uy Corona de\ Mar 675-3745 REDUCED $7000 COSTA MESA -On this tree lined street you will find a 3 bedroom family home wHh enclosed patio over looking • fun filled yard and pool with tinted patio and tropi- cal plant.I. feeling with exquisite drap- eries, lush carpeting & im- ported wall papers. Oioicely 60' x 200· near ocean. landscaped t& choreless) pa-Newport Beach 1200 Stvtnt•1nth St. School •••• ,, 7571 W1dmln,t11, W•1tmiri.t1r 3 BR, 2 bath, lorm dln rm. Sprin9d1ilt Sc~ool , • , ..•• , , •• , 14422 H1imm•n Plt c•, H.I. Comp. remodelled W/blt-in • bb sh 1,1,, H w · kit.WetBar,2patlos,quar-INCOME UNITS this Dover Shores exquisite 4. BR + family room with a "f~r view" of Bick Bay Is today's best value. Plush w/w carpetg & drapes, all electric boilt-iri kitchen It formal dinin& room. Loacbi of vi:tras. Park-like yard with autom•tic sprinkling 4 bedrooms -2 baths. lio & garrlens. Unbeatable LUXURY 3 br. 2 bath condo New luxury BuCC<lla • built for $78,500 wllh only $12,000 Jr 1 1 goJJ • down. P • poo • , fee land. home (fee simple). $36,275 -R h Owner transferred. $32,500 w, ,, cool ..••••••••• ;•• o•v1r, 1dm1n1l1r l & X Ruu•ll John1on lrit1rm•ilitt1 , • , I l60l Edw1 rd•, W1drni11,t1r lry Ille entry din rm;·'S 500 1" S2,575 down to vets, $6,275 ut Pardall, Realtor By Owner 642--J.rll down F .H.A .• 21561 Archer l•l60S!!!~W~•~•~to~lil~f~D~r.~~642-;;;.;5200;;;; ~~o-=~-·~--'---1 BR Duplex .... , ... $21,500 , 1 N 1 "" W ow ease .......... .,.. , Willo1 W1rn1r lnt1rm•d i1it1 •• , 141 I 1w a , 11tmln,t1r Joe Clarkson C\rcle, nee.r Brookhurst and DUPLEX: Ocean view. Up. Hamilton, Huntington Beach. 5 UNITS per on yrly lease. Lower 3 Duplexf.'1 ......... , ~1 ,500 6 3 BR Deluxe Apta .• $82,500 Ocean View School D istrict la..._•--•- Cird, Vi1w School . , •••• , ••••••• •• 6261 Hook1r St., H.I. - Call Jor information INCOME PROPERTY llst signal North of Coast New studio dupiex with l % on 10 mo. Grosa' o v • r Highway.} bath each. Another duplex S6100/yr. 713: :li8-4.167 Col11g1 Vi1w S,hool •••••• , , •••,,,. 6582 L1nno• St., H.I. C••ll 'll•w School ..••••••.•••••••••. 18052 Ll11 St., H.I. Coldwell, Ba~ker & Co. SHERWOOD ESTATES am a SPARKLING 2 BEO-LAR c=G"'E""""M"oo"n~,~H"'om"',-,-,1 br. the Sea ROOM HOUSE, 2 years new. Bath!, patio, c I u b ho u 1 e *)'stem. Now onty $45,00J • 5 UNITS H1iv1n Vi1w School •·•··••••• ,, 16081 W•iki•l Len•, H.8. H1rbou1 View School ••• ,, , . , , , 4J4J Pic~wick "Cird•, H.I. n• •· COlolf NI•.._., Ntwl'll't ... ch, C•liftmil Kl t-WI Olt ·- Te. 968-3036 290 It lot, dose to shopping. pool, private beach. 675-1672 Open 10:00 to 7:00 d11ily Income warrants price of BLUFF'S Spacious f Br. i 10% down. HWTy! on the beach, all fumishl'd • ~ Terms $41,500 L•~• Vi1w School • , , • , , •.• , , .••. 17-451 Z1id1r L•nl , H.8. l""ii:iii::::'':,:ii:iii::""' I ;:,,;;:;,:~:~::::..;: L1irk Vi1w School ' ..... ' ••• ' ••• 17200 Pin•h11rd Ltn1, H.B. I ROUGH AROUND -------i-li• ·~~~~.~p~;:;: ~.~ M1irin t Vi1w School ................... 5682 Tilb1r9, H.I. THE EDGES Top of the World 1093 Bok c M ... ~·· 15 UNITS COUNTRY- M•1do.w Vi•w School •• , •••••• , ••..• 5702 Cl•rk St., H.I. But a lilllc paint will make Have you been waiting for a O•k \'11w School,,, .••••••••••••.. 17241 01ik L•ri•, H.I. it "Home-Sweet-Home". fantastic view of the city Pl••••~t \'l1w Scho•I , , , , , • , , •• , , 16692 Lindau L1n1, H.S. Vacant and will sell IBA lights? You may get diu:y R1richo Vi1w Schoof .••..••••. ,, •• , .. 16940 I Str1•t, H.I. and VA and pay your costs perched in this immaculate Robinwood School , .•• , ••...... , .... 5172 McF1dd•n, H.I. to allow for painting. Mod· 4 tx:>d.room, dining room Spriri9 \'i1w School •. , , , •• , , •• , , , 16662 Trudy L•n•, H.I. cm 3 bedroon1, 2 hath. homl'. $42,750 St1ir Vitw Sch•ol , • , , , ••• , , •• 141 1 Worth Or., Midw ay City Banhvood Floors fully car-•!~ SP"nR·nigN" G er, ·1 • ~.,...,., ooe acre park like set· Tired Of Rentin9 ? But mjoy maintenance tree Jiving. Sl75 per month in- cludes everything • princl· pal, interest, taxes, insur- ance, and maintenance. 3 bedroom1 2 baths, 2 seclud- ed patios. Full tennis and swimming facilities. Assume 5% % loan. No intl'rnl ln- creasto, no poin!JJ to i:i-y. Try lO';t. dn and full price a low S1'1.150. Ung $156,0CKI ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST ATMOSPHERE With income potential. Charming custom home with pine panelled family room . large living room with fire- platt, and covered patio. Half acre lot with in.JI! trees. Zonl'd for 5 m o r e unit1. $31,0CJO. Sun Vi•w School .•••••••••• , 77 21 Juli1tt1 l ow L1~•. H.I, peted. SACRIF'ICE~ ·~'""' ._. ~1!:~;o:!•;c:;~;~1 • ." .'.' ." .': .' .' ." .' .' ·,·2·5·1· H·.;1 :::.'.!::;:·in~;:; :s-~ •:'-.• ~TY,, 293 E. 17th SI. 646-4494 •• a11yrime Hop• Vi1w School •• , .•.•.•• , .. , , , I 16Z2 Flinhtont, H.B. '"''"' I ho Bl """·~ . r r vd., C.M. 4.41 Acres L11gun1 Beach Unified School District 7:;$2 1:.1.J,;./GER 8424-ljj or 5-I0-5140 Allio El•m1nt1ry School ... , , , , , 21542 W11l1y Or., St. L19.1j;i;.;.,....;...,,.-..;; ...... ii;iiiii;ii El Morro El1ment1iry S,hool , •... 1681 Co1i1t Hwy .. L•9. Bch. Repossession Top •f th1 W•rtd E!1n·11nt1iry . Jl601 f,11top L•n•. l1i9. lch. f'IXER·UPPE'R Thur.ton lni1rm1di1!1 School ,,,, 2100 P1irk Av1 .. l1g. l ch. A lo1 ol house Jor thP money L..gun• l11ch Hiogh School -••••• , . 625 '••k A.,1 ., L•9. lch. here, despite the net'd for Private & Parochial School1 painting & dressing up the landsciping. Nearly 2100 S>t J!. shake roof, sprinklers, 740 W. Wilton, C.M. ll . & exce eot carpetmg more-H1rbor Epi,copt l School , , . lith St. I M•r9u1rif1 Av1., C.M, than-pool·sized yard. $219 Prine• of '••<• Luther•n •••••. 2917 1.4,,, \1 1rd1 Dr., C.M. Includes taJCes & lnsuroncc Chrid Lwthtra11 Sth•ol .. , • , • • • . . . . 760 Victoria St .. C.M. 11•ith Olli)' 107e down. Low St. Jo1chl111 •..•..•.•• •• •. • •. • •• 1964 Or1n91 A••., C.M. 6.97. Interest too! Acrou St. John th• l•ptl1t , . , ••..•..• , , .. , I 011 l•k•r St., C.M, rrom 2Q acres of Orana:es! ()y, lt4y Qut•n of th• A1191h ••• , 20~• M•r V\.t1 Dr., N.I. Full JX"ice $27,5001 Flr•t l 1pti1' Oty Sch••I .• , ••.••••• IOI M•9noli1 St., C.t.4. COU.EGE REALTY 546-5880 Irle•..-Wa~ Pt•p•talory Scho•l • '.'... 88 Fair Or .. CJ.4 •• i=========== I C•rd•ll Hall , • , .. , , . , . , , , , . , .. , • 1457 Supt•ior A••., N.I. S I Th' Bab I c1 • .,11 Morit••••t'i School •••••• 112!. S1nt• An• A•• .. C.M. tea IS Y· Efr•111e11t Sc.h•ol •..•. , , ••. , •• 26 1 Monti \'l.t1 Aw1 ., C.t.4. $27 1 950 Cor11 •lr• C0111ttllr Hi9h • · • · • • • • • JllJ w, l•••dw1iy, A~•h . Park and Beach at your Jeel! Marywoff C.fftellc Hlth •••.• , · 2111 I/ill• Rt1i l Or .. Or1in9• I BR house plus extr1 lit(! M•ter O•i Hith •••• , ••.••••.•.•... 1102 W, ldin91 t, S.A. lam nn -R·2. Room to •dd. Sen-It• Hlth Sell•ol •• ,, ••••• 1952 W. L• P•lm• Av,,, An1li. Sc.oiler 1.1•ill rany loan! Or1ri1iwoCMI Aced.-y •••:••••••• IJ7)l Cliriton Aw1 ., G.G. 8 11lbo• 811y Co•"ttv Ot:y kho•I •• , , ••• , , , •• , , 60 11 W1irn1r Av•., H,I , Pr of)4!r tles Wilt•• Wey $c.Jloel • , , ••• , , , , •. , .. 65 7 l/ictorl• Sl., C.M 673-7420 Eves: 673 -9187 , l A CHARMER! lmn1nculate -Early Ameri· can. 3 BedDOOms. Family Room, Double Flreplat:1:, Double garage, Work Shop, Boat Y1rd. Call for appoint· ment lo see thi1 spacious custom buUt home. $14,500. JEAN SMITH, REALTOR 400 E. 17th St .. C.M. ~3255 $40,000 Ocean View Colesworthy & Co. COSTA MESA 21HJ W~1Cl.u'f DRIVE PrirM M-1 property, 3ffi" X 646-ffil Open Eve1. 630'. Corner loc•tion. CALL COOL POOL• -BEDRM-MR. BLACK 540-1151 fopm -. 642-7777 Puc~) Heritage Real Estate. $23.500 "O" DOWN 19CU J-lnrbor Blvd., C.M.J -2 baths. Built-in kitchen. Open Eve1. DELUXE DUPLEX carpeting. drapes. Covered -~O~p-.-.~D-iily 1 t;5 Open D•lly 3 . 6 patio with BBQ. Anthony 208 39th 51 NB pool. Water so1te11er. Sub mi! 219 JASMINE, CdM -., ~-e. b c l no down (i.I. ~1120 View hOtnn, ste,.,., lo •-•"h. 3 '-"'se to ac , hanne , • ~ ~ • -·~ TARBELL 2955 Harbor er. 2 baths, living room + and Play"'~""· ~9.500 family, llrcplece, bit· Ins. Wo_rge Williamson, Rllr. DELUXE Sep. dining IU"l'", servicr f73-lll0 OPEN EVES. PENN. PT. home. 3 BR. Fam porch, carpets & drapes 3 -------nn., lrplc. Exceptional vi.1- for only $34,7so "' '"'•• .., '"'" ...;,,, THE ATRIUM "'· 156,ooo. 3 BR, 2 ba, dbl go1.r w/sun-lot, V1cant. 10% down. by Ivan Wells BALBOA REAL ESTATE dKk. ~IY financing. See R1tr. 646-3928 Eves. 642-01 85 D\Rllnctlve f BR, 3 BA, J car 700 E. 8albol Blvd., Balboa th/J: ptt!llge homt' today. *LACHENMYER p rage. 14.' Beamed ceiling. 613-4.14.0 Graham Realty 4 BEDRM _ $23.-7 -translucent roof. terra tile FOR Sale or trade: exclusivt' Nr. NB Poat Ofc. 646-2414 SUBMIT NO Dow' SNO and pa nclll'CI walla. Riviera BeCtkln o1 Pac:inc ---ltoy J Ward Co 646-15!i0 PeJl11de1; ' BR.. 3 'Ba., •TRANSFERRED• G.I. or low down to othm -· ...::..__ w/mald., qtn. Hid .. lllt. 1. .... , •• A...,.. 16.h. Mu.1 eom•1•1•1Y "'"""'""" in. Uslinas Needed pool. w111 1r•d• "" "' down. It'll 4 BR, l 1-th ""'r .chool •Ide l out. 2 bat1a. Quality PrlCf, $84,000. 0 w n er It pe,rlc. Low down. 64&-44.lf carpeting. 2 PIOOI for wt· 19 out ol ~ ot OUR Ust.ln1J• 1 ..c2Llc.c_'..c~c___1'~---- door living •t lt.J befl. BuUt· l't'll. Let 1.11 sell YOUR home . .,Country Club Home* .o.lt. ll•el £stett In """ l "'"'· Estal• DAVIOSON REAL TY ""°"" h. Un"'""· o.. o1, .. sized Y•rd. ~1120 Rltr. 2700 H3rbor 58, CM kind. A w•y of lift . $62,900. ~~==~~~:'.'.:~.!T~A~R~B!l~LL~~29~5~5~H~a~rbo~r 5'6-0460 .......,, $6l .<XX>. Ba. Spilt level. $37,900. TWO ON A LOT By owner * 644-0740 Attractive l'RS1 side 2 and CHOICE Park Udo ccndo. 2 ~en or 3 bedroom. Double Br. 2 Ba. pool frpl $3500 f1replace, e.xcd.Jent and WI-Dn. $2'1,SOO. 67i28li · usual covered patio. PLUS :::==='====="===I 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. S280 Newport Beach 1200 Pt'r month income. $27,900, INCOME DEPT. BES!' BUY BAYCREST SALE.s, INVESTMENTS Quic k Possesion EXCHANGES ' Spaclou1 3250 sq. tt. cust., WALKER & LEE profess. decor. & lndscpd., s Mr. Levine 5'1S.945l lg. BR. Xlnt cond. Rare buy at $69,SOO. 5%% L o an 5 UNITS tranferrable. Not ori lease On The Beach .. .,.. '4<>'828 Ev ... ZlOO WINDWARD LANE $47,500 BY Own"; 4 ,.,... old:"""·· LOW OOWN . Step out ot the mull sell! 3 BR, 2 Ba., 1850 door Into the w1ter. All fum. eq. It.: rumpus rm. 300 aq. lshed. Tenilic appreciation ft.: J car gar.: all blt·ins and tax shelter. Mr. Boggs incl. vacuum. S39,00J. Ope~ r· ~ ,. •• • -House daily 1 • 5; f43 -F"a r r-.:;. w-· ORANuc COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 644-4494 2 DOUBLE proge<s with ex. tra nlc J It. family room home. 2 bltbs, llrep\1ce. built·lm, hugto co v e r t' d ~tio, bkldc fence, lovely landacaplng. Owner leaving state-wants quk:k .sale. A*· ing $25,600. CAU. GLEN QUEEN M0.11.Sl (open evet) Heritage Real E!tate BFSf Gt buy in tovm with no down. l BR tam rm, l '6. ba, dble frplc, blt·inl. &eutlfUI ll&Jldteapil\I, beautiful p11Uo, bsutltul •rt•. $162 prtn. + li11 . KintA•rd Realty Ml 2·2222 F\Jllerton 548-3188 CUSTOM VIEW HOME NEWPORT BAY CONDO MEDALLION J BR 2 BA Obi gar, pools, golf, etc ONLY Di.500. 613-4?i6 WlllPrfront J BR, No. ~ Balboll C:O.es. $60,000. SJ0,00) Cll'h by loan. Bal. In KTeage Ll 8-7771. 1812 HIGHLAND Or, Hrbr Hinds 4 Br 2 be, tam rm, ..n httns, fri:ilc. 132.500 10% dn Owner. 5'18-2841, 1-129-2908 BY OWNER: Nic:e 3 Br. 2 Ba home, Newpon Sb 0 re 1 J.25,000. Tenm f I e x j b J e ' 6C2-3Q59 • MOVE Jn! Near nP\f f BR frpl., new cpll. nr. beach: S7S.oo:l'. Open weekPflda; 351 62nd St. Owner 6T.>-014-4 • ·-.. ' '. . 1 • ; \( ' 'l • OU S F011'5ALI HOUSIS FOii SALE RENTALS lllNTALS 1ENTALS RllolTALS RINTALS lllAL llT~TI 1::.::::::::::.:..:;::!.;;:;;:;:;1::-20~'° I lalboa ....,1_1• lJOO ~ llNch 1400 H.11.., Puml1htd H.uw Unfurnl1htd Apia. Furnlthtd Apia. Fumlahtd Apia. Urtfurnltht<J _o...-'-''"-'-•'----·I DOVER YIU.AGE COND'N . Newport laHh 2200 Collt -1100 Gontrtl 4000 Logunt BHch 4705 Huntllllfon INch .5400 Offlct 11...ttl 6070 .. w .. tcllfl, B • .. ," •" No Streets H"i:i: LOT * $'*9 MO * NEW 1'1rnl&bed 2 Bl\ s ea l!:XTRA ta· '2 BR. 1111. V.GUNA llACH •• taodlc&ped 2 BR. 2 ba, T Cross II\& 1/1 '1 • ail ""' boll! • In• 'utilltita paid. s.16-7111 °' Air Condlti.n..l~ """· Rm, pollo. 2 pool• O THE ILUFfS-AVAIL IMlll£0, M.,. Verdt 23' 'lttlltr \l<.B.l • ...,. !Pol Panomnlo vlow o•cr-~81 ON FOl\ES'l AVENllE club boU:W. all elec bltina. Just mAde lor • famUy wi\b 60' ~ m near oceart. -t BR, I I• llv\nc "' utll I-ll'OUnd rent PO dam-/Jllo Blach. Matur. adults Dtlk spaces av&llable ta Crpts. drpt, encloKd dbl chUdrtsl.. Tbl5 , liarle ~ '<t bednionu. 2 baths. Blu& I bdrm., tu.Uy IPldoul tam I d.l.okle' m: •• depostt rcq. ' ~. no children. JW, LA.ROE Uv. nn .. 2 BR SlS5 newett d1b l:tulldml et ..,.. ee11 ""'· "'"" .,... ~,_.,_Now 1..,,,,. B....ia • buUt tqlllppod, -,.,... bilt-tn kltcbon, lle<utllully 1111 S111lley, Realtor ~' :;.."! 1~ s:..f'sio.~ '" prime 1oca11on lo....,,.,... AdWU:. $29,500. 0 w n •r • ~( to ·~ aroctt>' home tfee 1lmpl.e). $36,250. ••allablt-now tor 'kl&e ~ yard. Yet.tt,y 64W66!i 642-mJ. SMALI. 1 rm. 114 pean. sso. Liiiana Beach. Alt condt" &l&-1'48 aunt, ubratY I: ftCl"Cltk>fl. '$3.DI doWn to vell, $6,850 $.1m per mtllitlli. ltue $S25/rno. Ind w11:tt HOWD.q PLAZA ulll Jld. App. Jumbo Jimbo, Llguna S.1ch 5705 tioned, carpeted, bttiudbil Condominium Living . • ........,., 2 botlu, • ac-down f .H.A. 21531 -"'her EASTILUff and ,....._ .... 1ce. DELuxE ,.,do.a ·1-811. 1"1 N. O.Ut Hwy. LB. -ptlltOled pvtlllonlng. T w .... to ;;o ..,... ol .....,, Clr<I• -·-hunt·and EA TY 61$.166$ E -100 CLIFF ORIV! "'"""'"" ........ ... Gardtn, cool; pool IDlllnl• play yard tn ~I '. adjoin-Hamn'ton.. Hunttn ... on Bea.ch. R L ve1. tum. -.pt. S135 + uW. 2·Bft. .<C1• •AL$ • Fortlt A••·· na.r leadl to alnod "1>ll< you rdax, Ing tt,. hot Pacilic Ocean '' 241 Via DelOto t dtn 1160 + ulil Aplto Urtful'Qlahtd LUXURY rt!RN/UNFURN Munclpal parldns !oto. 19> tri.veL S Bet, 2\.i be, store-$58 ~ e • (lit ll&nll Norti ol Cout 4 ta AVAJL.~MFJ>. Mesa Verde Htd. pool, Ample p&rtdn& Yearly Lea.le. 1' 2 Bdnna. _. mmth tor , ... c .. Dtlk rm. ()Jlnm. lctlvlty, "6,~ • ' · Htibwa'y,) Newport Qeach ' Bit.,·~ II• llvin& rm, No chlldrte. No P9'f-' Gener•I 5000 Ywl.Y I..eue. 1 bedroqm ~ chain avauabte far $5. R. c. GREER, 1te111y Burr ~le Re1ltor SHERWOOD ESTATES 644-11~ .... .,.., 1am1dln1n1 "'" \S65 Pomono, c~ 642,;;ssa ,,,,, 10 Shore • Sl>oi>• B"'""''" boon ...,..,... 3-116 Via Udo 673-9300 1 bl th• See bllt·ln kllchtn, beautUullY CHATEAU La PC>INTE RENT Ooeanvle'ol( from every Apt. service available for $10. 2901 Blvd. Te · 961-3036 ATJ'8.ACTIVE .,.terlront t landscapqt yard. Yearl,y ... 