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Light Bulb Drops 
400-Ft. Roof 


Vol. 84 


See Story Page 1, Sec. 2 


M 3 


Number 39 
îïOûECSS-Bullctm 


PO M O NA, CALIF., SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 9, 1968 


HOME EDITION 


PRICE 10c 


Carrier-delivered, $2 a month 


3 Sections 
42 Pages 


Battle Continuing 
A 
I 
S 
f 
/ 
Gis Punish Enemy 
Archer Sentenced 


In Da Nang Clash To Die for Slayings 


SAIGON (A P)—Pouring out of a sheet of machine-cun fire from advancing 
M 
4fciW 
SAIGON (A P)—Pouring out of a sheet of machine-gun fire from advancing 
armored personnel carriers, U.S. infantrymen tore into Communist troops along 
the coastal lowlands below Da Nang toda.\. 
First reports said 85 enemy soldiers 
had been killed, with the fighting continuing nine miles northwest of the provincial 
capital of Tam Kv. Artillery and dive-bombers joined men of the U.S. Amerieal 
Division in the onslaught. 
Open Housing Accepted 
Civil Rights Bill 
Ready for Vote 


A merican casualties were not 
disclosed under a 
U.S. 
Com­ 
m and policy of withholding such 
inform ation while a battle con­ 
tinues. 


E arlier. Communist 
gunners 
sent 40 m ortar rounds into night 
defensive positions of Amerieal 
Division 
troops 
in 
the 
sam e 
area. 
One 
U.S. 
soldier 
was 
killed and 25 wounded. 
WASHINGTON (AP) — A fter1 serve on juries, use public ac- 
m ore than seven weeks of de- commodations, 
attend 
public 
Saigon Lull Ends 
bate, the Senate has forged a schools and engage in other spe- Communist 
m ortarm en 
also 
civil rights bill which is ready cifically protected activities. 
renewed their harassing attacks 
for a final vole. A m ajor provi 
Federal Crim e 
on Saigon after several nights of 
sion would outlaw discrim ina- 
—Make it a federal crim e to quiet. Three rounds slam m ed 
tion in the sale or rental of most cross a state line with intent to into a police dependents’ hous- 
of the nation’s housing. 
incite a riot, to obstruct firem en inr, area in the slum s of south- 
“ I think we got as much in and policemen engaged in sup- ern Saigon. Four civilians were 
this field as we had any right to pressing a riot, or to transport killed and 20 wounded, 
hope for." Senate Dem ocratic ¡n interstate com m erce or teach 
viet Cong troops shelled four 
I eader Mike M ansfield said Fri how to m ake and use firearm s, other 
South Vietnam ese 
mili- 
day after the last of the am end explosives and incendiary de- tarv Dosts on the outskirts of 
m ents was voted. He term ed the 
^ 
n ets. 
S a ^ c L u T l . i e s at two of the 
open-housing section an upset 
—Extend to American Indians installations were not reoorted 
victory for its supporter, 
,hf pro,ec,ions of -he Bill of At the third, s p o k e s m e n \,u l 
1 he 
Senate 
approved 
the Rights. 
there were none, but a quantity 
am ended version 61 to 19, open- 
Mansfield told reporter«; 
he 0f 
am m unition 
went 
up 
in 
ing the way for a vote on pas- bad not thought it would be pos- flam es At the fourth nost cas- 
» w Monday. 
stble to get a bill through t t e ualhes were said to beT g h t 
4s the bdl now stands, its Senate with open-housing provi- 
„ 
f a t i n g w as reported 
principal provisions would: 
sions 
* 
u 
j 
j 
—G radually prohibit discrimi- 
He said Sens. Philip A. Hart, 1 
™ 
" t l M The 
nation in th- sale and rental of D-Mich„ 
lacob K. Javits, 
R- 
7nnP ne*r 
Don - 
housing 
When 
fully effective N,y.. W alter F. 
Mondale. 
D- H 
p ) 
‘ 
other NaiTOW EsCODe 
.fan. 1. 1970. the ban would cov- Minn 
and Edward W. Brooke. ! 
’ e 
, 
PPI 
0r 0,nei 
er nearly 70 per cent of the na- R-Mass* 
d ^ e rv e 
“ the 
!ion-s ^ e s along the frontier. 
tion’s housing units. 
share of the credit.” 
South 
V ietnam ese headquar- 
—Provide 
federal 
penalties, 
Thev were the principal spon- fPrs ^ 
governm ent infantry- 
for 
interfering 
by 
force 
or sors of an open-housing proposal ’T 0" ki,,ed 50 Communist troops 
threats with the right to vote, that would have covered virtual- 
’ 
y 
captured J weapons 
!y all of the nation s housing. 
and 100 rou" ds of rockets and 
Under a com prom ise worked m o rtars- 
* me 
j 
J 
lout with Republican Leader Ev- nam 0se *>]d'ers W0re k,l,ed and 
erert M. Dirksen of Illinois, who s,x f u n d e d , a spokesm an said. 
at first opposed any legislation) 
16 M arines Killed 
in this field, the coverage was 
cut back. 


All 21 Dead 
Probe Launched 
In Mine Deaths 


Judge Flays 


Wife Killer 
As Evil Man 


FLOODWATER SURVIVOR 


Joe E. W estm oreland of Ontario is shown in a hospital bed 
recuperating from ordeal in o W est End storm channel. 


FBI Works 
To Identify 
Bus Victims 


Man Swept Away 
In Flood Channel 


CALUMET, La. (AP) — The a tunnel 3,000 feet from the 
l q s 
ANGELES — William 
bodies of 21 men who perished mine shaft. The other five were Dale Archerd was sentenced to 
in the caverns of a salt mine located a few hours later. Offi- deatb F rjd ay 
f0r 
the 
insulin 
have 
been found 
and efforts cials for Cargill, 
Inc., which m urders of three persons, 
were under way today to learn owns the mine did not disclose 
!n passing sentence, Superior 
the cause of the fire that killed the exact spot. 
Court Judge Adolph 
A lexander 
them . 
The 
tragedy 
strock 
ei ht said Archerd is “ m ore evil than 
The four-day search cam e to months after the Federal Bu- j have ever seen before.” 
an end Friday. Sixteen bodies reau of Mines recommended a 
Archered, 55, was convicted of 
were found huddled together in sistsr shaft be sunk to provide injecting the diabetic’s rescue 
better 
ventilation, 
an 
escape drug to kill two of his wives 
route and various fire controls.jand a nephew. The death of 
( 
If A. Schrecengost, a bureau ^is seventh wife, M ary Brinker 
official 
in 
Indianapolis, 
Ind., post, Arden, brought about his 
said the recom m endations were a rre , t. 
she was a 
resident of 
m ade by A M. Evans, a mining fhino and was assistant publici- 
engineer from the Dallas sub- jy director of the Clarem ont 
district, after an “ observation colleges 
and 
a 
best - selling 
walk-through * last August. 
author. She died in Pomona Val­ 
in Minneapolis, W. R. Pearch, jey Community Hospital in 1966. 
a Cargill vice president, said 
. 
. 
, r . 
¡the com pany requested the in 
. 
. 
, rc er 
. m . 
_ , 
NEW YORK (AP) - Gov. spect.on and that some recom- „ ArCh0r,.d appeared cf m F; ' ‘ 
Nelson A. Rockefeller has asked m endations w ere followed, with 
'v * e n Judge 
Alexancer 
a group of 
Republican party others “ in the process of ap- p a^ 
sentence, 
leaders to m eet with him in proval and im plem entation.” 
e )ud8e 1S entitled to his 
New 
York 
Sunday 
afternoon 
Jim Bowe, a public relations 
own °Ptruon* 
^9 
said t0 news* 
“To exchange views on the situ- man for the mining com pany. 
m0a W!th 
a 
atlon of the p arty ” following added Friday night, “ there was 
suave defendant had 
a 
Gov. 
George 
Romney’s 
with- no specific suggestion in the en- know“ed8e of insulin from many 
draw al from the GOP presiden- tire 
observation 
which 
could years n n p 'w n « * as a m ental 
dial race. 
have prevented the fi re. . 
hospital technician. He was sus- 
A statem ent by the governor’s, 
Raymond R. Ashby, a coal !>ected o! billing seven persons 
press secretary, 
Leslie 
Slote, mine safety expert from Ken- inCiUdmS three 
of 
his 
seven 
said: 
’ 
¡tucky who was on the mine floor Wives but was char*ed with the 
"Gov. Rockefeller has asked a when the first 16 bodies were r irep heaths that took place in 
num ber of representative lead- found, said the men apparently ^ os ^ nSeies County, 
ers of the party to m eet with “ died of carbon monoxide poi- 7 !,h0y werP 
hls 
iourth 
him in New York on Sunday, soning. They died a painless ¿elfa, who died *n 
his 15- 
The purpose of the m eeting is to death. It was like lying d o w n ',e a r*o!d nePhcw- Burney Kirk 


Rockefeller 


Summons 


60P Leaders 


UPLAND — "I thought I w asicar but did not survive 
_ 
t ....... 
...... ...... ................ .. 
gone, to tell you the tru th .” 
Keichman fell but was able to exchange views on the situation and going to sleep.” 
° 
Archerd, who died in 1961; and 
A task force of U.S. M arines 
Thus Joe W e s t m o r e 1 a n d reach the bank. W estmoreland, of 
the 
party 
following 
Gov 
Ashby was one of the mem- Mary Post Arden (A rcherd was 
and South V ietnam ese infantry-sum m ed up today his narrow who followed him out of the car, Romney’s 
withdrawal. 
It 
has bers 
of 
two 
six-m an 
team s usin" !ne nam e Arden when he 
The chief exemption 
provided men battled 500 Com m unist for escape from death Friday in the was 
swept into the channel. been m ade clear to all 
partici- trained in m ine rescue opera- and lbe autdoress w ere m ar- 
BAKER (A P)—The Identities 
y tbe cornPrnrmse 
>s f°r 
>nd|- seven hours in the sam e general swirling w aters of a West End: 
“ I can just rem em ber hold-panis that the purpose 
of the tions who worked at the mine 
of several of the 20 persons who v'dual homeowne^s 
ha^hle area 
T hursday 
and 
reported flood control channel. 
ing my breath as long as possi- meeting is not to seek any com site since their arrival Wednes- 
An aut0Psy Performed on Mrs. 
died Thursday in *a bus-car col- 
* ° r n nta 0 
r pro" kiIhng 
164 enem y soldiers. In 
He 
told from his 
bed at Up- ble 
and everytim e 
I took a m itm ents of support for the gov 
day night. 
Arden showed that she died 
of 
listen nn interstate Hiehwav 15* 
,hem selves> rather than that 
fight, 
16 
M arines 
were land’s San Antonio Community breath of air, I swallowed w a-em o r whose position of noncan 
Ontim 
> 4 ' 
bronchia! pneumonia and hypo- 
killed and 113 wounded. South Hospital of the harrowing min- ter. I kept saying to myself ‘I didancy rem ains unchanged.” 
j 
1 
glycemia shock — a lack of su* 
Vietnam ese casualties w ere re- utes he spent in the channel just have to hold m y breath,’ ” 
Slote said that between 20 and 
ouShout the searcf- opera- gar in the biood. The prosecu- 
ported light. 
after the ca r in which 
he was ¡Westmoreland 
said. 
25 GOP leaders from all parts of ,,on’ mme ° ‘" c 'a ls KePl an °P" t»on cwitended that an insulin in- 
the country had been invited to tm ‘lst,c a ,r- 
¡action 
caused 
the very 
low 
the session. He declined to iden- 
When 
rescue workers 
ex* level of biood sugar. 


lision on Interstate Highway 15 usmg a real-estate broker. 
m ay not be learned for a week, 
_________________ 
officials say. 
. . , . 
^ 
, 
M em bers of an FBI disaster 
A l N i n G r C f Q S n G S 
team and authorities in this Mo- 
. 
n i 
• 
jave D esert town assisted Grey- In Philippines 
hound Bus Lines officials Fri- 


In other action in the north riding stalled, 
em m ost 
provinces, 
U.S. 
Air 
W estm oreland, 22, and Ken- 
Force 
B52 
bom bers 
pounded neth Keichman, 42, of West ( o- 


“ Bobbing Cork’* 


felt like a bobing cork. 1 tify any of i ^ 
^ 
to ^ U te the ^ 01®*1 a half m,le int0 the cav' 
The prosecution charged Ar- 
dav in trvine to E r m in e the I ,MAN" 'A <0PI)- A" Air 
suspecled Communist Z iU ons vina. were on the.r way io Ana- mus' 
b a,ked <“ « •' "<*i- time of the m eeting on Sunday ¡™s , wlth?u' s1*1« '"- lhf' 
(¡nance,lly by the 
d w™ .,ne_ l _ 
a‘r" n,,r carry'inear Khe Sanh and Hue^ 
Zlhe.m to do an audit for the up ' wa? 
" ,n* up an,l1' “m"' 
the Se 
on would T 
,T 
1 '««em-.K-r, 
ano,her,deaths, footing the w.ve.> bank 
ing 14 persons crashed on .he now 
coM 
'reil.kelv 
Southern Countie, Gas Co. (or 
* as 
pv" held in Rockefeller s Etflh Ave %'*'« ' " 
„ 
, 
northeast coast of the Philippine ( 
( 
1 
. 
B 
which thev work 
''d me 10 repeat my njm< 
nue «nartm oni 
, 118 d 
“ We have nam es of six or lsland of Panay Friday n ht lor a m ajor enem y assault. 
vvmcn iney *onc. 
The 
SQmeone 


eight persons who were sup-|The Department of Civil Avia 
. . 
~ 
7 
Hear si8 Alert 
posed to be on the bus and did tjon n id n0 one survived. The 
N ew Inventions 


victim s’ 
nam es. 
Many 
were 
burned beyond recognition. 
vice 
president, 
said, accounts 
and then 
killing the 
nue apartm ent 
** * an excellent sign that they women when he was faced with 


„ t 
Pi obl bly 
Rockefeller 
has consistently ara far a* ay ” 
t 
, J 
exposure. 
Thurm an Baker of 6583 Kimball said he j$ nQt a candldate for 
His o^)timism was banked on 
*‘i prosecuted 
three persons 
“ When we got to the Youth Ave. or B aker’s son, who found the Repub|jcan nomination for a hun0h_ihe f linprs had thrown for m urder before I becam e a 


president. However, he has indi 
him. 
O ther than a “ burning” stom- 
. 
2 
. 
. 
.cated that he would accept 
ach from holding his breath so d raf( ¡f a genuine movement de- 


not 
survive the crash ," 
said Cjvi, 
Aeronautics 
Administra-j 
BRUSSELS (U P I)-T h e new- Authority (in Ontario), we heard 
W alter leery, Sun Bernardino non at Kalibo Airport on Panay est of the world’s inventions, a s‘f» 
saying the Riverside 
County deputv coroner. 
sajd wreckage of the Fairchild ranging 
from 
an 
office 
desk Freew ay was 
d o sed ," 
West- 
Jh e only nam e relea-ed S0 p27 plane was found a short 
that 
converts 
into 
a 
bed 
to moreland recalled. 
Iw g. 
W estm oreland, 
a non- Veloped 
within the GOP. 
far, though, is that of Michael d |vtance from the beach. The pistols that guarantee hitting a 
"I told him (Keichm an, the sw im m er 
who ended up on h _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
B a rr\, a 39-year-old t ook identi- pjang Was en route from Manila bullseye in the dark, went on driver) to 
go through Kimball, 
sandbar in 
the 
channel, ap- 
fied by Coroner Fdw ard P. Doy- t0 Cebu Clty jn 
th(. central display today. More than 1,000 T hat’s where we met the w a-p ea red to be well and able to 
le as driver of the car. 


, up a barricade of salt in an ef- judge,” Judge Alexander t o l d 
a fort to seal them selves off from Archerd in passing sentence. “ It 
the 
fire 
in 
the 
timber-lined was their custom to leave no 
shiifl. 
witnesses behind. I thought they 
Friends and relatives waited, were the most evil.” 
hopes faltering as the long or-) 
“ Now it’s been my m isfortune 
deal wore on. At the final an- to come in contact with Mr. Ar- 


Jacqueline 
In Yucatan 


MERIDA, 
Mexico 
(U P D - 
Jacqueline 
Kennedy 
arrived 
F riday for a w eek’s visit to the 
ancient m ayan ruins of Mexi­ 
co’s 
Y ucatan 
peninsula. 
She j 
s m i l e d 
enigm atically 
when 
asked if her escort would be 
B ritain's Lord Harlech. 
Mrs. Kennedy was to visit the 
first of the ruins today. 
Coolly dressed 
in 
a 
white, 
belted 
dress 
against 
the 
80- 
degree 
tropical 
heat, 
Mrs.; = 
Kennedy arrived on a com m er­ 
cial airliner from Miami. 
“ Are you going to be met 
here by Lord H arlech?” news­ 
men shouted. 
Her only reply was a brief 
smile. 
The British nobleman accom­ 
panied 
Mrs, 
Kennedy 
last 
Novem ber when she visited the 
ruins 
of 
Angkor 
Wat 
in 
Cambodia. Since then, rum ors 
have persisted that the widow 
of the late President Kennedy 
would m arry Lord Harlech. 
H arlech and spokesmen for 
Mrs. Kennedy have consistently 
denied it. 
Harlech was a close friend of 
the 
Kennedys 
when 
he 
was 
British 
am bassador 
to 
the 
United 
States. 
His 
wife 
was 
killed in an automobile accident. 


Employes Fired 


Philippines. 
The 
plane 
went inventions from 20 nations were 
” 
reply. 
j 
ATHENS 
(UPI) 
— 
Deputy j nouncement a m other collapsed cherd. I think he is more evil 
down 
200 miles 
southeast 
of entered 
in 
the 
19th 
annual 
Keichman 
thought 
a 
car 
His doctor found no broken Prim e M inister Sdlianos Patta- on a cot, sobbing: “ Oh my God, than any I have ever seen be- 
M anila. 
international inventors show. 
ahead of him got through, but bones but ordered four or five kos announced Friday that 421 my son, my son!” 
f0re 
his car st ’«ed and w ater start- days of hospital bed rest. West- em ployes of the m inistry of the 
“ i ain’t got no brothers any 
Judge 
Alexander 
tried 
the 
mg 
: ed coming through the doors m oreland said he’s groggy 
and interior had been discharged for m ore,” 
a woman wailed. ease without a jury. His decision 
"I said, ‘Let’s get out of the his head and body aches. 
His “conduct unbecoming to govern 
Two women 
fainted. 
Some to sentence Archered to death 
car. 
We’ll 
have 
a 
b e 11 e r children, 
ages 4 and 7, do 
not m ent em ployes” or for proven m iners 
cried. 
Other 
workers is subject to review by the state 
chance,” W estm oreland recalled know of 
his close call. 
“ Communist 
anarchist 
activi- simply removed their hard hats Supreme Court, a process that 
today. He rem em bered a man 
“ My wife told them I got In ty.” 
'and lowered their heads. 
will take several months. 
who was swpet into a n o t h e rjsom e w ater and had a cold,” ) 
— ......— 



— — 
................................— 
flood in another storm in his he said. 
(jC o4 Oehihf 
Tanker Stuck on Reef 


Today’s 
Weather 


Too Much 
Success 


Mostly clear tonight and Sunday. Ex­ 
pected high today, 68; low tonight, 41. 
High Sunday, 72. F riday’s high was 
65; low, 44. 


YORK, England (UPI) — Stardom 
went to Joey’s head and it cost him 
the lush life. 
Zoo owner Reg Broom said Friday 
the 5-year-old monkey sta r of televi­ 
sion and films would return to the 
zoo because of his increasingly fre­ 
quent tem per tantrum s. 


INSIDE TODAY’S P-B 


Powell's Secretaries 


Expelled From Suite 
Oil Spills on Pink Beaches 


Page Sec, 
Page Sec. 
Bridge . . . . . . . . 
Entertainm ent 
.......1 
1 
Child’s Puzzle . 
Obituary .......... ........2 
1 
Churches 
Radio 
.............. 
Classified Ads . . .5-8 
2 
Sports . . . . . . . . 
...3 5 
1 
Comics .............. 
18,19 Scan 
TV .................... 
Crossword 
— 
Women ............ 
Editorial .......... 
Young People 
..13-16 Scan 


m m 
iss 


NASSAU, Baham as (AP) — A keep the slick from spreading to threatening the island of Exuma 
tide of thick, black oi! washed all 
of 
the 
100-mile 
seaward and the snowy white beaches of 
•D 
WASHINGTON 
(AP) 
— 
A unrepresented constituents, but onto the pink beaches of Eleuth- beaches on one of the most see- Harbour island. 
scruffy little office without even the large three-room suite Pow era Island today from the hold nic 
islands 
of 
the 
Baham as 
The ship tarried 1,800 tons of 
|;a carpet on the floor is the new ell used 
to occupy has been of a tank *r battered by seas up chain. The color of the beaches fuel in her own tanks, 
plus the 
outpost of the two secretaries aw arded 
to 
another, 
Rep to 20 feet and grounded on a comes 
from 
rose coral 
dust oil in 29 cargo tanks, 
¡¡¡who keep the flag flying for Jam es G. Fulton, R-Pa. 
reef pear Point Jam es, 
mixed with the white sand. 
The 13-year-old ship Is owned 
Adam Clayton Powell. 
The office to which the two 
A tug stood by half a 
mile 
The 
Greek 
tanker 
washed by Astro Constamo CTa. N av.f 
1! 
“ This is like a bad dream ,” holdover secretaries and Pow- from the 555-foot General Colo- onto the rocks Thursday night Piraeus, Greece, according 
to 
I Mrs. Dolores Gillespie said Fri- ell’s files shifted 
Friday 
has cotronis waiting for seas to di with a dead engine when the Lloyd s Register of Ships 
day as she and Cleomine Lewis such a low rating by House sta mimsh but the U.S. Coast Guard ship's fuel line broke and the en 
F arther south U S. Navy tug- 
v moved into the tiny office that tus-symbol 
standards 
that 
it in Miami said there seemed lit- gine room flooded 
bouts worked to pull the bow of 
the House allows the noncon- was 
recently rejected by the tie hope of saving the grounded 
The vessel went aground in another stricken tanker off a 
gressm an from Harlem . 
newest of freshm an congress vessel. Even if tugs could yank heavy w eather as it brought reef near San Juan harbor. The 
Deprived of his seat a 
year men, Rep. B ertram Podell, D her off the rocks, the Coast 18,478 tons of Venezuelan 
oil— Liberian-registered tanker, the 
ago by a vote of his colleagues, N.Y. 
Guard said, the tanker was like- about six million gallons—from Ocean Prince, broke up on th»j 
Powell has since been in exile, 
. . . . 
. . “ 7 
ly to sink in deeper water. 
Aruba 
to West 
Palm 
Beach, reef last Sunday and has sim e 
mostly 
in the isle of Bimini. But 
Ministers Meet 
One crewm an was lost 
and Fla. The ship was under charter spilled rvu) million gallons of 
Miss Lewis and Mrs. Gillespie 
BRUSSELS 
(U PI)—European presum ed drowned after a res* to a subsidiary of the Standard crude oil into an area 14 miles 
i have stayed on, answering let- 
Common M arket m inisters met 
cue boat capsized in an oil slock Oil Co. of New Jersey. long 
ters and trying in other ways to today for a new attem pt 
at Friday. 
He was identified as 
Three of the 32 crewm en re 
Puerto Rico’s D epartm ent of 
I serve H arlem ites who no longer talks with Britain in spite of Stratos M astrotainis, a Greek mained 
aboard 
although 
the Public Works and the U.S. Caasi 
have a m an representing 
them Frances persistent opposition 
to 
national, according to the Baha- rear deck was awash. G uard were trying to get rid of 
in the House, 
the 
United 
Kingdom s 
entry, m as air sea service in Nassau. 
Four miles of beach were re floating oil with em u'sions and 
The House has authorized re- 
Foreign M inister M aurice Couve 
Detergents to emulsify the oil ported blackened as a slick five were cleaning 
up 
blackened 
tention of the two women to pro- 
de Murville of France presided were ban g flown from Florida miles long and two miles wide beaches in front of 
luxury ho 
gj| vide assistance to the otherwise at the meeting. 
.and New York in an effort to spread beioie a southeast w m d jid s. 


Page 7, Sec. 1 
Progr««!.Bulletin, Pomona, Calif, 


Murder Case 


j 
Jose Hernandez, 45, charged 
with murder in Rosemead, was 
adjudged insane by Pomona Su­ 
perior Court Judge Carlos M. 
Teran and committed to the 
state department of mental hy­ 
giene. 


The action was taken Wednes­ 
day when Hernandez, who was 
described as a transient, ap­ 
peared for trial. The court ex­ 
pressed doubts about his pres­ 
ent sanity and, after study of 
psychiatrists' reports, ordered 
him sent to the state hospital at 
Atascadero for treatment. When 
Hernandez is believed capable 
of cooperating in his defense he 
will be returned for trial. 


I he killing occurred Dec. 2. 
The victim was Louis M. Mar­ 
tinez, 39, said to be the boy 
friend of Hernandez’s ex-wife. 
Sheriff's detectives said Hernan­ 
dez stabbed him to death after 
brooding over the relationship 
between Martinez and the for­ 
mer Mrs. Hernandez. Hernan­ 
dez had been drinking, they 
said. 


R ID ER S’ B E A U T IF IC A T IO N P R O JE C T - F o u r m em ber, o f the 
W a ln u t V a lle y Rider, plant the lost of 16 tre e , w hich circle 


the horse ring in Suzanne Park in W a ln u t. From left they 


LIBRARY BUSINESS — Two friends of the library confer with librarian Raymond Holt 
C n ° 
the current membership drive. They are John C. McCarthy, an attorney and 
Mrs. W illiam T. Cox, membership-drive chairman. The drive concludes March 21. 
Psychotherapists 


To Address Council 
Library Group 


Recruiting 


Volunteers 


The Pomona Friends 


Corbin is Candidate 


For Claremont Council 


( LAREMONT — No matter champion debate team, 
how he stands on the issues, 
During a three-year stint in 
City Council candidate Charles the Army after graduation, Cor- 
L. ( orbin should hold his own bin graduated from the Defense 
in the artistic aspects of cam- Language Institute at Monterey 
paign debate. 
and was a Chinese linguist. 
Corbin is a lecturer in for- 
He taught English and current 
ensics and an assistant debate ev*nts 
in 
Shapely 
School, 
coach at Claremont Men’s Col- Ridgefield, 
Conn., 
in 
1964-65, 
le8e- 
then came here to attend Clare- 
His candidacy places him in mont Graduate School in Sep- 
a six-way race for two council tember 1965. 
seats, to be filled by the voters 
Besides his positions at CMC, 
i A p !?1 9' 
Corbin also is a staff member at 
1 hough new to the Claremont Honnold Library. He resides at 
political scene, the 28-year-old 927^ Harvard Ave. 
teacher has had a previous flin g 
—-------------- 
at an election campaign. In 1964 Z c s r u r t i \ i « 
„ J 
he ran unsuccessfully for a con- _ _ _ _ _ x 
V G T S 
gressional 
seat 
in 
the 
New 
Hampshire Republican primary, 
of the 
Corbin is a 1961 graduate of 


CLAREMONT —• Two local tice and is actively engaged in 
psychotherapists w il l present the treatment of convicts on pa- 
their views on parental respon- role or probation on an out-pa* 
sibility in child rearing for thetient basis. He has written num-i 
Claremont Coordinating Council,erous articles on psychotherapy, 
— --- — « ..v..«* 
u,c 
v.oroi 
Wednesday noon at the Clare- j and has been appointed by the library are conducting a mem-Colgate L'niversity with a B.A 


171001 Inn* 
Superior Court in criminal and bejship drive to recruit more degree in 
Russian area studies.; 
Dr. Richard Parlour, psychia- domestic relations matters num-Jvoiunteer helpers. 
He was active 
in debating act- 1 
trist, and Dr. Thomas Brigante, erous times. 
, The drive will culminate in ivity at Colgate, serving as pres-! 
psychologist, will discuss “ Par- 1 
Brigante is an associate an open meeting March 21 at dent of Delta Sigma Rho, na- 
e n t a l 
Responsibility, 
Tw o Professor of psychology at the 7:30 p.m. at the library. Per-tional college honorary sp.*ech 
V ie w s . ” Program moderator/Claremont Graduate School and sons may sign up at that time, fraternity, and performing on 


are Jack Sreenan, Mri. Mary Stanton, Ken Kincaid, presi- 
deni 
and Dale King, vice president. The group plonled 
fruitless mulberry and older treesjjurchased with club funds. 
Business Mail Group 


Looking for Members 


The P o m o n a Mail Users’; The postmaster pointed out 
Council, whose purpose is to that heavy mailers can help im* 
improve service given to busi- prove mail services: 
ness mail, is looking for new 
„ 
members. 
~ By being aware of cycle? 
mailing, businesses can avoid 


No Maximum Social 
Security Pay Now 


, 
- 
. 
— ----- 
. wt a iiiciuuciMMu iee oi si a 
cipal of Vista del Valle School suiting psychologist, as well as person receives Footnotes the 
and a past president of the conserving as part-time consulting monthly newsletter ind has thei 
ordinaung council. 
¡psychologist at Webb School opportunity to serve the library; 
Dr. Parlour Is in private prac-iCasa Coiina, and the Youth.on either a regular or part-time* 
Counseling Center for San Ber- ^ 5,5 
nardino County. He is the for­ 
mer Director of the Psychologi­ 
cal Clinic and Counseling Cen­ 
ter at the Claremont Colleges. ices 
include 
book 
mending,! 


- • ..... ^ - 
By MARTIN E. SEGAL 
medicine or doctor of osteopa- den said* 


. 
.. 
, , 
« . « . „ » „ f t 
W henever Social Security ben- thy licensed to practice in the« 
be Leonard Munter, prin- has a private practice as a con- 
For a membership fee of SI a lhe New 
York State college ef,ts are le a s e d , questions United States. The choice is en-1 
“ * 
— — 1 1 
s-* — 
-•> — 
start pouring in asking why peo-,tirely yours. There is no such 1 
pie with top earnings do not im- thing as a “ medicare doctor.” H 
mediately 
get 
top 
benefits. 
Whether the doctor you choose 4 
j Right after President ~ ‘ 
signed the new law 
this letter from Mr. P.C. who iee is something for you and 


Winford Bisel, president of the .. 
organization formed last Sep- 
peak ma,hnf? timrs n«ar the 
tember, says the group now has firsl of fbe rnonth* thus avoid- 


122 members, more than double j ng P'!euPs and getting better 
the n u m b e r with which the,serVice‘ 
council began its existence. 
—Whenever mailers expect to 
The council, one of 350 such send lar8e volumes of mall, 
organizations 
throughout 
the tbey can 8et better service by 
country, is the outgrowth of a a le rtin 8 the postmaster so that 
National Postal Forum held last adequate manpower can be pro- 
fall. 
vided to handle the influx. 
Bisel said many service im- 
Bisel said any organization 
provements can be gained by which depends on mail services 
knowledge of post office dis- should be represented on the 
patch times to various parts of,council. He said the next meet* 
the country. Consultations be- ing of the group will be held 
tween the post office and rep-iMarch 26 at the Pomona City 
resentatives of businesses and Council chambers, 
other organizations often bring* Those who are interested may 
savings in time, effort and mon- contact Bisel at Pomona F 11 
ey, Postmaster Clyde R. Mad- Federal Savings and Loan As- 
¡sociation. 


O b it u a r y 


Charles A. Bell 


Charles A. Bell of 138 W. 2nd 
St.. San Dim is, died Thursday 


Some friends volunteer for li-i 
brary work to relieve the work­ 
load on the staff. Such serv-| 
I ices 
include 
book 
Cake Decorating 


CLAREMONT - A cake-dec- 


Ford Grant 


Sending 2 on 


Europe Tour 


Nation ’s 
• 
--- - 
««vii/» yvu iiiuuse n 
. 
it Johnson will accept the medicare allow- I 
\ \ 7 
n 
n 
t l l 
we got ance as 80 per cent of his total 
B ^ C t f l / iC / 
n r 
fua i. _______I___ , 
. - 


¡writes: 
the doctor to discuss. He mayi 
“ I will retire in three months not want to accept the arrange-!nallonwide 
a 
1 
• - 
ae nMnoM 


LOS ANGELES (U PI) - The 
weather summary! 


rough sorting and developing 
special collections. Others help 


n Jerseyyille, III., and had lived ;(ion Department will meet on 8ummcr momhs- 
n 
an 
tmas for the past 15 Tuesday mornings from March 
0lhers take part in fund-rais- 
yean. He owned and operated ¡12 through May 14 in the Me-,inE t0 buy equipment and fur- 


when I reach age 65, after hav- rTlent—in which case you may aii PrePared by the U.S. Weath- 
ing earned maximum wages — bave t0 Pay more than 20 per er Bureau: 
and paid maximum Social Sec- cent °* bis fee. But whichever 
Clouds hung over most of the 
urity taxes — since the system doctor you choose, 
medicare nation today with precipitation’ 
A T ord Foundation grant will begain in 1937. The newspapers Wl!1 reimburse you 80 per cent reported in 34 of the 48 adjacent! 


ofj 
and 


O u n e r c U 


Capt. Frank Pina 


a^grocery store in Charter Oak.jmorial Park crafts center. 
Mr. Bell was a member of the 
Foursquare Church in Covina. 
He is survived by his widow. 
Mrs. Ruby Bell; three sons. I 
Charles A. Bell and Billy L. | 
Bell, both of Covina, and Jo- i 
seph P. Bell of San Dimas; 
three daughters, Mrs. Fem A. 
Cook of Monrovia, Mrs. Elsie 
A. Bosch of Stanton and Mrs. 
Charlene Merryman of Covina; 
a brother, Fred Bell of Long 
Beach; two sisters, Mrs. Myr­ 
tle Hilllgoss and Mrs. Blanche 
Higginbotham, both of Yucaipa; 


Free Methodist Church. 
Capt. Pma was killed March 


1 while serving in Vietnam. He 
was the son of Mr. and Mrs 
Francisco Pina of 9969 Praderai 
Ave., Montclair. 
Officiating Monday will be the 
Rev. Apoliner Catalan, pastor; 
held of the Prince of Peace Church 


. 
, 
, tvl, c - of the customary and reason - States. Snow fell in the Great 
the County men to take part in the ment benefit under the new law ab!o iee ior bis services (after Basia and the South and Cen 
1968 European Planning Tour, 
is $218 a month. But Social Sec- you Pay lhe first *50 of total !ra! 
Rockies. Four inches 
They are Ken Hunter, Ontario urity tells me that I’ll get a lot medicai expenses for the year). snow fell at Elko, Nev., 
city manager, and Robert A. less. Why?” 
N o r is there such a thing as tw° inches at Rock Springs and 
Covington. San B e r n a r d in o 
y our benefit will probably be 1 “ medicare hospital.” Almost Casper, Wyo. 
Coumy administrative officer. 
>15« a month - the hi.hett ben- T 
7 
h05pital. ,in the United’ 
Heavy snow warnings were in 
e tour is sponsored by Cal efit possible for someone retir- 
,es 
15 dua*Hied to accept effect for today and tonight in 
dorma Tomorrow, a statewide, ing „uw at age 65. with maxi- m“ 'car* P’l,ien,s and receive the higher elevations of New 
nonprof,t association. 
mum earnings. 
medicare payments. A few are Mexico and Northwest Arizona 
Members will leave San Fran-I 
the 
theoretical 
maximum 
°,nly ,t>,‘cause 
Occasional light rain and drizzle 
now be- , equate fac,llties or otherwise occurred from the eastern Da- 
David sucn as oreal Books, and of-|via cmcago ana Montreal. The cause Social security benefits 
П° 1 i0,,0w (ederaI law* But kotas across the Great Lakes 
fer lectures, exhibits and other¡fhree-week tour will show how are based on average earn- T 
lhe 7,0C0 or s0 hospitals and upper Ohio Valley to the 
¡major European cities meet en- mgs - not earnings at the time u 
have qualified, you cammid-Atlantic coast. 
| 
vironmental Droblems. 
n t 
-r-uJ 
»noose any one. 


nishing?:. Some assist in the 
.work of gaining gifts of books, 
:special collections, endowments 
and bequests. Still others prefer 
publicity work. 


The Friends of the Library 


« 


f 


i 
»iivj 
:---- ............ 
*ne 
meoreucai 
maximum 
A memorial service for Spe-a 0 sPOn;»or discussion groups;ilsco May 1» and go to Europe benefit isn't possible now be- 
cial Forces Capt. Frank David such as Great Books, and of-|via Chicago and Montreal. The cause Social Security 
benefits 
Pina of Montclair will be 
held ler lectures, exhibits and other ¡three-week tour will show how are based on average earn 
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in 
the cultural activities. 
¡major European 
cities- 
| zironmental problems. 
|0f retirement. The $218 a month 
lhe program includes field figure is possible under the new 
. n 
, 
SIH 
|trips and seminars with leading law - but only for someone M 
wmes: 
know anigusty winds, 
government 
officials in each whose 
average 
earnings 
ton ? 
y 
years oi aMe- she 
2 Drivers 


Injured 


Southern California had 
o c-' 
casionai showers, clouds and! 


DON DES COMBES 


Des Combes 


Will Lead 


Scout Drive 


j country visited. Problem areas which 
Social 
Security 
|to be studied are housing, trans-|were paid) are $7,800 a year. 
taxes has never worked and does not 
*v THB A**°ciATeo prcss 
receive Social Security benefits, a &«nv, ciouav 
portation, industrial and recre- However, no one will be able to 
receives a pension of $128 a ,a & u.' rc!oW,fH 
iational use of land, and air and achieve $7 ,S00 in average earn- m° 
from 1)16 U S* ClviI ^ 
M^ arc!ou<fyou<,v 
mtil th« 
because her ^ceased h u ^ | № cr% T 
jings at age 65 until the year 
Two persons were injured late] water pollution. 
w IM1UI UJC 
^ 
, 
* 
„ 
m addition to Montreal, m em -liSL 
« 
,a 
at Valley Boule-,bers will visit Yugoslavia, Italy,.will have to include the lower I18' 
tl) 
p 
financially but tjenver? cloudy 
plawn Avenue. 
| ranсe .md Switzerland. 
maximum eaminos s#»t in fnr. 
cannot anY longer since my 
husband died. Is she eligible 


and 12 grandchildren and nine! 
m I I j ____ in 
-1 in iU T O C l 
Im h r iIm laA uJJTt 
—T Z . - 
*** 
* _ycar iShe rereivi»« a 
ti<to 
great-grandchildren. 
Funeral services were 
......... 
this afternoon at Oakdale Me- 
0f Los Angeles Thè Rev Jesus rflurs(*ay afternoon in a two| 
morial Chapel in Glendora. The * pacillas, minister in thè Con car coll,sion 
Rev. Larry Larimore, pastor of 
gregational Church Denomina-vard 8,1(1 Roselawn Avenue. 
¡France and Switzerland. 
the Foursquare Church in Co- tion, will assist along with other 
drivers were Arthur D. 
The group will include 
___ 
~ 
r wi, 
vina, 
officiated. 
Burial 
was ministers. 
Behrends, 30, Covina, and Ross planning 
officials, 
architects, 800 in 1959-05, $4,200 in 1955 58 for thf speciaI 
a montb Soc- ^j^iu c‘00dv 
made In O a k d a l e Memorial 
Burial will be at Fayetteville, d* 
E andridge, 
18, Monrovia, engineers, builders 
and private $3.600 in 1951-54). 
1 ‘ \ Security benefit? ' 
Park, Glendora. 
N.C. 
¡Behrends complained of back citizens concerned about the fu- 
The actual maximum benefits , V ’ Mrs* B” your ^-year-old 
and neck pains but declined ture of California. 
possible at age 65, with max- 
* 
13 aiready receiving a 
treatment. Dandridge was treat 
jimum earnings will rise every I" 
y paymeni of over « 
,ed at Pomona Valley Cummun 
About half of France’s popu-'year. For example, top benefit frT 
f 
,vmment_and so is 
ity Hoipital for a possible bro- lation of approximately 49 mil- WiB be $160.50 a month In 1969 ,ne, 
, 
th<* sP^ciaI age-72- 
i_ i.• — 
. 
-- 
. 
. 
’ an ! over henefif It oaac a«!« in 


Huh Low er 
54 
J6 
40 
4} 


j maximum 
state mer laws: 
earnings set in for- 
($6,600 in 1966-67, $4,- 


ì* Moine», г louOy 
Ooirolt, Cloudy 
Fairbanfcs, ctoudv 
Fort Worth, cloudy 


T odd n U n J Chapel 


TodJ and Smith, ine, 


FU N ERA L DIRECTORS SINCE 1907 


ken nose 
¡juries. 


Indianapolis, clear 
Jacksonville, cloudy 
Juntau, Cloudy 
Fan*a* Ity, cloudy 
Lo* Angelas , i0Udv 
LouayDie, claar 
$40 Mernphis, cloudy 
M.am|, clear 
Milwaukee, cloudy 
Melt -St P 
cloudy 
New Orleans, fair 


5» 
Ó 
40 
51 
46 
*7 
SO 
64I 
«47 
M 
64 
7! 
41 
74 
65I 


ÎV 
40 
37 
44 
51 
44 
2f 
41 
У7 
74 
£ 
M 
43 
54 
30 
43 
52 
57 
60 
a 
40 


and other facial in lion people is under 33 years|*l«5 In 1970, $185.40 in 1980, etc. Jh 
j ' ' . L ' l t ! . ' 
g^ s ,°.nly.t0 n'rrih,c; 


.14 


.06 


.58 


Pollock Mortuary 


those who are not eligible 
i Social Security and who do MX rjftifulUinSu* 
receive any other government)pilSj A%rec,ouay 
payment of at least $40 
month. 


I. 
clear 
a Sapid City, chwdy 
a Ukhmond, cloudy 
St 
l o ui*.'cloudy’ 
Salt Lk. fclty, ram 


for personalized sen ice 
Men Face Fly Fraud 
San 
San 


F U N E R A L IN SU R A N C E 


B eu au*a F u n e ra l Inaurane« can to affectively ligh ta n th# fin a n ­ 
cial «terne» ef tt<e»a w# aarv* « • w ould welcome an opp ortun i, 
to 9 }** Г 0« rt or» complete tìeta I« about the Gold an.eld 
w hich is a practical rnathod of proparm u in ad vance fo r 
fu n tra i tapin a ««. 


170 N. Ct ARE Y AVL. 
Potnone 
521 N. IN D IA N 
CUremout 
H ILL 


Member by Inviuiwn N A T IO N A L SELEC T ED M O R T IC IA N S j 


Phone ¿ 22-1217 
S 7 S 
N O R T H 


MARVIN H. TERRY 
Arrangements Pending 


N A . 2 - 1 1 6 3 


T O W N ! 
A V I N U I 


Mr. R.C, writes: “I am 86 
years old and due to have an 
operation soon. I would like to 
know whether I can go to any 
hospital, and any doctor, or 
must I go to a medicare hospi­ 
tal and a medicare doctor?” 
i 
, 
, 
J 
— 
i 
You can go to anv doctor of men who pIaced a fly in a m t t \ 
M Mr,*lr* 
— 
— 
— Jnnk bottle face fraud and ex- 'Bak#rittew 
tortion charges. 
na^t.tt'1* 


P r O O t C S S - R U llr t ilt 
The men went t0 executives 
^ ^ 
10f lhe soft drink planl Hnd 
jH jjp w 


manded $9,000 to k e e p silent 
U 
about the polluted pop. 
fC,UTit"'''0 


rein . . 
. r.n . cloudy 
■NffHt. d te r 
BUENOS A IR ES (U P I)—Two w^ihintto«*cioudv 
' m 
* 
1* 


Founded 
1№ . 
f. werk by Propre»'»■Bulletin 
lishing Co , too S 


7 day» 
io- 
Published 
_ 
, _____ 
Pu 
- 
. „ж— ^ I hörnt»* St , po- 
Calif. 
91764, 
Telephone» 
Oil 1201 and «jse-ew»« 
Drllvtry complaint ~с1о»т§ time 
J? 
Mooduy through Saturday 
ana io a m 
— *■—-*-■ 
Single 
on Sunday, 
copy price 10c." Delivered 
|l/ .í.,**rn,íC L.*í wqnthlv 
by mail 
12 ЛЬ monthly in the U.S 
Mexico 
land («nada; 14 monthly foreign 
■ 
becuna cías» mall privilège» ,щ. 
Ithoriied at Pomona, Calif 
Adjudi- 
“ oSo. ОЙ. 15' | J43’ 
F О M О N А 41.Щber Of Audit ^Bureau* of 
lotion 
National 
advertising т^огш- 
»euiaUvg, k a U Mewkpapw fr-ít!-_-i. 


! Spôkane 
I Thermal 


FOREST LAWN MORTUARY 


Undertaking and Cemetery Together 


Flowers from $4.00 
let Forest law n Take Care pf Everything 


Don Des Combes of Pomona 
has been selected to lead the 
1968 
Sustaining 
Membership 
Drive for the Old Baldy Council 
of Boy Scouts. 
Des Combes will lead a mem­ 
bership drive with a goal of 


4,000 
memberships. 
Working 
.so with him on the steering com­ 
mittee will be Barney Dagan 
of ( hino, who will be chairman 
of special memberships. 
Gil Ross of Chino will serve 
as chairman of promotion and 
arrangements, and Bill Ander­ 
son of Pomona will head the 
auditing committee. 


The Department of the Navy 
was established by Congress in 
1798. 


BLACKMAN’S 
MORTUARY 
”Economy with Dignity ” 


Peaceful Beauty 
Transcending 
All Time 


Eternal peace and rest 
. . . the inner comfort of 
this thought is part of our 
dedicated funeral s e r v • 
ices. 


CO VINA HILLS 
599-1236 


îrogrcss-fcullctin 
Wolfpack Walks Past Duke, 12-10 


■ W W W w ‘*‘ 


Saturday Evening, March 9, 1968 
Page ¿i 
Sec. 1 


West Returns W ednesday 
Lakers in Breeze, 
Plan Experiments 


SAN FRANCISCO CAP)—Bill — and can you guess who put 
van Breda Kolff says he’d like them 
there? 
to experiment during the last 
Your guess is correct if you 
seven games which his Los An- say Wilt Chamberlain and Hal 
geles Lakers play in the Na- Greer. 
tjonal Basketball Association's1 Chamberlain swept the boards 
Western Division this season. 
for 24 rptXKinds 
a 
I he Lakers, innovated in the and 
8coreci 
13 
^ 
whj,e 
fourth quarter Friday night as Greer hammered in 27 points as 
they coasted to a 130-122 deci- the 76ers whipped Boston 1C1-96, 
sinn over the San Diego Rockets. Friday night and moved closer 
Van Breda Kolff cleared the t0 the championship. 
Laker bench in the final period 


NBA Standings 


E a s t e r n D iv is io n 
, 
W o n 
L o st 
Pet. B e h in d 
Philadelphia 
5* 
Id 
.757 - 
Boston 
so 
25 
.667 
New York 
31 
37 
.507 
Dp'roit 
35 
40 
467 
Cincinnati 
35 
41 
461 
Baltimora 
43 
41 
.453 
Western Div sion 
St. Louis 
54 
24 
.69 
l os Angeles 
46 
28 
San Francisco . 42 
33 
Chicago 
25 
48 
teazle 
........ JO 
S3 
an Diego .. 
15 
«7 


6' j 
18"» 
2ÎW 
7?72' » 
1 
.274 
.195 


? 
6 
6 
10’ » 
76'» 
31V» 
38' 3 


The victory boosted the 76ers’ 
division-lead'ng m a r g i n over 
Boston to 6 4 games and re­ 
duced ther magic number to 
two. Any combination of two 
76er victories or Boston defeats 
will give the 76ers the cham­ 
pionship. 


Coach Alex Hannum of the 
76ers 
called 
Friday 
night’s 
game “ a game of spurts.” 
"And we had the right (spurt) 
¡at the right time,” he added. 
“ Wilt sure got us the ball when 
we needed it. 


I 
Both teams wasted sizeable 
¡leads in a game that was tied 
(five times in the last period. 
— ----------------— 
--- Matt Guokas snapped the final 
and get some sparkling play deadlock with 3:24 remaining to 
from reserves Freddie Crawford Put Philadelphia ahead to stay, 
Gail Goodrich and Erwin Muel- ■ 93-91. 
ler. But it was Elgin Baylor and 
Boston, 
playing 
without 
ill 
Archie Clark who led the way, Sam Jones, moved to within two 


Undefeated Bonnies, 
Houston Risk Marks 


B y Associated Press 
North Carolina State used some “ walk, don’t run" 
tbnll philosophy Friday nhiht and sent Duke’s 
••xth-ranked Blue Devils heading for the nearest exit 
Trom the Atlantic Coast Conference playoffs. The Wolf- 
>ack held the ball without taking a shot for almost 14 
minutes in the second half, then. 
jcored six points in the last 2% j 
minutes for an incredible 12-10 
victory that sent them into to­ 
night’s title game against North I 
Carolina with a berth in the; 
NCAA tournament at stake. 
Tourney Under Way 
That tourney gets under way 
today 
with 
seven 
first-round 
games at four scattered sites, 
including appearances by top- UCLA-USC game tonight at the 
ranked Houston and third-rared i>ports Arena resemble Friday 
it. Bcnaventure, only major un- n.ght’s Atlantic Coast Confer- 
beaten teams in the country. 
ence ice cube between Duke and 
Houston, led by Elvin Hayes, North Carolina State? 


Will Trojans 
‘Slow Dow n’ 
vs. Bruins? 


LOS ANGELES - Will the 


The Associated Press’ player of 
Bob Boyd, the Southern Cal 


Friday'« R e s u lt * 
Detroit 179. Cincinnati 118 
Philadelphia 101, Bo*ton 96 
Los Angeles 130, San Diego 123 
Baltimora 127 Seetfie 116 
Today'* Game« 
St, Louli at Chicago 
Seatt'e at San Diego 
Los Angeles at San Frartcltco 
Sunday's Gamas 
Cincinnati at Boston, afternoon 
Philadelphia at New York, afternoon 
Baltimore at Los Angeles 
Detroit at St. Louis, afternoon 
San Francisco at Seattle 


each scoring 23 points. 
points at 98-96 with a minute re- 
After the game, van Breda maining, but Greer canned two 
Kolff said he’d like injured Jer- free throws and Guokas added 
ry West back into the lineup another to close the scoring 
next Wednesday night when Los 
i„ 0Iher NBA actjon ^ 
Angeles hosts San Francisco to replaced Cincinnati in fourth 
work with n— ' — 1 
jl - 
»vuiui 
( raw ford, acquired piace jn the Easf b 
drubbing find themselves in third. 
Í) 
»La. 
_ 
« 
* A A _ 
I f I I 4M A M A 8iS 
41 Im a 


HOT NIGHT ON THE ICE— Kings* Doug Robinson (23 
left watches as his shot is blocked in most unusual manner 
by foot of Oakland’s Lorry Cahan during Thursday's NHL 
Kings Can 
Claim Share 
Of NHL Lead 


PITTSBURGH if» - The Los 
Angeles Kings of the National 
Hockey 
League 
can 
move 
back into a tie for first place 
in the West Division tonight 
with a victory over the Pitts- 
burgh Penguins. 
' 
The Kings, with a season 
record of 27 - 30 - 6, have 60 
points to 02 for the leader- 
Philadelphia. But if the Kings 
tie or lose tonight, they could 


- 


game at Forum. But it was a far warmer evening at Toronto 
where Philadelphia’s Larry Zeidel (lower left) and Boston’s 
Eddie Shack get involved in stick-swinging fury. (AP photos) 


| the year, takes its 28-0 record coach, doesn’t exactly say so, 
against 
upset-minded 
Chicago but he does admit "we will use 
j Loyola in a doubleheader at Salt a rather conservative approach. 
Lake c ity, Utah. New Mexico We II fast break on offense but 
State and Weber State both 21-5, against UCLA’s defenses we ll 
meet in the other half of the have to keep the ball under con- 


MTham<iS t g°* 
. 
. 
*he R°yals 129-118, and Balti- 
The Laker coach also said more beat Seattle 122-1 IB 
he d like to play Baylor about 
Detroit moved ahead of Cm- 
34 minutes per game to give the cinnati by one-half game for the 
star ‘orward 
a rest before the fourth and final playoff spot in 


p Th. , .u . 
a 
' c 
t? 
the East 
the shooting of 
T e 
ak 
.¡re in San Fran- 
Eddie Miles, who hit eight of 10 


n0« lZ7 n h tl ° P'a y pth? War* fi6ld *oal attemPts ^ the final 
riors before hosting Baltimore period when the Pistons broke 


the 


tomorrow at the Forum 
Elsewhere in the 
NBA, the 
the game open. 
Miles and Dave 
Bing each 
7r,ors, * re. 
«ored 31 points for Detroit. Os- 
»tones throw of their third car 
Robertson 
of 
Cincinnati 
straight Eastern Division crown poured in 38. 


