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1968-08-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
' • I I I t t I • . Mystery Body Found ~Oii Laguna-_CdM .Co~st . . . - I tJnweleome Guest in Czeelloslovakia I IT'S HAPPENING IN PRAGUE -Soviet tank rumbling down street brings forth memories of abortive Hungarian revolt 12 years ago. However, photo was taken in Prague, Czechoslovakia, today. This World UPI Tttwffte was scene in front of Wenceslaus Statue in Wenceslaus Square in Czech capital following invasion by Russia and four satellite countries. National Musewn is in background. Scorns Invasion Youth Injures Head in Dive To Flee Police Most Natio1is Condemn Soviet Marcli Into Prague An 18-year-old lunged from the arms of Laguna Beach policeml!ll Tuesday nlg.ht and dived through a second story window, smashing head-first onto the concrete patio below. The pile driving dive of Mark Harry "Blue Boy'' Fark'as was a tragic climax to an apparent marijuana par· ty. The Arcadia youth was unconscious this mom.in~ and in seriolls condition in an intensive care want of Orange County Medical Center. He apparently suffered a· skull fracture in the plunge. Police Lt. Robel't McMurray said Officers Roy Cam.pbell and Ken Carter went to the address at 10'J _ Catalina St. to investigate a complaint of loud mus.Jc. Officers entered, he said, when they smelled the pungent odor oC mari- juana·. McMurray said thrtt girls jumped out ·o( the 1econd story window as police entered. They Ocd on foot lrilurt. In the ensuing K'Uffle. Campbell managed to handcuff one young man as Carter struggled with Farkas. Campbell released his prisoner to help Carter and the still handcuffed yo\ltb jumped to lttedom and fled on foot. McMurray said Farkas then broke free and made his plunge. The-officer sald police found 12 marijuana cigarets in the apartmenL Police today .re seeking the three young women, and the young man, wi°)ooe wrl.st handcuffed. From \Vire Services WASHINGTON -Presiden t Johnson today declared "It is never too late for reason to prevail," in a statement he read before newsreel oanieras and radio-t elev 1 s ion microphones. The cttief executive termed the in- vasion a "fiat violaUon'' of the United Nations charter and sWd the United States was "consulting urgently" with other nations in an effort to "insist upon the charter rigtts o f Czechoslovakia and its people." * * * UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. - Secretary-General U Thant today de· nounced the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia as a b 1 ow to world orders a n d East·\\lest relations. He appealed to the Soviet Ur'lion to show "utmost restraint'' in its relations with the government and people of Ctcchoalovakia. * * * MOSCO\V -The news agency Tass published today an appeal addressed to the Czechoslovak people urging them to be calm and aid Soviet and other Communist forces entering the country. * * * 'BUCliAREST. Romania -Nlcolae Ctausescu. president 0( Romania and chief of its Communist party, today condemned the Soviet intervention in Cz.echoslovakia as a ''big mistake," Radio Bucharest reported. "The armed intervention I n Czechoslovakia is a big mJstake and a severe danger for peace in Europe and for socialism in the world," Ceausescu told about 10,IXX> Romanians who demonstrated in front of Communist party headquarters in sympathy with the C'Ledloslovaks. * * * BELGRADE -President Tito of Yugoalavia, who went his independent Communist way in 1948 and made it stick, today denounced the invasion of Ctechoslovakil. by Warsa'v p a ct troops as a "serious blow" to the Com· munitt W<J"Jd. "The entering of foreign military units into Czechoslovakia without in· vit.atlon or approval from a legal government has deeply worried UJ," Tito said in a statement to the ne"''' sfl:l'Vice Tanjug. * * * LONDON Mon! than 1 5 0 demoogtraton chanUng "Russians Go llome" and carrying an t I·-Soviet placards marched on the Soviet em· buay here today. Police moved quickly Crom behind the gates that screen the tree-lined street leading to both the Soviet and the nearby C:r: t:hoslovak embassy in ~est London and forced t h c demorultrators to U1e opposite side o! the road. * * * PRAGUE -The U. S. Embassy to- day advised Americans in Czechoslovakia to sit tight. "Until we hear further detalls, we are advising American citizens to re- main where they are," the embassy said. There are about 3,000 Americans in the country, most of them tourists. About 500 Americans are in Prague for a geology convention. * * * VIENNA -The Soviet inva.o;ion of Czechoslovakia WBJ!I Russta·s third use of force since World War 11 to keep its East European satellites ln line. ln June, 1953, the Red army sent tanks into East Berlin to c.TUSb a workers' revolt that threatened Com- munist control ovtr East Germany. ln November, l!JM, Ru 1 s i an armored units smaihed. the Hungarlan freedom revolt. ) DAILY PILOT WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 2 I, '1968 I VOL. "'MO. Ht,' S•CTIOfrtl, jJ l'AGll Free'dom Fighters' Resistance Futile From \Vire Servlce1 PRAGUE -Invasion forces from Russia and its four satellites blasted freedom fighters from the streets with guns and tanks today and put the liberal leaders of Czechoslovakia under house arrest to snuff o u t the country's brave experiment in reform. Czechs fought bade with spit, stones, jeers and even firebombs against. the forces of Russia, East Germany, Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria. Some Body Fished Out of Ocean Along Coast The body of an unidentified man in fl.is mid-40's was fisbed out of the sea beMen Corona de! Mar and Laguna Beach this momtng by Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen. The dead man was found floating face down, fully clothed except for Shoes, .about 9 a.m. by a passing :sports fiS!tlng boat, according to coun- ty Harbor Master Al Oberg. Identification on the body bore the name of a Plboenix, Ariz. resident. Newport. Beach police noted, however, that the name found in a wallet did not match w Ith any missing person reports on file locally. Oberg said it appeared tihe dead man had been in the water for "a day or so." He added there were no visible external injuries to indicate 1be caui>e of death. The body wa.s spotted drifting about 200 yards offshore, 11h: miles south of Corona del Mar near Abalone Point. Officials said a wallet on 1!he dead m'an contained money. They refused lo speculate on the possibility of foul play wit!hoot funher iuvesti.giation. Ike Still Critical But Army Doctors Feel Encolll'aged WASHINGTON (AP) -Anny doc· tors reported today that they were en- couraged by a certain aspect o( former President D w I g h t D. Ei..9Cnhower's condition but they "still view the gener.o.l's condition as critical." ln a medical bulletin this mornine:. doctors of Walter Reed Army l-lospital said: "Gen. Eisenhower spent a very comfortable night and his spirits re- main excellent. Ttie trend towards a decrease o( the frequency of carditc inegularities and episodes of rapid heart action indicab?d in last night's bulletin has c<>ntinued throughout the night. While the physicians believe this is an encouraging sign, they still view the general's condition &b critical." The matter of cardiac irregularities and episodes of rapid heart action h.ave all along been Uie major cause ot concern in connection w l t h Eisenhower's 1Dtest heart attack, bis seventh since 195S. Today's report was the first formal ooe tr om the doctors since the publica-tion of a repOrt ln the Washington Post that the doctors had employed "a new experimental beart·reguJ~ drug" in Else.Mower's case and Ulnt this, 1n Lhe opinion of the newspaper. could mean thet the somewtui.t optlmisUc re.ports made recently by the doctOrs could mean that the dru~ wu p.ving some benefits. . . paid with their lives. But by nightfall, almost 24 hours after they crossed the border and shocked the world, the drama had reached the inevitable end. World leaders reacted in protest. President Johnson in \Vashington call· ed on the Soviet bloc forces to withdraw because "It is never too late for reason to prevail." Yugoslavia and Romania reacted with shock and denunciation or the attack. At I e a•s t several persons were reported killed and 57 wounded in fighting at Prague, Bratislava and Koslce. There were no reports of any Americans hurt. Moscow declared the invasion, launched late Tuesday night, vtas by invitation of "party and government le"iders" in Prague to put down the threat of counte!Tevolution imperiling the structure oi Communism. Czechoslovakia's Foreign Ministry denied, howevet", that it had asked for the troops and. in protest notes to ad· bassadors of the five nations, demand- ed Ulat they be removed. · It was a case of commwllsm fighting within its ov"n orbit. .By all signs, the Kremlin and its hard-line See related ttorles and phoCo on pafe 4 allies ln Eastern Europe had decided to make Prague follow the path laid out for Hun gary in 1956 rather than let the Czechoslovaks escape Moscow's hold in the way Yugoslavia did in 1948. The official Soviet ntlWS agency Tass published an appeal to t h e Czechoslovak people to be calm and aid the occupying forces. Tass at- tributed this appeal to a group of Czechoslovak Communist party and government olficials, but named no names and did not clear up the ques- tion of exachtly who asked for the in- tervention. The invaders killed at least two persons and injured 25 in occupying the Prague rad.lo station. Four were reported killed and 10 injured in the B~hemJan town of Liberae. A 27-year. old motorcyclist was repor'ted to have died under a Soviet tank, his chest crushed. AuL".oritative Western source 1 reported that in Prague alooe tliere were 25,000 in'Vading troops, mostly Soviet but some Polish and Bulgarian. Every major Czechoslovak city was occupied. MIG 21 jets streaked over Prague along wit.11 twin.engine bomben. T·he sources said the RUS6ian rorces in Prague included. one airborne (See CZECH, Page %) Ora119e Couc Weather Nice day. That's the weather-- man's observation for Thursday, with the sun breaking early through patchy coastal clouds and bringing mid-70 mercury to the Orange Goast. INSIDE TODAY Tile Jtandings after the /irat Otree race1 i n the S.S meter oivmpic 11acht trialJ ore aive" tn. today's boating page, Paae 25. 111111• " ... ,.. u ' Ce~fwllle • Cllihlt!M 4$2 Cll!lltt a (...._. lj DMll IW!ttt l .,lttrlll .. _ 11 1111tf115-t I '""•• 1"11 , .... Cellt M ·~ 01it1ll1t• ,. IN-tJ hll L.--11 ' I • .Z DAILY PILOT Wednt:sdq, A119Ust 211 1968 ·U.S.·Troops Kill 182 as Reds Attack in Wave • ~ Ml'l -11.s. 1n11111iymon rtPeDed 1tn1•com m aD l 1 t ....... ... eM•lre --AmlrioP l,m-14 v+ "' ... 1'J Nlllll dlJ, ldlllll II lout I.II VIit. °""' mlllla'y --~· ·'Ibo ac1lon ne .. Ille · &ambodlan -~ lbO Cmurnnrist d<atll loll Ill fl8'1tinc uu. week northweet Of SoilOO ID nem1y &00. u. s. sources said &c estimated 600 Cons Peril 'Nine Guards In Ohio Pe11 COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -Backed by pollce reinforcementl, the Warden ot Ohio State PenltenUary met !ace·to- face with rebel convict leaders today and pleaded a1aln for the relea1e of nine guards held ho1tage under threat '1 deatll. • lndlcatlons wen the pleu of M. J. KOtotkl would co unheeded. '"We may have to blast OW" way ~n. there ... it looks like somebody is going to get hurt before it's all over," said Ohio Adj. Gen. Sylvester Del Cor· so. The meeting with the convlcl<I in the courtyard of the century.old lnstltuUon came a ahcrt timl'l after 150 Ohio high· way patrolmen weari_ng helmets. and face shields moved into the prison. They relieved most of the 50 Ohio na· tional guardsmen who had been on du-' ty during Ille nlght. Richard Armstrong, fiery, red- hajred spokesman for the convicts, threatened at the meeting with newsmen to immolate the hostages unlesll the rerorm demands were met. "They are locked in cells .and lf anybody tries to r ush us they (~he guards) will lj:et killed. They are gOlf!t!'. to be burned alive," Armstrong 11a1d while In the background the other con· vlct.s Involved continued their chan• Uni!. "dead, dead. dead.'' "We have four 10.nunce jars of lighter fluid and a half .1?allon or ~asoline." Armstrong said. "Our backs are against the wall. We must win all the way or lose all the way." The war of nerves began at 10 a.m . Tuesdav and was played out throue.h the nij!ht .as the convicts pressed for full capitulation on their demands for r.rison reforms, lncludinf{ removal cf sadistic guards" accused cf brutal acu. "There Is UtUe llkellhood the guards will be released before late evening." said Maury ~blentz , state director ('If corrections. "Our main objective i11 to get them back allve iI pos11\ble." Koblentz said the pr1soners were fearful thev wculd be shot even If th'Y r~leased ihe hostage!!. de 1 rite assurances by prison officials for their safety. Tustin Man Di es In Freeway Crash A four-car pile up on liOtJthbound Newport Freeway lanes Tuesday night led to the death of Albert Lee Colgan, 27, of Tustin. the Ca.U.fomia Highway Patm reported. The accident, wh..lch occWTed just p1b. of Dyer Road miuhed from one 1911 County Tr1fllc 196'1 111 Do11h Toll 111 car pu1hlng another. 0Uicer1 la.id a ur drlvftl by Donald J, Talley, 18, o[ Oosta MeM, waa being pushed by ooe driven by Shnone Pieltain, 45, of Costa Mesa. The Coljan car era.shed lnto the other two. A fourth car, driven by Gr•a:«Y J. MouJ.gey, 18, of Anaheim, smashed into the Colgan car. Only Mr11. Pleltaln was injured cf the otb-en involved i.D the fatal &CCJderit. DAILY PILOT N..,..-t heclt CNt. W... H••tl .. '911 ..... \..etmN 9-ti w ....... ...,., .... ,., .... ..., CALIPOINIA OltAHGI COAST f"USLllHINO COMPANY Roltotl N. Wt ttl f"l'ftldtftl ol'ld l"utinJIMr Jtc~ A. Curloy VI« l'rnldl!ll olld Gtrwor M-11r tholl'l•t KtevU ,,l!OI' lho111tt A. MMrphln. l>\tftffll\f lclllOr r1ul Niu•~ ... .,..." ...... DI rod• -- ----------~---~·~---- Vitt C.1 IMloked lnllCll'Od por-1 com.ti ol 12>e -u. s: llllulr)' Dl'fllbl-llM Ba ()II ....... •· -. olloul eo mllll ~I of s.lp-l~mllot -ol 'l'ly Nlnb dfy. Slx of the arinored vehiclts were deatroyed ln the .u.ack and one American killed and 23 wounded, the SOW'CeS sa1d. U. S. Chief Negotiator \Y. Averell Harriman, meeting With H a n o l 11egotiators for the l8th time today In Paris, denouncod North Vietnam for refwLn.g to show UJY restraint 1n response tw> U. S. ~ons following President Johnson's speech March 31. In a m<et!ng Which !uted for almost S.~ boun, -1rpd NOlih V•ittn.am to restore the DMZ "to 1ts UPI Te....._,. WEDDING SUNDAY FOR JANE AND NUMBER TWO Newport'• Jant Ru11ell To11t1 Future Hubby Jane to Be1narry Sexy Star to W ed Stage Actor Sexy actress Jane Russell of Newport Beach, who last month divorced former foot.ball &tar and coadt Bob Waterfield alter 25 years of marriage, Tuesday announced plans to marry actor Roger Barrett. Miss Russell, whc has made more than $1 million from the 1-loward Hughes movie "The Outlaw," will marry Barrett Sunday in the Beverly 1-lills Community ? re s by t er I a n Church. The buxom aclress made headlines in 1943 when the low.cut peasanl bloose worn in "The Outlaw" touched off heated debate about exposea cleavage.. BaITett, 47, la: predomlnanUy a stage acLor and formerly resided 1n Chicago. He has done numerous sum- mer .and winter stock productions in the East and Midwest. In her divorce settlement from \Vaterfield, Miss Russell, also 47, received custody of her two children Tracy, 19, who will be a brtdegmaid and Thomu:, 18. She also retained her home at 211 North star Lane, Newport Beach. Waterfield received the bRme In Sherman Oak• and custody 'ot their youngest son Robert, 12. In recent years, Miss Russell's movies have been at a minimum. Her most recent films include "Waco" and "Johnny Reno," filmed in 1965. Since that time most of her off-screen llia has been devoted to working with \VAIF, an organization he 1 p j n g nrphans aroWld the world. Friends Invited .to the ceremony in· elude actors Scott Brady, Dav1d Brian, Jack Beutel -her co-star in "The Outlaw" - Bob Hope, Richard Egan, Robert MJtchum, Frank Sinatra, Robert Ryan and John Payne, as well as actresses Agnes Moorehead, Jean· ne. Crain, Rhonda Fleming and Esther WWiams. Father Who Can't Swim Braves Sea .to Save Girl A desperate father who couldn't swim challenged the heavy surf in South Laguna Tuesday night to reach his 19-year old daughter who was being swept seaward in a riptide. A South Laguna boy kept the tl''o afloat while San Clemente lifeguards sped to the scene at the \Vest Street Beach. Captain Phil Stubbs said the guardi; received a call about 7:45 from a citizen saying someone in the water "·as yelling for help. The department's night patrol unit was dispatched. In the meantime, as the J;:irl , Iden- tified as Arthis Fleming of Placentia, was crying for help, her fat.her. Arthur Fleming. though a non swimmer. struggled through the breakers in an attempt to reach his daughter. SWAM TO AID , A South Laguna boy Identified a~ Ricky Rieb swam to lhe.lr aid, and Police Pick Up Potted Piper A romplalnt of t111U5t,,: piping on the darkened sands of Lagun1 Beach Tuesday ntght led to the •rn~t of a \Vestmlnster man on 1usp1clon of m.tl"ijuana poeffl991cm. Thomas JaJDH Lu&Uo. 20, of 8741 Paloa Vmiet, wet art'ested on 'n\alia s-t B .. ch, ac<mllng to u . Rober• McMUJTay. The offlctt sak1 ~ce found 1 pl~ and a b&g wltti about two ounc11s of marlju1na tn J.,uttlo'1 pock•t.. His companion wu not l'leld. MeMUrTay 1ald a complaint would be 110U~t to- day. L kept the h\·o anoat unti l the guards reached the scene approximately 13 n1inutes later. Guard Jon West brought the lather and daughter back to shore. '>'11th the assistance of Rich. Guards said Miss Fleming was in good condition, but her father was ln a state of shock. That rescue \Vas two or 64 rescues recorded by San Clemente lifeguards in the six. to eight-foot surf Tuesday. San ciemente guards said the yellow (caution) nag will be nown today, but t-xpressed concern over swimmers who will forget that dangerous rips still plague the area beaches. 'LOT CALMER' "It will look a lot calmer today. But \\•hen the people go out. the rips can &till get ta them. It's a yellow nag to . da>'· but it's misleading. It 's dangerous," said Stubbs. Today's aurr ts expected to be from CJ,·e to six reel. Laguna Beach lifeguards pulled 49 swimmers out or four-to six-foot surf, Including 14 rescues at Victoria ne~ch . .. \\'e had .!I lot (If rlDS. and big surf, Including some eight rooter1 ," said Lt. nean Westgaard. He ~aid the yellow flag will be flown today, 1fter three d•ys of red nag. He atressed a dangerous situation that still exists due to the rips. Titan II Launched VANDENBERG AFB i!JPll -A 10. •Wry tall Tit.In II bla5ted from Its ood<reround launching pad tx>doy tnd thundered tcrward a prnetecte dtarret 5,CXX) ~,, owr the Patc1Ac Oteao. original status ... In other action, Ccmmuniit. ground fire a:~ down nlM American hellcopt«a cart')'lng U. S. soldier1 Intl> batue will> 200 North VieU>runeee on South Vietnam's embattled northern tier, military spokumen said. It was the heaviest one-day loss of U. 5. hollcoptlrl llbce !!>< all!H' flnt invasloo ol 11le A Shau Valley last April when 28 were lost. Fighting rag. ed throughout Ille nlghl ond Into todoy • Spokesmen 5aid thf'ee U. S. so ldiers wtr• k.lJl.ed aM 16 were wounded while killing I~ North Vietnamese In lnltial fighting five miles northeast ol Quang 'J'rl, or 10 miles south of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vlnwna, Meantime, Viet Cong mortarmen opened up early toclay on H allied positions In the Mekong Delta and followed up willl five ll"'Ulld attaclct. Seven ot the Wgetl W"ere provincltl capitals, an about &O miles from Saigon. Although JnlUal reportl!! w e r • sketc11y, allied officials said prope~ lllil por-1 lolHI WON -llJI light 1n the pred.awn ~kJ. A City of Weeping People Canadian Co uple Esca pe as Soviet Tanks Arr ive By PETER GALLEY 1U1 TtN ft Ul'I WAlOHAUS, Germany -1 got out o[ Prague today Dllead of the Russians. I left behind a city of "''eep- !ng people. My wile Pliulelte 211, and my soo and I had been ~siting Prague - we 're from Laval, Quebec, a suburb of Montreal -and Q1l last night we had heard planes overhead. We lgnared it. But the Czech couple who had in· vlted us into t.beV home, and they had refused payment, woke us up and ad· vised ua to pack up and get out quick. Ted Kennedy Tells Plan To End War WORCESTER, Ml!ss. (AP) -U.S. Sen. Edward ·M. Kennedy, (D·Mass.) called Wednesday fOr an uncondidone.1 end to tile bombing of Nol'ih Vietnam. Spe-·g politically for the first time since the assassination er his brotheT, U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (D·N.Y.), Edward Keruiedy ouUined a fOur1>0int program to end the Vietnam War, The other ttne points outlined in Kemedy's i:npar'f!d speech were: -Ne(Ol[ot. with Hanol and Ille militlary withdrawal from South Viet- nam of .U for<ign forces, both allied and N«tb Vietnamese. · -Accompany the withdrawal with "Whatever help we can give to the South Vietnamese in the bullcling of & viable }JOOOcal, economic and legal structure that will oot promptly col· lapse upon mr ~parlure." -DemO!lltrate to both Hanoi and Saigon the "sincerity of our lntientions by significantly decreasing tills year the level of our military persmnel in the Soutih ." 'nle speech made no suggestion oC political endorsement nor did he in- d.icatAt whether he would attend the Democratic National Convention. Kermecly said he was rejecting 11ug- ge1tioa1 that he retire from public ll!e, saying, " .•. There is no IM'ety ln hiding. Not f,. me, not for aay ol us here tOdey, and not for our chiJdren, who will inherit the world we make for them." Kennedy said he would not propose halting the bombing of North Vietnam 1! It would cost American lives. "But two facts are unmistakably clear." he said. He cited these as: -The bombing has not reduced the mowment of men and materlal into Ille Soutil lrom Ille N-. -"An end to tile killing in Vietnam can never be negotiated as long as the bombing continues." Kennedy hl commenting on the Soviet t roop Invasion of Czechoslovakia c a 11 e d it •·a retrogression into an age >A'e all had hoped had passed" ••• and "and af- front to decency." The Ru ssians were corning. · \Ve filled up our rented ctr and headed for the service station for gas. The people on the streets of Prague were talking among themselves and they were crying. ~ was a long line at the gas 5t.a· tion. It took half an hour before we could get gtisoline. As we crossed a bridge on the way out of tlie city, we came upon a cannon and tanks and made a detour. l remembered what our h06t h&d said th.is morning: "We have had freedom !or one and a half months i.tter 20 ~ars of being slave1 of the Russians. And now we wHl be alavts again." As we drcve· thr<>ugh Czecho6lovak towns, on the way to the Wert Germen border, I had to stop and ask direc- tions and each time the people tolemn· ly shook han<b arxl l laid, "Good luck," and usually they replied, '"Than.ks. We'll need it." When we reached the border, we found the Cz.eeh border (U81"dl -big husky fellows -crying, weeping. "Goodbye!" I velled. "Hurry, hurry,1' they llh<>uted bock. The Russians were coming. -t:Ti:li:t *** CZECHOSLOVAKIA INVAS ION • • • div-~n, one motorized i n fan try diVls1on, one ™ tank battalion, one T62 tank battalion, various artillery .and anti-tank ouUits and support troops. lieavy street figbtin~ occurred around Radio Pr.ague, which went off the air with tlhe dellant strains of "'My Homeland," the Czechoslow.k national anUlem. Fighting ended quickly. One Russian tank lay burned out by !irebcm~ near the N1dio station. A red swastika waa SCNl·wled on it.a side· by !rtedom fighters. Two ammunition trucks were blown up aOO burned out. TROLLEYS SMASHED A barricade of seven trolley cars "'AS sbattered by ta~. Four Of the cars were bw"md. out. Crowds filled Wenceslas Square, the heart of tile capital, jeering, hissing, spitting, t!lrowing stones and even wads of paper. Mothers carried babies !n tihe crowds. At Rad.le Prague, the windows were broken and the masonry pocked by bullets. Four houses up the street wen gutted. Workers at f-act.orles wallred off the job and there was a threat of a general S'tlike. The Natiional A 1 s e m b 1 y 's pro- clamaUon urged them to "stay at your place of work and defend your en· terprisff . . . even by a general strike." Sporadic shooting rang U1t00gh Prague streel!l. A blast that ap· parently came from a heavy weapcn damagt!'d a house near the Swiss Embassy. The retonnJst Czech party leader, Aleander Dubcek, and some ottier progressive member.! of the party presidium were held prl.soner11 at the Central Committee headquarter& on the Vltava Rlver. President Ludvik Svoboda wa! is'<llated at tile govern- ment headquarters, Hradcany Castle. Troops and tankJ surrounded the eas· tie. The Czechoslovak leaders issued ap- peals t.o the populalion not to resist the invaders and to go to work as usual. CLANDESTINE RADIOS Clandestine radios broadcasting sup- port for Dubcek sprang up tihroughout the country and 1tarted a campaign fer the immediate convening ol tbe ex- traordinary party congress that Iliad be-en sclleduled for Sept. 9. At the congress, Dubcek had hoped to consolidate his po&-ition by ousting con.s ervative follO'>''ers ol tile form« hard-line president, Antonin Novotey, from t.he party leadership. N0""ro4.n1 'vas ousted by Dubcek and assailed fot Stalinist excesses. At noon the radio called for a one. minute work stoppage and horn honk- Jng to demonstrate solidarity with ttie Dubcek leadership and to demand the withdrawal of the forelgn troop!. Auto horns 1ounded trom those cars that were still on the streets. Most Prague citizens anawered a call to go to work nonn.a1Jy and to car- ry on with their duties. 'Ibey found Soviet and other !oreip WW on Prague's bridges. "RUSSIANS GO HOME" Historic Charles Brldge, a 13th cen_. tury landmark, wa1 smeared wt.th signs !ayin.g "Russlam go home." Some Czecboslovab drove around town with the naUonal flag draped on their motorcycles and cars. Women With babies in ~ arms cried at the 1igbt of the Soviet .soldiers. "It's just like 1939," waa a typical comment. That was the year ot Nu.i Germany's invasion. There wu firing when the occupiers burst into Prague radio. The station, broadcastinJ later from a clandelt1ne location, said Soviet soldien bunt ill, ripped out all wires and lay on the floor while Soviet officers went around locking doors. The Czechoslovak new11 agency C'J'K gave a colorful account ol first cluhes between Czechoslovakl restltlna: the invas.lon and troopa whlch entered Prague. The acCO\.mt went thla way: "Betw.en 11:00and 11:30 at leatt 10 ambulances arrtved outllde t be building of the Czechoslovakia radio, where a Soviet tank wu on fire. Soviet soldiers were trying to extinguish the fire with clothing offered by civilians. "Just before 11:30 Ule Soviet troops opened fire with all their 11mall arms for a period of about five minutes. In one of the side streets near thtl radio building a young man wa1 abot ln the back. People !led from Ille 1hooUng and flung them.selvee to Ille ground .•• at 12:2.0 a tank on fin! wa,, aeen r r om the window (of the CTK building)." Small.arms fire later apparenUy was augmented by larger tank weapons. The news agency report said that. as shooting gained in intensity, "cannon firing can be heard." FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY CONVIMllNt T~ll ..... S .... MICAMlllllc.AIO MAITIA CHAltOI ooov.oo ... llll NEWPORT AVE., COSTA MESA 22 Y11r1 In fh• S•m• loc•tian • !'•"','t•' ! lltJ I: \ Huntington Bea eh VOL 61', NO. 20'f, 6 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES Shot Doctor Recovering ht Hospital A Huntington Harbour physician, wounded in a gun battle in which be killed his wife Sunday night, is recovering from bullet v;ounds today at H u n t i n g t o n Intercommunity Hospital. Dr. John L. Fenner, 36, of 4162 Trumbull Drive, is still listed in critical condition with two wounds in the hip and abdomen, but will survive. "He seems to be doing okay and is going to get well," said a hospital spokesman. Huntington Beach police were called to the plush home by neighbors after screams and gunshots burst out in the normally tranquil suburb oC Hun· tington Beach. Mrs. Sylvia Fenner, 39, lay dead with a .283 caliber bullet wound in the heart and the couple's daughter Kyle, 3 was hunched overlhe body, sobbing~ 'Dr. Fenner, who helped police give first aid !or hi.s grave wounds, was ap. parenUy attacked by his estranged wife and killed her in self-defense dur· ing the shoot-out. He took away the rifle, police said, but 1'.'lrs. Fenner blasted him again with a .3.57 magnum pistol. Mystery continues to surround the doctor's exact · occupation today, however, because he was not prac- ticing, but lecturing for James W. Newman and As&ociate• Inc., Of Loe Angeles. Neighbors said brochures from .the organization, listed as an educational foundatioo by the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, told ol.. seminars for couples in w h i c h participation was encouraged, but no one was forced into embarrassing spots. s eer . . ~ ~ .. ,.··~'\· IT'S HAPPENING IH PRAGUE -li<>\11<1. tank l'Uil1bUng down street brings . forth· me~o~~~ of abortive Hungarian revolt 12 years ago. How~ver, photo waf Wen in Prague, Cz!Ch oslOvakfa,.·tOday. Tbts World • WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1968 nva ·,:·.· ... , ....... was scene in fropt of Wenceslaus Statue in WenCeslaus Square in Czech catn:tal followi ng invasion by Russia and four satellite countries. Natio~al Mllseum is in background. Scorns Invasion Your .Hometown Dally Pa per TEN CENTS e s All Leaders h1 House Detention Fl'om \Vire Servlte1 PRAGUE -Invasion forces from Russla and its four satellites blasted freedom fighters Crom the streels with guns and tanks today and put the liberal leaders of Czechoslovakia under house arrest to snuff o u t the country's brave experiment 1n reform. Czechs fought back with spit, stones, jeers and even firebombs against the forces of Russia, East Germany, Poland, Hlmgary and Bulgaria. Some paid with their lives. But by nightfall, almost 24 hours after tbey crossed the border and ~hocked the world, the drama had reached the inevitable end. World leaders reacted in protest. President Johnson in Washington call· ed on the Soviet bloc forces to withdraw because "It is never too late for reason to prevail." Yugoslavia and Romania reacted with shock and denunciation of the attack. At 1 e as t several persons were reported killed and 57 wounded in fighting at Prague, Bratislava and KosiCil. There were no reports of any Americans hurt. Moscow declared the invasion, lawicbed late Tuesday night, was by invitation or "party and government leader&" in Prague to put down the threat of counterrevolution imperiline: the structure of Communism . Czechoslovakia's Foreign Ministry denied, however, that it had asked for tbe troops and, in protest notes to ad· bassadors of the five natiom:, demand· ed that they be removed. It was a case of communism fighting within ita1 own orbJt. By all ~igns, the Kremlin and its hard·line See related stories and Spokesmen for the firm have refus· ed to explain what their seminars in· volve, and have given no information about Dr. Fenner's role. Kennedy Asks Unconditional Bombing Halt Most Nations Condemn Soviet March Into Prague phflCo OD page 4 allies in Eastern Europe had decided to make Prague follow the path laid out for Hungary in 1956 rather than let the Czechoslovaks escape Moscow's hold in the way Yugoslavia did in 1948. $2 Million Parks Bond Vote Called For Valley Ballot A sz million parks bond issue Tues- day was ordered placed on the Nov. 5 ballot by the Fountain Valley City Council. Acting on Ule recommendation of the Parks and Recreation Com· mission. councilmen, who said th~y feared passage of the controversial "Watson Amendment", decided to go ahead with the bond measure even though the election is but two and a hall months away. Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger. com- menting on the Wataoo amendment, said that November passage of the bond issue is essential, because the \Vatson initiative also might 'Win voter approval. If oossed. the controversial initiative woufd substantially reduce property. tax revenues and place strict limits on a municipality's capacity to bond itself. Proposed is the complete develop- ment o{ e;gtit neig'tilorhood parks, an 8 OOO-square·foot teen center on four a~res adjacent to Fountain Valley High School, the one·acre Oak Street Park across from McDowell School and a baseball area near River Park along the Santa Ana River. Market Robbed Of $1,500 Cash A ~~-rwunan -bran· dished a cllrom•1>lated piltol elClll'"d Tuesday ni#lt -with approximately $1 ,SOO !mn the sale o( the Safeway M a r k e t at Beach Boulevard a n d McFadden Avenue in West.minster , police reported. Police uld the lone gtmman who was de8CJ'ibed only as being about 4().. year-old appeared "unexpecte<lly" behind store manager Don Houston as Houston was locking up th e day's receipt.I, after tbe marktl had ck>sed . "Give me the money," tbe bandit demanded. \ • WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, (D-Mass.) called Wednesday for en unconditional end to Ule bombing of North Vietnam. Spe-g politically fur the first time since the assassination of his brother, U .S, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (I?·N.Y.), Edward Kennedy outlined a four-point program t'o end the Vietnam \Var. The other three points outlined in Kennedy's prepared speech were : -Negotiate with HaTJ()i and the military withdrawal from South Viet· nam or all foreign forces, both allied and North Vietnamese. -Accompany tile withdrawal with "whatever help we can give to the South Vietnamese in the building of a viable poli'Ucal, economic and legal structure that will not prom·ptly col· lapse upon our departure." -Demonstrate to both Hanoi and Saigon ttie "sincerity of our intentions by significantly decreasing this yell:r the level of our military penoonel 1n tbe South." The speech made no suggestion. oC political endorsement nor did he tn- <licate whether he would attend the Democratic National Convention. Kennedy said he was rejecting sug- gestioas that he retire t'.rom public life. saying, ·· ... There is no sz.(ety in hiding. Not for me, not for any of us here today, and not for our children, who will inherit the world we make for thenl." Kennedy said he would not propose haltiilg the bombing of North Vletnam if It would. cost American Uves. "But two facll are unmistakably clear," he said. He cited these as: -The bombing bas not reduced the movement Of men and material into the South from the North. -uAn end to the killing in Vietn•m can never be negotiated as long a1 the bombing continues." Addressing the \Vorceater Cb.amber of Commerce at Kimball Hall, Holy Cross College, Kennedy said hU program "should enable us .to end our part.k:ipation in this war with honor, having fuUilled our com- mitment to prevent a North Vietnam throat to the ,oelf deermlnaUon o( the South Vietnarn«!e people." Kennedy In e<mmmllng on 111e Sovi et troop. invaaJon of Ciechoslovll:ia c a 1.1 e d it "a retrogression lnto &D oae we all had hoped had passed" ••• and "and af· front to decency ... From Wire Servlct1 WASHINGTON -President Johnson today declared "It is never too late for reason to prevail," in a statement he read before newsreel cameras and r adi O· t e 1 e vision microphones. The chief executive termed the in· vasion a "flat violation" or the United Nations charter and said the United States was "consulting urgently" with other nations in an effort to "insist upon the charter rights of Czechoslovakia and its people." * * * UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Secretary.General U Thant today de· nounced the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia as a b low to world ordeis and East-West relatll')ns. He appealed to the Soviet Union to show "utmost restraint" in Its relations with the government and people or Czechoslovakia. * * * MOSCOW -Tbe news agency Tass published today an appeal addressed to the Clechoslovak people urging them to be calm and aid Soviet and other Communist forces entering the cowrtxy. * * * BUCHAREST, Romania -Nicolae Ceausescu, president Of Romania and chje( o£ its Communist party. today condemned the Soviet .intervention in Czechoslovakia as a "big mistake," Radio Bucharest reported. '''The armed intervention I n Czechoslovakia is a big mistake and a severe danger for peace in Europe and for 1oclali1m in the world,'' Ceau.sescu told about 10,000 Romanians who demonstrated ln front of Communist party headqu.arten in sympathy with the Czechoslovaks. * * * BELGRADE -President Tito or Yugoslavia, who went his independent Conununist way In 1948 and made It stick, today denounced the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw p a c t tl'Oopl aa a "aerlous blow" to the Com· munist world. "The entering of !orelt!Jl mlllt>ry units 1nto Czechoalovakia without ln- vitatJon or approval from a legal govtrnment bas deepl)' worried w," Tito said ill a statement to tbe news service Tanjug. * * * LONDON More than 1 5 0 demoostrators chanting "Russians Go Home" and carrying anti· Soviet placards marched on the Soviet em- bassy here today. Poli ce moved quickly from behind the gates that screen the tree·lined street leading to both the Soviet and Ule nearby Czechoslovak embassy in west London and forced t h e demonstrators to the opposite side of the road. * * * PRAGUE -The U. S. Embassy to· day advised A mer i c a n s in Czechoslovakia to sit tight. "Until we hear further details, we are advising American citizens to re- main where they are," the embassy said. -· There are about 3,000 Americans in the country, m~ of them tourists. About 500 Americans are in Prague for a geology convention. * * * VIENNA -The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovalda was Russia's third use of force since World War II to keep its East European satellites in line. In June, 1953, the Red army sent tanks into East Berlin to crush a * * * Soviets Again Jammin g Radios MOSCOW (uPI) -The Soviet. to- day reirnpo&ed ja:rrvning oo Western radio broadcasts for the first Ume in many years. The Ruariart·langu.age broedcasta Of both tbe British Broo.1easting Corp, (BBC) and ttie Voice oi. America (VOA) wue reported by listeners to have been aubject to jamming during the cruclal period when Warsaw pact forces were staging their military takeover ol CzecboslOV18ki'1, Jarnmlng of foreign staUone was rtandard du.Mn• the cold war tra but tt was drooped in 11181, except for OC· easima1 ltiterference wiU\ Pe.tin& ro<lio broadclst.. workers' revolt that threatened Com- munist control over EB!t Germany. In November, 1956, Ru s s i a n armoced units smashed the Hungarian freedom revolt. Ike Still Critical But Arm y Doctors Feel Encouraged WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc· tors reported today that they were en· couraged by a certain aspect of fonner President D w i g h t D. Eisenhower's condition but they "still view the generc.l's condition as critical." In a mcilical bulletin this morning, doctors o! Walter Reed Army Hospital sald: "~n. Eisenhower &pent a very comfortable night and hi s spirits re· ma.in excellent. The trend towards a decrease of the frequency of cardiac irregularities and ep~es of rapid h~art action indicated in last night's bulletin hrui continued throughout the night. While the physicians believe this is an encouraging sign, they still view the general's condition at. critical." The matter of cardiac irregularities and episodes of rapid beart action h.ave all along been the major cause o( concern in connection w I t h Eisenhower's IDteSt heart attack, his seventh since 1955. Today's report was the first formal one from the doctors since the publica- tion of a report in the Washington Post that the doctors had employed "a new experimental heart-regulating drug" in Eisenhower's case and that this, in the opinion oC the newspaper, could n1ean that the somewhat optimisUc reports made recently by the doctors could mean that the drug was giving aome benefits. Titan II La imched VANDENBERG AFB (uPI) -A IG- 1lory tall Tll.an Jl blasted from Its mdergi'ound laanchlng pod boday .and thundered toward a prtselecte dtarget 1.000 macs over t!lll Pacllic Ocean. ( The official Soviet rl€WS agenCy Tass published an appeal to t h e Czechoslovak people to be calm and aid the occupying forces. Tass at- tributed this appeal to a group of Czechoslovak Communist party and government officials, but named no names and did not clear up the ques- tion or exacUy who 4lSked for the in- tervention. The invaders killed at least two persons and injured 25 in occupying the Prague radio station. Four were reported killed and 10 injured in the Bohemian town of Llberac. A 27.year .. old motorcyclist was reported to have died under a Soviet tank, his chest crushed. Autlhoritatlve Western s c u re e s reported that in Prague alone there were 25,CMXI invading troops, mostly Soviet but aome Polisb and Bulgarian. Every major Czectloslovak city was occupied. MIG 21 jets streaked ()Ver Prague along with twin-engine bombers. 'Ille sources said the Rus6ian forces in Prague included one airborne (See CZECH, Page 2) Orange Coa&t Weather Nice day. That's the weather- man's observation for Thursday, with the sun breaking early through patchy coastal clouds and bringing mid-70 mercury to the Orange Coast. I NSIDE TODAY The standings oft«r the first thr11 TOCe1 in tit« .S • .S mttu Olympic ~hi trialJ are givn tn todav's boating page, Pag1 25. 1111111 It IMllnt 21 C..llflftll ' ClluHilil u.n c-1n a (!'Ml...... " O..ltl Nltklt r ltlllwltl I'... It •11twt*-I I l'IMllCI 16-U ...... (1111 It ''" o..tlttT • -.. A111 L..IM9" 11 % DA[LY PILOT fr U.S. Troops l(ill 182 as. Reds Attack in Wave· SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Infantrymen todly np1Utd .lllrM C.o mm u n I• t \. , hwna2 w.v1 aUacu on an American """°'eel colllnlll near Toy Ninh city, • ldll1nc at lout 182 Viet Cong, military :: IOUl'Cff rtPQl'ted, ' -• Tbt , aOti<lb 11ear the C&mbodlan ~: border btwibt the Communist death toll in llgbting tlllJ week oorthweot o! -f Saigon to nearly llOO. . i u. s .• cure •• Rid ... e11t!m ..... eoo ,. Cons Peril Nine Guards In Ohio Pen COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Backed by police reinforcements, the wardeti of Ohio State Penitentiary met face-to· face with Nlbe\ convict leaders toda.)' and pleaded aa:aln for the reldle of nine guard.I held bo1taa:e under threat of death. Indications were the pleas of M. J. Koloski would go unheeded. "We may have to blast our way in there ... it looks like aomebody is going to get hurt before tt'1 all· over," uld Ohlo Adj. Gen. Sylv.,ttr Del Cor· 10. The meeung with the convtctJ in the courtyard of the century-old inatltution came a short Ume after lM> Ohio high- way patrolmen wearing helmets and face 1hJelda moved Into Ille prison. They relieved most of the 60 Ohio na· tlonal guard.amen who had been on 4u- ty during the night. Richard Armstrong, fiery . red- halred spokesman for the convicts, threatened at the meeUng with newsmen to immolate the hostages unles1 the reform demands were met. "They are locked in cellg .and If anybody tries to ru111h us they (the guards) will get kilted. They are goln!it: to be burned alive,'' Arm111trong said while In the background the other con- victs involved continued their chan- t.in2. "dead, dead, dead ." "We have four 10-ounce jars of lighter fluid and a half ~allon or ~asollne." Armstrong said. "Our back• are against the wall. We must win all the way or lose all the way." The war of nerves began at 10 a.m. Tuesdav and was played out throul)'.h the night as the convicts pressed for full capitulation on their demands for prtson reforms, Including removal of 111adl11tlc guard1'' accused of brutal act11. "There ts little likelihood the guard!! will be released before late evening," sald Maury Koblentz:, at.ate director of correcUons. "Our main obJecti\le 11 to get them back alive lf po111ble." Koblentz 1ald the prisoners were fearful thev would be shot even U they relea1ed ihe hostages. de 1 p It e assurances by pri101n of!iclala for their safety. At the Lebanon CorrecUonal In- stitution. 80 mUes to the west, 800 of the medium security l)r11on's 1.400 in- mates Tuesday night staged a two. hour sympathy riot. Five prisoners were shot at the Lebanon prison . Two were reported in critical condition. Huntington Ma11 Loses Surf Boards Two surf boards v.alued totally at '313 were taken In l.ag>.ma Bea<h Tuesday night from tbe car of a Hun · tl"""1 Bet.ob 1!>111. Ponce Rid the boards were taken lrom the top ol a oar in lhe 100 block Tbllla Street. 'Ille theft wu reported by Pl\lllp A. lanoarone, 317 8th SL The bo8rdl were identtfied as a west cout OoY.<ey WEiber (feather) and an &a.at roast board from the Monmouth Beoch Surf 5bo1>. O~llY PllOI ................. c.nkntle ORANOI C'OAIT l'UILllHIHO toMP'ANY k•D•rt N. W11d p,..ld9ftt Ml PU,1Uthll' J1ck t . C1rl1v Viet l'taldlnl aM o.ntr'll ~ .. ", Tho,.,11 K11Yll Edl!Of" TI.011111 >.. Mvr~litl110 Mll'llllllle Eclllor >.ID•rt w. lit" w.1111111 R1tcl 1<1IOdlto )11H1U111ro11 lletdl l!clllot Cll'y Ellllot .............. Office JOf Ith Str.1t Motnf"t AJ4r.i11 r.o. '" 7to t2Mt Oflo«Offtnl ,......, .. 011 nM w .. 1 talflft kl"'9rl c.t• MM.I: m wnr ,.., """' ~ a.ctl: m ,..,.., Al'll'IUI ~I Vlet Cq a-annortd per10GDOI can'lorl of llllo 21111 U. 8. ll>IUlry Dlvlalon -tllo a.. CUI-plan· talion, about eo mlles nor111west ol Saigon and 14 ml!•• east ol Tay Ninh city. ~ $lx of the •mored vehiOltl WtTt destroyed in the attack and one American killed and 23 wounded, the sources laid. U· s: Chllf NteCIClotor W. Avoroll ~Iman, m~ "1111 Ha n o I •ecot1aw1 tor !!Jo 11111 11m1 ~ tn Pam, denounced North Vietnam for retwln& to show any restraint in responae to U. S. actions following Pn11dent Johnaon'1 1peech Mlf'Cb 81. ln a meeCng which lasted for almoet 3-lh: houn, Harriman Uf'ged North V:letnam to restore the DMZ "to its DAILY PILOT llllf Pl'ltt. Do You Reeogni:e lt1 Modem UgbUng system Installed at HunUngton Beach Pier bas given old pier a new look. The $68,000 system, acUvated this week, baa made !he pier an attraction for night time strollers who formerly shunned lt because of dim Jtgbts. City ofllcJ -ls promlse further steps In modernizing waterfront. Airport Protest M¢eting F Scheduled for Thursday A mass meeting of opponents to the proposed county regionial a.frport ln West Orange County has been called for 8 p.m. Thursday at the Marina Tustin Man Dies In Freeway Crash A four-car pile up on southbound Newport Freeway lanes Tuesday night led to the death of Albert Lee Colgan. 27, o( Tustin, the Califcmria Highway P atzol reporled. The accident, which occurred just north of Dyer Road r~ulted from one 11188 County Trafllc 19111 138 Death Toll 126 car pushing another. O!flcer1 1aid a car driven by Donald J. Talley, 18, of Costa Mes-a, was being pushed by one driven by Simone Pieltain, 45. of Costa Mesa. The Colgan car crashed into the other two. A fow1.h car, driven by Gregory J . Moarl sey, 18, ot Anaheim, smashed into the Colgan car. Only Mrs . Pleltain was inj\ll'ed of the oth· ers involved in the fatal accident. Two Telephone Booths Bombed Two explosions which damaged telephone booths in Anaheim }ate Tuesday night are under investigation by police tod.ay. The telephone booths, located at Loara High School and at a gasoline stia.tion at the corner Of Brookhurst and. Orange 1treetis, appear to have been deliberately bombed, Anaheim officers said. No damage wa s done to bullding9 located around Ille telephone bootl1'. High ~chool cafetorium, Sprlngdalc Street and Edlnfer Avenue, Hun· ttngton Beach. The meeting has been caJied by the ci tizens , committee opposed to the Bal!a ChJca site. The ll'OOP op.pose1 locating a mejw air facility on Coest Highway near Warner Avenue . Spokesmen for the group said the meeting i& open to anyone intere&ted. Petitions opposing tile airport loca- tion will be avaiilable at the meeting. The group It opposing the Bolaa Ohica s.lte, one Of five proJ>Oled for • new CQUllty regional altport. * * * Airport Seen As Major Topic At GOP Meeting A proposal for a county regional airport in West Orange County likely will be taken into the political realm tonight at wt.a.1. has been billed as a kickoff for the re-election campaign of Assem·blyman Robert H. Burke (R· Huntington Beach ) . The airport topk 11 almost sure to dominate diecussion at the 8 p.m, meeting at the Sheraton Beoach Inn for the Huntington Valley Yo u n g Republleans. The public het been inviltd to the session and indications are that f<>es of a regional airport on the Bolsa Chica site will be there in force lo hear whet Burke baa to say about devtloplng th< facility in West Orangt County, Representatives of s e v e r a 1 homeowner associations have in· dicated Uley will be present to query Burke on his airiport stand. Who~ Usll Younger Decoy Blood Needed SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -The clty'a eight policewomen are not ex- actly enthusiastic about a judge's sug. gestion that tlley pose aa prostitutes and arrest customers. Municipal Judge F'ltz·Gcrald Ames . saying that many cues are d11m.l11td for lack of evidence, suggested lady cops become und«cover apn\I and wear mini·sktrtc. "Who dots he think we are?" snap· ped one matronly member of tlle Ion:•, in an inlA!rview TuOlday. "We're not uactly Uie swineinl type," &aid another, Claire Lutz. 43, a 19-year veteran. ''We could ~ the part, I suppose. But I don't thtnk we'd get the customen." "They're going to nted younger blood than ua for U'11 type of thln.g." sNd one who declined to be named. "EiUter Ulal or we'll have to go out and offer drutlcall)' reduced prices." "I think we mlght get the hang ol lt after a whlle," aald Marg are t Hartman, at 31 the you n g • 1 t policewoman on the force. 11HeU1 it might even be fun." ------------~~.-----~- • oril\Dll ltatus." la other action, Communi!t ground Are abot down nine A m e r i c a n belleopttri carrying V. S. soldiers into battle with 200 North VJetnrunese on Soutb Vietnam'.! embattled northern Uer, military epokesmen said. lt was tlbe heaviest one-day loss of U. S. helicopters since the allies' first lnvaslon o! the A Shau Valley last April -:II _.. loll. Fl'1!1inl rog· ed th.rough<lut the nigbt md into today. Spokesmen ll1d three U, S. 110141.ers were killed and 15 were wounded while killing 15 North Vietnamese ill inl~al fighting five miles northeaat ot Quang Tri, or 10· mile• 1outh of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vietnams . Meantime, Viet Cong mortarmen opeMd up urly todoy on 14 llllled positions in the Mekong Delta and followed up With five ground attacks. Seven of the targets were provintlal capitall, all about 60 mills from Sal1on. Although lntti•l report& w t r t sketchy, allied officials said property and personnel losses were apparently light in the predawn attaclU. A (;ity of Weeping People Canadian Couple Escape as Soviet Tanks Arrive B7 PETER GALLEY .U T•lll .. UPI WAIDllAU8, Germany -I iol out of Pr-todoy "1lead ot th• RuttilDil. I left behind a city ol w1ep. lnl people. My wile Pauletta, 29, and my "°" and I bad -viltlJDi PrAJUI -w•'re from Laval, Quebec, a suburb of M-Hl -and 1111 laot ni&lll we bad heard plane1 overhead. We JIDCftd tt. But the CHch coupla wbO bed In· vlted ua lit.o their home, and they had refuled payment, woke U1 up and ad· vlsed uo lo poet up and 1ot out quick. County Okays Sale of Two Park Parcels Sale of l1x acree of county property to Ille clty ol Huntington lleocb !or development of part of the lab area ot the propoaed Centr.al P&r'k w.u •P· provod Tueodoy by the Board ol Sllpl<Vloorl. Pl'lce lo the clty , laid to be ono-hali of m.orket value ls fl&,llOO. The &ale ccmsk.tl ol. two parcels. One, of five acree, It a tenner gravel pit wNch wu exoaveted to & depth of 40 !eet. It Is located oo tl>e norlh •Ide of Taylor Street, west of Gotdenwe1t Stroel The major portloo of the f1ve ecrt• Is covered wlth wale< in cleptha Nll!I· ing from one to 40 feet . The total lake ii t•.a acre1. The smaller parcel, less than one acre, adjoint Ille lake oa th< east •de. Police Pick Up Potted Piper A complaint of flutist& piping on the darkf'tled sands of Laguna Beach Tuesday night led to the attest of a Westminster man on suspicion of marijuana possession. Thomas James Luttio, 20, of 874 1 Palos Verde1, wu anested on Thalia Street Beach, eccording to Lt. Robert McMurray. The offlcer 1a1d police found a pipe and a bag '\Vl.th about two ounce• of martjuana in Luttio's pockets. His companion was not held. McMurray said a complaint would be sought to- day. Airline Clerk Found Shot, Choked in Tub HOLLYWOOD !UPI) -A 41-year. old airline ticket clerk wu found 1laJn 1n his apartment here Tue&day. The body of John T. Read, a necktie knotted 81Wlld the neck and bullet wounds 1n the cheat and he-ad, was lyi ng face down in a water-f1lltd bath tub. The Ru1d.an1 were comtna. We filkd up our rented cu and headed for the 1erv1ce statJ.on for gas. The people on tht atreeta of Prague were tallt1na amoaa themselves and they were cryinj:. · There was a loo.a line at the au ft.a· tkln. It took hat! an hour before we could aet aasollnt. As we crossed a brld&e oo the way out of the city, we came µpon a cannon and tanks and made a detour. I remembered what our host hc:d tald thla mornin&: "We have had freedom for one and a bat! mOOlhs after 20 years of being slaves of the Russians. And now we will be 1laves again." As we drove through CzechOll<lv&k towns, on the way to the West German border, I had to stop and ask direc- tions and each time the people solemn- ly shook hand! and I l&id, 4'Good luck," and usually they replild,' "Th&nk:s. We'll need it." When we reached the border, we found the Czech border l\W'(1s -bJg husky fellows -crying, weeptnf. "Goodbyel1' I yelled. "Hurry, hurrl4," they shouted back. The Russians were ccmting. * * * * * * CZECHOSLOVAKIA INVASION ••• divUlon, one mot.orized 1 n f a n t r y division, one TM tank battllllon, one T62 tank battalion, various artillery and anti-tank ouWll 1nd support troops, Heavy atnet fighting occurred around R&dd.o PNlfUe, which ~nt off Ille a1r with tile dellant strains ol "My Homeland," the Czeohollovak national anthem. Flehlinl ended quickly, One Russian tank lay burned out by firebomb! ne.ar t:he rad.lo 1tatlon. A red 1w.attika wu acrawled on its 11de by· freedom filhters. Two ammunillon trucka were blown up and burned out. TROLLEYS SMASHED A barricade ol seven trolley cars w.as shattered by tankt. Four of the cars were burned out. CrO'wde filled Wtmce!Las Square, tile bean o! the capital, jeering, hissing, apl.tUng, tm-awtn:g stones and even wads of paper. Mothers carried babies in the crowds. At Riadio Prague, the windows were brok<n and the masomy pocked by bullets. Four houses up the street were gutted. Workers at factories walked off the job and ttl.eH wa1 a threat ot a a:eneral strike. The National A 1 1 em b I y •' pro- clamaUon urged them to "stay at your place of work and defend your en· terp:ri.ses . . . eve n by a general strike." Sporadic shooting rang through Prague streets. A blast that ap- parently came from .a heavy weapon damaged a house near the Swiss Embassy. The ttionn1~t Czeclt party leader, Alexander Dubcek, and some ottJer progressive members or t.he party presidium were held prhorters at Ule Central Committee h~dquarters on the Vltava ftlver . President Ludvik Svoboda was isolated at the govern· ment headquarter!, Hradcal'ly castle. Troops and tanks surrounded the cas- tle. The Czech0&lovak leaders issued ap- peals to the populaUOn not to resist the invaders and to go to work M usual. CLANDESTINE RADIOS Clandestine r.dio1 broadcasting wr· port f()f Dubcek sprang up throughout the country and 1tarted a campa.lgn for the immediate convening of llbe ex· traordinary party congress that had been scheduled for Sept. 9. At the congress, Dubcek had hoped to consolidate his p()Sitd:on by ousting conservative followers o£ the ~nner hard-line president, Antonin Novotny, from the party leader$hip. Novotny was ousted by Dubcek and &SNiled for Stalinist excesses. At noon the radio called fDr a one- minute work stoppage and horn honk- ing to dem onstrate solidarity with the Dubcek leadership and to demand the withdrawal ol. the foreign troops. Auto horns sounded frMl those cars that were still on the streets. Most Prague citizens answered a call to go to work normally .and to car- ry on With thelr duties . They found Soviet and other foreign tanks on Prague's bridges. "RUSSIANS GO HOME" Historic Charles Bridge, a 131h cen- tury landmark, was smeared with slgns saying "RussLans go home." Some Czechoslovaks drove around town with the national flag draped on their motorcycles and cars. Women with babies 1n their .arms cried at the sight of the Soviet 10ld1ers. "It's juat llke 1939," was a typical comment. That was the year ol NW Germany's invasion. There was firing when the occupJer1 burst Into Prague radio. The atatlon, broadcutlng later from a clandeetine location, said Soviet soldiert burat In, ripped out all wires and Jay on the floor while Soviet officers went around locking doors. The Czechoslovak news agency Cl'K gave a colorful account of first clashes betwe'n Czechoslovaks resl1Ung the invasion and troops which entered Prague. The accollllt went this way: "Between 11:00and11:30 at least 10 ambulances arrived outside the building Of the Czechoslovakia radio, where a SOViet tank was on fire. Soviet soldiers were trying to extinguish the fire with clothing offered by civilians. "Ju.st before 11 :30 Uie Soviet troops opened fire with all their amall arms for a period of about five minutes. In one Of the 1ide streets near the radio building a young man was shot in Ule back. People fled from the shooting and flung themselves to the ground ••. .at 12 : 20 a tank on fire wu seen l r o m the window (of the CTI< buildtll.g)," Small-arms fire later apparently was augmented by larger tank wea(>(?I1s. The news .agt!Dcy report 1aid that, as shooUng gained in lntenstty, "cannon firing can be be.ard." FRO M CALIFORNIA ARTISANS. ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY r~··~"l'"t tUll ,~\ r' . -- 1121 NEW,ORT AVI, COSTA MESA 22 Y••rt In 'The S11t11 loc1tlon / l'HDHI - ' '. i' _., t •~I .._ • t • ' ' ..6. .._.,. 't ,. ' ' "' --op: P J oo1 J ,_ J t 3 12 t pa L a s ; cs $ a s 4 0 I s • • • • • •• • • • • ' ., . -. _. Laguna Bea~h - DAILY PILOT Your Hometown EDI TION Dally Paper VOL 61, NO. 201, 7 SECTI ONS, 72 PAGES LAGUNA BEACH, CALIFORNIA WEONESDA Y, AUGUST_ ~I, 1968 TEN CENTS Laguna Moves to Beat Watson Initiative By RICHARD P. NALL OI 1'1'11 Dtlly l"lltl 5!eN 'Vhe city of Laguna Beach Le; trying to squeak saJe of bonds for ?\.fain Beach purchase under the wire before the "Watson Initiative" comes before California voters Nov , 5. Fresh from a Washington. D. C. session with the Internal Revenue Serv:ice (IBS), City Manager James Myste1·ious Body Found Off Coast The body of an uni~ntified man in hi!: mld-40's was fished out of tht sea betw'een Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach Otis morning by Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen. The dead man was found floating face down, fully clotlhed except fOr shoes, .about 9 a.m. by a passing sports fi.5ihing boat, according to ooun· ty Harbor Master Al Obe!"g. Identification on ttle body bore the name of a Plboenix, Ariz. resident. Newport Beach polke noted, however. tlllat the name found in a wallet did not match w it h any, missing person reports on file looally. Oberg said it appeared llhe. dead man had been in the water for •·a day or so." He added there were no visible external injuries to indicate the cause of deatih. The body was spotted drifting .about 200 yards offshore, l lh mile,, &OUth of · Corona del Mar near Abalone Point. Officials said a wallet on l!le dead man contained money. They refused to speculate oo the possibility of foul play without further inv-estigation. , Ike Still Critical But Ai·my Doctors Feel Encouraged WASHINGTON (APl -Army doc• tors reported today that they \\"ere en· couraged by a certain aspect o! former President D w i g h t D. Eisenhower's condition but they "still view the genert.!'s condition as critical." In a medical bulletin this morning. doctors of 'Valter Reed Army Hospital said: "Gen. Eisenhower spent a very comfortable night and his spirits re· main excellent. The trend towards a decrease of the frequency of cardic:.c irregularities and episodes of rapid heart action indicated in last night's bulletin has cootinued throughout the night. While the physicians believe this is an encouraging sign, ttley still view the general's condition a~ criUcal." The matter of cardiac irregularities and episodes of rapid heart action have all along been the major cause of concern in connection 1IV i t h Eisenhower's latest heart attack, his seventh since 1955. Today's report was the first formal one from the doctors since the publica· tion or a report in the Washington Post that the doctors bad employed "a new experimental heart-regulating drug" in Eisenhower's case and that this, in lhe opinion of the newspaper, could n1ean that the JOmtwh.at optimistic reports made recently by the doctors could mean that tbe druc wu glvlne some benefits. Two Boys Sought For Brush Bl aze Laguna Beach liremen dou~ed a one acre brush fire during the noon hOUr Tuesd&')' and today are seeking two boys believed to have caused it. Other youngsters at the scene ran home to ta-ll firemen and later said two boys fled as tlle blaze w.u: break· ing out. ~ was no damage. D. \\'eaton reported today lihat he's keeping his fingers croosed. Fearing that passage or the in· iti.3tive would snuff out city bond sales. \Vheaton attempted to cut through Wl85hington red tape to get the Main Beach show on the road. IRS blessing is necessary to declare that bond earnings for th e i r purchasers would be tax free. A non· profit corporation would sell bhc bonds for the city. However, \Vhea4>n said il the bonds are not sold by Nov. 5 and the in- itiative measure to phase out property tax and sharply limit bonded in- debtedness lihoold Pas5: "There's no way we could sell Ule bonds : we'd have to fwget it." Wheaton estimated that the bond eer issue for lease·purohase aequ.lsition and develcpment of about 1,000 feet of beach might be for $3 million to $31h. ntillion. Th.is v.·:.;1 depend oo negotiations with owners or the property. The city .has ialreaoy made a deal on three of the ~ls with separate owners for $50.000 (to the 11-0ys' Club). $43,000 to anotiher owner and $65,000 to aootber. nva \Vheaton is negotiating currently \vitlh otlher owners. The city is also negotiating with the largest owner. Consolidated ~1ortgage Co. v.·hich ask· ed $1. 75 million fOf' its bold.ings. Negotiations broke down alter the city olfered a lower figure and the matter seemed headed ror a Superior Court condemnation suit which would fix I.he pri<:e. IT'S HAPPENING IN PRAGUE -Soviet tank rumbling down street brings forth memories of abortive Hungarian revolt 12 years ago. 1-lowever, pboto was taken in Prague. Czechoslovakia, today. This was scene in front of Wenceslaus Statue in \Venceslaus Square in Czech capital following invasion by Russia and four satellite countries. National Museum is in background. Father Rescues Daughter Laguna Non-swimmer Saves Girl from Riptide A desperate father who couldn't swim challenged the heavy surf in South Laguna Tuesday night to reach his 19-year old daughter who was being swept seaward in a riptide. A South Laguna boy kept the two afloat while San Clemente lifeguards Sped to the scene at the West Street Beach. ''It will look a lot calmer today. But when the people go out. the rips can still get to them. It's a yellow flag to- day, but it's misleading. 1 t · s dangerous," said Stubbs. Today's surf is expected to be from five to six feet. Lagu'na Beach lifeguards pulled 49 swimmers out of four· to six·foot surf, including 14 rescues at Victoria Beach. "\Ve had a lot of rips. and big surf, Including some eight footers ," said Lt. Dean \liestgaard. l-Ie said the yellow flag wi ll be flown today, after three days or red £lag. l-le stressed a dangerous situation that still exists due to the rips. Captain Phil Stubbs said the guards received a call about 7:45 from a s th v 0 t A t • t citizen saying someone in 111. water OU le TWmese r lS was yelling for help. •' The department's night patrol unit was dispatched. In the meantime. as tbe girl, iden- ti!ied as Arthis Fleming of Placentia, was crying for help. her father, Arthur Fleming. though a non swimmer, struggled through U1r breakers in an attempt to reach hls daughter. A South Laguna boy identified as Ricky Rich swam to their aid, and kept the two afloat until the guards reached the scene appro1imately 13 minutes; later. Guard Jon West brought the father and daughter back to shore, with the assistance of Rich. ~ Guards said Miss Fleming was in good condition. but her father was in a st.ate of shock. That rescue was two of 64 rescues recorded by San Clemente lifeguards in the six. to eight·foot surf Tuesday. San Clemente guards said the yellow (caution) flag will be flown today, but exprf:ssed concern over swimmers who will forget that dangerous rips &tiU plague tbe area beaches. Planning LaguTW Visit ' A VK?tnamese artist examining America and ita art in a State Depart· mcnt tour will .rive in Laguna Beach Saturday "Where three festivals c:.wa.it bis viewing. Nguyen Cao Nguyen and his wile are to arrive at the Sur land Sand Hotel at - a.m., aooordlng to chamber of com· merce officials, They are from Saigon. Nguyen, a sell<ougllt painter and former student of aero n a u tic a l engineering (Fn!n<h MT Academy), held hb fir-rt one-man shOw in Manilla irl 1958. lie works in several media, tn. eluding Ule t!JlCient art of woodblocks which he is credited with rein· troducing to Vietnam. His most dJstinctive medium is tacquer used for palnllngs. Nguyen's main subjMU in the la<:· quer works are montagnards, peasants, women .and w or km e n • Thames cX his wooab1ock prints are more c lassical but the emphusis is on people. Nguyen exhibited In the 1''irst P<1rls Biennial in 1961 . was c0mmi.ssioner of paintings in 1967 £or the Vietnamese Army Wri!Cl's and Artists Assn. and has occasionally published blank verse poetry. The Nguyens will be hosted at a 1 p.m . luncheon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Sayler, 2317 S. Coost Highway, where they are to meet arti&t.1: and convnunity leaders. During U'le afternoon ttiey are to tour the Laguna Beach Art Associa- tion gallery where the 'AU C&Utornia Sh ow is hung, Challis GaJlerie11, the Splinter Festival, the Sawdust Fe1Uval and the Festival oC AN. They will visit the Golden Kiln to see ceramics. dine at the Jo' e st I v·a I restwrant and tee the Pag@ant Of the Mastera. On Sunday ttle N(ll)'CDS are to luvo for Dlsrre;yland.1 Hearing Slated On Top of World Highwa y Link By TOl\1 GORMAN Of tf!ll 01111 Piiot S11ff A public hearing is scheduled Sept. 3 to study construction or a road to link the Top of the World with Caflyon Acres Drive in Laguna Beach. Depending on the outcome of the meeting, the city Planning Com· mission is expected to make recom· mendations to the City Council con· cenring the proposed road, which would wind up Temple Hills. The city woutd then hold another public hec.ring berore a decision on the Canyon Acres extension. City Planner Al Autty explained the road would be a "medium range pro- ject." There have been no estimates of the cost £or the extension, which would be in excess Of 1.5 miles. The city's engineering department views the project favorably, since up· per elevation area Top 'or the World circulstion would be increased. Besides linking the Top or the \Vorld wltb Laguna Canyon Road, it would be: a shortcut to Mystic Jlills. and possibly, Arch Beach Heights. "The road could -save untold minutes for motorists coming from the Can- yoo," Autry said, "It could cut dawn slgnili<antly lhe amount of traffie that is i>resently routed through the ceotraJ ba&n." "But Mf'tMly, there are not MOU£b !Unds to uridemke this project in lhe very near ruture," Autry added. There b oo date in mind for the project to begin. "Something could hoppeti next month to change the picture," he said. There are. ftve parttls o( land Im· m<dlately af/oct<d by lhe exteq.,ioo. "It J"'Uld fie w their (tl1e oWn<lrs) ad· vlJllOie to dtdic<lte land for tl>e riiht (S<• ROAD, Pare %) lloo·ever, \Vheaton said the city Is continuing to <li£<russ settlement of ils condemnation with the president of Consolidated in hcpes of a compromise rather than going to court. or his IRS session. \Vheatoo said. ..They explained their time problem and seemed sympathetic to our need. All v.·e can do is keep our lingers crossed." e s All Leaders In House , Detention From \Vire Servtce1 PRAGUE -Invasion forces from R ussia and its four satellites blasted freedom lighters from the streets with guns and tanks today and put the liberal leaders of Czechoslovakia under house arrest to snuff o u t the country's brave experiment in refonn. Czechs fought back with spit, stones, jeers and even firebombs against the forces of Russia. East Germaliy, Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria. Some paid with their lives. But by ni~hUall, (See Additional Stories, P•g• 4) almost 24 hours after they crossed the border and shocked the world, the drama had reached the inevitable end. \Vorld leaders reacted in protest. President Johnson in \Vashington call· ed on the Soviet bloc forces to withdraw because "It is never too lafe for reason to prevail." Yugoslavia .tnd Romania reacted with shock and denunciation of the attack. At I e as t several persons were reported killed and 57 wounded in fighting at Prague, Bratislava and Kosice. There were no reports of any Americans hurt. Moscow decl31'1!d the invasion, launched late Tuesday night, was by invitation of "party and government leaders'' in Prague to put down the threat or counterrevolution imperiling the structure or Communism. Czechoslovakia's Foreign Ministry denied, however. that it had asked for the b'oops and. in protest notes to ad· bassadors of the five nations, demand· ed that they be r emoved. It was a case of communism lighting within its own orbit. By all signs, the Kremlin and its hard·line allies in Eastern Europe had decided to make Prague follow the path laid out for Hungary in 1956 rather than Jet the Czechoslovaks escape Moscow's hold in the way Yugoslavia did 1n 1948. The official Soviet news agency Tass published an appeal to t h. e Czechoslovak people to be calm and aid the occupying focces. Tass at· tributed this appeal to a group of Czechoslovak Communist party and government officials, but named no names.and d1d not clear up the ques· tion of exactly who asked for the in· terventioo. The invaders killed at least two persons and Injured 25 in occupying the Prague radio station. Four were (See CZECH, Page 21 Orange Cout Weather Nice day. That's the weather· man's observation for Thursday, with the sun breakini: early through patchy coastal clouds Jnd bringing mid· 70 mercury to the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY The standings after the fir1t thrte mets in tht S.5 mettr Olpipic JIQCht triall art gioen tn iocfav'• boating pagt, Paoe 25. l lr1fll ,, ...... " C.ltttn!ll ' Clu.lln..I u.n ,_ a (,....._,.... '' °""' Nt>t• 1 llfltwlel fl... 11 ll!twt•a._. I ,...... , .. ., "" C..111 11 ..,, htfttY ,. -" AllllL_..,.. 11 l I I 2 _!A.ll!_!tLo~r _______ wcc•:.:d•..:•_;•~..:"'-' -''..:'c..."_1 _n..c.._1_%1 ___ U.S. Troops l(il·l 182 as Reds Attacl{ in Wave SAIGON CUP!l -U.S. Infantrymen today repelled three c. o m m u n i s t human wave atll.ckl on an American armored column near Tay Ninh city, killing nt least 182 \'let Cong, military 1ourcea reported. nit acUon near U1e can1bodian border brou&lll the Communist death toll ln figt.tlng: this week northwost Of Saigon to nearly lOO. U. S. 1ource1 Hid ill estimated 600 Prejudice Topic for Councilmen A copy of a newspaper ad· vertisement and the signa.turet1 of more Utan 90 persons c a 11 i n g lhemselvea "Individual Cit I z en 1 Agalnrt Prejudice" are acheduled. for LRf!:na Beach Council 1 t t e n t i o n tonight. The body of the advertllaement in the . Aug. 5 edition of the South Coast Laguna News-Post . rel.ates to e.arl~er council chamber ag1tat1on over hippies in the Art Colony. "We do not agree with the demands for discriminatory harassment at re· cent council me&tinga. and will not allow the language of hatred to speak for us," the text states in part. It asks the council to call a halt to "public indulgence of irrational fear". Signatures include those of Mrs. Luci Berkl>Witz, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darrow, Mr. and Mrs. Karel de Smit. Mr. and Mrs . Fred Kingsland, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Knutsen, Mr. and Mrs. Michael McFadden, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Munsat, Mr. and Mrs. Geo!• frey Riker, Dr. and Mrs. C. J~. Richardsion, and Mr. and Mrs. Denms Madison. Also on the agenda ls a letter from Harry J. Lawrence, chamber presi· dent, commending the city .and police for effort& to protect the best image of Laguna. Youth Injm·es Head in Dive To Flee Police An 18-year-old lunged lrom the arms of Laguna Beach policemen Tuesday night and dived through a second story window, &mashing head.first onto the concrete patio below. The pile driving dive of Mark l·lar~y ''Blue Boy" Farkas was a tragic climax to an apparent marijuana par· ty. The Arcadia youth was unconscious thit morning and in serious condition tn an intensive care ward of Orange County Medical Center. He apparently suffered a skull fracture in the plunge. Police Lt. Robert McMurray said Officer• Roy Campbell and Ken Carter went to the address at 709 Catalina St. to investigate a complaint of loud music. Officers entered. he said, when they smelled the pungent odor of mari· juana. McMurray said three girls jumped out of the second 11tory window as police entered. They Ced on foot unhurt. 1n the ensuing scuffle, Campbell managed to handcuff one young man as Carter 1truggled with Farkas. Campbell released hb prisooer to help Carter and the still handcuffed youth jumped to freedom and fled on foot. McMurray said Farka.! then broke free and made hlt phmge. The officer said police found 12 marijuana cigarets in the apartment. Police today are seeking the three young women, and the young man, with one wrist handcuffed. DAILY PllOT i.,... ....... c.llfentle ORI.NCI£ COAST PiJILl$ttlNG COMl"ANY R•b•rf N. W••d PmldMll ll'ICI l"loltllltl'I« J1t~ R. Cv1l•y V!<t Prn!Ot11! •11d Ot'nllr•I Mellet~• lhom•1 l(1n1I fdllor TlioM1s A. Mvrph;n, Mt.,,.tlfl• f:.11or Ri<.li•ri P. Nill P1vl Niutn L1911111 .. ~ A<l~•Htl"' CllY ldl!or Dlr«tor 1.41pM IHclt Ofltw 212 For11t -"'••· M11lint Aclir111: P.O. lt1t ''' tJ•SJ OfMf Offt<.ft Co.le MfoM: l)O Wttl 11'1' It•"' Nl'll'JI0'1a./ldl:1211 W"I li.1b0• •llllll'l'f'd Hlli"tlntlOfl lttCfl: lOJ Siii lltMl ··/ Viet Cone &tUlc11.td armored penoanel carrloro of lho 25lb U. S. !nlenl>f Division neat the Bto Cu1 rubber plan· tation, about 60 mHea o«tbweat of Saigon and l4 miles eost of Tay Ninh city. Six of the ru-;nored ve hicles were destroyed ia the art.tack and one American killed aud 23 wounded, the &0urce1 aaid . U. s. ChJel Necollator w. Avereu llm1man. moellna with H a n o t neaot!aton !or the 111!11 limo !«lay bi Part., denounced North Vietnam for refusing to show t ny restraint ln rttp0nse to U. S. actJ.ol'I& following President Johnson '1 speech March 31, In a meet:.nt Which lasted for alm<>et 3·1h. hours, Harriman urged North Vietnam to re1tore the DMZ "to Its ortamat 1tatu.1." la otbtr action, communist ground ftre abot doWn nllle A m' er I can bellcoptera carrying U. S. soldie.rs into battle with 200 NorUt VlctnMiese on South . Vietnam's embattled northern tJer, military spokesmen 1aid. It was the heaviest one-day lo5s of U, S. helicopters since the allies' first inva&loo --0! the A Shau V1dley last April wb111 2t Wll'l loiL Fi&IJ!JJlt••I· ed throughout the night £nd into today. Spokesmen &aid three U. S. soldlers were killed and IS ware wounded while killing 15 North Vietnamese In initial fighting live miles oortheut of Quan~ Tri, or IO miles sou'th or the Demilitarized Zone uparatiD& tbe two Vietnam!. Meanllmt, Viet Con: mortarmen ope...S up ear17 today Cll 14 a111ed positions in the Mekong Delta aiid followed up •1th Dve ground attacks. Seven of the targets were provincial capltalJ, all about 50 miles from Saigon. AlB1ou1h lniUal report1 w e r e sketchy. Dilled official.s a aid property and personnel losses were apparenUf light in the predawn attack!. Laguiiagrim By Phil lntorl1ndl Maritime Museum Mulled Applicant Asks Planners for Third Deferment Wl~ Laguna Beach ever have • m'W"ltime m\J81!um ad antique thop lo • 19th ceotury building? This quesUon iJ preaently being toas· ed around at City Hall, Where l\uth Taylor asked for her thirn deferment· by the city Plannirrg Commission Mon- day night. Mrs. Taylor owns property at 563 S. Coast ¥Hghway. The land is zoned in three different classlfieatJons. One building that is partially lying In an R· 3 (multiple residential) zone was built in the 1800's. She is hoping to bave the land rezoned, which would permit her to change the house to an antique shop and maritime mu.se@l. • The problem : the building must pass cw-rent building oodes. There ii doubt, Reeves Ranch "Hey M•cl Wt w•nt to 1111om1 •rt; wh1r1 do w1 go? Development Council Expected to Okay Plans Bared Development plans for the 1,000-acre . ReeV'e3 Ranch in Capistrano Beach T h F Hik T • ht which will lndude 80 acres of waterways and lakes, 420 acres of ras ee e 0 nig open space and • :J6.hcle golf course were disclosed this week by a Laguna Beaclt councilmen tonight are expected to increase the monthly charge for trash and garbage col· lection from fl.50 to $1.75 on the atrengtlt of earlier &tudy and report&. In other business the council will: -Consider transfer application of the liquor license at Victor Hugo Inn from Fred Harvey, a New Jersey Corp. to TFHD Corp., organized in Delaware. -Take up again the cost of un- dergroundlng utilities In proposed Assessment District 66·1 in Arch Beach Heights . 1 -Likely approve an agreement with the Chamber of Commerce by which the city will again furnish '3,;,000 for From Pllfle 1 ROAD .•• ol way. Their property values would go way up. Currently, some of the land is completely inaccessible," Autry said. "But there are some praperty owners down below, where the b'ees are, that would not want to be disturb· ed. They'd probably be against the project," he added . "Based on the first public. hearing, any nwnber oi things can happen." sai.d the city plamer. U constructed, the road would be 56 feet wide, wit4l curbs and gutters. Autry said it would be much like Glen· neyre Street. There would be tour swltthbackls, or haWpin5. The gr.ade would range from fOW' to JS percent. Tustin Man Dies In Freeway Crash promotion and advertising. -Consider a letter from Lagunan Alex H.Ukevitch cautioning of the dangers of ocean pollution during economic expansion expected locally in the next few years. -Comlder for e second reading an ordinance prohibiting left turns from the Tic Toe Market driveway onto Thalla Street at Glenneyre. -Likely •el for Sept. 18 pubUc hear· Ing on bulky a·mendment.s on zoning to ordinance 209. -Probably set a public hearing Sept. 18 on t11e change of 1thtidistrict (zoning) application of Harry Willats and other property owners between St. Ann's Drive and Thalia Street below Coast Highway. The Planning Com· mission r«<nnmended against the change. -Consider a reoommendation for Improvement of Cedar Way between Acacla Drive and Rosa Bonheur Street. -Likely set an adjourned meeting Thur9d:ay, Aug. 29 to fix the municipal tax rate for 1968-69. Service Slated For Girl Victim Of Car Accident Rosary will be recited Thursday for Chri!tina Lynn Nowak, 17, Of Irvine, who was fatally injured Monday in a car crash near El Toro. reprttentative of the Mormon Church. David llailht of Brigham Young University, speaking before t h e Capistrano Unified School District Board on a proposed achool &ite, divulged the plan. Included in t h e development are construction Of condom1niurn·type clusters to house nearly 6,000 people, shavlng the 100-foot bluffs to create an incline to the sea and elimination of vehicular traffic by tile use of huge un· derground parking spaces an d pedestrian walkways. The property lies astride the San Diego Freeway and extends-to the bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Part of it is in San Clemente and1part in county area. Ruman: have circulated that the church planned to btlild a university on the property. It wag lndieated that the housing development in the park-like layout could begin within two years. Police Pick Up Potted Piper A complaint of flutists piping on the darkened sands of Laguna Beach Tuesday night led to the arrest of a Westminster man on suspicion of marijuana possession . Thomas James Luttio, 2(1, of 8741 Palos Verdes, was arrested on Thalia Street Beach , according to Lt. Robert McMurray. The officer said police found a pipe and a bag witit about two ounces of marijuana in Luttio's pockets. J-Hs companion \Vas not held. McMurray said a complaint would be sought to· day. Ji.,. ca .. \\ill be heard Oct. 21. In oth<r don at Monday night'• meeting: John Downer, at m Arch St., wa s g1lven permission to build a third fami· ly unit onto an existing duplex. -Permission was denied to Stanley C. Allen, a car dealer at 1102 So. Coast 1-lwy.. who asked that street im· provement requirements be waived. He had hoped to open a car lot along Oak Street, but the city required that impl"()vement3 on Oak Street would have to be made first. -Burton S. Dake Jr. was given per!ltlission to resubdJvide lots along the 100 block of Nyes Place th&t have already been subdivided. The land is part of tbe Arch Boach Helil>ll Ad· dltloo . -Ruttl K. La Porto was gi,.., pennission for division of land alon£ the 400 block of Blwnont Street. -Permlssioo was denied to Melvin Erger, 1339 Dunning Dr., for approval of home occupation. He wa,, not present. and not enough evidence was available to grant permission. -Vasco Batschweroff. 2919 Chateau Way, was givm permission to run a mWl order agency out of his home. -The variance issued to the Canyon Club was reviewed after one year. They have been required to build a parking ~ot and landscape the property near tbetr club at 1945 Laguna Canyon Rd, CZECHOSLO~~~i~e I~ASION • • • reported killed and 10 injured in the Bohemian town of Llberac. A 27-year- ol,d motorcyclist was reported to have died under a Soviet tank, hls chest crushed. .4.uthoritative Western source s reported that in Prague alone ttiere were 25,00> invading troops, mostly Soviet but some Polidl and Bulgarian. Every major Czechoslovak city was occupied. MIG 21 jets streaked over Prague along with twin-engine bombers. The sources said the Russian forces ln Prague included one airborne division, one motorized inf antr y division, one T55 tank battalion, one T62 tank battalion, vari0\14 artillery .and anti-tank outfit& and support troops. Heavy .street fighting occurred around Radio Prague, which went off the air with the defiant stra.ins ol. j ~My Home),ijnd. •:~!;Czechoslovak national anthem. i:'ightlng ended quickly. One Russian tank lay burned out by firebombs near the radio station. A red swa6tika was scrawled on its side by freedom fighters. Two ammunition trucks were blown up and burned out. A barricade of seven trolley cars was shattered by tank6. Four of the cars were burned out. Crowds filled Wenceslas Square, the heart of the capital, jeering, hissing, spitting, ttirowing stones and even wads of paper. Mothers carried babies in tile crDWds. At Radio Prague, the windows were broken and the masMTy pocked by bullets. Four houses up the street were gutted. \Vorkers at factories walked off the job and there was a threat of a general strike. The National A s 1 em bl y 's pro· clamation urged them to "stay at your place of work and defend your en· 'terprises . . . even by a genffal strik.e." Sporadic shooting Nirtg through Prague streets. A blast that ap· parently came from a heavy weapon damaged a house near the Swiss Embassy. The reformist Czech party leader, Alexander Dubcek, and some other progressive members of the party presidium were held prisoners at the Central Committee headquarters on Ule Vltava River. President Ludvik Svoboda Wr& isolated at Ult govern- ment headquarters, Hradcany Castle. Troops and tanks surrounded tile cas· Ue. The Czechoslovak leaders is&ued ap-. peals to the populat;)oq not to resist the invaders and to go to work as usual. Clandestine radios broadcasting sup- port !or Dubcek sprang up tbrougbout the country and &tarted a campaign for the immediate convening of the e"· traordinary party congress that had been scheduled for Sept 9. At the congress, Dubcek had hoped 1:o consolidiate hls )>OSitli'on by ouating conservative followers of the former hard-line president, Antonin Novotny, from the party leadership. Novotny was ousted by Dubcek and assailed for Stalinist excesses. At noon the radio called far a one- minute work stoppage and horn honk· ing to demonstrate solidarity with t.he Dubcek leadership and to demand the withdrawal ol the foreign troops. Auto horns sounded from those CUI that were still on the streets. Most Prague citizens answered a call to go to work normally ai;id to car- ry on with their duties. They found Soviet and other foreign tanks on Prague's bridges. Hi storic Charles Bridge, a 13th cen· tw·y landmark, was smeared with s:gns saying "Russians go home." Some Czechoslovaks drove around town with the national flag draped on their motorcycles and cars. Women with babies in their arms cried at the sight of the Soviet soldiers. "It's ju.st like 1939," was a typical comment. That was the year of Naz.i Germany's invasion. There was firing when the occupiers burst into Prague radio. The atation, broadcasting later from a clandet:tine location, said Soviet soldiers burst in, ripped out all wires and lay (ID the floor wbHe Soviet officers went around locking doors . A four-car pile up on southbound Newport Freeway lanes Tuesday night led to the death of Albert Lee Colgan, 27, of. Tustin, tile California Highway Patrol reported. Miss Nowak and the driver of the car. Robert B. Hellstrom, also 17, of Irvine, were killed almost instantly \vhen the car blew a tire and struck a utility pole on Barranca Road near Culver Drive . Both were June graduates of Mission Viejo High School. Recitation of the rosary will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. at Pacific View Chapel. A requiem mass will be said Friday at 9 a .m. at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Facility Chapel. In· tennent will (ollew at Pacific View Memorial Park. FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY The accident, whlch occurred just north of Dyer Road resulted from one 1968 County Traffic 1967 138 Death Toll 126 car pushing f.nother. Officers said a car driven by Dona~d J. Talley, 18. of Costa Mesa, was being pushed by one driven by Simone Pieltain, 45, of Costa Mesa. The Colgan car crashed into the other tv.'O . A fourth car, driven by Gregory J . Moarlsey, 18, of Anaheim , smashed into the Colgan car. Only Mrs. Pi('ltain was injured of the olh· ers involved in the fatal acciderlt. Miss Nowak is survived by lier mother and stepfather l\1aj. and Mrs. Chester L. Whipple. 17962 Gillman St., Irvine, father, Stephen J. Nowak , En- cino; brothers Gregory John Nowak, Encino; Kevin Nowak. Irvine; sister, Leslie, Irvine; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . Stephen J. Nowak. Los Angeles ; mater n a 1 grandfather. Lowell L. Spurlock, Ontario and maternal grandmother, Lovie Spurlock. Lo6: Gatos. Who, Us? Younger Decoy Blood Needed SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Th e city's eight po,licewomen are not ex· actly enthu&lastic about a judge's rug. gcstion that they pose as prostitutes and aJTest customers. 1'1unlclpa1 Judge FlU·Gt.rald Ame~. saying that many ca~es M'C!' dlsml!sed for lack or e\•1dence, suuested lady cops become undercover aa:enta and wear mlni·skirt.1. "\Vho does lie th1nk we are?" snap- ped one matronly mtmbu Of the lon:e, in an lntervfew Tuead&J. "We're net ua<Uy tilt swinging type," said anothu, Claire Lutz, 43, • l&-year veterari. "We could act the part, l auppose. But I don't think we'd get the customers." "They're Q:oing to need younger blood than us for thJs type of thin&." slid one ~'ho declined to be named. "EiU1er that or we'll have to go out and offer drastically reduced prices ." "I think we milht 1et tile bani of it after a while," said Margaret Hartman, at 31 the yo u n I e 1 t Po)kowoman cm 111• lorn. '11.U, it might even be fun." toNVIN!ENT Tell NJ IANKMll!lttCAltD MAJ'rlk CHMGI ("""(0111>1! 11111 OOltAOO ... J. C. fiumphrieJ Jeweler Jill NEWPORT AV!.. COSTA MESA 22 Y11r1 '" Thi S1m1 loc1tion •-v11 L1: 11'1 '"°Ill ..... ' I I ---.... . ' .. ._. . . .. l(enneCiy Tell s Plan To End War WORCESTER, Mess. (AP) -U.S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, (D·Mass.) called Wednesday !or mi unconditional end to the bombing of North Vietnam. Speaking politically for the w.t time slnee the assas~ination o! his brother, U.S. Sen. Rol>ert F . Kennedy (D·N.Y.), Edward Kennedy outlined a four-point program to end the Vietnam \Var. The other three points outlined in Kennedy's prepared speech were: -Negotiate with Hanoi and the military withdrawal from South Viet- nam of all foreign forces, both allied and North Vietnamese. -Accompany the withdrawal with 11 whatever help we can give to the South Vietnamese in the building of a , viable political, economic and legal structure that will not promptly col- lapse upon our departure." UPt T•ltphtl9 -Demonstrate to both Hanoi and Saigon the "sincerity of our lntentions by significantly decreasing this yer.:r the level of our militqry persoonel in the South." WEDDING SUNDAY FOR JANE AND NUMBER TWO Newport's Jane Russell Toasts Future Hubby The speech made no suggestion of political endorsement nor did he in- dicate whether he woold attend the Democratic National Convention. Kennedy said he was rejecting sug- gestions that he retire from public life, saying, .r: .. There is no s&fety in hiding. Not for me, not for any of us here today, and not for our children, who will inherit the world we make for them." Jane Russell Reveals She'll Wed Stage Actor Kennedy said he would not propose halting the bombing of North Vietnam if it would cost American lives. ''But two facts are unmistakably clear," he said. He cited. these as: -The bombing has not reduced the movement Of men and material into the South from the North. -"An end to the killing in Vietnam can never be negotiated as long as the bombing continues.'' Addressing the Worcester Chamber of Commerce at Kimball Hall, Holy Cross College, Kennedy said his program "should enable us to end our participation in this war with honor, having fulfilled our com- mitment to prevent a North Vietnam threat to the self dee:nnlnation of the South Vietnamese people." Kennedy .in commenting on the Soviet troop invasion of Czecboslovakia ca 11 e d it "a retrogression into an age we all had , hoped had passed" ... and "and af~ front to decency." Titan II Launched V ru'IDENBERG AFB (UPI) -A JO. story tall Titan II blasted from its widerground launching pad boday and thundered toward a preselecte dtarget 5.000 miles over the Paclfic Ocean. Sexy actress Jane Russell of Newport Beach, who last month divorced former football star and coach Bob \Vaterfie~d after 25 years of marriage, Tuesday announced plans to marry actor Roger Barrett. Miss RusseU, who has made more than $1 million from the Jioward Hughes movie "The Outlaw," will marry Barrett Sunday in the Beverly Hills Commwlity Pre s by t er i a n Church. The buxom actress made headlines in 1943 when the low-cut peas.ant blou.se worn in "The Outlaw" touched off heated debate about expcscd cleavage. Barrett, 47, is predominantly a stage actor and formerly resided in Chicago. He has done numerous sum- mer and winter:. stock productions in the East and Midwest. In ber divorce settlement from Waterfield, Miss Russell, also 47, received custody of her two children Tracy, 19, who will be a bridesmaid and Thomas, 18. She also retained her home at 211 North Star Lane, Newport Beach. ·Waterfield received the home in Sherman Oaks and custody of U1eir youngest son Robert, 12. In recent years, Miss Russell's movies have been at a minimum. Her most recent films include "Waco" and "Johnny Reno," filmed in 1965. Since that time most of her off-screen life has been devoted to working with Heart Recipients Doitag Well Heart transpla,nt patients Carl Van Bates, 50, and Maria Giannaris. 