3 Rooms '-'imlture lrOIU $150 nw 1.1p. leue All utllltJe1 paid excfSll N~ Beacli Open 10:00 to 7:00 dally lease S325/mo. incl water Btwtif.u. 2 Br. furn. apt.. 494-ut9 N1wporl H1lghll 1210 WlLL SELL l',lllO upder Mllt .. ! 81\, l ba.'>~,~"· clrpa • , suhillU pn.. ~mt. $33,950 netiBld ~1tlt· SAVE T!H'll.~ AmtAC. 3 Br. 1 ba. J.'IAKE OFFER 400PlratoRd ......... ~7~5~-4~63~1~00~ ''f ~VIV;H~:~64~2-~2253~:1:::!~~~~·~-:~ Sr. home, boll docll, winttr and 1arclqer aervk:e. 1 Htd pool, Carport • off it. $25 Month MODERN Carden apt, north 1111~it. Y Pllm 4 BEDRQOM lease. 613-3653 • Eve• MS-6966 paridnc. Adult1, No pets. rou. OP110N TO BUY 1 222 FOR"&"I' AvmuE bl 2 , (213) OW 7.Qr'I ' 1941 POMONA AVE .. CM. N d _.... 0 & c. end, 2 Ito?)', 2 Bil, !,ii Ba. 2 Lido I·'" , i•Sl F\ttpiace, tins, BA s It NEWLY 41ecorated 3 BR, 2 ° er-or .. · · 1Undecka, 111, 1 blk abop-LACUNA BEAQI _ ..., 1 ~ 2 cor ..,..., c.n 147..,.. WINTER· "'1 ~Fron• BA' Fir~'"· '""' draP<•. LIDO BAY VIEW . H.F.R.C. »inl·be&ch. Vecy ptllih, Will - SOUD )t.YFRDNT or 213, 431-3921 ~~w.~~OR~ <OY<red pofto, tovely ''""' SP<dool I BR Apt In""""" Fumltu"' Ronltl1 ..,._ 1,,., _ _, "?"'... yard 'eta l(tfft cul-de-uc. BJd&. Oatom Funt Yri1 517W.~C.M. ~MSl l,.,=====-=-: ~ .. 2-!tory, 3~Bft, 2 b&, ~!C F 1 1 v II 1410 WINTER D~ ..... t •• Ocean , __ -Avail ~. 1 lllO. /mo. 675-l61i RJ.tr. •irn w. '-"~. •-"-'Trf..21!00 LOVELY Whltewatu view, 2 CC!!om~-~m~..,~rc~l•!!l~-~....,,~~I kit, ~L!_y rm, unique -0Vf 1 n 1 ey frmt :s ai,)-"BA:"$2oo. tLU ;;:;.,,.--...,.;... ' -...,irni ~ 8R 2 Ba.w/aan.ge, 1 blk to - spJ.ral dp.h"cate. Sandy Nice 3 BJt By Owner, 1"-Stubore o,. ~ c t Mell 5100 lOWll 4: bee.ch. Adllits. Leut nn P.uJSAD~ Rd Cl ... * PLEASANT CWf Haven 3 beach. \T1'W J Pitt It slip. BA, bltinl, mitt mo, cri>ta. EX-ldODJJ.. Home 3 BR. 2 Coste MeH 4100 OI 1 Sl65 mo. 494-1891 Reat 8Sx237 $250 mo· Br, 2 ba + 3 Br Ocean Vu R. C. qipzR, Realty drpe:, trplc, panelled fam. , ba, catpelt, drapta, blt-tnl, e DELUXE 2 BR unftan apt ~ tncom• Apt. 149.500 .... 7219 3416 Via Lido 61J.m> nn., .,,.. ... patio, la lncd B1yo1to,... 2225 f......S. ..-lncloded $25 Wk. Up JIARIOR cl"' to...... t-~------ 1220 CharmiD1 lBr. l Ba. ~ lot. $.2S,IOO w/$2200 down 4 BR, afBA mil S!opt. 10 ~1;' Bk: ~ D• • Stiadio -A &di llP'L • • FURN,' atudio. 491-1056 lndu1trl1I lentil '°'° Newport~_ ... ____ rm. Easy livlni bomt. '6i!ti~toM. Can for app(. . ·". • IKI um.. Ph:me .... GREENS ,3 Bedroom ....,2 lath $1i6,0XI. By Owi:i,er. &?S-25n 962-1671 eftL A wtmds oa1y 8 Mos I-:·~..... ·er;1~ DEL MARe~ e Maid .8enb -TV ava.11. Rentals Wanted 5990 SOUTH SANTA ANA 2 Story 1 f}SO. -• • BR., fam. rm.; yearly lie. • New Cate• A Bv · Approx. 4500 1q. ft. with de- Cood Cond. New carpets Huntln_._ Buch ~400 Out of County \605 Lido Isle 2351 $250 Mo., water I prdener 2!76 Ne'fP9rtyetVJL . 548-m5 BACH!:LOR • UNroRN. NEED Houae for rent in luxe alr-<:ood. oftlct1. ~ $1500 DOWN •·--· paid. 546-0'229 NICE 1 Br. S>&.I rnan. $92.50 front $ 100 Costa Mesa, prefer Mesa proof room•. $400 per' month. Immediate Oceupsney SALE Or trade 2 Br. mocf. NEWLY decor. 4 BR. 3 4 BR., 2 Ba., carp., bJt.tns; incl util. 31Q Meadowlark Ln tncl. util. Verde, Sept 1st for Irvine Avail. immediately. FOl' 1n- 64Z-283S 541).2991 Price Sl1shed hse Yucca Valley priced Bat,bs. Avall. Sept. 7~ thnl frpl., famlJ.y rm.., patio; (oU 2300'blk Sl'lti·Ana Ave> l. 2 I! BDRM. faculty member I family of formation call K. W. srull SHARP TRI-LEVEL SlO,SOO eq, $4300. 499-4.ln Jtn1e. Ul'I Month. '673-6643 Avail. 9/1, SZE Mo. leue. ~aft 1 Sun. 213 EX~ ruRN. I UNFURN. 4. Price fU\ge $200 to $300, 6 with J BEDROOM 2 titl.ths, 2 •tory Out-of·aree. owner has &lafl:h· ews. 546-6865 SM Heated Pooll, QUld CU'9 mos to 1 yr. 213: 825-6280 or Eckhoff & Auoc., lnC:. ~ blk to club house, yearly l'd $2500 oU the price ot this 1705 Balboa lalancl 235l .c.t.EA:; 1 Br. w/w c:rp&, Cnter, Adj. to Shoppln1 -2.13: GL 7-2362 l8lB W. O:lapman Ave. lease only. $225 pr. month. beautifully decorated Meri· Laguna Beach Sl65, 4 B'R, 2 BA, cptd, chw:. Elec hl~. Quiet area. No ptbl allowed SEP!' lst Buslneu Woman Qrarwe, Calif. 1:642-=='835=0='=~=""====' I dith Gan\enl home with it'• ...,. OCEAN VIEW BAYrnONT 4 Br. 3 ba., hlh1f painted, tncd yard. Nr. frwyi 1 shape, Adult.· 2700 Petenon WQ, 1t Har-needs l Br unfum Apt, 541-2621 , Eves-wknd1 •5911 I h """ lobuloua d-dock Wm' ter '" Avail •-pt Adllltl, lcuc. MS--ti083 no pets, 549-0412 bor 6 Ad·-·, ~~ Meaa. "_1 1--~------us carpe ... ,., ,.._. BY OWNER * Temple HWs . _,. ~ ....... ~ C.M., Newport, Corona uc IDEAL Colta Meaa locaUOP, ,.l;crY:;;int:;;:. _____ 12_3_1 t dr ..... °""' il huae 9, Call 1-52.S-4444 ATTR. 3 BR, CU1)ded, frpl. l BEDROOM Upper, 5t6-o370 ••~-L T noo $85 All Ill' 1-ora or a~~ . 1455 Ternct Way, 3 BR, 2 Ba lrl d ti redecoraied, bit-ins. Adults. .. .... or aguna. o .... mo. 850 sq. ft. . mo. u 1 . Elepnt Private Twnhse 3 Br. rumpul roo~ with wet ~· elec kit w/blt-in range & Huntington Beach 2400 ~~ db~iar~~a 0• no peta, U2S. CaU aft. 5;30 Gar or carport necessary. pd. 67~1417 2 ba. eomm. pool, rec. & etc. Don t delay Oil this dishwasher, Ia:e liv rm., • PY. 6D..tOM Excdlent, park • Jfke sur-642-0086 after 5 p.m. M'°-~1-0-,~P~W--~tla"""'2.°"lllO""'aq-=-ft, Decor. extru lnd. $21,<n). ooe! frplace, beamed ceilinp:, 3 BR. wasbtr/dryer, dwsbr, :SMALL, 2 BR. No prll. 1 roundings tor adllltl reqllir-• NEED IMMEDIATELY: $175 cm. leue 613-t 52J Owner 8334104 I.re comer lot w/156' front. feoctd Jard Neu ttoro. child OK. $90. 16 9 6 COLLEGE or working man to i1ll' peace I quiet. 3 or 2 BR 1.l1furn house or (Mii')') College ltNlty 546-5810 Landlcaped Ii: lhruhc. J>ric. $1'/5 leue. 968-Dil 1.fonnwl.a, C.M. &C-'1'241 share apt. Swim pool, pvt, Diacriminativa)Ttnanta apt. w/yud. Have cbildrec, I=========! Ea1tbluff l242 td right! P.O. Box 914 IA· NEW 4 BR, 2 bath, tamll.Y :::~6 $15. No drink. 64:l-l<82 1, 2 A: 3 BDRM. API'S. dof, U40 mo or make clfer. loll 6100 ASSUME guna Beach ,....726 Logvno latch 2705 rm. eupeto, flreptoc:<, !ISO· ' POOL. NO CJllLOREN 494-1467 I"-'-'-'------ I $140 tmL.. paid. Lovely 3 NICE R-2 loti C.M', I: Hun-Kffp Your Coo GI LOAN EXTRA ORDINARY EMERA1ll TERRACE !)6>.&11. _ lot 1111 2 BR., blk. to K·Mut. MARTINUjlUE WANT 3 Bit hOUlt, N'pl. tington "''"'·...,... $lll,lll0 in this "' BR, 2 ha heated Owner desperate wUJ acceiit SACRIFICE! New Homs, 3 BR. 2 BA, $225 mo 2 BR. House on... . sn Joann. 548-0787 or5J6.7800 GARDEN Am. Belch 1n exchange for each. Low down Ot trade tor pool home. Quldc pos.wuim, s:noo for !tis ~cly 3 BR Ir: View:•· 3 BR, 2 ba, custom, * 494-8691 * per mo. 1984 Anaheim Ave. 1tfalibu ranch for wk. or 2 TD'•· Petitte Rltr. MMU1 $43.~ de bomt ·'Den l:lea'utifully Spanish styling, deluxe appts CM Call 837~ DELUXE l bdrin. $110. I dee.I -18th & 'Santa Ana, C.M. before school. 213: 677-200 O.L1ncy Real Ed1te panelled w'fili ml{ching bar. $33,500 OPEN HOUSE SUN. Summer Rentils 2910 ' for bacbeklr. 1993 Church St. Call Mn. Heiadenon 646-5M2 Day•: 213: 4.11-0331 eve. BAYCREST 2828 E. O>ast J-{wy, CdM Fully caipeled: Bright step Call for location A: tenm • N..,_t INch 3200 C.M. 548-9633 1m Santa Ana, Apt ll3, C.M. WANT ileeping room, male, Comer lOGxl.00. $29,500 613-J'nO saving ·Jtittbin with all the 4%-8833 LACUNA.()ceanfront, •pee-2 ROOM Apt. nicely tum. NE 42, no smoke or drink. WALKER REALTY 675-6200 1~~~~'!!!!!!~~~~1 modem appliances, adjoin· Lll5 PADRES REALTY tacular Vw8, priv. beach, !to t BDRMrfeW'POl'tBeach tn5 Month. 132 W. Wilson WLY DECORATED Newport . CM area. Bud 2 LOTS on Santiaao, NB Irvine Terr1ce 1245 lng family ·room. Exclusive . THlS OLD HOUSE huge room1, park-like gro. On qWet CUI de Sac. Over Costa Mesa. 548-9'j77 2 Bdrm. with ~ge. $100 64.:1--1252 cuh, terms or trade· Fte 1---------1 al: is a stately 2 slary with 3 und11. 2 Weeks ~ $900., 4 2100 SQ· ft. Gardener I water Nassau Palml 2 BR. $130 Dlspogal. Water pa.Id. almple. 646-8565 BY owner, 3 BR, 3 BA, la:. Family rm. $45,000. Gd terms. 67:J....@M or 673--0479 LISTER REAL TY Br's, wood paneled walls & Weeki $1400. Al.so Victoria Includ. $325 per mo. $295 on To $150. (alao unfum.) ~·~~e2 •.••5. Room1 for Rent 5995 PRIME Corona Del Mar !•~• B,.ch BL, HB 842-6633 o.ld mission brick floors & a Beach House, 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 year le'8t 646-4316 171 E. 22nd St. &U-3645 e 3 -~.. Octan view lot Not QU~ Sept. $1mJ .Owner. 494-4653, 2 3 BR 6 6-4120 e NEW $12.75 up. W/W carpet. . ** *.. LISTING ~ru: tht~C:nt~ry ;::; 4!M-495T or 494-5589 2 ~th o~me UnfUm BACH. $65, sep. house; util., l 8Jt Unf. apt. Kit. avail. Semi -prlv leasehold. Owner 675-4750 Corona del Mir 1250 Owner tritd of driving aXl hou:se. $32.950. MWion Rltf, l Ii: 2 Br. Furn Apts. 'Ai OitthaTeri NB lawM:!ry, gardener: penn. iB0 646-8359. 1J5 Albert Pl, CM R1nchn 6150 !.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I miles a day I. rnult sell al· 985 S. Cst Hy;y. 4g..a...qm blk to ocean. l20'J W. 3:XJ yrl.y gard~ tndudect party cnly. 648•2111 Realtor 548-Tr.ZO ROOM For rent. $50 mo utll For Fussy People moot .,w 3 BR bome. PANORAMIC VIEW Balboa Blvd. Balboa. $'IS Chet Sali.wr,, Rllr. 673'l!llO BACHELOR APT-FURN SPAC. 4 BR. Townhou.,, paid. H.B. area. 84Nll2 aft HORSE RANCH Beamed ceillngl in living Custom ho111t 4 ex:tra 11.rie wk-flSO wk. 4M-5U9 BAYSmE Vlllqe, $1'15; 2 :MQIS· Newport Blvd\ q .M. Newport Upper Bay, Pool. I ,,';;p,,m=, ====== superb 4 Bedroom home, Din· Ing room. fl.replace, bee.uti- f'UI pool, View. room, fireplace, date entry. bedrooms •2% f>atha dining NPI' Bch, 1 Br, sips 4, l blk Br. 2 Be., ttoft, ft'frl,g. Rec. facil. Children, peta 1 • 25 Acre rancll in No. Callt. Lar&e family kitchen "".1th room, fa~ly r~. huge ocean, S85 wk. Avail Aug 24 Carpets, dnpet. AdulU on-Newport Buch 4200 OK. $260, lease. ~797 , Guut Homes 5991 with '* mile of frontage on Just reduced to $53,<Dl DPEN HOUSE avocado buill·inl, dreuing clo.ets. Freezer A barbecue -~t lSth. &42-tm ly. No pets. Pool, •Up; call -AVAIL Ana 17, Dix duplex. 3 PRIVATE Room f0t am· main Hwy. All elec. 2 BR. in muter bedroom ch · (h f R f -home. This place comes ful· room ed & dta-" $21 S:,O • in kit eri. OWne.r, 28t9 NEWPORT·Balboa be a c b 675-1054 After t PM * lftftl ee * BR 2 ba, bltlru:, crptl, drps, bulatocy lady. Good food. ly equipped to op!!tl.tt and SAT & SUN 1-5 4627 Surrey C1meo Highl1nd1 eari~TER 1EA'L r{ . Oie.teau Way, 4~726 house. 3 BR ~ blk to bay. t BR, 2 bra, pool, w/yard & pr. $170 231 Knox St. Nice IUITOUDdinp. M&-4753 ii ideall.Y laid out for a aood •-·• Bl HB 842.(,633 $125 wk, 673-87B3 pool, mt..intcnarioe. $375. 369 APARTMENTS 548-3165 horse operation. Full price 16612 oeau• ., MAGNIFICENT 1 BR. tum. Apt. 1lpa. 4 Vista. Raya Orde, N.B. SPECTACULAR VIEW 2 BR. DUplex. Stove, rt:frig, Misc. Rent1l1 5999 $615,CXX>. For further lnforma- OCEAN VIEW LOT 1 Block to beach. Weekly 60-3369 or ~4 WatertronVLoc • Boat drapet, &: gardening ser. tion p I ea 1 e call Glenn NEW BABY?" $5,950 ~ small, but level $1.<Dl $85. Newport Bch GU-0316 NEW 3 BR., 4 Ba.; boat Sllp1 Available Adults. 548-20!0 aft 4::1> pm 1~~ CAR Garage n ear Thompson with Duplex Not ·re butnewpa.int new down, bal $55 mo. Llruna KfNTALS dock,1undeck.$325Permo. 2 BR·2 Ba~A,pts. 2 BR. 1%: ba. Orpl/crpts. =rt~Y :i8t;· ~ Eckhoff & Asaoc,, Inc. ~Ulr!g, ~in .kitchen, ca:ting, new dtaqes ·mak· Bch. <n4> 497-1210 Hou.a. Unfurnllhecl 36(X5. Finley.~ LEASE-Cl'·BUY Bltnll, s;ri ear/patio. Adu!U 1818 W. Ompman Av~. comer lot. 2 Bedroom• &c " this 4 BR SOOIAVEN 5 '"5 Mo • .l up· $59,500 up &U-lm Oran caw den, 2 bath 110me Pi.US 2 borne a real~ at $22,500. PECTACULAR View, 2 aty Gener11I 3000 Corone del 'Mar 3250 2525 Ocean Blyd., CdM $1~ ~ 5tMQ21 ... ~. STORAGE Garage for rent. -ge, , Bedroom Apt. N . major shopping & 3 BR 2 BA, tam, frpl, deck. 67~1788 ':"'" for further tnfo Nwport Beach 5200 Coeta Mesa. Qose.in, like 5"'1·2621, Eve .. wknd1 a.1M72'l A GOOD PROPERTY! ~-$35,500. Trade. 494--6187 CAMEO Shores 3 BR., 2 Ba., Herman Trott, Mgr, new. 548-3721 Pacilic Shore• Realty * 5 BR formal home * beautlfulb lndiacpd. water a: REAL ESTATE 53G..88M Eves. &36-3240 tXEA.NVIEW • $54,500 LOOKING fOR gardeller paid. $350. Month, PANORANlC Ocean View. 2 B/B General ~ ~ ~t-~~~~~~Nett Realty e 494-9318 l...f!e.9e, 2'13: 347·2819; 714: I 4 Br. Avail. Sept.-June UNFURNISHED .2 bedroom, --------~ A MllTAll, 6'15-00lS Eveti. 5008 Seashore Dr. Cll.3) 2 beth unit near Hoa& Hoe-Income Property 6000 332 Marguerite, CdM $2000 DOWN Apertmentl llutl OOEAN VIEW Dlluxa 2 BR, 9434615 pita!. Available Sept. lit. 673-8550 Seller pay• closini costs. 3 for Sale 1910 2 'b., home, fplc, dl.niQg rm, 2 BR. near ocean, crpta, $200. I""""""""""""""~!!'( oveniud BRs, extra c:loeeU, Look no flrthtt for Just blt-inl, patio, a-pis, drp1, $130 Yearly.~ dup!ex, ~ CORONA Dll MAR APARTttlNT HOUSE Harbor Yl'ew H1'lls l~ be.. blt·in~e•oven, EUROPEAN RJVlERA? a lltUe more than last atarbch.$300mo.~LE l28liii 46th St. 548-&Tl9 Avail: !BEDROOM, 2'ii bath,"" di.lhwa~ht!r w/w cptB/drps. Wh.Y? In South Lliuna there month's rent you can own ~_... lg. cul-de-~c lot, cunpleteb is rompue.ble living In Own-thil aharp 4 BR 2 bath RMI~ 615-2101 ""'Y"-ht; See by appt only pool USO. Avalla.ble Sept. Corona dtl Mar Lusk built homes located in the Southland'• most de- sirsble &: f1scin11lng area. Schools &: Calif. Irvine Ca.mpus ;tu.st m o m e n t 1 away, Sensibl'1 priced from bled, cm. patio, trpk. Move Y..Qwn luxurk>u1 3 BR 2 BA home with w/w carpet· LGf 2 Br .. 2 ba Unfum $200 ruRN or Unfurn. 1 BR 15th. "Adfilll (Wy, right in. apt. Elegant bldg on beach ing, built·ins &: much mo; Front 2 BR. 1 ba Un--ho1.11e. Yrl)o. Util pd. 305 • lay & &.ach VIiiage Rul E1tate w I unsurpassed view &. more. Payments IHI than furn $175 flM). R. Forney S4th, N.B. Adults, no peu. b1lty1 Inc. 9624471 546-8103 pool. Unftll'TI $65,000, furn rent • $185 per month Bier.~ (1) 82'1--0953 2005 W. Ba.lboa Blvd., NB IYail. For appt, 499-3451 all Nred be BEAU'I'lli.JL CUSTOM HOME .(~N 'AL$ =·? c'a 11 ~A~ • Huntlngten Buch 3400 2 BR., patio~~=:pt. 673-3&63 Eves. MS-6966 $34,900 to $48,900 LUSK HOMES Directiona:: MacArthur Blvd. Imm P9.ci!k Coast Hwy. or Newport Frwy. Tum on San Joaquin Hllll Rd., th e n follow sign• to model area. ATTENnoA Very apt.cious 3 BR 2 bath HOUMI Furnl1hld WAU.ACE ~41 (open t BR. 2 Ba., carp., drpl. Winter leue. 3403 Finley 'Witb bJge sepuate-tamny evn.) Patio. Leue $235 Month. • 675-t039 • room, wet ba.r &: 2 fireplac· Rent1l1 to Shere 2005 -OCEAN FRONT 2 ~-Avail. Sept Lit. &M-.u1 • ~ ...... m, n . D.iilt on 2 tree.1hadedyoUNG . • COATS flreplace,w/wcrpt'ni. lots. A lot of house for only ..... _ myM"'n-'",'•1~t2, bato 'BR, 2 Ba, bit-ins, cp(JI, Winter lease. M2-S436 fl8 500 .. -...,. '"' • & drp1, covered patio. fli,j, · · hse, nr octan, Huntington WALLAC! Refereneftl. 842-1063 1 BR, adulta cnly, no pets. P1ul Jon .. Re1lty Beach. 