Minnesota, 
also 
with 
60 
points in the West Division of 
the NHL, hosts the tough New 
York Rangers. A Minnesota 
victory would put the North 
Stars into a tie for first. 
The Kings are in New York 
tomorrow to close out a two- 
game road trip. L.A. returns 
to the Forum Tuesday night 
to face Detroit. 


NHL Standinas 


Chamberlain 
Next 76ers’ 
Cage Coach? 


Pro Basketball 


BOSTON (AP) — The Boston 


SAN 
Acton 
B*rnett 
Brift 
Brnnm 
' Flnnel 
Kimball 
Garrbee 
Fl#y 
William* 


LOS ANGELE 


Baylor 
C la r k 


O I E G O 
G F ‘ 
3 0-0 
2 6-6 1 
1 0-0 I Hawk ir,* 
i? 2*?« »? Ooo()ch 
13 9-11 35 imhoff 
- ft *? 
? Í 
8 Crwfrd 


Montreal 
Near York 
Bos'ort . 
Ci-cago 
Toronto 
Dttroif 


, . V Í . I t M u tila r 
4 10-11 1| Hamiltf 
Wetz# i 
5 1-2 111 
I tt J 
41 34-46 I M I 
3« M 22 IS—122 
Angel«* 
jj 34 j# 
foyjfd. out—Lo* Argaies Mue ier 
Total foul*— San Diego 28, Lo* Ansai#* 


m_JS 
O f t 
.5 13-14J Philadelphia 
a 
U h0* An'’ei«» 
8 4-4 70 Minnesota 
^ 0-0 U St. LouiS 
4 3-S 11 Pittsburgh 
4 0-0 8 Oakland 
6 Ml 19 
11 18 Hamiitn 
n 
J . 
.Tatai» 4] 16-42 172 Tot*l* 
Record American said Friday ?!" ?•••• 
. 
. 
, 
J 
L «* An#el< 
that it has learned Alex Han­ 
num will resign after the play- *« 
„ 
A,, 
. 
, 
. 
, . 
J. ./ 
Attendance 9,146 
offs as head coach of the Phila­ 
delphia 76ers of the National 
Basketball Association and be 
replaced 
by 76ers 
ace 
Wilt 
Chamberlain. 
' n#i*cos 
„ 
. 
. 
. 
T h a c k r 
Sports writer Murray Kramer 
said Hannum’s resignation is al- 1**5, 


'hiladelohia 


BOSTON 
Sandrs 
Russell 
Havlick 


O FT 
2 2-3 6 
« 4-6 li 


P H IL A D E L P H IA 
O FT 
6 4-4 16 
i4 l ì ?? 
> 0-0 0 
1 11 J 


hbrin 
ur.gnrn 
•reer 
uok a* 


East Division 
w L T Pts GF GA 
36 18 10 82 201 139 
33 19 11 77 155 158 
33 72 10 74 231 189 
29 70 15 73 189 187 
26 27 
9 61 167 U4 
22 30 10 54 200 209 
Weit Division 
76 ?« II) 62 140 14« 
27 30 
4 6Û 172 700 
S ü .** 60 162 198 
......... I? 27 
3 57 146 160 
21 » 12 54 1 61 117 
_ ,. , 15 36 
14 44 138 189 
F r i d a y ’s R e su lt* 
No game* *c«edul9d. 
Today's Games 
Çh cago at Montraai 
Detroit at Toronto 
New York at Minnesota 
Lo* Angele* «t Pittsburgh 
Oakland at $t. Lou.* 
Su n d ay* Gam a* 
Toronto at Chicago, afternoon 
Los Angelas gt New York 
Detroit at Boston 
Minnesota v». Philadelphie *1 Ouebtc 
St. Louis at Oakland 
M o n d a y * Gama* 
No games scheduled. 


0 0 jacksn 
one«, 
M#ichnl 
Walker 


B A L T I M O R 


ready In the hands of club offi­ 
cials. Kramer said Hannum is 
set to take over as head coach 
and general manager of an un­ 
named NBA team. 
The move, if verified, would 
r 
make Chamberlain a player- mckii* 
coach, similar to the role occu- Ferry* 


_ 
I t t . 


38 29-24 96 Total* 
17 17-Jli le ? 
27-28 16 2 5 - 9* 
_ 
• 
74 M 31-24—101 
Total foul*-Bo*ton 24, Philadelphia 23 
Fouled out-Nona 
Attendance—9,190 


13 
7 13-15 2I 
3 2-4 


twin bill. 
St. Bonaventure, winner of all 
trol." 


Boyd employed the slow-down 
I 2 rfegU!?r„ SeaS?n 
faces iast year aga.nst UCLA and 
Boston College in a single game « a , !he Bnjins ,nt0 overtlrae ^ 
at Kingston, R.l. 
fore falling—UCLA's closest call 
Columbia’s Ivy League cham- ail last year 
pions kick off the tournament 
Tipoff at the Sports Arena is 
against La Salle in the opener of 8 o’clock following a 5 45 frosh 
an afternoon doubleheader at prelim. 
The 
game 
will 
be 
College 
Park, 
Md. 
Davidson taped and shown on Channel 
faces St. John s of New York in U at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow 
the second game 
UCLA. which opens play in the 
Another 
doubleheader, 
this NCAA tourney next week has 
one at Kent. Ohio, sends Florida defeated the Trojans 15 consecu- 
State against East Tennrssee tive meetings. The Bruins are 
and Marquette against Bowling 24-1 on the year already with the 
Pacific-8 title locked up. 
The Trojans had a mathemat- 


i Marin 
¡ Scott 
illit 


* 
_ 
S E A T T L E 
O F T 
O F 
2 3-4 7 Tuckgr 
4 3-5 
4 8 9 14 M#*chy 
14 2*5 
10 
1-3 
71 Rul# 
6 1-2 
11 
7-7 
33 T h o rr 
7 4-5 
11 6 6 21 Mxuard 
10 
0 00 
0 Murr.y 
7 
1 1 ? 3 Wilton 
2 
3 2-2 
8 Kron 
1 t-t 
2 23 
46 30-14 


Darkhorse 
Favorite 
,tl At ’Anita 
Hi 
li 
ARC ADIA (U P I)—An unpre- 
1.5 
dictable race in which a horse .... LEA RW ATIR, Fla. fAP) — quoted 


'I Won't Tolerate Allen's 
Actions' Says Phil Manager 


Green. 
The seven winners advance to 
next weekend’s regionals at Ra- ical shot at the Bruins until Cal 
leigh, 
N.C ; 
Lexington, 
Ky.; trimmed SC’s hopes last week. 
Wichita, 
Kan., 
and 
Albuqu- 
Friday night in the Pacific-8 
erque, N.M. 
Cal tumbled arch - rival Stan- 
Coaches 
Norman 
Sloan 
of ford 88-81 with 6-7 Stu Watter- 
North Carolina State and Vic son scoring 26 points. 
Bubas of Duke, who were team- 
Watterson’s total was more 
mates at State 20 years ago, than he has scored in a game in 
called timeouts galore in thf fi- two years for the Bears after 
na! minute of their slowdown transferring from Menlo Junior 
| showdown to set up strategy. 
College. He hit 12 of 14 »hots 
Leads 4-2 at Half 
Bears ahead when the Indians 
Duke held a 4-2 halftime lead made a run. 
after state held the ball for 
Rus;; 
Critdjfield 
scored 
24 
eight 
minutes. 
The 
biggest ant^ R°h Presley, 22, for Cal. 
freeze set in after the Blue Dev- 
Indians’ Mai McElwain 
ils took an 8-6 lead with 16:15 re- scored 25 points and Art Harris 
maining. For most of the next £ot 
14 minutes, Bill Kretzer, State’s‘ 
In 
other 
Pacific^ 
action, 
6-foot-7 center, dribbled the ball Washington State and Washing- 
with only an occasional pass to ron 
out their seasons with 
a teammate. 
WSU taking a home court 87-63 
Eddie Biedenbach’s jump shot decision, 
tied the score with 2*4 minutes 
^^rtl McKean scored only 
left and then it was Duke’s turn 
or 
victorious Cougars 
to hold the ball and try for one )ut 
Wierman picked up the 
last shot. But State chose to foul s‘ac^ Wi!^ 25- 
Dave Golden with 43 seconds 
^JVe ( arr scored 18 and Jay 
left and the best he could do ^<)n^ R °r 15 and lor the Huskies, 
was make one of two free v' , u 
42-26 at the half, 
throws for a 9-8 lead. 
Washington State clinched at 
Dick Braucher gave State the jeast a 
*ur ^*r<^ *n 
con- 
lead with 40 seconds to go when -erenc® with an 8-6 record.Cali- 
he put in a rebound of Kretzer’s ’0!nia closes out its season at 
missed free throw and sopho- Stanford tonight and if the Gol- 
Cougars for third. 
Oregon State was assured of 
more Vann Williford made a 
foul shot with 16 seconds to 
play. Ten seconds later Golden sîa> !^' out of the conference 
had a chance to tie it up but 
when the Beavers took an 
missed his second foul shot 
State took only 13 shots, mak 


80-65 victory from host Oregon. 
Senior 
guard 
Vince 
Fritz 


by Quinn as “ certainly posed to be, you oon’t need his {or N. 
ing four, while Duke was two Hi.)re,d. 
*or 
Fritz was 


pied by his arch rival, Bill Rus­ 
sell of the Boston Celtics. 
Hannum has directed both the* 
joSls-Minmort js, 
24 
76ers and the St. Louis Hawks to 
NBA championships. 


Tptils 
B a tt lm o r # 
Scatti« 
Foul#d out—Non«. 
Tntm tou!» Baltin 
Atttndanct—4 0U. 


DETROIT 


121 % X . 


3 that had not won this year was „ h?re 
baseman disturbed that Allen would leave phone number. 


tided by sophomore teammates 


I 
1-1 
41 
J V M * a D /tk A ll 
--- 
------- 
4iV is 11« the tentative morning line favor- 
, 
,s concerned, the without permission.” 
We had no specific plan ~K Battolome with 21 and Gary 


Philadelphia Phillies’ high brass; 
ta »415 il^ iil,t0 was the attraction today as . 
15 horses awaited the start of ls r^pninS 
of patience, 
the $145,000 Santa Anita Handi- 


Both Quinn and Mauch were goinS 
in’° 
the 
^ame ” 
sald 
pressed as to whether or not Sloan' “ U iust d*veloPed as if 


Freeman with 20. 


Bing 
ÇT'PP**1! 
D«d< h# 
Dichgr 
Fox 
H#lr*tn 


In Philadelphia, 76er genera! 
manager Jack Ramsey denied 
the reports. 
“ There’s no truth to it at all," W * 
he said. “ It sounds like a fairy 
tai© to me. 
|t^3 T 
“ Alex Hannum has submitted 8mcinn#ti 
no resignation to me.” 


O FT 
CINCINNATI 


14 3 5 31 D itrK a 
3 0-0 6 Din«!« 
f 4 6 22 L o v f 


going for them. So we wanted to 
Allen, who finished with a .307 
over the court, not just 


...................... gSMM 


F o u ip d o y t — D t t r c a , t t r » w a ir 
~ 1,1 
¡IBJßnSfc'i¿ Wmên » 
Is Quarry-Ellis Bout 
Slated for Oakland? 


Allen, the Phillies’ All-Star 
_ 
,(T. 
. 
, 
,thtrd baseman who injured his ¡hcv have^tu^n inn lTnirnt u th **** alonF’ 
We had quickness 
. 
- 
- --------- , 
. ,,e ma|1 18 .mng tn 
fmed* n” bt wrist last summer, said in Allen in his five year with the "oinR for us and they had Sl/f> 
cap. the prestige race of thc and 
m not Rtinx to make « big Philadelphia 
he f l e w horn- t.- ,llu.s 
K 
* " 
' c...........— - “ 
1} winter season. 
speech about it,” stys General Thursday to h a v e the hand 
am«», 
Quicken Tree, 
a 5-year-old 
ManaRa»' John Quinn, referring checked by his own doctor. 
0 
gelding, was listed as the 5-2 10 A,,en'-S sudden, unannounced) But the 26-year-old Allen, re 
1 
19 favorite prior to the posting of dePar*ure from training camp, portedly earning around $80,000 


1 { iheoff^ a' ,rauck iine' And theun'h !fm i„rtv h ^ tly i r 
. H 
“ 
he * * * " iump t 
h 
e 
! 
" . ‘ t e S t o g " ; h o i d f n r ' 2' " r 
<"i"~ 
rtl11same oddsmaker posted t h e U{) his rn,nd hp s ^<J!nR 10 live dub." 
. 
, 
’ nas 1x011 nned a 
_ 
.. 
, 
y U entry of Australia'* T o b i n 
'j'8 life thr- way he wants it—butl Quinn uid he had been unable 
tlmes for vmlalln8 tn™ -' w .v,. 
L . «-/J«,. 
Bronze, Tumble Wind and Dun- 
11 Eets !n lbe way of Phillies’;to reach Allen by telephone be- 
b011^'. i! ^ 
Roing to be toler cause “ his number has been 
Genejchanged.” 
Mauch, however, said “ when! 


j batting average, 77 runs batted 
I in and 23 homers last year de- 
•t spite missing the last six weeks 


under the basket. 
“ They Let Us” 
“ When you stand there and 


UC Irvine, 
Nevada So. 
Finals 
Gain 


can Junction at 7-2 
With the track expected to be aied- 
slow for the mile and a quarter Mimch. 
stakes, Most Host, whose ability 
to handle an off track is known, 
was lowered from 8-1 to 5*1. At 
the same time, the entry of 
Rising Market and Proud Land 
was boosted from 9-2 to 6-1 be- 


says 
Manager 


club rules. 


“ I ’m not going to get into that 
¡phase of it,” said Quinn. 
Mauch, 
asked 
if 
he 


know. We’re not just standing 
there holding it. They’re allow­ 
ing us to hold it.” 
Bubas, who ordered his team 
another tough foe tonight, 
ever not to come out and press the Nevada Southern’» Rebels, in 


SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) - 
The University of California at 
Irvine basketball team —- nick­ 
named the Anteuters—hope* to 


b«llptoyer is where he is s u p ;|™ hf p|“ vi^ 
. " ' j 0 . " ( “ "J Wolfpack. took full responsible 
lhl Paci,ic. Co,s* 


OAKLAND tB — The heavy-' The Oakland promoter will be, 
weight boxing title match be [ w Chargin who is close!v 
, cau<* of Rising Market’s prev- 
tween Jerry Quarry and Jimmy .... 
. 
, ’ , 
l0us P °°r showings on soft or 
Ellis for the World Boxing Asso- 
wl,h the bldd,n8 
mushy tracks, 
ciation version of the champion P‘c Boxing Club of Los Angeles. 
The rest of the field was 
ship will be held in Oakland, headed by Promoter Aileen Ea iy,ade UP of Ala Ram, O’Hara, 
April 27, The Associated Press ton. 


Local Coaches Busy 
Rescheduling Events 


1 don t think anybody ever says, 
1‘The hell with anything. 


ty for the defeat. 
NCAA College Division basket- 
“ I chose to play it that way,“ bail tourney, 
he said. “ I told the boys that} 
The Anteaters knocked off 
f 
r 
M 
k 
* 
* dur*nR tbe course of the year 1 
San Diego State 78-© 
•CCldem l*,t !ummer Hf- hoped I had made some sood Friday night to guin the fmal, 
decisions. This one wasn't so fte r NSU disposed of stubborn 


Local high school and college and at UCLA today in 
coaches were busy attempting games. 
singlf 


was trying to push his car and 
shoved his right hand through ^ 
one of the headlights, causing 
severe lacerations. 
In the other semifinal, Dick 


UC Davis 96-91. 
The normally well-drilled San 
3rubar and Gerald Tuttle sup- Diegan» missed their first 10 


learned from 
Friday sight. 
reliable sources 


mauc up 01 Aia xam, U H ara, 
— 
J 
}{*» annarentlv was dissati* ------ 
“ 
«1. 
'he coupled entry of Biggs and 10 reschedule baseball games. La Verne', field was In such fled w, h the proeres. he tad P"ed tlM‘ vttal poim’ ,n ° VCr' e»wr 
P* Apt: 
From Lo. Angeles. Chargin pos,a8r. Rivet. Mr. Right. 
irack mee^s today after rain poor condition Friday morning been mak e; with he hand\n 
^ 
“ * 
.— . - 
- --• 
- 
rvintgmftmma aii 
---------------------- 
, 
a,,vi “'lina mitlasted South C jrolina *eju- 
telephoned 
T h e 
Associated Ju„nK,le Road and Kings F 
a 
v 
o 
r 
. 
al1 ^ one event Fn- after the heavy rain that the the Phillies’ camp and went 
Leopards moved today s game home to have his own doctor 
Formal annwncement of the Press in San Francisco to re-! 
*od,n Bronze, who has run on 
L<* 
site is expected to be made in port: “ The fight definitely is not dlrt m l* twice Wore in his en-| 
™ 
DjL'luhH r\£kv f u/aob (af tbz* K FYJlilpH llnujfk tMkf fne AaI»!»««! 
i tiie career, carries too wt-iuhf aay s postponements, figure to 
make 
it 
difficult 
for 
most 
Oakland next week for the 15- nailed down yet for Oakland, Ituie care®G carries top weight 
of 124 pounds despite the un 
familiar footing for him. 


American Broadcasting Compa- We’re still haggling over terms, 
ny on home television. 
Nothing is definite." 


Fridays runouts, plus Ihurs-jwith Chapman to Monday. 
The other make-up dates: 
round engagement, which will expect at least 48 hours more 
be televised nationally by the negotiations with the TV people. 
teams to rtichedule the events, { South 
The Australian hor s e, how-1 
i)n*y Azusa Pacific College p.m. 


check it. 
“ I wasn’t feeling good and I 
Monday 
wanted to see my own doctor," 
Hills at Ganesha, 3:15 Allen said. 
“ I suppose I ’ll get fined for It; I 


added 20, 13 more than his sea­ 
son's average. 


ever, was given the impost as * as abR* 10 play Friday and the 
Pomona at Long Beach MiUi- my contract says*' have to m I I A 
1 1 1 f i - T 
V 
a result of his homeland rernrd Cougars 
probabiv 
wish 
th*»v tan 
m 
P®y i 
w 
I w 
The fight, culmination of an 
The Oakland Coliseum Corn '“. T 
' 1 °l h‘s homt'l“ ndI1recorl1 , ' " K“ rB. p™ b,1.b!y 
Wlsh 
"*y,kan. 3:13 p m. 
imination series. Involved no.-relied , 
rrrf.....,T ,T. (,f 2V sukes victories. He won *»«dn t Loyola scored a J-l win 
Garey at Ret 
a a m Z lT T . S iS * * 
«"e <* his two *lans on the dirt over Azusa in Los Angeles. 
sible sites of the Astrodome at Monday morning, 
presumablylsince 
comintt 
Houston, Los Angeles and the to announce the fight would be ¡states 
held there. 
Chargin indicated that call 


to 
the 
United 


new Oakland arena. 
The issue got down to Oakland 
and Los Angeles and reportedly was premature, but said the 
the big television viewing mar- fight would be announced there 
k< t in Loe Angeles won out for 
the sponsors of the television 
show. 


if terms were agreed upon. He 
said Los Angeles still is in the 
running. 


The Eastern Conference base­ 
ball showdown between Mt. San era, 3:15 p.m 
Quicken Tree, however, was Antonio and Chaffey has been 
N< 
the most feared horse because rescheduled for Monday at Alta p.m. 
of his stretch • running ability Loma, while UCLA and Cal Poly, 
which he demonstrated last fair were slated to play a double- 
when he won the two-mile Dis-(header 
today 
at 
Poly. 
The 
P'ay Handicap in New York.;Broncs originally were schedul- 
He carries only 118 pounds. 


Garey 
Bonita at Azusa, 3:15 p.m. 
Montclair at Anaheim West 


day I 
$50C fine for every 
Red land», 3:15 p.m miss," he continued, 
"Don’t let anybody get 
idea I’m jumping the club I ’m *4 
going back tonight or 
Nogales at San Marino, 3:15 row,” he said Friday 
n> 
The nerve damage to Allen’ 
Wednesday 
Alta Loma at Chino, 3:15 p.m 
Thursday 


hand had apparently healed and 
»aciTi 
.¡he had been throwing and bat- wLPAZ*n 
ting 
freely 
this 
nng 
spring, 
S 
T 
L 
T 
S 
S 
W 
,C!r dT i 
rha,,ey •* SanIa Ap*' 
15 wasn't hurling until the weather 
ed to play UCLA Friday ut Pqlylp.m. 
I lurnnl cold," Allen said. 


82-79. All-American 
Larry Mill- Aftar San 
Diego 
went ahead 
er scored 24 points and Grubarj00 Rick 
Eveleih’s layup, 22-21, 
Irvine's balanced floor game 
tavr the Anteaters the lead, 33- 
32 at intermission. 
Forward Jeff Cunningham led 
ihe victors with 19 points, the 
same total as 
San Diego’s A| 
Skalecky, 
In the first game of the even­ 
ing, Nevada Southern led 16-1 
us on» KKA« in lbe opening minutes of play 
W KVPC 
before Davis got rul 1 mg, 
The Rebels had a 50-38 lead 
at the half but Alan Budde and 
Frank Stoneburger, both with 
19, led a comeback, 
Curtia Watson scored 27 and 
°6ib«r#Af teanmtate El hurt Miller 24 tor 
lmA i5) the winners. 


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Bill Langley 
In State JC Tourney 


Olympics Big 


Tourney New 
Pasadena Gets Revenge 


NORWALK — News and notes from the California Junior Col­ 
lege Basketball Tournam ent being played at Cerritos College 
here this weekend . . . 


By BILL LANGLEY 
P-B Sports Writer 
I head coach at Cal State Long 
Beach possibly as early as to- 
NORWALK — Hancock m ade morrow, 
a bad m istake in early Decem- 


A MAJOR TOPIC AT THE COACHES’ CONVENTION BE- Paid Hancock back Friday by 


If Tarkanian does go to Long 
ber. 
The 
Bulldogs 
whipped Beach, 
the move will really 
mighty Pasadena, 84-64, at the shake the California Collegiate 
Palom ar Tournam ent. 
Athletic Association as the king 
Pasadena, which had been of JC ball will take m any of fjnai c]ash. 
The tall Falcons led 
waiting for revenge all season, 
fHe state s top players with him. jajj the way, holding a slim 46-42 
Tops on the list is Pasadena’s halftim e m argin. 


27 points and guard Em erson 
C arr of South Bend, Ind., a for- 
m er team m ate of UCLA’s Mike 
W arren, with 20. 


Cerritos 
used 
its 
superior 
height to defeat gutty Orange 
Coast, 101-85, in the other semi- 


Dickinson Retains 
Doral Open Lead 


MIAMI 
23rd on 
(AP) - He stands ble bogey left him with a two 
golf’s money-winning over par 74 and a 36-hole total of 
list with a puny total of $6,450. 146 in the Dora!. The players 
Two weeks ago at Phoenix, they who had 147 were out of it. 


ing held in conjunction with the tournam ent is the Olympic trials, scoring a surprising 91-79 win in own S-foot-8 forward Sam Rob- 
Rebounding was the key. C er-iteam s. Pasadena brings a 32-2 
For the first tim e, the junior colleges will be participating in the the sem i-finals of the 17th annual inson, better known as Super rjtos grabbed 62 while Orange record while Cerritos is 30-3. A 


College of San Francisco edged 
San Joaquin Delta, 91-89, while 
San Diego defeated DeAnza, 71- 
60. San Francisco and San Di­ 
ego meet at 7 p.m. for the con­ 
solation crown following a 5 
p.m. third place clash between 
Hancock and Orange Coast. 


Tonight’s championship gam e haJfway 
0 ne more stroke dangerous 
com oetiinr 
pits the state’s top two r a n k e d ^ ^ 
*— - - . J 
. com P^” tor 
and 
a 


cut him out of the tournam ent 
Nicklaus 
after 36 holes because he was hind 
the 
four strokes over par. 
In the Doral Open here Fri- 


was 10 
leader. 
strokes be- 
40-year-old 
| G ardner Dickinson. 
In the six years of the Dora!, 
day, he was two over par at the Nicklaus 
has 
always 
been 


Olympic trials and the JCs are naturally excited about it 
One result is a togetherness 
spirit 
between 
the 
California 
Junior Association and the Na­ 
tional Junior College 
Athletic 
Conference, som ething lacking 
in JC sports. 


California will send seven top 
players to the junior college 
tria ls later this month in Hut­ 
chinson, Kan. with the NJCAC 
sending 15. An 11-man squad 
will be determ ined at the trials 
to represent the nation’s jun­ 
ior colleges. 


The California group will be 
nam ed 
after 
the 
tournam ent 
with 35 players on the nomina­ 
tion list including Mt. San An­ 
tonio’s Tom Jam es. 
Picking seven out of Califor­ 
n ia’s m any outstanding players 
is a difficult job. Only Orange 
Coast’s John 
Vallely can 
be 
considered 
a probable choice 
from the E astern Conference. 


California State Junior College Sam by the Lancer fans. Robin- Coast could only m anage 27. 
~ 
' 
- - - 
son, 
the form er Los Angeles 
prepster of the year, scored 32 tban 
N aturally, the win was unex- points and grabbed 13 rebounds van Vliet tallied 24 with center 
pected as P asadena mentor Jer- 
his two contests here, Robinson Rodriquez 
has tallied 63 points. 


Pasadena led 
all 
the 


big help for the Falcons is its 
Falcons scored 
more home court, where ( erritos is 
points. Forw ard 
J o h n undefeated this season 
An era in junior college bas- 


and he 
again. 
His nam e Is Jack Nicklaus. 
In 1967, Nicklaus was the golf­ 
er of the year. In the m odem 
era of golf, he has won $723,000. 


would have been cut g reat favorite o fth e galleries. 


The 
long-hitting 
Nicklaus 
thought he played well enough 
to be in competition. 
"I was hitting the ball good,” 
he said. “ I really hit some long 


ry 
T arkanian’s 
clubs 
always 
win the gam es that really count. 
Tarkanian will be looking for 


.... _____ 
Nobody tops that but Arnold;drjves mdnv 
"* * 
to dom inate F riday’s gam es. In Paul RUffner and guard Tony ketball will probably end to -!Palm er and Billy Casper. 
•*■- 
y- 
1 n was JlIst 


way 
his personal fifth straight state against the Santa M aria club, 
I cham pionship tonight when the taking a 44 - 30 halftim e advant- 
Lancers battle tall Cerritos at age. The Bulldogs, loaded with 


adding 
21 
apiece. 
Proving the team 's balance, for­ 
w ard Bob Horn added 19 points 
and guard Lee Mansell contri­ 
buted 18 assists. 
Orange Coast was led by 
p.m. 
im ported talent, tried valiantly reserve forward Ed Babiuch’s 
Tonight’s gam e will probably;to get back in the gam e during 23 points. All-star John Vallely, 
be T arkanian’s finale as a jun- the second half but it couldn't who had scored 40 points Thurs- 


night. Tarkanian, who has built 
powerhouses at Riverside and 
Pasadena, has compiled a fan- 


ior college mentor. According to be done. 
day, wa^ held to 14 by Cerritos’ 
reliable reports circulating here, 
Hancock was paced by 6-7 Bill tight defense Friday. 
Tarkanian will be nam ed the Jones of Washington, D C . with 
In the consolation gam es, City 


JERRY TARKANIAN 
. . . All-Stars coach 


Oilers Seek 
Upset Win 
Of Compton 


LONG BEACH — Huntington 
O thers high on the list include H ancock’s Malcolm Taylor Beach and Compton clash to- 
and Bob Baker, P asadena’s Sam Robinson and George Trapp, n’SHt for the CIF 3-A basketball 
C erritos’ Paul Ruffner and Santa M onica’s Sid Wicks. They are championship 
a f t e r 
scoring 
just a few of the m any deserving players under consideration, semifinal wins Friday night be­ 
fore 8,120 
fans 
at 
the 
Long 


JERRY TARKANIAN, THE KING OF CALIFORNIA’S JC Beach Arena 
coaches, will coach the All-Stars with veteran Sid Phelan of 
San Francisco helping. 
Tarkanian is pleased with his new duties. “ I am really look- Torrance 
72-71, while t o a s t 
ing forw ard to this,” he said. ‘‘It should be a great experience.” League^ champion C o m p t o n 


There has been a lot of talk about the United States Olympic 
basketball team with plenty of publicity centered around the 
UCLA stars —■ Lew Alcindor, Mike W arren and Lucius Allen — 
plus USC’s Bill Hewitt turning down the chance to participate, the doubleheader, San Marino, | 
While Alcindor naturally would be a virtual cinch to m ake the Bio Hondo League winner, 
the U.S. squad, the other three would face a rough series of plays Bishop M ontgomery, Ca- 
elim inations to earn a berth. The statem ent doesn’t downgrade mino Real 
their abilities either. 


The final team going to Mexico City will have only 12 play­ 
ers, supposedly the best dozen am ateur players in the United 
States. 


Huntington Beach, the Sunset 
League champion, edged North 


routed M arina, 78-43. 


2-A Finals 


In tonight’s opening gam e of 


League champion, 
for the 2-A title. Tipoff tim e is 
7:30. 
Mike Contrenas and Roy Mil­ 
ler led Huntington Beach’s scor­ 
ing 
with 
21 
points 
against 
North Torrance. Bill Taylor’s 22 
points paced the losers. 


Compton’s easy win was the 
31st 
for the undefeated Tar- 


ALBUQUERQUE, N.M., THE SCENE OF NEXT WEEK- 
end s NCAA West Regionals, will host the Olympic trials on 
April 4-6 when eight team s of 11 men each will try to im press 
the selection com m ittee. 


The NCAA’s university division will supply three team s and pa ^ ? ’ 
vvho 
meet 
Huntington 
one each will come from the NCAA college division, the Armed Beach at 9 toni8ht- 
Forces, the NAIA, the AAU and the junior colleges. 
Manwhile, Don Hibma scored 


Most of the nation's big college stars like Houston’s Elvin 12 
his 14 P?!n!? in U® .third 
Hayes, Louisville’s Wes Unseld, N iagara’s Calvin Murphy, LSU’s ^ 
i ^ 
as 
alley 
Christian 
Pete M aravich and D ayton’s Don May will be represented on 


w h o f c 
thn, trrM.hi* with »hQlthat ha,f*inch that m ade the 
W list s 
t»K? trouble witn the 
diffpfAnra m 
.• 
. 
un»hi«« 
aw erence so m any tim es. 
I 


“ I need work," N lckltus M 
but 1 d'd" 't 


After next week’s tournam ent 
| Nicklaus said he would drop off 
the tour and try to regain his 
touch for the M aster's at Augus­ 
ta, C,a. 
As Nicklaus faded out, Tom 
Weiskopf cam e on with a great 
second round charge and stood 
one stroke behind Dickinson in 
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The the Doral- Several other players 
Flyers are fighting for their life )Verf, w'tHin 
striking 
distance 
in 
the 
National 
H o c k e y or 
stretch run. 


tastic 198-12 record during the p n d ay after a bogey and a dou- 
past six years. 
---------- 
—— 
Friday'! Results 
Consolation 
San Dieoo 71, DeAnia 60 
San Francisco 91, San Joaquin Delia »9 
Championship 
Cerritos 101, Oranne Coast IS 
Pasadena 91 
Hancock 79 
Today's Games 
Third Place 
Hancock vs. Oranyr Coast, 5 P m. 
Consolation 
San Francisco vs. San Di-qo. 7 p m. 
Championship 
Cerritos v * Pasadena, 9 p m 


Philadelphia 
‘Vagabonds’ 
Need Home 


League’s western division. The hP- ' r h r ^ trou 
were not so 
76ers are on top and everything s anden,ea 
3S 
e 
I)0UR 
seem s 
rosy 
in 
the 
National 
Basketball Association’s eastern 


D oral’s 
defending 
c h a m p i o n , 
and 
Canadian 


.diVisi0n- . B ut.bMh. J ! hj ' ad*lphia S T M ia m ïtü h T 'J w w o S r ,- 
team s share one common prob- mem 
lem —no home court. 
wound 
Philadelphia's new $12 million !ejirnina,” 'd 
Spectrum , 
home 
grounds 
for 
both, 
has 
been 
closed 
wind damaged its roof for 


winning 
up with 


. . . . . , G a r d n e r D ick in so n 
Since Tom Weiskopf 
Charles Çoodv 
Johnson 
a Howie 
second time last M arch 1. Both §£* "Uncey 
team s have been chased to al 
tem ate home sites. 


John Schlr<* 
Oav# Stockton 
Dan Stkes 
Don January 
While the politicians and civic H o^W ianca. 
leaders wrange over the cause, 8ean Retram 
the Flyers and 76ers. called the 
Gypsies 
and 
Vagabonds 
by 
some wags, continue to hunt for lov p«ephv 
home grounds. 
The Spectrum , 
opened last Septem ber, will be u S ^ H & rt 
closed two to five weeks, until BfrtLc ^ Sr 
it gets a new roof. 
jffrru" 
The Flyers, leading the west- 
em division by just two points, R & ^ cgoSSS» 
have 
been 
skidding 
recently. 
Their last two scheduled home tSXi 
gam es 
were 
played 
in 
New 
York and Toronto. It's still not o ^ M a ^ T 
known 
where 
they will 
play JSlSg & W - 
next Thursday’s 
home m atch ^ 
cft3 3 £ e. 
with Los Angeles and a sched- 


Y-A-W-N — North Carolina State’s Dick Braucher controls ball in first half of A C C gam « 
at Charlotte in which Duke led at halftime— 
4 to 2. Story Page 2. 
(A P W irephoto) 


Dick Lot* 
M ike Souchak 
uled television m atch M arch 17 j3,v„ BLr^ T r 
Steve Spray 
i Dale 
Douglas 
Bovi ton 


cam e from behind to whip Aqui- Sports News in Brief 


the NCAA clubs. C a r y Smith of Cal State Los Angeles is a ” a*’ 71^ 
‘ !n *He finals of the 
at 
CIF playoffs F riday night 
Fountain Valley High. 
The 
San 
Bernardino school 


strong contender for NCAA college division club 


A training squad of 18 to 24 players will be selected from 


^ 
, ^ 
r 
Z 
V 
T 
a m em n ° J ? ' n **• h‘sh' al,i,ude C °'“rado ,e(J"b 
“¿ T o r T w 
Stale, where the final team will be determ ined. 
> y 
c h n stla n s. 
T ,m 
Tiemans 


It s a long road to m ake the U.S. team but it provides plenty scored six straight points to 
of excitem ent for basketball buffs 


Ashe May Skip Davis Cup Play, 
Protests So. Africa in Olympics 


bring the C rusaders within two. 
Hibma then did the rest. 
- 
, . ............ 
. 
. . . 
- --------------- — 
It was Valiev C hristian’s 25th Playcrs 
the world, m ay not niPht. Heilman, 162, Los Angel- ference basketball crown, Ala- 
* 
_ i 
rv 
• 
. i.»»* . 
o c 
cm v a/1 
c n m h t n a f iam c 
fn « 
. 
____ 


with Toronto. 
1 he 76ers flew homp for Fri- £r,nk 
m e #uri3 new nume ior r n Boft McCaiiister 
day night’s home finale against 
arch rival Boston at Convention 
Hail here. The gam e had been 
a sellout at the larger Spectrum . 
and 
some 
fans 
couldn't 
ex- 
-------- 
¡change tickets for the Conven­ 
tion Hall gam e. 
Next 
W ednesday, 
the 76ers 
will play the New York Knicks 
at the University of Pennsylva­ 
n ia’s Palestra, which holds 9,- 


streak. 
Both 
147s and were 


65-71-134 
70 6 7 -13 7 
(fi 69- ID I 
é? 71— 136 
77 67 139 
6« 7(3— 1 t? 
71-68 
139 
68 71—17» 
70.70.-140 
69 71-140 
70 70— 140 
6» 71— 140 
*1-77-140 
70 71— 141 
7<k 71-141 
71-70— 141 
69 77— 141 
Ta 71-141 
75-67 
14? 
77 70— 14? 
70-72-14? 
74-*«— 14? 
72-76— ’ 4? 
*7 75-142 
71-71-14? 
71 72— 143 
73-70-143 
77 71 
!«î 
75-*«- 141 
71-72-143 
*9 74— 141 
7? 7! 
143 
7 ! 73 
144 
70 74 
! 44 
70’ 74— ! 44 
73-71 
144 
74 70— 144 
71-73 
U 4 
7? 77-144 
72-77- 144 
7? 7 2 -1 4 4 
72 17-144 
72 72 
1« 
72-72 
144 
70-74 - 144 
74 70 144 
74-70-144 
71-73— 144 
71-73-144 
77-72-<44 
75-70- 145 
7 * * 9 
145 
74-71 — 145 
T1-74— 145 
74-71— 145 
73 72-145 
7172-145 
74 71-145 
7372-145 
7372-145 


Carolina 500 
Holds Trials, 
BOSTON — A rthur Ashe, one scheduled 10-round m ain event 
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — In ai***« j 
«•«*... uuiua u,- 
^ 
_ « 
of the ranking am ateur tennis 
the St. Paul Arm ory Friday quest for lhe southeastern Con- 200* The Spectrum holds 15,000.] GfQnt FlTSt 


REPORTS HERE SAY TARKANIAN WILL LEAVE PASA- straight victory, only an open-fP,ay in Davis CuP com petition 
sizzled 
com binations 
tO;bam a has nam ed C M 


But 
the 
team 
doesn’t 
know 
New- where its last * wo home gam es' 
ROCKINGHAM, N. C. (AP)— 


dena City College after the tournam ent to take over at Cal State ing-games 
loss’ to 
’ D 
o m 
i n g u e z This year because of South Af- Johnson’s head m_ the f(^ ? h jto n , veteran coach at Transyl- £ LhpfJi1NBA playoff gam es W1" fF‘nai ^uallfyinR was scheduled 
Long Beach. But the successful coach hasn’t revealed anything, m arring its otherwise perfect n c a ’s readm ission to the Sum- round. 
Referee Billy 
McCabt- vania college, as head basket- 
H mnrnina fr‘r ,ho 


In case you missed it, Tarkanian was the subject of a Sports record 
Illustrated story last month. He was referred to as ‘The Pied 
Piper From P asadena’ in mentioning his success in building 
state championship team s with boys from low income areas, 
mostly Negroes. 


It was quite a story but hardly com plimentary to the state’s 
junior colleges, described as way stations between high schools 
and universities for the nation’s dumb athletes — especially bas­ 
ketball players. 


m er Olympics, the Boston Globe st°PPed the onslaught when the ba jj coach, 
said. In a copyright story, the dazed Johnson, 164!/2, was pin­ 
ned in a com er, although still i 


morning for the Sandhills 
b o a r d 250 stock car race, run this aft- 


nat- 
24-year-old Richmond, Va . 
ive is quoted as saying Friday on ^‘s ^eef 
night: ‘‘It’s very possible that 
I won’t play Davis Cup tennis 


Ed Snider, 
F lyers’ 
chairm an, said the Spectrum ’s em oon, and Sunday’s Carolina 
NEW YORK A 23-year-old Pr°blems m ay affect the te am .,500 at the North Carolina Motor 


ATHENS, Ga. — Ken Rose- 
Boston Star 
Asks Bruins 
For $100,000 en’t reached a decision yet. It’s seast)n in a decade this year, 


middleweight boxer was taken 
worst thing that could Speedway 
to St. Vincent’s Hospital for ob- ^ P P * 11 10 °ur team right now,” 
At least four more cars were 
coin 
.‘o ur team ’s been readv for the qualifying effort 


★ 
★ 
★ 


THE QUALITY OF CALIFORNIA JC BASKETBALL HAS ,he Boston 
been well proven and is getting even stronger as evidenced by fensenian wi!I ask for a S100-000 


. 
, _____ 
servation 
Friday 
night 
after!said 
_ 
for the United States this year. m ond* who coached G eorgia’s 
knocked out in a fight at m a s,um P- And you need the for the Sandhills event, which 
because of South Africa. I hav- basketball 
team 
to its finest,tbe National M aritim e Union advant*ge of your home ice to races NASCAR's Grand Touring 
Lee 
Clemons 
of 
W yandanch,|broak a s,um P- 
division com pacts, and 10 cars 
a hard one, and I have to look has 
been given a new three- n .Y., was stopped at 2:44 of the 
“ This was the woek ^ 
team were t0 com pete for the eight 
rnnA M TA / An 
n 
kk n 
at u 
irom every an8le* but rm year coach,nR contract- 
" Ken seventh round by Teddy Pagan was pomR t0 Sbend at home t0 
rem aining places for the Caro- 
TORONTO (AP) — Bobby Orr yery ^ 
abQut 
wilhdraw . ,has 
done an outstanding job as of Puert0 Rico PaRan sem C|e. be with their families. Now they lina 500, a Grand National race 
Bruins’ All-Star de- inc „ 
our basketball coach as eviden- mons int0 the 
s wjth a |eft don’t know w hat’s going to hap- for the larger and more power- 
oed by our f.ne 1967-68 season.” ! and ,w0 
rij,hts 
and 
Re(eree pen 
ing.’ 
- 
,, - __ , . - 
„ ,. 
. 
. 
. 
: anvi two 
rights 
and 
the state tournam ent here, probably the best ever in the state. contract next season 
the larg- 
LQS ANGELES — Possibly said Joel E aves, Georgia ath- Petey 
stopped the bout 1 
A 
F or exam ple, four m em bers of last year's All-Tournament ?,st ? 
* 
t0ry 
N at,onal|the 
first jurisdiction involve -¡letic director. ‘‘G eorgia’s stretch | 
team are now starring in college basketball. Long Beach’s Carey 
ey “ *af ue- 
Bailey is at West Virginia and team m ate Mack Calvin starts for 
LSC. San Francisco’s F.ugene Williams helped Kansas State win,,, 
the Big Eight title and Pasadena’s John Trapp stars for Nevada 
ay„ 
Southern. 


jurisdiction 
_ 
, 
.. 
. - 
ment of the National Labor Re- 
an 
ag eson. a omey 
or lat,ons g oard Wllb a Sports or. 
the 19-year-old O rr, said F n - BantTatiftn 
m a 


finish — with victories in six of 
seven gam es against some of 


larger 
.ful stock cars. 
Philadelphia 
newspaper, 
Meanwhile, Jacqui Smith of 
carrying a story about the 76ers\ W inchester, England, had a new 
ALAMOSA, Colo. — Host Ad and fly ers' problem s, ran the tide for this afternoon’s race 
headline, “ Where Are Our Wan- after a 
am s State widened its lead as 


«r >n u 
tinn n/m hearing scheduled in Los An- 
We 
have to ask for $100,000 
. 
” 
... _ . 
Thn.p 
i 
. 
, 
w 
on the basis of ihe club’s own 
es M arch 25 Barlon * ’ Rob; 
Those are just examples. Many of the nation’s top team s (,v,d,,nC(, on how im porlam Bob- 
supervising exam iner of 


ganization could com e from a ; tbe best team s in the South — defending champion Lock Hav* derm 8 B°y* Ionight?” 


have been helped by JC recruits. 


★ 
★ 


the Los Angeles regional NLRB 
office, said he will hear testi- 
Iby is to the team . 
“ I understand Bobby Hull is. 
. 
.. 
. 
. 
I —... 
- . . . .. 
r . j ' _ 
mony from the A m encan Foot- 
going to ask the Chicago man- 
. 
„ % . 
DeAnza, a new 
junior 
college near San Jose, had the Strang- agem ent for $100,000. If Hull is balj le a g u e Players Association 
est route to the state playoffs. The Dons finished fourth m the worth 
$100,000 
to 
the 
Black dn< 1 ie 
erican Footba 
Lea- 
Coast Conference but ended with the title when Laney, West Hawks, then O rr is worth at Rue* 
Valley and Gavilan were all were found using illegal players, least as m uch to the Bruins.” 
The Dons gave a gutty perform ance Thursday night before 
Eagleson 
said 
that 
without ” *l-W A U K ht—Johnny 
iiien - 
losing to Pasadena, 78-54. 
It was the first time DeAnza had m etlO rr, who is currently sidelined 1 er 0 
SeaU,e wa-s 
,he **ader 


was particularly outstanding 


Car Owner 


Testifies 


On Turbines 


INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. IB — 
Race car owner Andy Grana- 
........... 
— 
, 
« j a . 
, , 
teilt testified Friday the con- 
With O rr in the lineup this 
(,ue;'liher wiiiI stan^d by w.iHe 
t r o v e r s y over his revolution- 
Jim Stefamch of Joliet, 111., Don 
3 


en, Pa., State fell further back 
i Friday night in the semifinals! 
of the NAIA wrestling cham p­ 
ionships. The Indians logged 78| 
points followed by the Univer-' 
sity of N ebraska of Om aha with 
46 through the Semifinals. 


going into today’s five-man fin- 


about half th êir gam es,' but with als of the P.ro,e“ 
onal„Bow!!r5 
Association $60,000 M iller Op- 


by a knee injury, the Bruins win 
about half their gam es, bur v 
him they win seven out of 10. 


one of the state’s top 10 team s this season. 


★ 
★ 
★ 


The tournam ent, well organized by Cerritos, has drawn good 
crow ds with plenty of excitement. Even San Francisco and Delta¡ye a G tbe Brums won 22 gam es, 
brought b a n d s. 


r „ 
ln a,lenda n e hnpinf! ,0 “ S 
t' S mU, h ™ 
0d w a r of .U -enm g of Yardley, P a., battle 
land some recruits. Cal Poly s Bob Stull is especially interested 
second year or a 
, , 
^ 
f 
In R iverside’s John Masi while MSAC’s Charlie Bragg was speak- 
W0 « » contract with ^ th e n g h 
to m eet 
^ 
W 
Bos(on 
He turned pro in 1966 the $10,000 first prize tomorrow 


MANKATO, Minn. - Cal Poly 
SLO overtook defending champ- 
. 
ion Portland, Ore.. State and ,iC Colle8e dropped 
grabbed the first-day lead F ri­ 
day in the NCAA College Div- 
ision Wrestling Tournam ent at 


minor wreck involving 
the 1968 Cam aro she had been 
scheduled to drive. 
In 
a 
practice 
run 
Friday, 
Miss Smith spun into a guard 
rail after losing control on the 
No. 3 turn. She was not hurt 
and Buck Baker, Charlotte vet­ 
eran 
who prepared 
the car, 
hastily repaired it and qualified 
. . . 
, 
. il Himself at a speed of 107.453 
S ANGELES — Azusa P ad- miles per hour, best among the 


Loyola Nabs 
2-1 Victory 
Over Azusa 


2-1 deci* day s five Sandhills qualifiers. 
Baker later decided to race 


lost 12 and tied seven. Without ^ arte r °* J a r/a n a » 
Joseph 
of Lansing, 
Mich., and Fred; 


¡and 
Eagleson 
negotiated 
his 
ing to Ivan G uevara, who is expected to be nam ed W hittier’s 
new head coach soon . . . 
The E.C. basketball coaches m ust organize a 2 0 gam e sched tontrac t Wlth the Bruins, 
uie next season with Rio Hondo becoming the U th m em ber. 
1 
Eagleson said it is one thing 


on national television. 


to 
ask 
$100,000 
thing to get it. 
Valley Parochial Sets Star Game 


The Valley Parochial League versus San Bernardino County been quite fair,” he said 
Is .sponsoring an All-Star basket-^.A , schools are St. Joseph and 
MWe hope to arrange a 


H A Y W A R D - Stanley W 
and 
another! W right, assistant coach of the 
U.S. Olympics squad and of 12; 
‘We’ve spoken to the Boston conference or national cham - 
m anagem ent, 
and 
they 
have Head track and field coach at 
Hayward State Friday. Wright, 
pay- 46. will come to Hayward Sept. 
St. M adeleine of Pomona plus rnent program for Bobby so that 1 and take full charge in late 
Our Lady of the Assumption 
of the club won't be 
hit with a October after the Olympics, for 
Clarem ont. The 
opposition will 
large lump sum of money. Per- which he is an aide to U.S. 
be provided 
by St. M argaret of haps we can arrange a deferred coach Payton 
Jordan of Stan 
Lourdes 
income plan.” ford, 
p.m. contest involving 
the 
top of M ontclair, St. Joseph of Up- 
Eagleson was instrum ental in 
players in the 
fifth and sixth 
land and St. 
George of Ontario, forming the NHL Players Asso- 
ST. PAUL, 
Minn. 
- Andy 
grades with the varsity contest 
TL— 
------w— - 
1 
» 
— -------------^ 
~ 
----- 
------- 
scheduled for 3 p m. 


ball doubleheatler tomorrow aft­ 


ernoon at the Em erson Junior 


High School gym nasium . 


Opening the action is an 1:30 Chino, 
Our 
Lady of 


ary turbine-powered car brew­ 
ed an air of hostility among 
U.S. Auto Club members. 


The 
STP 
Corp. 
president 
a federal court hearing the 
hostile attitude among USAC 
members influenced their dec­ 
ision to reduce the size of tur­ 
bine engines for racing. 