5, appear chipper following surgery at St. Luke's Hospital in Hous- ton. Bates, an Amarillo, Tex., shoe store owner, received his new heart Monday. Maria1 who is from Hagerstown, Md., received her new heart Sunday. \VAJF, an organization help ing orphans around the world. Friends invited to the ceremony in- clude actors Scott Brady, David Brian, Jack Beutel -her co-star in "The Outlaw" -Bob J~ope. Richard Egan, Robert Mitchum. Frank Sinatra, Robert Ryan and John Payne, as well ~ actresses Agnes Moorehead. Jean· ne Crain, Rhonda Fleming and Esther Williams. Czecl1oslovakia Not Suggested For U.S. Travel WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department issued an advisory to all American citizens today asking ttiem to defer travel to Czechoslovakia until further notice. . Americans already in the country were advised to keep in touch with the U.S. embassy. Press officer Robert J . McCloskey said that as of 7 a .m. PST no reports of harm to any Americans had been t received. There are about 80 Americans. in· eluding dependents, o ff i c i a 1 l y representing the U.S. government in Czechoslovakia. In addition. there are about 400 other Ama-ican citizens who reside in the country. 1 The St.ate Department said it could not say bow many American tourists are visiting Czechoslovakia at the present time. McCloskey said he could not confirm reports that about 3,00> American tourists are traveling in Czechoslovakia at the present time. Soviets Again Jamming Radios MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviets to- day rellnpo6ed januning oo Western radio broadcasts for the first time in many years. Tile Russian-language broadcasts of both the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) and the Voice d America (VOA:) were reported by listeners to have been subject to jamming during the cruclal period when Warsaw pact forces were staging t..'1eir military takeover of Czechoslovakia. Jamming of foreign statioM was standard during the cold war era but it was dropped in 1961, except for oc- casional interference with Peking radio broadcasts. A City of Weeping People Ca11adia11 Couple Escap e as Sovie t Tanks Arrive By PETER GALLEY A1 T1Wt.1U!'I WAIDHAUS, Germany -I got out of Prague today ahead of. the Russians. I left behind a city of weep- ing people. My wife Paulette, 29, and my son and I had been visiting Prague - we're from Laval, Quebec, a suburb of Montreal -and Ml last night we bad heard planes overhead. We ignored It. The Russians were coming. We filled up our rented car and headed for the service station for gas. The people on the streelll Of Prague were talking among themselves and they were crying. There was a long line at the a:as sta• tion. It took half an hour before we could get gflsoline. As wt. crossed a bridge on the way out of the cily, we came upon a caonon and tanks and made a detour. after 20 years of belng slaves of the Russians. And now we will be slaves again." As we drove through Czechoslovak towns, on the way to the West Ger?TUln border, I had to stop and ask db«· Uons and each Ume the people solemn· ly shook hands and 1 said, "Good luck," and usually they repUed, "Thanks. \Ve'll need it." When we reacbed the border, we found the Czech border guards -big husk_y fellows -crying, ~eping. "Goodbye!" I yelled. "llurry. hurry," they shouted back. 1 W!dne5day, August 21. 1968 DAILY PILOT 3 ·Repeat of History Goebbels Words R ecalled in '3 9 Invasion LONDON ~AP ) -It was Dr. Joseph Goebbels who announced the last in- vasion of Ctechoslovakla. The word ca1ne over the German radio at S a.m. March 15, 1939. Reading a proclamation by AdoU HiUer in his precise, reedy voice , Goebbels said: "Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist." Conditicns in Czechoslovakia were soch, Goeht>els went on , that they "must lead to the destruction of the last vestige of order in a territory. in which Germany is vitaUy interested." Now the Russians see a ne\V threat to order in Czechoslovakia. a territory in ~11.ich the Soviet Un.ion also is vitally interested. Th is threat. th e Russians say. arises ''from the counterrevolutionary forces w b i c b have entered into collusion with foreign torl-es hostile to socialism." Once again it Is Largely Germany- and one German in particular -which has helped to bring tragedy to the Czecl-6. Throughout th' Czechoslovaks· ef- fort to loose n the rigid orthodoxy of communism Utey have faced the stony opposition of \Valter Ulbricht. the East German chief. No assurances from A lexandcr Dubcek and his followers could persuade Ulbricht t h a t censorship is bad. that economic ties with the \Vest are valuable and that secret police are distasteful. Near the beginning of \V orld \Var II. !titler became more menacing toward ttis small neighbor. On Sept. 30. 1938 the MW?ich agreement was signed by Ji iUer, Mussolini, Neville Olamberlain of Britain and Edouard Daladier of France. Czechoslovakia was ordered oo cede all di stricts of Bohe mia and Moravia w1tb a German·speaklne: population of 50 percent or more. President Emil Hacha was sum- moned to Berlin 'a few months later. lie was forced to sign an agreement placing "the_!ate of the Czech people and their COt.lntry confidently jn lhe hands of the Fuehrer arttJ the German Iieich." Hitler had threatened to bomb Prague with 800 planes. The Germans marched in and held the Czechoslovaks in s u I> j cc t i o n throughout the \\'ar with savage force. E ventually the Russian a r m i e s • assisted by American force5 in the west, treed Czechoslovakia. World ·scorns Invasion Most Nations Co1iden1n Soviet March Into Prague Froio \\lire Services \VASHINGTON -Pre si d ent Johnson today declared "It is never too late for reason to prevail." in a statement be read before newsreel cameras andr adi i>·t e 1 e vis i on microphoiies. The thief executive termed the in· vasion a "flat violation" of the United Nations charter and said the United States was "consulting urgently" with other nations in an effort to "insist upon U1e charter _rights o f Czechoslovakia and its people.'' * * * UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.' Secretary·General U Thant today de- nounced the Soviet-led invasion or Czechoslovakia as a blow to world orders a n d East-West relations. l-le appealed to the Soviet Union to show "utmost restraint" in its relations v.'ith the government and people o( Czechoslovakia. * * * MOSCO\V -The nev.·s agency Tass published today an appeal addressed to the Czechoslovak people urging them to be calm and aid Soviet and other Communist forces entering the country. * * * BUCJiAREST, Romania -Nitolae Ceausescu. president of Romania and chief of its Communist party, today condemned the Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia as a "big mistake," Radio Bucharest reported. ''The ar1ned intervention i n Czechoslovakia is a big mistake and a severe danger for peace i.n Europe and for socialism in ·the world," Ceausescu told about 10.000 Romanians who demonstrated in lront of Communist party headquarters in sympathy with the Czechoslovaks. * * * BELGRADE -l>resident Tito of \'ugoslavia, v.•ho \Vent his independent Communist way in 1948 and made it stick. today denounced the invasion of Czechoslovakia by \Varsaw p a c t troops as a "serious blow " to the Com· munist world. "The entering of foreign military units into Czechoslovakia without in- vitation or approval from a legal gt.>vern ment has deeply worried us ," Tito said in a statement to the news service Tanjug. * LONDON * * More than 1 5 0 demonstrators chanting "Russians Go I-tome" and carrying a n t i ·So v i e t placards marched on the Soviet em· bassy here today. Police moved quickly from behind the gates that screen the tree.lined street leading to both lhe Soviet and the nearby Czechoslovak embassy in west London and forced th e demonstrators to the opposite side of the road. * * * PRAGUE -TI1e U. S. Einbassy to· day advised American s in Czechoslovakia to sit tight. "Until we hear further details, we are advising American citizens to re- main where they are,'' the embassy said. There are about 3,000 Americans in the country, m ost of them tourist!. About 500 Americans are in Prague for a geology convention. * * * VIENNA -The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia was Russia's third use of force since World \Var II to keep its East European satellites in line. In June, 1953, the Red army sent tan.ks into East Berlin to crush a workers' revolt that threatened Com· munist control over East Germany. In November, 1956, Russi an armored units smashed the Hungarian freedom revolt. Airline Clerk Found Shot, Choked in Tub HOLLYWOOD (UPI\ -A 41-y_ear- old airline ticket clerk was found slain in his apartment here Tuesday. The body or John T. Read, .a necktie knotted around the neck and bullet wounds in the chest and head, was lying fa.cc down in a water.filled bath tub. WEAR HOO HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA-IN THE HARBOR CENTER -ON THE MALL - WE 'RE OUT TO WIN YOU OVER WITH OUR FINAL REDUCTION OF THE YEAR OF HIGH QUALITY NAT. ADV. CLOTHES-SORRY WE CAN'T MENTION THE NAMES- AT ... ONE LOW PRICE REGULAR UP TO $160 SUITS Now One Low Price HERE is •n unprecedented opportunity for both t he college men •nd bu1ines1 e,..ecutive to meke one of the best clothin9 "buys" of the yeer. Don't let the LOW PRICE FOOL YOU-Thi1 clothing repre1ent1 our entire stock. the 1968 Fe1hion Spectrum included. SALE BEGINS THURSDAY AUGUST 22nd 9:30 A.M. REGULAR UP TO $100 SPORT COATS Now One Low Price Minimum Char91 For AJt1ratlon1 REGULAR UP TO $32 SLACKS If e 1evin9 of up to $80. on your 1uit interests you or up to $60 on your coet or $1 J on Y0"' •laoh hHd 10 GENTRY Thursday Now One Low Price STORE HOURS : .. -... 01ily 9:30-6 p.m , Mon. thru Fri. 9:]0.9: p.m. l111~A1111,Jc1rd M11t1r Ch•rt• Ge11try'1 Ch1r9• But the Czech couple who had in· vlled us into their home, and they had refuied payment, woke us up aod ad· vised us to pack up and &et out quick. 1 remembered what our host h&d said this morning: "We have had ireedom for one and a half months The Russians were corning. 1..::i:::::.,.;:aa""c:::""""""::i==m::;,,..::;::z:mm•""""••a""'•""'m""""""'l:l• .. ••••••I . , 1 • ' • -----~-~ - I I :f OAl1. v l'ILOT Wtdntsd1y, Au91ut 21, 1%8 ~ w .. .,..., ""' lf9flJ Actress Jano Ruuall, divorced l11t month a:fter a 25-year mar- riage, 1ays •he is getting married agatii Saturday. She sald that she will marry Roger Wy•tt B•rrett, an .actor from Chicago. Both are 47. ¥!•• Russell divorced Bob W•terfl11d', former professional fooll>all star, July 30., • Radio Urges Last Hours Be 'Finest' w ASHING TON (AP) -In Ill• last houri before its apparent take~wr to- day, lliadio Prague broadcast wbal lt feared was an unheard Ha1aurance to Ct.ecba that the world waa watcblng. It ura:ed them to be "courageous, dignified, but calm." The last sounds U.S. monitors in Washington heard were o! music and then a voice saying "\Ve ere again repeating an announcement ..• " Then there was silence. !lle amouncemfJnt apparently were these Immediately prior comments by first a male and then e female volce: • Hungarians See Repeat Of History VIENNA (UPI) -HWlgarian forces cibedien11y Joined Ille drive 14 crush the llberallza.tion ·of Czechoslovakia. TWeive ye.arc ago, the shoe was on the oiher foot. For 13 epic days Jn the fall of 19!6 outn1D11bered, outgunned. Hungarian freedom lighten defied S o v I e t military might. The western nations cheered the Hungarians but did not move to help them. Then, as today, U1e United States was in the throes of a presidential election. Great Britain and Fraoce were Launching their Suez. invasion. The Hungariana fought alone. \Vhen the revolt oollapsed under the overwtielming weight of Soviet armor, 2,700 Hungarian freedom tighten had lost their lives, about 20,000 more were wounded, more than 180,000 had fled to the west and parts of central Budapest were in ruins. "The Czechoslovak radio attempted to broadcast a statement by the Presidium shortly before om (2 a.m.) Prague time this morning. However, all the transmitters at our disposal were gradually taken out of QPeration and at present we do not even know how many of you have heard this in· formation. "We don't even know, listeners ol o u r radio, il you can be&l" Wl at the D1001eut. "We do want to remain calm. We a.re waiting for directives from our government and the Presidium of our National Assembly, although some telephone lines in our building have been cut olf and d<opite the fad that we can hear aircraft flying above the radio building. IN HAPPIER DAYS -Czech Communist Party First Secretary Alexander Dubcek, left, Soviet Premier Alexei Koaygin, center, and Soviet Com- munist Party Secretary General Leonid Brezhnev are shown during a happier period as they met for summit at Bratislava August 2. Today, Soviet. 1.W( Ttl.,Plttl Bulgarian, East Ger1nan, Hungarian and Polish troops are occupying Czech soil, The Soviet Foreign Ministry has emphatically denied that Kosygin and Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko have resigned in protest to the invasion of Prague. The Hungarian revolt began Oct. 23, 1956, with a protest march through Budapest by 12,000 students deman· ding freedom Crom CommWlist op- pression. By t.hat evening the wbol~ natJ.op '9.'as in ferment and an com· munications with the outside wm.d were cut · Charlei Brink 111. of Worce1tet', Maas., poses with his latt&t artistic adven- ture recentlif. He told Judge Walttr Allen in Worcestu Di.strict Court that he wanttd to mak1 the hudrant pret- ty. TM ;udge agreed that it 'U)(U prob- ably prtttier than f'egulation red, but it W<l.! not legal. Th• vouth toa1 fined $10. • Two :Minot, N.D., boys, Ray Gooch, 151 and D•I• Fllclcln91r, 14, like baseball and bicycling. So they pedaled some 530 miles to 1ee the New York Yankees and the Minne- sota Twins play in a four-game ser· ies. The trip took six days. • Marian Townes, o( llamilton, Ont., was waiting to cross a down· town street Tuesday evening when she was run down from behind by a bathtub. That's right, a bathtub on wheels. Mrs. Townes, 32, a tav- ern waitress, 1aid, "Have you ever been thrown to the street, then looked up to see a bathtub beside you? She suHered a brnlsed leg. The tub driver, who had piloted it down a hotel parking ramp, was charged with being a common nuisance. • = _ .. .,...., -. .-.... ""' ..... Tlic Internal Revenue Service • last week 1eited the "Nauti·Gal" ' 11ight club in Milwaukee for not l paying $8,421 in withholding i taxer. Some Nouti Gals from the 1 night club picketed the IRS Of· fices Tue1da11, wearing abbrtvo iated sailor &uits and carrying sign.t readinQ: "\Ve 1oon't bow to the &tern IRS." • A man grabbed $4,000 at a bank and rushed out ..• only to be met by a walling police chief. Teller Mrs. Betty W•terworth of the Toi· edo (Ohio) Home Federal Bank said she recognized the bandit as a man who had stolen $5,000 from the bank in June. She pressed the alarm button u be came in. North- wood Police Chief Thom•• H•ll ar· rested D•nl•I Goni••, 45, of Wind· sor, Ont., and jailed him on a charge of armed robery. Nation "We are convinced that you will act in the same way and that in t.be morn· ing you will go to work as normal and that you will try to do at your job au that is necessary. At this moment this U the only possible solution." At this point a female announcer took over from the male voice. She vouched for the loyalty of the Czech radio workers tG the Czech govern- ment and promised to keep listeners abreut ol t h e news as long es there ~ technical facilities. A male voice came back on. "The whole world was awakened from sleep this night," he said. "As our teleprinters are not functioning normally we ere depending oo listen· ing to foreign stations." "We are unable to give you mDre in- f<rmation at the moment," he said. "The world is awakening to an unusually sad morning, but it ill watching us and will continue to watch us at thls critical tlme. "Let us be courageous, dignified, but calm, and at our place of work. everywhere where v:e belong and where we must defend our positions. "It is neeeBsary that hlstory ghouJd be able one day to use those hilitoric words about us: 'This was our best and finest hour.' " Machu1e Gun Fil'e Stn·l'ed Shirley In Pl'ague Hotel PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - Shirley Temple Black said today; '·I was awakened by machine-gun fire Crom a deep a:leep. I thought it was a practice but then someone !mocked on my door and told me we were OC· cupled." Mrs. Black, once America's child movie star, described in an interview how she found out about the oc· cupation of Czechoslovakia· by Soviet and other \Varsaw Pact troops. She is here on a visit in connection w it h her work on multiple sclerosis. She was due to leave for Copenhagen today. but all commercial flights were canceled because of the occupation. "I plam to leave when nights resume," she said. adding that she was calm and not worried. Students Scream 'Russ Go Home' As Tl'oops Arrive By JA~IES JACKSON PRAGUE (UPI) -"In the square there were these trucks ftlled with young people, students I guess, and they drove throua:h the square waving a Czech nag end yelling 'Russians, Go Home! Rugsians, Go Home!" The speaker was Jeff Roberts, a 21- ycar..()ld student from San Francisco State University, and he was telling how he and a companion arrived in Wenceslas square in the h e a r t of Prague just as Soviet troops and tanks destroyed a barricade and fired sub- machine guns to clear crowds from the area. "There were per~aps IDJ Praguers, spitting and throwing paper on the Russians," Roberts said. "They did not throw rocks. Just paper. ''The Russians were Jn two trucks. Apparently they got very nervous and excited. They shot for about two minutes and all the people got down behind a wall or just took off." I walked through Prague this morn- ing as rapid bursts of automatic weapons fire echoed through narrow streets and Czechoslovaks holding transistor radios lived through the ter- rible battle for their country. As I left the U.S. Embassy building and moved toward the hill where Hradcany Castle, the seat of govern- ment is located, I heard bursts of small arms fire. It was impossible to identify the shooters or their targets. I crossed the Karlovy Bridge over the Vltava River and saw the WClrds "Russians, Go Home" written in four languages -Czechoslovak, Russian, German and English -and four col· ors. There 'vas no talking. People walked in silence. often in pair 1. One younl{ couple held hands thihtly and the girl was weeping. She held a radio. A tank and an armored personnel carrier could be seen across the Vltava pa.rked at the riverbank. Russian crews in ween uniforms stood along a railin,Z: at the edge of the river. They "-"Te hatless. One soldier flipped a cigarette butt into the river. • Ill Boiling Pot Warni Temperatu,.es Prevail Frorn Needles to Philly California ~outMt11 C1lllor1111 c;on!l"utd I~ r u"""' \ft rl•blt f'llvl'I cl(r.Ml1 ft>d tY but •u1ty Wll\01 butl.ied moun!1!ns '"" Clenr'll. •nd '°'",,., 1111'1 •nd ri.11d!t t lt\ldl. "" MKl\fl but -• 1!,lbtlcl· lnt I~ TM fl:W'U DI ttle ..-11 ''"" o!1n. It w11 fnOlllY l1lr I~ La. A~9•1 ... ti\!! vif.lnlty w\111 1111\t ltmP11r1!11111 cti1~01. Tri. mt xlmvrn t....,H,.IVr• "t!ll~t Wit IO. tem,,.r~ le 1ue .. clt.,-1 7'. Tonl ... l't IO"I' tJ., Ne p~li.ll(WI Wff ll'dk.tllo! I~ -U.S. Wtt""" l 11r,1u't 11¥ ... <lt• 1-1JI. T-•1tu,..1. how..,.,. .._ illlHdM l o dill tr-J to I o..,._ k"" "" Jf'ttol'lll """"'I. Tlwn w•1 Pit -Ill ttl• Lit ,...,. fltktl"llltld flismt n:k lllMM (hlttte Clncl1W1tll C!tvtlt M De<.¥~• "" Mo!M$ ~lrott EDtek• Fort wor"' '™~ "''"" H .... ulu Ml-'! \."" l'rtit. I' Ml .It " " .11 " " ,. .. .. " IJ 41 .0$ 11 73 n " tl n It 11 .... •l 1J .. ,, .. 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PILOT-ADVERTISE R-~ Pills Ma11 Help Take Doc's Orders Just Put It On Tah(let) DAILY Pit.OT 9 Current Pulls Ele~tri~ Suh NEW YORK (UPI) SANTA B!J\BARA -Its on a shoe·strine bud&el by 'ftler Jell or any other mlfllel!c Utld In lb• sea by silence wa11 heard around undergraduates in tht bl1e. moving part. meiDI of a maenet coil Babylonlam ta v er n 1 pro-the world. ment of a campus buildlng It was the world's flr1t whlcb carries clln'ent sup-. bably presaged to d a. y '1 Der Sple&el in Gtnnany at the University o t craft ope.ra\ed by means of plied by 1tor1g1 batteries. tttdi.t card charge account.a, hear:t it and reported It. California at Santa Barbara. the t.1ectroma,e_netic forces 'Ibe same batteries ar• used 'By Dr. Peter J. Ste19Croba edema may. thfll'tfore, be t su&gest, Mrs. G., that report researchers at Rhe· Time Magazine dedic•ted a On July 21, 1998, the ln the surrounding sea. to nnd eleotrtc current De Dr ••~---~-I beneficial in reducing the you read and reread these page to it. NBC News torpedo-shaped craft w11 Swlmmlng j u b t I ant l 'f pe:rpeod.icularly througr 1tte ar · .->KIU\Oluuu: am sever.it)' of corutary utery ielentllic findings until you lngokS Breweries, Inc. charted a spec.LG! boat and unloaded by 1 runt Ing beside it were its creator1, water to the mainetlr. ' 1. 8 44·year-old hoUff'WU'e. disease boti1 by decreasing understand them. When you GuestJ drank on credit dock to film it. students from a f:Dted m 1 c b anlcal engineerlnr Prof. Way ·~lalo1 • a BecaUM I've been fee Ung _,. tired all the time. 1 we'Dt to blood presrure and b Y do, you will know how in'I· with chartes and payments oause of all the ex· trailer and placed the 1enlon at UCSB and their "Lorent& force" Ja lhu1 pro- hypercboleaterolemla (too portant it is tor you to nu recorded on wet c I a Y c I t e m en t was t b e water of Santa Barbua proluror, Dr. Stewart Way. iluced, propeJ&i tbe sea my doctor. He scid 1 have much cholesterol in the ttio&e prescriptions 00<1' 10 tablet.a. Accouots were sel· performance Of a ten-foot. harbor where lt cruised Tbt model &ubmarlne pro-ww.er tow.ard the rear of the hlgh blood pressure and an blood)." on a low fat dieL tied aft.er each he.rvest. unmanned i11bmarlne built silently without propellor, pelt 11.teU by producln1 a 00,t wxl~ac:tlve~yroidgland. 1 _ _.;._.;.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....:...~~~-=--;............;.....:.~-,~.;,.--=--~....;;.~~'--·~~~~~~ He gave me irescriptions1-~· for thyt<>ld medlcll>o and pilta to btlp my blood pressure. Ht al.lo tok1 me to cut down Oil the foU in llll' diet. As I doo't believe tn ba· bylns myself Juel bocauae I'm a l«Ue tirecf, I ~ not .,. ' ; have Ibo pnocrtption filled. Don't you -tbal people ore taking too many pilll! -Mrs. G. Comment: An aDIWtr to your last question ftnt: Jt'1 true, ttlere may be too many pill-poppers In t!a U.S. MiWons of pill• are taken unne<:essarily a1 luative1, tranqu!lizers, v 1 t am 1 a 1 , tonict, etc. Granted, in mmy cue•, such mdcatiOll.1 are not needed, but lt ii tometimes danc..-oua lo be a drug nihilist and Dot be!leve in t.hem at all when medicatioo • reoll,y • .......,. It II my buncb, lltboullh I can't bt oure without relllly knowing you or your coa· ditioa, that you are Olltl of those who ii oeedles1J.y en· dllogerJnc your hll!ltli by not Wdng 1"J]s. Lei me toll you "1ly, Your dootoi-say1 that you have hlgtl blood pre11ure and a lazy thyroid gland. '!!at lJ "1ly he 1hlnkl It necessary for you to take medicine to combat these poten&l evlh. Ulldoubledly, be hail also fOUDd !bat your blood contains too much cllole&Urot. wtlch II bis reuon for 1Ug1estfng a low fat diet. It ts likely tbal yoor doc- tor prescribed your pUla because be knows that tbe comblnotloo ol biCh blood pressure, low thyroid IC· tivlty and bllll> choleat<rol la a classic triad which may endang,. a pollen~ making him more 1uecepti.ble to cor· ..,..., &ttack. My booklet, ''22 Waya to Prevent and Treat Coronary Dlaeaae" may be Of help to you. U you, or myoae elae, ...wd like a oopy, ....i 2ii ..U. along wi1ll a aelf-ad· dre1sed, etamped envelope to me In care ol Ult DAILY Pil.oT. Here are 1ome pvtial quotes, wlllch will also be of help, from an anlcle in the Annals of Internal Medicine (Feb. '68) by Alfred D. Steinberg, M.D., on studies perfonned In ~e Depart· ment. of PUbology, Harvard Medical School, B o 1 t' o n 1 Mus.: ''The Framtnrham (Mua.) lludy bu shown that h)llel-Ve wbj- haVI more severe coronary .artery di••••• than ~1ive (n«mal) 1ub- ject., .. Judfled by .. in· creased f requency of my oc 1 r dl a I tnfarctJoos (coronary &ttacka ). That study has also showed tllat hypercholesterolemia ( t o o much cholesterol in the blood} was associated with an increased risk o f myocardial infarction at each blood pressure level. "Myxedema patients (very low tllyrold gland !unction) with hypertension had an average coronary narrowiJ'lg of greater than 75 percent versus an average coronery narrowing ol. less than 50 percent in control patients with hypertension (alone). MY"Xedema patients with normal blood pressure had no increase in coronary narrowing when compared wit1l normotensive cootrol.J. These findings wggest that U ;., only in the presence of teyp..rtenslon that the lipid (tit) aboonna1llies of hn-:yioldism (law ~yt<>ld funoUon) cootn'butl to in· creased coron ar y nar· rowing. In one s erte1 , hypertension was fOund in 00 percent of bypotllyrold tients. Of these, ooe half 00 percent of hypothyroid patients. Ol these, ooe hall b e c a m e n o nnotenslve (n«mai blood 1.-. ....... ) with t b y r o I d treatment. 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Panty Hose Su alm StnU• Smo1ly ,_ lrl ... gee daf& gtyles. Sill~ SmO\ .., Average, aDd Ta!L JADE 12-Transistor Radio Sill• Stall -AM -Met lllt portable radio. Blrlll-~ 4 88 1ntenna. Cariylna cue Uwttbatt!Ty-• For projects, crafts I COWIUW )i()UStlw)ld ~;;;;,;;;=========1 ~~iln 69" REALTONE COMET ALUMINUM WARE E1g Poacher <$ • c., ... 1 88 llml Teflontined. • ~ Portable Radio AM I P1llc1 .... ,...._ lllM .... T::O:"~J :::.~11o16-9i•5ity. I'll. l~lvda earpiloll Ind batteries. • 11-Triulstlrt, M !Ma Breeze Box Fan 2 Sj)Ood, ~m switdl. 211' oxtrl lop ,;,. - 3 blodt.14 88 Higfl Impact plesllc crilL • Picture Wall Bank A po1ect 1ilt lot fWJ lillll i>lY • Bakep,, -•~·It~ ~ f.lrl lo ""'1lllrt II colotf1l litllo ~ ···-.r." Jro::-= 1 98 bole pan. 17\4" I f · ' cona f;~ 11C1 loll.' a lll\"1 1 88 . L::::==::;::::;::::;===t 2Y•"· • p Pel'calator 9 cup r111ge p!fCOlator wit~ 111s1 1 98 perc. kl!Ob. • DDll ble Boiler 1 qi. capac-1 98 1ty. • Playtex TAMPONS THE FIRST-DAY DOii • U, ti 4S% •rt ,..,.It • S1U·MJatl11 • flow -t~ !lull~ .,,1~ ""' ••• ""' pa1lt 11Mtk l oplar l S111r 811 111 R1plar l S.111 1111131 2gc 0 ··- ggc ~~ ' • s Qt. eo1an11er Q Footed and llind!es lor t~sier hat-1 98 · dtina. • ;.~==::=::::;i::======= SHULTON'S PAPERSMA: "Summer Fragrance" • F~ SPECIAL Cologne Mist ,, , loL Aonlli 1"1! DasUA( Powder l-oi. Fo-1 llosert flo•tt, rn~, Gm, Elctpldt l 11111 Amori- "' Old Spkt. UCI 1.25 .,.. tiJ "' lltl tf'lt lll'OO~ tolc'-Tht !MW • ., ti writt. Cholct of c.orm. .. , .. ,, 3!1.00 Super Sale PAPll-MATI "150" Pen I illw -lliP I , writi•1 ""'or!. Glllll Ink S"PI~· llf. 1.51 age ' CREME de CHANTILLY . ., ........ ' • " I I J Jfj DAILY PILOT For Tl1e Record Meeting• W9DNllDAY A~ loe1tmui.rt. \/I ll• M9r1M. llMJ .. niot Crlvt. NIWPOrl 6..0. •:• •. Ill, CIYll AJr "•'"" S.lladl'Oll No. n, Nnl Meet. StrMt, <Mte ""-9, 1 1.m. Ma..-ilc .... 11rln9 LOO.. No. 70I, -...-le T~lt. 1Slh ltf'fet .i ii. Alld.-.ws .. i.c., ... _. kKJI, '•·'"· Wt:slmlnditt' ~ C .... HI' .. _... lrw>. 1•1 loMdl llN. Weatml.,.twr, 1 1.m. Hunt~ l•dl MM-.k Lod .. , ~c W.11, l"05 Lake A-H1111< ""''°" lffdl, '''° '·"'· co1t1 Mesa Junior c1111 ... wr of c-"'*'u• MaN V•f1lil Country Club, CO.la M-. I•·'"· Coll• M9M E"le Aerlt, 15' W. ltth Strwt, Colt• Miu, I '·"'· ,,...,...,_ lli..-$Giii"' D•r.ct Cl .... T"'°'"""°" Hell, F I rt I Mllhodlll ClwKll. a w. 1m s1 .. Cot" MISa. • ·~· C.-CounlY ArNNur Al'l,_lctl Alsn., S...li.tle Hltll SChoo~ 69,.... Grew, 1:• '·"'· Or•-County Slrt Club, l!lkl Cl11b, :M5' Viti CIMrfo. NtwHrl ltadl. I : >Cl p.m. St¥tntll Stoll l"Ollftd1llon, Hunllllffon lead! T..,n Citnter, Gal"f!elCI Av.nut •!'Id M1l11 Sff'wolt, Humlnvi..n lhadl, I "·"'· THUllSOAY H1rtlor-Llla T11111lrMster'1 Club, Onlr• Ctftloetla, F•lhlon l11tnd. N......-1 Bfl<tl, 1 1.m. 8rffkll1I O.llml1t Clllb Of Colli Mew, Corti llfff Re111ur1111, HU Mlr11or 81Yd .. COlll M.1'111, 1:30 a.m. aoen1 ot R111ton, NtwPl>rt H1rbor- Co1" Mt'N, 81lboli 1!11, Club, 1111 W. Colll HtwllWll', Nl!WPOf"I Bffdl, I 1.m. WnlmlMl9r Rol•rl' CIUb, Kl119 '1 T1ble 1tesl111r111t, wntml111te1, 12 ,_ E1<d'lf"" Club el N-.1 H•rtlor, SM! $111r1 Rnl•11rr1nt, N......,,.. lladl. -IUw1nl1 Cllllt of COiia Mew-Notti!, COf"•I ltMf ltHl1ur1M, ,...., H•rbDr 8 1\fd .. Cotti Me111, 12:10 1,m. Hrot-' H1rtlor Klw.1111 Club, \11111 M1rl111, 1C.U BIYtllle Crin, NtWWI l!le•cl'I. 17:10 "·'"· COl'ONI dtt M•r l!,ch•.... Cluti. \11111 SW9CM11. 3Sl4 E. Co11t Hl1llw1y, COrot11 oiel Mir, 12 _,. Ne-'•lf'llnt llOllr"I' Clllb, D.11114!1'1 1tn1111r1nl, 2131 &rldOI SI., Coll• ~.-. FDUnlaln V1lln' KIWll11l1 Clull, l'r1n. cols', 11111 l!lt•ttl llYd., HUnl11191o" l!le1ch, U;U p.m. Or11191 Co.Ill CIYltl " Clllb, Mii.i \lenl1 Countr~ Clull, Coll• ~ ... UiU 11.m. Births A111111t 11. 1"' MOAG M•MORIAL MOS .. '1'AL Mr. •!'Id Mn. Robert Ho119, '''91 AUc•"ltr DrlYf, Mlnloll \114!1o, bol'. Mr. Ind /WI. Kltl!Mth For ... t, 5%21-A "S" 511'"1, Stnt1 l.M, •lrl. Mr. tr>d Mn. Keith MllcomMll, 54' 1u.,...1!1M Avt., Ntwl>Ol't ... di. ~. "''· Ind Mn. LOUlf Mol"lllll, an L1nce Wood WIY, 1rYfM, •lrL Mr. Ind Mr1. Ptler RHd, IOO SO. Slllllv1n SI .. S•nl• Anl, flrt. Mr. •nd Mr1. J1me1 Cl'lllk. :1217 H1rbor Blvd .. CO.II M1'11, ba'(. Mr. •!'Id Mrt.. D•nltl Pfttftr, 1113 Ducheu L•nt. S..nl1 AM, 1lrl • ..._. 11, '"' Mr. tllll Mrt.. J1d. G!bo.rd, 2700 P1te<'llOll W•Y, Cosll .....,, baV. Mr. 11111 Mn. Ml'url~ 0..111sftt, tol Arbor SI,. Cost1 Mui, boY'. Mr. 1nd Mn. Rich••• Plr11MU, 1°'1 S1r1toe• Drive, H11Mlnelon 1 .. ch, "''· Mr. •1111 M.-.. Arnold YMnr, 1014 SO. E11tl!d, Ave .. Slnl1 AM, boy. Mr. Incl Mrl. A. Lloyd Mc.P'-t, 11~ Prt1ldlo Drlvt, c.c.t1 Mesi, ba'f. Mr. Ind Mn. Douvl•1 ltun, '75 Woodl1r>d Piie«, Co.tr. Mfl.e, 1lrt Mr. •nd Mf'I. R0ger Pille, 717Ylo W. ••Y AYe., lllboli, tlrl. A111111St It. lffl Mr. l!'ld Mro. Wlltl•ITI l!ltrwlck, ~It So. c ....... ,.,v •. Of:l1191, twin bo'h. Mr. ""' Mr1. J1me. Hetifoo, 20631 HoPetown Lane. Nllfttl11tloll •~Kh, ""'· Mr. Ind Mr1. 8r1dlev ll1rrell, l40Jt C-r L11111rn, Di nt i:'/i!l.nt• 11rt. Mr. 1r>d MrJ, Peltr EJtilif; 112 V1r1ne Pltlct, lrYlne, bo~. Mr. i ncl Mrs. J1c~ Selmtn. lint W•lnlll SI., Founotln Valley, 11rl. Mr. Ind Mri. F~rlc~ Sdlllltw, 70111, 1•14 Peun St., Hvnll,.Jon l!llld'I, "''· Mr. Ind Mf'I. Jmtti>h Moor1, 3n---tt/I St., Hunll119ton &each, tlrl. A11tutT n, INI Mr. 1nd Mtl. 0.. l!lurnelte, 230 CK11 Pl1CT, CO.ta MMe, bol'. Doctor •!'Id Mr.. G""rtl 0111111, l060t U ROii Lint, Fount1ln V1lltl', bol'. ~. •!'Id Mn. Wllll•m Selcon, 21m Oecbldt Clrclt, H1mll119ton II.Id!, 11lrl. Mr. Ind M"'-81slllo MlrtlMZ. nt J01nn Slrtt1, C01l1 MP>1, bop. Mr. 1rld Mr1. SMun D'Or1m, 12ia So. Carll Drive, S1nl1 ""'' girl. AltlVll 14, lHI Mr. t nd Mri. Theooore He~m'"' tlSJ Cock1loo AYe., Fou nltln V1!lep, 1lrl. Mr. ll>d MrJ. Dinny !ion. )"''~ WHlml,..lo<' Aw., Cost1 Ml!fl, bow. Mr. tnd Mn. Lonnie Ayers. Jr., »OJ Vermont AY11., Cosio Mn1, boY. Mr. Ind Mni. Peter Killy, 1101 W 81lboli l lvd., N!WPO" l!le1ch, f ]tl .. Mr. •nd Mrs. Donald Hlgh1m1111. 16n) H1rbor l!llv(t,, Silnl1 Ana, boy. Mr. Ind Mn. Gene &tll11!, 2NI L1 Slllt AWi., COllt Mftl, bo-o<. A111111t IS, IHI Mr. •nd MrJ. JIY C1ICl~ll. •11 k Euclid Ave., Slnlt Ana, t lrl. Mr. 11'!1 M.-.. F1rr1n Miner, 1121 k . Pepltr Sf .. Slnl• AM, •lrl, Mr. l!'ld Mrs. llablrt Mt(1;1, 1G1U S11rou ......... , Slnt1 AM, bo"f'. Mt. Ind MrJ, Arnol(I ~. 102 W Ll..,1n Line, Slnlt AM, bcrt. . Mr. •!'Id Mrs. J1mn Coiner. t01 ~ndf!' DtlYt, Hvnllntlon l t l Ch, Mr. 1nd MrJ. ltlch1rd Gordon, 11~ Se. Sulllvtn SI .. Slnlt Anl, 1 lrt. "1191111 , .. 1'61 Mr. Ind Mtl. Jtfl'lft Gu111tlt1, 2171 l!Utll Pltct , (Oltl Mal. boy. Mr. Ind MrJ, Lt""' Ller11, 241l llnlt At11 "''·' c,,_11 Mo-w, t lrt. Mt l !'ld Mr1. hre11 Mtndlol1, :nt-1oth SI., Hunll"llOll l!lttcll. t ltl. Mr. •nd Mni. El"f'ln Mouwr, '11 ~!lnlsl!IM Drive, S.nfl A"•· tlr!p, Mr. tr>d Mrt. l11N1I SlllC.llti.. ?)Ol Harv•rd $1., Silnfl An1, bo1. Mr. Ind Mrl. FrN G""''· n~.o Dtl1w1rt Awt., HuMlntton BNCl'I girl. ' M~ Ind MrJ, Joel Holfnbt,.., l 1' Dl"lfltl• Ave .. Cof'ON dll Mir t lrl Mt . Ind M .... Dulltl Vltrtt"1'.' n:i4 °'rtl11, Nt'fl'llOl'1 l!l.udl, boY. Mr. tnd Mrs. Cllltont Herr!,,., ct M C1mbt1d9e Dr •• COlll MHI. t lrt r. Ind MrJ, City L~llyn, 41I C1rn1tlon Aw., Co,_ Oef Mir, t lrl, Marriage Lit"ettses ~AS \lll!:GAS, Nnl -M1H lltt •Clnltl hWM 1'111'9 IKhldt• Luo1 C, Wildin ll. Ind Mincy J • •-. l31. llOlll of Cos111 Me1.1 • ., tl:o<r ConllY, 24. 1 I Wntmlm>er, •!'Id Do1r1rft Mlrl1y11 s1,.., .111 °' Anal'ltlm "',""', u l 1<11111r111 ": of Dr1not, •rid 1.1 Dtlllth w 11on, n. of CMt• MHI . Cnel!l!'t 8fk11 ... Ind l!ll1ndlt II T~I, ~· boll! of kun1l119lo" IHd'I • . McC.n'rev, 6', of '"'*'"" W111!., Ind COf"1 MIP V1lt, Jl °' H111'1ll119foll l!lff(fl. ' ' H~_nry J. Sll1rr, d . -Dor•'"" M Oult. 4'. bo!f, el w..!mh\it<er. ""111111 ~kn'lf lolO 11 , ""' Mlrloo I' K_y, 5', bolll al l.9 ... na &f!9dl .. fi'ire Calls W•l'rfll•MI' l :Sl t .in. T\ltlllH'" tr•M lll't', lflln .v..-n• ""· ,._,Ill Vt llW 1:» Jl.fl'I. T-., fl,.. lrl-"-llorl, TtlWf •nd evnrt ·--11:$1 1.191. Tuellf1y, frl ... ""'' 17'01 Htwl_. II. 1:,1! !""·• ""6lal 11'. 6G'I Yt~ Ayt. J:&:·"'· Wf!~· IMlllal 11'. ~ lltf'rtCK~ .. ,... n·.., '·'"· no. .. ,,. ,_., 21t11 C"-"" l,ii;,. t .ftl,. ,_w, :11:1 W. In At!. f ·~·"'" CM II,._ P-911111 ·~ I; 1.111 .. i.I• ti.rm. ""' Strftf tllld Celling all junior hi 9irl1 to the TEEN-DIVIDUALIST SHOW THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2:00 p.m . Thi Broadway Huntingto" l•ad1 i nd N1wp1rt e Se• your fri•nds modal! e l1ern the fell fa1hion fect1! B NEWPORT • ..i-.;.. • .. MID-SUMMER DRAMATIC BLACK SHIRT SHIFTS CREPES 11.99 17.00 Comfortable classics From a famous California maker two easy-in stepins of I 00°/0 wool bonded to acetate tricot. A. ~ button-front with short slaevas, teilored coller. Si1e1 10-1 8 in ol i ... e, pink , cemel, tur- quciie or bl•ck. 8. Zip-f1ont ·sh ort sleav•d stepin, siz•s 10-18 in pink, black, c•m•I or turquoise. h-1ail and telephone orders accepted. Daytime Dresses, 73 . Black is back in romantic rayon crepes, all flirty and feminine with flowing rayon chiffon sleeves. Easy on back-zip stepins by Arthur love, sizes 10-18 and 141fi.221fi. c. White pleated collar d. Scoop neck ~1ail and telephone orders accepted. Budget Dresoes, 27. HUNTINGTON BEACH ANAHEIM c 1 :~Llf•I• 111rmo 1"" llrtfl enct ''' •.~. ,.,. ''""" '"' """.. 47 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH e 7777 EDINGER AVENUE 444 N. EUCLID e ANAHEIM SHOPPING CENTER Wtilnltt t . '""'"""' ... ~ 11111 Sttwl tne1 Shop Mondey thrv Fricl1y 10:00 •.m. to •:10 p.m. Shop Monday thru S1turd1y St.op Moncley thru Seturdey • "§;" '91••'"""' 1"' .,,__, Telephon• 644-1212 Telephone 192.llll Telephone 515-8121 4:.J! .. ft11W...,""G-IM " .. '!: Seturdey 10 :00 1.m. to 6:00 p.m. 10:00 e.m. to 9:10 p.m. 10:00 e.m. to 9:10 p.m. "~.t.l""t·.,n·fl~ .,... ,.... -L_.._ _____ _: ______ _: ____________________________________ __:'----------------..J u I • ----------------------------------- • I I ( 1 ' ( • • • ' • • . , I ( ,. ( .. • Seed of Friendship Planted Mrs. Joseph Winocur {left) and Mrs. Kenneth Starege (right) tell Mrs. Carl Mitchell how friendship grows by planting and cul- tivating a close organization. For that purpose the Newport- Costa Mesa Branch of the American Association of University Women will host a Friendship Tea from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Wino-- cus' Newport Beach home . Mrs. Starege, Mrs. William McFar- land and Mrs. Harold McConnell will assist. Mrs. Norman Egli, president will discuss the program of monthly meetings and special interest sections. Theme for the year is The Challenge of a Changing Society which will be pursued through four major study &roups. Men Can 'Man' Volunteer Bureau Tropical Aid for Opera , 1 League Lights Torches Grass s)U rts and opera make strange partners. However, when Laguna Beach Opera League members Ught Tonga torches for their annual luau at 6:30 p.m. next Saturday, they wiJI be help- ing a musical cause. A fund-raiser, the event will help retire past deficits of the Lyric Opera Association of Orange County so it may continue to bring opera to Irvine Bowl beginning Sept. 27 .• t:1nder the leadership of Mrs. H. Donald Outmans, the evening will feature dinner, dancing and entertainment by island dancers Dick Kaian- oano and the South Seas Rhythms. The beach by the Monarch Bay Club will be colored with palm trees, tropical flowers and ferns , and traditional island food will be sampled at low tables on the sand, according to Mrs. Robert E. La wson , decorations chairman. Other committee members who have worked on the event in clude the Mmes. Anthony Orlandella and Earl Woodard, entertainment : St an le y Eichstaedt and Jack M. Lyons, invitations, and William Hinwood , reserva- tions . Others include the Mmes. James Coen . secretary ; George H. K. Bry- ant, treasurer, and John Bermel, d6or prizes. According to Mrs. Theodore Beane. publicity chairman, the opera's past deficit is nearly recovered thanks to private and corporate contribu- tions and economic assistance from the City of Laguna Beach and the league's recent contribution of $1,000. By JUDY HURST Of IM Diii" Pli.t Ili ff One short newspaper arUcle enriched the life of Basil A. Jaggai-d of • Costa Mesa. The article informed him lhet the Volunteer Bureau of Newport Beach was in need of assistance. And Basil answered its call. "Thal was about three years ago," he remembered. Today· in addi· tion to his job working as a jailor with the Fullerton Police Department, Basil gives two days of his free time to the bureau. "I drive patients to the Orange County Medical Center, doctors' offices or where ever there is a need." Representing the bureau's men vo lunteers, Basil is tall and slender with grey highlights in his crew cut. With an English accent he explained, "I find satisfaction in helping people less fortunate than myself. The bureau usually needs me only on an emergency basis. There seems to be more call for women drivers," he laughed. Sitting back with his pipe in hand, Jaggard said he would rather help people in his own community. "I get disgusted when I have a call which takes me to Santa Ana. That is a city of more than 140,000 population which can 't even find enough volunteers." His wife Joan, whom he married in England. also helps the Volun· teer Bureau at home by addressing and mailing envelopes. Jaggard is originally from Cambridge where he was a bobby. The couple have one married daughter and will celebrate their 24th wedding anniversary. A resident of Costa Mesa for 10 years, Basil has worked with the police department for nearly five of those years. "I wanted to become a police officer but by the time l received my citizenship papers l was too old,'' he sighed. The good-loo klng volunteer driver likes to do gardening in his spare time. "I think it is easier for men volunteers to give of their time if they are working on shifts or part-time. Drivers are needed during all hours of the day ," he stressed. Jaggard wanted to work with the Boy Scouts as he d·id in England but because of hi s hours he was unable to do so . The bureau is in need of businessmen to work in various youth pro- grams. The men offer an image to the youngsters, noted the bureau's director, Mrs . Linnea Arkush. The opera program includes a presentation of Puccini 's "La Bo- heme" on Sept. 27-28. The following week will feature an Opera Extrava- ganza Ball for patrons and supporters, while the final Y.'eek , Oct. 11-12 will offer Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro." Men can speak of theit educational background and profession to young boys who cannot find this information in their homes, she added . Basil claims he was drawn to the bureau because of his conscience. DRlVING FDR .OTHERS B•sil A. J•ggerd "I have had no serious illness or catastrophe and I thought I was getting into a rut ... it was about time to help others." Has your time come yet? Unwanted Line Can Be Switched Off With Simple Click DEAR ANN LANDERS' My wife has been p~ued by obscene phone calls ror three weeks. We have noti· fied the police and they say they can 't do anything unless we can keep the caller on the line while someone alert& the police ar the phone company. Often the calls are made from public booths so you see how hard it is to cat· ch someone in the act. My Wife b on b'anqulliurs and Jog. Ing weight S?MI asked me to write and ask if you know of an effective method of dealing with these nuts who have nothing better to do than call people and talk rotten -Mr. L OF BOISE DEAR MR. L: The best way l4'1 deal with u obsetne phone call 11 to hang' up lmmedJately. This deprives tht. caller of the thlnt ht want.I mo1t -an audience. U ibe caller 11 phoning from • bootb be wUJ not 'eep tbrowtag: dimes Into the slot to hear the click ol a rettlver. The person wbo Is being harassed should never -repeal, nc\'er -ex- press fear, dl1g:u1t or .a "ger . This wl\I dellcht the caller and encoura ~r hi1n to keep calling. If the caller mn kcto w. threat of serious bodJly harm lht t.all should be reported to the police. Tht. Bell System 11 developln& 1ome amai- • Inf electronic equipment th1t t:~n automatically set off an alarm In the central office and trace the caller. I was 1urprt1ed to Itani from Joseph O'Brlea of llllnol1 Be.U that n1any baruslng cells 1're fron1 relatlvrs, neighbors or 1cqualnlence1 1~·ho bear a trudce. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You miss· ed a good opportunity to educate yl\ur readers when the woman told about ber friend who had lost 40 pounds and suddenly began to behave l i k e a teenager . She wanted to know if there was any connection. Many physicians are running into ''diet pill psychosis." This type of personaUty change is associated with addiction to amphetamines. The pub- lic should be made aware of the prob- lem. You can ltelp. I hope you will do so. -JHB (MD OF SHARON, P.A.I DEAR DOCTOR : Thanks for your letter. My medicaJ con1ult1nt1 agree that diet plll psychosis 11 a real danger to thoce who want to lote welJht without the help of a physician. Amphetaml ne1 (or pep pllls) p,... duce ten1lon, accelerate the responses ind promote Impulsive behavior. No one 1hould lake tbe1e pills (or ANY ptll11 fOf that m1Uer, wftbout the ap- -· prov.al or his physician . DEAR ANN LANDERS : In a col- umn which appeared some time ago there was a passing reference to a woman who strapped a bicycle i1orn around her husband's head at night to keep him rrom snoring. Will you please repeat the details because my old goat has been keeping me up with his infernal snoring for the past three years and I am willing to try anything. Don't suggest separate bedroom s because t put him in another bedroom two years ago and he snores so lc;ud I can hear him anyway . Please tell me the price o( the horn and where l can purcl\ase one. -NEED A NIGHT'S SLEEP DEAR NEED : I do not recommend the solution. Bicycle horn1 are for bicycles. If your hu1band'1 1nortnc ls a1 bad a1 yoo say, I suggest he 10 to a doctor. Minor IW'Cery m.lfbt solve tbl pro. blem. Want to say "no" to drinking without your buddies putting you down? Get cued in. Write for "Booze and You -For Teenagers Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents ln coin and a long , self-addressed, stamped envelope with your request. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to ht.r in care or the DAILY PILOT, enclos· Ing a aeU-addresaed, stamped •n· vetope. ' Way .to a Man 's Heart DEAR NANCY : I have oozy been married a few montba, but my wife ahows no interest in cooking eve.n though I complaln About her terrible chow. She jlllt doesn't .,l..f--"-ri!Und that the way to a man's heart i1 through his stom- ach. If this keeps up I'm going to have t.o start eating out in restaurant1. STARVING BRIDEGROOM DEAR STARV· ING: At the rate you're going you're going to need a diner's club card as well as a lawyer. The only way to a man's heart may be through his: stomach, but a lot of women find it a boring detour. Better try a little tenderness and en- courage your bride's cooking efforts instead of carping. II you can't find anything else, compliment on her on way sbe butters toast. Here's a dish tor beginners that sh!'ll have a hard time ruini.ne; but if &he does, smile and be quiet. With a little patience from you she'll learn . This dish serves two. BRIDE'• cmCKEN DIVAN ¥.I: teaspoon 1alt 2 chicken breasts, boned 2 tablespoons butter l package frozen broccoli 1 can cream of chicken soup 'i2 cup mayoMaise 1 teaspoon lemon juice an teas~ curry powder I/, cup Parmeean cheese, grated Sak chicken breasts. Melt butter Md saute chicken breasts until golden and cooked (about 10 minutes.) Cook broccoli in boiling salted water until barely tender. Drain. Arrange broccoli in a greased baking dish ; place ch.icke?l on top. Stir together soup, mayonnaise, lemon juice and curry powder. Pour over chicken. Sprinkle with cheese, Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Youthful Models What's 11our cooking prtdica?Mnt? Send it in and stt if wt c.an cook it! Whilt we can'i pllrs01lallJ1 answer aU 11our lttttrs, th.ost letters with the mmt tnttr· taining or ptrtintnt culinary probltm& tDiU bt publishtd in thi.! column. StmJ Jlour Utttrt to WHAT COOKS? c/o THE DAILY PILOT. Dressed in their best back-to-school attire are (left to right) Brian Cruden, Lori Cruden and Sally Escher. Fall clothing for all ages is featured in th• daily fashion shows staged at South Coast Plaza which began yesterday and continue through tomorrow. A dance contest is held each day following the show which begins at 2 p.m. Dance partners are not required. K.lothes Kraze for School Daze is the theme. Bruncheon Scheduled Golden Anniversary Mrs. Norman Watson To Head Volunteers Treasure Box Opens A new fund raiser for the Children's Hosp ital of Orange County will be the CHOC Treasure Box. Mr. and Mrs. Miguel A. Yero Sr. of Costa Mesa celebrated 50 years of marriage by repeating their nuptial vows in St. Joachim's Catholic Church. The honorees were married August 15, 1918 in the Catholic cathedral in Havana, Cuba. They have two sons including Miguel A. Yero Jr. of Costa Mesa, Mrs. Paul Berhart will two daughters and 10 grandchildren. A reception entertain the e x e c u t i v e took place in the home of the junior Yeros. board of Harbor Forwn and -;;::;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-, An expanding March of ., Dltnes program has ap- pointed Mrs. N o r m a n Watson of Newport Beach to act as California volunteer advis-or for the National Foundation. ~trs . Watson was at the same time named chairman of the Council of California Volunteer Advisors in which she will work with Mrs. H. 0 . Boyvey of Balboa, Mrs. Walter F. Johnson of San Anselmo, Mrs . R. Lyle Mitchell of San Diego and Mrs. Franklin Iandecker of Millbrae . The Newport B ea c b woman will work closely with women's clubs and y o u t h-serving organiza· tions to develop educational project! concerning prenatal care, the problems ot birttl defects and the help available to patients, families and communities through the March o f Dimes. \ ..... - Grand opening of the thrift shop will be Friday, Aug. 23, at its permanent location, 531 S. Main St. in Orange. It will be open six days a week from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will be staffed by members of the 13 women's guilds. Mrs. Edward Corlett ot the Little Red Wagon Guild is general chairman, while assisting her will be Mrs. James Evans of Cinderella Guild and Mrs. Leon Jones of Little Red Wagon Guild . Anyone wishing to con- tribute saleable clothing and householdltems may deliver the merchandise to the Treasure Box. Proceeds will help provide medical care for children whose health needs exceed family come. LB Overeater. Every Tuesday of the month Overeaters Anonymous gather at 8 p.m. in Laguna Hills. Leisure World. Clubhouse 2, dining room 1. PENETRATION _..,\I N•••ly •>'•ryon• r•1d1 flt1 A board member of the Orange County Chapter of VOLUNTEER ADVISOR Mrs. Norman Watson DAILY PILOT, kom1town 111w1• P•p•r for tlt1 F•b11!01u Or1nq1 Co1it. the National Foundation· March of Dimes, she also is past president of t b e California Federation of Junior Women'• clubs. She received the Ca 1 i for n i a Govemor•i Award for Outstanding Service in the Field of Mental Health and is a founding member of the board and past president of the South Coast C h i I d Guidance Clinic. Mrs. W.abon is a member of tile Orange Coonty Com- prehensive Planning Com- mission, Orange County Mental Health AHoclat.ion and the Harbor A r e a Coordinating Council. In her position a s volunteer advisor she will assist the rtepped·up attack on birth defects which a!· flict more than a quarter of a million infants born in the United States each year. The March of Dimes group is also substantially expanding its nationwide network ol Birth Defech<i Centers as well as in· tensifying tts educational programs and financing of basic research. Pour Some More Coffees Perk how thriftY are you when you borrow money The Laguna Beach Branch of the American Association of University Women invites eligible women to their in- formal summer coffees. For residen4 of Mission Viejo and El TOl'O the home of Mrs. Gary Leach of 1-lissioo Viejo will be ttie setting on Thursday , Aug. 29, from 10 a.m. to noon . She is taking reservations at 837-:m'l. Wooten residing in Laguna Hilla have two loca· tioos for parties tomorrow. The home ol Mrs. George H. Eggleotoo Will be th e acme at lO a.m. for mem- bon ond ,,_i. with manor mmiben 451-700. Mrs. CedJ Party Planned 'Ille El Camino Real Junkw Woman's Club invKes wooien In the CaplftrlOO Valley area to a community fund -raising party tooiorr°" at 8 p.m. in the OiOI Poiot Community Hoose. · · ... McConnell is co-hoste6s. . The second coffee, begin· ning at 10 a .m.. is for women living in manor numbers 701-on. Mrs. Lyal C. Baumgardner is the hoste ss. The Laguna Hins home of Mrs James C. Jacobs will be th e 10 a.m. coffee scene on Thursday. Aug. 2 9 . Resf'rvations ma y be made wit.h her at 837·8167. She will be welcoming women with manor numbers 251-450. Earlier this month several coffees took place I n ne ighboring cities. . This ye;or's program wUI include speakers. discussion groups and excursions to continue exploration of the Natiooal Association Tapics. ~ .., Southern California Thrift & Loa n specializes 1n personal . business and Trust Deed loans.,. Stop in today and see how we can solve your imme. diate money problems from depend· 1ble funds available right now. The Thrifty way can save you money. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT & LOAN M ..___.... -i..,; .. man 170 £•st J7th SL. eo.t• Miu ..... fl46 ·S0•5 Graduates of more than m American colleges and wi.ver&ities are eligible, Ap· plicatJon blanks will be available at tile coffees . and yearly dues are SI2.50 1 tm1.1m11UIP i.."U..., IS 6lS9 Wll1tth1 Bird .. Los An11l1s ••• 6Sl·l220 t,fn. George E. Goodall. -=================~ 4H-470ll • '· New 'Stew' Flying out of San Fran- cisco International Air- port as a new· steward- ess for TWA is Miss Janis Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rus- sell E. Miller of Nev.'- port Beach. She com- pleted six weeks of training in Missouri. the new vice president, Mrs. I' Tina Simakis at an informal brunch next Friday at 10 a.m. in her Newport Beach home. After the event, the board will continue plans for the citizenship class which it will conduct at Fashion Island Wednesday. Sept. 18, with the Orarge County Registrar of Voters as the principal speaker. CM Auxilia ry The first Thursday of the month members of the American Legion Aux- iliary. Costa Mesa Un.it 455, gather in the American Legion Hall, at 8 p.m. Kids Like to 'Ask Andv' ----VA!\T PA'IKING IN REAR BOB'S BARGAIN CENTER NEW! Stor• Houra MON. • Fll:I. f :XI lo ''OD SATUll:OAY f ·30 to S:OO CLOSED SUNDAY 1812 Newport Bl., Costa Mesa Ph. 646-7167 UUllll! BEAUTY SUPPLY DEPARTMENT AT COST and 10% BELOW COST We ar1 dlscontlnulnt our leauty Supply Depart· ment -Al Items must 90 to make room for other merchaodlse. 1411N •LONDI INNOCINT ILONOI NATUttALLY ILONDI! BRECK SHAMPOO ••. ''" 1 74 ht· 2.sa • Style Hqir Spray " ··.:~'. "" 67c THAT'S MY COLOR ;~~· '1.62 ROUX TINT & TONER ,,.., .. 59c LAPIN Colorful Tint ,:,·~:.. 40c CLAIROL S·HAMPOO :~~ '1.29 Pantine & Kindness.~ '·" 39c COVER GIRL "'"" • '"'t.'&. "" 96c R. H. LIPSTICKS WOLTZ n•u•• •• ,; "'"'" Cutex Manicurist MAYBELLINE All 1 .. 11a .,,., 1.00 WHILE STOCKS LAST llCI. 1.10 MANY MORE BEAUTY ITEMS, TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION WOOLWORTH'S _. io~.~~.~~ ~ COSTA MESA -COLORFUL BATH MATES Deep pile, lOOS Dacron9 polyester lid cover and 18"~' bath mat Choose Shocking Pink, Ice Pink, Green, Gold, Bfttemveet, Bristol Blue, or White. 77 •et ASK ABOUT LAY-AWAY, 10% down boldl your purehase at Woolwwtb'1, no oanyinC eblJ111, tYU, YOW MOHIY'I .... --W00L¥0DR W HW Shop Every Ev1nint Mond•y thru Frld1y Until 9:30 p.m. - Stturd1y 'Ti l 9:00 p.m. ' sa !ir be be •• a, >D -• t l • . . . ' , . . . . - • • no-uon 1eans 2.99-3.39 req. 3.50-4.00 Trim-fit western style jeans of polyester and cotton that never need ironing. Reinforced at points of strain. 6-16. boys' wear 14 boys' no-iron casuals from famous makers --·. . 3.69-4.69 reg. 5.50-6.50 Ivy or continental style polyester and cotton slacks that never ever need ironing. Loden, blue, brass. 6-12, 26-30. boys' wear 14 MacPherqus no-iron jeans in wide-wale corduroy 3.99-4.99 reg. 5.00-6.00 Cotton corduroy in fast-back, lean-Ii i western styling. Never need ironing Assorted colors. In sizes: 6-12, 14-18. boys'wear 14 • . STARTS THURSDAY boys' no-iron sports shirts in oxford by Sheldon 2.99 reg. 4.00 Permanently pressed polyester and cotton oxford cloth shirts with soil re- lease to shed stains. Assorted. 8-20. boys' furnishings 23 boys' mock turtle knit shirts by famous makers 1.99 reg. 3.00 A big assortment of styles and colors. All cotton, easy-care, color fast. Stock up for school and save! Sizes 8-20. boys' furnishings 23 ,,,(·.· ·' ·'WJI'' ·t;, boys' cotton underwear a wardrobe essential 3 for 2.00 Easy-launder combed cotton under- wear by Sheldon. White briefs and t- shirts in sizes 8 through 20. boys' furnishings 23 • • t • I • • ' 4 • I • boys' cotton flannel pajamas from Sheldon 2.99 reg. 4.00 Warm cotton flannel in both coat and middy styles with elastic waist bands. A big assortment of palterns. 8-18. boys' furnishings 23 boys' famous maker corduroy parka , 15.99-17.99 req. 20.00-23.00 Famous maker heavy-duty widewale cotton corduroy shell lined with deep acrylic pile. Sizes: 8-12, 14-20. boys' wear 14 save on cardigan sweaters from very famous makers 4.99-6.99 req. 7.00-10.00 A smashing selection of colors and styles for juniors and preps. It's a wise time to save' In sizes: 8-20. boys' furnishings 23 Wed~, August. 21, 1%8 DAIL~ '!LOT Jf famous makes ski parka with waterproof shell 11.99-13.99 reg 15.00-17.00 Water proof nylon shell is lined with deep acrylic pile. Zip-front with a con- cealed hood. Assorted colors. 8-20. boys' wear 14 Sheldon's turtleneck shirt wears long sleeves for fall 1.99 req. 3.00 Easy-care cotton knit is the top style shirt lor every scholar. In white, blue, olive, gold, maize. Sizes 8-20. Great looks at savings! · boys' furnishings 23 nylon knit shirts put on a mock-turtleneck 2.99 -req. 4.50 Famous maker pure nylon knits, full. fashion styling with short sleeves. Rich color choice. Available in sizes 8-18. boys' furnishings 23 • • ' • • • ' " I ' ' ' . may co south coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, c:osta mesa; 546-9321, shop monday thru saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. " ~-~------------- I ~------------------..,..,-....,.....~--·-· ....... .,..--_---·~· ~-=;~~-,,,,=~=,,...... J 8 DAIL V PllOT -.~ LEGAL NOTICE Spending in State Continues Climb OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll•tlng• fo r Wodn•tcf•y, August 14, 1961 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE """ HOTICIE TO Cltl:DITOllS SU~l!ltlOlt COUltT Of: THI! STATI: OP: CAllFOltNIA. l'Olt THE COUNTY Of: CtltAHOI! LEGAL NOTICE HI . A'*'7 Cl!ltTIP:tCATE OP: IUSINl"SS, E1l111 o1 MA RGARET POWELL P:ICTITJOVS NAME &ADLER, Dtctll<!d. TM unMr1!1ne<1 "°"' certllY ht 11 COll-PKITICE 15 HERE SY G1V€H to 11'111 0Uctth9 1 bus!ne11 al :WI Blrch Slrffl, cr.illton cf Ille lbovt Mm.II Ncelltnl N~rl lle1tn C1lllorni1, under IM llc· 1111! 111 Pfl"WM havlntr dal,,,.. a11ll\ll Ille llllovs firm n1me cf CERTlFIED 11ld cltctdtnl ,,. re<tulred to Ille "'°"'· ENTE RPRISES and !hat uJd !Imo II will! Ille necess•ry voudlers. In !tit otflc• coml'OSfd OI tl'll! tollcwlno pe......,, whoK DI 1"-tier-ol' Ille abov• tn!llled court, n•me !n lull arid olKt DI rt1l1Je...:1 11 •• or 10 11rt•tnt ll'll!m wlln 11\e n«tH•rY tallowl: YWci'lefl, to Ille unclert1gned 11 lht otllce Wlll lAM llURIC E, 736.1 Llm:oln, cf Brl'dolt, Gta1, W~Vll & H1rr ll0fl. Al· Anentlrn, C1lltornl1. lorn1n, .)01 E11I Coler-Bl\'d., D.rtd AUflUll 26, !ta Pat.1dtr11, C111fornl1, tllOI, wll!ch 11 Tiie Wlll lAM BURKE o!act ol bU1ln1H ol lht unel.r1loned 111 •II Stitt ot Cal1fo1nl•, Or1'lft County~ m1tl'rs P•rl1!nlng to llM! e•tate DI stld On AUflUll :IQ, 1ta, before mt, 1 Nc!lry clec.o&nl, within 11• "'°"lh1 attar IM tlril Public In •nd for ••Id Stitt, i>erMIMlf'I 11ubllc1tlon ol 11\11 notice. tPoe•...0 WtlllAM BU RKE known torn• D•lld AUPUll ,, 19611 to be l!!t PtrlOfl wl'lctt .... mt 11 1ublcrlb- Al!ten Pawell Sadie' ancr Id lo !~" wl!hln Instrument Ind Wlll l&m Howard S..dler acknowltdiltd he h&s e•tculld lhe 11,,.e. C!Hxecu!ofl ol Ille Wl!I cl Ormlh V. VII Ille 1bow l'a"'ed dtcec!Onl Hc tarv Publ!c·C1llrornl1 l ltYDOlP:, GJl:,1.Y, P1!nclo11 Olllc• In WHYTE .. HAR RISDN O••~ge Counrv 101 E"lll C1ler1llo 81¥111. M~ Ccmml1•foP1 E~plrH P1saden1, CJ~lorftlt, tlltl Mltrch 11, lt7l T•I: tlJ: 1tf.U« PublllMd Or8noe CNS! Dally Pilot, AlllffttYI IM" C•l!Xt<lllOll "-Ufll,ISI )1, 11 Ind 5tottmbtr •. ti. ~ubllil!ed Orange Coast Oa!IY Pllct, 1961 l~ A119uol 1, U. ?I. JI, 1961 1:161...a ---~~~~"""""""'=--- LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ' I measures personal, govern· '"" .... ...._ .. •141 ment, and business SN>ndi"" .u.1 c11r11 11 1t 11 Ee11.1u1ori 1"-co oi"'" u 11 u for ri>ed I n v e s t m e n t .1.&.E '"1'"111 '"•k :it •1 » Fa,...,...... !few 0t1c1 -. J1 n~ si~ .... ~ """' Emolrt G_,:ir ':i, ~ >• ~mt fi/«lrk ,It• I~ ~I It\.\ F~mtri r 1 nOwr ters i ~ ~" 5' tnroughout the state, ,f.o~rie .-.. 1on1 11~ ,~ 11•111 :1,..11u:wrt•1 .. 11 ,,,. v. •• r Personal income rose 7 1 "r,1t11,1u•1tlr1 1 "" "111 1 ,,.. ,,,,fuAll'I Thlli 1n, .a ~'* u11o \WI ' Al rtt;on'1 Inc .l6 ! IA. l•to Fil •f Liit Alt 'fl'I 3.... i ""'rcent in a year to S75 30 At i.o ault 'I 1 \.\ ll -lO\o Frt (! n l ift 4 JDl'I JI JD ,. ' 'Iii." l'rwtrl '' "'1\.1 .Wl'I Fllfld Amerlc• ~1.50 •VI 50 si billion in J uly. Wage and ~11~ ['r!,:Ji ~~ ,....~~ ~ ~j.. Ii:~::.."~' it,,,'"',•,.• ·~ ~ .. ·~ salary compensation ac· Am e1o.i t.Uln1 .1' 10.... U., "" ,1;. _.,, ,.. cou.nted for $52,07 billion or ~E~J:f~,r~h 11:te 111 " 1J.,. t'"$~=,~~t:·: ~~ "ff'i\i. ffl• person.al income, whil e pro· Amer Pl" & C0111t .!O B;., v. !j:; n NII ~"" u I t •• _.. I Am llto~ t. Pl&!''~ ,IO tr",•. '!• 1 .,., 1 •na £ 111rr1'L:11t 17: 7\/o pre ors a uu pro,._. .y n· .a.m1m Pro1rt H ... Merc c~a 1 u ,. II" come a nd pension a n d ~= c~ \..o JI"' H11 ;. ~~ ~~'.f~f; .a ~ ~\l fl"' welfare benefi la t 0 ta } e d ~~M,~c.iflll ~ ~ a.. ~:11 u.;~~ 't1lt3fr1t ,~.., 1114 ~I $23.23 billion, With the drop ~~dtftm,:·Ma~~:t~"' :i. u """' u N,•-., , ,, ,•,• '•'• •,•,•~ ' ' .. rn:•• r.~ n:: D ... rntr ,_ • .. , V. in nor sonal ~ndi.ng ln the Ar •1C1C••1 rv r ,. P1elt1t Naj Lift llYt """ 11 r-~r-Arll Aff.o ci..m ll 61 " Ptru1u_lv1n t Uf• , 11 1>1 n \ll \l' s tate, retail sales d eclined .7 ~~~::;.~' P~•~:'1 .l!'° "' :11"' v11 '!.".!'.':~,~",','.,, ,, S "" · th b 1 k.J.C "'"I• ............ oca .. e . l1 percent 1n a mon , ut ~:::'~~ti'on 1..:t,, 8 01 us 115 Rkh,_ cw. i.i. u ..., 4'.l"'t 'Jl 6 l h' h I G 111, 11\IJ lftl St. P.ul F .. NI 1 6' )J"\:o l2Yo »'.I. Rescue Rewarded were st1 . percent 1g er ..,1.':t.rli. 'E~u::.ic'• 11.,, 11\.io t:~:: & .~ DI fk Hv. J{'" than the July 1967 total. •rt'IQ 1-11nd P~a·"' "~ '° " Seabolr,o Coro H• 1.. ht . 1¥1n1 Mlr\el• '° n1>o 11,,, """ m••t en lj•• 1"' eo '-l ai A l"J · d · ted t J ph B ke Taxes. savings, and con· a11u1y coul\$ ·'° 11 30 11 IY Life '"' '" I\ 1 e saving a w a r 1s p r esen o ose ur . Bo1r1.,. V1n & SI .10 •J~ ,•,•• r,""• ~~11 Corl 0: '·'° loll •1 '° ~ In• Tru': 1'.• " ·.w>,:, uli. I J ) !TI' J bs I C ta M b J hn sumer interest ~yments s.n.S111re Hat11ow•v .. 14 --... A , , ••• , , ,_ .. "" ,, •• ''" ( e t , a c o emp oye, o s esa, y o '728~billi" · afiCsioru 60 !f\lo in., J,"" ~t1nc0"";'"" ,u,·,: 26 2J" Tr!;:U~w;iA°';;n !At 23 i.'' 23 advanced to 1 . on 1n B1oc:r>em1ca1 ·Proo;:ecturn If"" ?l~ nv. ompy••r EqylPmi .. 1~ ,,It. vnii.o •n• co A"'"° J:IV. 11 31~ Gant, safety cons ultant, E m p loyers Ins u rance o f July, a 1.2 per cent monthly ~c:~ i?:1Tnt VPllll 22 21S = r~P45o0s ·111 2; $1,"'1 21 ~E 'r1c1T~~~,l1l~.., u"",·· J:.~ ,""l W a usau . Burke received w a tch for res u scitating al d · f IQ 9 Boalon C1plt1I .S JJ.,'"° ~~ ~ ft'$C:l'nl Tedi 4U. 4Y, VOll<JWlllltn In!' •• 1'1 • k h " g n a n an mcrea se o • lklw•••r P'""' .1u '"' ra 614 ASA coro 11v. 111to wnt1rn Travei.tt 1" 4 ,... fellow employe'Stric en y seizure. n.orcent in a year's time. r~=:f!"do D~1t 24\.'I ls"' :•>w Ill" o,Hlan 0l1b 1,1~ 100, ','.~ WllMl!ni lns,co O " '" 7 6\lol------"'-...:-------"-------------r~ ••• 7 71 2'2\o 72 II• ro<IU(ll 6-. .,. ASTE BANKS Business spending f o r f~1'~r~~n<I 2.,r. 25 21v. 1nt1r,,.1ion.1 . .o 21111 11ti. t!."" B1nkor1 Tru111.60 n 10 •'~ ~fV. d u r able e q U i p m e 0 t iO-,','o'o'o' ,P!~oo"o'cll!!.!!'•1.1>11 U~ J: ~\.'i 81'1~11~1£,~ .~In! .Ill 111 ~ f1 ~~:~e~:,.r ~~ k~ :1v. '"' '1 v. "' ""'" 17,.., ll 2ll'I DlCkM!f! Elec!r°"lc• 70 11~ !7Vi Cont Ill NII Clll 1.70 ~Ill •J .iw, creased 6.6 percent in a 1111 war~r Service'·'° ~" 10 ,1 Dlolt•k U'h is HV. Flrs1 N•r Bk c~1 1 !<8'0 ~ 51,,. It's Your Move: T ta Ca,,.pyo C8W•t1 ·'° lli • l't 17 ' Dl~trt• Im: J\' ''"° 6~• Frankl!,, N&T B~ NV I.XI .'11>11 )l:r.I :11V. year lo 1i6.78 billion. 0 I Cannot1 Miii• l.60 /' 11.,, J"-g tv•rsa Im: DI t ll 1~1~ 16\lo IS~~ Mffl H•nove• Trull DU. 6S 65111 45 b • d' ( (" A.;i Cao T•cll Inc 411 IS\. 14'4 orn1"11Uf! Wtr .60 11 '1• !)'I, lG\'t MCrO&n (..U8r 4.«! Jjl .... \;l illl;o us1ness spcn 1ng or IX""' ~•oir.1 Reurv• co ". ll'" u•, Dovie oe~• ,M 11 11"" 11 Nfl Bk cf NA 11 30 u investment, up 2.6 percent c:..'ft,dv• ~:~r~~i6' J'" • l'·• ':;,~~,rn~, 2~.,,,. li'• 2)* Aii.c.na B8~E1sTER'4 BAr,:s 15"' 15 in a month and 19 percent in ~~:~. ~'1 "r'.ing u,',•l 1,I,·:~ 1,~i ORCfTlfc• 'C!~ ' . .o. ~ .... ~~ ~,,11 ::~: :: ~~51~·?: :r~ !f~ 11;:: d d to 112 78 Cllem Mlll!<l!I l11ml ., " (' n lnduslrlf!I u 0 v. 15\'t U\'t Bk ol Tokvo of Ctl JlV. 3J JJ ll> a year, a Vance • Cltl1ensUtl!A! 16V> 21 l64 1ec!ro(a11 .... t "'° Ce!ll!MllV1llevblc .:IO 11V. !I 1114 billion l·n J uly, ,S!!.1,•,•,M, ,',',','-•,~" H~ 1'1"' lm l..clrolu• 301'1 3PJ. XI,,"• Ctnlurv Bank 1 ,l'I How to Make It -"' -U'ilo 101 Ul'o ltc!IOll\ Cap 21~ 21•"" Cll'r Ntl Bk ,Ill 70'4 2.0~ .~ ______ ..:, ______ .-'.::;c;:;..:;.:;;c"-''--------j!1o1e1ron Nltmotie$ l'9 V. 31 Crock1r<lllz-l.«11 JI .., •• ',•,•,m, ~-'""c,,.,.;.U. ll\lo HV. 1 .. l1A F~"'!:iBlnk ,10 13 13y, lj Crossword P11zzle ACROSS 1 Scotlfsh he1dband fr Small clump 10 Lend su~orl l~ ··-Dame de Paris 15 "-•·• Your Face Before Mt": Z words 16 Europtan UIP 17 "-··-of Old Smoky"; Z words 18 The Yukon is one 20 S!ad!um shout 21 Kind of auack ZJ Shows pleasure 24 Sin9tr 25 Anlm1l Zfr No!ary JO Ewp!oit 34 Mine 35 Evll; Comb. form 37 ••• force 38 Jus I sit arou nd 39 ··••· frnee 41 Kind of rubbet 4Z Choler 43 Bild 44 Suit 46 ..... boy .48 Lays up: 2 words 50 At ont time I" th e past ' 3 • • '" 52 River of Africa 53 Ca talfn a It. commun ity 56 Indian of Sask1t- thtwan 57 Bii tlsh leena9er 60 Gov erning mechanism fr2 Ontar io's ···-· River fr 4 Dressed 65 Mo\le into \liew 66 Chop Into small pieces 67 Rodent!lke mammal b8 Boy Scout's concern t.o'I More advanctd Jn years DOW " 11 College subject: Alilr. 12 To bt: Fr. 13 Cliristmas metcl1andist 19 Represfnl· arioo 22 Loath Z4 G~mbltn g 1 Kind ot medium 25 B~by Pl'tttnder sitter's 2 "-·· Naneltt" conctrn 2 'llOrds 26 Siz• of wine J King of bottle th e Ger111a11s 27 Irish 4 Goldi in counry Seui le 28 Removed 5 Remove fl11m from tht offic e fr Color 7 Pu l into se rvic e 8 Chemin de - 9 Blitf and pithy 10 Dress ' scene 29 Rou~sea u !Ille 31 ..... Arabia 32 Ha\l ing certain projections J3 Efface • ' 11121/68 )6 Part~ to rea l esta te ·agreement 40 Tense 41 Bottom suppo11 43 Alpint region •5 Sicil la11 seaport 47 Otctive 49 Smalt tower 51 l ight meal 53 Chief 5~ Sou1he1n consteltat1on 55 Seaweed product 56 PoptJlar TV singer 57 ---· reader 58 See 50 Across 59 Employee tn fab1 ic mill bl 2.240 lbs, 111 the U.K. t.oJ Caus~ u11eas111rss " ,, 8'21168 rl•-v•~• "'" ~ 411'o F nl lncot"POrtllon I r.l't t~\'J !.l'o Feo Mart . .50 1 ~."~"· ·~14,.,Vi 2' F rs! urlty Cp l ,iQ .., _ Fed Slg11 & SIQl"lll M I -.. ...,... ~V. Gii-i V Hal Bk 1 ' 14~ U FM! Sign & Sig CVPfJ.20 -Imo.rial Bank 22 24 7J Frst Bmlcn Cori> • H lo:J H llr:..r!'r n.at Bk .14 1 Ali n .. F1r11 E~e' cm' 17 1• 11 Mlnufactv[,!" II•'* 10\4 :: ,r6 ~1::~~ ~~,,::a ,;~ 1:.,. ,f~ "nl1 ""°'N • flnk.J: u ...... , ... ~ '1 Pn;>elucl5 Ltd ,., 5\4 '"" 5\lo ~titff 1tt11N1r .~. ... • _.., Four S"r TV 714 7" 07'AO Sumitomo Bk C1I 1.10 JJl't ll ~I'll G1ruen ltnd co t'4 t '¥. Sul'riY Nal 8k 1 I I 1 GH Strvlca I 1,0'!; ',',• 'o'"o Union Barw::crp 1 . ..0,.. iSV. S6Vr ~'II atn-erel B,_111Q -US N1! B-. SD II 2',,. J0v. 19\lo •-•1 ll:t111rdl Cc 22YI 23'h ,~,Vi Valley HB Pl'lellnlx .Xis 17'4 l:AI; 21\1; -l"u.~trlK VV. 2'lY, Wtlls Fai:vo Bank '·'° ~ ~I SG\'J Gen Te 4\IJ Pl .fO ,1~~ UY, 1,~ ACFV.WriQ Sir cv4,,.S/1 '' t• Gtn Tl!i 5 Pl I ~.., 16 ••• Am. !lilt Rub CV,\l;IJ 130 1:11 IJO ~.ol!!trm RJra Int A9 1'4 7V. Arllen·M.ari1lr '5 26!• n n 11 .. 11 TK~<lllloln' 1 l"i 1V. Arl1n't Dfll/ CV4\'Jsl2 Ill 1fl !10 ISKO ll\llNmtnr,; 1'\4 11' 1Vi B .. L Oollcl C¥1"711' llO llS lrx>ell CcrP 2 t ltM 10I 103 B-ru• Airlines 511.11' HS l•S Guldan(t Ted> 5 SY. 4fo BUffum1cvWt1 16 1JO 130 Gulcllnc:e TK.11 CV pt 20, •• n, ~ •. ~ Canlrde Dt"V ev"'41ll 1U 115 He11ry Enoln Co •• ., cciom1111 Eno " n 71 11 11excel .611 61\fi 6l 61 1'! Control 0111 cv:V.stt 11' 175 s~~·~J co ~ ~l'I ~ ~ocX%~!1:;~:st:,~R ,~ '° I; Hou•lon Ftlrlts• 3'"' Wi 3'A FMC Ccrp cvll'ul1 1S2 10~ "liter ! "1 '8 «> Fruehauf Tr cv"76 I'° 38 In orm111c1 6' 66 '4'1.1 Gib Fl~ c11 (V41'>c~' n a 110 Inland Con!ll"'l't 1.«l 3! 36 l5 Hotlv Suga{ (•O'HllJ I'! 161 111 lrumenl SYSTEMISF\t>,l;V. 31'.t. Maull (Oji Ckt cv-.) 60 10 60 lntu .... 1Jon11 Chtm s 78 81 1• ""' ou!dr o KW 6J 1' n 92 tnlersl•!• Bake Pl '·IO 71 11 PaultV Pel }\M76 11' Ul 111 j1r11eno, A11<111w .911 JI 3t 38 Sflln MltsublsM cv6""•17 9! " 9 0 > Jerrold Ccro s 3111) l717 tnrllly Mir! cv ~ IO 91 102 $ Jurgenu~ proc .2.5 1 1~ 7 Thrll!y M1r! CY 6>17 110 110 .Jei Air F1el~ht ll•/.I n•i. •I Tol<vo Shlbaur• tv~•il t5 " •s K•l•er SIHr ! 11 7l1f· 71 \'i Tran• Weil PL S'69 .,, .,, Ktl1er S!eel DI '-* "lm 1:Vto il'!'o WIYnt' Mlq ~ll7 120 130 J:IO Kernor Coro ll'l:i 28'h 2 V:r Well$ Fargo l'4i at as 112 as 1Can11 El Pwr 2:! .5 19'A It~ l 'I• Whlllaker oc•lli·ll 181 1'6 191 "leliwood Co I.~ Jl~t 11 69 MUTUAL FUNDS Ken!uckv frltd Ch .\0 IJ 7~ 11\fo Para,,.ount Mui ta 9.6' l0.S6 •.6J {tYc!one Cutt Fa 1.20 JI l2 J! Unl!und 10.•l ll:Jf !0."3 ~V~:, :~:~· •• , f,,¥o ~~ ~,,. var1<1e•bllt Mur Fd t .'2 10.JO t .JI Kl!Uds.l'n Coro. 1.60 '° 12 «> Ko,.corp 26'·~ 20n 11'4 I Kr-r t.l cvol J.15 •I II o v, L.A. Airways ~ 6>./,i 5 t:,~...,;:,.-~ ~: 17 it.4 Lewrv·1 F-16 .12 J2 l1¥ne I Bowler ·'° !2'11 llh lear Jer lol U 1~ L~l•ure Gr""p olJ • 43 Liily, ~II & Cc I.loll 125'J:i 177 Ill t°7' S!~f Sklf"e .'4 4 1.S1 4 11 Mlcrouyne • 3J 3' JI M111n.urnc-Movlol1 · 111~ 11'\lo 11"'9 M G T A"I'"""' 10\li !°""' !01'1 Mllllnc-rodt Cllem 1 61 10 6s ~:~1~fH~"i= l{VJ ~~ fi\~ McLNn ll'ld • 33-\lo 3'1/o Y.1\\ Mtrcfl1nt1 FM LIN l }4V. 25\4 2•\.il M10l111C1 C1111!11 .20 lJV. It 17\lo Mona<ch Mlrlt. Sy1 .. 41 3',,. 39\fi Au1, '9 lnve-i. Boo IJ.:Jf 14.63 Morrl1 Plan I l4VJ 2JI? 241'> lnYel1 Grouo; Morr\~ KnudMn I 2•"" 25 U'h HEW YORK (AP) MUI 11.'511.•5 Murphy Pac Mar .!O 2•\lo •""> 2~• -the foUowin~ q.,o. Sloe• 22.~ 24.JS '411oona1 Sv11e"'I "3111 " ialioni, ~u111>ll<"d br• Stlecl t n 10 11 1 Neiman M11c111 .to ll\.'o 1317 Y.r Tiie Nalionol .a..ooc Var P•v fl7 t,96 Ne!wor~• Elec Co 11'.4; J21J• 11>./,i 1110!0 OI Securities Inv Rull 6 l'9 6 ti New Eng G&E 1.10 ,, 2""° 1• Otaler5, Int are 1s1el 261' ll.57 Nl cr.oloon Fiie 1.60 l'I ~'.~ J9 !ht Pritts 11"w111ch veil 17.0ol ll.6' '41eison ,1.c .~ JP'> .,1,.; JJ VJ their securltlr• Ivy 26.~ 26.Sl No Ctn! Alrllne1 .S 5',lo 5 could h•Yt been jQllnsln 22.•1 22.'1 No Cenr Air Unit• 611> 7 61'1 Miid (bid) or bouithl KaYS1""t Fund1: Nct1hwaf1 Ga1 so 11'·• !2\<o n~ (tsktdl Tue1d1y: Cu• 111 11.IO 11.1' gctan~rum Inc .60• !l'I> 11'1i 11~ Biel AMI Cul B2 12.1"12/• lg• Cc 1".l 25\I l~'h Aberdatn Vnavall CUI B( 10.JI J .1, """"" Metal .IUH 17i., t3v. 12"· Afhlaltd t.IB t .•l Cui I(! 9_,, 10.JJ Ormco CO<"o l! I!"' JS All Amtr 1 l• ju !u' tel 7.5! B.ll PabSI Brew ,l.S !.IV, '1~< 161'1 Amcaa 6°l't 011 Ul SJ 2l.Sl 15,,7 Pac Auto Prod J .i.-._ l Am Bwl J:6f 4:00 us S2 11.64 1J.7'1 P•c E1ec1tlco1d 11 12\, 11 Arn Oivln 1 J " 1! 63 Cus Sl ID.II 11.16 Pac Far E"l •I L1~1 2.«! •l"• "''• •l "• Arn Grlh 1."JS 1:u Cui Sl 6.f6 I.Mt Pac G•mblt--Roll ,81\ !! 15''> H'o Am In~ IO.Ol 10.0I Knlc~b I.ft 1.16 Pie Oul<Joor Adv. • l1'~ 36'« 3111. Am Mui 10 n !1 Jt Knlcii Glh !J,O\ 21.* PK Ve11 0 11 Cor11 II J4'" 14 Am NGw J:'ll J:ao ltxlnl!! 10,tl 11. P8 Gn I. Waltt 2~ it" 16 Am Pac Vnav1U Lt• ll:scn 16.55 11. P1l....,ar Mof1~1cr 6'•1 I'• 6~> Ancl>tt Gt""P ~ l lb9rlr I.IS l.M P1rvlew Gem ll ll"o 3' Grwth U.1.S 16.60 snte! • ulv SF Pauiov Petrel.um 11'·• 1514 "I.Sh Inv 10 1' 11 ti lilt St~ •.&I 5.JJ Peru~ Nlulll•en 60 16V, 21 26>r Fa In ¥ 11:6' u:u l;fe Inv 1.JO 1.H P!onNr N G~l .IO 2J "''• :0 Aucclate!I I 6J I IO loom/1 S1YltsFa1: PUBCO Pelroleo.o"' .!I B\.'o I~~ 11 A•t Hough1oii: . C-d 3'9.10,,.10 Pub Svc 01 NM .911 29~ 16 ... ~' Fund ,,_ 1.ll t.'9 C111U U.'1 U.42 Rl!Oeor Ccrp 78 76'!0 26 Fund B !J"ll1120 MUI 161116.24 Re~tll ln< I•, 814 IV. Stock t.l5 t lj M1n/lln 10.1111.11 Rkll1rd~on .IO ll'> J•'~ ll'... S.Ci Ca 1,SI 1:1 Mau Fnd ll.1111.Ct RcaOcr•n M!Q JS 11·~ 1•v. 16 Babso."\ I u I u MIU G!h JJ.50 1j.U Rober11 Ccn ... 1 6(1 II'·• 111~ I• B•ut Rid tJ.'16 u."o• ........ Tr 16.fS J .51 Robt!rlson, 11 H 2 :IO 1£'• l"l''o 211•·, BOl>ll•I~ I .S1 1 :11 Mares 13.0l 1).01 Rocktl RoiearcPI 11.,, 111. in. e01ron tis Jo·oo Matller1 JJ.tl JJ.fl RDC•,.-.11 Mlg 1.111 ll>io llh 21,._ Broad .st u -.J !6°66 MtOon 111s1 ll.71 ROOll"\ Br01' .Ills 12,,. ll4 JJ\, Bulloi:~ 16°'9 1101 MlaA Mui I .t 1.19 RO¥al Dul NY 1."'6 Ii IJ.~ v v. CG Fa 10:11 11:01 M-v Cit 11.10 1•.11 Royel '"~of A"'tr ll"> " ~ C&n Gen t.15 10.66 MOO<IVI 14.69 16 OS Rucker Co s 30\ro )IV. 21o,; C1nidl•n 11.•l lt.12 M<l<'lons FUflds: l•ratn1 ln<rus u lJl'J 15 C&pll Inc t.ll 10.01 Grw!I\ 1l .1' 1S.66 a!vrn Alrw1v• c.m 11'~ 22 ~l'di C&Ptt Shi 7.1' 1.50 lm:om 4.1• S.JO Sc1nllln Eltdrcnln l}\lo 13'llo 111.-< tnt 5/lr 11.ll U.ll ln1ur l .Ol I 80 SN Worlu 14\.> 2S1ilo J4\I; Cll.!ltonl<l!I Funds: MIF I'd 2'0.Jt 71.04 Sou C&ndv S~OPS 1 15 1n0 2S Btlan IJ.at U.ll MIF G1h 6.11 ,.~ S.mt•ch Coro 70 19\:o Com st~ 1.r1 2.)4 Mui jhrs 11 .161 .!6 l•¥~11·VP Ill '°""' «> Grw1 n t .11 10.0? Mui ru1I 2.lt 1 .... lmon & S.Cnu,itr OS I!-.~, t !n<orn 1.9~ 9.11 NEA Mui 11 .5111.16 SkaQgs Pav lH• 40s 2"" ,. 71V. SPecl~I l.11 4.16 Nat WStc 11 ,SI 11.S~ lo Call! Wiier .U 11 11~ l1 C~a .. GrcUo: Net Ind lj.OI \],41 0 UnlOfl G1• 1 TG ]'I l't'h ~,,. Fund 1'.1t 16.16 N~! lnveir ,zo 1.16 !oulheac!trn Drllllno llS •11-'o '9 '8\<t FTcnr 1()4.(W ro;.1 1 Nat SK Ser: ou!hwe11 Ga• ! 11'~ It"• 19 S~rh!d 11.lt U.13 Ba Ian 12.11 ll.JJ W R"'ch I. G.n +nv JO 12~ 17','0 lj"'> Chemlcol 1'.llt 21.l't Bond 6.7' •.II Space 01dn1nct 5\li 6'~ l'JI Colonial· Dl-.ld S.•I I.ti le>ec!ro·Dvnam!cs 11 ffV, lSI? EQUll\' .S.I, 6.l1 Pl ST-1.21 'DS Dtlno S1r~1 i.:ao11a1 •1-'o •l'o Fund U .I 15.41 lncom 6,16 ,: •• !SP lndu•I S U 14:14 U Grw!h 1.11 l.t4 Sloe~ t."3 10 )1 Ille E•plorallM l\lo ..... I>,:, CcmSI Bd S.11 '·1• G.-w1n 11.• u"ss Funds Mutual By SYLVIA PORTER If you are a man in t he 25· 38 age bracket who works for a national corporation, you can expect to be m ov ed at leas t five times before you reach your company's home office. At today's speeded-up transfer r ate, you'll be moved once every 21h to 3 years during these prime w orking years of your life. If you are in the saies e nd, the odds are exceedingly h igh t hat you'll go t hrough a series of tl'c:mfers. Almost h a lf the transfer s madt by a cross-section of the nation's indus trial corporations are salesmen, reg i o 11 a I or d istrict s a I e s manager s. Next in line are office , b rc.n - ch or plat1t manager s: technical service or s ales engineers: researchers or engineers. W YOU ARE simply an average family, you'll m <1ve several times during your adult years. One-fifth of our populutiDn moves eac h year, w ith one-third of the m oves in volving a change in states. As our population grows. so does our relocation rate. Mobility h as b ecome a way ol life in the U. S. in these closing d ecades of the 2oth century, particularly a m ong rising young e x · ecutives. T hi s has r aised th e revenues of the U. S. m ov· ing indu91.ry to close to f.? billion a year and promises to send them up another 50 percent to $.1 b illion w ithin 12 years. IT HAS LrFTED the cost of moving employ~ to the category of a prime cot'· poration expense. The c ost of relocating an employe is running as hig h as $9.000 - and this doesn't count the bigg er p cycheck necessary to entice a young executive up tile run"s of the cor· poratioo ladder. And it has ma::le movi ng an adventure in fringes for the en1ploye. rang ing from the purchas e of his house by the corporation to provision of m aid service to his w ife. T he industry's f i rs I -TllE MAJORITY of cor. poratri.ons now provide a t least one trip for tile w ile to look at a new home; almost 15 percent aUow two trips and 1.9 percent allow three trips. -A !at ma;ority -67 per· cent -financially a6Sist the e-mploye in selling his house, with methods ranging from outright purchase o f the equity in the house to con- tinuing paym ents until the house is sold. -Almost hal'.f, 43 percent, tran sport a second car to the ne w locatio-n . Most, thou gh, still do nol a llow for transportation or s u c h plea.sure vehicles as boats and trailers. A PROVA C AT I VE minority, 11-12 per cc n t, allow maid service to aid the wile in arranging her new home or to clean up after the departw'e £rom the old house. Increasing numbers of companies give ernployes an extra amount above actual moving costs to help the transferred employe cover hls tax bill, A trend most directly af- fecting the pocketbook is toward futter raises f or transferred personnel. As one traffic manager pointed o ut, the employe o-ften "r aises his standard of tiv- in g with ever y move." It's an absorbing m osaic. lo be studied both by the mover a nd the m oved. _ WJIAT'S l\.10RE, in a remarkably frank a nalysis, 0 . ti. F'risbie, president of Ailas Van-Lines. forecasts that wiU:tin 20 years. less than hall of today's major 'carriers will stiU be in business. Despite the an· ticipated 50 percent ex· pansion in the industry, l'~risbie sees soo.ring moving costs tracing a pattern similar to that of the auto industry, where only four con1panies are left out of 1.502 org anized since iag3 _ Ji e also predicts a v-a st c oo1·d inaUon or m o v i n g <:.!nong railroads. 1 r a i I er vans and airplanes. and the developn1ent of whole new con<:i!pts of nioving house· h old goods. la!e lndul!rlt1 !''> 6'1i 5'J. C°"'monwllh Fd•: NII Weil 6.lt •.II -----·ISub,crlpHon TV 11\, 121.1• 11~ Cao Fa 12.3124.39 Neuwrtl\ 11.tl/7.tl Su"w1 lnduJlnt1 11 7' :16 lncom lLtJ 11.17 New Eng 11.ll 1.2j .-----------............ 1!1.llilll...... Timar Elec Ind u 1i, I) ll'li n""'' 10.1111.19 New l-1or 2'1.68 29.M ''Forum o n M oving" w as held at the University o f Evansville in I n d i .a n a recently under the When I was in East Africa early this year, 1 was ut· terly fascinated by the sight of U1e non1 c:<ls w andering across the plains alone or with one or two others and burdened by no more than wore . I suspect I w as sub- coosci{;{1sly contrastin g them with y ou and me -who i.n each move s hip an average 4,08.5 pounds of goods an av. erage of more than 1,000 m iles . '\ :. 0 Interest f rom the 1st of a ny month on fun ds received by the 10th. @ rnterest from date o f receipt alter the I 0th, @)Interest to d ate of withdrawal on funds le fl 3 mont hs or long er if a ccount remains open until quarter's e nd. 5% per ~nnum eompou11ded daily cur . rtnt rate on passbook savings. 5.25% per annum on bonus accounts. / '"~ \~---------Jf not call or come in TODAY! MUTUAL SAVINGS ............... ~ ........ 2867 Ea~t Coast H1(ttiway •Corona Del Mir, Calif 9'625 1elephont 675-5010 111.•D (ltflCI • P.U.OlllA I\\ I tot0'A00 •l'l'll • ,.~AOf'NA C.-111 I! \()'I Tami>a1 )60 111 1'6 183 bs!ock 11.?l 1116 New Wld 14.tl 1•.ll tangfr Ina~, .'.II l8 Cwlth A&B !.71 1.91 Ntwton 14.Xt 1110 T&oo&" Co Ill 1''•lS JJ''> Cw 1h C&D I.ff 1.11 NO<'Nll II 1111:iu T11ltf! Fr,t1t J61o 11.._ 11\\ Ccmi>e~ 10.0010." Ocngl>I\ t.I IO. 2 ~~ou"m1~~ P~ooltl 1.'ll ':J·~ i!: t~~·~ l~: fa B:fl B·U ?~~ ,t.l/11::r/ Te•as Am '1111 COip • 10'• lo:!I 10' • Concord 12.• 71 '6 One w,,.s J,.11 !1.1 1 le(fl Caol"I Corp 111 l.S>.0 11~ 1S"l Cons Inv 1J·'° lt.00 O'Neill Un1v1U T~r,,.•I Powtr 10. 16 11~~ 16 Cons"' Inv ·" 100 Penn S. 9 11 t .U TIME .~ ll lit.. 15' ... Conv SK 11.0 U ... Pl Mu! 211.fl 10,41 Titan Grouo c !:Pt ll'l tPll Coro la 11.:U 17.tl Phlla J~.~ 16." Toroinol l>o To J" Cntrv Ca1> !l.26 U.11 Piigrim 11 ,lt tJ.tl TracQ<' 1...: SI 5l 51 CrDWn w l.N •. ,, Plier 1.51 •.:11 Tr1l<t Coro 17 II 11 deV•<il'< M n.os 17.05 P!nt SI H.J1 11.t1 Tr1nKOfl! G11 Pl"' 1"-XI '"• Dtc1t Inc !t.S't jJ ts Plonotr 1•.'1 II.JI Trine-Cons lMtr"11 ll 7• 11 Ot!Jawfre 16 '9 1.01 Pl111 Inv It.Oct IS.JO TravK.o<tQe .:IS 17,,. )I\• 111' Divid ~t 4.IM I(] Polaris I.17 •.Q Trice 4 31 321' JO t»wTh In 1.60 f.30 Ptlce TR 2S.l1 !S.JI Trl<!1I• /"""''' s 10 n 11 Or••el 11 tJ ll.7J P•Ollidnl s.n '·/' Trlr11!v /\dull .Ill 32 3J ;n Dl"fvf1,11 l!.00 11.) Puril1n 11.JS ll. I Tvuon Gu .0 15\'0 1Plo 15'!• f 1lon&How1r!I: Put"""' Fun<t1: Uulca iOl"l> . .a ft-> !O'~ tv. aai.n 12 oo u Ot Eoull h .'9 u .:11 Union oc~ & Mil 60 P9 r1 Pio Grwlh 11.~ U.17 Gtort 16 ... 11.fl U.I Env1/-.60 71 7:1'-t 2J~' G Inv 7.M 1.ll G""'h 131! U.10 VI•~ Ccn1t I Min l '° Ml'! l!J'" I.I 1""111 u.n 16 OI !ncom t.oll) 10 ?I Ullh Shilt Land '"" 10'4 914 iock ll tl \l .U lnYt1t 1.56 tl6 VWR Ula Coro. t lllt 1111, !1'11o E~rll l16JU.'ll VISJ• ll.5Gl•.7S VVKco lndul 6 6•1 5>.i, Emo! Gr 15.60\6f6 Rep Tech j·" l·l! Vieu D•v Co. l'• 4'" l'""o Ent<g\/ 11,IJ 16.I] Revere I .111 . V11!1w GI' 1' !]\• lll'I 1l~ E~!orlit t .75 10.N Scuddtr F!.!ndl: V1rtd¥"~ II 11\'i JI EQl/11¥ 11 .6611.lt Int Jn¥ !5.1115,lf Vlr~ MIQ Coro .J6 $>.. l\'o /Ht Eouil Glh lt.JO J1 U Soocl ,._.,,,. "·" 'l''o co or Am l1'Ao Jl l1V. t~Plor 71.61 1'1.ll 61t 11.ll 11.ll v Vllf>t wy.trd 16 " 15 F1lrkl ICM lt.01 Corn SI 12 1111.11 W1aa~11 & fed 1.211 '° S1 41 F""" 8Mu lJ.01 lJ.OI Ste DI\/ U.45 U .IO W1l•tr·S~Of Corp 14 U l4V, Ftd Grlh 16-Cl II.ff m Eoul! Ii." 70,)j W~rne< flt<,_ Br\ J4 11'~ 21\0 Ill;, Fld Cao 1'.3'1S.6\ In~ t.1710.ln W••~ N•! 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Atrn1 ll" r ''"' Q I.\ 0 '1r 1-1•-I. • .,,. 119 IM ftvnll: .. m Gt!! 1111 .Ct 1'"' lf\lo ltl.'o Har!weM 1,. "·U Vi l l n t" .. ,~ Arntt Gentr1l l.IO DI 121' ll .'ll* (;,r<;lw 1 .1111, ti{ ~ .• Am Gue• llfr ,,.. .._ 101t 1.-.. "' ~M 'ln t" w s '" !·"' Jtm H"I Ll•r r11 01 !I .. 12\l 11~ nu fM .M .,,.., /l ' •• "" '"' " ,~ 11• I''' "" ' ·JI' ·" 1·n """" . ' t . Ar-a~I '"' C! 10 n_ m ~$ me a•• 1 ·'t 1 • Vl•lrot ·tt I l""r~1·1• \':,¥.rt,,. 1';'! i "" •;:, il~m• F "' i ... , 1~· !~M~ IN I . lhl ,,.. Co 11, 't lf nc f:t ~ '" tHll!:lrl 1 , bt.wl"'~~1 l!''-'° Ll: !:~ ts~ I,... Trotr111 11' I :'5J 1· 'R' iJ.*t lJ: : "Jr~ri,:=:! fli... ~ ~ 1::l'~ry sttr £· • = ~ ~,·.uni omDIMft 1,.,. I • i11' ftY CoNfl 1t J '""' ·" -"-•! ! ftlll ...... "¥ lndlt ICN '-6' Wor!h "' s ponsorship of Atlas Van· L ines, Inc, Surveyed at the forum were a represen· tative sample of the nation's c or po r a ti o n t r a!lic managers, the men i n charge of tJ'Qllsferring personnel. From the jusi · completed sW"Vey, I picked the above findings. In more delaiJ , Nader Asks U.S. Ha]t 1969 Car Price Rike WAS HINGTON IUP)\ - The governm e nt has been urged by Ralph Nader to hend ofr a planned price hike by the auto in£1ustry on 1969 model cars. Consum~ advocate Nader c.harg~ the auto makers are "readylng for price in· creases.•· In j letter to Arthur M. Okun. chairman of the President's Council <l f Economic Advisers. Nader said the industry has no justlflcatiori for a price hike Uiis year. "Even government s:i:fety features cannot be blam~." he said. The only aafety feature on 1969 model cars ca!Ung for added expenses wi lJ be a pair of bead 4up- ports costing "less than 110 a pair." Nader com mented. Nader el5o criticized the council for a past policy or reviewing "prices in stMct Sttrecy" with the Indus try. According to N a de r , General Motors will set t.he ~e for the price hike, "regardless of what other companies announce first.'' Nad~r sald once CM an- nounces its prices, "read- justment.! will ta.ke place" among the other a u t o makers. Nader urged the council t.o r e co m me n d that the f'eder:il Trade Commission in vestigate the auto indust ry tn provide the governm <'nt \\i th an ;iuthoritallve delail,. ~ basi_. to deal with ~ price bikes. ' I 'I •r-at to st OS ,. T· 1e e, m ,. n- " t, !o 4 >r " ls E • d ·r p • •f n >I e r s r s j " '• ' ' ' f ' ' r 1 1 ~ j . . . . ~ - YOU'RE OBODY'S ·p1GEO If ye11'w 1!1""'1't'i tfie ·D;i;l(Y PIL:OT, you'r• es worldly w!ie iis Hi1 ltlrd1 '" St. M•rk'a Square in Venice. They know where to find food for the ltocly. And yeu have found the piece to find food for the mind. The DAiLY PILOT doesn't spoon feed you with pop, either. The brightest litrnel1 ef n•tlonal •nd local news ere mixed with the meatiest edi- torl•r' p•gea and topped by an exciting mixture of features, funnies and ehotoa for deaaert, SP,ark up your read!ng diet with the beat. ' ------~~-·----------------------- On The Square Just like the pigeons enjoying • 1ummer holldey with tli1 •++r•ctive tourist who brought the DAILY PILOT to Venice, you'll find you 're In 9ood company If you take Into your home · t~d on your own vacation "the newspaper nt•rly tveryonl •••d1 •lont the Or••t• Co.st." DAILY PILOT \ .. . ·~· " , .. ' " " .· ·' ,. " ... • ... . ' . .,, " -•'' ' ' . " " " . . "~ . . " .. > . ,. ' . . .. .. ' .. ' " .. . . • I l - •\ DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Lowest • Ill the County Laguna Beach res'idents this year face a s lo u t 37-cent increase in their Laguna Beach Unified school tax bill The new tax rate will be $2.98 per $100 of assessed valuatioot up from $2.61. lt figures out to about $28 more in school tax payments for the owner of a $30,000 borne. That's a sizable bite for the homeowner, particular· ly when added to increased city, county, state and jun· ior college taxes and the federal surcharge. • Let's see why there is such an increase . .. ·Eleven cents of the 37 cents was long ago approved by voters in long-term school bond repayments, which are higher this year than lasl That increase is unavoid· able now . Another eight cents or so is taken in added costs of running Thurston and Top of the World schools for the full year. Expenses include insurance, heati ng, lights and telephone. Again unavoidable at this date. That leaves a boost of 18 cents that school trustees seemingly can be held accounta ble for. But i n reality, this increase, too. was practically imposed on them. What happened is this. Income from one-half cent of the statewide penny sales tax increase last year was given to the poorer school districts throughout the state. Among these were school districts as nearby as San Joaquin Elementary (Irvine, El Toro and Mission Viejo) and Capistrano Unified (Laguna Niguel, Dana Point, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente). Laguna Unified received none of the sales tax income. With Utis added state aid, the other school districts increased teacher salaries. This was inducement for teachers to come to their districts where some school buildings aren't as nice or educational programs as expensive. Laguna and other relatively wealthy school dis- tricts which did not receive sales tax money then had Facts, Fiction About Crime In America Facta and Fled.on About Crime In the U.S.: Fiction: Most homicides are com- mitted by criminals, wiUt gain as their motive. Fact: Most homicides, by far. are committed by people without criminal recorda, not for gain, but for passion. Fiction: Most homicides are com- mitted on their victims by strangers. Fact: Most homicides, again by far, are committed on their victims by friends, acquaintances, relatives, or sweethearts, not by strangers. Fiction: Prison sentences in coun· tries such as England are longer than those in the U.S., and thus the crime rate is reduced. Fact: Prison sentences for com· parable crimes are generally shorter in England than in the U.S.; but con- viction ts swifter and more certain there than here, Which makes more of a deterrent than mere length of sente11ce . FICJ'ION: Convicted c r i m i n a 1 s sheuld be given longer terms, which w6uld allow them to be rehabilitated in jail. Fact: Fewer than three percent of all jail employes ere social workers, psychologists, psychiatrists an d teachers; and this sparse number is incapable of coping with the problem of rehabilitation in any realistic way. · Fiction: More and more people are turning to crime, which accounts for our hlgh rate of court cases. Fact: In cases of robbery with • Dear Gloomy Gus: I'd like to change the parking limits in Laguna Beach and other cities. These laws are for the benefit of the merchants, who usually govern the cities. But I pay f-or the streets, too, and should be able to use them as I .please. At least meter EV· ERY parking space , -K. L. '111• flMrvr. "'*" ..._... ¥INI _. lltc-rl/r fMM .. Ille ----· ~ 'l'ltw "' -.. 0'-"" .. &. D•llJ' PJllf, physical attack (which most people mean by "crime in the street"), more than 80 percent of the defendants have been arrested at least once before, and nearly 50 percent have been ar· rested five or pi.ore times before. It is "fast repeaters" who pile up the record more than new reeruits to crime. FICTION: Such defendants are "coddled" by the courts, which give them either light sentences or acquit them. Fact: It ls the prosecutor. rather than the courts, that determines the sentence, for In two-thirds of s u c h cases, the defendants are allowed to plead guilty to less serious charges in order to process the case fa ster and secure a "convicUon" on the record. Fiction: Sentences on the statute books are too light for such crimes as first-degree robbery. Fact: In New York State, the man· datory sentence for first-degree rob- bery is so heavy-10 to 30 years-that of 136 typical cases studied by the New York Times, not one was convicted of the crime for which be wa1 arrested. Fiction: Most criminals plead not guilty, go to trial, and are let off. Fact: In New York, for eiample, 95 percent of all convictions are obtained by pleas or guilty rather than on trials: in only 7 percent or cases is guilt or innocence decided by trial. 'Most Neglected Issue' WASHINGTON -Sen . George McGovern is set to announce a wide· ranging four-point program to deal with what he characterizes as the "most neglected. issue in the present political campaign" -the farm pro· blem. The South Dakotan. who recently threw his hat into tJ1e Democratic presidential ring, will spell out his pro· posals in a speech in Kearney. Neb., Thursday. Aug. 22. The address is particularly aimed at the Middle West , where McGovern hopes to garner delegate support -an effort in which he hu bad little success so far. McGovern's basic thesis is that the 4'urban crisis" in large part. is due to highly adverse rW"al conditions resu l· tilng ln steady large.scale migration to the cities. He argues that by im· proving agricultural conditions much progress can be made in eliminating 1erious urban problems. "REVERSING THE trond cl mlgra. Uon from country to city to a city·to- rural area pattern Jg urgently need· Id," McGovern will declare. To obtain tllil obje<:tlve, he e.nun- d1~ !be lollowlnl four -point pll.n : 1 •. "µIt price °' lncorne rupporta to IUD parity nturn5 to farm famm ... lllPl'laaim~ by ouch legislation as ls lio<dod lo permit formers to bargain IOI' •·fair mum . 2. "Expand credit at reasonable terml to l•rmer1 through farm credl1 be!». Farmer• Home Admln.istntJon 41dj Rini Electri(Jcatton Adm.tnUtradon, to meet aU sound 1111'111 credit requlremeall beyond tbe " r l .. .. """'" Allen-Goldsmit& i r capacity of private agencies to handle. 3. "Immediate establishment of ii strategie commodity reserve to pull excess supplies of wheat, feed grajns and soybeans out of free markets into a tightly held reserve to meet emergencies in the U.S. and nations dependent on us . This removal of ex- cesses should be large enough to raise cuJTent farm returns from wheat, feeds and soybeans to Cull parity. ' 4. "CORRECTION of urban·rur~I population imbalance wilh a rural rehabilitation program which includes u.se or tax incentives, and placement of a part ()f the federal government's $90 billion annual procurement of goods and service$ to stimulate: rural industrial development." Noting that wheat prices, now under Sl.25 a bushel, ace the "lowest in 1 quarter century", and that corn ha& dropped to below S:l a bushel i'the lowest level slnce 1942," McGovern will warn this portends serious threats for the future. "We 1re weakening both agriculture and our backlog of trained agricultural experts by our failure to allow farmers .s. dttent return for their pro· ducts," the Soutll Dakota p~sldential a.sptrant will say. "The decline in the number of farm1 continues at a rate of 80,000 to 100,000 farma a year," • to increase their teacher salarie.s. It was necessary to remain competitive in attracting new teachers and to be able to head off a drain of experienced teachers from the district. To do so Laguna schools had to tap the property taxpayer. Jn effect. the sales tax school aid program bas beel'l another state Robin Hood measure reordering the dis- tribution of wealth. That is the argument o! Laguna school adminis- trators. It sounds plausible, and all but one member of tile school governing board, Larry Taylor, bought it. The otller four trustees chose not to take a chance of losing good teachers or to cut back on school progra1ns to stave off a tax increase. With the increase. Laguna schools are stiU a bar- gain. At $2.98, Laguna will remain the only unified or combined high school and e lementary school system i:n the county with a tax rate under $3. And on this lowest tax rate, Laguna schools are able to provide the most money per pupil of any unified distMct in the county. The $774 it will spend per student is $80 to $200 more than any other unified school system. Laguna is indeed fortunate to have so much tax· able \vealtb for its school children. With this inherent advantage, Laguna residents have -through their school board shown a willingness to buy for their children a superior education. There have been evidences that it has been money well spent. Laguna children have consistently scored high on comparative reading tests. And the sch,ool di s- trict is sending 75 percent of its graduates to college, and a good portion of those to tl\e college of their first choice. II ,.. The 37-cent tax hike will hurt, but when all is said and done the grass still will be greener in Laguna where school iaxes are still the lowest and the educational product still among the best. I ~~ I '· .