842-1624 betw 5 I 9 It.EAL TORS ---------1 Yelll'l;f f't'ntal. $100 + uUJ. 847-1266 Eves.147~ pm 5464141_ _L_•g._u_n_•_Bt_•_<_h __ i_1_os • 6~~ 3 MAN to mtt 3 BR home (Open hrenlng1J MY Lovely lara:e S BR, S ba C d I M with poo1 N~ Beach. home to rnpioollllbl• hm Orone e ar 4250 Now Hear This I 642-1313 Befor ~~!""!!'!~~!'!!!"'"( Now HHr Thia I Minutes To Beoch •••• •PM. ' nooo "' AVAIL, FDR LEASE only l300 mo. o ..... ,,.1A1t. LEASE OPTION Tak ,, tt •--2 ·~· • •!llO-lM:l ' 123,500 i'ULL PRICE Now they can be 1hown. e over 571-70 ........_ rtory,I;-;,===-=,_-...,,,_,...., Apt 3 BR, 2 ba, crpt1, drpa, Sharpest 2 on a lot, in 3 BR, 2% be, elect. kitchen, ~ OCC College Stud~it tplc, CdM ........ f:iO mo. Condominium 3950 Cusi;e ~R all of Cbrona del Mar -and lg rm. rm. with frplc, 1 ~:bare aph.tw th Bachelor HOWll!, CdM •• SJ.2S· i;vu this includes outlying BRASHEAR REAL TY same. aft 5 Houle, 3 BR, 2 ba, CM $275 THE Bh1H'1, Avail Sept 1. 3 au"""t er •tion comnnmltlea ai.o. 847-3531 Eve. 541-2442 WOMAN to share my borne. C()l\Bm-MARTIN Br. 2 be.. Like new. $235 mo. c « appt. to iee. 2 -newer 2 Bdrm plus OPEN HOUSE ~arnem:'.·~~ Bristol & Realtors ~1002 Yr. Lee.644-®5 aft5:30 ORANGE p.::.;:r PR(). ma.sstve 1araa:e MF.REDITH GARDENS l026l PLACE )WI' want ad w~ SAN Clemetlte: 2..1 Br. tum . 613-85.iO $43.950 -AND WORTH IT! DAILY PILOT WANT ADS they an looJdni -DAILY or unfum. golf cwr1e, pool, 1~~~~---~-NEWPORT IEACH Jon.Day. Prestige area. 4 BR.INC R&WLTS! PILOT clauWed "2.(Sfl man,-id features. 496-2412 1 Bdrm Fum Apt. Available VERY ll'J' 3 Br 2 ba duplex, Bltns, crpll, drpa, pri patio. 1 blk/ bay & bch. No pet.I, yrly I.St! $200 mo. 673--6316 aft 6 pm. DUPLEX 2 bdrm, 2 ba. Crpts I drpe, blt·in1. Near ocean. $1110. mo. 548-8190 I '!!!!'!!!!!!!!!IJ!'!'!!!l!J!!!!'!!!!!~ DELUXE, uopor, new 3 BR 2 I' NEWPORT BEACH Ba., bllru, c1U1p., drpl. TRAVELDDG" Sundeek,.,; 14 blk. bay I: s; beach. $175 Mo. yearb'. Depreciation $18,600 References req. MS--7098 1966 Gro11 .......... $87,000 1967 Grosa •••• ,... $110,000 BE.AUTIFlJL 0 c ea n ln:>nl 1968 Gross , ....... $1.25,COO Apt. 2 Br. fireplace, patio. c. R. Ganlr( 642-1615 ~ Mo. yr)y. &42-9?60 aJt 1 e 2 CUSTOM 4 un it apt b\dp. Inc. $980 mo. nr. NEW Soundproof 2 BR. 2 Ba. Knott'•. Cash eq. $7500 ea, Acros1 bn. Coco's. 1665 trade w/.:>me ca 1 b . Irvine $185/$200. 64Z--0'239 534.-7740 evea. RF.ALTY BR 3 ba, tam. rm, liv. rm. ========~========::.:========i 1mmed1.ately 'Iii October 1st. E l Bl ff 5242 d. --H u Bu1inH1 Pr<>-rty 6050 675-1642 m rm, rumpua rm. f,JW General 3000General 3000Genlral lOOO Reu·rent !i0.11iii Ace.di r--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I .,. h., carpeted. ORANGE C™ST PRESTIGE Town Homt1 llARBOR View Hilla, Lwk R. 0 . 511tes Realty PROPERTY For lease, 2 br &: dee • 3 br ~::·o~··e:~t~~~~i 841$~~.SO ;~;; d.rr11-o~-...( -f#-Cf}Q.• 1:DWNER=="·s"'ma:;;o"'1um=."'"'°""B"R-. -,pt.,...1 ~~:.~~,:lli~·~~ din rm tam rm Comp p~· l" I."~ ~ P 0 -Ith ta aund~ A•aD 2-clU' ....... Rmt lt:•rtl at · " · ' · To qualified vetll. 3 bome1 .. ' """' • .., ... ~; .. d~d. pool• lndocpdl . Pill• to choole from, all fully cu· Sotuc iiiSfmplt Scnimbled Won! Puu~ for G ChudcZ. Sept. 1-t. to June 15th, 1969. S:.;;o.Aml w NB ~w m · : e ec. gar, _, -.ith buil No children or pets, Call IO a.y, .• 36 x 30' REDWOOD buildin& lo be moved. M\Mt 8el1 thls mo. S500 or best otter Loe FV cm Ward St I Calle Madero. C213J ~ll.24 or GM-1341 Acre199 ' 6200 WANT TO START A BEE FAllM7 GROW ALFALFA? WHAT Better Place than in Silver ValleyT Located In hJgh de1f!l't lB mile• eut of Barstow -80 Acrn, level land, well Ii: pump .l relel'- volr. Hu been in alfalfa - alfalfa ll'OW.ine in abundance in Valley, hla:hdt in prottln anywhere U'OUOd! WANT TO RAISE FISH FOR L.A. MKT? BUILD Younelt a lake for very Uttit money I )'OU'l't in bwineatl 90 LU:u tn ll'ft- ma.n·made • be1uttull There art 80 ecre lakes A 40 acre laket and 5 acre laku, etc, etc. A water Ilk.I 1utructk>n Jake ii almoat finllbed, Md a Polyneslan restaurant with campe> lfte1, tiahlng lakea, be-en In busineu long time. MUCH MORE dewl· Gpment gofna en in UN, lovely homes, acbool, church, etc, etc. Roule 66 So. of the Valle)' la now a compl.ud F!'ffWs,y, No. of valley b t.1 Vegu frftwQ. Other smaller Plll'Cel• available! Th1s land can be purcbaaed very rtuonably-ca.IJ ' talk to owner-M.7-6640 aft I PM or wknds. 2% ACRES. Southern / Caillomla. 13.00 "°""• 13-o6 fJet' month, 1295.00 MJ ~e. L. S'bftttlt, 326 W. 3rd' St L.A. Phone: (213) sn-5101 ., door. buyer can auum• pet~''" t·inl, doee to O• i.tt.. of the 17S-.351& Bualneu Rental 6060 614. % k>an. By 0 w n e r achools. Call for lntorinatlon · ,:,rra:mbi.c. wordl .,. "--"-------·-·~ iiCiioiironiiii•iidii•iiliiMoiiiiiriiiiii5~2ii;;SO ;;;.;;.:.;..;.c;""'-----,.R::'::E::._W_•_nltd-'-'"--..:6;:2;;40:I 644-2259 LISTER REALTY ·lowto'°""'°"'"""t..-.k l•ll-_ WANTED: Bualn.,,, 16612 Beach BJ., ua ~ I I ,.. ... , ... ___ , _ ...... a for WANTED: Small hoult', v-Young 'Executive , * roWNJ1o!i!i: * VAMLER OCEANFRONT ~~ • ..;;rl,:-,;;:;."iUQ49'-Mtl """ C.tholfc Church, I~ HOME • OOLY Sl'l,950 4 Br. l* bl. ic Plillman. I I I' I' I Yt•rl• R.•ntl l ..,~ 607 $9,000 Calh. 213: 254-4593 Modem.3 BR plu1. Bltna tnc) r-..... FIL\ bal • -• -• , ...,. •rt• Office Rent1I 0 BUSINESS end Shown by -1.. -.... No pets or children ..... -ot m,roo. I $100 .,1125 mo. Alr.Condltiontd PINANCIAL MillLL ll«llJI $2.000 <111>-$109 "'°· TIMOS 925 E. Balboa Blvd. ON TEN ACRES Dffl<H & l>Hk S-B °"""""' 541-2n pymtll lncJ prin brtftm. lm. I I' I I I 1 A: 2 BR, Film • Unf\lm with centrt.l secretarial, zer.. UI. ;q====nltl• 6300 ,. ____ &!L---A tu. 776-1'3:16 Anaheim Huntln..._ Beech 4400 lrom $150 mo. ~Cl / Prl/ ox Uld klepbone answerfnt BEAU'JT Salon, Prl"' ;_ _ _,,_ --· ... ., Pallol /Pooh.Ttnnto ·C.0-= Executive Heme 2YRoldShncttatO:ilonial, tnt1 Bktst. i bol• PutV M:Mce,upto2,t:m.,q.lt. tulck ale. EI~c•nt1-, IBD,3both&.Pool cioMt•be•dttn..,,.,.a, fVAHCO I Two 1oldltro dl1a11&l<q ·~~·LUX\llllt>US ~ Grttn. Th<M•tua!Bl4 d"'°"tad. ~led, P<· $1l.5UI 5 BR., 2 BA, up, 1 BR or den -. lkt!r Mrgtantr '1i r::ned the N RT LJVING 900 Sea 1.1.nt-, QUI M4-26ll 296.1 E. Cout Bwy, OdM n•lltd. Good c:llnttel Mr. -·~ FOX (l) Ba. hm, din, li• 1111 dowll , 2 -;' ~'::;:::~~!==:!.:~ a-to ...._.a gl•r In ~•. 4 ATIVE GARDENS CMa·• -~-nr ~-H-l Call 1 AN to 5 PM 675-«)'ll) BethoL 'l'oftra, $6,95<1. can m•N:~ "2-Pallol • all •'"""'· °""" r · --.... , ,_,,., •~• 6 POOLs.sAUNAS.JACUZZt ~·-• --• SECRETARIAL 0... Wlc!Lhmd, Wlllku & MU"1'saLWlllltmltburJ:4 Princfpabmo"IO:t-<033 IACEIAD •• ,,, :i1d~-i:J:1Bt';,.~•ll , HUNTINGTON OR FotnWoed, I BRa-· SERVICE Let.-. BR. den. tam ITD pool + BEA11I'IFUL t BR. 2 BA _ • apt. View. Shown dally ~7 Modern offktt:, carpets, air TV STORE m>l&I 3 BR. flOO.' Nr lchl& h 0 m •• by ....... N"' I I 1: r r Y"'·-~~loto ~ ... "'.::.No.i.'? ___ d' GARDENS PM and -430 """"-· ..,.,,,., ._ Good location. opportunity for • ....._ --a.. crpt1 I dri-~t . . _ _ _ Avocado Ave. ,.;s Ptr mcrilh. Oranae Cbun-two --1-$2500 ltock bd ~ ...,..,uw, ~ wnw. flttpl, bll·fnl. «N. patio. TENNTS-ENTERTAINM£NT 1 LARGE BR, ()pto beam b' Bank Bldf. 230 E.. lTtb St., equtpm~ Ai1o hq tJoortq BeautUW 3 Br. So. rA Mrl>WIY· Jly ......,. ooly, RtUD&bt.. * m4l6J8 DAILY PILOT DIM&A.. LIND. You cu 1111 tbem for jl.wt pen:i.s. a dq. Dial 642-¥11 11., ....... -· 125,400. • GJW,r'""llfO r r r r I' I' I' I' r I IOLSA.CHICA & HEIL celllnr, drpa, "''" ..... .. Cotta M.... 6C.118S plan. --962-lSIO , _ _ ___ •••• _ • ADULTS 147 .... 14 """'"'·IUlmo.m.<m< MED & Attwncy'a otnc.; CORONA •t1 Mar, E. Olut $16,950-0WNEll eOWM..t.11, • I I I I • I I I I I l·BR.fUro.ept.uctarcpte. 2 Bit., trpt., bal<ooy: ~lll0-1500aq.lt.,11Kood. Hwy, ""ul1 s.1on • 3 BR, IIK b&, blt·tna. ir,Jc, ~--• _ • • , • • • • • W~ttt I: cu tum. SI). '18 upttalrl. Near octan. $1.85. Coed toe. Low rtnt. 54M7t1 utablllb!cl t yn.. IM "21. ~ dbl pr. 8322 M\wltt Dr. ·-----~-, Palm St., H.B. 320 "'not::mpe 615-3145 APT Offict, Ground Door. m ~Tl!i l'lldlle -.. Mr.Ml SC" '"M·LETS '"NSWERS IN c• '"SSIFIC ·noN 1•00 !!JS.tGll -DAILY PlWI' WANT ADS w. Uth St, OJata M.... .;..;..,;;Wlilla:'::. -=...,...,...,,_...,.., -I sex::& lT TO 'EM! ""' A "" A White eJepMntlT Db1M+BD1 BR.ING RESULTS! Printe Utilitis f15 mo DbM • t • Lint ·-~-----------~-------~~ , • --------- ( 1. I , I I ' ,, , I •• -__ ,, ···---.... -·---~·--· ··~·· .. JUSINESS -FINANCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY • ... --.... --.. '!'l'-•*'!'l'-• .. --~ ... --.J08S & EMPLOYM NT ;OBS & EMPLOYMENl :;JO::B:::...:&::.;::::.;:..;L:..:0:..:Y.:.;M;;:E:"N":l l end NOTICES end NOTICES " " noo -'"-------1---------1Cement, Conc,.te 6600 Help W1nttd, Min 7200 ..._ .... ,_ 7100 Help Wanted. Men But. n.......o.0nl!Mo 6300 Found (Froo Adil 6400 Funerel1 6412 -Help Wen-, -n ..,.,... •• I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;I CE.M»IT Wort. all type1, NUTYILLC, U.S.A. ts now FOUND, sun. Aur. lJlb on No jOb too 1maU. Free est. .....,,.., appu .. -'" B&Jboo i.land, '""" • sold WESTMINSlJR H. STUFW<X ......,,. -ID Oranp ColJn. wed<!~·-· Initials on ... MEMORIAL PARK ty. Loeatlom art wait!Jt& ln sic.I~-Call & Iden t I t y, • cusroM PATIOS • concrete sawinj: ' rc:l'l'IOVal Slllt lie. e SU-1010 Anaheim, Lquna Bch., SP-&U-5678; 8 to 5:30; Mk for Mortu1ry & Cemetery H tin N,,_ Complete funerals 1.a Ana. Qranat. uo rton -· fr 8ch. • otbu areu. S14,950 1 ·ro-UND--11-,-.-G-,.-,-,-b-la-ck rom $245 Child Cere 6610 Ctsb req. 1''\Llly aeeured in· slrlpe, cat, abt. 3 mo. old, Cemetery Iott vm. ahOuJd ~tum h:t yr. male. Hu Oea co llar. from $130 CHILD c1re ln my home. call for appt. 642--2113 or Cam~ Hlahland, Corona dcl lncludM Dldowmenl care 1'~encf'd yard, hot lunches. write to 1617 We.tcli!f Or., ?.far. cau 67~7 Evff')'thlna in one beauutuJ n2.50 per week. $5. t•ch ad· suite no, Newport Be&ch, I=========~ place means ~ eM. ditiooal child. Jiuntinato.o C&1. 92660 Lost 6401 No trallic problema. Beach. ~1933 14801 Beacb, Westminster SPECIAL Summer program. Investment Oppor. 6310 Cl-flLOS Pet male Dutdi rab· bit (Mesa Verde area). 531-1725 893-2421 Ages 2~ to 6. 8 a.m. to 5:30 643s p.m. S18 w~k. CI a v I s $9.800 Will return you White except fM grey ears, _T_ra_v_e_I_____ Mootuorrl Schools, 1525 N. l15% m 4-5 years. mask & ll'OU$ers. Reward-MAN Exec. needs ride by 7 AM daily to vie. Imperial & AviaUon, lnglewood, from Balboa. Pay well 673--2842 Santa Ana, C.M. 646--3106. * M8--M56 * 545-7'ffiS Real E1t1te Lo.I n• 6340 MINIATURE Schnauz.er 8/7, nr. Adams I: Mes.a Verde, BORROW on Your Equity CM. Answers to Pepper. Private 2nd Marta:. money I ,,C,...~""°,.c,----~~ FREE APPRAISAL & BROWN Alligator billfold in Contr•ctors 6620 e ROOM ADDmONS e L.T. Coostruct Legal Notices 6450 Family roonu, kitchen or AS--"0-1_8/_1_2_l_w_ill __ 0_,,-,-be unlts. Single story or 2: responsible tor debts in-plans custom de1lgned , For PROMPT SERVlCE phone booth next to Reoputable Company aervln& AJbertaon'• mkt, 19th & Orange Count)' 18 )'ears. Harb. RN. 642-7890 Sattler Mortgage Co., Inc. I ==~~~o--.,.-,c--= 336 E-17th St., Costa Mesa BIG , Fat Tiger cat with oo.21n S6-0611. Nights chopped oU tail. male. estimates & layout, phone curred by me. John Kollen-• 847_15ll • bo'" 1 -~-'-'c....-occ....'---- SERVICE DIRECTORY ucensed Contractor & wkends; 613-7865 642-US7 Corona Hia:hlands, Reward. Appli1nc• Rep1ira 613-9474 P1rt1 6510 Residential • Commel'1:ial Maint & Repairs. Free Est 673-2129 Mortgages, T.D.'t 6345 LOST: Blk. Germ. Shep., _ _:...=:_'.!_ ___ ;::~IA;::;d:;;di"°tio:c,,.::-c*:-.R;-;,:;;m;;;od;;;,;;ling:::;-- female. "Fatty"; vie. of TOM 'S washer, dryers, etc. Fred 11. Gerwick, Lie. SAFE 12% PER YEAR Westcllft Rew. ~8-4102 Serv & repair. Speciallzed 673-W4l * 549-2170 SS,250 1st TD oo spectacular LOST red & white model d I s b w a sh e r cleaning. OS p . C Oceanview lot. Sold for 646--4645 PAT! • atio overs $7500. Payable 1% per airplane, Vic Mesa del Mar. I ==========ol Room Additiom, Lie. month Including 8%. All due REWARD! 549--0038 81bysitting 6550 642-5952 Days-Eve-Wknda 3 yrs 10% discount. 4!M-1137 MIXED Terrier, male, tan. Sl390 2nd TD behind S486S, Lie. No. 0423 West.cliff area. 1st TD payable 1 % per month incl. 10% all due. 5 yrs. Covera exc Oceanview lot. 20% discount. 49'-1137 12%% YIELD on Ra.son se- cond trust dttd. $4,<XXI cash. 494-7508 M. C, Thcnn. ANNOUNCEMENTS end NOTICES P.fY home Mon thnl Fri. A·l Carpet Cleaning 662S Reward. 646-5661 Personals 6405 refs, A·l care rum. No. Cos· ta ~tesa. ~9-0700 BABYSITTING in my home. * MUSICIANS * "" m"''· "'• 1n«<1 ""'· Refs. 646-4318 and piano player• accordian LOVING Care. Hot lune be•. or organ, for trio. Do stan-Lots of elO!), by mother of 2. dar<b, pop, rhythm & blues. Male Ol' female. For im-1 ~W~-~'~'d~•~C~M~·~S<&-<iS"'". _12_~~· I mediate work {714) 689-2011 BABYSITI"ING, my Mesa Revolutionary Host Dry Cleaning Method Rugs, Drapes, Upholstery Can be used Immediately alter work ii completed Sales, Service and Ins!Allation • Master Charge Verde home: tncd, yd. Mon. thru Fridays. ~1662 F d (F Ad ) 6400 2 MUSICIANS Wanted, lead OU~·-rN 1 __ guitars, bass or organist. Must sing, also be showman, BABYSIT. Pre-scb::>ol age. • Bankamerlcard Modern Rug & Catpet 433.5 Crenahaw, Los Angeles 213 • 296-5100 Collect FOUND: Yellow tiger-type small cat with green & white flea collar; vie. ol. 29th St. &: El Rancho Market, Npt Beach. 613-3156 DOG -Black Scotty about 6 mos. Found Tuesday on Newport Blvd., C.M, Wear- ing red collar. Every day 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. 646--0856 BLACK Fmeale cat with kit· ten. Vicinity N e w p or t Heights 646--5143 YELLOW Stingray bike. Vic. Huntington Beach h 11 1 a. 962-4587 MALE Poodle, tags. Vic of 22nd & Newport Blvd., C.M. 642-7001 FOUND Female Dachshund Vicinity of Brookhurst &: Adama, HB 962-1070 FOUND Back Bay-Harbor Hi Cius ring '69 548-5340 ADORABLE orange kitte11. 940 Paularino, C.M. DONT give It away, 1et quick cub for 1t wltb a Oail1 Pilot want Adi 642"678 for hard rock & Motown My C. M. home, by day or Mesi Cleaning Service sound. Must be 21 start work week. S4!Hi734 Floors, windows, carpets, & immed. Contact Chipper , ----------·I upholstery. Free est. Res & 646-9241 from 12 until 8 PM '· comm. 548-4lll Brick, M1tonry, etc. CARP~ , F 1 . FLY TO CATALINA 6560 .c.~ °" urn. c eanmg; DAILY FUGITT'S FROM for 1 day setvice & quali· ORANGE COUNTY' AJ.R.. BRICK, Concrete. Carpentry ty \\'Ork, call Sterling for PORT. Catalina • Vegas Custom CablneL!. Small jobs brightness! 642~ Airlines. e 546-G612 OK Free Est 962~ SPRING Special! Sc a ft. HAVING a party? Need Advanced Du,let • Uphols- musicisns? Modern, rock, Cirpentering 6S90 tery. 543-1188 Toll tree jazz. ~ CARPENTRY Eltdric1I 6640 ALCOHOi.JCS AnonymoUI Harbor Area. Phone 673-8™ MINOR REPAIRS. No Job ELECI'RICIAN Lit.'eflsed & P.O .