USAC cut the air inlet area 
of the turbines from 23.9 to 
15.9 
square 
inches. 
The 
change in effect banned the 
STP Turbocar after it almost 
won the 1967 Indianapolis 500- 


sion to Loyola University here; 
_____ ____ ______ 
Losing pitcher Steve Harkins the car, although track officials 
at 
3 
r tro u g h six in- said 
was somewhat upset by 
M ankato State. Cal Poly SLO, 
i " 
finished with a strong Miss Sm ith's wreck. 
. . 
. . . 
- 
™ \ three-hit perform ance for the 
she was gtven another ride, 


also in a 1968 Cam aro, owned 
on!y by Gilbert Shaw of Charlotte. 
> er- 
|ro rs to score two runs 
first inning. 
Azusa scored ¡ » o n ly run in ing in 


piled up 25 points and had six 
¡wrestlers left in championship 
a h 
%• 
, 
¡contention after Friday night’s 
? ir k “ “ 
1 
quarter-final round. 
Walk’# d° ub,e sleal and two 
— * 
* “ ------ in 


NEW YORK - Yonkers Race­ 
way president M artin Tanan 


baum suspended racing Indef- T « a" r " « w! « " S t o r n e s £ v e i " * ™ 


, 
Fifteen cars qualified Friday 
the for Sunday’s rate , with Je rry 
¡Grant of Escondo, Calif., turn- 
of 
in a 1968 Plym- 
outh. 
1 in"*!7 Friday f„nd adv,sed """¡C am p b ell. The Cougars had .wo 
___________ 
era to remove heir horses from mnm-rs on base with only one 
----------------------- - 
(he ’■'ables. 
I. is wuh great n u , in t h e n j m h i b u t h a d , 
ABA Standings 


r f t u r o t " T a k a n h . m m e n ir i 
“ t h a t . 1 . 
. 
. 
. 
9 
regret,” Takanbaum said, “ that 
due to the 
strike of mutuel 
clerks of local 32E, I have ad- w a|ked only one. 


tie for the one run. 
Harkins s t r u c k out 10 and p¡tueur 


! vised horsem en stabled at Yon-! 
kers Raceway that, 


; V i neso 
i/MJiana IÎ 


effective invitational 


mile 'race'.The'm'rbocar'broke 
7 cannot „accep' « « Thursday. 
u.uRtr ifurthç,. e n tre s for races.” 


Azusa will host its first annua! ScSaiT/** 
Tournam ent 


There is no adm ission charge elation last year, and he says 99 Heilman, seventh ranked mid 


down about seven miles from 
the finish. 


Granatelli sued USAC in an 
attempt to enter the same car 
and five more he reportedly 
is building in California for 


SAN 


AZUSA RACIPIC 
LOYOLA 
* 
it m u 
C t m p b ll, 
2b 4 1 0 0 Lost*in, 
2b 
Andrew, 
3b 3 0 Ï 0 Prier, et 


EatU rn Divis an 
Won Lo»! Ret. 
*5 
TI 
.694 
S 
l i 
.64* 
3 
S 
1$ 
.479 
1 5 , 
M 
» 
.4*5 
l é 'i 
7* 
81 
414 
20 
W ttU rn Oivision 
*4 
2* 
629 
_ 
41 
79 
516 
3 
h 
^ 
m 
.5 


FERNANDO, Mass, — !fa°r9wa, i,* 4 o i i Dimané, rt 2 


Star- New O riean* 
; Denver 
i DaiU * 
How & tor 
J7 
45 
. .. ! Anaheim 
23 
4« 
r. P.W O a k la n d 
j ? 
47 
Rnday't Resulti 
Minnesota 169 C'ahiând 161 
Dallas H ?, H ouston I I * 
Kentucky 169 New Jersey 106 
San Fernando Valley State Col- Ö 
' i f Ì f ? Ï 
¿ I f o | 
ieae tonm»d the list of individual 
« 3 ? ? ? vorrà, it 
3 0 1 0 


1 ni 
111 


371 
II 
324 
71'» 
31* 
31’» 


Wolfe 
If 
0 0 6 Wiknsn, 1b } S 1 0 
6 I 0 Mi Hen, »* 
7 6 0 0 


but donations will be taken toiper cent of the players in the dleweight, scored a fourth round 
this year’s 500, 
Both gam es will pit the All* help finance the league's track ; 12-team league, including Orr, technical knock out over Smiley 
Granatelli criticized a report 
S u rs of Los Angeles County program . 
¡are m em bers. 


lege topped the list of individual 
honors by capturing two events pr^ 
cJh 
in the afternoon session of the 
7 e a e 
* 
first annual NCAA College Div* tSui*1 
ph 4 1 1 ? touh 
ision 
Gym nastics 
C ham pion-iAium 


N e w O rle a n s 11*, PiH -.D uran 114 
u 
I 
Game» 
N o w Je rsey ar IrufiSiia 


^ 6 0 9 Rufineilt, pn i 0 0 


Ph û 0 0 0 
0 0 Gcodwin, 
' raw. 
3 6 0 0 
3 0 1 0 


Johnson 
of 
Chicago 
in 
their* by 
USAC 
on 
the 
turbine, iships at Springfield College 


70 2 I 6 
R H E 
______ 
„ 
o«« eoi— I 
3 Î 
Loroia 
10« 66« M a —-I 
3 « 
WP -Reid I P 
M erkinj (021. 


Denver at Kentucky 
PittsDuran al Dalia* 
g 
Sunday's Game* 
•ties et Anaheim 
aHand at Houston, alter noon 
Indiana at New Orleans 
Nt-w Jersey af Pittsburgh 
Monday'» Game* 
Dalla* at Denver 
Oakland at Kentucky 


LUNCHEON 
$125 
BUFFET ! . 
. . . T I 


"" ùtryimé M A j t fa I PM. 


R o b b i e « R e s t a u r a n t 
tm Pamenn Malt fa si 
MA 3-7A71 


R E N T - A - C A R 


Quality Costs Less At 


393 NO. EAST END 
CORNER M O LI AND 
(A IE IN O . T O M O N A 
— NA 3-1531 
INSTANT CREDIT 


P ro g ra s» .| u ll« H n , P o m o n a , C alif. 
S a tu rd a y fv g n ln g , M a rch 9, Ì967 
ive Debut Santa Anita 
■ 
Results 
isox in 


Prtdev'S Reverts 
Cloudy ft Siooov 
FIR ST Y S A R - * FURLONGS. 4 Y EA R 
01 
AND UP. CLAIM ING 
PU R SE 


'Search Pitch (L*mberf1 
21.» I so t *0 
Hev 
Sam 
(Mahornf>v) 
.3 83 2-40 
■Fleet indler 
(Seilers) ......__ 
4 40 
; 
T im g -i.U 2-5 
Scratched 
Kavnam , 
Stormy, 
Carillon- 
neur, Match 
Wits, Rich Intent, La 
T o r - 
tugi, Pappa Stiver, Cut A Meter 


SECOND RACE -4 FURLONGS. 3 Y EA R 
OLDS. C LAIM IN G PU R S E tSJKW 
Reputadle (Lambert) 
U B C S tO iT O 
Surf Rider 
(P.rtedai 
IJO 1.40 
jack's Aloha 
(biurn) 
4 to 
Time 
I . i l i s 
Scratched—Our Buddy. 


D A ILY 
D O U BLE—(31-SEARCH 
PATCH 
AND 
(S )-R EPU T A BLE, 
PA ID fttM.M 


TH IRD RA CE—J PURLO NOS. M AIDEN 
2 
Y EA R 
OLD 
F IL L IE S 
B R E O 
IN 
C A LIF. P U R S E *44M. 
Dum ptyj Goddess 
(Blum ) 
7,20 4 70 2.SO 
Trophy Queen (M Vaier/uel«) 
4 40 3.40 
Light De Road (Yanaz) 
5.00 
T me -.34 
Scratched Talking Wind, Hedda M ils, 
Petit* O*!. OuMlo's Miilv. 


POURTM 
RA C E—-*~FURLDNOS. M A ID ­ 
EN 4 Y EA R OLDS AND UP. PU R S E 
15,000 
EarthAAover (Gonzaei) 
15 00 7 40 5 70, 
Itsabreze (Laouardiat 
10 10 0.(0 
Prized Diamond (Costa) 
H 20 
Tim*— 1.12 2-| 
Scratchnd-Omaha Jack, Brundl, Phzl- 
¡1* Maoerman, M itt Maneuver 


PIPT H 
R A C E—4 FURLO NGS. I Y EA R 
O LDS. C L A IM IN G P U R S E 55.800 
Moaning The Biuas (Seller»' |.20 4.10 3.40 
Admiral 
Lazarem 
(M.Vinzta) 
4 40 3 40 
Golden 
Balcony 
(H a m *) 
4.00 
Time - -1 13, 
Scratched-Indian Gold, Nik» Dancer 


SIXTH RA C E-4 FURLONGS. F IL L IE S ft 
M ARES. 
4 
Y EA R 
OLDS 
AND 
UP. 
CLAIM ING PU R SE 55,500 
Qunado Quando (Blum) 
» 40 4 eJ 5.73 
SHk 'ft Set (M Velen/uela) 
11 40? <2 
Mabel's HCh*V (Yanez» 
8 43 
T me 
11} 2-5 
Scratched—Miss 
Hemp 
Fiowe- 
Patch 


TRY IT THIS WAY — Jo# DiMaggio, Oakland Athletics batting instructor ond vice pres»* 
Ri5k Monday something new during Oakland's workouts Friday. (AP photo) 
Good-Fielding Paul School 
Excites Angels With Stick 


STRATEGY PLANNERS — These major league managers aren't contemplating the effects 
of spring fever, but rather the progress of spring training. At left, from top to bottom, 
the Phillies' Gene Mauch, Ralph Houk of Yankees and the Cardinals' Red Schoendienst 
pond®r.their $,rate9T* while at right, Mets' Gil Hodges (14) talks with coach Yogi Ber.a. 
Pasadena’s 
Tournament 
Foe Named 


Joe Frazier Champ? 
Not in WBA, He's 7th 


Schaal was courted by only 
one major league team, the An­ 
gels, as a prep player in Comp­ 
ton, Calif., and thought he was- 
fortunate to receive a $4,000 
bonus. 


“ I would have signed for noth­ 
ing,” he says. "That’s how bad­ 
ly I wanted to play baseball. 
Now I’m ever more determined 
than I was then.” 


IT RESULTS 


Prep Gymnastics 


GANESMA •», LA PU D N T E 30 
Tumbi.na — Turner, 1st piace 
Goez, 
2nd; waiters, 5m 
Root climb — Ault, 
1st; Mar»h, 2nd; Brower, 3rd; Koriettz, 
4thI Randell. 5th 
Long «orse — Turner, 
1st. Goez, 2nd 
Htebscn, 3rd. High oar— 
Turner, 
2nd; 
Welters, 
5th. 
Free 
ever 
ose — Goez, 1st; Turner, fcnrj; Hurbsch. 
:5th 
Side hors* 
Mahan. 1st; 
Tav<or, 
¡3rd; 
Wilk*nson, 4th; Ault. 5th, Para'tels 
Turner, 
1st ; 
Goez. 
2nd; 
Dver, 
jrfl. 
Yoresen, 4th. Rings — Dvers. 1st; Goez, 
2nd, Yorensen. 3rd; Marsh, 4th 


is the most improved man on 
this squad,” the skipper de­ 
clared. "And Haller has become 
our take charge man. He will 
help our young pitchers a lot' 
with his experience and adds a: 
lot of sock to our team.” 
Still the No. 1 assignment fori 
the Dodgers will be: 
Score more runs. 


Baseball 
Linescores 


J O I N T H E 4 Ü . 0 0 0 S M 
A R T 


Savers at Pomona First Federal 
Killy in Second 
Place in Slalom 


M ERIBEL, France (AP) — 
Ican-Claude Killy, France’s su­ 
per skier, will have to come 
from behind if he wants to win 
the Meribel Grand Prix giant 
slalom. 
The Olympic triple gold med­ 
alist was in second place after 
Friday’s opening heat with a 
run of 1:22.94 down the 1,443- 
yard course. That was less than 
a 
second 
behind 
another 
Frenchman, Georges Mauduit, 
who was clocked m 1:22.05. Guy 
PeHIlat, also of France, was 
third in 1AA, 


Let YOUR money make MORE money with 
us. Your funds receive the nation's highest 
earning rate*, beginning the day they are 
placed...or if plactd by the tenth of the month, 
funds earn from the first And, of course your 
money is absolutely safe, insured to $15,000, 
If you prefer to save by mail, we'll even pay 
the postage. It only takes a few minutt s to 
open your account atany of our friendly otfk“» 
located throughout the valley, so why not get 
started on a regular savings plan now? 


Ltw er Bracket; 
Central 
State 
vi. 
Millikin; 
WeOmar. 
lo w 4 , 2 1 -4 , V I. V a i d o s t a t e . 
C e n t r a l W i s h 
ingfon State y*. Albuquerque, N M , 13 13 
A¡s orn AftM vt 
Hertiierson State; W rit 
m m iter vi 
Patadena. Bishop, Tex 
20-2 
VI- 
Monmouth; 
Hanover 
y». 
Southern 
Oregon, 33-5. Stephen F. Austin vs. East­ 
ern Michigan, 


Cougar Netters 
Lose at Biola 


A l mtr rurrrnf w iu a i rais vf 
1 % , »«Li n g t a t t u a l iy gara 
$.J 3% whtn compound té 
drniy and htìé fot ona yecr. 
Nau th r tc ycac bonus certifi­ 
cati! acmuntt pav yott a futi 
f i% m et th t ptn athng cur- 


re n t a n n u ii ra te . S a i ¡ng% 
m /n from date of t cipt lo 


d a ta gf u <tbdr a u i. 


LA MIRADA — Biola College 
defeat Azusa Pacific, 6-3, in a 
tennis match here Tuesday. 


Azusa’s only singles winner 
was Walt Schaffer, 6-4, 8-6. The 
doubles teams of Schaffer-Don 
Zimmerman, 3-6, 6-3, 7-5, and 
Dave Rose-Larry Yamane, 5-7, 
6-4, 6-4, scored for the Cougars. 


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t»d 3&b44 


Ìrogrcss-Bullctm 
Tragedy Set to Music 
ntertainment C a tc h M y S o u l' R o c k s 


$ 1 9 5 


Saturday Evening, March 9, 1968 
Page 6, Sec. 1 


Prime Rib 
Dinner buffet !. 


Mon. thru Set. S-10 PM. 
Rohhies Restaurant 
390 
Moll Cost NA 3-2*71 


Hitchcock Biography Is 
Rare Insight Into Director 


goes 
through 
rock 
V 
roll, 


swing, 
r h y t h m - and - blues, 


boogie-woogie, and 
occasional 


By JOSEPH H. FIRMAN 
{performance less of “ Othello” 


LOS ANGELES — “ Catch My than of “ Porgy and Bess.” Ray 


Soul,” a 
musical version of Pohlman's tremendously varied 
Shakespeare s 
Othello, 
is a score is far from Gershwin, but touches of bossa nova. There 
colorful, fast-moving production the swing of the show, the mod {are ballads, duets, and chorus- 
that owes — and pays — little costumes, and the largenum- es. None of it stays with you 
to the Bard, but oilers an eve- ber of Negroes in the cast seem- very long, but it is very rhyth- 
ning of imaginative excitement ed to echo “ Porgy and Bess.” 
mical and catchy, 
and fun. 
1 
Even the beautiful, 
, 
— — 
— , massive! 
William Marshall as Othello mjitar. 
um i vu-oon /»m 
* u rh-v,*im‘an(M),ues version set, patterned on Shakespeare Vis a sort of Paul Robeson (j.g.), 
MULLYWtot 
) Rare in-be interpreted—neither speaks was altogether new in my ex- of the lassie tragedy opened a Globe Theater, was reminiscent big and handsome, with a big, 
u . 
sight into the mmd of acres-the 
other’s 
language 
with perience: I began to study the ^lx*we(* stand at the Music of the multi-storied slum, Cat-handsome voice. Julienne Ma-¡s hilarioui' -mH 
ea. Koder‘8° 


1 V,! 
Z t J n n Z - V 
thW 
a r enan,° as we 
al0n^ and w 
T ' S AhmanSOn Vhea,er “ 
t 
i H ?W- . 
. 
T 
as Desden,0na m 3 Whit<’ Phae! S 
e 
do .h e y r r t h ^ e 
b> meeting of their two minds that 1 saw that there were weakness- Wtek- 
Pohlman s score ranges from micro-skirt and above-the-knee a c c e n t s P I 
[1 
I was reminded throughout the honkey-tonk to spirituals, and boots, is enchanting. Her voice pmjIia 
,s an exce!!ent 


is strong and pure, and her act­ 
ing makes the ill-fated heroine 
more than just a stricken dolly- 
bird. 


Jerry Lee Lewis plays Iago 


like a sinister Sportin’ Life with 
an Arkansas accent more pain­ 
ful to the ear than an electric 


But he’s great on the 


piano. 
William Lanteau’s be­ 
spectacled, flat-voiced Roderigo 


new 
book. 
“ Hitchcock,” 


Francois Truffaut 
transcended any language 
bar- es in it. This emotional siege I 
took a Frenchman to define rier. 
Truffaut 
had 
done 
his went through served to brine 
the impressive stature of Alfred homework well; he seemed to out an additional creative sense 
Hitchcock, who for more than 40 be familiar with every scene in me." 
ytars has been making films in Hitchcock ever directed. 
Hitchcock stated that he had 
England and America. He is 
The pair devoted much dis- always before memorized his 
virtually the author of the sus- cussion to “ The Birds,” which script before the start of filming 
pense genre, yet he has never failed to achieve hit status in and never referred to it. Nor did 
received an Academy Award for theaters but created a sensation he believe in deviating from the 
direction, although his “ Rebec- in its recent television appear- completed script; 
he couldn’t 
ca‘ was selected the best picture ance. Hitchcock said that he be tolerate the expense of having 
-r 
« 
j 
Came mteresied in the original the crew stand by as he made 
Truffaut, director of “ Jules story by Daphne du Maurier changes. But he did improvise 
and Jim 
and “ The 400 Blows” when it was printed in one of his on ‘ I he Birds.” 
and 
a former film critic, has mystery anthologies. He admit- 
On all his other films, Hitch- 
ong been an admirer of 
the ted that he lost his 
usual cool cock proceeded with almost ma- 
Hitchcock art. He came to Hoi- approach during the filming. 
clime-like precision 
Not only 
ivwood for extensive interviews 
“ I was quite tense and this was each script tightly organ- 
with his idol, and the results of was unusual for me because as ized; he made a practice'' of 
their talks have been published a rule I have a lot of fun during sketching each camera angle 
y Simon and Schuster in a the shooting,” he said. “ When I before 
production 
began. 
He 
handsomely illustrated $10 vol- went home to my wife at night, was ever the perfectionist, seek- 
ume* 
! ^’as sti!1 tense and upset. 
ing new ways to bring thrills to 
The ease of their conversation 
“ Something 
happened 
that audiences. 
Is remarkable, considering the 
fact that their remarks had to 


GROVE 


376 I. 9th $t. 
«82-1343 
ALL SEATS 
5 Q C 


STARTS 6:30 
5 0 c 


OPEN 6:15 
DORIS DAY 
"THE BALLAD OF J0SIE" 


Co-lMlvr* 
Poul Newman - Julie Andrew» 


"TORN CURTAIN" 


To go . . . . Spaghetti 


Go To 
MOUSE OF 
SPAGHETTI 
407 N-< Town«-— Pom o«« 


Concert Group Forms 
I Membership Teams 


Five divisions chairmen and ed by the Pomona Community 
1123 captains have been appoint- Concert 
Association 
for 
its 


Announcing the O p e n in g of 
GOLDEN WEST BALLROOM 


j 
0 
h 
n 
n 
k 


CATRoJ 


12400 STUDEBAKER ROAD 


NEAR NORWALK MWY. 603 
1 FIRESTONE BLVD. 


MAR. 8fh - FRI. 


Johnny Catron 


& His Orchestra 
25 YEARS OF SWING 


DANCING 
WED. 
FRI. 
SAT. 
& SUN. 


drive 
starting 


Think Young! 
Be Young! 
Stay Young! 


learn To dance and »fart living a more e x ­ 
citing life. Come to The . . . 
CONTINENTAL DANCE SlUDIO 


end Join our B e rln n e r Group Class (10 H ours 
or 10 wits, for |15.<>fl> or take p r i v a t e lessons 
at reasonable rates to fit your own personal 
needs and budget 
Also F R E E Adult Studio 


Dance 1 arties. C ell now and aak for a free 
lesson— N A 2-51*1 or visit us at 


1532 N. Garey Ave., Pomona 
1 to 10 P.M. Mon. thru Fri, 


★ 
TONIGHT AT 6:30 P.M. & 9:00 PM 
+ 
W INNER OF 6 
ACADEMY AW ARDS INCLUDING — 
b e s t p ic t u r e o f t h e y e a r 
t 


COLUMBIA P K T U E E S F R E D Z IN N E M A 1 N N S m . 


A MAN FOR 
. ALL SEASONS 


r h e M O N f C L A Ik t h e a t r e 
A I T T 
U A ! v 
s . u n 
« ■ 


UNITED ARTISTS 
I 


NA 2-3315 


SAT. A SUN. CONT. 2:00 
“BUNDLE" 4:15 A 8:52 
•VALLEY" 2:00-6:10 A 10:15 


BEGINNING 
AT 3:00 P.M. 


\ EVERY SUNDAY 
* BIG JAM 


S E S S I O N 


Bring your horn or bring a friend 


EVERYONE WELCOME at 
ELM'S LOUNGE 


-L IV I M USIC Ivor NIGHT tUT M O N D A Y " 
1250 EAST 5th AVE. 
• 
POM ONA 


membership 
March 31. 


The five teams which will be 
promoting memberships for the 
1968-69 season are: 


Division I — Mrs. Marjorie 
Palamino, chairman, Mrs. John 
Brasuell, Mrs. Mary Alice Ty­ 
ler, Mrs. Albert Stern and Mrs. 
Palamino, captains. 
Division II — Mrs. Virginia 
Shuck Ballard, chairman, Mrs. 
Alberta Gelwick, Mrs. 
Mary 
Walker, Mrs. Ora Juckett, Mrs. 
Malcolm Metcalf and Mrs. Char­ 
les Davie, captains. 
Division III — Mrs. Alphonse 
Fages, chairman, Alphonse Fag- 
I es, Mrs. Opal DeBeeson, Mrs. 
Richard Stewart and Mrs. Rob­ 
ert Leimbach, captains. 
Division IV — Mrs. Violet 
Bouillon, 
chairman, 
Willard! 
Weiser, Mrs. Margaret Decker,! 
Mrs. Mary Holmes, and Mrs. j 
Welsey Gaddis, captains. 
Division v _ Mrs 
Myron H e a d o f T r a p p F a m i l y 
Powei 
chairman, John P < n- ____________________ 
■ " 
l 
otti, Mrs. Russell Parker, Mr. 
and Mrs. Harold Goodell, Mrs. 
Earle Simon and Mrs. V.O. 
Weeks, captains. 


Pom ona Valloy fxc/ualv# fngogamanF 
-N o O n * Under 18 Admitted Unie»* 
Accompanied by a Parent__ 


V 
a l l e y 
o f t h e D 
o l l s 


C O L O R b y D E L U X E • P A N A V lS iO N ,j 
— 2ND FEATURE — 
“THE BIGGEST B U N D L E 
O F THEM A L L " 


* lyf CANTON SHOPPING C*NT» 
/ > 
*Ì 
SANDRA 


^ 
r & 
L 
, 
S99.234S' 


HELD OVER! 
OPEN MON.-FRI 6:45 
___________ 
SAT. & SUN. 12:45 
TO ttAt WALK-iM CINCMA 
f . A SWINGING SAFARI OF LAUGHS/ 


| 
WALT DISNEY’S 


YOUNG AND OLD LOVES—-Katharine Hepburn and English actress Jane Merrow are 
rivals for the affection of Peter O ’Toole as Henry II in this scene from “ The Lion in Win­ 
ter.” In real life Miss Hepburn relives a moment of her long and honored career. Over 30 
years ogo she played the young woman in her f i r s t movie, “ Bill of Divorcement” and 
Billie Burke was the 
older love” with John Barrymore as the prize, Henry. This is the 
first motion picture role for Miss Merrow. 


Baroness To Speak at LVC 


ALSO: WALT DISNEY'S 
Charlie— The Lonesome Cougar” 


EXTRA BONUS FEATURE 
SAT. & SUN. MATINEE ONLY 


Je rry Lewis in 


"THE NUTTY PROFESSOR" 


P 
NATIONAL 
G E N E R A L 


CORPORATION 


Each captain needs several 
volunteers to help sell concert 
association memberships. Any­ 
one wishing to help can call 
Mrs. Vera Van Landingham, 
membership chairman, at NA 6- 
6276, or campaign 
secretary 
Mrs. Lucile Schureman, at Na 
2-0313. 


The concert association exec­ 
utive board i.s made up of Paul 
Van 
Landingham, 
president; 
Loren Adair, honorary presi­ 
dent; Joseph Gendron first vice 
president; Mrs. Nita C. Jones, 
secretary; and Jesse P. E d ­ 
monds, treasurer. 


©FüXr» 
W E S T C O A S T 
E A T R E 


WEEKEND SPECIAL 


LA VERN E—Baroness Maria 
von Trapp, inspiration for the 
Broadway musical and film, 
“ The Sound of Music,” will 
speak at Founders Hall, La 
Verne College, at 8:15 p.m. 
Thursday. 


She will present a program en­ 
titled “ Around the World With 
the Trapp Family.” 
Tickets are on sale at the 
door. 
Known to the world as the 
novice Maria who was loaned 
by the Abbey to the Sal/burg 
household of Baron von Trapp, 
World War I naval hero and 
widower, as governess to his 


children (three bom to Maria), family went on tour in native 
and Monsignor Wasner, formed Tyrol costumes, singing early 
the Trapp Family Singers. Was- church music and folk songs, 
ner was responsible for the and playing rare instruments 
musical arrangements and or- such as the recorder, spinet, 
ganization of the group. The and viol de gamba. 


THEATRE g u i d e 


SATURDAY SCHEDULI 


"Flttw llly” 1:00-5:15 A 0:30 


Millionaire' 2:45-7:00 A 11:15 
SUNDAY CONT. 1:15 


TO.,,, 


- 
« 
o 


“■’T’irczz 
-ORIN 6:00—SHOW AT 6:30— 


S A T . 5 - 1 0 ; 
After 


C h u rc h 
S U N . 1 2 - 1 0 
COMPLETE DINNER 


at, 


COFFEE SHOPl 


^Sunday ’til N oon 


BREAKFAST 
STEAK 


■k » CGGS 


* H ASH BR O W N POTATOES 


* TOAST A JULY 


Choi«« of 


Soup du Jo u r or Tomato Juice 


Crisp Tasted Green la la d or Cottago Ch«e»o 


Delicious Cheese Omelette ..................... 1 . 7 0 


Deep Fried Eastern Scallops 
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Roast Sirloin of Beef, Brown gravy 
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Chicken Fried Steak, Pan gravy . ............2 . 2 5 


Special Large Dinner Steak % LB. ..........2 . 9 5 


Grilled Loin Pork Chops, Apple Sauce 
2 . 0 0 


Sorvod with 


Bakod or W hipped Potato«« 
Gordon Froth Vegetable 


Hot Roll« A Butter 


Ceffoo or Too 
Milk 10« ix tra 


Choico ot 


Cobbior, Ico Croam or Shorbot 


The shocking 
facts behind 
the marijuana 
controversy! 


OPEN 1:43 — CURTAIN AT 2 
SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCE— 
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A 1 0 V E L Y S O R T * f lE A T H 


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BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:00 
SHO W STARTS 6:30 
CHILDREN UNDER 12 FRI( 


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IN THE 
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MARIA VON TRAPP 


seven children, Baroness von 
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is 
a 
world 
traveler, 


church woman, owner of a re­ 
sort lodge, author and public 
speaker. 
Soon after her marriage to 


von Trapp, the family fled Aus- 
1 tria and Us lands and posses­ 
sions to avoid service to the 
Nazis The von Trapps, their 10 


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C O L O R 
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SHOW AT 6 30 


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9» imenca s Most Famous Swingers 


P - O R CX 


The Do’s And Don’ts For The Married 


Man Who’s Thinking Single —or 


The Single Man Who’s 


Just Thinking* 


STARRING 


WALTER MATTHAU 


ROBERT MORSE 


INGER STEVENS 


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MARVIN 


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ELIZABETH TAYLOR 


RICHARD BURTON 
“ THE TAMING OF 
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t h e m a l l 


TONIGHT SH O W STARTS 1:00 
SU N D AY CONT. !.*00 
“ TO SIR, WITH LOVE” 
Plus “ THE BOBO” 


T O DA Y COPIT. 4 :IS 
"Turning « I the S h ra w " 6 • 10:19 
"G irl A G e ne ral" 4:1» A 1:30 
SU N D A Y CONT. 3:00 


VIRN I LISA 
ROD STEIGER 
••THE GIRL AND 
THE GENERAL” 
THE TRIP 


R ? SR I = 1 
- C0S“ 55:B M llrtin Light Bulb Plugs Drain 
By Blaze 


A flash fire at SDS Data Processing, 600 E. 
Bonita Ave.f caused $8,000 in damage F r i d a y 
night, firemen reported. 
An overheated tank of trichlorethylene at the 
plant caused toxic gas to pour out of the building 
in black smoke. 


Firemen used gas masks and sprinkler system 
and drilled a hole in the concrete roof deck to 
bring the fire under control. Damage to the build­ 
ing was estimated at $5,000 and to the contents 
at $3,000. Firemen spent 21, hours on the call. 


Holdup Case Sent 
To Superior Court 


Sidney Russell Neece, 27, 11208 Tudor St., On­ 
tario, has been ordered into Pomona Superior Court 
to answer robbery and kidnaping charges about 
a holdup Feb. 26. 


Neece was bound over at his preliminary hearing 
in Pomona Municipal Court. His arraignment was 
scheduled for March 19. 
The holdup was at the House of Spaghetti, 607 
N. Towne Ave. A bandit go! about $80 there and 
locked the owner, Paul A. Krumhauser, 49, in a 
storage room. 
The suspect was arrested the next day when 
a friend called police and told them Neece had 
t a k e n an overdose of pills. Officers s a i d he 
matched the robber’s description, owned a similar 
revolver and had about the right amount of money. 


700 Ag Students 
Plan Field Day 


WALNUT — More than 700 young agricultural 
students are expected at Mt. San Antonio College 
next Saturday for the annual Young Farmers Field 
Day. 


Ihe event is co-sponsored by the college and 
Security First National Bank. 
f orty-five high schools and junior colleges in 
the Southern California area have been invited to 
participate in the day-long affair, according to Fred 
Hagan, MSAC instructor of agricultural sciences. 
Activities will begin at 9 a.m. 
Agricultural agents from the bank will be of­ 
ficial judges for contests in beef cattle, dairy cattle, 
sheep, swine and poultry. Contests in identification 
of seeds, ¿veeds, feeds, vegetables and ornamental 
horticulture will also be held. 
Heading the working committees will be Young 
Farmers chapter president Mile Williams of Temple 
City, assisted by vice president Jim Morris of Po­ 
mona. O t h e r committeemen are Don Eastis of 
Chino, judging classes committee; Bob Mulllon of 
Fullerton, barbecue; Carol Blaine of Pomona, hos­ 
pitality; Pam Walton of San Gabriel, tabulations; 
and Don Cram of Elsinore, program and awards. 
A barbecue will be held at noon for all partici­ 
pants. Entertainment and awarding of the winning 
ribbons and trophies will round out the evening. 


SHE D LIKE TO FORGET— Mrs. Rosemary Brown cuddles her 
toy poodle. Three newborn poodles drowned, two other d o gs 
were nearly electrocuted and her home at 4122 9th St. was 
ruined in the rainstorm Friday. 
( p.g photo) 
Storm Brings 
Tide of W o e 


Montclair Seeks 
Balanced Living 


MONTCLAIR — The Montclair Chamber of Com­ 
merce Economic Development Committee will spon­ 
sor a seminar March 15 to discuss ways of making 
the city an economically well-balanced community. 
The all-day program will be held at the Holiday 
Restaurant, starting at 10 a.m. It’s open to city 
officials and community leaders. 
Jack 
Rohring, 
manager of area development 
for Southern California Edison Co., will be the 
moderator. 


Pom onan Pleads Guilty 
To Riot Charge; Fine $25 


Joseph Peter Wymer, 18, originally charged with 
felonious possession of a pair of metal knuckles, 
pleaded guilty in Pomona Superior Court to a mis­ 
demeanor charge and was fined $25. 
Wymer, 2295 Kellogg Park Dr., was arrested 
Nov. 21 by police who said he had the knuckles 
and was a member of a group of youths who had 
surrounded a car at Huntington Boulevard and Wil­ 
liams Street. 


Wymer pleaded guilty to rout, defined as acting 
within a group advancing toward the commission 
of riot. The metal-knuckles charge was dismissed 
by Judge Carolos Teran. 


By ED FREDE 
P-B Staff Writer 


Rosemary Brown can’t forget 
Friday’s storm any too soon. 


It meant a series of unfortu­ 
nate and sad events, including 
the drowning of three puppies, 
the near electrocution of two 
dogs and the flooding of her 
house. 


What's worse, flooding has oc­ 
curred 
before 
at 
her 
rented 
house at 4122 9th St., but she 
hadn’t known that. 


It 
was 
raining 
when 
Mrs. 
Brown left her night job as a 
cocktail waitress at the Rock- 
ette in Montclair and drove to 
an all-night restaurant for cof­ 
fee. 


When her car wouldn’t start 
— apparently 
flooded 
by 
the 
rain—she called her sister, Dor­ 
othy Holmes, for a ride home. 


They opened the front door 
and water gushed out. There 
was maybe a foot of it in the 
house, but to the two women it 
seemed like 2% feet. Everything 
was ruined—Mrs. Brown’s per­ 
sonal effects, family snapshots, 
the furniture, the new kitchen 
linoleum she put down a f t e r 
moving in six weeks ago. 
Her seven dogs were where 
she had left them — the two 
Great Danes in their backporch 
pt n, the male toy poodle in the 
back bedroom, the female toy 


poodle in the cardboard carton 
in the kitchen. 
But the three 
pups to which she had g i ve n 
birth two days before were dead 
beneath her, drowned. 


The women set to work with 
brooms 
and 
mops 
and 
were 
joined as the morning wore on 
by 
Mrs. 
Holmes’s 
daughter, 
Linda, pregnant with her first 
child, and four of Mrs. Holmes’s 
seven children. 


Needing more cleaning sup­ 
plies, the two older w o m e n 
left, leaving Linda in charge and 
tying the two Great Danes, 180 
pounds each, to the front chain- 
link fence with a chain. 


Through a fluke (an electri­ 
cian surmised water coursing 
under the house had carried an 
electrical charge from the wall 
outlets to the front yard), elec­ 
tricity began cracklin around 
the c h a i n e d dogs, throwing 
them into a frenzy. A frantic 
Linda called for help. 


“ We weren’t gone 30 minutes, 
but you never saw anything like 
those 
dogs, 
foaming at t h e 
mouth 
and bloody all over,” 
Mrs. Holmes said. The Southern 
California Edison Co. electrician 
checked the fence for voltage 
(there was none) and the dogs 
were released. 
Mrs. Brown could only stand 
in the middle of her l i v i n g 
room and shake her head. 


P.C. Symphony Group 


Slates Concert Sunday 


Suspect Says He Didn’t 
Stab Youth in Cafeteria 


Robert Anthony Rosas, 19-year-old youth accused 
of stabbing a student in the Azusa High School 
cafeteria Dec. 12, pleaded innocent when arraigned 
in Pomona Superior Court. 
Judge Carles M. Teran scheduled his trial for 
April 15. 


Rosas, 158 N. Soldano St., Azusa, was accused 
of critically wounding Lloyd R. Spradlin, 17, 529 
E, Duell St., Azusa, by mistake. Actually his target 
was a member of a gang with whom Rosas had 
had some difficulty the day before, police said. 
1 wo 17-year-old boys, also arrested in the stab­ 
bing, were handled by juvenile authorities. 


Y Delegates at Conference 


Delegates from the Pomona Valley and Ontario- 
Upland YMCAs are among some 350 from five states 
attending the 34th annual meeting of the Pacific 
Southwest Area Council of the YMCA in San Fian- 
cisco this weekend. 
Local delegates lo the conference are Thomas 
Matzen, Burdette Boileau, Gerald Case and Dwtlc1 
Heggem from the Pomona Y and Robert A, len 
nings and Warren Bennett from the Ontario-Up­ 
land Y. 


CLARFMONT - The Pomona 


College 
Symphony 
Orchestra 


will play one composer’s first 


published work Sunday, 
p l u s 
more 
familiar 
selections 
by 
Beethoven, Mendelsfohn 
a n d 
Rimsky-Korsakov, 


The concert in Bridges Hall 
of Music will begin at 4 p.m. 
It is open to the public without 
admission charge but a volun­ 
tary offering will be accepted. 


G i o r a 
Bernstein, 
assistant 
professor of music, will conduct 
the orchestra, opening Its third 
program 
of 
the 
season 
with 
Beethoven’s “Overture to Corio- 
lan,” 


The special feature will be a 
performance of Webern’s Pas- 
sacaglia for Orchestra, his first 
published work. 


The 1908 composition f o r e- 
shadowed the epoch - making 
styl* Webern later was to de­ 
velop. 


Aist cm the program are Men­ 
delssohn’s Fifth Symphony and 
fte* Russian 1 '.aster Overture by 
Rimsky-Korsakov, 


The orchestra 
includes 
per­ 
formers from all the Claremont 
Colleges. Bernstein Is serving 
his first year as director, having 


come to Pomona College from 
the Boston Symphony Orches­ 
tra where he played violin. 


Car Strikes 


Patrol Car; 


3 Injured 


( I UNO — A 
Los 
Angeles 
motorist lost control of his car 
on Ramona Avenue here Friday 
and the auto struck a parked 
car, then bounced into a sheriff’s 
patrol car. Three persons suf­ 
fered minor injuries. 


The California Highway Pa­ 
trol reported that the driver was 
Tuny Wilkins, 28, of Los Angeles. 
His passenger, Joyce Ann Tho­ 
mas, 18, of Los Angeles, com ­ 
plained of pain but declined im­ 
mediate medical attention. 
Two sheirff’i deputies in the 
patrol car also complained of 
pain They are John Charles Von 
Collin, 30, of Ontario, the driver 
and Charles E. Koen Jr., 43, of 
Upland. 


400-Ft. Roof Falls 


Valley Cities 


Mopping Up 


After Deluge 


A freak mishap collapsed a 
400-foot section 
of the 
roof of 
the vacant Town and Country' 
bowling alley at 
1756 
W. Holt 
Ave. Friday as an unexpected 
storm tapered off after dump­ 
ing from four to six inches of 
rainfall on valley cities. 


The weatherman said 
there 
will be more scattered showers 
through today but predicted it 
will he mostly clear tonight and 
Sunday. 


Fireman said the roof drain 
on the southeast corner of the 
bowling alley building was plug­ 
ged by a floodlight bulb that 
floated into the drain and the 
accumulation of water caused 
the collapse. 


The roof section in the area 
cdlapsed and dropped 280,000 
gallons of water into the bowling 
lanes area, filling the lower sec- 
t on with water!8 inches deep. 
No estim ate of damage was im­ 
mediately available. 


The rain also washed away 
portions of dirt 
piled 
along a 
sewer construction project along 
Gr.nd Avenue near Garey Ave- 


Plant, Stores Flooded 


Wayne Manufacturing Co. at 
1201 E. Lexington St. was flood­ 
ed, as were some stores, includ­ 
ing several along the downtown 
Mall which were sopping up wet 
floors Friday morning. 


Owners of 10 houses on Gene­ 
va Street, where water covered 
floors when a storm drain be­ 
cam e plugged, also faced the 
task of cleaning up flood dam­ 
age. 


In Chino, as in Pomona, the 
fire department spent 24 hours 
mopping up in the wake of Fri­ 
day’s storm. A number of base­ 
ments were flooded and had to 
be pumped out. Out of 17 alarms 
reported in the period in Chino, 
15 of them were related to the 
storm. 


Scattered 
showers 
continued 
Friday morning before tapering 
off, dumping more rain in some 
valley locations. 


Ontario Hardest Hit 


Ontario got the heaviest re­ 
ported rainfall in the Southland, 
racking up another .57 inches 
Friday morning for a storm total 
of 6.32 inches. Other stations 
reporting 
additional 
rainfall 
Friday were Padua Hills with 
another .44 inches, Mt. Baldy 
with .37, Diamond Bar .13, San 
Dimas, .09, Upland .04 and Po­ 
mona .03, 


The unexpected storm caused 
four deaths, closed 
highways, 
flooded homes and trapped cars 
in the mud throughout the South­ 
land, 


Three persons died in traffic 
accidents 
attributed 
to 
t h e 
storm. 


Two mud slides closed the 
Riverside Freeway in Santa Ana 
Canyon, trapping 15 cars on the 
road between two mud slides, 
according to a county sheriff’s 
department spokesman. He said 
a car and a vehicle-carrying 
truck were trapped in the mud, 
but no one was hurt. 


1 he road was 
not cleared un­ 
til about 6 
p.m. 
Friday. 


In Port Hueneme Bay, where 
4.5 
inches 
fell, 
homes 
were 
flooded 
waist 
deep 
from 
an 
overflowing channel. 
Carbon Canyon Road between 
Chino and Brea was also among 
highways which were closed. 


Citrus Political Science 
Prof in Race for Congress 


Keith Shirey, 34, Citrus Col­ 
lege political science instructor, 
has announced that he will be a 
candidate for Congress in the 
25th Congressional District in the 
Democratic primary'. 


Shirey 
made 
his 
announce­ 
ment as a candidate at several 
petition-signing parties this week 
for 
presidential 
hopeful 
Sen. 
Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn. 
“ I think that America is in a 
state of crisis because many of 
us 
are 
not 
mentally 
tougn 
enough to face reality,” he said 
in announcing. 
“ It is a time for truth, a time 
for a call to sanity. I will tell 
the people of this district that 
the war in Vietnam is detri­ 
mental to the best interests of 
ihe American people. I will sug­ 
gest that it is absurd to send 
our boys into the steaming jun­ 
gle hells of Vietnam to fight for 
a people who lack the initiative 
to fight for them selves.” 
Calling for diversion of res­ 
ources being used in Vietnam 
to solve problems in this coun­ 
try, Shirey said: 
"While we are spending some 


$25 billion a year for this high­ 
ly questionable cause abroad, 
at home we allow our cities to 
fall into ruin, deny our chil- 


Kl IT H SHIREY 


dren the best possible educa­ 
tion, and lose the war against 
poverty 
and 
bigotry 
which 


threatens to explode into an 
revolt 
during 
the 
con 
months. The situation is me 
rous. We must end this dej 
able war now by negotiatir 
just, honorable settlement ’ 
our adversaries in Vietnam 


Shirey is a member of the 1 
ifornia Steering Committee 
the 
McCarthy 
campaign 
serves as its chairman in 
25th District. 


He is author of the publ 
tion, “The Case Against B. 
Goldwater,” which sold 42 
copies during the 1964 pr*\si< 
tial campaign. He is a for 
president of the American 1 
eration of Teachers Local 1 
has served as a speaker for 
Democratic State Central C 
mittee, and has been active 
the ( ovina - West Covina - 
Puente Human Relations C< 
cil. 


He holds bachelor of arts 
m aster’s degrees in political 
ence 
from 
the 
University 
Southern California. He and 


wife, Sue, live in West Cot 


and have two children. 


Races Start Orange Show With a Roar 


SAN BERNARDINO — The 
NASCAR 
superstock-car races 
will highlight the National Or­ 
ange Show tn San Bernardino 
this weekend. 
Sixty cars will race on the 
quartermile asphalt track in the 
Orange Show stadium as drivers 
compete for the $2,500 purse. 
The races starting today at 
1:30 p.m. include six qualifying 
heats and 
a consolation 
race. 
Sunday events start at 3 30 p.m. 
with three trophy dashes and a 
100-lap main event. 
The Orange Show, which con­ 
tinues 
to March 17, also in­ 
cludes: 
— Ihe 
Bob 
Baker 
Marion­ 
ettes, which can be seen every 
t a , The puppeteers perform in 
a theater - in * the - round in 
full view of the audience. 
— Marines from the San Die­ 
go Recruit Depot in a “ Patriotic 
I lag Pageant” today and March 


16 at 5 p.m. 
in the S w i n g 
Auditorium. The pageant has 19 
sea-schoo! Marines in full-dress 
uniforms corresponding to the 
historical 
period of the flags 
they carry. The 
Marine band 
will present a 20-minute con­ 
cert both Saturdays 
The 
S o u t h e r n 
California 
Edison 
Co. 
“ Eleetra-lartd” 
in 
the commercial and industrial 
exhibit building. Some displays 
include a kitchen counter that 
cooks, 
a picture that 
heats a 
room, electrical fountains and 
outdoor lighting, 
- The Choralettes, comprised 
of 
125 
girls 
of 
Lamar 
High 
School in Houston, Tex. in mus­ 
ical 
concerts 
Wednesday 
and 
T hursday at 7 p.m 
in Swing 
Auditorium. 
—The ( inesphere Chevy Show 
which takes its audience by film 
on a helicopter ride through the 
Grand Canyon under the Rain- 


bow Bridge, a mule ride down 
a steep canyon trail, and skiing 
down snow slopes. 
Four Chevy junior cars, val­ 
ued at $500 each, will be given 
away. 
— The Ponderosa Ranchón se, 
made famous by television’s Bo­ 
nanza series, to be on display 
during the entire show This is 
the first time a Hollywood tel­ 
evision 
set 
has 
toured 
the 
Cartwright of the series, will 
headline tonight’s stage show in 
Swing Auditorium. 
—1 he Movieland Petting Zoo 
which offers small children a 
chance to look at and pet the 
large collection of animals. The 
zoo includes domestic and barn­ 
yard animids plus a tapir, spot­ 
ted llama, elephant, zebra, and 
South 
American 
chicken 
that 
lays colored eggs. 
— Elaborate 
exhibits 
con - 
structed with oranges and other 


citrus fruits entered by 2 
ties, communities and 
Local cities with exhib 
San Dimas, West Covii 
Montclair. 


— A custom car show, 
features 40 cars meludi 
Bat mobile on exhibit th« 
show. 


— Women and girls in 
tanee race Sunday at 
The course will be on a 
road. 


— Entertaining stars 1 
nightly stage shows. Th 
Loren 
Greene, 
Saturdav 
Im Gabor, Sunday; Get 
wards, 
Monday; 
Eddie 
body, Tuesday; 
Gary < 
Wednesday; 
Jim 
Rober 
Arthur Duncan of the La 
Welk 
Show, Thursday; 
mary 
( looney, 
Friday 


Hope, March 16; and Jar 
ny, March 17, 


't c i v 


Mem ber of Baptist G eneral Conference 


9:45 A M. Sunday School 


11:00 A.M. Morning Worship 


6:00 P.M. Youth Hour 


7:00 P M. Evening Service 


4552 N. T O W N E AVE., CLAREMONT 


(N orth of Baseline) 
M onrad Porgasen 


Peifer 


Church of Christ 


MEETS AT 2200 NORTH O R A N G E GRO VE 


SUNDAY 
THURSDAY 


•ISLE STUDY— 7:30 P.M. 


Phone 626-7023 


S lllE STUDY 
WORSHIP 


Church Will Install 


New Pastor Sunday 


Dr, Dwight L. Stevenson will 
speak at 10:45 a.m. services 
Sunday at the First Christian 
Church (Disciples of Christ), ai 
which time the Rev. Robert L. 
Jones will be installed. He be­ 
gan nis ministry here Feb. 15. 
Dr. Stevenson is professor of 
homeletics at Lexington Theo­ 
logical 
Seminary, 
Lexington, 
Ky., and is presently visiting 
professor of evangelism at the 
School of Theology in Clare­ 
mont. He has written a num­ 
ber of books on B i b l i c a l 
pleaching 
and 
Bible 
history 


and is an editor for Christian 
Board of 
Publication of St. 
Louis. 


Also participating in the in­ 
stallation at First Christian will 
be Dr. Fred O. Francis, profes­ 
sar of New Testament, Chap­ 
man College, and the Rev. Wil­ 
liam Terbeek, area pastor for 
the Christian Churches (Disci-! 
pies) of Southern California. 


progrcss-'Bulíctin 
arch 11 eu/ó 


Page 2, Sec. 2 
Saturday Evening, March 2, 1968 


Chino Pastor Returns 


From Pacific Visit 


SfRVICE 
M U T IN G 
and 
TM 


Thursday and Friday 
7:30 and 8:30 p.m. 
JEHOVAH’S 
W ITNESSES 


1546 3. G a ra y— NA 9-2659 


W A T C H T O W IR 
STUDY 


Sunday 3:00 and 7:15 p.m. 


— Public Invited — 


SALVATION ARM Y YOUTH CENTER — Copt. John Carr of 
the Salvation Army chats with volunteers over their work 
at the new building behind the church, at 456 W. O range 
Grove Ave. Each day from 3:30 to 8 p.m. the building will 


be used as a youth center for after-school activities for 
children from the third grade to age 16. Paul Myers will 
supervise the program. All children are welcome for basket­ 
ball, games and other activities. 


DR. D W IG H T ST E V EN SO N 


% 
Covenant Church 


Evangelical Unifad RretNran 


17SO H . Town«, Roman« 


REV. ALEXANDER McCANDLESS, 


R a st e r 


LESTER HOLSTEIN, 


Y o u t h D ir e c to r 
N. TOWN! AT SAN RERNARDINO 
Ph. NA 2-3969; NA 2-8701 
9:30 a.m. Sunday School 
10:50 a.m. W orship and Jr. Chr. 
5:30 p.m. Youth Groups 
7:00 
P-m - 
Fam ily 
Bible» 
Hour 


Wod. 7:1$ p.m. Bible Study and Preyer. Crib A Nurtory Caro Each Sorv. 


r 
■ 
: 


Council of Churches 


Governors Convene 


D R .J O H N W. BLACK 


R a u l’s Episcopal Church 


243 East Alvarado Street 
NAtional 2-3019 
The Rev. Robert E. H enry, Rector 


S U N D A Y , M A R C H 
10, 1 9 6 8 


THE SECOND SU N D AY IN LENT 


8:00 A.M . 
Cpiebrat'on of H oly Communion 


9:00 A M. 
F a nitty Service — Celebration of H oly Communion 


10:00 A M, 
C hristian Education Classes for all ages 


11:00 A M. 
Morning P ra y e r and Sermon by 
Ths Rsv. bryon J, M cK aig . Assoc ate Rector 
Celebration of H oly Communion during Len t: 
Tuesday at 9 a.m. 
Thursdays at 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. 


PILGRIM 
CONGREGATIONAL 


600 N O . GAREY 


Raym ond A. W ater, M inister 


D o n a ld I. Reapers, A i toe late Minister 


10:00 AM. 


Sermon: “The Lord's Prayer— ‘Our Father . . . hallowed 
be Thy name.’ " 
Rev. Raymond A. Waser, preaching 


10:00 
Church School Classes 


11:00 
K o ffte Kbitch 


11:10 
Senior High Class 


11110 
Collegers* Class 


11:18 
Ptlg n m Carolers and 
PHgrtm Choristers 
rehearsals 


1:00 
Senior High P. P .— 
Bike ride, meet at 
M ills and San Joss n 
Clarem ont 


5:00 
Pastor's Class, Mr. 


S t U d y 


6:18 
Ju n io r High Fellow- 
ship 


Ex-Pastor 
Will Speak 
At Dinner 


Dr. John W. Black, former 
pastor 
of 
Trinity 
Methodist1 
Church, will speak at Trinity’s 
first Lenten dinner Wednesday.) 
Dinner will be served at 6:15 
p.m. Dinner reservations may 
be made up to 5 p.m. Monday. I 
Dr. Black began his ministry 
in the Pittsburgh Conference in 
1928. He came to the Southern 
California - Arizona Conference 
in 1943 and has served many 
churches. He served as district 
superintendent of the Whittier 
District after leaving Trinity 
and is presently associate pas-; 
tor at California Heights Metho-1 
dist Church in Long Beach. 
Dr. and Mrs. Black's children 
grew up in Pomona. John Black 
Jr. is minister of La Tijera 
Methodist Church in Los An­ 
geles. 
Their 
daughter, 
Mrs. 
Robert Seeds of Long Beach, 
teaches kindergarten in that 
city's schools. 