·. """""" •¢ t..'t::>-....,."1;1~ ,,,.,~ --~--. ~ ,-.0!1" L ''MN/IA, VIJ11AT WAS THAT (LICKING SOUND?'' Bolsa Chica as a Site for New Ait•port Homeowners List Disadvantages To the Editor: As a member of the West Prestige Homeowners Association, I would like to point out the following facts. The Bolsa Chica site for an airport is not as centrally located as some of the other proposed. sites in tt:lationship to the area to be served. There would be an overlap of service areas with existing airports: Long Beach Airport is 20 minute:;, Orange County Airport is 20 minutes, L.A. Ajrport is 45 minutes. This could result in flight pattern interference with Long Beach Airport and Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. Since the cost or building an island for the atomic energy power plant in approximately the same area proved too costly, it would seem thtrtltis pro· ject would be even more so. THE BOLSA CHI CA site w o u I d result in an irreplaceable loss of one of the last existing natural beach areas in Southern California. This is the only area left OJ)en to the public for swim· ming and surfing without charge. A large parking lot was recently built to accommodate the many thousands of people who take advantage of this wonderful beach. Many people in the area have moved bere from El Segundo to escape the noise, air pollution and traffic cori- gestion from L.A. International. and would again have to move elsewhere regardless of loss due to deflation of their property. Leaving the city with Jess tax revenue. Huntington Beach would no longer be an ideal residential area for raising families. SeV1!ral of the new schools would be useless and would result in total loss in taxpayers' money. The new goU course in Hun· tington Beach would be useless as well as the Meadowlark Golf Course. THE CITY HAD quite a celebration when it went over the 100,000 mark in population recently, but it would soon fall way below that as people moved to get away from the noise. trailic and air pollution, causing a big loss in city revenue fer property taxes. sates tax, etc. We feel that this is a different circumstance than people who com· plain about the noise of an airport near their homes when the airport was there first. We realize that this would be quite an engineering feat but. since there are other locations that can be utilized., although some of them might be ideal for future home sites, we do not think it is right or fair to ruin home sites already established. MR. & MRS. A. B. VAN SICKLE Good l11vestme11t To the Editor: Js Social Security really 1. good buy for the tn>ical American worker and his family ? Answers vary of course, but some broad conclusions can be stated. The vast majority of people now working on jobs covered by Social Security will draw benefit.o; far in excess of what they have paid or will pay in taxe..:; during their worklng years. In most cases, the return will be ~--811 Geor9e ---, Dear George: In the paper in your column you offered a guaranteed solu· tion for faulty memory and said merely fUI out the coupon. I couldn't find any coupan. A.G. Dear A.G.: Hm. I KNEW 1omethlng had slipped my mind, • I '" ,Mailbox "" •)$; Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit apace or eliminate libel is reserved. All Let· ters must include signature and mail· irig address, but names wilt be with· held on request mucb _larger than the combined tax payments of the worker and his employer. The reason for this is that Social Security financing ls arranged in such a way that each generation pays the benefits of the previous generation. IN OTIIERS WORDS. people now working pay just enough in Social Security taxes each year to cover the cost of the year's benefits to those already retired and to the dependents of deceased workers. The Social Security system differs from a prtvate insurance plan because current income for the Social Security system is matched with current ex- penditures while private insurance must build large reserves to pay off in case of death. As a practical matter benefits have become just about inflation proof. Congress has a history or increasing pensions and survivors' payments as living costs have risen over the years. This ls possible because as inflation occurs so does the Soecial Seeurity tax take. Jn the 18-year period since 1950, benefits have increased faster than living costs. and important new benefits have been added to the pro- gram. For these reasons, our Social Securi· ty program is a good investment even for those who pay the maximum taxes in years to come JERRY C. GRUBE Ratlo11a/l::atlf1ns To the Editor : I find it difficult lo express my feel· lngs. having watched "Hunger in A.merica" {CBS Reports), and "One Nation, Indivisible.'' America would seem ro have a much greater pro~lem Ulan the threat Quotes \Veston. \V. Va ., Independent : "We have reached the point where right is Qn the defense. because the law is in- terested in protecting only the of· £ender. In dividuals and groups that lite trying to undt:!rmine and destroy the laws of our country, Its ideals and belle!s. should be dealt with firmly and prompOy."' \Valtham. l\1a5s .. News-Tribune: ''\Vhat was once something known as aid·to·the·poor is now a support system for all families whose Incomes don't mellsure up to the minimum determined by federal o«Jcials to pro· vide adequate subsistence. Millions of famWes ln the U.S ...• heretofore not on publlc a~stance will be •ubsldiz· ed." \Vrnen1burg. hto., Star.Jouna1I: "Effective law enforcement is (al prerequi91ite for an orderly society. Public officials, charged wtth the respon.slb!Uty cl nulintalnlnc law and order, have no·altematlvt ln carryln.g out lh• obligati.,. ol their'""-'ntey muat act wltb courac.• a &nnneN.·· ' of communism in Vietnam, or ln Czechoslovakia for that matter. We are faced with nothing less than a crisis of conscience -both nationJI and individual. or what good is our wealth and labor if we canoot use it to preserve and enrich human life, all human life? SO~fE ARE BEGINNING to see - perhaps only dimly -the misery, the brutality and the waste in many American lives -both our own and those of others. To those I have seea, who quote Scripture in the defense of bigotry, I offer the following poem that 1 have carried with me for many years: "I looked for my soul, but it was not there. I sought my God , but He eluded me. 1 searched for my Brother, and round all three." I KNOW OF PEOPLE who are either neutral or negative toward poor people and those of dilferent races. Their rationalizations betray their handicap. They are looking a t material wealth and awards which can only be temporarily theirs -and they ignore the more significant work of preserving and glorifying life. Christ, Gandhi, Martin Luther King could all come to their door, bleeding from fresh wounds -and they would turn them away? After all. who wants to get involved? I am beginning -only now -to think that I SHOULD. ROBERT E. PERRY Tragedy 011 Taltoan To ttie Editor : A visit to Talw.an has provide<! coo· vincing evidence that to speak of it as "Free Chiaa" is to rob "freedom" completely Of its true meaning. To millions of Taiwanese the government of O\iang Kai-shek is a "garrison state." Many Americans may remember the Red Guard who in 1966 escaped from mainland China and sold to t h e Reader's Digest his story of thought- control and oppression of the cuJ tural revolution under Mao Tse-tung . The Red Guard later went to Taiwan. Arriving on Christmas eve, he heard bells pealing out the "good news" of the birth or Christ and exclaimed that they spoke the message of freedom. Before long, he learned otherwise. HE DISCOVERED that in Taiwan there are paid fuU-time and part-time informers in hotels . f act or i es . restaurants. schools, etc. spying and reporting on any talk or activity op· pased to the government. People are shadowed. arrested, tried in military coorts which flout due process and are sentenced to unduly long terms at hard labor or even death. It is estimated that between 100 a n d 200 are officially executed or somehow "liquidated" ever)' year. \VllEN f'INALLV the Red Guard learned the truth about life in Taiwan, he said it was worse than in Com· munist China. That marked the end of his freedom . Now he is "det.a.ined,'0 no one knows where. A newsman who has made several efi«ts to reach him has boon bnubed off by tbe authorities who say be Is unavailable for tbe time being. The Amer1can people sboold be made aware of the trqedy thre7 are helping lo 1118<t oa lbe !Jll.nd ol 'J'laiwan. It Is a tragedy based on two mytN wlJfch the government.a in Talpd and W-ngton h Ive ~led since 1949. One Is !bat ~1ani11 government ts the tr u e pemment ol lbe ai1 .... ~;,,the 6tber, that Tliw~ll; ~ S1a1istir1 Gloomy Gus recently (Aug. 13) pro· vided a particularly vivid example of the use of a completely meaningless statistic in support of an argument. It was pointed out that if oae ignores the poorest· 20 percent and the richest 5 percent of Americans "that leaves 75 percent of the people with 75 percent of the wealth -the widest distribution or individual wealth of any country in history." In reality one may choose any coun· try in history, choose any percentage he desires, and still be able to find a group of people who comprise the chosen percentage of the population and possess the chosen percentage of the wealth. This is demonstrated by the following argument in which a specific percentage. 80 percent, is us· ed for the sake of clarity: IMAGINE THE PEOPLE of any country lined up in order of wealth with the poorest man on the left end and the richest on the right. Begin by recording the total wealth of the group consisting of the poorest 80 percent o! the population. Successively select new groups by discarding the poorest person in the current group and ad· ding the person immediately to the right of the richest man In the current group. , Continue this process, recording the total wealth of each succeeding group. until the group consisting of the richest 80 percent of the population is reached. Note that each group con- tains 80 perei?nt of the population. Now consider the list in which the wealth of each group has been recorded. THE FIRST ENTRY is Jess than 80 percent of the total wealth since the group consists of the poorest 80 per· cent of the population. Each entry in the list is larger than the preceding one since successive groups were formed by discarding a poor man and adding a rich one. The last entry, the ~·ealth of the richest 80 percent. must be nlore than 80 percent of the total wealth. In short, one has a list of numbers which , when translated into percen· tages, begins at something less than 80 percent, increases at each step, and ends at something more than 80 per· cent. At some point in the list the percentage must pass 80 percent. Pick the group whose entry is closest to 80 percent. Thus. by ignoring some of the poorest and richest people, one can find a group which contains 80 percent of the population and very close to 80 percent of the wealth. It is clear that this argument depends neither on the particular percentage involved nor on the distribution of wealtti in the coun- try chosen. J . DELANY -----I Wednesday, August 21 , 1968 The ed itorfal page of the Dail" PUo& 1eelcs to inform and 1tim- u1at1 ncu:kn b~ pr1srnting thil l'lewtpapcr'1 opfnion.s and com- IMnlarJ/ on toplct of Int.rut and ,;gnlfic<zn<e, by providing a forum fOT tM f'%p1'1!Srion of our r«ader1' opinioru, and by prl!lsnting the diverse view- point# of lnform.ed obseruer1 and rpoke"""' on topk1 of the day. Robert N, Weed. PubU1her j • -Newpor·i -D~rhor DAILY PILOT Your Hometown EDITION Dally Paper VOL 61 , NO. 201, 7 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES • NEW~ORT BEACH, CALI FORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1968 TEN CENTS May Ease Airport Pressure Air Master Plan Gets 'Limited' City Backing By JEROME F. COLLINS Of ,.,. U.llf Pllet IMff The Orange County Master Plan for Air Transpoctatioo today has the city ._1f Newpoct Beach's cautious en- Jorsement -in part. City councilmen, after a month's delay, unanimously voted to urge swift Implementation of those portions of the William Pereira report that will "take the pressure di" Orange Coun- ty Airport. Munlcipal lawmakers declined to LBJ Urges Red Troops Withdraw WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pr..ident Johnson today called on the Soviet Union and its Communist allies to withdraw their tr o o p s Crom Czechoslovakia, He said "It is never too late for reason to prevail." Johnson, in a statement issued from 01e White House, said: "It is a sad commentary on the Communist mind that a sign of liberty in Czechoslovakia Is deemed a fun· damental threat to the security of the Soviet system." Johnson said the "tragic news" about the military inter-ventioo in Cr.echoslovakJa "s b 11 ck1 the con- science Of the world." "The excuses offered by the Soviet Union are patently contrived. The Czechoslovakian government did not request its allies to interfere in its in· temal affairs. No external aggression threatened Czechoslovakia," Johnson said. The president said the action by the W'3.r&aW Pact allies was .a "fiat viola· tion" of the United Nations charter and a.s a result the U.S. government was urgently consulti.ag other natioos to coo.sider what steps should be taken in the United Nations. George Christian, presidential news secntary, said shortly after noon that the "hot line" between the White House and the Kremlin had not been used during the current crisis. He declined to discuss what -if any -communications have taken place today between the United States and the Soviet Union. Body R ecovered Along Coas t; Identity Soug lit The body of an umdentifled man in his mid·40's WIG fished out of tlle sea between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach this morning by Orange County llarbor Department patrolmen. The dead man was found floating face down, fully clothed except for shoes, about 9 a .m. by a passing sports fishing boat, according to coun· ty Harbor Master Al Oberg. Identification on the body bore the name of a Phoenix, Ariz. resident Ne"-port Beach police noted, however, ~the name found in a wallet did not match w it h any missing person reports on file locally. Oberg said it appeared UH!! dead man had been in the water fol' "a day or so." He a~ed there were no vis.i-ble external injuries to indicate the cause ol death. The body was spotted driftlllg M>oot 200 yards offshore, 11n mllec toutb of Corona del Mar ne.v Abalone Point. Newport Resid ent's lUailhox Explodes An explosive situation was touched orf in the mailbox ol a Newport Beach resident, police reported todah. Harold Ad.ams, ~ Golden Circle, sl.id he heard .a loud bang about 8:30 p.m., and when he went ouL'iide to in· ve1tigale. discovered his w o o d f! n mailbox had been blown apart by an unknown lyPf! of e1plosive. ' give the report a blanket endorsement, aJ had been recommended by the council's own Air Traffic Advisory Committee last month. Councilmen Monday night pointedly left out of their endorsement resolu- tion any support for Pereira's pro- posals to expand County Airport facilities. This is what they did support, in the words of the four-point resolution sent on to county supervisors: -"Future development of a major s new internati.ooal airport to serve the Los Angeles.Qrllnge County-San Diego metropolitan areas, for example at camp Pendleton!' -"Construction of a new regional airport in an optimum location ln Orange County, completion to be no later than five years from now ." -"Regulation of activity at the present Orange County Airport during the interim period until a new regional airport can be put into operation." -"Adoption of a long-range plall fOr eer IT'S HAPPENING IN PRAGUE -Soviet tank rumbling down street brings forth memories of abortive Hungarian revolt 12 years ago. However, photo was taken in Prague, Czechoslovakia, today. 'This the development of general airports, airpacks and metroports." ''ImplementaUon o fthis ~gram," said the council, "is of the grave6t urgency, and time is a crlticel factor." Former Mayor Paul J. Gruber told his council colleagues that be would like to see added to the resolution a ban a,gainst jet traffic at County Airport once reglorral airporls open up. He was reminded, however, that the council is already on record, end has so advised county authorities, nva against increased jet traffic at C.ounty Airport for any reason. City Attorney Tully S e y m o u r described the resolution, which he had d.Ndted, as a "limited endorsement." lie explained it avoids specifics. "Later," be said, "you can state any detailed reservations you might have about the report." These reservatlon1 would presumably involve recommendations by Pereira that c.ounty Airport begin preparing itself for IOme 5.2 million u .. 1 T...-. was scene in front of Wenceslaus Statue in Wenceslaus Square in Czech capital following invasion by Russia and four satellite cowitries. National Museum is in background. Tustin Man Dies In Freewa y C1·ash Of Fom· Autos Too Few Buses Ike Still Critical But Army Doctors Feel Encouraged A fQur+ear pile up on southbound Newport Freeway lanes Tuesday night led to the death of Albert Lee Colgan, 'lT, of Tustin. the California Highway Patrol nported. The accident, which occurred just north of Dyer Road resulted from one car pushing t.nother. Officers said a car driven by Donald J. Tall~y. 18, of Costa Mesa, was being pushed by one driven by Simone P ieltain, 45, of Costa Mesa. The Colgan car crashed into the other two . A fourth car, driven by Gregory J. Mou-isey, 18, of Anaheim, smashed into the Colgan car. Only Mrs. Pleltain was injured of the otb· ers involved in the fatal accident. 825 More Must Walk to Scliool Some 825 Newport-Mesa students who la.st year rode buses to school will have txJ walk th1s fall. Maps of bus areas appear today on Page 17. A majority ol these, 450, are high 9Chool &tudei:U. Also affected are 225 intermediate school student! and 150 elementary school students. They are tile victims of an extens.ion of walltJng dislmces adopte<l by school 'trustees this week because of a school bus shortage" Walkini perimeters around schools h&ve been expanOed from l 1h miles to two miles for high school students, one mile to l 'h: miles for intermediate students, one mile to lVt miles for fourlh ~ sixth graders, and 3/t mile to ooe mile. for kindergarten Urough tbmI graders. Most students who rode school buses last year will ride again. About 6,300 will be repeal.ers along with a couple of hUDdred new !tudents, accord.ing to John Morrison, a:upervisor' of tran.sportati on. Not all Hlese studects will live beyond the walking perimeters. Some will be bused because their route to 9Chooi would require them to cro1s busy streets. Foor factors have contributed to the school bus short.age: -A bond measure t-0 buy new buses llilled. --Oki.er buses are wearing O\lt. -EnroUment has risen. -Double sessions will complicate the bus 1cbedules. Clam Diggers May Dig In By JACK BROBACK Of "'-D•llY 1'1191 Si.ff Clam diggers in Oroange O>unty flood control channel! 'Whictl are sub- jected to ocean tidal flow waters may have to pay a county license to gather 1fleir c&tdl. The Board of Supervi'°" Tuesday ordered the C.ounty Coumel's office to Teport back on Sept, 17 oo ttie prac· ticality of margm, ttie clam diggers. bottl amateur and professional a fee. The recommendation wu made by George Osborne, chJ!! flood control engineer. He faYOred a $100 a year license. Severial regular dam diggers ap- pearecl et the 1upervi.eors meeting to 1eek clarification of the move. "Clam dlggen have been ob6eTved by flood con~ patrolmen but they have not been disturbed." Osborne - said ln a letter co the supervisors. '"l'!hey were not creating a nuisance or damaging flood control dlanoels." Triggering the proposal was a te· quest by the attorney for bait fi.!llerman Willie T. Williams for an exclusive license to fish the control channels. A recent ~ by channel patrolmen foond two diggers plying (See CLAMS, P11e !) ' • WASHINGTON (AP) -Army doc· tocs repcrted today that they were en- couraged by a certain aspect of former President D w i g ht D. Eisenhower's condition but tbey "sUU view the general's coodltl.on as critical." ln a medical bul1eti.n this morning, doctor1 of Walter Reed Army Hospital 1aid: "~n. Ei.slnbmrer tpeDt a very comfort.able night and his 1pirita r• main excellent. The trend towards a decrease of. the trequency ol cardi'C Jrregularities and epl&Odes of rapid heart action indJcated in last night'• bulletin has continued throughout the night. While the plcyslcW>s believe thil is an encouraging sign, tbey still view the general's condition i.t: critical." The matter of cardiac irregularities and episodes or rapid heart action have a.JI along been the major cause o( concern in connection w l t h Eisenhower's latest heart attack, bis seventh since 1955. Today'1 report was the first formal one [(om the doctors ti.nee the: publica- tion of a report ln the Washington Poat thm the doctors bad employed "a new exJ)erimenta.I heart-regulating drug" ln Eisenhower'• case 8Dd that thi.S, in the opirion of the newspaper, could mean that the somewtat opt.imistlc reports made recently by the doctors could me•n that the drug wu eivlne aome benefits. •A ----·--·--·------~--~-------· -----_,_ _____ _. -- passengers annually by 1973. About one-fifth that number now use the airport. "What we're now endorsing," said Mayor Doreen Marshall, "could help take the -pressure off Orange County Airport, especially with (!()Ostruction of regional airports." On Gruber's motion, the council voted to ask county supervisors to "give this program the highest poui· ble priority." e s :All Eeaders In House Detention From Wire Strvl~• PRAGUE -Invasion force1 from Russia and its four satellites blasted freedom fighters from the streets with guns and tanks today and put the liberal leaders of Czechoslovakia under house arrest to snuff o u t the country's brave experiment in refonri. Czechs fought back with spit, stones. jeers and even firebombs against the force1 of Russia, East Germany. Poland, HWJgary and Bulgaria. Some pald with their lives. But by nightfall; (SH Additional Stories, Pae•• 3, 4) almost 24 hours after they crossed the border and shocked the world, the drama bad reached the inevitable end. World leaders reacted in protest. President J ohnson in Washington call· ed on the Soviet bloc forces to withdraw because "It is never too late for reason to prevail" Yugoslavia and Romania reacted with shock and denunciation of the attack, At I e a s t several persons w e r e rep<rted. killed and 57 wounded in fighting at Prague, Bratislava and Kosice. 11iere were no reports of any Americans hurt. Moscow declared the invasion, launched late Tuesday night, was by invitation of "party and government leaders" in Prague to put dawn the threat of counterrevolution imperiling the structure of Communism. Czechoslovakia's Foreign Ministry denied, however, that it had asked for the troops and, in protest note1 to ad .. bassad.ors of the ftve nation.s, demand· ed that they be removed. It was a case ol communism fighting within its own orbit. By all signs, the Kremlin and its bard·ll.ne allies in Eastern Europe had decided to make Prague follow the path laid out for Hungary in 1956 rather than let the Czechoslovak• escape M06cow'1 hold in the way Yugoslavia did in 1948. The official Soviet news agency Ta11 published an appeal to t h e Czechoslovak people to be calm and aid the occupying forces. Tass at· tributed this appeal to a group of (See CZECH, Page !) Orange .... Weather Nice day. That'a the we1thcr- man'1 ob1tnation for Thursday, with the 1ua breating e11ly throup patcby coutal clouda and brl.Dgiog mld·70 mercury to the Orange Cout. INSIDE !'ODAY The stancUng1 a/tff' tht /int three races in lht 5.5 met11r Olympic fltlCh£ triall CTt gi~ In toda11'1 boating page, Page 25. •1t111t If Mtllllf• tt ....... u ~U-lt c......... ' MM!"'" ·" Cl9MI.... ..n MWIM I c..in a ,_._.. "'""" '' c,.._.. " ,......, ,._ .., .,_,. Jll9tlcft r or... C...tJ 1 ............ ti .............. ,, ................ I 19CI.. ..... 1tolJ ......._. 1 .. 11 .....,. INf~ ,..,.. C9* 1f T......... d •Mt ...... ,. ...... , ' ~ lJ ...... ..... It Afll ~ n WWlll ,.,... W I ) % DAILY PllOT • Wedl'ltsday, August 21, 1968 - Surf ·Crisis But It Could Be Calm Before New Storm Unfriendly Udes poondlng the Newport Beach shoreline since Sunday started settling back to normal today, but llleguards worried that a brewing octan storm could whip the surf back up again. Hundredt of residents Tuesday night sbood at the edge of the crumbling beach in West Ne"WpOrt, watching the evening's high tide lap at patios or several oceanfront homes at the end of 42nd Street. Newport Beach city staff members, feeling there was no Immediate: risk of losing homes to the sea, have not re- qllhted emergency mobilization or all Orange County agencies and workers. CUy counCilmet1 set up the option Monday night after declaring tl\e oceanfront to be in a state of llmlted peril. The U.S. Army C-Orps of Engineer' -asked by councilmen to begin Im· mediately a $250.000 erosion control project slated for Sept. 3 -was still deliberating the request today. Lifeguards said they carried out 106 rescues Tuesday, compared with 215 the day before. They also issued 362 warnings, compared. with more than Newport Pushes Move 800 for Monday. "The weves are 5 to 8 feet , and look llke they're golng .down , unless another storm trends in another swell," a spokesman said. waves at the Wedge on the Up of the Balboa Peninsula were r e p o r t e d C'Nlshing in at 10 to 12 feet Tuesday, down considerably from the ~foot giants of Monday . Riptides wen reported s.till a threat, and fl'Wimmers were again advised to swim par-aDel to the beach 1f caught in one instead of expending energy on ?"Ying to get back onto the beach. Airport Use Board Asked Newport B e a c h city councll m e n ~lieve Orange County shoukl have an Urport Land Use Commission, and me mayor of Newport should be on it. A resolution te'lling c o u n t y ;upervisore about the city's view is on its way to the cou:rrty board todaoy. It was adopted unarrimou9ly by coun· cilmen Mmday night. The acUcn waa taken after City At· lorney Tully Seymour told municipal lawmakel"I tnat creation ol the com- mission ls allowed under state legisla· tion adopted a year ago. It affects all counties with more than ooe airport. Orange County supervisors are already on record as declaring the commission isn't needed. 'Tbe COuoty Airport Commission is enough, said supervisors. Newport councilmen, however, scof· fed at the county board's po<SitiOD. It was based, Seymour indicated, on the opinion of the Orange County airport manager. AIRPORT SECRETARY ~ .<:Jirport manager serves as secretary to the County Airport Com· mission, &ome of whose recent con- cerns would be expected to be assum- ed by the Land Use Commission. "The lac! ttiat the airport """"4{er advised against it, I'd comtder a rather biased op.Inion," sad Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons. The Land Use _Commlssion's responsibilities would include recom- mendatioos to coocemed agende1 on the Ulle of )and near the airport 8Dd on Mesa Student Spending Her Summer in Sweden "You haven't lived until you've seen a Japanese movie with Swedish sub- titles " 17-year-old Sandy Laufer wri~ fram her summer stay in Sweden as an American Abroad representing the Costa Mes.a Chapter of the Ame1-ioao Field Service. Selected last March as an AFS finalist from Costa Mesa High School, Sandy learned in June tlhat a family had been found for her summer visit. Her new father would be a r ailroad man her mother a housewife, her sist~ a teen-ager named Birgitta. A sign lettered, "Welcome Sandy to the Bogren family" was her greeting when she arrived in Vanrras, Sweden. Since thec &he has been keeping her friends posted with e. series of colorful accouat.s of her adventures. "Have you ever tried sleeping with the sun meaming in your window at 3 a .m. ?" she wrttes. "I lreep waking up and tblnting it mwt be noon ." Except for the "hip soup" which is very a:weet, .8Dd "smelly fish" (a literal -). s.My aa~ she fiDr:b Swedish food much too al· tractive. "I try to work it off swimming, though," M1e writ.es. "When I deli......i my loiter from the ma,..-ol Coat.a Meaa to the mayu-of Vannas, he gave me a fret!! pass to tile t.own swlmmJ:ng pool for the summe:r, so"" spend a lot of llm< tit.re." A trip b> the summer home of an uncle, aunt and coushls in Lapland found reindeer visiting daily. Tile trees along Ule road, ate found, were rermntscert of tocenes in ' • D r . ZNlvago." ''Papa put nets out in the lake overNght and nex.t morning we had about 20 &h. Mama cleaned them and I got to wash them <if in the lake. \Ve smoked most of them and had same for breakfast." DAILY PILOT __ c:.n ...... OJlANGI[ COAST PVILISHIHG COMl'AN'f 11.obtrt N. W1td Pt'ftldent t11d P'vllllltltf J1ck l. Curl.., Viet Pr"ldrnf •nd 0-.1 M1Mter lho1111• IC11wil Edllllr lhtll'ltl A. Mirtflhint Menttlfllf Edlkr Jtr.M• F. Colli111 P11rl Nin111 H--1 llttQ ltdwrlllll'9 CllY Elll!w Ofrir<:IGI' ....,... ..... •otnc. 2111 Wttt 1111.01 ''''''''" Mtlllnt A.14r ... I P.O. l ox 1175 t2661 .,_.,.._ C.'9 ~: -Wht 8tY '"°" L...-hllcll: m ,._, A- H""'"""'1n ~: at -''"" AMERICAN ABROAD Sandra Lauf•r Te1evlsioo., wi1tl one chamel broad· c.-g !rom 6 p.m. tn midnight II a favorite family diversion. w Ith American pM>grams like "The Virgi- nian." "Mission lmPoSsible" and "lUgti Ch.tpa.rral," all present:ed in English with Swedish subtitles. This, Sandy notes, is fortunate, because her progress with the Sweetish Jan·guage has been painful. She describes it briefly as . "murder" and adds, "Spanish is much easier. I think I'd better go back to thDt." Sandy will be flying home at the end of the month to her Costa Mesa home at 1340 Garingford and the beginning of her sei:iior year at COS'la Mesa High School. The second phase of her life u; an AFS representative will include a series of illustrated talks to schools and clubs on her personal experiences as ·a teenage mem!>er of a Swedish family. Copters Res um e Service; First Load Lighter The first Los Angeles Airways com- muter helicopter since flights were suspended a week ago touched down at the Newport« Inn Heliport at 7:58 a.m. today. It brou&'ht -and departed with - fewer passengers than usual, "1be load was a little btt lighter. t guess it will tall:e av.'hile to build back up." said a heliport employe. Flights of the big Sikorsl<)' S6l aircraft were resumed on full schedule today, after 1 as t Wednesday's Comp~ ton c r a s h which killed 21 penon.<i brought a voluntary co m pan y suspension. Metal fatigue wttich caused a main rotor to snap off caused tlle tragic crash in a playground, aecordlng to the Nation.al TransportaUon Safety Board. New spindles have beon Jnstalled on Che lour remalnilla LAA bcllmpten. I building heights. Serving as an ad- visory body to the county board -a s does tit• Aif1lOl'I Commlssi<>n -the Land Use Commission would CMdut"t public hearings on all matters comJng before it. Councilman P~ul J. Gruber said the Land Use Commission iJ an ObvJou1 necessity because of the Airport Com· mi5slon's recent intruslm. into a Newport-COsta Mesa a n n e I at I on squabble involving temtory adjacent to the airport. WENT TOO FAR "The Airport Commission ftllt too far u far as Newptrl wa s cooce1ned by recommettdlng againet that an· nexatiot:l," said Grober. "lbat wam't it.I responsibility." 'lbe new commlasion would com,. prt.,e seven mem·ber1, inclucllng the mayor of "a clty adjacmt to or con- ttnguoos wltlt" the allyort, in the wordo ol tile Iegi!lature'• enablin« act. Tbilr, M>ggested Seymour, coulcf well mean M&'fOI' Doreen Marshall. Newport councilmen liked the idea. Dooold Mcinnis said tile ColDlty ~ague of Oties should take up the maUe.-. Vice Ma')'Ol' Panaos agreed. "We C«'baioly weren't consulted by county 1upervl.S'ors Oil tbia. Instead they coo· 1Ult the airport manager.'' SEND RESOLtmON It was finally decided, on a motion by Gruber, to seDd a resolution to euperviaon asking fonnaUon ot t h e lolld Use Oommisslon, and tn Odvise the League Of a.!iiomla Cl1l<s Of tho ,action. "We'll tint go to Ule supervisors " said Parsons. "And if that doesD•i work, we'll go to the league." Se)"D'l.our'a investigat.iOD into the possibll1ty ol the new commission· ruulted from a suggestion made by oot.nc!Unen one :mooU!i ago. The sug· gestion came trom prominent Oou.My AJr,xrt expansion foe Dan Emory. He Hid city ment>ership on such a com- m!lskm might be one way of giving Newport lll(Q ilrlluence in w,iort ma!l«I. From Page 1 CLAMS ••• their trade In1 the Garden Grove- Wintersburg channel which Mnptles into the Botm Ol.ica lagoon area In Huntingtx:ln Beach, and 6even in the Talbert-Huntington Beaoh c h ia n n e I whJ.oh nows into the Sanba Ana River dha.rmel near its mou..tl'J. Osborne said a oheck revealed that the fiShermen range in pn:iits from $10 to $35 a day. He said there are three t~ of. shellflsh generally found in the tidal channels -razor clams, butter clams and cockle clams. The engineer offered the supervisors lour alternatives: -Close the area to shelHlshing. (He noted humorously that the clams would like this best). --Continue t.he ~resent program. -Grant an exclusive license to Williams. -Issue a yearly permit to bait dlg- gellS at $100 annually. He favored t.he latter proposal. Leon Selliez, manager of Scotty's QUick Frozen Bpiit, 418 30th St., Newport Beach, one O{ tihe Largest suppliers of cl.a.m..i f2f ba.it 5Md of the diggers, ''It's a tough way to make a living." He said clams are a "popular and expensive bait." They siell for 70 cents to $1 a package with eadl package containing about 20 clams. enougfl for not more than a half day of fishing. Th< Calilornla Fish and Gerne com- mission was represented. at Tue6Cjay'1 discussion and reported th:at the com- mission is not in favor of a county license fee. Clayton H. Parker, deputy county counsel. said there W.:M!I a ques· tion of jurisdiction ral.9ed, that the st.ate may have preempted the Ueld. Two Boys Sough t For Brush Blaze Laguna Beach firemen doused a one acre brush flre during the noon hour Tuesd8y and today are seek.lnog two boys believed to have caused it. Other youngsters at the scene ran home to can firemtn and later said two boys fled as the blaze was break· ing oo~ Tbm was no damlll•· - • -~--..,.... .... - SUNSET, SURF AND SAND IN YOUR EYE IN OLD WEST NEWPORT Romane• Somehow Missing for Water Weary BNchfront Homeowne rs UPITti.tltl'I MARINA MANAGER lrvln•i• Fisher 'Buck' Fisher Named Irvine Marina Manager Robert A. "Buck" Fisher of Newport Beach has been appointed marina manager for the Irvine Co. In bJs newty created position Fisher wi.U undertake a survey to detennine the most effective use of Irvine Ranch marlnias and a survey to determine the neeWi of Newport Harbor boat owners, company officials said. Fisher, of 2.572 Bay shore Drive, is former manager of Bayadere Marine Service, a subsidiary of the Balboa Bay Club. He ls also the former western division gener61 manager for Pom Coolrolo, Ind. Fisher was an All-American football player at USC and played pro- fesstonaMy with the W a s h i n gt o n Redskins. Two Telephone Booths Bombed Two explosi.oos which damaged telephcrne boOtbs in Anaheim late Tuesday night are under investigation by police today. The telephone booths, 1ocat.ed at Loara High School and at a gasoline station at the corner Of Brookhurst and Orange streets, appear to have been deliberately bombed, Anraheim officers said. No damage was done to bu.ildings located II'O'llnd the telephone booths. From Page J CZECHOSLOVAKIA INVASION • • • Czechoslovak Communist party and government offJclals, but named no names and did not clear up the ques- tion of exactly who asked for the in- tervention. The invaders killed at least two persons and injured 2S in occupying the Prague radio station. Four were reported killed and 10 injured In the Bohemian town of Liberac. A 27-year- old motorcyclist was reported to have died under a Soviet tank, his chest crushed. Authoritative Western sou r c e s reported that in Prague alone there were 25,000 invading troops, mostly Soviet but some Polish and Bulgarian. Every major Czechoslovak city was occupied. MIG 21 jets streaked over Prague a long with twin-engine bombers. 1be sources said tne Russian forces Jn Prague included one airborne division, one motorized I n f a n t r y division, one T55 tank battalion, ooe T62 tank battalion, various artillery .and anti-tank out1lts and support troops. Heavy 1treet fighting occurred around Radio Prague, which ""1!nt off the Zr with the defiant strains of "My Homeland," the Czechoslovak national anthem, Fighting ended quickly. One R,ussiarl. tank lay burned out by firelxmbs near the radio station. A red sw.a6tika we.s sc:ra·wled on its side by freedom fighters. Two ammunition trucks were blown up and burned out. A barricade of seven trolley cars . was shattered by tand. Four of the cars were burned out. Crow&; filled Weneeslas Square, the heart of the capital, jeering, hissing, Sopitting, tmw;.ing stones and even wads of paper. Mothers carried babies in the crowds. At Radio Prague, the windows were broken and the m-asoory pocked by bullets. Four house1 up the street were gutted. Workers at factories walked off the job and thli:re was a threat of a general strike. The National Assembly's pro- clamation urged them to "stay at your place of work · and defend your en- terprises . . . even by a general strike." Sporadic !l>ooting rang through Prague rtreets. A blast that ap- parently came from a heavy weapon damaged a house near the Swiss Embassy. The refonnist Czech party leader. Alexander Dubcek, aDd sOllle other Car Ster eo Stoleu A car burglar took '176 in loot, in· eluding a stereo unlt and 16 tapes from a vehicle belonging to Rick Powell o( 101 Via Genoa, Newport Beach, Tues- day night while the owner was et the Fox South Coast Theater, 3410 Bristol St., Cosba Me.Ga police said today. progressive members of t.he party presidium were held prisoners at the Central Committee headquarters on the Vltava River. Prtsident Ludvik Svoboda was isolated at the govern· ment headquarters, Hradcany Castle. Troops and tanks surrounded the cas· tle, The Czechoslovak leaders issued a~ peals to the population not to resist the invaders and to go to work a.s usual. Clandestine radios broadcasting wp. port for Dubcek sprang up throughout the country and started a campaign for the immediate convening of the ex- traordinary party congress that had been scheduled for Sept. 9. At the congress, Dubcek had hoped to consolidate his position by ousting conservative followers of the farmer hard·line president. Antonin Novotny, from the party leadership. Novotny was ousted by Dubcek and assailed for Stalinist excesses. At noon the radio called for a one· minute work stoppage and horn honk· ing to demonstrate solidarity with the Dubcek leadership and to demand the withdrawal Of the foreign troops. Auto horns sounded from those cars that were still on the streets. Most Prague citizens answered a call to go to work normally and to car- ry on with their duties. They found Soviet and other foreign tanks on Prague's bridges. Historic Charles Bridge, a 13th cen· tury landmark, was smeared with signs saying "Russians go home." Some Czechoslovaks drove around town with the national flag draped on their motorcycles and cars. Women with babies in their arms cried at the sight of the Sovie t soldiers. U.S. Troop s Kill 182 as Guerrillas Attack in Wave SAIGON {UPI) -U.S. Infantrymen today repelled three Com rn u n ls t hum<m wave attacks on an American armored column near Tay Ninh city, killing at least 182 Viet Cong, military sources reported. The action near the Cambodian border brought the Communist death toll in fighting this week northwest Of Saigon to nearly 500. U. S. sources said t.o estimated 600 Viet Cong attacked armored personnel carriers of the 25th U. S. Infantry Division near the Ben Cui rubber plan· tation, about 60 miles northwest of Saigon and 14 miles east of Tay Ninh city. Six of the mmored vehicles were destroyed in the artt.ack and one American killed and 23 wounded, the sources said. FROM CALIFORNIA ARTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY lllJ NEWPORT AV E., COSTA MESA 22 Ye1" In Tli• Sime loc1fion 1 ~"'VII LI! 1171 ,.HONI - • ty •• ,. ik n· e. S• p-.. p- Jt :n .. od >d og " y, •Y >r •· k· ,. ,. a T• od m ,. ;h od '" " ?t n t n {, y n h >I ~ ,1 y I• .r h • • e Wtdntsd.,-, Au,vst 21, 1~ •I OAJLY mor 17 Newport-Mesa s~hool Bus Ser"Vi~e Areas • I I 3 4 I l I I II 2 3 I 4 I l I Maps show who will ride school bus and who must walk. Students in white areas walk. Student~· in shad- ed. areas live far enough from school to be eligible for busing. Dangerous street crossing must be made on way to school from black areas so stu- dents will be bused. I I Fr---r11 • ' F I I I I I °< I '"·"( •, "· .;. MAP SHOWS WHICH KINDERGARTEN THROUGH lRD GRADE STUDENTS WILL RIDE BUS Shaded are•s ere beyond one mile; black areas require hazardous crossing /1 F D ! ~;,~ "':,,~·,-~ .• , .... ii 1 I (! ~-.,.,,,_ ' .I I \a -·-~ •4! I Is) l • "'• I • ,.,.,.., I Strut:.M., DJ~ Newport Harbor and Costa Mesa -···-···-· ----' --_.. -. --.. - ., • g a m r• • I c • .. "· --D I F I WALK OR RIDE IUS IOUNDARllS SHOWN ,OR SIX HARIOll AREA INTERMEDIATE SCHOOLS Over mile ind 1 ht11lf •nd from dt11n91rou1 ion1.1 tfudtf'lfl m1y ride td'tool bu1 --------- I I ' I I 4 I 7 i I 5,,.,, .M., <f Newport Harbor and Costa Meaa 41 ... ~ -···---• ---!.. ---• -.. ~ .. .. --' • • • r- I c I I F I 8USING AREAS SHOWN FOR 25 llLllMllNTARY SCHOOL ?ONES, GllADIS 4 THllOUGH 6 Walking perimeter for upper 1r1d1 elemtnt•'l •tudent• is mile 1M one lllU•rt.,. ,. .,, ''''·'~ .. ·~- 2 ' 3 I I 141 l~, (I) I. L I I S vut .MAP of \ewport Harbor and Costa Me.a f., .. J, ~ -···-.. ·-. ---• --... -·· • -...... .. -· .. t • • • .. - II - c I I . . • , I I .. 4 I -. ~~ -. HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS WILL If MOSTAl'l'ICTllD IV CHAMOIS IN IUS J:ONU ..+ Walkln9 """"'••Y ,....,,.,. ... lw• "'lloti 4JI whe ""'" laat yaar mutl wallc I , I • J .. -. DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Civic Center Findings Money tallts. It is especially loud and clear during discussions of such matters as Newport Beach's badly needed new civic center. A team of e<>nsultants retained by the city reported last week that a site at Newport Center, adjacent to Fashion Island, is the best bet by a considerable mar- gin, in terms of money and in terms of serving the public, flexibility, aesthetics, and fut ure expansion needs. But especially in terms of money. The total cost of developing a civic center there, according to the consultants, wouJd be about $1 million less than the cost of deYeloping the same facilities at the present City Hall ,;te. Th.at figure could well lead to a move of the seat of triunicipal government from the Peninsula. lt is doubtful that anyone at City Hall or anywhere in the community was prepared for such a differential. It is a figure that is, of course, based on a number of asswnpti.ons. Among these are marketability of the p resent site, as a location for a luxury apartment house, purchase of the Newport Center land for $90,000 an acre and a lower cost of construction at the now undeveloped latter site. (It will cost $4,459,000 to rebuild at City Hall ; $4,102,000 to build at Newport Center.) Here's how the city's hired experts break it all down: -Proceeds from sale of the present 4.5-acre site: 'f.3 million. -Minus the price of some 6 acres of Newport Cen- ter land: $588,000. -Plus the savings ,in construction costs at New· port Center: $357,000. -Net savings: $1,069,000. This is the money that will be doing the loudest talking when civic center site s election committee members, and then the City Council, start deciding where the groundbreaking should take place. The citizens' committee will want to take pa rticu· Facts, Fiction About Crime In America Fact& and FJctlon About €rime In the U.S.: Fiction: Most homicides are eom· mltted by criminal!, with gain as their motive. Fact: Mo1t homiclde11, by far, are committed by people without criminal recor.ds, not for gain, but for passion. Fiction: Most homicides are com· mitted on their victims by strangers. Fact: Most homicides, again by far, are committed on their victims by hi.end!, acquaintances, relatives, or sweethearts, not by strangers. Fiction: Prison sentences in coun· tries such as England are longer than those in the U.S., and thus the crime rate is reduced. Fact: Prison sentences for com· parable crimes are generally shorter in England than in the U.S.: but con· viction is swifter and more certain there than here. which makes more of a deterrent than m ere 1ength of senten~. FIC110N: Convicted c r i m i n a 1 s should be given longer terms, which would allow them to be rehabilitated in jail. Fact: Fewer titan three percent of all jail employes are social workers, psychologists, psychiatrists a n d teachers; and this sparse number is incapable of coping with the problem of rehabilitation in any realistic way. Fiction: More and more people are turning to crime, which accounts for our high rate of court cases. Fact: In cases of robbery with Dear Gloomy Gus: That Costa Mesa car dealer who advertises "less than two miles ahead" on a Coast Highway brn. board coming into Newport from Huntington Beach must be meas. uring with funny speedometers. -R.'M, Tlllt tutu,. ""'*"--¥MWi "" lllteffHrllY ftloM tf tt1e MW.,._, SHf "ur Ht -.V. h 81M'"' ~ .. D•lrr Plllt. physical attack (which most people mean by "crime in the street"), more than 80 percent of the defendants have been arrested at least once before, and nearly 50 percent have been ar. rested five or more times before. It is "fast repeaters" who pile up the record more than new recruits to crime. F1CTION: Such defendants are. "coddled" by the courts, which give them either light sentences or acquit them. Fact: It is the prosecutor, rather than the courts, that determines the sentence, for in two-thirds of s u c h cases, the defendants are allowed to plead guilty to less serious charges ln order to process the case faster and secure a .. conviction:" on the record. Fiction: Sentences on the statute books are too light for such crimes as first-degree robbery. Fact: In New York State, the man· datory sentence for first-degree rob- bery is so heavy-10 to 30 years-that 0£ 136 typical cases studied by the New York Times, not one wa1 convicted of the crime for which be wa1 arre1ted. Fiction: Most criminals plead not guilty, go to trial, and are let off. Fact: In New York, for example, 95 percent or all convictions are obtained by pleas of guilty rather than on trials; in only 7 percent of cases is guilt or innocence de<:ided by trial. 'Most Neglected Issue' WASHINGTON Sen. George McGovern is set to announce a wide· ranging four-point program to deal with what be characterizes as the "most neglected isS\le in the present political campaign" -the farm pro· blem. The South Dakotan. who ·recently threw his hat into the Democratic presidential ring, will spell out his pro- posals in a speech In Kearney, Neb., Thursday, Aug. Z.Z, The address is particularly aimed at the Middle West, where McGovern haf)es to garner delegate support - an effort in which he: bu had lltUe success so f.ar. McGovern's basic thesis is that the "urban crisis'' in large part is due to highly adverse rural conditions resu]. tiint 1n steady large.scale migration to flte cltiea. He argues that by im· proving agricultura1 conditions much pl"Ogreu <;an be made in eliminating aertou. urban problem1. "REVERSING THE trtDd of migra. doll from country to city to a city.to· rur.J aru ptttern b urgenUy need · ed," McGovern will d!M:lare . To obtain thl1 objective, be enun· dated Ille followh>g four·poh>t plan: t "Wt price or Income .aupports to lull parity ret= !<I farm lamllie1, lllJ'Plementod by 1uch leglJlation u is •eded to permll farmer• to bar1alo for .-fllr rtllln!. 1 .,Elpand credit at reeaon.able tmnt lo Wmerl througb Wm cndlt boab, Farmers Home Admlnl6tndoo ud .Rural Electrification A4mlalllradoo, to m .. t aD sound Ima c:redlt requlrem8DU beyond the I capacity of private agencies to handle. 3. "Immediate establishment of a strategic commodity reserve to pull excess suppLies of wheat, feed grains and soybeans out of free markets into a tightly held reserve to meet emergencies in the U.S. and nations dependent on us. This removal of ex· cesses should be large enough to raise current farm returns from wheat, feeds and soybeans to full parity. 4. "CORRECTION of urban-rural PQpulation imbalance with a rural rehabilitation program which includes use of tax incentives, and placement of a part o( the federal government's $00 biUlon annual procurfme.nt of goods and services to stimulate rural industrial development." Noting that wheat prices, now under $1 25 a bushel, are the ''lowest ln a quarter ce.ntury .. , and that corn has dropped to below $1 a bushel, "the lowest level since 1942," McGovern will warn thJs portends serioo& threats for the fu ture. "We are weakening both agriculture and our backlog or trained agricultural exf>erU by our failure to allow tanners a decent return for their pr&- dueb," the: South Dakota presidential aspirant will say. "The decline in the number of farms continues at a rate of aJ,<XXJ to 100,000 farms a year." ' Jar pains to satisfy itself that the figures a nd the re. search -particularly in relation to salability of the present city hall site -are as sound as possible. Even if the dollar advantage were quite a bit less, the reports by Welton Becket and Associates and Eco- nomics Research Associates contain other very strong evidence favoring the new site: centrality for greater public convenience and better service; greater flexlbll· ity Ln design and construction: room for expansion i op- portunity to have other governmental agencies and public activities associated into a true civic center. The pressing need for a new city hall and new po- lice facili1y ii beyond question. Likewise a new main library. lf the economic evidence stands up under the citizens committee scrutiny, the site quest~on can be promptly resolved . A Too Rare Book A new date has been set for the first public hearings on William Pereira's Orange County Air Transport Master Plan. Airport commissioners, in switching the date from August 30 to Sept. 16, acted with reason. They wanted the public to have more time to acquire and study cop- ies of the William Pereira report. After all, people must know what they're talking about. And copies of that report are mighty hard to come by. So much so, that in all of Newport Beach City Hall, there is but one copy today. 0 We haven't been able to gel any more,'' says City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt. ., This seems a bit absurd. We trust .. county officials will boost the next printing order of this publication . lit should not be that rare a book. N Bolsa Chica as a Site for New Airport Homeowners List Disadvantages To the Editor: As a member of the West Prestige Homeowners Association, I would like to point out the follawing facts. The Bolsa Chica site for an airport is not as centrally located as some of the other proposed sites in relationship to the area to be served. There would be an overlap of service areas with existing a.irports: Long Beach Airport is 20 minute~. Orange County Airport is 20 minutes, L.A. Airport is 45 minutes. This could result in fligh t pattern interference with Long Beach Airport and Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. Since the coot of building an island for the atomic energy power plant in approximately the same area proved too costly, it would seem that this pro· ject would be even more so. THE BOLSA CfUCA site w o u l d result in an irreplaceable loss of one of the last existing natural beach areas in Southern California. This is the only area left oi>en to the public for swim· ming and surfing without charge. A large parking lot was recently built to accommodate the many ~usands of people who take advantage of this wonderful beach. Many people in the area have moved here from El Segundo to escape the noise, air pollution and traffic CO'l· ges.tion from L.A. International, and would again have to move elsewhere regardless of loss due t.o deflation of their proper ty, Leaving the city with less tax revenue. Huntington Beach would no longer be an ideal residential area for raising families. Several or the new schools would be useless and would result in total loss in t.axp ayers' money. The new golf course in Hun· tingt.on Beach would be useless as well as the Meadowlark Golf Course. THE CITY HAD quite a celebration when it went over the 100,000 mark in population recently, but it would soon fall way below that as people moved to ge t away from the noise, traffic and air pollution, causing a big loss in city revenue for property taxes. sales tax, etc. We feel that this is a different circumstance th an people who com· plain about the noise of an airport near their homes when the airport was there first. We realize that tills would be quite an engineering feat but, since there are other locations that can be utilized, although some of them might be ideal for future home sites. we do not think it is right or fair to ruin home sites already established. MR. & MRS. A. B. VAN SICKLE " Ex.,easlve Control To the Editor; The arrogant impudence of those. assuming to have the right to .. tamper with the freedoms .and rights of the citizens of Newport Beach. They must not be aware of the meaning o( the Constitution and the Bill of Rights· safeguarding the U.S. citizen from e.x· cessi.ve control by its government. The inference that the citizens of Newport Beach are the enemy and must. be watched by the police at all .----B11 George Dear George: In the paper in your column you offered .a guarantet:d solu· lion !or faulty memory and said merely fill out tht coupon. l couldn't find .any coupon. A.G. O.ar A.G.: Hm. I KNEW something bad &Upped my mind. Letters frcr.n re aders are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to Jit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. All let· ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be wittv. held on request. times, infrared lenses, piercing fog and darkness up ta one mile away zooming in on anything that moves - how about lip-reading fellows ? YES, WHE RE IS it indeed, if you happen to live, say on Ocean BouJevard, on Balboa, on the beach· front, or Corona del Mar, or the bay, or any other place where a camera is placed pointed (rotating) into the general direction of your home, picture-window, patio, e t c . , en· tertaining friends, or one might wish to sit and rest lightly dressed, or in the altogether, heaven forbid ! Cameras would surely be placed higher lilan ordinary voyeurs' eyes. So -the BIG EYE, all-seeing fog -and darkness - piercing eye could see what your hairdresser does not even see! Tell me, would you reel compelled to pull the draperies or sit so you could not be seen by the THING? TO ARINC CO. I say take your dam- nable electronic marvel a'Jld put it on a desert island in the South Pacific to watch birds with. a perfect testing ground. The legal and constitutional -aspects should be weighed by the Supreme Court. The demoralizing a n d dehumanizing effeot it may have on the community. Wh-at about deteriiorating the personal relation5 between the police department and the public? The cost of printing and distributing of a pamphlet containing heavily· slanted facts. misinformation, omit· ting important safeguards to protect the citizens' nights. Paid for wiU1 our tax mooies by the city of Newport Beach! Suggestions were made to vote publicly on this very impartant mat· ter, before it was rejected by the City Council 4 to 3, bless their minds. If voted on. there will be ample time to actively oppose this issue. So -please -to those who are co ncerned about their freedom, SPEAK UP AND SPREAD THE WORD! BEN DUYNDAM Lomn Bo1olblfl 1'o the Editor : Thank you for your intelligent. and encouraging ed.itoriaJ re the Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club. As one of the lady bowlers in the group, I have enjoyed many challeng· ing and interesting atternooos and bave appreciated the kindness and frfendship of the gentlemen who make up the greater part of our club. Ne'A-· grft!n.'I have long been needed and the pubtlc park in question with its present limited use seems to be a logleal location. Knowing lawn bowling as we do, we are iure our club would be an .uset to any neighborhood. ELSIE HUBBARD Bomlers' C'ue To the Editor; Thank you for the Im. editxJrlal in ' your August 14 issue. lt stated the lawn bowlers' case perfectly. The direetx:irs of Irvine Terrace Harne Owners Association have sen.t a letter to their members containing many untrue and misleading statemell'Ls, especially concerning ex. pense to the city taxpayers because of lawn bowling. The bowling club pays all maintenance-of the greens and club house, totaling about $3,000 per year. The city pays the club $900 per year towards these expenses. THE BOARD OF Directors of Irvine Terrace did not tell the home owners that for the past several years the city of Newport Beach has paid $12,000 per year for their parks maintenance, and that th.is year the city is paying an ad· ditional $5,500 for lrvfue Terrace Park improvements. The lawn bowling clubs in 20 other cities in Southern California all receive greater amowits of public assistance than does the Newport Beach clLtb, some a.s much as 100 per· cent or their upkeep. The 99 active members of the bowl· frig club feel that because of the large expense to aJl city taxpayers for upkeep Of Irvine Terrace Pack, with its present limited use, the park should be made available for more ac- tivities that all of the. people in Newport Beach could enjoy. ANGUS POITER Flu•h the Sond To the Editor; The continuing fight and the huge outlay of money the city of Newport Beach spends to try to save the West Beach and homes reminds me of the old ctiche, "It's like shovelling mud against the tide ." Any time that man has thwarted nature he has had a fight on his hands. Our eroding beach is a classic ex· ample of man's futile attempt to win a losfug battle. It is an established fact that the n'la· jor source of sandy beaches is due to the sand being brought down to the coastline from the hinterland by rivers or washes which periodically handle huge volumes of run-off water during the ra.i'ny season5. I WAS BORN IN Loog Beach and I can remember when the outer end of the pier on which the rO'ller coaster still stands (Silver Spray Pier) was in 15 to W-feet of water. At high tides the surf came all the way up to the pike. When the 1..-0s Angeles river flood con· trot channel wrui built and the river directed into the ocean at the west side of Long Beach, and before flood control dams were built, seasonal floods would bring tons of sand from the mountains and deJ>OSit it into the: ocean at Long Beach. As years went by the sand eventually built up the beach until the Silver Spray pier was "high and dry" and the beach ex. tended weU out beyond . Government breakwaters have changed the cur· rents and eliminated the surf so that now the beach remains int&CL \VBEN THE PRADO dam was built and the free flow or water was eliminated tr om the Santa Ana Ri'ver, sand was virtually stopped from being deposited on ltle be.acb at West Newport -thus the problem whlcb we n<JW face at West Newport Beach. ~ WOQ!dn't it be feosible for the Rood «lOlrol engineers lo perlodlca!l,y FLUSH the •and from the Santa Ana river bed by openlog the Oood gates of tile Pnldo dam and allow oontroiled emountl of water to surge to the coart? I am wHUng to wager that this m-would briDC lllAll'e ...i to West Newport Beach in one action than bulldozers could transfer in a week. This is an idea from a layman who would like to see our beach~ preserv- ed without having to call in the ''shovellers of mud against the tide" at great and unending expense to the taxpayer. CLARK SWEET They Blom It All To the Editor: As an interested mother of three boys playing ball this season. I would like to make a few comments regarding the Harbor Area Baseball Program. I feel this is the finest organized ball of any area in which we have lived- from the top men like MacMillian and Kubeska to the umpire·coaches like T. O'Shea and T. Parse! -just to men· tiO.Q. a few; they are wett schooled and oflhe highest caliber. · I was under the impression that during a baU game the "umpire" was the "officer in charge" a5 it were. J find it very upretting to see the parents interfering by questioning and arguing over every call. THEY ARE DOING their very best and cannot always be on top of every play, but decide as they see it. We will "lase these fine young men as umpires as that $6 just isn't enough to com· pensate for au the abuse they have to take. Parents are supposed to be spec· tators -there to cheer the boys on. What possesses them to scream out at these umpires? What bas happened to the respect for authorfty we've been trying to teach these boys? They blow it all in one ball game. J would imagine these are the same parents who can't put their pride in t~ir pocket -must stand up always on the side of the child even if wrong against school offi'cials, police, etc. Don 't they realize these boys will Jearn to accept the calls made and take it in their stride ? DISAPPOINTMENT is part of tM ball game and a big part of li fe. Ac· cepting it is a step toward maturity. Boys must learn to profit from their mistakes and resolve to do better next time. They must learn self-control and NOT be allowed to throw hats and gear in anger -it's a dangerous habit. It is very easy to h.ave everything go our way, but we haven't taught th~m anything if they can't ac· cept a loss without having a tantrum. Let's not fail in our Harbor program as so many Little Leagues have done over parental interference. How about if we all start anew next season teaching and practi"cing respect for authority? MRS. J. S, ---iiiiill- Wednesday, August 21, 1968 The editorial page Of tli.t Dailt1 Pilot .teekt to inform and ttim- ulat• reader• b11 preientino thil newtpapn'1 opinions and com- msnUaru on topici of fnkrt.tt and tignificanct, by providing a forum for th1 e.ipression of our reader•' opinknu, and bu J')ttSftting the diomt fMw. pofntt of f:nformtd observer• and IJ>Oke"""' on topics of tM do~. Bober! N. Weed, PubU&her I I --------..,.....-------------_,....----~--~-------~-· -· ....,.. ·-=-· ........,. ·1 -~ Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT Your Bo.metown EDITION ' VOL bf, NO. 201, 7 SOCTIONS, 72 PAGES COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1968 ~zec LBJ Urges Re~ Troop.s Withdraw WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson today called on the Soviet Union and its Communist allies to withdraw their tr o o p s from Czechoslovakia. He said "It is never too late for reason to prevail." Johnson, in a statement issued from the White House, said: "It is a sad cQmment.ary on the Communist mind that a sign o[ liberty in Czechoslovakia is deemed a fun· damental threat to the security of the Soviet system." Johnson said the "tragic news'' about the military intervention in Czeehoslovakia "s hocks the con· science of the wo1·id." "The excuses offered by the Soviet Union are patently contrived. The Czechoslovakian government did not request its allies to interfere in its in· temal affairs. No external aggression threatened Czechoslovakia,'' Johnson said. . The president said the action by the Warsaw Pact allies was a "flat viola· tion" of the United Nations charter and as a result the U.S. government was urgently consulting other nations to consider what steps should be taken in the United Nations. George Christian, presidential news secretary, said shortly after noon that the "hot line" between the White lJouse and the Kremlin had not been used during the current crisis. Hammett Keeps Post as Mesa Chamber Prexy Medical center administrator Jae~ Hammett has been re-elected pres!· dent of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce with the biggest vote of confidence -80 percent of ttie ballots cast -in chamber history. Six other persons were elected to three-year terms on the hoe.rd ~f directors and final tabu1ations of mail balloting will be annoWlCed Sept. 12 at the monthly board luncheQn. New officers of the organizatioo will become o{ficiaUy elected at the sttrt of their October-to-October working year, with formal installati<m clue just before year's end. . . President Hammett, administrator of Bristol Park Meclical Group, is ac· live in various ch<:mber activities and has served in his top spot for the past Uttf!e years. . . He will head a slate of directors in- cluding Dr . Robert Moore, Orange Coast College presiderrt; Thom~s Chandler, local sales manager for Air West, and Joseph Metcalf, Sears & Roebuck and Co., manager, South Coast Plaza. Other dirett.ors newly elected are Chtrles Edwards, district manager of the Automobile Club of Southern California, John Murphy, I r v i n e Industrial Complex president and Eugene Bergeron, Baltz Mortuaries president. Fourteen other previous directors, all well known in Co.9ta Mesa cpm· munity activities and business, 'will serve ori a holdover basis, according to Executive Mmager Nick Ziener. They are Paul Nissen, Gordon Martin, Edgar M. Seconl. Alton L. ~iser, John P. Endicott, Werner Escher, John C. Leomardt and Mrs. tucille Pinkley. Others are Dom.in\c Raciti, Nate Reade, Kenn Rima, Melvin M. Schinkel. JoseiU C. Steelman and \Vtyne Toscas. W rong·way Turn Jails Mesa Man A Costa Mesa man was arrested Tuesday night after he made a left turn and crashed into a left turn signal etandard while a patrolling policeman watched. Ez.t:iel P. Ruiz, 41. or 271-'2 San Lucas Lane, waa patched up at Costa Mesa City Jail w)th a cut under his eye and booked in on suspicion of drunk driving. Ruiz was southbOund <>n llarbor Boulevard at Baker Street shortly before 11 p.m. when the accident OC· curred, police said. ' s e-er IT'S HAP P! l~G 'fl PRAGUE -Soviet tank rumbbng 'down sf;:.;f brings forth memoiies of aborti'le Hungartan revolt 12 years ago. However, photo was taken in Prague, Czechoslovalqa, today. This Mesa Councilman Called 'Communist,' May Sue "The two councilmen who voted againsl it want communism." This is the quote during Monday's Costa Mes-a City Council meeting which today has one of the two leaders in question considering a name for the speaker, such as : Defendaot. The possibility of legal action being considered by Costa Mesa Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson, followed words by an outspoken constituent Ted Bologh Monday over a controversial rezoning issue . The switch of elderly Francis X. Shoen's four-acre parcel at Newport Boulevard . and Baker Street from manufacturing designation to com· mercial use was up for second reading -which would have made it official - when some coWtcilmen had second thoughts. During the year-long effort by Shoen to get the land rezoned oo he can apply Ike Still Critical But Army Doctors Feel Encouraged WASHINGTON (APl -Army clo<:- tors reported today that they wve en- couraged by a certain aspect <lf former President D w l g ht D. Eisenhower's condition but they "still view the genert.l's condition as critical.'' In a medical bulletin this morning, doc\.xs ol Walter Reed Army Hospltal gajd: ''Gen. Eisenhower spent a very comfortable night and his spiriL! re· main excellent. The trend towards a decrease of the frequency of cardiac irregularities and episodes of rapid heart action indicated in last night's bulletin has continued throughout the night. While the physicians believe this is an encouraging sign, they still view the ge neral's condition~ critical." The matter of ca.rd.iac irregul.a.rities and episodes or rapid heart action have all along been th<' major cause of concern in connection w i t h Eisenhower's lr.itest heart attack. his seventh since 195.S. • to put a service station up, councilmen and planners have studied and Y»ondered whettier some other use mi ght not be better. As a result , it .appears the issue has been distorted into a denial of the Cree enterprise system. Second reading of the rezoning ordinance was delayed on a 3 to 2 vote Moqday night, on the basis that new pending regulations on service stations and industrial property should be clarifi~ first. Councilman William L. St. Clalir reopened the matter for discussion later in the agenda, at which time Bologh took the podiwn to help sup- port Shoen. "The two councilmen who voted against it want communism," Bologh said, implying t b e moYe was a blow against Shoen'.• developm en t of the pror,erty he has owned for more than 20 years. 111 believe I was just called a Com· munis.t," said Vice Mayor Wilson, a member of the An1erican Legion, turn· ing to Cioty Attorney Roy June for ad· vice. "I didn't say Communist," snapped Bologh. "Mr. Bologh," said Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, rapping bis gavel. "We have a recording," soothed June. Subsequently, councilmen opened the vote again and passed Shoen's rezone tp second reading by a 3 to 2 margin, with Wilson and Councilman George A. Tucker voting against lt. "It appears there is widespread con· fusion on this matter in the audience," commented Council.man Willard T. Jordan. Ironically, Monday's action or in· .action will have no reai effect on the outcome of the service station project Shoen has planned, He must still obtain a conditional use pennit trom the City <A>uncil when the rezoning Is final, and a decision could then be made .against him if councilmen believe it wise. Wilson, however, continued to si m· mer over the alleged slur on hli; allegiance and 11 pondering What steps. tf any, W take. Under the law, one can initiate either law fiult or criminal proceedings if evidence justifies his case. ------~------·----· --. • nva Ill • • ... ~111: was scene in front ot Wences1aus Statue In Wenceslaus Square in Czech capital following invasion by Russia and fo ur satellite countries. National Museum is in background. Too Few Buses 825 More Must Walk to School Some 825 Newport-Mesa students who last year rode buses to school will have to walk this fall. Maps of bus areas appear today on Page 17. A majority of these, 450, are high school students. Also affected are 225 intermediate school students and 150 elementary school students. They are the victims of an extension of walking distances adopte::1 by school trustees this week because or a school bus shortage. Wal king perimeters around schools have been expanded from 11h miles to two miles for high school students, one mile to 11h miles for intermediate students. one mile to l 1/4 miles for fourth !.:u·vugh sixth ~ader-s, and o/4 mile to ooe mile for kindergarten through third graders. Most students who rode school buses last year will ride again. AbOut 6,300 will be repeaters along with a couple of hundred new students. according to John Marrison , supervisor o f transportation. Not all these studen~ will live beyond the walking perimeters. Some will be bused because their route to school would require them to cross busy streets. Four lac-tors have contfibuted to the school bus shortage : -A bond measure to buy new buses failed. -Older buses are wearing out. -Enrollment has risen. -Double sessions will complicate the bus schedules. Millionairess Faces Suit Over Unsightly Buildings Millionairess Sa r a Bartholomae maintains a Santa Ana mansion, but her holaings in Costa Mesa are Jes palatial so the city is about to destroy them. The trouble is. according to City At· torney Roy June, that no one seems able W find the absentee land owner to notify her of the necessary legal steps. Costa Mesa officials, as a result, are about to file suit in Superior Court wb.ich would open the way to demolish the two vacant structures at 2629 Orange Ave .. as soon as possible. This could come within 60 days. City Councilmen declared Mrs. B.artholomae's two buildings public nuisances last November and a demolition permit was obtained within the 30-day destruction clause, but the job wasn't fin ished. The city has declared &everal pro- perties In town to be public nuisances, an action which requires thetn to be de~troyed or brought up to cunent building standards. Usually, demolition is the cheapest filing. Only one other time did the city fUe sult l!gainst a property owner on the public nuisance basis and he tore down the structure in question shortly after filing. 2 Hurt in Mesa Auto Accident A La 1-labra man and his daughter were injured. late Tuesday night in Costa Met;a when their car cf ashed in- to a curb where the driver anticipated a. driveway would be located. Harold 0. Eckvall, 47, suffered a lacerated lip, while Lisa Eckvall, 12, injured her shoulder when she slam· med into the windsllicl4, popping the glass out ot its fnlme. Both sought private m~al treat- ment. llir" Police said £ckvall was driving west on 19th Street at Park Avenue shortly after 10 p.m. When he saw what he w~ 1ooldng for -an open liquor store. Otficers said the car's windshit1ld was fogged up and be missed the drl)\ay . Dally Paper TEN CENTS e s All Leaders In House Detention From \Vire Services PRAGUE -Invasion forces from Russia and its four satellites blasted freedon1 fighters from the streets with guns and tanks today and put the liberal leaders of Czechoslovakia under house arrest to snuff o u t the country's brave experiment in reform. Czechs !ought back with spit, stones, jeers and even firebombs against the for ces o( Ru ssia, East Germany, Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria. Some paid with their lives. But by nigh tfall, (See Additional Stories, Pages 3, 4) almost 24 hours after they crossed the border and shocked (he world, the drama had reached the inevitable ~nd, World leaders reacted in protest. _ President Johnson in Washington call· ed on the Soviet bloc forces to Withdraw because "It is never too late for rea:son to prevail." Yugoslavia and Romania reacted with shock and denunciatioi:i of the attack. At I e a s t several persons were reported kiUed and 57 wounded in fighting at Prague . Bratjslava and Kosice. There were no reports of any Americans hurt. Moscow declared the invasion, launched late Tuesday night, was by invitation of "party and government leaders" in Prague to put down the .threat of counterrevolution imperiling the structure of Communism. ciechoslovakia's Foreign Ministry denied, however, that it had asked for the troops and. in protest notes to ad· bassadors of the live nations, demand· ed that they be removed. It was a case of communism fighting withln its own orbit. By all signs, the Kremlin and its hard-line allies in Eastern Europe had decided to make Prague follow the path laid out for Hungary in 1956 rather than let the Czechoslovaks escape Moscow's hold in the way Yugoslavia did in 1948. The official Soviet news agency Tass published an appeal to t h e Czechoslovak people to be calm and aid the occupying forces. Tass at· tributed this appeal to a group of Czechoslovak Communist party and government officials, but named no names and did not clear up the ques· tion of exactly who asked for the in- tervention. The invaders killed at least two persons and injured 25 in occupying the Prague radio station. Four were reported killed and 10 injured in the Bohemian town of Liberac. A 27-year· old.motorcyclist was reported to have died under 1i1 Soviet tank, his chest crushed. Authoritative Western sou r c e s reported that in Prague alooe there were 25,000 invading tr00R5 , mosUy Soviet but some Polish and Bulgarian, Every major Czechoslovak city w8s occupied. MIG 21 jets streaked over Prague along with twin-engine bombers. ~ sources said the Russian forces in Prague in cluded one airborne division, one motorized i n fan try division, one T5.5 tank battalion, one TS2 tank battalion. various artillery and anti-tank outfits and support (S.. CZECH, Page 2) Oran9e Coast U'eather Nice day. That'i the Weather· man's observation for Thursday, with the sun breaking early through patchy coastal clouds and bringi ng nlld-70 mercury to the Orange Coast INSIDE TODAY The standina.s after the first three racei in the 5.5 meter Olympic yacht trial& are gfwn fn today'i boating page, Page 25. S/1111t II •••tlfltl u C1Hftf'lll1 ' CltulllM u.ll c.,,.1t1 a Cf'fH_,,.. I' ON!fl Ntllc•t 1 ld!r.111 ,... " l11lerflfft"*"I I 11111111t• 1a.u l'lre Cllh It l!•tl Outltltr M Meret~H n All• t.alllllR ti MtlllilfW 11 ~Lktll•lt ,,...lltlp ·'' ~-I M1lh1tl 1'1.Wt I' fll....,_.I W... M Or"'" Ctvlltf , SYl'ftt """'r II SOcl•I H.... lJ.11 '""' , .. ff T ...... ltlM 41 WNtlltt 4 O..,_ Wllltt n WtrW Jrt-. ... •• ~ I ' ' % OAJLV PU.OT Wtdnts&y , Au11ust 21. 1%8 Vktfm of Crash Copters Fly By At Pilot's Rites Seven small cboppers new by Tues· day as tuneraJ services were con· ducted at Pacific View Memorial Park for the Costa Mesa pilot killed in last 'Wednesday's ll-fatality Lo5 Angeles Airways helicopter crash. The eighth -a Sikor1ky 561 com· muter craft Uke be fltw -roared ovu 1be pilot's restin&: place today as the firm resumed scheduled filghta via the Newporter lnn. Capt. Ken Waggoner, who would have bee:n 34 last Sat~ay, was buried in the Mausoleum of e Pacific in the hills behind Corona de Mar. A full mllttary honor aerv~ follow· ed rites for Capt. Waggoner, of 3131 Pierce Ave ., veteran of eight years in U.S. Marine Corps aviation, While the seven helie()J>ters gave an air.borne salute. It was the second time in three months tha1 men or the Professional HeUcop1er Pl.Jots Association took to the skies from whidl a friend recently fell on the same somber funeral mission. They also. perlormed the salute for Gapt. Jack Dupies as he was buried In Good Stuopberd Cemetery, Huntington Beach, after his helicopter plunged to t h e Paramount tragedy, worst com· rying 22 victims with him. One friend said the fonnation was made up of four helicopters in the ·vanguard and three in the rear, as Uiough to indicate one wa<J missing. Capt. Waggoner leavet his wife Pen· ny, along with children De Ina, 14 , Debra, 5, Billy, 2, and Donna, three months, as well as his parents and brothers from Oklahoma. Los All'geles Airways resumed operations today after replacing roh'.lr spindles in their four remaining Body Recovered Along Coast; Identity Sought The body of an unidentified man in his mid-40's was fished out of tlle sea bet'w'een Corona del Mar and Laguna Be.a.ch this morning by Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen. 1be dead man was found floating face down, fully clotlhed except for shoes, about 9 a.m. by a passing sports fishing boat, accordtng to coun· ty Harbor Master Al Oberg. Identification on the body bore the name of a Phoenix. Ariz. resident. NeYr})Ort Beach police noted. however. tbat the name found in a wallet did not match w it h any mJssing person report! on file looally, Oberg said it appeared the dead man had been in the water rot "a day or IO." He added there were no visible external tnjlaies to indicate the oause ot deatti. The body was spotted drifting about 200 yards offshore, 11h miles south (If Corona del Mar near Abalone Point. helicopters after metal ratlgue WWI decW'ed the cause of Wednesday's crash. No cause has yet been revealed for the Paramount tragedy worst com· mercial helicopter crash in aviation htstory. Last wee.k'c cram wu th• 1e· cond worst. * * * Copters Res um e Service ; First Load Lighter The first Los Angeles Airways com· muter helicopter since flights were suspenQed a week ago touched down at the Newporter Inn Heliport at 7:58 a.m. today. It brought -and departed with - fewer passengen than usual. "The load was a UtUe bit lighter. I guess it will take awhile to build back up," said a heliport employe. Fllgllt1 ol the b!g Sikorsky S61 aircraft were resumed on full schedule today, alter 1a1 t Wednesday's Comp. ton c r as h which killed 21 penons brought a voluntary c o m p a n y suspension. Metal fatigue which caused a main rotor to snap off caused the tragic crash in a playground, according to the National TramportaUon Safety Board. Costa Mesa Se ts City Tax Rates For Coming Year Tax and assessment rates, plus the amount of money which wW be needed from property taxes to run Costa Mesa city departments for the next fiscal year has been officially set. The usual tax rate Is $1, aKbough supplemented by varlolliS assessment districts to pick up the extra funds for required operation, u allowed under general law city setup. The City Council set the property tax figure at •t,445,000 for general department operation and $246 ,000 for the street lighting di strict. Similarly, a tax rate of 33 cen-1s on each $100 in assessed valuation will be in1posed on property within the Costa 1\1esa Recreation and Park district. Car Ste1·eo Stolen A car burglar took $176 in· loot, In· eluding a stereo unit and 16 tapes from a vehicle belonging to Rick Powell of 101 Via Genoa, Newport Beach, Tues- day night. Who!' Us? Younger Decoy Blood N eeded SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The city's eight policewomen are not e:<· acUy enthusiastic about a judge's sug- geation that they pose as prostitutes and arrest customers. flfunicipal Judge Fitz-Gerald Ames. saying that many cases are dismissed for lack o! evidence, suggested lady cops become undercover agents and wear mini-skirts. "Who does be th.ink we are?" snap· ped one matronly member O( the DAILY PILOT OUNGE COAST f'UILISHINGo COMPANY Rol:t1tf N. We.d 'ralfto'lt lo!MI Pobll•llet' J•c\ R. Cvrley \'kt Pr~sid'ml end' Cienec"•I IMM;tr Th°"'•, Kt1 .. il .,,~ Thomtl A. Murphin1 ""'"11$11"' Edi~ P•~I Nj111n Aclvt!<Usl11~ DifKIOf' c ... MIM Ofnc• ]JO W•d l•Y Shetf t-leili 11~ Addten: l'.O. l o• 1560 •2626 Otfler Offlcn ,,,,_., kid'!: 7111 .,.. .. , '41bot 8oult¥ftd l.,..,,.. e.ec•'t: 711 Fo~• A,,,,_ i"lllr'lllllflOI'! 8f"'1!: .J0t JI~ ~IT~I force, in an interview Tuesday. "We're not exactly the swinging type," said another, Claire Lutz, 43, a 19-year veteran. "\Ve C<luld act the part, I suppose. But I don't think we'd get the customers." "They're going to need younger IJlood than us for this type of thing," said one who declined to be named. ··Either that or we'll have ta go out and offer drasticaUy reduced prices." "l think we might get the bang Of it after a whHe," said Margaret liartman. at 31 the you n g e s t policewoman on the force. "Hell, it might even be lun." Runa\vay Caddy W reeks 4, Cars GARDENA (UPI) - A mo4Crist \VTeaked havoc in a pGrk.ing lot Tues· day y,.1]en by mistake she shifted into a. forward gear instead of reverse. Police said Edna Eugenia Toney, 58 o( Los Angeles, caused about $30,CMX> dan1age to her new Cadillac and four other cars. "J'hey said Iler car ju111ped a curb and $hot acrm the lot, bouncing ofi ollher cars in tht process. f'o1r s. 1'oney was treated ror facial cuta and releas· ed from Gardena Memorlal Hospital. Newport Resid ent's J\failhox Explodes An expJ08'iv! situation was ~ouched oU in the mailbox of a Newport Beach rtsldent. pollct reported todab. llarold Adams, mt Golden Circle, said be heard a loud be.n& about 8:30 p.m., and wbtn he went outlid1 to In· vesllgate, diacovered his wooden mailbox had beeo blo,.. 1part by •n untn.,.. type ol explosive. ,. , . . .-.... -----~~· CAll.Y ,11,0T Iliff '"'"' 'Menagerie' Perfon11s In Water Show Cats, rnguins and other animals will monkey aroun Thursday and Friday at Costa Mesa 's Estancia High School as extras in Third Annual Recreation Department aqua show, "Summer Fun." Appearing as zoo inhabitants will be (from left) Mindy Kratzer, 12, Cindy Salberg, 11, Debbie Moe, 12, Sue Moultrup, 13, and J ean Salberg, 10. Show, part of Social Arts Week, starts at 7:30 p.m . both nights. Newport Backs County Airport Master Plans Qy JEROME F. COLLINS Of ~· O•llY ,li.t ll1H The Orange County Master Plan for Air Transportation today has the city of Newport Beach's cautious en· dorsement -in part. City councilmen, after a month's delay, unanimously voted to urge swift implementati-0n of those portions of the William Pereira report that will "take the pressure of!" Orange Coun· ty Airport. Municipal lawmakers declined to give the report a blanket endorsement, as had been recommended by the council's own Air Traffic ·Advisory Committee last month. Councilmen Monday night ppintedly left out of their endorsement fc'solu· tion any support for Pereira's pro- posals to expand County Airport facilities. This is what they did support, in the words of the four-point resolution sent on to county supervisors: -"Future develapment of a major new 1.aternational airport to serve the Los Angeles.Orange County.San Diego metropolitan areas, for example at Camp Pendleton." -"Construction of a new regional airport in an optimum location in Orange County, completion to be no later than five yea;rs fz:om now." -"Regulation of activity at the present Orange County Airport d1;1fing the interim period until a new regional airport can be put into operation." -"Adoption ol a long-range plan for the development of general airports, air parks and metroports." "Implementation o fthis program," said the council, "is of the gravest urgency, and time ls a critical factor." From Page l CZECHOSLOVAKIA INVASION • • • troops. Heavy street fighting occurred around Radio Pr.ague, which "Went off the air 'Nitti t1le defiant strains of 0My Homeland," the Czechoslovak national anthem. Fighting ended quickly. One Russian tank lay burned out by firebombs near the radio station. A red swa6tika was scrawled on its side by freedom fighters. Two ammunition trucks were blown up and burned out. A barricade of seven trolley cars was shattered by tanks. Four of the cars were burned out. Crowds filled Wenceslas Square, the heart of the capital, jeering, hissing, spitting, bowing stones and even wads of paper. Mothers carried babies in the crowds. At Radio Prague, the windows were broken and the masoary pocked by bullets. Four houses up the street were gutted. Workers at factories walked off the job and U1ere was a threat of a general strike. The National Ass em b 1 y • s pro· clamation urged them to ''stay at your place of work and defend your en- terprises . . . even by a general strike." Sporadic ol!ooting rang through Prague streets. A blast th.at ap· parently came from a heavy weapon damaged a house near the Swiss Embassy. The refonnist Czech party leader, Alexander Dubcek, and Some other progressive nlembers of the party presidium "'ere held prison('rs at Uic Central Committee headquarters on the Vltava River. President Ludvik Svoboda was isolated at ~e govern· meat headquarters, Hradcany Castle. Troops and tanks surrounded the cas· Ue. The Czechoslovak leaders issued ap· peals to the population not to resist the invaders and to go to work as usual. Clandestine radios broadcasting sup· port for Dulxek sprang up throughout the country and started a campaign for the immediate convening of ~e e:<· traordlnary party congress th.at had been scheduled for Sept. 9. ;\t 1he CQngress. Dubcek had hoped to consolidate hls positi<>n by oosting cooservatlve followers of the former hard-line president, Antonin Novotny, from the party leadership. Novotny was ousted by Dubcek and assailed for Stalinist excesses. At noon the radio called lor a one· minute work stoppage and horn honk- ing to demonstrate solidarity with tbe Dubcek leadership and to demand the withdrawal of the foreign troop!. Auto horns sounded'!rom those cars that were still on the streets. Most Prague citizens answered a call to go to work normally and to car- ry on with thelr duties. They found Soviet and other foreign tanks on Prague's bridges. ' Historic Charles Bridge, a 13th cen· tury landmark, was smeared witb signs saying "Russians go home." Some Czechoslovak& drove around town with. the national flag draped on their motorcycles and cars. \Vomen with babies in their arms cried at the sight of the Soviet soldiers. "It's just like 1939," was a typical comment. That was the year of Naz.i Germany 's invasion. There was firing when the occupiers burst into Prague radio: The s'tation, broadcasting later Crom a clandestine location, said Soviet soldiers burst in, ripped out all wires and lay on the floor while Soviet officers went around locking doors. The Czechoslovak news agency CTK gave a colorful account of first clashes bet"·een Czechoslovaks resisting the invasion and troops which entered Prague. The account went this way: ''Between 11 :00 and 11 :30 at least 10 ambulances arrived outside the building O{ the Czechoslovakia radio, where a Soviet tank was on fire. Soviet soldiers were trying to extinguish the fire with clothing off~d by civilians. ''Just before 11:30 the Soviet troops opened fire with all their small arms !or a period of about five minutes. In one of the side streets near the radio building a young man was shot in the back. People fled from the shooting and flung themselves to the ground ... al 12:20 a tank on lire was seen fr om the window (of the CTK building)." Five Hippies Face Narco Court Trial Five 'defendants arreMed in a twln· pronged narcotics raid on two hippie· type Costa Mesa communal residences three weeks ago a.re due for preliminary hearing Thursday. Lloyd Lilly, 20, Paul M. Besselsen, 18, Wendy J . Weiler, 18, Susanne Smith, 18. and Gerald McNulty, 19, are due to appee.r at 9:30 in Harbor Diotrict Judicial Court. 'Ibey were arrested at 2019 Pomona Ave., by Oosta Mesa and Tustin police, who seized more than $2,000 in narcotics, marijuana a nd cash, cap- ping a two-month investigation. Brothers'tary and Jack Hahn, both 19, of 288 Victoria St., were due to •P· pear in court today for preliminary hearing on the same c h a r g e s : possession of marijuana a n d dangerous drugs. Timothy R. CTraveUe, 19, of the same address, is due in court Sept. S to enter a plea to charges of possession of heroin, but is free on hii own recognizance 1n the meantime. earl.a M. 1'rown, 18, of the same ad· dress. was arrested at the time, but later freed When no charges were fileJ against her. • U.S. Troops Kill 182 as Guerrillas Attack in Wave SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. infantrymen today repelled three C o m m u n I 1 t human wave atJtacks on an American armored column near Tay Nlnb city, killing at least 182 Viet Cong, military sources reported. The action near 'the Cambodian border brought the Communist death toll in fighting this week northwest of Saigon to nearly 500. U, S. sources said en estimated 600 Viet Cong attacked armored personnel carriers of the 25th U. S. Infantry Division near the Ben Cui rubber plan· tation, about 00 miles nocthwest of Saigon and 14 miles east of Tay Ninh city, Six of the armored vehicles were destroyed in the attack and ooe American killed and 23 wounded, t:be soorces said. U. S. Chief Negotiator W. Averell Harriman, meeting with H a n o i negotiators for the 18th time today in Paris, denounced North Vietnam for refusing to show Zl'IY restraint in response to U. S. actions following President Johnson's speech March 31. ln a meet:.ng which lasted for almo3t 3-'h hours, Harriman urged North Vietnam to restore the DMZ "to its original status." In other action, Communist ground !ire shot down nine A m e r 1 c a n helicopters carrying U. S. soldier• Into battle witb 200 North Vietnamese on South Vietnam's embattled northern tier, military spokesmen said, It was t.he heaviest one.day loss of U. S. helicopters since the allies' first invasion of the A Shau Valley last April wben 26 were lost. Fighting rag. ed throughout the rtight und into today. Mesa, County Sign Landscaping Pact The ci.ty of Co.s.ta Mesa will maintain Jandscaping of. the Red Hill Road overcrossing or the San D I e g o Freeway in an agreement signed with the county Tuesday. Terms ol the .agreement call for the city to accept control of and maintain such landscaping located in county territc.ry at the city'6 601e expense. Former Mayor Paul J . Gruber told his council colleagues that he would like to see added to the resolution a ban against jet traffic at County Airport once regional airports open up. He v.·as reminded, however, toot U1e cooncil is already on record, and has so advised county authorities, against increased jet traffic at County Airport for any reason. City Attorney Tully Se y m o u r described the resolution, which he had drafted, as a "limited endorsement." He explained it avoids specifics. "Later," he said . "you can state any detailed reservations you might have about the report." FROM CALIFORNIA ,-.RTISANS, ENGAGEMENT RINGS OF INCOMPARABLE BEAUTY These re s e r v a t I on s would presumably involve recommendations by Pereira that County Airport ~cgin preparing itself £or some 5.2 m1lUon passengers annually by 1973. About one-fifth that number TIO\V use the au,>ort. Tustin Man Dies In Freewa y Crash Of Fou1· Autos A four-car pile up on souUtbound Newport Freeway lanes Tuesciay night led to th• death ol Albert Lee Colgan, '1:1, ot Tustio, the eaurornla Higllway Pawl NOpon.d. 