• Box 1223 Cotta Mesa. Too Small. Cabinet in. gar-bonded. 'small jobs, ages & o t b e r cabinets. mainten. & repair.I. 543-5203 545-8115 EYeB. 646-2372 Day11 ;====""==== Announcem.nts 6410 Lifette Ht1lth Studio Hospitality is Dur Motto FREE STEAM WITil SWEDISH MASSAGE Open wkdy1 10 am • 11 pm Sundays 10 am • 8 pm 519 E. Broadway l..oni'. Beach (213) 437-7009 MANY WONDERflJL OP· PORTUNITIES lla•• been discovered 1n Cl.aultied Ada. Tum b•cS: to "Bwnnet.s Op- oortunJljea" NOW! 6611(1 H. 0. Anderson. G1rdenln9 e NO JOB TOO SMALL e 1---~----- Re1idential -lndmtriaI Com-ANTHONY'S mercial. Repair & remodel. Garden Service Reasonable. Uc, bonded, in. 64(>1948 !lured. LANDSCAPING e 962-1961 e 962-83n e LAWNS REMODELEJ> CARPENTER &: concre1e Exp horticulturist. ~·ork. Room additions, pet-Reas. monthly Gardening ios, garages, etc. 25 Yrs GEN'L O · ean·up, tree SPrv, exp. 642-3877, 648-5667. rototll, grading, sprinklers, MASTER CARPENTER lawns, haul'g. Re as, New & repairs, S4 hr 646-58-18 5~3900 aft 5 PM 1--eu=r-=&"Edg=~,""'La.,...w-, --1 No Matter What It Is REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS CABINETS. Any size job. '25 yrs. exper. 548-6713 Maintenance. Licensed 548-4808, 5(5.8570 aft 4 PM Japanese Gardening Professional Maintenance Cement, Concrete 6600 Landscaping 64&-6553 EXP-T CEMENT WO MOWING, Edging, vacalawn. Wheddye Went? Whaddye Got? SPECIAL tLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Special Rate S llnu -5 t ime• - 5 bucks RULES -.0 11\Utl lNC~UOii l-Wl'ltt ""9 MW Ill tr_,., ~Wllel ,.... _,. Ill tr-. t-YOUll ""°"' llfld/OI ~~ 4-4 Mnt• 01 ..,..rtlllne, ~Oll41NG FOii U.Lll -JllAOES ~L YI PHONE 642·5678 Te Pl1ce Your Trider'• Parldl1e Ad LAKE Ta.hoe View Lot N•· vada side, paved $12,500 clear. Exchange for some- bodys headache! Units, TD's, or ! Bkr. 6'&5726 NEED MOTORCYCLE Have 1964 Simca, rebuilt engine, new tires. $450 or ! .................... 494-7204 WILL trade beautifully land· scaped 4 BR, den GG CUI· de-Sac ho1ne tor E. Costa Mesa, or W. Newport home or units. 539-5933. Ocean View -Nr Npt pier. 4 un its tum, best rental area. $.58.SOO • take sm hse in trade, Owner 2000~ Court Ave., 67:Hli27 TRADE equity nice 3 BR. for large 4 or 5 BR. with or without pool. Prefer Huntington Beach or Foun- tain Valley. 847-4378 DIAMOND approit 2 ct Guaranteed $axl value tor Mercedes, property or ?? """" 3 Br. & den, suncleck. Ocean View Dana Point. $14,000 eq.. Trade for 60' Expan· able Trailer. {n4) 49&-2491 eves. Capistrano Area 4 ac undeveloped land. Off Ortega Hwy. Trade for in- come or M·l or sell. 5'$.2425 21 UNIT MOTEL, We st L.A. $125,000, gross approx. $20,000 yr. EXCHANGE Re- no, Nevada, Perron Realty &12-1m LOVELY Aocessory & Anti· que shop, apProx. $3500 stock & fixtw'es; trade for late model car or what have yoo! 673-0598 4 BR, 3 BA home. La Ha· bra Hts , Horses ok. Lg 1A,; acre avocado. $15,<XXI equity trade for R.E., car, boat, 'fD's etc??? 496-2931 Great lakes Trlr. 18' Elec. .brakes, 2 butane gas, be-.i.t· ing !ftove, ice or elec retrig, Newly pe.hited. Trode for camper or P.U. 548-1945 TRADE 4 BR • POOL BAYCRESl' !Jome, for 5 or 6 BR -SAP.fE AR.EA * 646-8565 * * * * L1ndscaping 6810 2 BR tum condo. on Bch nr. Ve.nice, Italy in exclus- ive resort area. Trade tor local area 3 or 4 Br. home or vac . lot or boat. &16-1217 e $4,800 TO e Trade on 4 or S BR house Newport or Corona del Mar 4!WOOI DESERT Hot Springs 3 bdr., 2 ba, view lot, ac· cess to hot min. ba. For Mesa or Beach area. Loe. phones 548-n46 or 3ml$5. 2 DUPLEXES val. $37,5(.0 in Costa Mesa. Trade for house or trust dct!d1. In- come $415. Owner. * 549--083.1 * no.000. equity in W. Covina ijllls home 3 BR, 2 ba, den. f~me in Laguna Hills CM' Ne'Wllt. Hts. Principals only. 673-5752, 12-5 PM. '65 Lotus Convertible, $1900 equity, Will trade for SlOOCI car & you take over pay- ments of S95 month. 537. 6901 before 1 PM 3 Acres, Big Island, Hawaii. Will trade for down on build. able R-1 lot, home or ??? in Newpor1 Beuch area. OWNE.'R 842-6184 ~O Ac mobile home park m orange groves; air-cond. clubhouse, res. Sp. unfin. Trare for local vac. sub div. land. &16-1676 owner. e 1960 OLDS e 4 door sedan, aJl power f'Qllip., new tires. Will trade for 10' glass outboard & motor. 5'1&.7391 Small mod trailer park, riv· er & hwy. frontage, nr. Den- ver, $30,000. clear. For Or- ange. SD county prop, Prin- cipals only. SJ6-7017 2 BR 2 BA Twnhse 5" o/o Brookhurst Adams $2700 eq. Total $13,980 P&J $62 Tax Ins f..Iaintance $43 for home or ? &16-3389 Trade.Just surveyed Jrce & clear 24' auxiliary Sloop. ~Dl'-Beach hse, dpbt, ap1 ., rncome .prop, TO, tnobil home. or ? . Eves. 515-4412 * * * YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A .._... . RK Gen'! cleanup, Hauling. Rea~nabte Prices. ~peclallz.-Odd Jobs. * 548-6955 GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING Ing m custom p.atios. Free I-========~ & GARDENING est. Call anytime 642-9'196 JAPANESE GARDENER SERVICE SERVIC~ DIRECTORY Sewing 6960 Alterition..-.-642-5845 Neat, accurate, 20 yrs. exp. DAILY PILOT WANT AD EXPE'R, reliable maint State licensed contrctr, CUSTOM PATIOS & Reas. mo rates. 89'2•3219. ReRldential -Commercial Block walls. AlllO concrete -:-=;-:;=o-:==----1 Yard cleanup. Free est. &awing & rt.moval. 842-1010 LO\V COST Maintenance No job too big 893-3581 ?.fO\V -EDGE -SPRAY BEST In concrete. Walks, FERTILIZE. !162-7349 ./ HEAVY yard work & soil pool decks, floors, patios. preparation. McCann & Son 642-8514 e JAPANESE GARDENING * 495-469'7 * • Servlce aeanup. Lanclscap. TILE, Ceramic 6974 * Verne, the Till! Man * Cust. work. Install & repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch. Lending sh o ,., .. er t't'pair. 847-1957/!HG--0206 Supervisor Pl1tlng, Anodizing & Pr ocessing t.h\.c::hinilli Strike Conditions Exist NEEDED IMMEDIATELY * 100L &: DlE MAKER * GEl'lERAL INSPf.X:TOR * MAINTENANCE MECHANIC * t.WNTEN A.NCE ELEX:rRIClAN * ~'1.'QCKMAN-SI'ORE & L!NE * 'I'OClrL CRIB AITENDANT * ME:l'AL ASSEMBLER * RIVETER • METAL FnTER * POWER BRAKE OPERATOR * PUNCH PRESS OPERATOR * ENGINE LATIIE OPERATOR * TURRE.1' LATHE OPERATOR ~ve .urospace manWacturcr hu • re- qulrt?menl !or • man to act up and manage a plating, anodllln£ ard processing facUlt,y. Appl.J- eant must be eXJ)l"riene- ed ln the chemistry or metal cleaning, electro- plating, anodizing and non·metalic coating pro- ce!l6ell to military speci· fications. In audition to chcmstry overall know- ledge. a n d expe_-ience should Include the super. vision and operation or facilities and equipment for perlorming the oper• ations mentioned. Mail complete recume of qual- ifications, experience and * fl.lILUNG MAOiINE salary required to OPERATOR 8 I 0760 S * BENCH MACHINIST ox • anta Ana • HELIUM ARC WEll..DER .,-.,.,--,------I* MACHINE WELDER As.sistant * EXPERIMENTAL YOUNG MAN • ~~~~~ON STRUC· 11 or Over tuRE DEVELOPMENT ?.tECHANIC Will be considered for a career position in the Con- sumer Acceptance Depart- ment of our Orange Councy Branch. $3.25 PER HOUR Our · personnel department will COnsidef' • High school graduate with good work or 11Chool """"'· e Ex GI's • College students not re- turning to school tttls semester. • Out ot state applicants &incerel.y interested in Mablishing residence in Orange County, Call between 9 AM & 2 PM 53S·ll83 Press Operators SARGENT- FLETCHER 9400 Flair Drive El J'.1onte, Calif . 12131283.7171 12131443.7171 An equal opportunity employer BUSBOYS AND DISHW ilHERS Apply in person 9-5 p.m. REUBBI E. LEE 15 I E. Coast Highway Newport Beach MECHANIC OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT S562 to $685 Automotive mainten- Sales & Service Are you this man! u you a.re, The Singer Company needs )'OU. You may now be employed but V.'lllll lo improve your pre&- ent position. Salary plw commission, company car fumlshed, all eompo.ny ben- l'!fits and paid training (11'1> .,..m. • Apply in J>j!rson Mr John Ferraro THE SIN6£R CO. 7777 Edinger 18 Huntington Center Huntington Beach CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Join todays fastest growing prof<?sslon-Mutual Fund sales No experience necessary· We train· full or part time Mutu1I Fund Advlson, Inc. Npt B. 'M03 Westclll1 64U422 S.A. 12U N. Broadway .. ,_ HOUSEMAN Experience preferred Ame ric1re, Inc, 214 Hospital cm:i. Westminster 893-4541, Ext 331 Equal opportmlty employer JOB Available City of Laguna 8 e a ch . CUSTQ. DIAN . .$411-$493 mo. Permanent position. Ex· perienced men ooly. Good warking cond'a. and fringe benefit!, Apply by Aug. 23--6B at Public Works De.pt., City Hall SOS Forest Ave. e Boat Assemblers e Carpenters • Painter• Apply in peraon Jensen M1rlne Corp. 235 Fiscber, O:>sta Mesa Rubber expetienct only. One on 2nd shift, one on 3rd shift. Apply'°' ance worl<. Service, adjust JANITOR and repair school busscs and Personnel Office U.S. Divers Company 3323 W. Warner Santa Ana An eqU.al opport\QlJty employer MAC DONALD'S other automotive equipment. and general cleanup man. Ap. One year rl'Ceflt experience ply In person. Ask for Mr. in automotive m~hanica, Robert Rogalski, Service 8th grade education, U.S. DcpN I. auzen. Apply in person 9-4, ABORS CADILLAC Pl!l'sonncl Commission ou.1 _~""°~-',l•_c~bo,•_· _B~lv,d_ .. ,c_.M_. _ ice 7972 Warner Ave., Hunt-Production Trainee ington Beach, by August Apply in person 231'd. TROY ENGRAVING Co. MAC DONALD'S carry out restaurant ia looking for professional JANITOR full time. Excellent working conditions, paid vacation & profit sharing. Apply 1 Pl\f to 5 PM , Monday thru F'ri- day, 16866 Bt>ach Blvd., Huntington Beach. 2322 S. Pullman St. S11nt11 Ana, Calif, OISl!\VAHSER, 3 da,ys ·l night a week. Starting salary St 75. See Terry at 495 E. 17th .. C,M, or call LI 8-9314 LIQUOR CLERK Retail. Full time, also part time. l"op salary. Write Box M 172 Daily Pilot. ~ looking tor tull or part time worker. Clean, con- genial sun-otu'ldings. Ex- cellent worl<ing conditions, pold vacation & profit shar· IN.~.,..,-..,~Tu,-=--.,.------ ing. Apply 1 PM lo S PM. SALESMEN SERV s1a atten. Salary & comm. Full & prt time. Tom Sharp Union, OR 3-3320. 2201 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. l\1onda.y thru Friday, 16866 Beach Blvd., Huntington No Experience Necessary. Beach. Plenty of floor time. Highest paid commissions. Paid holi- -~S~A~L~E~S~C~L~E~R~K~-1 days and vacahon. Excel- Agencies, Women 730C See Betty Bruce at Licensed -Qu11ity ing 531_7034 aft 7 p.m. CORRAL'S lm1sq> & rototill Cement work. 839-5006 """ -I h RE.LIABLE: Reas. Oriental '·· z: n:e es' ave own ----------I equipment. 962-4764 Full & Parl·Time for Ne-...·-JOBS & EMPLOYMENT port Center, Huntington lenl training and promotion potential. Apply in person. Ask for Mr. Roberts mi~~ lxec Agency for Career Gm. 410 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. care. Cleanup, odd jobl. Vincent. 642-0326 Job Winted, Men 7000 Cent<.>r & Fashion Squar<'. La Habra . ATLAS Chrysler-Plymouth 2929 Harbor Blvd., C.M. For Fast Service & Expert Ass;is;tance DIAL 642-5678 DIRECT JUST SAY CHARGE IT! This Page REACHES 68,972 HOMES 'ACHWEEK =========I Paperhanging Painting 6850 General Services 6682 PROFESS. Window, walb & fir. cleaning: busine1s, resid., & coostruction Crystal Window (l('aning Free Estimates 5'18-8737 • l DAY service. 1-lome & apt cleaning. Crpts, walls, windows, painting. 642-8520. Sterling for brightness! Haullng 6730 LITE JlAULING & CLEAN UP FREE ES'flMATF.S. * 546-7849 * Lite Hauling-Trimmings, 'l'rash. Garage Cleanups Name It! Reasonable BIG JOl-L'l 642-4030 PAINTING And Pl.pering. If you call me we both benefit Exclusive buy 001 expensive Try me and see. 541-3157 INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Pa.inting. f'rce est. Lie. & lns. Chuck 54S.5314 HAND Y man painting & clean up work. No job too small. Call Pancho. OO-n10 "Paper Buggy" 847-16~ Mobil stOl'e • home calls \Ve advise • 5'!.ll • in.'ltall PAINTING Aver. room compl. S25. & up. Neat work. Local refs, 847-1358 If You are an experienced f.{arine gas engine man with knowledge of electricity & are capable of professionally installing equipment on ne1v boats call or come by \Vest Coast Yacht& In c., 333 \V. Coast Hiway. N.B. Job Wentad, Lady 7020 Practical nurse.c'omt>Bnion. Drive. Good cook. Lite house-...·ork. ~I Job Wanted Men & Women 7030 EXPERIJ.;NCED APT MGR Couple 1vith many years ex- perience in Orange Co. \~:ants opportunity to handle your properly. 613-4769 CLEAN Lot!, garages, etc. Tree removal, dump, skip, backboe, tlll. grade. 962-8745 Xl..i'lT paintin1: Interior/ Exterior. 17 yrs local refs . Very reasonable. 89-~3408 INT -ext. Average 1 BR apt, labor & mat'b s 7 4 . 5 o. Domestic Help 7035 642-7528. 548.-1927 LIVE INS Hou1ecle1nlng 6735 PAINTING Interio r/Exterior. Employer pays lee• Free Estimates! George Byland Agency * APT. o..EANlNC * fast & Thorough, I fUrn i$11 Everything. 642-81&4 =*=&1;2=4669=;*=""=~;112=*= 1100 B E, 16th, S.A. 547--0395 Plumbing 6890 Chinese Uvt-lns. Oittrtul Interior Decorating 6737 e Residence · Comm'I • e Painllni. 1nt. A ext. • W4lll Covnin,irs • Color Coordln11 llon FREE ESTIMATE Uctntcd & l.nlUNd MODERN PLUP..lBING 24 Hr. serv. Work gll{lr. I.Jc., in&ur.; remode.I, repa.Y..,rooter serv. s:n-7566 Marv's Plumbin1t Service Rei1'1ir -Remodel •646-9801• Plumbing 6890 DECORATORS * 2·1 HOUR SERVICE * !36-9513 Plumbing, repair, remodel, I==========: I Eltc se-...·er cleaning 6755 Guaranteed * 646-ltO'J e IRONING · Sl Hour e Remodel., Repair. 6940 Brint bangus plfl.M SU.20U 6f4 Se&I St., CM REMODEL ii: REPAIR EXPER. lronlni ol all typN. Carpentry • Paint • Plaster S1.25 Jfour. 614 Capitol, Cos-A: Concrele. Dick &U-1197 I& Mtu. Ma.-7330 Ofal &12-5678 tor RESULTS Permanent. Experienced. Fu East Agency &42-8703 Help Wanted, Men noo RF.sPONSffiLE adult lo operale power sweeper wttk ends. Pf'rmanent , 546-1797 SERVICE StatlonAttend. &-11 P.M, Dq>erienced. Over 21 490 E. 17th St. 0.1 sroo:: CLERK • 40 hours. Experience prt>Jerred. 1510 Newport Blvd., 01 DELIVERY. Mature driver, night work 3 AM. The Plzu. Ma.n 642--9498 aft 10 PP.I * BARTINDER * A~y in per1on, r.teu Lanel. lTOO Superior, C. M. \\'htte elephant.I! Dlm .. •~HM: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~- ' l , APPLY rN PERSON Tha TOBACCONIST Inc #46 Fashion Square, La Hatira PRODUCTION WORKERS r or Ceramic Industry Day shift. Apply Industrial Clay Products 18765 Fiberglass Rd . 1-luntington Beach. Calif. FRY COOK Expel'lenoo:i Apply at THE RIGGER Ho. 15 Fashion Island Newport Center N.B. MACHINISTS ENGINE LATHE Minimum 5 years f'Xperl· ence. Compnny benefit~, ov· <'rtime, paid life & medical. Bonus plan. Apply in per· ""' TROY ENGRAVING Co. 2322 S. Pullman St. Santa Ana. Calif. Lathe Drill Press Miii M•chinist $4.00 per hour + and overtime, 58 hrs per -...'k & up. ff' you are an experierK't'd 5"5-0431 l\tarine gas engine man with PART Time crew manager knowledge of el<'C'tricity & eaBy y,·ork. 3 Ol' 4 hour~ are capable Of profe!