Members of the provisional 
governing board of the Pomona 
Valley 
Council 
of 
Churches 
shared their expectations and 
dreams of what they think such 
a council should become at a 
meeting Sunday at the First 
Presbyterian 
Church 
in 
Po­ 
mona. 
Some 35 of the 40 members 
were on hand, with Dr. Harry 
K. Zeller, pastor of the Church 
of the Brethren in La Verne, 
presiding. 
"We are aiming at a sense of 
identity, a concept of our role," 
Dr. Zeller said. "We are not 
going to rush into a structure 
or organization for the group, 


because we might decide to go 
another way." 
"We plan to deal with the real 
expections and far-out dreams 
of what such a council can and 
should do," Dr. Zeller said. 
An informal steering com­ 
mittee will plan the monthly 
meetings 
of 
the 
governing 
board, which holds its next 
meeting April 18 at the First 
Christian Church in Pomona. 
Zeller said that the only real 
confrontation at the meeting 
came between those who wish 
the council to deal strictly with 
local 
issues, and those who 
want it to consider national and 
international issues. 


Church Plans 
Art Contest 


“ Our Lady 
Queen 
of 
the 
Angels, 
"Pray for Us." 
An art contest to choose the 
illustration best illustrating this 
theme has been announced by 
the 
Roman 
Catholic 
Arch­ 
diocese. 
A devotional Mary’s Hour will 
be held at 3 p.m. May 5 in the 
Los Angeles Coliseum on the 
above theme, with a prayer of­ 
fered for peace in the world. 
Ihe winning illustration will 
be used as a program to cover 
tor the event. 
Entries should be submitted 
before March 30 for judging, 
¡and must be accompanied by 
i the artist s name, address and 
telephone number. Illustrations 
; submitted should be 10 by 14 
; inches, two colors, or black and 
one color. Competition is open 
to persons of all ages and faiths, 
¡and may be submitted to Mary’s 
Hour, 
1400 W. 9th St., Los 
Angeles. 


CHINO—Dr. E. Marvin Jack­ 
son, pastor of the Chino First 
Baptist Church, returns to the 
pulpit Sunday after a week of 
m e e t i n g s in the 
Marshall 
Islands, 
He spok ' to the armed forces 
at Island M morial Chapel dur­ 
ing Religious Emphasis Week. 
At the 7 p. m. service Sunday 
Dr. Jackson will discuss his ex­ 
periences in the islands and 
show slides. He will also preach 
at the 11 a. m. service Sunday. 
Sunday will also mark the 
"America for Christ" offering. 
The American Baptist churches 
help to support the work of the 
American Baptist Home Mis­ 
sion Societies and the American 
Baptist Board of Ffducation and 
Publication through this annual 
offering. The theme this year 
j is "Faith Is the Key," and the 
goal is $<50,000. 
The 
Home 
Mission Societies work among 
p e o p l e of Mexico, Central 
America, the West Indies and 


the people living in many North 
American cities. 
The offering 
will be taken in the S u n d a y 
School classes and the morning 
and evening worship services. 


The first alarm clock, made 
by Levi Hutchins of Concord. 
N.H., 
in 
1787, 
could 
never 
change its "ring" time once set. 


THE CHURCH OF GOD 


5. El.a n o r at I. 8th St.. Pom ona 


Sunday School 9:30 a.m. 
M o r n . W o - sh ip 1 0 : 3 0 a in 
I v o n i n g W o r .h t p 7 : 3 0 p m. 
P ra ye r M oating: W ad 7.30 p.m. 


Sifter la V arna Manuel, pastor 


Church of 
Christ 


1022 W . Second St. 
Pomona 


iMorn. Worship 
10:30 a.m. 
[Eve. Worship 
6 00 p.m. 


IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 


156 7 S. R **arvo ir, Pom ona, Kannath Jobson. pastor 


9:30 A.M. Sunday School A W orship. 7 P M. Inspir. Hour 


W ad . 7:15 p.m. Bibla Study and P ra y e r 


M e m b e r o f G e n l. 
A \»o< 
o f R e g u la r S a p t lt t C h u r c h o * a n d A m c r. C o u n c il 
of 
Christian 
Churches, 
W e 
support tha 
20fh 
Cant. Reform ation 
Hour. 


BAHA’I FAITH 
AT THE T ME of the appearance of W (1’ MaMest,*- 
t on of i»o.’ 
extraom.tary progress lus occurred 
m 
the «e-pi 
rf m nds 
thoughts 
-nd spirit», 
For ei- 
ampie, m this divine j<j# n** »hat oeveloomrrtt has 
been attaipfd 
an.) ,t is no« on7 the beginn r>g of 
iis a * * ” 
(Bat' * ' 1 It '■!>>'.it) 


M e e t in g s fa r Inquirers, Sa t. 8 : 0 0 R .M . 


237 W. 13th St., Claremont, 034-7344 


For Inform ation Call 624*5642 (M o n tclair) 
HOUSE OR WORSHIP 


629-7951 (Po m o n a) 
WILMETTE, ILL 


FIRST BAPTIST - M ONTCLAIR 
5154 PALO VERDE 
Rev. Paul E. Horn, Pastor 


“ M A R C H FO R M IS S IO N S ” 
9 :4| A M. 
B IB L E SC H O O L 
11:00 A .M . 
& 
7:00 P.M . 
R*v, W illiam Simmons, 
M issionary from Argentina 
W ed March 13 
7:00 P M. 


The Gideons 


— A C ontm atn e Baptist Church— 


REV. H A R R Y E S P L A N D 
H E L E N B E R G F A L K 


Lemon Grove 
Church Choir 
To Perform 


Missionaries To Speak 
At Crestview Services 


(LAREMONT—Two mission- Mission in Assam, India. She 
aries will speak for the Crest- taught literacy classes and also 
view Baptist ( hurch Sunday. 
wrote teaching materials for 
The Rev. Harvey Espland, a Sunday school classes, 
missionary to the Philippines,' Crestview Baptist Church has 


Ex-Congo 


Missionary 


Will Speak 


! 
CHINO - The Rev. Billy 
Starnes from the board of mis- 
jsions of the Methodist Church 
¡will speak at 9:30 and 10:50 a.m. 
¡services of the Chino First Meth- 
i odist Church Sunday. 
Mr. Starnes is a director of 
the Advance, under the joint 


YOUTH FOR CHRIST 
presents 


SPLENDOR 


OF 


SACRED 


SONG 


with 
Thurlow Spurr 


& THE SPURRLOWS 
M o n d a y -M a r c h 1 1 -7 :3 0 P.M. 
Chaffey High School Aud. 
1 , m il* So. of Frw y,, on Euclid Ave , Ontario 


ALL SEATS RESERVED 
e . 
. 
. 
„ 


Tickets on sal* at door, or 
Students $1 .50 


Cail 213-331-0066 
Adults $2.50 


will speak at 11 a.m. services. 
He and his wife centered their 
work in Cebu City, where they 
were in charge of the mission 


CHRIST THE VICTOR 
LUTHERAN CHURCH 


Sunday, March 10, 1968 


Sunday School 
8:45 A M. 
Worship Service 
10:00 A M . 


(Iro a d c a it on K K A R , 1220 KC, Pom ona) 


"LIM P IN G BETW EEN TW O O PIN IO N S ’ 


Lentan Service: Thursday, 7:30 P.M. 


A Dialogue Serm on Dram a: 


“ W HAT IS PEACE M A K IN G AND WHERE 


DO W 1 BEG IN ” 


The Rev. Thomas E. Mails, Pastor 


4 23 N. Mein Street, Pomona 


Phono 623-4408 


been participating in a mission 
ary conference for a week, 
which concludes Sunday. Mis­ 
sionaries from around the world 
IIDI Akin t i« tr 
. r-u 
u Ruest house* Later they took *have been familiarizing the 65 
of 
K I 
Ilf »/ 
part m evan«elistic ministry Baptist churches of the south- 
J i i n V l ?d7 
e T I 
f 
I and helped build the Firsl BaP- west district of the General Con- 
^ ‘n i f, , 7 
church llst Church which now bas its ference Baptist Church with the 
Sunday at 
p.m. 
0wn Filipino pastor. 
work of the missions. 
I be singmg group contains 40 
Helen 
Bergfalk, 
who 
will 
A mass rally, with representa- 
yoimg 
adults 
from 
Southern speak at 7 p.m. services at the, lives of all 65 churches, was 
California *ho are part of the church, served three terms with!held Friday in the Pasadena 
musical ministry of the Skyline the Baptist General Conference Civic Auditorium. 
Wesleyan Methodist Church in;--- ----------- -— -------------- 
— ---------- 
Lemon Grove. The church fn 
Lemon Grove has 14 choirs in­ 
volving over 600 singers. 
Derric Johnson, a graduate of 
Azusa Pacific College, is direc­ 
tor of the chorale. 


Hungarian Unitarianism 
To Be Observed Sunday 


Central Baptist Church 


of Pomona Valley 


Independent # Fundamental # Old-Fashioned 


S u n Ja y School 


M orning Seri u e 


T ra in in g 
Unton 


E i cuing Sen t. c 
U ( J , Prayer S e n ii e 


10:00 A .M . 


11:00 A M . 


h:00 P.M . 


7:00 P .M . 


7:10 
P .M . 


d . 
d „ T- 
» 
u 
* 
The lJnitarian Society of Po-ierals. fhe struggles of 16th cen- 
, 
f Vtu 
ci 
r ? UrCl! 
m0nu VaIlcy wiU ce,ebrate lhe 
Unitarians Francis David 
pastor of the First Church of louth anniversary of the estab-and King John Sigismund of 
the Nazarene in Lpland, .¿0 W. lishment 
of 
Unitarianism 
in Transylvania on behalf of re- 
9th St. 
Hungary Sunday. 
iligious liberty in a time when 
¡he Rev. Ernest L. Howard death by torture was the ac- 
will speak at the 10:30 a.m. eepted lot of heretics are too 
St rv'ce* 
= little known. Yet four hundred 
Commenting on the observ- years of rehgiou, (reedon) 
ance, Mr. Howard said, "The 


Film Showing 
On Program 
<idcc, mi 
nuwaru saiu, 
"ine 
"Dust or Destiny" is the topic Hungarian Unitarians and their Very 
si,," e 
wi,h 
of a film which will be shown (contribution to the heritage of thenv 0n Sunday. March 10, we 
at 
the 
Grove 
Street 
Bible (religious freedom have often wlB honor their dream and their 
Church Sunday at < p.m. The been forgotten by western lib- courage ’’ 
produced 
by 
film 
was 
produced 
by 
the 
Moody Institute of Science. 
The Rev. C. A. White, pastor, 
will speak at 11 a.m. services. 


VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL 
WORKSHOP 
CONCERNING STANDARD MATERIAL 
IN OUR STORE, TUESDAY, MARCH 12th — 
7:30 P.M. 
CHRISTIAN LIGHT BOOK STORE 
343 North 2n d Ave., Upland 
p h o n e 982-2642 


BILLY STARNES 


¡commission for education and 
cultivation of the mission board. 
From 1956 to 1960 he worked 
in the Congo developing church 
and mission schools. Since re­ 
turning to the United States he 
has joined the Agricultural and 
Technical Assistance Founda­ 
tion of Los Angeles, helping to 
develop the Congo Polytechnic 
Institute and the University of 
ihe Congo. 
The church will hold its quar­ 
terly 
conference 
meeting 
at 
7:30 p.m. Sunday to decide on 
a parsonage for the church. 


D«af Interpretation 


at Ail Service* 


NOT affiliated with 
any count I 0fi 


) chu. th e t— local, 
national 
or 
world* 
I wide. 


7 35 S. Mills Ave., Claremont 


*•7 • • lern «, Pottor 


N A 6-7430 


Z }irò i (ß ap tist 


HO LT A N D G A R E Y , P O M O N A 


8 15 and 11:00 A.M. 
“ th e m a r k s o e the c h u r c h * 


7:00 P.M. 
"THE CONSCIENCE OP JU D A S ’ 


Dr. Cole at all Service* 


9:30 A M . Sunday School 
(F o r A ll Agee) 


8:00 P.M . Ju n io r High»; 
Senior H igh*; 
College-Carter 


W EDNESDAY, 7:15 P.M. 


BIBLE STUDY A PRAYER 


Dr. 


Edward B. 


"T e d ” 


Cole, 


Paet«r 


" I n T ba H e a rt O f Pom ona V a lle y 


W it h Pom ona V alley O n O u r Heart** 


EASTER Season Inspiration at 
WALK-IN, DRIVE-IN 
CHURCH 


Sum.§ January 1, J94J, l,ig e (amili** repre*eiuin* clow to 1,000 people 


h iv e 
the U nique 'Lallt n, D riv e -Ia Ser*»ce* for the ( im lime. 


* 
’ ‘ 
*h ,n ,t y o u S u r id iy fo r I e i'r r Sc n o n VI o rih ie . 


Mirth !o Í 10 k UittO, "Stott Fuji«* end stm Uvm^,“ If Rev, 
lJiVid R*y'* Tupie. 


At 7.00 p.m. VcfjHf*. Rev, H .nry Rettami *¡U dueu**, “ j«*u* in 
üeihvtinaae »nd Reiriyid." 


Jtuft mi, will you} 


Valley Community Drive-In Church 


___________Lone Hill 4 Covina Blvd., San Dima*, Calif. 


Reorganized Church 
Of Jesus Christ Of 
Latter Day Saints 


343 W . 13th, C larom ont 


N A . 6-4361 


RAMONA 
AVENUE 
CHRISTIAN 
CHURCH 


(D istip le i of C h rh t) 


Church School 
9:30 A M 


M orning Service 
10.45 A.M. 


N EIL C. COLEM AN 
M iniite» 
Come Unto Me 
400 N. Ramona Ave, 


La V arn a 
3 9 9 -3 6 1 3 


Jewish Community 
To Celebrate Purim 


Jewish residents of the Po­ 
mona area will join their breth­ 
ren throughout the world in ob­ 
servance of their ancient holi­ 
day, Purim, next week. 
Purim - Lots, in English - 
finds its origin in the Book of 
Esther, which relates how the 
lewish queen to King Ahasueras 
of Persia, saved her people from 
destruction 
by 
Haman, 
the 
king’s prime minister. 
Haman had decided by lots to 
destroy all Jews in the Persian 


Charlas W h it# , Pastor 


9:45 A M . — S u n d a y School 
11:00 A . M . — M o r n i n g S e r v le t 
" T h o C h r is t ia n W e 
W o r k e d to D e a t h " 
6:00 P . M . — -C h ristia n E n d e a v o r 
7:00 P . M . — E v e n in g Service 
C olored F ilm 
“ D u s t or D e s t i n y ” 


K B B L 99.1 F M T h u rs. 10 A .M . 


GROVE STREET BIBLE CHURCH 


J3 8 (A S T G R O V t S T R K T , P O M O N A 


FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD 
CHINO 


( W e h a v r sold the church, to build anew, 
we meet in The T h im b le C l u b — 
M a y we look for y o u ) ? 
12TH & B STREETS 


9 45 A M . S u n d a y School 
11:00 A .M . M o r n in g Service 
7:00 P .M . E v e n in g Service 
7:00 P .M . T h u r s d a y , Bible S t u d y 


Pastor Rev. 
H ow ard t. G raves 
6 3 8 -6 8 0 0 


BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH 


10th and Gibbs Streets 


Sunday School ............................................ 9.30 a m 


Worship Services .................... 1 1:00 a.m., 7.00 p.m. 
Youth Fellowship .......................................... 6;00 p m> 


Midweek Prayer Service W ednesday 
7,00 p.m. 


N ursery Care at All Services 


Robert W. Estus, pastor 
622-6033 


First Church of God 


1233 East Kingsley 


H IR S C H ill D. R IC I, PASTOR 


9:45 A.M. Sunday School 


8:45 A.M. & 11:00 A.M. 
“PRISONERS OF OURSELVES’* 
Rev. Herschell Rice 


7:00 P.M. 
“GOD’S MATCHLESS GRACE’* 
Rev. Herschell Rice 


W .d n .sd o y , 7:30 P.M. 
Bibl. Study and Proy#r 


Child car# for all sarvices 


Yoúr 


METHODIST CHURCHES 


I 
' v;v 1 
TRINITY 
Pearl and Gibbs Streets, Pomona 


W O R S H IP SERV IC ES * AND 11 A.M. 
‘‘OU R G O D ST U P ID IT Y " 
Dr. Robert P. Shuler, Jr., »peaking 


CHURCH SCHOOL 
N u r.e ry for infant» and toddler» 
I t ) A M . 12:15 
l»M . 
Kindergarten thru ti.th grade 
9 ,,)d , , A M . 
Youth, W e tle y , and adult» 
10 00 A m 
„ 
. 
_ 
IV IN IN O G RO U PS 
Yeuth Choir reh earsal 
5 ¡4 5 P M 
M YP Snack and program , Jr. H.gh School. College 
6:43 to 8 30 P M 
Singleton, (fo r »ingle y o u r* adult» to provide follow »hip .n 
ChrUtifi» en vironm ent) 
7 00 P M 
Convonier.t off-street p arking 
M IN ISTERS: Dr. Robert P. Shuler Jr., Rev. Robert I. Laird 
PHILADELPHIA ST. METHODIST 


951 I. Philadelph ia 
Rav. Clinton W . Sw en gel 
Youth and Adult C la tio i — - 9 :30 A.M. 
Church School 10:30 A.M. 
W orship 10:30 A.M. 
*— 
1 N u rtory Caro P rovided — 


WESTMONT METHODIST 


l t « l W. N inth Jt. 
P .m o n . 
W orsh ip 9:30 A 11 a.m. 
Church School 9:30 A 11 a.m. 
Youth Group» 3:30 A 6:30 p.m. 
____ 
Minister»» Leonlda» I. Iro c k , A. C. Stark 
CHINO FIRST METHODIST 
* l*th A Rive rsid e Or. 
Church School 9:30 A 10:30 a.m 
Youth Group» 6 A 6:30 p.m . 


*e v. Carl W , Schmitt 
W orsh ip 9:30 A 10:50 a.m. 
N ursery at all sorvicat 


CLAREMONT METHODIST 


Foothill at Y a la 


Two Identical 
9 :30 and 11 p.m. Sunday 


W ° r,h lp 
Service, 
(T .m p e ra rily to bo In Id ucation al B u ild ing, 


Church School 
9:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday 
M inister»! Pierce Johnson, Vernon Story 


Church School: M r,. H arvey Seifert 
M u .Jcj Or. Han» W o lf 
Child Caro at All Timo, 


LA VERNE FIRST .METHODIST 
3205 “ D" Street 
*#v j, |#rnard 
9:30 A.M. Church School 
1 1:00 A.M. Morning W orship 


MONTCLAIR METHODIST 
DRIVE IN - W ALK IN W O RSH IP 


empire on the 13th day of the 
month of Adar. However, when 
his plan backfired and he was 
hanged, the Jews designated the 
following day as their Purim. 
Traditional for Purim is the 
booing of Haman and the cheer­ 
ing of Queen Esther, and Rabbi 
Irving A. Mandel will read the 
story of Esther at 7:30 p.m. 
Wednesday 
at 
Temple 
Beth 
i Israel. 
Purim assembly for children, 
kindergarten 
through 
fourth 
grade, will be held next Satur­ 
day, and for older students will 
be conducted Sunday. 
I he temple board will spon­ 
sor a purim carnival on March 
17 starting at 11:30. Art Bernard 
is the chairman of the commit-1 
tee in charge, and the public is! 
invited to the temple where the 
carnival will be held. 


In addition to the traditional 
Purim food, there will be fun 
booths, 
outdoor 
games 
and 
prizes. 


Church Group Undertaking 
Variety of Unusual Tasks 


Page 3, Sec, 2 


CHRISTADELPHI AN 
House of Worship 
9th and Gibbs 


P O M O N A 
Ph. 622-5378 


First Talk 


Of Lenten 


Series Set 


The Rev. Raymond A. Waser 
of P i l g r i m 
Congregational 
Church will give the first in a 
series of Lenten sermons on the 
Lord's Prayer at 10 a. m. serv­ 
ices Sunday. 


Robert Richards and Dorothy 
Stewart will sing and Jennifer 
St. Clair and Barbara Middle­ 
ton will be featured instrumen- 
1 talists. 


The pastor’s class for young 
people 
preparing 
for church 
membership will be held in the 
minister’s study at 5 p. m. The 
junior 
high 
fellowship 
will 
meet at the church at 6:15 
p. m. for worship and then will 
tour Todd’s Memorial Chapel, 
returning to the church for re­ 
freshments and discussion. 
The 
senior high 
fellowship 
will hold a bike ride Sunday, 
to be led by Dr. Eugene St. 
Clair. 


WILLIAM SIMMONS 
Missionary 
1 


Will Speak 


MONTCLAIR — A missionary 
who will soon leave for Argen­ 
tina will speak to the First 
Baptist Church 
of 
Montclair 
Sunday at the 11 a.m. and 7 
p.m. services. 
William Simmons and his wife 
will serve as houseparents and 
teachers in a school for mis­ 
sionary children in Cerrillos, 
Argentina, working with the 
Conservative 
Baptist 
Foreign 
Mission Society of Wheaton, 111. 
They will travel to churches, 
telling of their future work, be­ 
fore leaving for Costa Rica to 
study Spanish. 


Associate 


Minister 


To Speak 


Donald B. Keepers, associate 
minister at Pilgrim Congrega­ 
tional Church, will speak at 7 
p.m. Wednesday in Pilgrim Hall 
of the church. 


Each Wednesday a Lenten 
program is held and dinner 


By GEORGE W. CORNf I I. 
NEW YORK (AP) - An en­ 
terprising Protestant denominJa- 
tion is taking on some unusill 
tasks, including an effort to |;i 
people 
know what individual 
congressmen think about th)e 
Vietnam war. 


“ This is a prime moral cori- 
-cern of our times,” scud the 
Rev. Dr. Everett Parker, direc­ 
tor of the Office of Communica­ 
tions of the Unit'd Church cm 
Christ. 


“ We think it s important tjo 
help encourage a fuller clarifi­ 
cation of viewpoints betweeh 
government representatives and 
the piihlii' on this whole matter 
of peace.” 


The United Church, a two-mil- 
lion-member communion whicli 
has pioneered concrete steps iii 
the cause of Christian reunion, 
also has undertaken several oth­ 
er uncommon projec is, includ­ 
ing: 


—Setting up watchdog com­ 
mittees in local communities t(> 
keep check on radio and televi­ 
sion broadcasts, on the lookouf* 
against the airing of materia! 
reflecting bias against Negroes,1 
—Establishing 
community 
groups to guard against extrem 


1st tactics to vilhiv individual 
public leaders, educators, mal­ 
tsters or institutions by loose ac­ 
cusations or name-calling on the* 
air, or otherwise. 
The 
objective, 
Dr 
Pariaf 
said, is “ not censorship but ball 
ance’—to try to see to it that! 
misleading impressions aren't 
being foisted on the citizenry 
about persons or programs by 


I one-sided attacks, from left or 
right. 
Both of the broadcast-moni­ 
toring projects have been under­ 
written by foundations. The one 
on extremism by grants total­ 
ling $85,000 from the Field Foun­ 
dation and the AFL-CIO, and 
the one on racism by a $160,000 
grant from the Ford Founda­ 
tion. 
Under the plan for guarding 
against racially distorted broad­ 
casts, steps were under way this 
week to form local committees 
in 10 Southern cities, with others 
to be formed later in many oth­ 
er places, including the North­ 
ern communities. 
“ We’ll go into any community 
where responsible groups want 
us to come,” Dr. Parker said. 
Local committees are given 
guidance on analyzing broad­ 
casts for possible discriminato­ 
ry material, and when patterns 
of bias are discovered, evidence 
is to be documented and dis­ 
cussed with station manage­ 
ment. 
If, and only if, that effort fails 
to correct the situation, action 
would be taken to formally mon­ 
itor and record allegedly biased 
programs, with findings and pe­ 
titions against station license re­ 
newal presented to the Federal 
Communications Commission. 
While the various projects are 
a new sort of operation for a re­ 
ligious body, the United Church 
is experienced at innovation and 
initiative. 
The denomination 
itself, 
a 
merger 
of 
the 
independent- 
minded 
Congregational 
Chris­ 
tian Churches of British origin 


and the Evangelical and Re­ 
formed Church of German ori­ 
gin, is the first merger in the 
nation’s history to unite tradi­ 
tions 
of 
different 
governing 
styles 
and 
national 
back­ 
grounds. 


One 
of 
the 
denomination's 
pastors, the Rev. Dr. David Col­ 
well, of Washington, is chair­ 
man of the Consultation 
on 
Church Union, an effort to unite 
10 major denominations. 


SOUTH HILLS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 
1 170 West Fremont 
Rev. Ivan W alks, Pastor 


Sunday School 9:45 A.M. 
Y ou n g People'» G rou p * 
Friday» 7:30 P.M. 


M orn ing W orship 11:00 A.M. 
"THE DISCIPLINED LIFE" 


CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 


875 WEST O R A N G E G R O VE AVE. 
ARTHUR C. KE!M , PA STO R 
9:30 A .M . 
C H U R C H S C H O O L 
Jes»e B ro w n . Supt. 
W 3 R S H I p 
" M Y N A M E IS L E G I O N — F I D E L I T Y " 
Rev. R a lp h C lic k 
Y o u th Group» 
" I and Tn o u 
. . L o v in g . " Sp e cial M u t fe fo r S u n d a y 
t v e m n g Service, N a n c y M u m e r g 


10-30 A .M . 


6:30 P .M . 
7:00 P .M . 


ülÉÉÉËÉi 


Presbyterians 


To Pick Slate 


O f Delegates 


Ministerial and lay delegates 
to the 180th General Assembly 
of 
the 
United 
Presbyterian 
Church will be elected Tuesday 
at the meeting of the San Ga­ 
briel Presbytery at the First 
Presbyterian Church in Baldwin 
Park, 4428 N. Stewart Ave. 
The general assembly, con­ 
sisting of around 950 voting 
delegates, half ministers and 
half lay members of the church, 
wrfl meet May 16-22 in Minne­ 
apolis, Minn. The top legislative 
and policy-making body of the 
United Presbyterian Church in 
the U.S.A. has met without in-! 
terruption since 1789. 
The Presbytery of San Ga­ 
briel is one of seven district 
units comprising the Synod of 
¡Southern California. 


509 SO. CO LLEG E AVE., C LA REM O N T 
Dr. Kendall Brvson, Minister 


10:00 A .M . — - W O R S H I P — 11 :30 A .M . 
(2 S E R V I C E S ) 
'The Significance O f Belteiing" 


FAITH MISSIONARY CHURCH 
1173 San Bernardino Ave., Pomona 


S u n d a y School 
9:30 A.M. 
M o r n i n g W o r s h i p 
10:35 A.M . 
“THE REST OF F A IT H " 


M i i t i o n a r y Youth Fellow ship 
6:00 P.M. 
E v e nin g 
W o r s h i p 
7;00 P.M. 
M i d - W e e k ( W e d . ) P r o y e r 
an d Bible Stu d y 
7:15 P.M. 


” W 
h ( h r ; s f 
Ctfitd ' 
1 Cor. 1:23, 


ft. John t i l 3 
g U 


—» ,,»» 1 » i » \ I'h i l i ». » 
^ 


FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF CHINO 


13th A Park PI,, across fr o m tho H ig h School 
SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES 
Sunday School 
4 VJ a m. 
Monurg Worship 11 00 a m 
h 00 pm, 
tuen n-j Woruiip 
7 00 p.m. 
Pram L«t# W*d 7 p m 
Sat. 7 30 p.m. 
M. Oacuspfl Pastor 
Mr P. Woodward, Youth and Music 


B Y F 


Dr E 


A il eteetrii for \our comfort and conitntcHit' 


DONALD B. K EEPERS 


served at the church. Reserva­ 
tions for dinner may be made 
by calling the church office. 


Mr. Keepers supervises the 
church school, is minister to 
youth groups and is an asso­ 
ciate in worship and administra­ 
tion of the church. 


Lutheran Churches 


FREM ONT A BEN H O 
NA 4-3111 
CHU RCH IC H O O L 9:30 A M. 
W O R S H IP 9:30 A 11:00 A M. 


of Greater Pomona Valley 


POMONA 
(I. L . C .) 
C H R IST T H E V IC T O R 
423 N. M a m St. 
623-4408 
T h o m a » E. Mail». Pastor 
S u n d a y School 8:45 A .M . W o r s h i p Se rv e* 10:00 A M . 
L iv e B r o a d c a s t of w orship service on A M radio 
K K A R 1220 K c — See our r e g u la r c h u r c h ad s 


FIR ST 
POMONA 
395 S a n B e r n a r d in o A v e 
(N 
T o w n * A v * . ) 
(A .L . C .) 
C h u r c h : 622-5615 
School: 629-0802 
Rev. F re d ric k J. L a n d d t c k . P a a to r 
S u n d a y Sc h o o l 8:45 a.m. 
W o r s h i p 10:00 a.m 
GOOD SH EPH ER D 
1700 N . T o w n * A ve . 
626-2714 
D a v id A d a m c ik , P a s t o r 
C h u r c h School 9.30 A . M . 


C LA REM O N T 
( L - C .A .) 


W o r s h i p 11:00 A . M . 
IM M A N U EL 
C H IN O 
5648 J e fferson A v * . 
(M « . S y n o d ) 
R. C. S c h s u , P a s t o r 
S u n d a y School 9:30 A M. 
W o r t h . p 10:45 A .M . 


MT. C A LV A R Y 
D IA M O N D BAR 
L u t h e r a n 
M is s io n 
(M o . 
S y n o d ) 
M e e ts at G olden S p r in g * Sc h o o l 
D o n a ld Stoike, P a s t o r 
S u n d a y Scho o l 9:00 A M. 
W o r s h i p 10:30 A M , 
O UR SAVIO R 


250 E a s t G ro vo 
D an iel S a b ro w e k y , P a e to r 
S u n d a y School and Bible C la s * 9 
: 
A M. 
C h u r c h Se rvice 10:30 A . M . 


N O R T H POM ONA 


( W is e . S y n o d ) 


JOHN VESY 
Church Play 


Scheduled for 


Sunday Night 


CLAREMONT - “ The World 
of Carl Sandburg,” a play by 
Norman Corwin, will be pre- 
jsented 
by 
the 
Alpha-Omega 
Players of North Hollywood at 
the United Church of Christ, 
j Congregational, in Claremont 
Sunday at 7 p.m. 
i 
The senior high school Pil­ 
grim Fellowship is sponsoring 
the play. 
John Vesy, Youngstown, Ohio, 
singer and dancer, and actress 
Gene Gould play the leading1 
parts. 


Vesy has performed in more 
than 30 states, and for two 
years was actor and director 
for The Bishop’s Company. 
Miss Gould has toured with 
The Bishop’s Company through 
the 50 states and Canada. She 
is now a leading actress for 
Alpha-Omega Players. She has 
appeared in more than 40 stage 
productions, both classical and 
modern, in California and the 
western states. 


Director is Drexel Riley, for 
four years a resident artist with 
the Dallas Theater Repertory 
Co. He is a director, playwright 
and former assistant professor 
of drama at Southwestern Uni­ 
versity, Tex. 


10:50 A.M. Worship 


“ THE CHURCH OF MY DREAMS” 


9:30 A.M. Sunday School 


7:00 P.M. 


“ ARE YOU THERE?“ 
Dr. Ca rl M. P u rd y 


P a sto r 
POMONA FOURSQUARE CHURCH 
480 W. Monterey Street 


D R EX EL RILEY 


Church Sponsoring 


$100 Hymn Contest 


Trinity Presbyterian Church 
(if Atlanta, Ga., i-» sponsoring a 
Contest with a prize of $100*fur 
the best musical background 
for a selected hymn text. 
The competition 
will close 
July 31 
Ml composers inter­ 
ested 
> entei mg ire it vited to 
^vrite for a copy of the rules and 
(>f the chosen text from I rinity 
Presbyterian C h u r c h Hymn 
( ont *st, 3003 Howell Mill Rd., 
NV\ Atlanta, (¡a. 30327. 


The Living God 


Anyone whose life has been touched by the healing power 
of divme Love, anyone whose prayers have brouQht a 
glimpae of what it mean* to be spiritually alive, knows Lorn 
h.s own experience about "the living God” apoken of 
in the Bible. Awarenesa of His presence comes in different 
ways to each individual, but it grows only with deep prayer 
and »tudy. Christian Science Reading Rooms and church 
services are there to help. You are always welcome. 


First Church of Christ/ Scientist 


1665 North Son Antonio A vonuo 
POMONA 


TIME: Sundays 11 A.M. — 
Wednesdays 8 P.M. 
SUBJECT THIS SUNDAY: 


“ MAN” 


Sunday School at 9:30 A.M. (Up to 20 Year«) 


PEACE 


1107 Glon A v * ., E a s t of G a n e s h a H i g h Scho o l 
V e rn o n T r a h m a , P a s t o r 


W EST POMONA 


(M o . S y n o d ) 


• u n d a y School and W o r s h i p ’* ;« ) a n d 10:30 A M. 


P R IN C E OF PEACE 
M O N T C LA IR & W. O NT. 


1415 W . 5th (Ont.) 
(A .L . C .) 
Clarence A. Pauleen, P a e to r 
Sunday School 9:45 A M, 
W o re h tp 8:30 a r d 11:00 A M. 
N u r s e r y C a r * 


ST. LU K E 
C LA R EM O N T 
2050 N o r t h In d ia n H ill B o u le v a rd 
624 8898 
(M o . S y n o d ) 
A 
F 
G r a u d m , P a s t o r 
S u n d a y School 9:15 A M . 
W o r s h i p 10:30 A M . 


ST. PA U L 
POM ONA 
610 N. S a n A n to n io 
( Mo. S y n o d ) 
H e r m a n W 
Mueller, P a e t o r 
7 
' 
S u n d a y School 9:30 A M 
W o r s h i p 8;Qy an d 10:45 A .M . 


There are about 2,289,300 for­ 
eign born people living in New 
York. 


CLAREMONT UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST, CONGREGATIONAL 
Harvard Ave. at Sixth St., Claremont, NA 6-1201 


7 :3 6 A.M. 
" ( m m 0* -y*0 «r« " S e rv ic e In K in g m a n C hap el 
•‘DON'T LOSE OUT O N LINT'1 
Rev. le»li* O, Strottiern 


9 :0 0 6 
1 1 :0 0 A M . 
W o r s h ip S e rv ic e In th o S a n c tu a ry 


‘ CRIDiTORS MAY FORGET TOO QUICKLY*' 
Rev, tdward W. M aury 


ST. ST EPH EN 
6466 Franc*« St, 
C H IN O 
( A . L . C . ) 


Welcome tc 


305 E. Arrow Hwy., Pomona 
R. Dwight Brown, Pastor 


•27 1433 
G a r y L 
B e r k ltn d , P a e to r 
S u n d a y School 9 45 A M. 
W o i s h i p 11:00 A . M . 
N u r s e r y C a r# A v a ila b le 


T R IN IT Y 
M O N T C LA IR 
6080 E. K i n g s le y 
( M o . S y n o d ) 
D o n a ld J. P o g a r a k i , P a e to r 
W o r s h i p 8 1 5 6 10:45 A M. 
S u n d a y Sc h o o l 9:30 A M. 


t r i n i t y 
737 So, H a m ilt o n Blvd. 
nev. P r a n k G u n n , In t e rim P a s t e r 
S e rvice s at 8.30 a n d 10:45 A .M . 
S u n d a y S c h o o l 9:|0 A M. 


POMONA 
(L .C .A - ) 


peek Where feint It Reel I 
Enjoy These Three Great Sunday Services! 


SUNDAY SCHOOL 
9:30 A M . 


M ORNING WORSHIP 
10:50 A M 


EVENING SERVICE 
7:00 P M 


Progr#*».Bulletin, Pomo 10, Calif. 
Saturday Evening, March 9, 1967 


McCandless Resigns as Minister 
At Claremont Presbyterian 


FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH - CLAREMONT 


( A m * n c » n B « p t l » t C o n v e n t i o n ) 


Harrison at Mountain Aves. • 634-4496 • R. J. Hunter, pastor 


9 30 A M 
Chyrcti School 
U 00 * W, Worship Servit» Mnd Children s Church) 
6 )0 P M Jr A Sr H. Youth C. r-uos 
7 00 P.M. Çhspe! Hçur 


1 ''' jP®*: CLAREMONT — 
After eight riffay %.PRF,;.?yiiwwyA.w1*.'• -w i w w ! 
« I f y*arS aS minisler of the Clare- 
r 
J H | mom Presbyterian Church, the 
^ v l H Rov 
Kenneth McCandless has 
0 
* " t 
il|L | 
resigned as p a s t o r of the 


J R . 
Mr McCandless, 47, said he 
... t 
X § wi-hnl to become a 
lavman, 
*»«*%. 
Hid t1' !t 111*-- de< is mn < a me from 
- p * * 
■ jl 
no !’nhap;<iness with the church 
J C 
nor from any unhappiness of 
jj|f the church with him. He indi- 


i-> ~ Jjjji cared he might go to work for 
the Claremont Colleges. 
........|jl^ 
J t S 
M 
I I 
He asked the cooperation of 


% 
1 
m , ' m b , 'rs 
not 


I 
him to 
perform 
any 


w 
vli 


| LIlf*' 
' '' 1 
¥■ 
at Claremont Presbyterian, in 
a. 
order to turn the church over 
REV. K, McCANDLESS 
.|C( 
wholly to its new minister. 


& S i 
With 
regret, the Session ac- kytery 
to acknowledge 
■■# JLJI 
cepted his 
resignation, dated 
resignation. 
i 
Feb- 23> and has asked the Pres*l 
Under Mr. McCandless 


istry, church membership has 
increased 
from 
300 to over 
1.000, the budget expanded from 
$65,000 to $160,000 and a new 
sanctuary constructed. 
In the spring of 1964 Mr. Mc- 
Candiess went to Hattiesburg, 
Miss., to help with voter regis­ 
tration. 
Before coming to Claremont, 
he was pastor of the Fox Valley 
Presbyterian Church in Geneva, 


FO O TH ILL BAPTIST CHURCH 


SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION 


1364 N. Town* Ava., Clmt. (V , Block No. of Foothill Blvd.) 


Sunday School 9:43 
Training Union 6:15 


Morning W orihlp ll:C O 
Even ng Sorvlco 7:30 


PASTOR: OEOROE C. KENNEDY, PH. 624 8610 


UNITARIAN SOCIETY OF P3* 


918S Mont* Vista Ava., Montclair 


10:30 A.M. Church School 


10:30 A M 
"EARNING OUR TRADITION 


Rov. Ernast Howard spooking 
He was the youngest of four 
children of the Rev. W. T. and 
Anna B. McCandless. He grad­ 
uated with honors from Wash­ 
ington and Jefferson College in 
1G42 and received the B.D, de­ 
gree from Western Theological 
Seminary in 1945. During World 
War II he served as a Navy 
chaplain. He has done graduate 
work in religion and personality 
at the University of Chicago. 
* h e! 
Mr. and Mrs. McCandless and 
their three children live at 886 
min- Santa Clara Ave. 


CLAREMONT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 


1111 N. Mountain Ave.. C'arem ont 


The R e v . K e n n e th 8. M eContH»$$, P a s to r 


W O R S H I P S E R V I C E S 
9 :3 0 & 11:00 A . M . 
( C h i l d c a r e ) 


C H U R C H 
S C H O O L 
t in A M 


FREE METHODIST CHURCH 
4*0 I. 1« Verne Ava., Pomona (No. at Freeway aft Towns Ava.) 


Sunday School 9 45 A.M. 
Youth Fellowship 6:00 P M 


Worship 11:00 A.M. 
Family Hours: 7:00 P M 


M i d w e e k S e r v i c e 7 :0 0 P M , 
ROYAL W. (DWARDS. Paitar 
Professor 
Of Religion 
To Preach 


Groundbreaking Rites 
Scheduled by Church 


Mt. Zion Baptist Church 


841 S. Moin St., Pomona 


9:30 
A.M. Sunday School 
11.00 
A.M. Morning Worship 
6:00 
P.M. BT.U. 


LA VERNE - Dr. Glenn 
O’Neal will be the speaker for 
the groundbreaking ceremonies 
for the new buildings of the 
I rst Brethren Church on the 
corner of 6th Street and White 
Avenue, Sunday at 3 p.m. 
Dr. O’Neal is secretary of the 
Southern 
California 
Brethren 
Conference District m i s s i o n 
board and professor of homil­ 
etics at Talbot Theological Sem­ 
inary. 
Mayor Frank Johnson and Dr. 
James Hutchinson, president of 
the Bonita Ministerial Associa­ 
tion, also will take part in the 
ceremonies. 
Dr. Ellas D. White, pastor of 
the church, will speak at 11 
a.m. worship services Sunday, 
at the old church location. A 
film will be shown there during 
7:30 p.m. services. 


CLAREMONT - Robert G. 
Hamerton-Kelly, assistant pro­ 
fessor of religion at Scripps 
College, will speak at 11 a.m. 
Sunday services at the Church 
of the Claremont Colleges in 
Bridges Hall. 
Hamerton-Kelly holds under­ 
graduate 
degrees 
from 
both 
Rhodes and Cambridge univer­ 
sities, a master’s degree from 
Cambridge, and theological de­ 
gree from Union Theological 
Seminary in New York. 
He taught at the seminary 
and was a Rockefeller fellow in 
religion before c o m i n g to 
Scripps College in 1965. 


Music: Mrs. Jeanette Banks 
Pastor: Rav. Paschal Banks 


CHURCH O f THE O P EN BIBLE 
CHURCH OF GOO OF THE ABRAHAMIC FAITH, HDO., OREGON, III. 


440 W . La Verne Ave., Pomona— Delbert Jones, pastor 


4 | 
v -tr --- Robart See, Asst. Paster 


Su n d ay School 
9:45 a.m . 


| ] 
H p 
M orning W o rsh ip 1 1:00 a.m . 


’—i 
^nd * 
Sundays, 3:30 p.m. 


B B n tlU 
Cerean Youth Fellowship 


M OUNTAINS OF PACKAGES— Mrs. Sam Sutton and Mrs. Anna Louise Sides of the W om ­ 
en's Guild of the Church of Religious Science, inspect stack of five-pound boxes they 
have packed to send to lonely GIs serving in the war in Vietnam. 
(P-B photo) 
L.V. Prof 
To Debate 
On Panel 


Church Guild Sends 
Packages to Vietnam 


Bethany Baptist Church 
of Montclair 


9950 Monte Vista Avenue 


SUNDAY SCHOOL 
9:30 P.M 
MORNING WORSHIP 
8:15 * 11:00 A.M. 


"Personelitiet Around the C ro u ” 


Relevance Gap 
To Be Studied 


WASHINGTON (U P I)- A so- 
called ‘relevance gap’ between 
high school students and the 
Christian faith will be studied 
at Georgetown University June 
17-21 at a workshop sponsored 
by the university and the Na­ 
tional Catholic Educational As­ 
sociation. 
Workshop 
director 
John Cermak, religion consult­ 
ant for the NCEA, said students 
feel certain traditional theolo­ 
gical ideas are inadequate in a 
technological civilization." 
"The purpose of the workshop 
is to bring to the surface the 
specific reasons why a rele­ 
vance gap exists in adolescent 
religious education and to pro­ 
vide guidelines for the develop- 
ment of a 
more meaningful 
curriculum in this area," Cer­ 
mak said. 


DR. G LEN N O’N EA L 


At 1 p.m. a basket lunch will 
be held at the church. 


CLAREMONT - Some 200 
packages 
for lonely 
fighting 
men in Vietnam will be on their 
w&y this weekend to Travis Air 
Force Base Base en route to the 
battle zone. 
They are a gift from the 
Women’s Guild of the Church of 
Religious Science, which last 
year raised more than $1,000 
at several benefits to support 
the Vietnam project. 
"It is our hope that this effort 
will show an indication of our 
love and appreciation for the 
fighting men in Vietnam, and 
will provide ‘a little something 
extra’ for a few men who think 
they are forgt/ten, 
but are 
not,’’ said guild president Mrs. 


Anna Louise Sides. 
The packages will be sent to 
four units, to be given to sol­ 
diers who do not have contacts 
irom home. 
The units are the 9th Infantry 
Division, IV Corps; 1st Infantry 
Division, III Corps; 1st Air Cav­ 
alry Division, II Corps, and the 
3rd Marine Division, I Corps. 
Each five-pound box will con­ 
tain home baked cakes and 
cookies, paperback books, writ­ 
ing material, shaving equip­ 
ment and other items, plus a 
personal message and a retum- 
address card, in the hope that 
there may be future corres­ 
pondence between church mem­ 
bers and soldiers in the field. 


LA VERNE - Dr. Vemard 
Eller, associate professor of 
religion at La Verne College, 
will join with the Rev. William 
H. DuBay in a panel debate on 
Tuesday from 7:30 to 10 p.m. 
:n UCLA’s Dickson Art Center. 
A lecture covering "Religion 
in the 21st Century" will be 
jriven by Thomas F. O’Dea, 
University of California, Santa 
Barbara. 
The evening will be the last 
in the "Religion and Contem­ 
porary Society" program of the 
UCLA Extension Division. 
Father DuBay was suspended 
from the Archdiocese of Los 
Angeles for his support bf labor 
unions for priests. 


EVENING W ORSHIP 
7:00 P.M 


“Tar Condemnation of W o rtbiennet\ 


Nursery Cara In all service* 
D. I. BRAY, Paitor 


PO M O NA 
Um 11 
c h u r c h 


"Church of th* Dmly Word** 


524 E. Pasadena St. 


Sunday $<l«aal 
Ciotta» for all eget 
Oavolional Service 
"THE UNMISTAKABLE 
EVIDENCE' 
Jewish Schools 
Teach 540,000 


NEW YORK (U PI)-O f an 
estimated 1.3 million Jewish 
children in the United States 
between the ages of three and 
17, more than 540,000 are re­ 
ceiving some form of Jewish 
religious education, according 
to the 3rd annual census con­ 
ducted by the American Asso­ 
ciation for Jewish Education. 
This shows a slight decline in 
enrollment from previous cen­ 
suses taken in 1955 and 1962, 
probably due to the declining 
birth rate during the 1950s and 
1960s, the Association says. 


MON. 7:30 P.M. ' LESSONS IN TRUTH 
Clatt 


David Pol 


P ta ym r S e rv it# 


M id - W « « k C la n 
' U N O fR N iA T H A RE THE 
E V E R L A S T IN G A R M S ' 
R#v. 
G e rtru d » T u n flan d 
M in i it» r 
Common Education 
Programs Planned 


CLEVELAND (UPI) - Three 
major Protestant denominations 
are 
planning 
for 
common 
Christian education programs 
that could go into effect in the 
mid-1970s. 
They are the United Church 
of Christ, the United Presbyte­ 
rian Church in the U.S.A. and 
the Episcopal Church. 


Recognition 
Day Planned 
For Students 


Lent Is for Modems 
D|4l-A-PRAYf«-~74 HOURS— NA 2 3596 


Missions Expand 


SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (U PI)— 
Two 
African 
nations, 
Ivory 
Coast and Rhodesia, a r e the 
latest countries where the As­ 
semblies of God has sent mis­ 
sionaries. 
T h e denomination 
lists 884 missionaries in 75 
countries. 


C H U R C H OF CH R IST 
CLAREMONT — Internation­ 
al Student Recognition Day will 
see more than 30 students at 
the Claremont Colleges from 
some 26 countries attending 
Sunday services at the First 
Baptist Church in Claremont. 
"Making World Brotherhood 
Possible" will be the sermon 
topic of the Rev. R. J. Hunter, 
interim pastor, at 11 a.m. serv­ 
ices. 
A dinner will follow in the 
church fellowship hall, at which 
each student will be accom­ 
panied by a host member of 
the church. 
It is an annual 
event at the church. 


500 VINTON AVE 


LYNDELL CHEIVIS, Minister 


Jim William», Assodate Minister 


t;30 *.m, Sunday School Classes for til 


10:45 a m . Morning W «r«hip 
(Child Cara A vailably) 


f:00 p m. Kvaning W arahlp 


7:00 p.m. Vouth Fellowship 


W f D. 7:10 p.m. W crahip a. Bibla Study 
Zoologist Urges Research 
Into 'Religious Experience' 


By GEORGE W. CORNELL 
AP Religion Writer 
NEW YORK (AP) - Scien- 
t sts, concentrating on physici 
and chemistry in trying to ex­ 
plain man’s development, still 
face 
many 
puzzling question 
marks—and 
a 
noted 
British 
zoologist maintains the answer» 
may lie in the realm of religion. 
He suggests that telepathy, or 
thought transference, may offer 
a clue to new, revealing lines of 
inquiry into the human makeup 
He calls for vigorous research 
into "the nature of religious! 
experience" and into the "psy­ 
chic side of man." 


And he predicts the results, 
would "show the way to a re­ 
establishment of the idea of God 
as both a philosophical and sci­ 
entific reality." 


These striking views, citing 
gaps still looming in Darwin’s' 
evolutionary theory of natural 
selection, are advanced by Sir 
Alister Hardy, until 
recently 
head 
of 
Oxford 
University's 
zoology department and a re­ 
nowned exponent himself of the 
natural selection theory. 
Writes New Book 
Presenting his case m a new 
book, 
"The 
Living 
Stream," 
issued by Harper & Row, he 
savs: "If only one per cent of 
the money spent upon the physi- 
cal and biological sciences could, 
be spent upon investigations of 
religious experience and upon! 
psychical research, it might not 
be long before a new age of 
faith dawned upon the world." i 


A W arm Welcome Aw aits You At 


Pastor, 1 5, 
Will Speak 
At Mt. Zion 


The Rev. Thomas Masters, a 
15-year-old ordained minister, 
will speak at 11 a.m. services 
Sunday at the Mt. Zion Baptist 
Church. 
Mr. Masters has evangelized 
in 39 states and was in this area 
a month ago. 
Sunday evening he will speak 
at the Second Baptist Church 
in Riverside. Mr. Masters will 
soon appear on »he Art Link- 
letter House Party show. 


POMONA VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH 


•«S I. ARROW H W T „ POMONA (JUST S. Of TOWNS) 


€##o#r#tl*»g w ith C o n s e rv a tiv a t a p r it t A tt'n . 


IU N U A Y SC H O O L 
" A R E T H E H E A T H E N L O S T Î" 
Dr. P a n k e y p r e a c h in g 
M ettage b y Rev. Rebert C o lim a 
baptism al service 
Sacred Music 


Event Planned 


Or. Dana Pmskey, tr.. Pattar 
R e v . 
R o b e rt 
Collins, 
A tit . 


FIRST 
PHBSOYYÍRIANCHURCH 


‘Family Week’ 
Slated in May 


NEW YORK (UPI) - Wtyt 
of strengthening and enriching 
family life will be emphasized 
during "1 amiiy Week,*’ May 5- 
12, sponsored by the National 
council of Churches. 
Special forum-? and speakers 
sponsored 
by 
churches 
and 
family-helping 
agencies, 
will 
stress the theme, "Strong Fam* 
ilics-Strong 
Community," 
ac- 
cording to the Rev. William H. 
Genne, coordinator of the Na­ 
tional Council’* Commission on 
Marriage and Family. He said 
the church has an important 
part to play in this area. 