'The accident.. which occurred just north of Dyer Rood rt!ulted Crom one car pushing another. Officers said a car driven by Donakl J. Talley, 18, of Costa Mesa, was being pushed by one driven by Simon! Pi!ltain. 45. of Costa Mesa. The Colgan car crashed into U1e other two. A fourth car, driven by Gregory J. Mou!S<y, 18, ol Anaheim. smashed .into the Colgan car. Only Mn. PldWn was Injured of the olh· en involvod in the fatal ocddeol CONVINllNT Tlll,\\5 •ANKAMlllCAAI> MAITElt CHMIGI COSCOIOf IU• -- J. C. J/.umpkrie~ Jeweler 1111 NEWPORT AVE.. COSTA MESA 22 Y••n In lll• Sam• locdion IEVILLI 1111 ·-· - l I I l ' 'Ntdflrsdly, AugUst 21, 1%8 OAILY PILOT 17 Newport-Mesa s~hool Bus Servi~e Areas l 3 I 7 I I 11 ! 3 I I 4) 1 I I J<5 "'IC? ;:... ... ,, Maps show who will ride school bus and who must walk. Students in white areas walk. Students in shad- ed areas live far enough from school to be eligible for busing. Dangerous street crossing must be made on way to school from black areas so stu· dents will be bused. I c I I F 8 A:CH . .,, I Dll-----{f!l----f l-----{I MAP SHOWS WHICH KINOERGARTEN THROUGH 3RD GRADE STUD!NTS WILL RIDE BUS Shaded 1re11 are beyond one mile; bl1ck .1reas require h1z1rdou1 cro11i"I ' ' S ITTf.t ..1l1., 1'/ l\ewport Harbor and Coota Mesa .{;;·-" --• ----~· ~ ---' -· -• I • • • r I + c • I f • •• ••• l I I © I ~ 3 7 WALK OR RIDI aUS IOUNDARllS SHOWN ,OR SIX HAR90R ARl!A INTIRMIDIATI SCHOOLS Ovtr milt and 1 half 1M from clint•rout 10n11 1hHitinh may ride ldtoel ltu1 ·-----·--·-------~---------------~-·------ ' I 4 . I 7 I I J<5 "'IC? ~ ... ,, Strut ..M"P oF Newport Harbor and Costa Mesa -···---. ---' --.... -. --. - ., , • e • r- 11)-----{C I E F • ' D I f\-----jl BUSING AREAS SHOWN FOR 25 ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ZONES, GRADES 4 THROUGH 6 Wo1lking perimet•r for upp•r 9ri1de elementary students is m.il• •nd one quarter ·.,,,, ·:,,. "'·:-,,., 1 I 3 4) . l -- (1 /, I I I D (E· -' ., ' a ' ··~ . . I 4 I 7 l s 4 s B ,.._ t'rfl I !Af1 r/ ~t''4'J)Drt Harbor "nd Costa Me .. ...... I ~ .. "' .f-0 .. l -···---.. . ---' --.... -· . --.. --..... .. I c D I I I HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS WILL 11 MOSTA,,ECTED IY CHANGES IN IUS ZONES W1lkln1 bound1ry puoltM Ollt tw• mllu; 4.IO who ....t1 IHI yHr muot w1lk ' • ••• '" • -.. -• I ' ,. ... . .. DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . .. •'" -. . • • Seems a Good At the northeest edge of Costa Mesa, bard by the edge of the Orange County Airport, lies Santa A n a Heights -a community 10ng recognized on maps as a .separate part of Orange County, California. Santa Ana Heights is ~ in and out of the Harbor Area. The name itself is a misnomer, for it Is har(i]y a ''heigh'ls" nor is It close to or with Santa Ana, other than having a Santa Ana malling address. In other ways 'Santa Ana Heights is identified with Newport and Costa Mesa. It is in the Newport-Mesa school district, for example, and certainly its economic ties are very close to both Harbor Area cities. But Santa Ana Heights is in many ways uniquely itself. It is in no city limits and those Santa Ana Heights residents who are most proud of being identified with tbe!r small community have stubbornly refused to court annexation by Newport and Costa Mesa. For the most part, this fear bas been unwarranted. Neither city would gain sufficient tax revenues from such an annexation to balance municipal services re- quired in the area. The strongest identification for Santa Ana Heights through the years bas been its mutual water company, a small system owned by shareholders who reside in the Santa Ana Heights area. Further, the water company's supporters don't want it to go out of business that way; they'd rather see the company turned into a county water district just like the · rving Costa Mesa and establish a 1200- acre entit their own. The Cost.a Mesa County Water District offered to buy out the shareholders for $500,000, but repeated de- lays and debate reached such a pitch that the offer ether has been or may be withdrawn. It is an issue not to be resolv.ed easily. Large share- Facts, Fiction About Crime In America Facta and Fiction Aboat Crime in the U.S.: Fiction: Most homicides are com- mitted by crim.illah:, with gain as their motfve. P'act: Mott homicides, by far, are committed by people without criminal records, not for gain, but for passion. Fiction: Mos t homicides are com· mitted on their victims by strangers. Fact: M<ist homicides. again by far, are committed on their vjctims by friends, acquaint.ances, relatives, or sweethearts, not by strangers. Fiction: Prison sentences in coun· tries such as England are longer than those in the U.S.1 and thus the crime rate is reduced. Fact : Prison sentences f<ir com· parable crimes are generally aborter in England than in the U.S.; but con· viction ls swifter and more certain there than here, which makes more of a deterrent than mere length of sentence. FICMON: Convicted c rim i n a I s should be given longer terms. which would allow them to be rehabilitated in jail. Fact: Fewer than three percent of all jail employes are social workers. psychologists, psychiatrists and teachers; and this sparse number is incapable of coping with the problem of rehabilitation in any realistic way. Fiction: More and more people are turning to crime, which accounts for our high rate of court cases. Fact: In cases of robbery with Dear Gloomy Gus: That Costa Mesa car dealer who advertises "less than two miles ahead" on a Coast Highway bill· board coming into Newport from Huntington Beach must be meas· uring with funny speedometers. -R. M. n11 fMhl,.. Nl'llKTt ,.....,,. ...... .., -aMr1" fHM at !ht ,.. .... ...,, StfMll Yellr Hr -· '9 GllM!y a111o C.HY Piii!, physical attack (which most people mean by "crime in the street"), more than 80 percent of the defendants have been arrested at least once before, and nearly 50 percent have been ar- rested five or more times before. It is "fast repeaters" who pile up the record more than new recruits to crime. FICTION: Such defendants are "coddled" by the courts. which give them either light sent.ences or acquit them. Fact: It is the prqsecutor. rather than the courts, that determines the sentence, for in two-thirds of s u c h cases, the defendants are allowed to plead guilty to Jess serious charge's in order to process the case faster and secure a "conviction" on the record. Fiction: Sentences on the statute books are too light for such crimes as first-degree robbery. Fact: In New York State, the man- datory sentence for first-degree rob- bery is so heavy-IO to 30 years-that of 136 typical cases studied by the New York Times, not one was convlcWd of the crime for which be was arrested. Fiction: Most criminals plead not guilty. go to trial, and are let off. Fact: In New York. for example, 95 percent or a.U convictions are obtained by pleas of guilty rather than on trials: in only 7 percent of cases is guilt or innocence decided by trial. 'Most Neglected Issue' WASliINGTON -Sen. George McGovern ls set to announce a wide· ranging four-point program to deal with what he characterizes as the "most neglected issue in the present polltJcal campaign" -the farm pro· blem. The South Dakotan, who recently threw his hat into the Democratic presidential ring, will spell out his pro· posals in a speech in Kearney, Neb., Thursday, Aug. 22. The address is particularly aimed at the. Middle West, where McGovern h0pes to garner delegate 1upport -an effort in which he hN bad little sU<:Cess so far. McGovern's basic thesis is that the "urban crisis" in large part is due to highly adverse rural confiltlons resul· tliJtl in steady large-scale migration to the c.ltJe1. He argues that by Im- proving agricultural condltlon~ much progress can be made 1n eliminating serioua urban problems. 1rREVERS.ING THE trend of mlgra- tion from country to city to a city·to-- rural are1 pattern ii uraent:ly need· ed." McGovern will declMe. To obtaia thi1 objective, he enun-~ted the following tour-point p!&n : -J. uwt price or income aupports to fQll parity returns to farm famll le.s, ~pplemented by such legislation as is alteded to permit farmer• to bargiin let • fair murn. 2. .. Ezpand credit at reasonable tet.ms t.o larmers through farm credJt bliJD, Farm.us Home Administration and Rural Eltctrlflcati•n Admlnlllratian, 14 meet all soQnd farm ctedlt requlremenll beyond th• ' ~ '1 • Allen-GpJdsmith ' capacity of private agencies to handle. 3. "Immediate establishment of a strategic commodity reserve to pull excess supplies of wheat, feed grains and soybeans out of free markets into a tightly held reserve to meet emergencies in the U.S. and nations dependent on us. This removal of ex- cesses should be large enough to raise current farm returns from wheat, feeds and soybeans to full parity. 4. "CORRECTION of urb11n-rur;:il population imbalance with a rural rehabilitation program which includes use of tax incentives. and placement ol a part of the federal government's $90 billion annual procurement of goods and services to stimulate rural industrial development." . Noting that wheat prices, now under $1.25 .a bushel. are the "lowest in a quarter century", and that com has dropped to below $1 .a bushel, "the lowest level since 1942," McGovern will warn this portends serious threats for the future. "We are weakening both agriculture and our backlog of trained .agricu.ltural experts by our failurt1 to allow farmers a decent relurn for their pro- ducts." the South Dakota pre4ldential aspirant will say. "The decline in the number or farms continues at .a rate of 80,000 to 100,000 farms a year." holders in the mutual company -the Irvine Company and the Santa Ana Country Club, to name two -may have convincing votes for either program, but chances are the fight will be carried on among the 2,000 resi- dents of Santa Ana Heights. Some of the reasoning is sentimental. There are San1a Ana Heights residents who think their sometimes brown~Unged water is softer than that that can be sup.- plied by any other agency. There are others who fear municipal annexation by either city and who feel dis· solution of the waler district is the first step toward be- ing gobbled up by the city of Costa Mesa. But there are others who have been concerned, and with justWable cause, about the future of the water service in Santa Ana Heights. To these people, the very, very first-rate operation of the Costa Mesa County Water District is more important than the prestige of having a waUr company or a water district bearing the name ''Santa Ana Heights.'' The fact is the CMCWD would in all likelihood be a • very good bargain for the average home owner in Santa Ana Heights. The fire protection and the almost unlim· ited storage capacity of the Mesa district are assets that cannot be overlooked. Moreover, the CMCWD water rates have remained quite low. even while the district has been enla r ging its mains and bolstering its fire pro- tection tie-ins. Residents of Santa Ana Heights owe it to themselves to study the issue calmly and unemotionally. Settlement of the very vital issue of future water service should not be determined on vague fears of annexation by Costa Mesa or Newport, but rather on the very real question of getting the best water service for the least amount of money. c Balsa Chica as a Site for New Airport Homeowners List Disadvantages To the Editor: As a member of the West Prestige Homeowners Association, I would like to· point out the following facts. The Bolsa Chica site for an airport is not as centrally located as some of the other proposed sites in relationship to the area to be served. There would be an overlap or service areas with existing airports: Long Beach Airport is 20 minute:>, Orange County Airport is 20 minutes. L.A. Airport is 45 minutes. This could result in flight pattern interference with Long Beach Airport and Los Alamitos Naval Air Station. Since the cost of building an island for the atomic energy power plant in approximately the same at.a proved too costly, it would seem that this pro· ject.would be even more so. THE BOLSA CHICA site w o u 1 d result in an irreplaceable loss of one of the last existing natural beach areas in Southern California. This is the on ly area left open to the public for swim· ming and surfing without charge. A large parking lot was recently built to accommodate the many thousands of people who take advantage of this wonderful beach. Many people in the area have moved here from El Segundo to escape the noise. air pollution and traffic cori- gestion from L.A. International. and wou1d again have to move elsewhere regardless of loss due to denation of their property. Leaving the city with less tax revenue. Huntington Beach would no longer be an ideal residential area for raising families. Several of the new schools would be useless and would result in to"tal loss in taxpayers' money. The new golf course in Hun· tington Beach would be useless as well as the Meadowlark Golf Course. THE CITY RAD quite a celebration when it went over the 100,000 mark in population recently, but it would soon fall way below that as people moved t.o get away from the noise, traffic and air pollution, causing a big loss in city revenue for property tues. sales tax. etc. We feel that this ls a different circumstance. than people who com- plain about the noise of an airport near their h<lmes when the airport was there first. We realize that this would be quite an engineering feat but, since BH George ---, Dear George: In the paper in your column you offered a guaranteed solu· lion for faulty memory and said merely fill 'ou t the coupon. 1 couldn't find any coupon. A.G. Dear A.G.: Hm, I KNEW something had slipped my mind. Dear George : Do you think it would be all right if I exchanged the present my girl friend gave me for my birthday? It ~·as a rowing machine. I'm not the athletic type, and hate to hurt her feel· ings. She's bound to ask what became of the rov.1.ng mach.inl!I, What oan I do? PERPLEXED Otar Perplexed : Exchange it, and tell tier a lit· tie white lie. Take a shower with your clothes on . and run over and ttll her your ro1Nlng machine sank. tWrlte to George. I.he adv1cf: columnJtt who ie; so confused he. ls happy to pass ii oo.) Le tte rs from readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is Teserved. Alt let- ters must include signature and mail· ing address, but names will be with- held on request. taxed like any bu·siness. There are zoning and dem·anding traffic pro· blems. The legally elected r epresen· J tatives might work with promoters to r find a tidy city share in the spoils of future youth music enterprises. Con· trary to the mayor's observations, I believe ltiat the ratio of arrests and disorder will be found much higher outside of our city's saloons. there are other locations that can be utilized. although some of them might be ideal for future home site11. we ,do not think. it is right or fair to ruin home sites already established. MR. & MRS. A. B. VAN SICKLE J '/ae11 Blow It All In the meantime we might inquire into the prospects of borrowing a Communist from Texas or Hollywood for our well·meaJling patriotic groups to look at and talk to. KENNETH H. PORTER .<itatbtles Gloomy Gus recenlly (Aug. 13) pro· vided a particularly vivid example of the use of a completely meaningless statistic in support or an argument. It was pointed out that if one ignores the To the Editor: poorest 20 percent and the richest 5 As an interested mother of three percent of Americans "that leaves 75 boys playing ball this season. I would percent of the people with 75 percent like to make a few comments of tlle wealth -the widest distribution regarding the Harbor Area Baseball of individual wealth of any country in Program. h. ,, I feel this is the finest organized ball 1story. of any area in which we ha~e _lived-~ ln. reaµty one may choose any coun· from the top men like MacMillian and'· try m history, choose any percentage Kubeska to the umpire-coaches like T. he desires, and still be able to find a O'Shea and T. Parse\ -just to men· group of people woo comprise the tion a few; they are. well schooled and chosen percentage of the population of the highest caliber. and possess th~ c~osen percentage of l was under the Impression that the wealth. This 1s demonstrated by during a ball game the "umpire" was the _f~llowing argument in whi_ch a the "officer in charge" as it were. I specific percentage. 80 percent, is us· find it very upsetting lo see the ed for the &ake of clarity: parents interfering by questioning and arguing over every call. THEY ARE DOING their very best and canoot always be oil top of every play, but decide as they see it. We. will lose these fine young men as umpires as that $6 just isn't enough to com· pensate for au the abuse they have to take. Parents are supposed to be spec· tators -there to cheer the boys on. What possesses them to scream out at these umpires? What has happened to the respect for authority we've been tryi ng to teach these boys? They blow it all in one ball game . I would imagine these are the same parents who can't put their pride in their pocket -must stand up always On the side of the child even if wrong against school officials, police. etc. Don't they realiie these boys will learn to accept the calls made and take it in their stride? DISAPPOINTMENT Is part of the baU game and a big part or life. Ac· cepting it is a .step toward maturity. Boys must learn to profit from their mistakes and resolve to do better ne.xt time. They must learn self-conlrol and NOT be allowed to throw hats and gear In anger -it's a dangerous habit. It is very easy to have everything g<l our way, but we haven't taught them anything if the)' can't ac· cept a loss without having a tantrum. Let's not fall in our Harbor program as so many LltUe Leagues have done over parental interference. How about if we all start anew next season teaching and practicing respect for authority? MRS. J. S. Phantom Communlats To the Editor: lns(ead of worrying about phantom· Communist.! lurking in the &badows or lnsi111lficant transgresslom upon our fla g, the dty fathers might 1(1.ve &ome needed thought to nther entidee. The Bethel Towers is a commerci al enterprts. by a church and l!hould be IMAGINE THE PEOPLE of any country lined up in order of wealth with the poorest man on the left end and the richest on the right.. Begin by recording the total wealth of the group consisting of the poorest 80 percent of the population. S~cessively select new groups by discarding the poorest person in the current group and ad- ding the person immediately to lhe right of the richest man tn the current group. Continue this process. recording the total wealth of each succeeding group, until the group consisting of the richest 80 percent of the population is reached. Note that each group con· tains 80 percent of the population. Now consider the list in which the wealth of each group has been recorded. THE F IRST ENTRY is less than 80 percent of the total wealth since the group consists of the poorest 80 per. cent of the population. Each entry in the list is larger than the preceding one since succesSive groups were formed by discarding a poor man and adding a rich one. The last entry, the wealth of the richest 80 percent, must be more than 80 percent of the total wealth. Quotes Weston, W. Va., lndependent : "We have reached the point where right is on the defense, because the law ls in· tuested 1n protect1ng only the of. fender. Individuals and group.a: that are trying to undermine and destroy Ute lawa: of our country, Its Ideals and beUefs, should be dealt with firmly and promptly.'' Warrensburc. Mo.. Star.JoW11al: ''EUective Jaw enforcement la (a) prereqWslte for an orderly socl8ty. Publlo offidals, charged with the responslbillty of malnt.&111.ing law .and order, have no alternative in carrying nut the obligations of their olf!oe. Tb•y must act with cour.ap aod firmness.'' In short, one has a list of numbers which, when translated into percen· tages, begins at something less than 80 percent, increases ~t each step, and ends at something more than 80 per· cent. At some point in the list the percentage must pass 80 percent. Pick the group whose entry is closest to 80 percent. Thus. by ignoring some of t'he poorest and richest people, one can find a group which contains 80 percent of the population and very close to 80 percent of the wealth. It is clear that this argument depends neither on the particular percentage involved nor on the distribution of wealth in the coun- try chosen. J. DELANY Good lnvesl111ent To the Editor: ls Social Security reaUy a good buy for the typical American worker and his family? Answers vary of course, but some broad conclusions can be stated. The vast majority of people now working on jobs covered by Social Security will draw benefits far in excess of what they have paid or will pay in taxes during their working years. In most cases. the return will be much larger than the combined tax payments of the worker and his employer. The reason for this is that Social Security financing is arranged in such a wa)' that each generation pays the benefits of the previous generation. IN om.ERS WORDS, people now working pay just enough in Social Security taxes each year to cover the cost of the year's benefits to those already retired and to the dependents of deceased workers. The Social Security system differs from a private insurance plan because current income for the SQcia\ Security system is matched with current ex· penditures while private insurance must build large reserves to pay off in case of death. As a practical matter benefits have become just about inflation proof. Congress has a history of increasing pensions· and survivors' payments as living costs have risen over the years. This is possible because as inflation occurs so does the Soecia\ Security tax take. In the 18-year period since 1950, benefits have increased fa ster than living costs, 2.nd important new benefits have been added to the pro- gram. For these reasons. our Social Securi· Ly program is a good investment e.vl!ln for those who pay the maximum taxes in years to come. JERRY C. GRUBE --~-- Wednesday, August 21, 1968 The lditorial page of the Dailfl Pilot tteks to inform (Ind rtim.. ulatt read.tn b11 pre~enting thia M10Spapa'1 opinion.I end com- mentary on topics of fnterut and .significcnct, bt1 providing o forum for tM ezprrssion o/ our readers' opinions, end b11 pre.s.mUng the diVfl1"SI tlieu>- pointi o/ infomuid 1;1bservers and fPOqnncn <in topics oJ the day. Robert N. Wee:d, Publisher BY WILLIAM REED Bolsa Airport .Opposed Hundreds Petitioning Agains t Hun tington Site Reeds ••• In the Wind Airport Commissioner R o g e r Slates had some nice t,hings to say about newspaper reporting of the current hassle over the county Master Plan of Air transportation. On making his remarks to the Ch.amber of Commerce ~1onday he pointed out that misconceptions often are formed by people not reading ;ie\vspaper accounts com· plelely. As an example he pointed out that. lhere are many who feel the Airport Commission is going to pick out a site for a future county regional air facility. "Not true," says Roger. * Roger emphasized that the com· mission's interest is in gathering facts about the five proposed airport locations and then passing on to the Board of Supervisors facts which might point out \Vhether it would be profitable to pursue Phase 2 of the master plan study or not. Phase 2 is the one which is to delve into the cost factors and on \Vhich any decision about locating an airport likely would be based. The need now is for information and fortunately there are many residents who are more than happy to tell the commission that they are for or against a particular site or t\l.'O. * In Huntington Beach, for ex- ample, there is no doubt that the people living west of Golden West Street are going to oppose the Bolsa Chica site and tell the com- missioners that they do not want any of their money being spent on further studies of .this location. Newport Beach and Costa J\1esa residents have never feared to tell the supervisors how they feel about the present airport and likely will continue to be vocal as long as there is any possibility of a jet in- terrupting the tranquility of the area. To the south the interest in airports is just as great because an airport of the proportions now being discussed will a f r e c t everyone in the county. * Where should the facility go? Anywhere but here, seems to be the anS\\'er. Brakeman Warns Children, Killed , LONG BEACH -Death waved a red lantern for railroad brakeman Dave Whitson, 50. of Huntington Park here Monday night. Alarmed at children who appeared to be endangered by a switch engine on the next track, Whitson jumped down and herded the youngsters out of the right-of-way to safety. The veteran trainman then jumped back aboard his own rumbling train a s the switching engine approached on the opposite track. 11e lost his hold on the boxcar lad- der. He fell into the path of the oncoming engine and died under its grinding \Yheels. A new airport may be needed to ture the air transportation ills of Orange County, but a large segment o( the Huntington Beach populatlon leaves no doubt that the airport is not wanted in the city. More than 300 persons are out tak- ing petitions to the public of West Orange County and hundreds more are expected to be involved should a coun- tywide campaign be needed. The petition battle is being con- ducted by persons involved with the Prestige West Homeowners Associa· lion and by those sympathetic to the anti·airport cause. The petition calls for a negative stand on the Bo ls a Chica site because: -The noise of landing and taking off of jet airplanes and other types of large airplanes would prclvide a permanent nuisance to surrounding homeowners. -Bolsa Chica location of the regional airport would lessen the value of large sections of expensive pro- perty. -There is a physical danger to life and property, homes, schools and businesses in the flight path or Jan· dings into prevailing winds and take offs during periods of changed winds. -There is a danger of fire and ex· plosioz+ W:i swrounding areastas a con· 'Short' Lots For Harbour Tract Appro':.ed Although the city minimum lot size is 6,000 square feet, the Huntington Beach City Council has approved a tract fC"lt the Huntington Harbour area with lots ave£aging 4.,600 square fee. The tract of 65 homes is planned by B. A. Berkus at the northeast corner of Admiralty Drive and Pacilic Coast Highway on a channel of Huntington Harbour. The question of Jot size \\'as raised ~tonday by Count-ilman George McCracken prior to the council's unanimous vote of approval for the tract. "l want to be sure we're not getting below 5,000 square feet in our lot sizes," said the councilman. Berkus, pointing out that his tract is being offered as a planned develop- ment said that the smallest lot in the tract could be as small as 4,400 square feet. but that each lot has an interest in 658 square feet of common green area and about 1,500 square feet of waterfront. McCracken was joined by Coun- cilman Jerry Matney in discussion of the lot sizes and boU1 agreed to the smaller sizes after noting the ad· ditional park land and water. Mayor Alvin M. Coen asked the question which has plagued the council over recent months and t6 which no satisfactory answer has been found as yet. "\Vhat's the hardship?" The state laws require a hardship on the land to be demonstrated before the city can Jegally grant exceptions to its laws. Councilmen have granted many variances without being about to find a suitable hard.ship. "Perhaps we should go to the state and get this hardship law changed," said Mayor Coen, who is a lawyer. Despite the discussion on hardship, the council agreed to grant the varian· ce although no one seemed able to name a legal hardship on the land meriting granting of law exceptions on the lot sizes and other building details. She Has New Heart sequence or storing large amounts or avalation fuel. -There is a danger to the 1ur- roundi.ng area of mid-air collision as a consequence of conflicting air traffic patterns with Los Alamitos Naval Air Station and the Long Beach Airport. -It is uncertain as kl the wisdom of the Bolsa Chica site in view of its close proximity to the Long Beach airport whi ch also offers commercial flights. -The site is not well placed in rela- tion to the population and geographical centers which it would ultimately serve. -Use of tile airport 'vou\d be restricted for considerable periods of time by ocean tog and high seas breaking over the runway. -The effect on marine lift is unknown. -Possible destruction to beaches down coast is probable and the loss of property due to such water action would be extremely great. -~1ucb of the natural beaches or the area will no longer be enjoyable because of the noise and danger associated wltil the airport. -There will be in all probability numerous lawsuits for damages to surrounding property wblcb would cause an additional financial burden on the public treasury. -Possible related commercial and industrial development would not be compatible with the large number of existing homes. -A great expense is envisioned in connectlon with c a u s e w a y con- struct.Ion. -Other locations presently under consideration or yet to be consldfred could be developed at less cost and offer more convenience to the public and less expense to surrounding prop~ erty owners. The peUtioo claims the backers are for an airport to serve the future coun- ty needs, but "believe that such an airport can be located at a site other than Bolsa Ch.ica." Wallace-Reagan Ticket? AIP Chairman Doubtful Pretty Kitties Oklahoma City zoo foreman RaJph Harris bolds the zoo's new snow leopard cubs for their first public showing. The twins are the filth and sixth sno.w leopards born at the zoo and are a rare breed of Him· alayan cat. OKLAHOMA CITY !UPI) -The Oklahoma chairman of G e o r g e \Viallace's American Independent par- ty said today Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan of California would make an ideal running mate for Wallace but he did not think Reagan wou ld accept. Reuel Little, a Madill. Okla ., oilman and state party chairman, predicted \Va\lace would carry Oklahoma in November with 44 percent of the vote. Little said he plans to discuss vice presidential prospects with Wallace ~ilen the former Alabama governor brings his presidential campaign here \Vednesday for an all-<S'ay visit. Little said he had heard the possibility the vice p r e s i d e n t i a I nominee "might be a Texan, a man in California and po6Sibly (retired Air Force Ge n. Curtis l Lemay." Little said he did not know who the Texan might be. "Ronald Reagan would be ideal jf we could get him," Little said. "But 1 , Physical Exams Scheduled for Student Athletes Student athletes interested in winter or spring sports must have physical examinations before the opening of • • don't think we possibly could." Reagan, a recent candidate for the GOP nomination for presidefllt, em- phatically refused at Miami Beach to be considered for vice president. He said he preferred to complete his term as California governor. Little declined comment on reports that a Sl,tXK:l per plate private lun- cheon "\\'Ould be staged by \Vallace sup- porters at noon today. Ocean View Trustees P lan An·owhead T1·ip Ocean View school district officials will retreat Thursday to Lake Ar· rmvhead for a three-day conference on matters affecting the system. Supt. Clarence Hall said his assis· tant :superintendents and other central administration officials are to discuss recent legislation on education and new programs Ocean View will start this year. .Westminster School Chief Urges Quick Bond Sales In the off chance lhe ~proposed \Vatson amendment to reduce proper· ty taxes carries on lhc NoYembcr ballot. the \Vcstminstcr s c ho o I superintendent is urging his district trustee to sell their bonds while they can. "'Th.is distr ict would be wi se to sell enough to build the Cascade School, in case the \Vat.son amendment does pass." said John Land Jr. telling the DAILY PILOT what he would recom- mend tonight at the trustee meeting. The Wat.son Amendment, backed by Los Angeles County Assessor Philip Watson, as proposed would limit the amount of tax on property to one per- cent of its valuation. Schools can cur· rently tax to five percent, Land said. Passage of lhe amendment "would mean we could not sell any more of our boni;ts." he explained. l·le said the district has $1.3 million in bonds it could sell. If trustees agree '>''ith Superintendent Land, they w\11 authorize selling the bonds some five months earlier than the)' originally planned. "We would not have sold the bonds until construction of the · school got underway," LaOO. !aid. "We hoped to begin building after the first of the year." Cascade School is to be built on a 10- acre lot south of. Bo1'a Avenue, bet\veen Beach Boulevard and the railroad tracks. WEAR 2400 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA-IN TH E HARBOR CENTER -ON THE MALL - high school to participate. { The examinations for all sports, in-,• eluding football, cross country track ~ and water polo , will be given Saturday WE 'RE OUT TO WIN YOU OVER WITH OUR FINAL REDUCTION OF THE YEAR OF HIGH QUALITY NAT. ADV. CLOTHES-SORRY WE CAN'T MENTION THE NAMES- AT ••. at 8:30 a.m. in Room 101 on the Marina High campus. Athlete:; in all Huntington Beach Union High School District schools are required to purchase their own in- surance. Forms for obtaining it through the district were mailed to known athletes, but those who didn 't receive them can get information when they take the physical. ' ! ONE LOW PRICE REGULAR UP TO $160 SUITS Now One Low Pri~e HERE is •n unprecedented opportunity for both the college me n end bu1ine11 executive to meke one of the best clothing "buys" of the yeer. Don't let the LOW PRICE FOOL YOU-This clothing represents our entire 1tock, the 1968 Fe1hion Spectrum included. SALE BEGINS THURSDAY AUGUST 22nd 9:30 A.M. REGULAR UP TO $100 SPORT COATS Now One Low Price Ml1tlmum Cltar1• For Alttrotlons REGULAR UP TO $32 SLACKS If • seving of up to •10. on your suit inftre1ts you or up to $60 on your coet or$ I) on Y0 "' •loch hud to GENTRY Thursday Now One Low Price STORE HOURS: Deily 9:10-& p.m. Mon. thru Fri. 9:)0.9: p.m . Mr and Mrs. Nick Giannaris visit their daughter ~1a'rta, 5, after the girl's success"ful h~art.transplnnt su~cry at St. Luke's Cbild~'s llosp1tal 1n Houston. f\1aria, of Hagerstown, Md., is reported in satisfac- lory condlllon. l111\A!ll1rlc1rd Mtll•r Clr.1r91 G•ntry', c1ro,,,, • •• -------·------ = ----·----·-~-~~~~------------- ---- -" . . . . ~ . ...;.;,;;:----.. . ... -. DAILY '1LOT c~ .., .. '*'f ,.. ....., Adreu J1no Ruuoll, cllvorced last month · after a :z&.yoar mAr· riage, • .,. 1h1 ii gelllng marrted apln Saturday. She aald that mo wlll marry Rotor Wyett llr-. 1111 actor from Chicago. Botb are 47. Mia• RulHll divorced Bolt .W1i.rfl1hl, former profesalonal f()Olball atar, July :II. • Radio Urges Last Hours Be 'Finest' WASHINGTON (AP) -In tht lut houri before t1a -•nt iu.....-to- cl&y, Iladlo PrlllUt broadCOlt -\ it feared w• • umtard reusurance to Czech• that the world wu watching. lt urged them to bt "courqeoua, dignlfled, but calm, II The 1aat IOUlllll U.S. monlton In Wllhlollon heord w•• of mualc .. d them a voice •Yinl "W• are a&aln repeatlne an announcemmt ••• •• Thm then WM 1Uence. The amouncement apparenUy were theae immediately prior comments by firlt a male and then a female vd.ce : ., Hungarians See Repeat Of History . VIENNA (UPJ) -Hungarun lore•• obedienU,y joined the drive to en11b the liberallr.aUon ol Oecholllovalda. Twelve ~ans ago, the shoe was on the other foot. For 13 epic days In the fall ol 1956 outnumbered , outgunned Hungarian freedom lighten defied s 0 v le t military mighl ·The western nations cheered the Hungari&JlJ but did not move to help them. Then. as today, the United States was in the throes of a pre1ldential election. Great Britain and France were launching their Suez invaJlon. The Hungarians fought alone. When the revolt collapsed under the overwbelmmg weight of Soviet armor, 2,700 Hungarian freedom fighters had lost their lives, about 20,000 more were wounded, more tha,n 180,<XX> had fled to the west and parts of central Budapest were in ruins. ur1 Ttl""-'' The Hungarian revolt began Oct. 23, "'lbe Cuch0tlovU. radio attempted to broadcast a -m•nt by the Proaldlum lhCl<lly bel<n 0200 (2 1.m.) Prague time tbiJ ·morning. Howevw. all tbe transmllterl at our dllpolal wen gradually tum. out of oPfiration and ef preteDt we do not even know bow m111y of you have bell'd tbis in· formatlOJL .. We d0n't even know, lilteners of IN HAP PIER DAYS -Czech Communist Party Bulgarian, East German, Hungarian and Polish 1956, v.ith a protest march throug'1 First Secretary Alexander Dubcek, left, Soviet troops are occupying Czech soil. The Soviet Foreign Budapest by 12,000 litudenbi deman• o u r rlldlo, if you CID bear ua at the -· "W• dct want to remain calm. We Premier AJ••e1· K••y"'", center, and Sovi'et Com· M' · tr h h . all ding freedom "from Commumat op-~ "" ,...., 1rus y as emp alic y denied that Kosygin and prmsion. ere 1Nltlng fOf' diret"tives tram our governme.nt and the Presidium of. our National AIMJDbly, although 1ome telepbelle lines in our bulkting have been cut .a· llld deoplte the fact that we can beor aln:ralt 071ne ~ the tl!!llo b¢Jdlnl. munist Party Secretary General Leonid Brez.lmev Defense Minister Andrei. A. Grechko have resigned By that evening the whole nation are lb.own during a happier period as they met for in protest to the invasion of Prague. -was in ferment and all com· munlcattcms with lht outside 1"1114 sununit at Bratislava August 2. Today 1 Soviet, were cut. 1~-'-'-~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~.:.::.:...::::.~~~~~ Charlei Brink lll, of Worcirtn , M'an., po11:s with hU latt1t artiltic adven. ture 1'll!Ctntl11. Ht told Judge Waltt:r Allen in Worcester District Court that he wankd to mtlkt· the h¢rcmt prtt- tv. Tht judge agTttd that it uw prob-o cbl11 prettier than regulation f'td, but it was not ~gaL The ~outh wai fintd. $10. • Two Minot, N.o·., boys, R1y Gooch, 15, and D•I• Flickfnger, 14, like baseball and bicycllng. So they pedaled aoine 580 miles to 1ee th~ New York Yankees and the .Minne- sota Twins play in a four-game 1er· ies. Tbe trip took sl:r days. • M1ri1n Townes, of Hamilton, Ont., was waiting to cross a down· town street Tuesday evening when she was run down from behind by a bathtub. Tbat'• rtght, a bathtub on wheels. Mrs. Townes, 32, a tav- ern waitress, 1aid, "Have you ever been thrown to tbe street, then looked up to see a bathtub beside you? She sufferm a bruised leg. Tbe tub driver, who had pilotod it down a hotel parking ramp, was charged with being a common nuisance. • The InternoZ Revenue Service last week 1eUed the "Nauti·Gal" night club '" Milwaukee for ttot paying IB,4.21 j n withholding taxt1. Somt Nauti Gals from tht night club picketed the IRS of· fices TuesdaJt', wearing abbrev- iated 1ailor 1uit.s and carrying signi reading: "We won't bow to the stem IRS." • A man grabbed $4,000 at a bank and rushed out ..• only to be met by a waiting police chief. Teller Mra. Betty Waterworth of the Toi· edo (Ohio) Home Federal B an k said sbe recognized the bandil as a man who had atolen '5,000 from the bank In June. She pre!Sed the alarm button as he came In. North· wood Police Chief Thom•• Hall ar· rested Danl•I Gon l••, 45, of Wind· sor, Ont., and jailed him on a charge of armed robery. Nation .. We ue convinced that you will act in th• .-me way and. that In the morn· ing you will go to work as normal and that you will try to do at your job aU that ii necesscry. At this moment this la the only poulble llOlutioll." At this point a female announcer took over from the male vOice. She vouched for the loyalty of the Czech radio worker• to the Czech govern· ment and promiled. to keep lllteners abreast ot the newt • k:mg as the.re WU'e technical facilities. A male voice came back on. ••The whole world was awakened from Bleep thil nilht," he 1aid. "As our teleprinters are not functioning normally we U'e depending on Urten· in( to foreign atatiODJ." . "W• are unable to glw you more in· formation at the moment," he said. "The world is awakening to an Ul1UIUllJy lad morning, but it is watching UJ and wW cominue to watch us at this critioal time. ''Let us be courageous, dignified, but calm, and at our place of work, ewrywhere where we · belont and where we must def«ld our posJU0111. "It is neCee:sary that hiJt«y should be able one day to use those historte words about w : 'Thls was our best and finest bour.' " Machine Gun Fire Stir red Shirley In Prag ue Hotel PRAGUE , Czecho1Iovakl• (AP) - Shirley Temple Black said today: "] was awakenttd by machine·run fire from a deep sleep. I thought it wu • practice but then someone knocked on my door and told me we were oc· cupied." f\.Irs. Black, once America's child movie star. described in an interview how she found out about the oc· cupation of Czechoslovakia: by soviet and other Wiaraaw Pact troops . She i9 here on a visit in connection w it h her work on multiple sclerosis. She was due to leave for Oopenllagen today, but all oommercial flights were canceled because Of the occupatio n. "I plaa to leave when lights resume," she said, adding that :she was calm and not worried. Students Scream 'Russ Go Home' As Troops Arrive By J AMES JACKSON PRAGUE (UPI) -"In the aquare there were these trucks filled with young people, 1tudenll l guess, and they drove through the square waving a Czech fiag and yelling 'Russians , Go Home! Rw;sian!J, Go Home!" The speaker was Jeff Roberts, a 21· year-old litudent from San Francisco State University, and he was telling bow he and a companion arrived in Wenceslu square in the h e a r t of Praiue just as Soviet troops and tanks dettroy«I a ban1cade and fired sub- machine guns to clear crowds from the area. "Thete were perhaps 200 Praguers, spittinf and throwing paper on the Russians," Roberbi said. '(They did not throw rockl. Just paper. "The Rus1ians were in two trucks. Apparently they got very nervous and excited . The y shot for about two minutes and all the people fi!Ot down behind a wall or just took off." I walked through Prague this morn· Ing as rapid bursts of automaUc weapons fire ecbotd through narrow street.I and CUchoslov.aks holding transiJtor radios lived through the ter· rible battle for their country. A1 I left the U.S. Embassy building and moved toward the hill where Hradcany ca.sue. the seat of govern· ment. is located. I heard bursts of small arms fire. It was impossible to idenUfy the shooters or their targets. [ crossed the Karlovy Bridge over the Vltava River and saw the v.•ords "Russians , Go Home" written in four languages -Czechoslovak, Russian, Gennan and English ~ ,aqd four col· ors. There was no talking. People walked in silence. often in pa Ir s. One young couple held hands tl~hUy and the girl was weeping. She held a rad.lo. A tank and an armored personnel carrier could be seen acrOS!'I the V1tava parked at the riverbank. Russian crews In irreen uniform s stood along a railing at the edge or the river. They were haUess. One soldier flipped a cigarette butt into the river. • Ill Boiling Pot Warrn Temperatures Prevail From Needles to Philly Ca llfor11la SoUll'ltr1t Gtillfornle 00!'11"'*' .,., u""~r vt rleble 11191'1 dou•h tmtv but 9'111\1 _,.,.,. butll'tftl """"'"!"' t nd .,_m .,.,. hM"l'I' 1urf '"" rl~!10t1 1trvdc """ -chel bVt ........ 1\11111,. 1"41 ,.,,,., tl'lo font o1 lhto Pfl'I lftrff "'"'· II WIS motl!V f11r I" L,_ A"9rlH •'Id Yklnltv wllll llttlo 1e....,,.rtturr en...... T1"1 me•lmum ltn'IHrtolU•• rl!Odll\ll Wll -. coml'tlrwd to lu.-••I"• 1'. lanlofll'• i.... "'- He •r.ct.l,.llolt -llldlteltd "' lllt U.l. WM...,. Bur.eu•1 ti.,..•, ror.c.11. T.....,-1tum. """"-'· --~todk>l"""'Jfl)t .,.. .......... fM --·-II, 7• TlleR "''' flll -'" "" l• ... ,.. ..... h l#I. 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I'll. 642.0010 7172 IDINGll AVINUE COSTA MISA COSTA MHA Ph. 142-4495 HUNTINGTON BEACH • • I ' l l t ' 1 • J • • • ! • 1 J ., 1 1 I ' • • • • • • • •· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • •• •• .1 :1 • • • • • • • • • • •• • : I •' •I " •• •I •1 'I • • " • ·: • Wtdntsdl)', Autust 21, 1968 DAILY "LOY f RFl{Son ..------Guard Called. ·Up ·-fo r€onvention . ' . . . Saw Dad Slain N&W YORK (UPI) - Sen. Robert F. Kenned,)''1 13-year-old son, Dav l d, W<rtchlng telovilian a1ooe In a hotel room, saw the on.- the-spot television report oo hls father 's UINCillnation, a noted poychiatriat reportod today. Dr. Gerald Capla n , writing fOr McCall 's magazine, said Dtlvld was the only one of the 10 Ken- nedy children who was &lll.;:.;::;;=;;.,;;;;,;,;;;;;,;;-;;;;,;;;;;;;;;m.-~-~~-~ watching televbion when "Non·involvemea.t la & WI.)" ot. Jife these days." the seDl.tor w.11 shot. Writer Theodore White CHICAGO ( AP ) anllolpate trouble. '"l'lli> io "It ii to make ""'' that IJ91ey Slid be mado tllo P · f ibl a. -auUonary mMlurti to we hive the necK1ary request "in OC'COrdanct with 1tud.led the queadon." repara1ion5 or poss • de~i ~;ilh people Who tniaht siecurlty to back up our the recommendation or tbe tr o u b 1 e d u r i P I t b e come he.re to c a u I • police, it ~uar)', '' Daley superinteodent ol, poUce. Md Democrat l c N.Uoaal troubles,'' he llld. said: otJJ~r experta Mio have Coovention are proceedlnal_:;::::::::._:::..::=::....~~~===-~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The troop• wlll be Ito· tk.r>ed iii tnnoriea for th• lint few day• and will ba avaH.ablt it necessary. on two froota -NaUona.1 GuQrd troops have· been oNered to active duty and proteSt groups are prac· tic.ing defensiv. tactics. Gov. Samuel H. Shapiro, acting on a request from Mayor Richard J. Daley, Tuesday autMrized 5,469 gusrd.smen to .co oo active duty in Chicago ttarting Fri· day. Shapiro's executive order said "demonstcatiOrll by di!sident organizations may result in a tumult, riot or mob disorder" and that "a !~~-·~--~,\·., PUBLIC NOTICE! ['_=:~ :1 TRi\VELING TO THE /\lf~PORT ' for lnform1Uon can 776-9210 AVOID AIRPORT CONGESTION uH AIRPORT COACH .~ f'Nquent • N lf•bfe • eo0oo -.. .... lee.,,by deiUM aloocondl--· -oiioe ••. dirwctly lo yo<r ah'llne tannlnal. from .Wlltlm Toi <2.95* u. r:CmatlOMl 155 11t111J $1.25 * °'""' Coooly Ailpoit l2S., Clllldr• 5-11.:. Mi rn time ol public disorder and!-======================================== daiger exlsts." _ I· fQWld'the boy ''awa k e befuri! the television screen, devastated at Ute siibt he had just seen," Clpl&n. said. "White did not arrive 1n ti'me to prevent Dav:id from learning the news 1n the worst possible way, but he was able immediately to cilshion the blow." the psychiatrist said. "I-le did this in a most efrective way -not by discussing it veI1>ally, but by playing the part or the loving, nurturing strong man. Invasion Wounds Democratic Doves Shapiro said Daley bad in· loTmed him "lllat t b i s threa~ Jituatioo i n Chicago may become beyood ttJe ,,_.l of tit• civil aWborities." In a tnessage issued along witti tile order, Shapiro Si.id, "l hope and pray that t!H'se troops do not have to take to the streets o! Olicago, but l/iey will be ready if tltey have t.o." All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Satvrcfay "In the Kennedy family i;:ulture, the father is ex- pected. not only to be tough, a;tead!ast and pereevering in adversity, but to prov:ide emotiooal supplies to those who are dependent oo him . "White. fn line w:ith jhis tradition ' and his own leel- ings, held David in his arms and gave him bodily com· fort and offered hot chocolate. He stayed with the boy and shared lt.is desolation ." . Dav:id was one of s.i'x Ken· nedy children w h o ac- companied their parents to Los Angeles for t h e California primary. They I were staying in a suke ol rooms at the Ambassador 1-lotel, whe re Kennedy wa.s killed. The children were believ- ed to be asleep when Ken- nedy was shot, Cap\an said, I but "!rfends went to make a check" and ·White found David, the only one· awake . The other .children in the hotel were "watched until they awoke" by former asllv!ylut· Joltn Glenn and Mr<s. Dean Markham, a frieJl d of Mn. Kennedy, who to1d U\e'm the news. The Older children, in eastern prep schools, were wakened by staff members and told about tieµ-father's death. Red Invasion Could Bring LBJ Return CHICAGO (UPI) -Sen. Ralph w. Yar'borough of Texas said today the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia could bring Pre 5id ent Johnson back into the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. Yarborough called this a "very definite possibility" WASHIN!iTON (UPI) - Democratic doves, wounded just as their campaign for control of the Democratic convention wu btfUDng to lift off the ground, were thrown into disarray today by t b e Czech05lovakian crisis. , Baaker1 of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy and G e o r g e McGovern said R u s s i a n movement of troops into Czech05kwakia, if it turned out to be seriOOs. could rein- force the party's cold war wing and spoil their efforts to elect a candidate bowld to a platform calling for steps to end the Vietnam War . News of the Czech crisis hit the Democratic platform committee like a thun- derbolt during a free.swing- ing debate on a Vietnam plank Tuesday night. It came just as Secretary of State Dean Rusk bad Mississippi Delegation Said Racist OllCAGO (UPI) -Th• Democrats have refused "Lllly White" Milsissippi the sheher of the broad um· brella which traditionally has protected all wings of the party . Jn a historic action, the Democratic convent.ion's Credent.ails C o m m i t t e e branded the regu l ar Mississippi delegation as racist and voted to seat in it! pl.ace a half black, hall white lmurgmt band of "Loyalists.'' The committee's decision, announced by Gov. Richan! J . Hughes of New Jersey at a steamy post-midnight news conference, came as no surprise. But the size of the vote - 83 to 9 in favor of seating the LoyalisU -stunned oouthern delegates who face similar challenges . wtilch would escalate into a May As ks Split "strong po<sibility" if Vice President H u be rt H. SANTA Jlf.ONICA (UPI) - Humphrey fail!: to win first· Swedish actress May Britt, ballot victory ne:s:t week. saying sbe had "become ill The Tu:u aenator said and unhappy" during her Czechoslovakia "points up marriage to Sammy Davis the risk of tying down all sued th N gr our us.able forces" i n Jr., has e e 0 southeast Asia. The Viet· -=·="=te=rtai=·ne=r=lor=di=·v=o='"'=· ==;! riain War, he liaid, bad1,. ·•weakened our forc.u in f:urope." "With the hard linen tak· ing over in the Kremlin, we'U !ind stiffened resistance in Vietnam," he predicted. •IDI OUl HORSI SI W9111 J Sit .....,,. - N..--t llffCR AIM ···-Mr MAUIU IA.NCH ...... ~ ..... C.U: 121 1 677-J MI NOW ACaPTING APPLICATIONS FOii THE FALL SIMESm r. .. 1.. '"'""' COMMENCING SEPT. 9lti. 1961 .... MM' ,., .,.._ 'COLLEGE OF LAW Vinceot S. Dakimar, Dean ...... a--1.......,... ........................ ~ ... ........... .. , ., ~ ...... -................. ....... ................... ~ ... ... ,_T_,__ ......... S.-...•J.». (JlttrO...) ~ Col tr .wt "'° -(714) SU I Sll l2MI WUTMICSTll AVllM. UllTA MIA completed a I e n gt h y , sometimes bitter statement d e fend ~ng the ad· ministration's Vietnam pollcy and was preparing to aMwer questions from the panel. A newsman handed him a wire servi'ce bulletin ,and after a hurried conversation with Olairman Hale Boggs of Louisiana, Rusk im· mediately 1eft the hearing room. "l thin.It I'll go and see what this is all about,'' he told the committee. Besides missing an op· portunity to pin Rusk down on Vietnam, the committee doves said they feared pro- admin.Jstration Democrat.: would gain new strength at the convention beginning in Chicago next week . John Kenneth Galbraith, one Of McCarthy's key ad· visers, said there was "no question ~ut that it will en· courage the cold war com- munity" and perhaps cause the climate of the con- vention to change just when it was looking favorable for the antfwar wing. Daley, questiooed b y newsmen, said he did not Nixon Seeks Rocky's Aid In Election NEW YORK (UPI) - Ricbard M. Nixon met today with Nelsoo Rockefeller in an attempt to enlist the New York governor in his cam- paign fOr the preoidency. The two men &at dawn over coffee in Nixon 'e Fifth Avenue apartmen t to discuss the ques.tiiion of how active Rockefeller VIOUid be in the campaign. T h e governer has liatod his sup. port for Nixoo and his vice presidential l'UJllling mete, Moeyland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew wt bas left imclear v.tJrttier be will stump the !bate or lhe nation 1n behalf of the ticket. ' • SUMMER SPECIAL! let us capture your child's sunny sparkle in a fine portrait 3. 495 are j1st Ht l zJI '9t ,..., uil twt Jx7 ltr rftt ·f.,.llt ..,. __ ., -. -·"" .......... lode«, .. .............. ,c, .......... c..- .. ..... ".,~1,.. •• :• lppl0 llf111tflfR I &)•••-' a ... ,...._ ........... )" .. · ruw,_ -· ... ... flW, OMNI • ,.., .......... ...... l ~J THRU SAT. ONLY! RE U . E I And color ams no -. at Penneys l Choose '-3 "°'°" ... all at 0111 law price( Nlit '"'""Y ......... -P•••>•""" Pwr::wt "-' HUNTINGTQN BEAC~ {Hunti•~n c;.n~i), , , SAYE 50e9S Penncrest41 18 cu. ft • side~by-side ice maker refrigerator • C:O.-,.lotoly""1tou ......... • Roomy 223 poo.wl -<OpOcitp • 11.6 CV, ft. heh food ltorap • hrtomottc Ice...... ~ ·~ ............ 32' .... • "'tfdtd lllOijilillk door ....... •Roll ... wheehr.._ ........ • A¥0Cedo, wtitt or c:oppw luc• Reg.469.95 NOW$419 Pay as llttlo a 16.50 per month SAYE 4le95 17 cu. ft. frost less refrigerator with -automatic ice maker • Ilg 138 ~ freeier-CClpCKity • SpNoct control kt lwttw cornpa1 lnllllt e, fuU Mdftt egg Ol'ICf ~•tor-ave • 6 cantii..tr aMlwl • Ole om ho1dts with wood graln u..rtt •A_.-"'992'wlde • Coppll tale, Cl'fOCodo or MiiN Reg. 369.95 NOW$328 Pay .. little .. 13.50 ,.. _... NEWPORT BEACH (F11hion lsl1ncl) ., ,. • • DAll.Y PILOT Highway Projects Sped Up SACRAMENTO (AP) About $157 million worth of. highway projects throoglloot California will be started ahead ol scbedule a n d 8hould be finished widlin the next two years, the state has announced. Gordon C. Luce. secretary of ttle Business a n d Transportation A g e n c y , pointed out in Tuesda'Y'S an- nouncement by G o v • Reaga1J's otttoe that the move will be •· spur to the state construction industry and its employes. The St.ate Hiehwey Oom· mJSSion, meetin g in Sacramento, a p p r o v e d allocation of trhe funds at about the same time the governor's office was an- nouncing they are available. A list of the specific pro- jects invol~ was not made public immediately. In a news release, R e a g a n declared that "as a direct result of economies and ttie application of s o u n d business practices ... this administration· is now in a position to step up the state''!i overall higbway CODr struction program." That, he 6aid, mecms 0 we will now be in a pOl!iition to not only save more lives by me.ans of safer highways, but to provide better service to the driving public and further s t imulate the economy through additional constuction." Two Juries Nixed For Murder Trial SAN JOSE (UPI) -An unusual defense motJon for two Juries waa denied Tues- day in the murder·kidnap trial oMwo young men ac- cused of killing a 17-year-old boy and critically wounding his girl friend near Ukiah. It was one year ago today that Timothy Luce, tlle son of Laite Oowrty Dinrict At- torney David Luce, was murdered and S u s a n Bartolomei. 18, was shot tour times, beaten and raped before being left to die in a roadside ditch. Miss Bartolomei was in a coma for Seven months foll.owing the brutal incident and still 4 altnOlt com· pletely paralyied, Thomas Braun a ti d Leonard Maine, both 20 and from Ritzville, Waab., were a picture of contrut 11 they listened to Superior Court Judge Joseph Kelly deny a motioo by Malne'a attorney, John Poulos, fot t w o separate juries. Poulos wanted one jury to readl a verdict on the cue and a second jury to decide the penalty if a first deiree murder verdict waa return- ed. Braun was outward 1 y calm and composed while Maine was tense and anx· ious. Newton Celebrating Before Gun Battle? ,QAKLA·ND (UPI) -Huey P. Newton was celebrating the terminWon of his three years' probation only hours be/ore his alleged gunfight with police, according to witnesses at his murder trial. Newtm, 26, co-founder of Girl's Body Identified SAN MATEO (UPI) Police StlUgbt clues today in the brutal slaying of an at- tractive blonde w1lo doubled as a night club singer when she finished work as a hairdresser. Officers identified the sun - tanned woman as Mrs. Brenda Joyce Gregory, 25 of San J05e . Her badly mutilated b o d y w& foond early Tuesday in a vacant lot just one block from the police station. the Black PanUlers, Is charged with the fatal shooting of Patrolman John Frey. 23, &:1d the wounding of Patrotmao Herbert Heanes, 25, during a pre- dawn gun batt1.e Oct. 2.8. 1be suspect will testify in his own defeme, pos&iblJ lat.el' today or Thursday, but defense att«ney Charles Garry was expected to ham- mer at the dlaracter and at- titude d. Frey. Deferue witnesses from the ghetto testified Tuesday the patrolman "harassed" thenl and called the black people "niggers" and "black bastard6.'' They a I a o testified on Newton's ac- tivities the night ol the shooting. Donald Hopkins, a Negro and £6sistant to the ex- ecutive vice chancellor of the University of California, and Joan Lewis, a young Negro woman, testified they saw the suspect celebrating the apparent end of his pro- bation on Oct. 27, SPORTING IDEA ON THE BACK TO SCHOOL SCENE HIS N' HER WATCHES GONE BOLDLY, MADLY MOD ~ ... ,.,mt of the limes in a kick of color at Penney's! rind the face al time on neon cotored patent leathers, frantic fabrics, and not-so"'5quare regu. lat dress and sport models. Don't wa it til tile 11th hour. The prices are low r+<:N/. YOUR a-IOICE 7.88 cau.11 tr AT 'tom: ..-Cf S lfNf......, ,_,.,.,,,, ..,.aM IM ... D&MONDI. Cit *MOM' IOIOUNfrNOi. WA1'~ ., .... _ FUUERTON 0 •1119ef1rr C.111er H1rlter at Or1111•th.,,, HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH Mu11ti119to" Ce11i•• F11J.ie11 l1la11il fill119•• •t Sall or.,, Fwy. MtitA•ffl'ilt •t P.c. Cit. Hwy. ¥. - All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday l'llY •• llHle u $1 ......... Penncrest® Imperial 10 pc. canister cleaner ' 5495 .., .. -....... _.. Now Vibra·Bea!" floor noui. beats, sweeps and suction cleans iust like on uprightl Cleaner 1tands on end for ease in cleaning stairs. Includes cleaner, tool eorrier and 8 accessories. Gold/white. I • Penncrest® lmperial ••• 2 cleaners in one! • Powerful upright ·cleaner converts to canister at the twist of a dial! • Beats, cleans, sweeps out dirt from all your carpets and floors • Special triple filter system; king-size disposable bags • Modern sculptured styling; blue/white Attachment tool set for above includes Tufflex® fiber hose, telescoping wand, crevice tool, upholstery brush, dusting brush, and floor and wall brush '19 UBE YOUR EN NEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TOOAVI Powerful 6-in-1 rug and floor conditioner 7495 Pay .. -.. $S ,.. _.. ' for all your floor care needs: power scrubs, wet pick up, applies wax, polish and buffs, damp mops, shampoos carpet. 3 position handle, 14 pc. accessory kit. NO MONEY DOWN.•• USI l'INNIYS 1IMI PATMINr PIAHI NEWPORT BEACH (Fashion Island ) HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Center) ,.., .... ~ --.11, . ' '• . ' " ., ,. .. •· . .. • ' ' • , Coroners Convene 200 Hear New Methods in Analieim B1 JACK CHAPPELL Gf .. h lfr ,.. ittfl AN AHE'I M -New method> llld ~ques ol investigation ln coroM.rs' case1 wer1 de:icrlbed here Tuesday to more than 200 coroners from the U. S. and Caned& m..U.g I\ \he .NI· tional Assoelation o( Cor, oner1 Convention. The gl'Ollp beard Dr. Bernard · J . ·P'LouiJ!Uo, C'halrman of the department Of Radiological Servfett at UCl.Callforola College ol Medicine, deacribe how X· rays could be Uled to help identify bcMlios and deterrnP! tti. manner in which injuries were sus- talned by ~ Vic:tim. Or. O'Lougblln described a case in which the body of a small baby was found in a water filled ditch. First in· dfcallooa were 111'it tile child had drowned, but upon radiological investigation, it wu determined the child had died e~ewhere and was thrown in lhe ditch. Ill'. O'Loughlin said previous fractures whi'ch showed up in X-rays indicated foul p4y. Radiological lnvestigalioo it ailo ben<ficlal in lhe ideo· tUlcalion olvlctims In plane crashes in which Jong delay in rf!laching the dead may obscure identification, Dr. O'Loulhlfu said ... DEATH 'J'llO'J'ICES BLISS J11!'1U WUlll'" 1 1111. Jtl l l ''rlt u,... Cod• Mnl. Si.wvlvtd " Witt, H1rmlt1 . mether, AMI• '""' Gf IC.lltor1, l 1x.1 follr dMlll'ln. Nlhi B\ldlllll~ Arvln, C1Mf.1 Evl Af'M'f, ll-1 .. tlY Glo¥· ltf', SPolric.I, N.vt411 C .. r1 N1borl, ..... iev. C1llf.1 1lx 111t1ra,, twl broll'ltr1 •Ml 12 9r1ndd1Ud~ l«'llces, TI1Und1v, WHklllf c1111,.1, J "·'"·· wnll lllY. M.C Cronic offlcl11fll9 t11"""9ftt, H1r'bltr Rtll Memorlll ,.rt. Vl1lt1n1111. WM· netd1v 1'1fll,..,, 1 te t 11.rn .. Wnklllf Cll1Ptl. NOWAK c11r11111111 LVftn Now1k. 11Hi orn1111n. lrvllll. Dll9 Gf "'9111, Al,lfUlll 11. Sur· v!'ffll by mo111tr, Slllr""' wt.1.,,11, ,,.. VllllJ fl flltr, '"""'"' J, Nirwlk. I Mlo no: brettlen. G.-rv Joll11 Now1k, En- cino: kevln Nowt~. 1 ..... 1 ... 1 1!111<'. Let-tt.. lf'VIM; Pllll'MI 1r1ndP1r ... t., Mr, 11'111 Mn. SRl>lltft J, HOWtk. lo 1 Allftlnl '"'"'""' 1r1Mlf1.,,.r, leYHll l . SPUrladl, On!1rla1 ff!lhlfNI 1r11'1d-maffltr, lorrtll S""rtodl, lCll CO.I•. ll• clhltlall llf t1w ll;Olll'V Wiii be "'Id Tl!u~1y, I 1.111 .. P'Klflc VJ9W Cll1pel. lllMUletn Men, P'rtd1v, lt 1.m., iv..· rt"' eco1. Alr 'wtlllY OllMt, Stnhl ""'· 1~1, · P'tclllc Vl1w Mtmor· ltl 1'1r1c. Dlrwcl'td by ,1clrlC View -~- BAJ.TL MORTUARIES Corona de! Mar OR S.9!50 Colla Men MI I-UM BELL BROADWAY ; MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\teu LI 11-3433 DILDAY BROmEl\S Hanllngton Valley ~lortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntlnstoa Beach 81!-TTll PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Momiary Chapel 3500 PaclOc View Drive Newport Beach, CaWornla 144-Z'lot PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1801 Bolu Ave. We1tmln1ter 89S-3521 SMITH'S MORTUARY m Milli SL Hu!lacto• Beacll LE Mm WESTCLIFF MORTUARY t."1 E. 1'1h SI., C11la Men 11111118 Nuclear-age devek>pmen~ in the ideDtillcaU'on o f physical evidence comn1ooly handled by coroners were described by Dr. Vincent P . Gulnn, tetb.nical director of the Activation Analysis Pro· gram for Gul! General Atomic Inc. Ideoti!ication of tr a c e elements by radioactive analysis can give extremely a~urate information In the comparison of hair samples, bullet wounds and ~hot distaocf1, he 1&id. An txample, Dr, Guinn told 1 the corone rs, was a study · 'which analysed the hair of King Eric XIV of Sweden. It showed that he died as a result of ar11nic poisoning. The good king died more than 400 years ago, ao the caae was moot, Dr. Guinn noted. . Speaking on ''Interpretation o f Tox· lcoiogical FindlnBJ," Robert H. Cravey, chief tox1colog.ist tor the Orange Cout1ty Cor· oner's Office, i&id th t amount ol new drugs being put on the market is rtag- gering. Many of. these drugs, if taken incorrectly, could cause death, he said. ln determining the lethal doses , Cravey said that person-to-person variables In the acceptance of drugs made a nonlethal d05e for one penon deadly t o another. Alcohol when used in con· jUilction with certain otber nonleth&l d r u g s can kill. Cravey said. Thus the eUect of drugs in _ combination complicates the tox· icologi.st's job. Swimmers Get Advice As Sea Batters Coast COTI'ON'S POINT - High waves were 1 t 111 washing the Southern ' C;dlfornja coastline today~ a n.d marine meteorlogist1 issued thi.s advice from Double Tax Hits 1,500 In County SANTA ANA -P~g twice for the same service is ttie position .about 1,500 Orange County reeidents find them.selves in becauce the 1'aw is not exact on the cessatioo ol taxation upon incorporation ot· an area, say OOunty ollidal!. The 1,500 property owners are in areas once county and \Served by sp ec la.I districts but now part of a city. An example includes some 200 homeOWners who live in an area nortti Of Coast Hi#J.way aOO east o I Newport Boulevard i n Newport Beach, They are asse.ssed the old Costa Mesa Ligl!ting District tu of ~.5 cents, but 8lao pay 4.5 cents to Newport Beach far the ume llgtiting 5ervi~. swimmers who migbt find themeelves caught in rip- tides : "Swim parallel to the beach for a few feet to escape the riptide's path. Don't make tite f:l'Tor of trying to bottle your way . dJrect!y back to the shore." The big 1urf, conceived in :m A!tarctic atonn, got 1t least 975 swimmers lrXo trouble Tueiday, hrtnginl the total to more than 3,000 rescued by lifeguards st.see Sunday. • M06t swinuners w e r e troubled by riptides -• nam>W but strong llow Of water from ttie beach 9ut to the aea, JifeguardJ repom.d. Altbouih \ h e 11"' ol I he breakers haa gr ai d u al l'y diminished since a reported high Of 20 feet Monday, lifeguards repoiUd n· 0 decreue Jn the number of rescues. ~ :'I~ , AJ. Zuma 8-11, lhe lllrf w11 U hi&h aa ei&ht fett and he"' at Sllll Olemente, :six feet. Beaches at Sant.a MoN.ea and Dana Point were closed alter several near drown· ings over the weekend. At Ctmp Pend.le1.on, near Oceansode., Martm C c5 r p 1 reaervisU piallning to pa<!· dle out on rubber 00.U to 1 submarine Offshore were tilwarted. by the big . waves foe a second day. County's 'Dry Period' Requires $7 Million SANTA ANA -Not hav· ing money when it is needed for purchases 11 one of Orange County's problems in lhe ao-called "dryperiod" before tax monies COme in, according to C o u D t y Administrative Off 1 c er Robert E. Thomas. He says about f7 million will be needed to tide the county over during the September . November period. The money Is borrowed from banks, probably a\ about 4 percent interest for 1he abort Wm loen• wblch are paid oil by n.c. 31. Supervisor• pointed out that the county m111y times missed barga ins on purchues because of Jack ol . money in the fall period. Last year the oounty bor- rowed '7.5 million Mid \he year befO!'t, $8.5 million. Since the county first bor· rowed $S mllllon in 1965 lt hun't beftl. able to keep enough money on tw.ld to operate li1rOU111> the dry period. NIGHT and DAY SERVICE 9:30 A.M. TO 9130 ,.M. -SATUllDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 '.M. • DAILY PllDT 7. All Penrrey Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday NEWPORT BEACH (Fashion Island) ' I DISCOVER PENNEY'S WONDERFUL TOILETRIES AND PAY LESS! • • ... Jfmne11 ....................... .. fonoula htlpo -m.y, Twlnpolr. Two 5 oz. tvboa.,., 64• lmeralcl th1m1M9. Sofa for tinted hoir. Alto Atrthtr Glo ahompoo for dry hair. 16 oz. 77• Hair ttyllng 911. Regular gives body, marc. m., Nts. Alao Super. 16 oz. 97• T-.,ly beth,_,, tluua. Solt, obto.i...t In white, pink, yellow, blue. 5 5 ~ Th-ply fac;al tU... buy o box for both. room, b.droom, office. White, pink.. yellow, blue.300-.. led Orltmouthwaah -all purpoee antf.. .. pnc. Alt0 ~lu1 Oral. 16 oz. Ilia. C,,.r11 d.1r f;1ir •r•y-no locquw formula. ffaN.to..ltold or NgUlors 7 ''oz. tfn. • hmhtln• Mplcfft1 IOft, obtorbent. 4 to • box. 1A4 Super ••rbent, 40, N 1 box. 1.37 -loo flm-Rotulot °' "'I*· AO ........ 1.19 Dantlrvtl __ , ,,,,,.,.. I u. lln. UHYDUFI EN NEV CHARG ACCQ••NT TDCIAYI HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Center) • -- 1 ), • 8 O>IL Y PILOT Mesa Playhouse To Give Awards Melina's Success Key: 'l'n1 Beautiful Liar' ... TM toiat efftci U det1a1t.atirlQ .•. not to bt missed" WAIJDHN ~••~YID n'AYNB .,,...SSIN c: C> lJ NT I) C> \\' N Fi"e actors t nd actressei1 from the C06ta l\1esa Civic PlayhOuse's 1967-68 season are due for another round of applause Saturday night. That's when the playhouse wi U present its s~nd ui · nual ·awards for top performances of the past season at a banquet schedul· ed for 8 p.m. at the Costa ~1esa Country Club. Eighteen performers have been nomfririted for the five trophies, including three for the coveted Thespian tl1e-rnesa T,.1,-,o•r,•·-•F·1,-~1-,, .r, '~•1'· ··•--,_l\_,,n,~. •- NE\'JPORT A~JO HARBOR IN (.J~fA f,1 ESA TELEPHONE 541·1552 FOi INFOIMATION -FIRST RUN IN THE HARBOR AREA- JAMEB GAR II ER• GEDRllE KEllllEDY• EYAREIZI ---a •• p 1n th9Jung,. thayhum.dtM ~ th• woman,-"' 9ach ott.rl ' ~ ~·:;,," PiNll Jllllllll' ... -· E:t ALSO ADDED ATTRACTION 1,HVE1$AL "'IU(Nff lo TKMNICO«>I• "MADIGAN" ··-RICHARD HENRY WIDMARK FONDA . INGER STEVENS AND FOR THE KIDS AT 2 P.M. ONLY "THE BAffiE BENEATH THE EARTH" CONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 2 P.M. WED.-THU RS.-F Rl.-SA T.-SUN. Show Starts at 7 PM. Monday and Tuesday "BATTLE BENEATH THE EARTH" 11 2 P.M. Only PINK JUNGLE ot 3:30-7:00 •nd 8:SS "MADIGAN " ot 5:20 ond 8:SS HEWPO~T BU.CH " 011.3·1350 FREE PARKING NEWPORT BEACH PHONE OR 3-8350 FIRST RUN IN THE HARBOR AREA Does this look like a movie that could give you bad dreams? ~J . . ' ~ Doris Day and Brian Keith ''With Six You Get Eggroll" ALSO ANOTHER GREAT COMEDY lrs A DEMONSTRATION! ITS A RIOT-OF FUN!! ~-R= •wbere ~lsGo - TIOUb/e follows' • WJMAH COlot SJ IYI. SHOW STARTS 6:45--CONT. SUN.IEIOM 2 ,,M. Award, given for the outstandlng performance or the season in a role of any size. Vying for the top honor are Don Rhoades and Ruth Gottuso, both for their performances in "The Girls in 509," and Patty Neederman for her role in "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs." Last year's winner was Gene Benedict fm-"The Best Man ." Nominees in the other four categories are: Best actor -James Greer, " Dark at the Top oC the StDirs": Gene Benedict. "The Little llut"; Neil Sawers. "Claudia," and Rey L'Ecluse, "Tilree Ba gs Full." Best actress - Betsy Hewett and Audrey Snitzer, both for "The Girls in 509"; Elaine Barnard, "The Dark at the Top of the Stairs"; Leslie Day, "The Little Hut," and Llnda Baum, ''Claudia." Best supporting actor - Paul CaldweU, "The Girls in 509": Ed Little, "The Little Hut," and Tom Tjtus , ''Three Bags Full." Best supporting actress - Marthella Randall "Olaudia," and Shi r 1 e y Dillon and Kathy Ladd. both for "'Ibree Bags Full." Pati Tambellini, resident directM oC the playhouse, a nd pianist Anita Grossman will conduct the awards pro· gram which will follow the dinner and the 7 p.m. social hour. UNUMITID Fill PARllN• Ill lllllll l!Rmllll ··Alan Ai'l'in Theaters Meet in LA Hotel The A m er i can Educa- tional Theater Association, the world's largest body of educational and professional theater craftsmen, will hold its 32nd annual convention meeting in Los Angeles at the Statler Hilton Hotel, August 25-29. More than 2,000 represen- tatives of collegiate, com· munity, children's theater, regional ~nd professional theater from every state in the un i on w i ll be representated at the conven- tion. The annual convention permits an examination and performance of the newest ideas and techniques in the development of theater art and craft for AETA has as its goal the stimulation and organization for young peo- ple, educational theater ex- periences of the highest possible standards. Box Office Opens Doily-12:45 P.M. ePERFORMANCESe l 03 ·S ·7-9-11 P.M. YEAR'S BIG COMEDY EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN SHOWING SECOND BIG COMEDY ll'S A P1811 ... II ..a lfll llMl 111 msl fll! TV Firm Sues ABC For Breach Kids Like to 'Ask Andy' * Tonight * RUDY 11 l•<k M'GOOS PIZZA, PASTA, SUDS " STUFF 16et .... , •• Hwy .. ....._. l dl W.llSI * •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• * ROSEMARY'S BABY IVR'I' EVENING AT ••• 8:00and 10z30PM IPAO!PIP'fl Harbor llvd. Oriv•ln TMat,. Cllna.I KIJMAllCU ... IMUYU...fltMY 2:4t ·l:16·t:• ... 1t:UPI 1Al11NT 12:11•2:11 · ldl ..... _ .. -·--~·1.11 1:U•t:llPI EVERY EVENING AT ••• 8:00 and 10:00 PM AT Hl·WAY 39 DllVE•IN THE GRADUATE H.,ff, II"". •* McF•dil•n Sll-1271 •••• , wm tH!A!ll.IOU: .. O!t9!JPHllY lm!!xhl '*''If . ,,,,,. M!J!!C """'"'.AN l®M °!:®9"il'! ll!l!IC!!I '''*''* .~ . I become cute. I doo't want to be cute." Ctcil Snlith, Timt.! II AMERICA HURRAH" . Melina Js not e u t e . D r, "telu UST TWO Wll"S e HU '1 not cute. She is ,,._ . ""'" ,,. ··"'· Tlllt• Sit• T!lflltt, (till IMM other things. "•_, ... c11 TllM1r-N..-t MIM T,....._T~vn. lhr• klOI. ,,,. N-. u"""" """''"' 1~ •r 11M Mlllll" "I have liked men all myl~===================: life," she said. "Men like tolr be loved. It is a luxury tor a man to be loved. For a woman it is a necesslty." The look in Melina's eye made it clear the point was beyond further discussion. She also believes a woman should hold mystery. "The man who has 1ived with me for 12 years now says I am tbe most secre t person on the world," said Melina, who married Dassin last year. "It is the highest CGm- pliment he could have paid me, because I am a liar, I have facets that are not well known." ·-- OHN NOON 21111111 w .. 11 C111tl111111tt ............. DVKE • Doris Day in "WHERE WERE YOU WHEN THE LIGHTS WENT OUT?" Melina dislikes being ca11· ed fiery, although she ls cer· tainly that. !':::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ "F iery is a corny ex·l- aOTH l'ICTURltS IN COLOR pression," she said. "I like to eat and I like to make love. I know how to hate. I know how to tive and to cry. And I know h ow to be blasphemous. "Best of all, I am in good health, yes?" Yes, indeed. a...tf "' ,,., .... , Oi:wl KNOTT$ e COLO" "TM• SKAJUEST GUif IN Tiil WIST" Alen A"KIN e COLOR "'TME RUU~NI Ala CO. IM•1 TH• llt.ISS~ltS -'•I ~fflld F_t,,_ Entlft1"""'"' Olr!s DAY e lrttn "l!llH "WITH 6 YOU •IT IOOIOU" ""'"FONDA "A II• MAHI fOI A urrtl LADY" ;;;;.... __ .... . --·--bc..-:r•:• fllr'Mtftl .... _. .... , ,._ M JltCIOl'T e COL.Ok e '1'HI GIAOUATI " lllo'MI 9t ,,. Ml 11.:ID EXCLUSIVE AREA RUN ACADEMY AWARD IJWINNER BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS e P•rform1nc•1 e 1.3.5.7.9.1 I-p .m. 01ily JOSEPH E. l.EVINE ~ -/ \ MIKE NICHOLS \ LAWRENCE TURMAN \. ~// \ , ................. ·,, " \ L\\ ~ !PICIAL P.T.A. SATlltllDA'Y MAT'INll ALL tllTS Mc l'l•IT MIN IN TNI' MOON'' -SMO'# ttMI "'" ... M. ·----'~---!r-4 • • • W«IM1d~. August 21, 1%8 PILOT-ADVERTISEll-3 un w ... ....,. Au,..t 21, 1961 DAILY ,ILOT • r111s Mart Delp Current Pulls Ele~tri~ SulJ ·Take Doc's Orders Just Put It On Tab(let) SANTA BARBARA -lta on a shoe-airing budcet by wator Jell or any oilier macneCtc Otld 111 lh• '"by NEW YORK (UPI) sUence was beard around undergraduates in the ba•e· moving part. meana of 1 mapet coll Babylonian tavern 1 pro· t.he world. ment of a camplll bulldinJ Jt was the world'• first wh.lch carrle1 current IUPo bably presaged today '• Der Spiegel ln Germany at the Universltr o f craft operated by meana of Plied by 1tora.at batterJu. edi ard lta ts hear:S It and reported lt. CalUornla at Santa BarbarL the electromagnetic force• 'tll9 l&Dle batwte• are uted By Dr. Peter J. StelacrQn edema may , Ulerefore, be t asuggellt, Mrs. G., that :;po~crese:r~:;,1:~~be'. Time Magatine dedicated a Oa July 21, 1911, the in UM surrounding sea. to Mncl electrtc current 1 bentflclal in reducing the you read and reread these page to tt. NBC News torpedO·•haped c:ratt wa1 SWtmmiDJ j u b 11antl1 perpendicularly through Ule Dear Pr. Steincrobn: am severity of coronary utery scientific finding$ unUl you Ingold Brewerle1, lnc. charted a speelal boat and unloaded by 1 r u 11t1 n g buldt tt were itl creator1, water to tbe magnetic fle ld- a 44-year-okl hOU1e'41fe. disease both by decreasing understand them. When ~ou Guest.I drank on credit dock to fil m it. students from a rented mt c: b anlcal encineertna: Prol. Wa11.1p,IaJu tbat a Btireedcai:~ ~~~~~ ~!:.tlln~ blood pres,ure and by do, you will know how lfn· with charges and payments Cause of all the ex· trailer and placed 1o the 1enlors at UCSB and their "Lorentz force' ii tbUI pro- b bypercbolesterolemla (too port.ant it is for you to fill recorded on wet c I a y c: Item en t w a 1 t be water of Santa Barbara profusor, Dr. Stewart Way, dllC9d, propeHinf tbe ,,. my doctor. He tad 1 ave much cholesterol In the those prescriptions md go tablet... Accounts were set· performance of a ten-foot , harbor where it c:rulnd The model submarine pro-water toward the rear of th• ~tt~e1:;:oi'd,f.'!t~1_b_lood~l-."~~~~~~~·•~•-lo_w_f_M_m_e_t_.~~~~tl•_d_~_u_r_•_•_ch_hl1'~~-'-t_·~~un~m_ann~•d~•-ub_m_arln~•~bull~t~•-ll•_n_uy~wl~th-ou_t-'-pr-opell"--or-,-'-po-il~lb_eU~by~~pr_oo_u_c1n_1~•~boll~t--~-"~~~~ He gave me prelCriptioal !or tllyroid med!clne and pllll UJ help Jll)' blood pressure. Ht '1IO tlOld IM to cut down on tho Illa in m1 met. Al I doll'I believe In ba· bylnl mytell Jull .,.__ I'm a llti!e tired, I did DOI have tha ,....:rlpllon lilied. Don't you --.peaplo ... taking too many pllll! -Mrs. G. Comment: AA -to your 1ut question ftnt: It'• true, there may be too many pill-popper• in tilo U.S. Millioo• of pillJ ani taken unnecessarily as lu.aUva, tranqallizer11 v it am 1 D I , tonier, etc. Granted, tn mam1 cue1, such medicatiom are not needed, but II II oomeUme1 dqll'OUI "' be • drug nihlllll ID<! DOI believe in them at an when medlcadoo II Ml:r nectlWY• It 11 my bunch, altboup I e111't be 1ure wllhout relill' l<Dowlng you or :iour COD· d!Uon, that you ani ... at thOH who 11 netdleaaly en· c!anterinC your beallh by no1 laklnc pWJ. Let me !ell you why. Your -1aya tllat you have blab blood . preuure ID<! • luy thyroid 111Dd. That 11 why he lblDb II neceuUJ for you to tu.• med!clne to combat -pollenllll evtls. Ulldoubleclly, be bu allo lound that 70lll' blood cootainl too much cholellletQI, wlllch II bll reuon !or IUllullnt a low fat diet. It ii likely that ,.... doc· tor inscribed your pllla because hi bow• that the c<>mblnatlOD at blCh blood pre1aure, low tbyrold. ac· tivlty ID<! hl&h choleaterol 11 a cluslc trlod willch may •ndanier a petlea~ maldDI him more 1111cepUblt to cor· -rdtck. My -1et, ''12 Way1 to Provent ID<! Treat CorOD11'7 Dilease" may be Of help to you. U J'OU, or lm)'Cll• elle, W'OUld Dt a copy, -21 ceXI alonC -• aelf .. d. dressed, atamped envelope U. me In con ot the DAILY Pn.oT. Here 1n IOID4 portlal quoUI, wbJch will ailo bt ol help, !run .. arllclo In the Annala of IDtemal MedlclDe (l"eb. 'M) by Alfred D. Steinberg, M.D., co atudies performed in the Deport- meot of Pathology, Harvard Medical School, B o 1 t o n , Ma11.: "The Framlnsh•m (Mau.) atudy bu llbowD that ~ve IUbjecll have mor1 Hvtre coromrJ' aJW)' d 1 I t a I t than nmn-ve (normal) aub- iecll, u Jotlled b7 ao ID· creued freq u • n c y of my oc a rd l altnfarctlom (COr<>nllrY olla<b), That study bas al!o lhowed that h}'percbole11terolemia ( t o o much cholesterol in the blood) was a.ssoclated with an increased risk o f myocardial infarct.I.on at each blood presiUl"I level "Myxedema patient• (very low thyroid llaod function) with hypertension had an average coronary narrowing of greater tblD 75 percent versus an aver-it coronary narrowing ot le11 than 50 percent in control patienlJ wllh hypertonlion (alone}. MyJ:edema plltienll with normal blood press1D'e nad no incruH in coronary 'nmTOWing when compared .wttll oonnotemlw c-oll. TbHe flndlng• auggegt that it i3 only in the ~ ol hypertension that the llpld . (lat) obn«mallliet 0 f • hypolllyroldlsm (low thyroid . !unction) CQnlril>ute to in- .creased. e or o oar y nar· rowing. In one 1 • r I • • , ·liyperlenalon ,... IOlmd in 50 pttCQ of b;ipo41>yroid tienU. Of these, one half 50 percent of bypolhy<dd patient.I. Of tbeM, Ofle hall ·b. e c am 1 no rmotensive ~-blood preuurtt) '1rith t b '1 r o 1 d treabnenL Early Ina~ ol mµ· BOAT BUFFS AIM•lll LM••Mt " ... •"" k tl • ti111a Maff11t "41ttt .,,.,~,"' .... ,.., ..... ,..,., lit Oran .. C.•"'r· HI• ... chui•a , • ..,,,. .t Mato ,,., '"' y1,lrrtl11t "'"" h • tla lly faatim af tf11 DAILY PILOT. '.'i • • LUX Toilet Soap ALL Detergent IATH Sl?E JUMBO SID .. BLANKETS , ... _ "Tllerml" Blllket --ldlol Ir "Seville" ,_ __ ,, --55% '.':l.,l!J .,.,.. fl' llldnl. " IOIJjOlion. t\ 2.98 IOlidcokn. :1 3.98 ~ <Si,) • f ashlon Quick ... .. 1111t-llf ~~~1.19 lro1i1g Table ~"I:..~ 8 88 pad llld CM' llt. I torN Fii •••••••••• IUlllRMAID Dish Drainer Your choitt plastic disb 2 28 drainer or D11in Tray in ISSOrted colors. • Hcl Clearasil. Yanishi11g Forn111a CttH -Medicatiocl can be Jgc woni under makeup day or night. Clearasil Soap Helps Pl'lect 1 .... ishtd s>io m AJ 3 t 711c to day. I .i- Skil T• r .. 11 cwus~ ... Gi"""" cream medication covers Jgc blfll'li~. wtrilt.£:ting itCllt. .... 1uMs1n £"ma.di P~ wtp.I, COO&,ftAV Polaroid111 .SUN GLASSES . lolj ..... 11r ... -llactor l""'"wlll -- "Cnztrr ht" :r:.. 2.98 ?l· '. SCOPE Moalll Wash 1.98 .... Bays' Briefs & T-Ulrts Wllll -... infort:ld. Slzll Z· l~ • 6' .. 1 Boys' s'"'" S. Crew Sacks ~ Wllita W/Mst. s1ripe tops. Silos i ID 811 & ~II. Re1. 59c 2i$1 Boys' Stretch-Rib Banloa Seeks l . Assl sfyla l!ld colors ln Cable and ~I. Slus I ~Ill I ~IL 49'="" Mii's Stntcb a.1. Seeks r.r """'fit ... Aul <Olo!I. °"' ,,, frts l~ll 7gc Bauer & Block ATHLETIC SUPPORTERS S.INCH WAISTUllDS A -&lastie -"'I ""'"" ,., frt 1 Pl'tactloi 1M to111 wur. Mlde of lltlt· rnitlillt ndtllr, ... llO Qltilj ~ Ul'L sa.L-nts Wlist 26" ti Jr --llbWllst32"•1r ~-llO lillsl .. •II" #5 1JI YllH "' 1.15 Y11M aac 1.29 PUREX Bleach EXTULARCE 5 QT. SIZE 55c SENTRY flea Collar FDR DOGS OR CllS 1.39 WHITE KING 110" KING SID 79c AQUA VELVA SHAYICUAM whll"lll-· ••• 11u. 2t.r1.0 ....... A ,,.__ A BA.CK·~ ·SCHOOX.. A NGE Theme Boak =" Slaplw s,1r1I lits into rin& ~~Pod~l"'li9'« binder. J sub-7• u.111o """1111111 Ject dividers. ;i-flftllh. P1t1ell Tablet !1ln -90 lleet• Siu -8"•12''. Lil- SALT WATll SpinniRf omrr "Hick f l11" f tt 2· piece tubular glm rod with 4 spinninl[ 1uldes, anodized 1lumi~m lock· ing reel s!1l. "Quick 550" reel hclds up to 380 yds. of IS.lb, liM. lej.17.41 -IAYU.M FIUH WATll Spinnino-OU!frr "ll1cl Fl11"1\~.ft. tubular 1ilu od Ii~ I cP.rw19d spiM111J 1UideS, cork hl!ld le, ICflW-lock· ill reel wt "Quick 210" reel wittl fdjust- 1blt dr11 ... 111timmt. loillM-IAY!lM 29.48 23.44 "Spin-Casti1&" OUTFIT I 1 "H1tll fi11" 6~·1t red witll 4 s~in· ning 11.Jides, specie cork llandle, Iii~ tetl seat. "Ptn111iA 202" reel with heavy duty bail. Holds up lo 250 yds. of 4 lb. lr':ino lint. • SALT WATll Outfit WW' ''Qi 4.69 8.88 Kolestral Hair Conditioner CONDITIONINR TIEAnlUIT FOR HAIR AND SCALP Conditions ni&lecled 11.lir ••• •~ or dulled by permallellts, bleacbes, tlnB. weather llld back cambinc. Makes hair buutiful, 1il~y. hlstrolls and wvres u si• "ltina• 2 119 1.10 Sb1 !•r 1 HUNTINGTON IEACH :~kr.~ . NDYPORT IEACH W'-\~~.!: HUNTINGTON IEACH :"t':':..,. ·-·-·-·-·-·-· lla*k Stitt...,rwlMOllt- tlw/pocllltlblll" -3 1111111·-. AnL "lon.;JQ" 611-Blrd Glue r ~ Pl'i«". mtts l --~ ..... l!llc llLtfU Uil. Y11r &mice JADE , Choose from f1mo11 labels IWrinr IUCb ,. conlin& lltlsts asr •Lhlllhltlp • FrW Sllltrl • llncl1I .... _ 1.49 .... 12-Translstor Radla S.11111111 -111-...... =!~.:-:4 88 u .. ttbltlltJ-, R ALTONI Portable RadlD COMET ALUMINUM WARE ErgPoacher e 1''~'.;;;: 1.88 8-Breeze Box fan Muffin Pan _.... 2 speed, "" sli1t1. 2tl" ax1r1 i.ao 12c1,... ~ size -3 "*'14 88 Tdon coat· 1 83 ffi'1' lopict pillllc ed. • cnlL • bale OI• .1714" I I ~.~t,,R,:!~ m:: 1.88 Pmllllr dftm ·:=======. ~7~:r.; tr Playtex TAMPONS 1 . . fl THE FllST-llAY TAN Dorrble Bolll' . • ., b 411' _ 11.- .1 ql --1 98 . • S.H·N)ntlll ,,,. . . ""' -f-- ""' ••• llft, ~ ·-!tth~ !~~-~ ..... 198 ~ side. • lipl1r l Slfll h11f I CtllDgne Mist , • , 2 tL Alfl"I Spny Dustin1 Powder 4-G!. "'$-lm,r ·~ ESCIOldl I AMI- "' Old spto.. llCI 1.25 lipln l $Qlf hi If 31 llyloo tip ""' .al tlil """"' -The new w., • -Clloa " -11(.411 3i1.00 Super Sala PAPll-MAR 11150" Pen !'. =.,...:.r Glalll 1111111Pi! • CREME lie CHAIT1LLY " ....... . • • • • : • • • l • • • • • , • ..... ..;. -"t ft "' .a. • ,,,• """°' =C =a .. --... ' -.. ;p; .-.:...--.......------------------ I r I I • I ' • ' JO WLY •ILOT ~: Fo1· Tl1e Record ltleetlng• WllDNISDAY ""OMllT'orl1t .. °YMttn\lllhrt. V 1111 ""'l"'• lOd h'f&lde Drl.,._ N..,.,.. •ffdl. •:• •. m. • Cl\'lt #Jr l'ttr'tl ~-Ne. n. toUl Aacll Irr.ti, C•tlo ,,._., 1 '·'"· IMtcll'lk S...t1rlM Lodi• Mo. 111, ""'°"le T_... lJlll S1"ftt 11 SI. ~ Pia«, H-9 l<IKll. 1 '·'"· Wftlft'llllllw Eadie .... Cll/b, Ht'l"ennv 11111, l*l ... di a1w1 .. watml111twr, 1 ·~ HUlll.,,.1111 8Mdl Mawllc loffe, Muolllc Hall, 7fllS Like A.v-. """° tll'lllhWI ••tdl. 1:• '·"'· Coa" Miu Jlffller Ch1mblr el (..,. merce, Mae Verdi Country Club, C.11 M~, I 11.m. COiii MeM E .. 11 A1<l1, 15' W. Uth Sir.et, CO!lll MtN, I "·'"· Sclv•r• 11111.... klM.. Dll\W Club, T-H1ll, Flr1t -lt!odll l Olurdlt 4t w. ltttl St., COiii #.Ml, I ...... Ori"" CounlY "1Nftul' AltNr10mlc1I Awl.. S.nl!lto Hlth khool. Gan:ltn GllWt, l :JI "·"'" o~ C-"t Skt '""'· e11u CIUb. ,_.,. Vt. °"°"'°' Ntwll«f lffdl. l :JO '·'"· Sewt!ll'I si. F(Klftdaflon, Hunl1Mklll BNdl TIN'fl (ft!Mf, C1rtltld Aw..- 1NI Melfi Sir.I, HuntlnelOll l11dl, I p.m. THVl.IDAY HU1W·Lttet Toetlll'lftllr'I Club, Ontrl Ct~a. F1'11lon l11tncl. NtWl'Ol'1 •••di, 7 1.m. B•Nklltl 0.,tlmfll Club"' Cost• Mt!t. Cort1 R-1 Rtsr.vrtnt, 2"'S Htrbor l lYd., Coslt Mew, J::JO t .m. lo.rd of R•tlfon, NtWPGl1 Htrbor· cos11 Mew, Iii•~ llitY Club, n:u w. CD11t HlgPIWt'f, N~POl't llitttll, I t .m. w11rmtr111w Rlll•rr Club, Kln1'1 Ttblt Rt1f8.,..1r11, Wntmlnstff, lt "°°" E•dWltlllt CluO of NtW9'0f'1 l"•l'Mr, Shift Slllrt llt1r.11tr1nl, Nt-1 llNdl, -• • • Klw1nt1 CIUlt et Cosr. Mt1t-North, Corti RMI ll11t1ur1nl, 2"'5 Htrbor BIYCI., Co.It Mtst, 11 :10 ,.m. Nl'WPClf1 Htr.ior Klwtnls Clvb, \tlllt Mtr1N, 10U llilYlkM DrNt, NtwPOl'I letch, 1':10 ,.m. C""'"t del M.tr Exchtnttt Club, \llllt Swftltr1. )$3' E. CD11I Hl1flw1y, Coron• dtf Mtr. 11 noon NfWllOl'f·lrvfnt Roltrv Cl\lb, Dtnltl't RtsNur1r1t, :r&ll llirl1tol Sf,, Co1t1 Mo:u, -· FDUrtf81fl \'111.-., klwtnlt Club, 1'r111- colt'. 111!1 lliffdt l lYCI., Hunllntlotl 8e1ch, 11:15 p.m. O!'tnte C1>11I CIY"•n Club, Miit Vtnlt Country Club. Ca11r. ~ lJ;IS '·"'" Births ....... , ...... 1;$1 it.IOI. T\llld1y, trtn f\ra. 1.on ~-111:;.~ -1•111 Vtl"l 1;111 It·"'· WllltY, fire ft"511 .. flon. T110ert 1nd-:!:l":,," .. , .. di "~:J~ sl. ,.,, ,,....,. n,., 1't;11 I: ·-· !r'f 'W' ""1 '!'t it Aft. : t.ffl. '1 .......,, INlllUI elf. 10!.2 ,, ... t " ...... C•lling •II junior hi girll to fh• TEEN-DIVIDUALIST SHOW THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2:00 p.m. The Bro1dw1y Huntir1tton l1ach and N1wporl e s •• your fri•nds modol! • l••rn the f•ll f•shion f•cts! B MID-SUMMER DRAMATIC BLACK SHIRT SHIFTS CREPES 11.99 17.00 Comfortable cliusics From a famous California maker ••. two easy-in stepins of I 00°10 wool bonded to acetate tricot. A. % button-front with lhort sloeves, +•ilor•d coll•r. Sixes 10-18 in olive, pink, c•mel, tur- quoise or bleck. 8. Zip-front short sleeved st•pin, 1i1e1 I 0-18 in pink, bl•ck, c.•mel or turquoise. ?itail and telcph_on.e orders accepted. Daytin1c Dresses. 73 Black is back in romantic rayon crepes, all flirty and feminine with flowing rayon chiffon sleeves. Easy on back-1ip stepins by Arthur Love, sizes 10-18 and 14 1/i-221/i . c. White pleated collar d . Scoop neck ~tail and telephone ord~s accepted. Budget Dresse6, 27. ) .. ~: ... ;.j , -·· .. • . ' .. -. c U·M I.II'. ~. rwwt. '°JI Chlrtt I•~· aJ9l.. r.cw. mw. ,,., "-"· • ·'----------------------------------------------------------------------. :I •·"""' ur flF'ir. ,_ ..ry '' • .::-.... '"""' '"' ,_, ... N E W P 0 R T H U N T I N GT 0 N B EA C H A N A H E I M h~hlll ti""'-17"1 ltrMt 11111 1<!\J..~. "'" ''""' -'""'.,. 47 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH e 7777 EDINGER AVENUE 444 N. EUCLID e ANAHEIM SHOPPING CENTER 11.3'"~ 1'11111 1!tm1. 111ti ltrtt! "'' Tel•phone 644-1212 Telephone 892-Jll I T •lephone SJS·l 121 tir::;.•,.i. '"""" ""' ltrtott 11111 Shop Moncf•y thru Frid•y 10:00 •.m. to 9:1 0 p.m. Shop Mond•y thru S•turd•y Shop Mond1y thru S1turd1y <l! Nr'>· r.111 •1M1'1·Clf'lttf1• ,..,~ S•turcf•y 10:00 •.m. to 6:00 p.m. I 0 :00 •.m. to 9:JO p.m. I 0:00 e.m. to t :JO p.rn, 1:• •1'!1.~ frpllt ffr• .u-.11 rwn _..'l~~~~~~~~~~..:_~~~~~~~~...:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_J w.1-u. ~ ! ,; ft ·" ' • • • \ . . . ' Seed of Friendship Planted • • JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 w---.r, A-.t Jl, UU M• P ... II Mrs. Joseph Winocur (left) and Mrs. Kenneth Starege (right) tell Mrs; Carl Mitchell how friendship grows by planting and cul· tivating a close organization. For that purpose the Newport· Costa Mesa Branch of the American Association of University Women will host a Friendship Tea from 2 to 4 p.m~ in the Wino- cus' Newport Beach home. Mrs. Starege, Mrs. William McFar· land and Mrs. Harold McConnell will assist. Mrs. Norman Egli, president will discuss the program of monthly meetings and special interest sections. Theme for the year is The Challenge of a Changing Society which will be pursued through four major study groups. I. SCHOOL DAZE -eberyl and Laura Cook can't believe their eyes as Mrs. Douglas Ryder and Mrs. Wallace Short (left to right) prepare for Back to School Daze, a dinner meeting which will initiate the season for the Fountain Valley Woman's €lub Monday, Sept. 9. Belles School ···- Ringing Bells Polishing bright red apples are members of the Fountain Valley 1 \Voman's Club as they prepare for Back to School Daze - a potluck din- ner meeting which will initiate the club year. Members will borrow their daughters' styles and arrive attired in li ttl e girls' school outfits. Colorful school lunch boxes and thermoses filled wlth cattails will center the tables in Tamura School at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 9, and mem- bers and invited guests wtll bring salads, entrees or desserts for the buffet. Appropriate musical entertainment will be provi ded by the club's trio, comprised of Mmes. R. E. Lydden, Mike LoCicero snd Jack Runge, who will sing "Teach Me Tonight." Mrs. William Carroll will accompany them at the piano and Mrs. Richard Kingsbury will direct. The club chorus will sing "Little Red School House," accompanied by Mrs. Carroll, and "School Days," accompanied by Mrs. Peggy Funlc. A lesson in home economics will be presented by Robe rt Gilman, instructor in meat education for Alpha Beta Acme Markets, Inc. He will discuss grades and tuts of meats, economical cuts and the best way& to cook them. He also will explain proper methods of freezing and .storing meats and meat tenderizing. Film .strips Viii.I be shown . and a question and answer period will follow. Sponsoring the program is the Home Management and Finance Section of the club. Serving on the committee preparing !pr the opening event are the Mmes. Douglas Ryder and Emilio Chavez, home management co-chair· men: Frank Amato, hostess chairman; Robert Peterson, Wallace Short, Gerald Stevens, Dale Mowery, Thomas Humpprey, Wayne Hanlon, Curt Burnett. Robert Moss, Richard Gillum, Melvin King, Loyce 0 . Weaver and Charles Keane. Ju niors Enjoy La st of Lazy Su mmer Days As summer speeds to a close and the busy bustle of fall waits just around the corner, members of the South Coast Junior Women's Club are planning to take advantage of the last of the lazy days at an old-fashioned family picnic beginning at 9: 30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 25, in O'Neil Park. Ready for lemonade, lots of food and games are (left to right) Mrs. James West, Erin Thomp- son, Mrs. R. Bond Thompson and Diane West. Unwanted Line Can Be Switched Off With Simple Click DEAR ANN LANDERS; My wife has been plagued by obscene phone calls for three weeks. We have noti- fied the police and they say they can 't do anything unless we can keep the caller on the line while someone alerts the police or the phone company. Often Ute calls are made from public booths so you see how hard it is to cat· ch someone in the act. My wil• i. oo traoquili>ers and w.. tng weight She asked me to write and ask If you know of an effective method of dealing with these nuts who have nothing better to do than call people and talk rotten -Mr . L OF BOISE DEAR MR. L: Tbe beat wa)' to deal with an obscene phone call 11 to haar up Im mediately, This deprives the eaUer or the thin( be wants most -an ~ ~ ANN LANDERS audience. lf Ute caller 11 phonin g from a booth be wUI not keep throwing dimes lnto lhe slot to bear the cUck of a receiver. The per1oii who Is belna: harassed should never -reprat. neve r -ex· pre11 fear, di1gu1t or anger. This ~1111 deUa:bt the caller and encourage hhn lo keep calling'. If the ca llf':r mMkts ~ threat of 1crlou1 bodily hnrm tht (';i ll should be reported to lite pnllce. 