\Slonally el-'enings -...•orking with boys installing equipment on new Must have ca r . e.om: boats call or corne by \\'Mt missions. For lnformaUon Coast Yachts Inc., 333 W call 893-5375 and ask tor Coos! Hl"'Ay, N. 8 . Bob MEN WANTED REAL ~ATE. Shouldn't e CARPENTERS you be Riling the hottest • t.1ECHANICS area I lfuntlngton Beac!I? e PA.INTERS Call for apj>t. Villagt: R. E. APPLY IN PERSON 962-4411. 516--8103 LIDO SHIPYARD SERVICE S111tion Atteridant 900 Lido Park Drive Know lube U cit N wpon 0 A.. • o Mge, &0me c e1""' mechanic. C 1 p 11 b I e of COLLF.GE Studmt perm managing 1Crv 11 tat i 0 n . positioll. FuU lime summrr. ~8-2104 p/lime during .sch! •t l<s~ER;;;;V~l~C~E'°"'Sc------Cbevron s111u bch · ta man, t'Xpc-r ?'I Of! in Full time days, Sun of! A~ J...a:runa . No htpp!es or loni ply Pflsier Union ~rv.' 2248 hau-. Must be 18. 5'1.lary + Ha.rbor 81 C t.f comm w/r&i.lcs. 494-9003 " · · ASSISI'ANT MANAGER Electronic Salesman Costa l\feta Car Wash, finf' With knowled~e of pcu11 and/ person. App\)r In Pl?T'l!IOO 2059 or 1V ~piur. lf1.rbor CM H/\Y. Wright Co. ' . . 17'70 Newport Blvd. CM * F'RY COOK. expcrlmwl. No Sun'• or holidays. Apply bcl. 11 AM, S12 W. 19th. C.M, CHARGE m • By appoint. 646.3939 Help W1nted Women 7400 General Sales Bull time or U to 3 basis, Qualified to worl< in high grade fashion atore. Ex· perience preferred but not necessary. Offen immedi· ate liberal di.9count and pleasant environment. Ap- ply, BUFfUM'S Fashion Island Newport Be1ch STORE MANAGER Chris' oprning 9XJfl in Soutti Ccnst Plaza. Requires fUlly experienced women'1 spec- ialty shop manager. Oppor· tunity to grow with expand- ing fashion organization. Sal- ary baaed on experience + volume. Sen Mr. Berohn, O!.rb1' FashiOns 9821 a.p- man, Garc:l!.'t!. Grove. SECRETARY Needed by lirm Joe. in San Oemente. f\f ust have good typlna: skills & ability to wortc wtth figures. No &horth•nd nece51. lnteresUng work I: liberal company ~lits. For App't. call 1-49'2-1153 MA1'JRE Wotn3n for af. ternoon cart ror 1 yr. old; Killy brook Sehl. • r ta 546-6426 S F.rn.ET ARY La.iun• law ottiee: Rood a/h ' f.)'p 1ldlll req. ·~ MOTEL MAID PaM Ume NB. ~l8fl JOBS & EMPLOYMENl JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENl MERCHANOISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADE Help Wented Women 7400 EX{EPTIONAl OPPORTUNITY! for experienced • W aitrhses e Cocktail W1ltre1ses Wu Bc.:n'.t ia aocopting appltca.tiort1 for theee ~ sltloos. Apply In per'°" Wu Ben's 333 Bayslda Drive Newport Beach E..'CPEJUENCED PA.RT TTh1E PROOF COMMERCIAL TELLER UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 4525 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Be1ch 540-4424 SALE ANO TRADE Help Wtnted Help W anted _w~o:::m:.:•;.;• ___ ..;7:..4:.o.:OO _W=•o.:m;.;•o,:n __ , __ 7;..4.:.:.;00 ~rnlt~• • • SEWING INSTRUOOR • SAWGIRl Are you these women? If yoo are. tilt Si~ ComPiUIY needs yau, You may mw be en1 ployed but want to lmprovf' your pN-sent position. Salury plus oomtnissions, Ila.Id vacatiorul p I 11 • many °""" """"'"" Appl)t tn penion. Mr. John Ferrtro THE SINGER CO. 7777 Edinger 18 Huntington Center Huntington Beech RECEPTIONISY- OCEAN VIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT $41g. to $509. 8000 Furniture ' J. C. Petme}' C.O. \.It_, ::r~:: I J .MEDITERRAN~·,.A-N .. ~ 'sALESLAOIES SPANISH HOU$CWhret and Mothers , O&n )'OU fP8J'e a k!w hours :;. I each day and ntid to the l 'C1 fa' f.1/J , Iamily inc<>m• at !ho """' urni "'" Jie11 -Vle time! Scbl!dua.11 con~l­ mt !or you, moming11, tfl· ernoons, evenings or combi- nattons of all. Work In a tun atorc under the finest of conditions wld 1op SU.per- viltion. Apply in penon PcfUU!)''S Fasbion fsland 9:30 a.m. to 9;30 p.m. Mooda:y thru Friday All st00en1 positions filled Equal opportunity employer Experienced Mature PBX Operator Part Hine Sat & Swi days. Apply in per.ion Sher1ton Be•ch Inn 21 U2 Ocean Ave. lluntington Beach Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500 Orange Coast New Sltowroom Samples Wiii S.11 Any Piece Individually 8' Carved arm divan, lg matching chair with beautiful fabrics ; 5 pc hexagon dark oak din· ing set with black or avocado framed chairs & vtnyl cushions; 5 pc bedroom set, 9-dr Mr & Mrs dresser with lg framed mirror, 2 lg commodes & matching headboard. ONLY $429.95 1$895 Value) or TERMS as low es $3 W"k No down -uae our' store ch1rge plan Approved Furniture (No Finey Front -BUT Quality Values Inside ) 2159 Harbor Blvd., Costa M.1e 548-9660 Open 9.9 Dolly-Sundey 11-5 12 Y e•rt 11m1 location -same owners Jr. College District "' ~} , 011~;.E~~eaa t..~r ~LLJ MERCHANDISE FOR SALE ANO TRAOE ll25 SAINT Geoiice. e le c-t r I c gU.l!ar, with chord. 3 Piek up&. Good condition. s.a.s. .. 4--0lll ELECTRIC guitar. coil cord $45: ampliHer $25. Both A·l condition. ~:ua JGQR Spcc:iaJ allver Al'llC'y Dutt', pcrf~t cnnd.; 1st $W steals ;1. 673-237\ ~~w,!>rg~'!0E~ Season Sale! Fall shi pments ol Baldwin Piano~ &. Organs on tlie way. Ou1· Door & dilSCOT! models must gu. Prices slasbt..>d? i)o{'s1ft it 1nake sense to Wop w; before you bu y? WARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO ll'IOl Newpo11, C.M., 642·8~S-l '··--"'11 ............ •J, ~·-' MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR • ~lE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE t.-.. Friday -August 16th 7:30 P.M. $20,000 INVENTORY New Mediterranean Furniture By Drew, Stanley, Martinsville, Basset - in beautiful bedroom and dining room & living room sets. L-Ovely occasional chairs, rocker~, recliners, love seats, china cabinets, , COt'ktail tables, commodes. swag lamps, pio· lures, coffee tibles, low boys, chests, bunk beds, secretary desks, RCA stereo, TV's, mat. tresses, twin corner unit.s, appliances, beauty shop equipment & MUCH MORElllll WINDY'S AUCTION 2075112 NEWPORT BLVD. Orar.;. Co's Largest B•kirul To"y'1 Bldoa. M•l'l1. One-Stop Music Store COSTA MESA -646-8686 V.'urUtzer pia11os & orgiu1s OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 Fischer, Kanabe piano '·I--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Player pianos, reblt, guar .• 1~ ~ _ - . -· ·-· _ .... Dogs 1125 2 BEAUTlfUL AKC 101!" Toy bred black poodles. Shots & worms. ~. J.. 528-8lS8 DACHSHUND, male, one year, blu:k & tan. AKC reg. Very a1fectionate. J 5 0 . 675-.10i6 A-11N.FemaleSc6nau:i:e r PUPI;• AKC reg. Ean c~ ped. All Sholl. 67!)..3251 AKC ?i-tln poodle pup, apricot male. Pick. of li!ter. 8 wk&. Reuonable. 540-8638 evct. BLACK Cocka"poo puppies l1 {'aoh. 2!>7B Willow Lrne C.'°\f. &48-3156 1 YR. Old Alas k a n Malemute. AKC Ir. shotll. Loves children. $75. 5'.S-4930 An equal opportunity employer Operate PABX swilc:hboard, handle ineoming and outgo. mall, light typing {35 w.p .• m.)., one y~ experience sv.i tchboard or general oH· ice. 1-Iigh school graduate, U.S. Citizen. Apply in per· son 9-4, Personnel Conunis- sion Office 7972 \Yame.r Ave., Huntington Beach by August 23rd, Operator ~ 'iiiii ~iust have one year cxper-!I ien<..'e on olfscl duplicator, able to do light-table and G~Va~tICHS-r-.tANNING'S SWIMMING POOL Machine!°Y!... ;k.--.-100 18 Ft Pool, F'iltcr, Sw1aee · Horses 1830 r-.1USIC CITY Sk immer, ?t1a.intenance Kit. 8 x 10 CHANDLER & Price ---------Decorator darkroom ...,. 0 r k. Salary Receives cancellation of $22,000.00 3400 So. Bristol FREE Growul Plld. hand fed press. Has clutch BAY l-1are. Xlnt cond. 1tenth~ Cmta MC'sa * 5'J().2l6S $149.88 for idh~ & also a brake. New western saddle&. tack. R.N. Part t ime evenings Exeellent saliry & work- ing conditions. $458-$506. _ Spanish and Mediterranean Furniture Sr. Steno Clerk All N-Top 9~a1lty lrorul NG-• NO\V l-IERE -tlle new SECARD POOL roller trucks & ret:ently * 536-1986 * painted. 2 chases, quoins, furniture, 2 cases hand set lyJll!. call 536-8411 H.B. New Store Openin9 Shorthand lOO. Challenging A Decanrtor'• Dfff111 He• 11 011 Dkplay Supersounding T-200 1-liring all <phases of help. I'(>sponslble rosition. Start Items as follows: Gorgeow 8 ft. custom quilted Hammond Spinet orean CAI..J... JI.IRS. DECKER 323 S. M11.ln, Oran&• 532-1997 • 'I'OP PAY! $469. sofa with separate loose pillows with heavy oak SCl-IMIIhDoTfPJnHIL .. 1Lyet! 0 LEGALLY RELEASED 893.1321 e Managers e Cashien Assistant Snack trim decor and matching chair, 3 matching oak · · IPS C • PAWN SHOP FREE TO YOU • Sales & Stock Girls Bar Manager occasional tables, {2) 58" tall decorator lamps, 1907 N. l\1ain ° 20th e Diamonds e Guitars FASCINATING op-I h · h · I · ht · Santa Ana TORTOISE shell female, kit-.,..... or LOCATIONS: 4 . 10 p.m. Monday thru angrng c am swag amps in wroug iron, an' '""""""""""""""""""'I •Surfboard:> • Dii..ims neat, accurate girl .with N n--'-B . k . · t b d •t · I ' ten nws. old, Gray maJe, bookkeeping exper., some ewport ~--~ Thurs. Start $2.57 hour. -piece 1ng size mas er e room SUI e ID pecan ROCK 'n Roll combo organ •Cameras •Typewriters kitten. Very affectionate typing; radio exper helpful. Town I cOuntry, ~e Apply l\foa thru Fri. paneled Mediterranean style with top quality by Doric. 1'~endt"l' dcluxt> •Tools. • \Va!chcs about 3 mos ~d. 893-2H67 · s tart S350 Month. p,10n., ~1~ n•,..., STREET 2701 Fairview Rd. 15 yr. warranty king size mattress & box springs. amp .. w/reve-rb & foot con-•'l'\"Uck loao.s ot merchandise 811!!i Tues., Wed. 3 to u, Sat. & ~'¥'"""'" .,,__n. Coste Meu 834-5708 Spanish decor dining set, etc. trolled vibrato. Both 3 moo 1838 Newpo~ <downlDY>'tl) 2 ADORABLE k 1 t t f' n •. Sun. 7 to 3. Martin Aviation cn4l 8384890 'Mio" h•11Ml•I was rq:11l11t Sll21.00 old. Sold new for $UOO. 1'h.ls • 646-TI4l • J-lomeless unle!l3 1 a k {' n. 545-4300 Ext. 37 ·=====~~--ISECRE.IARY Cl k ho MUST SACRIFICE $698 00 week only -S70Ci. Put you1·scll in our Place Siamese mother. We-aned & TOY & GIFT PARTIES HOUSEKEEPER. Live in. 1 ?. 9 p M ~ond!~.f-nd~ FOR ONLY ......... -................... -····· • Gould Music Company Harbor mvd 1)..1 Theatre h s br kn fl 7 3-6 00:; Housewives, eani froni $500 Young man in family has S -turd 9-6 PM Th sd ' A11y "-<• C•• .. P1rclriosff h1dlvld uolly 2D-1J N. r.lain, S,A. !J r:.()6$1 3700 P.1cFadd{'n, S.A. anytime 8/I6 TRANSPORTATION BOlltS & Yachts 9000 THE FAP.IOliS "JI?.t WEBSTER" Committee boat for Newport Harbor Yacht Club lllr many races. For aa.le •·a s ls". Diesel. 720 W. Bay Ave. Balboa. $4,iaO. 673-7730 AUGUST SPECIAL! Haul out, paint jobl • best price on the water front. NEWPORT DRY D0CXS on the Bay at 20th • 675-.15(5 • to 12.00J by Dec. l.Jt. NO impQred s ight Princi,:1al ! ay 1 • ur 8JI T1rml Av1il1bl1-N1wc.om1" to C1liforni1 -SWAP MEET DELlVERING OR C(}[,. duties, cooking for him and ou. Credit ApprovM:I lmm1d i1t1ly Danish Spinet Piano AUSTRALIAN Shepherd L ECTIONS, FREE maintaining his qtrs. ?1-1ust -NEW -$398 female, 8 week!, purebred. Newport Dry Docks 67>15C6 HOSTESS GIFTS, Call be capable of be~ second BOOKMOBILE Driver-Clerk. , , .,-,] Special purchase, oaoo wal· Starts Au.g 17 962-5332 lS!L'.ZS Santa On the Bay at 20th st. NOW! mother. Ideal fOl' woman ~:~y.8;JO.:'I PM, Mooday . l Furniture nut. Full 88 note. Tem1a $13. 1----"5::.JI:..·'::"'::·:..<i::.:..I :_1__ Mariana F .V. Boa.Ii hauled, bottom scrub- Gi.!ts & Gadgets 842-1593 wishing perm. home. Very _ _ _ -per mo. POOL TABLES BEAtrr 5% mo tortoise shell bed, painted &: zinced. All WAITRESSES desirable quarters. Sa1ary -1844 N B 1 d C M I ) Gould Music Company New & used $97.SO up. Table kitten. Will pay spaying. other maintenance., .engine CLERK -hours 12.9 PM, ewport ou evar , osta eu Ion y -·5 N •1 1 S A "'-"'"o .~ -•• 19 7 E-·,·en-~ o·ly ,,-... open. Must have exc:ell. '""' · "11 n, · · ""'·"""'! tennis, Poker tbles, bars&. """'""'" -am. -10 -""-'"~·---~~--! ~,.~, ... ~ " L'\I ?1-Ionday ·Thursday. Frid~ ot Harbor ltvit. pm 8/16 apply. No Phone c:alls references, no drinking or off. Saturday 9-6 PM Every night 'til 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'tll 6 e YAMAHA 0 stools, Indoor ganles, etc. READY to ao-19' 3'' Glastron Pl'a''. 5moking. P.O. Box 388 ~ Discount prices? BADGER 4 YR. Old Malt'5~ Poodle, w/"'" HP Mere. In.cul 2 YEARS Coll =e minimum. Piano' •·d o-a''' -DENNY'S Corona del Mp. ~.. ...,, • ., SALES, 409 S. Main Orange {male) ne~s home with drive, inboard bait tank, tilt ~~~e~~B:%~~.:. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Garage Sal; 8022 All styles available now at or CaU Frank 538.o:lu . Open children. Between 5 & li bed trailer. Comp. eqp'd. tor 1~~c:8:e~~-R.N. 11 -7 52S Main st., H.B. 536-9327 Job Preparation 7800 QUICK Sale. Fast Bargains! COAST MUSIC 12-8 p.m. except Wed. p.m. 646-3750 8/I6 fishing. 842-1739 HOUSEKEEPER, Ir vine Full or part ti1ne SCRAM LETS PlummOO fea ther palm tree 1839 Ne~ Blvd., C.f.1. BEAUTIF'UL Bl-fold interior 1 BLUE Kitten wtth light MUST Sell . make offer. 20" Terrace, Corona del Afar. AIDES • 115, 4 telephone pole bar 271 doors (4 panels\ each panel :-a:y eyM. 2 blac~ & white Owen inboard· lapstrake Excellent starting salary Experience preferred • fry Cook ANSWERS ~~ls1251,1~_:_a .. ch,,.'.~o.vM';-SroJO'.· WURLITZER ORGAN 17%" x fi' 6%" quality tlenl. mont old . utility-last, seaworthy-bait and working conditions. 4 7-3 and lI-7 ot:U w .-""',.,....., , Percussion. Hawaiian Gui· hardwood Alltiquf' ivory :.43-4079 8/17 tank-hydrolle&-fullcovers. hou rs per day, any:; days a Parle. Lido • Busboy antiqued golf leaf, frame all tar· Bells. Harp. Zither . . with roMi. trim. A 11 FR.EE Kittf'tlfi, 2; playful; 4 675-4n.J or (213) 691..{)T.;1 week. References required. C'onvaleSC"ent Hospital • Dishwasher Mar.iel _ Moist _ Havoc_ hand carved wood $15. · ·· · •· · · · ·· ·• •..•••.•••• $788 hardwood. R ca 8 on ab I e mos.: to good home a 1967. 13' WHALER. w/40 hp o.~TJ transportation. 673-0!lSS 1445 Superior 6ia-3606 New Guarantee 499-21$.l or 837~1 &12-l.323 Afternoons 543-TI86 JOHNSON. Full rover, 0an. BABYSIT T ~ R w••Ied. Newport Beach 642·2410 Full time be.sis. Qua.lilied Arcade -HAVE MOVED Gould Music Company COLOR TV, Packard Bell, After 6 P .M. 8/15 11.295. Day1 642-9784, Evee. ,,. .... to work ili-high.srade rest-Two soldiers discussing SAT from 9 AM genuine an. mature woman with own ---------·! aurant. Offen; pleasant l!fl· their sergeant; "He joined tique8, re.frig, furn it u re 2045 N. Main, S.A. 547-0081 Walnut console, remote, exc. WANTED, very special home 646-6894 trans tor 2 boys, ages :; &: 2. vironment, good company tfle army to forget a girl in odds & ends, '40 Ford. 2470 \VURLITZER Console Piano cond, S250. Original pain. lor mixed collie. 8 mo., 1-5-,,.-.,-.-..,.-1-,..