T i t Vm ited P re rb i te n a n C h u n k im t ie V .S .A 


401 N. Gibbs St. 
Pomona 


Johnson To Preach 
CLAREMONT— The R e v . 
Pierce Johnson will ¡»peak at 
9:30 and 11 a m, services Sun­ 
day at the Claremont Metho­ 
dist Church, 


9:30 A.M. 
CHURCH SCHOOL 


fpr all agt* 


9:30 * 11:00 A M WORSHIP SERVICES 


(awripry car«) 


Church Plans Film Sho wing 


CHINO—The Chino Brethren in Christ Church will show 
the film "Beloved Enemy" at 7 p.m. Sunday in the sanctuary 
of the church. 
Th" 90-minute story tells of a young scientist who devotes 
himself to disproving the deity of Christ, only to discover 
overwhelming proof of the Resurrection, the Rev. Charles M, 
Rickel, pastor, said in describing the film. 
The regular morning worship will be held at 10;30 am. 
and Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. 


WESTMINSTER FELLOWSHIP; 


9:30 A,M. 
Collegi • Career meet» in 


College Room 


The Rev. 


Jahniten H. Calhoun 


Patter 


6;3Q-feOO P.M. Junior High» and 


Senior High» 


pr«gr«il’Bulletin, P«mgm», Calif. 
Stiturday ivgning, Mar«h 9, 1967 
Page 5, Sec. 2 


3 P o m o n a Teachers 


To Take Sa b b a tica ls 


Three teachers 
in 
Pomona 
city schools will be on sabbati­ 
cal leave next year, following 
approval of their applications. 
They are Charles L. Cliffe, 
science teacher at Simons Jun-j 
ior High School; John R. Al­ 
berts. drama teacher at Pomo­ 
na High School: and Gerhard 
Singer, elementary instrument­ 
al teacher. 
Cliffe will spend his year at 
M i c h i g a n State University, 
working in the development of 
a junior high school science 
program, 
with particular at­ 
tention to earth science. 
Alberts will work toward his 
mister of arts degree in thea­ 
ter arts at Ca! State at Fuller­ 
ton. During his sabbatical, hej 
plans to review dramatic liter­ 
ature as background for appro­ 
priate drama selections at the! 
high school. 
In Switzerland 
Singer will spend a year in 
formal and independent study 
in musical performance and lit­ 
erature at the Schola Cantor- 
urn, Basel, Switzerland 
Total cost of the district for 
ihe three sabbaticals will be 
$6.500. 
Three teachers have resigned 


as of the end of the school 
year. They are Miss Sylvia R. 
Grainger, teacher at Philadel­ 
phia School, and Mrs. Adele M. 
Httbatka, and Miss Doris M. 
Karl, 
teachers at Palomares 
School. 
Leave of absence was grant­ 
ed to Mrs. 
Sally-Jo 
Pierson, 
school nurse, for the 
1968-69 
school year. 
Three Mired 
Teachers hired for the cur­ 
rent school year are Mrs. Ver- 
nice M. Deming at G o l d e n 
Springs School, Philip Rubin as 
a psychometris% and Mrs Ar­ 
lene M. Eaton as cosmetology 
teacher at Park Avenue High 
School. 
Secondary school 
principals 
this summer will be D a v i d 
Evans at Ganesha High School, 
Robert McQueen at Palomares 
Junior High and Charles Cliffe 
at Garry High School. 
A 
closed personnel session 
was called at the close of the 
meeting to hear protests from 
five organizations to the deci* 
sion of the district not to re­ 
employ 
Charles 
N. 
Watson 
next year as director of pupil 
personnel services. The board 
took no action. 


Citrus College Lists 


A re a H on or Students 


AZUSA — One hundred and man s,ePhen ¿«"sen, 
John 
WIW Iiunureu « « g sun, Pena I op« Jo lly , Lame Kirby. 
ninety*SIX students from P 0 • 
Herbert Krimmel, K athleen Krivs, 


mona Valley and nearby areas i'^ n ce^ A ii\ T undiev.TRui* ¿ S i 
attending C i t r u s College are elu 
L.on*«tr*ah, A lb e rt Lop 
. 
, 
. 
■«•/. reres# Loremen. Robert Mar- 
among 3/8 who have been nam- u 
Uuubeth 
McC ann 
Wtiimm 
pri tn lhi> dnin'a huf 
' Uk*t‘r. O uvM M Donald, Nancy 
ea 10 me oean S list. 
Meehan, Richard Moehrinjt 
l.dgar 


A I f l f R ) orM flA-nninf 
M u rp lw , Bruce 
Nelson, M a ry Noro- 
a a.u to » graae point average 
Ut.nnig 0wt,n 
G4fy p e r s o n , 
is needed to reach the dean's < ,l,ld ^itre. Patricia pi* a. su*«n 
, 
. 
l’re*le\ 
W illia m 
Q uirt, Tom 
R a is 
'on. 
Sharon 
R a m age, 
A d a m arie 


T l „ . 
it . , 
Rhodes. T e rria Rigby, Linda Rilev. 
1 I.OSe n am ed to the list fro m Ruth RUtgers, Craig Ro'hc’tie. Sus- 


lo c a l 
a r e a s 
liste ri 
h v 
r n m m n . an Kubin, Susan Scarb roug h . M a ry 
Itxai areas, JlSiea oy commu* Schaeffer. 
Patsy 
Searcy, 
Janice 
nity, are; 
Short, 
Donald 
Slrney, 
Stephen 
Smallwood 
Sharon 
Smith, 
M ary 


G L E N D O R A 
- 
A ndrea 
A d am s, jS ™ >1 ^ a i* * 11 
n ] * L r y «-*?"!?* 
C ecile 
A lfXM n drBv'irz 
^ hiriev 
An- 
Kttft-H 
Soyidnu, 
DdVlu 
Spfln^* 


dersoo, 
v ir g ii, « | f e 
v: 
SprsatS nn 
* * e r v * n 


A nett, 
P a u l 
A rigan, 
B ria n Atkin- 
T ^ !m » t 
rhnm=.5 


s .n, Celia Bau m b e rg e r. 
Keith Beat ro ll 
Patrfeiq 
luwSler 
nZTn i 
on 
Robert Bohl«*, Paula 
Bolduc, T?!.*!* U.m 
sieve 
VnTherk 
nTTT 


W i n | f r ad 
Bra ith w a U e , 
Doro - \- re , 
i r u f i 
w . l / n r ^ 
iftrM h in 
thy 
Bushev, 
Krystvna 
Ylytomski \vI|A't t. „? 
o i l] 


K a th e rin e (a lk im , 
Ihom as Collett. W a s tL v T id a W ^ fta 
p f trtri^ w i . 
Anita 
rnltfn* 
Pntri/<i« 
13’Amore , 
• . . 
. 
* I atricia VVig. 


n» 
w in ,ey* 
,udirh 
Yaeger. 
Leonard 
Y et. 


ie Ja n ice 
Your>k and E ric Z.ering 


O t t e r b e i n 
Mrs. Ethel Flood 


964-2891 


r h n r r h 
C A VERNE—M a ry 
Sw an n. Eli*- 
abeth Sm ith and Margie Lozano. 


Anita 
Collins, 
Patricia 
Jane David, La Verne 
f)on Dierking, Dana Downle, Janice 
Duhart. 
Beverly 
Durbin, 
Melanie 
«LARI.MOM — Thomas Antal, 
Durst on, 
Gordon 
Easton, 
Chervl •,anf .B*Ndmin. 
FlC4k, Lucy 
Eckels, Cherri Edwards, Brian El- Gon/ale?., 
Dale 
Hiatt, 
Rebecca 
la, Cindl I.llenberger, Richard Es- .K,aY rn4nV Mary Leyden 
t lintun 
talamo, Thomas 
Fabian, 
Juanita M®*®". 
Edward Michael, 
David 
Flegal, Peggy Prm«. Chris Gev 
Susan Perry, Carla Pfeif­ 
er, Gloria niacalone 
Grace Giai- ft‘r* B9naltl Reiter, Cynthia Rom- 
mo, David Gibh Allan Greene, Sun 
D£ n® 
Rebecca Spiel - 
dra Gregory. Cvnihia Grim, Vic- 
Kathleen Swink and Nancy 
toria Grover. Susan Ouenterl, Jim Wilson 
Guthrie, 
Clare 
Gut?will#r. 
Alyce 
COVINA—.Jorge Alaniz, Barbara 
Hamilton, Marian Hamilton, Helen Mloom 
Robert Bruce, Joan Camp- 
Hasty. Steven Hawk, Daniel Hen- bell, B< tte Foster, Jern Garrard, 
derton, John Herttua. Lynne Mil - Peggv Gil. Katherine Griffis, Judy 
son, Chris Himes 
Kathryn Hoff- Hanson. Auston Ison Barbara Han- 
anah, Marianne McCramr, Bomne 
O'Toole Sandra Pearce, Janet Rek- 
stad, Bvron sears, Sandra Selber, 
Anna Senn. Beverly Sheets, Gary 
Shreve, Johnna Smith. Virginia Thi- 
elan and Lynda Westmyer. 
WEST COVINA—Janet Anderson, 
Andrew Canamella. Joan Cordova, 
Judith Gunther. Linda Holt, Mary 
Jablonsky, Gad Latotraca, Jill Neu- 
sus, Orvella .Sanchez, Denise Sny­ 
der, 
Mona 
Swmehart, 
Elizabeth 
_________ __ 
Toth. 
Leatrice 
Weinberg 
Sharon 
Werner and Stephanie Williams 
The children’* choir of the 
p o m o n a — Betty Blood, Giem - 
... . 
. . . . . . . ... 
. 
,, fhurchill, 
Loretta 
Fox, 
Maisha 
Walnut Methodist Church, will Paul and Dovid soils. 
present several musical num - » 
rv ^ v,iIa' 
Jarquellne Frevquc», Marie Weiss- 
bers at the evening series in the »r. in and Patricia vvh te. 
Bell 
Memorial 
E U B 
Sunday. 
I 
s a \ 
DIMAS—Virginia Galfano, 
. 
.. 
„ 
Jlmothv Jackson and Janet Ligon. 
Mr, and Mrs. Murray C amp- 
cue a m o n g a — shernii Madsen 
bell of Nova Scotia are visiting arul Jam'1 Siemens 
at the home of Mrs. Campbell’s 
sister, Mrs. Jean O’Day, Anoth­ 
er guest is a sister-in-law, Mrs. 
Arline MacKenzie, of Colorado 
Springs, Colo. 


Girl Scout Troop 94 is spend 
ing this weekend at the Covina 
Scout House where the gir-ls are; 
studying outdoor skills and dra 
matics and will hold a Court of 
A w a r d s . Accompanying the 
troop 
are 
the 
leader, 
Mrs 
George Grant, 
and coJeader. 
Mrs. Leonard Kestenbaum and 
Mrs. John Robin. 
Charles Metcalf has been in 
the Queen of the Valley hos­ 
pital in West Covina for several 
days where he is undergoing 
treatment for a heart condition. 
The Women’s Guild for Christ­ 
ian Service and the men’s group 
of the Little Church in the Val­ 
ley will 
meet 
for a 
potluck 
dinner at the church on March 
19, beginning at 7:45 p.m. The 
Rev. Kenneth Van Wyck of Gar­ 
den Grove will be the speaker 
and will show slides of a recent 
trip to the Orient. 
Robert Sayler of San Francis­ 
co is a guest at the home of 
his mother, Mrs. Charles Met­ 
calf, of the Hi Lea Trailer Park. 


NOT It E OP HEARING OF 
PETITION I OR PBOBATL OF 
WILL 
No. I A P-SU5S 
In the Superior Court of the State 
of t itliforniu for ihe County of Lu* 
Angeles. 
In the Mutter of the Estate of 
M A D ELY N 
MORAN, eke MADE 
LYN GAR ROD. Deceased 
Notice I* hereby given that the 
petition of George 
jnr the 
Probe»« of the WtU of th«* «bove 
named deceased and for the issu­ 
ance of Letters Testamentary there 
on to George Mer«n to which »efer 
enct* la hereby made for further 
particulars, w i l l be heard at 9 
o’clock A 14,, on March 29. 1!*68, 
at the court room of Department 
EAST "A 
of the Superior Court 
of the Niute of California for the 
( ountv of Lo^ Angeles, City of po 
m ona. 
D ated 
M e rc k 7, iy$g 


w il l ia m g . SHARP 
< ounty Clerk and Clerk tjf 
H e Superior Court oi I he 
State of California for the 
( ounty of Los Angel«'" 
By A Hennings. Deputy 
WINSTON R. CORNELL 
14321 fc. Ramona Blvd. 
Baldwin, Calif, UJTOd 
_ 
Attorney foj Petitioner, 
* March 9. 13, Ifl. 19«, 


Ontario High 


Announces 


Top Students 


ONTARIO - These Ontsrio 
High School students received 
a B or belter gradepomt aver­ 
age for the first semester which 
ended Jan. 26. 
Jack Adams, Vivian Aguilar, Mi- 
chari Bachler, Darrell Backhaus, 
Randy 
Barker, 
Charles 
Uayle*t, 
Jcffiey Beasley. Kathy Beeks. Pat 
Becks, 
Jeofito 
Benevides, 
Dennis 
Bennett, Veda Bine, Sharon B<>yce. 
Carla Brooks. Gary biuton, 
lohn 
Burciaga. 
Uruie 
Bushore, 
David 
Byers, Brett Coils, Terri Camon, 
.Mary 
tauter, 
Arthur 
Connery. 
Pamela Connery, Jim Cook, Rubt*n 
( o r t e t , 
George 
Costa, 
Bettina 
( rawford. Jamerd Cross, Carol De 
Lou w 
Definq 
Delgado, 
Ramona 
¡Delgado Mika Dillard, Linda Dut 
rani, Carolyn Evans, Neal Even * 
huis, 
Robert 
Flnklestein, 
BilUe 
I iske, Nancy French, AND Garner, 
Ldwaid Goff, Gary Gray, Linda 
¡GletnfieldL Barbara Guerta, Jose 
• Guiiien, Laura Guillen. Jean Gur - 
lute. 
Ke'hle.-n 
Hamilton, 
Dennis 
Ha.-kviu 
Dorothy Henley, Amada 
Hernandet, Bertba Hernand* i, Edo« 
ise Hernand«*, Sergio Hernandez, 
Ru hard 
Hofcr, 
Dutryl 
Holland, 
Robert 
Hoskins, 
Gkil 
Ho-tetter, 
Stephen 
Howard, 
Susie 
Howard, 
Grant Hutchison, Richard Jaoobs, 
I Karen, 
Jameson. 
Mike 
Jamison, 
’ Kathy Jarreilo 
I 
James Jones, 
Karen Ke'« hum. 
Betty Kunkle, Thomas Kurth, Eddie 
Latta, Bob Lemmon, Larry I u« a- 
ering. Bruce Lut*. Michael Mah«*r, 
Lidtt Martinez, Ronald Methti, Mi­ 
chael 
Mays, 
Raymond 
McAdoo, 
Rosemary McCracken, Patricia Me­ 
lt urdv. Robert McCietrick 
Martha 
Mi Vav, Jackie McWilliams, Ar ita 
Milland 
Itm Miller, Nancy MlHer, 
Pat Miller, (mil Murphy, Martha 
iNe»era, Connie Nielson, 
Dawn Olson. Debra Otson, Loret 
jta Orcutt, Lewis Qril*. John Payne 
Larry 
J'ayne, 
D ouglas 
Pearson , 
lommv Piceno. Mark Pitcher, Lin­ 
da Porter, Dan Ramirez, sheum 
Ramsey, Karen Rato'.orn. 
Chailei 
:i 
RevBOld-». 
Dofifia Rice, David 
Rich. Ronald Rich, Derrell Ring • 
Bag, Dennis Roberts, John Roberts 
{Caroline Rodriquez, Kathrvn Rog 
er» 
James H »hrer, Kathleen Ron- 
nie Namy Ross 
Gary Roth, Robert Samuel, Pat 
rjria 
Selby, 
Terry 
Shoub 
Jim 
Shaw, Edith Shey, Norbert Siegler, 
Paul St John, Richard Streifel lin- 
oia hundcen 
Jim Swilling, Linda 
i urn bow, 
Nelly 
Verbürg, 
Debbie 
Voitk, Debra Wallace. Judv Wed 
it1*, Debbte Whit«;omb. June whit 
ney Nanry Wilson 
Barbara Wirt/, 
Mary Wirt*, Marylin Wolfinbarger, 
Dianna Yokley and Ken Ywk- 


★ 


B 


U 


Y 


N 


O 


W 


S e e 


C l a s s 


80 


F o r 


G o o d 


U 


S 


E 


D 


C 


A 


R 


B 


U 


Y 


S 


B 


U 


Y 


N 


O 


w 


★ 


ALPHABETICAL 


CLASSIFIED 


INDEX 


—A— 


4cre*#* . Ranches 
Aircraft 
AiMiqu* Au'oi 


Parts t, Accessories 
Sntmue 
rurnishrfifls 
ADdlunc* ¿ales 
Appltancs Service 
kulo Reetilr 
PeDs - Accessories 
Tires 
Autp*, 
«or 
Sale 


kulos 
wsnted 


gsbv Siftlne Wanted 
B<r/clfS 
Boets, Sports faulp 
«mJ 


• u t e m i«... 
Iguildine Msttriais 
Busmens - industrial 
Sale or Leas«> 
Bus;ness Qeportunitv 
Business Eeulpmt-it 


■ r- 
—(- —* 
Cameras and Eaummsnt 
¡Camoer Repeir 
L . 
> Accessor r . 
Ctfssi (fd Business and Service 


Directorv (tee t** nmn« of 
Clsisjfitd Ad G • on i 


Schools 


Lost 


; 
L O S T S Y / L i. R« a ' V f'EMAt E 
toy POODLE 


F E A'A R D 
<?9 3 3»7 
,LQ iT 
uoht tan b r i e f c a s e 


IMPORTANT Moers and boov-, 
I __________ 
983 7116 
kOST: 
3 rr old rhsl* 
white"»«', 
moynd 
Vic 
Garey 
Hiqh 
Sct-rri 


?0 
Cesper Reward 622 3530 


« A LOST — female“ tortoise shell cat. 
7»a 
An<, iq Dt'bbi.' 
Vic Mountain and 


60A 
Arr0W Hwv* Upland 6760948 


6i 
LP ST Jri-coio-ed malt Collie 
Vic 
Base 
Line and 
Carnetian, Cuca- 


mopq.) Reward, 985 3368 
LOST 
Manila 
envelop 
contalnin® 


Serviceman's 
papers. 
Very 
.m- 


portent, sen Oimas. L v 9 2193. 
B ACK 
mai» 
German* 


vie 
Philadelphia and 
Telephone 
Reward 
Ans 
to 
"R ip " 
626-6447 


4 Help Wfd. Male 


HANDYMAN - D ISHW ASM FP 
. ivg in 
yu sons 


M t 
s a l o y j opge 
SALESMAN W ANTED 
Full or Parf Time 
PO M O N A MAUSOLEUM 
502 E. Frank11 in St., Pom. 


75 


13 
71 


¿9 LOST 
Slack 
and 
tan 
Doberman, 


5 6 
years 
o»d 
Vlcmitv 
Chino’ 


^7 
REW A RD 678 8210 


W ild Canadian Goose 


?♦ Vicinity of jChmo 
Pewa-d 
618 9636 


HOLST c • N H E iF E R . 1 months old 
Vicinifv of 
Yorba and 
Riverside 


Drive. Chine. C ell_N A 8-3355 
cat, t 
vr. old. Last 


PI 
and Berkley, Any 


62)-47 54. R EW A R D 


Monagoment Trainee 


Travet trailer manu'acfurer has 
opening for sales trainee with 
expcrienua 
Coins* degree pre- 


ferrtd Excellent opportunity for 
advancement 
Ceil 
(213) 
444- 
0551 tyr appointment. 
Shepherd BU SIN ESS 
Owners 
Compencafion 


Corp. needs reprasentativei in Po­ 
mona 
Va'ley 
Stl '00 
to 
$11,OM 


Cali tor Interview 12 2 daily. (714) 
624 7413 Eves £24-4164 


--- 
; 
We 


Help Wtd. Male 


• ’ TEST 
TECHNICIANS 
Experienced in functional testina 
of solid state electron* 
equip­ 
ment. 2 years experience Pius the 
kncwledde of basic electronic* r#-i 
qulred 
APPLY AT 
CONDUCTRON- 
MISSOURI 
POVONA DEPART,MgNT 
2771 N. GAREY AVE 


POMONA, CALIFORNIA 
(7141 593-259), EXT 250 
a>-e 
and 
always 
hav^ 
been 


an _tauat 
opporlunity 
employer. 


D A ÌT COOK 
for 
iyncheons. 
PartJ 
time Appiy 1451 W Foothill. Up 
Mind. Exper only 


9 Help Wtd. Male 
9 Help Wtd. Female 
10 


Chad Care & Nursery 
Licensed 


Coming 
events 


-D~ 
Dressmaking 


Educational 
* 
[Electric Cars 


Found 
Furn.shed 
Housss 


Fumishea 
Apartments 


Furr 
6 Unturn 
Apartments 


Furnished 
Rooms 


Hay - Orsln 


Feed k Pasture 


—M— 


Help Wanted, Female 
He'P Wanted, Male 
Help Wanted, Male or Female 
Horse 
Ranches 
Hotels • Motels 
Houses 
For Sale 
Household 
Furnishings 
Household Furnishing» Wanted 
Household Furnlshlnqs For Rent 


¡Imported Sport & Midget Cars 
income 
Prootrty 


investments 


_L— 


iLease or Rent 
Tars - Trucks - Trailers 


tasting» Wanted 
t ivesiock 
. . . . . 
I ost 
lots 
............. 


S4A 
__________ 


... GRAY mate 


vie 
Willart 
informer ion, 
__ _____ 


l.05T 
Strayed or ? 2 month o»d 


: German Shepherd, black and tan 


14 
Vic 900 W Orange Grove. 622-945 
2 Rtv 
reward, 
L O S T T I PÒ O b LC i, 1 
1/ 
gray._ NE 
Pomona 
fore 7:30 am 
or a 


Mk. 1 dark 


. 
624 3968 
be 
ft 5:30 pm. 


74 Found 


Experienced Cook 


School 
background 
desirable. 


Apply st Claremont Colleges, 
747 N Dartmouth, Claremont. 
8:30-11 
am, 13 pm 


Metal Polisher 


F xper-enced on automotive ac­ 
cessories 
steady 
employment, 


paid 
vacabpt., 
insurance 
and 


frtng* 
benef ts. 
1".ao 
S 
Otter- ; 


bein. La Puente 
1213) 964-645«. 
An Equaj_OpPOr»unity Empicynr _ 


S A L iS M E N 
Now calling on serv­ 
ice sta 
oarages or most any type 


tommerc-al 
accounts 
Additional 


non-con*iicting line 
No Installing 


coll*ctlng 
or 
servicing, 
Commis­ 
sion. Call 628 5681 after 4 30 p m .' 


SHEET METAL 


Layout 
man, 
inspector, 
brake, 


shear, 
or 
punch 
press 
opnrator. 


Anyone 
of 
the 
*bov\ 
«poly 
st 


CASTl E 
IN D U ST R IES 
INC 
OF 


CAL IF , 10419 Mills, Mtcl. 
* MALE MODELS 
520 hr. tAodgling men s ipring 
f a s h i o n % 
end 
Photography. 


Intervtfwm« 
daily 
JO B 
2186 


PAT QUINLAN AGBNCY (213) 
33 014.) Refer to your ad under 
class No 6 


Y* H E L P W AN TED U* 
D RA KE S CAR WASH 


401 N 
East End. Pom. 


TV t e c h n ic ia n s 
SEARS, RQ FB iCK * CO 
»0470 Mibs Axe Montclair 


Good pay and bene(|f|, ¿9 5102 


"An Eauai Opportunity Employer" 


MACHINISTS 


Turret and Engine Lathe 


DAY and SW ING SHIFT 


• Night Bonus • Pd Vac 
• Top Pay • Fringe Bnfts 


EX PER IEN C E REQUIRED 


PneuDraulics, Inc. 
8961 Central, Montclair 


"An Equal Opportunity Employer ' 


E X P E R 
kitchen 
net« 
wanted 


Pleas# 
apply f am . 
to 11 
am 


0'1>' 
W | . 
P QCthUI, C-ar#moer 
b e a u t ic ia n wanted, some tèi tow 
\m 
prefnrrad 
Excellent 
salary 


Smati shoo 
ceavonientfy 
Mtcxten 


622-5935 or 424 8732, 1417 N Gsr*y, 
Pomone. 
___ 


j/ R .N . 


For 3-t ! shift 
Apoiv at Hl(lhav«n 


ConvSi#tc#of Hosoital, 590 S 
mo, 


an Hill. Ctaremant 


TTTa6y*n ? 
r» o»«) w«*k- 


Vickuty Lin- 


36A 
39 
46 


NOTICE TO FINDER 


The penal code of California pro 
hibits that one. who finds a lost] 
article under circumstances which, 
Tive him maans of Inquiry as to 
the true owner and who aooropr 
etes such property 'or nis own us*- 
Without first maklnq a raasorahm 
effort to find the owner is gultb 
Of larceny______________________ 
F*5u N D . 
wom'ns 
nxoensive 
r ng 


write 
to 
Post 
Office 
B >* 
2794 
ATTN: 
Ring, Pomons 
Ca forria 


f i.- ir r r - — ■ 
1 
eut w. cast erra, rom, 
5 SCHOOL. District nea- 
F'-mor.x 
n- 
_ 
. 
. 
, 
. 
vite» 
applica« on* 
for 
çxoarlenr# 
D r i x / A r e 
\ A / n n t F * r i 
‘ «hoO 
hi!» driver 
CxiJrv Una. 
k/flVC lb 
V U O ilie tl 
f «oeriem e 


school 
bus 
driver. 
Salary 
renge 


5468 to ÎS6? 
Call personnel officn 


<f 714-599 1 206 


Dynamics Technician 
CT ENGINEERING CORP. 
Mira Loma Space Cente- *85-7461 
An E quäI Opportunity Employer 


Trop 


Educational 
6 
T rT va lley bftiVing school 
30 hr Driving Education Classes 
5 
Driving 
Lessons 
$; ? 
6212131 
Si OW 
learners and 
educationally 


handicapped ehildrgn. Grades 1-6 
Small 
special 
class 
nd v 
«Man- 
ton 9 3:30 P.m. 424 167», 
___ 
* 
ir 
REA D IN G AND ' S P F llIN G 


PHONICS) 
Your home 
AM ages 


NA 
4-6228 aft 
3 


16 


Î5A 


52 
3) 
48 


lì 


—M— 


Machinery, Tools and 


Farm Equipment 
, 
Meat & Produce 
Miscellaneous 
Miscellaneous Wanted 
Mobile Homes & Trailer* — 


Camper Sa.es or 
Rgntals 


Money To Loan 
Money Wanted 
Motor 
Homes 
Mobile Homes Trailer Parks 
Musical - Radio - TV 
Musical • Radio - TV Sarvlca 
Musical 
Wistructlen 
—N— 


Nursery - Licensed 


and 
Practical Nursing 


Nursery Stock 


—O— 


Offices Stores 
_ P _ 
Pets * 
Supplies 


Pet» Wanftd 
Poultry. Rabbits A Suoa es 
Poultry 
Rabbits A Supplies 


Wanted 


Real Estate For Rent 


Pertly 
Fu/nlshed 


Reel Estate Wanted 
Real E»ta'e Loan* 
Rentals To Share 
Resort Property 
Rent 


Real Estate Exchange 
Resort Property - Sal« 
Room A Board 
Res’ Homes, sanitariums. 


Licansed 


—S— 


Scooters * Cycles 
Swaps 
„ 
.......... 
Soeciel Notices 


—T— 


Travel 
___ 
Trader 
Space 


Trust Deeds 
Trucks For Sale 


—U— 


Unfurnished 
Houses 


Unfurnished Apts 
............... 


Wanted To >w im 
........ 
!w ock Wa-ued, Female 
Work Wanted. Male 


Classified Ad 
Information 


u .jflj* ________ 
★ HIGH SCHOOL 


Registered 
with 
California 


p.m 
★ 


Stata 
Department of Edur«t on 
Finisti 


at home in soar* time 
Write for 
r 
free booklet American School, Box 
5825 Progrexs-Bullebn Pomona 


7. *NO RTH -W E5T COLLEGE 
l i t 
Medical A Dental Assistant* 
l i f 
(rerme-iy Sojth West Colleoa) 
7¥i 
M ED IC A L S EC R E T A R IA L 
2121 
W 
Garvey Avenue 


West Covina 
(113) 962-1495 
*5* 
SENO FOR F R E E BROCHURE 
PAT QUINLAN AGENCY 


599 


PEN TH O USE SU IT E 


STARDUST PRO F 
B l DO, 
S 
Birrarie* Cov 
(211) J3!?14 
Oyr 
Grequates Farn 
B.g’ Pay 


R E SID EN T 
APT 
m' a n a G ER S 


training school beginning 
» wee* 


cour-e prepares you tor res dent 
management 
position 
Placement 


service 
available 
Frank 
Charte» 


1454 N. Perk 
Avt, Pom. 629-013’ 


g Help Wanted 


Male or Female 
36B 
» 
V23 C O UPLE 
with no chlidren to a 


40 
sist manager, piy jjo Q per mcnth 
plus apt Call 427 2064 


OUTSIDE SALESMAN 


Agg 30*43 
»oagr. responsible sol d 


citizen. 
References 
Long 
hours 


fust 5 days and rotate ,hort Sa» 
Urdavs. 
Regin 
tralnin* 
at 
Jioo1 


and weekly advances to 5’30 end 
0« 12 we k$ 
Phone NA 68815 a 


ter 5:30 p m. for aupt. 
VACAY16N B A S S E ft wanfed now, 


SQUIRE B A R B E R SHOP 
CA LL 620-9124___________ 


EXP FR Y COOK, ninhf thifl 
An 


ply 
Coffee 
Shop, 
Bowllum, 
466 
Holt MontclQir 
H A RA EftlZE R O PERA T O R 


Progressive 
gr-iwth 
c o m p a n y 


with 
fgti 
benefits, 
exC 
work its 


conn 
non-defense indugtry. Sdaryi 


OP*n 
Call 593-4491 «or «PPt 
Lane*1 


Paciffr, 
2*14B 
Metropolitan1 


P'., Pomona 


Yard Man 


Refs 
ABCO R EN TA L 
1920 w. Holt 


SA LESM EN 
$150 pe- wk guar sa: 


for 
agency 
insurance 
sains 
a«'d 


service. 
Complete 
t-alning 
p-o 


Qram. No exo ne> . Apply 471 W 
Holt, __ Pomona 
624 sx2£ 
T IR E 
MAN 
fuil 
Of 
part 
*.mn : 


Mu*t be atjie to 00 truck tir*», 
wheel 
balancing 
and 
passenger 


tires 
Apoly 109 E 
Sth, Pomona 


See Bill, 


PUBLIC SPEAKERS 


Part time fortune recruiting sate» 
peonie 
with 
our 
company, 
Se-d 


brief resume to BOX 5830, PRO 1 
JlRESS BU L LE T IN . 
___ 
GUARDS 


Immed 
openings 
tn 
the 
Ontarc 


area. 
Send repi.es to BOX 
‘¿28. 
Q PROORt SS-BUJ.LETU4 
_____ 
0 A S S E M B L E R - 
Exp in hxtruSiOn1 


bending and assembling to plastic 


' containers. Exp with epoxie nec-i 


»-»sary 
15449 
E, Walngt 
Dr, 
In- 


Justry, 595-7110. 


Full or Part Time 


Pa>d Bonus 


ical Ice Cream 


R rstrvefr and Second St.___ 


• G RO W WITH 
CONDUCTRON 
IN POMONA 


Join 
this tast 
u-owfh 
electronics 


company 
wifh 
fine 
ooportunttie- 


«or promotion and many company! 
paid benefits. We h»v<* fmmadiafes 
openings 
for 
the 
foiiowlng 
poii 


tions. 
• ELECTRONIC 
CIRCUIT 
DESIGNERS 


B SEE of M$6 E required 
Two to 


10 yea-s e«p*’ enee In electronic 
Circuit «pxian of anaioq solid statn 
Circuitry 
Experienced in irtrgra' 


ed circuit application and video or 
rader display 
A P P L Y AT 


MACHINISTS 


KAISER STEEL 


Has immediate opening* 
for 
MACHINISTS 


(General) 


Must be qualified to set 
up 
and 
perform 
all 
types of machine work. 


Become 
a 
part 
of 
a 
large, stable organiza­ 
tion 
w h i c h 
provides 
good wages, advance­ 
ment and career oppor­ 
tunities, stable employ­ 
ment, free family health 
and 
insurance 
plans, 
liberal vacations, 7 paid 
holidays and incentive 
bonus plant. 


Appfy 
at our 
Employment 
Off cr S AM to 4 10 PM 
Monday 
thru 
Friday, Sat­ 
urday 8 AM to Noon 


For your convenience. Employ­ 
ment Office 
wifi be open foe 


V ichinist 
interviews 
u n t i l 


I PM on Wednesday, Martn 13, 
1968 


w a n te d 
Woman 


children «4 and 5 vrj 
days In own fiomg. 
COln school 423-714« _ 
R N » 
cook, 
«»yctHatric 
tech», 


nurses aides and kitchen gmgmv- 
«*■ 
needed 
for 
new 
tone 
term 


mentai health center 
So open 
n 


South 
Pomona 
in eariv 
A o r I i, 
I p 
R 
f S 
i : 


rev, Romena.____ 
A LE R T HOUSE W IV ES "to take 0r 


de-s and make dalivaries 12 e<tr 
hr gr mere 
15 hr* ae- g*. 
In 


vejtm*nt 
u n d e r $5 
NA 8-1232, 


9«6-301t, 
_______ 
SA LESLA D Y exp In floral arrange 
m*nts 
and gift »effing 
$«i 
p'u» 


comm 
inker, lews 
at 
store, 
110 


I 9fh, Up'and Dpfr Sunday 


W ANTED 
beau’y. 
brains 
ancF~ a 


desire 
tor 
m^rey 
Combination 


cock*i,is.toed 
11-7 
The 
o*il cl 


entei«. 
Send 
background 
to Sox 


5834 Progress-SuUfttn. 
♦ E X P E R Medical Secretary-; R e­ 
ceptionist. Medical t*rmtn«io«y and 
Insurance. 
Send 
resume 
»o 
Box 


54119, Progress Bulletin. 
COCKTAIL-FOOD W A IT R ESS 


W E E K E N D S 


MT. BA LD Y XO O GE 
YU 3*1115 
* 1 < T PUNCH O P E R A T o l."e x p e ri­ 
enc’ d 036 
Ouelified for fu 'jre su- 


pery »or of smell group 
Pomona 


location, 
«feasant 
working 
condi­ 
tion* and company benefits. 
Five 


di« 
week, 
no shift 
work 
Oid**r 


person 
preferred 
Our 
tmofoyeex 


know of Mis ad 
Reelv 
to 
Sox 


58.1.1 P-ogress'Bulietin 


H O U S E K E E P E R - B A B Y S ffT E R 


Live in or out 


Calf after 5 30 am, 634-1|07 
hOOTe K EWWiI -compan'ion "for « d- 
ertv 
lady. 
Live in. 
iLOO 
mqnth. 


NA 9 2*6« 


H O U S E K E E P E R . 
live in r’"w « to * 
with 
i 
bcv. 
10 yrs 
Light n»kpg 


m exchange for room and board 
and 
»alary, 
**4-8u|, 
ask 
tor 


Mery. 
W A IT R fs V E v e i 
ma’urt 
experienced 
Pomona 
l i X M t f f f 


aee bovs. 
In Or out 
*th, Pomona 


„ „ _ Jt, matui 
Äpoiy 
1210 f . 


Ygïï 


nd 


Hglt, 


time for 2 ich 
be ever Jt, L lvt 


' 
wk. 667 E. 


62 3 Sì M 


Mult 
. 
Start t i 5 


Fascinating Profession 


Will train nght women in tied 
of 
makeup 
technique. 
Thi* 
i* 


not door to door or party-oi#ns. 
Cali 
Mrs. 
Curtis, 
599-5393 
or 


(21 3) 944-93«!, 
V IV iA N E W OObWARD COSM ETICS 


<31 


We 


CONDUCTRON- 
MISSOURI 


POMONA D E P A R T V E N T 


.77! N G A R EY AVE 


POMONA. CA LIFO RN IA 
'7141 593-2591, EX T 250 
am 
and 
aiwav» 
have 
been 


equal 
oppor* unity 
employer 


Personnel Services Dept. 
v a [c c p QTPP1 
^^USTOM ERS W A IT IN G ® 


N r M O C R 
O I C L L V ^ v JIv r 
Beautiful eaamatie» to (haw 
i 
9400 Cherry Ave. 
Fontana, Calif. 


An Equal Oppor tun fy Employer 


Help Wtd, Female 
10 


Beautiful cosmetics 
to show 
and 
Mil! 
tam ing* 
unlimited! 
"Avon 


Catimg" You! 
629-2587 or 986-6671 


★ MANICURIST ★ 


Chtrtg Saayt^ 
639 760« 


B E CAUTIOUS OF ADS 


NOT S P E C IF Y IN G D E F IN IT E 


N ATU RE OF WORX 


ASSEMBLY BILL 2112 


Adds Sec 
9T4 and 977 to fh# 


1964 Civil Rights Law 


prohibits, with certain exception, 
discrm.nation b e c a u s e of sex 
Since some occuaation» «re con­ 
sidered 
more attractive 
to per­ 
sons 
of on* 
sex 
or ihe 
ether, 
advertisements are p aced under 
the Mai* or Female columns for 
the convenience of r*ader* 
Such 


listings *r* not Intended tg ex 
ciud* persons gf either sgx 
THIS newspaper 
strives 
to erg- 


tect 
its r**d*’ s 
age nst 
fraud 
deception 
or 
,'ifwstTces 
Adver 


tiiements 
whlcn 
require 
cash 


bonds or lnv#sin»enf* in stocks, 
samples, equipment should be in 
vesfigeted thoroughly 
All advgr- 


t>».ng statement» muet t>* accur 
eta 
All ads pertaining to sales 
must carry 
!h* word »«'*» *r d 


must r*l*t* »cm* natgr* of work 
involved end not designed to mis 
lead 
the reader 
Any ed 
requir­ 
ing * tuition for »tuchr tgurs* it 
net 
considered 
• 
hda 
wanted 


ed 
and 
should bg 
in c •stifle* 


non t "Educational.** 
NO 
H E L P 
W AN TED 
AD 
CAN 
S T IPU L A T E o r i n f e r a 
D E F IN IT E AMOUNT W HEN 


starting 
pay 
Is 
commission b* 
• Is 
Report any ««CeptlOr to this 


rule to tho Classified Advertising 
manager. 
NA 3-1301 


Onterlf-Uaiand A re a- Y U 4 » rll 
The 
Progress Bulletin 
reserves 


the rlgh? fo :*|#ct or rg-ge.t n u 
«dv*rti**mont| for tho orotodion 
of tho advorfltor and roeoer. 


READ YOUR AD 


Upon First Publication 


Phen* 
NA 
I 1 *01 
regarding 
onr 


TvpogroohMCOl 
frrgr. 
Adiustmonf 


du* to fvodfreohicel error on the 
p*rt 
of 
m* 
Progrees Bulletin 


shell 
be 
limited 
fp 
th* 
actual 


cost gf logro used tg odvortlie 
th* |t»n» which appears in error 
and th# adjustment will bo mod# 
only 
on 
fh# 
first 
Incorrect 
Ir 


sort Ion. 
Deadline-New Ads 


And Cancellations 


N o w ads and «.aneoiiatione must 
bo rocoivod not latO' than ] pm 
dov 
hefo # publication 
10 
O.m 


Sat 
for Sun and 19 o m. day bo 
for# 
a 
eg si holiday. Ad* muot 


run on# Insertion before change 
of 
coav or 
cancelation can 
be 


man# 
D EA D LIN E fgr tingle col 


commtrciel ads wRh larger then 
agate 
lye# 
3 
pm . 
Friday 
tor 


Sunday 
M U L T IP L E 
COLUMNS 


2 
col 
wide 
3 
Inch 
deeo 
mini 
mum 
Doodlihf 7 dOvi prlfr to 


bublkeficn 
T h g r i d e y } a m 


deadline for Sunday, 


CLOSED SUNDAYS 


Private Party 


(Fgmily Ad) 


Non Commercial 


RATES 


5 avoreoo word* b#r lino. Mini­ 
mum of 3 llir~ 
--- " 


12 50 }0c as 


R E S P O N S IB L E 29 yr old or old#’ 


Interviews 
2 
to 
$ 
p m 
March 


11th and 12th 
For work a* Mr 


Taco. 
1216« Central 
Av e , Chino, 


pwpa 
R T f 5 
ratired 
coup e 
to 


manago 
small 
motel. 
P C ’s 


aulred 
Apply at 1651 W Ec 


Upland. 
NA 9 9980 _ 
~ ’ T EM P O R A R Y 
JO BS 


M A N PO W ER 
m m Indian H ill, P em. 
633-2583. 


E N T E R P R IS IN G men and women I 


Learn how to operate a business 
from 
your 
hom# 
Full 
or 
part 


time. 
Your 
choice 
of 
six 
p<-od-; 


ucts. 
Experience 
«n 
direct saics 


helpful 
but 
not 
necessary. 
Idesl 


for experienced managers 
Opttv* 


unlimited 
Phone 
today. 
622 0639 


M A KE 
extra 
m o n e y 
No'- 
•’ 


products end Edith Rrhnborg pure 
rOSmofiCI Coll 439-7474___________ 


ERMA’S 


EM P LO Y M E N T A G EN CY 


113 W . College 
COVINA 
% 
ED 1-3344 
KIDWELL & KECK 


E M PLO Y M EN T AG EN CY 


445 N. GAREY 629-2531 
Housewives 
College Students 
Shift Workers 
Part or Full Time 


If you have a few hours a day 
and would like fo work at your 
own 
speed 
fo 
oeh 
« 
proved 


product 
released 
to th* 
Watt 


Coast 
iuit 
recently. 
10 
* m 


2 p nv only. 
524 S Mountain, Ont 


WANTED; INSPECTOR 


TO ASSUM E 
overall quality con­ 
trol 
responsibility 
for 
iob 
shop, 


machine shoo including f rst art. 
tie 
tme, final end tool inspector 


calibration 
and 
maintenance 
ot 


ail related documentation 


r^.Kiii I 
E V E P E T T C m A R L II INC. 
oothIII, 1243 
Transit 
Ave., Pom.. 627-5367 


★ ASST. FOREMAN 


To work with and supervH* 
people 
building 
form 
b«0Cks, 


router 
blocks 
drill 
fixtures, 
templates end tool trygut. Also 
som 
production work 


A thorough 
understanding of 


sheet metal levrut and develoo- 


BAR MAiO to work in very nice 
neighborhood beer bar 
seme <nod 


servrd—no 
exp 
nec -Little 


204« S. Garey, Pem , bet 5 7 #y«s 


WOMAN to Hve- 


COOK 
ian 
si 


Fun time Position open fa'- expe­ 
rienced 
hotp.tal 
cook 
Apply 
in 


person Contrai Memorial Ho-O'tii, 
5(^50 
San 
Bernardino 
St., 
Monf- 


Housework ,tnd C LEA N IN G LA D IES and day babv 


ment 
s gnment. 
a must for 
ffus as 


★ BUYER 


FULL TIME 


NO ÌX P 6 R N EC ESSA R Y 


M u St 
BE 21 


PIZA p a l a c e 
9414 Cantral 


See Rav 
Btackshear 


Minimum 
purchasing 
hardware items », 
c.a- and ae'ospace 
operations 


o» 3 rears exoer in 
materi.il* 
and 
MS 
was tor commer- 


me»ai mfg 


DRIVERS 


With late model ) or î i ton 
truck, 
(Or 
able 
to 
Purchase 


same) to t r a n s p o r t mobile 
homes or travel fret let s thru- 
out 
Ü S A 
Age 75 55, able to 


pass 
physical, 
steady 
w o r k , 


good oay. Mura*n Driva Away 
inc 
(7i4) 628-8981 


Avionic Structures is a small 


expanding 
company 
supplying 
j 
manufactured items to the etet 
tronic, 
supersonic 
transport 


a"d 
transportation 
Industries 


Avionic Structures 
1479 N , State Coir on Blvd 


Anaheim 
(7)41 77? 9950 
i "An Equa! Opportunity Employer" 


child care 
540 wkly 
Cali 416-4600 


after $. alt day weexeng» 
TV UNIQ UE opportunity tor intelli­ 
gent young air I Interested in work­ 
ing in a pensile relations orientat­ 
ed locai office 
Some bookkeeping 


expf'ipnee necessary 
Other quali 


fications-—typing, use of dirfat ng 
rqyiament and a desire and atn!- 
ty 
fo deal 
with 
people 
Submit 


brief resume with sefarv mquir«*- 
meets 
Box 5826 Progress BuUeLn 


»è»kY M ATURE woman fo care for 
3 children 
5 dav> 
wk. 
2 school 


age References r>27-336’ 
M ATURE 
'tnab e *■ man to 'eke g p flR B M B N T 
care of « children (2 school age 
tat need* R N 


$ days a week. Live m, Spanish 
speaking nref NA 9 4163 _________ 


Zipper Setter 
Garment Factory 


574 W Monterey, Pomona 


Accecting 
applications 
tor 
gxami- 
nation ior 


TYPIST CLERK 1! 


Perform duties of personnel clerk 
I yr ot eterica! exper 
required. 
Type <5 worn 
bt a high school 


! graduate 
Appty 
before 
S 
p m , 
March 13. 
tU to- 
Personnel Commission, 
ROWLAND SCHOOL DISTRICT 
1130 Nogales SL. Rowland Hgts 


964-137! 


sitters 
negded. 
Must 
drivo 
uwn 


car end n#v# phare, 
Apply We# 


Care Agency. 629 3136 


TAKE applications for exper nurses 
aid*. I V N. s 
and 
exoer 
cooks 


Apply Silvertop Rest Home, 
1425 


Laurel, Pomone. NA 2)111 
Go Go Girls & Bor M aidt 


Top Salary and fie* 
Call 
for 
aapmt _ 
593-7412 


BARMAIDS W ANTED 


♦ $175 wk gu*r*n*e#d ♦ 
623-45T 4 
_________ 
convalescent hmpi- 
'I and r.V M 'f 
Ex- 


ce: 
benefit» 
and 
work>n« 
condt* 


(ions 
Coil between | end ] pm, 
624-1237. 
_________ 
UN EMPLOYE O'* M e n y~Tcb pp**n- 
ings with Sarah Coventry J#w# ry. 
Anyone willing fq learn can queii- 
fy 
Must 
bo tvor 
II. 
For 
into 
, can 626-2951___________________ 
: FU LL time’ ’companion to' widow! 


She*« 
room and board 
in 
com­ 
pletely turn 3 bdrm aot in Mtcir. 


.¿V W 
)lL s L h * J L m 
i 


T fL fR H O h il survey 
Experienced 


ontv 
Pleasebt 
f«t«o*-r»- e 
work 
from our office, Hourly wag* Aao 
39-60 Part »ime M6 1771 
(Continued N ext Pag e) 


CLASSIFIED 
DIRECTORY 


N A 
2 - 1 2 0 1 
O n t a r i o - U p l a n d 
A r e a 
Y U 
6 - 8 6 8 8 


GAREY 
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 
HOME JA V IN G S & LOAN BL DG. 
IU IT E 5C3 


10« Pomona Mali Easf, Pomona 


623 4391 


See Our Listing» Sun., Mon 
E X P EfU ~ h a i r dresser ’poi low i n g ore 
f*rred. Nice salon 
Apply in per 


son. 
40« 
Indian 
Hill or Call 
for 
appt 62) 1710.________ 
OUT of schoo'’ Unemptoyed> Go' 


* problem? Come see us. W* can 
help you 
Coll C P F RATION 
UP 


TIGHT fodor. 629 8585, Mr* Coch- 
run 
___ 


M EN— W O M EN 


New national company estab­ 
lishing in tbit prgo naeds help 
to recruit and »ra«n represen­ 
tative» 
Whatever vour background. If 


ycu *r* industrious, wt cen se 
cut# Vdur future 


iend 
b-iel 
rgsuma 
to 
BOX 


»iff, PR O G R ESS B U L L E T IN 
BERSON EMPLOYMENT 
Agency 
AIL N O FEE JO BS 


STA FF 
Spec Dagre# requu, mm I 


yr exper 
inf p an recruimg 
Sa 


ary sta'ft to $fe9 IR 799 


H O RTIC U LTU RIST 
Degrge 
- 
spa 


CiPliiafTen field 
A 
lot 
Work 
in 


plant 
breeding 
genetics 
Salary 


60 I6K P M -269 


MECH 
EN G 
Young 
Eng, Lie e. 
per fine Salary to !2K 
F 214 


SA LES 
TRA iN Ek 
Co will tram a 
young 
man 
(some 
sains 
exper 


pref) for outside sales 
Will own 


lerrit. 
Salary 
*S0Q 
plus car 
A 


expen SS 111 


PR O J ENG 
BS In mech or chem 


design develop and 
implement* 


»ton 
of 
equip. 
Non d#i#n»e 
co 


Saiery to 1<K 
E 217 


C iv il 
fNG-Degx## re« 
work in 


ail erees of pipe deioin. 0 3 yr» 
exper. Salary fo *900 1 203 


F E M A L E -StOr* 
manager 
Strung 


ladies reedy 
to wear exper 
M 


be capei* wait groqmd Sal 


negotiated M-203 


1947 E 
Hoff 
POMONA 
623*1477 


— Beauty Salons 
I' 
SARAH'S ~~ 


BEAUTY SALON 
Open 6 Days A Week 


Mon-Tues-Wed 9-5 
Thur* & Friday 8-5 
Saturday 8-3 
Open Eves By Appt 


E V E R Y TUESD AY S P E C IA L 


Shompoo A $e* 
Short Hem - 12 50 


<93« S 
Ger*y 
678 1711 


—- Bookkeeping Service 


e bookkilp \ i m 


Business 
Books 
end 
Tax 
don# m my hom#. 595-9688 


-— Brick W o rk 


'arp&ntry 


c a r p e n t e r 


Patíos, 
cabinets 
remodeling 
& 


Hom# Repairs Ca I Beil, NA 6 0621 


— Carpet & Furniture 


Clean-Dye-Repair 


C A R P ET '' SA LES 
AND 
SER V IC E. 
INSTALLATIO N S 
R E P A IR S 
t i l ­ 
ia»» or NA 8 2221. 
. 
, 
, 
< v w s e v r s e s r N r v w v v s A r S i —— I n SU f O flO ri 


— Hom e and O ffite 
Cleaning 


NU-WAY W A LL WASHIW g 
NO M ESS 
COSTS LESS 
595-2643 
o r 
LV 5*31471 
B E T T E R 
build.ng 
maint 
Com- 


Residential 
Floor 
wa.^a-wirdow 


washing carpet clean.nq 
629-56)1 


C A RPET Cleaning, floor care 
win­ 
dows Home or ind 
Pro* equiomt, 


etc 
Ask tor Gene 
623-7100 


—-Tox Service 


•Cement W o rk 


p A T io s , s l a b s 
s i d e /TaT k S 
Pionier,, Block Walls 


NA 6 30?8 ___ 
NA_ 8 2565 


Free Estimóles on any Job 
Prmo* from 37c 'q t» _ NA » 6268 
• CEMENT WORK 


INSULATION 
Blown in 4" 


AVK h A jL HQ), t P I 


''7-3736 CoBocf 
(714) n 
Cor 


Work 


Palios, 
d’ vowavs, 
bkx* 
wens, 
_ 
, 
.. 


pa* ages .mi <,*-uentry 
New a d — 
F a i n t i n g 


remodeling 
f ree est 
NA 
6 49/e 
— 


-—ëlectrlcal W o rk 


— Landscaping 


~ > O S*EY S PRU N IN G SERVICE 


RO SES S H R U B S - P i ANTING* 


References 
622 1302, 


¡F IR E P L A C E S in 
your p r e s e n t 


! home. Pallo, RBQ pH types of ma 


spnry 
Fia. fr<*# est, reas 623 |13S 


mum of 3 Ln*s Minimum charge 
13 50 |0c discount »or r#»h with 
copy. C#»h with copy en «II work 
wanted eds. 