1'he Bell Sys tem 111 developln1 101ne arnuz· ~ Ing electronic equipment th Al can automallcally 1et off an alarm In the central office and trace the caller. l wat 1urprt1ed to learn from Jo1epb O'Brien or llUnolt' Bell that many harassing: calls Are fron1 relatives, neig hbors or acquaintances who bear a grudge. DEAR ANN LANDERS : You miss· cd a good opportunity to educate yftur readers when the wom8n told about her friend who had lost 40 pounds and I --·· ...... --_ .... --··· ................. ------..---....____.,,_....___...__ suddenly began to behave 1 i k e a teenager. She wanted to know i( there was any connection. Many physicians are running into "diet pill psychosis." This type of personality change is associated with addiction to amphetamines. The pub· Uc should be made aware of the prob· !em. You can help. I hope you will do so. -JHB (l\ID OF SHARON. P.A.) DEAR DOCfOR: Thanks for your letter. !'tty mcdJcal consultanll agree 'hat di et pill p1ycbosl1 11 a real danger to those who want to lose weight without the help of a physician. Amphetamines (or pep pills) pr o-. duce tension, acoelerate the responses and promote lmpulslve behavior. No one should take these pill• (or ANY plll1, for that matter, without the ap- proval of hl1 physician. DEAR ANN LANDERS : In a col- umn which appeared some time ago there was a passing reference to a woman who strapped a bicycle i1orn around her husband's head at night to keep him from snori ng, Will you please repeat the details because my old goat has been keeping me up with his Infernal snoring tor the past three years and 1 am willing to try anything. . Don't suggest separate bedrooms because I put him in another bedroom two years ago and he snores so loud I can hear him anyway. Please tell me the price of the horn and where I can purch.ase ont. -NEED A NIGHT 'S SLEEP DEAR NEED: l do not recommtall the solution. Bicycle born1 are ftr bicycles. If your hu1band'1 snoring 11 as bail a1 you say, I suggest be go lo a doctor. Minor aura:ery mla:ht solve the pro- blem. \Yant to say "no" to drlnldnt without your buddies putting you down ? Get cued In. Write for "Boote and You -For Teenagers Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cent& ln coin and a long, self.addressed, stamped envel ope with your request. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of the DAILY PILOT, encl ofo ing a self·addressed, stamped lato velope. • • -_, -----------------------------~---------- n Youthful Models Dressed In their best back-lo-•chool attire are (left to right) Brian Cruden. Lori Cruden and Sally Escher. Fall clothing for all ages is featured in th• daily fashion shows staged at South Coast Plaza which began yesterday and continue through tomorrow. A dance contest is held each day following the show which begins at 2 p.m. Dance partners are not required. Klothes Kraze for School Daze is the theme. ~~ -w~ I c ~I). :':-.. '.:': •. . , ''--' '• . / . . . . - Way to a Man's Heart DEAR NANCY: I lave only been married a few months, but my wife shows no interest in cooking even though I complain about ber terrible chow. She ju.st doesn't understand that the way to a man's heart is through his stom· ach. If this keeps up I'm going to have to start eating out ' in restauranta. STARVING BRIDEGROOM DEAR STARV- ING: At the rate you're going you're gong to need a diner's club card as well as a lawyer. The only way to a man's heart may be through his stomach. but a lot of women fin d it a boring detour. Better try a little tenderness and en· COW'age your bride'• cooking efforts lnltead of carping. If you can't find anything else, compliment on her on way she butters toast. Here's a dish for beginners that she'll have a hard lime ruining; but if she does, smile and be quiet. With a little patience from you she'll learn. This dis h serves two. BRIDE'a CHICKEN DIV AN \2 teaspoon salt 2 chicken breasts, boned 2 tablespoons butter 1 package frozen broccoli 1 can cream of crucken soup \2 cup mayonnaise l teaspoon lemon juice 'h teaspoon curry powder '{, cup Parmesan cheese, grated Salt chicken breasts. Melt butter and saute chicken breasts until golden and cooked (about 10 minutes.) Cook broccoli in boiling salted water until barely tender. Drain. Arrange broccoli in a gt' eased baking dish; place chitken on top. stir together soup, mayon nai se, lemon juice and curry powder . Pour over chicken. Sprinkle with cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes . What:s your cooking predicament? Send it in and see if we can cook it! While we cant personally answer alt your letters thos e letters with the most enter· taining ur pertinent culinary problema will, be publi,rh.ed in this column. Send uour z.etter1 to WHAT COOKS? clo THE DAILY PILOT. Bruncheon Scheduled Golden Anniversary Mrs. Norman Watson To Head Volunteers ·Treasure Box Opens A new fund raiser for the Children's Ho 1 pit a 1 of Orange County will be the CHOC Treasure Box. Mr. and Mrs. Miguel A. Yero Sr. of Costa Mesa celebrated 50 years of marriage by repeating their nuptial vows in St. Joachim's Catholic Church. The honorees were married August 15, 1918 in the Catholic cathedral in Havana, Cuba. They have two sons including Miguel A. Yero Jr. of Costa Mesa, Mrs. Paul Berhart will two daughters and 10 grandchildren. A reception entertain thee x e cut iv e took place in the home of the junior Yeros. board of Harbor Forum and -;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-, An expanding March of Dimes program has ap· pointed Mrs. N o r m a n Watson of Newport Beach to act as OaWornia volunteer advis:>r for the National Foundation. Mrs. Watson was at the sa me time named chairman of the Council of Callfornia Volunteer Advisors in which she will work with Mrs. H. 0. Boyvey of Balboa, Mrs. Walter F. Johnson of San Anselmo, Mrs. R. Lyle Mitchell of San Diego and Mrs. Franklin Iandecker of Mill brae. The Newport Be a ch woman will work closely with women's clubs and y o u t h-serving organita· tions to develop educational projects concerning prenatal care, the problems of birth defects and the help available to p at i en t 1, families and communities through the March o f Dimes. A board member of the Orange County Chapter of the National Foundation• March of Dimes, she also is past president of t h e California Federation of Junior Women's clubs. She received the Ca Ii for n i a Governor's Award {or Out.standing Service in the Field of Mental Health and is a founding member of the board and past president of the South Coast C h i I d Guidance C..'linic. Mrs . Watson is a member of the Orange County Com· prehensive Pl811ning Com· mission, Qroange C o u n t y Mental Health Association VOLUNTEER ADVISOR Mrs. Norman Watson and the Harbor A r e a Coordinating Ccuncil . In her position a s volunteer advisor she will assist the stepped·up attack on birltt detects which af· fllct more than a quarter of a million infanta born in the United St.ates each year. The March of Dimes group is also substantially expanding its nationwide network of Birth Defects Centers as well as in· teDSifying its educational programs and financing of basic research. Pour Some More Grand opening of the thrift shop will be Friday, Aug. 23, at its permanent location , 531 S. Main St. in Orange. It will be open six days a week from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will be staffed by members of the 13 women 's guilds. Mrs. Edward Corlett of the LitUe Red Wagon Guild is general chairman. while assisting her will be Mrs. James Evans of Cinderella Guild and Mrs. Leon .Jones of Little Red Wagon Guild. Anyone wishing to con- tribute saleable clothing and household items may deliver the merchandise to the Treasure Box. Proceeds will help provide medical care for children whose health needs exceed family in· come. LB Overeaters Every Tuesday of the month Overeaters Anonymous gather at 8 p.m. in Laguna Hills. Leisure World, Clubhouse 2, dining room 1. PENETRATION N••rlv 1v1ryon• t••o:l1 the DAILY PILOT, hom•town n1w1· p•p•r for th• F1bulou1 Or1n91 Co11t. Coffees Perk how thriUV are you when you borrow money The Laguna Beach Branch ot ttie American Association of University Women invites eligible women ta their in· formal summer coffees. For residents of Mission Viejo and El Toro the home of Mrs. Gary Leach of Mission Viejo will be the letting on Thursday, Aug. 29, from 10 a.m. to noon. She is taking reservttion11 at &'37-3093, W<llileO resid i n g in Laguna Ri\kii have two loca· tions for parties tomorrow. The home of Mrs. George H. Egg!eslDn wiU be t he 1oeoe at 10 1.m. for mem- bers and guest.I with manor numben '51·700. Mn. Cecil Party Planned The El Comlno Real JUDI« Woman'• Club invites women hi the Capistrano Valley are.a to a community lund-ralllng party tomorrow 11 8 p.m. ln the Dam Point Commun!QI Houae. McCoonell is co-ho'1ess. The secood coffee, begin· ning at 10 a.m., is for women living in manor numbers 701-on. Mrs. Lyal C. Baumgardner is the hootess. The Laguna Hilis home of Mrs. James C. Jacobs will be the 10 a.m. coffee scene oo Thursday. Aug . 2 9 . Reservations may be made wW'I her .at 837-8167. She wW be welcoming women with menor numbers 251-450. Earlier this mOflth several coffeeii look pl.ace i n neighboring cities. This year's program wUI include speakers. discussion groups and excursions to cootinue exploration of the National Association Tcpics. • . . Southern California Thrift & Loan specializes 1n personal. business and Tru st Deed loans ... Stop in today and see how we can solve you r imme. diate money problems from depend. able funds available right now. The Thrifty way ca n Qve you money. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA THRIFT & LOAN Graduates ol more than 975 American colleges and wliversities are elifible. Ap. plication blanks will be £Yllilable at the coffees, and yearly dues are $12 .50. M ~hi 170 E1st 17th St., Coslf Mtw .... 646·5045 em~· P chairman i1 6359 Wilshire Blwd., Los An11les ... 653-8220 Mrs . George E, GoodaU. -================--41)1-4703. New 'Stew' the new vice president, Mrs. r Tina Simakis at an informal brunch next Friday at 10 a.m. in her Newport Beach home. After the event, the board will continue plans for the citizenship class which it will conduct at Fashion Js_land Wednesday. Sept. 18, with Ute Orar.ge County Registriar of Voters as the principal speaker. CM Au xi liary The first Thursday of the month members of the American Legion Aux· ihary. Costa Mesa Unit 455. gather in the American Legion Hall. at 8 p.m. Flying out of San Fran· cisco lnlernational Air· port as a new steward- ess for TWA is Miss Janis Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rus· sell E. Miller of New- port Beach. She com- pleted six week s of Kids Like to training in Missouri. 'Ask Andv' ~~~~~----- V A~T PA"KING IN REAR BOB'S IARIOAIN CENTER NEW! Store Hours MON. • FA:I, 9::JO lo .,oo SA TURDAY 9::JO to S:OO CLOSED SUNDAY 1812 Newport Bl., Costa Mesa Ph. 646-7167 Ulll lll! BEAUTY SUPPLY DE ARTMENT A COST and 10% BELOW COST We are dl1<ontlnuln9 our leauty Supply Depart- ment -AR Items must 90 to make room for other merchandise. IOllN llLONDI! llOtOCllNT ILONDll NATUllALLY llO!ojOE BRECK SHAMPOO Style Hair Spray " "· u• 67c lEG. 1.00 THAT'S MY COLOR :;~· '1.62 ROUX TINT & TONER '•'""' 59c LAPIN Colorful Tint ,:,'\'.: .. 40c CLAIROL SHAMPOO r·.~ '1.29 Pantine & Kindness.~·:; ,_,, 39c COVER GIRL u, .... '""::'G. LIO 96c R.H. LIPSTICKS WOLTZ !TA.LIAN NAIL POLISH Cutex Manicurist MAYBELLINE All tl'e- •1G. 1.00 WHILE STOCKS LAST •••• 1.10 MANY MORE BEAUTY ITEMS, TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION " . WOOLWORTWS _.lo~.~~~ ~ COSTA MESA -- COLORFUL BATH MATES Deep pile, lOOS Dacron9 polyester lid cover and 18"x30'' bath mat Choose Shocking Pink, Ice Pink, Green. Gold, Bittenweet, Bri.~tol Blue. or White. 77 •et ASK ABO UT LAY-AWAY, 10% clown holsll your purchase at Woolwc:rtb's, no CQ.n')ina chugM, ever. • ..... -.. ···--·· YOUI MOHIY'I wotfH ... llf W'DOLV--on1H·• Shop Every Evening Mond•y thru Friday Until 9:30 p.m. - Saturday 'Til 9:00 p.m. ----- ~ ' ' ----- J ·-~----~--~-------------·-"-''"'· - l ' I I .-. -· ' . --... .... -. . ----:;; ' 1- Horoscope Leo: Pace to Change THURSDAY AUGUST 22 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Where there was inac· tion today there is change, com mwrlcauon, possible travel. Personal magnetism draws opposite sex. You could sell anything. Be vital, dynamic. nus could be your big day. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Much action , centers around home base. Be sure oC safety measures. Rushing about could bring adverse results. Family member may appear to be carrying chip on shoulder. Be diplomatdc. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Take care during any journey. Excess speed is to be avoided. Obtain hint from TAURUS message. Yo u coWd get news w h i c h creates abrupt change of plSins. Be mature -main· lain poise. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): You get action where income, gain, opportunity are concerned. Be aware of details. Have fact$ at hand. If information is correct. you impress those in posi- tion to pay. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)' You receive news w,hich gets you going on unique assign- ment -could involve writing, traVel, -publishing or advertising. Be receptive. Utilize creative resources. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)' Important relationship can get started through mutual interest. Participate in club, gro1.4p activity, Sh or t journey could result in new bobby. Keep mind open to various possibilities. LIBRA (Sept. 23.Qct. 22)' Strive to perfect techniques. Friend can be of aid . Be a good listener. Some who ap- pear aggressive are merely exp re ssing enthusia6Dl. Realize this ; respOnd ac· cordingly, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): IDdividual who carries weight ol authority seeks your opinion, Be Corthright. A void pretending -state tacts as you know them. This results in greaWr con- fldence, respect. Honesty wins day. SAGITTARIUS fNov. 22- Dec. 21): Check messages. Be sure yQU understand di re otions, instructions. Carelessness in these mat. ters could create frlction. You are due to finish an im· portant project._ do it well. CAPRICORN (0.c. 22- Jan. 19): What you regard· ed a secret comes into open. Seek new avenues of expression. Encourage fresh contacts. Don't hang on to outmoded methods. Mdney situation requires direct ac· tion. AQUARIUS !Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Unless you control im· pulse. temper, ttiere could be break in important rela· tionc;hip. Attention centers aro und marriage , partnership. Legal agree- ment may not be all that it appears. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Avoid any walkout. You may feel abused, misun· derstood. But display of temperament at this time does not aid cause. Strive to retain sense of balance. Be aware of consequences. MRS. MICHAEL DORAZ Wed in Ma11achu11tt1 Nuptial Vows Performed M. A. Dorazes To Live in CM During double ring rit.es in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport B e a c b Betty Ann Thompson became the bride of Robert Lawrence Ingalls of Laguna Beach. The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierenfield performed the ceremony for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Scott Thompson of Newport Traveling to Fall River, Mass. for her wedding was Donna Mary Madden of Cos· ta Mesa, who became the bride of Michael A. Doraz in the Sacred Heart Church. The morning services were conducted by the Rev. Lester L. Hull and the bride was given in marriage by her father, Patrick Madden. The new Mrs. Doraz is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Madden of Costa Mesa, while her husband's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter Doraz of Fall River. A reception in th e Pocasset Country Olub in Portsmouth, R. I. followed the ceremony. Beach and the son of Mrs. Her veil of .. silk illU5ion fell Lillian lllgalls of Sacramen- from a double crown ac-to and George Ingalls of cented with lace and seed Arlington, Mass. pearls. Given in marriage by her W.aid of honor, ~ss Joy father, the bride wore a Ke n y on a n d J u n 1 or white silk organza over taf- bridesmaid Miss P a u I a feta gown, trimmed with Madden wore pink chiffon chantilly lace and featuring gowns fashioned with a a train. She carried white scoop neckline and cap orchids, gardenias and sleeves. A band of venise stephanotis. lace in a floral pattern trim· Attendi'ng as matron of med the empiie bodices. honor was the bride's sister- Chiffon loops with floral in-law, Mrs. Tom Thompson trim designed each head· who arrived from l:lonolulu piece. for the wedding. She wore a Other attendants, Susan pastel blue silk over green Delisle, Colleen Murphy, frock and carried carnations Cheryl Murphy and Judy and delphinium. Stafford were similarly at· Gowned alike and car. tired in aqua and wore rying identical b o u q u et S matching headpieces. were the bridesmaids, NJss For her wedding day the bride chose a gown fashion- ed with tiers of chantilly lace and silk organza, ex- tending to a cathedral train. Walter Doraz was best Mary Cramer, Mrs., John:,.-,== man while ushering guests Richard, Miss S h a r o n Birthdays Celebrated to their seats were Patrick McCasline and Miss Jean Madden, David Doraz, Riy-Corney. mond Brogi, Ted Step and Attending as best man Michael Welch. M ark was James Clark, while Delisle was ring bearer. ushers were Thompson, The former NJss Madden Vernon Baker. Denni s is a graduate of Newport Rosenberg and David Ber· Harbor High School and ry. Orange Coast College. She is Following a reception in attending California State the chur.ch's fireside room, College at Long Beach. Her the newlyweds left on a husband is an a·lumnus of Canadian honeymoon. Upon Single Catholic college Durfee High School and was their r eturn they will reside "" ·th a student at Bryant College. in Laguna Beach. graduates or nurses wi He served with the U. S. The bride is a graduate of birthdays in August will be Army. the Principia, St. Louis and feted by the Catholic Alum-The couple will be at California State College at nae Club of Orange County home in Costa Mesa follow· Fuilerton. Pier husband at. Friday, Aug. 23, at 8 p.m. ing a wedding trip to the tended Atlaotic Union Col- All members fitting the Hawaiian Islands. lege, Massachusetts. above description will be ljjjiijj--iiijjiiijj--~~-----iiijjiiilii--~~jjiji guests of honor during the YOU party, to take place in Hun· A NEW tington Beach. Guests are welcome. There will be dancing to exotic sounds of steel band music from Trinidad , original polka music from Yugoslavia and American music. Swimming and tennis will be available for the sports minded. Membership is open to qualified Catholics, and more information is available by calling Miss Barbara Renner at 638-0959. OCCAC meets on the second Sunday of every month at 7:30 p.m. in the Charter House across from Disneyland. Secretaries At 6:30 p.m. every second Thursday women of Bahia Chapter of National Secretaries' Association In· ternational assemble in djf. ferent locations to attend meetings. Mrs. Sally Flem- ing at 673-6360 may be telephoned for additional in- formation. WAlll:MOU'SIE OUTLET FURNITURE ... CARPET 811 SOFAS $169. ·~-FORTREL CARPETING .... .... 5.95 J, J, KNICKEUOCKH 4001 lllCH ST., N.I. ,....,_.. ,.11..... ' MlcAt1flWl'f 545-8409 in a MOMENT OR TWO a HAIRPIECE by malAed See •nd try on1! You will loo k ind feel lov lier thin ever. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE LOW PRICES! (effective 'til Aug. 311t, so hurry!) The TOPPER 1 wiglet designed for $ 4 9 5 the fill-in or 1dd-on .... , . , .. , , , . , . . . • The WIGGLE 1 wiglet with lot1 of curls and swirl .............. , ... . '7.95 The MAXIE 1 wiglet so Iara• it styles like • cascad• CASCADES ................ s9,95 B.ig and full for the new curly look $14.95 WE SPECIALIZE IN R .. tyllng-Cl .. nlng--Rep•lring BenkAmeric•rd--M•ttar Ch•rge malli11~ i malli11~ WIG SALON WIG & BEAUTY 638-9190 SALON 1144 Wllthltl111'-AftHI 548-3446 JIO.D ._ 17tlt s ...... STATER.'S CENTlR Hlll~R.lN SQUARE w.._, .. ,.,, Collf.,,.lo c..t.M .... Cel ....... Once-a-year VIP~ylon tricot pantie sale •for Ill• Very Intelligent Pupil BI KINKl'S R19. LOO Now l/:Z.60 ... ······· TRUNK Si1•1 5, 6, 1 R••· 1.65 Now J/4.25 Si1•1 I , ' R••· 2.00 Now J/S.20 BRIEF Sh•14to 7 R19. 1.50 Now J/).75 Si111 8, t . R19. 1.75 Now J/4,50 FLARE LEG Si111 6, 7 R19. 2.25 Now J/S.&S Si111 8, 9 R19. 2.75 Now )/6.•S OPEN 9,3 0 lo 6,oo, ANO FRIDAY EVENINGS CONVENIENT PARKING AT OUR REAR I EASTI ENTRANCE IN COSTA MESA IT'S DtPAftTMt!NT STOl\e! 1816 Newport Blvd. ,-' Foreign Dignitaries View Pageant Don Williamson (right) producer of the Pageant of the Masters chats back· stage with Mr. and Mrs. Alvaro Obregon of Mexico. Obregon is a former gov• ernor of the state of Sonora and son of the late president Alvaro Obregon. The Festival of Arts runs through Aug. 24. THE DIMINISHER PERFECTION IN UNDERSTATEMENT. Beauty is softly controlled curve! that fit iin with today's form hugg!ng fashions. Nemo offers Small Chaifge to the lusciously endpwed you with the "minimizer bra" that pares you down for today's shapes with floating undetwire support. Low Cut .sides ate perfect for that sleeveless look! In white, or nude; 32·38 B,C 6.50, D, 7.00, DD, 7.50. NEWPORT ((!urtt of Felllfon e H""'1 INCi! T1"""-.... uu ihOO Moil. lll'V !"r1. 10:00 •,m, 1$ 7:• 11.1n. i ll. 10 •. m. lo f ::lll •·"'· • HUNTINGTON BEACH rm Ed!tl"' Avt I Mllntlllllofl l1•d 1 T.ilOl'lont ~ lftoit MOl'ldf~ ltirv S.lvnll Y 10100 •.m. lo ffJO•.m. ' ' . Foundations, 19. Mail and telephone orders accepted. I . -.. -·---·-----.. ........ ...._....._.._ __ ... _ .. --·----·. ·-· ---··. -. ----------------------------"''--- 111111!1111 ............................................................................................... ~~~~~~~---,---' -• T. I J4 OAILV PILOT boys' sweater and action pant la'fings 5.00 valuH a , Hardy permanently pressed cotton and nylon tw ill denim. 3-7. 2.59 b. Famous maker cardigans of Dupont Orlon• Acrylic. Asst. 4-6x. 3.49 jumpers feature action skirts 4.49 5.50 values Its solid top has b rass-look buttons. Bonded Orlon• a crylic in many silhou- ettes, solids and ploid s. Shown, a kick pleated p loid. 4-6x. In 7 to 14. 5.99 girl's sportswear 77 '-· ,n .r. s;, length luxury pile coat 22.99 and 17.99 Magnificently plush acrylic pile with quilted milliu m lining. In ash and blond. preteen 6-14 , girl's 7-1 4. preteen 90, girl's 56 • • -t ~ ,. ". . no-iron dresses in happy plaids 4.99 Big collection of permanently pressed• polyester and cotton dresses that never need ironings. 7-12. 4-6x. 4.59 girl's dresses 56 sleepwear to sleep and dream in 3.99 5.00 values Famous maker brushed acetate and nylon sleepwear. In pajamas and long gowns. Hot pink, maize, mint, aqua. 4-1 4. girl's sleepwear 79 girls' leather loafers 6.99 reg. 9.00 The classic style Apache. Perfect for starting off to school. In swamp, blu e 5-10. boulevard shoes 112- raincoat with cozy zip-out-lining 9.99 Bright red a nd green ploid combed cotton tarpoon coat sheds water, its zip-out rayon lining sheds cold. Black velveteen collar. 4-6x. 7-14. ll.99 girl's outerwear 56 knee high socks at wise savings 59c 1.00-1.50 values Girls in the know want knee-highs for school. Smart mothers save now. We have a bunty of styles in assorted fab- r.1cs and clors. Small , mediu m, large. girl's accessories 118 Jumping Jacks girls' white saddle oxfords 8.99 reg. 11.00-12.00 Big savings you can't af ford to miss. A favonte style for school and play. Misses 12'/i-4. teens 4'/i-9. young people 's shoes 70 -. the easy-moving skirt swings into fall 4.99 7.00 value The easy-moving, fluid line Skirt in bonded Orlon8 a crylic and wools. In solids or plaids. This is one style from a vast collection of the new a nd cla ssic models. 7-1 4. girl's sportwear 77 the jumper wins new honors 9.99 13.00 value Moving in with fr eer cut !or mobility of style. We have a b ig choice of styles :n acrylic solids or plaids. Preteen 6 to 14. preteen sportswear 90 for young boys moc-toe oxford 7.99 reg. 10.00-11.00 Ruggedly styled black leather with flexible composition sole Every boy will love this comfort. Sizes 81/2-12 , 12'/i-4. young people's shoes 70 may co south coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, costa mesa : 546-9321, shop monday thru saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. I' ' " JI -~ ........ , ... 1 • -.. ---_,,. ----- .·~. Mac Phergus • • no-uon 1eans 2.99-3.39 req. 3.50-4.00 Trim-fit western style jeans of polyester and cotton that never need .ironing. Reinforced at points of strain. 6-16. boys' wear 14 boys' no-iron casuals from famous makers 3.69-4,69 reg. 5.50-6.50 Ivy or continental style polyester and cotton slacks that never ever need ironing. Loden, blue, brass. 6-1 2, 26-30. boys' wear 14 MacPhergus no-iron jeans in wide-wale corduroy 3.99-4.99 reg. 5.00-6.00 Cotton corduroy in fast-back, lean-fit western styling. Never need ironing Assorted colors. Jn sizes; 6-12, 14-18. boys'wear 14 ... a av t=+-es: 4 zc c e . . .. . . 4 II A $ I i St 0::1-01 U & S 44 , ....... , . . ' STARTS THURSDAY boys' no-iron sports shirts in oxford by Sheldon 2.99 reg. 4.00 Permanently pressed polyester and cotton oxford cloth shirts with soil re- lease to shed stains. Assorted. 8-20. boys' furnishings 23 boys' mock turtle knit shirts by famous makers l.99 req. 3.00 A big assortment of styles and colors. All cotton, easy-<:are , color fast. Stock up for school and save! Sizes 8-20. boys'lurnishings23 Easy-launder cembed cotton under- wear by Sheldon. White briefs and t· shirts in sizes 8 through 20. boys' furnishings 23 • ' ' • I I • • • • • ' . I ' I • • I • ' • • • boys' cotton flannel pajamas from Sheldon 2.99 reg. 4.00 Warm cotton flannel in both coat and middy styles with elastic waist bands. A big assortment of patterns. B-18. boys' furnishings 23 boys' famous maker corduroy parka l:i.99-17.99 reg. 20.00·23.00 Famoui: maker heavy-duty widewale cotton corduroy shell lined with deep acrylic pile. Sizes: 8-12, 14-20. boys' wear 14 , save on cardigan sweaters from very famous makers 4.99-6.99 req. 7.00-10.00 A smashing selection of colors and sty !es for juniors and preps. It's 1J wise time to save! In sizes: a.20 . boys' furnishings 23 ,. a q:e .... • • . . . . , ; , . . "'. . . ... . . . . DAILY PILOT }$ famous makes ski parka with waterproof shell ll.99-13.99 reg 15.00-17.00 Water proof nylon shell is lined with deep acrylic pile. Zip-front with a con- cealed hood. Assorted colors. 8·20. boys' wear 14 Sheldon's turtleneck shirt wears long sleeves for fall 1.99 req. 3.00 Easy-<:are cotton knit is the top •tyle shirt for every scholar. In white, blue, olive , gold, maize. Sizes 8-20. Great !ooh at savings! boys' furnishings 23 nylon knit shirts put on a mock-turtleneck 2.99 nq. 4.50 Famous maker pure nylon knits, lull- fashion styling with short sleeves. Rich color choice. Available in sizes 8-l 8. boys' furnishings 23 i I I I may c:o south c:oast plaza, san cliego freeway at bristol, c:osta mesa; 546°9321, shop monday thru saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m • • 'i ' J!ll DARY PltDT Wtdntsday, August 21 , 1%8 LEGAL NOTICE Spending in State Continues Climb Total spending ln Cal~onlia topped the 196 billion mark ln July to show a gain of 7 .1 percent over a year ago, although only a ,1 percent iocrease in the. month, according to figures just released by The Bank ol California. PeriOOal spen· di'ng dropped .3 percent to '51.02 billion p r l m a r i 1 )' becaU1Se of higher per$0tlal LEGAL NOTICE taxes and lower payrolls. P11-111\'li Business and government NOTtCI! TO Clll!DITOllS b SlJPl!IUOll COUltT Of' THI! &pending, ()Wever, were up. STATE Of' CAL1,0llNIA FOii The tri·State b a n k ' s '"" co~::!!r,.o•AMO• economic series. seasonally es111• 01 ARTHUR s. al.ACK. Jlt., ~-Husted at an annual rate, Ofc••.ed. &UJ 110TICE tS MEll.EllY GIVEN loll ll'le !l'l!dlkw'i OI Ille 1bow n.m..:I dt<.'*'11 LEGAL NOTICE :"'' 111 l>tf'°"" ~-~11111 d •!n" "''"'' 1111' ----~7""'0"::::'.;:'.:0-7.;"-;,-wld dectdenl •rt ""ulrtd la lilt ltlem,t· ... 1111 Ille nKn)<lry vouchen, In !tot oll!Ct HOTICI OF ~UILIC SALE GI mt clerk o! !I'll! lbovt tnl!lltd covrt, or OF CCILLATEJIAL '" er~MI Them. w!Tl'I l'llt ne<tu.tl'lf (Al..l,O•NIA COMMERCIAL COOi vO~I. Jo 1M u1>11tnl11M!d .. ""' otllct SE(T10M f$M•l e1 lier tttorn1y5 JtrDlllf: J. MtVO tnd NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN ltlal t ~rvln M. Cl\nbrtl, 510 Wfll Sl>;th Stre.t, Pllbllc ule of colllllt•tl wlll "M Mid ,,.,, Suite Number 51], Loi. An,.111, Ctlltom\t IM 27111 di' of A\lllutl, lfil ti the "'°"' of 9001, wllldl ls !tit 1i.ce of Du)lneu ol ll ~OC A.M. ti 'nO 5, Mtln Slrtet, S.ftlt 1f1fo Uftdtni11ned In t !I mtrltl"i pert1\11I"' AM, City of Slnlt Ant, Countv of °''""' 10 lflt nltff of u !d dKmnl, •llflln ti>; $1tte ol Ctllfilrnlt b¥' Htmllkltl Tllrlll I. "'°"Ills '""' 1114! ll•il J>llflHcallon o4 this Loan MClll'ltd ptrTY under tnd PUtllltnl la rw:itl~. that nr!tln secvrlfV ttr-nl mtft Ol'I Otled AVll>JJI 2, 1t61 ~ t "h dtY of J1nu.ry, 1'67 bv .t.111MnV A:uth M. Blick Soitll tM S1n1n sum dbe: G G's lltck E~eculrl~ ol !he 'Wl11 GI O••lrf. !M ~bove n•ml!O 6ecl!Otfll THE ITEMS OF COLLATERAL TO BE J :OROME J. MAYO •M SOLO ARI!: M.-.ltVIM M. CHE511tO, 1 &1r 11/ ... 1F>e!I w/red lt•llltr IOll Sit Wtll $blll Sir..,, " Ill• d'lal'5 red letlllt• Sllllt ffllMNf SU, 25 dltlrs red ltlllltr ltt~ i.-.1.Mtlff, C•lltrftlt •14 17 11bln l ff. llltmtlt< Td1 (11ll) ,,, .... ,. 1 Wtlkln (.Ollltt (4) ltPI Al+ll'Mn for EQC\ttrl1 I t lr CON11l'-' Pllbl!shed Ortntt Co.11 Dtfly PllOI, l 1!1lnltu llffl oink !21 CMlll. A~Ull '· 1', 11, 21. IHI 115Na OATEO THIS 16lfl Of AUll\111, iua. OVER THE COUNTER NASO Llotlnt• for Wedno>d•y, A119ust 14, 1'6t ••• ............. -. ........... LEGAL NOTICE TU ... HAMILTON THRIFT & LOAN llv1 C. Mera.do SUl•OC ,.ublltlled Ortnte eo.11 0111¥ Piiot, Crossword Puzzle NOTICE TO Cltl!DITO•I SU,EltlOlt COUll:T 01' THE STATE 01' CALll'OJl.HIA FOii: THIE COUNTY OF Oll:ANOE Hf. """'°'"' Ellt41t Of MARGARET POWELL SAO'l..ER, OK111ed. NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN fo the crldllO/'$ of ll'lt •boYI named dectdtnl tl\11 1!! i>erM>nS htYl"ll cl•lm1 •01ln1! ~ ulll decedtnl 1t1 requlrt-11 lo Ille lfltm, wll!! the MCHUrY YDllChen. In the offlct at fllt cltrk of TM tbovt entllled courl, or IO llreotnt lt'lem wl!h Ille ne<:H••rY ~rl, lo Ha undtrslvned ti Ille dike at ll<vdolf, Gr1v. wnvte & Htrrhon, At· IOrflfYlo )01 Etll Color-BIWI., P•Slllent, Ct!llornlt, t1101. ""'Id! 11 fhe OllCt Of bu•lnHI of fhe undet119ned In I ll "''""" "rlllnlnt lo !IHI t1!1tt of u lll ll«lodtnl, within 1111 monlh\ 1t11r tht llrst pubil(tllon of 11111 nollct . 0111<1 Auvu.1 1. ltu Akkn Powell Sadltr Ind Wll!lem Howtrll Sidler CIH!~KVlors ol 1t>1! WIU of 11>e '"°"' n.1"11111 Clteeejent Bll:Tf)OLll, GltAY, WHYTE a HA•llU,ON JOI E1:P Calor-'9 11"11. P•.-"'• c1nl9l'n!1. t 1111 T11:· JU: 1fJ.-.J:MI Alt_.,. lor C•E~IClllort P11b!lshed o ..... , Coa11 OtllV Piie!, AUg(lll J, U, '1, 11, ltrl& 1l61"'8 LEGAL NOTICE Aw1111 n. ltrll 1~ LEGAL NOTICE C•ll:T11'1CATE OP' IUSlloflESS, 1'1CTITIOU1 NAME Tiit underslg....:I don certify hi !1 c.o11-ducll1>11 • DllllNH II :Ja11 Blrcll Slrttl, NtwPOrl Beach C11/lorn11, under llHI! llc- llllOVJ llrm n1me of CEltTIFIEO ENTERPRISES •n<I lhel 11ld firm 11 com~ell ol 1h• lollcwlt111 person, whOlt ntmt In 11111 Ind Pl•Ct ot resldtnce I• 11 lollcW1~ WILLIAM &URKE, 1164 L!,,.;oln, A111lwlm. Ctlllornlt . Oiled ALl!IUll :10, 1961 WILLIAM BURKE S11te of C1lllorn!•, Orante C°""t'I': O.. A1111u•I :10, 19611, ~ore me, 1 NoltfY Public In &nd lo• •11d Sl1te, oerM>n&ll'I' IPOll•ed WILLIAM BURKE kr.ll'<j" fo me 10 bt lt>e oer10n wl'lc11t ntmt 11 1ubstrlb- od lo the wllhln ln1lrumenl "'" ICknoWled-Qed he h•• t•KUled tlll t.tmt. Ormah V. U!! Ncllrv Publlc-C11llon1I• Prlnclotl Ofl lct In Or1nee Covnrv MY ,.,...... ... 1.... E~Plres March 11, 1t72 Pubrlo.llld Or•ntt Co11I 01lly Pllo!. Autuat 11. lt '"" Sea!nnboer 4, 11, "" \UMt LEGAL NOTICE -------- ~~~-•• ----.-·----~·~-~--··-... -A. ' I l i I I I I I ' I I I I ' I I ' I I I -• -. ~ • Tuesday's Oosing .. . • • ;a:; 454 4 e eg o se;s:u Prices -Complete New I i 4 ,, Pi a 5. ¢ cc ~ York Stock • ~·l'CCC-C i : ' 1 •, .. "' . . • ....... 1'68 DAILY PILOT Exchange List I • . . ---~ . DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE For 'Wall{·in' Schools Fountain Valley school officials are seeking apptov· al of an almosL uncontested $8 million bond proposal Sept. 17 to provide the system with all the buildings they think they'll ever need. The $8 million, supplemented by $17 million In state School Building Fund loans, will provide 11 new schools, bringing the total number to 23, to care for the peak enrollment of 17,700 students the district expecF.i by 1978. .. The building program, schoolmen say, would make the system a "walk-in" district, providing a school with- in walking distance of nearly every child. And furthermore, di strict's finance directors say, the payback on the bonds will not increase taxes. Such a situation as expounded by Fountain Valley administrators is obviously beneficial. The bonds are to provide all the schools officials say they need, unless city projections of population and construction growth change radically. Voters are pro- mised. this is "the last time," even though the district has only asked for approval of four proposals since 1952 . The safety of the children is a foremost factor. since they would seldom have to cross a major roadway go.- ing to and from school. The district, too, could save the $22,000 it spend s for each bus it buys or leases. Having a school in each quarter section should as· sure residents the district will not be faced with over~ crowded schools in the future. This year, Fountain Val· ley and Harper Schools will hold slightly more than the maximum limit, and by the end of the term, four more ,schools are to be overcrowded. The school district existed 87 years with only one school. Then in 1963, it had five under construction at the same time in order to meet the growth rate of the city. While it educated only 660 students just eight years ago, the district bas experienced a 3,000 percent growth Facts, Fiction About Crime In America Facts and F iction About Crime la the U.S.: Fiction: Most homicides are com· mitted by criminals, with gain as their motive. Fact: Most homicides, by far , are committed by people without criminal records, not for gain, but for passion. Fiction: Most homicides are com- mitted on their victims by strangers. Fact: Most homicides, again by far, are committed on their victims by friends, acquaintances, relatives, or sweethearts, not by strangers. Fiction: Prison sentences in coun· tries such as England are longer than those in the U.S., and thus the crime rate is reduced. Fact: Prison sentences for com· parable crimes are generally shorter in England than in the U.S.; but con· viction is swifter and m ore certain 1here than here. which makes more of a deterrent than mere length of sentence. FICTION: Convicted c rim in a I s should be given longer terms, which would allow them to be rehabilitated in jail. Fact: Fewer than three percent of all jail employes iare social workers, psychologists. psychiatrists a n d teachers: and this sparse number is incapable of coping with the problem of rehabilitation in any realistic way. Fiction: More and more people are turning to crime, which accounts for our high rate of court cases. Fact: In cases of robbery with Dear Gloomy Gus: People here in Huntington Beach~ Fountain Valley and Westmin- ster who claim that the intel· Jectuals have been quiet about getting out of Vietnam should turn up their hearing aids. -P.A. B. Tllll ffffllrt f'ftfl<T'J ,..,,..,... VleWI 1111 llKtlUfllV fllOM If !"'-lltWIPIPli', Sef!od ~our Hf l'MVI "' GltOl'!IW Gus. DtUY "''°'· physical attack (which most people mean by "crime in the street"), more than 80 percent of the defendants have been arrested at least once before, and nearly 50 percent have been ar. rested live or more times before. It is "fast repeaters" who pile up the record more than new recruits to crime. FICTION : Such defendants are "coddled" by the courts. which give them either light sentences or acquit them. Fact: It is the prosecutor, rather than the courts. that determines the sentence, for in two-thirds of s u ch cases, U1e defendants are allowed to plead guilty to less serious charges in order to process the case faster and secure a "conviction" on the record. Fictioa: Sentences on the statute books are too light for such crimes as first-degree robbery, Fact: In New York State, the man· datory sentence for firsl·degree rob- bery is so heavy-10 to 30 years-that of 136 typical cases studied by the New York Times, not one was convicted of the crime for which he was arrested. Fiction : Most criminals plead not guilty, go to trial, and are let off. Fact: In New York. for example, 95 percent of all convictions are obtained by pleas of guilty rather than on trials: in only 7 percent of cases is guilt or innocence decided by trial. 'Most Neglected Issue' WASHINGTON -Sen . George McGovern is set to announce a wide· ranging four -point program to deal ~·ith what he characterizes as the "most neglected issue in the prcst>nt political campaign" -the farm pro· blem. The South Dakotan, "'ho recently threw his hat into the Democratic presidential ring, \Vil! spell out hi s pro. posals in a speech in Kearney, Neb., Thursday, Aug. 22, The address is particularly aimed at the Middle West, -where McGovern hopes to garner delegate support -an effort in which be has had little success so far. McGovern's basic thesis is that the "urban crisis" in large part. is due to h.lgh.ly adverse rural conditions resul· tilng lD steady large-scale migration to the cities. He argues that by im· proving agricultural conditions much progress can be made in cliJninating gerlou.s urban problems. 0 REVERSING THE trc.nd of m1gra- ~oo from country to city to a city·to· rural area pattern is urgently need· ed," McGovern will declare. To obtain this objective, he enun· dated the followin1 four-point plan: J. "Ult price or income supports to Ml parity retw"n1 to farm famiUes-, tupplemented by sucll legislatJon as is u-eded to permit farmen to bargain for a fair return. i. ;'Expand credit at reasonable terms to fanners through farm credit banks. Farmers Home Administration and Rural Electrification Adm.lnlstratJon. to meet aU &ound farm credi' requirements berod the. 1--, Allen-Gold smith ,,. ,, 4.• capacity of private agencies to handle. 3. "Immediate estabUshment of a strategic commodity reserve to pult excess supplies of wheat, feed grains and soybeans out or free markets into Jl tightly held reserve to meet e1nergenc.ies in the U.S. a_nd nations dependent on us . This removal of ex· cesses should be large enough to raise current farm returns from wheat, feeds and soybeans to fuU p.'ll"ity. 4. 11CORRECTION of urban-rural papu!ation imbalance with a rural rehabilitation program which includes U~e or tax incenUves, and placement of a par.t of the rederal government's Q) billion 3Mual procurement of goods a nd services to stimulate rur.il industriaJ developmenL" Noting that wheat prices. now untler $1 25 a bu~hel. are the "lowesl in a qu arter c~nlury'', and that corn ha.~ dropped to below $1 a bus.bet, ''the lowest !eve) since 1942," McGovern "'ill v .. nrn this poMends serious threats for lhe future. "We are weakening both agriculture 1nd our backlog of trained agricultural li'xperts by our fadure to allow tanner! a decent return ror their pro- ducts." the South Dakota presidential aspirant will say. ''The deUne in the number of farms continue' at a rate of 80,000 to 100,000 farms a Y)'"·" rate, and now has a.n enrollment of nearly 9,000. And the growth continues. It may be too much to hope for to say the district will never have to ask for approval of another bond issue. But by the same token, what is being asked bas m erit. A "yes" vote on the proposition also means a vote of confidence for the district officials, who are fashioning a philosophy of the best possible individual· ized instruction for every child. The issue is worthy of strong support from district voters Sept. 17. Need to Move Swiftly The possibility of a county regional airport in Hunt· ington Beach has been met with fear and strength by residents of areas which might be in the flight pattern of large jet aircraft. (See Mailbox below.) Upset as members of Prestige West Homeowners Association are at the thought of an .airport on the Balsa Chica site, they have been even more upset about the Orange County Airport Commission's efforts to speed public hearings before the airport master plan was available for study. Fortunately, the commission bas decided to delay the hearings until Sept. 9 and has made copies of the airport master plan available for public sale. Now it is up to those interebied in the effect of a regional airport locally to look into the situation and be ready to defend their vtews on any particular site. Even a casual glance at the report shows the need for moving swiftly to solve air transportation problems. Leaders of the Prestige West homeowners are to be commended for launching a study of airport sites at a time when many others have been content to just ignore the airport troubles, hoping they would go away. H Bolsa Chica as a Site for New Airport Homeowners List Disadvantages To the Editor: As a member of the West Prestige Homeowners Association, I would like to point out the following facts. The Bolsa Ci1ica site for an airport is not as centraUy located as some of the other pro-posed si tes in relationship to the area to be served. There would be an overlap of service areas With existing airports: Long Beach Airport is 20 minute:>, Orange County Airport is 20 minutes. L.A. Airport is 45 minutes. This could result in flight pattern interference with Long Beach Airport and Los Alamjtos Naval Air Station. Since the coo t .of building an island for the atomic energy powtr plant in approximately the same are.a ~roved too costly, it would seem that this pro· ject would be even more so. THE BOLSA CIJICA site w o u 1 d result in an irreplaceable loss of one o! the last existing natural beach areas in Southern C.alifornia. Th.is is the only area left apen to the public for swim- ming and surfing without charge. A large parking lot was recently built to accommodate the many thousands of people who take advantage of this wonderful beach. Many people in the area have moved here from El Segundo to escape tile noise, air pollution and traffic cori- gestion from L.A. International, and would again have to move elsewhere regardless of loss due to deflation of their property, Leaving the city with less tax revenue. Huntington Beach would no longer be an ideal residential area for raising families. Sever al of the new schools would be useless and would result in total loss in taxpayers' money. The new golf course in Hun- tington Beach would be useless as well as the Meadowlark Golf Course. THE CITY HAD quite a celebration w:hen ~t went. over the 100,000 mar.k in population recently, but it would soon fall way below that as people moved to get away from the noise. traffic and air P.ollution, causing a big loss in ci ty revenue foc property taxes, sales tax, etc. We feel that this is a different circumstance than people who com- plain about the noise .of an airport near their homes when Ule airport was there first. We realize that this would be quite an engineering feat but. since there are other locations that can be utilized, although some of them might be ideal for future home sites, we do not think it is right or fair to ruin home sites already established. MR. & MRS. A. B. VAN SICKLE Four Polnl1 Tu the Editor : My family and l oppose the pro· posed airpor1 site at Bolsa Chic.a State Beach. We moved to Huntington Beach be<:ause we wanted to gel away fro1n the continual jet flight pattern at lnterootional Airport. Mother is partially deaf due to the ch ronlc noise of the jets. We feel •lunt.ington Beach ii; a fine residenUal arta in which to raise Dear George : In the paper in your column you offered a guaraotetd tolu· tlon for faulty memory and said mertly fill out the coupon. 1 couldn't find any coupon .. A.G. Dear A.O.: llm. I KNEW something had slipped my mind. Letters f'rom readers are welcome. Nornw.lly writers should convey their rnessages in 300 words or less. The right to conde11se letters to fit space or elirninate libel is reserved. AU tee. ters must include signature and mail· i1tg address, but names will be with- held on requ est. future Americans. Let's keep it fihat way. MY POINTS OF opposition include: 1. Loss of our natural beach area. 2. There is a major "fault" area located near this site which could be disastrous to many people should an earthquake occur. 3. Noise. air pollution and traffic congestion would have ill effects on the entire West Orange County area. 4. The alrport would result in a total , change of area personality from residential to commercial. I could go on and on, but think I have gotten my point across. Have mercy on the poor residents of Hun- tington Beach. Thank you kindly. JOSEPH. FLORENCE and E ILEEN LUSS! MARIE ALBANO Prohibitive Cosl To fihe Editor: Fe·a~ibility study! Is ii feasible to even consider the building or an airport out into the bay? Wouldn't the cost of such a project be absolutely prohibitive? And wouldn't the cost or maintaining such an installatio_n. be equally prohibitive? If the desaliniza- tion plant estimates reached $765 million dollars. wo-uldn't the figure £or an airport facility stagger even the tax·hardened citizens of Orange Coun- ty? SURELY THERE must be a better solution, for the cost consideration is only one of the many valid reasons why an airport at the proposed Bolsa Chica site would not be advantageous to anyone, tf the moving or dirt is the only dra\\'back to the San Joaquin Hills site (quoted Crom article in the DAILY PILOT -and really, where wouldn 't there be the moving of dirt?) and if ~ airport would provide a service to Its people and stimulate the growth of a t.'Om1nunity, would not this com· p\eteJy undeveloped site be the perfect answer? Quotes Weston. \V. Va., lnde~ndent : "\Ve have reached the poinl where right is on the defense, because the law Ls in· te.rested in protecting only the of- fend er. Individuals and groups that are trying to undermine and destroy the laws of our country. its ideals and beUef5, should be dealt with Cirmly and promptly." Waltham, Mast., New•Tiibonet ;'Whet wa:s once something tnown as aid·to·the·poor iJ now a support system for all families whose incomes don't measure up to the minimum determined by ledeNI olfi<Ws to pro. vide adequate subsittence. Millions of families in the U.S .••. heretofore not on public Ulllsllance will bo 1UbsldiJ· ed." ~ Nems Alerted Hirn To the Editor: As an interested citizen of Hun- tington Beach, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the splen- did public service you performed with your newspaper. I am referring of course to your reporting of the proposed airport site at Bolsa· Chica State Park. If it wasn't ror your comments, we would never have known of this "happening" Wltil it was too late to do anything about it. I attended a meeting the otber night along with several hundred of my neighbors. Needless to say, strong opi. nions against this proposition were ex- pressed by all concerned. REASONS, too numerous o tion, were given in detail as ""'"' we ace against any plans to b d n airport of any type at Bolsa Chica State Park. On behalf of all the home owners and myself who attended this meeting, I wish to express our heartfelt thanks to your paper for ·all your help. I believe we can now take positive a'C· tion against this development and defeat any plans they might have to railroad this propo9ition on us. DONALD J. O'HARA Won't Sit Still To the Editor: I have followed with great interest the debate concerning p o s s i b 1 e airports for Orange County. 1 hope you 'll bear with me as I make a fe-w points about the fut u r e of Orange County and pru1.icularly Huntington Beach: Orange County is well known as a nice place to live. It wit! not continue to enjoy that reputation if the county government starts pushing it.s citizens around. The citizens of this OOWltry are prob- ably a tittle different from those you 're used to , They have above average in· come and above average education. Both conditioos make for an effective pressure group when they get the feel- ing that they are being manipulated. CONCERNING THE Pereira report and planned subsequent actions. l get the feeling th a t there may be some "public be damned'" attiude on t he part of the county government, name- ly the Airport Commission. (That's· a change of role, isn 't it?) Inasmuch as the report il'i not yet released to the public , and the hear· ings are scheduled for August 26 through August 30, J get a feeling that the Airport Commission "-'ants to get the matter over with quickly , before effective opposition can be raised. Well , this is my home, my com · munity, my life!! r w ant to be con· suited _: also. l DEMAND to-be C<M1~ s uited. Ten days or less to study the tePort and form conclusions are just n01: enough. I suggest you lend your support bl a rescheduling. CONCERNlNG TllF. 801.~a Chica airport si te, William J . Pereira must have his ha.ad in the sand. An airport there will create an lngl~·ood en· vironment out of a vtry nice section of Orange County, I ror me wlI1 not sit still f o r the destruction of thb: n l c e residential nelghbcrbood alld Its ad· jacent beadles. I lpeul a lot Of time finding a location lik8 t!ilr, and will spend a lot more to tee to it that it11 DOI destroyed. r would su.ggtS"t that w• need a survey ot potantial airport 6fteJ wiUl pewle considered, Alter all, this eou& ty is what It ts because of ii• PEQ. PLE, llol 1111 alrplanes. R. A. liUTAKE --~----~-·--------. ---·------------------ Slatlstl"s Gloomy Gus recently (Aug. 13) pro- vided a particularly vivid example of the use of a completely meaningless statistic in support of ·an argument. It was pointed out that if one ignores the poorest 20 percent and the richest 5 percent of Americans "that leaves 75 percent of the people with 75 percent of the wealth -the widest distribution of individual wealth of any country in history." ln reality one may choose any coun- try in history, choose a ny percentage he desires, and still be able to rind a group of people who comprise the chosen percentage of the population and possess the chosen percentage of the wealth. This is demonstrated by the following argument in which a specilic percentage, 80 percent, is us- ed for the sake of clarity: -~G INE THE PEOPLE of any countfy lined up in order of wealth with the poorest man on the left end and the richest on the right. Begin by recording the total wealth of the group consisting of the poorest 80 percent of the population. Successively select new groups by discarding the poorest person in the current group and ad- ding the person immediately to the right of the richest man tn the current group. Continue this process. recording the total v.·ealth of each succeeding group. un til the group consisting of the richest 80 percent of the population is reached. Note that each group con- tains 80 percent of the population. Nuw consider the list in which the wealth of each group has been recorded. THE FIRST ENTRY is less than 80 percent of the total wea·lth since the group consists or the poorest 80 per- cent or the ix»pulation. Each entry in the list is larger than the preceding one since successive groups were formed by discarding a poor man and adding a rich one. The last entry, the wealth of the richest BO percent. must be more than 80 percent of the totaJ wealth. In short. one h~s a list of number! which, when translated into percen· tages, begins at something less than 80 percent, increases at each step, and ends at something mo re U1an 80 per· cent. At some point in the list the percentage must pass 80 pereent. Pick the group whose entry is closest t.o 8C percent. Thus, by ignoring some of t!le poorest and richest people, one can find a group which C()ntains 80 percent of the population and very close to 81: percent of the wealth. It is clear tha! this argument depends neither on th€ particular percentage involved nor oil the distribution of wealth in the coun· try chosen. J . DELANY -----~ Wednesday, August 21 , 1968 Tht edilorioJ page oJ tht Dafl11 Pilot itek.s to inform 11nd atim- ul.ate rtadtn b11 prt.sentina thiJ newspaper's opinions 11nd com- fn.t?lt.ary on topic..-of lnterelt and significance, by providinQ a forum for th.I e:presslon of our readers' O]'Jiniom, and bg presenting tkt diver.st vft10- pofnts of informed obsm.1E11 and tp0kt:mn on topiu of th• c1cv. Robert N. Weed, Publlsbtr ----.-" .... -.. r ,.-""I T -----.___...-~·---.-,-~.-... ----....... --.... ----.--................ ,,....., ... -... :w-.,,.. ...... _O:,""'"'•"i<"" ... ""'""'""••="'"""'•,...,•:-'"'"""--::•-:•.~•~'-:•,-•:-•-:-.,.,.,.,,:":" .. ~Y:;.:-::--::-::::-:=-::--:.,~,:::.-. W!dne~I.)'. Auoust 21. 1968 DAILY PILOT J9 Area Duo Seeks U.S. Diving Tea1n Berth PATTY SIMS Rig's Pants New Magic For Angels By EARL GUSTKEY Of IM D11i,. 1'1 .. 1 Stiff You can dream up all the theories you want about how Clyde Wright dazzled the Baltimore OriGles Tuesday night, but Bill Rigney will stick with his green pants, thank you. The Angel skipper appeared at Anaheim Stadium decked out in a pair of bright green pants afld he promises to do so again this evening. Tonight is your lasr chance to iee Angel Slaw Aug, )I .&.ngels vs 81ltlmor1 7:5.S p.m. KMPC /110} Aug. 11 An9ols 11 01kl1nC1 7:2S p,m, l(MPC (7 0) the Orioles at Anaheim. Manager Earl Weaver will pitch Dave McNally (16-8) against Rigiiey's choice, Geo r g e Brunet (12-12). Wright, the forgotten man on the Angels' sagging bullpen staff. was positively sensational Tuesday night. He threw a 6 1/3 inning no-hitter in relief of starter Rick Clark. Thanki to a five-run fourth inning, the An~ls won easily, 7-2. Nobody would have guessed Wright had the nifty performance in him. In £act. Rigney admitted afterward that he was afraid to bring in Wright, who has pitched only 2 1-3 imings since August 10. Before that, Wright was firing 155 howitzer shells into t h e detSert near Barstow while on two weeks reserve duty with Uncle Sam. It was the best Angel relief' job t.his year. The only close thing t.o a hit the Oriolet'i could mw;ter came on the last pitch ol the g a m e. Brooks Robinson s..ent a screamer toward center but Bobby Knoop made a great leaping eatch and Wright had his quasi no-hil- ler. Only one Oriole reached first during Wright's working hours. He walked pindl hitter Cllico Fernande'z in the eighth but he was erased on 1 force play at second. Wright retired 19 of 2.0 hitters. "That was the best fast ball I've ever had," Wright told writers. He seemed just as amazed as anyone. "I can't explain it. In the bullpen, I had a good curve and a nothing fast ball. 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LONG BEACH -Two Orange Coast area Olympic diving can· didatel will be in United States teun trials at the plush new Bel· moot Plaza Olympic pool with com· petition already under way this mmftng with prelims tor women 's -..,,,-springboard. Prelims start at 11 a.m. daily w*i finals ill 7 o'clock tonight lilroul!h Satur<lay. In action today is Patty Sims of Mesa Verde Swim Club, tabbed for fifth in final rtandings. Dueling Thursday Dnd Saturday Is Miss Sims' MVS C mate Bob Wilhite, a platform performer and former CIF champion from Costa Mesa High Sotiool. All 21 women were competing this morning in preliminaries which will determine the 12 finalists ror three final dives of their own choice tooigbt. Thursday, the ~en will compete OC) the springboard while the women stage a 10-mfAer platform exhibition. Friday, it'& ttie women's turn on the plaUonn while the men perform off the plaUorm in an exhibition. Then, Saturday, the event con· eludes with the men's platform competition and an "aqua gala" featuring the 12 <livers who by then will have been selected to represent the United States at Mexico City. The women's three-meter spr· ingboard competition w i l I un· doubtedly establish a pattern of e:<· tremely close com petition. Con· tention runs deep. Sue Gossick is the athlete who perhaps faces the most pressure in the first event. Last summer's Pan American Games champion. fourth place finisher in springboard diving at Tokyo, 1966 indOor and outdoor &pr- ingboard champion and 1967 na· tional indoor queen, she WC}S able to finish no better than fourth in this month 's National AAU meet at Un· coln. Nebrask1. Buttherewereex ten u a ting circumstances. Miss Gossick suf. fered a back injury tr&·ining for the r..ltionals, and in U\li lifht her seventh place in one-meter spr· ingboar;:l. diving {not an Olympic event) and fourth in three-meter springboard is less a surprise. Off most r«ent form , however, t h e favorite must be Jerrie Adair, 18-year-old WO()(tland Hilts diver who performs under the banner of the Phillips 66 Swim Club of Loog Beach. Miss Adair won the event at Lin· coin. with Keala O'Sullivan or Hawaii's Punahou Swim Club se- cond, ex-Olympian Lesley Bush of PGA Warns Rebel PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Golfers joining the new A·merican Professional Golfers organization will be barred from participation i!l Professional Golfers' Association tournaments, the pre6ident al t.he PGA warned Tuesday night. Max Elbin told about 70 pros: "You can't belong to two organizations. You either belong to the PGA or forget it" as far as tournament competition goes. Elbin mede his commoota at Whitemarsh V·alley County Club, site oi Thursday's $100,000 Philadelphia Goll Cl86sic. However, the ruling will not apply {or the Ph.iladelphia tourney. Later this month , Elbin said. the PGA will issue new entry blanks for tournaments. Those refusing to sign the new blanks. which appare11tly would in· elude a statement sa;ying the goller did not belong to any other player's organization. would De banned from PGA play, El bin said. ' Formation of the APG was an- nounced Monday in New York by 13 touring pros who identified themsMwes as the new group's organizing com· rnittee. One of the 13, Frank Beard. 1aid he signed up 70 of the 100 pros present at a meeting i1onday night. He said a continuati..,;i o{ the meeting would be heJ(f° ~ednesday night. Beai-d explained that the APG plans to operate largely for young pros who must qualify each week to gain a starting place in tournaments. Elbin said PGA Secretary Leo Fraser answered questions for about 1 ~ hours Tuesday night before a fight broke out, ending the session. The ruckus involved Miami. Fla .. pro Pete Cooper, who attacked a photographer he thought was taking An l!nscheduled Stop Jockey Henry Wajda comes to a sreeching halt on the track when his horse, Chere Charlene, suddenly decided her race was over at a track in Salem, N.H. Wajda received a slight shoulder injury and said he had no idea why Chprii Charlene came to such an abrupt halt. Plum to Start At San Diego FULLERT()N -It'll be Milt Plum at quarterback for the Los Angeles R'ilns in an exhibition game Saturday night against the Chargers tn San Diego. Ram Coad! George Allen said Tues· day he would start the veteran ac- quired in an off-season t!'"ade with Detroit. Plum will play the first half and Roman Gabriel. the Rams' regular signal caller last year, will play the 1econd half, Allen said. Must Run 11.4 Lifetime Best Will Do It For Olympic Hopeful Olympic hopeful Def' D e B u 5 k figures her formula for making the U.S. track squad which will perfor')i in Mexico City is a simple one : t~n a lifetime best 100 meters this Sunday in the team trial& at Mt. San Antonio College. showing at the national AAU title meet sta ged last weekend in Denver's thin air, having placed seventh in the 100 with an 11.6. Laguna B~s TI\.O in 9th After Scare by Marshall "I should be able to make the tea.m If I can run 11.4," says the pretty 22- year--0ld Costa Mesa m o the r . housewife. "My best to date is 11.S and frankly I'm optimistic over chances of """"'""""""''""""" .... WHITE WASH "Ever)'(lne wa s just fa ster than me -that's about the only way to explain it.'' she says. "Anyway, it's the Olym- pic b'ials that count and I feel that t have the advantage of being familiar with Ml SAC's track and the smog." Dee says the Denver altitude (5.280 feet) really got to some of the gals. "Four girls required oxygen and stretcher removal from the field the ftrsl day." she recalls. "The only thing that bothered me was 1 headache - 11nd yo u felt Uke y<iu'd run a mlle after a couple of 110 1prlnt.s. NEW YORK (AP) -lsm1el La g u n a, Antonio Amaya Ind Ben- ny B r i 1 co e were the winners of the three t~round features at Madison Square Garden Tuesday nighL But today you could aJso make loser Lloyd Marshall 1 winner off hi1 fine showing in the windup scrap with Laguna. Laguna. th• flashy, f o r m e r lightweight champion trom Panama, stopped Marshall in 2:49 of the 'ninth round because of a deep ga11h over lhe Newark. N.J .. newcomer's left eye. Although Laguna was leading 6-2 In rounds on the ~orecards of 111 three officials. the 22-year-old Mar5ha\I had Lag\N worried until referu Johnny Lo Bianco lnttrvelled in tbt ninth. ' • Laguna had 1hot over three hard rights to the bleeding wound. Marshall, a 2·1 underdog m11king his maln event debut in the Garden. 1ta2- gered his surprised foe with 1 jolting right to the jaw only seconds aft~r the opening bell had sounded. He jarred Laguna again in the fifth but later in the round the. cut opened wide on Marshall's eyebrow. "I had him in the first round but I let him off the hook," said Manhall. ''He bo:red his way out of it be(ause I was too anxious and missed." ''He's a good puncher," 1aid Laguna. "Ht cao~ht me with 1 good one tn the ftrll round." LalfUD• Is the No. 1 lightweight con- t.ender by Ring Magazine and No. 2 by tht World Bolin1 .U1ocJ1Uon. • ..................... being among the top finishers at Mt. SAC. "Quite honesUy, my main concern at the moment is Sunday's qualifying race. Four from each heat will ad· vance to the finals and since all eight girls In each heat are pretty even, anything could be happen. It'll be tough. that's for sure," she admits. Off would be A cinch Olympir med1lilt -either in the 100 or on the relay -iI she. survives Sunday'• trials. She'• not dj!coura~d by ber poor "Wyomia /Tyus) said running in Denver was more difficult than In Mexlco because of the difference in humidity. She Wld me that Mexico Ci- ty (7,347 feet) has never had any iU-ef. feet on her." Miu DeBusk'• chances of btating the Ukes of Tyus, Barbara Fm-ell, Mildred Netter ind Margaret BJ.Iles seem remote, at best, unless she can come up with that Ufetlme ber;t of 11.4 during Sunday's showdown . And with a 1pot on lht Unittd States Olympic team and A subsequent medal or two 1t take.. that may servt as the inspiration required to clip 1n trtra ttnth of 1 second or 10 off her t1m1. ' • Princeton. N.J ., third, Miu Cri>ssick four.th and Miss Sims fifth. Miss Bush ii joined by Phillips 66 Cub's Larry Andreasoo as the only 1964 Olympians attempting to regain places on ttie U.S. team -a ract which stands as strong evidence of the rapid turnover and devtlopment ol out.9tanding U.S. diveri. Andreason, a bronze medalist in springboard diving at Tokyo, won th e National Indoor platlonn crown earlier this year, but did not place at Lincoln. Other leading women C'Ontenders in the two events inc lude Kealea O'Sullivan of ~lawaii's Punahou Swim Club. Joel O'Connell of Santa Clara Swim Club, U . Micki King Of the U.S. Air Force and Fl«ida's Brandon Swim Club, Sue Gossick of Tanana. Shirley Teeples o f Compton. Golfers pictures at the meeting. Earlier in the day, Paul Warrec, director of the Philadelphia classic, saitl:O'ltlrwould have to deal with the new organization because Df his obligation "to do the best for my tour· ing toumameots." Warren, who also d i re c t & tournaments in Cleveland a n d Jacksonville, Fla., as well as the Citrus Open and the Atlanta Goll Classic, had the backing of Irving Meyers, general chairman of the Philadelphia classic, and Ray O'Don· nell, president of the Whitemarsh Valley club. Regan Gets Absolution From Giles CHICAGO (AP) -Manager Leo Durocher of the Chicago Cubs and relier ace Phil Regan are satisfied. but National League President Warren Giles might have picked up a king siz- ed headache over the illegal pitch in· cident. Giles met with Durocher. Regan .and John Holland. vice president of the Cubs, Tuesday and then issued a state· ment absolving Regan of any wrong doing in Sunday's hassle over illegal pitches. Umpire Chris Pelekoudas called iJ. legal pitches on Re,l!'.an during the first game of a doubleheader with Cin- cinnati. Pelekoudas said he cnuldn't rind any evidence on the ball but he was sure a fo reign substance was bcin l? used by Re ~an after seeinJ?; the fli~hl of the ball. "A sinker spins Wh e n it breaks." said Pelekoudas. "And a ball with Vaseline on it breaks down without a spin." Durocher and two other Cubs were thrown out of the game following heated arguments, and Re ~an had his head. face and the sweat band or his ca p wined of£ by umpire S h a g CrAwford. The C11bs fiemanded a hearinJ?. Giles. in absolvine Regan. said "I know Phil and hnve respect for him and felt a gentleman like he should be sh'lwn the consideration and courtesy of hearin'! him. "Phil told me he did not have Vaseline or other lubricant on his sweat band and I btlieve him." said Giles. "Chris Pelekoudas suspected he did have lubricant of some kind, but told me his jud,1?ment of an ille2al pitch wa s based almost entirely on the ac- tion on lhe ball in night. and seems ronvif1ced it acted like a so-called spit bal l." "This is a most difficult problem for the umpires and they are bein11t: ur S?rd on all sides fo enforce violators of il· le~aJ pltche!t." 1108 WILHITE McLain Express Derailed • • ' DETROIT (AP) -Denny McLain, the tint sore-shouldered right-handt.r in baseball history to win 25 rarne•. wasn't very upset by the four errors that carTied the Chicago Whit.e. Sox to a 10.2 victory over Detroit in the ae· cond game of a twi -night doubleheader Tuesday. Two of the errors were by normally sure-handed Al Katine and seven of the nine runs of£ McLain were unearn· ed. John Hiller pitched a one-hit shutout as the Tigers won the ()J)ener 7-0. "This time they make a few errors." said McLain afterwards. "Twenty-live other times they neWT threw anyUUnr away.'' McLain, 25-4, was pounded for nine runs and nine hits in 5 2·3 innings, in· eluding a grand slam homer by Pete Ward and four bits by Gerry McNertney, who drove in folU' runs. "I had so Ii t t I e l couldn't even fine sse that ball," said McLain. "I threw as hard as I have all year in Boston last week. Tonight t couldn't make a pitch." W ha t McLain dJdn 't have, Hiller had. The only hit oil the 26-year-old left-hander was Ron Hansen's leadoff single in the filth . ''A walk and an error loaded the baa· es with nobody out, but Hiller got out of the jam without giving up a run. It wa s a year ago Tuesday that Hiller got his first chance to start for the Tigers and he responded with a shutout. His wife, Janice. hasn't seen any of her husband's starting assignments. County Kids • Face Marv land • WlLLlAMSPORT, Pa. -'Jbe Bolaa team of Orange County was scheduled to put in its first appearance in the Little League World Series here today. Bolsa, represeflting Fountain Valley, Westminster . Garden Grove aod Santa Ana, was to play Hagerstown, Md .. 1t 11 a.m. (PDT). Conrad Deschesnef became to nervous before Canada's final Little League playoff game last week that he developed sto mach cramps and w &11 unable to play. Deschesnef also was nervous Tutf· day, but not enough to stop h:im from delivering a game-winning single \o give Sherbrooke-Lennoxville, Canada, a 1-0 victory over Chinandeg1, Nicaragua, in the openlng game of Uk Series. In the second opening-round conteft, Richmond. Va .. over-powered TerH Haute, Ind .. 6-2. Sinking Ship Has Sunk, Hapless Dodgers Awash HOUSTON <UPI) -Los Angeles Dodger lefthander Mike Kekich today has the untlappy task of plugging the hole in the sagging Dodger dike to keep the team Crom being swamped In the National League cellar. Keklch, 2-6 faces Mike Qiellar. &-9. and h.is Houston Astro teammate to- day, after they washed another wave of defeat upon the Dodgen Tuesday. with theU-8·5 win. En route to the victory, which push· ed the Dodgers further into the ceUar, the Astros blasted the bulwark o1 the Dodger pitching staff. Don Drysdale. for fi ve runs in 4 2/2 Innings. Rusty Staub drove in three runs for tht winners with a double and a u.crlllce fly, as Astro 1tarter Larry Dierkor picked ll1J 11!1 sixth 1tralfhl I win to raise his record to 12-10. Drysda]e's rceord Is now 14-11. Bright spots for the Dodgers \n Tuesday's night of gloom were Willie Davis. witll a stolen base and three hlta, Including a triple, and TOm Haller. who drove In U..H runs on 1 single ind two sacrifice rues. LOI AHO•LEI MO\llTOtt "r ~"" Crtwtvrd If • J 1 I """""• t1 G•ilf'ltl•n t1 ~ 1 1 1 N Mlllt>' r1 W O•oi. c1 S t J 1 T°""' u Htlllf' t t 0 l S ..,._.. ~ F1lrlt lb I 0 I 0 Staub lb It l•llirY a 4 • 1 I lllftr Jll ~1b JOOOMw*t1b Y-lltt u J o t I ,,..,_,. II ~ 2t> 1 • 0 0 .. """" ( o..,-. .. • t • 1 1 o .. "'., • ~unllfl• 0011'-IM• 1"111'9'1' .... I 0 I 0 Orllllt • 0000 A1..,lrrt 1 0001 IC!lo'/t'r.i. 1101 ·~·· 0111 .. , ..... • J I t 0 • 11 0 S I 1 t I I I 0 J 1 I J I 1 I I I I I l I I I 1 f 1 I I • 1 0 • • • • • '•111 l! SIO J "-tel JI It• Le•A""ln J Olf lllt )...J Mo\lslool I t e , ) J I I ••..I t:-1<11rrw-. v""'"" It. 111...,. t. LfA ... ,., ... •. ~l""' •· Ja-st•, Jt-GAlll'ltllan, w. 01¥\a, I W, Q,tvis, t.-St..,., ...,._., &l'-H ... ltr L ,,_,_'-" ........ l I ~._ ................. h ..... ,k. ........................................... -----------_.._ ____ -~ --· -----~----- I • 1Q DAIL V "LDT Wednttday, Au91-1sl 21, 1%8 You won't believe the Angels' crowd prediction ~r Denny McLain, should be be alter bis 30th win at Ma- beim Stadium In tbiee weeks, · "Twenty.five thou.sand tops," is the flat prediction of the Angels' ticket manager, Dick Foster. • Foster sounds like a pessimistic sort. If h~ re~y believes only 25,000 would show up for such a bistonoal event then the Angels (and all of baseball, for that mar .. te:·) are in trouble. There was a time when a pitcher going for 30 woWd\· have drawn 25,000 in Kingwood, W.Va. ~ From our view, and m view of the fact that no pitcher since Dizzy Dean in 1934 bas won 30, McLain ' should fill the house if he pitches in Anaheim on Sept. 9th. 10th or 11th with 29 wins undet his belt. He has 25 now. Shocked at Foster's remark, we reminded him the significance of such an event. "Twenty-five thousand tops.~' he repeated. ls there a doctor in the house? * * * REVENGE DEPT. -There's a story behind the double Oriole pitcher Jim Hardin belted Mon- day night to beat the Angels. . Hardin. teammate Don Buford and Billtimore ' manager Earl Weaver were guests at the Southern California Sportscasters luncheon at the stadium Monday afternoon -eight hours before Hardin was to take the mound. Hardin was standing behind the mike, answer- ing questions, when DAILY PILOT columnist Bill Burns asked: ''Why can't pitchers hit?" '' ,. rrrw °'MIG£ 'ou11TY •LINEMAN OF ~. mE YEAR:':.(f.l.ATbR Pel), .. .4LL-CIF "PLAYER OF "TUE YEAR"' (ANAl4£1f.f ),,, ON€ OF 7H£ fi/M~ST Pl?EP &OCK£R6 EN€R VEVELOPCD /N CIF GRID HI~,,, Gauchos Nearing Big Day By EARi, GUSTKEY ot .. ...., , ....... " The ·countdown n o w regiltora 10 daya unUl Sad- dleback Junior College joins Sout.he.rn California 's mwllroomini JC football picture. Head coadl George Hartman will get a look at all his proopecta fur Uie lint time when tbe Gauchos undergo physical exams at tile coUege's administrative ofifces Dear Mission Viejo High from 9 a.m. to noon, August 31. Hartman was n a m t d attlletic director and football coach for the first-year school last winter. He's been furiously b e a t i n i the recruiting paths &lnce end is arucious to see what he's lan- ded. "You know how it goes - you never know who Y9U have until they acb.iaily register. But right now it looks like we'll have some pretty good football players." Hardin grinned and started to answer but Weav· er cut in with: ''Let me answer that. The first thing you have to rtali:re is that, generally speaking, pitchers are not athletes. "Pitchers have been blessed with one talent - the ability to throw a baseball very hard. But for the most part, that's it. They're just not athletes. You can tell that by just looking at their bodies. "On the other side of the coin, most hitters are athletes. They have the good hand-eye coordination that most pitchers lack." · Scribes Tab''North ' By lB-12 Holes· in· one Registered At Seacliff, Santa Ana Top Stars In Olympic Swim Trial Saddlebeck wiA play a four-year college frosh· small JC schedule its first y.>M, beginning witb the Ca! Lutheran frosh at M:i.9Sion Viejo Hi'gh oo .Sept. 21. STRONG AT QB "I think we'll be ol:oogert at quarterback. Bill Janes from Laguna, Rod Graves from Tustin, Gary Rossman from Foothill and Chris Hector from San Olemtnte have all told me ttley're coming." Weaver concluded his treatise by assuring those present that Hardin -a likeable, slow-talking 2~ year-old from Memphis, Tenn. -was the excep- tion. ''Jim's not a bad hitter-for a pitcher," Weav· er added. · About 10 hours later, Weaver's words most have still been ringing in Hardin's ears when he stepped up to the plate in the seventh inning and drove home the winning run with a double. Oh yes, he also threw a two-hit shutout at the Angels. * * * ORANGE COAST DEPT. -Football coach Dick Tucker may have the biggest tight end in the South Coast Conference this year. He's Bob Mechicoff, a 6-2, 240-pound specimen from Whittier. He sat out last season. * * * DRAGS DEPT. -It looks like Orange County has become the drag racing capital of the world. National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) statl,tics revealed lest week that Orenge County International Raceway at El Toro drew 280,000 fans for its first year of operation-topping all other tracks through· out the country, And the crowds keep coming. OCIR general manager Mike Jones expects 16,000 to watch his Manufacturer's Funny Car Championships on Saturday, Nov. 23. On some nights, the dra gs outdraw the Angels. Another big date for OCIR is September 14. That's Jones' world championship points meet for fuelers. Such meets are held all over the country end contestants try to accumulate enough points to compete at the Tulsa, Okla., finals on October 20. Maybe Mclain ought to go for 30 at OC IR. Cycling Trials to Open Mass cycling, o v e r disia1!ces ranging from 1000 meters to a couple of 112· mile ro.ad races -wiU1 the ultimate goal a berth on the U.S. Olympic team -y.·ill be held this weekend starting Thursday at the Rose Bowl . The Initial event will be a 2000 meter tandem event around the famed Pasadena saucer starting at 2 p.m. Thursday. The scene then shifts to the E n c in o Velod:rome, where trials and finals will be held at 1001 and 4000 meters on Friday and Satur· day. JACK 'N JILL WINNERS -Dr. and Mrs. Charles . Milone Qefl), ol Annanndale Golf Club teamed wtih Lola WlnU!rbum and Tom Stoonson of lrnne Coast Cowrtry Club to capture ICCC's 9tb annual Jack &. JIJI Member-Guest Golf tournament. The foursome ,. I ~ Don't bother to show up for the 9th annual Orange County All-Star f oo t b a 11 classic at Orange Coast College TblJ!t'!d!y nlg1lt. The final icome is already known: North 18, South 12. At tea.st that's ~ result predicted via a vote of Orange County s port s writers -alleged experts on such matterr.. Only one of seven balloting scribes gave coach Jim Coon's Rebels a victory nod, and that was by a 20-14 count. ~ remaining six went with Herb Hill & Co.,' Ille closest pick being 14-12 and the widest 28-14 (by the DAILY PILOT). Obviously the w r it e rs chose to follow tradition wilich has found the North victorious on six of eight previous confrontations. 4 EX-STARS ARE DEAD Four former players In the annual Orange County North-South All-Star foot- ball series have died or been killed since perform· ing in the summer prep classic. Steve Joyner of La Ha· bra High is the most re· cent victim. He was killed in Vietnam action. Ji m Takahashi of Gar· den Grove died earlier this year. Orange's Bob Pillon was killed in an automobile accident and Dennis Es· tes from Valencia was lost in the Vietnam hostil· iti6'. Two Orange Coa11t area goliers plopped in holes-in- One at area co u r 1 e 1 recenUy. Richard McDonald o f Huntington Beach scored his .ace last Week on the 13th hole at Seacliff in Hun- tuigton Beach. He used a four iron on the 166-yard shot. The otberace was acored at Santa Ana Country Club. This time the bulls eye shooter was George Fruehl· ing, playing with John Lowe, Ralph Culp and Clayton Rose. Fruehling fired a 148- yard, five-iron shot into the cup on the second hole. Costa /lfesa Jack Valasek scored a 72 to win the low gross title at the club's recent low gross· low net tourney. The net winner was Steve Christensen with a 78-15-Q. Other low finishers were Jim O'Shaunecy, Norm Potekin, George Dernbach, Joe Mosteller and Frank Bartosh. The blind bogey winner was Joe Costello. with a 72. Hazel Webster won the women's club's three blind mi~ event on the Lake Course. She fired an 88-14- 74. Other flight winners were Rita Kern and Millie Pedersen. ln tfie net blind mice event qi the Mesa Course. Carnelle Kennedy posted a 36. Jack Towle will be the target of the rest of the field when the ·inen's club holds its second annual champions tournament September 2. Towle won the '67 title. Low handttappers entered so far incluile Bob Steach, Frank Bartosh, J a c k posted a net 128 to win over the field of 96 contest- ants. Tourney chairman Tom Hudson, center, awarded the trophies. The Jerry Helperins of the host club and the Clayton Roses of Santa Ana CC "'°" the low gross honors with 156. • .. Valasek, Ted Berner, Darrel Benedict, Steve Dye, Joe Oppenheimer, John Hacker, Babe Hodnick and Bud Sleva. Rancho San loaqtdn The low net winner Satur- day was Gerald Miller with a 67. Al Vegnerini posted a 70, Pat Wade and Covel Allen had 71, G e n e McDonald, Doug Terry and Elmer Haminall logged 72's. In Sunday mixed couples play, the Marvin Jobnsons topped the field with a 137. Shirley Overstein and John· Lancaster had a 140. Irvine Coast In the .annual member- guest Jack and Jill affairs Sunday, Lola Wlnterburn and Bob Steenson teamed with Dr. and Mrs. Charles Malone of Pasadena to post a winning 128. Actually, they were tled by the Carl Gregorys and the Bob Crosgroves but won on a coin flip. Given third were the Gene Ronalds and the Thomas Kohreys, with 129. In better ball of partners play, Tom DeForrest and Len Pellatier shot a 62. Bart McHugh and Hank Smith were secondat 64. In Saturday's better ball of partners event, Jim Harsted and John O'Malley topped the field with a 59. Second were Russ Walkins and Duke Wilson at 62. Huntington Be...,h The President's C up tournament on August 31 and September 1-2 will be a 54-holer. Club officials ex. pect about 60 golfers to compete. Santa Ana Qualifying has started for the men's c I u b cham- pionship tournament. The 15 best gross scores from the 36 holes or quali- fying will qualify. Th e automatic qualifier ls last year's winner, Dr. Bob Irwin. The first round will be played Saturday. Sept. 7, with the next one set for the following day at 10 a.m. /lfesa 1' erde The only event in the near future is the August 2.5 guys and dolls tourney, in which six foursomes are slated to participate. SeM!Htf The Los Angeles Airport Lions Club conducted its an- .nua1 tournament at SeacllU tooay. The Long Beach Food Sa I e 1 man's Association takes to the links Friday and the Lever Brothers Comp~y has a tourney slated for Saturday. The South Bay Dally Breeze plays Sunday. Pro Soccer Standings Mw1ll A"*'lull 5-Lu-EASTEllN CONP'EllENCI Atl1nt1 W11t1lnvton Ntw YDl'll ll1ltlmort llos!Ofl Att1ntlc DlvltlOll W L T IP' P'tl. GI' GA 1•45.U1S4'5l7 1• f ' n 15( 51 50 10 612" 1.U 5l .u !1HJl1111l1.t0 1u•u1os•16' Llktt OIVlllan Clevelar>d 11 ' 11 51 15' Y .a C~klllO 11 I t 51 1.U 5t Y Toranto 11 12 4 .Q U4 .u '1 Pttrol! s 11 ( l4 ,, "° J1 WESTERN CONl'ElllNCE 01111 Olvltlo~ K1ru1s (]ty 13 ' 5 '1 Ill IS " St. Loult 12 11 ' «I 130 41 ;SJ H°"1lllfl 1l 12 • «I 124 50 lo\ 0.1111 2 :u ' ,, 51 27 101 P'1clllc Olvl11ton San OIPOo 17 1 ( SI 16' 5f 31 01~l111C1 U I 5 4 Ul St :n VarKOUYer 11 1• 4 .U ltt .W 5f LOI "'""In t 10 I '2 110 .W 41 T ...... 'l"I lla11th Hou1ton D, St. Loul1 0, !l<i 011111 !, Bool'lltl, 1, "9 At11nt1 1. W111\111tlorl 1, 111 Chlcevo J, Detroit 2 cttve11N1 2, r ..... 10 1 Bidding for spots on the U.S. team that is expected to again dominate the sport in the Mexico City Olym- pics. the c re a m ol America's feminine swim- mers compete in the final tri.t•ls at the Los Angeles Swim Stadium s t a r t i n g Saturday morning. The hectic 5·day showdown will conclude on Wednesday, Aug. 28. Preliminaries are set for 10:30 a.m. with finals at 4:30 p.m. daily. Potential gold medal win· ners at Mexico Oty lurk in virtually every event and most a.re newcomers from the gang that cleaned up in Tokyo. Catie Ball, 16. holds the world records at both the 100 and 200 breastroke distances. The leading butterfly can- didates are Ellie Daniel, 18- year old student at Penn State and Toni. Hewitt, 16- year old senior at Corona de! Mar High School. In the freestyle events there's Jane Ba:rkman, 16, and Sue Pedersen, a mere 14; Debbie Meyer, 15, and Eadie Wetzel, 15. And the talent r u n s through an the events. Kay Bell of Tacoma is an outstanding prospect in the 100 backstroke while the veteran Pokey Watson, a mere 18, is the favorite at the 200 backstroke distance. Versatile Sue Pedersen is also a... strong threat in the 200 and 400 individual medley events, witt\ strong opposition from C 1 a u d i a Kolb, who won a silver medal at Tokyo in ttie 200· yard breaststroke. There will be two sessions each day, starting at 10 :30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Ticket prices are a.m . prelims, $3, $2 and ti.SO ; t.i!temoon finals, $4, '3 and $'l .50. Four of Hart man's players are playing i n Thursday night's North . South county prep all-fitar game at Orange Coast. That list includes Graves, halfback Tim Butler from San Clemente, Foothill back Paul Cox and all-1.e!gue guard Jeff Virden from Tustin. While Hartman is elated at his quarterback pro- gpects, he's apprehensive about ottier areas. "We don't appear to have a fulibaclt right now and I'm worried about the lack of size in the tackles we do have." TO EL TORO After the phy&ciaLs are administered, Hartman will herd his football candidates into a barracks at the Marine Cori>S Air Facility at El Toro. The team will live ~re for two weeks, work· ing out twice daily. Golden West began its football program at the same place two years ego. Saddleback's football field is supposed to be ready by September 16, when the players emerge from E l Toro. '111E Gauchol5 will play their home games at Mission Viejo High for about four years. After that, the largest football stadium in Orange County should be finished. Saddleback ed- ministratocs are planning on a 15,000-plus seat facility. The &chool'a district com· prises 49 percent of the total land area in Orange county and they figure that Sad• dleback will eventually be the county's largest junior college. Baseball Standings WHY IS THIS YEAR ANY DIFFEREHTI National League Woo Lo5t Pct. GB St. Louis Cincinnati San Francisco Olicago Atlarta Pittsburgh Philad<'lph.ia 1-fouston New York Loi Angeles 80 46 .635 64 57 .529 65 59 .524 66 61 .SID 63 62 .504 80 65 .400 57 68 .463 58 69 .457 58 70 .45.1 54 70 .'35 T9HRy'I lllwrh Hew Yortl I, San Fr1111Cl1CO t PMl.O.JPl't!I I, S!. tou11 J PllftburYll " Chw;!nnell J .._,., .. t ... Antell!• J 13\1 14 14\1 16\1 191> 2111.i: 2211 l1 ZS C~kl .. '· Al!111t1 J. 10 l""'llth Tlltr's 0.-Stn Fr1nclKe !M•1Ct1I 2241 11 "-V .... l 'itc· Ancfrtw• Ml Anania CP-s t.t 1"<1 ll"9d IMJ ti C~k•IO CJ..,01111 1).17 •"<I Mvt .. 121, 1 SI, Louis CC11llon 11 ... ) t i PtllledtlPl'tlt (~ H ). ft.I ... ! Pllllbvrlltl j!lau 10.J) at Cl>Kl,,...11 (Ml.,., 11·1), 1119111 L• Art90111 (ICekldl J ... l at ~ {Cutll1r .. f), .... 'American League Detroit Baltimore Boston Cleveland Oakland New York MinllCSOla Calirornla Chicago Washlngtoo Won Lost Pct. GB 79 45 .637 'rl 52 .561 68 58 .54(1 67 61 .523 63 62 .504 58 62 .483 58 65 .472 57 18 .451 62 72 .U9 47 76 .382 T"'"-Yt ll-ltt New Yon. s, Mln1111011 e CitY1llNI 1, llot~ 1 Callfonllf, 7. 11~ t ~t..orr 1·2. Cllk..t~ 0.11 W•tt>I"'"°"' ,,), Olk!-~ T ... t"I~ 7 t2 14 16\1 19 ~II %211 Tl 3111 New ~ f0-.!11t 1·11 11 /11..._fl !IC•• t.tl, ""' 8tltlmort IMcNalty IH) ti Ct llforftlt !ll'\lflr.1 11·111, ~19M ~11ago fC1r1M .. 111 II o.trolt (Lelldr 10..1), llOl!cwl lt.onll9r9 :M) II Cltwi.lld (Pine H I, .... Qllly ·-.c:lltdlllt'. Orono• Co.'s Oldtst It Most RlfJ)lcf.td Ltncoln-M~rcu~ Dtoltt Johnson & Son 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH 642-0991 545-1271 ' .. . . - Traditionally Augutl tnd S1pt1 ... b1, 1r1 th1 "''nth• th1t you tr• bomb1rcltd with tpl11hy "ytt f•tnd cl11r1nc1" 1•11 1d.,1rliti11q. Yo11 91t ii lro"' '"''Y dirtclion: newt• P•P•rt, r•di1 i nd TV. y,,, in and yttr 0111 if1 lht stmt old story, But Th.is Year ls Different At Johnson's ll1ct11•1 ti.it h th1 ytar 1f 011r tr••* MOVL Aff.r fift1111 y1111 1t !ht , .. ,.., 1ott lion w1 will bt rnovin9 1eo11 11 I "'•9nillt111t naw f1dl!f<t e11 H11\.or loul 1v1,.., J~ Ce1l1 "4111. Naturally WI hopt '• dhpo11 .1 OIH tNTIRf: ln· •1ntory of 61 ,..CHI.I 1.111 Mfoi1 - "'II"' -IO thtt e11r lllW f1cility Collll b1 llock1d with brt"d naw lt6t 111od1l1, Naturally t. J1 thl1 -mud ltt tv+hl1i1ly ,.- p1titi•1. Naturally ro11 wlll w1nt It ta~• 1d•1nl1f1 1f thit 1111111111 1lt\lttio11. Today .l --------------------------------------'="'---"'---~- -- GOlflNGA WITH ~If.Mid ,o~ ~.., __________ ... , ........... ,. ...... ._ ,UmNG STROKE SHOULD IE UNHURlllEO A major puttina: f1ult amona.,. &olf1rs is the normal tendency to rush the stroke. They start the club . baCk toward the ball too quickly-before they have fully compllted their back- s~rokes. R~sh!ng putts is espe. c11tly common when the situation is tense. I • • • • •• • • • • • • .. • • • • • ' ' • • • ' \ ...Ji ' ' .....o- . To . make sure that you give your stroke all the time 1t needs to strike the ball squarely, think of the rhytJ1m of 1 clock pendulum. R"ecall to mind that unhurried, never-rushed movement back and for. ward. Actually, In the corfect putting stroke, the putter• '1ead should ·accelerate into the ball. However, )lou must "wait" for the backswing to finish before you can start a forward stroke tha t will accelerate smoothly. ,., TllvnUr, AMt. n, '"' c ... r •n• P11r. l'lr11 l"MI 1 l".M. 01U., Dovlll-"'1"1 1nf Sec:Mltl llCft "tllT IAC•. ' tu'IOl!lll. Two ve•r old 11111••· C1lbrtd1. Cl1lml1111 prlc. 1111.000. PurM $2.XIO. An!'llt Mull CJ P11omlno) 11' Mv C1m.o CJ SelH!r1) 116 Fl1S11l1111 lltlHI (A Ju1re1) 116 p_,, Ftl CW Mlt.or""vl 116 Ml111 Clltr9fl Off CA MltH) 116 Ol/npatt1r 11' A.Ide A Cloud (A Plntdal 116 HO!'IOl'td Ll<lv CE Medi,..) 116 Ollr A.eturn (I A L 0110 "111 TudM A.tbll CD Hill) 116 Ytllow RIYtr CR C11T11>11l 116 Oil Tiie Mt'!'ld 11 W HtrlTllll) 116 AIM l:llt"i. Truly F~r C1 M Vtltn.i111i.1 116 GIYI F1ncv (1 A L Dlt I) lllll J<Ntul HClllsll (M YtMI) 116 Fo~ Pity Cl W H•rmll1) 116 All Tiie Sime O M Vt l!nwel•) 116 k l!'ldll!'I Coe IR lllt!'ICtl) 116 IECOND u.c•. 0.. mllt. l &. ' VHr old 1r111dons. Pune 13.000. Ptmoertd Kint (It CtmPt1) 115 Ttke A Tri' (J PtlomlMJ 115 Ju111 C.IUl'I fJ L•mbertl 11$ llrotdWt Y Clown (E Mttllnt ) 115 Dlwndlt CF G1n1) xltn Tl"l•I Tttl 15 Trevino) 121 Coflee Con Cit lll11w;o) 112 Del Mar Results Del Mar Entries Four t nd Score fD Piercd 115 McV•I (W Htrmt ll) 111 Ptddl1 Wheeler iJ Sell!rs) 11~ AIM ElltH1i. Urvenl {L GIU19t n) 115 Gloflou1 VlcTM IA Plntdt ) 1U THlltD ltACE. 6 fu rlongs. l Vttr old• t/\d UI>. Cl1iml1111 Pllte ~.000. Purse S2AO. Ll1l1> llbrtr CW Httttdtl 111 Rullth .._ (A l Dltrl )1117 Rlr19 Frtt CJ Limbert) 114 l• Tortug1 (II Yi>rkl 117 Music CrPdll (E MPdlnt) 1U Curr• Tl11 (II C1mp11) 111 Around Set CD HtllJ 1Dt Pt-Sliver !M Vtlemuel•l lit l'OUllTH llACI:. 6 flrrlon11. I y"r olds. Altl!Wllnctt. PurH l3,5GO. Mr. ler<N (M Yt neU 1U Aller llern IA l 0111J XIII Hice Mlllake IR C11n1111) 117 Full Mea1ure (A PIMdlJ 11• Slldt In T"' Mud CW Hwttdl) 111 Wln11> le• ID Hill) 11• "ll'TH ltACE . .6.boul Ph fllrll!!'ltls on turf. l vur olds end u•. Cl1lml119 Pt"ICe 561!1).$5625. Purtt $3.000. Gin Tour (A Plnetll ) lU Don Swtn!'I IF Gt rtl) X109 C1r1IC110 (J Sellen\ 114 Tehtrl (II Ct"-11tro) 1U Every Chionce CW H1rm11l) 117 Bltd< Mood {A l 01•~ X109 lletu•1 lled Tle (J l•mbert) 114 Oflermlned lid Ill Penlt!WJ 117 Eng!lsh Comic IG l•nOWtV) l!J Ccunt Cht rltt (D Plertt) 114 SIXTH RAC&. ' furl-1. t Yr1r olds 1nd u•. All-1nce1. Pun.1 M,500. Ctrtulo IW M.-homevJ 111 El Sclm1t1r (£ ~11111 114 Tni!'l!llll!m IA P!nedtl 111 Slllp1 And S11eft1 (A L 0111) )11°' l \ldty Bui.II fD Pier«) ltt Sled~ (II C1mp•1) 114 Adc>Plfll (W H1nn1IJ) 11• ADD 2 OEl MAR ENTIUES •.. 1 SEVENTH •ACE. Dile ml .. on tutt. S vNr olds. Cl1lml119 price JI0.000. St,000. Purse S3.SOO. T<11> Flaor (D Pierce) Tit Kodla~ Kid [W H1rt1dl) JU Wllcl'l'1 llrolll IA l Dltl) xlot' Ch1nnl!'lg Flttl IJ Soellersl llt Mister Ed M (M Vt ll!'llvtlt ) in Prompt C>ell¥erv (A Plnedtl 112 VIMI Jr (0 H•ll) 114 llo•.r llob (J l t mbel"ll 111 Ched<POlnl Chtrllt IW Htrm.111 lit Prr~ Julltn flt C1/Nl11) 112 AIM EU1111i. Ct1HOl'fl!1 llov (W Mlhomn<I lU llOHTH ltACI:. 6 turl-1. Two ~tr old fllfln. Allow1ncn . l'une ss.ooo. EPf tnd Em (A Mtnel 112 Allod<>it (A P!nPd1) 11' Fourth Round (J Sellers) 11'1 Jen Jnslr CD P!en;e) ni Anoeltune IA l 01111 x101 Slffen Court (W H1rlt clr.J 11, NINTH ltACE. About 1Vo furlO!'ln on turf. l yqr olds •nd Up. Cllim!119 price 112.$(X).111.000. PUl'10I tJ,!11)1). J~ Jetn (W Mehorney) 111 M1dl11 !M Y1""rJ 117 $•tin Son (F Glflt ) "111 Flv S!tler Fly (II Ctmp11l 112 Jet P1trol cw H.,,,,.,,l IU A.Id V1nd1I 10 Htlll 11' Mor111ve llroke1 !A l'lnedtJ 117 F1ttlble CM Vt ltflruelll 111 N-tukum {A, Yorl<J 117 Actor 2ncl ID Pltrt11I llt Ferryman Act Stays Together The Jim and Pat Fer- ryman brother act from C01ta Mesa Higb School wlll resume at San Jose State College thb !all. 1be two gridders as &led on San Jose's pre-season football roster, Jim at 205 pounds and Pat at 220. Both were st andout performers at Costa Mesa High. T'tle Ferrymans join. two otber Orange Cout area gridden for the opening of two-a-day San Joee drills on August 30. Frank Weiratb, Eutern Conference back d. the year Jn 1967 fOr Orange O>a.st, reports with OCC ·teammate DOii Mdllahal!, a guard . WeiN.th p.r e pp e d at Marina High and McMahan at Mater Dei. Jim Ferryman ifi one ol 20 1 Spartan lettermen return- ing. He's listed as a starter at the left Unebacking slot. Pat, another transfer from OCC, ilS a reserve tackle. San Jose opell8 its season against Stantord on Satur- day, Sept. 21, in pme that will be televised as ABC's game of ttJ.e week. Merchants Duel Stars On Sunday Champion Placentia Merchants will square off against an AU-Star delega- tion from the Orange County semi-pro baseball league Sunday night at Memorial Park, Santa Ana. First pitch is due at 7. The All-Stars, managed by Marv Rosecrans of Santa Ana La Fonda, will be taken from the following roster: Westminster John Camp, Paul Renfro, Mike Grasse, Dick ·Freese, Irvin Lowen, Larry :W..auzey. Chuck Kester, alternate. Co1ta Mesa Comets Gary Bowman, Ch i c k Peart, Jim McKay. La Fonda, Santa Ana Dave Miller , Ray Cline, Ron Murdick , John Hockenberry, M. Campbell, Bryan Tewell, Terry Tewell. Santa Ana Angell Curt Mau1din, Ron Tsuruda. Pete Baffron, Bob states, Pete Borgas, Gary Sheldon. Deep Sea Fish Report OXNAllO -14 ........ , 'Y•llDwtln. :ns t.111.s, n 111111>u1. 11 lint cod. "l •l>Ck 11111. ,All.ID/II: COVI: -.. tlllllenl ?1' ctllco bt11, 11 bonllo. ' llt Hbut. OCEAHSIDI -J6J 1ntl!!rs1 10 t ll>teon. 2J7 btrr10Hlt, l54 btu, 1" bonito. J wlllhll 1e1 btu, J Jtl-tH, 3 lllllbvl. IAN Cll:MEHTI: -lfS tntltrl; m "°"Ho, 1't boss. 2 wlllh Mt bt11, 1113 btrrtcudt . ' llttlbul, HUNTIHOTON •EACH -lltrv.....U 1ntlel"11 210 Di>nlto, t• llltlbut, llt btn. JI bttrlcvdt. MlllMOIA IEACH -11 11111i.rs1 21 ctllco btn. IS bonito, 2 lltllbul. ltlDONDO ll!ACM -1t7 lll'llllrll t 11i,.eore, S blue/In tunt . 