-bo-•I-. -35-u=p 5 Yr old in school 1A. day. 4 Sa?eswomen benefits. Apply: Brooklyn, when he just 811 E.15lh, Nwpt Hghts. Xlnt cond. Like new $495 tinp n2S (appr. $400). male. Needs &hot1. 54()..fil83 Evinrude Lark. tilt traHer, Doy \\leek. El Toro area. BUF .. 'M'S ll "'d HAVE MOVED * &12--0133 * . Ladies qua1. clolhing, like bet. 3 PJl.f, 8/15 t .U.t •-Fine ladies clothing. ru W? cow .. lo GAR AGE Sale. Good ====~-----1 ncv.•, SI to $5., 11.!i. 7 . 8, ""~=-i--;;=--:c:.:: I canvas op, new P • ....,.,. 837-7'247 TOP PAY' the Bronx. I bugains. Many misc. ltf'ms. SCH1Jl\1AN'N Spinet piano. 8-10. Mesa Verde.~"" ,,,,_25 ADORABLE. nutty, ailver 17{1 Pomona, Sp. 3 C.M. DENTAL ASSISTANT Apply in per~on Fashion Island MERCHANDISE FOR 31311 Monterey, s. Laguna Traditional Style. ......,..,,,.. grey, lema~ kiftens <2), &: i,t or 1/3 Interest in 19' Over 25. Some front desk ex· No phone calls please Newport Beach SALE AND TRADE GARAGE Sale: furn .. ap-Good "cood. * 673-0496 KNITTED fABRl(J Mam a • has •hot 1. CruiuJn runabout wl1.D52 perience preferred. Must BACK STREET SHONINGER Sp•"'! · 642-5802 8/16 ~da "'I· 646-4144 ask for pllances, clothing, dishes, ..... piano, FO have more than one year ex-25 Fashion Island YOUNG men & women 71-35. Furniture 8000 de. m Darrell. CM 646-6675 Queen Anne design, beaut. " R SALE 2 Female 2 mo blk puppies. Bill. perience ln dental oUice. Nl!WJXll"t Bee.ch Positions open for winter -cooct. $67!>. 6424971 Remnants, 118.JJlples la Mill (Will be am all dogsJ. Very 11' SKI and flsbln&. Trailer. 49-l-0034 after -4 :30 employment. Full &: part FAMl_LY Moving-sacrifice. 2 Appliances 8100 -=========I ends Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 aood with chUdren. 54G-0620 '5 HP Mercury. Just rebuUt EXPER. TELLERS NEED 2 mature ladies 10 time. Apply The Dorymen nautical lafl116, 2 hatch -'"'--------Television 8205 p.m. 929 Baker, Costa Mesa After 2 P .M. 8116 miy 10 hr. on the mGtor. Exp. Safe Deposit Clks v.·ork 4 hours day, 5 days in Fish & Chips. 2100 Ocean. :v'd. ·~nd ~ble,•,bl 1 Llkhat. WHOLESALE To Dealers, FINAL WEEK OF l10;:1ELITE XL7 chain saw. WANTED ad !ml for very C.G. equip. $500. 540-0001 BANK OF AMERICA our new, modem ins. oUice. _I:::ron:::.:Ic.N:::'Bccb:::tw="::.Z.S.:..o:p::.m::.·__ cov · co a e. e Apt ownrs &. public. l'l!frig-26 Hercules 3 spd girla. lovable yng man A: cbu. mix STORAGE, Trailers, boat&, 548 \V.19µ1 st., O:ista Mesa No experience nee. but must NEED handy man. Retired new. 84&-0076 . erators guar $15 +Cross top Midsummer Clearance bike. Craftsm('fl hand terrier. Sm bl'eed. OldPr etc . .$7.50 per/mo, Work Equal Opportunity Employer have pleasant phone voice couple preferred. Exchange MASSIVE Spa.rush dining set, $25. Sq top $50. Dble dr. $65. All C~or TV's ltlust lio! mower &: catcher. Bowlin&: chldm pref. 531-6614. llpat'e. W..2Ei01 & !!i48-33i1 and not alraid to talk to """" min-apt maint. for rent. table, 6 chairs, 2 pc. hutch Frost free X top $85. Obie dr RCA VlclOI', Zenith, Pack-bnlJ, lo! lbs. 54U7!Yl Part Time pl~. Please call for"\;;. 61J....4rn . w/g\ass doors. Ne ar new, Frost Free $100. Also wash· ard BeU & Admiral. Some . DOW Manual Water Softener, 1 EXp., Av1JL ,Skipper Bookkeeper/Cashier tervlev.· bet\veen S&ll. Ask cost over $900, sac. for ;400. ers/dryers/treezers/ranges. nC\v . some repossessc<.I. ELECTRIC Car, 3 wheel, Norge auto washer, a.s Is. For Me:tiCIJl &1l.boal waters, Apply in person for Jackie. 847--0993, 847--0990 EXPER. drug clerk; 40 hr. 675-3506 \Ve will never be undersold. Priet?s start at , . . d~!lcry driv0en. good coo-548-00JO 8/17 -1 * 673-6156 * UDO CAR \VASH week; no eves or Sun. ;i--;~'ii-::c:-=,.,.--=-..,-,. A.OK Warehouse, 7722 Gar-$149 11100 will volt dw'ger 3 nutty llttlr kittens, boiw-. 14' BOAT-Trlt" A 1007 33hp 481 E. 17th Costa Mesa SECRETARY ALSO, exper. drug delivery 8 EAU T 1 Fu.~ Daniih den Grove Blvd. 1 Bick W. ol TERMS AVAILA BI.E bi t-in. $250. Sat. only from broken tl ready to <o to Evinrude. Xlnt cm. tt.'I<:. & stock clerk. 540-45*> credeni:a . Sacrifice $50. 4 10 to 5, 536-6789 _.., BAR MAID -To assist Manager. Good ;;,_;::::;.co;:.;~~.;;;:.__,, modern hvlng room tables ,a.=a"o"h"•I"G" • ..,.c,,. ~Frwy~~·-,-HENDERSON'S good home. 546-0Cai 8/16 345 E.1~ St. ar. 642-1269 GO-GO DANCER tYPing & shorthand skills Tl IE BEAU'l"'Y SALON needs $50. 644-1352 PORTABLE GE diishwa.aher, 1877 Harbor (downtown) CM 'Gil OPEL Cadet 4 8P(i. stick FREE Baby klttena 10 weeks Apply in person. 2901 req. Hrs 1-5. Mon·Ftl. Apply good. hair styUs~ w/follow. c"HES<"'~s'-'71ac;b7!•,..,-;:-h_-,_"_m_•-,-d• top of the line m.00. Used * 54R-0155 * $71'5. King of Lawn mower old -and 2 adult females. H bo • --· Prt J··'I tim• 538 W ~~ ==========cl w/calcher $40. Mcl..ai--,.._,, ar r. Sassy ........,.,,y. 612 Terminal Way, C.~f. mg. or w · · le ti! h · le5$ than 1 yr, Moved &: '""' ......... coe. ~ 8/15 5-15-9983 * \VAJTRE:sS Wanted.App l y 19\hSt.C.M.642-4778 =tal. ~e1';C:t .t ~~: don't nct!d. $100. firm. Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210 ~1~r .$.15. 261C2 Elden Av. UVE ·IN Housekeeper and orfice llP~tairs 9-ll:JO Af\.1. Agencies, M. W. 7550 i -"'~-"""'=--~--~ _54_0._5_m ___ ~---STEREO 1968 solid slate COLOR 1V Pack.ant Bell 6 WKS Old orange, grey &: ' white female kitten. Very lovable. 540-2087 8/17 9010 SOOIVBmD # '119 with ttaller. $325 ()oceMie Yacht Sdet • 642-Sl!il • ch ild care. Private room 2 • 5 P P..t . La Cave --~ 8' SOFA, naugahyde, foam WESTINGHOUSE con:-o le model with Al\1/Ff.f portable tf', new $2'25. Son; and hath. $20(1. mo. :'llf.i days Restaurant. 1695 Irvine Ave, ARGUS cushicm &ellt &. bac:k, cov RAD AR AN GE , Et.EC-radio, 4 spd changer, Take :'I" TV with battery cha.raer a \~·eek. Perm. pogition with Costa r..1esa Work Near The Beech like new $125. 673-2"1".l6 TRONIC OVEN. $4!15. Ex-over small pa.ymen!.s or new S85 646-2l7-4 ' references. 5-10-9212 I °'==~=~---cell. cood. 646-8128 193 20 h ~-"· D • -~·~-·------WOMEN PIT w I c II. r . DINING Room Set-Salem . ca.s . "-1L"Ult ept. ,. SHARP Bar Maki, no ex. Fullerette HB. $2 hr gu ar. Oaims tme AA ........ $390_ M•plo 5 -"•"•· llOO. WASHERS $29.95; dryers 535.723) '57 ~C Sta WR« SJ.50. 10 KITTEN, Female. 6 Wet"ks WANT to rent Lido 14. AUg. needs home with children. 17-SeJil. 3. Balboa hi., Grey & white. 540-2087 8116 Grand Canal C&ll coiled 1 • u • .. _ _ metal shelvings 8'x3'x2f' $111 MIXED Shepherd 8 moa. 213-31'8--6416 Female, 1payed, aU i;hots. L-Ell""'MAN=~1"0~·.-o~p-top--eon-.1 8.18-5946 8/16 d!tlOQ· ~00. 636 Havana 4 MO. Oki male pert, DOJde, Ave. Umg Besch sbs14 blk. very lovable. 439-4893 perlencenect"SS8l'y.Applyin Lynne Brown :'14 0 -1932 , Asst Bkkpr ............ S13J * 673-2639 * $35; Freeiers S75; Relrlg., 2 dd h person bet lOA.M & 6 PM. 842-7692 !Receptionist ............ Sl.'"JO =~=-~~-~~ coppertone &: Avoc.; Gun.r, Cameras & Equip. 8300 f"a. a mac · 5 5Pd Vikki '• Lounge, 1791 % Plumbing !l\les ........ S350 SOFA $25., end tables 3 for S40-l095 Derailer hike $30. 612-1.269 1-IOUSEKEEPER Live .in. $25., I•bl• lamp•«.''·· CINESP"~"II Ek!•• UP OLSTE Newport Blvd .. Costa ltfesa w "·· b ~ VACUUMS e """"uu. • ' H RING • $79.50, 2 or .. 1ng mot f' r, 9 year ARGUS EMPLOYMENT chairs s10. 833-0585 • len!· Ottked out by EK· pc. (European craftsmen) FULL Time stenograph er, old daughter S.A. Area. SlO up. Repa irs & parts. S.150 with case. fH&.5471 ~·ree est, d•I. "'okup, 215 excellent typist, s 0 ni e 835-732'7 CONSULTANTS AG Ei'llCY GREY FornUca top table, 2 Re•sonable. Coast Vacuum .- 546-6I34 1117 LEA'-="RN=_,.,-,s"ai!"'· -..,-..,eust,..-,-om-1 &horthand desirable. Writr ~ \\'estcl!U, N.B. 548-7196 leaves, 6 chain. Xlnt cnod. 3.13 E .17th, CM, 642_1560 YASHICA. Must sell $60 Maln, HB "Berny" 536..&105 P. O. Box l536 Newpoct N12E ED30 -3R~adble exp. hskpr 1624 E. 17lh St., S.A. 547-&136 Call aft 6 Fri, ~1188 * 545-2636 * 14' OUTBOARD. 211 1-fP $250 FREE part Angora 5 mo old cat. AUccdonetr, playful, healthy. 892-7182 8/lT Beach ; : .,., ally. Moo-Fri. CASH for furn &: appllllJlCes. SERVEL gas refrigerator 14' Jl(oxair Rnlntxr.v Air . clean- Harbor Hills. Own trans. Schools-Instruction 7600 \'Ve sell good Wied furn. 1712 double dr. New u n t t · Hobby Supplies 8400 er. vac;uu1n cleaner COit 2 KITTIES; l yrllow IPaded e SALES-DREMf· J OB e ~ -. . -Np! m. CM •~1015 540-6670 or 545-3625 ;....,.. II -· ' I & 1 mall "' K I -I job I~===~-~-~-T ~ REVEL Am-·,0 ao• -'OI -, ~. lie ~. 54s:4504 :::: ~.,., s grey ..,uen. tti> your mpo11an u WAlTRESS for beer her. ime 1A running out RCA REFRIGERATOR -.. , .... " "' .... ~ 1116 ,vile & mother & f'arn a \\"alt'a "LU Atmrey'R." at ENROLL NOW Garage Sale 8022 Froet-frec. CroS6 top. $75. set. Track, poo·cr p<ik, :; KIRBY vacuum cleaner &: wkly 11ay check. 548-9526, Beach & y 0 r kt 0 w n . for ~ial back-to-school be-I--"-------"-540-5238 cars, & O"'lnlrol lcr. Good attachments. Take over 2 MO Old bl.k. frma1e puppie, :.44-3854 968-1469 glMf'r le brush up courlf" tn "LOTS-A.stuff" Triple bunk 8 CUBIC Fool G . E . cond. SSO. 548---042(). small payn1ents or $57.20 part Cocker, very 1mart T • & Sh th d •-• 1 ••-• ~=;':'";:~o;===:;;::.l,,'.'~asb~. i:'°'~"'<f.;~t~do~p~I.2KE~~5-~72~89 548-4543 8116 EXPER!Di'CID Motel desk EX PERlENCED WaitreS& yp1ng or an .....,... mat:Cre68, ..,.,...cs, rehi1erator $50 -548-2550 r clerk, PBX. ty11i4t, aee 25-f 3-ll '-'>educational • day or nite chairs, golf clubs. Ftl.-Sat. Sporting Goods 8500 Sl·IADE plant clearance! lOC BLACK A: Tan Germ. Shep. 40. Apply days Laguna or K~~mCotte Shop Learn at your OYoTJ pace. 218 Via P alermo, Lido. Antiques 8110 SURFBOARD 9.3 .. Jacobs. 3 10 SI~: all in COl'ltainers. l&f Pure bred, 11 mos. female. Village, 31106 s. Coe.st Hwy. 2273 Harbor Blvd. CM Q)pyv.Tiled teaching tedmi-GARAGE Sale, Aug. 17th, g. mil.hog stringers. mahog t1til Memll Pl. 0.t 642-6625 8116 SEWING Machine opcratoro, SALESGTRJ~ w I bk'kpg ex-ques. 7: clothing, bedding, Alm. GRAND OPENING SALE block, siml·speed Skac-Xlnl FABULOUS Sale! Oothlng % 8 -4 MO. Old lcittnis varlou1 ('XJ)('r. on dreSSE"s. Top pay; POU.Y PRIEST 17309 Pqilar St., Fountain Tiffany HO\l.se. 3 big days. 11 rond. 830-1954 -prt·.'C. Thrift Shop. l.S70 colors. Very cute. per. P 11rt, possibly full tim(', BUSJNtSS COLLEGE V-'ley. 8<7-1034 to 9 pm. Signed Tiffany N m d CM 543-4079 8/16 slrady. Apply 890 W. l8th, PEru.1ANENT, UNDER 30. .,..., N N B ~ If · Ill FT HOBIE ewporl v " . Costa Mesa. V,_._ __ 1 --·-· "'" · l!'WpOrt I , N.B. 0 NG ~-ooh pieces, T f any masterpiece PORTAB LE k 2 SERVEL. Ref"'.. & mall """""'· '"""6WJU, 497-1335 For details, c:all todfty M VI ....... rpentf'r t • • 1 of a kind, Tiffany hang-SURFBOARD OX)'ll:t'l'I tan ''6' I ORDERTAKERS. Over 19, BAB y S I TTER I: lite 548-9723 turn. Aup-, t.by tum. Thur· ~ lhadet &r others. Signed Exerilt!nl condiHon v.•/carrylng CUC $ !J 0. gas stove to prtv11.te party. bWlt 35' Sklop. By hou r or1 d~. can TQnY 613-$ll lit 5 18' DA YSAILER and Trailer * $650. Days 540-9291 Ewe 673.at36 IIOURLY ~AI3 * Rhodes I9's * Fun Zone Boat co.. &lJ:ioa 41' SCliOONER; kc e l 1 be.llast, molds .et up. l'OIJ ftnish. $600. 805: 252--7834 e AQUA CAT* with racing Mil, tni1el' J7!f; • 494-7451 14' Satellite da,ys or evrs. Ple11.sant work M!<eeJ!('r. Start immc.-d. 3 ---------1 Sat. :us Monte~, Balboa. marble museum pi«:c of S50 * &t2-oo22 :i4S-m8 I keep calling) Aler 6 P.M. 642A836 8/16 from our ()f:rice. No exp nee. dlildN>n. Own tr an 1 P. Typing Speed Slow? , ~61~~:..n.::<n=_,,..,.--,--~-I nude beauty, lots of gl Ms &: 9 FT Surfboard. N~ver used. BRUNSWICK pO()L TABLE. MALE, 6 mo old blk. Germlln $1fi(l. *' Ml-5151 Sbopbonl ''"''" 5JO.-Oro6. --=RA=c"1N"G:-;:K"IT='E---1 893-2867 8-15 Jeff AUen * 64$.o38Ci Salary Kl 7-1323 &1G-287S Our dtttrlc typl:!writcrs ani• Garage Sale • al.lo wci.aher china, l..L!vely ca r ved orWiMI prici S20D. $l2S (II' $1'15. BABYSmER ovt'r 18. 5 Dent1I Office ~ I available :ur1~a Auguit for &. Dryer. 881., Aug. 17th. fwniture, (."'hevcllc mirrors, be&t olftr cub. ~2425 546-63&2 or &16-3959 nitcs wk. My heme. Own "'-.. 1, Exp ~ ~5 ger pt'tlctlce,N to . Di1 Lambert Dr .. H. 8. roll top dcsltll, hall treff, s•m ~nARD IO' u-~ -1c "• "~''" Too Im a k er tro..ns. call &U-6269 before S ~• .. • • ...,..... • ewport trunks, ('tC. A trunk lood to v~ uv _.. '"' e ~~. pm. * 546-3000 * School of Businu1 GAS •tow, tools, fum. choose from a.t opening sale Like new, ISO. 642-4283 aft Predsb1 'l' oo I• wUh HOUSEKEE:PEH. Uve in. Bar Maid -Dancer, mp 646-0153 Sat!Bun. Aua. 17 & 18th prices. 5;30 cabinet. SISO ~ "'·--844 Presidio, C.Ost.a Mesa Zl36 N wport c Ill l\fCRI. Exp"d. "'/dtUdrm (3 ) wages . .., .......... Bee.Co&ta Typing Speed Slow? GARAGE SALE • Mi*! e &0ino0& 9~~~-urfboArd,goodl--------- Ev./o wk. elld off. 646-0603 r.1eu.. 646-9935 Our dectrlc l)'pf'Writen are ~ household Xema 644--0413 Misc:. Wanted 1610 BABY Guinea Pia, l mos., Loog halr. beautitul. No cage. 6'fl-ll33 L.OVELY & wl old puppy. Part Labrador I Ba!rfl'. ~1416 8/31 CAPABLE mature lady. CUI: HOUSEKEEPER. 4 1 e h I evailable durlna: A~ tor 932 Cap'ltol St Qd: · S.Wln9 Machin•• 8120 ---=='----1·-'-'-----"---- for 2 email dilldren fot 1 chUdm. HB att• 7:30-5: 30, incUOt, g llO s. · " · Calf Club Set, McCrf'lor. w A N T E D Free Kittens month; live in. 54~1976 5 da,ya S«l. Refs. i47-4lll8 Newport GARAGE ll!Je, mo v l n 1 . 1967 SIN G ER• comp! 4 Woods, 8 Irons. puttu, Tigtt striped Sl5-7Z17 P-r CrulMrt 9020 40 X 12 l.JVE aboord Flsbt< • 671 Dittel. Iqine Pf'OCMI -ildlna , .......... _ $$500. m.1!1311 BABY~ n--•-• ... 13 DENTAL ASSISTANT, over School of Buslneu M.iscl!O , hooae:hold, antiques ·~~n,ut cahln~t. 1°1 1 1vorc11 1 -=='=l"'==*==~"='="==I __ .1. 4..fli. SERVEL Gu refr1i., (OOd .,, £ , ""'"'" L~"' 441 AliMJ Newport Bch al,..,,. Orcet a ll "' r c e _ WF. n~ quail!:)' (no '"'"' cond. Pidt: Up. g'15.q157 3/16 mo o\d boy. 7:30-5, Moo .. 25. Ora1 sur~ry. MU.t ta.ke 646-0153 ' . Automatic, Zla;·Zag, Touch-M lscell1neoU1 8600 pleue) F\Jmlturt color Sk Bo FtL Call aft li. 1 • 571-329-t Md reftd X-rays. 54&-7719 SOtOOL Children's vacatlon THE SUN NEVER SETS en o.matie, bul!Ofl holes. blind TV 'i, 11~, 1ppilancea. 1 MALE cat • 1 fcnale cat. Sf!!C! Ii •ti ~ *" ax:rAJL WAITR.ES.5 * PB.""< ()ptr'l!.tor, answning ratH:. Olllco&t IO • U!MOO Cuaified'1 ldlOD power. hems, overca1ts wltboot at~ REFRIGERATOR sz;.oo tooU A: office eq1.1tpm.mt. f:rl8-Q)3:9 8116 !4' FIBER.CLASS Ski bo&t. Apply tn pet'IOfl. Mea l..&nf's, service. Exprr. pn'!fcrTed. Typlna School. 5'1--2859. 173 For an ad to Nil around 1.,chment1. AA!lume $3.87 per ACCORDIAN '50.00 TOP CASH IN J) Minute• ~A Bed. needl rwc:cwtr1ng. 10 hp. lntfO o.b., trallct, 1'700 ~. C.M. Mio •a• 30. OR S-llli& Del Mar. C.M. the clock, dial 6G-$67J. mo.. Of S37.99 cash. 526-6616 MUSf SEU. Ml-5960 531·1212 * 893-alM 6'f3.4'm ~ 10 a..m. l/lT Top c:xnd. $550 5'5-(81.0 -'--------:.::...:::.: 1 ----~ -------- ' l r l I I l • -7 --~ ---·-. ._. . --· ---._. ...... --~ ---... -.... .... --... -----~ .... --·.......