Por Lid* Por Timo 


K 
1 6 2 t.moi 
J fimo» 
0 timi» .,, 
1 »imo» 
}»c 
4 timo* 
ire 
J ‘¡mg* 
.....Uc 
10 timge 
, 
jJc 


30 timos 
He 
Consecutivo 
fîmes 
— 
No 
copy 


cher*. 
Otner 
r*t*t 
en* 
confrec! 


rei*» 
not 
shown 
above 
upon 
re 


quest 
Phono 
NA 
2 ‘ 16l 
wntori*- 


■f s*nd #|,»>_Y_U_646y 


Sp ecial N otice» 
I I 
AS 0» M*rcST fhi I will no longer1 


be responsible for any droit other 
i fh#n my own. 
Gi berft Wilkin» 
714S Etiwanda Aye 
Jrtiwanoe Colit 9173«__ 
j AS 
of 
March i, 
196« 1 
will 
nói 


i ¡ingtr 
be 
responsible 
fir 
any 


debt* other than my own 


Louis Gott Jr 
934 N, Towne Ay#, 
| 


Pomona, CfMf 


THE F A M IL Y 'S eternal ioy is the 
Mormon 
goal. 
Coll 
Latter-day: 


Sam's rep 
623 7380 . 628 »641 


SENSITIVITY TRAINING 
Dev* op teif-oworenoss, sed at 
Leptanço, 
iatfrpgrsqgal 
comne 


fenre 
For compii mento ry ses 
sion, egli «fl-H U 
________ 1 
IF YOU W ISH to know your B bf* 
better, 
diel 
(714) 
*23*7*1 
for 
« 


Help W td . M ale 


¡A R C H IT EC T U R A L 
draftsman 
$r 


I or 
Intormediale 
only. 
C o v i n a 


area 12131 332-5609 


INSURANCE SALES 


If 
y«u 
art 
unhappy 
running 
a 


: debit, or unhappy with your prm- 
i ont company and want something 
i chaiiongmu, 
fra.noes 
invited, call 


mo for 
an appolntmsnf 
623-6537 


E X P IR ig N C C D 
auto detau 
man. 


Must have valid drivers He 
See 


! Denm* WiHOn. 
Ken* Aut* Detail, 


iflO-A E 
1st 5». Pomp/ a 
DESIGN 
DRAFTSMAN 


An excellent oppurtunitji fer en 
ambitious, 
capable 
D e s i g n 


Dr§t!im#n 
You7!! participate in 


In# c-sign of a variety oi Me- 
chonlcal 
end 
Ileclro Mecham- 


c*f Induilrlol Qiowlh Produci» 
end 
Systems 
Minimum 
of 
2 


yr* Methenical Drafting expgri 
enc* w th strong ngnierical and 
mechanical 
abilities 
reuuirtd 


Some coney* course» ana 
H» 


draglie 
ana 
iletfrico l 
Circuit 


Ji* aer iene# 
desired 
Cali 
Don 
•howl. 
(714) 
4*4 3406. 
or on appointment 


Progrest-Bulletin 


Quick Action Wont Ads 


— Building Contractors 


Remodel, 
ccmpigt» 
t»*o 
or 
an? 
1 pert 
Financing. 
17 vr» Pomon» 


Reference» 
Lynn Waggcner, Working Contr 


Estimate* 
NA 2-9804 


Heco Construction 
Rgmobgimg 
room addition*, kifch 


ens or balhs 
100 urr cent f.nonc 


ing, nothing down, 8 v x IP POv 
A»k for our uniim.ied li»f of sat 
lified 
customers. 
Ltcen-rd 
and 


bonded for 
your 
protection 
Day 


or mgnt cell 628 )*2v pr 986 1048 


WWANOSKY BROS 


BU ILD iN G 
CONTRACTORS 


Room 
odd, 
remodeling 
custom 


«eb n#fs, etc. Fr#„ est NA sui sl 


ED JO HNS CONIT 
Qualify Room 


Addition» 
100'v 
financing 
F R E E 


EsT 
State uc 633-711? 


ADD A ROOM 


Room 
oddilioos 
end 
remodeling 


our specialty, flkiality work ot roas 
k i«*. 


Algar Construction Co. 


9*1 fc Haif, Pww. 623-866) anyfirre 
ROOM ADDITIONS 


REMODELING 


Garages, Polios, Firogiacos, Etc. 
Qualify consirucfion at a very 
re.i-.onab a price. 
106% tinannnf. 
Lie, ins. Call for a free plan 
and estimaie 


POMONA VALLEY 


HOME IM PR O V EM EN T CO. 
6?9 9V10 416 E. Tth, Ponxma 


bMALL 
or 
largo 
eitKtrical 
job» 


drye- range Lookup’ 
Cali anytime 


(-<)• nc-. 
Electric, 6«J - AC’ 
270 M E T E R box*» Installed — dry­ 
er 
and 
range 
wiring 
Licensed 


—fences 


W O O D FENCES REPAIRED 


—Floor Coverings 
Linoleum , Cptg,, etc. 


Aver room 520 Outside stucco, 
170 
Also small repair iobt 
Neat, clean, exp. 
622 '57* 
599 A VER STUCCO A A LLS 
i 


$26 aver rm Material» ]nci 


L !C I N SU RE O Frg* est NA £-$113 


.7a Kli.iable painting ft 
A I types 
nr*#’ 
Low r«t*$. PrOfl 
est 39 yrs quai 
work 
NA 4 54*1 
PAINTING 
BRUSH 
OR 
SPRA Y I 


l-perienced 
reotoftalb* 
r*fe* 


special rotes and attention t* opt 
owners Call 423 27*7 


CONTEMPORARY 
TAX SERVICE 


1622 N, Gorev 


(1 Biock N ot Freeway) 


Mon thru Sat 9 to * 
No Appointment Necessary 


Evonings by Appointment 


623-3848 


SKOUSEN 
INCOME TAX 


SERVICE 
Largest in the West 


CONVENIENT 


W* com* to your hom* 


✓ ACCURATE 


Return tr>pto chocked 


^ 
GUARANTEED 


Fee refunded if not pleased 


622-5147 


Toil Are# Can CoHocf 


V IN Y l , file 
and 
linoleum, 
caroe¡ 
0/ formica, »toso ubi* rafe». Cal! 
627 29.« or 627-29«» 


Plumbing and Carpentry 
New and repair work 
Gu*r. Free 


ext 
629 0922 gr 624 7*9» 
•Top Soil 


—-G ardening 


■Plastering 


PLASTER PATCHING 
Reasonable 
♦24 1 85) 
Re­ 
am; ^ P IA S T E R P A T C H IN G ^ 


nf-Ext. 
*2*4177 


—Roofing 


or 
ROOFS' ROOFS' 


Checked 
eoeirea replaced 


Depnndab * per-on** service 


MR. R iC E NA J-J151 


t u a T0R wORk 
n*w lowns 


ovot -g 
C i t 
h #e 
gres* 


weeds Cleangp. NA 2-191* 


kti w é i.L k f PT là W n s 
h* B E A U T IF U L G A RD EN S 
Low monthly ratei 
428-2597 
le» t xpep aAR D EN ER 
Y»,a 
Cteenup 
Rea» rate* 
Res or con 
m ereiai 
S99-?»37 or 599 56/1____ 
GARDENING 


1 a n a p in o 
t eanup, hagling 
ex 


Pt-rt pruninu 
rs*-w lawn* 
Mpnthfy 
tale* f r*e est. 633-545$ 
EX PFR ieN C FD ' Gardeners frr . ,j 
c ean u. , and mcmthiy v ird cere — 
S h o e 
S h in O 
S f o n d i 
F u estimar,-i 
t j.i $99 5*45 
- 
' 
° 
* ' a n a * 


L A N 0*5 C A P IN G 
5PR1NK 
U R S , C LFA N U P, AND M-AiNTf. 
NANCE 
NA 4-1447 «r NA e-020« 
M ow , edue. new iawn» 
cioè ni ng, 


Sprinfcier» repalred, rubb*N> h*gied, 
Frgg est *29 ni?) 


TOP SOIL AND F»LL 
OlRT 
Oe- 


moflfton, pads 
end tractor work, 


964 7 46J or *28 4417 


• " t o p "s o il • 


PLA IN OR M IX IO 


STEER FERTILIZER 


Ground, 
»god, 
wood tree 
at 


pi«nt in bulk, S3 50 rd 
t)0'-:v- 
erod 
»4 
yd 
tack I 4 
$ 
••Ne. 


I vd 
mini. 
$/- 


it 
L fe 60c *« 
Aik 
grovel and bark 


I E E E R N EST C iT iZ fN at H Min 


kl* 
.Wow, 
all 
Shin*» 
35c 
) 2£X) t 
Heft, Pomgng. 


O. F. W olfinbarger 


Cor of Eretici» end Bee»?- 
0»' 


NA • ï 030 
V U S «3*3 


Tractor W o rk , 
G rading, Bulldozing 
and Hauling 


— Carpentry 


C A R P iN T lS 
W ORK 
H¥ 
J O B 


Room 
additions 
or 
frame 
w cx 


LjcO AtM Cali 6.9 8 3 » , _____ 


'C A R P E N T E R 
WORK 
AH 
type* 
Hcurfy 
rates, power 
ftcls. Fully 
experienced 
Ceil NA 3-2947 


-'GARAGE' DOOR5" a s 
low " n- 
V 


tor 
16«7. Ail fvpgs 
of 
repair». 


1 broken springs replaced 
NA 3 3396 


Don’t Wonder Ph. Onder 
j for anything in carpentry 
Cu»tom 


! cab’f.e«» 
a 
»petlaity, 
9(6 6155 
or 


*2» «824 


YOUNG, OLDER M AN 
wants yard 
work 
*22 682« 


— Hauling 


Furniture Van Type Truck 


NA 20187 
Rubbish Hauling 622 2076 


ANY KIND 
A N YTIM E 
R u b b i s h hauling, hew» dump 
truck. Any fob, -mail tvd <i. wreck 
ed 
Cleanups 
Free est 
Rea» 639* 
6121 
H A U L I N G —- Cleanup 
any* -r>d 


t'as'- 
skipjgoder work. Free Es; 


Furn 
movinu 
622 7140, 98é Î9M 


L IG h t HAULING garage and lawn 
(leaning 
AIM lanR distance haul- 
irtg 
Free estim ate 
NA 9 80S 


R U BBISH HAULING 


Minimum chars« 15 Free estimates 
YU * 105* 
_ NA .,.14 


LIGHT 
HAULING 
turn rubbish 


Yard -ggraue 
cleanup 
Free 
est. 
Reliable Ed Dorns * 2 i'"42 


OK. 


★ Income Tax Specialiitsillr 


«enable, fesf. 
accurate — R««» 


No. Gorev 
Ptungna 
•IUISL.. 
I xes ,6j4 mj 


INCOME Ta x 
At Cooper, 7Q4 W Holt, Pomona 
____ 6391361 or »J#. »jj|£______ 
D ‘ L'5 
Ingomo Tax itrvlco. 
y*«|r 
home 
or 
mm# 
»36 xMH 
or 
*22 
96m B , Appt only 
★ FED - STATE $5 UP ★ 
lafUfactton 
guarenteeg, 
b am a 


U t % S ? J 59 )’'iSSf" * (3l!)% fe lS l. 


Tax Preparation 
Sema reasanapta char## 13 yoam 
r.ght 
f-.tr» 
ef 
,’25 
W 
Hgrf, 
Pe 


mcna 
F ur 
m torm «ti«A,'_tah 


Auams Real Estate, 43» 55?« 
C A M P B E L L '! Expert Tax Servlet, 
vour home or mine 
24 hr very 


ke 
NA 2*7*4 or NA 2 47% 


INCOME TAX CENTER 
54« | Holt Pgmgna *27 ’*>5 


$ 
Tractgr 
worV 
w# 


ix ’T C T - Æ 'td S 


weed 
rtn 


AM BITIOUS tosai cqiîege bov has 
tractor and true* ~fto*Us work. Lot 
c tearing 
arid 
godtng, 
treo 
re­ 
moval, 
haut# 
rom oval, etc. 


Hartshorn Vnferprtso* 
503 657« 
ARÑgpF? 


4 be temen 
pastore. I 


“ 
s 
a 
v 
a 
: * 
1 
u n n i 


Found*t on* 
Deo# s 
end fr*#* 


T MOMAÍ* h CkT^E 
422 631) 


— Tree Service 


OOGM s t i f f S e R v ic e 
Pruning 
Tgqeinq 
and 
Removal 


Weed 
sp/avm* 
l Y 
3 30?« 


— Upholstering 


—W recking 


:u 
sidenTUTö* m 
m 
a - r f r 
926 »474 


ext, 
JU 


FMC 


three minute message 
R U M M A y i SALE 


MbP i O P W fc omona*t\a(|i,UW' 
west CORPORATION 


R IV E R S ID E DIVISION 


An Equal (jppvtluh.iv Employer 


A Quick Reference Directory 
For All Your Help Wanted Needs 


They Are As Near To You As Your Telephone 


* 


CLYDE \Y WARREN 


a H N IN O tA N H 4|¿L, C L A R E M O N T 
624x1617 


Pi ogrets-Buileftn, Pom ona, Calif. 
S a tu rd a y Iv o n ln g , M a rch 9t 1967 
Page 6, Sec. 2 Houses 
18 Houses 
THE WILLETS 
By Walt Wettert 
GENÍRAL 


• i ai nr older 1'. . ‘OCV horn« 
ea 
* x » 5 
A i 
roaed 
10». 
SA V E ! 
on 
this, 
fixer-upper. 
P ull price, »12,500. 


Bill Zeman Realtor 
622-3231 


Houses 
18 Houses 
Houses 
Houses 
CLAREMONT 
P O M O N A 


LA VERNE 
.O W N ER. 
3 Bdrm. 
U 4 baths, 
poo., ige f«m rm, near shopping 
it1 *i5c^2Pls 
A ssu"'«' Exist»"« 'can 
°f S16.300 wifh $900 down. 593-5951 


LENDERS RESALES 


I LEY 
R e a lt y 


CHINO 
Custom 
built 
older 
home 
immaculate 
condition, 
j 
tqe 
bedroom», p 4 baths, sep din­ 
ing rm, bright breakfast area, 
service porch, fireplace 
Ex- 
iffL 'o p *1 
landscaping. 
Only 
Sit 000. 
Bill Zeman Realtor 
622-3231 
1^ UPGRADE 
vour 
lying 
and 
family 
security 
with this charmmg 3 bedroom and 
den or tamiiy rm. home in a good 
convenient location to ad schools 
and ■,hopping 
features a kitcnen 
a 
wid please any man. An en 
Closed rear yard with a sparklmg 
20x 40 pool *or the chikjrtn'i rec 
reation 
M any more spacious tea 
ures X 0^ W*H 
want to 
see 
tor 
voursed 
oy 
calling 
now 
for 
an 
appointment Pr,Ced at $33,000 with 
excellent terms 
K * CLAREMONT 
0|S T R |C T , 
3 
bedroom 
With p 4 bath, cor location in spot- 
t#ss cord it too ready for 
irnmedt- 
*/* occupancy. FH A terms if de* 
*ired. Priced to sen at $16,500 
JOSEPH D. BECK 
J * * " » Country Realty Co 
590 N. P a rk Ave 
629 7 523 


200? N 
Garey 
Eves 
$93-5852 


Work Wtd. Female 
12 


i r o n i n g d o n e in m y h o m e 
N EA T A N D R E A S O N A B L E 
________626 2855 
_ 
C O LO R E D .ady would !ike domes­ 
tic work from 8 a m 
to l 30 p m 
tl.25 hr. »39 7694 or <956291 


i r o n i n g W a n t e d i n m y h o m e 
*1 00 HOUR 
_____________ 628 3558 
• ^ P R A C T IC A L n u r s e wishnWcaVe 
?Li toK «“ ’' 
L,v' ■" *• 
•r* IR O N IN G S a a n t e d h* 
. 
»1 50 do/rm 
Will Dick u p xnd deliver 
62M048 
HOUSEKEEPING 
Call 62I-I2C1 between $-9 p m. 
T Y P IN G 
accurately 
and 
neatly 
completed 
to 
your 
srec.flcations 
bv e»p typist 985 1250 


Real Estate For Sale 


Houses 


MONTCLAIR 


2 bath*, 
blt-ins. 
0 
Vet $!00 dwn, 
19163 Oak Glen 


Need A Home Loon? 
Call Lyffnn Say ngs & Loan 


j j M 
R 
E A 
^ K K T 
^ E j * 


PO M O NA NORTH 
560 E. Foothill, Pomona 


Houses 
18 Houses 
GENERAL 
GENERAL 


Lender’s Repossessions 


Fantastic Terms on All Homes 


Drive By and See 


12696 17th Sf., Chino 
only S 19,950 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
656 Cedar St., Ontario 
only $20,000 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
2152 N. Indian Hill, Claremont 
only $39,500 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
9050 Fremont, Montclair 
only $19,500 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
1119 West 17th, Upland 
only $20,500 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
Open House At 
1391 West Arrow Hwy., Upland 


* 
* 
* 
* 
* 
Call Lender'« Aaenl 985-4AI7 


SACRIFICE 
SALE 
O w ner'* 
sacrifice 
is 
y o u r 
•a in 
Be the f.rSt to see this chmfir­ 
ing 3 bedroom 
home 
situated 
Close 
to 
everything 
Features 
large 
living 
room 
with 
w w 
Carpeting and draperies 
3 ium- 
bo sue 
bedrooms 
serviced by 
beautiful master bath that jgft 
glistens 
Fam ily 
style 
kitchen 
with buiit-in range, oven 
,»nd 
•oads ot natural cabinets 
Pear 
yard completely fenced w>th ? 
car garage 
Full price $13,750, $200 total 
cost for a veteran, 
also very 
low 
F H A 
ana 
cold war 
vet 
terms. 


STOP BEING SLAVE 
to a home that exceeds vour 
needs, 
anlpv 
the comfort 
ana 
de iqhtj 
of 
this 
compact 
an 
suff.cient 
3 
bedroom, 
2 
bath 
home 
which offers all 
norm.it 
requirements 
ter 
real 
eniov- 
men? Nice corner, $?» OCO 
Refer No. 653 
NA 4-3561 
8 13 W. Foothill, Clmt. 


REALTY CO. 
4791 Holt Blvd., Montclair 
626-8597^or YU 4-1761 


B Y 
O W N E R . 
4 bdrm, 
| S tMth 


fireplace. 
Assum e 
existing 
f h a 
6 , loan 
No agents. Cali tor au 
POmt 
621-1885 ____ 


LENDER’S 
REPOSSESSIONS 
FANTASTIC TERMS 
DRIVE BY and SEE 
656 Cedar St., Ontario 
O nly 
$20,000 
Call Lender’s Agent 
985-4617 


5067 HOLY, MTCLR 
NA 4-0041 
TREMENDOUS 
VALUE 
513,500 
GENE HURT 


You'll love This Qualify built 
*Ad plaster wood 
shinuie 
constructed home 
3 a * gr- bedrooms, larne ward­ 
robe 
close's, 
g earr mg 
hard 
wood 
floors 
throughout 
The 
kitchen has ceramic tde court- 
*'•' 
toos 
pient/ 
of 
cabinr n 
targe service porch. This hone 
is 
ocafed 
in 
area 
t n n t 
shov-s pride of ownership 
F p S1J.50C 
$80 89 per m or'h 
inctudmg principal and interest 
No money 
oown to f o r m e r 
servicemen. 


P O M O N A 
REPOSSESSED 


IT'S A V/INNER! 
$17,500 
Claremont 
Owner 
leaving 
area 
must sell 
D?1* week! Call us today on this 
charm ing home Too location 
Sold 
rail 
fencing 
accrvT* 
the 
toveiy 
exterior 
of 
this 
ow 
line 
rustic style. 
Inside we find 
$pa- 
cious living rm, elegant w w car­ 
peting with loam rubber padding 
1 tke walking on air). Central floor 
plan-—3 
i umbo 
su e 
bdrm s 
serv­ 
iced by 1 - baths, deluxe k.f with 
cabinets 
galore, 
sep serv 
porch, 
tfl rear yd. comp fenced 
Plenty 
of room for your boat and trailer 
i car detached gar. 
f p $17,500 
No down Gl 
Only »105 per mo 
we both principal and interest. 


Houses 
18 Houses 
REALTY CO 
GtNCRAL 
MODERN BEAUTY 
G CNtRA 
4730 Holt Blvd., Montclair 
Centrally 
located in C h i n o 
proper 
3 queen sue bedrooms, 
m baths, kitchen with cabinet» 
ap,enty 
This 
California 
modern 
has 
open beam ceilings 
completely 
ten ced 
vara 
Alt 
*hts 
n e a r 
schools and shopping 
P R IC E D TO S E L L AT O N L Y 
$12,500 
No down to Gl 
only $200 ctoe­ 
ing costs 
iow down tor anyone 
Monthly payment «sly $74 9$ ,n 
eludes 
both 
principal 
and 
in- 
SPANISH STYLE $18,000 
2 bdrm plug dining room, fam ­ 
ily room and o> n Spanish style 
home ioce'ro 
,n good area ot 
Pom ona 
Priced less than PH A 
dppra > »1 
Most be seen to be 
appreciated. Shown ov appoint 
ment only 


5067 HOLT, MTCLR 
NA 4-004 1 
GENE HART 
No Down Pmt. To Gl's 
Here is a sharp and sellable 
home 
located .n a genet rest 
dentiat area 
2 bedroom and den (or can 
be u.ed as 3 bedroom*) plan. 
Roomy 
ester tut 
bright 
kitchen 
w.fh large din>ng aiea, lots of 
spaciqu* natural wood cabinets, 
bunt in 
range 
and 
Oven 
too* 
The t„g formal iiv ng room has 
beautitut nearly n#w w w car­ 
pets 
and 
d r a p e s 
included. 
Plenty 
0# 
room 
tor 
kids 
to 
romp 
m 
this beautifully 
land- 
scaped fully fenced yard 
Priced to sen at $12.950, no 
down payment to Gl, $400 down 
to 
anyone 
Paym ents 
of onjy 
$ 1} per 
month 
inc tufl 1 g 
both 
principal and interest 


?47 F 
H OLT P O M O N A 
V F O O T H IL L . C L A R E M O N T 
Eves 
624 697; 
NA 4 3521 
NA 4-3561 


LENDER'S 
REPOSSESSIONS 


f a n t a s t ic t e r m s 
DRIVE BY and SEE 
9050 Fremont, Montclair 
O n ly . 
$19,500 
Call Lender1» Agent 
985 4617 


COMPARE THIS! 


H uge 
sp raw lin g 
rustic 
ranch 
. T * 
sw eeping 
rocthnes, 
cogi shade trees and quiet st. 
Deluxe rioor plan 4 kin? itie 
badroom t, l-« baths, form al liv 
m g room , 
open 
beam 
ceiling, 
r e a l 
log 
burning 
fireplace, 
queen's 
kitchen, 
b u ilt -in 
even 
and ran ge with 
loads of cab i­ 
nets 
2 
t a r 
detached 
garage 
, F u ll 
price 
»15,9», 
no 
down 
Gi. low down F H A 
$95 93 per 
m om h 
pays 
p rin cip al 
and 
In­ 
tel esi, 


NA 4-0014 


Open Every Day & Sunday 


9 a.m. to 8 p.m. 


Houses 
Houses 


★ PRICE REDUCED * 
4 h e d rm ? bath. K in g s 
ley are a. O w n e r t ra n j- 
fe rrtd , m u st tell, E m ­ 
p lo y e r w ill a ss st w ith 
c o st*. 
N o w 
o n ly 
H I . - 


QUALITY HERE 
PRICE TOO! 
Three 
b.g 
bedrooms 
p l u s 
*2i,V L°°m ,hat 
J 4*Z5- 7 *f 
o f t with a hue* 
used brick 
log 
burning 
tire 
place, expansive carpeting, nice 
draperies. 
B ig 
country 
% t y I e 
f i P i » 
loads of cab-nets 
and yards of counter » p a i e 
From 
the 
huge 
family 
room 
ytj( 
view me 16x33 p 0 OL 
one A L , f n h2V.U ,* n<i’n8 to y in 
#ne ot oor better areas 
Full 
te'rm, , , M °S 
F H A Vtsd 
VA 


★ JUST LISTED ir 
D riv e 
b y 
1125 
L o m a 
V n t a 
Stre e t. 
P o m o n a . 
E x c e lle n t f u t t n c i n g 
a v a ila b le . 
T h is 
lo ve ly 
h o m e 
h a s 
m a n y 
fe a ­ 
tu re s. co m p le te b lt-m e 
in c lu d 'iig w et b a r a n d 
p ro fe ssio n a l B - B . Q, 
m a n y e x tr a s too n u m ­ 
e ro u s to m e n tio n . 
D i ­ 
vo rce fo rc e s sale. 


★ EXCELLENT * 
★ LOCATION * 
3 b ed rm , 2 b a th s. V e r y 
c o n v e n ie n t fo r sc h o o ls 
sh o p p in g , etc. L a r g e 
p a tio 
in su re » 
co m p lete 
p riv a c y 
on 
the 
sm a ll 
cu l . de - sa c 
street. 
f h a - QI w ith m in im u m 
d ow n . 


RAY LEVICK 
REALTOR 
1803 N. Garey, Pomona 
622-6659 


Lender i 
s u p p l y 
ol 
home$ is low. We still 
have some that needs 
repairs 
and 
painting. 
Some are r e a d y to 
move into. A few with 
pools. 
Why 
not 
call 
now for terms and lo­ 
cations of these homes. 
No loan points. 


Exclusive Agent 
624-0808 or 985-2707 
Eves, Call 624-7268 


NA 3-4381 


Open Every Day & Sunday 
9 A.M. TO 8=30 P.M. 
W * Trade & Buy Equities 
CHINO 
5606 Riverside Drive 
Count them. 53 including Co~op< 


LISTINGS NEEDED 
LET’S TRADE 
983-3418 
624-0014 


ADVANCE REALTY CO. 


4730 HOLY BLVD., MONTCLAIR 


CLARÍMONT 


M u s t 
yen 
A i* urns 
Gl 
Loan. 
3 
*5 I •• hath, new draur. 
bit 
in 
Fireplace 
Recently remodeled. 
Lge 
Fool 
631-139? 
4 Y R laruft, 4 pig* bdrms, 2 bath», 
nr _ i 
at 
Cut de sac, 
3v* 
biks 
a r m , 
i t 
bikv 
M S 
ExcH 
ad 
0i4 . 
ROMibillties 
624-9131« *26 
4*„Hy [OWNER 
r bedrm 
iwj 
k it,1- 
0 ^ ,lfS' *atm g area 
in 
.lwe ft* r 
yard, 
,rn for 
Mwi! oi tfdi rt 
Near giade schls 
•n<f Park 
F H A 
624 5992 


D IA M O N D BAR 
IN 
E Q U E S T R IA N 
ESTATES, 
«X 
h.bif t'Ome 
Large 
3 bedrm ana 
den and family rm on l ' i la» a 
M7 500 #Crei‘ PfiC*d *' cos, 


REALTY CO 


4730 Holt Blvd 


“G O O D PEOPLE TO 
DO BUSINESS WITH’* 
450 N. Garey at Holt 
REALTORS 
NA 3-3441 
(Continuad Next ?age) 
Montclair 


Mouses 
18 Acreage—Ranches 
20 Offices—Stores 
25ATrust Deeds 


[13 ACRES. Will sacrif 


P O 
M 
O 
N 
A 


( C o n t i n u e d f r o m 


P r e v i o u s P a g e ) 


S73 


MOVES YOU IN 


Just $80.00 per month 
princpal 
and 
Interest 
cult 3 beckoom home In 
Pomona with fa ra M 
" 
at 40) S t a n w oo d 


Includes 
T h .s 
North 
located 
Close to 
schools and bus. Call agent col­ 
le t (213) 964-1315, 


SPLISH! SPLASH! 
Your family will swim their 
wav to health and happiness in 
this beautiful 15*30 crystal dear 
swimming pool (heated and fil­ 
tered). 
, 
Also featuring 4 
iumbo size 
bedrooms and FA M ILY ROOM, 
luxur.ous 
w-w 
carpet ng 
real 
log burning fireplace, IQ baths, 
deluxe 
modern 
kitchen 
with 
built-in range and oven, sepa­ 
rate service porch, FA heating, 
2 car attached garage. 
Full price $21,$>3, no down »0 
vets, ontv $132 per month in­ 
cluding both 
principal and in­ 
terest or low down FMA. 
SPARKLING GEM 
It'* a must to see this charm­ 
ing spacious home with a mil­ 
lion 
dollar 
vie« 
of 
the 
foot­ 
hills. CLAREM O N T 
SCHOOLS, 
Features 
ideal 
central 
floor 
8Ian 
with 
double 
door 
entry, 
FN T PA L AIR CONDITIONING. 
Huge 
living 
room with 
plush 
w-w 
carpeting 
and 
draperies, 
corner used brick fireplace. Ex ­ 
tra large family room adjacent 
to deluxe kitchen with budt-in 
range, 
o v e n , 
(D ISH W A SH ER 
TOOL Loads of natural finish 
cabinets. 
3 
Iumbo 
Site 
bed­ 
rooms serviced bv 2 beautiful 
puiiman baths. Separate service 
porch 
Sliding glass doors off 
family room lead to 12*24 cov­ 
ered 
patio. 
Park-lik» 
grounds, 
rear 
yard 
fenced, 
2 
car 
at 
tached 
garage. 
Heavy 
shake 


r°Fu ll 
price 
$24.950, 
submit 
your down and terms. 
NA 6-1241 


Open Every Day & Sunday 


9 a .m . to 8 p .m . 


I family. For Dairy or Horse Ranch 
NA 8-1232. 623-8533. 
CHINO RANCH ES ~~ 
J' j Acres, Barn, house, fence 
1' ? Acres lg# home, poo) 
V t Acres Old home 
$25.000 
* 3 Acre home, barn 
2* t Acres show hors# setup 
OMEN SUNDAY 
ST A M PFL R E A LT Y , Chino 
391? Riverside Drive 
NA 8 S2M or NA B 773A eves 
EGG 
RANCH on 
H i 
ar-ns land 
3.500 
laying 
h e n s , 
800 
young 
chicks. Clean 2 bdrm home, stor 
an** 
room, 
detached 
gar 
Plenty 
room for horses, $31,500. Wül sell 
as a horse ranch for $28,750. Call 
owner in San Dimas, 1 ?14)_599 1475 
PC B U Y V TO S E L L 
B IL L M U R PH Y CO R E A L T Y 
3?n8 Riverside Dr., Chino 
NA 
8 59s 
or 
NA 
8 5517 
* SA C R IFIC E 
20 acres NW of Yrek*. 


In FOR 
L E A S E 
with 
. , 
1. month 
free 
modern offif, .. i„ ji 
$50 .including utilities 
rent. Nice 
N 
Garey, 
_____ 
NA 2 5269 __ 
2 MONTHS 
F R E E 
R f n T 
and larger stores tor 
20x65 


TOP money paid for real estate 
Trust Deeds and eayltles Hensley 
Torti, ATS N Euclid 
Ontario eg* 


31 Unfurnished Houses 35 Furn. & Unf. Apts. 36A Unfurnished Apts. 
37 


Desirable 4 
Call 
626-4264 


Sears 
(213) 332-1931 
_________ 
F R E E RFN T, Modern of 
pvt rooms, turn heat, air 
419 
N. 
Garey, 


Near; 


2 MOS 
(ice, 3 
cund. 
carpeted, 
Pom $t35 NA 2 5269 
O F F IC E space available near P v 
Hospital. 
Completely 
furnished, 
Incl all utilities and lenltor v ry 
at $55 per mo Mr, Beck. 629-7522. 
MODERN O F F IC E , E X . i.OC 
300 
w 
» 
4 
600 
sq 
?t 
at 
3 Sc 
tents per sq. ft water, heat, air- 
rond Furn parking. 
STRI iT, 552 N Park 
623-2551 
FURN air conn, utilities Pd, $25 
565 — $110. 894 N Garev Pomona, 
NA 2-3307, NA 9 3470. YU 2 
“ 


w**flReal Estate loans 
32 


First and 2nd TJD Loans 
„ 
Ray Levick. Broker 
i»03 
N 
Garev, 
Pomona, 
67? 4459 


Money To Loan 
32A 


MONEY available for 1st, ?ñd~früst 
Deed 
loans. 
M a r v i n 
M<*Clure, 
Brkrx . 4780 Mission, On!*r,o 627- 
1112 or 984-3071 


Klamath 
Riven, 
Fishing, huntm 
trees, 
51.000 
F P 
(714) 
624 89 
Post Office Bo*_537, Clmt., Calif 
IN GROWTH AREA 


5 acres R 4 adioining new 
be.ng completed on 9th Street E 
of PlpeUm* A ve. Comfortable home 
2 acres chain link fenced 
Prier 
$75,000 Owner will carry 1st T.D 
Call Joe Burrous 623 3441 or eves 
129-0904. 


)l Business Oppor. 
WARNING 


schooI R e a d C o n t r a c t s T h o r o u g h ly 
AND 


I N V E S T I G A T E 


B E F O R E Y O U IN V E S T 


Real Estate for Rent 
Furnished Houses 
34 


26 


FOR LEA SE • 
home, 
$145 
and weekends. 
NICE 
3 bedrm home, dbl garage 
with ige f#nc#d yard, water and 
trash pd. Would Ilk# 1st and last 
mos rent In advance. 
9120. 
1170 
PorT1 
p0f Ihforrn can 


Furnished Apts. 
36 


U T ILIT IES 
paid 
Large 
3 
room 
upstairs 
apt, 
Male 
adults, 
$75. 
624-7867 
1 
A LL U T IL IT IE S PAID 
Real 
nic» 
3 
rooms 
Close 
Hughes. $65 Adults 629 9472 
707 N. PARK 
1 Bedroom Apt., $70 
No children, no Pets, 


? BEDROOM apt, furnished or un 
furnished. $77,50 end up. 1373 5 
Reservoir, Pomona. .. 
_ ......... 


partly f.rnishtd, 
Weber street. 
12 
ROOM 
house, 
$55 month 
lOAt i, 
Pomona 
n a 9 9179 
CLEAN 
N EA R LY 
NEW furnished 
houses. 1 
ige bedrm, iiv and di­ 
nette, 
tile kitch ana 


4 Locations to Serve You 
Main Office 200 W Holt, Pomona 
2030 N 
G A R EY , POMONA 
700 E. FO OTHILL. POMONA 
8970 C EN T RA L 
AVE , 
MONT. 


State inspectors and Investigators 
are enforcing Sect.cn 17500 of the 
Busmen 
and 
Profess,on* 
code 
which leads (In part) as follows: 
I? It unlawful to publish any ad­ 
vertising which >s untrue or mis­ 
leading and which 
,s known or 
which bv the exercise or reason­ 
able care shguld be known to be 
untrue c mislead no 
The P og­ 
ress Bulletin strives to protect its 
readers against such advertising 
and exception to tnls should be 
reported to the Classified advi 
tising 
manager 
Immediately 
phoning NA 2-1201. 
T v 


Horse Ranches 


bath, 
yard 
9«r, 
smaller 
Ownrr 1342 W 2nd, Pom 
It BD RM FURN DUE EX, 1841 S 
Reservoir, $72 50. 82«/GO for ap 
i poinfment 
E X E C U T IV E 3 td-m 2 bath Clare­ 
mont 
home 
Nicely 
furnished 
lease. 
$185 
629 5304 
or 
623-8383 
eves 
CLEA N 
I 
BED RM 
cottage, 
*75 
mo. Util Pd 
Rear of It 133 Ros- 
wejL_NA 2 3*49 
14» 1 b e d rm 
util pd7*0oT Adults 
pnlv, 
no 
pets 
11014 
Pipeline, 
Pomona 
NA 2 0 I3 0 _ _________ 
M* 1 
BED R M , 975 E. Monterey. 
Adults 
ng 
pets 
$75, 
water 
pd 
N A J 430, or NA 2 9150_______ 
I 


• Q u ie t T r a ile r L iv in g • 
Rept.il - extra clean, nice. AduifsJ 
Poof 
E. Chino, Ctose to shopping. 
628 7811, 986-1670. 
FU RN 1 BD RM D U PLEX , commu­ 
nity 
washer-dryer, $65 mo 
and wkends 
NA 9-2749 


2 BDRM. UPPER $60 
Adults. Inq 520 N. Eleanor 
CLAREM O N T 
Quiet 
comfortable 
duplex 
apt tor 1 
adult 
Cose 
to 
business 
center. 
Garage. 
$79 50 
NA 6 1143 


★ BFRKELEY MANOR ★ 
LA R G E CLEAN 


1 and 2 Bedroom Apts 


Carpeted 
Drape 


^ Air Conditioned 
^ Heemd Pool 
1660 N Berkeley Ave Pom 


I 
««HUB. M l .fW i Jf f 
C'osr .to 
downtown shopping Mgr at 
90 N 
Gordon, Apt 1. rOfh, 
629 6080 
D E L U X E 2 bdrm, 2 bath apt 
Air 
cond. dishwasher, carpet- 
<ir#p*s, 
2161 N Towne, Pom 
62 ) 4946. 
| 
yd. 


C LEA N , quiet apt 
bdrm and kit 
Pvt. 
ent, 
util 
Pd 
$45. 
965 
W, 
3rd , Pomona 621 3001 
M A LE 
bachelor, 
utilities, 
linens. 
*16 
weekly 
Inquire 
at 
265 
S 
Reservoir Apt 9, Pomona 
N EW LY ciec, compì turn 2 bedrm 
apt, all utils pd Pool, no children, 
no pets 
$ ! 20 
Sahara 
Hotel, 
447 
w Monterey. 


2 
BDRM , 
Carpetmg, 
fenced 
Clean, disp, Children O.K. Reason-t 
able 
629-5907, 
1 
LA M PL IG H T E R 
A PT S—789 W 9th 
UPLAND. 
SPEC IA L 
FOR 
THI 
MONTH 
OF 
M A R C H - 2 
W EEK S 
F R E E R EN T ! 2 ft, 3 Bedrms, Gas 
pd 
Built-In 
oven 
& 
Range 
Airi 
conditioned. Garbage disposal. Car­ 
pets, Drapes, Heated Pool 
Child 
Adult Section 
_____ 
985-2916 
i> se*SPACIOUS 2 bedrms” w-w car 
- 
peting, 
aìr-cor.d 
bit ms, 
unfurn., CHINO. $87 so 
$95. turn, $115 NA 2-6012 


2 BP. C IM T . N of Foothill. Htd 
pool, ige patio, central heating and 
cooimg 
Adults, no pets. Util paid 
$165 mo. 622-2339 ___________________ 
2~BDRM, Montclair 
Ciose to n»w 
Shopping center 
Adults 
no pets,' 
$80 With utit, $95 62? 2339 
j 


GAREY NORTH 


Deluxe 
2 
bdrm 
and 
2 
bdrm 
and fam room apfs 
Some $100. 
; 
See Mgr 3124 N. Garev, Aot, }, 
[ 
P o m o n a ____________________»>5-54*31 
LANDES APTS. 
4694B Bandera 
MONTCLAIR 
SPACIOUS 2 & 3 BDRMS. 


P ro g re s i- B u llc tin , Po m o n a , C alif. 
S a tu rd a y fv g n in g , M arch 9, 1967 
P a g e 7 , S e c . 2 


Livestock 
47 Miscellaneous 
56 


yr 
NA 


$95 UP 


BACHELOR O $65 
NO KITCHEN 
BACHELOR • $85 
BEDROOM • $110 
BEDROOMS • $120 


Equal Opportunity Hou$ing 
2 bedrm, 
carpets, drapei- clean, 
freshly painted, $90 
1354 5, Ham­ 
ilton, Pom. 629 288) anytime 
NA NT conveniences of aot living— 1 
but want home type hying? Try 
PARK WEST APTS. 
1-2-3 Bedrm, R O dishwasher, fire 
piace. 
w-w 
carpets, 
drapes, 
Pvt 
patios, tod pool 
2435 Ange>a St | 


B E A U T IF U L 
untu-n 
pietelv 
redecorated, 
paid 
2 bedrm, $113. 5174 Bandera, 
Apt i 
Montclair. 
2 bedrooms, carpets, 
drapes, 
blt-ins, 
air 
cond. 
Near 
shops and schools 
NA 8-3641. 


h a l f 
ARABIAN 
Horse 
4 
mare. 
1415 E 
9th, Pomona 
2 3724, 626-9560______ 
13 MOS 
Perm 
Reg 
Pinto colt, 
brown 
and 
white, 
$150 
Also 
13 
mos 
Perm 
Reg 
Appaioma Filly, 
Bay with whit« frost $250 62* 1195 
before 5 or after 8___ 
G E N T L E 
horses 
and 
pomes, 
an 
kinds 
and 
prices 
Will 
sell 
o,! 
trade 
Horses rented 
628 6929 
H O RSES 
Boarded 
and 
trained 
5 
acres- lots of riding room 
Boxed 
Indoor stalls with sawdust bedding 
*30 mo with fend. Irrigated pas-1 
ture, 
*50. 
Inq 
for 
lessons 
and 
training. 11989 N, Telephone, Chino 
627-4276 bet a p.m 
W EST E R N clothing, boots, mocca­ 
sins, saddles, halters, vet supplies. 
L 
C, Hitler,. 5226 " b " St., Chine, 
/n**,itunt»» UTAH saddle horses, gent!» broke 
^11 ^ VTMUW5; tnr ehiiHran 
Ar 
ad>ilt« 
.A/1 ! I aail 


k Pomona Carlton 
2 Bedroom Apts. 
Air 
conditionpd, 
heated 
pool, 
bullf-ln range, refr aerator, car­ 
pets 
drapes, 
recre.nion bldgs, 
outdoor BBQ and dinmg area, 
garage, storage 
close to down 
town shopping. 2 blocks to bul. 
No pets 
$85 up 


for children or 
adults 
Will seti 
or trade 
628 9909 
R EG 
Quarter 
Horse, 
4 
vr. 
old 
gelding. Famous Wood lints 
Gen-. 
fie but spirited 
Corroí with sad ; 
die and ali tack 
V550 
982 6877 


g a r a g e sale 
Sat Sun, 28*3 Valley B vd 
BOATS, Motors. New, Us«l 5AVF 
M O NEY, Terms 
Miller's Lard na 
301 N. Garey, Pomona. 
873-2488 
BIG G ARAG E SA LE Wed thru Sun, 
2-4 
pm. 
Power 
nand 
saws 
and 
other tools cabinets, plywood, patio 
chairs, trunks, folding .*hkis, etc, 
etc, 314 Geneva 
Ave, Claremont 
KIR B Y V AC U U M 
Complete 
with 
guarantee 
Runs 
like new 
N^w cost $300 pig*. Pav 
off $46 16 or easy payments, Co- 
v 'fja_ Credit 
Dept, (213 ) 
331-5919 
★ 1966 SINGER * 
ZIG ZAG 
No 
attachments 
needed 
Full 
size 
console 
model 
Guarantrn 
Included 
*48 SO or 8 payments 
,of 
$7 50 
on 
approved 
credit. 
*Ca¡i 
anytime 
Hr 
free 
h o m e 
demonsfrahon. NA 4 3304 or YU 
3-301 * Agent. 


Pets and Supplies 
52 


$25 


No. A 
'ask for Jeane" 628 9427 !47i South Palomares 
629 *451 


Util Pd Pool NW Pomona 
No 
Children 
or 
Pets 
Frank Charles 
629-01 31 


HORSE 


RANCHES 


LIC EN SED 
general 
building 
con 
tractor 
desires 
participation 
In 
business 
venture 
with 
mature 
M 
corruJtifibie venturous person with * BR triPwx, W f Pd 
land and, or means 
Write to Be* 
5835, Progress Bulletin. 
FOOD TO GO. Very clean, ac'Oss 
from busy shopping center 
High 
potential. 
Owner 
must 
sacrifice 
j622 5159 or 674 1365. 
FA 


gardener, 
Baby ok 
Inq. 
mature adults only 
632 E 
Uth, Pom 


rent n o w 
Lge yd, picnic area, 2 bedrm du 
piex, carpe's, drapes, very e'ean 
Blt-ins. $125 622-7598 
ILY 
emergercv 
Take O v e r 
small going bus ness. Excel oppor.1 
. 
n . 
F.ne toc In Chino 
Thrift Bekery U n t U m i s H e d 
H o U S e S 3 5 
id Grocery NA 8-7148 


• BY OW N ER 
1 ac-e fenced 
bedrm 
and 
den, 
pool, 
shuffle* 
board, 
family 
orchard, 
3 
st ■ s 
and fach room and corrals, $43, 
900, Call (213) ED 5 8665 
ACRE 
HORSES OK 


POMONA NORTH 
560 E. Foofliill, Pomona 


S A N 
D I M A S 
L.ge 
FOR SALE or lease or owner 
4 bdrrns, 3 baths 
? firepl 
«-« 
carpets, drapes, ktf-dlning w-e ec. 
h ■ ns, service area, 2 car 
gar, 
oa> o 
Save $3000. Must sacrifice. 
$25.SCO 
Call (714) 599-4373 


U P L A N D 


ANXIOUS to sell our lovely 3 bed 
rm 
and 
d*fl 
home 
Beaulifu y 
decorated, 
comp 
landsc 
O P a n 
muse 7051 Jasper St., A'ta Loma 
98 7 293* 
_____ ___________ 
LENDERS 
REPOSSESSIONS 
fa n ta stic terms 
DRIVE BY and SEE 
1119 W . 17th St., Upland 
Only 
$20,500 
Call Lender s Agent 
985*4617 


cust 3 bdrm, 2 hath home 
fenced. 
F P 
$32,500, 
Gl 
or 
otter 
down and terms 
Agent, 626-1241] 
NOW — F'hone NOW tor your horse 
ranch Day or nigh! syrv;C8 M etro 
POiitan Realty. 622 4839 
____ 
pwBY OW N ER 
2 acres with cu s­ 
tom 
bit 
hou(n 
Firpofacn, 
hdwd 
firs, bit Ins, 
F-A hea’ 
a i tone. 
F <cei 
location 
on 
Philadelphia 


Bidgs. to Move 
22 


100®te FIN., 5602 N. Peck,~Arcadia. 
New ? 
3-BR 
2 ba'h, hdwd fico> . 
$2995 up deiiy 
Open 7 day 
10 5. 
! 446-4539 
‘ - 
t . » -. 


Resort Prop. Sale 
23 


~OW k 
YOUR "OW N 
VAC AT,ON 
LAND! I have several 40 acre 
parcels forest lard tn Redwood 
Empire, each wTh stmam 
fe > 
cel ten) hunting and fish ing $201 
lo *300 ac 
Good terms 
Phong 
for fre* brochure 
Agert, 627- 
1371 


Be a ut 
C:,c¿ l EAST 


Income Prop. 


B i 
i A N E R 
14 
unTf 7 
n o i 
CICs» 
in 
Newly 
I *w 
vacancy 
factor 
$65.000 
$15 'A 
dr * n 
’ 857 
- 193-301$ 
7* BED R M 
HOME* and 


24 


FOR L EA SE 
Laundromat, 1875 so 
ft 
Good 
location. 30 washers, 8 
dryers, Sepiraied section for dry 
cleaning and tailoring 
Very littie 
investment 
Wonderful opportunity 
for 
right Party. Call owner 
622 
2001 or 627*743________ 
- 
END Liauor Store for sale 
due to death of one of the part 
ners 
998 E 
Holt, Pomona. *35. 
000 plus Inventory. Old liquor lie 
622 4104 ____ _____ 
C H ILD R EN S STO RE-Excellent fast 
growing 
business. 
Sacrifice 
for 
quick sal#. 108 W. "C ‘* St., On- 
tarlq ^ 
_________________ 
RESTAURAN T In Chino. Very nice.! 
Includes and bidg. 1800 sq tt. »nd 
fixtures 
Sacrifice for $29 8 50. By 
owner, (714) 593*717. 
_ 
Our success story 
IS YOURS 
As a Richfield 
Dealer 
We offer 
PAID TRAINING 
40 hr tune-up course 
20 hr brake course 
Financial assistance 


LIKE OWN HOME N W 
2 bdrm, w w carpet 
drapes, 
ins, 
retrig. 
a>r 
conci, 
water 
$109.50. 622 6759 


c v. . 
SM ALL 1 
bedrm in triple 
c 
” an 
util Pd 1014 
b 
So. O 
■ Ontario. 
678 5083, 
628 4004 
FU R N ISH ED 
Bachelor 
Apt. 
, water 
pd. 
Close-In 
252 
E 
_Sf , Pomona. 629 92*4. 
_____ 
I 
BEDROOM , waik-ln closets, 
shower. Bus stop 
$70 month, wa­ 
ter paid 
622 2955 
R ED EC O R A T ED bachelor 
625 
N 
loranne, 
Pomona. 
Utilities 
paid. 
No Kitchen. $55 
629 3556 
HOM EY 
2 bedrm, 
atr-( ondltioned, 
caroetmg, 
plenty 
of 
bit ns 
Ga 
rage 
5150 Canoga, 626 9865.______ 


• 3 ROOMS FU R N ISH ED • 
Utilities pd 
Nr Clv.c Center. 
Call after 3 pm 
629-5691. 