112 ctllco b,t11, :IJI bonito, 6 lltllbuf. ll1r1e1 - lit tntltru 21 ttnd b1s1, '16 bonl!1>, I ht llbul, )Jl mtck1r1I, 101 rock fl1n . llAL •l'ACH -1117 11111l•ra; 4 btr· rt cuda, 13' bonito, t.12 11nd btu. s lltllbul, ltrve -SJ t fllli.t11 S Nr· r1cu.i., 21 bo!'lfto, 5 11nd b&u, 10 ll1llbvl. IAN DtlOO (l't. Lt"'t·M&M · trltlltrm•ll"• Llolldlntl -no 1nt1tr11 111 t fbtte,., 1t Jtllowt1!1, tl \I01pl\1n, :Kil ftilowll11 tu .... Um"' .. ! lnckl -131 l ntlt,.1 61 Vt lk!w11U, 715 bonllo, 115 btrrtcudt, IJ Nu, :ro •lbtcore. Nl:WP'OltT (Arf'1 Llonoll"'I -fS l"11lera; 2! tlbtcore, ,, btrr1cuc1e, " bonito, n botlL (01¥1'1"1 l.O:.rl-276 t111tler" n tlblocort , ;ti blrrtcudt, 1'3 bci!'llto. 207 btu, 4 lltllbut, 4 m1rll"' l tun1. S_ECARD'S ••• 20' .. 12". ..... DHr OVAL lflore Sports OnPage24 100% FINANCING ~ ~Liff, HAND S<IMMfl IMJNTfNANC! KIT, C~ICAl DtSl'iNSH:, flllf o•OONo PAD WlTH ANY 1M PUltGHJ.Sf 16d4 DOIMI •OY lllT taaplsta...., s599 ........ Ow.I 20 ._llCNllMI SICARD S. MAIN a.ANGE £11Aik 532-1992 llOllM, UUO IO 7,JO 7 DAYS A - ,..r\ L.a..a... ..... _~~-~...._ ____________ .. __ ............_..._.__.._--._ . ' . ... ' -· ···~··-¥• 1., .. , ........ ;, A11911~t .:J, J.'JOCI LAU.Y t'tLOT ZJ Ail Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday Reg. 25.88 NO Buy now and save on our diamond quilt seat covers! PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE CUAltAHTE£ AGAINST fA1lU1tf l'ennt)'t 1u•rt!'l!Mt rttry Foni,...ost• t ire q1i111t •II l•ilur.1tnllM-lllll1u•r1n· I•• l11t1 fOf tlw •nlift 1u-ninlee period t1'".J!I;\_,~,. ...... ''II. 1tlt!'CI !Of eKll lire. If Int tire lt!lt clur· in• th• 1u•r1J1lff period, r1tu1n Lt with )'OUr &Ul••nlff" Ufllfiule Ind l'cnf\C)'t will. at Ila eplion' UI r1p1lr tlMI llN . (:JI r1pl1<1 ii with • new Ure, or 13) ,,..,. )'OU •n immf'di11te rriund. If we 11pl.ce tllc' tire 4M1i111 1111 "" 1tpl1c~ment period,, there 11 no ch1111; II -, .. ,IK• U'lt 1/11 1t11r 1111 '''" repltcemenl period. )'Oii Plr so~ 1>1 ~~ IHI tllt!'I tri. current .. uin1 prCo of th• tire includin1 1111 F11kr11 Es· cise T111 !wt aue11ntn 11•in1t t1l111rt c11..-t for .xi.ilsJ. IUAltAHT[[ AGAINST Tlt£AD WU.ROUT Pen!'llVl &ulfl!'lllU ewry fOflmotl• !fr. ftJ.Ctpl !he 72 M'it!I) 11tin1t btlf .... ,. 1111 fOf Ult! tnl;,. cu•1•nlee ,.rio41. You benefit n tollows' If )'Ollf tire _..,, out durln1 llMI ttrtt .,..!! or 1111 au1r1nle• period, r1tur11 ii with )'GUI' 1~111lle1 cer· tilC1l1 •nd P1n111~1 wlH npt1c1 tour tirt ' will! •·new 11,t flhe Chlflt !Of 111•1 #Ill br SO% of Ille C'urrtnl "41i"I price l!teludlns F1der1I ClCiH T11.); ii )'011t Uri ~lrt OU! du.i111 t11<11 Hcond hi ll. Ill• chtr1e will he 15~• ol lh• cutrent 1tl1in1 prk1 lneluCli"I Ftdtt.i [1.ciH TIJ.. TlltlM au11111ttll 00 no( •llPI)' merciel uae of tlrt1. ""'-'• ..... ,_ ..,., ...... .. 11.,. worlt; ' .... ;. ....... .,. ... """"' ,, .. ""*'-"' "''"" SO'Mo ttl ,.,;., lS'Mo .U ,..W NEWPORT BEACH ( Fe1hion l1lend) • • UBEYDUR EN NEV CHARGE ACCOUNT TD DAY I • Pay •• llffle •I $S per~-"~11 ,,,NO MONIY DO All vinyl, box quilted for a smart look of luxury. Completely water and stain resistant; wipe5 clean with a damp cloth. Designed for young moderns on the go ••. now available at this terrific low price! Expert installation available FOREMOST(i) MILEAGEMAKER 4 Pl Y NYLON CORD TIRE BACKED BY OUR 1 YEAR FREE REPLACEMENT GUARANTEE! 24 Month Guarantee with 12 Month frff Replac.mtnl 650-13 block tubeln1 plus 1.11 fed. tox and old tire. 12.95 Whitewalls only 12 more . Size Price Fed. . Tax 700.13 ••••••••••••••• 13.95 ......... e••···· 1.92 695• 14 o o t t t tot t t -. t t It 13.95 t I It It I It t It If I 1.95 735-14 ••••••••••••••• 14.95 ••••••••••••••• 2.06 775.14.,, ••.••••••••• 15.95 ••••••••••••••• 2.19 825-14 ••••••••••••••• 17.95 ••••••••••••••• 2.35 955.14 ••••••••••••••• 19.95 ••••••••••••••• 2.56 560-15 •••••••••••• 1 ••• 14.95 ••••••••••••••• 1.7.C. 685·1 5 ••••••••••••••• 14.95 ••••••••••••••• 1.88 73.5-15···· •••t••····· 14.95 ••••••••••••••• 2.os ns.15 •••••••••• ••t •• 15,95 ••••••••••••••• 2.21 815• 15 O O 0 t t 0 O t O O t t t •I 17, 95 t I I t t O O I If t • I • I 2,36 84.S.15 ••••••••••••• t • 19.95 ................ 2.54 I FREE tire rotation every S,000 milNI FREE puncture repair for life of n.adl FRIE tire mountintl H U NT i'N GT 0 N BEACH (Huntington .. Center) I • ...... , ,,.. ' • ~-~-----. ---------... -.. --·--·---------------------~~~----~ ....... -~-.--~-._..--. • zz DAILY PILOT WtdntldtJ, .A.,.11 21, 1'168 ~IL~T-~DVEltTJ$1g Woln<ldtJ, Ail•"' 21, 1968 ~~--~~· ~--~----------------~~~;;;;;;;;~~-• 6827 WntmlMter at G • had! & EdlnC)et' llvd., Huntington • 2300 Harbor llvd. at Wllsan St.-• 233 E. 17111 St.-COltCI M- leach Harbor $happing Center, Costa Mesa Shopping Center, Costa Mesa WestmlMter • FREE ROLL OF FILM laalntan Koclaco.or or Thrifty Bia+& White 126-12o-620-127 Wiiii -~ .... .. -left "" ........ , .. ....... .. wHiN TOUPICK uPiou1 COMPLITID WOIK. Curl Rlla1i11t Kit s350 Curl Free • • • • • • .. •2•• 1.... .......... c •• ,... to Otllon at $1.4f . sac @:L' Spray Deodorant 8-. Stylln9 Gel s1 25 Dippity Do .. • • • ...._ Mot11hwmli 75c Lavoris .. • • • • • • • lottle of 100 Tabltts s1 49 Bufferln • • • • • • I . :· .93c Paclr of 12 S11pp.it111es ! s1 59 Preparation H. '1 ' • • • • Paclr of 10 Capllll11 s1 59 Contac • • • • • • • • ShNr Strip 45'• .. Al Wide :14'1 77c Band Aid .. . llottle of 100 Tablets SJ 49 Caroid & Bile • • • • • PUI Bottle of 30 @f' Chewaltle M.ttlple Ylta111lna ----...... el ..... -.. '" :" •119 Compar e to other bn.nd11 Riling' up to '3.19 tor bottle ot 100! 77c Ma:x Factors's Lamltawool Puff s1 .oo va1 .. 39' Jhi&bt color putt wtt.h ribbon ln ll&ftltary e 1 l l o wrap. UM wtUI your ra•orlte .. •200 Shulton ........ ...., Lotion !AOVH ,...., s 1 00 •kin IOfter, more IOYtly. s4oovalue CreHNDe Chantilly W t tb free ,... .. .... sr pell... t or ........... .. ............. I NEW! lxcl•l•o ot Tlrl"YI Ca .. nteNatfOMI .,_..,$1M @:t1>Antacld Liquid ~79C \ S 119 Val. Lady lallMr 4 Pu.,. ... c ....... ......,; .... ._ ... 77' 10-os. Jar cre am clean.ea. n~ lubrtcatu ud m&J be ulll!ld u powder -- •soova1. Tuuy Moisture Lotion or Cre•111 • ... •1su Glass Door Bookcases =i.--~t5~$999 at or Maple eolored t la I • It. • a. ,t..dJut&blli center lbe.lf, lJdOxaJ" tor \l I ' U book.cue. cbl:n& e • ti 1 a • t, turlo ......... srs Plush Nylon Bathroom Rug lx6 Foot Wiiii Matclllwt Lhl c- '5'' 12-Yolt Auto Yacuuhi !i:'\~~r ... J:: $398 tu,. II ft. 9:>rd ud DO'W'Wf'ul ._. ·~ allnklng Beahi Lantem Operat:M la ' .,,.. '~~ .... ~$169 1n1. ~.•le. Deluxlllllttdlon Ice Cream 'i Sundae Cups 2 .. 19c 12 OS.. tmlt&Uon tOI ~ In !'Udse or OMrry tla•ora. :Jual.ty at a D:scr!inl Pric 16 Transistor Pocket Radio Atttoclfw Stylfotl $488. · ror yOW'Mlf • for (itb! Wltlt. ..,. phone, carry .... i'eaturw u:c.llent ton. and 1xrinc'• tn mo.t .U.tl<Jll.I -1.th - '5" Value Palaley Round Tote Luggage Iott mid• let stJ"l• ...... mu i. miut " .... pattwn~ ae!Unc eol• 11r1 ! ll'u I sip~ 1 dou· blt u.cu-. ~ . •IM. • "'" .,.. ••• 11'11 . • 14'h" ...... ,. • Iii%'. .':"." .. " .• s1 49 Value! Wood Framed Pictures DISCOUNT SAU PllCID 10~xl!i'6. or lh19" la wbJecb far .,. ftr7 home. ChOOM ...,.nl ,air t. add slunour t e ,. e • , ...... '2• Ralcl Ycmlhartl "l"' llup .,, ....... s 1 n aww.y, Repell flltl\ moequJ- tou, l'U\#. Ula. ' s299s Value! Swing Door Desk =:~~;, $1995 rnarnettc closure. W&l.Dut perv a,.. DMC' tlnl9h. 2b: 1T~dl~". 40'' Walnut Hope Chest Hlnpl-door top w I t h handlome walmlt Pvvaneer """"-.. -tt CIJl be u-1 tot .-Ung .. w.n u ~. 550 Val. Ingraham llectric Alarm Clock -l'rlcff '2'' Taper-~ped. wtth oval cryat&l, golden edp. bef&'ti c a a 1. bi~·. Ncm.-tWlli- nouo dJol. '3'' Val. Bobbing. Heacl Tiger • Jotllted b •• d boM fr11l1 with utUe mo-..... • • ' • • Al • • • -~ :.; ·$ .. " ,• - . .. . . . . '"" --.. ----.--·=------------~-4 ---• A-.............. A --. .. \i • • .... ·- = -::p ..... • • ,. i; .. U SS ¥ a µ . . .. . . . . . . . ... ... ......., ....... 21, 1968 = PlLOT·AOVERTlll!t.-4 - T · at Goldtil Wm, !· .. iscount Priced 1 Silve 62· I " '" . s2 4 ·Flat Style (onch Kits . 1::·. $J79 Triple Head Norelco .Shaver Trlple Head lhaftr' for taaler, cJOMr lhaveL Pop-up lrbn· mer !or sideburna. .... """'""' .............. . $)~Pack of 500 ·~Iller Paper 86c ·-Qliol.ce "' w1dt • eon .... ••r1laal rul• ... 500 «IUJ!t. All-ln-Olie Note look ..... ~ $268 ...... S..llMl ..... I IncJudea B·rtnr bind· er wtth •lid• rule, dpper pouch, them• book, dlcUon.ary, tuler paper and 111.dtat. Floral Cl!' pWlq dmlpa. -.............. , .. wlfto lk 37c .. Utllty , ... -,.,,. _____ _ " ~.- -Mo .. -l'rlcNI 37c . " 4ti ,., • .-Plolr ,.. ----·- •1"value Cork 8alletln lloarcl . '1'' 18126" •erk board wlUI .............. frMDt. r.klt.- cltla. •fflea. •4•• Value! Tape Tool Lobel -· '2'' II 4 I • • 1406 W. Edl111Jer Cllld ltfltol St- Edlnger CtllfW, S•11a Ana • 17904 MCICJnolla SI. at Talbert, Fountain Valley . NatloHlly Fa111•u1 Men's a ·wo111en'1 17 Jewel Watches YwChla Each in sift box with faclor7 ,,,..... an tool Mat.chins bracelet upanaion bondl or ttrapo. "Nam• brand wltb ubrlaDblo m&inlpringa include aulanatiel, ralendan, diamond trtm euea, mu.1 more I Long Sleeve Women's Fancy Blouse Yw $298 Cllolu l.,f-lHRlflYS DWN PRICI SPICTACULARI 5398 Women's Acrylic Sweaters Long Sleeve '2'' .... Q.tl -- Bell rintrm for ochoo!· tim• I Full fuhlonod tur- tlenecb In aolid colora and 1trlpea and claaaie cardigana In Jl'all'a now. Ht colon. Bluo 14 to 40. Men'• Orlon• Acryllc Cardigan '7'' MW LM11 o••••• ...... Knit llretch Nylw Short lloovo Gltfs6 llNtch NylonTl1hts -·w--;159 .,S..ta ....... -... ,. 11.J't ...... boo H'9h Sox ~~99c .... tou. Cascade'of Color Jewelry :c~~t c 1:11=~-~ 69 OrttL ~ p I • '-Jl'ialtlWt. Blu .. Shirts Tm& Neab ~ Ko9 Tvtll N.::Jc 18" Jit&Jm -'"" °""""' .,.._.., -· 'l'\lrtt. Nedt, Btrfpt4 Oottcm. ran turtI• 1MtS1. ................ loys611Ntch . loclu 2 ':: aac ..,1 ........... Bl&cJt. blufl, brcwo, ollTe fldl• an bl._ 1to11. f1 Key RI ... & Sweater Gusa• 59" Wo•e .... Casual Hanel a1 =~.;:E s2'' 151-.....,. ..... I ---"-...... .-. _______ _.._ -~-___ .._ __________ ......_ __ -• -- • p •• ·--. • CAREER CORNER~,. ..... i. ---... ""' ·---Blue Skiea•for Air Work ·-= ..... The Pltll'burih Post-Ga· zeta and Mil• Ll1n award a new M8ftUr1 porWble, cour- t••Y of lb• Royll Typewriter Co., to. Mellnlt Cll'ael for her q,..suon: "I'm wrltinf for my bro- tbor who la In Ibo Air Fon:1. What can you tell me about airplane ·.,.,..,. mocbanica omplo)'Od by Ibo llrllnes!" A. -Employm .. t GI afr. crall medlanlcs la expected to "tak~" dllrlng tbe 1970'' maJnJy bocaU&e ol Ibo anUclpated incre ... In Ibo number ol aircraft: ICllle 181,ooo -II aviation llr· cr,lt may bo ln Ibo air by 19e0 -an !Din ... ol about 88.UXt over the number now flying. Alrllnea have 1,0llil new aircraft on order for de- Uv.ey In 19118 tbrouCh 1971. Much ol Ibo npld l'OWlh wlll occur tn commuter ser· vico and private aircraft with leas rapid, but tul>otan- tial, •xpanslon In Ibo larpr lines. Joi..o,.. Alrlinu me- cllanlcs Inspect, llel'Vice, re- pair and """'1>1111 hllrcialt. They may perform line· malntenaooe work (making on-tbo-apot rapalrs) at Ille larger tennlnala, or make major repllra llld periodic Inspections at a hMdquar- tiers overhaul base. Over· haul mechanlOI may IPfclal· 17.e oo a particular part while line-mall!tenanat mecblllics muat be able to do every. thing. Per1onal QuH.Bcatlou. Here's a job wt.in being a "nit-pkker" doem't hurt a bit. An llzpl1no mecbaalc murt work with accuncy and preclsioo, be attentive to detail. a Who,.. Emplo,.... Ap- proximately ball work for ochodulod llrllnea and tbe otller ball are employ<d by Independent ropalr lh"I". A few thouhsand· work for cer- Ufied supplemental airlines, aerial appllcaUon and air- taxl firms, private busineu, air 1cllooll and Ibo Federll g<M!nuneot. (Not Including those worldng in aircraft manuladurlng planll-tboir dutioo an dlfforent.) ' 11Dlvontttao: lbt ~ period la JI to,. ~ Finl -far AY1 111 IAMAW ~ man, la__.;-. -. tboaumbar al ·.,_ tw la Umltod. Tba - Jo6 --111111111 -. men ~ Ill U.. lloP ..... Tiit -..,a.. -vldloucollollt.........,. which m11 llUr bt Ullfu1 -Ibo -docldt to bocoma a lecbnldlll or englMer, and lclloola •ual- ly plac:e sr..t.-111~ Aller tralnlnl and JI mciollbl of experience, m~c1 must pu1 teltl for a PAA liCOUM to npalr llrplants. For apprat!cellitp 1114 canor lnlormallm, wrlta to Mr ,.,._ Department. IAMAW, MICblnlsta' Build· ing, Washlni\On, D.C. 2)1111. For FAA-aj>pr-ocheol1, write FAA Library, HQ:aO, Fodonl Avlallca .AdmJnls. tration, WMhinitoa, D:C. 20!!M. elv-1:14pt., ..,... 'f'Wf' ~ tw flltlolre colwn '-"' .. ,..J. I.lit"' c.-·~ Mr. c/o 0.ll'r ""· ..,,.,, 11Ct """ •n•-rs a11 llie •lwll. Mesa Post Honored Co9ta Me1aA mer lca 11 Legion POil 455 bu ..-tv- ed an award frcm. the Na· ttona1 O!-lm•ollon ., ei. Logion for coodutlnc .. out-..: d!lkl ~ --' Newly -olllctrl ol Plllt 455 for 1-.,. Boed S. L. Froltac, ..,.. mander: Neal H. Houpn Jr,, pastcommandtr : Eugem1 O. Berlm>a. !Int vice commander; Thoma• H. Rhodet, teeond vice CCR· m-; Nelli H. HOU1an. adjulant aod -of. fl«T; Willlam H. Hurllon, cllaplain; Howard H. Duffy, historian: Rmert C. ~. judge advocat.e : J t 1 1 e G uym, ,.,.,_......,.s: aod Ray Bollm111; -ofCcer. -I•· Most airlines S d Enr 11 belong to Ibo Intemattollll lrou 0 8 AssoclaUon of Macbiniats · and Aerog.,.,. wort er, In Academy (IAMAW) ..-Ibo Tranopoit Workers union. In 1968, the Stephen Alll1l Stroud. aon average union hourly wage of Mr. md :Mr1. VOJ'D' J . for mechanlca la fU4-wlth Stroud ol 2!'18 LaSall• Ave., UP to double Ul!!e-41>d-!l·balf Colla MoN, bu enri>Uod bl f<Ji ho'!lifay._ rn.igo bi!roe-the CllUoma Ma r It I m • flt. b>clud• reduced trawl Acodolny and · b • 1 u n rates, peid 1lct le1ve, re· preparlltion to become 1 !Inmont, lnluranct ancl hos· -moriDa olllcer. pltallzatkln boue!lts. (Othe< Upon comp-of tho a1rtntt mechulcs tener· eour1e Stroud will recelw a ellv have I°""" ~1.) bachelor'• de Ire e tn Tiie Lddor u,. Ad ... ce-nauUcal ·aclenc•, a -ment from Journeyman u . thir4, mate llXI, if mechanic m11 bo to lead quellfied, a c<l1D21111""" os mechllllc (or cmr chief) to an eostgn m 1111 U.S. Naval in....-to lood lnlpector Jleiehoe. to lhop ! ....... , IDd, OC• --'--'------CUlonally, to;esory IDd eucutfve Uons. Gettlal a J . You can become an amatt me- dll.ntc in one of three basic woyo: apprentlcethlp (tbne to four years a f te r high acbool; Annett Forces m• ehanlc experience usually count. toward require. menb), one-ttle·Job training (time varies with the tndJvi-dual and hl1 experience op-· portunlties), or.faduation from a Feder Aviation Administration (Jl'AA)-ap- proved 1chool. Apprenticeship training 1ome major alrllne1, in co- operation with unlon1. FAA· approved achooll may be private or public mechanic ICbooJI, Junlcr collea:ea or FASHION SHOW and DANCE COITEST \'YITH l'lllZES • ~ . . " -.. I . '• ~ .; ,. ...... ' .. . . . . . " --..--. .. ,,-..--. ;::t:;r.~;~~ll"_~~-''!'•-•r=.•>•~0=~<=•.••r.-•""'"~"l•!".''l:""'",...'\C"."'r.!'"""· .,..,.7,T<."iii"""'" .. ''!'1'"""•"'"'"'"'-"'"'"~""·"•~••'i<""-""""·"·"'""'"'"'"'"''·""c:"""°"""'"'ree-'e:"'"'"''''''"""ne;"""r.-.,•s..,,.•.¥.""·"·""'"'"""""~""'*"""''"'"'e-•'•''"'""""""Sr'"""""'~'"'·"""-· %4 DAIL V PILOT South Queen Pretty Joan Russell of Newport Harbor High will be the South queen Thursday night w h e n the Rebels face the North in the 9th annual Orange County football classic at Orange Coast College. Los Alamitos Results TUll50#11Y, AUG. M, 1"41 CINr .t. 1"1tl l"lltST ltACI. 150 y1rd,, Mll6eft 2 'CN old1 . .i;11!ml,.,,, PUfl.e Si m 'R'"orid1'1 Rodi.ti (flrlrititv) n .llO 1.60 s.:io Tllrff Al1r1n1 Ulrookl~ld) II.Ml I.CO OoiilYl ll 1 .... 111u (Or1n•I lAO 11..-11 1/10. Scr1Kf'4d-Oowntowft Gtl, Goldotft Vt llt 'f', St'COHO ltACI'. 0 .,.m. l w•r olcli tnd 111" 111 Gf'..O. I f'h11. Punc IUOO. Stir Evtn (Morrkl 1A t.:IO 2.60 Jt'f' H. ll1r (Adair) 6.olO l.111 OH-Mr. L-Sl'IDI rK1111t) l.14 DH-ltr.itl C1111ty (Llpl\lm) :U0 Tl..-:111 t/10. Scr1Kf'.td -Mr, H"" Gia, MOOll f11r11y, B11d1....00. M«:av'• lit., DH-0..tdllffl fw tl'llrd. DAILY DOUaLll-l·W""" .. lttdltt & •Siii' • ., ................ . THlltO ltACI. lSO Ytrdl. Mtldefl 2 Yttr ... dt. Cl1lml111. Pur14 Sll'OO. Mtrtr. Mlt Dawn /Ad1lr) U.00 1.60 6.20 Fo,....1rd Bali.rt tH Cr_.,) 11.00 t.20 FltVIY Hotl111 (K111llj '-OCI Tl..-11 I/ID. Scr11CMd -flruclt't Jft l1r, Yo Q'-ro. K1we1h WHl>rwlt. l'OUltTH ltACll. l50 Yardt. ~ VMr oldt and UP In Gr1dit A Plua. Pu~ 11900. Prl-1 Dii i flanlct) 5-" A Lte (Smllll) BtH Deck (Morrill T!,..._11 4110. 4.20 l.00 1.111 ,_. l.60 <M kr11<11ec1--Ml11 0-Deck, Vart- dy 1!1~. """""' CM,._r, Stoll Thi Musk. Olo Van. l"ll'TH UCll. lJlt yardl. MlllM!I t 'f'ttr oldl. P11 ... 1170CI. Prll'ICew Jro\ltl'Oll Cltabl11sonl l.IO 2.60 t.AO 011rv1 M Trlllll' (Ll ..... ml J.211 l.2D lonH1d9 Bolo 1111,.i....1 ""' 1 1 ........ 11 $110. kr1~ln1 l1r. SIXTH ltAC•. AOt nrdl. I _, oldl tnd' 1111 lft Gr.de AA Mlftla. Pu .... U10CI. Llk1 A Rodcirt (Srnlllll 11.20 I.AO f.olO Triple G1119ff (L!Phltml f .60 •A DI<!< J1cll IDr.,-.rl J.• Tl,..._20 '110. kr1tthtd-IUchlwr'1 Tonto, Dlfllll Taotln. Vandy Olli, Onefortt..mon..... SIVl!NTM llACI. l.50 y1rd1, t .,..r 01d1. Clalml,.,,. Pum tllOO. Cllu Chu aoO 1 IStr1unl l .20 2.'11 t.20 ).60 2.60 T<11> Alimo (l!lrlnlcl..,I Sc-O' Trautlll (D,...,.rl 11 ........ 11 6110. •• No Kratcft,eo. l!IGMTH ltACll. lJO \ltrd•· I .,_, oldl Ind' 1111 11'1 Gr.O. M ttlut. Tiit Browlrr. Pune UXIO. P1111 P1l'1 DtndV (COllllll ) Gl1u Chlr1 (Or..,.r) c ....... r DlndV tLll'hlrnl Tl...,._11 "10, .S.20 1•.• , ... 6.AO ,,olO ••• AllO Rtl'-MYma G.,...y, !mt 5.,,_. orl1t, 011 lt1x ,.,. llr. Go Min No. Ro.II Klnlck, Bold 0-, L.0-, let Roduf. Scntc:MO-Moon C11dtoH'. NINTH ltACI. olOO y1r•._ ) _, oldt ind u. In Gr.0. A Ml11111. Purw Sl1llO. G1lllnl V11or (Kt nlal Li no Mitt Clrll'llllrrl Le'l"I Dr11 (llllblMOll) Tl,.,.._tl flll. 7.00 S.111 :t..AO S.'11 l.lm .... 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(J KanW 111 M1r1Muln (H Crosby) 17:1 Tom L.,..,, ('° C..o.llY'I 11S Go A Mitt IT Llof>lrn) 11' Llttlt y_, (J ltoblnsonl 117 NINTN ltACI. MIO Yim . S Ytllr old1 aM UI' '" Gr..O. A.A Mlftlll. Purw u ..... Dlll'lll T•lln' (P Cr-.ll'f'J 116 Tiie Mtrdll Wlrid llt Ad1lrl 11• S.fldv Olk (H Crt111rfl 117 KIPIY't Cillooll ID Clrdola) 111 0.111wt11t1n111•11 CJ lloblmortJ 111 Mld't ~ (It aaM1) 1!) Ml1• Llttlt Dfl:k IW Sir-I 11'. CARATS BACK TO SCHOOL SCENE ,.. .. _ t.aa SOFT 111c1 ~ LONG lnki.ts for Added Cu1llbl't .. famp 11..IO L""""°""' ..it Ind ,..-. °!uoy•nt T' 50Cks &re light on the feet 1nd I delight fD wear. 75% Ork>n acrylic fiber for btioyanf bulk, 2S% Nylon for kino- size strength. They're machine-washable Ind qu~k-drying. Choose frOlfl ~ flsll- ion cobs. r->ilEGISTER NOW FOR'--. rnrr zu~!~" r 11 ~~ SCllAM•LR FlEE PllZE Dl:AWtHG-No Purthase Necessary ind you don't have to be present to win. See this motor· cycle at Norm Reeves in Anaheim and the H01JSt of Suzuki, fountain Vallry . Se~ on yo.w bock to IChool itemt at Carats. 'ifi ANAHllM * OA-N OtlOVI °"-C_.,..._ •••••• , ••• b '-" ..... '-.... ,,, .. "' ...... •conA MISA ...... (_ .... .......... ,,,.1 ..... 1• .,., c:sr...-. (11411 ......... * HUNTINGTON llACH ....... ...... (- '"' ........... ,,,., 111 ...... •, .............. ,,.-:=i ..... 0..0. cwo.ws .... _....... .. ....... cs-... • ,. ~ .. :, ----· ---·~ All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday :: , LING BUYS! FREE CUSTOM DRILLING When you buy a Foremost bowling ball. Penneys will measure and custom drill it to fit your hand. No charge • .. just another great serv· ice from Penneys. Lightweight women's bowling oxfords • Towneraft borte smooth leather upper • New rounded toe for excellent fit NEW.PORT BEACH (Fashion Island) 6" UB&VDUR EN NEV CHARGE ' Jewel toned plastic bowling ball plus bag 1799 Dart 300 is the favorite bowling ball of both beginners and better bowlers. Handsome jewel tone finish comeJ in blue or gray; rnists dust and grit. Made to American Bowling Confer· ence specifications. Available in 10, 12, 14 and 16 lb. weights. Well de- signed case of expanded vinyl with paneled construction. Black, blue/ white, or red/black. Zipper, lock and key. Foremost Keystone Bowling l11g, if purchased separately ... 3" D11rt 300 pl11sffc bowling b11n, if purchased separately. . 1)4 Comfortable T owncraft bowling shoes for men • lono ...-•'-loath..-upper • A strike for tho •ri-bewl0t HUNTINGTON BEACH (Huntington Cent or) 7" -·-- ---------------------,---~--------------~ ~.~~ ------... A ... -·-.... .-. ----_-....--..- -..... • . .. • a a CZ .. . . . ~ . • • .• Cox Holds Olympic Trials Lead '. , Marshall and Fay Trailing Le~r . ~ .. ;:, By ALMON ~EY' 'bas caund C!!lile a 1111r yljh o.i., '11" INtllltl ...... its hydz\aulli: mast adjuster, (lardner Co~ of .Man-hos been consistentjY ~ toldtillll Yacht a!'!>. N. ~.. ll1 lbe _.;.;_..,· ·~· . 1 • l•:~·"!"l• ~a IT.'&<. ~-:-~.aw~~ OIP>Plc 'Nllot every· daY-6nhh la !I" lil:at ra<e bli :tr ftollhed In the 10 1 best peH.,,.._, !lo 11.nisb• :;:., to ot:'~:S~ ~ ~.j.~ -~ R4 IJl!l scare ID th~ first !hr<• o1 · r:-·-·1plaang hiln olotb . se.Yb ICl\Odlllod. !"Ctl. ){e With (6 point.I.. • n<iw ..,_.fill¥bes.o11-M· ~ ~ N<>tUI ,. .. one · o1 Jlii~' a ~ ol six p<>lii\>· over the flarligg Uoe. early ~6 j'oy oj ,Housl<>n .. Tuesda)<•"li<l.""1.!:0 i-eatarL Te~ me 'I( t!ie mainstays of . After ~ be, ,IOI the;'1-tnternltlonal · S.5-Class ' caught in a wlDdibl:ft which WF.J WettqeSdaJ'• race by a dropped ~ far back •• -. . w;<ie margin, but bis sixth Warren·.-J»•af'ker, cl plilce linl•beo In the first Newport Harl>or· Yacll~Clllb tWO races COUld boost him seem1 'to be .tuck 10th tbe DQ' bi&ber than tfilr.d overall numbe:r !Qi wtlether he likes wjijl 2.1A points. Fay ls sail· it ur Dot. :He bas 'fiaiShed mr· Sundance, a boat he loth in all·three race1, plac- d6s1i;Ded him.sell. Jng him lotb overall with 48 Jthn•Marshall's Bingo II, PoinUI. Stamford, Conn., remained Scott Allrao, sailing !or the in' second place ln the stan-U. S. Naval Academy, An· dilr@:s with a fourth place n~polis, showed Cashes of fibisb to go. with h.18 third hh old form Tuesday wben ~ liret in ~the previous be .approached first weather He now has 13. 7 mark i.n third place and hek1 . it until the final beat when . 1'ickef ol Newport he dropped lo eig!1'il. He i.< HOtl>o< Yad& Club saillJ1g m 11th place witll 49 points. Charade, Copped down · a AfCassel, Voyagers Yacht rt.lg on tbe ladder with a Club, is sailing a new boat, ~· place ftnlsh . Bis 1core Savage, an<t is holding down ~/-14'.7. 12th place with finishes or ::;, · J.2.S-16 for 55 po\W:. Cassel L~p!AN FlF'l1I is a newcomer to the class ·Gordon Llndeman'1 Cloud aDd is sailing a new boat Nine from Milwaukee is in built especially ror the filth place overall with trials finkh.., ol. 7~'fnr 28.7. . Sharing the fifth spcJt with DELAYED Lindeman is. Earl Elms ol Tuesday' a race w a s Mi99ion Bay' who bes been delayed nearly two hours as consistentlY improving his the committee waited for performance wiih a M!oord the wind to settle d<>Wn . at M~. Even so, it shifted nearly 4-0 ·G~ Driscoll'• Ramona degrees after the start, forc- iS' one of the few new baots lng the race committee to d "e.1 Ii ii e d and built signal a new course for the s-i?cifically for t h i 1 series second weather leg. WhlCh is holding high oo the Fay led the entire 10.8 scoreboard. With finishes of mile distance, increasing his 4-8·7 Driscoll is 7th with 35. lead on each of the six legs. Ted Turner of Atlanta, Cox pushed the Texan Ga., has never been aQle to hard over the first half of break out of the middle of the course, then dropped to the fleet. He has fini shes o! fourtf:I and fifth on the se- 8-7-8 and 48 points for 8th cond w ind w a rd and se- place. cood leeward leg. He got Lowell North's Luv, which C3denz11. cranked up alld DOUSE THOSE CHUTES -Gardner Cox's Cadenza (No. 68) doesn't look too good .as leaders In the 5.5 meter Olympic trials approach leeward mark and prepare to douse spinnakers for the final beat DAILY .. ILO ll•ff .. 111119 to the finish. Cox pulled back to second place. From left are Cadenza, Bill ·F1cker:s Chara~•. Scott Allan's Outa Sight and Gordon Lindema.D.1s, Cloud Nine. Nady Takes Big Lead in Finn Series Irving Wins Pilot T.rophy Looi,: Niady of th e University of Calif'Ornia at Berkeley jumped into a sizable lead in the Fjnn Clim North American sail· I n g cbampidoships at Alamitos Bay T u e s d a y without wiMing e race. The Berkeley sailor firmh- ed third end second in the first of seven acheduled races, giving him a score ·of 8.7 under the Olympic scor· ing system. Wimers o( the opening races were a pair of Mant· oloking, N.J. skippers, Carl Van Dyne and Dan Hurley. But thelr perrormances in the other race kept them from Uie top spot. Van Dyne bolch second place in the scoring with 18 points. He finished 12th in the tt:rst race am woo tlle second. Hurley won the first race but dived t'O 15th in the se- cond to give him 21 points and tie foe third place with Robert Doyte, Plean, Mass .. wbo had finisbes ol second and 12th. A pair tJl sevens netted Pete Cocrad of St. Francis Yocllt Clul> !illih ovenill witll 27.pointl. -~ There are 44 entzies in the North American title reget· ta. Moot ol them will go In San Diego next week for the final Olympic trials 1!I tile cl:ass. None of the local 1kipper9 placed among tbe 1Jrs,t 10 1n Tuesday'& ~ners. The top 10 In the standtnp: I. IAuis N.adJ I u c Berkeley, ~2 -8.7 i . Clari v .. Il)ne. -tnloking. N.J. 11·1 -18 3. Dan Hurley, Man· toloking, N.J .. 1-15 -21 4 Robert Doy}e, Plean, 1i-1ass .. 2-U -21 5. Peter Com-ad, St. Fr.an· cis YC, 7.7 -26. 6. Norman FrttmfD , llhaca. N.Y. 14-4 -28. 7. Blll Ste1eman, MBYC, ,_J7,J = :18. 7 l L Gm HuyL Puon> Rico, i ;.13 -2ll ' I. Bob Andre, SDYC, 1·9 -2ll j 11, P• Dollerty, U.S. !._ Q ... 1 G110N AcademJ', 9-14 -36. I Alex Irving, skipper of the 40-foot double-ended gJoop Sparkle, was the winnef" of the DAILY PILOT P"'l><'tual Trophy in Balboa Yacht Club's Balboa to Long PuiDt and Long Point .. Balboa races. 'nle two races are the windup in the 66 Series. The DAILY PILOT trophy is given for tbe yacht with the best COlTected times tor the two r~. SJ)arkle finished first in Ole86 in the race to Long Point and fourth on the return race. Overa.D winner o{ ttie Balboa to Long Point race was Cllmles Glasgow's L-4-0 sloop Impetuous b'om BYC. Winner in the return rad was the Columbla·50 Release skippered by George Sturges of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, 'Ille return race was a slow affair in which ClasseS C, D and MORF did not finish before tile 7 p.m. deailine. Final results of the two races: a11N1 II \.Mt l"tlM OVERALL -CH l,_,_1, Clwirlll G'--, llVCj C21 V'oiint1 U, Miki HbP,, llYCI {. l Mervlda. Jolltl l"IYM , ave . Cl.AU A -(11 *!'lite, Aln ll'V .... , iYC 1 12) Fl1re, ~w 1"~1'11n, ~l~I (3) N ... ~. Jfdl B•lllil', CLAU ·8 -llj Eow;hl;ntr~u. W\'nn lledell, BCYC; t I Vtle, Jtc~ Blbe, IYC. Cl.ASS C -jl) l~I; (2) Mervlda1 (J) Jtll, Jim lorter, JYC. ,,Cl.ASS D -!!) VotlMI Iii n l Un• ·~Dick LlndltY C8YC.. I' -(ll D<lhlnlri. Miiton AHlont, LI / {7'1 V1YIC:I-, 8111 -l(lelnSm_!~~~ NH.YCI (J) Alolle, Gle!I RM, -.1 C•I 8.olly, '""" '"I' LfY,. Newport Harbor Club Def ends Wales Crown Newport Harbor Yacht Club will be the defen<!er Monday when the Prince of Wales Bowl competition for the North Americf:ll match racing championship gets w1der way at Los Angeiet Channel Race Due Newport Bar.bor Yacht Club's Coait Charm.el Race , the ruth of six races ln tile Ahmanson Series will be Mlled Saturday. The raee It.arts at noon Saturday from a otartiog line a quarter ot a mile west or tbe Emmy Drilling Island, approximately two miles west of the Huntington Beach Pier. Tbe cottt11 takes the ocean racing yachts to the Pdnl Fermin buoy wost ol Loe Angei.. Har1lor ee- tranct, tbeoce acrot1 the cbomlel In Ship Rock al O.talina l9tbm111, then back pat th• Emmy drilling island. finishing a qu.arut O{ a mile -of the B&n.o. Pier. Total d!llance II P mlle1. ' Yaollt Club. NHYC won the f I r a t Prince of Wale6 col'Dl'ttition last year with Scott Allml at the helm. Skipper for NHYC in ttie first defense will be John Hogan. The series ts one of the North A me r i c an diam~ Ji.oosbipa of ttie N o r th American Yacht Ra c in g Union. NHYC represents Area G, the entire Californill. Fin<lliMs In 111e Prince of Wales Bowl were 1elected after quarter-final and semi· final ellminatloru1 , The races win be sailed in Shiad• c11 ... sloops. Other tlnaiists: AREA A Vlneyanl Haven Ya ~ht Club , Massachusettl, Antbmy K. Van Riper 1. AREA 8 -Rocky Point Yacht Club, bid Greemrkh, Coon ., Wiliam S. Jayton. AREA C -Me<edecorlk R i ver Yacht Club , Plllladdphla, Pa., James C. c.r.o.. AREA D J- Yadlt CI u b , MiHlnlppl, JO«ph Blythe Jr. AREA S -Lake Geneva Yacht Club, atteago, Ill., Mrs. Jan• W. Peiel. AREA F -New Orle-Yectit Club, Mltwte, La., Wllliem J. lbs Jr. ' Ol1l1illittH "bf Tiii Allrld ll1rt Comp1n1; 10 PrOf11 • loa" "•Ill NtWalla,fltl ' . . . ' ; ~. OOPS, WE GOOFEDI ' IMAGINE!! We Show A Profit in 1968\' to Date Our ·Tax Consultant Says: "Give Some Back This Week" so ... FOR FIVE DAYS ONLY ...,. We Make The Following Offer: 1. HUGE 200 S(j). FT. ROOM ADDITION Ancludht0: Plan& • Permit• • llue f'rhrtt Completely W9ather Proof Wall• • C.m.nt Sklbs REG. ~1850 NOW ONLY 2. Plus: + + Insulated Roof + + •120000 FULL -,. PRICE DELUXE ROOM SIZE PATIO ' lncludlne11rtanz • Permits • Slut> Prinh' ~ •INSULATIED ROOF• I Plus: + + Complete Screen In + +. REG. $895 NOW ONLY •59500 FULL PRICE .. , rr · • • All WORK DONE BY OUR CREWS -NO SUBSll 18 YEARS EXPERIENCE • GENERAL CONTRACTOR CALL NOW -546-956a ' •. CALIFORNIA PATIO SUP.PLY •r TN We7,,. 1341 SO. BRISTOl, SANTA ANA PAY NOTHING TILL ·1969! O..lifiMI .... ,.,...._.., lnvlt9d .. lfMtul,. I I ____ ..__ --------··------~. --0 ..... ----------·-'----- QC . . • • DAJLV >U.OT J5 LEGAL NOl'ICE LEGAL NOl'ICE ...,,.., .... ,. - SS SA• "'5 ClltTll'ICATIE ~I' aUSllllE CERTll'ICATIE 01' COltl'ORATIOlll l'Oll l'l(flllM ,_ 111•111• :ni. 'ut!Oef\11 .... ~ rtJ1n!!N.:.µr1lf'!I TIU.lllSAC"TIOlll 01' aus1111111 UHOEll tt.11 he Is corid\ldl,. , · rnliur..., l'ICTITIOUI lllAME tlu1!11eu II ... lnd!Vldu•I ., 1'02 ,.,,. Un<ltr"ll11Md Co'1'0r•t1on don Or1nten.or.o 1o1,t1w1n:I, ._ Perlt. lle•Kov cartlfl' tl'lll n Is conductlnt Ill C1tlfornl1, under the lldfllout rlrrn Mmt 1nltr1or ~etl"' bulll'lftl 11 ll6 So. o1 ORANGETHOltPE STEAM: HOUSE, T111Tln A"t'•nu-, Or1ng1, C1llforn!1 under .... • • __ • The llcllllou1 firm n11mo ol LOIS INC. efld llltot ' ; ~,,.,........, HAROING 6 ASSOCIATE end 1!'91 Mid :;:, ':r=l~ns/= :=.,M~' 1:' nrm 11 _,_.911 of !tie follil'Wf1'19 COi'"• wit· w1t1on. when• llf"lnc:Jpal 11i.c. of 'Jolin ,i. ,.,,.~ HU M..r~ butlllftl !1 •• follawt: Street ~ncl O,.kl, (e11f<inll. 1'11n:ll1111/P01!, lrw;,. ll• SO. T111!11t D ,_,• .., .• , o '"' Avp., Oreng1, Ct lllornl• 1 Jotio1 ",\, ;_,,~ WITNES$ lh II.Ind 11111 3111 d.9"t' of Jufy, STATE 01' CALIFORNIA, 1947 COUN1'Y OF LOS Al«J,ELEI. u. HAltOING-POST, IN,, ori A111usl 1, JJ'I, blf0r1.iw... 1 Nc11,.,. Jo Ellen l'Oll · -... Prnld1nl lt\.Jjnd.for ... d COUll.,J"d SI•"' Lais c. H1n:ll119 Jrp;,t..,..._ JIM ~1.,!lef"lluson SKrellrY lo mt lo M Ille ...non whc11 n•me 11 IUbKr!bffl fo the w!tto!n In· W, E. s,r JOHN, lfn1m•"'' 1nd fdl(!OW....,. "' mt !fWll 'ou"IY ltrk he o:KUled the 11me. ITATI! 01' CALll'ORNlA Wllfll1t ml' hand end -L · COUNTY OF ORANGE ) ... (OFFICIAL SEAL ) ' On rhll 3hl divot July, 1947, ~ ftle OoYi. o . alinw l,llldertl1/llll, • Noler"t' Public In end for No1•'1' .. 11bt1o-C.tltoml• ~Id Countv end Sl1!1, nsldlM '"""'"" Pr1nc:r111I Office In duly cornmll&lio!'llld 1nd ~. Pl'f":IOnlll• · · · Lal "-le. C-tv ~-rM Jo l!litll P111t ll'ld Lo11 C. Mt",_IMIM EJl>I..... Hlrd!"ll lmaWl'I ta me ta .. the .. 1"91ldl'nl , Jenu1rv 1, 1m and $.eertl•rv o1 1111 corpor1tkln fNt .,.. IC.I.NH. l'llRN a IU.11~1 At'IY. ~ ""' wllfll" ... ,,_,,. on beMll' of ffSt w .. 1 ,..,,,,.,..., :Ml. Ille corPOratlon t'l'ler11ln na!Md. •nd Lei An"lts. c,1r1 ""' , •tlinowledoftl lo 1'11<1 lh•l ...ct! ai,......tton Tel: {!UJ n..wt ,.~ t!'ll MnM. JOU.OC WITHE» '"'f Nord Ind .rftclll -L poubffltlld ~ c....i Clelly PllDI, Doneld L Dlnltll, A1111ust Ill. 21, • *tel a.11mbtr •· Noftl'Y·P'utllk Cetnomll IHI 1~ PrfndPtl OfflC. LEGAL NOl'ICE Or1nM Countv Mv Commlp lon (Qll,... M1rcti 20, 1941 'ubll"* °"'"'• eo.11 DI!!\' ,not, .hr I\' 31 Ind All91Mf J, 14. 21, 1Nt I~ I • LEGAL NOTICE l • • i --~------... ------------------~~..-.--~-------------------------------: .. :-- • Brand New WILSON FORD SALES 18255 BEACH BOULEVARD CHiway 39) HUNTINGTON BEACH • Brand New 1968 THUNDERBIRD ·SA~s1200 e :j'F) iP Brand New 1968 COUNTRY SQUIRE 7 sm s1000 <a~and .1968 Galaxie 500 ·FULL PRICE Over 40 Brand New Station Wagons In Stock All At Low New 1968 MUSTANG Low ••• llml. 9'11 c .1.D. va. CP\11--tt.. ,_. tt-1"'· ,._. 111 ... tlrtk•, s.19tt91r. C11N11ion., /lH..FM tl'tfe NdlD, Ill .. IM!ltu ... \lflllbUlt)I ·-· b9d!r 1"Cll.lld1Mllro tin"" 91-.., Wllltl _.., MW fll'M. H•rdt111. at CID v• -Int, crul1-o-m11H:, '°-9'Mrlllll I. disc: br•keL AM rHlo, clod!, eornforl .,,...... wmn111cin, tll91'1t tMficll _,, vlnYI 1 ... lttior trhn, _,,,_., u-.n. rM'IOl1 e11ntre1 ,.,1 ... f'br, ""1'tCH10i. MN!t"ljl Ooorli, fUll wheel - "" tnd 111 1t1nd1rd l1ctory ec:iultrnenl. HO. tit Discount Prices SAVE s750 SELL DOWN' 68 •• "36J-Vf, tr11!...+1111llf. •-r .i..rlflll, Powtr dllC brtkff, Rtdlc, l(nl~ vlnv1 f11xurv ~ktt ... 11. Delu•e 1111 belts, C:Onsolt, ln~rior dKor ttrO!A>. Tinted .,,u, l lKll ltndl U fop, Wide OVll WSW llru, S!HI •1Yltcl -I•. GT/CS fqulp~t Pk .. $2188FULL PRICE Brand New 1968 CORTINA GT Brand New 1968F-250 ' Camper Special or . $2188 FULL PRICE Brand New Fonl Custom fOI, 1•11 la C( ST. tJ hp lV tf11111\f, fully l'flKhrcrt!Hd l U>Md lr1111o· '""•loll. llllK brli<M, lnhlrlO!' .&. exterior dKor .,_ .. rM'°, ""ter, WSW lfr•. )60 Vt 1ntlM. 1111VY duty Ylnyl trim, full folm cushion, cruli.om1tlc lr1n1ml11lon, boo:Jy 1llMI moldln11, r•dlo • ht•!•, t1111tc1 11111, 1250 Ill. ,,.,,,, ... 1 .... 24Sll lb. N!ar 1:41....,., Spe- cl1I. Slock iP!'lllf , blollc HARDTOP. Fr•1~ 1ir h11l1r I d•fro1t••. beck· up, dom• I court11y l!9hh, buc'c•f •••h, 111 vinyl him. nylon c1rp1h, roe••• p1n1I moldin9 1hould1r btlh, p1dd1d d11h I I 1ir 1coop orn1m1nl, 1111 I vi1afi, wind1hi1ld w11h111 I 2 numba' ft• $2788 ""'°'"' ...... "'*'°*"' · 1p11d wip1•1. No. 1141 ILUI 1001( PllCE S1011 FULL PRICE Over 3S lrand New Phase II Cortinas 'Cortinas .and Even Station Wagons Available WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY El DORADO CAMl'ER FULL PRICE Over 30 Brand Nwe 1968 Trucks in Stock for Immediate Delivery. ·Al Marked for Clearance Savin9s. IMPORT DEPARTMENT LIKE! NEW! SPECIALS! '66 TOYOTA '67 TOYOTA '66 L.T.D. $1995 FULL $69 :: '65 VOl.KSWAGEN '~"' ,,.,,, '""· ''"· '''· PRICE $69 D Coron1 . Autom1tic, r•dio, h11t1r. Coro111. Autom1tic, r1dio, h11t1r, •nnyl roef. No. 185. own No . 11 Cit No. 948. ILUI IOOIC PRICE $2500 ILUI IOOK ..... '"" ILUI IOOK ..... '"" ILUI IOOK ..... "'" '66 MUSTANG $1395 FULL $47:: OUI $895 $1295 $4 595 ''"''"· '"''· '"''" "'" PRICE $47 Do~ ~~r:~ T~~!L Tg~:L I wh •• t •. No. 715 ILUE 1001( ... ICE $1930 !~! M~~~MT. POI~~ M~!T. '"!~~ M0$~3MT. ;~~~:~~.~!.~~"~" $19 9 5 :~~LE :: .:, ILUE IObK PRICE $2450 ~~ :.!7 •. ~~;l~.~.1 ~'"'1 $1995 ;~,~LE::.: 1nf1rior. No. 117 O ; •. ~~~~~.~~'~:E"~'.'.'.' .......... $169 ~~·~;~;~~'~:."'.''.'.'. ............ $189 '65 Plymouth'"' $1·4·95 FULL $50 = ~.~''~j:;,~~?.~~!':.''.~''.' ~'.'.'.'.': . $199 ~~· ~;~.~?'.~'':.'~~: ''_'_d. ...... $269 '""Ill H.T. VI. ''-"'";LUI IOOK •llCE Sl710 PRICE $50 ·- -;?,~O~~ .. '"'"· '"" '""'· $189 1 ~~~ !.~.~c?.~ .. ""' '"'"· $289-~~"> ~~~~ •. ~!.~:, .. $1895 :~,~~ :: .= N '' I • N I Joi '"9'"'· No. IOllo• '"" o. I I • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · '· ·''' • • • u99•9• ric ' 0' ''''' '•'' • •' ILUI IOOIC PlllCE $2290 ~NTSPECiALs :~.,,! ·,~.!.~~ 1197 $1095 :~l~LE ~~ .: ILUE 10011 PRICE 51590 :.~ .. ~~~.~~.E~., $895 :~,~~ $\;1 =. rttc•. No. I o•4 D•WI ILUI 1001 Pl ICE 51415 ~~7.~~~~. !!",:. $ 2 49 5 :~,~~ : .: ILUI 1001 PllCE S2tl5 ~~·~:~to ~ICKUP ........... $189 's~"~;~;E~~~~.~TN'.~.''.'~'.-. ...... $28~ ~; .. ~~~~·O PIC~UP .... : ...... $289 ~~.;~~~~~'.~:~~'.'.': .......... $1095 ·ss FORD PICKUP $349 ·6s FORD F.JSO $2495 VI, •ulo11'11lic. W/d11ui1 lftOUt1l1d c•frlptr unit . No. 1221 ....• , ••••••••• ,, •.. ,... Li~• n•w. No. 1257 ........... . ALL l'AYMENTS ON USED CARS INCLUDE TAX & LICENSE & FINANCING CHARGES FOR 36 MONTHS ON Al'PROYED CREDIT N CA PAYMENTI I CLUOE T X-LICE Sf. Fl CMA GES FO A P OVED C EDIT HIT SIDI! W LL Tl ES D WHEEL COYE S 0 IOMAl MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND SAVE AT WILSON FORD TODAY, HUNTINGTON BEACH (Hiwar 39> 18255 BEACH BOULEVARD 842-6611 , A~~1~ ~~·D•ya T~td·d~~;u0r;,~, 'JI. 5 92·5 5 U I I ' • • .. ~~·--~' . ·-~"' .... •-·~-....... -~.,.,..-~_.,,., • ··~· .... -. ...,.r •. L.~~-·~=u..<~ .. utz~ . ...:,_ . ._.._= ...... ~="HC-....n-...:s=nm..;...-•....;,• ..... ___ ...,. ___ __.._...__ .... >_., ... ,_. •· .;;...... . ....;.;... ..... -·-·-·~· .;..e -=-·...;4i...·~· --...;.~. ~ • ..;;_ --..... • • • ... • • ----..-...-------~ --~ .._ ' - •• -. • ' PILOT-AOVERTISER-FI Wednesday, August 21, 1968 i W~l'lfsday, A11g11st 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT :Jl1' DAI .LY PILOT FOOD SECTION 'Bet You Can't Eat Just One' ScrumpUous appetizers 2 teaspoons Worcester· 1 package (9;) ounce) pie 1h cup ra18iJ:ts, chopped wblch can be made ahead of shire sauce crust mix Cook beef and onion bl time .,.. a real boon to a 4 drops Tabasco sauce Prepare pie crust mix as shortening until beef 11 busy hostess. Here are 2 packages (3 ounces directed on package. Roll ~ crumbly and browned. Stir several suggestions whlch each} cream cheese, incil thick on lightly noured in remaining lngredienta; are winners for flavor . They room temperature board. Line small patty heat well. Chill. Yield: BUSY HOSTESSES FIND DO-AHEADS A BOON Hea/thlul, Too require little last-minute at· Chopped nuts and I or paris (sandbakkel pans ) About 2~ cups. tention and are tr u 1 Y m1nced parsley with pie crust; prick with HAM AND elegant. Sottea gelatin in tomato tt.nes of fork. Bake in hot CREESE FILLING Frosted liver s au 5 age juice. Place over low heat; ov~n (425 degrees F .) until mold is certain to be a stir until gelatin is dlssolv-done, 8 to 10 minutes. Yield: 2 cups finely chopped favorite. The spicy sausage ed. Combine liver sausage, 2 dozen tarts. · cooked ham mold can be made a day onion, salt, Worcestershire JU cup finely chopped ahead, stored in the and Tabasco sauce: beat un-SPICY BEEF FILLING onion refrigerator and q u t c k I y til smooth. Add tomato mix· 1 pound ground beef ¥, cup drained sweet frosted with cream cheese ture; blend well. Pour into pickle relish and sprinkled witb chopped lighUy oiled 3-cup bowl. "2 cup chopped onion 1h cup shredded Cheddar nuts at tile very last minute. Chill until firm. Unmold on 1 tablespoon shortening cheese Served with crackers or serving plate. Stir cheese 1f.i teaspoon cinnamon Yi: cup mayonnaise or party rye, it makes an ap· until smooth. Frost liver lf.tteaspoon allspice salad dressing petizer with that 1'1'11 have sausage with. cream cheese. ~ teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons prepared another" flavor. Sprinkle with chopped nuts mustard or minced parsley. Yleld : ~teaspoon pepper Combine ingredie11ts; 1tlr. Party shells or rounds fill· About 2 cups. 1 tabtespooo red wine Yield: About 2~ cups ed or topped with hot or cold TINY MEAT TARTS vinega!' Wiener Filling: Substitute meat fllllng make superb Beef, bam or wiener fill· 1 can (8 ounces) tomato "hopped wieners for ham appetizers. The past r Y ing and omit onion. shells or rounds may be ---=----------'"'-'-•----------------made ahead of time and stored in the 'freezer or r,::::~=~=======;;;:;;;:---::--,:::::--:::----:::::;r:::;-1 refrigerator until serving time. If the pastriea are warmed in a slow oven before filling, they'll have that fresh baked flavor. The tiny tarts are baked in sandbakkel pans, but if none are available, tiny muffin pans may be used, Or substitute two small rounds of pastry and put the rounds together With a meat £illlng, 1oBDdwich style. Now fo!' some easy-to- make fillings. Spicy beef filling has a most unusual combination of flavors -ground beef, spices and raisins, surpris· ingly good! The filling can be prepared ahead and heated just before serving. Or perhaps you w o u I d prefer a cold filling. Here's a ham and a wiener salad filling. Both can be prepared ahead of time and spooned into the tart shells at serv- ing Hme. Read Every Page-Check the Outstanding Values! This Sale Continues thru Sunday, August 25th! IF YOU FAIL TO GET YOURS· ASK FOR A COPY! Ice Cream Soothes Sweet Tooth See how easy hot and cold appetizers can be! Why not serve easy-made appetizers at your next party? JUn A FEW OF THE All too often children are cautioned against eating too many sweets for fear it, or they, will lead to tooth decay and the later ac· companying miseries of the dentist's chair. Aspic Has Potpourri Of Flavors While many Of us think of aspic as congealed seasoned tomato juice, the word a51>lc refers t.o many different types of jellied mixtures. According to the ell· cyclopedi a Larousse Gaatronomlque, coosidered to be the world audlority of food, aspic is a term whi'ch applies to a way Of ar· ranging cold dishes. It """""'· the book t.!l.s us, Of putting fillets of fish, slicee: of chicken, game, meats, vegetables, frujt, in· to moulded jelly. SHRIMP ASPIC 1 pound llhrimp, fresh or frozen l enve lope unflavored gelatin 1.rl cup cold water 1 8-ounce bolrtle clam juice 1 cup tomato juiCe 3 slices lemon 1 small onioo, sliced Sprig parsley stalk of celery 1 bay leaf 1 tablespoon m i n c e d green pepper _ , Wash sllrimp but M not remove shells. Sprinkle gelatin over cold water to S"Often. Combine in a saucepan cl&m juice, tomato ju.ice. lemon slices, oni'on slices, parsley, celery and bay leaf. Bring to a boil and boil S minutes. Add shrimp and boil 2 minutes. si.atn liquid Into a mllillg bowl. Add gmtin and 11tir until dis<olved. Chill until mixture begins to thicken. Meamvhlle, remove lben. and s p 1 i t shrimp in halk (stretchet a pound of ohrlmp), removing black vein. Wben gelalin begina to tneteo, lo1d In shrimp llld green pepeer. Spocc O n t large mold er lndlvldnal ramekillll. alill ~ firm. Serve rib Shrimp Pink DreeciDC. -• oervlllp. llllUMP PINK DRESSING 14 cqp oour creom 14 cup d1iJI ...... J __..,. ma)'OOllllle ~ lealpoM lllt llalh cayenne ~~ .. Dentists today are all for an ounce of prevention, they do not reatly like to grind away on your teeth as many cartoonists would like us to believe, so they are in the that can actually lead to forefront when it comes to recommending good nutri· tional habits to help prevent tooth decay. Along that line there is one "SWf!il.t tooth'' satisfier stronger, healthier teeth ... in two words, ice cream. A "cool" way indeed to avoid any monotony when it comes to answering the call of that "certain craving." FROSTED LIVER SAUSAGE MOLD 1 pound liver sausage 1 envelope (1 tablespoon) plain gelatin 1 cup tomato ju.ice 2 tablespoons grated onion t;, teaspoon salt ·we'll pay you 25Ctofil todays .Knox. (But the big payoff is at your fingertips!) Now Knox• has put all the gelatine your troubled naiJs need into a luscious new grape drink, with a fresh-from-the-vine fl avor. Like the other fruit.flavored Knox Drinks, it never gels, even on ice . Only Knox could do Jt. And only Knox has the published medical proof: 7 out of 10 women grew longer, stronger nails in just 90 days . So start sipping, stop chipping-and send for your 25; today. For your 15¢ .•. send to: r------------------------~-~ I XDM Refund , Box If!, New York, New York llOM I I E.nclo&ed Is • boxtop from new Grape, Ort.nae or Cranbm'y-C)range Kno:it Gelatlne Drink. Plu.se iend my 25t to: Cltyi------------- 11111•--------Ztp, ____ _ I t"t•el'l•UHl'lll••1t.-J ~----------------------- • --------~--------r-....:---~-------~-------·----~-- SAFEWAY BIG, BIG BUYS ,, Town Howse AT YOIM llElllllOIHOOD SAFEWAY THIS WEEK! lladotlltUIDA_ ... Excellent For Outdoor Barbecuing. Marinate F« A Tender, Oellcious S1eal<. Cling Peaches Chef Pak Paper Plates :.-:::-25' Deliclom llest«t ll;"L or Fruit Saltd .. ~:-...... ,. -Mo.rt-. .,.. 7- ~rty Pride llu Made Potato Chips Mayonnaise Tn PllOll 49' ~O: Sof :e&IA« ll'h-tl, Fresh & ~SJI pactap ··-·-•49c Gttolf« "''"' s.llds. lllect 1Ns 111111 low, low Price! Jar Fil'll & Gol•• Ri,e Fancy South Amer'*> Great For Snacks, F« ltl1Ch BoxesL or For Slicint e.er oreakfast Ceruls lb.1·0' IE llJRE ·10 CHECK OIJR e/ICIJl.IR 106 ADDITIONAL BIG BUYS l1 SAFEWAY 1000 Bayside Dr.-Newport Beach 24 Monarch Bay Plaza-South Laguna ' l. •t ---· ------.... -.--=----:=--~-~---------·-----------------------------------------------------r ZI DAil v PILOT Smokers Anonymous Winning Cigarette Battle " . . BOSTON (UPI) -There Altl>0ugh it is limited at • .are no butts about I.be aim presetlt .to the New Ugland of Smokers Ano~ymous. · area. SA ii formulatina • Aud tha\ obviously, is to plans to e~b\igh branch of· , convince 1moken they don't fices throughout tbe nation. really want to light up. Francis J . White Jr .. one Millions of Americans are of the .rounder1 and present kicking the habit, -but not head of the project, said SA without a struzgle fn1m the was formed a1 an answer to tobacco industry -as anti· the. need (or a program anoking campaigns 1och as dealing with the "epidemic Smokers Arlonymous begin proportions o f cigarette to make headway. smoking" In lhi1 country. · Smokers A non y m o us ''The most import.ant Jn. (SA), a group founded three credient in any quit smoking y.ear1 aeo. la gradually attempt .ts motive," White emergln,e ino a f u J I y said. A smoker w b o Gr&aniz.ed force in thl: fight HWants" t.o quit f0f a good against tobacco, particular-reuoo can be successful. 1y ci&aretw:. "If you don't re-11,y want to .. bros. . coffee , ... _ 53~ quit. chances are good that you won't," he &~d .. SA is 1 non prof i t organi?atlon dedicat,_ed to helping people break fhe ad~ diction to tobacco. I t reaches the public through advertisements ln variou1 media, after wh i ch seminars of 10 meetings over a four -month period are held. ''We average about 300 ca U:i a week at the SA of· fice ," While said. Those callers are then mailed the ''Smokers Anonymous Do It · Yaurself Kit," and are ad- vised to register 1 o r seminars. . Part of SA'• proeram is to convince the smoker he wants to quit. usinc logs to overcome the r•· UonaUz.ations ' smokers find lo defend their habit. Willpower. SA Claims, "ia almost always an ineffectual method and usually yields transient results." White said his group based its program on "the trial and errcr of direct experience" obtained in the give and take of the seminars. White aaid almost one· quarter of • mlllion Americans will dit this year because of illneas . directly linked to 1mok.1ng or com· ... ..... c...,.. tomato UMIT I luice LIBBY'S 46 OZ. CAN --~-19c ·-l'UAIMt ~:..oc: u plicated and impacted by smoking. He also noted a one-pack a day smoker 1pend1 in the vicinity of ruo a year on cigarettes. The U. S. Suraeon General's task force for smoking and health tccused the tobacco industry of 1'en· couraging d e 1 t h and disease" through an ti· pensive p u b Ii c relations campaign to discredit "evidence that smoking is a health hazard." White said SA 's battle ae:airuit smoking is con· atanUy being challen(ed by the tobacco induatry. He aaid there exista a continual .... ,...... ., .. , t1=".;9;u...... .. .. . ww..r llllllNS. n POMS. :M oz. ......... , , ...• , • . . . . • .. ... 10- ~~ or.C!.~.~!.:::~ .......... 2 j,, 29• l ·-· MA• ..Z NAS 4 $1 S&W, 3aSOllNS .,, ..... ,.,, •••,, ••••·•• ..... , ••• ,, fir ~.!':!.".~~-~ ............. 4 .. •1 ..... m·s FIR ma-ch•ck steak .. S.D.A. CHOICE 49~ ch•ck ... 7-hone roast ~.S.D.A. CHOICE 49~ Ing chicken parts R £Sll . ::..59·c ·-.. ARMOUR STAR, I Lt. PKG. 3 ., c all meat franks •• bombardment cif psychologically desie:ned aCI. verU.e.ment& ur&in& people to smoke. The tobacco in· duatry 1pend1 bUUona of dollars lo a "carefully con· ceived and generally lllC· cess!ul program designed to promote and solidify tobac· co addiction," be sald. SA admits that for some people. to quit smoking is a gigantic task. but not an Im· possible one in view of the fact that millions have quit in the. last few years. SA beean because of the dif. flculty William A. Pordon had ln kicking the habit White and Pordon, co- foW1der11 of SA, &ot the idea for Smokers Anonymous after Pordon paid off a flO bet to White. lie bad wagered be could quit smok- ing. He was, succeasfUl ••. for awhile. 1 \ The organizaUon lbes the voluntary assistance a n d counsel of many eminent physicians and educators., SA recommends the best way to quit smoking is the "cold turkey '' approach '' complete ab5Unence. If one CID eet throU&h t b e estimated 30-day withdrawal period, SA 1ay1 that person "is well on bll or her way to success." DETERGENT 59c GIANT ALL D!AI ~Ar• aUllllY'S COOKIH #1..0*"5,CHOC.C~.,,;01 ..• HAaAOS l'IOCOUMf~ ••••••.. ZHTaARSOAP 11!1111. PAO:. P.lllOCAGf Of S • , ••. llOFT ouo ctflffOM, OE.Iii. l'MX, l ..... ' .. ~ork shoulder roast l'ICNIC SlYli! 39~ . MA.a aACOll 55c .,.. Sitt, • "* PlfCf .............. .. CRISPRITE aACON Wft.tOH'S . ' •••••• , •••• • •. ' " • • • •"'" !It. SLICED BACON Wll.SOH'S cm!flfO. , •••.. , •••• _ .. ,,,lb. RANGE aACON I IMn' t COUPON Pat ADULT CUSTOMn:-OffH GOOD l\UGUST 22 Mwu AUGUST 21 U ' , I HOtli\El 2 ll. PlrG., TI-Hat ~CEO .. , .... ,_ SKIPPER STEAKS 55c 69c $129 55c 7 .It -I I 9 ,-.J3t ...... -----·· ••••••• ~------------------------------------------~ ~_.•"""'-TtOL !'CG. ...... - cucumbers ,.,,,,.:!:!"'"1 scotch 80Ul9llR , IDNGGR&N 1& •.. 3~29c -............. It' BRAVO FLOO. WAI ... ""'" .,. l'9UIO !llRtU .. noz . 1¥08' UQlllD """ llOU,_wROWR YmDIT MAYflfSN GULF MUl.Tl·PblPOSI Q .126-11 MAYOIHIAISE DH FOOD COFFEE INSEa SNAY IHACOLH ~..:43' '"" . 63C .... ~ .. ,~~.tt,, 5 9c Hi. ••• , ... ,, ':.:" $J29 ••,::.• 99' •. Clfll •••• ':NP ... cm:•• PlllCIS DFKTIYI 7 Fill DAn, 111UIS., MlllSI 21"'"' ......... , •• MAYFAIR MARKn-175 EAST 17TH ST., COSTA MESA 2030 W. 11t St., Senti An1 9192 We1tmln1ttr, Garden Gro'le DfTllGlWT MlAO UD SMOULDHS CASCAH SIAMPOO -:r:.79c ~ 93c • Bir I I ... ._ I ( ' ' r , wrrH W.W: EXTRA SPECIAL \ DELIVERY TO CARMEL , Viriinia Foota. the brain behind tht "Planruni Ptrl!":'.1 Party Se"ice" here at ruchard '1 wu waiting ber tum in 'frolll cf the bakery counttt • couple cl Saturday1 ; back. The cal ln ff'Ol'lt cl her ukrd for 6 loaves of Granary Brt•d, and WU u.d to : dlsccver all the Crllli&rY Bread bad found its favorite toasters to pop up in for th! ' coming Sunday.Virgin i •; heard lhe gal mention that every time 1he came down this way, she always took 6 loaveoa bllck with her to carme-1. Up popped Vtta:inia : with, "I'm &0inl up to Carmel Mond•Y· I'd be 1lad to brine 10Jne up to yoU if • you'll live me ~ur address." . Tbe pl, "You can tind me at ~ I Magnin rl&ht in town ..• ; lt just so happened that 1 Virginia-was coordinating the · invit.ation&l fish.Ion 1h0w, • with >9 ~s. cpening of The Tonery Which is rl&ht , aCl'0$5 the 1treet from I : Mtgnlrl, IO eTerything tum-'! ed out rttl fuY· The TOl-1• geey 1*d it:i openin.r last i ~:::a~~erev~~~~ ty In your full.ft, vitgini.1.·1 :; party phuminc qUartera are •· tethered in our Flower Shop • ; . Weddin&•, dinnen, barbe- cues, boat christeninp .• ~· any p&rty whlch requirn the ~ perlect blending of food,/ beverages, nowen and peo- ple will acid up to the right • answer if you call for 11 Virginia. U &he i!n•t at her:· &hiapareUi pir* desk, such . things IS the Toggery bl " Carmel are the reason why.~ Leave your number, r;he'U ~ always gel In touch. ., THE YUM YUM ~ JN THE GRANARY ' England rates it as their : most popular loal. If flavor is golden. Granary has it, with mall flakea that have been dried and cured in a coal-' !ired. brick-lined kiln at: Burton-On-Trent. The gol~en : malt flakea are then blend Pd 1 with tasfy l<>R:ethemtss :o: wheat flour, malted barleyi and rye flakes. The resuJt, a : smooth crisp crusted, soft in the middle bread with litllt 1 nibbles flakey things runnin1 all the way through. A .real loaly loaf to slice at the table and eat with bl&: bklbs ot but· '"'" HOW NOT TO BE DISAPPOINTED Please call Rhead. If the gal who wanted the Granary b~ad had called in the day before. thr Granary bt'eEld wmtld have been waiting with ht"!r name on it. On busy weekends. the bakery pro- bably has more special peo- ple orders sacked and boxed in the back than they r.tll over the counter. CAlL THE BAKER CALL THE BUTCHER TOO ., . U a special size and cut or meat is on your menu, Cllll the1 meat department, and let them h a v e it tMdy and waiting for you. Our meat men will have the time to select the very best and make it personaUy yours . Perhaps you'd like a boneless leg or lamb or a boneless hi!lm kl do on the rotisserie .• want same fresh trout or a whole salmon. ll couple of whole cn!cked crabs .. There is a great deal oI aa.tWaction in knowing that a prime rib roast or some double thick filets have been cut esfX'cially for You, and wrap- ped for you. with your name on the package . . Meaft selected with tender Jo\'ine care .. Our meat men love to cater ta ~e. and bow the pecple who know lhll, love to have our meet men cater to them. ntE ANSWER TO THE JUICY C'HJCKEN Have YoU ever watched our harllecui!'d chickms go round and round on the rotisserie in the delicateuen. Thl're art five strings each conlaining 4 chickens. They ~ strung on sidewa}'!. not f!nd ta l'ncl. As they go round &l'ld round they pivot and the juice tro~ one string dr1P1 down on thl' strinr underneath. so they all baste tb. em 1eI•e1 . Wl.C'l- dt"OUAty moist and tend@r .. II )'OU haw ~ lute buds all set fill" ooe, again why not call to be sure It 11 ready and Wlliting for you, Funnv th ing how dticktn Javers 111 grl 1be urp tor ~rbecued <"hlcken on !I'll' '\.lime dity. And d0"1'1 fnrgM th!! stuff('d bftkt'd PClt•IOI!.! m ~ along with It nr the 1leamed nutty ricr And if th!! btrbecued chlck@~ hu all ftown the coop, )'OU nUeht enjoy 0.lcke'I Breutt Maryland tn • lUlcious cream grt.V)' with I confetti ot muahroom1, rtd Pl"Pl>f'r! and green cnio111 or Teriya)d chldc!'tl b?fflta and ll'VJ. ruchard·1. the peoplt store. \\"hert Mlf"Vinc: YoU 11 flUt ITKlll Important bulinus. • • -----------~-o-~d'"-~~-""""'*-=""'"'"-""""T"T•• -"="-"• '-"-"---=--=rn--=--'"'"'» ... ~~'t-~=~--·-.c"'-'C-~~~·-·~·~·~·~-~·~·~• -. _. .... . ...... .., ---.... ..... --. -..--.. _,,__ _,. __ ~ _ _ _ _ ~ • • • !""'.:'.£ • • PHONE 673.0360 FOR HOME DELIVERY PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 22, 23, 24 • Orgen Serenldos For Your Ple1sure LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLW. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE by Bernice Fay ' i~.' THE FINEST BEEF AV AILAILE ... RICHARD'S . . . TOP OF THE GRADE U.S.DiA. CHOICE •• ROUND STEAl S•;:~;:~ff SWISS STEAK COLD STEAK SLICES Marin•+• thick ste1ks in 1h c. soy seuce, 2 cloves qerlic minced, l/J c. vegeteble oil, 'h c. sh•r,Y, desh hot pepper s1uce. Broil or b•rbecue steak to desired donene11 . Be1te with merinede ... S•lt end pepper to t1stL Cool. Slice in thin diagonel slices. ~ GREAT .FOR ROAST SAUERBRATEN RUMP ROAST BONE-IN B~s. FOR COCKTAIL MEATBALLS, LEAN Ground BEEF 4~B. BAR·M WESTERN STYLE, SMOKED PORK CHOPS ~.29LI. PORK LOIN ROAST 98CLI. ZACKY FARMS FANCY FRESH, CALIFORNIA , Roasting CHICKEN 55~B. Baste with butter, roll in sesame seeds end barbecue. Northern HALIBUT STEAK GENUINE NOVA ~COTIA FINNAN HJ\.DDIE Whenever you're looking for 1omethin9 unusuel or fancy to serve -try our Cendleli9ht Meats or U.'S.D.A. Prime Meats! SWEET, LARGE CLUSTERS FANCY THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES 1~a: Fresh, Snappy, LoceRy Grown KENTUCKY WONDER BEANS 19~s. BEANS VINAGRETIE Cook 11/1 lbs. beens until tender. Drain, Cool. Toss with Girerd's Clear French Dressing, fresh 9round pepper. Garnish with chopped parsey end fresh on ion rin gs . Ext~•. Fanc.y.1,.Mount~in Grown ' BARTLETT PEARS 19~B. GARDEN FRESH FOR COOKING OR STUFFING BELL PEPPERS 1~s. Wtdntwt.J, Augt,t$l 21, 1%8 OAJLY PILOT ft FOR YOUR :V ou can serve foods fit for a royal family! Richard's h'es ell the lies! in rich array. (We won't carry second-rate products, just 10 we could sell it cheaply-it wouldn't be fair to you•) Quality products in wide varie. ty plus happy s'rvice -IS Richard's. ff:Je&eatiM~ RED-E-SERVE BAVARIAN BRAND BRAUNSCHWEIGER I Ol, 69' CANADIAN STONED WHEAT THINS ""· 49, kRAFT MIDGET LONGHORN COLBY CHEESE 1 ,.. 89' ARDEN ALL FLAVORS YOGURT A perfect summertime dessert . , • a 01, An eesy way to entertein with e varied errey of excitin g food1 to pique jaded eppetites. FROSTY DRINKS *.COLD STEAK SLICES COLD ROAST CHICKEN (Cut in i,14 's) SMOKED ALBACORE *BEANS VINAGRETTE SUMMER SALAD (in our Deli) RICHA·RD'S POTATO SALAD A Selection of Interesting RoHs & Broad CONDIMENTS *CHIFFON CAKE COFFEE 14 01. SUN KIST Orarige Juice: .. 51o.51 SUNKIST LEMON, FRUIT OR ORANGE BARS ' ,11. OOWNEYFLAKE HOMEMADE SIZE WAFFLES STOUFFER'S CREAMED I 0 OZ. 39¢ 29¢ Potatoes •ndPeas 39' STOUFFER'S BEEF STEW 10 ••• 69' STOUFFER'S CREAMED ~fff! ~ ~ .. ~ "\~ .. t:Ute~ ~ ~. . . . Chipped Beef ~~. 8'' BIRDSEYE Chopped SPINACH,.,. 7 .., $) From England-Rainbow Striped MINI STICKS l ightly citrus flevored, fun for lemoned• swinle sticlcsl Re9. l9c, Box of I 4 BOXES s,1 DARK N' RJCH Molassas Bread 49' AIRY, LIGHT, LEMON Chiffon ·Cake 1.69 BUFFET FAVORITE TWIN ROLLS HONEY.ALMOND COFFEE CAKE 6 ..,29c "" ~ 15c FOLGER'S COFFEE I LB. FOLGER'S COFFEE 2 lb. FOLGER'S COFFEE 3 lb. SUNSHINE HYDROX COOKIES u ... GERBER'S STRAINED 69' 1.37 1.98 59c BABY FOOD •If· et. 12 fw $1 ARDEN AA BUTTER I LB . 79' LIBB~ PINEAPPLE JUICE ..... 4 ... $1 LIBBY GARDEN PEAS "' 5 ... $1 LIBBY CREAM CORN IOI 5 lw $1 LIBBY WHOLE PEELED TOMA TOES.,, 4 .., $1 LIBBY YELLOW CLING SLICED PEACHES r~· 4'··51 1?_;..l.4 .l' ... -MARKET OPEN DAILY 9.7, SUN. 9-6 HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP • Ol'EN DAILY 9.6 OPEN DAltY 9·6, SUN. 11 .4 \ '• . •• LIBBY YELLOW CLING Peach Halves~i.41•• 5 1 LIBBY PORK and BEANS "' 5 .., $1 LIBBY SAUERKRAUT LIBBY VIENNA SAUSAGE .... 5 .., $) LIPTON TEA ·BAGS 100 ••• 98' TOIL.LES BOWL CLEANER .... 69¢ TEMPO IN SULA TED 7 OZ. Foam Cups::. 21··49' ART SHOW in our patio THURSDAY, AUGUST 22 BIRDSEYE LEAF SPINACH ,. ... 7 ,., $) BIRDSEYE CHOPPED BROCCOLI ,, ... 7 ,., $1 Having A Party? CALL VIRGINIA FOUTS FOR En.tertainment, Bever191s Food, Service, Fk>w1rs1 CALL 644-1798 • ·~~'al"··-· <!lbaif!;f;~ FRESH POM POMS Won't wilt in the ht•f, lont lestin9, yellow, white, levender, bronse. 1.43 bunch FLOWER SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR CLEANERS OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY 9-1:10, SAT. 9.5 DAILY l :IO·•· SAT. l :JO.J ----------------------------------------~------------------------------___________ ........ _. ---------- CAN-DO PARTY STRAIGHT FROM PANTRY Keep A Picnic Up Your Sleeve Have you a trick or two up your aleev• to m • • t surnmer·wean' youngaten' cborus of, ''There'• nothini to do?" Here's a ~tiOn th at mothers as well as their ollsping will enjoy. Pack up a "CU-do" picnic, corral tb o1 1 bore d younpten, 111111 head for tho park, or ·a shady spot in the backyard. What's a Can-do picnic! Tt'1 a royal na.vor fe&Jt that you put together in no time trom on-hand itema in free,er or pantry. From the freezer come tasty franks to cut in thirds and thread on kabob skewert along with c a n n e d whole white potatoel, 1mall tweet pickles, and stulled green olives . Grill the kabob1 over a cbart:Oll fire and baste with a barbecue 1auce of piquant flavor that childl'Ql really go for. It. too, comes right off your pantry !tleU--0ut of .a can ol double rich, double thlck ...i expertly .........i coodemed tnm.to ooup. stir in vtneg•, brown sugar and a small amount of prepared 1murtard. When the 1avory kabobs are grilled to a tirn. serve wlth the rmuln!.ng sauce Whl.C'h has be e n heating oo Ille edge Of the pill. ' ··11 ·•1 lo C(lmplete ·· you "Can-do1 picnic with a green bean and mushroom salad (canned green beans and canned musbroon11 tolHd With bot· Ued ltallmi 1tylo dressing) and for deuert, canned ready~ pudding in the yotmpt.ert' f av o r I t t QavQf1. PICNIC KABOBS WITH PIQUANT SAUCE 1 can (1°"'6 OWlClel) OOD• demed. tomato soup l/4 cup vinegar 2 tableopocml brown 1ugar 1 l6upooa prepared mua· lard Combine all ingrodienb . MaDI l'ii c&tlpl NUOI. FRANKFURTER KABOB Prepare l&UC't. 0n 8 skewers arrange alternate· ly; a franklurtert cut in thirds, 1 """ (1 pound) whole potatoel, drained, 8 whole aweet pickles, a large stuffed green ollve1. Place on grill about S 1nchea above glowing coall. Brush kabob< with aauc.. Cook about 10 minutes, brushing " I t h sauce and turning twice. Heat nimalnJ.ng 1 au c e. serve wt.th tib0b11. Makes 4 oervinp. 'How Sweet It Is' Make Candy Together Summer'• the time ,...hen kido -for 1lllop to do. Ifa ten that ~ yen to mM• candy ofttn 1trlke1 --So U your 7oomg1tm are beo!DI for • candy-miking 1elll~ hen'• a recipe you can try together. It'• for poanut.-butter fudge with chocolate rwirled in. Sure to bl. fovorito with •mall fry. PEANUT BUTl'ER SWIRL FUDGE 2 Cllpl sugar :t/J cup milk ~ of a 7~c• jar manhmallow cream 1 cup smooth or crunchy peanut butter 1 teaspoon vanilla "' mp 11ml-1wet l chocolate piec:et, melted Combine .,,,., and milk . Brinl to a boil and coot ot a boll to -11 •fol• (234 Mcr.n on a ca1.dy tMnnometer). R •move ,,.,,, beat and otlr in m1r1hmallow crum, ~ baftar mid ...ma. Wbon -ud blended, ...... etml1 IBID a bat- lertd l-lllcll IQ..... pan. Spoon meltocl cllocolJle ..... flldll ud nlrl Into tudi•· ~ 111111 warm. cut mto 1-· indl equareoo Cool unW 11t a.nd then separate into pieces. SUMMER SANDWICllES Peamrt butter II ti.De for &ummer sandwich Jundle1. Just remember that there art other sandwich com· blnationt besldet peanut butter and jelly -popular as that ls. Hert ar. some •UUestions for Wldwich lpreadl: 1. t:bop leftover cooked ham and mix with peanut butter, chili 1auce and mayonnaiH, 2. Make plain peanut but- ter sandwiches; dip in slighUy beaten egg mixed with a litUe mllk and frenchlry Iii butter o r margarine . S tewed tomatoes tute a:ood with theae. 3. Add a little ftnely diced celery and pie.kl• rtlilh to peanut butter. Mix grated carTOt, finely shredded,,__,, and minced panler with peanut butter. 5. Add crumbled oisply· coohd bacon and chopped rafJllll to peanut butt.r. 6. Add leftover drained crushed plneappl1 to peanut -· CROSS RIB ROAST ~~t::s,,.Bgc CHUCK ROAST ~nirts ........ ,,7gc GROUND CHUCK t::.~~ .... 11. 5gc RED SNAPPER :~~~t::~~:: ... ,, sgc SMOKED BONITA lWcl: .... 11.98c FRANKS MINHATIIMIWll •••••••••• Ill• 3gc P2-PILOT-AOVIRT15Elt ' • CHEESE ~·t::i~~-~~1~~···········''· age SLICED HAM lllf.A ............... sgc SWISS STEAK ~~~~::~~~CUT .......... u.69c SEVEN BO ROUND B CANNED HAM HOIMIL ..... 111 TI,479 FAMILY STEAK ~~~~cl\:~t~ ........... u. 99c sweet Seedless GRAPES LARGE lb. BUNCHES • • • " • • • " • · ac N0.1 NEW POTATOES 1ussm ...... u. AGE UUMSOLID 5c CABB MEADS ......... ll. EXTRA FANCY PEARS tRlE R\PE BARtlms ' ... lb. ···pEPPERS fRlSK GRlEN 5 C UMNCKl WOllDlR FIUM BELL-Nia SIZE EA. TO STUff • • • • • • • •'"'' ICE MILK f:~~J:.N ................... ~111.3 I lXTIA YAllC!- HONEYDEW MELONS 7~ GREEN BEANS LONG• 12c SLICING LI. COKES FALSTAFF BEER ,~Jz:a + SHRIMP =-:r'~-~~ ........................ ~ 6 ORANGE JUICE ~1::.~~ ••••••• 4 ~ ROSARITA :::~~~~~~t!N.2 'l8 ROSARITA lllf/CM!tll lltClllLU~ 2 /6 cocm1L uc1 .••.....•...• ROSARITA :::li~:::g___ ...... 2/8 ROSARiTA IUNIURllTG .••..•...••••• 2/6 .. BOURBON =~.:::. .... 47' BOURBON :::;1:: .. ~ .... 1 VODKA ~-~~-~ ........ 811 SCOTCH :o:: .. ?.:~ ........ . BEER :::i:= ................. 32' WHISKEY •. , ... -...... .. r•••••••••••••-••••······--·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1r ••••••••••••••••••••••···--···········•••••••••••••••• • MARGARINE ALIERTSONS-UMIT 3 15 ( PER FAMILY-OFFER EXPIRES 8/25 ••• , ••• LB. .................................. I • I • • • • POTATO CHIPS ALIERTS()NS-UMIT 2 PER FAMILY-OFFER EXPIRES 8/25 •••• 16 OZ. 44c_ I • • • • I • I • I . I I I • • • BATH TISSUE AURORA-LIMIT 5 5 $ PER FAMILY-OFFER 2 EXPIRES 8/2$ • • .. • .. • .. PACK • ' LEMONADE TREE$WEET-LIMIT 10 1 ( PER'(FAMILY-OffER EXPIRES 8/ 25 ••••••••••• 6 01 • .............................. ·-------------------~----:.JI,,;··············--················---·----··· •• , . ,, w~.~-•n.1M PILOT·ADVIRTISl!R-"1 SEE BOTH SIDES ~~~·~moooo ClEAR PLASTIC MEAT TIAYS • Cool1 fo•l•r • Free1•1 fo1ler • Get J11i1i1r, Mo .. Te nder Meat • fr••t•r 0 ST Ready-No Re-Wrapping A CHOICE 49c · N,.., '"'''· '"•"., 0 EEF LB Ab1orb1 Juic:e1! . .. . . . . . . NO HIDDEN ·ROAST CHOICE 59c FAT OR. soNEI · . BEEF ..... LB. .._ _____ _. PORK STEAK ~~' ... 1.49< PORK CUTLETS ~~.·~w 89< ·• ·. ~ ~.;. I •$ •' · .. . ·' ,. . ' : . ·"· . •I I . '• '• ·. ' • . •· . ' t • :j; • GREEN GIANT NIB LETS ·JANET LEE A-A LGE. EGGS , ""'· ......... f'OlkSMIU, -. -· " farmer Jahn 29c SAUSAGE ~N~~ $ 12-oz. TINS Crisp French ROLLS 3~CH -Maxwell House Coffee HB. TIN 2-LB. TIM J.LB. TIM $137 $·199 fa :· :Dove .Liquid '6 DETERGENT 32-0Z. BOTTLE ss~ I . Hi-Ho Cra~kers I 13~0!. 41 . • Albertsons GIANT BOX s s C DETERGENT Hoffman Bettermaid :i~~ ...... LB 57c LIVER ~:~~~BEEF. LB. 5gc RICE KRISPIES ~~~1•1 •. ..;2/ 88c CHLORINE :u1o~:~a1t10Ns ......... 45c . SPR•Y STARCH t:~~lltian ... 59c POOL ACID i~i1~i:~~~110• ........ 69c GELATIN ~:~:&~~W~ ...... hr.3/29c COFFEE lUIAN ........ 1~.n. 69c 111r. l45 SALAD OIL cwrsco ........ 2411.!attlt 43c DETERGENT tt::r:~:: ........ l!tr. 39c CAKE!MIXES ~:t.~.~:~ ...... 3/ 1. SHAMP.00 ~:in1~:10.~'.~~~ ....... 69c TEA BAGS llBUTSDll.I ....... ucaunt 45c SETIING G£L l~~£,~E:it:'.~~~ ..... 69c DOG FOOD YEl'1Nu1ms .... . . 1uu. 119 TOWELS ::;~}~~:i~1.'.~~ ............. 3 / 1. PANTY HOSE w11. 1.11 PArw ......... Now 129 ORAN.GE CRUSH it:rD~::~rt .49c Costa Mesa -535 W. 19th Laguna Beacli -700 So. Coast Hwy • Fountain Valley -16042 Magnolia Corona del Mar -3049 Coast Hwy. Huntington Beach -8911 Adam~ Huntington Beach -15511 So. Edwards I···•·· ..•.••..•••••••.. ··-···· ..•.••.•••••••..•.••••••. ··-r .••.••.•••• ··············-············ ••••••.••.••••••••• ., DOUBLE sr·AMPS ' . . . Double Blue Chip Stamps On One Complete Grocery Order WITH THIS COUPON OFFER EXPIRES 8/25 TOOTHPASl\E EXTRA LGE. CREST-WITH THIS COUPON-LIMIT I EXPIRES 8/25 ••••• 59c ~ ~ I • DELITE BACON HOFFMAN-WITH THIS COUPON-LIMIT 1 PER FAMILY-EXPIRES 8/25 LB. 39c BROWNIES AT OUR IN-STORE BAKERIES LIMIT 2 DOZ. PER FAMILY- EXPIRES 8/25 ••••••••••••••• EA. 5c :r : • • • • • • • ···-······ .. ··························-···-··········""····-·································-·-···-········· .. • -- ----------------------- /' \ DAILY PllOT 3J PULL NO PUNCHES FOR COOLER Serve With Punch Berry Bonbons Hunger Chasers 'l.'hl.! simple, easy-to-make cranben'y4pple punch puils no punches when it comes to the perfect thirst-quenching cooler tor a party. With the punch, try serving these Q-anberry Bonbons made from oake aquares split and filled with cranberry-orange relish and topped with a rimpte white icing. CRANBERRY .APPLE PUNCH Juice ol 3 lemons 3 cups granulated sugar Fresh mint leaves 2 cups water 4 cups c.ria.nber.ry..apple drink OR S cups cranberry juice and 1 cup apple juice 1 quart club soda, chilled Ice cubes Lemon slices Combine lemon j u i c e , sugar, 20 Bmall mint leaves and water. Bring to a boil and simmer 5 minutes . Cool ; then strain. Chill. Milk Helps The Heart Many trace element! and sa1ts ia.re needed e v e n though in many cases in the most inflnltesim'al amounts to keep the heart functioning et top level. For example, a sudden decrease in calcium ions in the blood have been known to cause convulsions and death. Th.I.a is fiO because the heart muscles can contract normally only in t h e presence of. the proper balance of. sodium, pbospttorous, potassium and calcium kmr. The importance ol milk with its balanced retio of phosphorous to calcium as a staple in the daily diet can not be over slated. In other words , it can be said that milk and its attendant dairy frod1 really get down to the heart ol the matter. Pleasing Cblll<d fresh California Bartlett pear1 may be Cut into crescents and served witti brown su1ar as a ln'akfast treat. S o m e breakfast~ters Hke the cool, tresb flavor of cubed Bartletta on cold cereal. On Sunda;y top quartered s.nd oored fresh Bartlett pears with thawed frozen raspber· ries or blueben'ies and aer~ with peocakes. Combine this mint syrup, cranberry.apple juice and club soda in punch bowl. Add ice cubes. Garnish with lemon slices and more mint leaves. serve in chilled punch cups. Make 12 to 14 punch cup servings. Fresh, New Ii 9201 ·!%\ 8-16 ik ' 12Y.i-22Y.i H if EIGHT fresh, new fashions from 1imple basic to high to low·belttd beauties -EIGHT smart ways to look fall-winter, all seasons. Easy-sew. Printed .Pattern 9 2 0 l : NEW Misses' Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 11!1. NEW Half Sizes 12"2, H I\, 181\, 18\i, :IOI\, 221\. SIXTY·FIVE CENTS Jn coins for each pattern - add 15 cenbl fo.r each pat. tern for rirst-cla11 malling and special handling i otherwise third·cla.11 delivery will take three weeb or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern De,pl, 2.'l2 West 18th St., Nn' York. N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with Zl!t_ SIZE and STYLE NUMBt.;K. What 's new for faltf Mn answers ln our Fall~Wlnft!r Pattern Catalog. Free pat. tern coupon in Catalog. Send 50 ccnbl. • ...,, ------1_.;.a·~-_,,---·- ) 3% OAILY PILOT '+-PILOT-ADVllTllllt ••• •• . , • .. El Rancho's Garden Patch is filled to overflowing with all the crisp, cool, items to provide your family with a tempting salad treat during our. ~ . delicious .· I ~ p,_ i Tomatoes ........... '. ................ :. 1¢ JIN ril!o , •• IOlid ••• for. plclun p~ 1lioea ! , Radishes ................... 2 FOR tsc (rlinerolll bunehea •• 111tY, flavor .• bright color l ' Pears L~· ... ;.~~-························· 19~ ltlpe.Barllttta,. '""ifNh pean with cottaao oh-I Green Beans ....................... 19~ ,. Crisp ••• with that.1ard111 freoh flavor·! .•. R • . 9c oma1ne ........................... t... . ~ .. (Criap loav11. · •• dewy fresh ••• llld JO ~l>ller ! (· , Green Onions ...................... 2 ,. 1 Sc Bic buncJtea gof delicate, yet authoritative flavor l Cucumbers ........................... 2 FOi 1 Sc Bell Peppers .... : ...... : .. : ................. 1 1~~ Firm ••• for ,1licea that atay crispy tn 11.lads·! Cri.spness tha~ i,n.sures that fresh .sweet ta,ste! And · here's· more. Salad . 'makin '~ and go-to'tlethers ! Carnation Tuna ............. 4 FOR S1 . 00 . . . · Miracle . Whip ...... _ ... , ................... 49c Kraft'•· ... ide~l for salads or aandwichea ..• quart! ' Cheddar Cbeese .......... , ... ,,. .... ._ ..... 79~ M•Jd •L • I ,. '. t .. 1 ••• naturally amootb and~..,. .. r~ wie .pitc.,~f;· .. ff ~t,,_ Firm. chunb of aweet light meat ••• aave .on No. 1,4 cans. Salad Dressings ................ 2 fOR 39' Cottage Cheese ..................... 33'~· King Crab Meat ............ ···:······s1 25 Deming'1 ••• No. 1/z cans •.• for ·a aalad that's Sh~r deli.gtit. ~ Meadow Gold ••• for1 deligt.ttul 1ummer·salad1 .• ·-. • quart ..... 63e New! Good Seuons, .. th.i~k and creamy ••• 4 varieties! Royal Gelatin ....... . ..... 12 FD« S1 .00 Macaroni ................................... 2 .1~ 39' Iced Tea Mix ................. 12 fORtl . 00 Flavors that make appealing aalads ... great desserts .•• reg. size. Globe Al •.• Salad or Rer. or Large ElboWll ••• I lb. pkgs. Nest.ea .•. lemon flavored ••• ready in a hurry •• , 1% oz. pkp. Sliced Turkey ............................... 29' Potato Salad ........ . ...... 3 roR Sl 00 Wesson Oil ................ · ....................... 79c · Leo'a ••• tender dark meat ••• for a fine Julienne salad •.• S oz. pkr. NaUey'a .••• 15 oz. etna. ••• ready to take aloDI' and aerve ! Bir 48foz. bottle ••• uu it so man y ways ••• and uve! ' Hearty meat Specials from our Butcher Cases 'J'h ick ... lender .•. juicy , •. 'speci ally cut for you, from the top ·sirloin of U.S.D.A. Choice Bfff ! ••. boneleu and close ly trimmed, El Rancho style ... broil over rlaiinr coals for a roaat that ha1 to be heavenly! You'll be rtad you shopped El Rancho! Jim Brady Stea~ ........................... $1 69 ,b Top lirloin at it.a boo.elf.SI beat ••• cut extra thick to gi''' you an outstanding steak! U.S.D.A. Choice! Ground Round . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 69~ Always fre&h •• , alwaya u Jeau M il sho uld be! Here'& quality you can tell at fi rsl taste ! .Chateaubriand ................................ $2 29 ib · Grocery Specials CIH Sugm-.................................. 53c Pure cane ... 6 lb. bar ••• from Hawaii 1 Yuban Coffee ............................... 67~ Coffee at iU best! ••• 2 lb. can ••• $1 .33 Friskles Dog Food ............... 5 ••• '1.00 New Ground Rounds ••• beef, chicken, liver. Miracle White .............................. '1.29 Laundry ad ditive works 'l'tonders ••• half-gallon! Bathroom Cleaner ........................... 69' Do,v's ... does the job so '"'ell, easily ! 17 ot. aerosol! ~~~;jjt;~;~: j~; ·;;i;;~ ·;_;,;~~~·; ·2~· iti: ~!:. I P-n'ct.s in effect at aU storu Thurs. thrmigh Sun., Auo. ti, 1$, .t4 , 15 'Wine and Liquor Chfts Krug BW"gundy .. .. .... . .. .. . '1.49 •• Deep red ai;id deliciously dry ••• fine wine J Charles Krug ChabUs ................... '1 .49 ·~ So dry .•. and light ••• a dinner wine you'll love I llllf Gallen Sale! Save <>:" tl eae apecial 11alue1 in biqgt-r .UU. Ea~y Times ................................ '11.49 Save $1.50 on the big half·gallon, atraight whiskey? Beefeater's ................................ '13.49 The ri'n that made martinis famoua ! ••• half..pllon ! Crown R~e Vodka . . . . .. . . . . . .. . .. .. . .. '8.88 Blends 10 7ei1 v.·iUt any mix ••• h&lf-gallonl I · / -~-'. Cir.e. 1ounelf a iourmat.'1 tealt! Beef at its naturall y-aged best ... \\•hy settle for les11er pleuure? ARCADIA: Sunset & Huntington Dr. {El Ranl ho Center) I ' ~ ' Sliced Bacon ........... 59~ · HALIBUT ... ~~-1 .. ~.~~~ .. 39~ El Ranclto'1 own ••• ranch 11,yle ••. lhlck, lean From the bank• of Greenland ••• bak1 ... or alleea wltll -1moke,J; roodn111 I bar·f>.qu1 halibut steak •••••••••.•••••• 49c lb. " • PASADENA: 320 West Colorado Blvd. • SOUTH PASADENA: Fremont & Huntingt9n Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Warner and Algonquin {Just East of Huntington Harbour) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. {Eastbluff Village Cente~ ..... r BOUND l'OR INDIA' Student Dan Sl•tar Sophomore To Study In India Dan Slater of Newport Beach, a aoptl9more at Calliron College of the University of the Pacific in Stockton, leaves Sunday for a year's study at the Callison Oversea11 S t u d y Center iii Gangalore, India. Slater, 19, the 11on of Mr. and Mr11. Robert Slate of 1412 Lincoln Lane, is e graduate of Newport Harbor High School. A political science major, he plans to enter law school u p o n graduation to prepare for a career in International Law. A recipient of a California State Scftalarship, Slater was co-chairman of he col- lege council during his frel!lh. men year and chairman of the "Year in India" committee. Computer Matches Up , Roommates RIVERSIDE -R<>om· mates by computer selec- tion? That's a new 1ervice students at UC Riverside will enjoy tbl11 fall , ac- cording to Dr. Norman Bet- ter, Dean of Students. i;one of the major aolll'ces of unhappiness a m o n g &tudenU, part 1cular1 y freshman student&. is the problem of adjusting to a new roommate," 1ay1 Dr. Better. "Incoming students to UCR this fall are being asked to fill out an eight- page questionnaire on their likes, dislikes, and general living babih!i. "This information is then fed into a computer . and student! .with compalable life habits and attitudes Sie paired. It is our hope thi1 will make for a happier life in our various residence halls." UCR Is the first campus in the nation to adopt this new approach to an old problem, Developed by Neil A . Eskind, owner-manager of -University Data System1 in ~1 Angeles, other colleges and universities around the country are expected to eventually adopt a similar pattern. Boys Spear Fish Prizes The annual spearfishing contest sponsored by ttie Boy1' ctub of Laguna Beach wao held ....,.nUy, ri.b an Clnlnge boy taking the honor1 of most fish caught and tbe greatest weight total. Gerry, Fenn, 13, was crowned the wimer in the senior divilion. followed by Dirk Van Deuisen, 15, of Laguna Beach. Van Deusen won the prize. for the lar1est fish 1Pt•ed. ' Othei' tell> -Pots were Cl.Po turt<t by Krelc Adler, bl• heather BJtb, of Lac-. and Tom Qulna ol Trabue:• Clll1)'1llh Ro' Mdlennon. II, Of Laguna Btach. won iit all categoriec .in the jun.lor d.ivilioa. RUBDll'l-UP were Q-a!g Qulm and RObe'1 Llndae7. Fireman Picked For Conventio • Wtdrie:sdQ, AutUSl 21, 1%8 DAILY PILOT 33 JC!hnson Aides Preparing to Leave White House WASH~GTON CUPll - White Htu5e 1taffer1 are preparinf\for the inevitable move frol\ the center of power, SOJ\le philosqphl~al· ly, some ntslalgically. "This is )leavy busi.qesR ." lay& Elizabeth earpenter, ~s 1ecr y to Mrs. Lindon J nson. rs . Carpenter treely ad.nu.ts she will ml51 it. She has been on the Johnson top a.ta.ff for tbe longe5t consecutive period, dating back to 1960. Mr1. Carpenter, a former newspaper woman. knows she has a desk waiting for her in husband L e s 1 i e Carpenter's news bureau I with a sign "Lli Types Here." But DOW she wurtr a taste of the other media, She is getting a bead start oo wriUng a book and it pro- bably will be ready SOQa after January when life with the Johnsons ends. As a statt she reportedly has been offered a salary In &ix flgur.. from • publisbiog firm. Wttl)t Liz has also been sounded out oD tne idea of a television snow. Tb.is in· trigues her. President Johnson's press aec~tary, George Christian, wants to try his band at fic- tion when his Wh!te House days are over. Althouth a Teun, Mrs . Carpenter'• r~ are in Wa!hington. But Olrl!tian is building a home in Austin and expects to enroll his children in school there dllr· ing the rail term. Also ex· pected to head for Austin Js White Holl!e .associate press secretary Tom J o h n s o n . Youns 11 he .Ls, (27). be bas sat in Oft IODl8 or the Dl06t confidential meetlngs the Prt:sident bu held during his final months in ttie White House. He takes nearly verbatim notes on what goes on. Altpough he has had en· ticing offers from bUJ.lne11 fir.ms and new1papet pubUsher1 wbo have optn· ing1 at the top, he ii e'J· pected to move to Aultin for at least one year to be Johneon'• office mana.cer and with the help of other staffer• Id h•!f' cllurn oul the Prftldent 1 memoir• :'BEEF ROASTS ' ·.) TOP' Of THE CHOICf GRADf • OY!H ·HAD'( . CENTER CUT CHUCK45c . OR 7 ·BONE c~~y~, ' . l l Cudo"' y,;,,.,,..d tli• Von1 Woy/ Clf(/(Jf( ·-CHO/Cf ''" '9t «fAOY TO llQ .. ' FAMILY COLD 4 POWER AUGUST IS SANDWICH MONTH R 11 B ad VONS fYOiill a s. n re u.01 ••. o" . ~ long Rye Bread ~~~.. 35 V E Bu ~ ........... _ c ons "" ns o• w.,,. .. 1111 •·'"tr -- BUTI'ER PECAN COfME CAKE VONS • DANISH STY1f ' 79c Modi. wil" butl.,-S"""'' 12 .•.•••. MfJIQTJN IALT ,~~:.~~"' Ii> Hfl/lllK CfK/Klll ·~¥~:~. f» llAWAllAN /Jf/MllfJJti~&~ LAZY PfJPf)INfl. ~i&~~ » /Ji.llfJ« /)(J(}RJ(Jf)~ 21%9 VONS MEAT PIES l llf•o Mtol"' roe",;., 4 . 89' OtlfHH, lllf If Tlrillf :~~ : S.COUISI DINNERS ................ "-0~ U' GIUIFRlllT. JUKE ....... -~·:11ori 2/31' JOHN'S fltOZIN PIZZAS ........ G~"!',~'oil II' XINT MEXICAN DINNfR ...... . ''"'JI 41' XUff ENCltlllDAS ............ '.':: ,ro;:"'.:~ 41' llUIT TACO.ITT!S ...... . ........... ~..:;_ at• PlPPOIDGf FARMS CAKU ... ~.·;:oi::.it .. IAL' h.ol'A~ .. ~:~~~g., ~ fr,,iC J;l'fC,,trf HAlF GAl. CTN. ovr Froz•n Food Values! rnro Vol11e'1 DUNG!NUS ... LA!.l:,l Kll'fG Whole Crabs ••NO, IQI t OOl 59' t.i-tt l'l•OI • Crab legs IHllotio.• ~ 'I" _,,~!" l.I. llEF FRITTERS ,,o::;. ·~ PllUCll PllllD HUIUT ~:'11'1. lf, lllLllUT nu.in ................ ~·'if: 'l ' IOURllT 11111111•, ...... , ... ,'.,'::',;,'"'~~· l II PIJICll FIWTS ................. f.'::i'':;' 831 • PRUNE PLUMS .. ELON • CIANSl<AWS "' <I • HOHEYDIWS $AL"' • CAHTALOUPI ., Fresh CellfY :... . 2 i 2' PtlltMS :.-=.. -::r .... """" , • . ~ CHECH VONS ""'· SI/Ill PRICES & SAVE! BANQUET ~~.~HERS 37'' VONS MAlGAlllNI ........ :. ....... !::: 2/ .. OAn M•Aru WHIP .............. ~ ... (\ING I'll,.._. ,.OCT''""' .... 1 ..... 21' R\.m.f ..... OI Mlt-."' <VI l!ST FOODS MAYONllA~I ......... ::'; II' WISSON OIL ............................ ~·~:'. 47' -~· ·-·o Yl)oll-!f.-IOI .a. lnRr\.IKll --·~ .. 1.U. •""°'-i.o.. p - B~~AD 22' " • " h .. "' , , • KELLOGG'S COIN FLAKES ........ 1',U .. VANILLA COOKIES ................ '.r.':'.~: JI• LO.CAI FRUIT DllNKS ........... ~:::'!'. 31' INSTANT MASHED POTATOES 11'= :.~ 41' ROY Al SHAKE·A-PUDD'N . . ... :~~ 4r IUTTIR·NUT INSTANT COFfll ... .'.'!'t '1" Bock lo School S,,.ciol! MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS .... , ,, .. ,, ..... , .... TlllTltl.•l llJ. ltTTll, lll•t llll'lt. l 11 t IT It llLlll • ,.,, ..... _,,., ... 2 °1' $3 ......., .. "_ --• HI< Frvit Drinks :::::' '46:: 3 i 11 ·'' .. ' ,. . ···~ Lt0 $\ICIO C•U((fN 0.-!utOT. >·Ol.1'110 •l< SLICED MEATS •;,; :::" 35• "'1C.IOUfi ... AlfO MOZl~~lll" Pizza Cht1M :J?o. l'l,: ... ~ ····· 45' WIUClit CllTWllD • Alt ,16UT • l.j,J. l'l!G. Polish S..sat1 .... "' 95' f T.::;:t• 11:" 79' I CI K Sligar --10:. •1 1• " FYFE & SCOTT SCOTCH 58• 1795~ MG9ft01la, Foulltaln Yaney ,. -·~ -· = = • • a a sass cs ca a 2 I 5 EC --· _., n . 1968 I· ,.. 'PURCHAll OP OUR PA8ULOUI ' ~~ i I ··-•••• nn• PRICll IPPICTIYI THURS. THRU 'IUN. AUOUIT 22, 23, 24 and 25, 1961 ONE FREE EACH WEEK Clip· out each wae~'• set of coupons and redeem · them each week, ai dated; on your 1hopping trip to foocl Giant. Each week you will get one of the 9laue1 illustrated absolutely free. In addition, you . may redHm 3 additional coupons, each worth 20c towards the purch.ase of additional glasses. . COUPH W01t111 •t1 Towards the Pvrdtote of LIDEY SIL VER FERN IO.OZ. al&YlllAOI WITH A FOOD PURCHASf OF $2.00 OR MORE REG. 49c OM! COUPON PEI CUSTOMER COUPOll WORTH 20' towanb purchaM of LIBBEY SIL VER FERN 9·0Z. OLD PA•HIHID IEG. "''• ON! COUPON PEii CUSTOMEll COUll.H WORTH 21' towards tfta pvrchaM of LIBBEY SIL VER FERN loOZ. .!UICI OLM• lfG • .t9c ONE COU'°N Pfll CUSTOMfll -itii nm~ ii.~i.iisi ii1ir121, 1111 ' COUPOll W01t1112D• LIBBEY SILVER FERN 1 sv,.oz. coeuR REG . 49 c ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMEI :~(T~!'!o:!o:i;~~~l~J!·!~ 1 I ------::::::::~ I ' EXTRA SERVICE! CHECKS CASH ID AND; ••• PlllCU IPPICTIYI ATTllUI •••••iAn MPl•M•111en• . DllLYI .A.MBRICAN EXPl\1!:88 • WE GIVE BLI BLADI CUT PARMIR JOHN -IHOULDIR c c lb. ------- ......, _____ _ ~------ WILION'I . SMOKED PICNIC lb. SLI ·BA· , _____ _ .. ------------. fl!SlllARGElOIN -89 ' PORK CHOP• lb. SHRIMP fl!SH,WT!RNGllAIHfEb . • 69 c U.S.D.A. CHOICE l!Ef ONLY-CHUCK 80NILlll ITIAKI U.S.D.A. CHOICllllrONlY 69 C 0-80NllWllllTIAK· 111. CINTIR PORK ITIAKI lb. ....... 77c flCSHGROUNO 39c C•••re•Mli PORll< IAU.AGI lb. SN•••• .. _1••1 ........ _•.· ____ ... _ _.iTAUAN 14'u1AG1 98-!b. LIAN CUIES 79 80NILlll ITIW 811P lb. u.s.D.A. CHOIC( ll!EP ONLY 3 5 811P IHORT Rl81 lb. I ASSOrT!D fRUIT flAVOU , ~ JILL·O GILATIN 5 .. oz.$1 PKGS. PRISHKllT OllAlllllLLY 2.21t. 39c l•n " ~ ,.-BllCH0 NUT ...,. BABYPOOD STIAIHED \.. ~~· 10c ~ r-~ CHICKEN/flSH, UVEll , KIDNn 01 PU.IN CALO CAT FOOD 8 "Oz. $1 CANS DllNKIHG OI DISTILLED SparkleH's Water,~.c 39c fllfSH KIST FRUIT COCKTAIL 3.~·~~N 23c CHl~fON (I NCL 4c Off) MARGARINI ~~~: 37c G1!1H G1AHT-FHNCH 01 sucto GREEN BEANS TALL 25C l03CAMS • '" I -NIST. IN'. AUNl ·l'C STU.' .. vnA. 1011 '========:( 'IOW ~ "n GREEN GODDESS : iii 49c STAI ~~=": ~'~ '1 ~ .... ~------,., I\ .... --- --~ '-····-- c lb. ----------------------------------------------------' ----------------------------------------------------· . LICID I !. .. • -N -----'!.~:-----------------------------------------------' .. ' .. '1t .... •----~----. f I~. · U ••••• A. GRADI 'A' ~ •. ll •••z•• l'lb. ROASTING I c .............. . _!b ..... I .( _________ _. Dl)P tEG .. ti:!GTllO Pt • 2.1b. s1s• ~ L-~'~··--:::-:: NISTEA(J.OZ.JAl, 19<) 3.0Z. $, 33 INSTANT TIA JAi AUNT J~~KOSHEIOI · NLllH DILLS ' 32.oz.5.c· JAR Biilf.1 PRlllRYll 2~f.z. 55c vnA.PAKT il:HllllD) QUAIT 49 ~ 10RAN'I .IUICI ITC • 'IOWLCLEAHER 11 -01. 99c• . n . ..,~oL SIZE , · DUS!RTii;IG •·OZ. 49c : DRI WHIP PKG. ST4l STUfirD 7\h-OL 59c ...... OLIYll JAi 1 •11roitrr-_ 2;.oz. $119 . ' qi.IWl!'IL ITC • ' RATH CfDAI fAltMS 2-1.b. $129 SLIC .. BACON Pkg. fAaMEIJOH~ UNIS 3 1.01. $1 PORK•AUIAOI ,,... HONEYSUC!'.ROZ!N 2'h·Lb. $339 TURK ROAIT Pkg. ICELANDIC fl ZEN 12·0t. 65c PIRCH .ITIAKS Pltg. PIZZA MIX .llNO'S PLAIN 3 1s'h .... •1 pk91. ' CAL FAME •RUIT •1 DRINKI 4fw•lt• .... - DAILY PILOT • THOMPSON lllDLlll S1lll1' .MHCJ' ' LA1101 ci.unn• J ...-~=-=--="-i YELLONWS lb. > ONIO u.s.••·' ...., MILD c IW!ET, JUICY LE GRAND NECTARINES GARDEN flESfl ... ROMAINE LEnUCE .... L. ............ ..::::;;... ......... e»11Jt111«s1 4 ... !1 10:a ;:\'. 69c JUICE OH BOY .,. KElMIN PIZZA IN A •AO •RUIT CHEESE-PKG. Of I ICll PEPPERONI-PKG. Of ' S.4.USAG!-PKG. Of 6 99c 6 !~~49c M.C.P. RT D ORAllOI BANQUn .IUICI IUPPIRI IUCID 11rr, TUn:fT WITH LEMON $AUSIUIY ITlAK 2H"37C 2-lb. '139 ca•11 pliig. SARA LE! llMPU! MOM POUND •RUIT CAKI ~:.::!. Plll!I . 1~·•r. asc :e;;!;-'69 loyte11b•l'l'J' c .... .. ,,k.1 " LIQUOR SPECIALS 6nAllS ... · ·CLU•SILICIU STRAIGHT BOURBON AVflY lllKlfD s 1onuwo . Of CHOICI •TIAIOlD ITIAIOKT IOUnOH WHllll:IT-IU~ln IK QUAUTY &PIAVOI 59 PULL """ I \ ' DELICATESSEN FOOD GIANT -PROCESSED .SLICED CHEES• 1-0LPKG. 45c AMEllCAN PlM11!NTO SWISS FOOD GIANT -Rl!fl/GIRA TED SALAD DRESSING ll!UCH!!Sf 16-0•. 49c 1000 ISi.ANO Jor FARMEll:JOH N-SLICED LUNCH MEATS BOLOGNA COTI'OSAl.AMI HAM LOAF' 6·0L 29~, Pk9. DANOU IMPOll:TlD-41A-OZ PKG • ILICID DANllH HAM 65c HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS SCOPE ,';.':.'. asc . bottle TOOTH PASTI ef;~CREST !XTllALARGI 61c TUil REGULA.I 01 MINT • 8-year Manhunt Pays Off PORTLAND, Ore. (UPIJ -Elibt yean ol tedlou& 111- vestigaUon b1 a veteran police detective and a rehash story by · a • ....,peper ,.,,..Ur bu led to the arrest of three men in · connection with the murders of two teen-are 1weethM?tl. Larry Ralph Peyton, 19, Portland, was found stabbed to death in hi• blood-l- tered car in a •·tover'1 Jane" area in Portland's ~. A~st 21, 1968 THI m.AH0t WOl:LD .. MR.MUM ~ fACfOrt:I REJECTS NO!"thwest lliU.. Nov. 7:1, 1------------rJ The parUy nwle body 0( ~ Ii I 1960. (/~ his 19-year-01d girlb'iend, r ,,.--------!1 B'f"rly Ann Alla., Port I" Townsend. Wut., Wll8 found~:::=============~=!_ Jan. 9, 1961, near U.S. ~ about 3S miles north of here. She had been raped ud &trangled. solve t b t. Peyton-Allan and cbeck1nc out witnesses. Arrested Monday on two case... Son said the progress on coonU each of first degree the investigation WM due to C I The search for evidence Cross-eyes Need Early Treabrient I SAN FRANCISCO -WW crot1-eye1 in a cblld ••a:o away" ll laft untreated! This is a common misconception among many parents and pediatrlcianll says Dr. Robert L. Tour, a UC-5an Fraziclsco Medical Center ophthalmolgi.t. A ctlild'1 c r 0 11. e y • I "riiigtit appear to Improve .Ugbtly with age," but he will never be cured "without proper surgical or m.,,:Hcal treatment," Dr. Tour says. One Of the m0rt un· f o rt unate complicationa which may occur if the con· dition it not treated ii the deve)opnent of. amblyopia in either eye, resulting in permabent villon Joss. "Thll I I particularly tragk: ll the good eye ls loat later in life due to accident or for aome other reuon," says Or. Toor. The physicia,n contend.I U is "vitally important thet treatment for cross~yes beein before the age of seven." murder were ar . plainhardwork-mostofit Frederick Jorgensen, 27, became one of Ute most in· monctonou,,. 1.=========.I and his brother, Edward tensive and agaonitina in· -But the: detective. refused Ralph Jorgensen, 35, both Of vestigations e v e r UO· to discuss evidenctl which Portland, and R 0 be rt dertaken by the Multnomah led to the arred.1. Gordou Brom, 28, Salem. They were held without County Sheriff'& office. bai~. Time after time, detec· Th DAILY PILOT Multnomah County Dis!. lives seemed within a single I A l l y , G e o r g e V an cormectiDg thread of 50JvUtg HoomiW!ll _gave credit to a the baftling mystery, only to story in tbe Oregon Journal learn that the thread did not by reporter James Long for creating the ""break" which exist. Covers Boating Best in West Tho Or1ng• Co.st' s Most Complet. PRINTING SERVICE ~w Phone 642-4321 Jed to tbe arresta. On June 15, 196.5, Beverly Loog'1 story, published Ann's body was exhumed in1 -;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~I Sept 26. 1966, rehaahed the an effort to plnp:>int their known fact& of the case in time of deatt:I. Detectives detail, d:iscuned theories, had obtained information and presented a plff that aUeging she Vr1U held cap- witne!sea come forth with tive in an apartment for information. aeveral days before sbe was The man wbo spearheaded murdered. Tests ruled out the inveetiglation from tbe tbt possa"bility • beginning was a detective Two years ago Son said for the Multnomah County 2,292 persons had been ques· Public Safety Deplrtment, tloned and more than 400 E I c. Son fill ~ who poo&ible suopocto had been ar ' • ~ cleared. The number of has 27 years on the force, was j<tned three years ago persons interviewed now is by Jack R. Elliott, 451 a believed to be more thatJ V~--~ 22 years. 4,000 with about flOO suspects =•~ ~ elliltlnated. For the pair of detectiws, 'Ibey have submitted 275 the lwnt far t!te Peyton-107,000 mil .. """"""' lead• Allan ~ became • near have traveled r o u g h 1 Y obsession. "I've s pe11t houri and Mvwti..-t . hours !yin« in bed just think-T 0 0 THACH I ing about the cue, Aid Son. ~rt:· 1tt ....._ 11 ...-. "Lots of times I just i= _rfl'MI 1 ....."'~t\ :_-::.-::.-::, couldn't aleep. The case .. lllflll-. ,._ .. OU.JU.• wouldn't leave my mind.'' -. .~=·~ ~·-;-, Son waa quol<d by Loog in ... ra . Je1· ~, "" 1966 as ..,.m,, "There's • ~ . _ ....,=.-!" nothing I wouldn't Ii•• to - •' I See by Today 's Want Ads e A V.W. Dune Bugry ia be- tna: rid •t .. law pricl!. Bet tbat'a a cute little bu&IY ••• • I've never 1ee11 10 many beys in used can 'With ao mlll'(Y extras; stueo, air conditioners, etc. e Sounds like tomeorie Ls giv. ma-UJt their hobbies • • • Kayak, 50 lb. Bar Bell Et, game tab!.~. all for sale. • Hett'• • beautilul buy! Ski Boat, extra shazp 14' with 66 hp $795. pl\111 trail- er a locluded. • ln~rest«I in property? 1brft C:Ommereiala f o r sale: 1 with Uvfn&' quar- 1.r• SIUIT APPIAUIO -TOP QUALITY OUTDOOR LIVING IS A WAY OF LIFE ••• IN ORANGE COUNTY! ••• and Santa Ana :Tent an'il Awning nos tne New Looi< for '68 , , , •v•'Y.l~ing to malie outdoor relaxation a family pastime. ALUMINUM PATIO COVER Planne'il for eitner largo or small homes ••• mobile homes tool Durable, long lasting all aluminum construdion . Screened enclosures -large :doors ..• comple!ely liug proof. --... OUR ALUMINUM WINDOW AND DOOR AWNINGS FIATUltlNG 11 STUNNING DKOUTOI COLOlS FOi YOU! SIUCTION, PIGNT, VIWNT, MOOIRH, NAVlfUl •.• AND so MAHY smll FOi SO MANY HllDS, c • .,. Tio!! -111H .. 11 l•ctoty wfl-f., 4' ,._, '"'• M-.. *" .,•1111fodvri119 •tyl•1 .. to111pi. ... " .... ., .,.,.. ., •rthlt.ct-. C..111pl•t. ...... 111 .. , ... 1.c1io.. "' ,..Ifft ..,tu-4 1111..iltMi.. ffllll f11rfli1til11f1 .... ,, .f •II ••• .t Se11N A.II• T•~I 11111111 Aw11\tlt Y9" 111-.,. ,.,.1.,.. M--, ••lt'9• .. , c-i.ry, 111vkk 11<tio!I •111111 co.,.plt~ llllt,."9•~illty , , , pl111 ..,, J y.ar 1uora"le•I Tll lllW LOOI FOi '611 WIYAS AWlllllGS • YAWICIS • CUITAlllS Nothing Decorale1 like Con¥1:11. leautiM New Colon l New fabrics. for home1 • • . for bu1ine11 I MANUl'ACTUUD • INSTAWD SANTA ANA TENT .... AWNING co. fACTORY SHOWROOM 2202 I. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA 141·0491 llANCM omc1 01tAM1 COUNTY AWNING CO. -..,,.., *"" -•· c-ry ·e1r r; •Alflll, PaU•ION .:!""•• IJ',-6J'll '"" ~ 611 .. J'M ....... --,....,. ........ ,_._ ...... t ' RLPHRBETR "MAN in . BLUE'' ' Summer ,_ Spectacular! featuring fantastic back to school buys! .... ' . R\.PRR 1£1R fantastic buys · CANVAS BINDERS 1 r 3-RING 66 SOME STORES C '. CHAME .$1.19 · ~HI iNTENSITY LAMP GOO~ NECK• ~FOOT C-ORO $2'' EQUAL TO 1()1).WATT BULB · I' SOME STORES CKARGE $4.99 · ~J:!:&•'s SUPERSTARS 1 ·• PASTE & ;LUE COMBOS 48 C •TAP£ & GlUE CCMBOS VALUES TO 63c 11 ~· SHEAFFER PENS BAUl'OINT tr CARTl!IOGE 89' SOME STOii£$ . CKARGE $t00 • GIRL TALK BINDERS • NOtEBOOK--4''x6H " • TffEME,100!< -81>"111' s2•• PSYCHElltUcCOLDllS SOME STtlllfS CHARGE $UI TAfE TOOL LABELER INCl.uptNG $ EMBOSSlftG TAPE 2•• SOME STORES • CHARGE $4.95 ~THERMOS SNAK JARS -~, 1 L~ BOX SIZE INSUlATED • PlASTJC 86 C WfT1t S~REW CAP SOME STORES CHARGE $1.09 . TYPING PAPER TABLET ERASABLE BOND TABl.ET OF 62 1 52 SHIDS • IV."111" C SOME STOMS CHARGE !9c ROLL TOP PENCIL BOX • PlASTlC PENCIL CASE •PE!f(ILS •PEN 79 • ERASER • RULER C SOME STORES CHAAGE l9c SPIRAL THEME BOOK 4.SECTIONS OF 21 COlll1lE RULE • !V."rll" 88' 3-0MDERS • ~UNT SOME STORES CHARGE 91< __ , I -- . ' ,, . , ' ·.' • • ' ' • ' ' • ' •• • ' .... f ') . " .. '..:..