-·-..-~·---.. -----· J 34 omv PILOT Thundar, ...... 15, 1968 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION TRANSPORTATION lmfl!rtod Auto1 9600 Imparted Auto9 ' 9600 Imported Autol 9'00 Uted Carw --9900 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -----$~_:-Ski Bo.ttt _ ~o ""'°='or'=°"cy"'<_1., ___ 93_oo_ 1o . ...,"-"•"-".B_u"'gg,_l•-•-~97515 ___ M __ G_-__ TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC ~U;;:•.:ed:;_;C;;:•;;:n:..,._ ___ 9900:.:.:;: U••,.d_C_tr~•-___ 9900 __ 1 A True Wlnnerl HONDA 300 SCRAMBLER TrBug, glass pickup body for MG CllSTO..\l BUILT 1'hundl!I"-1966. J1.111t like-Newt New VV{. New, oompletl!'. $100. bird Fornullll 233. Thi$ 23' ovcrsb.e tiru. Ertta CCQJ' Call 644-0306 alter 6 J>M FREE VFX:AS VACATION WITH A '67 VW, 1 owner Excell. oond. 1968 r:l. DOR.ADO, S.000 ml. Leaving country. 642~1241 Pttm tires, lthr, vin top, CORVmE -Jo""REE VI:X;AS VACATION WJTll A DODGE 1963 Pola.ra ~ xlnt cond. 3S3 eng., a door, all extraL One '1Wrler. 114: 846-9464 au fibet'ltlua V-butlom bell.u· for dirt Motor just rebuilt. ty has America's moil fa. Must llCt to llP(>reciate. S4S& Imported Autos 9600 r11oUs racing dt-gign. SAF-c""'":::.' 77689::;..-;.,...=:oc.--I ESl' SKI BOAT BUILT, It's 1967 YAMAHA rough v.·atet tetited and 30Scc equipped with a Berke!<')' BIG BEAR SCRAMBLER jet ••• pow~red by 8 60 bp ~95 rn~E VEGAS VACATION WITH A PURCHASE Sales, Service, Parts Cornplete new 1'1C i.nv('ntory See the new Austin America Here Now! Newport Imports ltd. 3100 W. C06.5t Hwy. New11011 &ach TRIUMPH TR4A 2 to ch()t)Se trom. 'llle$e beau- tyll are both like ni,>w. Can tln. all or pnrt. Pmt $35.00 per mo. 0 .A.C. ELMORE VOLVO '68 VOLVO GE'r OUR LEADERSfUP SA VIN CS BEFORE YOU BUY!!! AM/1''M, Uke new. $8950. 673-<635 C:HEVROLET '66 OIEV 11, VS, 283' ~1'1£., auto. trans. 29,000 ml. Top cond.. orig. owner. $1200. 1963 CORVETTE F.B. Cpe. FORD Fire a!lver wllb rich r e d leathef'e'\IC inl, -A rcit\ bi'/\U• t:y. C.aft tin ell or part. Pmt 1958 FORD Station wagon, $28.00 per 111o. O,A.C. good tran~tatlon, Mllll Aero Alartne. Crulses at 4.5. Phortc lr.)~397-0, Pri. Pty. All ot the exlrfls incl. llS J-IONDA 305 SC rambler. Ex· rodio, ~ speaker ~!tJteo & 4. eel. Cood. 675-1746 tatter 5) w,. Invite all of Oro.nge Co. to come in and !ltt oor large lnvt"ntury of (.'Offiplctely re- (.-ondiUoned sport& cars • All mod<"ls to ehoo!lt from. ELMORE 64MKl5 540.1764 Aulhorittd MC Drft.ler TOYOTA MOTORS Pbofl(' ~-3320 LAI..: I Can bf firuin...t. 5'8-97S4 M UUl.O llfi5 2 Oft 6 cyl O!f!Y. C.ood tires, .l running cood. Must EL MORE ~i", . ...i. ,,.,. •. $250 TOYOTA 1962 XL 500 Ford. pa, wheel custoin trailer. Coe;t ewer $12.000. ()y.'ner says ---------PORSCHE 15300 Beach Blv~I.. Wstmnstr '66 SPITFIRE-IMPDRTS !ell lnrmedl Sac $2 00 . bucket seats, xlnt cond .. MOTORS .Low mileage, prlv party. btst offer take!! & it's nearcy Auto Set vice ~10'f'OHS new. fH2A3n, Ext. 240 Days: & Pim 9400 TOYOTA l ___ _.::._:=.:_;;....;c ...... ___ 1&1·3320 644-1742 Evenitli;:s and \\1eek· ,,...,,.,, .. ends. CJ-LEV 327-375 HP Short 15300 Beach Blvd .. Wst:mnstr 1965 PERFOR..\IER Glass Ski block. B~anced. polish~ '6 'ffiflThiPH TR.'i • 4 spd, Boat. Blue metal flake crank, Sig-erson cam. sns. dlr, wire wheels. Needs lit- 548-0072 tie body \\'ork, Trans & Uni.sh. v.•hite OOck to hack bucket seats, Col1tinental big 'GS v.w. engine and trans. motor xlnt cond. Make ot1er. wheel tra.ilt'r with white-$375, seals $4). 536-8507 J..;494-_977_3 ______ • I f'REE VEGAS VACATION \VITI! A 1961 PORSCHE Super 90 Abeululely the 11ba.rpest ln Or. Co. Ctn fin all or part. Ptnt $39.00 ~r mo. O.A.C. ELMORE wall tires. Two !liX iallon Triiler, Travel 9425 '67 DATSUN, sta wag, auto, TOYOTA gas tanks. Ski rope and $85 dlr, rh, take older trade or worth of skis. Complete GREAT Lakes 18' Elec $65 cash dels. Make low MOTOP.S with 100 HP' Mercury brakes, 2 butane gas . 1iymts. 494-9773 ~89-1-3320 engine. Excellent ll'ki and Hea~g stove. Jee or elec • SPot Cash for Imports 15300 BeaC'h Blvd., Wstmnstr family boat. Sharp! $1750 refr1g. Newly Pa n t e d · \Ye pay more for any imPort PORSCHE '66, 9U \Yebers. 540-4612 after 7 PM 548-1945 regardless of year, make 21.000 mi; white w I bik MUST SELL! 22' Travel Trailer or condition. Try us before int. AM/FM. chrome whls. 16' FLEETCRMI, 75 h.p. Dbl bed Ba Tandem axle you sell. ELM 0 RE $4G50. 968-1589 Johnson, all eleclric & trlr Buick ~uipi to pull. EasY MOO'O~. 15300 Beach Blvd. '"'65 PORSCHE c C.oupe, nn:ie + many Xtras. ssoo. lift hitch. S2250. 675-l319 Westmmster. 894-3322. gr~, new-tll'i!I, rebuilt SJS.7:?75 or 494.1544 · engine. $3300. 98'2-7909 or Trailers, Utility 9450 AUSTIN HEALEY 91!2-1s11 14' SKI Boat, Gl&58 bottom, ====~~---mah"". dk run. lghts, tul Utili."· 1,ail-4 x 7, '55 PORSCHE. Drafted, must "• ~ " '63 AUSTIN HEALEY 11 n-bl & ...... uip. Trlr. & 35 HP , ;....._1,, '68 pl•I••· se . ""' t. eng, trans, ~.. ""O" "3!X»" rdstr., overdrive, wire ..,"" 54' =11 Johnson $375. Cost $750. $75 * 837-8888 """"· """"' 6T:>-30Tl wheels, Beautiful Blue. l-=----P~O~RSCHE=~--- 00 $1795 20 FT. Chris Craft Speed Trucks Y5 '63 Super 90. Excell. cond. boat, f!}I' sale as is: eng. ,59 LAND Rover 4 w/d, "lllll Li.n: 1 After 7 P1.1 call 548-0547 needs work. Highest ofier model &!, new tires oversiz· """ UUIO 1966 PORSCHE 912 5 speed, takes. 673-3003 ed. in back, new clutch, Am-Fm, fog 11.5, exhaust. ""'"" & ""' '""· lirg. re-IMPORTS $4200 * 673-1782 Boat launching 9034 cent valve job. $900. 642-3807 75 HP Evin.rude w/controls '50 GMC 1h-ton van, new 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64&-9303 ___ R_E_N_A_U_L_T ___ 1 $400. Fathometer-Raytheon eng., good tires, radio, btr.1 _________ ECONOMY & transpcrtation DE726 $395. 675-2152 Asking $250. 494-2538 CA TSUN car '59 Renault 4dr. Sed. 1-=:========~ I '62 ¥.i Ton DODGE truck. '60 ---------Gd. cond, new clutch & Boat Slip Mooring 9036 MG. Both in good cond. •67 DATSUN paint job. $235. 673-6961 J'vfOORING, Newport Bay. 548-l~2 4 Dr. STATION WAGON . Doo. $5200. lncl's. Santana 22, full '64 FORD 1Ai T Pi~. V.fl. Automatic trans mission, 1961 RENAULT Caravelle race, 9 mo·s old. 847-4525 R/H. 3 speed. Fleecside. radio, heater, white wall fair cond., good tires. $150. WANTED Boat slip or trailer 5.~7614 aft 4: 30 tires. A beautiful one owner 9: 30 to 6, 644--0330 for 16' boat. Teal Blue. ;(;~::;;~~==== 642-7900 ., 646-4188 JHpl 9510 $1795 l ===~====I,,., J NT ERNATIONA ej, .... L··..:· Boat·Y1cht Scout. 4 wheel drive, travel UU" WJW Ch1rter1 9039 top. New lires. Excellent IT'S SMARTER rondlli•" SS!<· Call '4'--0297 IMPORTS TO CHARTER 1952 WILLYS Jeep -4. wheel Cal 25 -Rawson 30 -Alberg drive, Olev 327 eng. E~ 1966 Harbor C.M.' 646-9303 Ii . Bowity 40 _ Newporter too numerous to menuon.1--=~,.,· ==..--- ketch • l\fariner 40 • 548--0072 '65 DATSUN Schooners. 27' Fairliner . 3()' Station wagon, dlr, 4 sp:I. Trojan . 38' Spt Fisher_ nu-CAMPERS 9520 Must ge t 11uctioo! Very good merous others. ---------condition inside & out. $150 CALIFORNIA CRUISES SALE cash dels, or trade. Will Iin· 20 years in Newport USED TRUCK a.nee balance of ~36. after 4, Ernie Minney 548-4191 AND 639-3617 or 494.9773 BLUEWATERO-!ARTERS CAMPER '66 DATSUN :!7'-40' U-Drive Skip, Avail 1600 Roadster Day/wk. 646-!XK!O 24 hrs. SALE 4 spd, dlr, Honduras orange. We have 8 Jatge selection ol Black plush interior. $150 I CHARTER THE FINEST cash dels. TAKE low pymt1. N_ .. 40' K•l"b cl""" i to 10 foot eab-Over "-"" ~· After 1. 494-9773 or 639-3617 , 673-2517 e 675-2400 and non cab-Over models SUNBEAM FREE VEGAS VACATION \\"ITif A 1963 SUNBEAM H.T. 1'his one like new. Can !in. all or part. Prnt S.17.00 per mo. 0 .A.C. ELMORE TOYOTA ----------TOYOTAS Trlun1ph rdstr., radio, beat- er, wire whN-1.s. $1395 TOYOTA MOl'ORS Phone 894-3320 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr '67 TRIUMPH Spitfire Mark IL Low mileage, xlnt me>ch cond., red w/black top. $t"JOO, Firm. 549-3883 aft 6 PM . VOLKSWAGEN '66 vw The Popular "Bug" ComflC'tHion Orange. Loaded and absolutely immaculate. Can linanl:.'e all or pa.rt. f'ay. mU;. as low as $2'2:.00 per mo. 0 ,A.C. $1495 ELMORE priced frOm $400.00. MOTOR HOMES 9215 TRUCKS -TRUCKS-TRUCKS JAGUAR Sport Sedans, Couprs, •\V<tg· ons. We've gol them . All l'ypcs, sticks. automatics. Most one owner with low ntilcs. Can finance all Br '65 V\V Deluxe. Very sharp as car. No d\\'Jl OAC $40.60 mo, D!r. 842-4615 '60 PARk\10NT 10 x $. 3 Br. l ~i ha, Xlnt cond! Nr beach. 642-0098 MUST SEU.! 1 BR Mobile Home. Carpets & drapes. Adult Park. 847-59'14 BICYCLES 1 MAN'S, 1 Lad.if'!I 10 spred, tip top rond. Call &42-4Sl4 alt.er 5 PM 1959 .. · 1966 ·Camper equipped1--------- heavy duty Fords and Chev· FREE VEX}AS VACATION :i~: ~~:~99· All pric-1966 j~HGtAR BANK TERMS XKE Cpe. 2+1 Trades Welcome Room for 2 kid6. This Is OPEN ROAD ~y $4";,1am"' """"' "'' 830 S. HARBOR BLVD. SANTA ANA 531-4655 Housecar ELMORE TOYOTA MOTORS Phone 894-3320 15300 Beach Blvd .• \V!1bnnstr '63 JAGUAR Mark 2, sedan, auto/.pwr, air. ch r om I.' wheels. $2,250. 673-6900 KARMANN GHIA 196ti KARMEN GHIA. Jm. mac. cond low mileage. $1850. 675-55TI '62 KARMAN Ghia. Desert Sand. Good corn!. Lo mi. $1050. 962-3475 The fabulous Opc'T'l Road, l=E=L=E=C=T=R=l=C=C=A=R=S=9=2=50= I Carmiel chassis mount with features found in models SHELL Camper, bu ilt for Econoline P/U or any truck. $200. f714) 893-2309 Mini Bikes 9275 1.fESA MINI BIKES 39.95 up Sales • Parts • RPpairs 2267 Harbor, C.M. • 548-3007 1\\'ice thl:' t'ost of this unit. inr.h1d i11i;: ne"' space agl:.' mono toilet :.')'stem. S.S49:i. OPEN ROAD 830 S. HARBOR BLVD. MERCEDES SANTA ANA 531-4655 19&1 2200 4 door sedan. 11uto 'li4 RANCHERO VS stk shft trans, po\1·/S, mar o on. Motorcycles 9300 w/rllmfl('r sip 3 .Sl:mQ. 5 Perfect mech. eond. $2300. Call 67l-7384 9 to 5 spoked wh!s 4 spinrr hubs BRAND new Honda Trail 911: SlOO. 5-il}-3-16.l 1vrekdays. aulo. Clutch: le5.5 than 100 ~~~:'.'.:~----1===''====== mi. Cost $400 • Sell for s:i.oo. F'OR SAL E '64 . ~. L ('hev. MG 646-Zr.?4 truck w/67-101% fl c11hover1 --------- '67 BULTACO • 2JO cc rarnper. Air-({)nd, many FREE VEGAS VACATION i\f at ado r, comprl:.'~"1on ,'~·tr~"'='·~'=~9_oo7._,.;_,:_·:_2'bc_5:.__ \VITH A part payments as IO\\' $22.00 per mo. 0 .A.C. ELMORE '&I V\V Dclu.xe $59 dwn OAC Pymts only $33.50 mo. Dir. 842-4615 i\!OTORS TOYOTA 'fi6 VW Xtra clean car. Pti. 89<1-3320 No dwn OAC Pymts only $47 15300 Beach Blvd., \Vslmnstr ,,m~'~·~D~l~'·~84_2-4_6~15---~ ,68 TOYOTA '66 V\Y Xtra clean car. No d\l'Jl OAC Pymts only $47. GET OUR LEADERSl·IIP mo. Dir. 842415 SAVINGS BEFORE '65 VW Delu..'<e. Vpry sharp YOU BUY~! 1 car. No dwn OAC $40.60 mo. ,.... L,,,,: I 01,. 842-4"15 ""°" Wl\O '67 VW Bug, At\IJ/FM, 8 track stereo, sunroof. $1500 IMPORTS -~•'--644=·""':.:.:..-•=---.64 VW Conv. Real nice car. 1966 Harbor, C.M. &16-9303 No dwn OAC. Paymts ,67 TOYOTA ONLY $31. mo. Dir. &42415 Corona Sedan Dix 1965 V W Xlnt Oxid. FM. AM Automatic, rh, d!r. Car has Radio. \Yood Wheel Gd. Tire>s 642-4780 be<'n k<'Pt in suprrb condi· I--------- tion! $100 Cash dcls. \\'ill '63 SQUAREBACK $I 0 5 0 clutch. fine. private party. TAKE Rebilt. Eng. Nu. low pymts. Alter· 10. 639-3617 After 6:00 673-4588 _,_,_4~>=1-9_7~73 ______ 1 • -,-,-V-l_V_X_tr-,-.-io-,-.,-,,.-$50-- TOYOTA d~ OAC. Pym~ $53 mo. l!EADQUARTERS ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr Phone SfH-3322 '61'i Toyot<i Crown sport sC'dan. air etc. Offer! • 008-43&1 • TRIUMPH '67 TR 4-A. R/J!. ·wire whl.5. Clean. Lo rnilc~. Private party. 6.13-&112 Orangt'. ·59 TR 3. \\'SW. stCrC'O, nu upholslt'ry. 673-1895 ask 'Wd !I JdlJ11 lU!r JOJ Dir. 842-1615 relea<;e, alloy r ims. $600. CA.\(FER, k cabover: stovr, 1960 M.G.A. ROSR. 837-8888 ice bo.x: sips. 4 plus. Fits &'Ol'IOniy Special :.i 1n.p.g. jN;;e~w~C~a~,~·~~~~9~800~~N~ew~C~a~r~1~~;;~9~8:00~N~e~w~C~1~rt~~==~9~8~00 '67 Y A.i'\iAHA 180. Hardly any truck. $650. 549-2493 Can fin all or po.rt. Pmt used~ Xlnt C'Cfld . ,\1u51 ~ell! SZ2.00 per mo. O.A.C. SPEW'f,SOMEnMES TE y 'fOU 'li.. SIMPLY S450.646-8112aft6:30 Dune Bugg,_i_11 ___ 9_s_2_s, ELMORE l'WINK'l'OUt..OVE 808 RR M.-N'ETOCWOOSE '66 HONDA 305 drt'a m. full l-'REE VEX;1\S VACATION i'MESE~F\JI-8U1CK Bt:TWfEiN US! lJSEDQeS ~ -'~-drtlS S450 Of best offer. \r!T! I A i\10Toft' MOll!E ,./'W.I YOU LOVE' Me: ! f.IU~. ~ (1141 893-2300 1968 DUNE BUGGY TOYOTA 'ti5 YAM.AilA l~. Jminac. Cu~tflrn hody 111th t:A.ndy ap-Phone 81.H-Irnl Xlnt cond. SZlO. Phone pl~ m('t11l fl;i kr paint. Cor· 15.100 Bt-ach Blvd .. \Ystmnstr 675-5881. \'(ll r 11\1T, w hii::.h IUt cam • 1966 RONDA 160 maa wtW?oe'ls &. hloon tires. The nk'f'~t ooe In Or. Co, '68 MG GET OUR LEA.DERSllIP SA VlNGS BRF'ORE YOU BlJY! ! : Dtrt Bike. ~tni (111.rlJ, Come in and t'Ompan thi s 646--l~ one. '671-fONDA 3(fj ELMORE E>cc<I. «lOIJ. 147'. T~~~ d>~~ 5t6-f933 afttt 5 Pi\f. 00. 'l'R1UMPll 650 Bon· Df!Yille ~O(X) .ml Be!lt otter tUn. 81S.267'1 eves 615--2492 'U ALLSl"ATE '.l"il Bib ·eoa:. Good """'"'""· 1.000 ML SllO. iw&-7<m ~ (19.1,112(1 • 15300 Beech Blvd , \\1!JtmMtr 1996 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 LA PAZ * 64 MGB * BU<'.'.GY GUILDERS Xlnl cond $1,100 Oompletf' bui:uies. part1 & 842-2186 ~8. cha.'•I~ Ahorten· 1967 MGB lt1ust ... n. ltavina fnc. 962·2273, 96.Uli.18 coont,y oill 5f3...4040 Phane 842-6631 TERRY BUICK 122-Sth ST .. HUNTINIOTON Ill.CH 111 l l•c• ~ P.-lftc C.... Hwy. r.,_,,_ 536-6588 c1,,.. ,,..., J.. .• ......... .. .IL USID CAR LOCATION AT Beach Blvd. & Main St. $1849 1968 OPEL Oite It •~•' Up Ft-011t Ptrform111c1 P•clc•t• Sho11llitr kltt Qv,11irod Hoa..., Di.tty Whit• Wtlt Tire' l1tt.ry lmmedioto Oolivory, No. ) I Plwt T •l i U(. I ..... ," Pbooe 894-3320 $775. * 546.3.m 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmni;tr =~=~~--=-­'67 FORD Bronco-like new. only 1.200 mi. Good tenns. Private owner. 673-7559 ''1 FORD 500XL1, hi P'rl·, 390. Pwr. steering & brakes. Lt. b!ue. Best otter. 546-0820 '61 FORD Wagon v~. Alr c.'Ol'ld., R/H, pwt str. $185 540-3568 MERCURY '68 COLONY Park Station V.'agon. l will now sacrifice my 2000 mile den1onstrator. As completely equipped u you might want. Will sell er lease. Can Hal Sanders at Johnson & Son Orange tiiunty'a oldest established Lincoln Mercury Cougar dealership, Newport • Costa Meaa. 642--0981 1968 MERCURY Statio n \Yagon, brand new. Hard top, third scat, disc brakes, power steering, radic> and Inventory sacri:fice, S3990 at Johnson and Son, Orange Coun1y's oldest estal:il.ished Llncoln -l'<lerC'ury -Cougar dealership, Newport -CM ... '4z.