UNDER N EW M AN AGEM ENT 
Newly Dncorated 
WINDSOR HOUSE 
1 ovniy I * 2 Bdrm Apts. $90 5110 
Bit ins- Heated 
Pool—Nr. 
Shopng, 
See M anage r Apt 
10 
621-8259 
1435 W Laurel, Pomona 
2 AND 3 bedrm apfs. Pool, car­ 
pets 
drapes 
blt-ins, 
5194 
San 
Bernardino, 
NA 
6 2036 
2 bedrm apts. (turn and 
! unfurn). Carpets drapes, air cond 
. . . J bit-ms, 
from 
$100 
Holly 
Apts, 
Jth! 1068 
E. 
Phillips, 
Apt. 
A, 
porr 
NA 9 6804 
tij. ? BD RM deluxe oool ar*s, Furn or 
” ” 
Ai. 
*-. it » 


. M7. 
akland, ; LA R G E 


unfurn 
Air cortd, 
btt-ins, 
refrig 
carpets drapes, walk-ir closet Lge 
sfg area 
$100 up 
4830 Bandera,1 
Vtctr 626 9643. 
drapes, ige yard 
$90 mo. 629-7936 


bit- 
pd 


LEASE-OPTION 
5 bdrrns, 2 <torv. 631 W. Cetfar,' 
Ontario. Cail »82-0304 eves or Ana 
heim 871-500C 
ext 569, days, ask 
tor Mac. 
! 
2 
BEDROOM 
AND 
DEN 
HOME 
For lease on 'a acre Corrals. 
AGENT 678 5538 
7 BDRM S, 
garage, 
Ige deep 
tot. 
$95 mo 
D rectiy 
across st from 
Wayne's Mfg. 
1817 
S. 
Reservoir 
E 
Pomona 429-6690 
PA R T LY furnished 
1 
bdrm horn* 
on rear 
Carpeted, ceramic tile In 
k itch and bath 
Ideal tor a worn 
an 
Good area 
$65 per mo 
Wa 
ter paid NA 3-303* 
___________ 
3 BDRM . hardwood firs, 
garages, 
patio, 
fenced 
mo. water Pd 
1490 
Pomona. 9*3-4746 
iwyw 2 STORY Older 
baths, 
turn 
or 
Center 
_ .......... 
_ _ 
FRONT duplex, lovely 2 bedrm 
hath 


CLEAN I bedrm apt. Fresh paint, 
wash-dry facilities. $77 mo Water 
pd 
Adults, ro pets 
629 2450 
ATTRACTIVE U P P E R 1 bedrm 565 
Hdwd firs, tile, no children, 1047’rb 
S Reservoir. Key at 1069. 


s w r a c HELO R unit in duplex $49.SO 
per mo All util pd 18924 Kadota 


2 BDRM, carpets. 
Central location 
after 3:30 p.m. 
THE ORIENT 
2 bdrm, btt-in stove-oven, refrig, 
carpets, 
drapes 
pool, 
air 
cond.j 
No pet« 
51J0 San Bernardino St, 
Mtclr. NA 4-3*15 
★ HEART OF POMONA^ 
XX 1st VAC AW: IBS IN MONTH 


C LAREM O N T NO OF FO O THILL 
Soaclous 
3 
bedrm, 
? bath 
dish­ 
washer, central heating and cooi 
Irg 
Lge patio, heated pool. Out 


Standing toe 
nr 
Be’sy 
Ross 
and 
Griswold'» 
Adults, 
no pets. 
Util 
Pd $240 mn 422 2319 
_____ 
PARK VIEW APTS. 
Now renting 
1-2-3 BR. 
All electric. 
All built-lns 
in­ 
cluding 
dishwasner 
washe- 
and 
dryer! 
Heated 
poo!, 
drapes, w w 
carpet, garbage 
disposal. Plus — 2 baths1 
Corner of White and Hayes 
La 
Verne 
• • • 
593-7649 
BIG AND BEAUTIFUL 
Heated 
pool, 
2 bedrm, 
2 baths, 
HUGE master bedroom with walk 
In 
wardrobe 
cioset 
All 
deluxe GERM AN 
feature, w-w carpeting and drao 
erieis. 
Bui't-in 
range 
and 
oven 


GERM AN 
Shepherd, male, 9 
old, 
all 
shots 
and 
Mcer.se. 
Good watch dog. 987 <257 
SM ALL 
male 
dog 
free 
to 
homu, Chihuahua and Peke 
Good 
comp 
for 
older 
person 
593-3756 
GOLDEN LABRADO R P U P P IE S 
7 W E E K S OLD, $25 
985-7303 


RUM M AGF SALE 
By Pomona Lion* Host Club 
rar JJ-14 
215 Pom orajM all West 
m os'CARRl-TS, installar has 
ito v ny. 
! SG 'xJL1 99 
Yd 
Cyrrnljt 
Services, 
i 423-6732, or eves, 981-453? 
★ ROCK SHOP ★ 
Findings. 
DiHlahlng grits, rough 


rock, tools and machines 
Green’s 


Lapldarv at Green's Trai'er Sup 
F y* i xO N 
Benson af Holt, Ont. 
W ARNING 
K IR B Y 
O W N ERS 
- 
You 
ro u " 
ear>-el ynur 
lifetime 
war-anty 
by 
letting 
some unau* 
tror zed agency repa.r it with for- 
tign parts, 
POMONA V A L L E Y K IR B Y 624-4240 
ELECTROLUX VACUUM 
Rebuilt 
i ft 


N ICE 
a k c 
Basset femaie 
p u ppy 
P ossible show qualify, term s 
Also, 
sm all, gentle Japanese Soanlei, no 
papers. 627-1187 after 5 pm________ 
H A PP IN ESS 
s 
a 
ooodie 
ouppv 
Our 
cup runneth 
over 
Adorable 
AKC miniature 
groomed. 7 wks 
62 4 4794 orJ199 3270 
______________ 
R EG IS TER EO 
white 
Poodtos, 
1 
mate, 
l 
f»mate, reasonable 
626 


b o x e r 
p u p s 
a c k r<.g 
Beautiful B R U N S W I C K POOL TABLES 


lik# new, 2 year guran- 
_ 
, r -Y $12*8 
Ffer F R E E Home 
Tr ai call 627 5111. or 9*6-507, dir. 


show quality. 
r»g 
champion stock 
Rn- 1967 M O DELS 
all accessaries *27$ 
duced *0 $4 5 
Must fell. 987-2301 -100 Far C»m_ /ir«n., M2 0922 Deafer 
POODLES 
595 23*0’ 


*2 M W 2 ._ 
_ 
_ 
2 BR $88 ★ 1 BR $76 
Utils t> d 
760 E. 2nd 
Adult* 
CASA BONITA APTS. 
206 E. Atvarada, Pom. Excoetton 
Igr 
single 
Gas 
and A D U L T S 


LU XU R IO U S all n»w 
bedrm 1 
story apts. 
Beautiful 
carpet rg, 
and deluxe feature 
7 H EA T ED POOLS 
2 Bd $94 50 Unf 7 Bd 
$87 50 unfurn 1 Bdrm 


1 and 2 
H U R R Y ! 
furniture 


PATIOS 
$11* 50 turn1 
SID’ 50 furn 


Iiv room, bit in butler pantry. A ll 
newly decorated. $125 mo. 
FLAMINGO APTS. 
(2 blocks W. of Sears. Cali NA 
2-2*5? for appt ) 
1191 E. Pasadena 


AKC TOY 
A p r i c o t _________________________ 
yWkwnoPDPP 
Co* e 
p it, 
regis 
ter»d 
Excel wo'k ng dog or com j 
panton. NA 7-1226 
SH E PH E R D , 
female, 4 
months old 
Wonderful disposition 
All shots 
*20 
626 0766 
i 
Lovers—K-ng ""Cobra1 
Guppies, 
tanks, 
Stlem 
Giant 
Pump. Dvna Flo filter _984 4470 
LABRADOR R E T rT e V IP'S 6 weeks 
old 
Taking 
orders 
AKC 
E«ce' 
line. 629 4903 eves. 
P R E E 
S'* pupp.es 
5 male, 1 femaie 
AM fuzzy. 
628 8075 


★ 
S. KONI KAI ★ 
on Reservoir 
to U11-1135 E 
W on 7th 
7th St. 
ally 
nice 
water paid 


Cail 


•»ten 
pr-ce 
629 


3 
Bdrms 
dm, } 
poo , fenced 
yard. 
O W N E R , 
s 
firepl, 
.68?. 
_ j 
3 
BED ROOM 
HOME. 
20x20 
famdv room with built in bar, 
2 
baths, 
near 
new 
carpeting- 
hardwood 
f oors, 
20x40 
heated 
a d 
fiittrtd 
pool 
wHh 
slide. 
C ost to Euclid 
Ave, 
Upland, 
Owner will sell tof 
FH A ap­ 
praisal of $26,0C0 
Can 623-4583, 
Ontario Realty, 1052 W 
4th St, 
On'ario 
Open 
*til » 
pm 
¡ 
SELL, TRA D E O R T e AS6--heavv 
share roof, atrium entry, 4 bdrms, 
19 
master 
bdrm, sume- J » iths, 
covered rear pa?¡o tn tencfd vo 
East 
of 
UPlanf 
near 
Choffev 
Coi'ege. $35,50C 
IT T dm or leas# 
at $225 (2)31J3 1 9477_____________ 
N E W 
custom 
mgaallton 
borne 
bdrms, 
»antasti 
k tcfl 
wtm 
* 
bit ins serv po* :h, tarn rm, ore x- 
fast bar, din rm 
i»e IW rm w- 
fireol, 7 baths, w-w carpets, 7 P* 
t.os, 
attach 
d ti 
oar, 
a<r 
co« • 
sorklrs, 
'anc. 
aid fenced 
4, 
N 
Third 
Ave 
or call 


builder 982 58 . __________ 


5 7 /i 
and 
1 
hndrm 
duplex, 
3 
car 
aar 
$?4,T00. 
By 
owner 
723 E 
K m g sley Aye , Pom 
LOCK ‘NG 
for 
depreciation 
write 
o't 
H#vg 7 apt houses, can w r'*e 
ptf 
$500*1 p*-r 
y r . 
A ls o 
n e ts 
12'-. 
Phone for particulars. Broker. 626- 
'9 ‘ 
or 1213 ) 339-3101______ 
D -f’t. EX plus 7 apts. Drive by >4 
f 
Lincoln. Near Garev. O 
clsturb occupants. To see. 622-2493 
4 P' E X — Bv Owner, lge 1 hed-m 
un ?s Carpets, drapes, redec, Good 
r>-fi*e 
builder. 
Incrme 
$365 
mo. 
L o w 
dn 
Pr.ce $31.950 Apt 
A 
857 
S 
Palomeres 
Pomona,________ 
2 " BD RM ~HOU5 E 
AND D U PLE X 
|r 
m e 
$215. 
Price 
*i»,s:o, 
628- 
371C. _ 
4 UNITS 
HOUSE 


Stations Available in 
Pomona, Covina 
FOR C O M PLET E INFO CALL 
J 
Gordon 
Prisbrey, 
(714) 
774-0800 
After 
6 pm and weekends, resi- 


Classified Ads Get Results 


2 double 
vd. 
$140 ___ 
Bonnie Brea. S68 50 


Available April 1. 
3 biedrm, l 'j 
unfurn. 
70* 
W 
NA 8-1232 
duplex, tovtly _ 
ew carpet* 
near 
Staters. 
N. Garev store, ideal for retired 
coup!». 626 0733 after 7 p m 
Ct.AREM O N T-3 
bdrms, 
2 
baths, 
wailed va-d fruit trees. Mt. View 
school Call 593-6343 
, ______________ 
4 BD RM ON 
ACRE 
or 
more C O M PLE T E LY 
m Chmo area 
Rent or lease with 
OPf>on (28 0097 


Gas 
„ 
Adult ~ __________ 
* * 1 BED R M D U PLE X APT Ww 
AM furn 
hdwd flrt., $60 Util. Pd 
if 
desired 
Nr. 
Mai! 
NA 2 49)9 
3 
ROOM 
newly 
painted, 
adults, no nets 
Close to bus and 
stores 
Util 
Pd, 
near 
Orange 
Grove and N. Garey 
Ino at 1432 
N 
Gordon St., or call NA 3 1538 
or NA « 3542 after 5 


NA 3-3753 


3 ROOM furn apt. Block to mar-, 
ker. 
$40. 
Pensioners 
prefer-«) 
62 2-1 776 
_ 
_ ...... 
. 
] 
28' 
FURN 
hie 
trailer 
Sé 5 
mo 
2 
mo* in adv 
222 E 
Foothill, Po 
mona, So 67, Pom 593 7643 


; Real Estate Exch. 
27 


BEA U T 3 bdrm, 2 ba'hs, lg# 
rm, dining rm, kltch, blt-ins, guest 
house with kltch, cov patio, trees, 
, nr schit, stores 
NA 4*691. 10015 
Ramona. Monticlar. 
__ 
4 BDRM, 
IN 
bath 
home, btt-iiia.i 
FA h»at, hardwood floors, 2 car 
gar, fenced yard 
Located on qui-i 
»t dead red st 
Yorha school dist 
2251 Munster St., $’40 
Key at 776 
Lasena f t lust around the corner. 
L Y 3-1037 
j 
,1 
BEDROOM 
house, 
water 
anQ 
trash paid 
$70 mn 
retired cou-| 
pie preferred 
1129 6 . 9th, Pom. 


furnished 
bachelor 
1 bdrm apts 
Util F R E E I 1360 
3rd St , P omona. 622-6502___ 
ïïv 543 W ASHINGTONr t 
bedrm, util LEH IG H T ER R A C E Apts 
Pd, no children or peti, S7S, Call 
622-5761_________ ____________________ 


ALSO 
1 
and 
2 
bdrm 
duplex 
apts 
with 
all 
above 
features 
from 
SBv 50 
★ DESERT PALMS ★ 
500 San Francisco 
ADULTS 
NA 3-3753 
VERMONT APTS. 
2 BFD RM 5, $«5 and UP 
M GR _15S6 S Garev, Apt. B, Pm a 
4 6 
I 
ANO 2 bedrms, 
1 
and 7 
baths, 
turn 
or 
unfurn. 
Carpets 
drapes, bit-ins. pool 
From S8V.5C 
Adults. 
535 
W. 
Alpine, 
Upland. 
Apt A 
«82-1006. 


WESTWOOD 


P R IV A T E G A RD EN S 
Brand 
new 
1-2-3 
bedroom 
with 1-2 
3 baths in NE 
Po­ 
mona Each is a pvt single story 
Vitla wdh patio and rear ya-o 
Beautiful 
individual entry 
way 
to each through separau 
gard­ 
ens 
2 car garaqe 
**ith door. 
BRO N ZE 
M ED A LLIO N 
w.th 
superb 
C H R Y SLE R 
A IR T E M P 
air conditioning 
and the latest 
F R IG ID A IP E 
electric 
range 
and 
dishwasher 
Also 
drap*d, 
carpeted, and completely sound­ 
proof. You really must see the 
outstanding elegance of these un­ 
usual 
residences. 
Located 
on 
San Bernardino Ave, lust 2 blks 
West of Indian Hill Pomona. 


AKC REG. 
: Sm all 
Reas 
POODLES 
|93 1707 


From »134 
624-5140 


Bv owner. 
Each 
ins, 
range, 
w w 
Locked gar. New, 
location 
Monthly 
pr re $46 060 515-797$ 


2 
bdrms, 
built* 
carpets, drapes, 
choice P om ona 
gross *465 
Full 


N EW 3 bedrm and huge family rm 
nome, 2* ? baths and oversize gar. 
21OC sq ft 
Claremont school dist 
Ow n« will trade equity of aporex 
$80QQ for m obile home or ? offer. 
Clor«mont Realty 
313 W 
Bonita Ave 
Claremont *?4:3«75 
---- 
•?« 4*51 
Eves. NA 3-4925 FOR SA LE or rent -2 bedrm horn# 
near 
downtown 
Pomona, 
Newly 
carpeted 
and 
decorated. 
$11 900. 
Easy terms, or $95 per mo rent 
M>4 Wnconson Ave 
YU 5-4019 or 
Y U 5-4*2*. 
___ 


l^large 2 bedrm. 
Centrally 
located 
north 
of 
Holt 
Ave . 
Pomnra 
Nice 
large yard 
Rent *125. Call 
O l i n 
C o n s t r u c t io n 
Sat and Sun 624-8310 


★ BACHELOR APT. FURN 
New, modern, very 
clean, quiet,! 
pool, carport, $7$ mo , water do 
41*0 Mission Blvd 
(E . 5th A ve J j 
1 B ED R M turn. Adults, all utilities! 
Included 
$80 
2nd floor or 
resi­ 
dence 
Close In 
NA 9 7717 
N IC E L Y 
furnished 
2 
room 
up 
stairs 
Outsid» 
entrance 
Senior 
clt ten ladv. $50 mo util Pd 
No 
children 
or 
pets 
51S 
E. 
Pasa 
pena St 
______ ___________________ 
STUDIO apt nr Monterey and White 
Newtv 
pamted 
Single adult. *40.- 
624-0794, *24-t4"8 


owner- 


LENDER'S 
REPOSSESSIONS 


F A N T A S T I C T E R M S 
OPEN HOUSE 
1391 W . Arrow Hwy, Upl. 


o r c a ll 


L e n d e r 's A g e n t 


9 8 5 - 4 6 1 7 


Lots 
19 


Inflation? - Taxes? 
Builders - Specu afors 
CHECK THIS 
V* 50c PER SQ. FT. 
100x420 ft. lot. 
Zoned 
R -3-1000. 
Pom 
for 
40 
Income 
units 
2 
older rentals cn property now. 
, 
Full pnee *21,000 terms. 
KEN WALSH 
LEGTERS REALTY 
565 E. Holt Ave , Pom. 
NA 9-5219 
E V E S, NA *7826 
LIVE IN ONE-RENT ONE 
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 
$12,500 


2 story with 
b«lrooms 
upstair* 
Located good N E 
Pomona area 
A coat of uaint outside will metre 
this an investment worth consid­ 
ering 
Call 
Jo# 
Burrous 
623-3441 
or eves 629 090» 


4 Locations to Serve You 
Main Office 200 W HWt Pomona 
2030 N G A R EY POMONA 
700 f 
F Of) T MIL I 
POMONA 
•970 C EN T RA L AVE , MONT. 


id R j 
LOT in Upland 
Xlnt loca 


tion 
Must sell. Make offer. Cat! 


V. ,r> r ri. 985 287’ 
P 2* 
Room 
tor 9 
units. 
Oh]®''®- 
i f i OCX; 
Cali after 5 p.m. 626*7463 
Of 624 71*8 


P VT P T Y W ANTS R-1 tot. 60 « 120* 


*n 
nice 
neighborhood 
Approx 


$4500. 628*7*9 after S:30- 
..... 1 
T.~.r,c 


F O U R C-l tot* together or separate REALTORS 
betw 
market 
and 
drlve-ln 
4331 
Descanso. SW _£h ino. 62*-774*.___ , 
i| L I S M 
5» tfy tS Business-Industrial 
high school. *4600, casm *4000 and 
take over **6o" bat. 626-6621. 


NA 3-3441 


inquire about our trade in program 
RAY LEV IC K REALTO R 
1803 N Garev, Pomona. 622-6659 _ 
W E 
make trade* 
anywhere, 
any- 
d r-e. anytime, ohone us day o 
n.qht 
Metropolitan Realty, Harry 
.Mess»ng*r. Rea tor, 627 4039 


Real Estate Wtd. 
28 


Small Rest Home or 
Sanitarium 
Box 1047, Palm Springs, California 
IMMEDIATE 
$$ CASH $$ 
For your equity 


1 
D A Y 
S E R V IC E 
C A LL U N IT ED R E A L T Y 
626-1241 
560 E. FO O TH ILL BLVD . 
POMONA 
___ 
S CASH S 


In 24 Hour* 
l^NET CASH TO YOU 
(X W E PAY ALL COSTS 
1^15 DAY LISTINGS 
^GUARANTEED SALE 
iX W E TRADE 
I^FREE APPRAISAL 
HARTIN REALTY 
627-3567 


4 bedrms. $110 
to i Serrano». (213 ) 443*171____ 
3 
BD RM 
HOUSE 
tor“ lease 
l's 
baths 
*130 mo 
*50 claamng fee 
Call for appt. 629-0344____________ 


BRAND NEW 


Compietety and 
Beautifully Furnished 


S IN G L E S - 1 
B E D R O O M 


Low -Daily-Weekly 
Mo. Rate* 


h o u s e f o r r e n t -p o o l . 
*115 MONTH 
626-2543 B E F O R E 9 A M 
? 
BEDROOM S. 
2 
Children, 
first 
and 
last 
month, 
$75 
cleaning 
charge, $60 month 
Inquire at 265 
South Reservoir, Apt 
9, Pomona 
'2 
B E D R M 
D U P L E X , 
G A RBA G E 
I DISP 
I N 
Park, Pomona 


L a r g e 
3 
b e d rm , 
»71 W 2nd, Pomona _ _ 
back 
yard, 


595 8772 
dtocide 


e f r e e u t i l ' t e s 
i F R E E PA R KIf.G 
e HEATE 
• MAID I 
e LIN EN S a v a i l a b l e 
e TV PHONE SER V IC E 


2 bedrm,I 
2 
bath 
studio 
apts 
C a r p e t s.I 
drapes, air-tord, end patio, heat-i 
ed 
pool 
Furn 
and 
unfurn 
Inq. 
10371 
Lehigh, 
Montclair. 
624- 5833 
SHERRY PLAZA 


$80 UP 
A! SO W F E K IY RATES 
UTH S PA ID IF D FSIR ED 
+ C A R PET S & D R A PES 
* POOL 
AiR COND 
W BUILT-INS 
+ 34-HR 
LA UN D RY 
FA C ILIT Y 
W S E P ADULT SECTION 
W LO V ELY GROUNDS 
NA 2-3701 
Mgr—Apt 16 
548 E Phillips 


KING’S COURT 
APARTMENTS 
Now Available 
Air Conditioned 
Furnished-Unfurnished 
Bach lor s, 1 and 2 Bedrooms 
RENTS FROM 574.50 
12131 Yorba Avenue, Chmo 
628-0625 


LOOKING FOR 
AN APARTMENT? 
Pomona Properties now renting 
W 2 Bedrm *90 
♦ W w carpi ts 
a Enel garages 
* Bui ' ns 
a Air c and f ned 
a Garbage Disposal 
a Heated pool 
a Drapes 
a Pvt laundry rms 
a Two bedrms 
a Fenced yards 


Poodles, AKC, Black 
Min , 3 mos old.__________ 59V 4665 
PUREBRED BEAGLE 
I P i yrs 
$20___ 
624-6876 
W IR E H A IR E D Terrier.' female. 
18 
mos old, registered 
Good watch 
dog 
$25. 624 4316. 
G ERM AN S H EP H E R D PU P 
9 wks. 
old, female. 
$20 _______ 
629- 5669 
YOR K IE S , AKC, 
has 
shots, 
good 
‘ with 
children. 
Would 
make 
an 
j idaal 
Easter 
Gift. 
(213' 
964 3143 
★ PUPPIES ★ 
Femaia Min Dachshund 
626*766 
B A P K L E S S B A S E N JIS AKC 
Pups, adults, stud service 
i 
P»f or show quaMty 428-1500 
TOY C O LLIES — Shetland sheen 
dno 
AKC reg 
Champion elf—dale 
v ik ng 
tire 
326 " B " 
E. 
Acacia, 
Ontario 
AKC Toy Pood e*. a* stud 
61* to 
i 944 m 
a-i coles including dark 
apricot Also puppies 628 «856 


C U L L U M A u c t io n S e r v ic e 


i«.c 
T ® *'* m Pom ona V a ile v " 
1*55 Grier, Pomona 
NA 2-766) 
C H ILD R EN 'S T ov* we Wed F R E E I 
No Purchase Nec»ssary 
D IC K * M U F F L E R S E R V IC E 


1 4 0 9 W . 
H o lt 
O N T A R I O 
62« 0681 
or 986 8*67 
W EST ER N clothing, boots, m o cci 
Sifis^ sadd'es, halters, vet supplies 
F 
. Stetier 5226 " b " St. Chmo 
U PH O LST ER Y run down« Let us 
££i;0Vl r 1 
new 
p s’ber and 
son 
Our own work. 599 3874 


S E W I N G M A C H I N E S 
Freight clean 
j brand new 
196* 
ayfwnat'C ■' g rag sawing mach.nes 
Slight base damag» 
$36 50. 5 yr 
T?rrr,6 
avaliaWe. 
Call 
772 5370 
anytime, 
for 
free 
homp 
demonstration. Or caU 
(211) 442- 
64 vi 


C A R P E T S 
Have th# best in caroet* at whole­ 
sale pr.ee 
Many colors 
tt 25 »a 
and uo. 622-0444 _ 
’ * 
va- 
V D8L C R Y PT a? 8e*!evue Mauso­ 
leum in_Ont. Reg price *1025. asu- 
599-4^15 eve» 
or 
mg 
*900 cash, 
wkends 
Sewing Machine Rental 
Rent 
chine 
® r e * T96* sewing ma- 
, Only 
is 
ppr 
month 
-I r*:9M St(tCh 0r ¡ g 
Fm» 
‘’’f i “ ® •'Ni de..very. Call any- 
° r YU 3' 3cn' 


AKC 
PEKINGESE PUPS 
reg 
and 
farm*. 
NA 
2-2353 


L u ro n V in y l L in o le u m 
. Sharp patterns to choose from, 
Reg U 95 now »2 «5 p*r so. yd 
w S 3. L P A IN T S T O R E 


g-f. N 
G A R E Y 
P O M O N A 
POMONA GUN S H O P 
Hundreds 
of rew and 
used 
gun* 
Gunsmith on Premise* 
... 
Himftng Licenses 
" 
Ho’f 
__________ 629-0316 
Miscellaneous 
56 


At the following locations 
_ 
902 E 
Grand. Rom 
»29-1081 
1306 5 San Antomo, Pom, 673 3681 
4575-4741 Cancga, Mtclr, 
626 7»06 *95 
1166 S 
Reservoir, Pom 
»23 3880 


K EN M O RE 
washer, 
excel 
shar- 
$50, 
mi sc 
lumbar, 
2x6'*, 
2*4 . 
4x4's 
and 
3*8's, 
cheap 
672 9688 
T EN T —N EW 
to* ’ ? s, wai 
_______________________________626-6090 
V IN Y L 
linoleum 
tile 
carpet 
in 
stalled 
Low prices 
Your mat0- a 
or 
mine 
R ch. 627-ÎV89 or 
f • d 
627 2 9 3 * ................................. 
Y A RD SA LE -eve'»thing go*s You' 
price it' Sat 
-Ml day 
2:107 Hid 
den Pines Dr , Diamond B-n 
PaTIO 
SA LE, 
refrg. 
tu rn 
some 
aru que*, 
glassware 
and 
dishes 
Si* and Sun 
12 noon 5 p m , 2625 
j Hgmlock Wav, Pomona 
Q U J E T 
ROOM, 
GAR AGE 
NO Y E GAR SA L E i - Furn, c shev 


Resort Prop.—Rent 38 


■ HAVASU~LAKE — Lovely new" 3, 
i Bedrm 
home with beat slip. $40 
we#* end *125 wx 
879 0411. 


Furnished Rooms 
39 


S M O K E R S ,'U ; 
MONTH. 
7 ÍI 
E 
] K IN G S LE Y 622-0363 
$8 W K. 
Furnished rooms 
La^ge 
Clean, 
quiat 
Good 
neighborhood 


ID ^ W iM M IN G POOL 


Rentals To Share 
36B 


U . 
U H - V I» , 
v n a m e a t a . 
. 
G IR L ' to »har# "apt wife same. $75 
p#id' >;s 453 Townhouse Pomona i241St-ít?r 5 and 


tose In 
Men only. »01 N. G mbs. 
ROOM—Clo*e in, private entrance. 
Man ontv. Appiv cottage in rear, 
617 W. 4th St . Pom 
STUDIO apartment with fireptace, 
utilities 
paid, 
outsua 
entrance 
$15 week 
NA 9-2366 
F Ü ÍN sleeping 
rm 
Util pd 
See 
after 
4:30 
pm. 
529 
W 
On tarto. 
YOUNG 
working 
man 
or 
toHege 
$75 
student to share 4 bedroom. 2 bath PATIO 
house 
with 
3 of 
same 
672 7001 
LA R G E well turn, twin beds, pvt 


i#*s^2 BDRM . 
fenced 
$80 month 
Pomona._______________ 
V E T * — 
10 QUV. 
■ng, log 


1379 W 5th Ave Pomona UNENCUMBERED working uri to Olin ent Off g assed-in polio. 1C43 
* J 
' 
snare ayt 
Rets exchanged 
Up W 4th St, Pomona 
land 982 4388 morning* only I POMONA Dunfs n 
629-6285 


25 
Sale— Lea*e— Wanted 
CLAREMONT 


Elevate 
thov* 
thoughts 
and 
think m terms ot owning *©rr,e 
of this great land of ours. Th.s 
HO 
tt 
frontage 
Foothill 
B vd 
by 
269 
deep. 
C t 
zon<* 
Sale 
price $55,000. I0*o discount for 
cash. 
Refer No 262 
5067 HOLT, MTCLR. 
NA 4-0041 
W EHARTi 
R 
E A 
L T 
Y 
f 


NA 4-3521 
NA 4-3561 


PUD D iN GSTO N E H ILLS, lake view! 
tot 
One 
acre. 
392 Cannon 
Awe, ¡¿~f 


M-1 & T-3 
Approx 
2 acres 
796 ft frontage 
Excei toe for small industry. Good 
term s available. 


Commercial Corner 
Zoned C-4 including a o. *38 ccm- 
mercial 
blog 
and 
a 
3 
b e d 'cum 
, house Pfited tor quick sate. 
BOB RICHAROS 
NA 2-1121 
Day or Knight 
i 
PRO FESSO N A L O F FIC E B l DO 
®n 
Ind an 
Hill 
corner 
n e a r 
S«ars. 
to ts of 
paved 
parking 
Good investment, use part, rent 
pari 
*75,500 
Submit 
t e r m s . 
A<^*nt 627-1371 _ 
!M 1 A R EA machine ^hoy 
1000 ft., 
*95. 
Only 
one 
available, 
worth 
1 your 
call, 
W >tl 
snow 
anytime 
Owner (213) ED 7 6303 or 627 ¡233 


WILL PAY CASH 
For equity In your horn* 
Call Joe 626 4714 agt. 
WE SPEAK SPANISH 


ATTENTION: 
CASH quickly for 
Free 
appraisal 
— 
Montclair Home Owner* I 
C A LL B IL L —424 0016 
Advance Realty Company 
! 
5 rA$H N C H FOR YOLJR HOVF $ 
We pay ait cost*! Ask about our 
guar, sale and tradem programs 
NA 4-0041 
G EN F HART R E A LT Y INC. 
5067 Holt, Montclair 


your Eoulty 
Fast 
Strvica 


• WE BUY HOMES 


as Es- 
Arm#d 


San Dimas, 599-10*4._________ 
W6- S E L L lot 18, Mt 
Sprir 
ta,e*. La Verne In toothilis 
guard, uvt streets, pd TV cable, 
16 000 
*0 
ft. 
*9,000. 
Pvt 
pty, 
(714) 424-9523 


Acreage—Ranches 
20 


3 BD RM house on approx t acre 
In 
Wamut. 
IlS,000, 
SI.90C down 
62* 4186 
_____ 
A C RE vew tot on Bette Vista 
St , Alta t orna. 2" wafer line with 
rainbirds installed around property 
Entire tot level, Ayyru* 20 vcwng 
trees pointed. *15.000 622 4391, 


FOR R FN T lot 60x150 tented 
E M issi >n. Pomona. 
427 4970 
_________ 
9th 


• Immediate confidential «ervica 
• No matt« r how far back in 
defau'l 
• We per ail cost* 
• - • 
Cali Day or N gM 
624 869? or YU 4-3.7 


Free rent if you 
View home, w w carpet 
burning f replace, deluxe| 
planning, 
ail 
king 
sze 
bdrm* 
central 
hall, 
master bath, 
sharp 
queens 
kitchen. 
Good 
tocatton ; 
Pay $83 94 per mo 
both P and 
t 
No pmtx for 60i days 
Delaney, | 
(213J_ 337-6267_ or_ >213)_33f 1124. _ 
• 3 BD RM , *115 month, fst and 
last n'Os rent 
Hdwd firs, garage 
Children OK 
Tampa St., Pomona 
(213) 255 2614._____________ 
i 
2 BFDROO M . close in 
Adult* 
No 
pets $100 month 
_ _ 
629 6660__________ 
I 
S A LE - or Lease. 4 Bedrm , crpts , 
drapes, tk* bath 
Fncd 
Yd 
Scr 
pat o 
cooiar. 
bit ms. 
Nr, 
Pom 
$155 after 4 30 
LY 3-2719 
N ICE 4 bdrm home, family room. 
1 *, 
baths, 
fenced 
v d , 
nr, 
scls. 
Water pd 
Lease *175 mo 
Avail 
March 
12 
Set after 
5 pm . 
at 
1317 W 
Uth St , Upland_______ 
3 B ED R M home 
Westmont area 
Block wail in back yd 2 car gar 
Nice 
patio 
Walking 
distance 
to 
Gen. 
Dynamics, Grammar 
tc h l. 
and church Avail. March 15. *121 
Call after 5 p m 
NA 3 5623. 
O LD ER 2 B E D R M ,“ Spanish stucco 
near 5th and Reserygir 
*85 mo. 
B IL L ZEMAN R EA LTO R. 
622-5231 
2 BR dean, adult* 
No Pe|s 
C®r- 
ivt and drapes 
Garage 
68_ S “ 
f ranoscg, 
*85 
mo 
Key, 
NA 
2 -302 or 
YU 
2 8187 ______ 
J AND~4 SO R M —hou*es. *160 mo. 
Chmo area. 
Call 627 1021 after $ 
. 
O LD ER 3 bdrm, 1 
bath 
Carpet*, 
drapes, (crgened patto, lanced yd. 
NE 
$130, 622 0774.___________ ___ 
D U P L E X - A ll 
electric 
2 
bdrm*, 
T j 
baths, 
w-w 
carpet, 
draoe», 
Wator Pd $119. mo 5393 Maitland. 
Ont 
Appt 
NA 6 53*6 
_ 


W ANTED lady to »hare my home 
1710 W 9th 
Nr bus line and GD 
*100 mo. NA 2-0*34. 


by dav or week 


1 btock from General Dynamic« 


27' 
HOUSE 
Trailer 
Clean 
Ctose 
to mkt and dfV bus 
$75 mo. all 
util pd Inquire 1094 E Fifth A ve, 
Pomona 
623-2915 
SOUNDPROOF 
Front and rear doer*, tike home 
Hardwood, 
tile, 
aircond 
POOL 
Adults 
Laundry 
I 
b<k 
to 
Holt. 
Single $85 
2- Br 
*115. 
Spacious 
LA U R EL PALM S, 1446 Laurel A ve 
$79.50 
Cory 1 bedrm furn ear Private 


northwest 
corner. 
Pipeline. 
132'x156‘ 
to the ce»mt» 
Low 
taxes. 
Good potent ai 
Now 
has old house rente). Sacrifice bv 
owner. $10 9 50 , 626-108» 
________ 
s«ep«y»For rent 
Amsrox 1800 to ft 
bidg *135 month 958 L HeU Ay#, 
Pornoru) 622-8931. 
M-1 
Zone, 
tcntr j| 
tot 
Concrete 
biurk 
bidg 
1056 sa ft 
3 pn-,se 
wiring, heating 
and In*«!, Oriva- 
fn door 
6)9 6989 
6 23 7 622. 


h* v# .200 SQ FT new .nasenry buiio 
ing 
Stri-et 
frontage. 
M l 
11/0 
Price Si. (nr. Sears). Mr. Beck 
■ 629 7522 
___ 


761 
L lW I* R E A L tV e p . 
_ 
and CASH in I to 3 days tor homes 


11 ACRES 
, 
. 
15x50 
already X0'*5O 


NEW • 
For Retail 
Concrete bl 
12'x38‘ —450 


RENT • LEASE 
Mfgr, or Industrial 
i -mfg.—M l 
M 2 I n# 
sq ft 
3 ph» air *5» >0 


this area 
W II pay all cash net 


to you 
No deductions 
No reduc­ 
tions My offer In 2* mln 
GIIMORE. 624-6060 


$-- $— $ 
CASH NOW 
FOT YOUR HOME 
Free Aopral*al-Fast larvica 
Call NA 3-4381 
(Pomona Realty Company) 


$ — 
$ — 
a 


158 W. WILLOW 
4 room cottage, carp port, ctose 
to market 
Vacen» March 10 
$7$ i 
C 
h 
Reeve». >7/1 D N 
622-4065 or 629-8113. 
3 B E D R M D U P L E X , l>q bath», R-O, 
DW, carpat», draito*. pvt vd-patto, 
$135 
Lease only 2031 A Via Lido, 


1 blk NW Frwv and Towne Avt 
W? BR O LD r R 
Reatonable re#rt. 
NA 
2 0742 
anytime 
A BD ELLA . 
REA LT O R a 
____ 
2 BD RM house, dean, fenced 
Hdwu 
firs 
2 
children 
OK 
rage 
Water pd 
*60. Rear of 1/48 
W 
9th or 2nd nous* East Brian's 
Grocery, north Central A vt 
Clair 
L Y 5 1771______ 
j 


4 BDRM , 2 baths 
blt-in*j family| 


entrance lovely grounds 
Adult 
and children sections 
All utili­ 
ties paid. At»o weekly and semi 
monthly rates. 
1449 East " D " 
Street. Ortar.o, 984 8121._____ 
★ TAHITI VILLAGE 
f aautitul toe and small 3 o#u m, 
bath apt, air cond, lge heat 
ad 
pool 
with 
diving 
board, 
budMn 
rente 
and rtfrlg, car­ 
pets 
and 
d rapes, 
soundproof, 
pr y patio and garden. Shuffle 
board 
and 
volleyball 
courts 
Recreation 
buildtog, 
garage 
and »foraoa. No pets. $79 $0 UP 
________ NA 2-0215 pr 431-3166 
**s»| ATTRACTIVE FURN. APT. 
Children OK. No pets 
<17.50 up 1390 E. 5th, Po m ____ 
CONVENIENT LOCATION 
Air cond 1 and 2 bdrm apt», 
furn Walking distance to dntwn 
Pom 
Cloved gar 
with storegt 
»pac . Lge swim pool heated. 
BROMLEY VILLA 
6»4 N Park 
(Just 1 btock N of Holt) 


Unfurnished Apts. 
37 


CLAREM O N T, 
lge 
QUlat 
T bdrm 
with vd 
Adults, no pets 
737 W 
Harrison A ve, inq, 729 W Harrison 
TOWNE A VE North- of Fwv~ 2 bed­ 
rm 
2 bath. DW, eiec range, atr 
cond $110. No pets 622 2339 
A P T S , 
newly 
cktoorated 
S 
E 
sect 
Pomona. 
*50 
to 
$60 
mo., 
water pd 
NA 2 4359 
LO V ELY 
2 
bdrm 
dupmx, 
pining 
i room, new carpets 
drapes. Stove 
optional 
Yard 
gar 
$105 
W 
Orange Grove, no pets 
NA 3 1710 
APT 
FOR R E N T ’ Unfurn.shed o' 
; partially 
furnished 
344 W. 
13th 
1 upstairs._Wat*r pd, 622 *313. 
$90 MO 
2 bedrms, Ige private pa 
tio. 
Garage. Convemtnt 
location. 
! 622-6470' 
___ 


POMONA DUNES 
Clean rooms, poo!. TV, rnasonabie 
1274 W 
2nd. 623-9255. 
ROOM W ITH KIT, pvt entr, phone 
shower, util end linens. $10-S13 wk 
2148 j ; E " , La Verne __ 
E V E R Y T H IN G turn 
Bachelor'apts 
$8 and $10 per wk. Phone NA 9- 
6984 or 623-7841.___________________ 
SAHARA HOTEL 
Ctoan rooms, shower 
TV, laundry 
room, heated pool Weekly, montht- 
ly 
447 
W 
Monterey. 
622 9165 
A W A YMCA hotel, *14 wkiy incl 
Y 
rrn-mbersnip. 
maid 
s e r v , 
com-op i#und. 
and brktast avail. 
350 N. G arev 623 4433 WWW 
C LEA N FU R N iSH E D RCOM 
Kit privileges, linens furn. 
*!0 wk. NA 3 3756 


X T . 
_ 
. _ 
. jgs 
drap#-:, blibds. useful Junqu# 
79c 
N 
Myrfie, Pom, W 
of Hamilton 
ANTIQ UE 
couch, 
carved; 
Small 
anfiqu# china cabm»! and some 
antique cha. s LY 9 jl21 
THOMAS e'ecfr-onic organ and hi 
fi 
comb 
with 
bench 
Recent'v 
tuned and new ca-fr.dge. 76C E 
Alvarado 
YA RD SALE 
12640 Yorha Street Chino 
Saturday and Sunday only 
SunkTst. D O U BLE crypt in mausoleum 
2nd 
' tier UP 
10 
below selling once 
CflJ NA I 2 791 
sat*. 
Children's 
clothes 
tires 6 50*16 
Mi* 
Sat -Sun , Mon 
667 Lorann#, Pomona 
PORT RECORD P L A Y E R 
15. For 
mica table 
* 
ch’ lrs. 
*25 
«<12 
red nylon carpet, Hd 624 / 88 
TV SET. *50 
Goif cart 
*15 " B»1 
sormg and mattress. HO 
Dnesser, 
*5 1183 E 5th, Pom 425 7828______ | 


B o t t e r ie * $ 3 .9 5 E x . U p 
1344 E . Holt, Ont 
YU 6 1207 
Dir 
IBM Exec Elect 
und*-rwr>ed man­ 
ual typewrtrs, 
10 kap elect add 
tog mach Sat pr Sun Only 626-8054 
GARAGE SALE M *- h 9 10-11 
lt- 
5 pm. :■« F. 
Pearl. NA 
2 6000 
Clothing, 
trunks, washer 
etc 


R O C K H O U N D S 
Rock 
polishers, 
cutfert, grinders 
complete 
supplies 
for 
fee 
reck- 
r»und 
and 
silversmith 
Custom 
K-vv '• iry, OP a I 
ladr 
turquoi*» 
Pc- 
n na 
Rsck 
8, 
Lapidary, 
s 
Ciark, Pomona 
429 9302. 
FOR better cleaning“ t0 "keep cof- 
5®*. ytqm m g 
use 
Blue 
lustre 
5 • ' ® * f 
cleaner. 
Rant 
eiecfr c 
$! r J * J 
Newbarrv, 
Pumqna Valiev Center 


S I N G E R A U T O M A T I C ” 
Slant needle sew mach with cab­ 
inet 
and 
guarantee. 
l * e 
rew 
Makes buttonholes, **nCy patterns', 
6 md 
hems, 
etc. 
Auiomaticaiiy' 
,N, % 
WOO 
Pius. 
Pay 
Off 
*/! 26 cash or low payments 
Co- 
¿ ^ ^ Cr 
e 
d 
i 
Z 
j 


Cameras & Equip. 56A 


C O M PLET E 
outfit— 8mm 
Cerena 
Zoom#* A-genieux 
iens 
oius 
pro. 
tector. 
editor 
and 
lights. 
Must 
624 j006^_ 


Miscellaneous Wtd. 57 


U s e d G y m E q u ip , 
Reasonable NA 3-4643 * 
G if t s 
w^ee 
school 
This 
to clean house 
f me rfi vevt 
-° '® n 
Ca(^5V3-4472_______ 
W ANTgQ 
Good 
clean 
erator* and gas ranges 
____ 
NA 9-706T 


of any typa of serviceabfe 
toys for a church nursery 
* y bur 
opportunity 
and at the same 
'he live* of chti* 


refr g. 


AC? TUVTLTfNNí c ! S $ ( ,r , 0„ 0*~ 1 
Cvtinders. 422-7079 
R E E 
pickup 
Higher 
prices 
tor 
Iron metals. AA Metal Salvage, be- 
628-6363 


Swaps 
58 


Room and Board 
40 


Room and Board-—Montclair 
Gantieman preferred 


6z6 8486 
SIN G LE, SUO 
Utiima*. air condì 
. 
. 
. 
, 
I tioning, garbage disposal, 
heated LIC E N S E D private home for eider 
pool, carport, 
mona 


6SS N. Dudley, Po , ty lady or fenttoman, 
(A (W)317. 


Ambulatory 


bdrms, 
Inquire 


A B B E Y LANE APTS 
Clean 2 bdrm - carpet, drapes, ilr 
cond 
M rs Kam ps, NA 7 985« 
3 
BD R M 
apt, 
carpets, 
drapes 
Available Marrh 
14. 
Further 
in- 
tor matton_ca11 967 2904 after 5 pm 
2 
BDRM 
aot, 
W w 
carpet.ng 
drapes, reg vi/e range, fenced vd, 
enclosed garage. Water, trash pd 
Retired or semi retired COUPle pre 
jferred. NA 9 6616 


U T IL IT IE S P A I D 
Immed occupancy 
Newer 7 bdrm 
with bit-inv 
carpets, drapes. Only 
*100 m o 400 E 
P h illip s .___________ 
f l A 
V E R N E S ’ F IN E S t • 
Newer redet, 2 hedrqo|nv, 2 baths 
Built 
ins include D ISH W A SH ER 
ADULTS 
2 
btock* 
to 
shopping 
828 M ARIA 
• 
599 2825 
SPACIOUS 1 bdrm 
with baicony. 
W-w 
carpet, 
drapes 
air 
cona 
Convenient N, Garey tocatton. *85 
593 5534 or 622 *668. 


W HY L IV E A LO N E? Lge rm, lob- 
y g iJp 
bv, TV, firepl. Maid service 
*100 
2^» \ 
mo UP 
210 S 
Fern. Ont, 9*6-925? 


S T E R E O C O N S O L E S 
1968 
Unused, Complete with new 
guarantee, 
4 speaker sound sys­ 
tem 
solid 
state 
4 $pd 
English 
changer, etc. 
tn beauhful Walnut 
cao-ne* 
Pay off 
$4? 76 or 
easy 
oayrn#n»s 
Covina 
Credit 
De»t 
(213) 331 '919 
FU R N IT U R E 
and carpet. 
Private 
party. Sat and Sun oniv 
10 a m 
to 4 P m _]248 _E_ Klngstov.__ 
N EAR 
N EW 
- 
Crown 
Elect» c 
Guitar 
and 
Amplifier 
$45 
Go 
icart, $50 
Call eves 593-1479 
W ATCH A'AXERS 
TOOLS 
— New 
bgnch, lathe ctoanmg mach, hand 
tools and parts. 
$225 
NA 2-038E 
C HIL D;Sr qR O y . ~ T Q P. D t_S K, 520 


RCA stereo comb 
$300. 


W ILL 
and 
fruck 
W ILL 


traoe 
small 
986 §487 anytime 
trad* Toy registered 


'42 
S ■ udebaker 
Lar'x 
freezer 
for 
pick uo 


j ' ? * * * 1 *as*dri#r. 62(M?65 


Í 
S 
C 
T 
E I T T * 
brnwHw 
¿ 
re. Mistión & Ramona, Pma 
Every Sat i 
*un 7 am to 3 ?» 


Business Equip. 
and Furnishings 
59 


Hotels—Motels 


H O T E L M A Y F A I R 
41 


RM SET, *l}5 
W ill con 
»«dec pavn-enH. $93 4'68 
E X C E L L E N T . ’ pMician! 
and “ eco 
nomicai. 
that's 
B u* Lustre car 
pet and upholstery f-eaner 
Re 
- 
I electric 
»hampcxjer 
*1. 
Westrrwr- 
| Hardware, 1(1) _W. 5th. Psmona 
for PVT 'P A R T Y 
must 
sacrifice 
all 
furniture and household goods to 
cludmg 25" color TV. coopet ton# 
refr g. 
almost 
new washing ma 
china, men's and women s quality 
qua ¡ty 
clothing 
and 
numerous 
misc items 6J_7_.il28 
4 .- 
CU 
F T 
Wheelbarrow 
w *h 
pneumatic L '* 
$15 
G E 
rgtrig 
10 
CU. 
ft , 
*20. 
Cooking 
with too griddle, *10 NA 4-7438 


BRAND new, lust prrived. 4 draw­ 
er 
tue 
cab,net» 
^ 
hlWi 
1 wk only *?? $n 
tow jn c*. P a t t o n 
558 E. California 


wide, $ r 
ft thl* tow 
. 
s a l e s 
c q r p 
St < Ontario 
DR 
eg s 
983-1579 
,„rC02 L E B 
m®at "case 
pgli 
egisfer, miscaiianeou^ 
Must sail. 


fit Household Furn. 
60 


Can be vour sgara bedroom 
out ot town guests 
Comfortable, 
friendly, 
clean 
and 
home 
tike 
5 ngies from *16.50 per wk. Cot 
te* shop, Pood tood, 6 am to 8 
pm daily 
Downtown 3rd and G*- 
rey. NA 2 1224._________ __________ 
POMONA DUNES By dav or week 
i -ar rooms, pool, TV. reasonable 
1274 A 
2nd. 623 9255 
S L E E P IN G AND KITCHEN UNITS 
1 
*20 wk 
*7( 
mo and up 
62? 7828 K E Y CUTTING ma^mne *nj£ mctqr, 


‘■VAI L 
table, 
lamp, 
85; 
tabi# lamp, $i5 
record Player 
ED 5 MU I 


sectional couch. 
*40, 
cor 
*20; 
goto 
ch#iub 
tabi# 
fff**! 
and 
goto 
ö*co 
Port fNUIco *te»»o 


W E S T M O N T 
— I 
and 
3 
walking distance 
to 
GD. 
14*. Valgr, Pomona 
_ 
6»'9V,.Stardust Apts.2441 Alpine SVurUnPi ^ Anoth#r AWARD WINNING POLY 


•p's 
Heated p-xsl 
2 blks W i l Eo- 
N i S I A N 
apf 
blcig 
Take 
advent 
did 
! Wk *' to Arrow tfeyy 
ot !xjr ®r t 'OP*n ,n fl-f9n-U i MV 


and $100 per mo 
985 2)02 or 9*S 


4146 


A LQVilY apt home, 1 bedrm 
furn, ail utilities Paid. 1 child ac 


It i ) E. 5th, 
Pom. 


Meat and Produce 
45 


WANT to buy fresh produce and 
fruit from farm. Call 622-9302 or 
write Post Office Box 10*9, Pom. 


small amount pi 
) 59 3 447: 


nos. 
A v a il 
to 
A pril 
t. 
800 
W. Orange 
Grove,. 
Pomona 
and ask tor Dick or call 629 
fur further Into» rnatton._______ 


$IQP ßy 
KC 


tool*. *50 
*139 30 59 3 4473 
Home Beer Bor 
I k * new. 
NA * 3*71 
e 
NOW 
adv# ' sa 
Shop, Monday thru 
* 30 and 10 am 


OI 
Frto 
on 


bw.ip 
■tar be 
k k A R 


« 
M M . . ^ 
I 
capttd 
Individually 
contro4ied 


haat 
laundromat. 14491 
panel rav 
East " p " 
THE OLINAI 


u?? Hay—Grain 
— 
Feed & Pasture 
46 


St , Ont 
Phone 9*4-*i?l! 


rm 
with 
fireplace 
Creek. 
*175 
599 4707. 


Rolling 
hilisid# 
property 
surveyed tor 3 western ranch fyp# 
homesites 
3 
to 
4 
acre 
parcels 
and owner will extend oiled road' 
to »¡las- provid# water and level NA 4-0081 
area 
tor 
buitoina 
sit# 
9 
miies 


7SO sq tt 
7000 sq ft 
MAN V O THERS A V A ILA BLE 
Lloyd * Industrial Park 
4737 Holt, Montel«lf 
bidg 
1423 E. 5th Ave, 
leas« 
A r corto. 


i;*i49 Listings Wtd. 
29 


mon, 
I »04. 
623-3441 or even.ngs at 622- 2 


4 Locations to Serve You 
M am Office 2uO w. Hoit, Ponmna 
2010 N 
G A R E V , POMONA 
* 
| . FO O THILL, POMONA 
1970 C EN TRAL 
A V I , MONT. 


REALTORS 
NA 3-3441 


1.71 feres to 
13500 down, 
balance. 


NW Chmo, A ! zone, 
sei.ar will carry the 


1 65 peres, R-4 zoning with targe 
older hr,me rgggcprttod inside and 
Out 
NW Chino aridi 
HO< ;XS OK 
Br<A#r Owner, *32 JO. 