--· ·- .. r.....,, August 20, 1'68 . ~ISCl l lANlOUS DAILY PILOT .4, About Our DO UBLE DISCOUNTS Better,,_,, n DISCOUNT PIKES/ ZEE • 'T1\0P1C TONI PAPER ""u"' 28• TOWELS .,/,~ He • llAYI :re ---On• 0nJY • Lodi< Sa>H • Pr!nlod Jl~l :! & . ·Jln.. Wlthw1 C.U,,.,. "' 'Some Stot• Ch 29c I I • iE'DoNiOis 4:25c AvOCADOS FLAVOR 25~ FlllOIEH •I OUNCZ CAif • 2k VAWI •-•nB ""'WY<lO!l!l;AJI ...... •111 JUCR JN • ORAIGE ilUICE YpAMllf 22' . . ·iiLiPIPPiis4:25' Ii OUNCE ~ Ge VALUE ; .. w._iomcw. ""'""."oz. ,,. fllUIT PIES ALL VAftlr!lll 711 •liCHPiEHELL llt 304 DELIC AlE SS EN & CR EAM ERY 10ME llLIMA llTA ITl»E:S DltcOUPrf OWllK. f!llllll sl'll'iu"'iiEF IUCED . lie 63' ~~~:~A:aoru lie 151 !.'!'!! ....... !?Yll'l!' 36' u11EAI CHEuE "'v.1,. tLPll IPI • 16-0lr:, •Bl,VAWE 571 SALAD DRESSJH. r.:;::::,o,N . It OZ. l!OQUEFORr l6c VALUE 8k lllltl Im • W'JSCOHSIH .;"LONGHORN 83' CHEDDAR CHEESE i~.~ ,. .• .,.. Ill• • 1-LI ... oz. ... N<T W!IGHT coo1'iiil''ii~C'cil~c1!1 •1 n .. -~ C?, • FWRIST QU'"'1Tf FWFERS •• DISCOUNT PRICES El.l'.GANT • B!AIJ'TIM AFRICAN VIOLETS IN A SJ 19 4 INCH POr· e Ml\1..[l I A~f Ui..S IOMt A1.PKA ltTA STOllEI'-OltcOt/Nf C:IWC:I PRJCE CONT ADtNA .. I OZ. CAN 18' TOMATO rArn Tlc µ_m>N • 3 OZ.• lC CM. <161 UllI TEA lltI l5c .. , 2 OUNC! JAJ\ --NESIEA INSTANT ru lie 111111 21(\ CAN• HALVES« IUClS ·-MUNJ'S PEACMIS l3c "11 FOREMOST• 18 OZ... X62!C· PllDGt 211' LllY PUDDlll' : iZMow 2lc r'.fuf'aiiln'r~fily lie 81' 41 OUNCE CAN .... _ DWWAllE PUNCH He oM1 KUlfGllY TAC%• i t.1. IOX Jl'l' PANCAKE 1111Xmc:!..•o01'1' Sic 'f • WILSON FISTIVAL BOIELESS·llAI l\ILLY ·sin COOKED WY TO I II. CARY[ M<COrs. u-oz.l · .. • · BEEF .,._, IACOI . ORAMBEPLUS OUNCE ... 391 lciT ·a'Ruli 'stl'Cucni3e 48' ILP'MI 101 • FROZEN • lG-OZ. PAC'UGI; 2·4· BROCCOLI SPEARS f'.,,. . C 1"'Au1 ""'L1FL'o''°"'"wER1 1).0Z. •Acuai: 24' ........ @J:hi;Hitin;Ho 581 -""" "'' ITOltES DllCOtJtfT CIWl(;E Pfl1Cf FLU• F""Fr· 1B>-OZ.RE'°11AF.• WRI!Z/W~T 22 1 VA!. REG. 011 SANDWICH l lPHll IUI .. 9 OZ. PACUGE 0 17_, VAL. 341 DOIETTES :f.iw,\'"'° "' lllh OUNCE CAN'• Wl'TH PEANUT'6 PLANTERS llXlD IUTS Uc 791 PA.CIC Of U •VANILLA SDOOPYCUPS '31. 35' Meat you can trvst and at DISCOUNT PRlaS tool I ' RLl'llA BETA WEm•N]ll4.'.%em I ROUND CUBE s11t T·BOll STEAK STEAIS •· STEAIS rutL aac SIRLOll TIPt11t SHORT cur I~ STEAIS ,._ RIBS McCOfS • MIL PACKAGE 'IOWA MAID • I-LB. PACKAGE ALl'lll IETA • DEPE.NDABL£ QUALITY BEEF Lllll 32' SAUSAGE U.S. G<ll'T IN!!'.• ?'UM FILLET rAR $1 ot of SOLE 1EAOY •· ROS£'$ • fWOttN SHRllP 39c STICIS I:: . C!'1>.f!ESH • ntOllll FRlt:D 1)1.f 69' HALIBUT SLICED BACOI EASTERll QUALlrt SWEET SMOKm • R£B. I tMICX lllPllll IETR ... 511 CORll llllG 11001 -• GROUND BEEF """'. !OOftO. PAK 3-ll!S. OR ll'lll THESE PRICES EF~CTIVE THURSOAY through WEDftESDAY AUGUST zz.a AJAX LIQUID Cl E'IER QB OUNCE BOTILE • INCLUDES Uc OFF SOME STORES CHARGE 73c Ml4'a TMI c.wiOIMIA A.. a,· •.• , , ' STORE HOURS: • ~ til":!flll, iaA.M. 10 9 P.M.,SAT.andSUN.!OAM. •7P.M. ON lMi'C . 710' ~, ,~ ............ .;...........,...;:. ___; __ .;......_-.I: ' " r I . . , • CO)TA MISA-141 L 17 .. It . • • flUNTIN•TOM llACH-11611 N ...... St. HUNTIHTON llACH tMI ..._ IOUIMTAHI •ALll'f-etM w .. ~·UNA-JDtU S. C.. HhNr --------------------------------------------------------- • • .. ~ -- :Ja DAILY PllDT Wedniw.v, AllgUsl 21, 1968 "TENDER-LEE" FINE QUALITY FULLY COOKED · LARGE Sill-TO FlY S 1" •.urN lff•tw• . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • . tb. COOKED DAl\.Y-4·~ Tr•'t .,. PIUtt IHllMP •• , , , , , • , •• , , , , , , • • Fklltt FILLll 591 MONTlllY IOCI COi •• , , , , , , , , , a FkUH Alll!S 89' D0¥11 SOLi •• , ••••••• ,, ,,,,,,, a FROZEN FOODS CARNATION-I YI -Iii. Pk1. .,. PISH STICKS , •••• , •••• , ••• , • , , , • M CARNATIOH-l·lb. l'lt. 6ff FIUIT Of SOU .•.••.•• , , , , , , • , • ,.. MRS. FRIOArS-7·••· Pkt• .,. l.9.f, SIHIMP , • , • , , •• , , ,, , , ,, • , u MRS. Flt0AY'5-I·••· Pkt. 75' 60UIMIT UIADU SHllMP , .... ,. • GOlTON'5-l·•a. P•t· 49• FISH PUPPS •••••••• , , , , , , •• , , , , , • !ONE IN Wednesday, August 21, 1968 US. ::D.A. "Choice " :Jender-A'JeiJ Steer Bee/ ROUND STtEAK H. S KOLO KIST-"·~ 8 89C lllP STIAKI •••••••••••••• for SHURE.TENDA HUT 'H EAT .,. NIA.DID Hll PllMU •••• , , , , • , a ROUND STEAK ........... 89~ ' tvTT I etNnR • BREAKFAST SPECIALS CRISPRITE OR YORKSHIRE SLICED BACON ss~ LUER QUAL. SWIFT PREM., WILSON'S CERT, V•cwwm P•cked 69' SLICID IA.CON , •• , , •• , , , • , , , , • • a WHOU OSCAR MAYER-I .tit. Pkt• 794 IONELESS ROTISSERIE ROASTS c TlNDEl-CUIE $1 09 STEAKS ......... ... IONE IN-RUMP 75¢ ROASTS ......... a IONELESS 79¢ STEW BEEF .. . a IONELESS-EYE OF ROUND s 119 : ROASTS . .. . .. .. . ,.. : SIRLOIN TIP OR TOP 10\JHD BONELESS STEAKS c CUTS : IUCU 55~ ! 98~ ' ' ' ' ' HAMS L1m1 H11u ••••••••••••••••••• 55•• OSCAk MAYE0-12-~ "•· 69' LB. IONELESS-EYE OF ROUND $139 : STEAKS ......... . .. 1 LB. • ·······-Sunn'! Valle'! LARGE FRESH SMOlll LINKS • , ,, •••, ,,, ,, ,, • • • 11 (}raJE ''_)}. "··-·····-·· ALL GRINDS HILLS BROS COFFEE SAVE 16e '3 LB. CAN .. $ 89 c HILLS ,,.. BROS r, . DECO RA TED BORDERS GALA PAPER TOWELS GIANT PKG. tNCL IOt OFF BIG 148-CT. ROLLS c #JJ-( or 1 i ! aiNio ........................ 59c . JERSEYMAID Id QUALITY ; WONDE ~ "HOLSUM" WHITE : 1-ll. CTN. I-LI. CTN. 1 OR WHEAT-li·•J. Lotf 1 REGULAR TREESWEET FROZEN-6.(!)Z. TINS 3 ''AA" : SLICED : IMPERIAL BUnER ... 79cj BREAD ... 22c! OLEO ....... 35c ORANGE JUICE ...... fOR ............................................................................... .Jl9uor ::Department HILL RIVER-A BLEND WHISKEY '3~! KARASOV VODKA '2~! OLD CARAVAN I ::DeAcafeJJen ::Department LUE8'S ALL MEAT ERS JANI AMDE•SON LON5HO•~·Ol. ,.(.. 45• CHIDDAR CHIUI ...................... . OL' VIRGINIA ' ROD'S -SALAD ' BOURBON SLICED MEATS : DRESSINGS '3~! IEEF. HAM. CORNED IEEF. TURKEY ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 3 ·:~~. s100 '':J.ieJ ta o/ :J.reJh " Produce SEEDLESS RAPES V.151 YlllOW MlAT 5 • 1 00 NICTARINIS ... ........ us. ROMAINE CRISP LARGE !ELL LEnUCE PEPPERS IRIS IAS~T. ITl. FRUIT PUNCH ............. .. M JI TREE TEA-INCL 25t OFF TEA IOO-CT. BAGS .. :~~'. .......... WIN FREE • NO·FROST .~~~!!!!. o FAST FREEZING, NO D6FROSTING o FOODS EASY TO SELECT, SEE AND STORE o UPRIGHT CONVENIENCE. BOOKSHELF DOOR o 1 l.6 CU. FT. LAST WEEK TO REGISTER AT Quail ::Dollar Sale QUAIL FRUIT COCKTAIL 5 ~~s s100 QUAIL-CUT GREEN BEANS 8 T~~lS s100 KERMIN'S FROZEN MEAT PIE DINNERS 14.oz. 39c PKG. 2-~R 19c 4 ~R 29c SUNSHINE STATE FROZEN-1>-0Z. TINS NC ,UICHAll MICISSAll' LEMONADE ••• 3 '°' 25c PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. THRU SUN., AUGUST 22 , 23, 24, 25 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE 2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA I "· " . ' .-ffB·fl DAILY PILOT • • ' ' . • , . . ' BONE-IN USDA CHOICE ORSTATIRIROS. CIRTIFllD IElf WedMSd111, August 21, 1968 . i ' CHUCK ·ROASJ U.S.D.A. CHOIO OR ST A TIR IAOS. CIRTlfllD lllF 39~. GROUND .. BEEF ,. L:S. aun PORTION 53• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • BREAST OF TURKEY "''·2 891 • FRESH• LEAN DELICIOUS GIOUND DA.ft. Y lfrl ou• OWN STOllS 43~ f"'. OR WHOLE HAM ............ LI. • USOACMOICIC!!UTAMllOS.CMTIFllOIHF 7 8 C FAIMH JOHN SMOKIO UIDACHOla OR STA.TEI -.OS. IElf Pou$H · 69' ao· UND BONE IOAST 55' RUMP ROAST ~-: ...................... -...... ~. SLICED CHIC!(EN ~ ""· • JAlllAGI ........ __ .... . ....... -.... USOACMOICl!>IST•.ntllOS.CHll•ffD-. "49c ,MOlllLU DI IRF l·ll._PKG. C IOfiifLISS IOlUD SHOUlDll C , , DINNiRFRAl«S ... 49 BEEF ROAST -...... -.......... 79 CHUCK STEAi( ............... .. .... LI. . 'OSCAIMA.Ylt·ALLMIAT 9 . USDACHOICEOllSTA.nRIROS.IEff 98 FAIMllJOf9lll..U.llG.Ol,l .Ll.THICK 5·9c '•OLOGNA·~t.39<'~~~s c SIRLOIN TIP n•A•....... ... c SLICED BACON ......... -................. LI. ' . I I • :SC..r•uv11~1DN1Y-04ICKM . · · 1 $ ~,!.!,!OOD _.~.~ 10~ 1 CHILI :::.•:.i:i~•---3 l.~\ s1 ~~~FEONOTD_ ~120~f031 1: CORNED aEEF ...... ~ .... u~z.53c KRAFT MARGARINE . . ........ REG.JARSEA. pL•u••EscuADDERNc•••MUYORcjraiv . . 49c ••11a.1 •5c LOWnFOAM BUTTER ........... -............... 1&-oz. :i--... _ .. ___ .a DETERGENT SWANSDOWNMIX FOOD .... , ......... PKG.39c ~D~PPED TOPSP.,.IN~ . 2 5 ~OX s 2 79 AN'G EL rHIPJ'~~ ?/od 1tat«u! iiiAii1AS T ....... -.... INSTANT 69c :J:touis'i 0111ER .. _.59' LIPTONS-REfRESHING • 99 c Olf.l)A11·01'PACKAGE ' INST ANT TEA .... &-OZ.JAR ;HASH BROWNS ......... 6 PKGs$1 GRAPEFRUIT ~~i?.~~i ................... 6°" •• 54' ;:SiRLOIN T1'---·-................. 14·0Z59' WILD BIRD SEED ~~r~/yN ........ 5 t .. 49' GRATED TUNA VAN CAMPS ........... 2 •• 49' GRA1NG2Ez.Ju'°ici ................. 6 ~fN; $1 LARSENS VEG-ALL ...................... -2.o,25' IMPERIAL MARGARINE ............... LB 39' l~!NCAKETT~A!YER ... ,3PK~.1 ~UND CAKE _ 12.oL 79 FISH STICKS _ ..... "oz. 5, .MRS. FRIDAYS s149 RUPERT 12-0Z. BREADED s~ ~OURMETSHRIMP •·L•. HALIBUT PORTIONS _ ;1 ~OLD KIST gnc BREADED PORTIONS 4~ 'BAGGED STEAKS ..... ,. :I . RUPERT CATFISH _ .. 12 oz ;, KOLO KIST , stk ftll~ftr BREADED 4~ CREAM C.tllCKEN ~i•'•' :I CQp,l)R-PERCH _,,.o, ;, OESSERTTOPf'lll5 , . ',.. . 3ftc·llU,.Elft't2-0l.8READED 4~ :11EAL WHIP ~---•u•llT ;r HAllQOCk-OR -SOLE ....... :1 , CREAM COOKIES CHOICE ............ 28-0Z. 59' PACIFlC TREATS ................. -.............. LB. 39' CAT FOOD ~r2Ki·~~ fit~. -···-2 '°' 31e: DOG FOOD VETS 15·0Z. CAN :3 2'1'0 REG. & CHICKEN FO~ I - LIQUID PLUMR .... ::-.............................. OUART 89' TOWELETTES WASH N·DRI .•• -...... :6~~2 59' GREEN GIANT BEANS'•1n:t<EN SL 19.oz. 27' GREEN GIANT MEXICORN ... ,, . .,, 27' GREEN GIANT WHITE CORN 11.0, 29' LBS. • ! · ASPIRINS : DAILY PILOT 38 . "us'-•INE ••·••· 89' · MOUTHWASH . BAYER 200-. $149 ASPIRINS ........... . GREEN GIANT PEAS & ONIONS "·"' 31 ' GREEN GIANT ASPARAGUS CUT --•O·OL 35' GREEN GIANT ASPARAGUS ;'tr,~i~ .......... " oz 53' . """" 99• ' nc.. • OfTt I ELECTRASOL • • • Gi'iiifns . a 29c : ~~~·LOUP~ 5 ... w --·-·•.I 0 ITALIAN SWllT RID . ·--29 ·st.JOSmt '" • PKG.Of J6 ; CONTAC ;DIODOllANT ~93• ......... • VACUUM ... ,. 49' CLUlllR BAG$ __ TOP JOB CWlll CIAIT-llll 59' ' J COMET CUAISll ~CAii COFFEE MAXWELL llOUSI ., . AUTOMATIC 49c DISllWASllU 11T111Gm . lJ.OL llUL "''· PALMOLIVE 53c UQIAD 8~~TPKG. ---·-· ITATmBROI., 3&. 1'A BAGI--.,,-~ ONIONS .5 29' lA~~~~., •••LIS, 3~2 SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE7-FULL DAYS. THURS.11\rU ~D., AUGUSln.d·211h J.430 W. Lincoln. Aolholm 1522 Wtotml-llml. W-IMle 2164W,.._,,,.p,Anlhofm . 142J2Mf_A.._Whlttler 2llO ~ llMI. Coot• Mooa llDO I. COllhlo,'Or•• · - 107 W, lflll ~.Coote ,,.. 2'M "'1_, St. Soni• """ I -tlll , .. , • .,.A._. ....... .._. I i ·' 11 I ------·--------~------- -~--------------------------------- ' ff . DAii. Y PILOT ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE TDAYS AUGUST II THRU IUQUST21 , .. 'it!d~)'. "'" ..• ')1 1968 -Ill WHITE FRONT RIB STEAK .LUER FULLY COOKED lllTT 5nc SMOKED HAM ... "?"!'~-'11b WERQUALITY,aNTERCUT 90c HAM SLICES · ....... _ Otb FRESH FRYING OtlCKEN PARTS LEGS& THIGHS· ( WHITE FRONT'S LOW EVERY-DAY DISCOUNT PRICES PLUS VALUABLE COUPONS . ARDEN FLAVOR FRESH 69¢ ICE CREAM HALFGAL SPRINGFIELD ORANGE JUICE 110..--35' TREESWEET LEMONADE 6oL-. 1(1;$1 POPSICLES & FUDGESICLES •.... 4+$1 DRE-IDA HASH BROWN POTATOES2•.-3+$1 CERTIFIED ONION RINGS 6 .~ ---3+$1 .VAN DE KAMP'S FROZEN ENCHILADAS11<oL 3+$1 BETTY BAKER FRUIT PIES I"_....._ 25c SARALEEPOUNDCAKEnoL 69c DOWNEY FLAKE WAFFLES 12oL· 35c MORTON CREAM PIES I " Autd. 25c MORTON MACARONI& CHEESE 20 OL 35c MORTON 3COURSE DINNERS 17oL . 5h CARNATION NO. 'h CAN CHUNK TUNA ... .... 3~ 79c WHm . :~ COTFFEE ! l HILLs3LB.s17~ 1 BROS. CAii . I CAL-FRESH FULL Qt. 39c MAYONNAISE ........................ . CAL-FRESH 12 OL CANS 12' s 1 SODA POP Ftl~1°ris ........... ~ · CAL-FRESH 1 lb. 6b s 1 MARGARINE .......................... • SPRINGTIME 1 lb. Pkg. . 5b s 1 OHvtONTGODLDOHAMG BBURUGENR ors 29c MARSH MALLOWS ... -.. • 8 Ct. ........... COLORT!X PAPER 1 oc POTAT01CHIPS ....... . ..... 49c ~!~.~!_NS ·-....................... 6:k~'.·6gc IJ f;J,/CATl\.~.'i/·,'_\ FRLAN Ks~~: 59c ARDEN, IND. WRAP, SLICED I OZ. 45c CHEESE ~.~~~~1;!=.. cli1iPPEosMEArs _ 3~s1 RATH'SSLIQDASSTD.60%. 3F s 1 LUNCH MEATS·-·-· ~ RATH'SSLIQD60I. CoooSolomi 39c LUNCH MEAT.~~~ s'LicEDLABREAD ....................... 23c ~o~~~~~NT ................................ ~~ .. $1 .09 '-~~~~~~~~--- fr 'HITE FROJVT"S f'ARll1 FRESH FRl7ITS /1.\'D J'EGETABLES SWEET, THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES lbs. c U.S. NO. 1 WHln ROSE POTATOES lb. Cello 8119 c . ,_ fllSll 2 15 FARM FRESH GREEN ONIONS. RADISHES .................... ... c TENDER CARROTS -........... . 10~ . 15~. , 'IHICl[MIATY 25c JUICY . FRESH AVOCADOS _ ............................. --.E•CH THIN SKINNED LEMONS __ _ BRISTOL AND PAULARINO, COSTA MESA ! MAAkfT HOUR S MON TMA U FRI 11 lO AM 10 Q JO P M I SA t 9 JO A M to Q JO P M -SUl'lil I 1 1.10 A M to 7 JO P M J I ..... Wliln ~ 2232 HARBOR BLVD . IN ANAHEIM M.1.A tl:IT HOU RS MO N THRU SAT 10 00 AM to 9 JO p ..- SUNOAT 10 00 AM to 7 30 PM .t . ARDEN YOCURT .... , .. " ............ 11 ""' 5111 STA CRISP SODA CRACKERS '"""'"" 1•.31c NBC HONEY GRAHAMS ................. • •. 38c SINCE 1929 WHITE FRONT :; .-~ .. ~.;. ~.: --.7. ~•':-"."--0---';". '."'. ••~;".'" :::•:':°'.~~':~'.°";'~'::'!!!~-~,.::'!.L:" .. '~:"""!"'. !f-~.~-'.°!.-'.'"*~'~~~-... .,.'.".'1'"''.:":.~;~e;o~~."!"'¥!~~$,..¥"'1§11"1¥~4 ... #!1!1!$"'4¢11!11011!1¢-0'1!!J"""P'llC-P•S-U IO!"'S""U .. U O{ P~l'!LOT·ADVERTISER Wtdntsd«Y, °"""'' 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT 41.I # ' ,. ., l . W',';;M.:~ 11Jc i;;;• .... '*'t: 29' .c:H.. ..... ~ s1u· ·-l'JL... ... f!1i "9l1W • • • • •CAM U#- ---"' · s1n l111111i CtffM.. . ' . a.-.... Pim ·-=4t -· Toilet ns ... -:27c ;;w ·····'= 27' ..,,... . . . Vets Nu11etl':s1• Nt'-' • Vets lla11111~59C TRY OUR ~IOUS : MAmT BASm SALADS · ' W._.._.._.~ldlewr ..... ................ edl•• .,. ... _ ... __ _ _. pwwwlflA-W 1111!9 ,,_, .................. _,_, """' "°""" left ouf hwt ~ bo!Mr-1 . I.ii·''•. .1 ''.1' '•' '·· ' , 'li -·, ~' '' LUNCH KITS ,~.111 !.·•'<II\ I' I ' • J "-1 " I' If.! ~~ ... ~ ...................... Sftll Jel , .... ~.·;i--·----s-Scotcll ••••• ':' ... --.. ,,...c..t.....,.. SCSI . ..... ..,.. '""''ii - h"it::ii..szn IA ..,_, ..-r '9l.lfS I VIOITAlld a Oll'P"tmD.,. SUNRISE FRESH v ..... ,., ......... ............. ,.....,.....,., ,... ....... ,.,..., et".,.... --jil;ilim.-:5'· ...... W:"T •• ..::-.It SGfad Oil •• '":::: 34c 414!.ln..tt. --2 . Noo11111 •• ~w ----.. 17° s ......... ::: ...,,.._,........ 41' Flllllt Bitter, • c ,_,_ '>lie Puddings •• ·~ 1.;i· Via-All •••• ~ 11i: w.an. ..... au • .._. G::° Bem3 ""fi3C ~'--' °""" tl"".44· lath Towtls ·• w..77c. "'*......,. ..,.°"""'_, 7..QZ. CNI enc Sa merBIOlldt • .,., ~-Mlllldlll -...... 3 51 .wiitr. ... ~ ,_.,,._T_,... '*4 71C Ci'.est • • .. • • t\Jll Ht<>d. $"""""' °""""' 711c ShalllflOO ••. •;;:, ii c:.r.; .. ~ ".:: 63' -T , ... M., rllts •••• -· ---...... 7'k-lce en-. . "" ;r ---65,c Shrimp, •• .'~ ..... _ 3'1c Sanll1111 •• ~ ,- ............. Diie Polish ••• , ":!; Uil ·--.-.$149 Polish •••• CAN spney Sttrch~ 57c W_...,,(W. li OIWNI) 3')e Toilet Soop • ': .J-c-•--l&c Potatoes •• "~ Salads •••• ·~ 33' M91W.....,.........,."""""" ...._._,,._..,hill..., 34c Cheese •••• ': ....-cANOIVMtlfrfPAClllOt. ... __ ... 711c CheddarCheesi11. ii' .......... '.l'le Wchattl •• -=,J,)- 1111~1 QU J\llfT \Vlf·i (Jl/{O!tl(,f IHHIO ~OU tC>tlt.il lo,QJ(HIJ('lll FILLER PAPER PKO II* Of 5na \H({ '' I V!llT{l.".l (J>',< fdJ'< I o~ I' ~f .. _AllVofi.... ~. I ere. Pies • ' .... aJ" ' a..ua ,._~ ..... °"""'c.-. .._ .... .,T•T• 'Hie Potatoes •• ''= Lu· . c_...,,._ ...... ..,.....s- ......... ...., $111 Beef Entrees ~ ,_..,'-AllVerlollll COc Pizzo Rolls •• ";:ilU . COHVIHllHT, IAfl, iNIXPIHllVI REPUBLIC · MONEY ORDERS I l\YfAYS EVERYDAr Market Basket Discounts Prices On Quality Produds- No Games, No Stamps, No Costly ''EXTRAS''.... . Moll -..'claim lo have low prlclS. But on what -on a handful True, you give up ~omos, stomps and long store houra to ohop of lltmo, or Inferior produdl? Nat Market Bmket. Wo dlxount. at Mor~et Bosket. But you get bargain• and quality always, W<try- prlcos all lhl'OVllh tho store•. And ;varanlM lollsfactlan or your day, Seo for youroelf. mon.y back on wery purthcn.. •&c.pt falr..ffaded or gowmmenkontrolled ptka U.S.D.A. CHOICE TEND~Y BRAND T·BONE STEAK II TOP SIRLOIN !.149 BONUS DISCOUNT SPECIAi. .. U$.O.A. 040ICf """'""' $129 EASf!IN GWN fEl> '" aNTll °' 5nc POrterhouse Steak. LL Piiit LO ins-:: ... L& il- U.IJ>.A. CHOICI ~VllN<D . s· llc CAIJ'°""A..;..;. -""" CllfllP 511c llone steak ••• LL ii· f rjiD'g Rabbits •• LI. il- SWIFT PREMIUM All MEAT c WISHIONE GM.OE A flOUN c 49 . 49· Franks •.•••••• ~ Roasting Chicken • LI.· •·•1•.1:0. ... 'r"-"'"" noc RID SteaK •••• ,.ilU. U.IAA.CiloktlT........,....... s1 i• Club Steok ..... U.s.DA o.m Tlfldtfey ...,..., $189 Spencer Steak,, • U.S.D.A.CWc. ,.........,. lk9M1 St:"w Beef ..... age {Itel. I Oc Off lAlll) O(ODOWlf >OAI' PALMOLIVE GOLD =·32c at First Bite! Almolf ouory day 1ameono we know tolls us thoy'w )Ult met T onderay Brand Beof -and fell In IOYO at flrll bll9. ~ybo 11'1 Tenderoy's notuml ftndtrntH. Or Ill d .. m.uro bluih of lroshnasa. Or Its promise of -..al fal!h- fulno11 (Tonderay to kH tho guosswork aut of bvvfng boo!, f""""r). Think you're too sophlsflcatod to flnct romo..,. In • piece of boo!? Then we dare you'lo meet Tendeiay -I wo'll be glod lo Introduce you. •10NUS DISCOUNT SPECIALS Ptket ore effKo ttw .... ~h T,...., ....... 27,1Ht '~d-.JV....__l6cr. ~ Meat. -Uil-.... ._._ ~ 37 Wafer Beef • ';; 0 6-ol. PKG.. •tc rm;;u--;a::n. 7!f ' a. ............. ,.,.... l!OI lol1p1 ••• '':l: Uil Slk:ahc':': ~ 75' WAPlltSUCtD, t-11.n:G.•Sc. e COSTA MESA-ms-. •NEWPORT IEACH4\::::A'!:!°1'W::.:: .... ,e HUNTINGTON IEACH-W!'=':.. .... e FOUNTAIN YALLEV-:,!•~;w" ' • ----~ --------------~--------------________________________________ ....... ;It DAJLY PILOT WrdntJdQ, August 21, 1968 QUARTERBACKS -Johnny Unitas, 9uarterback for the Baltimore Colts, discusses his style on "NFL Action" tonight at 8 p.m. on Channel 5. Also intervie\\'ed on the half-hour color special are quar· terbacks, Sonny Jurgensen, Don Meredith and Fran Tarkenton. TELEVISION VIEWS Much Much Football!! By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UP I) -"Must you televise d?,ub- le headers?", compuained the football w~dow. ~n Sunday my husband parks his bottom m a chair anU doesn't move for seven hours." The Jetter, typical of many, is as much a h.ar· hi nger of autumn at the TV. net~orks a~ falling leaves. William C. MacPhail, vice president of CBS-TV who got this one, sympathizes with the lady and her seasonally bereaved sisters. A lot of thought has gone into trying to ID:ake football watching another example of connubial together~ ness. , But is hasn't worked. The game really doesn t have enough woman appeal and the bad news for rives is that any husband with a hopeful of se.ts \\'ill be able to tune in some 200 games this season. This is a Jot of footb all , MacPhail thoughtfully remarked. "\Ve're aware of the possibility of overexpo- sure " he said but as long as the ratings go up \\'e have to su1pply tbe demand. The intensity of feeling about the ganle is remarkable. When we moved announc~r Ray Scott from the Green Bay Packers after 12 years we got a petition of protest drawn up in Martha's Coffee Shop and more than 1,000 letters." Along with ratings and attendances the cost of supplying foot.ball to TV fans has risen sharply and worringly. "We used to use five cameras on an event, now \\'e use 15," Ii1acPhail said. "The production and presentation are much more sophisticated and the cost of the rights to the games has spiralled as \\'ell. As a result the price per minute to the spon- sors has soared though there's an aura about being associated with big footba ll games that seems to go beyond strictly commercial considerations." (Sponsors pay about $70 ,000 per minute on net- \vorked games.) . ?vlacPhail. who has given CBS the reputation of taking a chance on encouraging new sports for television, said he was frankly disappointed about soccer. "It's the world's most popular sport outside the U.S." he said, "Yet it's down in the ratings this year from last -and it was bad last year. I had thought the mergeor of both leagues might improve the situation. But we won't make a .decision about soccer until Nov. 15. I want to see all the figures first. \Ve may be doing a job and not knowing it for five years. On a re~nt trip I saw as many kids play- ing soccer as footbafl . Surprisingly one of the most successful fra nchis es is Atlanta where they're in· lroduced the game in schools." li1acPhail, v.1ho has a long family connection with base ball, said baseball attendance are holding up rl espite serious criticism in the press. He thinks the game must be 5peeded up -a problem, incident· ally, facing anther fading bat and ball game across the ocean, English Cricket. 1.facPhair saJd this will be the key· year for na- tional acceptance of televised ice hockey. "I'm very hopeful on ice hockey,'' he added. He said CBS \\'Ould carry the Forest Ilills Tennis Championships because the public is fi nall y beginning to recognize the names of plavers such as Arthur Ashe. He con- siders golf to be ·in acute danger of over exposure. ''There are new tournaments every week," he said, "But the same fa ces." De1anis the Menace PEANUTS • I ll !I ,_,, DR. KILDARE GORDO JUDGE l'ARKER ~EILA?' nus IS S,,M. PRIVER: VOii ASK.El' THAT l U.U. YOU! 'IOU MUST lll11r0:'. I'M. A l'E5T, SAM. •• !UT IS ntERe ANY OlANCE Of SEEING 'K>ll TI-115 EVEMING!' MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS ME NON UKUM UL MANS! HATUM PUTS ! MUTI AND JEFI= 1l>NIGHT I SERENACEO A 8EAUTIRJL 5EHcRJTA SINGING BEAl1TIFUl- LOVE 50NGS Ui'IOER HERWINCOW/ MISS l'EACH IT'5 "EAU.Y VERY IW'OKTANT •• ,1.NI' I HAVE A CAR! t CAN MEET YOU WHER· EVU YOU;s::.•~V •1' (6;-j"'::-: By Ken Bald By Gus Atrlala tF rr WJiR.ENl-r PeR. Tll/5 OIVIJ.·SJNT LllMlMGO--· ' --1TWOULO 5" Ml!RLI" AS /!J/!LIEVEO JT! By Harold Le Doux 11°5 lllE PARKERS t WANT TO TALK A&OUT,. SM\ •. l llT I SU Pf'OSE IT OJI WA1T ... LOOK, I'LL PltlVE &V Tli C lll EATER Ar.otiT SIX.• FIFTEEM 5'-lARP! MEET ME OCITSIPE ! By Ferd Johnson BUT ~AT FROSTS ME l s-r~T "TIU'YALWAYS COME ON 11l~ PAYS l Pl.AY <i«F! By Tom K. Ryan UL MAllS TAKUM ME PUPPY FlSS WAY! MASSY, NASSY LIL MANS! ·. PIO S HE U KE rr? SHETAAEWME A BEAUTIFUL. "FL.OWER ! By Al Smith By Men '/ES, ft·1fSS PE.4lH , ~HE ALWA Y> Pl'l<S Or< HIM ... I HATE MMZCJA ... I HAT£ MEit, I HATt: H!lt- IP r<EVal S~K TO ME~ AGAlr< AS" LON(. AS we uve:-IF ' I • •• I COUU) Ol'IL\'. eE SORE SH' WOl!Ull'l'T GeT tMD llT ME- ' ,, WEDNESDAY AUOUIT 21 Mm: Stn Ed'll'tnl Ktnnedr'• ,tddna btfott tlll WOfWQt, Mta., Chtmber· If t:om1nt1C1 II sd\lduled lor tel• cast II IZ llOOn • 1 PM today. ''" IJ"" "' .., (C) (611) " """"· . 0 • ....,..., .. .., -(C) (30) II !tM Alllll ntw: (C) (90) Gums 1r1 Soupy Stlu, '°"'' 1Jn11r lks:l.lt Griffin, sin11r Bobby Sf.oil ind ltt ·skatln1 stir ...., l•· nov1. In ont p;it, Allin pll)'J Dr. Ritht11 Sule and lnttl'Yiews Soupy Sala, • min e1u1ht In t111 UICt t1t1lu of lfl tllthqu1U. (R) a Sb: ra.a llMI: ..,........, {iii)'St1ry) '5'-TOft)' Clutb, )oennt ""'· 111 -... (C) (!O) m ... •-c·~ GD WMY• """ CE'.l A111t S11bll .. ,:30 0 KNIC Ntw1 Service (C) (60) • 0 1llt Cf'OIWJ Siew (t) (30) GJ 11H1t111 F1k t30'J m lldfllt's ..., (30) m ScWu ....... ''Computer lot Apollo." JoOt Atdl rtporll 1111 th• compvtar '*"Pl• at MIT \11 Cam· brldtt, Mtu., wltlcb cont191s Proj· •ct Apollo'• rulcl1not 1J1ltms. II> lhtldlrt S4 (C) 7,0011 ll!Hll CIS """' _, (Cl ' {!O) Wlii Ctonklte. ~ pi F 1_, ~30) Iii.I ""' "" (30) m •-· -· C30> fl!I r..c..r 'II: ''Ultrtlurt." Aaron HJUm1n, liom Santa Mtri1 H.S., u pl1ins•how ha 11111 tit• no\'el, short stolJ and poeflJ to help stu· clenb 1pprtcill1 li1111turt. f!I Ft/fa SMdMI 7:301J Oii ())list II S,ICI: IC) (60) Sciwt·litlion ldwtnture •rill with GU)' Willitms, June loO;twnt, Mir· t1 Kristtn, Billy MUlllJ 1nd Mpl1 C1rwri1ht Jrlo JtofyHne IWlilablt at prw till'lt. • ,,,.11 9m"" - -tfi (lO)Jilri. Dry1dlM 1lf1n1• I• 1 Mlutfd to hit 1Mt1J Hiiia wlltn CitllHIJ pll homtaldl for tllt t!lht cf JllO'll'. (~ ·-(C) (10) ,.,'\\'!/, ':: -: CCl !301 m...,•..,.!Cl C10l m -" "' """ e<> clo> 111-·- ~ .. IJ 9 (I)·-.... (C) (30) OMl'tf Dout111 pt1n1 tt ao lo • farm symposium ""' ltm LIM tt home with Entllshma11 T•1 N1111r cr1titt Hor1111). w110111 ,..., hlrld IS h11 l1mpol'llJ r1rmhallll. (R) D !D(l)Krart Miiie M1ft: (C) (10) Glle!tl ltt Thi rOIH T09s. Rita G11dner. T1"' Ht1dl11, )oa11 RMln, ind SIJ ind The f1 mHJ Sto111. 0 ~ (}) Wtdneld•J Nlsttt lllw11: i?) 'Bu Stop'" (comedy) '56 - M1ril)'ll Mon1e1, Arthu1 O'Conn1a, Hopi L1111t. Don MurT1y, Hint Conreld. Blttr Fltld. A motl., col· lectlon of traw1111 1nM 1l '°"" tnrthl about thtm111Yu whlll tnow- bouncl 1t 1n Arlzo111 but tlop. Amons thtnt II 111 11ubs111t w. bor who yfrtually kldlllped • ..,. 1n1ert11n1r In hi& cltl:trmln•tlon to m•ny hlr. (R) m 1111• .. 11111 s. ce> <:t0> \ et.I N£J fflltivll: "'frolu." Co11- ductor B11111rcl Ketfft lllcls Ill• londGll Phillllrmonic In th1 rlrat movemellt of J1etllov11fs Sy111phoftr No, 3 ln E Flit M1jor, Op. 55. Xetff• •ill 1111!ym thl MOWtm1nt i nd ditc:uwn 111 !Mflratioll. ., ........... '"' IJ 111 Cll "' a .. !Cl C'Ol Gutll Strolhlf Mlrtkl pilJI th1 Rw. Mr. Allilr1Dll, 111 1n1ll'lllltld, hllfMl«frrifll l'llrilltr wflo IUI• denbllJ 11.1111 into Plull 1111 Oid: Kol1istlr'1 n"' ur. (II) m-!Cl c,., 1111_._._ 10:00 II a CI> Diii Dllul.: IC> (80)' ' Ur1 Wilson Jr .. Rich Littl• atld Enid ' Moller 111.t. 8 0 (1) 111111 I• T•• U1: (Ci (60) "l h• "'"' of LucrlCt." -. os-.. Nlla11 ..... (C) (I( i as--c611l GI Jd ...._ "• CCI (SO) m•-..,!Cl c•~ fZI ..,,. ,..,., ... CMl'lf"MU Ill .... _ D ~III "" -"'' !Cl C!Ol ""° m -!Cl C30l •• ,.,,. .. Jed. A runslinaln1 cowboJ (Sim: lhn1t) ma to play both sicl• at ; 1 r1n1• wtr bttwwn r1ncht11 incl 11:00 B EMii O'Ql4 111ptrt: fC) ()()) homutttcl111. (II) Jerry Dunphy. 0 Till Kippy W..._,: (C) (~) 8 DI llti ...... (C) (30) "M111tt;1." Part I of a two-part ~ml Tom Brokaw to B1j1 Cllilomi•. Slim 11111 Ht11· · rietta tr1wel 450 miles aoulh tf a"' ~ f'O) the bofcltr lo tht temi·tropical Mu.ic1n vill111 of Mult1t. O il1l ®"' """"'!Cl CW> "Gtllw11.' John Stwd 1nd T1r1 Kini Melt I Ru&&iln •1tnt who .. caped from • ti1httr 1uarcled man· 1stl1Y Ind killed I British lltflt. A second R11ui1n 11ent cllS1pp .. r1 ffom th• 1110n11tety incl 1noth11 British llenl cliu, Ind steed $U$o pecta that a wclkl bottl1 incl 1 copy of ll!JllTl.'I Mltuf'll His!OIY 1J I..: (C) (lO) Battt W1tcl. e Mewl« .. 1U111 " • ....,., ~s" (d11m1) '61-Dlvid J1n ... n, MiW, Rooney, .IKk C.r10n, KHn11 W)'lln, Ol1nnt Foster, Oi1n1 DolL m "' -!Cl Cl50l m •• .............. <d1am1) ·31 -Alicf FIJt, Wimer Baxter. M11azin1 ll1'tl muth to dt with 11:3G 1J MD: "J•111 [qlel" (dri' lh1 mysltty. (R) mi) '57-Kim Hmk, Jiff Chlnclt1r. ~~•~>~Jul~-:-:: D ID (I) De T•IPl a.. (C) i M1rius Gorin!. 0. W. flSCh1t. A )'GUiii .om111 who It Ill 1111Willllll .ct0mpllt1 111 a murder sttks es· tlpt on • blrp on tit• Rllint with t111 1id of tht vwt1•1 uptaln. m Tnrtll 1t ~-(C) (30) • MIN: .. l lrt frWq' (c:om- edy) '40 -CllY "9nt, llOMHn• RumlL O ll2lCIJ "" - -CCI m""' ..... <60) iz:00m•,.,.. tc> fD Cin¥ln6a 1 .. : "Bill Colby." J1mu Dir clitc11SS11 the 111ttmful Heiro comedi1n'1 Clttlf u tell'lt-12:30 m All·M\illl Slllw: ., Was 1n M- ilon incl club p1rforrntr. venturm," "Llt't LNI 1 Little,• Im ~"'llr Ori'" "S.lly. lrtr11 and Miry,~ "Wom11 1/ld the Huntlf:' 1:001J NF\. klilll: (C) (30) "Sulld1y's ID ActfM nlllrr. ~port If Htll." Cool Htrou." JohMY Unilu,. so.nllY J11r1tMt11, Dn11 Me1edlth and Fran 1Z:45 Q Mnll: (C) ..,... 11111 lllHlt T•~•to.11, four of th1 best q111rt1r· Rid" (idYentura) '66 -Cl11islin1 backs in prt footb1ll , discuss thei1 NiellOn, Helmut llnl'll. lnd;.lclutl 1tyleL m Htal (C) (30) ID -o "'-'"' CCl ''TM Pol itical Pirti -." Andrew Hacka, prvllSIGr llf llOlitic.ll sdMct If Cornlll UnlwllftY, dilC-till dltftttna1 111 Dt:moclltlc 11'111 lit · publkt11 phllolopl'illl. 1111> - THURSDAY DAYTIME MOVIES l :JO D -t» lflll W1ftl" (d111111) 'lS Luise Rtilllf, ftmricl 1t11'fll D (C) "1.a111bllll" (1ittenhtr1) '6Z-Ctllftnln1 Polled:. !') ''&Ille n n.lr TNI" (cemtltJ') 'SZ- Jun"' Ct1lll. 1:00 8 !Mii: ''Wal,. {1dwntur1) '4' -Jon Hin. Merli MOftf•. D Mwit: "h4lm "'-t" (~ Ptnsl) .,~Joell Btn11ett, Jtrntl ·-llC.•-111 1116 .... 11:00 0 '1 •illlrll lennilllt" (WIStttll) '50-Jamu £lllson ... Stalllilil1 ... h lr'" (comtdJ) ''4-Fllilll M1 .. Mul'l"I)'. u,,.m..., ,..,.. c.,,...,, .,.__ Joti11 Suotl. *Hit ... Ill" (mYt- ttry) 'S7-4f11ao H11L . 1:JO m "&u,I bf Nt11tt" (m"1111) 'l7-W~lllm Hal!, Anni N111t1. ':JO II "Cr$ l11!dint" (1d'/1nturt) ·5l-G11J Mmil!, ROltr Struth. a.,."" M' c~r•1 ·u- Rlthm1 Arltl'I, ltetMtt St1r.k. THE BOAT BEAT AlllMll l1e~•b1y, 111ff•111! 1w11'11 wh1n.,. 111 ~It t•w1r19e •f .,.cktl11f, ''"'r1 th• boil be•t fo• th, DAILY PI LOT. H1'1 th• e11ly f11ll ll1111 bo•!i119 f1p1rt.r 011 •l'ly Or•1191 C•11nty ~•wip•p•r '''°" . --' .... ~ -: -: -... -·-·~·~·-=-==:---•-=-•o:.:"!!"="!~'"'4".-•"!"!""'%111'!!.~'~'.--"!~~-~.'"'!!'!!""'¥'""!'"'4'_" ... =--""'' '""'!'--.,..••"!'!'. -.vl"'l•'"~IP'••"'"''"•.,.'""''""'' .. a'""z '"'"'"'""'a .. u '"''""'"'"'""'a'""' 14zzzz • Wtdnesda,y, AllgLISl 21, 1%8 DAI LY PILOT f18•f_ Wtdnesclay, A141wt 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT 43 _;.' ·-News of Cf)ast Men in Service on Duty Around World --. . Spec. ! David R. Barue1, Cipt. Marvin L. Per· Tactical Zone. Vietnam. Lt. (j.s.l Joh P. Meya, -Lacklaod AFB, Tu. and h&1 Brouu Star Medal. aboard the USS 'neon· od tralnlJ>tl In I Ir In I io, son of Mr. ands Mr5. rymaa Jr., son of Mr. and , • .,. th 0 .,_ USNR, soo oI htr. and Mr1. been asslened to Air farce T 6. WIWam C. n-s-••, _ deroea. weapoos. Howard \V. Barnes r., 2267 ~ .. eue . ~one, ion Gerald H. Meyn, 1590 VJa -.,v1 ·-Canyon Drive, Colla Mesa , l\1rs. 1'1a.rvln L . Perryman of Mr. and l\1r1. David L. Cortica., Laguna. Beach, ls Technical Training Center, 9'lS Capital St., Costa Mesa, Pfc. Harold S. Downey Set. Jam.ea R. McFadde11 wu named crane operator or 24411 Btid#; Road, El Senne, 19361 Brookhurst, serving aboard the U.S. Lowry AFB , Calo. f or bu been assigned as the Jr., 2:2, 100 of Spence Jr., son ot Mr. and Mrs. of the month for the '19th Toro, is returning to bis HunUngt.on Beach., has been Navy's newest 1 t t • c k 1choollnc as an lotelligenc·e photograpbic orficer at the Downey of 1015 Mt.,llon Jamee R. McFadden Sr., ot Engineer Group near tong Louisville, K)'., ANG u n It assigned for duty at the U.S. aircraft carrier, the USS apec1allst. Da Nang Marine Bue, Viet· Drive, Costa Meta, hp;& been 2370 Elden Ave., Colta , Vi t.nam after completing a training Air Foret Academy. America. nam. U , Borgman was assigned to the 4ttl Intartry Meta, has been assl.gned for • 81:~ne1e enter.ed active du· ~!~s '°:t d~~~~~~~ Pfc. Gary D. Henry, son The ship Jg operaUng u a p~ti, ~:·.o~~~~'!tt.RR.DD'~ gr;,~~ serv ing in ~!:~i= =~e~;~=~r:jft. duty at Patrick ~B, Fla. i ty in 1961. He attHen1dedh Tex. oJf Mr•s· t NeCova 1 G<>Msney, h854 part of tt:ie U.S. 7th Fleet on Pont, 9Sl Meadowlark Lane, 0 C b M. Sgt0.1 Jack!Me ~ .. ~r: ' Newport Harbor g oann .. s a esa, as Yankee Station, Gulf ot Laguna Beach, has been Lt. Cmdr. F raacJ1 V, Pvt lie R. om t, of son of enn . Q\IU.\.ly. ~ school and Santa An a Pf c. Ro b ert J . been assigned to the 4th 1'onkin. awarded the U.S. Air Force Peaand, son of Mr. and Mrs. 1960 Churcb Sl, Costa Mesa, Delaware St., Hwiingt.on College before entering the MacDonald, son of Mrs. 0 . infantry Division n e ar Commendation Medal: Col. Frank Pesanti of 390 West completed. a bMllc field Beach, has been assigned to service. T. Watrous or 2401 ""Holly PleJku, V1ctiiam. Airman Pr • 9"' I 1 E. Du Pont, :. supply sfaff af· Bay St., Costa Mesa, has artillery course at Ft. Sill, Andersen AFB, Guam . Lane, Newport Beach, is Pfc. llenry • 16, an in· Starkey, ton of Mr1. Bonnie ficer, wu derorated for returned to the United Okla. A maid.enance 1tbedullng Cadet Candidate Matthew serving with a unit of the fantryman, attended Corona L. Hendrje:, 42• Redlanch meritorlow: service with a States after an eight mooth The son of Mr. a.ad Mrs. supervtsor, the weeant it• ''· l\fihaylo, son of Mrs. An· Force lAgistic Command in de! Mr High School before Ave., Newport Beach, com-U.S. Advisory team In Viet-combat cruise with Attack Don F. Love of Newberry, member of. the Military .a.e O. Mihaylo of 949· the Marine Corps I Carp.s entering the service. pleted basic training at n.am. He also holds the SquadrOn Twenty Three, Calif., he received specializ· Airlift Command. Cheyenne St., Costa Mes•,1---------------------------;;__ ___________ _;_ ____ ,;_ ____________________ _ has been assigned as an airman lC at Goodfellow ' AFB, Tex. The cadet has entered the tl.S. Air~ Force Academy Preparatary Sd1ool where he will receive concentrated training on basic academy subjects for competition as a cadet can dida te ap· polnlment ta the Air Farce Academy. Wllliam R. Callender, 100 of Mr. aod Mrs. Robert s. Callender of M4 Via Lido Nord. Newport Beach, C?m· pleted training at Officer Candidate School, Quantico, Va. A member of tile Platoon Leadera.Class program , Callander, a senior a t Denver University 1 w i 11 return to Quantico a.ft.er oommiss.romni for • basic officer coun:e prior to a1signment to a ltation of the Marine Carps. Three Oranf!;e Coast men are serving aboard the at- tack aircraft carrier, USS Ticonderoga, which has just completed a six month deployment in the Gulf of Tonkin aff the coast af North Vietnam. They are Airmen Wllliam F.. Rogers, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rogers af 1107 A c a c l a , Huntington Beach; Charles B. Davis, 20. son af Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. DaviJ af 2039 Phalarope Court, C o s t a Mesa and Airman Appren. Christopher F. Boltz, 21, ion of Mrs . Thomas R. Holme of 512 Iris Ave., Corona de! Mar. 'Vhen the Ticonderoga completed her latest deploy· ment she became the first carrier to have completed four tours of duty on Yankee Station. Arnly SP5 Jeffrey A. Lowe, 22, IClll of Mrs. L. Audubon F"°"" of 437 AU... AVe., Newport Beach and Cfayton M. Lowe of South P;:sadeoa has arrived in Vietnam. He ls a personnel clerk with tbe Fifth Infantry Division. Lowe ls a 1963 graduate of Newport Horl>or H lg h School and atJtended Orange Coast College. Seaman Rel ROOer& P. Harmon Jr., USNR, 18, son of Lt. Cmdr. and Mrs. RO be rt P . Harmon of 7092 Ford D r I v 1 , Huntington Beach, has reparted for eight weeks of basic training at the Caast Guard Recruit Training Center in Alameda. Upan completion of the recruit training the 11ew CQast Guardsman may ap- p_ly for turther training leading to a specially rating in the field of his choice. Pfc Richard Debruin, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Debruin and husband of Mrs. Nancy Debruin of 2280 Pacific Ave., Costa Mesa has received the Cambat fnfantryman Badge. He is assigned with Company E, 1st Battalion of the First Air C av a 1 r y Dlvisioo'a 5th C~valry in Vietnam. Three Orange Coast men are serving aboard the amphibious assault 1h1p USS Trlpall aperaUng off the coast af Vietnam. They are Seaman John F. Rlctles, a>, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Rickles of 211 12th St., Huntington Beach; Seaman Appren. Wllll•m M. Gu ffy, 20, son of Mr. and Mr1. William E. Guffy of 312 Bucknell Raad, Costa Mesa, a nd Com muntcatlons Yeoman Seaman Joseph F. Ramano, 22, aon of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Ramuno of 7fl1 Poinsettia Ave., Corona deJ Mar. Airman Chrb A. W•ath, son of Mr. and Mra. Doran L. Waugh of 25291 Sea Rose Court, Dana Point, b11 been assigned to a unit of the Strategic AJr Command at Davts·Moatban AJl'B, Arb. Airman Wauiti. •fin: pro- tection tpeclallat Is a 1911'1 uadu•te of San Clemente Hlsh School. Seccnd~DaYlll L. PopoJo7, eon of Mn. Ellu-Pope)07 ol !All Coriander Drive, C 0 S t • Me,., bu bffo •olgnod to a unit of the Air Force Lo(J.tllcu Command a t Nft•k Air P'afttt Obio1 JUNIOR IAIY FOOD :::\'.J..._16' BABY FOOD :~an~~ 11c LIQUID SIMILAC m'i~-26' HILLS BROS.ll:"w.-69' HIW BROS.::=...._sp7 ... HIW BROS.::= ... _sl" INSTANT COFFEE:::\.0::1" Tll IAGS :lr.' 65' ... f6y 'lkt"--GOLDEN FRENCH'S MUSTARD 2"-0unce Jar ' ... NIBLn'S CORN ........ _.22' HARVEST DAY PEAS .. ua-17' YORK COUNTY ONIONS .. ..._31' ... Dll MONTE PEAS .. ...._22' CUT GRHN BEANS~· 23' SHllUE BEANS:::'"' 27' B&M BEANS:= . 37' VEGOABLE JUICE :\';'.:'."' 37' TOMlTOES:l""M' 17' ~· ----~'fkt! 't.T DRINK HAWAIIAN PUNCH "6.0unc• Can 3:1.0 APPLESAUa :JI.' 36 FRUIT COCllTAIL :::~ 37 CUNG PElOIES ::;::"" 26 PINEAPPLE::--25 BLUEBERRIES :::"'"' 36' GRAPE JUICE =-'..::." 32 ' WRCHAD£:::::::.-36' <°"'° IEEF :':l.... 57' LUNCHEON MElTr.:. ... _ 53' CHUNK Mil:Jl.'!'.:'." __ 29• HEINZ ltiuSH l:ln~:O:-29' swm PKKL1s :::;.--49' PITTED OLIVES::''--"* 46' .. -/6y 'fkt!.--. BATHROOM DOW CLEANER 17..0unc• Con r Eacli wt w..t It I.Icky '-an111 a ''1102111" ... It's yotr writ!• 1•••111 el coli- pltll lllbflldllL WC0: 'MEAT BUYERS PERSOHlllY SWCT ONLY TOP QUAL- ITY MEAT, AND OllY I Im OUT Of 5 COMIS UP TO LUCKY'S Hl6ll STAW St p .... Jtll' ••• .. '-l!J with lfcky's Top Glallty Meats, F•Dll ... Grocery It-y11 bow .. tmt ... lllalti _. l1wlr llds ... tlie flllllt Fnlts ... V19ttabl11 It Low Everyday DIKOlllt Prim. SHOP LUCKY TODAY ... ~AY, AND ENJOY GRElnRrS"-'AVING=;..;;.S•;_' -----.. . ..,, ...... ~. --' . CHUCK ROAST ~~=:~r..DJU'ICT 38' IL STANDIMG-1.AIGI DD .......... , .. CROSS RIB 7 8' IOlllLISS IPA$T ••• UAN UD JUICY ................. ,... lk. GROUND BEEF 4)' FIUH, WN,,,AJID TINDll. .... ,.,, • .,.,,.,,........... 1•. !1:~2.~~ .. ~.!..~.~~ ................... $1~~ !!!'J.~~~r~oo~•~•~~ ..... 4 9!. sucio BACON WCKYIUND ._ .. , ..... 55c 1.P..i Pec.bttt ,. , ... ...:.· •• ~.,, • .J__ • .,,. HYDROX COOIOES=:"~.59' PACIRC TllElTS , ..... ~ 36' NABISCO CRACKERS =-33' HARVEST DAY BRllD=--29' PANClllE MIX :::-45' CAKE MIX~ .. ':.~ .. 33' FROSTED POP UPS im~:.~~ .. 45' .. -'6y'fkt/.--, INST ANT COFFIE BORDEN'S KA VA .5-0ul'lce Jar a&a FRESH FILLO OF SOLE ....... 89,~ U111, .... wWIJOll,.IUCD, 1.U.Pll. 64< BACON •••••••••••••••·••••••••••• OK.llMATd,twrn,WCID,1.U.NI. 69< PREMIUM BACON ••••••••••••••• ISU.IMATUTlbllSIKU,1"°'""Plt, C IACON ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79 BuntRFLY COFFEECAKES,..., BRAN 33 MUFFINS ,.._,___ c PMNtlttt",Mtl ..... .,_,, __ ,.......,, 25c Cooldts "'· ------'~"'"" ... •...,.nous. ,....,...._ .--~~ CHOP sun:::.-:::. ... ~,M~--95• GRAPE JAM:::" .. 52' MIXED NUTS=-'... 79' vm· DOG FOOD-a• SPllKXILS SUGAI ... ... 57' SPAGHnTI ::t~"'-69' IRIQUnTlS :':.-79' 7' <:.:£_/,, LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON ll OUSEWARES £ BlAUTV AIDS CREST TOOTHPASTE REGULAI OR MINT RlVORlD PAMILY llZI TUii 6·9' !..DD.!.!~~..._.... ___ 1a• S!!l.!lJ!~-""-----········--···-99• THiil ROWERS 51 c _.....,,.. ____ Mt ... f-~." ...................... -- 76• --RIGHTGUARD DEODORANT ___ 54• AQUlM.WI LOTIOH.--..;.;~---•tu .......... __ _ f'?'~~ PRELL SHAMPOO CONaNTRAn ·~~y $117 TUii SCOPE "kOFF" 11:.ltl 81 c CUT ·UP FRYERS FRISK UJ.D.A.IUDIA FIYlllG CHICON 3511. Rll ROAST :: •••••••• , , , .89,l PORTERHOUSE STllK':t ..... sn: RIB STEAi ::= .............. 95.i.. SMOKID PICNIC .:=::., .•••• ,,43,1, CUBE STIAKM ••••••••••••••• •1~ CHUCK STEAK ••••••••••••••• 48l RUMP ROAST ••••••••••••••• 78&.. HEN TURKEYS ~ai:.,., •••••• 39l SIRLOIN TIP •r:r.::-•••••••••• 9&l CHUCK ROlSTc:r-•••••••••• A7iL BONEUSS HlM.=:::::.\'i:~ ..... •1; fAJIJY",I .... NIUCA.fflUNfllMffl 'LOllGHOINCHIESI 59c MIN Wl~--.. --.. 1 ......... LUCKY SUClll WNCH MEATS 31< .. I ... , Spic ... P&I', ...... a.-ML pq. OUrl..OW~Pricl! LUCKY MONTEREY JACK CHEESE Chunk- l·Pound • 79' SLICED CHHSI ~~J.._ 34c Alltttiua, lwh., ri.1 .... , 11.,1t • ....,.. !!,~~t: 5.~~~-----... 1 ....... $pt ~~Ac!,':!~~!!\~.~~-~-,.._ 47• ~~~~-~-E ________________ .... 57• ~~u-~.5.~~~-~~-'"-'"· 53• ~~~.~~~----·-· ........ 87• LUNCH MEAT . 98< O.C.-..,..., Yllritty P111:1t.-... 1hL Pkf. ... th• 1-it.,1u li11M 011 thlt. flCllt• <0111111111e lint • UIC!lt aamp1in9 of th1 tho1,uandt of low, low tllKOunt pric•1 ii 1tor• for you at luc•y. !DOK FORKEY BUYS · "IEY RYS~ m ntrl·AtllP .... "ul"• llf ... flct1ere'1 fl..-rMJ,,.••tltul tllnacn, .. DI '1l'f lfY" Htlll llstef Ill Jat I I .. et .. NIJ em nl1n 11 stir• fer ,.. ... • ..... ,. .. ,.., ........ "U1' llr ltltll ,_ 11n11llJ 11t I• · Zlllltl Ml'llAI IAllMSI DASH DmllGBIT ::.-:._•211 DW SOAP:::'.. OS BOLD DETIRGENT..... 79' OUrLO\V ~Pri:ll WCKY MAYONNAISE Quart Ja' 4&0 ' ;1 . • FRUIT PIES:?'.:?-_, 33° COOKIN' IAG :;.o::;::o::n..-27" MACARONI:="--31' PIZZA ROLIS::"",_. 59' SANDWICHES:=o.'!:i-57° CREAMED OllCllEN:::..-;. 63' MEYER'S BRllD=-sa• ... ~'fkt!.-... PAPER GALA TOWELS Giant Rall :a PIOSW&T pw:=.=.:m-31• SLICED B&F::---It" sou nun~-69' am FRESH HlDDOCX·u.-77• ORANGE JUla ::"' 24' TREESWEn JUla :'... 49° FOREMOST BUTTEll l:'..".!l"' 79' MlRGlRllll~ 42• BORDEN'S MARGARINE ~nL..38' ... f6y'fkt/.--, HUNGRY JACK PILLSBURY POTATOES 16-0unce Bo• . ~ . ,,~) ·.1 ~ 1!1.·1· ' .. ~-· DELSEY TISSUE:;:: 24' scon NAPKINS:::.."' 36° KLHNEX TISSUE :='Ii 27' PAPER PLATts :::::-.:: 79• IVORY SNOW... 79• ClLGON =-73' OUrLOW ~Pricl! LADY LEE ICE CREAM Y.a Gallon Carton WCADE·:=---69' MR. CLElN=.o"':."' 6.6" STA PUFF ~"::=-79' IVORY SOAP:'::"""""' 21' UQUID THRILL=-· 51• Dill TOIUT SOAP.... 14' • GMmlllll'lt Conlfell.d ond ,. .,,.. ""'-llClllpttd ~,, ... ,,,IMIOY TMI PINHT QUALl1'T PAODUCI AT IHI COUNT PIUCHZ OllQUIT A IRlND "~ U.S. 110. 1 IUDI BANANAS ,ay1,~s 107545~- ----------------------~ ----------------------------------------------------- ~_.._,··~-·-~-~.~~~~~~~~='!!J!!!!'!!!'!!""ll'llJ!!!l!l!!~~~.~-..... -el!!---.......... ----..,..: t 44 DAILY PILOT Swfft Thomp10n Seedless .GRAPES 2; 25' US NO. I WHITE ROSE POTATOES 10 LB. CELLO BAG 35' FRESH LOCAL K. Y. GREEN BEANS 2; 29' MILD SPANISH CENTER CUT USDA CHOICE ' . RO'UND STEAK USDA CHOICE . RUMP' ROAST • USDA Choice Bone'"° TOI' SIRLOIN ONIONS •••• s~ CORAL QUEEN 1 LB. PKG. $119 OSCAR MAYER FUUVIEW 69c! FRESH HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE 29.~. BREADED SHRIMP SLICED BACON • llt· SWEET CASABA MELONS 5 fb. SWEET NECTARINES · 5 Lbs. $ J ::~:.COFFEE Can 3-lb. 2·1b. Can • • • 1.37 I ·lb. Can • • • • 69« FROZEN FOODS FOREMOST DUTCH PRIDE lmit1tion ICE MILK POPSICLES FUDGESICLES IOXIS OF 6 IAlS -Y°" !Oot• T""'1of24 a.. f<lr $1 .00- 10-oz. Pkg. BIRDSEYE e l'EAS e CORN e CHOPPED BROCCOLI Mer 6 oz. CANS ORANGE JUICE ~$ R BARMBULK 49¢ TENDERIZED s109 OSCAR MAYER PURE PORK 79c WEINERS .. La. :·~~~K~u~~ • LB. LINK SAUSAGES • 1& LIBBY'S PINEAPPLE JUICE F 0 R 46 01. CANS NUCOA MARGARINE ..... COMET CLEANSER 14-oL CANS FORM OST COTTAGE CHEESE Pint MD FACIAL QUALITY TOILET TISSUE 2·Ply R 0 L L s MANDALAY SLICED PINEAPPLE \ No. 2 Cans F 0 • "14 SLICES IN EACH CA ' ' BLUE GINGHAM SHORTENING 3-lb. Can Prices Effedive: • Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun. , August 22, 23, 24, 25 Prices subject to stock Oft hand. WE GIVE BLUE CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACENTIA WE GIVI BLUE C:H" STAMPS 19th and Pl1cenfl1 710 w. Chlpma~ •. _.....,,_.... --··-- WtdntsdU, Allgusl 21, 1968 OAILV PILOT 4 Southern Callfornla'• Fadory Direct Dealer IS NOW OllNGE COUNn'S N0.1 LARGEST VOLUME DIALER DUE TO THE TREMENDOUS PUBLIC RESPONSE OF OUR SPECIAL FACTORY ~PURCHASE SALE OF LAST WEEKEND WE ARE ALL CAN, WILL & MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND! All PAYMENTS ON USED CARS iNCLUOl IAJ\ & LIUNSl FEES ANO All FINANn CHARGES ON 36 MON I HS ON APPRO VlO BANK CREDI! '6S CHIYIW MALIBU C". s1""'2i'L6""'™· ':;..:Ir Ul\4.s4' '"'3· llf1.~a::· s""'4"'3(UX~M. ~g NICI IOWll MTlllJ. +TAX ' UC. nMT. ntn. '67 CHIVROLn IMPALA I .. , Ml«.., ll1 ent.~ 1&11, ,..., ""' .. tlltO.. wsw, .. ,...11, v!n\'l !rltef. mt 7'tQI 51866 TOTAL 563 '°"' $63 ""' 1111(1 IOWll Mnll T, +TAX & l lC. nMT. PTMf, '66 FORD FAIRLANE COUNTRY SQR. '.$'f '.6• .... , ... 6~ _.,.~ :~· ~ .. S.5'11. •"'7~. ~1;L ~Es"" 7 .m~. ' It-TAX ~ ll(. PYMT, rfMT. IWI IOOK PltCI $2420 IWI IOOK .. tel $1tle IWI IOOI. l'l.ICI 12671 GOLD ITA• '6S FORD GALAX.IE 500 ftt!•I)' air, l&H, Ault., rewar St-. WSW, ~lop (l[tk29!) 16S PLYMOUTH SARLUTE t .. l&ll n 11' ~tri.t, bucbr 1Ht1. Q...i&, IWIA 9911 '66 PLYMOUTH FURY II s1166 +:!~~,c. 540 ::=:. 540 ~ir~· $966 '0 T.. s33 ""' 533 "'" ,.ICI IOWM MTlllr. +TAX , uc. n.111. n.111. s40 .Ill.~. nMl. M.UI 1001C. ..SCI I 16IO M.Ul IOOK l'l.ICI $SHI GOLO ITAa 16S PLYMOUTH FURY II '66 MUSTANG cou" '66 CHEVROLn ,C.,....ot4'""'"''•-""· "kb! -n. wll te •11 ~"'"' CUA'"l $1066 +?:~~ s36 irii s36 ~'l· fie!. lll,...¥.1, r.a.. lwtir, ~k. •.,m .IUG 9011 •966 :::.L s33 = 4. T.U: & l!C.. rfMl. s33 .m::. ""'· ll,1$;1 kmlii 1114 WAH llttrint {tlk0-496) $966 ::~ s33 ~~ s33 + TAX ' lK. nan. ILUI IOOK Plltl $1SH 11.Ul IOOK ,.JCI $ 1 IM IWI IOOIC ..SCI $1570 '66 TOYOTA DELUX '6S CHIVELLE SEDAN '64 CHIVROLET IMPALA S.S. V..f ........,.Mt.""""~"tu, dtfro1ter, c1rpt!1, II~ {!'GUl&j s966 ':~~ s33 ~~ s33 ~~~~~. !+ TAX ~ llC. nMT. nMT. 2-41. hanl!ep. R&K,. 1ut1., ""'· ltr & brk&., m "'~·· butk1t Miii. wsw 11,... UZV 1511 $966 TOTAl 533 ""' s33 ""' PlllCI DOWll Mlllll. 1+ TAX & L!C.-PTMl. rTMt. ' .. _,, ...... 11,,..,.,,,,.,,1 .... ("iG.tl-0 •866 TOTAL s29 '"" s29 ""' NICI DOWll MTllf. + TAX ' UC. n.11t. nMT. llUI IOOK ,.!Cl S11SI IWI IOOK PllCI $ti21 IWI IOOK flllCI Sll20 '62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ll'l(ll:lrf tit a.ncll!lonlfttl, -r 1tHrln1, wl~ Ind 1Hl1, tadkl, Mtt~r, IU!,,~ =:: $26 = s26 ~t UV( TU' llC. ""'· '"'"· ILUI 10011: PRICE $1 lZI 165 DODGI DART GT. 2 °"°' """"•"' t&ll., A~I• .. r.s .. 1uc:k11 s.111, t1'"11 {MrK374J $86·6 TOTAL s29 ""' s29 mu "9:1(1 DOWll MTMll. +TA.II & l lC. PUilf. rtMI. 11.UI IOOK PlllCI Sll1S 163 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2 4f ~¥41111• ll1n;., l1eltf'I •Ir Cllld., l&H, """ llrg., br1k11, wind., -11. (0C.U11 1 $666 TOTAL 523 ""' s23 ""' llllllCI IOWI M1"11, + TAX 'ti(. nll'T. nMT. ILUI IOOK l'lK.I $14:15 '65 MONZA '66 FORD 165 RAMBLER STATION WAGON Aull. Kulor. fUDTUll $666 TOTAL s23 ""' s23 "'" "ltCI MWI MTlll.Y, +TAX & UC. PTMT. nM'\', Crtr~.,.,...,.,., l&ll, tute., V..f, WSW, whu l c"""· (Kfl401 $766 TOTAL s26 ..... s26 .. ,.. NICI . Mn llllMLT. ~TAX 'l1C. nMT. nll'T. ~lllt. lraal., ra.d!lt -41\ttfK, Wckft -II, ~rptb,. M!ilt lidrntlt. (llMU75f) 5666 ::~ s23 = s23 ~::::. :+. TAJ! & UC. nMt. nMT, IWI IOOK PllCI $1131 ILUI IOO!t PIJCI $127e ILUI IOOK PllCI S 1 lff '63 COMIT WAGON ' <••~-.~· ... ··~--·"'"'"'*'· l&ll, •iny! !tllli lfi1H, (PWF ..,,. 5566 :i:~ s19 ~ s19~~~t}. + 1.r.x & uc. ""'· rr111r. ILUI IOOIC H:tCI $11• > '66 DODGE CORONIT .r.1,11...,.n\. 11ti1or. Ma~, '""" axt111. wo11 0311 $766 '.:i:! $26 ~':~ $26 ~;~~. 1+ TAI & l tC. PlMT. PTMT. ILUI 1001. NICI S14SS .... . . -- ''5 tH!\IWOLET IMPALA "~S ... 6"'•"$m6~ilon. =~:tftrllllls'1"'9~ Ind:::: .. !Vs'1" "9'J TOTil ·~ PllCI lli'CIWI MtMlt, -I· TAX & l!C. rYMl. ,TMT. ILUI 10011: NICI $14JS '64 CHIVROLn NOYA 166 FORD FALCON f•cf . .Alr, Al~I•, 1t .. 1,r, WSW, C•,,.n (Ser. N•. 14911) $566 :~ 519 = s19 .wm. + TAX 'uc. nM'T. nMT. $26 .:ll:l. Pl.Ill. IWI IOOK NICI 11140 0 FOR YOUR PROTICTION AU. lj~IOR DOOOI USlD CARI with a GOLD STAR 100% UNCONDJTtoNAL IUAUNTEE-THI$ STAI ITATU IN WllTING TMAT MAUOI DOOGE GUAUNTIU Tiii CAI 1o0% AGAINST MECHANICAL DEflal FOi 100 DAYS 01 4,000 MIW WHICH IVR COMO FIUT AITll PUICMASE, THts INO.UDU All MICMANICAL PAITI. 1ua11CAL EQUIPMENT, 1AnEIY, Sl'(lDOMITEI., UDIO, NU.TEI ON ALL CARS. THIS IUAU.NTEE COYEU ALL PA.ITS AND U.lOI REE TO YOUI U.... Low Ml .... • 6111. •7'• ttw. .0'• ""-"' To (,._.. p,_ '66 VOLKSWAGEN ~ 4 ';t'-!PIC 7•11 ,.. 1.160 ._ ~rt~ s46 ::::.: s46 .:::. + h t ' lll. ,,,.... • ..,.., '64 VOLKSWAGEN wi9Y"i:1 ... '"' "" ~ 106 ~~~ .s26 •;:::. s26i:.r~~ + lu & Uc. ''""' ,.,_., '60 VOLKSWAGEN $'lf6· '*J ·llH"" ;;,;·.-li~iu:s"'1' 6 , ... 1 s 16 ••• 'I D rt1c1 hwt ~·~ + lu & lie. rayllt. OPEN 91.M. TO 11 P.M. Open All Day Sunday Se ffabla Espanol ANOTHER HARBOR DODGE FIRSTf 1nanc1ng ANOTHER HARBOR DODGE FIRSTf Now Available On All New Cars & New Trucks In Stock On Appravecl Bank Credit -----------------------mmmmH----------------------- ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST TRUCK, CAMPER & VAN HEADQUARTERS SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE BRAND NEW '68 DODGE BRAND NEW '68 DODGE 1/2 Ton Pickup and Compor 1/1 Ton Pkkup s-.,,llillt wlttl I leol u~ .... """"'" 11"' l, llt" -.4\tt( lllM 5-IUN. All f'U9fl, S .,. ... • "'" lt•nt., ILO. 11,..., "9" tf9h1u , 11.D ... n~e>-1 .... 1 iflMllt. A• ffl St•k Mrlltt; A,ic fff $1"1:k H" 719. 5ll 'll 52_$.f? 5§.~ s§.~ 52112 lowtl MOlrtlll f fin'Al PltC1 IOWI MO!mll.Y YOTAl .. let r.r.TMOfT PlfMlllT +TAK I uaMll PATMUl"I r.r.TMllT + fAK I lt«Nll ..... NIW IMMl9iAfl MUVllf fMMhlAfl llllV'llT ,..,_... lolcl'"" !ti & fln...u &IM'1CI ~ ... -1'1>1 l'I ll'tlr9"'4 h11k tNt!ll '61 DODGE SPORTSMAN YAN • l ll , v.1 •n9 .• 11.000 lb. front •prin9• • 1•.000 n ••••• , 1prin91 • 111 115•1 5 l ·ply ttr11 e R1dlo e H11t1r e Du1I W11t Co1tt mitrori e Rtfri9tr1lor e Sl11lt e Dln1H1 • l ulll·in w1rdroh1. A1k for Sloe.It Ne. 190 e 1111""41 ... O.ltmy. •101 5 107 '3629 :~: + T11 1 l'"-lOlAl 90wtf TOTA\ MOMtlfl.T ,.,,.."" ... ,....,, rtWflll'lll lnl.I ... Ill & fl~•~to tha ... I"' 4 -t~1"' IU~ biM. trtfil Lar9est selecticin of Char9en to choose from in Southam California. All colon and Choice of equipment. 1968 CHARGER " ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • Bucket Seats • Hideowoy Headli9hts • Full vinyl Interior • Nylon Carpetin9 • Rear Deck Spoiler • Full racin9 instrumentation • Bumper Guards • Ash Tray UCJl!t • H.D . SprillCJs • H.D. Torsion Sway Bar ••• Ask for Stock No. 945, No. 137, No. 136. " ;.?.~~ l~A!O~T 52 569 PAY'MlNT PAYMENT TOTAL paac1 t L:~ ... P1ymont1 include t1x & llconu & fl nine.• ch1r991 on 48 month• on approved IMnk crodlt. j Pow1r 1leer!n9, v.s , 1uto. ~--.•r1ns., r1dio, h11t1r, d• -fn)lllr, full vinyl Interior, pedd1d dish, carp1fs, tint· 1d windshi11d, wsw. Stock #379. ~~! .~~1. $ 2389 :if~~: l'AYMINT PAYMOO DllfVllT Pvmtr. lficl\IOJ T&l & flftlon(t "'*"""' 41 ,...,_.,. •Pl'lt"<l bl~k crt6il .1.1114, !.w 1t1l11 .. 1 fOTAL MONTHLY TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT PAYMINT '68 DART Fully equipped wllh r• dio, heater, WS# tires, padded 41sh, defroster, oft. 689 TOTAL PlllCI t ,'.c"'f,... . lllMIDIATI DWmT UIH, i.w "4111.,.. tvaMO) : • • ---• 4 • -----........ --...... ~~-----------~~~ ---~-----·-·~-~-----..... ---~·-·-· ..................... ~.--~-........ _. _____ ._. __________ • ____ ,.. __ 1 !'llllllllll .................... 111111 .. 111111 ...................................................................................................... -.~-,_........ ....... -,--. -.. ; ... ~: • 11 OAll Y PILOT mryono Hai Sometliing Thot Someone e.. w.n.,,_ 'J'JIE BIGGES'J' Sl!Vfill.8 llfAJU[ft'Pf.ACll ON 'J'U ORANGll C9AS'f\-P..BONll alJlllCJ' 84%-A'7a You C..n Sol It, Find It, Tr.d• It Wtlli 1 Wi nt Ad Houw l'OR SALE HOUSIS FOil SALi HOUSES f Oll SALi HOUSIS FOii SALi HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSES 1'<>11 SALE HOUSES 1'<>11 SALi HOUS ES FOR SALE HOUSES FOii SALi ~~------~1 ---------~ 1;·~·~·~·~"'iiiiiiiiiiiiii~1000iiiii 1-"1 1000 General 1000 -··· IM Oenorol ' 1000 -·· 1000 -·· 1000 Coll .... "-P ... •'-rk"----1-1:-IS lrvlno Tornce nu lohn macnab • DOVEll SHORES '~t __ ..,, -w. LoeWt A.LA--· --.Df&ett. A -...... rocm wltb • DXldm:I ~ ,._ .... ol unflll«I ""' ·tq!Ol'•twd Tra\.'tttJM. 3 tams, pNs llePIJ"8le guest cabana dMlped aa • aum room an4 • cuual aittin&: arM. adJolnlne t h e pool. view· dlnlngroom with Sl.lb- tle wall tones and tatuttd wooled dnpdie:a. 'Ibe lim- Pe atdllttctural Unn •c· oeatuatl! n. elepnc. of one cl the ftnett bomH tn New· port Harber. Thll 11 one of U. mom: beautUul homes we b&Ye ""8' attend to the -puhllc. Call lor Appt, (7141 642-1235 REALTY OOMPARY 881 Dgyao Dr!Ye N ....... ll<adt .. What You Are Lookl119 For? Ocean View home 3 Bedmorm. 2 baths THE BLUFFS · BEST BUY You can't beat tht tow price CC\ thJs bee.utiful pride of ownertlbip honle. Four spac· iota bedrooms, 3 Queen lii- ed balhl, ~t livtn&: l'OOC1\ with open beam ceil· ln&s ud rutfU1 view. Own- d' tranl&rT@d out of a.rea • says 1111 NOW! Onb' $36..500. Submit )'OW' am.tlltr bomt on our S\W"Mtet tn.de plen. Eastside Tri·.leYel Quiet cul..._ --Thb home " -speclal -bu 3 pe.tlo6, 1 11.tge kit and QU&lity deluxe f e a t u r e: ' throughout. call DOW to lee lbllluphome, .$34,500 Newport •t Vlchlrlo 646-8111 (Open E .. nlng1) "'~ ,::_ ~,,..,. -5 BEDROOMS • in===":i. $950 $41.<m • -....,.. TOTAL CASH ONE MAll'S LOSS can be )'Otl. pin cm thl.a 4 BR, 2 belh horne. Sm.U"""' """"""'oJ ooly Sg;,(J lo anyooe. N~s nothlni -ttedy for occupancy. Small nKinthb" pt.)'lMOll ol only $UO month Jl9¥S AU.. No extra balloon ~ents evw. Can be --· Bcqulcltl AMIMAIS, KIDS & 4-H Have you or Y'O'r child- ren IOOl:"ed for a home ~ animal.I could be robed. portld .. t\on in 4-H A Future rumen. etc. couJd be a part of their fOMllalfve yean. Then lh1I home ii for )'OU. 3 BRI, formal din- in&: room, ovenbed pa- tio & plcnk atta PLUS 11 BR &: den auest ~. Submit on down payment, a: lndude a Blue Ribbon entry in next year'1 4-H Fair. /OiJJI,,,,, COATS ~WA~Cl REALTOllS 5464141- (()pon EnnlnpJ ,,, H's Eisy To Buy In Newport Buch Only $4,IXXJ down 00 ttrls fum.. llhed 3 bedrOl;>al bNcb, cot· tare loea\ell an larle R-2 lot • wtlk to marketl and bMdt • ->aid . ukJna 129.9'0. m.m> Quiet Clfflhayen MESA DR MAR FIVE BEDR()O:.t.S, two star) home wllb THREE LUXllR. JOOS BATHS. -Uy ......... and dnped ·Wills of rlcb Qlnut. Redwood ~. COVERED PATIO ...-Ith Bar·a-Que. Double pl'· qe, P,us LARGE DETACH· !D THREE CAR GARAGE wUh bizb door to ~ ~ camper, bollt or tra.ilu, Ute the 1P1A Pla&e u • famil.Y CAME ROOM!? Nkely land5c1~ • Planten lront and rear. REAL VAJ... 1--------MESA VERDE NO DOWN TO VETS Tranatl!IT'ld OWIWJ' wanta ao. don U1 tbil cbarmklc I Bd· rm + J"amlly room ln q\llet cW de aae. • (Joee to ICboob • Ubrar)' .• ~ will tell FHA or VA. Call us now tor full particu1an. • FUll prlc. S25.9SO. ~UIJ 646-7171 OPENE'ml. ' THE ~J L./\.L ESTATERS ACR<»S fn>m IChool, l 8", Waterfront Homes 1i; ha, i.. fam. rm, With 5Hp ..,..,,....in .. tlo. with $'800 I -.. nl'-26/mo p;a. • tn private cemmunlty ot cin:t=..,...==ru=====: aingJe family ....... Pt\-- vai. lllJpo lor larl• boou. Newport Booch 1200 3 BR. J bath , • • • $5.2,900 2 Bdrm + dell ,. $59$0 BEST BUY BAYCREST Waller Hua Quick Poasesion Spacioul 3250 aq. It. CUit., p-o!est. decor . .i: lndscpd., 5 ... BR. Xlnt -· RM< buy & at $69,$00. 5ft~ Loan Clka=V,-~ C.. tranterrable. Not OD lea.ae .....,. =. tlllllNllf land. 646-2828 Evu. 11:1 N39 oa .,.. 2100 WINDWARD LANE --·-· -CUSTOM VIEW HOME UE roR $38,000 -Acr l --;~-:----.---You'U ..,.,, lhla :>bedroom Now1 Rent Before fl.love • ln condition hom•. llCOME UlllTS NEWPORT BAY CONDO MEDALLION 3 BR 2 BA Dbl aar, poob:, au1!. etc !lmmedlato """"°""'> You Buy? Good clJlletlns. Lovely )'Vd. Wt have the answer! Call tD ONLY $36,500. 6l3-<l56 BAYCBiSr ... Owner. 3 Bt. 2 Ba., family rm. : beaut1tully ~le prq:e. A 1 kin & tee th1a mUntena.noe • free $26,750. 4 BR 2~ bath beauty. Swlm- 613-9200 E'Ve. 53-0'lll mini" and tmnis, and private Bay & Beach d-1'dlltlel. ""5/ Re1lty, Inc. Eveninis C.U 5-f>.283J mo. Ea.s1ly available for Ol25W,BllboaBlvd .. NA t -~V~ACATION ERsl ~,.,..:.~~ - NEWPORT BEACH Extra aharp 4 BJt, 21,> bath bomt in Newport.'a &e9t Aftl. Walle to M&flo lner'1 I& Harbor HI School Laze • loaf around the 15x32' beattd POOL. Party A play in added rt!a'eaUon room. Payments: of $166 per month oo $21.500 loan. MAKE YOUR MOVE BEFORE SCHOOL Sl'AftTS. Dljoyina: Balboa with )'OUf C I rlh & C family! Llidni It .. much 0 eswo y o. ~e :;"!"'~~~~= 642·7m MOVE In! Neu new 4 BR., house! Lara'~-lli:fnc'room 190IHarborBML,C.M. frpl., De1f cptl. nr. beach. ~ Ews. $28,lllO. Open weekeO<b; lS1 with fireplace, dJnin& room, I -,;;--,.-~,.·-.--.=-62nd SL OWner r15-0lff 3 bdnns.., patio. AN o ao Tll'9CI of Crack•r·BoJl do&e: to iood &y IJWimming Construction? Waterfront 3 BR, No. 62 beach for the kiddies. $39,500 Then this i1 the home for :you., Balbot. Carea. $60,tXXI. BALBOA REAL ESTATE Quality 3 bedroom, 2 bl.tbs, S30,!m cuh by loan. 'IOO E "-~ Blvd Balboa Bal. ln ac~ Ll 8-77n • .._..._.. ., diDinl" room. Finest locatkn. Cotta Mesa 1100 673-4140 OPEN JIOUSE WXURY 3 bf', 2 blath condo, 3'.120 Allao, o.rta Mesa <M11er Sacrifice Sale! trpl, pool, r:oU, fee land. Thul'llday, Friday, Saturday Lovely 1.a.Msca.ped, 2 BR &: Owner trans:fer'ttd. $32.500 A: Sunday 1 -5 P.M. dt'l'I home with view, 2 !.n-By C>i#'oer. 60-3311 JEAN SMITH, .,,... unlb in rear with LARGE Mobllo Hom" 2 room to build more: ii Batha,pa.tio,clubhou1e BY owner, S BR, S BA. 1&. Fuilly nn. 145,lllO. Gtl tttm1-673-t20C or 6TS-CM1'9 CorGn• dol Mor 1250 __ .:.;.....;... __ _ Cameo Shores Spect1cul1r View LovelY custom 3 BR, 3 ha~ pool, immaculate. 1mme<i ate pc1•eaDon, THE FOX (X). 67J.9'95 ~ HOME A lnoome; newly decor. 2 BR. 2 BA., 1"- bathl; garb. dilp.; dlb. ........ Near Fuhion Island e 7Q2 Avocado, Ol..'d e ABOVE THE BEACHES Mllllon $ View from 1180 91;1. tt or root dedt. Clatom ee- . ment lilock: 2 Br. 3 ba. By 0 w n er $88,0CXI. 54&83. * 1113-11113 * Lido Isle IHI BAYP!IONT DUPLEX En.doled patio. 2 .. 3 BR. F;z.placel, $1l5,lll0. W1lkor llo1lty 3336 Via Lido tl5.ml XLNT VAl.UE Well klcated llp&dot1a ' Bd, 3 ha an 46' lot. Ne11t Tennll, ....... Shopo. N- work, but iood value, $58,500 R. C. GR.Em. Realty 34.16 Via Lido 673-UXI Huntl"""" luch 1400 Qukt:~ Requ1red tD mow Into thlaliwi;iiii;;;i Qnflllct 1arp WNi1 home. OOH' to Woll HllJbei ET•" 6G<290 :::. ~:.!' ';..':.' ~ ~ ~ ffilf • WCOAL;:sc· HA"BO" marut. lhla ooe woo't 1ut. ~ • $163 per month includes tax· f REAL TORS "'""' """"""' re 17 546 4141- (0pon IWllnpl 2414. Vista Del Oro Westcllff Barg1inl Spack.ling • tre11h It. newly deoorated J BR 2 bath borne with famib' room Ir separate lar&e 11.asa en. cloeed play room overlook. ing 1Bx30' pool &: sunny patio! UndertJriced tor thll area! Only $42,750. Ruth Perdoll, Ra1ltor 1605 WestcliU Or. 642-5200 REALTOR d....... Locst<d at :18> pool, private beach. 61$-1612 400 E. 17th, C.~. 646-3256 Mesa Drive a c r o 11 from BLUFF'S Spacious 4 Br. 3 Y E I Santa Ana Country Oub. oung xecut Yft Original asking Pr i c e Ba. Split level. $31,950. Give )'OUr family a treat, $47,500. Twu recent drastic By oymer * 6"-0740 60' x 200' near ocean. drive by these two beautttW. teductkm. UoUSt1al 011Ce in DELUXE Comdo. View of 4 bedrocal • 2 baths. homes. a lifetime investment op. pool 2 BR. 2 BA. Firepl, New lUXUI')' Buccola • built 223 Roblnhood Pl. portunlty for right part.)' $.ZJOO. da. $27,950. ~28li home Uee limple). $36,250 • HUGE LOT Nt!'WPOrt Bt'ach -WESraJFF DRIVE 3 BR • 2 BA TH .... T1ll °""'ET,., $37,500 Iott Santa Ana Aw.) alert to appreciate and able $3,300 down to vela, $6,IM 2512 Danis Pl. to take swift action now! Newport Hgh. 1210 down F.H.A. 71531 An:ber (off Moote Vbta in C.~f.) 1\l a k e 0 ff er. 642-0138 Circle, near Brookhurst and Call Rottman Ralon 642-645.l * PLEASANT ClW Haven 3 Hamlltun, Huntincton Bet.ch. ----- IRIGE LOT FIXER UPPER °"" ol ... "''"" end "'' x ""'' ..... ocean. Ve!enN oo down m el-NEWPORT HEIGHTS Uni" Jn the"'°" d>armlni 4 bodroom1 -2 batti.. YOUR CHOICE 2199 Fairview Rd. 54&3222 -;c,-;--,-.-;;;-,,-~ Br, 2 ba + 2 Br ~an Vu nst 1ignal North at Oiut for """"'· "'bntlt ,,... Wooded Retreat lnoom• Apt. $49,!00 54&-1219 Highway.) terms. Have you thought about coun-SAVE 7%-$26,750 ATTRAC. SHERWOOD ESTATES one cl tbeM 2 bxnea. 2 new 4 Bdrm. in excellent loca-aectian of the Bluffi NA luxury Buccola • built li&dnp ·each 3 BR 2 bathl Uon -l'l baths, new car-overlookJ:na: pool with home {fee simple). $36,275 • FANTABULOUS try living in a spe.do.u 3 3 er. 1 ba. MAKE OFFER by the S.1 FAMIL y ROOM -bedroom home on a large 400 Pin.te Rd. 646-3079 Tel. 968-3036 tn excdlmt condition. Obe pet&. lmmed11te posaeuion be&utilul mountain view $2,515 down to vets, $6,275 ii a Cllr'DC!!' lot, the other n;. upon buyer'• ~t a~ exceptional ltndscape mwn F.H.A. • 21561 Archer $22,500 wooded lot. Relax in this Open 10:00 to 7:00 dilly Family room covers rntirt country atmosphere f o r !H~1~r~boir~H~lg~h~l1~nd~1~12~3~S: I -~~ tra larp llJl1de lot. Pa.Y· proval. $24,500 with $1,900 Leuehold only $216 yev Circle, neu lln>okhunt and ment. (either me) down on FHA terma. Widow 644-1133 Hamilton, Huntmctm Be.ch. length of home. Rich panel-$23,900. I !'.!'=.'~"".;.:ti": l..,.!\s~;i~a 1417 Mariners Dr. On\Y•::,~ :A~ .... $150 Month P.I. "'°"""out ol coun t r y EVES. 644-1541 not """1 North ol Cout -o11... I =!:!!:!~ ~~~ / l!lgh...,.> drMm kitchen. Sliding doon REALl'ITV Come Bet this new listin&: to ll~ble 2 BR on R-3 lot, $22,950 ea. 646-7~EN rn:.~•13 1· .. SHERWOOD ESTATES RB>OOD $3000 T~r. ~~' to lovely yard. 54tJ.IT20 ........ 'J • oil rny1lty inrome & 2 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Bl. •• "anyhm~" be held open black to the beech. flClV\ .Otlt• Jl11\ £st1tt Newport II Owner mo\"ed and will arll Open 10:00 hi 7:00 dolly DAILY 1 .s ~ 4 BEDRM -$23,750 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.~I. will handle. It ba1 5 Bedroom1, fam nn, SUBMIT NO DOWN IMMED. occ. Attr. 2 story. 3 balhs. Ideal for the busy Pacific Sliores Realty Vic!orll VA NO OOWN. Thit corner iwi;iiiiii;;;;ii:;il:; ,,, "II I home Is v1C1U1t It ready for '">-.n-.-..._. .,_ your ocrupancy. J lilt, 2 '119 ---~ ._. THE~EAL ESTATE'RS . Ivan W1ll1' Newe1t Model 4 BR 4 ba, fQrmal din rm, tam nn w/.,,·et bar. J ell.I' gar. C.Ontnct now for Aug. completion & choose your own colors & carpetlni. Roy J. \Vard C.O. 646-1550 G.J. or low down to others. nIA appr $30,200. Coruider family. 847-8586 Eve1. 842-f73R Complelety rrfurniahed in-much le11s. 3 BR, 2BA, 1tep.. p Ba Rff ,; .. & out. 2 b•th• Quallty dn. li,. ,m, 1""20' fam. rm, ele rrell y • VA APPRAISAL $25,400 • DQ down pay?IM!!I.!. 3 BR, 1%. bath. \Valk to the beach. Built-in range and oven, FA beat, frptc, erpta, (Open A CHARMER! baU.., w;th Wk• roof, ... let's Join Forces Evenlnns) Immaculate -Early Amert. cated in Nrwport Beach CUJ>eling. 2 Pltios for out· blt·in &tereo, intercom, toll door livlna at Ha best. Built· water plum. Lg cul-d~uc lot Jn range & oven. Estate Nr. So. OMut Pl, acllla Ir • can. 3 Bedroom1, Fam1Jy Uwer Bay. lz:===mm=mm=tJ Room. Dou1>11 Flnp,_, New Price $29,500 HUGE LOT =:1;~ :ror:;:: Newport ment to 9e& thia specious at custom built borne. $74.500. Victorfi ~ ..:.!'.,,.~ :'.: JEAN SMITH, New lwruoy Bu=la • built REALTOR 646-lll1 home !fee dmplel. S:W.~ . otCXI E. 17th St., C.M. s.&-3255 (Open $1.8:50 ~'II to vets, $5.350 l.,.iiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;; I down F.H.A. 21541 Archer !" Qrcle, near Brookhurst e.nd Forecloture Hamilton, Huntington BMcb. Needt paint & Y&rd work, llit '1.,aJ North of c .. ., but ,,.,..,,, 1 grtat buy at SPANISH HACIENDA Highway.) S27.SOO '<''tth 10'/o down I& a SHERWOOD ISTATES ~'i'o loan at 6.9% inla'est :0.1uy Bueno 3 BR 2 bath home ~ ft.~ e:~~ · S2U mo. brlud@ every-that owner baa \lied lmqin- '19 -thins-4 BR, family room adon in ttNtini thJ.I clever T 961 *6 A -i.1ont1a1 dJnlna mom. -""'°' "'th lold f Open 10:00 to 7:00 dilly f>:'t ~!' :i;oo~t. expmaive wood ~ ~. most rooms. 2 fireplace1, a (~'!"1~~~~!"""!"'"1 OOILEG~ REALTY bullt·in kitchrn, ootmandinc DA YIDSON Realty,""l'!....,~""'"-.'!""''"I ,.,,, w1th ..,.,.., wood CORNER LOT ,~Almost Newport Hts. homo ot only 125,!00 • EZ Mea Verde 3 BR + tamily. V«Y unuaual property, 3 BR, tenns. !Mctrlc built·ilu. VACANT famlly raom. bullt-lna, fuoe.. - 124.560. place, 2 double p.rqta, Ult Rltr. 1150 Hart>ar Ml, CM on alley. Bloclc wall fence, Mfi.5460 S..Uli8 covered patio. Immaculate I ' \I J • \\ 111 1 I ~I \If\\ II\\ ll I I ! • ' 1 " OONT ~ a a•Q", pt conditkwl. Need quick ult. 1003 Btker, C.M. 546-M40 cru1ck C&N:I iof at wta a uktrl1 $35,600. C'.AU. GLrn l~'\I!!~~~!!!'!~"!!!~ Dally PD.at nnt Adi QUEEN 54().llSl <open evta) DAll..Y PILOT WANT ADS "2·S67S Her1tage Rnl Estate BRING RESULTS! ind Grow With Our Community Reel Estate Profea:donals - We can otter you • plea. aant, active •tmospben for REAL production. IOYD REALTY 3629 E. Coast lfwy., Cd.M 67S.S930 Homes for Trade &U-ZZ21 PR.lCE LOANS EQUITY U9,500 $14,000 S5500 P>.500 $14,500 S6000 $21.s<ll m.s<x> UO,<Xll $22,!500 Sll,500 $10,r.nl 123.s<ll 117.s<I) l<lltlO Bill Smiley, Prlnc. & Bkr. REAL VALUES Profftlion1I ZoM J BR, l %. M, 'ii block OPEN DAILY 1 • S To ... ch 135,500 302-D Cabrtllo. Comer San-2 on lot, Cbn:na deJ Mar ta Ana Ave, Cose to 17th $43,$(). St. ahoWlna &rel. Dn, den-Newport a.ach, Rlty. tal ottl.ct1 or lab., uhlblt 675-1642 hall, aiawerinc s ervice, PrlcH Rliht $20,tSO photo studio, aeneral rt-• FHA VA aearch. 2 large 4 BR hou9eS + on Jot ll3xll5' to alley. Could • 3 B1t fam nn w /frplc .__ • Cptl/drpS', stave & retrlg. '-"' remodeled for above U5e!!I, Rltn:. S-t2-9730 E\•eli. 548--0720 Loon Vibert, RH lto r • KENNEDY 548-0.lB!I anytime *Country Club Homo* DELUXE 2860 aq . ft. Unusual. One oJ a PENN. Pl'. home. 3 BR. Fam kind. A Wl)' or Ule. $62,900. rm., frplc. Ex~ptional val- 54M401 ue. $5'6,(0), ~USlEST marke«pll.ce ln BALBOA REAL Em'ATE town. The DAILY PILOT lOO E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Custfted leCUon. s..... 6i3-4140 moriey. t.ima A effort. Look I --:N;:,,..,.,.-,:-G"ar=...,.-,-.,,.-.,.t•"'T- now! 11 Find If with 1 want ad! sized yard, 54().}720 freeways. 31(6 Roosevelt E11tbluff 1242 TARBELL 2955 H1rbor Way. 0.0.r. 546-31>1 /aii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ By Beach 10% Down uruen11 Oivorctt anxious to move 3 BR 2 bath borne, larie tram area. Has neat, small ltvtrw + famll.y room, fire-3 BR 2 bath. family room at plaOP, built·inl, cpt1 / drpa, only S2J,500 In Back Bay larp ca.nae. Vacant. area. Reedy for oHer! Rltr. M6-3928 Eves . .UW-9308 COLLEGE REALTY SJG.5880 *LACHENMYER 1 1ro~R"iSal~• ~.,"' ... ~ ..... ,."',!!!.,"',,~,, 4 BEDRM.2 BATH -3 bdr, full cpta/drpe:, nict $23,750 yard. Xlnt location near Quality carpetlnl Ir CW1tom 5Chlsl!ihops. 221'.l! ~finer St. drapes, l patios. Dree.m all C.?tt ~731J, 642--07'Jl ~t·ln kitchen. Jr. Estate LGi'. f Br. 3 Ba.. C&rp,, med crounds. No down G.L drps., many utra.; 1 yr. or low down Non-Veu. old 6~ G L • --~--540-1120 ~ • LNl:W, vwun !!'RBEU. 2$5 Harbor I':'"="=======- Neat As a Pin -Collep• Pork Good Eastside location, 3 BR BY Owner. 3 BR. 2 S.., fam. + den. Au.tme 5" % loan rm .. frplc .• elec. bltns. Lee. $156 P.J.T.J. Shown by 1pp1: kitch. Walk to all sdKlols. ONLY $22,0C.O Assume 51N. % FHA loan of MIZELL Ree.Hy S19,200. $166 Mo. pay 1 5.f8.2m8 ewrything. Cub to loan or 1115 ntE HUB of activity for 10% dawn to new loan, service bu.!;ineMes ..• the S24,500. M6-.J860 o..,.llied Ads. DiaJ 64.2· · ·a I :Jf<:oiiilJ''i'1 lobeiiiOl1i;;w;;>uciO•n• ,.,..,,..;;;; to offer your ae:niee NOW, DAll..Y Pil..oT WANT ADS! 4 STARS Lovely Spanilb Blllf11 home 4 BR, 3M, VIA from evecy Llvlni rm. Prlced under $40,<Xll. CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 3036 E. Co11t Hwy, CdM 675-1662 .ANYTIME -=-= Beautiful Bay View! Bluffa llPlil·le<vel 3 BR. 21Ai bath condo. New, vacant, IJl!1@ct own colot carpettrw, quick poae11k:JD. Few blcdl to propoeed Marina & New· port &ach Tennll Oub. ReduCl'd S2,000 to S45.500 O.L1ncy Real E1t1t1 2828 E. Chait Hwy., CIL'¥1 61:1-3770 la Your Ad in our claa1liedsT Someone will be lookinj: fer lt. Dial 642-Mi'l! """· !tmcod, lanl!acapinr, le cul-deec Jot. 'Ibe iow.t prtce: lrt Nl!'W]JOrt Wert. Vlll19e Reil E1t1te !1624t71 54&8103 Families Wonted 4 VACANT HOMES FOR SALE & LONESOME 4 3-4·5 BEDR00t.1S. HAFFDAL REAL TY ''Home:'! to Matcb Income" 8470 \\'arn"r 84.2-4400 $49.SO DOWN To qualified Vtbl. 3 homo to choose from , Ill.I fully car- peted W:ltb built-ins, cloet to schools. Call for information LISTER REAL TY 16612 Beach Bl., HB MUl5lJ 4 BEDROOM li.repja~. bltins, 2 BA'1 A 2 car 1arage. can 847-4245 or 213: 431·3921 3 BR. fam. rm 3 i-. 2 yra oild l mi from ocean, 614 ntA. klen. Call for appt. aft 5 962-i569 • Fer Daily Pilot Want Ad&. Dlal612$11 Genorol 1000 Genor1I 1000 Gen1rol 1000 Gener ii 1000 General 1000 General 1000 Gononl 1000 Gonorol 1000 General ~~-N_o_w __ 1s __ T_H_E_T_IM_E_T_o ...... eu_v ____ ~~ HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE:--11'1842-4455 7612 ...... KOOL POOL 1h38 HEATID a ln.TPED. Hua Yard. JIUGE HOUSE. Terri!ic lfome fur lelaure llvtns. FOHCLOSUU--llPOUIS$10N??? Thil ranch atyl.t f bedroom hu 2 1paciOU1 baths. shake roof lush tropical l,11nd· fOlJlinc, built-in aDd a country type fireplau. VACANT. $9s.oo Toti! Movt>-Jn Cosll to VETS •. , Low Down fllA. $500 DHAM conA .. 3 bedroi:wn-. 2 batht., 11""'&: rocm "ith romantic f1repl1tt. ~aullrul kitchen , forctd air heallrt;. 2 car pra.e. huge enc:ol&ed )'I.rd, cn•t for ctiUdttn. Own~rw m<wlng Vf't)' fOOn, no,. $500 "°"'fl. paymtnt letia than rnL MO DOWN VITS -$1 .lOI DOWN NIA For this ah&ke rooff'd bNub'I 1111a "'9m\ hwh a btd1wm. 2 bath borne t. adorned with 1le1un1na hardwood noor... roma:nt.k: nrepi~. and a;arkllns adtch- c ona block from ld'lool and doM to ~ OwrM trlndmf'd wtU. Quk:1r _ .... DO YOU NUD ROOM? We haft t!le home for roul f beodroonw. 2 ~ .... ftr"Olaca. 2AOO tq1.11:r1 teeL ~10 tt. loL Deep Jiik carpet. m:t hpn uar~ , NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711 20U Wostcllff Dr. •I 1 .. 1 .. Open Evenlnos ~~~~~~~~~~~~ COUNTIY ATMOSl'HIU With lncome potential O\annln1 cuatom home with pine panelled famHy room, large living room with fireplace, a.nd covered patio. Ha.11 acre lot v.1th fruit trtt1. Zoned for 5 nlQre: unllL $31.950. WALK TO THI OCIAN from thl• large famll,y home. 2.200 aquare feet af llvln1 ll'N In thb ah.arp 4 ~ room home. Thrtt speclolll balm, two attncUve patios, v.ith n sy maintenance free llvl.n1. 1ru1e living room wtth tlrepla~. Enjoy the 11ummtor, enteri.tnlne madt pleuurMblt in a kitchen with all b!Jtlt.Jn appllanca. Enjoy the Blue Padflc and Uve ln •b'le. Only $33,900. Submit your amalltt home on our ~teed trade plan. THI 11.Ul'PS -llST IUY You can't bat the 1'"" prkl on this beauUtuJ riridt of ownmhip home. rour •J)fldoua t.ckool111, 3 Queen alud bath&, maanlflc.nt lh'lns room with open beam ceUlftl: arid n1UU1 vt.w. Owner traNhrnd out of art:a -U¥1 MU NOW! Onb' S3tli.-Submit )'our ll'JWJ« borne on our ,uuantea tndf' plan, IACl IAY DTATI This cbonnlots ...... " ............ bup park Uh lot wltll bldmll!?1 eourt ant room for pool. Located on a q\dtt CUI~ •tr.et Jult OM blaiik to the ...... N-Ba1-8 ............. preva1ll thrwchoul Lush --ond toftrtnr a.... Sep&tlt. f:am1b' rocm for mtertal.nlnf. Offered at $C'7;500. can todq to .._ lullmlt ruar llblila' home oo our s-ranteie trade plan. COST A MESA OFFICE-545-9491 2790 HAllOl ILVD. Opoo !w10l"t1 ·~1 t P.M. HOW MANYl~llD~l~OO~M-.-J~IA-TH ___ ....;:;,i;.;;;..;;;.:;;;;; home can )'OU find with NO DOWN picyment to Veta and only $3,800 to all others ln ~ ~ry chol~t Costa 1.te&a locatlon? Spe.dous separate f&mlly room ma115lvo flrepla~1 tremendowly large kitchen and dining room with electrl~ built-Ina, dl&hwuner and wate:r tof~ne:r. Gorgeous dMp &hag carpet &nd bright huge bedroorru wtth clOlfta pJor.. 2 Huie Batha up and one do"'ll. It'1 clean u a modeJ and landtc9ped pf'Ofealonal1¥. A forcnl Ale makes thta undoubtedly one of the out.standJnr bu7I of the yar, TAK! OVll 1¥• FHA 11-fESA VERDE bea.u.t;y In prime location with p1.ymenll of onl.y $180 per month lncludlna: tan.. Abtolutely tmmaculate .f BEO'ROOM, 2 beth and tar.nil¥ room Jta.wallan modem wtth secluded back back yard And rn.doU11 large tt'ft9 1ur: roundin&: fantastic covered pa.Uo so quiet )"OU won't know you ha\•e neJahborw. Gracloua entey, pluab car~ts:. draPt1, warm n~pla.ce and 1parklins kitchen prove lb lttmendoul value. Forced to hlO\'e and vacant. con -CWN -COMPOUAILI PertecU,: dl!:lcriba thll Immaculate 2 BEDROOM home with pJutb deeo pile ...,,. .. t.brtch• Id-• wlth a11 ellcttlc buUt-lnl and kine_.....,....,.,~ and b&tn cm quiet 1tntt ntt.r the: Bee.eh ahd 1 block ftom abowtna. Ottmtd at • tan.tutk: Slf.000 wtth PQments ¥ low u sua Ptr month. $16,600 -POOL TIMI 'hb Ume to IN Ulla COil 2 BEDROOM home on quiet 1trttt wtth tmmense badt )'&I'd with PLAY AREA & POOL "parato. A lltUa """'' anti )'&I'd -k -thla tb4 ,_., HST BUY AT ONLY $18,600. A NIW llCOllD ••• W•lker a LH Seid 114 Resale H0111e1 In One w .. kl ........ .... _ l. \. "\ , ' lilllll"'!"'!lllllll!!lll ................. "" .. ""'""""""""""'1'""""'""'"'"""" ................................................................. ~~ ..... ~~~~~~~--------~-------~ ---~ ~ ~ - ~dnudat, AltQll.St. 21, 1%8 HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi R E NTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS HDUHS furnflfted Hou111 Unfurnl1hed Apt.. FurnlthM Apts. Unfurnl1hed A.ph. Unfu ml1htcl Hunttnglon Bolch 1400 Loguno Bolch 1705 Lo•uno •-,-L Vo; No port ... ch 3200 --------1--.:_-----5-100-1.c;0::...,=:,:-:;do:;l~M:::.,:---;5;;;25;.o NEWPORT BEACH • """ ""'" w -Ntiwport leach 4200 Co1t1 Met.II llnll~ ~iew EMERAW TERRACE FURN or UNFURN 1 ;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; iiijiijiijiijjijji• iiiiiiiiiil2 BR., frpl., b a le o a y ; 3 BR, .ana. Owft..Your-Own 3 B~ ~F mo Lovdy • Bedroom v~1 1 HARBOR =~= aw;. 1"""""'" ., .. , 1n .1.,...t =======*==I "°"'' 1n 0over "'°"'· * Cll1nnel Reel * 3 BR 2\-; M.tha, ltxl.8' fll'n. buildln&' on be•cb + Pool. Summer Rental1 2910 Ycvs I.die $850 mo. Cllll: 2 STORY Uy room, with titepl.t.ct, $65,<0> Unf'um. Furniture JOHN MAQllAB, Rcl.lty APARTMENTS lormal dining roorn, com-av&ililble. Fot a.ppolnlment LAGUNA-Oce&nll"Ol'lt, Jpec. 642.&215 SPECTACULAR VIEW -• GI all ·-·~1 '"'"'""'"""'"'"""'"'""""'""I W1teorfronl/Loc ·Beat pletely earpelt!U. Sell or t 'l»-.l'W tacular VIila, prlv. beacb,I' Slips Available •'HA. , ___ n<_E_B_l_G_ON_E__ buce rooms, park-like rro. 2 or 3 BR BRASHEAR REAL TY Sprawlina 5 BR " den, Del unds. 2 Wf'eks Sept. $900., • 2 Bath ho~ Untum 2~ Bath:~ GREENS Huntington Bolch $400 2 BR, l"' BA. Bit-Im, BACHELOh. • UNFURN. ..vu.her/dryer, rebia .• pool, from S 100 11so. .,.__ Coll alter • Incl. utlL l=P~M,-,·~~-~=-= 1 • 2 A 3 BDRM. EXTRA lg. l BR. $11.). * '* DAILY PILOT 4.7 * * * * 84.7~1 ~l-2442 968-1178 Piao tile floors, Cathedral Wff:ka $1400. Also Victoria OiUhaven, NB. ~Mo. &: ~;r:$59,~ UI BELOW MARKET beam ctillns:•, llv nn, Beach House, s BR, 3 BA, 000 Yrly, aard,ner includf'lt 2525 Ocean 3 BR 1% be. $21,900. Bit-in Spa.nlsh ~. w/w apta, Sept. Sl<nl .Owner. C!K-4f63, Chet Sallatury, Rltr. 613-6!0'.I 673-1788 -tcrB~~o nnge It wen, ~ dis-bit-in range l oven. $31 ,960 • 494-4957 or~ 4~RM plua dm or 5th Hmnan Trott, Mir. posal, t i I I!! kttdt., .....,, 0 r r I!! I' )'OUI' down pmt. 1 a: 2 Br. Furn Apll. % ' CUI-de-Ac. Schools, I!~~~!""'""!~"'"""'!" porch, b'plc, upgraded w/w 1 .. -.. -.,.""ioi;Rliityii,iiii191-0731 .... ;ii;;iiiiii I blk to ocean. 1209 W. 1..Jndberrh.IWaer CdM Hlch. TEACHERS, avail. Sept 4th, ruRN. A UNFURN. Urtiltles paid. ~711!2 or Haatod Pool., CJilkl Care 548---0'18'1 Cuter, A.dJ. to Sbopplna; -1o.:;;B_:R.:;_;,_~b-lt-~im-, -cp-.,-. -.,,,.,---, No pell allowed patio, $150/per mo. 1503 C 2700 PelttlOcl Wa;,, at Har-Alaba.ma st. 5.16-2074 Whodctyo Wont ? Whoddy1 Gott SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION POR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclol Roto cpts/drps, lhake root Cor. Balboa Blvd. &Ibo&. $15 Lease •t $:M mo. Including mod. l BR. &c 2 BR. troot. &: fenced lot. $2'100 dn. MAGNIFICENT wk-f150wk. 494-5189 Ptdner. Arent 646.3%6 Nr. Ocean &.. bay. Bltns; ~ A Mama, Com Mesa. i========== 5•H1370 I 5 II°" -5 ti'"" -5 bucb •vLr• -AO •vsT tfotC\.1JD1o OCEAN VIEW LOT NEWPORT-Balboa be• c b GREAT Family BE Ac H disp., trpl. F .A. hi .. patio: Laguna Baich 5705 1-MIM "" ,_,... 10 ltMt, ..........,.., r.::: -..... 1-YOUlt ,,_ anfl• ldd-. ,,_. 1nu If ~ 1lla ge Real Estate $5,!l'JO ·small, but ltvel SUXX> bouR. 3 BR % blk to bay. HOUSE -4 Br. 1 ha! to bch carport. No pet.I. Gaa & Excellent, park • like ~ 100 CLIFF DRIVE LUXURY FUR.N/\JNF1JRN Yearly Lease. 1 &r; 2 Bdmu. Yearly Lease, 1 bedroom 1tep1 to Shott I Shop& Oceanvlew from every Apt. 1-ffOlklNG llOlt MLI' -faAOES otlLYI down, baJ SS5 mo. LagUna $125 wk. 673-3793 w/oeean flew. Gttat foe water pd, $130. 1132 W rowid.J.ngs for adultl uquir- PHONE 642-5671 962--1~71 Mli-8100 J '!!Bch~-~(T1!'!4!'!l!'!m~!'!ll31~~~!'! J BR •·-A 1 _, 4 children. S350 mo, yeer4'. Balboa Blv., Apt. C ;.,., peace Ii: ,.,,;et. .,. Pl1ce Your T r1dar'a ParHIM Ad 1 '-'--------1 . i .... "· p . ...... .,~ .. ""'73 "~" ·=~ -... , .... CUSTOM HOME 1 Block to beach. Weekly ~ ' ou-~ BEAlfl'lFUL Waterfront apt. DiserimlnetJve Tenant. Very spacious 3 BR 2 bath witb huge separate tam.Uy room. wet bar 4 2 fireplac- e11. Built on 2 !Ift-shaded loll. A lot of house for only $28,500. P1ul Jonn Re1lty 847-1266 Eves. 847~ L1gun1 Nlguel 1707 $85. Newport Bch Mz-.-0316 BAYSIDE Village, .$175: 2 2 BR,. patio, boat dock. l, 2 & 3 BDRM. API'S. ---------Br. 2 Ba., atove, refrlg. Winter lease. 3403 Finley POOL. NO Qlll..DREN • OWNER'S CU.tom-Built ~~NTALS C""""· "-· Adul1& on-• 615-<039 • MARTINIQUE from $150 mo up. lease 494-2M9 Loaded w/ quallty fetttures House& Unfurnished ty. No petl. Pool, alip; call 3 BR 2 baths, built-ins, GARD. E APTS 4 BR '" BA ll ~-I 61>-1~ A" 4 PM N • MODERN Gordon apt, north n , V~11, e ec G•neril 3000 ...,. uer carpeta throughout. Steps to kit bar, bld11t area, beam --------OCEANFRONT 2 BR:, gar., O<:Mn... $200/mo yrly. 18th&: Santa Ana, C.M. end,2atory,2BR,l%Ba,2 ceiling fa.m nn, huge lllone AVAIL, FOR LEASE frplc .. carp., drapes. 642-3812 Call Mr• Henderaon 646-5.542 rundecks, gar, 1 blk shop-~ I 2300 J bit~ va-· =====~=--1777 Santa, Ana Apt 113 C.M. ping-beach. Veey plush. Will u-p ' .. , • ..., ..... um • -3 BR, 2 ba, crpts, drps, $250 Mo. ~arf7 675-1536 OCEANFRONT, W I n t er ' · ' tum . $2'25. 494-9982 aystem,oompinsulated Ap< yard, patio, 2 car gar-tple, 01M •.•••.•• S250 !"! Newpo' rt Sho -.. o lH.&e. 2 Br. $1~ mo.; 3 Br. "THE GABLES" NE'N delux lge 2 BR 2 BA, 1 F.unl.ln V.11.y 14,0 -~-90• Bedlelor House, QlM .. ......, res .,4.,,1,, Sl.'15 mo. Avail Sept. 8. wun1.llhop. view of Moving Sept. lllt: 2 BR. w/ blk lo ocean &: park. S2flO wlley & ocean, tinted win-House, 3 BR, 2 ba, CM $215 NEWPORT SHORES .~"'=--=,.-,,=,.,--,--...,.-,-,-,, garage $135. Adult11 on1y, mo, le&se, adulta. 494-4060 Nice 3 BR By Owner, 1%. dawB -more than 25 custom. RH.It CORBIN-MART~lB62 2 BR &: Den on years leue WINTER Rental, furnished 2 Qui>., drps, bltns, patio. LAKE Tahoe View Lot Na· vada aide, paved $12,500 clear. Exrllahge for 10m8"' 00d,y11 headache! Unlta, TD'1, tr ? Bkr. 675-572.6 NEED MOTORCYCLE Have 1964 Simca, rebuilt !Q&ine, new tires. $450 or ? ··---············· 494-7204 ·se CABIN Cruiser 24' Chry- llltt eng. l5(XI value. Want truck, car, or down on houae or ? C a 11 646-6486 or BA, bltins, aoft H20, crpts, blt leatures. , • the finest! on $190 mo. 642-3430 BR Bay tront. Lovely view 2437-C Orange Ave. Rent1l1 W1nted 5990 drps, frplc, panelled lam. Aglri~ $59 500 00 & p&tio, 673-3ffi3 Call Between 2 &. 5 ~~~~~~---• . 1 .. ~ -~ . Costa ,,.... 31 Npt. Ht&. 3 BR, 2 ba, cus-nn., screen""' patio, g ... ._. Shown by appt * 49S-28Xl• J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==== Coron1 del Mar 3250 2 Bl.KS. to beach; 3 BR. e 636-4120 e WANTED to lease new view 642-5100 lot. $25,900 w/$2200 down • Riviera Realty 2 Ba. duplex. Lease Best Value • 2 BR, <:rpta, home or ftl)t. 2 or more BR, : ~~~:~~~i; 6%% loan. Call for appt. ~ S. Coast Hwy, 9> Lag B/B NEAR Beach, CdM, 3 BR, 2 $225. Call: 00--6836 d ....... diahwasber pool 2 BA, 2 car gar, carpets, Trade for boat, Rea.I Estate, 962-1678 eves. &: wknds only baths, $315 mo. G. H. .,...., ' ' drapee:, w/ litUe or no PAC ISLAND VILLAGE AVAU. IMMED. Mesa Verde Roberlaon Rl ... · 6154440 4250 quiet. Adults, no pets. SUO. _ _. k b "bl OI' '!'D. Owner/Bkr 646-7484 1605 2 BR 2 BA cmdominium 4 BR, lge living rm, ' Y Coron1 del Mir 2295Paci.ticAve.548-6878 g ..... -uenwor, yrespons1. e 1---------,0u __ t_o_l_C_o_u_n_1y ____ 1Elec kit, sunroorn, many ex:-dous tam I dining rm H B h 3400 ~ couple w/ llJbstantial pre-2 DUPLEXES val. $37,500 1• spa • untington .. c 14Bdnn F\irn Apt. Available 1 BR Unf. apt. payment, bank rel& ln Costa Mesa. Trade f 0 r traa, 1500 at, frpl, garden bilt-in kitcheri, beautifully immediately 'til October 1st. $80 Newport to Dana Point pref. SALE Or trade 2 Br. mod- hse Yucca Valley priced $10,500 eq. $4300. •99-Un patio, pool facility. Ex-landscaped yard. Yearly FREE RENTAL BOOK Ree.3 rent. So.1% Acacia Realtor 548-7120 App $300 mo. Write The house er trust d~s. In- tremely nice. le111e $325/mo. inc:! water Drop In •nd BrowM ORANGE COAST d 8 p 0 0 __ 63 come S415. Owner. ·~ 900 R_.. --' · 2 BR. Ma.'l\lrf! A ult.II. $ll0. ruggeret, . . U\JA , * S4S-083.l * .,.,..., ...... g ....... ener service. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Cozy PROPERTY "'"· Call to Aee • 499-2800 673-3663 Eves. 548-6966 Fireplace. Double Garage, 673-8550 Crpt.s, drpl, bltm. Walk to Laguna Beach 1-,-------m-,-rim-,-.,, Logun1 B•ach 1705 _R_E_N_T~A-L_S ______ 1 Completely Fenced. Lffse. ahoJ>3. No peta. 54G-SlOO NEED House for rent in Mllsbmg ''"' for 4 stock j!:~:::::._:::::::;_ __ ;;c.;.;c WEST Back Bay, Modern 4 $187 50 th OWNER'S furn. 2 BR. ~!:!. 3 BR 1% ba. Drsr/c:rpts. C051a Mesa, prefer Mesa • HouMI Furnished BR. corner condo.: balcony · per mon · with lg. aundeck. Avail. B\tm, pr! gar/patio. Adults Verde, Sept ht for Irvine Must. rims, plus bst. o(fu. THE Costa Mata 2100 master Br. suite 21,i baths Sept. l.t. to June 15th, 1969. $140. 549--0433 546-40'l1 eve faculty meml)er & family of 538-9751. BIG ONE panelled fam . rm. frplc. No childre.n or pets. Cell AVAIL. Sept, l, lg. 2 BR, 1~ 4. ~ce range $200 to $300, 6 THAT'S THE BEST DE-BEAtmF1.JL, new, 4 BR, ex:-patio; exceptional rec. 675-3518 ba, G.E. bit-ins. Adults. :l.40 mos to 1 yr. 213: 825-62lll or SCRI?l'ION OF nus OV-e cut iv e t ype h ome , facilities pool aervlces; 2 BR, Flrepl., edulta, no pets. E. lGth Pl., C.M, 548-6432 213: GL 7-2362 ERPOWERING C'ONTEM· Fireple.ce, lal'&e' yard, priv. adult/teeM. $260 Mo. 7682 EDINGER $150. Agt. Aho 2 BR un-1 YR leflse. 3. 4 Br. unfurn La Coste Country Oub ' BdrmHOME. TRARE $15,000 Equil;Y tor CABlN CRUT~ or ? , 494-8437 l BR furn condo. on Bch nr. Venk:e, Italy in exclus- ive reaort area. Trade tot local area 3 or 4 Br. bmt• or we. lot or host. 646-UT1 e $4,800 TO e Trade on 4 or 5 BR bomt Newport or Corooa del Mar 4>1-7'itl! Commercial Bldg E. Coast Hwy, OlM, valt1e ~.<m Inc $13,980 Equity 1611,00l. Take mati.n. lat TD I: cub 673-0173 Bkr. $15,00:J equit;y in Dana Pt. 3 BR 2 BA borne, w/cent. gla.as encl. e.drean, Blt in kitch, w/w cptl, poet.for Newport Bcb aret.. OwMr. &12-282.1 OlAMOND approx 2 ct }uaranteed $2,0XI value for Mercedes, propert)I' er 1! MG-3389 20 Acres, dear, hi dl'!9fS't; level, nt. Yucca Velley. Trade up for income, motel or apta., or vacant land. OWNER, 646-1615 Ocean View • Nr, Npt pier. 4 un.ita tum, best rental area. $58,500 • take en me in tr fl de. Owner 2mi% Court Ave., 673-«m. dishes, linens, w a ah e r , Avll.fl. now. 642--6906 or (213) 842-4455 or 540-5l40 *"·-'~"'_, L"R:. A392 h 5200 / 2 ba bltns d ·• PORARY HOME. Deta.iled 593-316& , .... ,..,..>=, .,,.,..., Newport Be•t hm, w , , w ..... er, exterior of wood stucco, & dryer, near May Co. &: L h 3 ONE 2 br, &: one 1 br, w/w I ;;;;;::;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;:;;;;.J 220 wiring, by Sept 13. Will * * * * * * · public &: Caddie rloola. AVAIL IMMED. Mesa Verde agun• &.ac 705 ta •-•~ A R" I 1 pay $250 mo max. CdM area , , m.ensivt use of deccntive $300 mo. 976 Denver Drive., ' ~R. lge ~vi.Ill rm, MONARCH BAY AR EA :W~1a~~~~"'"· 8 / B pref. Write E. D. Mathis, I '!!!'!!!!~!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'1!!!!!!!!!!!!\!~!!'!!!!!l!!!I! j s::~ting 5 BDRM. a: DEN C. M. 549-m7 . spa.ctoua fam/duung rm, LOVELY OCEAN VIE\V 3 UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 835 Aahley Dr., Simi, Caill., IR_E::NTALS REAL ESTATE FLOOR PLAN. bas dbl. door Nowport •-och 2200 hilt-in kitchen, beautifully BR & den, 2 BA, cptl, ori>s, BACHELOR apt. Near 2 be.th unit near Hoag Hos-93065 Apts. Unfurnilhed G•n•r•I entry hall w/ftoorl ot Del 1ni landscaped ya~. Yearly frpl. pool. S300 mo, AOO beach. Utilities paid. $85. pita\. Aveilable &pt. 1st. SEPT 1st Busineu Woman Piso tile, opens to rear liv. YRL-'--y"'."'ru-RN-. -.-,,-.,,,.--,-.-,-.,· l lease $325/mo. me! water avail. ~BR. 1% ha. S2'15 mo. &75-3153 aft. 5 PM. $200. needs 1 Br unrum Apt. Misc .. Rentilt 5999 Butineu Property 6050 rm. w/CATHEDRAL BEAM-kdt, 3 tiths. dishwhr. 1h blk. and gardener service. adWts 49&-1243 betw 11)..5 pm B•IL--4300 , ALSO C.M., Newport, Corona de\ l---------l NTEM 673.J663 Eves. 548~966 · -3 BEDROOM, 2~~ belh, lace Mar or Laguna. To $100 mo. STORAGE Garage for rent. ED CEILINGS, CO . to bay, l blk. to ocean. $300. . illCNTALS ,....., M Clo · lik PORARY SPANISH DE-_ mo. al& l5tti St. N.B. LEASE OPTION. Bring your A t F rnlshed PENINSULA Point pool. $250. Available Sept. Gar or carport necessary. ......-a eu, se.1n, e SIGNED FIREPLACE. W/ 67S-41G9 paint brush. 3 BR& 2 baths, _ _:_P_•_--"-----12 Br. 2 ba, car port, yrly '"' lSth. Adults only. 642-0086 alter 5 p.m. new. seam w CARPETING TIIR.U-OUT family room. Nice reslden-General 4000 ~able tenf:lnta $167.50. Bay & Beach REPUTABLE iady perm. GARAGE For rent, storage ALL 5 BORMS. SEXl..UD· OCEANFRONT 2 Br. lower tia1 area. $185 month +op-I---------1544 Miramar, 675-1338 Realty, Inc. employea In Npt Bchdesires only. New. $'lO Month. ED DEN, WITH RICH duplex. Dlsp., gar. AvalJ. tion. CALL ~1151 (open HOLIDAY PLAZA 20'25 W. Ba.lboa Blvd ., NB nice beach apt. Sept thru MZ-~T WOOD PANELLED ~~5; vmtr or yrly eves) Heritage Real Estate DELUXE Sllacioua 1-BR. 81lboa l1l1nd 4355 673-3663 Eves. 548-6966 winter or yrly. Reas. Ref. REAL ESTATE, WALLS " OPEN BEAM CUL OE SAC • 3 BR/ 2 Ba fum. apt. $135 + util. 2-BR. 73.5-4639 Gener•I 1 C~ILINGS, now being used WINTER LEASE, 2 br, 2 be, home -lge. food. yd. -encl. + den SlOO + util. 2-3 BR.OwnUnitl, ca~. Lowk DELUXE, upper, new 3 BR 2 FAMILY Of 5 returning from 1--"="-''------~s billard room w/regula-with lge fenced yard on lanai/lam. nn. -cary. &: Htd. pool, Ample parkina dn. · carry • .,.,.,w wee Ba ., bltns, carp., drpl. oversee.s Em b 1 as y Post, Income Proptirty 6000 tlon size table. channel, with dryer. 3507 drapes -$210 Per mo. No chlldren. No peta ="""~::;·:;61>-:=!99=l====== Sunde<:ka; ~ blk. bay & need 4 BR unlum. Mme. OP~ STAIR CASE LEADS Finley (714) 673-8249 646--4m 1965 Pomona, CM. 642-5858 beach. $t7& Mo. yearly. Ye-arty leue, local ref's. *PUBLIC AUCTION* Live High Store Bldg. &lbos Atee, suitable for anything -Real Estate, Bank, Fishing Tac- kle, etc. Llving que.rtera \C>- stairs. Bargain at $66.SOO - will lease. BURR WHITE, RHltor 2'JJ1 Newport Blvd, N l!Y/llOrt Beech 675-4630 eves: 64.2.2253 TO 2ND STORY PAST OCEANFRONT 3 BR .. 2 car VERY CLEAN 3 BR 2 bath, CHATEAU Li POINTE Huntington Buch 4400 Referentte req. 54.5-70Cl8 673-lOl!t By Qtder of aitorneys ·three \VALL OF Gt.A$ AND gar. dean; '275 Month, w/w· cupets, fireplace, Lovely furn. ~BR. apts. Ofl. 1-BR. tum. apt. suit. for cple. DLX. 2 BR etudio, adults, no l,Y_:.O.:UN~G~A-lt-.y-.,-w-i_le_&~ln-fo-nt ~~-a~! :1!!~d i= I ::8.:":c'ic;n.:IU;;;;_;.;Rc.•n;.:l;,;•c;.l_..;6060:;;,::.:;1 OPENS TO LARG~ yearly stove. re.frig. Immediate street parking, carporlli, Water & gas furn. S80. 918 pets. Re!'1. req'it. Lease desire interes'llng tum . cot-all 1st TD $36 500 each DELUX rMt., fully equip, PORCH. We 11 • 675-1536 • po 1 s e 111 ion . $160/mo. Heated pool. S150 per mo. Palm St .. H.B. n 50. Call 646-3580 or tage for year lease 9/1 CdM n..~: 11 000 d '•-1 Sat · Incl. neon sign, A-1 loo. In kitchen with extensive use COATS • WALL Ac E Adults, no ..... ts. "'"" A"78 ••• •979 M 1401 ..,,..., ' own ..... e ., Dn H B ·~1369 CHARMING beach cottage~ ..,.. ,,,,,,_.... .....,..,...... 642-9470. Inquire gr. or Laguna 543-4221 . s.-14th 3 PM t ·1 t. · · ~ of hardwood cabinets, ALL ftt:"A• 'TORS,~ •141 1941 POMONA AVE., CM. ~-, , a SI e, -========= blk to ocean, winter rental, ~ ......-. Su,.,..rior N B 791 -799 "'--'/ -BILT-IN RANGE & OVEN, L B h 4705 ,.-' . ' BEFORE lhe 1111 need 3 or 4 _,.,.,... .,.,..... mar Ave., Offic• Rental DISHWASHR., GARB. DJSP. _124 __ 3S_lh_st_. -673-J<li6~----2 BR Cotta~. Furn or Coit• M•ta 4100 agun• •IC · BEAUTIFUL 0 c ea n front Br. House. Leuc. Coda Mesa. For turthez: in-1.;. _ _;;_ __ :.;_ _ _:60;;;;_7c0l ETC., opens to formal din-WINTER· Bay Beach Front. Unfurn. $87.50, No pets, NEW Furnished 2 BR 2 Ba Apt. 2 Br. fireplace, patio. * 64&6484 * formation, contact Buckeye ing area. This truly unusual 4 Bdrm· 3 bath· S300 per mature adults only. 2070 $25 Wk. Up aU elec bu 1 J t . t n s. $250 Mo. yrly. 642-9760 afl 71====='==== Investments, 403 W. 8th St., home has to be one of the mo. 9'25 W. Bay, ORl-6721 Newport Blvd. C.M. e Studio 6 Bach apt&. Panoramic view overlooking p.m. Rooma for R•nt 5995 Lot! Angeles ID014. ZlJ: m06t out.standing values we 3 BR Townhouse, fam rm., e tncl Utlll 6 Phone .n. Aliso Beach. M11.ture adults NEW SoWldproof 2 BR. :I Ba. 627--0192 ru: 838-7598 Eves, have ever oUered at, B•yshor" 2225 pool, clubhouse, N\\>'Pt • Maid Service -'IV avail. only, no children. Sl.85. ACT'Ol!ls fm Coco's 1665 ROOM For rent. $."JO mo utll NEWPORT BEACH $31,950 FULL PRICE -4-B'-R-.-,-BA-.-,-vaJl-Sep_t_l_O __ I Riviera. 01Udren OK. L&e. e New cafe A Bu ,:<::9!>-3:,::7SS""'.,---=-.,,-""' Irvine S18.5iS200. &ti.um rd. H.B. area. S42-3l32 &ft TRAVELODGE OFFER YOUR DOWN 9 Moa lease. Priv. beech. Avail ~I. $225. 646-1248 2376 Newport Blvd. 5'8-9755 3 BR 2% BA, all elec 1;:=~=.;.;====;;;;;l:~p~m~·======= Depreciation $1.8,600 PYMTI OWNER WILL $150. * 548-8232 EX-MODEL Home 3 BR., 2 Sl40 tmL. pa.id. Lovely built-ins: Panoramic view East Bluff 5242 Guest Homet 5998 1966 Gross .......... $87,000 HELP FINANCE! ha, carpets, drapes, bll-inll. 2 BR., bl" to K-Mart. overlooking Aliso Beach. E T H 1967 Gron ••••.••• Sll0,000 4 BR, 3 BA., Private com-~ M ture adulst only no PRESTIG own omes LADY Pri t ~· "''' G "~ 000 MISSION REALTY munity & beach. Sept-June fenced, gardener incl. $235 571 Joann. 548-0787 or 536-780'1 a ' For lease 2 br & den"-J br . ' va e room, • •· I'OS3 ·······• •~· Le Bkr 545-2424 Eves 54&-9480 childr("l'I. S221J. 499.3755 wolh 2 0·, 2,. both•. Gold hght car_ e, ldry, r A b, Ex-C. R. Gangl &42-1615 985 S. Coast Hwy., guna $280. &4:Z.-5Zll DELUXE 1 bdrm. nto. Ideal N • t l ho 670 Phone (714) 494--07n ATI'RACTIVE 3 Br. 2 Bath. for bachelor. 1993 Church St. * JAPANESE MODER * MedB.llion ell electric. POOL c e P . 1o 11 a me. LUXURY duplex. lncm. $425, Balboa '1300 Close to &chools. 0 n C.M. 548-9633 $185. 2 BR, view, NEAR 2-car gar. Rent starts et Catalina, Leg Bch, 494--2425 mo. 4 BR & furn. 2 BR .. 4 ..... OCEAN VIEW CUI • ~·-d _,1 BEACH. Adults. 4M-3579 RLY b J J d yr1 Id Ocee.n 50 d BY OWNER * Temple Hills .... e-sac ....... ...,,, rps,..., COLLEGEorworklngmanlo ,,.,;:;;:;;;;~==-=-=-"-$250 mo. El.OE am u11.tory a Y-0 • Y s. 1455 Terrace Way, 3 BR, 2 Ba PENINSULA. Winter or bltn.s. Cov patio, 545-1341 share apt Swim pooJ pvt RENTALS 837-Sn Amigo Way, N.B. Private room. Loving care, S3/l,!IOO. Xlnt cood. 213 : Yearly. Bayfront, Pier, · ' · A to Unlurn'ioh-• =========== Good nutritious me a I a. 6.'n-957$ elec kit w/blt-in range .l IMEO. Occupancy. lmmac. gar. S75, Ma-I® aft 6. P • eu fioe.t. 5 Br. 4 bl. 2 turnace•. b bs bL · ..__ / Corona del Mir 5250 548-4753 lNOOME &r. Home-Owner dishwasher, lge I.iv rm., wbr/dryr, displ, lst Class. 3 r. e, t-ms, uw , w w FURN Single, util paid. I General 5000 ========== · frplace, beamed c:ellinp. 67~2039 cpts, 1% ba, nr mark~ta & working Adult. $65. 274 E. Miac. Rentils 5999 Exel. inc.-deprec/ lnvt. 4 Lee comer lot w/156' front. achool. $180/mo. 548-33.71 l9tb St. CM . 646-l7l4 RENT ""_ Br. 2 ba. ttf!I, 10-2 Br. apt., Landscaped & shrubs. Pric· Lido Isle 2351 4 BDRM Plus Den. 2 Story. ~ 1%i CAR Garage near pool l Yr. old. 675-l39J od right! $39,700. P.O. Box -'-"----'-'------M,.. ~· Ma,. ....,... mo. REDEOOR.ATED 1 br. wlw 2 Rooms Furnltur• t\. N c 1 Hall 125 914 '--·--B-ch 494-47'26 "'"' ... ..,., crpta, drps, conveniC!l'lt loca-$25 Month ~,.~• ewpoh "r I Y ru . Buslnen Propeirty 6050 .._........ .... 2 BR .. 2 ba .. avail. 9/10 9 64&-9683 tioo .,.,.. 523 Bernard St mont erroo ty Co. mo. Is .Inquire at 218 Via ~. . FULL OPTION TO BUY &12-Im S1crific• of Homes Dijon, Lido Isle CLEAN 2 B~. w/.crpts, lri>lc, BACH., c:lean, quiet; park-ON TEN ACRES MUsr BE SOLD! gara~. Pri patio. $150 mo. Ing. $80 _ Util paid. Man No depo!llt o.a.c. l l 2 BR, Furn & Unfum Thlly Furn Model Home View Bilbo• Island 2355 83.)...1359 1637 Irvine, C.M, 646--5736 H.F.R.C. from $1.50 mo. Frplca I Pril of Ocee.n, 3 BR. 2 ba, never ---"------4 BR., l%. Ba., carp., drapet'!. NASSAU PALMS · 1 BR Furniture Rent•lt PatM>s /Pools. Tenn!&. Con- lived in . Horne under notice BAYFRONT 4 Br. 3 ba., Oe8;!1. Nice area. Oose In. furn. Sl 3S. Pool. • 517 W. 19th, t,M. 548-MBI tnl'I Bkfst. 9 hole Putt! -$33,500 incl all. Owner aid dock. Winter 1.se. Avail Sept Avail. 