-0981 IMPORTED CAR SERVICE ' IN THE HARBOR AREA COMPLETE SERVICE & PARTS VW e TRIUMPH e PORSCHE e JAGUAR e TOYOTA e MERCEDES S~IAUZING IN RE<TRONK TUNE-UP AUTHORIZED MG DEALER Immediate Delivery on the fa bulous Austin America, Huge Selection NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD. 3100 W. COAST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 642-9405 S40-1764 I • - TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~-------..;.;.....;......;...'------'-'-..;.;..;..;.;.._.....;c..;.._ U!!ed (1r"I 9900 MU~TANG i--,-65_M.U5TANG Spt Cpe stick six. Golden rod yellow with G.T. decor-ln· teriot. Abao.lutely showroom ....... $1495 Can finance all or part. Pay· ments es low as $22.00 per mo. O.A.C. ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Pb. 894-3320 1s:m Beach BITd., Wstmnstr 9900 Ustd C1n PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLAC SALE •'67 Cadillac I •'66 Cadillac ' •'62 Cadillac I •'68 C~dillac El Dorado Coupe de Ville I Coupe de Ville I Sedan de Ville fi;lt pwr, f•cf 1ir Full pwr, f1cl 1lr Ft.111 pwr, f1ct tlr cond., n•w ctr w•rr•n-cond., v•ll•w w/blacl ' F11ll pwr, ftcl 1ir cond., new ctr w1rr1n- ty, 9old w/brown •i11yl •inyl top, bl1ck lthr cond., loc1I cir, low ty, gold w/bleck ¥inyl top. i~t. Lo-mll11. mll••. lop, gold int. $5995 $4295 $1595 $6195 PRI Prty wm ..., !300 """" •· 68 Co.dlllac • '66 Ford blue book. '68 Mustane; stk • '67 Olds •• 68 Cadillac de VIiie Convert El Dorado Econoline mut, tac alr. Lo ml. Tt'mll, or coJ!Skler trade for gm •ta f ull pwr, f•ct •i• Window V•n -9oocl wagon. 646-2388 , cond., ntw ci r w•rr•n· lot c•mpin9, 1urfin9 or ty, fl,,.,.;,t bron11, to 111• •1 • Club W•y. '!i6 MUSTANG. PIS I 8, 289 bl.ck •inyl top, b1i9t 21.000 111i. Auto +r•n1. V-8; auto .. hdtp. R/H; sell inl•rior. Only ll.m 0• trad• """" '"' $7115 $1595 trans. car. ~ eves Toro concl., r•d w/hl1c• vi- nyl top, rid lihr int. $3995 Sptd•I r•cf w/whil• lop, whitt hhr Int ., '"II pwr, fo1(t 1lr cond., n•w ci r w•rr•n· $6495 --------------- Uttd C•rt 9900 PONTIAC ---1962 PONTIAC LeMln• Spt. Cpe. Aulomalic, arctic white with red bucket Rats. &QuUtul oondttkll. • $795 Can fi.bance all or part. Pay- ments •• low u $17.00 per mo, O.A.C. ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Pb. 894-3320 15300 BM.ch Blvd., Wrtmnstr 1966 PONTIAC GTO. Vinyl h&rdtOP, power b r • k e s, 11.eerina. Col'llklk! • h 1 r t , bucket seats. 389 e1g, air oond. Ory owner. S2.t75. 962-3000 afl 5; all day Sat I sun. RAMBLER 1965 RAMBLER TAKE°"" pymnt• fl•· Mo. •'67 Cadillac •'67 Cadillac •'68 CadiHac , •'65 Cadillac 4 "'· '· -'1&tioo ~ ..... 1967 ~1ustang GT with • I ' Polar IVO?)' w\th contra•linl trade for &ood trans car. Coupe de Ville Coupe de Ville . Coupe de Ville j Coupe IM Viii• lntenor, air cond. A iorse- &1&-82lG full pwr, fo1ct •ir . Fr.111 pw r, fo1cl •it out automobile. Only I--------con4., ntw cir w•rr•n· Full pwr, fo1ct t lr Full pwr,, It el '" cond., grttn irl, w/ $l395 1--------ty, brown w / b1i91 concl., lltw. C•t ••ttlft· 'coftd • nt w cir. w•".111• 9r11n Int, low milt1. OLDSMOBILE •lnyl top, bei'll• llhr ly, turquo111 w/blo1 ck ly, r•d . w/wl11l1 ••nyl loc•I c•r. int. lthr int. lop, wh1t1 lthr Int, $3395 OWN-ER_ln_V_l•-1 -N-am-. $4995 $5095 $6195 '""""~' 65 eu11us. x1n1 -• - -.• ------•'65 Cadillac ,,,..,,PS,PB.m.36,000act •'67 Cadillac •'67 Cadillac •'68 Cadil.lac coupe de VIiie miles. 549-2425 Coupe de Ville Sedan de Ville ' Coupe de Ville full pwr, f•ct •ir Full pwr, fo1ct o1 ir l"Ull p.,..r, ,.,., ... Full pwr, fo1ct 1ir cond,, fi r•mitf r•d, PLYMOUTH cond., ntw c•r wo1rrin-cond., n•w c•r w•tt•n· cond., n•w cir w1rr•n· wkitt ¥i11yl t!P• rtd Can finance all or part. Pay. ments as low u $22.00 per mo. 0.A.C. ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA Pb. 894-333'.l 15300 Beach Blvd., W1tmn1tr 1-------=-=---ty, blu• wAlo1ck •inyl ty, blu• w/bl•c• •inyl ty, lit• blu• w/.,..liil1 lthr int. low 1111111. lo· '~d~~~ o~erw~ ~ lop, b$41w. 199"· 5 lop, b$461ut int.95 J •inyl 's''5' 99blu1 5'"·· c•I ''s'· 3495 i:ag~: !~~~ 0 ; I ' best oiler! 499-2-481 aft 5., ~ 11 I will fix. 833-1027 --.. -----I 'i:::.TL~tn ::"tk.n"."';= ALLEN Oldsmobile-Cadillac 1494-1 084 1 STUDEBAKER Ph. 847-5735 1150 So. Coast Hwy '84 STUDEBAKER com. La B h mllnder 4 Dr. R/H, auto.; PONTIAC 9una eac perl. """1; 1..wnor. 1595 - 1964 PONTIAC . ------- G.T.O. coupe PONTIAC PONTIAC Beautdul """'"""" wlth1-------PONTIAC whi<e buctwt "'"· A1' 1981 GTO 2 dr Hanltop tully 1--------4 SPEED rond., &ulom••o. equipped, • "Pd. ""°" "'"'· ROY CARVER SPECIALISTS 51695 "" u1ce now, ,,;.. in PONTIAC Can tinance aU or part, Pay· •rvlol. Mu1t 1 e11 lm· HIGH PERFORMANCE ments as low as $22.00 per rnecUattly 11,000 mlle1, D Harbor Bl., Coat.a,._ CU~OM CARS mo. 0 .A.C. 1>.115. CIJI -!, alto• Kl 6-4444 LARGE>r SELl'lCTION IN ELMORE 1130. -Oranp °""""'' Exd ... ., ORANGE COUNT\' • ·ii '11\Biiil> 126 Ho, o.a1 .. .., l!olll -Ro,.,. """ Selected Auto ot offer. MS-647t T·BIRD e '62 T·BIRD e Xlnt cond • 674-1584 • '64 T-ifu'( top condllie11. All powr, must sell, prt prty. $L1Si &4U3'17, "~"'°' VALIANT MOTORS TOYOTA Ph. ~-3320 ' rt•. ••"' ... tu11 . '"'" -· Center Oritin&l owner. S2•t 6. M GT6'48{>ttd '61 Dix Valiant, rl h, new ~ Excellent a>ndlticn $13 0 0 um HU'bor Blvd. 537-4646 battery, tram, iood tirea. 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr j()¢il ff TO •bit 14&-299!1 CHARGE rl'! ""'· 84i.llOl3 alt • PM ~"'========-====~===='-=='======== New Cars 9100 New Ciro 9800 New Cari 9IOONew Cars 9800 New Cers 9800 BUICK Formerly STANSBURY BUICK SERVING THE HARBOR AREA WITH LIDS OFF DEALS Lid's Off On HIGH PRICES-Lid's Off On HIGH FINANCING Lid's Off On TRADE-INS Brand New 1968 BUICK SPECIAL DELUXE 4 DOOR SEDAN Fully equipped Including V-1 onelne, super turbine tran1ml11lon, power atMrlftl, power brlk .. , rNlo, speed alert, whlN will tires, tinted gfaq and meny other acce110rl"' Stk. No. 144 $ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ENTIRE BUICK STOCK AT '68 CLOSEOUT PRICES ONE STOP AT POOLE BUICK DOES IT ALL SAl.6--SltYICE-PARTS-fflWICl--INSUWICf & SAilSfACTION Open Mond•y thr°"'h Frldey 'tit 9 p.m. Open 'Ill 6 on Seturdoy -CLOSED SUNOAY BUICK In COSTA MESA Yovr Authorlud Buick· Opel· Jot_. Dealer 234 E. 17th St. 548-7765 ----------------- DAILY PILDT 35 New C.tr1 --.....--9800 New Cat"I -9800 Ntw Cert 9800New Cerw 9100 CHRYSLER/ PLYMOUTH/ IM.f.!!!.IM, C S!:.,"X!,Wl In the polite city ot COSTA MESA . . ... • BRAND NEW 1968 PLYMOUTH FURY I 2 DOOR SEDAN 2 to chOOM from. Numbor1 315 & 434 • LOW AS e:ae& DELIVERS PLUS TAX • LICENlll ON APPROVED CREDrr Stock No. I 021 (uxuriout Brood New 1968 Chryslar New Yorlar 4-Door herdtop -Absolutely loaded with every c°"oelvoblt •trlr• -Air Condition ing, Automoti< Pilot, AM/ FM Multiplex stereo r1dlo, 3 In I Bench aut root.nor, vinyl top, tilt-tolesc:ope steer· in9 wheel, full power steering, br•kes, seat, windows1 white sidewaHs, front ri9ht hied rest and many more. A truly outstendin.9 automobile. Huge Price-Cuts on Fine Used Cars '65 DODGE Dttt 1 D111t, 6 -..,llnder 1co11omy wf+li btl•n•• .f fo1cfory w1rr1nty, Ne . 66M '66 FORD Cou11lry S1d1n St•tio11 W19on, v.1 , 1utom•tic , powor 1t1•fin9, pow1r lit•ff1 i nd f1ctory 1ir cond ilioni119, No. 6704 '62 CHEVROLET Ho•• 2 Joor h1rcllop. "6", r•dlo, he1t1r, low "'il•s. No. 6715 '64 CHEVY II A11torn1tic, 6 cvlincl•r '" .. fully fie· tory •quipped. No, 6724 '68 Roadrunner YI, 4 1p••d, r•clio, h1•t01, 1xc•ll•11I condlllo". Lin th•n 10,000 11111••· Ne. 66 J4 '63 MERCEDES 81 n1 220 SE 4 door with wlnyl In. terior. Unm•lchtcl qu•liiy 1ut1mo· bil•. No. 6729 '66 PONTIAC 5TO .. ,,_,cl, VI M·,.Wtf, ,.Jlo •ncl ht•l•r. No. 6510 '68 FURY Ill Con.,ertibl,, VI, 1ulorn1tlc, r•dlo, ht•+•r pow•r .t .. rin.g a br•k•t. WSW, F-ACTOAY AIR CONDITION. ING. No. 6644 tlTLtlS First in SERI/ICE ''" •II••' llH•1'1/f;/ f,fll''lol 1 We mairit1in ont o the lart· 11t end rnott rnMernty equ lP'" ped service facllltle1 In tJi1 West. All 14WrtlMll Cltll -..,. .. """ ..... All ICh'er'llMd ,,. ....... flll 111111 fleel\M .... .,. ••11111 Ullftl 1unM1 "-* 11,. .... , ... l I 1 ., ,I ----._..,... -·. --o:------• --------.. . --. ---~-. DAIL V l'ILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l"·~tu CERTIPICATE OP IU51Nf!SS, FICTITIOUS NAME TM under1!9Md do certify !he'll ire eonductl"9 1 tiu11"'" at 20f3l !lrook11ur11, Hunllft91i>n Beech, C1llfarnl1, under !ht fltllllou1 I I rm n Im e of ARRC. ENTERPRISES Ind 11>11 11\.d firm II cornPo>e(! of !he foll°""'l1>111 1111r..,,,1, wt.Me 111mn In full Ind pl1cn of rnldell(f 1re 11 followr.: ARTHUR F. ADAMS, D.D.$., lC16 J1111 Road, C•lt MO'll. D. G. ROSELLINI, D.o .s.. lfSO 811ffrk Drlvt, Cct!I Mnl REMY R. ROSELLINt, M.D .• 17Jl Orcl\erd Drive, ~nl1 Anl. tRVING M. CYRIL, M.0 ., t1U2 Felrle"' Ctrdt, Hunt!nvt<111 8e1ch JOHN A, FEMINO. M.D., 2700 P1ter1<>n Wev, ,I.JI!. Jll, Coste Mell 01ted A119111! 1, lt68 ARTHUR F. ADAMS, D.0.$. 0. G. ROSELLINI 0 .0 .$. REMY JI. ll:OSELLINI M.0. JOHN A l'EMINO M.0 . IRVING M. CYR1L M.D. ll•le of Cal!foml1, Los Anoeles CeunlY: On A1>11v1t 1, 1'68, beiore mt, I Not1rv l"ubllc In tlld fer Hid Stele, person1lly IPotlr<KI ARTHUR I'. ADAMS Ind 0. G. ROSELLINI 11\d REMY R. ROSELLINI end JOHN A. FEM!NO Ind IRVING M. CYRIL lu1own lo mt lo be the 1>11ri1ln1 whose names art subKrlbed lo !ht wl!llln ln1trume..! end edcnowtedsled llwt tx• ltCVI"' the 11me. (OFFICIAL SEAL) Johanne W. Dttrl.,. No!erv Public Slate of Calllornl1 County ot Los Anotlet. Mv CommlHlcn Explrn, July 10, 1'71 Publlsllflf Or1ntt Coa1t 01llv Piie!, Augu1I I, IS, H, 29, 1Ull 1369-68 LEGAL NOTICE SUP•lllOlt COURT 01' TH• ITATIE OP CALIPOltNIA l'Olt THI: COUNTY 01' OltAHGIE Ne.A-4tlM NOTICIE 01' SAL• OP tt•AL IESTATIE AT l"RIVATE SALi E1llte ol IRENE AGNES COLE 1k1 IRENE COLE, Dtcultd. Notice Is herl'b'f 91Ytn lh•I °" O<' ..-1er hl>lembtr 10. 1'611 Ille undenltned l1vln!1 I(. C.rr!ean 11 Exe.:utrlx of ttoe Wiii of Irene Atnn Colt, 11c., o.c111e<t, will Htl 11 prlval• ui. to lt>e hl9he-sl net •rdder, 1ubhtct lo tonllrrnft!lon bv ltlo 1boviH'n!lllecl Sul>!lrlor Court, 111 right, 11- lle, Intern!, and Pt!l lt of The de<;.,:lenl 1t Ille lime of her llee!ll, In and tc !~st ter· llln re.i Pf~perty locelfd In the ca...nty of Or1noe. Sta11 cf C1lltcr11!1, otferlbtd 11 fol tows: Lot Fourteen In Sieck NIM of Tr1ct No. 813, CaPl1tr1no lltlflch, " 1hown on a meP recorded In s-21, PltH 1 le 10. lndu1lve, of MIKtlltntous Maps, recor11s ol Or1ntt Countv, C1lllornl1. Common!~ known II 2&H2 Vie Granada ar 26912 Celle Grenade, C1Pl1tr1"" Beach. Call!. Sublet! lo current t1xn, coventnh. c on dlllon1, rntrlcll01>1, rt1erv1llon1, rlthl1, rlghb of w1v end 11um-enb ol record. 8ld1 or otters ,,. Invited !or n ld pro- Ml"tt 1nd must bt In writing Ind writ be re.:elvfld ti lllt Office of Gilvin R. l(eene, AllomtY ,, L1w. ~u Norlh NIWP<>rl aouiev1rd, NtW!>Orl Btath, C1lltcrn11, 11· tcmeY for Hid Execvtrlx, or may bt flr.d Wllh IM Clerk of 11ld Superior Court or dellvtred 10 tho 1ald Extc.,lrl~ i>er1<>n1llv. 11 .inv !lmt after llr<I publlcallon of 11111 not;ce end before making 11ld 11~. Terms tl"ld ccndl!I0<11 of ule: C11h Jn i.wtul monev of lt>e Unllfd Stein of Amerlc1; 1°"' of the 1mount bid tc •t- comNnv tht otter e...:r the belenct tc W paid u-confirmation ol ule b"f" Ille SllPf!rlllr Court. TIXH, r..m, -••tint 1nd m&lnttnenc:t b...,.111, end premiums Ofl IMUfl~ ecapllblt fc ltoe PUrch11tr Wll bt Prortted 11 of "" dtlt! of rtccrdl"' of oonvey1nce. Tiiie Wiii bt dtllYtred ltlroutll txniw w1!11 tht llS\lll flYl1ton ol ncrow end tit" costs.. Tht undenltntd r....,..,n tl'>t right tc rtl.et 1ny 11\d •II bl-ch. Oiled: August 6, 1'61. L1vl"l1 K. C1rrlg1" Executrix ol !ht Wiii ol Irene Ag"'" Colt, ek., OtcHstd. •ALVIN It. ICEINI Alto""'" 11 Llw 411 Htrtll NtwHft aaultv1nt N-11 •t•cll. C1Kltf'1!lt '2UI T""""-' ..._.IHI AllwMY for Ext<:utrix . Publll/\ed Or•~ eo.11 Dilly PllQI, Autusl I, f, 1$, 19'1 l:Ma.Q LEGAL NOTICE tUl"llllOll COURT OP THE STATI Of'" CALIFORNIA JCOR THE COUNTY OF Oil.I.NOE Nt. 1•Uot SUMMONS ON COMPLAINT POR l"AltTITION OP RIEAL l"llO .. ~Jltv .i.PTHUR H. LISHNER end DOROTHY L'"'"lo/ER, husband 11'1d wile, Plelntltl1 v1 Lr ' '4 A. BARLOW Ind DOES I THl':OUGH )(, l11tluslv•, O.!tndanl1 THE PF.OPLE OF THE STATE OF C4LIFOl!N!.i. lo The lb:lvt n.111T1fd Dtt&n· dlnl1 1nd to ti! Pttlonl unk-., who ll~ve o• tl~lm 1"Y lnterttl In, l!r Htn 111, fl!f "'-'"" ll<!•el11 described: YOU ARE tlFREllY OIR.ECTED lo f!lt 1 wrtnen p!f>·d(nt tn rtsPonse to Ille Compt1lnl of ll'IOI 1bcw nlmed Plllnlllla w;l!I the cler• of Ille ab:lve enlllled COi.ir! In !tie 1bcrw tnlllled 1dlon brouflhl lltlflll -In Hid court. Wlll!lll left (10) .. YI 1fler !he utvlce Oii vw of th11 1um· "'°"'' If lerV"d wll!lln !he 1llow 111m..s counll', or w!!llln Thirty ()Cl) den II i.trv• Id ebewf>ere. YOU ARE HEREllY NOTIFtfO !llel Uflltu vau so fllop t wrlt1t" rt1PCn1lve 'leadln9, uld plllnlllf1 will llkt l~nt fer 1nv money or da.,....ges tlemlnded In tl'>t Comtolllnl 11 1rl1lnt -con1r1ct, or wm _,., to l1'lt Ccurt tar t!W 111\t-r ~lltf dtmtfldld 111 lhe c-i.1111. "*"""'' P.,-ttllol'I 11r nit lll.lf'Ju1nl to Cede of Clv!I Pnx.edurt. S.C.tl-752 1nd 152(1) of Ille fotlowll'lll ml P<Wtf1'r llletled In Ille County of Or1,,.., Of Ille Stalt ol c1 1:~ornl1, dHUlbed .. follow!: lot ' In llodl: 41) of Hvnllntlen 11 · di, 17:l• Slrll'I Stdlcn In Ille CllY o1 HU11!1"9:<111 IMd'I, NI<! COll'll'(, 11 Pet' , ··~ rccordtd In 191111 t. P1te 11 of Mbo:·!!t-MtPs In 1M: ..nlct ol !he c-tr It~ 01 .. kl Caunl'r. YIN IMY ... fllt adYla: ol If! lltomeY on llllY mttttt Cl!!Mecftd wltto !he C-ltlllf -11111 ~ Suell ••. '°'""' lflOllllll .,. conw!Md wlltlln lhe 11mt 'lmll ttt• ltl fills """'"°"' for flN!lf I wrlltl"ll ,...,..,. " flM' eon.i.1"', OA TED JUir tS; I,._ w, E. ST JOHN .... Ir W11tw I. lurh o.urt' Clertt eROMMAN ... MIUl ,_ .. .... t ....... ..,,. ...... '--• ....... C.ltflttMIM'1 Ttf 11111 l7W1t4.. ,,,.,..., """-" fir , ... ...,,,. ....... l"lltl"'* Of111tt Coelf o.ur 1'111,t, Autwf a. 11. ft, tt, 1HI ,,,, ..... Thursday, AugUst 15, 1'68 LEGAL NOTICE TV Reception Worries Sentinel Cities Exel ting Red Roses Long Why not lavish her witl~ these deep red beauties? 99c doien !while 1i..1 lalf) UMBRELLA 7 Foot California Umbrella. Your choice mos&, turq. or 11eUow. PET SHOP Pemco 5 oat aquarium. with reflector $9.9$ value '6" Lovealt~ ••• Dellghtftd Parakeeu·tke perfttt 9lft. 'I" _....:. ..t. ---l ..l. !_ • }. ,. l .. .• .I ! • ,/!_~--'' LADIES · STRAW BATS Keep cool and fresh with one of these de· signed to keep 11ou prett11 while in the garden. reg. 98c 47c Be iure to have plenty on hand ••. pick up an extra set of these deluxe skewers today, specially priced Painted Wooden Daises Pict: -or I ti:>Jtft ol ti'!-c!willfllflll ~ CUI cull lusl p&rttct for w1l11 or --· rw. n.n enly '1" Delu:ze Chaise Leange Pads Abortions-., On Increase Add an extra splash of color to 11our patio with these deluxe 10 polyfoam filled padt. reg. $11 .95 '8" '