911. 642--0076 1~ E. ~-d St, .,.2 ~.,.,, 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 Green. financing · 9. Call l. 525-4444 '' "'' ~........., GOOD LOCATION for de· 900 Sea Lane. CdM 644-)fil] LOS PADRES RLTY LGE. 3 BR. 2 Ba., carp., DIAL direct 642-5678, Charte scribina; ~e TV sets vou'd fM11cArthur nr. Coast Hwy) Laguna Bch. <IM-8833 Huntington Beach 2400 ~·· bltns. Lease. No sm, your ad, then alt back and like to aell: the Classified 36 x 30' REDWOOD building to be moved. Mlll.'lt sell this mo. S5<K) or best offer Loe FV cm Ward St & Calle Madero. (213) 633-1124 or SM-3347 OIA.RG!: IT! LAGUNA BEACH Air Conditioned ON FORES'.1.' AVENUE Desk apeces available in newest office btilldina at prime location in downtown Lquna Beach. Afr eondl- tiooed, carpeted, beallliful paneled partitionifll. Two entrancet: Frontage on Forest Ave., rear leadl to Muncipal parking toti. $50 per moDth far apace. Desk and chairs available for SS. BU!inesa: boura an.swmin& service available for $10. All utllitlet paid ~t telephone. DAILY Pit.0r 2'22 FOREST AVlllUI: LAGUNA BEAOI 494.9466 SECRETARIAL SERVICE Modem offices, carpets, l1r conditlonJng, parking. From 165 per month. Orange Oolut- ty Bank Bldg. 230 E.17th a., Coflta Mesa. 6'2-1485 DaiJ,y Pilot Want adlll AlW!l,YI a Go-Gol SPECTACULAR View, 2 sty ctnldren or pets S4Ml834 listen to the ~ riJli! Sectioft. Dial 00-5678 now. 3 BR 2 BA, lam , frpl, deck. 2 BR. nr. stores &: beach. Yr· 3 BR. house, Ige. ~ed yd, RENTALS RENTALS SOCK IT TO 'EM! No Matter What It Is H.Et~ r ALS $35,500. Trade. 4!W-5187 ~;~;:· s79 mo. ~·=~ Call col.I. HouMs Unfurnished HouMs Unfurnl1hed OON'T JUST WISH h .ome. Houna UnfurnlshN thlnit to furnish your borne DIAL direct 6C2-5678, ct.r;e JS YOUR AD IN CLASSl-1 _.;G:.:•~n:;":.:'::,1 ____ 3:;000:;;,::_;:Ge_;:;,:no;:cr_;:•_:_l ____ 3000:.:.;_;:;,:G...;-..;"°:;'..;'c.'----J-OOO_ ...• find great buya tn to-your ad, UMri alt back and FIED? Someone wW bel- day'e Clu:sitied A• &ten to the phone ring! looldnc fer It. Ola.I 6G-5678. [PIOER ' I r · I ------~ Overheard In trove! bureou1 I G U P E I 1 I "I went on a 0 boct trip. lhe ·=~1=1='=='==~~ ::: ;:r•f;~~~t f~!, ~-,. e-"' mind, but my friend kept IDATBIN 1-ltup.• . '· I I' I r I ~~;~z~;E!r '• r:iw.r:"~~"! r r r t I' r I' I' I I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLAS$!FICATION 8000 t ' NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For Fist Stl'vlce It Expert Anirlonce DIAL: 642-5678 DIRECT JUST SAY CHARGE IT! .. !lllllll!!lllllllllllll!'lllllllllll!ll ........... ,. .................... '!ll!.,..'!'1"1'1""'911!1111!!!11!19'!!11'""!9'!'11'111"'""""'!!1'""""""'1!11 ..... ..,l!!I ... .., .. "'!! ................................ ~~~~~._ ••• ·--•• -. r ___ .. ..,. ... -.... -......... -··· .~... -*..-•" • I r I ' 41 DAILY '1LOT IMPLOVM&NT BUSINESS 1Jiit ANNOUNC!MINTS SERVICE DlllfCTORV SERVICE DllllCTOltV JOIS a EM'LOVMINT J.OIS a !M'LOVMENT JOIS & I MPLOVME ~OIS & .~css •nd . PINANCIAL FINANCIAL ind NOTICIS S~!.l!!' c1 .. n1n1 6615C•rpet CIMnlng 662$ Job Won...,, -7000 Holp W1n!M, Min 7200 Help Wonted, -7200 Holp w •• ,..,, Min noo BuL ()pf>o<tvnltl• 6300 a... °'"°"""''''" 6300 '-"" 6401 LOT MAN Machlnlm "" l<m'ARD, Cock •r Your Rugs, Upholstery USU> CARS Sales & • Engine t.the Strike Conditions NaffonalOrc)anlzaffon ....... female, P>dol> tan & Drapes Guaranteed ..,_ Exist 6 white, 2 yn:, choktr ' flea TV ltEI' AIRMAN Service Machinists NEEDED Now expanding to. oc>ll&r, namt WUZDY . Lott Spotlessly Cleaned M8.lMl IMMIDIATILV Suncb.y vtc B:raokl A Cout EX-con, white, 38 m . xlnt Drill Press West Coast HW)I, LqWlL """'"· latelllrtoL K<ldnr Are you this 1111nl • * TOOL It DIE MAKER. fM..2369 er 4M--n8' CAN IE USED IMMIDIATILV 1ood polition. Reliab l e . • GENERAL INSPiX:TOR Enjoy = profit. with a new, nolH'Ompeli· SEALPO!NT S l a met e AFTER WORK ,IS COMPLITID Write Box 1355 o-.a Meta Operaton • MAINTENANCE Fem.de. Vk OrclOO & It '°" &rt, 1be -MECHANlC live p uct. (Nothin& like II an,ywbere) Revolutionary Dry Cleanln9 Method -ComP"i1¥ needs )'OU.. You S.view. CdM. t.led Mae &: Job Wonted, Lady 7020 CNl9ht Shift) • !WNTENAllCE Amanng low inveotmeDL Pro~cl<d torntor· a.na "Metoo". Plat tic flea may now be .mplofed but ELECTRICIAN ies. No fixed overhead. No previous experi· collar. Reward1 6~ for ltugs, Upholstery and Drapes JAPANUI want ttl lmprov11 )'0111' pr•• 46 hr mln woric week 1r S'l'OCKMA{ll.SOORE 6 ence needed. Year-round prOflt, proven auc-LOST -G,..n pa.rU:eet AL'O SALES -SERVICE -INSTALLATION SCHOOL GIRL ent po&l.tk>n. SalU)I plua J>r.oftt .tlarinr LJNE cess. "PETEY" 'Nhllt we wt~ on IANlAMIRICAID NII llTIMATtl MASTll CHAl•I Domtltlc worir, llv. ln with eomn::U&aion, comJ*lll' cM * TOOL CRIB ATl'll<DANT If you can invest 'llSOO. (oecured by inven· •a.ca.tklrt Mete Verde ana. .lmerlcln ra.m.U,y , Goe• to turnbhad , all com~ bto-J. C. CARTER CO. • M2.i' AL ASSDt!BL.ER Call Linda • ~Tl if Modern Rug & Carpet Co. CX:C. 646.0384 or 548-!182 elilt and paid train1na: pro-•~ER tory) and you oan spare 1 ... than 10 bn. a ...... Jopan-Sc!Mol Girl ...,,,, • . AL Fl'ITER week, in I• than two ye&l'I you can be as- 4335 c::6-~~~~:~ro~" C~~SLtc~GILIS ~71 W. 17th St. '* POWER BRAKE sured of xlnt. onnua! eel profit. BIO, Fat 'I'IJtt ... with Domeatk Work, Uve-ln with Apply in pel'IOn Cott• M-aa OPERATOR -"" tall, malt. Amerlcan family. Goe-a to Mr John P1rr1ro 54W21 *'PUNCH PR~S Get in on bhe ground floor ol this new, ei· Corona H.igblanda, bward. I~ OCC. fM6-03U or 5'Ml.12. OPERATOR . citlnC area Of mens fashion bwin•s. "'""'" SOCIAL so:R.E'l'ARY. Have THE SIN6£R CO. An !<!ual opportunity * ENGINE L.A'nlE Phone l>Ar. W1yno, 1>42-9470 BROWN Alllptor bUlfold in hbyolttlng 65SO Gener1I Servlc• 6612 ex c elM n t ............. ..,,..,,., OPERATOR -_. ..,.. t o ....,..,...,.. run or port n77 ldln .. r • TURRET LA.THI: or wrire tor Information; AlbtrtlOl'I'• mkt. 1'th • BABYSJTI'INO my home, PROFESS. Window, walll 6 tlmo. 61>-00&'! OPERATOR 892 w. 16th St., Newport B11ch, C.nfornl• Harb. Rew. ~7890 weekdaya S.5. Fenced yard fir. cleanina:: bu 1 l n ••1 , Ptact1cal nune-campu»on. 11 Huntlntte" Center Plumber • MlUJNG MAauNE LOST 2 pra of (lrtlCrlpUon '4 per cily. WKtaidfi C.M. rnid., & C<ltlb'UCUon Drive. Cood cook. Lita Huntington Stach • OPERATOR RIAL ISTATI Jlu&H, 1 dark, 1 recutar, in .....,.,., Crystal Window Cleanlri1 houll!wark . ......., * BENCH MACHINJST Buo. Opp1rtvnltl• 6300 blk leather ca.I'!, nr Lido RELlA B L E mot ht r Free Esllmall!a 5411-8'137 * * C11penter * HEUUM ARC WELDER GeMral bridge:. Rf!'ward $10. 875--3537 WHkday1; lnf'Mt to ' Yf:llt'f, e I DAY Hrvice. Home It Jail W•ntld ltEXAIR, INC. • * MACHINE WELDER BEAtrTY S&lon. l'l'b .... ,,.,, """" M"' ...... apt cle:anin;. O'ptt. walla, Men & Wom•n 7030 NOW HIRING Cabinet Setter • EXPERJMENT.AL Office Rent1I 6070 Personal1 6405 MS--OlCS wirldow1, palnUnr. 60-8321>. • MECIUNIC quick tale. E J.eaa o.ll1 42 MEN BABYSIT. ,.,.._,,,.,.. Sterling for brlghtne:ul EXPERIENCED APT MOR * f ABRICA.TJON SI'RUC. ~ MONTH decorated. cai,..1«1. ... Blll. CUMMINGS formerlJ .... Couple: with many ye ani ex-With mohlle home tx· TURE DEVELOPM»IT My C. M. kome, by day or "MR. nx rr· Call Bob for n•lled. Good dientel. Nr. operating the Mrvlce dept week. 54!)....6734 homt maintenance painting, -"' On ng• Co. WE NEED 42 MEN WHO crlence. Excellent MECl!ANlC Bethel Towers. $,950. Call tor SUperior vacuum & Sew· wama opportunltf to handla NaT .mwD OF n•flt1. Apply In per· P'umlJlbed offlct •et . HOT Duane Wicklund,. Walku &: CAPABLE, ~ ca« for repairs, d ... •• -ARE ... Cente< • 1938 Harbor your property. 67:J.-.t789 HARD WORK AND ARE SARGENT· SPOT! Ut1lit1N pald. Prl· LM, Sf.5..M91. Blvd, eo.ta Meaa, ii happy pre·achool children. My relerence.'1. 673-6963 .. n. AB!..!: TO Sl'ART lMMEJ>. vate entrance. to announce the opening of home $20 wk. 642-4414 Dom .. tlc H1lp 7035 JATELY. NO EX.PERI· FLETCHER 569 w. 19th, CM lu1. W1ntecl WIS hi:a own .win1 &: vacuum Hauling 67JO NECESSARY AJ5 EXPLORER 9-IOO Flair Drlv• ENCE Air-Conditioned CASH tor •mall ......... aalff I .e:rvice center. Wt Irick, M•sonry, etc. Lite Hauling·Trimmlnp. DOMESTIC COMPANY Wll.L TRAIN. El Monte:. Calif • Offices & Deak Sp•c:e ~ Newport • C.M. -..ii nationally .... 6560 Trllh, Gara.a:• Cleanups MOTORHOME CORP. 12131283-7171 wtth Dflnb'91 aecretarW, }(er. UM. Priv, part)'. MIS.-23n Vtrtiaed 111.etf!OI. Wt hope all BRICK, Concrete:, Carpenltl' Name It! Reasoria.b\t GOOD PAV 1213) 4'13-7171 ox and tuepbona amwerlnr our friendl will stop and 1tt Custom Cabinets. Small Job• BIG JOHN MZ..C030 4000 C•mpus Dr. lll at Bill'• Appli a nc e HELP LOTS or OVERTIME An eQlllll opportunity aervice, up to 2,000 91. ft. R .. 1 lat ... le•n• 6340 Center, 1916 Harbor Blvd, OK Fret Ell 962.-6945 CLEAN Loll, aarar••· eto. Ntwporl Baach The Mutual Bldg. Tree removal, dump, tlrip, DURING N EX T ' t:mployer 2863 E. Cot.ft Hwy, QtM BORROW an Your Equity Clolta Me9a. 548--01.U C1rpent•rin9 6590 backhoe, till, 1(1'8.dt. 962-17~ MONTHS. Call 8 AM to 5 PM 675-4070 Private 2nd Mort&. money *ALONE?* Uve in or liw out SALES, 3 ONL V FREE APPRAil8AL I: e NO JOB TOO SMALL e LITE HAULING & Cl.EAN CALL PZR60NNEL DElPT. Shop 11 Home 3 OOMMERCIAL. l indUIL, PROMPr smvia: R.esldenttal • tndustrl.al Cbm-UP HeunkHpert R'Sllrdl..,_ of 'ti 1 wtth livina qtrL Reout&bl> eom..., """""' WHY? mercia.l. Repair • remodel. FREE E8TIMATES. !!ll:cel.lior Apney n4-1211 ar exper1enc1 Call owner: 846-21.10 Orange: County lJ.yea:s. Let P!,)'choiorleal !! u r v e y Reuonable. Lie. bondad., In· • 546-78'9 * 4ll So. Broadway, LA 9001! Carpel & D11pery $975 FIRST MO. 1300 SQ. rr. m•. 1765 Sattler Mortaq• Co .. Inc. ftnd the rlJbt pe-raon for you. "'""'· (213)~7 (213) 620-1135 * * Interior Decor1tlng 6737 Potential if you &incl!r~ Orq • Ave., C.M., <.."OM)er 338 E. 17th St., Coaa Mt.a Information 24 Hrs. 11 day. • 982·1961 • 96'2·11371 • LIVP: INS Specialists ly wan t to work and etrn bldr. nr 17th St. Ml-8111 IK2·2171 M5.00U. Nl(ht1 PSYCHOLOGICAL SURVEY M.AST'E'R CARPENTER e Residence • Comm'I • Employer pays fee:1 CAREER blr money, can follow 01\> • wkenda 673-7885 142-ll57 542-4776 New Ir. repairs. ~ hr a Painting, int. 4r ext. Ceorie: Byland Agency orroRTUNITY! Carpe t Sales experience a den, y ou ahould writ. lnduttrlal Re"t1I 6090 £KECt.ITJVE early 40, no 536-3900 aft 5 PM a Wall CoverU!.11 106 B E. 16th. S.A. 511""'95 must. Drapery vcperien<..~ ont order everyday end -·---Mortg1get, T.D.'a 6345 cli:i1drtn , meet lady to age CHAUFFER-Body Gu ar d , Join todays fa1te1t IJ'Owins it you can do that SOUTH SANTA ANA REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS e Color Coordination profeuton.Mutual Fund 1ales preferred. ExcC"llent com· Approx. 4500 1q. ft. with de-SAFE 129' PER YEAR 40, oo children. Enjoy social CABINETS. Any siu job. FREE ESTIMATE Retired L A P D Sttgeant No experience ne:cessary· pany ~neflts. Apply. 1 can offer you $5,250 lat TD on Jpectacular • recrtallonal activities. Licensed & Insurtd 1ingle, free to tr a ve l . luxe air-cond. offices. Fire-Photo7 Uf• time refs. 25 yrs. exper. 5"'TI3 MODERN 613-5680 We train . tull or part time: • $12S Wffkiy SliOry proof rrom1. $400 per month. Oceanvlew lol • .... '"' Newport. Box M-176 Daily -Mutual Fund Advisors, BARKER BROS. • New Cadlll•c furn. Avail. immediately. For in-$7500. Payable 1% "" C1ment, Concntl 6600 DECORATORS Chinese live.int. Oleerful Inc. • Work 6 hrs • d•y month Incl uding•"'· All due Pilot 5.16-!l;JJ Permanent. Experienced. . tonna.tion can K. W. Small -Npt B. 1603 We:1tcliff 642-6422 13 Huntington Center • Executive trainin9 with 3 yni:. 101* d i 1 co un t , 'PROBLEMST Send $3 for CEMENT Work, all types. Fat F..ut Aa:mcy "'"'"" S.A. 11U N, Broadway Huntington Be•ch • Bonut pl•n 494-1131 1 a m ple l e 11 1o n i n Nn job too small. rree est. Ironing 6755 Eckhoff .& Jusoc., Inc. 547.8331 An equal opportunity • No C•"v111ing 1818 W. Cllapman Ave.. $139() 2nd "' """"" $4865, Me:tepby11k:I • PeriOflaJ &: H. STUFLICX 5'8·8615 Agencl", Min 7100 1piritual htlp. Lesl!Oll 1eriea IRONINGS <b1e ln my home empl.oyu Apply 1500 Adams. Suitt 303. Orana:e. Calif. lit TD payable. I~ ... • The Mqnificent YOU • e CUSTOM PA110S e D<cel!ent work, yoo fumi.Bh Costa Mesa . 11-4 p.m. d&iJ.y 3'11·2621, Eve•wkncl1 538-5971 month incl. 10% all due 5 concrl!'tt aawlng &. removal yn, C.Ove:ni exc Oce&nview Marlin. lll08 Miramar. #2'* Sta te \le. • 842·1010 hangen1. ""'• M t s a, Service En9inffr FRY COOK Lats 6100 lot. 21% distcount. 494-U37 LM An gelts 90051 Newporl Beach area. $1 per Repre1ent1tlve Experienced MAINTENANCE WE HA VE an Ollttlinc in Ifie: ACCORDIAN * CUSTOM PATIOS & hour. 642-8.181 to $575 Apply at circulation department for 12~% YIELD on lll'tsnn ae-* Block walla. AllO concrete MECHANICS R-1 CORNER Lot 50xl:t7 to cond trust deed. S.f.000 cash. tOr small organ l pl.iyer !or aawlnr & l'Lmov ll].. 842-1010 IRONING. ak: "'" Please: Fee Pa.id. 2 -3 yr1 engineer-THE RIGGER an ambitious younr mllII alley. $13.500 net. Tu!tin &: 494--7508 M. C. Thore:i trio. Do &tandard1, .... brina: hangers. 2 5 1-B inr bkgrnd, 2 yra collea-e: No. ]jj Fasliion llla.nd Immediate employment for who i1 willin;-to 1t&rt 1t the C1zy so. Newport H~. rhythm & bl.uea. Male or fe-BEST In eonettte. W11.lks, Avocado CM &4&-82'!7 math &: phy1ka. Company Ne:-wport Ce.ntu N.B. Senior Malntenanei! Meehan. bottom ol. a buaineu and ()o,.'Tltf'. 00-2666 ANNOUNCEMENTS male. For immediate work. pool decka, nool"li, patiOI, ffiONING. TERI'S P RESS is k>okin( for 10rrteone who ic1 with electrical or me-WO<k and learn. No ex· PRIME Corona Doi Mar ind NOTICES (n·o 689-20"!1 64l-851f SHOP HAS MOV E D. knowi IMCbanical & e:lec· chanicaJ b&ckground. De1irc perieoce nrctsA1)'. Thi.s is Oc•an vi~ lot. No t Found (Frff Adi) 6400 FLY TO CATALINA Child C•r• 6610 540-001'i trlca1 motoni. WUI not be HOUSEMAN applic9.nt to have experienei! a slf:'ady, permanent 1itua. leuthold. Owner 675-4750 . ' --DAILY F1JGHTS FROM EXPER. i.ronini of all type:1. repalnnan. in packl.fin1 machinery op-tion with the: opportunlt)' for ' wrs "" Sonllaao. NB FOUND, Sun. A111. 11th co ORANGE COUNTY" Am.. CHILD care in my home. $1.U hr. 674 Capitol, Costa Dl11Htch Experltnct prt"ferred e:ral:ion1, repeir and maln· r a p J d advancement. Ex- cash, te.nN OT trade:. Fee Balboa. laland, silYS" ' &old PORT. CaWlna • Vegas Fenced y11rd, hot lunche1. Mesa. MB-7330. 56-1605. & Order Deak Arnerlc•re, Inc. tenance. Apply or call eelle:nt benefits including the aimple. 646-8565 weddln1 band, initiah on in-Airlines. e S46-fi612 $12.50 per week. $5. eech ad· from $500 714 Hospital Circle: We1tPack per.onal use oi a company -Ta«e nrder1 on phone and di1· Westminster Ni.chine• Carp. car. Must be at leaat U and ""'· Call • ld ein t i f y. ditlonal child. Huntlnaton L1ndsc1:plng 6810 Acreage 6200 BALBOA Island Method.lit patching. Office ~"P ~Jptul. 1193-4.541, Ext l3.1 866 W. 16th Street h11ve: valid driver'• UceMe &lZ-:1671: 9 to S:30; Ask foi· ~ach. 846-1933 NWa. Church Pr~School. Now GAYNOR'S LANDSCAPING Lite but accurate typina. EqU81 opportun1ty e:mploye:r Newport Stach 5!0-0161 and good driving •oconl. '" ACRES. So uthern enrolling 11ft emoon aMslomi. CHILD CARE my J\lesa de:I & GARDENING SERVICE Also fl!e Jobi;. CootaC"t Milan Ltavltt at tht cawomla. $3.00 down, $3.00 MALE kitt en ...... w/ Hrs 1-3 PM 675-0950 , Mar home-Nights. State: licen1ed cmttctr, DAILY PlLCYf, 330 Wtet per month, $295.00 full price. white: paws & ..mite hind 673-9223 546-2531 Res idential -Commercial Premier MAC DONALD'S Bay St., Costa Me:u L. bwfclt, 326 W. ltd St., lf:g1. wh. apot on noae, wt!. FATHER wt 2 mothtrless CARE for INF ANT In my Yard cleanup. Free ed . Personnel Agency Bu1boy1 & L.A. Phone; (213) 623-5101 neck & chin. Found 16m A: chldrn, ~ 2 ' 6 'NOUld like lovely N~port Stach home: No job too biJ: ~I 645 E. 17th St .. C.M. Dllhwash•n is looking for full or pert BUSBOYS Tur9IX\ CM 8/20. &u-7143 rm I board w/ reap cpl. 61~5429 CORRAL'S lnd.5cp I rototill 646-0531 Full timr, over 18 time: workM". Clean, eon- R. E. W•"ted 6240 DARLIN G Pup • fuzzy Your ~t. 54G-4871. Bob. 1104 E. 17th St., S.A. &enial surroundi.na;1. Ex· bto:Sf:-tl.ea colla1' ( c a n 't Contractors 6620 serv, Free. e!'t, heva own Awty in Person eellent worlc.lna cooditions, AND WANTED: Small houle, very ALCOHOLICS Anonymouo e:quipment. 962-476' 547-9721 Bob'• 8i9 Boy ne:ar Catholic OJ.urcb, for kep) near 19th • Monrovia Harbor Area. Phone 873·8724 e R00:-.1 ADDmONS e 154 E. 17th St., C.M. p&id vacation&: profit shat-DISHWASHERS 19.000 Cuh. 213' 251-4593 SIS-TJ08 P.O. Box 1223 Coata Mtaa. L.T. Construct P1:perhangin1 Helo W1nted. Men 7'200 • in£". Apply 1 PM to S PM, FOUND; wristwatch, vk. Family rooms, ki tchen or Painting 6150 Moriday UU'U Friday, 16866 8.JSINE:SS end Sunvif:'W School. nr. Hunt. Annauncemenh 6410 unit&. Single story or 2: Office Supply Beach Blvd., Huntington Apply in pertnn FINANCIAL C.enter. H.B. Call&: aientify. p!an1 cwitom de:1lgned. For PAINTING int. ' e:Jft. A·l MAC DONALD'S Beach. 9-S p.m. Bus. Opportunfti• 6300 8'1.s883 Llf1tte Hetlth Studio u tlma!PS .l layout, phone work, re as. lie. 897"452'1, Salesman MALE bl.ack min. poo<ll• Hospitality 11 Our Motto • 847-1511 • 893-0000, 8.'JS.1900. =ry ""' restaurant " Experienct'd for Sen D~o REUBEN E. LEE MELODY must k!enfify. Call m-rm FREE STEAM WITH LiC('nsed Cmtractor INTERIOR &: EXTERIOR lookins for profe:s1ional area. Write: John Scott: Dishwashen SWEDISH MASSAGE Statlooers Corp. P.O. Box CLEANERS "' "'2-<612 Open wkdy1 10 am -11 pm Rt~idP.ntia.I • Commerci1tl Painting:. F1'e1! est. JAMITOR 350 SM Diego, Cal. 97112, or Over 18. Nights only. 151 E. Cooot Hl1hw1y OpenltMJ ' MO. Old l"I.)' male cat Sundays 10 am • 8 pm Maint & Repairs. Free Ell Lie. A: Ins. Cluck 548--531' -call 234-0344. Confidential. Apply afttr 3 p.m. N1wport Be1ch found Johtlbl StablN Santa S19 E. Broadway 673·212!1 llANOY man pain Ung • tull tim~. Exrclle:nt worklna: SEE MR . SHIN N•w Stom Height.. MS/1381 Long Beach (213) t.n.7Cfi9 Addltlona • Remodeling clean up work. No JOb too eondltton11, pejd vacation & Delivery Boy FIVE CROWNS BELLY BO.A.RD BOY 'S Recine bicycle v!c. Grand ()penin& Salt! F'red H. Gtrwick, Lie. amall. Call Pancho. 642-7150 profit shariJ1a:. Apply l PM RESTAURANT LAMINATOR EX'p only. Ap- New at.ore O'Nnft"1 o.ow bti.ng NNo'p«t pier. Call .m ide:n-THE PIRATE'S CHEST 673-fi041 .. 549-ll70 "Pi per Buggy" 847-1659 to 5 PM, Monday thru Fri-Over IS. J\tu1t know loc11I 3801 E. Ch!1t Hwy. ply El Paipn 197' Placentia aRJOinted. L.A. ~ Oran1e tUy ~klre 10 am ~m; Gl.tts ! Dfcoratlve lt.em1! PATIOS e Patio Cov1r1 Mobil store • home: call1 day, 16866 Beach Blvd ., 11..re:a. Apply In Person. Corona. de:l Mar Ave. CM. 548-590.1 Co. locationa •vailablt for CAR Kow, call Library An-551 W.19th St. C.M. Room 1\dditlons. l.ic. \\'e advi5f: . sell • in5tall Hun tingtoo Btacll. Crawford's Ph1rm1cy * JANITOR. Exptrienctd. 1804 Newport Blvd. ambitiou& men teekinJ sub-nex H1B. and I dent ify Adj. DiLon'11 Beauty Shop 642-.'i!l!a Days-EVe-Wkn ri11 PAINTING Aver. r o om Costa Mt911 General Woodworking """ Mesa Memor i a l litantial income. -= com pl. $25 • • "'· Neat GenerAI Help Machine Woocfc•n-ing Hoapital Apply 301 E. Vic- Top quality cleaning ' laun-TINY Black I T&n cklg. Vic Fun1ral1 6412 C1rpet Cle•nlng 6625 work. Local refs. 847-tl58 75 MEN Wood Part• Assembly loria, C.M. Ph. 60-273f, dry qencin completely aet l Ttb I Irvine. C.M. Call i CARPET &: Fum. cleaning; XLNT painting lnle:rior/ Good work~. Slar1 wmt; Im· Artiflci1I Limll Fib. SERVICE Station da.y warlt. up ready to do buaineu. Wt ide:ntify' 645--0191 WESTMINSTER for l day service I: quali · Exterior. 17 yrs local rl'ls. MEN me:dtately. Good PRY Pfl.ld Malurt, cxpericoced in Minor tune up Elql nee. train thoroughly. NO SELL- FOUND' Whit. poodle MEMORIAL rARK ty work. call Sterlin& lor Very rtuooAblt . 894-3408 on romple:OOn nf each job, v.·oodv.·oriling. Good mech-3928 E. ~t Hwy O:l.M. ING. No e:xperienee neceua.ry. anical ab\lit)'. Others nted Balboa Yacht C ub area. hrlghtneS1 ! 642-8520 Jr-.'T ·ext. Average: 1 BR apt, TECHNICAL Wrlten and Cuh inve1tment w.rio full Mortu•ry & Cemetery 5c I ft. labor & mat'la $74 .50 . La.rte exp. chain now talcinc C.tt no t apply. parts lll!lters. Experienced. price. (Fully """"" by call 613-2150 SPRlNG Special! 1pplicatlons. Full or pl time . Mr. Roid 774-72S 1 Kin91ley Mf9. Co. Comr,t•t1 funerals Advanced Carpet • Uphols-642-7528, 543-4921 516-tfi10 equip I supplies), Start now MEN'S Pre acr l pt l on rom $24S AgC' 19 · 33. S.rvic1 St1. Attend. Earn Big Money In an l!X· sun&1aue• found in frmt of tery. 543--1188 Toll frer PATNTTNG. Ext & lnt. Ext $4.00.per hour CaU 54&--6116 for sppt. * BARTrnDER * ci~ busineKS ol yrur own. 007 Seashore. 54G-52l1 Cemetery lats hoUif' trlr. 17 Yl'I f:."q), fret for bu1Y production 1talion. Apply in person, Me.a Lann, Fo• in I r:rvi tw p ho n e from $130 G1rd•ning 6610 HI. Accoust eeil. 548-6325 Comm, ""'"' + 15~~. Bott Electrician 170.1 Superior, C. M. . PURPLE 5f:vs S I i n &' r a y PLUS unltd. oppty . r or appt 6.'IMm. 9 Uru r;, J\fm to Includes Endowm ent Cue INEXPENSIVE HOU8e Pain· Call 89'1-S.\12 Expcr!cnrt'd DEUVERY. Mature driver, ...... In Mtsa Ver de:. Evarythlna: bl one beautiful ANTHONY'S phone/642-7816 F'r!., or write NIELCO, P.O. ting wilh Pxpensive: look. M.rlnt DieMI night work 3 AM. The Pina --place mea.m lesa cmt.. Garden Service MAN to work full time: in u. Box: 3010 Anaheim, Calif. .Uk .,, Don 673-6881 • BOit Assemblers Motor Man Man 842-9498 aft 10 p """ AOORABLE orange kltttn. No trafftc prohltm1. 646-1948 • C1rpinters HAUL RENTALS. Mu~t ~ l1lander Y•chts 940 Paularino, CM. 14801 Beach, Westminster ne:et ht apPtarance, ha ve GARDENER And handy man NUTVILLE, U.S.A. b bC1W LANDSCAPING Plumllin1 6190 • Painter• 1682 P111centia Ave:. for private restdenee. 1\111 5.11,1725 893-2'21 L.AWNS REMODELED neftl handwritin1. Will train acceptlns a.ppl.lcatlona for LOii 6401 Apply In ~r90n rlgtit man. .... , 1930 Oitrta Mna time. MU51: have. ref. 549-03$ Exp horticulturist. * 2' HOUR SERVICE * Jenaen M•rine Corp. franchlae1 ln Orallge Coon-Auto Transport 644S ~aa. monthly Gardnlng Plumbq -" remodel Newport. Blvd. CM. ty. l«'ations are wal ling in LOST Harbor View honMe Guaranteed • 646...1~7 235 Fischer, Cnsla Mesa DISHWASHER, 3 days • 1 DESMOND'S A.t1"cl11, Women 7300 Anahtim, L«gune Bch., Saft.. UH. Female German Shirt WNTD, Jide Goldenwett & G~'L Cletln·Up, trf!'f: soerv. night • week. Slarting ta Ana, Orange, Htmtington IWr Pointtr. Rew a rd ! Edln~r HB Main • mtofil, ~a~. aprlnkler1, Marv'1 Plumbing S~rvice Car Wash Help 18.!ary $1.75. See Terry at Bch, It other areas. $14,950 549--0156 Broadwa.y S.A. I AM ret 5. lllWTll, haul'a. R ta 1 . Repair -Remodel 4\ll E. 17th., C.M. or call LI Has ope nin&: tor full ti me: Boolock~ ....••.• to sex> Cash req. Fully .tecured in· .., ...... .. ..... , •646-9807• Full time ar wkends. maintenance: man. Apply; Secretaries ..•••••.•• to S!iCXI veat. should return 1st yr, REWARD. Yorkshire terrier, Min fl&:f! 18, apply in person 8-9314 #3 F11hion lsl•nd Typist gen afc . . . . • • to $500 10 mo malf', loM 9unda.y vtc Cul le Edge Lawn Plumbing 'U hr. aerv . Work "'YOUNG MEN--Call tor appL 64Z-271J or Brooka • Oaviota .. Lqum. L'Slll Notl<OI 6450 Maintenan ce. LleenRd i\lllr. Lie., insur.; remodel , U DO CAR WASH Newport Ctnter OMV ................ to $475 wrl~ to 1611 Wmtcliff Dr., repair, rooter 1erv. 531·7566 481 E. 171h Costa P.1e:sa wtllinJ to work A learn a Steno .................. $415 Suitt 210. Netrport DH.ch. ...,.,,.....,,. I WllJ.. not be f'ftpont:iblt for 548--4808, MS-8S70 aft ' PM trMll!. FUll time: mipl . BUSBOYS Med/front I bade ..•. to S450 Jape.nest Gan:biJ\I SERVICE Station AttC'nd ant 18 ye:an or okler, c.i . .,... SIAMESE cat. fe m a l•, any debt• other than my Remodel., lite~lr. 6940 full time:, daya, and a part 518-5625 Genen.l Office . . . . . . to S400 s.-..m • ...,,,_, own. Oif:kri A. Berge Prolessional Maintenlll!Ce Days, pa n Umc. _ ............. $."00 TV STORE time 5:PM to 10 PM, Must Multillth Operator Call behr I & 3 PM Good-... -...... Reward. 531""'3993 SERVICE Dl~ECTORV LAndacaplng """553 REMODEL & REPAIR bave exp, J03 E. l~ St. Experitneed. 3 Shift• 536-8866 for appointment Tme .... bklqJr ........ $347 two peopl11. nm 1tock and LADIES prelCription glaMea MOWING, Edit\ni. vacalawn, CaJi>entry • Paint • Pl.ute:r C.M. ' Mtrtec Reproductlon1 lluntington Tmt F&ctory .•••••..•• $339 Alj>hllt, Olio 6520 & Concrl'te. Dick 642-1'197 Trne rt11erV•tioo1 • , • • $300 equipment. AlMi h•• lloorins A ..... v;c '"" A Gt'n'I cleanup. llaullns. SCR.VTCEMAN $110. sl , 111.1. 546-9240 S(oftcliff CctunUy Club plu. Pbona 5'8-M!M Mcnwia. CM &U-2966 DRIVEWAYS It Pllrlting }otg Odd JobA. • ,...,., Af1f'r tn.lnlng period , pro-El•ctronic S•leam•n Tme ~ & file ........ $299 ~Int 6960 PART 1ime cre:w manqer, CORONA dtl Mar, E. CoBst REWARD: rtpa\ml • te:al ((Ill,~. f rtt LO\V COST Main tenance: ~in& to '120 .; ~hltlt be With knowl~J{t of ~ru. and I ta.sy work , 3 or ' bouni ALLSET AGENCY lfWJ', S.0"'1 Salm . U.t Nond Otlhuahtll Smset Mt. Rtu. !00-1413 P.10W -EDGE· SPRAY Al .. rationt-6-4'2-5845 m1rrk-d. Apply Senicesoft, or 1V re:pelr. e:venl1111:1 wwkinR wuh boys. "'1 W. 1tth, C.J\t. .. ,__ eQbllltwd I )TS, ~ bell art&. 592-1~ QUALITY ....... 1e a I FERTILIZE. • 962-134<J Nt1t, accurate:, 20 yn. o:p, ~ n.t SI., Newport Beach. H. W. Wrl9ht Co. M"'t b1V1 Com-e "'r . IHch ArN . Opon lnga 613-7159 LOST female ~ Yic d roalin& drlvewaya & JM.rlring e JAPAN ESE GARDENING RE"TIRED Man wishins to 1170 Newport Blvd, 01 mi5Sioru:. For infonm.tlon YACErl' Sa1n ()). New aa.11-W~ &1boa Blvd. 6' 18th kits. Wm.&1r. IH.Jl29 Service CecilqJ, LAndsc•p. TILE, Cer1mlc 6974 auppleme:n t income for clean tt call ~ t.od uk for E:MPLOYER PAYS FEE SL, NB Reward. 673--4i534 Ina 531.7034 aft 7 p.m. up worlc at retail &leery. FAST~ Dall\J.n deal t Bob S<ct'y.-Sttoo ........... 1433 power 6: bkrJ. Exel, water * Vtmr. the Tlla Man "llt n~ 2 pe r m an •n Ghi l'rldo>, .,... •• $315/l<OO !oc. All/port. -P-1?.5 LONGHAIR Grey female cat· hbyoilll"ll 6SSO RELIABLE: Rtu. Oriental CUii. worll. lnttaU .. rflpa.\tl. Ai!P¥ bl perwon at Frm::htt a.alesmen, new • u.ted. Top 2 SERV sta Attendanta/Salt • ow Otrt .... " ...... $'50 Dllly Pilot Oollu. Vic Tho Blutt... BABYSITMNG. My 11om .. .,.,.., Cleanup, odd Jobi. No job too amall. Plaster Pastry. U70 W. Baktr, C.M. pay plan. Call f!H.977'J a.all mtn. Full I pan time. Ex • APPUCANT PAYS FEE QUICK Shop -8Mp ""'1d! ~14.116 Meu de.I P.far, Any qe Vincent. Ml...o326 patch. """"" 1bower DISH MAOIINE opera.tor, for c.o ...,_ per. R&y CRrvey C'bf:vron . R<C<Pt./'l'yplat .... Po/l<OO 0.0.0! l640T Mopclil St t.CBJ': Sat. l'IOOll; white Toy welcoma. 546-3003 Mow{ni.F.dre-Vacuum ttpalr. 84?-1957/M&-mOO O>ata MM& Memorial Hoa-SERV. Sta Attm w/TDK"h 9CM S. <:out Hwy., Larun1. Acc't. Cerka (3) •• S.f00/$450 We 1 t m l n1 tt r M PM Poodle, malt, wk:. lrrint BABYSrTl'ING wanted in lJiht H111llna I: Clean.tip DIAL dtttct 6U'61I, ""1r• pittJ. :m Victoria, C.M. ~xp. Start SSOO mo. APP' y TECHNICAL ........ .. d Tnlntt ncot>tllYI>< $300/Po 1\J...s.t. T«T. Ol.U. --&1:1-tttl my homt'. Daya • 646-0481 E\ret • your •d, thm sit bade Md I • 542.2134 • 10-3 1691 PlaC'entia CM Su ptrt.s Ullc~, e:xpcrif:rl<:f:d. J. R. ,,,f:'l"Ce. Auoc. Apney \Vhlte deJll:!.&Ots? Dime+llnl l'l1dto ._ ... Dimo+llno -Dial 64).6611 lar RESULTS limn to the phon<I rinfl CllAllGE your """ od MW. btW -l.8lli Ntll'port, C.M. .... ,., . I . t . ,. 'JJlllllQ~C$111$$111(1'114"111110•1$11¥ .. U .. 1¥.,.C.,.UlllllQl"'IS ... ICCIC'°'IU•C$1110111<~0 .. 4$114$114•G• .. 1 llCllllOIJllJ1$$1¥CSIU•C'°'•'U•C011••.,.s""c.,.sl"'lc'"'o"'"•""P"''""'•'•s .. -==•e--...,.,...-•• -•-~·~·--·-------... --• -..... --· -· JOll • IM'LOYMI NT JOll • ~LOYMINT .IOIS & IMl'LO'l'MENT JOIS & IMPLOYMliNl JOIS & IMPLOYMENT MlltCHANOISI POii MlltCHANDI SI ME RCHANDISE fOR SALi ANO TRADC newport . personn~ agency l'te PU! A<m'G a..l<S (2) •• " lo "'° Ml& "'II· NCR ml. O>o---SECRliT~ ••••••.... $SOO lo-pooltlos w I t b l'Ol.ml bl.ilkMn. Must bavt xlnt aldlll, S!Xlllm"Al\Y ...... to $450 SeCyto........,,._ trat«. X\nt oppr. F/C BKKP!l ........ to $600 Train to be uai&tant to con· -· -!II mlleo """' Newportlleacb. " 133 Dover Or., N.8. 64~~·10 549·2743 MISS EXEC AGBICY Secretary ••• " •••. " • . • $510 Booltkietper ........ " " $50) Bkllpr/lecz,y ... , • •• ••• • • $5(KI Dic'pbooe lllC)I •••••••• $475 Medical 8lc:)i • • • • • • • • • • $450 mM: eJliee cype .......... $400 Girt 1't1de¥ •.•••••• , , • , $315 Perlonne1 dk • • • • • • • • • • $312 ReceptbUst • • • • • • • • • • • • $lZ5 PIT legal .......... $2.50 tu- flQ:W. O:lut Hwy. N"""'1. llMcb 646-.1939 Help Wanted w-7400 ---- Waitre11e1 -AUD Caahler Hoatesa NMt appearing. 7400 W1nted . , • Women! Wt Won't Promise You the World EYm (ho wt have otftc'l!S an S O:indni!n.b: lut ..• All ro1d1 do Ind to Western Girt ·Put ~ ofta tic.Ula to """'· E:xdtln(, "'""'"'°"" local ........,,, .... will put $$$ tn )'OUI' pockets? I J~:~f«] COME IN TODAY ·~·~·-!!!· -Anaheim, 118' W, Llncoltl -Santa 4na, Ph. 540-0325 -())eta Mna, 2700 Harbor "" ..,ua1 __ .. .... ..,.... EXPERm<CED PART TIME PROOF COMMERCIAL TELLER Help Wan!M Women 7400 • SEWING lllSlRUOOR • SAWGIRL Are you th ... wom•n'1 lf )'OU are, tbe S1n&tr O>mpany needs )'OU, YO\I · 1M.Y ncrN be employed but want to improve your present poaitim. Sal8.Q' plua (){)Jrtrnission. paid vacations p l u a many other benefits. Apply in peMIOn. M r. John Fe rraro THE SINGER CO. 1777 ldlnll"r 11 Huntington Center Huntington Baach HOSTESS Over 21 Apply In Person 9 • 5 p.m. REUBEN E. LEE 151 I. Cuot Hlghw•y Newport leech UNITED CALlfORN IA ,,...,...,.. .... ___ ,1 IANIC '" 4525 MacArthur llvd. Newport leach 540-4424 An equal opportUnity employer MAIDS NEEDED Experienced ot will train for steady work. EXTRA GOOD WAGES Good woridni conditions. Apply in pen;on to hou11e- kttper Mrs. Jayce Miner, bet9am&3pm. Lagwi.a Counlr)' Oub Village Help Wan!M Woman 7400 Help Wln!M Women SALi AN D TltADI SALE ANO TltAOI 7400 furnl!\1'9 toOO Purnll\I,. toOO Ml.,.\la-uo ~~~~I ················· ';.~.i:"~ EXCEPTIOllAL Spanish & Medltemuiean Nll'Wport Ste.ch Bought Mln ufadurer'1 Showroom l 1m p l .. *AUCTION* Nt«i• OPPORTUNITY! At Terrific Savlnp! PART TIMI 8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's chair; 'FRIDAY-AUGUST 23rd 7:30 P.M. SALESLADIES for uperlen<ff beaut fabrlC5. 3 Pc hexagon dark oak din. H.ousewivta 8lld Motherl tiet. w /black or avocado framed cha..lra; 5 Cl.ft YoU spart a I•• hours e Waltreista Pc 'BR set 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, '"" <la> and add 10 ""' 2 commodu, decorative headboard In Span-New Mediterranean Furniture familY incoMe •t th@ aame • Cocktall W1ltr11au isb oak or avocado deslan. By Drew, Sbanley, Mlrli111ville, Buaet-tn limo? Schcduol• ""'"nl-ll•Dll Sold Individually beautiful bedroom and dlnlng room & UvlnJ .nt tor Yoll, momil\is, alt· Wu lkn'• u a.ooos;:!n& Sbot Around-be.lore you by see US! room set.a. Lovely occulonaJ. cba1rs, rockers. mioons, evcn1n&•oreombi-11pplicariON tor these P>-VA L E $195 -PULL PRICE $429.95 recllnera, Jove seats, chlna cabinets, C""ktail l'lltion1 ol all, Work in a sltiona. or terms e1 low as $3.00 WMk ""' tun •tore under the tinelt No Down-Use Our Store Charge Plan tables, commodes, 1wa1 lampa, pictures, cof· ol condition• and tGP super-App ly in ,.,son No Fancy Front-BUT Quality Valuea In.aide fee tablea, low boya, cbestll, bunk beds, d._esb, vision. Al'PJtOVED FURN. 2159 HARBOR CM RC.A s tereo, TV's, m1ttresses1 twtn comer Apply"''""'" Wu Ben's 12 Years same location-same owners untl!, appllancse & MUCH MORElllll PeMey's Faahloo la.land ''!II •.m. to ''!II p.m. Dell y 9-9, 10.S Sunday e 54t-9'60 WINDY'S AUCTION Monday thru l'rldo,y 333 lay1lde Drive •••••••••••••••••• All student positions tilled Newpor t Be1ch _JOts5 & &l't\PLOfMI N l ,urnl .. ·-•l'UVlo 2075'/i NIWPOIT IOULIVAlD Eq\..:1 opportunity emplo~r 1v.. 9VVlol' -_________ 1---------Jobe Men, Wom. 7SOO l•hlncl T•ny'• 1149. M•t'h. TRllR Si.vines a: Loan eq>erienc. preferred. RECEPTIONIST Typing required Apply in pert0n No phone calls pl•• .. MARINERS SAVINGS & LOAN 1S15 w .. tcllff Drive Newport Be1ch Single Young Woman • • • • • • •JI 8 • COSTA MISA -646-IW ll.N .• !;!1,..!,11 -7 WANT Sharp IUll tint•--$ave $dve ~y· OPIN DAILY' .. 4 AIDES keeper to do l>l)TOU, pur-Why Rent Furnlshff? cha.1e ordert, 00ttlni. bill· You~ buy a complet• apt. -+ ---------------Experience prafen'td izl&:. Mtl!lt have formal train-lull .,,-•·-1 7-3 and ll·l •UITI turll" tor only AntiqUM 1110 S rtlng Good Ing and aood retereneea. $8.8& per mo. No money _po 1 Pt.rk Udo Ability to 1et up budsetll, in· down. Paymantl iAcluda alll--*-'-ES'l'--A-T_E_SA_LE __ *_ Conva1MCCI Holpltal ventory conb'al l)'llentl etc, taxH ii: m•-..... 11. 14~ Su-h-'plut Sood ""'" AntiqU* china, bric.a.brae, .,_..,. l;l • tff\lme to 15'S 7·Pieoe llvtna rm . ..,,, Newport Bet.ch f42.4.i-10 Ne-Bl"d CM ...._11 .Uverpla.lt, etc. Sal., A.ug . .. ,....., • .. · • ..,.... S.piece livint: rm. 1tt. ~o ~· '"' a-tn-t ~th. 10-6 PM, Sun . Aug. -----...,,..,.----1 U"W ...... .u .,.... llll'l!'l'l • lOilieee bednn. 1et. TELLER 25th, l~ PM. ONL~. 16386 Sa•lng• •loan''"""''"" de-( II f T , FURNITURE Fell,,.. D•'. Oran,.. oinbt• but no• """""'" O ec or ralnee Ll(j)UIDATORS . cau Mrs. Motes for app't. lBm' N~port Blvd., C.M. Sewin9 M1ch1ne1 1120 Mutual Savinp It Loan Salary Plus C.mmisaion Optn Evea. 1967 SINGER, Wal ('(m!!Ole Aasoc., 2867 E. O>ast Hwy .. Loc1I Collectlon Agency 9 I I • • I I • • • int·I. Tranaler of lf'rvlca CdM. s-~o C1ll Mr. Beale r ~·-1 •;n>11~ 1:wn tureretu.medtromdis· man f orce11 repo. f~qual opportunity employer 642• 7352 .Play 1Ndiot1, model hornea, To u e h-o -m a I I c , 11uto, decorators e&ncellatlon. •la-ur. bu~oo hole., blind Spanlah l Mediterranean etc l\ema, lancy 11titcht1. No •I· SURFBOARD 9'&" Jacobi, S mahog atringen, mabos tt.11 block, lhn.1-&peed Skq. Xlnt cond. Q>.1954 M i1c•llaneou1 SWIMMING POOL 11 Ft Pool, l!'llte.r. Sw1ace Skimmer, Milintenmoe lCit FREE Ground Pad. $149.11 SECARD POOL ·' l'!3 S. Main, Orup 532-199'J PETE~ CHRISTIAN of the T tlephone Glrls $100 WEEK Exper;enetd or !'IOI · lull Newporter Inn RD FURNITURE """"""~ • .......,. 13us 1144 Newport Blvd., CM cash or auumr $4.10 mo. l'p!',~,"",o"ur","cll'!!!l!!~tn""'o•ur!!!Jl-!\15"',I •,._ n'~I Iii 1 Guar good . 526-(.616 H bo .-.J ..,, l\l' r Blvd 0-I 11\eatre Wed .. Sat. I Sun, 'tit 6 Muslc•I Inst. 1125 3700 McFadden, S.A. SWAP MEET H1a an opening kr or part lime. Apply 9 to BIAUTICIAN 4 . .150'.I Ad&m s, '-lite 303, .... h 1 Costa Mt••· ,..,\ Ollowing --=-==~==--Call 644.0340 Office Equipment 1011 120 Bua A('('(lrdian, J treblf: Noexprr.~. (No 1tudent5 Please} Apply in ~l'IOn lob's Big Boy 154 E. 17th SI., C.M. STORE MANAGER 311!'.Wi S. Cout Hy. •t Aliso International Firm now &e· i,,..,""'..,'.,".,· .,Sou..,•h.,La!!!!"""'!!!!!!!!• I cepting application• for ilm· OFFICE WORK GALLEY Cook. Part Time swHc:he1. Xlnt eon d. Ideal FOR Sal< A.8. O I e k tobl tor ~..,.,. $.IO. SJ6-4428 S""' A<U< 17 00 Sport Flsbln1 bolt. model 320 olf1et duplte1tor. 9-S .,,,.., S31·111:l ah 1' Olris' openin&: llOOll in South I ' bitioua )'OWi.&' woman to Young lady for light ofii~ * 968-3220 * 2 old '-===='=====d yrs · Good rond $700 I~===-,,-,-~= UNDERWOOD T.vpe\lTlter &: telephone work. Ne-at •P-1 Contact Mtu ChnsienR~ ELECTRIC i\Jlt&r. coil cord S25, blondt' kidney ...,~ pearancoe, Ask fm' Mr . Ken· Agencl11, M. W . 7550 6424QIO. $45; ampllller J25, Both A·l I"""' Coast Plaza. Requires fully participate in Brand Iden- experienced women'a spec-TELLER tifica.tion project. Must be nedy, l)34 &. Kilson, S.A. FO condition. M6-435S co1 flee table and matchina S1leswomen Fine ladles clothini TOP PAY! W.ty shop mana~. Oppor· Experience preferred neat appearing, personable, tunlty to crow with upand· SANK OF AMERICA enjoy dKlln&: with the pub. 540-6678 or 54()..6677 · ARGUS R Sa.le A.B. Dick table amp tables $.25. deak $3 kit. Work Near the l•ieh model 320 offset dUplicalor. P lenoa &. Organs 1 130 Chf!l'I bar, nttd reofini!hina' ill& fashion qanization. Sal· 615 E. Balboa Blvd. lie and free to tn.vel one ary baaed on experience + Balbo!a week per month. Jo~tn, Wom. 7500 2 yn old. Good cond. 1700. ------S3, f\nph1ce wnnd SlO 320 --------Teller .................. ~ ~-= Miu Chrlatmsl"n Season Sale! :t&-r;J; P1.. Costa Mes•. Apply in ptrlO'll No phone calls pleast BACK STREET volume. Set Mr. Berohn, Equal opportunity employer $125. per wk s•l1ry Ouis' FaahiOna 9821 Chap. after brief IJ'ainlng pm-• WAITRESSES Bo!*keeper • .. •• • ·• $100 wk Janitor ............ fl.60 hr l~~ ~tr~:._~.od~ I C. Fflll lhipmenlll of Baldwin BEAlmFUL Bi-fold interl.Qr door& (4 panela) each pu\e1 17"-" x &' 81,1" quality hardwood Antique t v or y with 1old trim. Al 1 hardwood. RP•1 on a bl ! 4~J15t or &31'-0791 • 215 Falhion Ill.and Newport Bee.ch man, Garden Grove. HOSPITALITY Hostess ii gram, 1'"or appointmPnt C4l1 looking for a mature woman m.1183 9 .11.m to l pm. New Store Openin9 with 11 genuiM intPreat a.nd • HOS1£SSES Meta.I achinner .• $2.&'i + hr . c-.-"1aft, ---.:tmal t1'b. Pil f'IOll ' Ora ans on the Artiaan type. Xlnt cond $27S. 646-fUS 9-S · way. Our floor 6: dlacoo models mu•t ao. Price• AllGUS EMPLOYMENT l'art Time Hirln&: au phases of help. liwe of people kl welcome lookkuper/Cishier TOP PAY ! new families. Must ha v , Repro Typists • BUSBOYS CONSULTANT AGENCY 20l3 WMelltt, N.B. 541-7798 1624 E. 17th St .. S.A. 541-6336 ---H 1lashed! Doesn't it m.11.ke ounhold Goods 1020 senst to f.hop u1 'oefor9 you DIVOR.CE force. N1e ot. all buy? Apply in penlDn e Manaa:era • Cashlera car, t)'pewrltef', s1le11 exp.r. UDO CAR WASH • Sales & Stock Girl.a ience and boodabh•. Call To 11'8.in on IBM MT-ST 481 E. 17th Costa Mes;i LOCAT10N5: -.-==·==~~=='I typewriter. T ype 66 • DISHWASHERS Schools-Instruction 7600 houtehold turn. \!\('I. tent WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO trlr, frttUT, wuher/drye:r, 1801 Newport, C.M .. 642-8'184 I m!ac. itrmt. 962-792& Orange Co's Lerge1t QUEEN Booe l'Prlna• & mat. One-Stop Mu1lc Store tre• Good cond. $50. Sealy. Wurll\Zt'r pianos &: ora:ans. S.>6384 Fischer, Kana be p I 1 n o s, COLOR TV, Packard Bell. walnut conaol.e, remote, t xc. cond. $250. Oriir!nal pa\n. llna:s $125 (app.r. $400). Ladits qual. clothins. lilce nrw, Sl lo $5., 1zs. 7 • 8, &-10. Me1a Vtrdr.. 54&--0625 OUNCAN Phyfe 4 pedettal din rm or !iv rm table. 3 leafa , m11h S4n Encycio,..edi1 Brltannlea. 52 hookl complete w/ yr bookJ IJS,.._..,, WOMAN To wm In dam! Nowporl !!<•eh POSITION OPEN w.p.m. Apply Sh A 1 · Town & Country, Orange Full & p1rt tirM Apply In person 2:30 . 4:30 doily SCHOOL Cblldren'a vacation r1tea. Chilcoat 10 · Lesaon TypinJ" School. 548-2859. 17J Del Mar, C.M. op PP )' m person, no in packing and ins"""t.ion pb -"-r.. Ha.bra ,~ .. one c~ please. Win-tor ceramic induatry. Ap. cbeU'I Donut Shop, 2!M7 Telephone BACK STREET ply between 8 llll1, & noon Hariior Blvd., Costa MeA. in4J 8384890 Industrial Clay Products HOUSEWIFE Needtd tor 1876& F:lbl!rglau Rd. pvt time nWd 5ef'Vice. Own Huntington Beach, Cal.if. tnn.portatton $2. Hr. Ca.11 GIRL FRIDAY UTE d11)'WUl'k, ans. phone, 648-1446 Mime reading aloud . 0vl'.r Part time. Some experi· 30 M dr WOMEN PIT w /car . · UMl lve. $1 .65, 3·8 hr t">..u. ence required. 60 w.p.m. "'" ,.,. -'"•rl · I'd z-<Werette HB. S2 hr ""'&r. '" ""'" Y 111va 1 "'y electric 1"""'Writer. 10. la~ ·-E c 1 fl s Lynne Brown S .f0-193 2 , ..,.,.. -,.er ......... · oas wy p M:Z..769:1 key adder, good with fii· T, NB. 546-7331 llttl!. N ea t appe&ring. NEED af t er 1chooJ Send letttt with salaJ'y SECRETARY baysittu. Pr~er mature exp@ci.ed to H.M.F ., P.O. To assist Manager. Good woman. Vic ol NB Own Box 2115, Newport Beaeh typing l sltorthand skill• ="~"'~'·-•_15-_1_533~-------------·I ~·T~ ~°':~Fri. c:~.pply rnm.o CIU't; 3 llChool age. ...,. My heme. 0vm trana. Nr A11iatant BAR MAID - Adams &. Matnolia, HB. Teletype Oper1tor GO-GO DANCER :;"""°"===-----~-~ 1 Diversified dulleli, brok~ ApP ly in person. 2!!01 MATURE woman to babysit age experience pref!"rtt'd. H&rl>or. Sassy La.asy. for reducing program. Small Starting sal11ry S.11S-$400. !i-15-991i3 '* Income, own trans. Ca.JI Goodbody & Company CHURCH StC!lOil'apher, full 642-3830 LAGUNA BE.AQ-1 time. Excellent typist. Some MGrHER'S beJptr, t.kg, uv. Call for &pp0intml!r1t lhorth11.nd deairable. Write in. Mu.t be honeet, reliable, MRS. KIRNER 494-800-1 P. 0 . &x J;M6, Newport Room, boud a: !lllJary. Bea.ch. 5"-3881 WAJTRESSES WAITRE;S, Experi~c.d. EXl'ER. cmmetfe •a I e 1 ; mature. l :J0-.8 p:m. 6 day•. be.di area, P\tll ttme, no Experienced onJiy! Sunday off. Apply in person Sun. $3 • '3.50 Hr. to atart. Apply in Pllt'llOn HAMBURGER HENRY R8PlY Box M-179 Daily Pilot SUR.ft & SIRLOIN 1135 Placentia. Costa Mesa CHILD care: 3 achool age. 5930 Pac. Cat. Hwy. Cas hl•r Experl•nced My home. Own trana. Nr Newport Bel ch Wallich Music City • Ticket Ada.ma a: M~ia HB. -~=~=~---1 dept. P/time with ~me full 002""'3 GIRL FRIDAY lim<. So. CoHI Pl"'· C.M. CHILD cat'e; 3 achool age. S-6 Year1 •ell roundtd ottice MATURE, yoong bllbysltter My horn.. Own trans. Nr experlmce. 60 wpm electric to live in in exchange for Adami ti Ml4!QOlia H.B. typewriter. Accun1.cy e•scn· room &: boal'd and small 982-am tial. Capable of 1uurning te· Mlary. Unwed m o I he r aponsibill1:3'. Salary commen-welcome. 536-7817 WIG STYUST, ~rienced aunte with abUJcy. S47-0638 CJiild Care • Corona del Top ~OO or fi44.l2l.f Mar teachtt needs littf'r WAITRESSES--I AM ID noon wee kd1ya dur+ BABYSITrER full time; my Experienced on.Jy Med ing achool y(?U. 6TJ.O'l3.'> home, M-Verde. appl,)'. No ph one calls MATURE Woman fnr af. * 54l)..(ll6f * PINlt!. HOUSEKEEPER wanted for DENNY'S , temoon c1.re tor 7 yr. old; Killybroolc Sehl. a r t a widow, live in, drive, own 1600 S. Coll.at Hwy. 5'16-5426 BR &: BA.. ~ req, 499-JM6 t.runa Beach ===~=-,.-,--,-1 VERY 11ttn.ctive girl to Dent1I Office Mln1ger EXPERIENCED Automotive model lingerie, :J or• hrs. 11 Sln<. Exp. 25-olS. ~ cuhier and relier week, not In public; slnglr. • 5f6..DXI * PBX. Contact M.". Bel I or married. Reply Box M· WAITRESS 21 aJ>d OTer. Ex· ~1. Willon Ford Salem, in. Dally Pilot J»@reinced. aPPb' s w I a 1 18255 Beach Blvd., Hun. (]Wet C1' N. N""'°rt. NJJ. -.... eh. HEALTHY· HOURkeep!'l', live 8 AB Y S IT T :E R wanted. in, no drUiktr. For further mature womim with own triJo. Call 5'0-13.ll tram for 2 bot•. •ltt s & 2. 5 Yr old tn acbooi "' day . .f SITI'ER wanted; My bcmt O.t wttk. El Toro area. or )'OUJ'W. Vlt Beker 81:, CM. &37-7'J•7 MOTiiER'S Hf'lprr, no coc*'g. Llve·in; 2 &Chi cllildren, 581/ + prl rm I ba. 842-7154 DR UG Store Oerk, full time, neat, exper. Mid·AI~ prel. Apply In person 31582 s. Cll Hwy, So. Laguna -lft • ""'· -~s=1c=11~E=T'"A~R~Y~-* (O:KTAJL WAn'RESS * We ln.uance baeko'ound WAITRESS Needed. fu.ll time APP11 ln penon, Mtlll Lariel, Sfti't!Ted. ExlftlRve train-•ummer, part timr wlnltt. 1109 ~. C.M. ing to rlabt l}rl. Newport MA.t"ried. H.B. area. 5J&.-(712 Jtn.tD' iVN ll·7 Is. 3.11 Bffd\ 8l'ft. 6G-d!il ar Sf3...1757 ..,.. H.B. ~ Good UVE-IN Houlekeeper 11nd LTEMPORA===.,-R"'Y,,-'°1)'1"11""'' '".-v=.60 alar)i. MT..-r:t betMm 1-S child care. Prhat41 room per hour. Reply ~.o. Rnx HOUiiii'iiPi2tt liw In. end 1-th. D» mo. ~ daya ll5, Collll Mea, giv .. phonfl Exj'd. w/c:hildren ( J) wk. PUnt. pa11&n wHb rd. number. D ./o wk. end olf. '4S4i101 No 1mokiq. ~ 1 'w~.-N-T~'E=o-~v~.-,mn~.,..,,~ llClllTARY WAITRESS ~ ,_,...,,,, bcll ' ---law otrioe; SoOd t/h ., -.. __ .~ .. I 8l"M. M:nd IC!. vq>. etc.. to -.-' .,.,., -· ........,. n M-11'8 ""Pila •.c:nlkilllnq.9t&4tl eraoaLee'1Rfttatn.nt, Da..., t 8Afiiffrilitcrttachtr'1fi '12Jl. Bl ....... SI ., EV nr. *WAITRESS and llOSTESS mo. o13 loll., Pm. rey Npt. ~~~=-..,.,.,.,.---Mr. SttU, Fetrrlew 6: Hti. ~ 54MJ(IM SAL.ESGUU. w I bktcps O • Wilton C.M. 6C2-0732 PU.Ct )'Gm' want ad •bttf: ~. Part. poMibJ.Y NU time. LADY Jot boolewoc1c Tut--Fr1 tJii1 .. Jooldne: -DAILY EIU'!fAN!'.NT, UNDF'Jt 30. 12:al •':JO Own rant. JWf. PU.Or d eW""" IU-il'1I Viliam, LlzuM, 497...t:JM IZlttr. m.m5 ( Marshall Communlc1tlons 2230 $. Anne St. S1nt1 Ana, Ca lif. 540·2820 An cqllill opporh111ity employer • Commercicll Teller Excellent opportunity! APPLY IN PERSON f st National Bank of Orange County 1650 Adama Costa Mes• General Sales F'uU time or 11 to ~ basis. Qualified to worlc In high grade faidtion atorr. Ex- periene<-preferred but not necessary. Ofltra immedl· Rte liberal discount .nd pleaunt environment. Ap- J>ly: BUFFUM'S Fashion Island Newport Beech HOUSEKEEPER. Liv! ln . Young: min in family bu lmpared «ight Principal dudes, oooking for him and m~nlatning hl11 111r~. Must be capable 01 bfoinc 11ecood mother. Ideal for woman wishing perm. home, Very desirable quartera. Salary open. Mu1t have excell. tt:ferf'nc.a, no drinkina: or 5mokin.g. P.O. Box 381 Corona del Mar. Coco's Famous Hamburgers 17th & Irvine Newport leach MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRADI Furniture 1000 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Pill.Yer pianos, rl"blt. l\l&r., Oerage Sale 1022 Grandi. ~----''---"'°--·--_::;:.::.:: WALLJCHS.MANNING'S MEN, women, kid '1 clothe1 MUSIC CITY 5c • 15. EJtttric broom SlS. :WOO So. Bri1tol Dnk $7, Glft1 St . Tennis Colla Meu. * 54G-218.'i racketa $1. OU paintinp S5 . S25. Houaehold ilema ~ · S.i. NOW HERE -the new CU~M Vt!lvet d rapt: a , Toyg 5c • Sl. Bookt Uk'. Polt Supersoundln1 T·200 nevPr been uaed made to tit la mp $2.SO. llU Azil!morr Hammond Spinet organ • 9' opchlrc c/ to fir, Candor -Gripe -Pw·ge -Terr. CdM Thurs. ooly -the fin eat yet! S.-11gpoay &1:n. $73. Avocado Bandit -BRINGING PATIO SALE, c I 0 t h In It , SCJLMIDT·PHILLIPS CO. iri·n heavy mesh drapu tlt.!1 Overheard in travel. bu· fumitw'•, toys, ~utilul 1907 N. Main O ))th 11' opening, $85. 549-1713 rH.u: "I wmt on & 00..t trip, Hant fixture.., le mi1e. Santa Ana ONE Set ar Box srr;.n,a. ---------IThe1euwererouahandlood 1tem1. 8124-7.i, 16&01 $10.00. Kitchen door, & ft., waa ltlr rurthelt from my Newland St., H.B. ROCK 'n Roll combo organ 71~ Inches Ion&; by 29 lnchfs e Fry Cook • Busboy • Dishwasher Full time baail. Qualified to work in high grade rest· a.urant. Offers pleasant en· virorunent, 1ood company bt:nefita. Apply: IUFPUM'S Fashion Island Newport ... c:h mind, but rny friend kept by Doric. Fender deluxe wide. $5.00. Table model TV BRINGING It up.'' AUG. n t hru 24ih • amp., w/revttb & foot ran-doesn't worlcJ sood for "'"'Y Amoro··on ""•lorn T-d~ ·di~ -clothea trolled vibraro. Both ~ mo11 "'"'111, :r,,.oo. ~ " .. · car ra io • ... , .. 001 desk, J So d r ()() h ,,... rnsde dininr rm 11el, drop misc 19452 H rd! La o d. I new or SU , T is ~68c-"<so"L"r"o,.-,1"•'"t•-,•t'"cr-.,.,..-eon-- end llarveat tablt extends to · a ng ne week only -1795. .t0lf!. Diamond 1tylus, 4 11•" x 42" & clost11 to 26" x Jl.B. oU Yorktown. 962-7105 Gould Mu1lc: Company 1peed. 179, Wlll accept ri 4.:l", g Clllle teat ladder back MOVING-Everything Mu! t ~!i N. Main. S.A. 5'17·~1 weekly. F°t'ee homa trliJ. c:hrs. 2 pc c111tom made Go! 6801 Se .. hOff Dr. NB. e YAMAHA e s:ID-1212 hutch, $800. Chest freezer Thur1, Fri 1 Sat. G°'o~t..0,.:--=co=IN~S~-,..B~.~U-. M~ ... ~,-.. -I t G•••GE Sal .n Pianoa and n-ans _..Map e ormica table for "".... e -... week. '"''5 a:old piecee. 50 peto (183.50), comer twin bed 1rouplng Wonderful bar;:aiNt. 1241 All s!yle1t available now At :.!() peso ($28.50) and 10 puo $25. 2·9' round burnt orange Beker, Apt B. C.M. COAST MUSIC !115.25 ) oc all tbree !« $104. Nill S2S "· 4&" round creen 1839 N.wport Blvd., C,M. Call 548-6449 gl"' ""'wroooltt iroa tablt Appllan-1100 64&-0271 --c•""""""V"'A""C"'U"'U"M"'S~ .. ,_--1 Y-0,..U'"N'"G_m_cn_l_w_o_m_c_n,..2,..l·~JS".1 & 4 chra SlOO. 644-llfia SPEED Queen wuher. SJ•?. PI AN 0, SDI. •t u d I o $10 up. Repaira & puts. Potition• open for winter KNITTED FABRICS Gibson room air oond. $240. Wurlitzer, xlnt c 0 n d . , Rea90nable. Coast V•euum emplcyment. Full " part Bodi brand new. Woo on TV Walnut case. bmch. 548-3206 333 E .17th, CM, 642-1560 time . Appl y The Dorymen ..... FOR SALE prop-am. Call aft 6, 673-3876 Fu RNITURE, appllancea, F ish & Chi ps. 2100 Qi:e&.n· Television 1205 · 11 •-.... t front NB btwn 2·5 pm. Ren1nant.a, aamplea Ii: MUI WASHERS $29.95: dryera nusce · uv\lle:~ ten\!. ..c.;-~==~~-~1 eod.1 Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 $35; Freezers S75; Refrlg., FINAL WEEK OF Can be teen bet. 10 AM le 8 * ACCOR.DIAN * p.m. 929 Biker, Co4ta Mesa eoppertont le Avoc.; Guar, Mid1um mer Cle•rance PM, 501 Fe:mltaf, C.M. 1°!' imall organ/ player for P'AMILY Movlnr~c:rlfice. 2 ~0-1095 All Color 'IV'1 Mual Go? •57 MERC Sta wag $150. 1D trio. Do itandards, pop, nautical l•-. 2 hat~ BE •~• th mellll llht!lvinJa 8'x3'x24" 118 .-... hm & bl Mal 1 .. .,.. = Au 11t"uL G.E. range. RCA Victor, 1.enl , P11ck· '"'' uei . e or e· co•'d. end table&, 1 hat. Like nf!W! 2 ovens, broiler 6: ml BeU & Admiral. Some ea. 2 add macb. ! spd male. For Immediate work. ch cov'd. cott. table. Llkt roti.erle. SU.31115 nrw • IOme repo«sesaed. Derailer bike $30. 64.2-U69 tTI.•l 689-201l new. 846-0076 Pr! I 1 I ELECTRIC -"-y " ton. wITT"'-::70=7',.--"7'"1HC1I'POINT 12 cut ft. Wh ite ces •ar a . . . ~ •ru<"" 711 • Waitre1s over 2 1 • CASH . cash h1r tum., tll!PI.. refrlieratol'. Top ~ier. $149 12~ KW A.C-3 p b a ae e COOK • 1'\1'1, antiques, a:fas1wue, $50. 545-a646 TERMS AVAil.ABLE l(ftleralor. Ski bo.t with Apply in person · lools, ml•c. HoutetUl or one HOTPOINT lee bltin k HENDER.SON'S motor. Shop tiooll. 642~0 428 E. 11th St., C.M. ilem . 646-1579 I.Op&. hiih C:en combo. ~e 1877 Harbor (downtown) CM UPHOLSTERlNG • $79.50. 2 Amigo• Rntaurant MODERN blrch drOJJ le.11.1 new cond. $95. g.u...1861. * 548-01$ i: f'IC. (European crattamenl MAINTENANCE MAN for 36 dining: table with 2 hos1 &t 4 F~e etil. drl, picq, 215 1silt motor hotel in L.arunR sid! dWra. J leaf. S75. HOTPOINT a 0 t 0 m •t ic HI-Fl & St ereo 1210 Main. llB "Berni" 536-6.fllli •-h If ._.. 'f 67' ~22 WASher $50. FJeotrk: dryer °"'ac • m1uT1r.u, w 1 e . ......, STEREO i-• • ""mma-•-'e * Id do id work Sal $50. &41-8115 """ tolld ata1e rw .... .-i cou mfl . ary 2 DANISH mod end tAbl ... 1 e '· ~ I Ith AM/FM Anchot' l.<>d .. Vua Order ot l !lpt turn l•hed •94-4563 KENMORE elect dryer Gd MIOM! muue ,,. ='°==-_,---,· ""'°--,,..,..,.1 am lamp In gold 6: blk. 1 lrg: cood. S'IS. l Jrt ~. ~90'.l7 radio, 4 1Pcf ch&.nger. Take Amerlr". Aui. 23-24, 145 E . EXPER. drug deril; .fO hr. st!U life, framed picture. aner 6 PM o•er amall payment. or 19th St. C.M. week : DO ev81 or Sun. Make offtT'! 549-1713 $93.20 cuh. Credit Dept. I 'K"1"RB=v.--,"'aeu=u"m-c'°le'"an_e_r_,& ALSO, exper. dru1 delivery PORTABLE typewrlttt $25 SERVEL gu refrigerator 14' 5.15.123) attachmenti. Take 0 v • r l ttot'k deak. COLLEGE · double dr. New 1.1nl t.'""'========= PHARMACY 54IM580 C b e rr y Hut c h S s_o 1· amall pa7ments or SS?.a:> ~~----~--I Upholstered orqe Chatr ~O or 545--3625 Ca mer11 & Equip. 1300 cash. ~It dept. KE 5-Tl89 MEN 6: women. lJ le: over, $20. 675-1911' rves. Nor ge El•c:t ric: D ryer M 1 ·~ 3.lmm GAS ..... !II" ye 110 w tu1I IE parl-tlme; cook, ice s;;o. * 1131.2856 am ya""°"or SLR ACCOUNTS rec e iv ab 1 e cntam lf!l"Vke, a 11 · 1, DAY btd love seat .i:ce, x~nt m. Call a.fttT 5 d~uxe. Sx'T Oriental nq, bkkpr, ell.'J)eritneed , able to mint.IP!'. Call ~l Atter c:Md., dk crtf'O, rayon aaon, t l lO • su.M51 •. drape9. ca.le curt• t ft • . 1 PM $145. 644-1569 Antiques 646-8710 operate Burroua:bs 1~ datl. -===='"'====~I proceulng madilne I REIJ'BLE c 0 up le '° BUfTET or use u dreMtt • W~ Now h.tve in a tock an Speftlnt Good. l500 BVY YOUR P'IREWOOD Pttform AIR arml)'lia. >Ont manqe 15 umt apt. hou.le. •oraie cabinet. 40" lcar . outnl.ndin&: French ~oosmg . 10 lronl, I.J NOW I SAVE!! ..1ary and fringe benefita. No Pf!" • Exp. pre{, C..11 ~. $0. 64f...15'8 mom tel with 2 m1tchlnr wocich. bte. foldloc can, 12 S.'5 a CORD. 541)..SM'l Writ• Dax M01M Dally Pilot. 53&-3634 for appl. CASH tor film & appllancet. armoll'f!a. A V'l!l')' fine IArge new ba1la. ~ •.t. ball.t, •II RUGS sek!-$3. drHtet !§Oro..t;2, e A l.JkRble '(>Ollttln for • HAIRDRESSER. ~f. aom• We sell tood uaed tum. 1'772 matiorany roll tr,,, ~lie ~lime .$75 nm or 4 tnmk 1.1. X33 Gl!f!l'I CM. likable J)traon. CASl·nrn.. fOl\owing. Busy Newport Npt st. CM ~1015 from An okt bank. Plua our 1968S PC'OOf lltU. t 8 5 6 00-6880 cotlW!'nlent ho\•"· nnt rtUI S&Jon, Xlnl opportunity! 673-OlA1R ' Ottomo1n $Z5 Leaf = 1:n~ fine Eu~ " Pon)(IN.. API c.. c . M . =oo=us=LE=-= ... ----.... --,p1e'"1'",-Wlih""""1 L1oo THEATRE, Nt'lf]Xll'l 5342 Alk far Tom de.It S25 Step table p LARRY MORGAN Andqueii 6t6-8l82 frame. Good cond1tlcn G. ~~ h. Mr. HA•kinlon, • COOK. !Xperlenctd. L&mpa $2 M&-4151 M2I Ne~ !Uvd. St1R11ICWU> 9'1" * 546-9M2 '*' , ---------· 1Coata Mr11 Memo r I al 3 P1ECE Mdional tola, a.ta Men * S..1313 ''Ja.cb''. &itcellett cond1ticm DEXX>RA'l1NG Piper, ell AYon C1lllna H.,.;w ••:>11 301 E. • .,. belle, pd -.... $!<). QulTI'ING euS!Nllls 11n. ""'· ,...,,,,., "'""' $1 -111. 'l'l'Pow•W. toria, C.M. Pb. 642-27'l4 56-1158 Early Amer l\Unltuni, orlen-SURFBOARD. 1'4''. Joe $30. Poluold ~. 5'M051 Put ~ time IO work. For HELP wanted at dw MOVING! U}Wite pW)o, An· ta1 • ~ A-boobd rup . QI.Ilg. 2 GR.EY Wool nap. b1J. lmmfdia.te opportunl~ call Jack tn the Box • Beech tlqueo, boJ* • twin t.c11, °'PPel' brte-a«-ac etc. m6 * 137.2907 * k12, with pmdl • .Jr4atd!Uw 5«).10Cl, 54&63&l Blvd. IOUth ol Ecbn.&tt· mllc. tum. 54&-0462. E . 0-•t HWy, Corona del KAYAK $15; 50 lb. Bar Bell h&ll rumer. $40 aD. 5tM15D BABYSrn'ER. Live in ot BU.15 Beet · m9904 t5iM;-WALNUT dJnlnc tabk., ab Mar. JIM $10; tablrt! pma SOc: to BOY'S tic. 5 1peec1 tmcui'y out. Own tr&Np. Eve/eomr: Cook, 4--lJ pm $30. Pli'I' eitt chain, 3 ltavts + eustom Fa-Da1b' Pt.Jot Wut AdJ. 1.l. Call: S.Jln bike! $40. dl.)w, 5:40-M86 l0 AM -3 PM 6: i., Waitrem ft't!I, OUil '275, 1C481 Dial IC$1I Mite IJepbardal Dua· .. Unt * Nl-tJll * J • twt.V PllOT Wtdnesd.11, AU9l1sl 21, 1968 ANDI fDR T R:.:::A.:.:l=c...... TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ' TRANSPORTATION . . . .... ~-· • TAANSPORTAt16N . AND TRADE -··- ~Wanted 1610 Boals & Yachts 9000 TRANSPORTATI ~ I TRANSPORT;,t.TION TRANSPORTATION ~kl Bolts 9030 Motorcycl~ '300 lmportld Auteo 9600 1_1_m..,po_r1_..,_A_u_1 .. __ 9600 __ A Tru1 Winner! '61 Y1mah1 tATSUN lmportld Autos 9600 U1od Cano 9900 UMd Cln ~ We llave accumulated ~rtll . A N T E D .....u ---"" ... , mo" "" ·-~ . tokf. No reallOflabJe otte. re-w~ qu&llty <no Junk twwod ! ~ • Ful'l'liture, OGlor '66-16' Lone Star, Johnsoo ~I. ;stl!n!OS, •pplbt.nca., 40hp ........... , $15!1>. 6 ottlce l'lQU.ipment 'm-21' l killywood Craft, 75 CASH IN :II Minule1 hp John~. SS trlr, $1900 1212 * 893-0055 '61·~· Burchcraft, 160 ONC, .. J/O, ttll.lier f'lc: ••... $2195 f.jtEE TO YOU '6J .J9' Md>tlloog!I Cn'11 , '"".,._, ____ .;_ __ I Flying 5-ol.trlr .... n e. ~· Fixed cat, trained ttl Ill)' in home, Af· f~te & loving. Used to ~ aloM. 536-9419 ~. 8/22 '$-16' ~ntury Resorter, Needa/eng. Nice condition! 1995 18' Utility, V Bur\k.!i, 601'1.p Fiaberman. Spec, trlr Sl250. WEST COAST YAOITS Newport ~ M1uina CUSTOM BUILT ThUnder-100 twin, week-ead apedal bITTl FormW. :cy!. Thi> 23' $299 llll flbtra1111 V·bottom beau-HERB FTUEDLANDER ty hlls An1erica'• most fa· Pb. -63&-UD:l mous racing deaJ&n. SAF· 9625 Gtil'den Grove Blvd. EST SKI BOAT BUILT. lt'1 HONDA lli SCRAMBLER. toulilh Wlll<"r teal«! J.od 1006. Ju.at like New! New eQllipped with ·a Berkeley oversize tire1. Extra 1ear jet . , , powered by a 450 hp b:lr dirt. MolOr just rcbuUt. Al't'Q Marine. Ctulscis at ~-Lota ol chrome. $450 or bet!it AU of the extras Incl. 111 oUtt. 962-7689 radio, 4 speeker stereo & f. wheel custom trailer. Collt Trailer, Tr1vel 9425 ovet $12,1'.XXl. Owner ay1 bH1: oiler lakes&: it'• nearly new. 642-4311 , Ext. 240 Ony1; 644--1742 EvenitJgs and Week· ""'" 1968 14' NOR.Tl~ Little Dipper. See a Pat or Ern1e at Fairview D'ICo Service, Fair I: Fairview CM • ~ '64 DATSUN Pickup The popular and hlLl'd to find model! lt'1 red and haa 4 speed tn.nmllsaloo, • real mileap m•ker. $1095 C1n linance all or 1Mltl. Pay- mcnta as low u $22.00 ptt mo 0 .A.C. ELMORE 110T0RS TOYOTA Ph. 89f..33211 15300 Bee.ch Blvd., Wstmnitr aJpDLY sood natured black ~le kitty and ~ cute ~ male. Looking for ~ b:lme. 2 mo. old, traln· ed~ box. 549--0102 8122 1 PERSIAN, Angora male (t:,_Kereci) Dt"eds home. Also ~ 4 mo. old male gray, •~lped need1 one. ~ 8/22 33.11 W. Coast J-f'wy. Newport Betic:h * 642-7711 ASSUME &lance on 19&1 Ownes 30' Cabin Crui.1er Yacht. Twin 225 H.P. V8 engine., sleeps 6, solid Boat Slip Mooring 9036 1963 Fleetwood 14' '66 DATSUN Roadster 1600, 4 houM! trailer. $3'15. Bpd, Bronze, fog Its, ll'\lnk MOORING. Newport Bey. e 847-3432 e rack. $1850. 5'18-5663 a"Jt 6 $5200. lncl'1. Santana 22, full I========="' I =p=m=.=======:c nice, 9 mo's old. 847-4525 Trucks Y500 ma.hog, double planking bot-Bo1t· Yacht tom & &ides. All teak deck-Chatters 9039 ing. Just loaded. Only 200 -----"----- hours. Call Rogu Miller IT'S SMARTER '61 GMC 'n ton pickup. Top medlanicaJ. co nd it io n 642-8119 ~·find good home for boiiitiful male cat • gold an WIQ:e .. Very affectlmate Md ~with .small children, ~143 8/21 wCh'ED gd mi for very J6tible yng man A chu. mix t~er. Sm breed. Oldrr • p...r. s:n-ssH. 546-1100 TO CHARTER JHpt RALIAN S hepherd f e, 8 week!, purebred. 9;_a -5 3 3 2 18828 Santa Jljriana F.V. f'iitPtDL 'i Pure b red I~ Doberman. Lovet c\lcfrn. All ahots "? ""' ~LE Kittens with ~einittena! Must 11ee, on-~:2: lelt 457 Ogle St., C'li!. i 8122 P T ::COCk·A·Poo 6 mo old. 8 hall Persian JdttelU, ~ ~aple Ave., C.M. after 6 .JlL 8/22 • to lovable home with p.rd. I'A yr old Collie- ph e rd, f emale s'lf3384 8123 16' PLYWOOD Glaa1 Hooielite 55--1964 outboarct', wed 97 hre:. XJnt eonc1 American trailer, must ae~ to apprec. F..ntire ootfit $1600 . .....,.. AUGUST SPECTAL! Haul out, paint jobe • best price on the water front. NEWPORT DRY DOCKs on the Bay at 20th • 675-151li • 19' CEN1URY 225 JU> aid & 1pd boat, Xlnt cond. thru. out. Worth $3000, Accpl any reaa. of fr . See at dock • 4208 River Ave. 675-1355 READY to g<>-19' 3" Glastron W/120 HP Mere. in.out drivr, inboard bait tank, tl!t bed trailer. Comp, eqp'd, tor fc.hing. 842-123!1 16' BEEDiCR.Arr, glass covered. Trailer, 25 l-lP moror, Full Se.Iety equip. men!. Sacrilice 1J 4 O o . 545-&91 all 6 PM 6'2' INTERNATIONAL Scout. -4 wheel drive -travel top • new tirell • excellent con· dition $995. Will consider Cal 25 • R.nwllOll 30 • Alberg 35 • Bounty 40 • Newporter ketch • Mariner 40 • Schooners· 27' Fairliner · 30' Trojan • 38' Spt Fisher • nu- merous olhers. trade -642-029'1 CALIFORNIA CRUISES CAMPERS 9520 20 years III Newport --'''-------- Emi1 Minney 548-4 191 SALE e CHARTER TIIE FINFST New 4-0' Kot<h USED T1lUCK 673-2517 e 67>-2400 AND BLUEW ATER OIARTERS 27'40' U·Drive Skip. Avail Day/wk. 646-9000 24 hrs. Flying Lts.ons 9150 *LEARN TO FLY $495 Late model Coessnas. Low rates also for instrument & commercial. Newport Air Assoc. 673.0313 9200 MOBILE home for sale. 548-2000 CAMPER SALE We have a large selection ol clean 8 to 10 foot cab-over and noo c1b-ovtt models priced from $400.00. TRUCKS ·TRUCKS ·TRUCKS 1959 • 1966 • Camper equipped heavy duty Fords and Chev· rolel.s • From $499, All pric· l!.'d to sell NOW! BANK TERMS T rade1 Welcome OPEN ROAD FP.)IB;. to a good borne, part 1964 29 Owens DC. Flybridge, C$ii &: part English setter, fully equipped, New paint, ~· Ideal t: or children. 50 hrs oo overhaul. Make of. I========= ~~ B/2'Z fer. 54&-3973 eft 6 PM ~ trained: mix Toy 14' SKI &: fish, just refinish· ~ester Terrier, I yr old «I, Johnson 3.5 hp, trlr. feiiOale. Pttf:er adult a. ligln,skil:,ancboretc.$400 $-5'67 8/22 ;;;546--07-,;;c; .. ===,..,,,,....., ~E-6 week old kittens. B' D IN G HY FiberglMSed ~co mother. Afternoon&. Plywood with oars. M&ke lj'f:-1323 Eves. 543-7786 otter. * 67J..6234 * FIAT '67 Fi1t 850 Coupe Low mileage, 1 owner car. $1789 HERB FRIEDLANDER Ph. • SJ&. UKXI 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. '67 Flit 124 ""'"" $1589 HERB l-"'R.IEDLANDER Ph. • 636-1800 9625 Garden Grove Blvd, ~7 850 Spiel•" Week-end Special. $1899 HERB FRIEDLANDER Pb .• 636-1800 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. '68 Flot 850 Coop1 $1899 HERB FRIEJ)LANDER Ph. • 636-1800 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. '67 FIAT 852: $150 &. Take over paymts. d $59 mo. Priv-,i.te party. 549-3969 JAGUAR '60 JAGUAR MAJ\K IX : right hand drive, English serv. his!'Ory from new. $1450, will trade, 2 1 3 : 59&-4327 '63 JAGUAR f.-tark 2, sedan, BUto/pwr, air. c hro me wheels, $2,000. 673-6900 I4(ELY I wi old p.tppy. 14' BOAT-Trlr &: 1967 33hp PJi1 Labrador " Boxer. Evinrude. Xlnt cm. $525. "'"1'76 !Ill 345 E.19th St CM. 642-1269 ~co Fema.It cat 2 yn:. 30· OWEN'S Cabin Cruiser, ~ apec:ial home. 642-1323 twin acrew, Slpa 6. Many "5; Ml-7'186 eves. 8122 Xtras! Call aft 4-54.9-4283 ~OS. Old ball Pu'aian 12 FT . Aluminum ~~~~~I KARMANN GHIA 3~1 1 c o female cat . boatl.motor less than l yr. Housecar 7925 B/22 Xlntcond! $215. 9624113 Mo'no' Blk" 9275 ~ The fabulous OPli!n Road, Z ~ABLE Female be~ &: 17' AMER. Ma.re glass boat ---"-'----- i MESA 1.IINI BIKES 39.!li up Carmiel chassis mount with tiger striped kitten 10 $500. HD trlr $100. Ollver 35 '--tures found in models have llhotl:. 83.'HB42 8/22 hp motor Sim. 6754214 Sales • Parts • Repain: ~ce the cost ot this unit, Oct; 2267 Harbor, C.M, e 543-X07 2 ~v:ABLE cats, 5 mo. male 25' TROJAN, 1 mm ac. including new apace age 6-"t!ma1e, will apay & alter, throughout with slip. Zl5 In-Motorcycle• 930Q mono toilet gyriem. p{if all 1hata. 542-2002 8123 tercepter 54.950. ~ $S495. ~E Jdttm1. 1 wka OPEN ROAD ol;<. hoo .. b rok•n S1llboat1 9010 968-1877 817l BEAUTIFUL Jolly Roger 25' Ito ~MO. Frost pofnt Siamees aloop, 11ii fl'I old, pert. cond, c~t. 635 -7925 (wit h Bleeps 4 w/bead, galley, sliOts, 8123 atove, new 5 hp Seagull q~AGNE male cock-a· rootor. Sacrilice $4,500 firm. ~-All shol!, 10\.'able, To Odl for appt 673-549'l, ~ home. 642.-5880 8122 494-7445 --===,...,,=--~fOVING, mu1t give away SNOWBIRD # 379 .utlful blk. fem. (altered) with trailer. $325 ee.fsian. 494-&3ffi 8/22 Oceanic Yacht Sales 830 S. HARBOR BLVD. SANTA ANA 531-4655 OPEN ROAD 15' CU.stom chuis mount on 1 Ton truck, 4000 W a:en. plant. air cond., stereo tape ll)'!llem, sell contained. Pressu r e water system etc. Excel concl. S3000 down-take over $50/mo payment. 546-0750 '60 GHIA 549...0SOS -67'41 Ito 1970 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 196t. KARMEN GHIA, Im· mac. cond low mileage. Sl850. 675-55n 2 JO'ITENS, fem. A: male, ftit't striped&. blk. l wht. 6 ~ old. 546-1570 8123 R.tU" grown male Siamese, ~tie &: a.tfecionat.e • Call ilCer 6 P .M. 673-1{174 8/23 • 642-5151 • HOURLY RENTALS Dun1 Buggies 9525 MERCEDES BENZ --0---"'-"---- 4•(;1ANI' Type yureas, idtal ~ iandSCBping. 49H£i2 .... 8122 l ~·· whl. kitten,,, trained 6 ~ old. 646-1361 srn FEMALE \Vh ite rat with cage: 646-1375 8122 FIREWOOD, You pick up. 408 Huntington 5J6..8748 8/2'2 FREE:Mlxed Collie puppy to good home. f.Jl-0860 8/22 PETS ind LIVESTOCK Cots 8810 SJ.i\.MESE KITI'ENS, Seal Point. trained, 7 wee.ka. SZO. 8'M961 8825 2 BEAtTl'IFUL AKC lO'h" ToY bred bl&ck poodles. Sbota & wornui. $75. l· 523-tlBS pups for aale. A.KC. l'f'li.!ltered. C 7 1 4 ) 492-1812 MIN .. -fem&le Schnauzer pups Axt: .... Ear•..-. All .i-. 6"""51 CE AKC, white, 1830 BAY Man. Xlnt cond. cende wllltem uddle A tack. * 5J5..l986 * 'lilAHSPORTAljlON a.0,i. & Yacln 9000 -u· s. wi.i.r • '61, jj) "" $900. LIDO 1' No. 7125 >Clot SUSO. °""' -Eve. -STORAGE. Tratien, boa.ta, ete t?..50 ptt/mo. Woft """'· -• 543-Xlf» DAILY PILOT WANT ADS BRING llDULTS! ., * Rhodes 19'1 * Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa LIDO 14, 2 aets d. aalls, trailer, good cood, s~. ,,....,., 1968 Ollum.bia 21 w/ Johnson ootboe.rd. M a n y Xtras! $2100. * &IZ.249-l FOR SAIL Lido 14 No. 465 & American Trailer $825. 545-2611 LEHJ\IAN 10. Good cond. Alum. &pars. Fiberglass. $275. Sacrifice. 615-2681 SNIPE 16' 9". Bargain, $300 inc. trailer. Glassed hull. Good c:ond ' 4!»-6129 14' S.tellite SS:il. * &l.:?·5151 Power Cruisers 9020 O\VENS 26" cabin cruiser, '66, Low hn. full)' equip. Sacrifice! snoo. 842.5789 25' 0\VENS CAB CRUISER >.1nt cone!. Lotld«I! Sac! 547-7103, 67f>.5008 eV('S, Speed-Ski 8o1t1 9030 VACATIO~ Special~ 1966 Cris Craft 17' speed boat 65 V\V aun root Ask Sl.000 · Cllev VR eng. inboard . 40 hrs. origme1 -radio -all leather int. Ski bar moun1l'd in engine -plu~ brand nt-w Coleman Cllmpini:: outfi1, O&l!li• ltnl -3 V.'llY rotlV. <"OOler -2 gill !lnCtW h !f' Juro - 3 bun'M'r C"amp E.!O\'f' - Jantrrn 300 Wll!S -1 !-[~ il:lg bars -1111 for S."\29.:i.OO 100 % tin8.TIClnr:: o .. ,A . c. 615-ill.47 (priva le wty) 1957 lB' MERCURY ulib(l• bolt, with l!fi7 T Bird ena. rood fmlil1 boat ln1ler $750. Ph. 312-7936. *"' TaJlor Awe. HB. SKI Bott, extra eharp, lf . w:ltll 85 J{P Me.IT, $195. Trlr. ---LATE '67 GLASSPAR lT, Men:: Crui.tt UO. new traUt.r. 6'Ul33 aft, 5 PN" SEE TIIE KAYCYrE e LA PAZ BUGGI~ e 962--0538 or 962-2273 WANTED co-driver, for La· Paz .r&O! with • pesos. * 642-0350 * V\Y DUNE BUGGY $650. 673-4281 Imported Auto1 9600 • Spot Cash fOI' Imports We pay more for any import regan:lleu of year, make or condition. Try us belore you sell. ELMORE i\10TORS, 15300 Beach Blvd. \\'estminster. SM--3322. MG MG MG '68 MG YEAR END Clearance AND DEMO SALE SEE US TODAY! ~e.tut. Llmia • ltlPORTS 1966 ttal'bor, C.M. 646-9303 PORSCHE '63 Porsche C..pe, 4 S,.M. NdM. 549.0JOl -673-1190 1970 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA '60 Porsche Coupe $2099 HERB FRIEDLANDER Ph .• 63&-UQ) 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. '57 PORSCHE, White, good interior, Priv. pty. mu.st sacrifice! 494-1354 PORSCHE '67, 912-5. Red. $4700. Private party. Mint. 646-6764 NEED A CAR? CHEVROLET VOLKSWAGEN '6SVW CAN'T BE FINA?<CD>T e 8'.nkrupt'!' •~onf es.d C>edltT • 01.....,.., 100°/o Worrfll!IY ....,..._., hlty -.1p•4 + e M111wy e New la Area? AU.. PARTS. Al.J. LABOR Niii.. MW Payday PtYment1 '66 Chev. Impala Hair;itop '1799 McCARTHY MOTORS Sport c:oup.. ~~ ..p.. la> So. M.a1n • Ed.Inger Power stffiin&. Ttflted 4lu:s, (2 biockl N. of Seaft) powerglide, r a d Io, 7ir:iyl Santa AN! Pb 542-3501 11eets, new-rue.. Run; onl,y Cb Q~ BUICK 23s~~C,~i: ~r ~~· .,. o:S '67 WILDCAT 2 dr. tn'. ..... Holiday Ram~er ''"'P ~:,.u ~~· buc, seats, pOM:r, 1969 Harbor, CD.ta Mesa Jr ....,. .. ~ Ph. 642-60'.l.1 :: Driv• tn • Open SU4- CADILLAC OIEVY Impala hanl top '62, 549~ -671-1190 low m!Jeage-Xln't can<jtioo, 1970 HARIOR ILVD. 1962 CADILLAC Pvt, party, Call after! 5:30 COSTA MESA Coupe De Ville p.m. 962-8964 : '66 VW PQ111.r white. Full power, air '66 CAPRICE, vinyl ! top, Th. Popul1r "Bug'' cond. Immaculate. auto. U'ana., pwr. bra.k1 " Competition Orange. Load«! $1495 ateer . $2,350. fi73-5857 ! and absolutely immaculate. Can finance all or part Pay-=======.;:=! Can finance all or part Pfty. ments u low u $22.00 per mts. u 1ow as iz.?.00 per mo 0 .A.C, mo OA~1495 ELMORE ELMORE MOTORS TOYOTA CHRYSIJRi '67 NEWPORT CUsfomi_fact. air, vinyl top. Priced for quick sale. (1) 637-749f Ph. ,.,.3320 CONTINENT~L TOYOTA 15300 Beach Blvd., Watmnstr • MOTORS Ph . ..,_3320 1961 CADJLLAC' doo, s..ian '63 Continental 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnatr de Ville, 6 windows, power Gof.g~ leather uphoijtered '63 VW perf cond 35 000 mi seat, po-.ver windows, power sedan with air conditioning. nu lirt'!l, rbr bumPer pro: steering, power b r a k e s , Full pcJ\1-'er extras. 'tinted tectrs. Musl 1ee to apprec. ~er trunk opener, air con-glass. A real cream pjfi, Sunroot $ll00/best offer. ditioned. Nice body no $1480 : P1'"' can "'"-"" ... i.. 1750·00 Pvt. pa<Iy. Holiday · RamMer Dune Buggy Builders 879-0088 (Fullerton) • . 1968 wrecked VW, 3000 ml. '67 EL Dorado, white, Blk 1969 ~~ ~ Comp! except tires &: radio. padded top, blk int Imm.ac., Drive in _ Open ~ $950, 833--0812 under warranty. See at ' COME1 ~ 65 VW $1049 R/H DeLux Balboa Marina. Mr. Hovey Model Extnt. Clean, Llke 673-8840 New. _Going ove r •ea a .1'•". -;1°'967~EL;;c--;Doro--od-,..o-, 7le-•"'•he-r '61 COMET, Stands:n:t: dlltt, 847-5955 mt., AM/FM stereo, elec R&.H. $295. ~ or ONE O\l/Tler v w. 61 vents & trunk. Climate eon. '-=64z-.I==""===·=· ="=· =·O:==I Squareback New rubber. trol, air cond. f.1l.lllt be. sold. 1• Top cond . .$2095 aft 6 S6150orbestclfer.67~35 COUGAR~ 847-8001 '56 CAD Funeral coach. Good!------_;.;.:;.._ TOYOTA '66 vw 2 Dr. 1300 Deluxe. Lo cond. Equip w/ surfboard '68 Cougar CXR-7) Ai and ---------· 1 rnilage. Very clC"an. 1.1U51 racks. Best oHer &42-8598 well equipped. 1.-tust ieiJ. or '68 TOYOTA seU immediately. $1300. Pri 'li6 CAD OPE DE VILLE lease my demon!ltratjlr be- YEAR END .. -. ~0 1039 •·" · d fore Aug. 22. Call Wayn• t-•J ·.,.,,.... ~ ....... pwr, air con ., etereo, • Cl d. •~OM ., • ., ""'"" Squire at Johnson llt Son, eara nee vw '""'"'" s t .. dy in •tock. ,.. "· ~· ~'~ Orange County' it:-old$t es-1500 CC· SJ!l). 40 hp· $235. 1966 C'OUPE de Ville, all t'X· tablished LincOln • Mtrcu:ry AND 1300 CC • S32S. 36 hp • $155. tru, priv. party, $3!lll. -Cougar dealership.: New. DEMO SALE 642-0350, 646-7670 Eves. * 675-1465 * port • Costa Mesa. $Xl w. 1 OWNER '65 VW. Beige Coast Hwy., Newport peach, w/tan int. R&.H, Xlnt cont!. CHEVROLET 642-0081 or 545-8278 l $1,200. 642-7241 or eves. , I SEE US TODAY! 673-7032. •61 I la 67 COUGAR. 16.000 jniles, L • mpa Stick 4 speed. XR7 inferior. e.tul tt.Dta '67 VW Xtra Itice car. $50 Convertible, medium blue, Wire wheel covers.: Tape dwn OAC. Pymts $53 mo. with white top. Automatic deck & Al\1 .Jlldio~ Air. IMPORTS Dir. 842~615 transmission, power steer· Gold-green coroc. Ne..t tires I ~========:o ing, power braJ<es. BEAU· & brake11. $2995 .. ~ 9-5 1966 Harbor, C.t-.1. 646-9303 TOYOTAS Sport Sedans, COUP"!!, Wag. ons. We've got them. All types, sticks, automatics. f..1ost one owner with low miles. Can finance all or part payments as low as $22.00 per mo 0.A.C. ELMORE t-.IOTORS TOYOTA Ph. 894-3320 15300 Beach Blvd., \Vstmnstr '67 TOYOTA DELUXE SEDAN Dir, oac, automatic, radio, heater, white side walls, Like new! High gas mileage, low pymnts. $175 Dell! or trade. Pymnts $46.86 mo. 4!»-9773 TOYOTA HEADQUARTERS ELMORE 15300 Beach Blvd., Wstmnstr Phone 894.3322 '67% Toyota Crown sport aedan, air etc. OHer! • 968-4364 • '68 TOY<Jl'A CORONA. Like new. Small dn. T.O.P . -T1llUMPH '62 TRIU1.IPH TR 4 Roadster British racing green Many xtras. Excell. cond. 673-4281 1967 TRIUMPH 2000 4 dr sedan. Private party $1950. Good cone!. 675-4lli VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO TIFUL. Only '67 Cougar XR-J1 .G'I) fact ---$795 air. Loaded! Ullder: war· '68 VOLVO Can finan~ all°" part. Pay· ranly. i ments as low 81 $22.00 per R/sterro, nu lires, f3275. mo 0 .A.C. 548-6767 or 548-0788 YEAR END Clearance AND DEMO SALE ELMORE ~10TORS TOYOTA -·-· ·:-- CORVAIRi -'62 CHEV. Mon2a~pe. Ph. 894-3320 Gold l\1etalic finishf with See us today! 15300 Beach Blvd., \Vshnnslr matching vinyl bucket!lee.ts, L '66 CHEV MALIBU Auto. R&H. A real finf back· /Jll 11 Jtin: 1 • . to-school car for : t4llL UUIO Chevelie 2 dr. H.T. Co\on1a] $595 : cream with fuU black vinyl 1st car I t llarbo: Blvd IMPORTS be"clo ·""'· thrifty 283 "'· JOHN°S000 N & "soN' m. engine. P. steering, R&H. This beauty, low mileage, Lincoln-Mercwi 1966 Harbor, C.M. 1)46.9303 one owner car full price is CO!ila Mesa Bnutit '68 VOLVO ;.,,, 1'11 Harbo< BJ,d. Jk2.l(f,() $1795 '64 SPYDER-Tan "'' ho GET OUR LEADERSHIP 1st car lot on Harbor Blvd 'J'w-~n __ .. 4 T d · SAVINGS BEFORE · ........._.....,&.....,· ••P • YOU BUY'" JOHNSON & SON R/H, w-w. xlnt ""' .. .,,_ . · · Lincoln-Mercury mg $925 CM eves -!' Sun. L • c--M B 842-ms • "~'"" esa ranch ~ e.tul ttota 1941 Harbor Blvd. 642-7ffi0 MUST Sell '63 Coi:vair ,,. MA l\lonza. 2 dr. 4 8JxS Xlnt IMPORTS ~ LIBU amd. $575, 646-7587 : Super Sport ·5-l\10NZA o · Flashing r e d au!omatic :i • ng, "J>Wner. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 trans, J>O'A-'er sieering pov.•. X8 1"1 1 '°,"dM. $975. ~9136 · e are A or eves• '67 Volvo 122 S er brakes, IMMACTJLATE. ·· 2-door, like new. $2089 HE.RB FRIEDLANDER Ph. • 636-1800 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. 1965 VOLVO Pl!m. Radio, overdrive. Xlnt corn!. $2300. 842-7347 Only CORVmi $1495 Can finance all or pa.rt. Pa.y. ,63 C'ORVETTE 2 TOPS ,66 rnents as loo.v as $24. per ' moOAC Must aell. Best offer . E. L. M. ORE eog. • body. M"'Y Xl<u! 774-4110 or 675-1307 uk for Chuck. 1\10TORS '63 FASTBACK,1 white, 371. TOYOTA 370 hp. Muat I 51900, Sport C1r1 9610 Ph. 894-3320 646-3085 aitG"j>m.-~--------1 15300 Beech Blvd .• Wstmnstrl======'===='I '66 Oatwn 1600 ROADSTER 4 Spd, dlr, oac, Honduras or· ange, black plush Interior. SUPERB CONDITION! $175 Oel..s, or trade. Pymnts $46.86 mo. After ll, 494-9773 DOD.Gt' 1963 DODGE DART Silver blue witl"\~-Yful con· trasting inleriot: A\J.tomat1c, slant six. Just aa'lresh as can be, On!..... ' r. -· $995 Oln finance all or pArt pay. menls as 10'&'1 '9.S $19.00 per mo O.A.C. • ELMIE 1964 Falcon Futura Convert V-8, auto tra:., 19, wsw Xlnt ett1d., blue. ·56-4293. -------~-~--~---.... -.... ----·=---~-~-~-~--= -------------.-..-.-----.. ----~~~~~~ .............................................. ________ .._. ______ _ ,.._.--..~---r-.-.--~...-v ... ;r=,.~.---.-.....,. ~~'4\i',. .,. .... ~.~ -·~-•-v..-10:.-·-.,,.-.., .. r••..,,......,-.... -.,....-..--....----..--....-.~~----------~~~-----· ...--- TRANSPORTATION Wtdntldq, Auoust 21, 1968 DAILY PILOT /JJ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION'=-=7-,K'i-:A:-::N"s"'PO"'•~r"'•"'t'"1o"'k::---.T"llAli'"'""'""SPO""'ll"'T"A:;,Tn.ION<Tr.:...J~ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION HOO ~COME IN FOR A--------:- TREMENDOUS YEAR END SAVINGS l, •••• ~.: ON A NEW OR PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLAC 1968 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE A 1tunnina: San Mateo Red exterlor. Thll beautitul 1968 Cadillac hu all Cadillac power equipment lnclu4in1 brUIH~ .. _wq aeat-door locks, tilt 1teertna wheel. cruJM eon~ i\ddtomat:le, J1vt1 control and ot COW'M tactoiy a1r condl.Uonlns. Numbir 1.11"224 $ ,,,,,,,...._---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELECT FROM,--- 166 CADILLAC -~ de Ville. Solld ,p-een flnlah with rree:n ted.er and nylon interior. Full Cadillac power -equtpnent ph~• factory air conditioning, tilt-. -"J.tMd.ftl wbee.11 pow.r dDOI' lockl. 8 WI)' Nit · ~-.and· many otner of the extru ottered by Cadillac. SALE $3888 PRICI '65 BUICK Wildcat hardtop. Fully equipped with radio, · heater, power steetlnll', power brakes, white wall tires and tlnted gla.u, Finillhed in beauU- . ful Arctic white with full red vinyl interior. Top condition both inside and out. SALE $1666 PRICI '66 CADILLAC Sedan de Ville. nntshed In IU5h Sudan beige with Sandlewood vinyl roof and Sandlewood leather and JIJ'lon lnterlor. Full Cadillac power . equipment includes factory air conditioning, l!QWer vent windows, cruise-control, twilight sentinel, Ult and telescopic steering wheel and other accessories. SALi $3888 PllCI -- '64 IMPERIAL Crawn 4 door hardtop. Leather and tapestry lnt.erior. Fully equipped with power 1teerlng, power brakes, power "'lndows, power 6 way 1eat, automatic dimmer, AJ.I/F?>l radio and tactorY air conditionlnr. '· SALi $1777 PllCI '66 CADILLAC Brouah&m. Beautiful Topaz Gold with Sandle- wood land.au root \\1th leather interior. Fu 11 C&dillaor.s:er equipment plua factory air condttt power vent wlnl!OW&, door locki. AM-FM ra lo and twill1ht 1enttnel No ftner auto on the road than Cedlllac·a Brouaham. Thia LI a 11UST SEE. SALi $3999 PRICI '67 CADILLAC Coupe de Ville. Beautiful Monterey Green fin·, lsh with Black vinyl roof and full leather -in.; terior. Full cadlllac power includln1 power vent windows and ot' course, factory a1r con- d1Uonin&". SALi $4777 PRICI '63 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. 4 door hardtop. Lime IJ'tth with leather and nylon Interior. Has power 6 way 1eat, power windows, power vent win- dows, pov..·er 1teerln11', power brakes, factory air condl tloning. SAU $1444 PRICE '65 MUSTANG EcononUcal 6 cylinder engine \11ilh the 1tand· ant trammlsslon, radio Md heater, wh.lte 1lde wall Ure1. Snow white exterior with harmoni- zinll' blue tnterior. SALi $999 PllCI OTHER SPECIAL VAWU '62 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE e '64 FORD CONVERTIBLE • '64 PONTIAC STA. WGN. e '66 BUICK LE SABRE e '68 BUICK ST A. WAGON e '6 7 CHEV MALIBU COUPE e '66 RAMBLER STA. WGN. e '67 MERCEDES SEDAN • '6 7 FORD RANCHERO e '64 RAMBLER STA. WAGON • '63 CHEV HARDTOP CPE e '66 BUICK H.T. SEDAN e '6 7 BUICK EUCTRA e '65 THUNDERBIRD HJ. e '6 7 FORD RANCH ERO e '63 CHEV H. T. COUPE e '65 CADILLAC ledan de Ville. cadlll&c'1 t!Mlt Ind tully _., oqutpped for llllllll)' drlVlftl· Of coune Utll tncluclel fl.ctorY l1r oondlUOfdnl, powu -6 way """'" ... ~. till ·--L 11114 llnltMd lo -Tw-quo!u with harroonlltns ·lt&U\tr and cloth interior. SALi $2666 PRICE '63 OLDSMOBILE This popular Super 88. Fully equipped Y.ith automatic transmls&ionJ radio and heater. power brakes, white alae wall tires. Flnished In tL light ~n exterior with harmonizin& interior. This car ii u.le priced jUllt rlaht tor you. SALi $888 PRICI '65 PONTIAC Grand PM Automatic tranamiulon, pcl'oWr steering, power brake•, radio and heater, buc- ket seats, center console, tachometer, \vhite 1ide wall Uree. SALE $1444 PRICE '64 FORD Galaxle 500 convertible. FinL~hed in ArcUc whlte with a matchJna: white top and full vinyl Interior. V8 enrine, automatic transmis- sion, power 1teerlng, radio and heater, tinted 1lus and white 1lde waJJ tlrc1. A very nice autornobUe. SALE $1222 PRICI '64 CADILLAC Hardtop sedan. Beautiful Topu Gold t1n1lb with matcbln& &old leather and eylon lnter-- lor. Full Cadillac powtr equipment plUI i.c- torJ a1r conditlonlilc, power Windows, 6 way power Mat. Thll one II a drftm and uhlblta · the ~ only one owner can offer. SALi $1777 PRICI '62 CADILLAC Equipment lncludel power 1tttring, powu window•, power brakes, power eeat and fac- tory air condltionlna. Other Cadlllac utru are power vent windoWI 6 way aeat and autronlc eye. &auutul Normandy Blue ftn- l1h with white top and whlte full leather In· tertor. SALi $888 PllCI '64 CADILLAC Convertible. A cool coral ftnilh with blaclc top and full leather lnterlor. This ii one ot thoae hard to ftnd modell with full Cadillac power acce11or1es Including brake•, 1teerin1, windows, aeat, and tor tbOM very warm m,y.. factorY a1r conditiontna. Thil LI priced for a quick sale this week. SALi $1777 PRICI '63 PONTIAC Bonneville Coupe. Gold with h&nnorrlzina in· tertor (full vinyl). Automatic transmlu!on, power steering, p0\11er brakes, radio and heat~ er. white side wall tire1, tinted alau and much more. SALE $999 PllCI SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN------- 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 u....,;1rs 9900 U1ed C•rt 9900 Uaod C.n 9900 Uud Caro 9900 Uud Caro 9900 Uud Caro 9900 Uaod Caro 1--~-----"l'oRD '63 fORD FAIRLANE 24t ... UcJ9ry air, 260 engine with tti~k !illft, R&H. A real thrttty one to commute with or run an'lUnd town. Full OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH PONTIAC PONTIAC RAMILIR --1962 PONTIAC _ '62 FORD '61 M""""'. Statlon w-. '65 MUSTANG NEWPORT BEACH 4 SPEED 1964 PONTIAC LaMant Spt. Cpt. 1965 RAMILIR falcon Deluxe Third 1eat, auto traN., Spt Cpe .Ude aix. Golden rod G.T.0 . COUPE Automatic, arctk white with f dr. 6 pu1 ltadoo ~ 2 -. wbJU. wttt> btoo Inter-whit.Wallo, Pow, ""'in( • yellow with G,T. d"°' In-POLKE CA"' SPECIALISTS e.au1"ul hlu"Kondy w Ith nd bucket ,..u, e.autiful Polar t"°"' wttb <UltiUtlng ior, automatic tnmsnJK!on, disc brakes, Factory Air, terlor. AbloMeJy lhowroom IU HIGH PERFORMANCE white bucket aeats. Air oondltion. interior, air cond. A~ radio, beater,• real mlleqe dual ectlon tall 1ate, AM fruh. CUSTOM CARS cond., .automatic. $795 out automobile. Onb' FORD MERCURY MUSTANG getter, Only radio. Brand new Montego $1495 1981 F-85 Old111nOOlle1. HI· LARGEST SELEcttON IN $1695 Can ftnance all~ part Pay· $1295 , $695 $695 model. Buy today fur $3793 can finance all or part Pay-performance black .\ white ORANGE COUNTY Can finance all or pert Pay. menu a1 low u $17.00 per Can finanCt! Ill« PU"t Pa)'.· lst Ql'.Jol.o.n Harbor Blvd. can finance all or put. Pay-or lease tor Sll7 per month menu u low u $22.00 per with interceptor equipment, Selected Auto menu u low u $22.00 per mo O.A.C. ment. ••low u $221.00 per "'"" JO~??~.!.,,SON ':~.~ck>w u 11100 "" E'.=E&,"'.! mo ELMORE ~ fuiiPrice 13112 u.,e:,t:r 111- 010 Eo.lcM. ORE ELM~•sRE mo ELMORE °""' ..... "'"""' ELMORE .... -.. Llncoln -M.... $1177 uou l!Ml. He.i'\lor"81vd. 642-7tli0 cury • Cougar dealership. MOTO RS '6.1 Plymouth Sta Wag. Ex. MOTORS TOYOTA MOTORS •• -RS ~--~ ~·-•teu. ~ TOYOTA °"""-Orig own.r mi or TOYOTA -. ~ •-TOYOTA ,.,4 SPUD TOUYOOUTA "'"~' --~ " ~ Un l••rs;ty Oldtmobll• •-t If • 499-"'81 I ' rn ----W. Coest Hwy., Newport Ph. m3320 2lfJO Harbor Blvd. ~a o er. ..., a I . Ph 894-33ro 1!300 Beach Bmi., Wltmnllt ru.. ~ $PECJALISTS Ph. tl!M-JDl Beech • ..,...., or ..,.m 1!i300 Beach Bl•d,, Wotnwt7 Coot• M.,. 15300 S.1<h Bl,.,, w"""''" 4 SPEED l'3tltl ll<l<h Ill ... , W- HIGft P!JtFORMANCE 1!i300 ....,.111,._, w""'"'"' ••1 Prty .. 111 .. c 1300 """" -PONTIAC _ '63 PONTIAC LaMANS SPECl~um T llRD CUSTOM CAllS 55 >'ORD Sta w,., Stick, '9 MUSTANG bl"' bod<. '61 Muotanc Ilk '63 OLDS FJ5 SAVE M l' 1,.7 GTO 2 d Ct>« 11<1utllul """"' m•tallc ,. • LARGEtt.SELECTION IN erwtne. Dependable S180. ahlft, fac air. Lo ml, Ttrm.1, OlUaai 2-dr. C..'pe. A spark-Hanttop fwiy equlpped ~ finish wtth l&dcl1e vinyl buc. HIGH PERl'ORMANCI l--------"---I OR.ANGE COUNT¥ "'8-80!5 '61 MUSTANG or OOlllldor tnde lor om"' !Ing a>ral with White vinyl .... noor lhllt, J"'t W.e kat. Int-.,,."""'" P. CUSTOM CARS '64 T·Blrd $1390 ~ltc'~ Auto 2+2 FAST BACK. OOM· waioo. 64&-2388 bucket ,..u, V-3 auto """ new -In -Muot It-, P. """"' R/H. LARGEBr SELECl'ION IN $1390 . ,._ MOCURY PIEIUY CUSTOMIZED! '67 Muttant $1750 ... lhlft p -· !WI . . -thlt -to ORANGE COUNTY ~ ""°"' ...... bl&d< " -nter ... , ........ 1n-... ... • ""'· v.a. Xlnt -"""'""" ·thni-out'. Ni :::.. 1m;;i:at:i.'n ~o . $1095 Sellcted Alto """""" a1r ..,;;;.~ NI mn -Blvd. 117"641 u .......,.. 8rond -· ....... Indy Map •!Im. Prlco a11 .. l,11> ,.._ • "' '"' Jot on u.-11w. Center _,, 1111-. -tllit.- • --1'0RD $35IO. ,.__,. .... -· ~~·r: OLDSMOlll.i $99S PRJV. ...... -"""""' JOHNSON.& SON UOSI -S1Yd. 131-.. -N ... lib .. -. 2 Dool har4~, pod tlrel 6 ltetr 6 dilc brakn, auto tee low mllt SHOW lit car lot on Harbor Blvd. Grand Prix lllver ~ bUl Unco1Mlft'CW'Y Ntw UNI. Our Belt liii)r:--· t..am. J!!ddod dub l tnno. AM ndlo, ddux.,... ~· eondy .;;.. nd, '81 OLDS Dllta 4 Dr. M"t JOHNSON & SON vinyl top, f,;... air, ltlll P.,., °"'" M• -ltAMll.iR HoUday RmnbWf ::~...::..~ ~ ~~ -2-Dr bud.top. lkq or wttb metal a.kt uunt, 36 :::r =~ ~ hlor Uncolo-Mccury all utraa $1.toO. HOO un4tt 00 Harbor alwl. IG7'(llO , 1181 Harber, a.ta MS· a-~-bu a 1... ::::_. ....i: J:.,_ ""':':.". mooth llnanclntl "allahl' factDr7 air oond!J;...... .:d °""' M.,. Bnulch Bill. -ROY CARYb llAND NIW Pb. INm tGtJ atr ~ untt e>ranie Qiunty'i oldest tt-n995 Uc. VCA• other nice ace e • 1 or I,• 00 Harbor BIYd. 6C2-1U50 MlJsr SACRIFICE! BeiOW PO!fllAC Drtvt In •()pa ~· p1., .,. ... • heater, Total tablllhed Lloa>lo • M....,..,, lob Longpre Pl•... eall todoy tor 1'611 TOltO. load<d, "" ......_,,book. 1 ownor b1lc • IAMILIR • '6'1 T BIRD .U -• ~oo. NO LOWER. • <bttrar -Ne.. p _.,__ """"°' 111t. Dk. Pbone 1131XI. Privoto P•rl>· •a Grllld Prlx. full,..,., air .. -IL, °*' -J YIAll WAllltANTY air. ""' llnl. II«" R(r.. c.u _, H.B-part -Ool!a 11-.., w. '"""" 5IMm,. _, • 546-M211 . """'· aood tlttt. l7Wln.. Kl 6°4444 $1969 '""· • -··-!: • M\Jft-6W.. _ '60 rmt. 2 °*It Rwy., Newpm Bncb. 13600 BHdl Blvd. !92.-J 82 OLDS II Holiday Hdan. • '13 OLDS. 98 Coup., air m.otl3 Ortn,. °*"1'1 SJdMw e 'G T.amD e dr, 111 loJ;.P/S, P/B, """ &12.81 or 5iMm SHARP '&II MUSTANG. 46.IOO ml, lull -·I..., ....i.. lull ""'' blua, lln-M GTO 4 opted -... -• a.r. 1011 Hollday ROH.llr lDllt oond fl!JO _..._ with "4 11> "1 MONTEREY 2 dr Jri, 11.000 Ml. ll'm I"" "'t' """" '"""' mac. $1llX>. m4lt4 "'""llmt •<•>dltloa I II 00 -1181 -· ~ -e 11"1!N 9: -.:• - ttrlci .• Niw """"' ote. lull ,..,.. auto t:w, al« mcl1 -oood. 1111. tllH31tl 'Ill OLDS OJtluo. Ht, 2 dr., -'G TEMl'lll'lj 111lo, Ml, I °""' In. ()ptoi !Ian. M T·lllllll NI -.i._rp &aartn.,:a& 'SD> or oau-. XJnt <'CIDd.. aeu. H . THZ Qinaa:a YOU CAU.. '63 OLl>.'J r.e. autn. Rill ' auto., PIS, COrllOl EMtr--D1111.1 i'UClt wan1 Adl11 dr., pd ooaottkm, MO. Ph. MMm tm'Y Mr' A I tf'ldl lta'M. can 543-IUJ &tter s:JJ p.m. &te-15'3 nm Quta<ER. YOU SELL Lo mo ... 646-6698 aid cretn. Sll60. ma AIWIYI a GooGol * 5.l$-D)'l aoac rr 'l'O ·m1 Mint Cmd. &t&-87 " I ·' ' I , ' . --~ -------. --...... ---.... -------------------------__ ....._~~~---~~----.._. ................ _ .... _____________________ _, \ C7 ~--.......... -.-----------......-......... -...--...................... ~-.... -....---................ -.. -·-"~ ----- 5~ ~All V PILOT Wedntsd~. AUgUsl 21 , 1%8 ---- 9100Ntw Cars 9100Ntw Cars 9IOOHewCars 9IOONaw Cars 9800 Pil•w C1n -9800 tffw C.n 9IOONtw Cars --JUST ABOUT A YEAR FROM NOW • • • • THAT'S WHEN YOU'LL BE ABLE TO BUY NEW PONTIACS, ~ .. TEMPESTS & FIREBIR·DS WITH THE SAVINGS YOU CAN GET NOW! i! BUY NOW I SAVE ' NOW ••• SAVE NOW I BUY NO\f • • • •WANT TO OWN A FIREBIRD? Well; who wouldn't? WHALE OF A SAU:! • f Right now at Roy Carver Pontiac you can select YOURS from our huge stock, arrange the terms you wish & drive off in '68s most exciting car • · •• all in less time than it takes to tell about it! • LOWEST PRICES • EASIEST TERMS • GREATEST SELECTION :~~. :~~!~~~~!."'·· , ............ s1977 r•dio, h•1ler, whit• w1ll1, f1ctory 1ir .... , ...... , .. :~.~ .. ~~~!.~?.~~! ... ,i;, •. , ......... s1977 i119, r1dio, h1al1r, wliit1 w1lt1, f1clory 1ir, p1dd1d roof. ' :~. :~~~.~eL.~! : .... ;., ... ,;, .. ,s1977 h11t1r, white 1ii:l1 will tir11 • , ..••. , , , .• , , ••• , • , • :~. ~.~~v~.·!~,i;~,!~ ..... ;,,, ,.,;,, 516 77 !111ltr, whit1 will tir11 , , ....• , , •• , . , , , . , ... , .•. , '64 FORD WAGON $1977 Country Squiro 4 door ' P•l1•n91r. VI, crui11J1•tic, power 1t••ri119, r•dio, h••*•r, whit. w1ll1, f•ctory ai~ 'ond, '64 OLDSMOBILE Dyn1mic 11 '4 door h1rdtop. Hydr1m1tic, power 1!11r• $1377"' ing, pow1r br1~11, radio, h11t1r, white wall fir•1 •nd ~ f•,tory •ir conditionin9 •....•• , • , • , , ••••• , . , , • , • , . '67 CHRYSLER ~ _ Cu1tom N•wport 4 doo'. Autom•tic, pow•, il••ring,$3277ffe ; • p~w•r br.•~••: r•dio, h••I•'· whit1 ~·II tir11 •nd f•ctory __ ,:: l tr cond1itonrn9. 1 ~.517 •cl~I.!•1 •.... , , .... , . . .-• ?- :~~' ~.~~.!.'!~.,;~~-.. ~~~.~; .. $2177·~ h1•t1r, wlilt1 wi ll tir11 i nd f1ctory •ir conditloni119 .• , -::' • lr I ' I. : . : r .. t• • " ' : ' \'I I , \, ! . i ··\·. ' 1' '\· . ' , · ; ,: ··'' I "\ ·.!;1 .......... : :1," ...._ ' ~ . • ""\ ! ,. I ~ I \ --------- - - -.. -... ----~-~~-----.... _..._ ......... ----------............ # ...... ,< ...... ,,,,,., ..t .. -------------------------------------- Ali leMey Stores. Open Ever lght Monda\' T~rough Saturday THRU SAT. ONLYI COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH Harbor Shopping Center Huntington Center Fashion Island ) ·~ ' , 41 I t .. ' ~ 2 DAJL Y PILOT Wedntsday, ~st 21, 1968 • All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday, 'Sot1t& Acltoot • 1Jl!JttlR44 f ;. School clothes for boys at savings prices! a,,y 91yt. ..,t shim haw. btg ..._ ....,.... body ond lhort ......._ MIOI ¥eloua blend of polo;dlr ondcotton o.tord la ,....,..._... ••• ,. Ironing ...... wt... tumble a-Md. ctMK>M .oW. Of ploida. 6 to , .. w.. ...... atyle .._..of t.lty. '-a---tne~w/cotto.. blend. la1adied at al points ..... Newr-Iron ,..,. ,,.. .. finieh. tool In IWN'f· loclM, ........... 6 .. 11 ~ Ian. 6 to 16 •'""'- JEANS OR SHIRT 1. 99 Stylish tvrts.n.dt lmlts of shape retoWug. WWt ....want ~· ~· $hort ...... .a.rt ... IWN'/1 red, gold. .... Oii gr'Mft.6 to 1~ 2.66 loMe shoee en bodt lft .. ~for sdlool tilM uuaa: Ing. CoMfortoble Moel ha¥e ,.,.,..... oubole and ...... Mode/ blodt ~ onty. 3'11 .... 8. 99 A~ thee In llttle beys' slztt, 10 to 3 .......................... 6.99 TDDAYI ,. ! DAllY PILOT a All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday . ~~--------· ; PEN"N" •J'.RLG'82 •' ' . ' ~ ~""".B'V.B'H~* •WHEN TUMILE DRIED THRU SATURDAY ONLYI Now! Boys' school slacks have Penn-Prest® PLUS Soil Release! Fabulous ·P.nn-Pr .. ~flnlah cOMbb•e& with new Soil R.i.o.. proc.u to ..... "-tfw...., _..ing alocb In townl Now ft9,.,... -M • the wash except the pnul Oxford ......... fll For1rel• polyester and ti0ttoft are tai1ared In skinny Grad style. Sen-1- tapered I.gs, p&aln front, belt loops and hemmed bot- toms. S.. tMm in of"'9, astro blue, most and moi~ .. Reg. 3.98 3 33 NOW • ..,... ...._ 6 .. t2 ....... _, • ...,I• 12 .._y. Reg. 4.98 3 99 NOW • Preps' 1lzff, 14 to 11 regular ond atom, 14 ,k) 16 hwlry. - t , 1 ' ~ 4 DAILY '1l0T T -------------------------------- w~. ~t 21, 1968 All Penney Stores Open Every Nlgllt M"onday Through Saturday School time separates for young girls Penn-Preite top1 are a delight to uirla ... a ., Ironing treat to mothenl Jutt wath'em ond tumble'em dryl Turtt.ned< knit top II Kodete polyester ond cotton blend. s1z ... $-M.l. llltoll 1leew blouse hot matching heodband ond todtt, tiz• 7 to 1 ... Toi;>t avoiloble In white °" faahion cok>ra. 2.59 lporty lookln1 skim few the foll foahion look! Of Acrilone oayllc bonded tlD 100% acetate lnlng to kHp their thope and body. Choose osscwted bo11 pleat ploida whh stretch woiat, 1i:i" 7 to 11, cw block /white t-indstooth dtedc In 1wingy A-1hope, ai:iea 8 to 1 ... $5 loddle 1hoet toke a forward 11ep in fothl°" w•tlo •.• .,. ,.,lor scheme. ~·nuke and Of'ongel &.. tMtm todo) Sizes .t to 9. 8. w Above W-UI .... ..,._,. I .. 4 ............ 6.99 Wednesday, August 21, 1968 DAl\.Y Pa.•r:·I All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through Saturday I Penneys has everything for the schoolgirl Glrle' Penn•Pr .. t• .,,..... of WOY9ft ploldt, IOlkla and prints ..,. nMCI Ironing when tumble dri.d. Great polY91t.r/eotton bl.r* la damdll, thltt lhlfta or A--shape1 vmh JmoglncrtM trfnw. ._lto6x Ila" 7te12 1.,....tecl, full tathlllftM -.dlgane -toft acrylc tiulky ~ta. Whit•, blue, red or gold. An ovtstondlng \'Glue ... thlt tpedol low ptbl 7 .0 16. 4.44 ~ aweaten In aiH• a te 6x .................... 3.3a Olrh' fvll 111,. with built-up or a+ttable •lrclp .tioulden. ...,-poly9tter/~on bi.r.d le,.,...,. ll'On ,_,,..., •• Mlte.4tol4. $1 ""-' l:ghta ti&.d )1111 nvt-t b ~o-.ng ~I 100% ltNklt nylon ..tth full fabdc .a: in ca•orted .o • r 4-611), .p.10). L{12-l4 .... ./'' . "I t • ~ I I ~ f I ' ' , I I t • ' I I .. I (. WedMsdaJ. Ai.gUSt 21, 1~ All Penney Stores Op8nEvery -Night Monday Through Saturday Knit iumpers ••. students' choice for fall P:o.Won--M .. JUftb'a mo._..._ ~ .. colo.M knit lumpen ancf,..... 1 41:-• ....... eolledfon 1nap1 .... 1 ~ .... w '-t _. atylee, hlgh.riM or drop wals._ wllt the IGllk of Hparat••· See tt.. In ... tow 101id1 of r*/I</ aJabcnter and blue/ olabc.twar..., / yelt.w Clftd 'l'fl'f I rect plakls • ...._ ..._ 1 '911 Special Buy! Jr. dresses for campus wearing I • ...,_,, the aemed..-'t newest looks for comput-bounct fun'on. N ~ pric.s, too I fabrlca ••• the easifit of care ••• are fuu--proof blinds, something a glri r.olly appreciates. Colon ••• In solids and pWda ••• all a girl could ask forl H...-.'s fust a aamp\ing. A. Double button shift la Orb.-acrylc lallit "-'-d with acetate trfcot. Blu., rwd, br~ g,...,. 7 ti> 15. l .U I. Stripe trimmechkimmer II Color~r.ron knit bonded to~ .... trlcot. Charcoal, ru1t, gold, green. 7 • 1'. I.II C. Low-lerao 1lde pleated Jumper ol ~ ,.,,trr./ Q)fton. In an o...nment of happy plaids. Jr. Petite 3 ~ ll. 7.11 D. lutto-n hont slitevet.sa sheath with squc:n nedc front band yoke. ~ cmnel, goJd. k . Petite 3 ton. 7.11 7.88 and 8.88 -------------------------------------------- _W_edft_ie._,_A»!Ju_sl_2-"'14''"-1968 _______ DAll Y PILOT 7 --All Penney Stores Open Every Night Monday Through S~turday Stock up now! Tremendous value on women's fashion panty hose! lheer, ..ama.. ..... por1'J ._.,. • wMt undet-today's short akirtal ~ lw culottes n pant..._, tool In Me flotterlne ahadn of .-mton and gllla \o GM144lan1e11t ony watd- robe. Sias Mart, ...-ag., long, ....... • 2forl.99 ( ...,,_Iron Pele.--..Prest•bra o.ar..e pal)w1ut • c Wa-wllh '-is ....._etylino. WW., S2~ A,I, C .... '2 \ . ' . Women'• Penn Set panties Soft, -11tfortoble fMN1fiea 'in Penneya •dui!M Mend« ,,..onen4 a>tton. White. 32-4-4. 3tor~ ""94hapecl "°"°" bra c--lle'OOCltWI ._ wfftl telly ......... '-Mlbw ~· :whlt.. 32-M, A. I~· '2 Comfortable half slips Dec.oroti....ly trimmed haH alipa ~ nykwi satin trlcot. AslOrtHI colon, ~ slns. TPDAVI , ., .. 1 , 1 1 ~ i 1 1 i 4 .. ~ ' ~ ' • t J 1 I 4 • l l I f _ DAil V PllOT Wednesday, August 21, 1968 ... COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbor Shopping Center Huntington Center ~--------A .............. 1 PENN·.P.R.E's:r' ' ' :y • ~&:.N..V..R~. TUMlll Dlf!O NEWPORT BEACH Fashion Island