Bill Zeman Realtor 
622-3231 


BR IC K 
bidgs, 
34x48 
M T 
$)2S 
500' cov storage btwn Didgs.j 
Rear parking. W . 2nd St 
623-3634 
1000 
& 
2000 
SQ 
F T " Industrial 
suae* 
Near 
Central 
& 
A r r o w 
H w . Call collect (21)) AT 2-1245 
N E W 
block 
building fqy 
com m er­ 
ciai 
industriai 
or 
manufacturing 
Available appro* March 1 
heated, 
* r 
C' ndii om d 
office*, 
restroom 
facilities, 
plenty 
of 
parking 
16' 
ceiling. 
S#e at 
1339 
w 
Brook*,! 


Ont 
629 0681 and »86 8867. 
| 
BOOMING ONTARIO 
For lease 11000 sq ft btdg, Hgtr 
Ave 
Retail 
whoiesato, 
or 
li#it 
Mfg. 1750 . 628 3802__ _ 
&P r 1200 SO FT- 2,300“ sq ft 
Po 
<nqna 
industrial 
Park 
1897 
Mt. 
Vernon 
Are., 
between 
Erie 
and 
Union 622 5440 __ 


REN T OR L E A S E 
ONTARIO 
100' 
) Phase power 
$69 5* 
1.200'—Naw offices 
*100 
1 400‘—Paneled ottice, pwi 
$1)5 


3,200 -Store and »hop 
$700 
2,400'—ip rk Ir» pwr 
ofti«#* 
$175 
4 800'- JC' hi tosidt, 3 pt ase, $350 
5,600'—with yard 
$250 
24,000'—I phase pwr, etc, tow rgntal 
Phone 629 4735 or 984 6759 
Courtesy to broker*. 


INSTANT CASH 


We wdi pay cash for your equi­ 
ty 
10 day service 
We pay *H 


cost* Fre# eorpetsat, tre obito* 
tton 
¿*H N * l-11ii. 


c o k I l e y r e a l e s t a t e 


1042 W 
4th s t , Ontario____ 


NEED HELP? 
TO BUY OR SELL? 


We otter exp and »aryic* in our 
cony. 
N EW 
jcafton 
at 
Indian 
hü! A Arrow 
Cti 
(a il us today: 
62 4 5064 


argmgnf. 


S., 624 


ATTENTIONS MONTCLAIR 
H O M E O W N E R S 


Our otf'ce* hay# many demand* 
for homes in your area 
Lis! with 


us and »'art packing Call Advance; 
Realty at NA 4-0CU today! 


2 
B E D R M 
house 
thermo 
service 
porch, 
trash 
paid 


10751 
Monte Vista 
6 2 2 6 561 
2 
B E D R M ] 
fenced 
yard. 
I aid 
Aduil*. »75. Monfeiato •'•* 


ve» NA b 4486 ___ 
__ 
___ _ 


2 BEDRM DUPLEX 
*22 3333___ 


2 BDRM 
* ' cond, carpets, drap*», 


builf-ins, 
lot 
of 
storage, 
fenced 


yard___________ ' 
______*22 4^0 


2 BD RM . targa, clean, fer ■ ed yard, 


qarage, 
quiet 
Near Central 
and 
Mission_NA 8 3270 
6 6 $65 
1 B E D R M house, ¡195"%, 
Grand, 
Pomona 
1 
veer 
leas* 
Call (213 ) 449 2*33 after 4 pm 


L E A S E OR L EA SE OPTION 


1461 
v»a Zurlta, Claremont 
*271 
Mo including water and trash pd 
2 Bdrm haateo puoi 623-1041 dart 
or 593 51 33 eves.. 
_ 
M ONTCLAIR 
2 
Bedroom 
duplex, 
bit ins, carpeting in ((yino room 
Water 
and 
trash 
pai«, $89 
per 


* » » 176 


& Sun. 


bedrm home 


• IF YOU msl»t on cleanliness endj 
weil maintained surroundings, see) 


Mant-j our 
beautiful 1 bedrm turn eof 


I Reasonably 
priced 
at 
*79 50, 
all 


utilities Pato. 986*121 
j 
1645 
Grass: • • “ EXC EPTIO N A L LY clean and 


I naat 1 bedrm furn apt. A wunde« 


fui 
home for 
retired 
person 
or 


voung family (TV 50 AH ut'! paid 
M g n f f*4to'21 for toll de'ait» 
j 


wxtar MONTCLAIR ¿ ’bedrooms, aircond 
wem.WT' W(i !■• 
r 


heat, I 
*62- 


bit-toi 
carpets, 
draoes, 
private 
garage, laundry room 
5163 Cans 


ga 624 3644 
_ _ ____ 


LOVELY FURN APTS. 
1306 San Antomo, 623 3611 


*29 50 P E R week, tovety 1 bedrm 
an util pato . AdTacent 
1 


International 
Airpor 


» t f „ & i r i i 6 4 i ) r " 


íaart, "NÀ 
B E A U T IF U L 


month 
Open Houst Sat 
»alt or lea*« *xac 
J 
baths 
biM n 


Investments 
30 


4 
Carpate, 
erg» 


Ref's required 
(213) 631 7636 


2 
BED R M 
duple*, 
timed 
single 


gar 
fenced 
back 
yard 
Built-in 


ftoM 8Mi „ 
to 
Ontario 
Interna» onaI 
Air* 
1649 » 


• 
• 


Citan 3 room, *51 50- Ctose in, NE 
To »r Adutts pa^'^50, 
inq W i 


__ ___ 
bedrm turn 
Ground 
floor 
Weil 
kept 


lawns 
and 
maintenance 
aervice 
Select this 
and 
move 
in 
today. 
Only 
$79 50, 
all 
uti! 
»aid,” 
449 
I 
D 
St , Ontor.0 9*4 8121 
QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD 
I Bedrm turn «pi. *79 50 all ufli 
paid 
Laundromat ©n premisas 


Ctose 1« schools and San Ber- 


The exceptional in Apt. dwelling 
f 


uiat, convenient and comfortable, 
bedrms«, studio garden typ# with 


enclosed 
garages 
Lue 
pool 
*n i 
\. 


elect 
Only I un.ts 
North Fgmona L IV E S T O C K 


rasldentiai area Boixr nk and V-n 
ton St. Mgr. at 3924 Bobolmk or 
phone 
Olin Construction 


426 3575 _ 
Sat ._or Sun 
$34 <2)0 


2 BFDROO M D U PL EX 
Drap«« carpet and rang*. 


Children OK 
678 939« 
CANÒGAN a p t s 7 3 BEDROOM S 
! and 2 baths. *v5 up. 46 22 Canoa a, 
Montclair 
Mgr. 
624 4133 
*80 MO J 
BD RM carpat 
draoes 
p r conditioning, .Ru>it 


B R IGH T well grained oaf h*y 
• ngston, 13406 Palmetto Ave., 
na NA H 510 


Liv 
CU- 


47 


ith saddle. 'It|Í0 41 
rtg 
Good with 
chit 
28-4197 


• I \ 
9395 


nardtoo Freeway 
I child OK 


ist se* ta appreciate 
Must 


C i '’ 


S a l i i 


kW BACHU OR collage. No. Pomona 
2 years old. 
Refri«, nq cooking 
tao utilities paid 
4260589. 


Ins, 


rader*; Montclair. 626-8553 


2 BR, spotless 
Retn«. *tove, car- 


pet», drapes, air (.and. Amherst, 
Montclair *90 593-3ÌI7 
a w 2 B E D RV 7 S90 
Ga* and water m 
Upper and lower _ 599-»'9J____ 
URLANO —*$75 
2 bedrm, cafpety, 
drape*, 
bum ms 
air cond 
Wi*h 


privale patios, *85 
f e w f t 


• JUST a v a ila b le • 


2 
Bdrm*. 
bit in*, 
carpets 
*nd 
drapes, 
private 
pnciowKi 
patws. 


N 
Pgmona 
422-2321. __________ 


W ELSH p o n y 
yr old 
geidtn 


dran. P hone 
' 
_____ 
____ ________ _ 


“ HORSE SAL E " 30-31 March 
j 
Pomona F atr Ground tn# new 
modern way A C T l Ö N S A lE . 
Entries now accepted tor 
catalog listing Cali now 


(213) 3i f 24J1-!7i4 ) 599 u t? 
: 


R E G I S T E R E D 3 
y e a r c J App.i OO 


sa mare 
B«»#utifut arh.t# bianxet | 


Also n e a r new doubl« einen West-1 
ern saddle 
N A 2 S?4v 
MUST S E L L 20 M O 'O lD F IL L Y 


G R E E N B R O K E , G EN T L E 


626 4406 
W ILL 
T R A D E 
deep 
freeze 
and 


utility trailer for horse* 
986 8487 


anytime, 
_______ _ 


l 
Q UA RTER 
s»ud, 
3 
vr* 
G'd 


Started good, 
pat'-ac Pet* breed 


tog 
1 
paint 
mare. 
7 
yr* 
old 
uarte» 
conformation, wall broke 


42I-6623 & 


$90 


7 Bdrm apt. new 


drapes, 
air 
cgng, 


lies 
Stove and lefrig 


gligHXe to register 


W ELSH mare, beautiful 2 yrs 
part 
Arabian $150. 
saddle, 
Cali 624-8966 
p# p #5 Y ü 'O l Ó Palomino g#ldtngi«Tf 
pony 
T L Ç 
(Fiai 
>99-1195 
or1^ 
1113) 966-3068______________ 
5 AQHA r*g quart#» hors#»- 2 staL 


lion*. 
2 
marea, 
I 
fifty 
Miller 


f 


usioni Men's saddle, buck (tite a d 
tax# otter 628 18/3 


FOR SALE 


100 shares of Inland Bank Stock 
at 
a 
discount 
For 
an 
a oof, 


send name and phone number 
to owner Post Office Box 8ue, 
Ontario 
Calif 


GARAGE SALE 


Moving must sell- No JU N K , Ken-, 
more deiu»* ya> rang' 
like tsew, 


griddle 
in 
center, 
never 
used 


Window 
to 
door. 
bcM i.er 
with 


brain, Kanmor* datum twin wash-; 
er and dryer, gas. 
King th e el 


fice desk, never m ar too, walnut 
finish, drawers lock; N#w Gr#f d 
mother 
eier 
ctork weiny* 
finish, 


I' Fiuer#-,c#nt light, 
Tootes Gar 


den 
Toots; 
Childrens 
4 
wheat 4 


seated peddle Surrgy with fringe 
ou top 
.Vhiriy-bird 
2 seat* pump 
Raca car ta», 
BA * i»'* Girls or 


bov 
Training 
wheels; 
Drapes 


Books. 
824 
Hendrix, 
Cl*r#mun! 
624 7J08 
_ ________ 
i f W A i b for reiurn of mqtogi |fr> 
plana and radio missusg from m y 
garag* at 1269» 3rd St, Chino, on 
3 3 6* 
a;0 7 J[?8 _____ 
Play Pen $!•; Crib $18 


Bugg 
*5; Double be* $45 
tie, 
NA 8 488* 
t a k e sol! away tn# B»ue Lustre 


way from carpets and gpno«»tv-ry 
Rent electric •.<■ «mpocu-r it 
Rica's 


Pamf J t o L j 6/0 N. Garey, Roman* . 


CARPF-TS 


Used carpets, from J5c yd 
nt-w 


carpet, from $2 29 yd 
Oh 


M^csion Blvd . Pom 
6 


3 seeea. $25. (213) 


W 
M 
* 
E■ « .'7 aoty,, ,'e-ed 
R 0 C K E R ' 
s_»ov#, COM PL E T E 
household 
furnishing', 


3 d»v,r?P 
« 'r 0*" r® 
an y',»ne 
J 900f$ south of Kinfliifv ñi$ 
On*;j 
At tor sate sign 
** 


~ 
■ 
h7 „ SCp ' H °* Ntotottorran**«» style 
» 
. E*ci cond, 1 >r 3(d 
Babv 
; turn,ture R_e#*or ,*b e 591 ?8a8 
»— 
KIT C H EN 5ÇT, 
platform 
rocker" 
and 
rtltP' ^ a;n'nï 
4 »malfar Ud^ 
between 
jer back chans 
All good, excel 
1220 
rond $15 and under^624 8697 


so*® hfto iov# s#«* 
fur* 
oupise blue 
used 2 months, $iso. 


: *32 


R Q V ILLE DAM Dedication May 4: 
13 lecreation area* planned land 
Doom 
will 
follow 
Richard 
Fora 


•.pec.ali|-ng to Orovtlie proPtrtias I 
Owner and agent. 624 2166 


dr apes, t $99^ 
5101 Marl# Court!| F u r n . & U n f . A p t s . 
3 6 A 
1 0 3 7 3 A m h * r * t , Montclair 
2 p m 


Trust Deeds 
3 1 


or U ff ffé-Hl* 
_______________ 
For R«nt in Claremonf 
All new condition thruout. wail to 
wall carpeting, lge 
family rm . 3 
* n o «m a n ARMS APTS* 


J BD RM HOUSE turn or 
unfurn 
Newly 
painted 
tostde 
and 
out 
Call NA 9 1615 or mqutra I2SI W 
4fh St 
Pomona 


Call NA 60941 betw l i e 
j 
or NA 1-12J1 


LA R G E family ap»s F.cxl loca*ion 
3 bedrms, J batos, pool 


W E BU Y ï Y j ST D EED S 
Marvin MrCh/ra, Brkr 
4780 Mission, Ont 
627-1112, 984-3078 


W. H, John Wiemann 


OL .h mm ÇTION 
Wkdys 626-357S 
Sat Sun. 624 1)10 


P 
acheter», 
1 
and 
2 
bedrms 
urn and unfurn, 
1 
avaiiabte 
Madera»* ratas mel utils. Pool, 
•«r cond. 1231 E, Pasadena S t, 
Pomona. 629-144? 


Apts. 3102 N. Garey. 
7f91____ 
j 
$90 
2 Budroorns. w-w carp#-» 
i orepes, 
bit ink, 
air 
cond 
Lorn* 
Apts. 
Ith 
St and 
Hamilton, 629 ! 
f f l : 


laundry 
facili- FOR 
R EN T 
norte corrals, 
stalls 
laungry 
tacm-i 
d hay she,dt 
U n 0ima% 
986 >41* 0» 7*1-7709 
★BURRO, $25 ★ 
»f? 2103 
3 YR. OLD ARRALOOS A 
438(07* 
____ _ 
HORSESHOEING $8 UP 
Dick Clav 
YU 6 3801 or 
__ 
NA ■ 8531 
J- fr. Old Bay Galdtng. 


Exp. Rider. 


*400 
986 447b 


USED— TV'S 
Refrigerato/s 
Washer*— Dry«r* 
Phono*— Freezer* 
»29 50 
S P E E D Y S 
guaranteed 
584 E 5tn, 
P ott 


La Fie*»«; 
Apt 2, 59i 


BELT REDUCER 
mo* *pevt*l |I3 
ABCO Rental 
829 5011 
BALONEY 
This h no baloney, you can gel 
fh# best sawing n w h in i buvs in 
town 
A IL S T A t E 
APPLIANCE- 
916 5111, or «22 #113. 


6720858 
____ 


Ilr* /|f*to*i*fr«gea(« cocktail tabi#! 
kd,« l.kL.COr.‘, . ian P 
W0- 
Rbv.iJ 
k tch table 
$1$ 
Occasional chair, 
*'0 
Tw o 
wafnut 
tacies 
|tj 
ea. 
g., • 
N 
MAHRESS & BED " 


Nlattress and Oo* springs 
*79 10 
? * 
n#w 
Danish 
bookcase 
headboard and bed na me 
TUI .•» 


exeai cond 
Stol separately. Mast 


set! quick NA 2 . act 


9 FT. COUCH 


_ __ good ror-i. art 5081 gfe I. 


FR EN C H 
Provincial 
so, d 
bSrcft 
drop 
i#af 
t#b« and 4 matchirg 
1 tfe 't. 
'> Wood cond. ITS 983-1456 


M AHOGANV 
L iv 
RM 
T A BLES 


ANO 
LA M PS 
Aho 
fegdrm 
s#t. 
| 
627 26*7 


'N E W coop#"on# washer and dryer, 
4 orange bar stoois, 
: 
626-8*18. 
_____ 


• P IE C E mahogany^ Duncan Ph»»# 
, dinma 
room set 
i i « ; imat! 


oar chest, 118. Call day* 422 
Eves 626 4150 or 624-18*8 
G d O D 
rood. 
West inghoui# 
fro» 8 


free 
refrig 
»70 
Sura 
*30. 
2 
, Mahog 
or can 
tab « 
H i 
ea, 
mkdays 
«»’ei 
S, 
Sat., Sun., 
all 
day 
624-404!, 624 2474, 624-2220 
Special This Week 
| on Dearborn heaters, mgtai cabP 
] net* and wardrobe». 
Serf's 


I 
#'62 *‘P " Street Cht»w 


A Nifty For Th* Thrifty 


Liy iN G 
ROOM S U IT E - 
Soto 


bed 
u'»d chair. 
3 
tab e* 
gnd 
J 


te rm 
AH 
7 
pieces 
ngw 
On 
|1R X on budge' term* 
W R i G mt l u O i 8 5 
| 
375 S Mam $ f . 
' E A R L Y a «sane#« Sol* and march- 


in* chair 
High wnsg back 
wood 
tnm, 
tho.ee 
of 
nawgahyd# 
gr 
twned 
Reg $77- IP t C t A l s ** »T 
d*f act 
tra»w 
Factor? 
anq 


■AVfI Arrow Fum ttur* Factory, 
10 Arrow Mw> 
L « V#•!>» 
Opgn 


eekday* 
tl 
tg 
I 
pm 
Trnns 


J 
5 Jt h r ch.*,«# i d , ' # 


-zizfr 


y 
8, ties 
9oma-Ri 


i v jll 
h\ 41HMT 
c n#rI« 
W e L C O M l i i C l i \ V 
_ 
(Continuad Next Pag«) 


ECONOMY RAMBLER 
SELECT USED CARS 


P ro g rets -B u lle tln , Pom ona, C alif. 
Saturday Evening, M arch 9, 19 67 


Household Furn 
LEAVING thr area, m int self. 1953 
Olds 
and 
'50 
Nssh, 
sioo. 
sach. 
__________ 
6240925. 
1963 
CHEVY 
Super 
Sport. 
2 dr. 
HT, 
327 
cu. 
in. 
engine, 
chrome 
reverse wheels, bucket seats, auto 
tram . 
Take 
over 
pmts 
1052 
E. 
5th St., Space 62, Pomona. 
'66 DATSUN 
Pick your color, choice of Two, 
j red 
or 
white 
Radio, 
Heater, 
4 
speed frans 
LOW Mileage 
SPE­ 
CIAL AT 
$ im , call 986-191/ dir. 
TW O --!966 Chevrolet Caprice 2 dr 
hdtps, 
1 
has 
air-cond, 
high 
bid 
takes i or both. Financing avail. 
I Call 623-1474. 
" ’65 BUICK WILDCAT 
4 dr. hdtp, 320 hp eng 
R H, P-S, 
P-B, auto shift, air, tinted glass, 
25 000 ml. 
Sherp. 
$2595. 
624 3742. 
★ ’59 Pont. Catalina ★ 
Conv. 
Black, white top 
red and 
white int. V-8. auto 
R H, PS. PR 
Best otter. YU 4-9530 aft 5:30 P M 
'65 MUSTANG GT 
789 Hi performance V-8. GT option, 
inferior decor group. Yellow with 
black interior 
LOW Miles 
VERY 
CLEAN* Priced to sell this week­ 
end 
$1599 
call 98/ 1917 dir, 
65 MUSTANG 
289 engine. R-H, P-S, P-B, Cruise- 
O Malic, tinted glass, excel tires. 
S harpy 19,000 mi. 
$1695. 
624 3742. 
CROWN LEASE SAYS" - Even If 
oankrupt, even on state aid. 
No 
side 
loan, no furniture loan 
No 
credit 
needed. 
Good 
frans 
cars 
from $39 
dn plus T end L. $8 to 
$J?_wk 
P hone. 621 1319 
_______ 
LIBERTY FORD 
SAN DIMAS 
"Short Drive to Greater Savings" 
100 
W 
Boniia. 
S 
D 
Lv 
9 1221 


M cM a h a n s 
t r a v e l t r a il e r s 


KENSKILL—TR A VELE2F 
IDEAL 
CARDINAL 
FIE LD & STREAM 
R IE B A L L -T E R R Y 
SANTA FE 
KARO USELL 
K E N C R A FT 
CARL'S 
ACRES OF TRAILERS 
1223 W. Mission 
Ontario NA 2 1072 
Aircraft 


Mobile Homes 
70 
Trailer Parks 


LARGE space, trees, landsc, close 
to shoung 
transp. Excel loc 
402 
E. Foothill, Pom 
626 8296 
LARGE trailer spaces 
1 month free rent 
Adults only. 622 9x27. 


'63 C H E V Y Im p. 4 dr 
ht. 327 V 8, 
1 
»act a ir, PS 
auto. $1325 
985-5963. 
' Y Y 
'61 “ C A D ILLA C 
CO UPE 
OF 
V IL L E . Full power, fact, air, exec 
1; cond. 
$1095. 
595-7348.______________ 
*61 OLDS CUTLASS 
F85 
PS, radio, heater, air cond. 
629-6740 after 4 p m . 
61 Chevy, Excel. Cond. 
M aka offer 
628 0388 
■64 C O R V E T T E , 4 spd. fuel" intact* 
ion 
hdtp 
$2330. Call 624 6264 after 
p p m 


PO NTIA C 
Grand 
P rlx, 
alr- 
<: d, 
PS, 
PB, 
like 
new 
Onlv 
Yp 000 
m i. 
$5.000 
car 
for 
only 
-• 
*5.- 624-2192.___________ 
<1965 CHEVY Im paia HT. One own­ 
er, ex 
cond 
$1x95. 
_ 627-1128 ____ ___ 
'63 
GRAND 
PR IX, 
2 
dr. 
Excel 
. cond. 
ta k e 
over 
pymts. 
Bat, 
$1300 
Ca t after 5 p.m ., 629-6571. 
66 
PONTIAC 
Bonne.. 4 dr 
hdtp , 
full pwr, air, 
tow mi 
Like new. 
Pvt 
party 
$2650. 595-5306_____ 
’60 Impaia Coupe 
Black, very sharp 674-3675 
'56 IM P E R IA L . PB, PS, P W , auto 
fra n s , 
air 
cond. 
$150 
NA x ■ 271. 
* '6 7 P S lC O N P U Y u Ia . Deluxe, 4 
dr, excel cond. $400 for mv eci fy. 
Call 
599 2418 
aft 
S.30 
w eekday*. 
Al! day Sat. 
★ STUDEBAKER ★ 
Parts, ia ie s . 
Service. 
Carnahan 
A 
Norton, 319 1st St., CLA R E M O N T . 
♦ ♦ ♦ 
64 < HE V Y II a * a 
Nova 5 S 
2 dr, yiw W black 
Inf, 
bckt seats, r-h, vibra, walnut strg 
wheel, 
tach, 
E,T 
mags 
A 
ci'-rm 
whls. Goodvr wide-oval 
red lines, 
hvy 
dtv 
susp 
Must 
sen. 
*1450. 
NA 7 8X89 


• 1 1 -Pc. Liv. Rm. Group 
Quitted sofa and chair; 3 occ. 
tables 
lovely pillows,- pictures; 
occasional chair. 
• 5-Pc. Din Table, 4 Chrs 
FOR THE FINEST 
FOR SALE ANYW HERE 
• Master Bdrm Set W ith 
spacious 6 drawer dresser, m ir­ 
ror, 
2 
night 
stands, 
headbd, 
• Bunk Bed. or Twin Beds 
4 drawer chest. 
628 W. Holt 
ONTARIO 
YU 4-7113__________ 
CAMPER SPECIAL 
1964 Chev, 
p u„ 
ton capacity. 
Split rims. 
4 Npe»*d box, positraction. Factory 
set 
up 
for 
camper 
and 
trader. 
All extras, very clean 
$1500. 2216 
Stanford, Pom NA 8-4943 
'52 
C H E V Y 
' i 
tn 
pick-up. 
Good 
condition, 
standard 
trans, 
good 
tires. $150^NA 8 7338____________ 
‘ ~'50 FO R D 1 j TON 
: 
P E R F E C T C O N D IT IO N , $175. 
1 
NA 8 0461 
JEEP 
1964 
CJ5 
4wd, 
PTO, 
hd 
winch, new 6 Ply tires, roll bar. 
tow bar, beater 
Warn hubs, posi 
traction t and r. NA 6 5757 


NO MONEY DOWN 
36 Mos. To Pay 


ALL CREDIT OK 


CHINO Discount Furniture 
5338 Riverside Or., Chino. NA 7-1541 
Open Daily 10-9, Sat 10 6, Sun 12-5 


Lease or Rent 
7 
Cars - Trucks - Trailers 
Household Furn. 
61 
Wanted— 
USED CAR RENTAL 
82.50 per day, 621-1319 
I BUY FURNITURE 
DLR. 622-9263 
Classified Ads Get Results 


QUICK CASH 
We Need Good Clean Furniture 
And Appliances- Any Amount 
______ 628-3802 or 984 -3118 


Have A Job and 
A bility to Pay? 
Have No Credit? 
Need Transportation? 
ACTION C#RNER 
E 
Holt 
Pom ________ 623-2454 


OPEN SUNDAY 11-5 


Clean, used FU R NITU RE 
APPLIANCES, TOOLS 4 
O FFIC E equipment i 
piece or a houseful!. 
200 NEW AND USED 
ALL MAKES AND MODELS 
Uprights - Grands 
|^ Spinets - Players 
(X Consoles 
Spinet Organs 
^ Studios - Restyled 
Church Organs 
All Models 


WE MUST MOVE THESE 
UNITS THIS WEEK END. 
WE NEED ROOM 


Imported-Sport 
79 
and Midget Cars 
THAN THOSE WHO CLAIM 
TO PAY THE MOST. 
30 V IN . SERVICE 
24 hrs. per day— Dir, 
NOW! 
The hot fastback 
in Europe 


59 CHEVROLET 
. . 
$199 
? DOOR Stick 
Cood trans­ 
portation. 


54 CHEVROLET . . . $199 
Automatic, 
radio, 
heater, 
WSW 
tires, 
r e a l SHARPII 
• Furniture • Appliances^ 
• Color TVs • Stereos • 
Housefuls Our Specialty. Dir. 
N A 3-4411 
61 MERCURY 
$6 
COLONY 
PARK 
WAGON 
4 Doer, P-S, P B, V8, auto­ 
matic. 
FELIPE MACIAS 
(PHIL) 
CHINO FORD 
Pianos and Ori 
461 1 Ho!t Ave 
M ontclair 
624-0057 


04 CHEVY 
NOVA, Stick 
Nie» car. 


l i 
happ y 
to 
in n o u n c i 
th a t P H IL M A C IA S ha# 
jo m ed ou r Sale« S ta ff in 
C hino. 


P hii 
ìn v ite a 
all 
of 
hia 
friends 
to 
com e 
in and 
m apect 
th è 
new 
F O R D 
Im e or a good Used C ar. 


W ill top any 


Legitimate Bid 


Don't sell, call me 
622-1361, DLR 


66 FORD C i/. S i. $2999 
10 
Pass, 
390 
*>ng 
bright 
yellow, lug ra<; 
a )R , pow- 
ng, 
powet 
brskes. 
WSW tires. 


Musicai Instruction 66 


EVANGELISTIC STYLE 
FAITH PRICE 
Organ, piano class lessons. 
Reas 
rates 
NA 8-8134 
NA 8-56CS 
PIANO 
instruction 
beginning 
an a 
advancect 
Also theory 
xil Canoe 
Cove 
Diamond Bar, 595-5002 


Household Furn. 
62 
For Rent 


L .J L E N t a w a s h e r 
KEEP IT IN YOUR HOME 
*l PER WEEK 
M & V E l E 
fRIC 
<50 Pomona Mall West 
NA 3-2521 
W INDOW SHADES 
R er’a's 
Beds Chairs—Tables 
n 
GIST S 
4f0 Pomcra Mall West 
NA 2-7277 


PERKINS TRUCK 
SALES AND SERVICE 
International 
GMC 
900 Price 
N a 2-1288 
1659 5th 
NA 9 3669 


13101 Central Ave. 


CHINO 


NA 8-4726 YU 6-8089 
Tachometer 
Four on-the- 
floor 
Underetatinc 
Disc brakes 
■ e t r a * 
Vinyl 
■p totster? 


Appliances— Sale 
63 


The 


Sporty Looking 


and 


Performing 


Car 


F o r th e E co n o m y 
M in d e d B u y er 


ECONOMY PRICE 
ECONOMY MILES 
EXTRAVAGANT LOOKS 
EXTRAVAGANT 
DURABILITY 
EXTRAVAGANT 
WARRANTY 


50,000 Miles 
Major Warranty 


100 % Parts & Labor 


O N L Y 


66 TOYOTA Corona auto, 
loaded 
immaculate cond. 
White. Original 
owner <1495 674-8879 ____ 
e-57 
JAGUAR 
SK 
coupe, 
over 
hauled 
engine. 
Absolutely 
mint 
condifkm 
Prep fee 
$55 
Balante 
$785 
100% financing on approved 
credit 
SEE 
at 
HOUSE 
OF 
IM 
PORTS, 
217 
S 
Brea, 
Brea 
529 
1967._______ 


58 CHEVROLET 
★ YOUR MOBilE H O M E !* 
Con be traded in 
★ FOR REAL ESTATE ★ 
Your coach paid tor or not. 
may be used at down payment. 
# BUDGET TERMS e 


. HARRIS MOBIL E HOMES 
Holt Btvd at Central Ave . Mfcl. 
(At the Valiev Drive In Theatre) 
626-7315 day. eves 636 772* _ 
• FREE CAMPER SHOW® 
DAILY 
NEW and USED 
KAMKAMPER 
U" DREAMFR 
v" Tn« A N G E lU S 
se* LAZYDA.’ E 
* * Th* e l d o r a d o s h o lid a y 
^ STaRLINE 
WE SELL EM ALL 
INCLUDING ACCESSORIES 
OVER 50 New Camoer Truck» 
To Choose From 
PERKINS TRUCK 
SALES AND SERVICE 
INTERNATIONAL 
CMC 
y*LprJct 
NA 2 1288 
»659 
fc 
Sth 
_ 
NA 
9 3669 
BUY FACTORY DIRECT 
NOMAD 
Golden falcon Travel 
trailer 
Courtesy Mobile Home 
1328 W. Holt, Onf, 
9860317 


H a rd to p , 
8 
e yl, 
A u to m a tic 
R ad io , H a a te r. P o w e r S teer, 
in g . 
E X C E L L E N T 
C O N D I- 
T IO N I 


8 e yl, S pecial. P o w e r S te er, 


infl, 
A u t o m a t i o, 
Radio, 


H e a te r. 
(Volkswagen Bug) 
$895* 
5495* 


63 0LDSM0BILE F-85 '64 RAMBLER Classic 


770 Sedan. 8 c y l., A u to m a tic 
R ad io , H e a te r. 


W a g o n . R ad io , H e a te r, Pow 
er S te e rin g . L ig h t B lue. 
5895* 
S795* 


63 RAMBLER Amer. 
'65 CHEVROLET 


C o rv a ir Coupe. R adio 
• r . 
4 
Speed. 
e > 
C L E A N ! 


T u d o r 6 c y l., R ad io , H e a te r, 
H a rd to p . 
5495* 
51295* 
FRANK WHITE IMPORTS 


A L S O T H E L O W E S T 
P R IC E D S E D A N O N T H E 
A M E R IC A N M A R K E T . 
W IT H A U T O M A T IC 
t r a n s m i s s i o n 
A S A F A C T O R Y O P T IO N , 
5995* 


T h e S eekest Look 
Sport C a r 


Only 


See it to d a y — O 
O 
1 
d riv e it a w a y 
I 


•P lu » T a x A L ie . 


FORREST (W OODY) 
TEFFT 
CHINO FORD 


it 
happ y 
to 
announce 
th a t 
For rest 
(W o o d y ) 
T E f F T 
hd# 
jo in ed 
ou r 
C a lc * S ta ff in C hino. 
W a s born in Illin o is and 
h a * been in m an ag e m e n t 
and 
»ales 
in 
the 
a u to ­ 
m obile 
m d u ttry 
fo r 
20 
years. 
W o ody 
in vites 
all 
his 
frie nds to t»e# him for a 
N E W F O R D o, L ie d Car* 
CHINO FORD 
13101 Central Ave. 
CHINO 
NA 8-4726 YU 6-8089 


'61 FALCON 
'66 RAMBLER 


R adio, A m b as s a d o r, 
O P L , 
H a rd to p 
C oupe. L O A D E D , F A C T O R Y 
a i r 
C O N D IT IO N IN G , 
LOW AS 


O ption to Buy— Free 90 doy Service— Free Delivery 
— Free color Antenna. 
5495* 
52095* 
FRANK WHITE 
IMPORTS 
Free Las Vegas Vacation to each new 
(4 days— 3 nights). 
Call betw een 
9 a.m . - 9 


customer 
Sales & Service 
1407 W. HOLT 
POMONA 
NA 3-7311 


40 tram, 
ixd 
Flat 
306 n m 
C i 
Conv 
AM-FM 
new 
Michelin 
x 
•xhausi 
#yifem 
OPEN 
SUNDAYS 


A S e c o n d C h a n c e f o r 3 5 C h i l d r e n ( P a g e 3) 


MAGAZINE SUPPLEMENT 


• EDITORIALS 
• SCAN TOUR 


• COMICS • BRIDGE • BOOKS 


• PEIRSOL • PROFILE • TEENS 


• O N THE TOW N 
• W OM EN 


• HOME • RADIO-TV • HOBBIES 


Pom ona, Calif., Saturday Evening, March 9, 1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 
Page 


CN Scan Profile: Franklin Zahn 
Portrait of a Dove 


By TONY NAVARRO 
P-B Staff W riter 
Every 
Saturday 
a 
gray­ 
haired and gentle man from 
Pomona quietly takes up a sta­ 
tion on the Pomona Mall in a 
silent vigil against the war in 
Vietnam. 
There, around noon, Franklin 
Zahn and one or more of his 
friends 
make 
their plea 
for 
peace besides a large sign pro­ 
claim ing their vigil. It’s easily 
seen by motorist on Garey Ave­ 
nue. 
“ Sometim es they beep their 
horn and wave; som etim es they 
shout, 'Go B a c k to R ussia!’ 
Som etim es they just shout and 
you don’t know what side they 
are on,’’ said Zahn, a retired 
engineer. 
Passersby on the m all stop 
to voice support, 
argue 
with 
Zahn or just plain ignore him, 
but most, he said, accept the 
leaflets 
Zahn and the others 
hand out. 


THE LITERATURE, publish­ 
ed by the Community Council 
for Opposition 
to the 
war in 
Vietnam, 
contains 
statem ents 
against the war attributed to 
Gen. 
Matthew 
B. 
Ridgeway, 
Gen. David M. Shoup, Lt. Gen. 
Jam es Gavin, Rear Adm. Ar­ 
nold E. True, Brig. Gen. Hugh 
B. Hester and Brig. Gen. Rob­ 
ert L. Hughes. 
W hatever the reception, Zhan, 
a religious pacifist, intends to 
continue demonstrating, either 
through silent vigils or other 
forms of expression, his con­ 
victions against war. 
He 
has 
been doing this for too m any 
of his 60 years to quit now. 
“The violence of war m ay be 
justifiable but I don’t think it’s 
justifiable, m orally,’’ Zahn said 
softly during an interview at his 
modest, neat home at 836 S. 
Hamilton Blvd. A sign on the 
front door reads, “ Stop World 
War III Now.’’ 
A man with twinkling blue 
eyes and pleasant disposition, 
he talked slowly, often pausing 
before trying to put into words 
the thoughts welling within him. 
He is 
against not 
only the 
Vietnam war but all wars be­ 
cause in the long run they strive 
nothing, he said as he recalled 
his activities. 
His m ost dramatic involve­ 
ment cam e in 1962 when he and 


mm 


ON THE COVER 


Cecil 
Bishop, 
superintendent 
of HiUview Acres, chats with 
Terry Wilson, one of the chil­ 
dren under his care. Thirty-five 
youngsters like Terry are find­ 
ing a new life at Hillview. The 
story is on Page 3. 


• 
• 
• 
• 
• 
• 
• 
• 
• 
QUALITY 
W ATCH 
REPAIR 
All Work Done 
On Premises! 


1 Y mar GuaronlM 


Larry Wellins Jeweler 
285 Pomona Mall East 
Neat Doer to loo'« Candy 
NA 9-2150 


two other pacifists were jailed 
for sailing into the Johnston Is­ 
land n u c l e a r testing 
zone 
against 
federal 
court 
injunc­ 
tions. 


“ You try to turn the other 
cheek, even at the expense of 
losing your life,’’ he said. 
HIS 
COMMITMENT 
for 
peace and against war through 
the years has 
taken 
form 
in 
m any ways. He has walked the 
picket line and offered him self 
as a hostage to the Soviets. 
Since World War II, he said, 
he has never voluntarily paid 
that part of the income taxes 
that goes to national defense. 
However, 
the federal 
govern­ 
m ent, in one way or another, 
alw ays m anages to get all of 
it, he admits. 


“ Refusing to pay taxes is a 
thing som e people don’t really 
think of as a protest,’’ he said. 
“ It m ay just be that som e peo­ 
ple don’t want to be involved.’’ 
Zahn, a mem ber of the Clare­ 
mont Friends Meeting, reflect­ 
ed on the impressions made on 
him by a student m ovem ent 
against the war during the ’20s 
when he was a student at Cal 
Tech. 
“There 
m ust 
never 
be 
a 
w ar,’’ 
was 
the 
rallying 
cry. 
Then cam e World War II and 
the Korean and Vietnamese con­ 
flicts. 
So 
what’s it 
all 
been 
for? he asked. 
He spoke of a movie he once 
saw. 
“A man walked up to this 
fellow carrying a sign and ask­ 
ed, ‘Do 
you 
think 
you 
can 
change 
the 
world 
with 
that 
sign?’ The fellow replied, ‘No, 
but this sign will keep the world 
from changing m e’.’* 
After 
graduating 
from 
Cal 
Tech as a m echanical engineer, 
Zahn 
taught 
at 
a 
California 
university and then worked for 
an oil comapny. He gave up a 
successful career as a m echan­ 
ical 
engineer because of the 
way technology was being used 
for the war effort, he said. 
Zahn was drafted in 1943 and 
was sent to a work cam p in 
Oregon for conscientious objec­ 
tors. He and several others de­ 
serted, he said, 
because “ all 
around the U.S., hospitals were 
crying for help.’’ 
After notifying authorities of 
his intentions, he went to work 
as a janitor in a Portland hos­ 
pital. 
He 
was 
convicted 
for 
deserting 
and was 
placed on 
probation for 
six 
months 
— 
working at the hospital. 
“ I was called a ‘quote, de­ 
serter’ but today they call you 


BARS 


STOOLS 


• 
RATTAN 
• 
MAPLE 
• 
WALNUT 
• 
WROUGHT 
IRON 
• 
DRAPES 
• 
CARPETS 
• 
WALL 
DECOR 
• 
LAMPS 
• 
GAME 
SETS 
• 
STEREOS 


a 
‘resister,’ 
when 
you 
break 
from all the conscriptive serv- 
cie,” he commented. “Not only 
is war morally wrong, but con­ 
scription is wrong.” 
After WWII, he moved to Po­ 
mona and worked as a carpen­ 
ter on the construction of homes 
for Negroes. 


NOW, HE SMILED, 
all 
his 
income com es from buying old 
houses in white neighborhoods, 
fixing the houses and renting 
them to Negroes. 
“It’s for integration.” 
He tries to keep the income 
down so he doesn’t have to file 
a return, but this isn’t always 
possible. 
“ Because of my religious be­ 
liefs, I’m opposed to contribut­ 
ing to the war in Vietnam,” he 
said. So again this year, Zahn 
will file a return 
and leave out 
a percentage for defense. 


He still belongs to the Fellow­ 
ship of Reconciliation, which he 
joined in 1935, and has support­ 
ed the War Resisters League, 
Community Council, the South­ 
ern California 
T a x p a y e r s 
Against War, and other groups. 
“ I’m a joiner when it com es 
to p e a c e 
organizations,” he 
said. 


“ What have wars solved?” he 
asked. “ Look at Poland. All we 
did was free the country and 
give it to the Russians. Is Pol­ 
and free now?” 


Pair Finds 


M arriage 


Is A Riot 


LINDESBERG, 
S w e d e n 
UPI) — The wedded bliss of 
c young Lindesberg couple last­ 
ed four hours — from the altar 
to the dessert course at their 
nuptial feast. 
Then 
a 
family 
fight 
broke 
out. The bride, her mother and 
two sisters landed in the hos­ 
pital. The bridgeroom and his 
uncle, 
father - in - law 
and 
brother-in-law 
landed 
in 
jail. 
Said 
the 
22 - year - old bride­ 
groom as he left jail: 
“ I never would have got mar­ 
ried if I had known all these 
complications would arise. I’ve 
decided to get a divorce. 


Explorer I, the first U.S. sat­ 
ellite, recently passed its 10th 
year in orbit. The craft has 
logged more than one and one- 
third billion miles. 


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marble 
taken 
recently 
from 


the 
women’s 
restroom 
inside 
the science building. 
It is the second such theft at 
the 
school. 
Earlier, 
someone 
unbolted a sim ilar 28 by 60 inch 
piece of marble from the m en’s 
room. 


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Happy Children 


Dem onstrating 


Power of Love 


By BOB NAGI.Y, P-B Staff Writer 


Photos by SID I R ID K IN 


( 
HINO—More than a score of volunteers who 
give their time and effort to Hillview Acres are 
learning through daily examples that TLC begets 
rewards far greater than money. 


That’s where the words stop and the work begins. 
Each weekday morning the home staff sees to it 
that 35 children, from 5 to 16, board their bus to 
attend classes in the Chine School District. 


Tender loving care is a way of life in the ranch­ 
like community where the average age of a resident 
is 8, and where children, mostly from broken homes, 
are getting a second chance of a lifetime. 


While the children are pone, the cottages in which 
they live become work areas where volunteers join 
house parents for mending, ironing, laundering and 
cleaning. 


The home is one of 50 operated throughout the 
country by the Churches of Christ. Its purpose is to 
“provide and maintain an environment that is con­ 
ducive to physical, spiritual, intellectual, emotional 
and social growth and development.” 


But the most fun, the volunteers agree, is when 
the bus comes home and the fresh country air be­ 
comes filled with young laughter and the energetic 
confusion of children at work and play. 
“ It's hard to be!i ve,” < n 
volunteer said, follow­ 


ing a 7-year-old boy with her eyes, “that he comes 
from a broken home where both the mother and the 
father used to take their frustrations out on him. He 
was so frightened when he joined us a couple of 
months ago. Look at him now!'' 


The boy, becoming aware of her stare, ran up 
and threw his arm ar ound her. 


“ Hi, Aunt!” he grinned. Then he looked around 
sheepishly and whispered in her ear. “I love you.” 


Cecil E. Bishop, superintendent of Hillview Acres, 
says demonstrations such as that are pretty common 
at the home. The children are loved, and through 
love they gain security. They give love in return. 


A little girl comes up and sticks her foot out. 
The volunteer bends down and ties her shoelaces. 
It’s the little things that count. 


Although the public still thinks of Hillview Acres 
as an orphanage, very few orphans stay there. Most 
of the children are the products of broken marriages. 


The home was established in 1929 in Ontario under 
the name Church of Christ Children's Home. It 
stayed there until April. 1965, when the church 
bought 40 acres at the corner of Chino and East End 
avenues and developed it at a cost of $750,000. 


The home has nine buildings, including four 
cottages where the children live. An expansion pro­ 
gram was begun last month to build two more cot­ 
tages for $125,000. Bishop said the two add it local 
buildings will provide room for a total of 60 children. 


Although the home accepts children without con­ 
sideration of background or religious indoctrination, 
it is pretty selective of whom it will admit. A study 
is made of all applicants. 


Children who have excessive mental or emotional 
problems or who have severe physical deformities 
that make group living ineffective are not admitted. 
Neither are children who are delinquent. 


Those who are accepted are required to stay at 
least two years. Fees are on an abiluy-to-pay basis. 
Support for the home also conies from the Churches 
of Christ, county placement agencies. United Donors 
and Associated In-group Donors (AID). 


( OPERATING costs are further reduced by ac­ 
centing selfsuffkiency. The staff, with the aid of the 
children, raises beef and pork. Much of the produce, 
particularly corn and beans, is raised at home, and 
25 trees are expected to bear fruit for the first time 
this year. There is an abundance of canned jam and 
jelly. 


It’s a place where children reap mast of the 
benefits but the volunteers also get their share erf joy. 


The motto is: “Take a Child by the Hand.” A 
look at any resident will convince most skeptics that 
the home does restore to its young people the human 
dignity which was stifled in the merciless race of 
the jet age. 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 
Page 


EDITORIAL 
To o Boy W h o 
W o n ’t Be Bock 


Berry s World 


A boy died for me in Khe Sanh today. 
I didn’t know him, and he didn’t know me. 
But he died for me just the same. 
I learned about it when the 6 o’cloek newscast 
showed him being carried off the battlefield by his 
buddies. 
He was going home at last—but not the way he 
had dreamed of going. 
I watched the newscast as I ate a good, hot meal 
in my safe, comfortable home. 
The news was pretty much as usual. The war in 
Vietnam . . . college kids demonstrating a g a i n s t 
changes in the draft rules, screaming and mugging 
for the cam era . . . more teachers out on strike. 
After dinner I tuned in to a program on which a 
comic wisecracked sourly about the way the war 
was going—and probably got more money for doing 
it than this boy in Khe Sanh had been paid all the 
time he was in service. 
Then I went to bed, free from any fear that the 
house might be blown up by the enemy. The enemy 
is busy over in Vietnam. 
But I couldn’t get this boy off my mind. 
I wondered if he had been frightened. Of course, 
he had. Who wouldn’t be? 
Had he hated this w ar as much as I hate it? 
Probably more. He was IN it! 
But, somehow, those boys in the thick of it over 
there seem to understand more clearly than many 
of us just why they are there, and the dreadful al­ 
ternative if they weren't. 
How had he felt about these characters who are 
def> mg the government, calling our leaders m urder­ 
ers, tearing up draft cards and pulling down the 
American flag? 
However he had felt, he had fought for that flag 
until he was killed. 
It’s too late now, of course, to try to thank this 
boy for what he did. But it’s not too late to thank 
his buddies for what they’re doing. 
But how do you thank someone for facing death 
for you? 
How do you reassure him that as long as men 
like him are willing to die for freedom, freedom is 
worth dying for—even though it be abundantly used 
and abused by the very ones who disdain to fight 
for it? 
So you hope that the boys over there realize that 
dissent is loud and gets attention, but that gratitude 
is 
quiet and doesn’t make the 
headlines. 
You hope they know that millions upon millions 
of Americans are with them 
all the way. 
I ho[K' and pray that boy knew it as he died for 
me in Khe Sanh today. 


AS WE SEE IT...By One of Us 


NOTICE TO DESTROY WEEDS cards h a v e 
been mailed by the county fire chief’s office to own­ 
ers of unimproved and, in certain cases, improved 
property in the county. These notices are sent only 
to areas served by the county fire department. 
Chief Keith Klinger urged owners to cooperate 
by eliminating weeds and grass before they become 
dry and a fire hazard. The county fire department 
answered nearly 7,000 grass, brush and rubbish fire 
calls in 1987. 
Property not cleared when county crews w'ork in 
the area will be cleared and the work c harged to the 
landowner on the 1909 tax bill. 


SIX-YEAR-OLD Russell Hanney of Pomona- who 
Is the 19t>8 Easter Seal Child in Los Angcdes County, 
visited the County Board of Supervisors this week to 
officially open the Easter seal campaign. He and 
four other handicapped youngsters presented simu­ 
lated floral leis fashioned of Easie r seals to each 
supervisor. 
Don Belding, president of the Crippled Children’s 
Society, introduced actress Nanette Fabray, volun­ 
teer chairman, and the five youngsters. Miss Fabray 
presented Easter seal badges to each of the super­ 
visors to designate them as honorary Easter seal 
chairmen in each of their five districts. Supervisor 
Chairman Frank G. Bom Hi said “ these children need 
all the help we can give them. 


* W ouldn't it be wonderful to be afraid to do a cartoon 
about Vietnam , because the war could be Over before 
it's published? " 


LEON DENNEN 
Free Press Also Has 
ations to Notion 
Oblig 


Secretary of State Dean Rusk 
was 
clearly 
an 
angry 
man 
when he told a group of news­ 
men that criticism of the way 
the Johnson administration han­ 
dles the war in Vietnam some­ 
tim es gets to the point “ When 
the question is, on whose side 
are you?” 
The secretary even implied 
that some newsmen “go prob­ 
ing for things that one can com­ 
plain about when there are 2,000 
stories that are more construc­ 
tive in character.” 
He 
ignored 
the 
dedication, 
heartbreaks and frequent hero­ 
ism of the vast majority of 
American 
correspondents 
who 
often risk their lives to dig for 
facts and bring the news to 
their readers. 
Nevertheless, Rusk raked an 
im portant 
question 
about 
the 
role of a free press and other 
m ass 
communication 
media 
that needs to be examined con­ 
stantly and debated in a free 
society, especially in time of 
national crisis. 
Throughout the ages, freedom 
of information has been a thorn 
in the side of t> rants, dictators 
and unscrupulous politicians. 


In democratic society the ex­ 
istence of a free press is one in­ 
fallible touchstom* of the claims 
of any nation to be free. 
A 
dem ocratic 
nation 
needs 
news “ for the same reason that 
a man needs eyes,” Rebecca 
West once said. “ It has to see 
where it is going.” 
Several thousand years ago 
the H e b r e w prophet s a i d , 
“ Truth abideth and is s t r o n g 
forever; she liveth and conquer- 
eth for everyone.” 
As human society evolved and 
developed 
social and political 
consciousness, freedom of infor­ 
mation 
became 
the 
indispen- 
sible weapon in the struggle 
against tyranny and arbitrary 
authority. Today only Commu­ 


nists and dictators question hu­ 
manity’s right to know the es­ 
sential facts that determine its 
fate—m an’s life. 


But a free press in a demo­ 
cratic nation also has its obliga­ 
tions. It has the responsibility 
to report facts carefuly, weigh 
their significance and explain 
them as objectively as it is 
humanly possible. 


Surely it was sloppy journal­ 
ism to report, as one American 
magazine correspondent recent­ 
ly did, that “Not a single Viet­ 
namese I have met either in 
Saigon or the (Mekong) Delta 
blames the Viet Cong” for the 
m assacre of the civilian popu­ 
lation. 


Is it possible that the corre­ 
spondent 
did 
not 
dig 
deeply 
enough and thus gave a dis­ 
torted account of the true feel­ 
ings of the South Vietnamese? 
According to Dr. Simon Arau­ 
jo, reports that most South Vi­ 
etnam ese favor the Viet Cong 
Communists and dislike Ameri­ 
cans “ are not even half-truths.” 
The doctor from 
Venezuela 
has been in charge for m a n y 
months of a dispensary near the 
Cambodian border established 
by 
the 
International 
Rescue 


(Co n tin ued on Pag« 27) 


LOUIS C A SSEIS 
Clergymen 
May Switch 
To the GOP 


Many liberal clergymen who 
backed Dem ocratic presidential 
candidates in 1960 and 1964 may 
switch their support to the GOP 
this year. 
The shift is alm ost certain to 
occur if Gov. Nelson A. Rocke­ 
feller is the Republican can­ 
didate. 
It will be less likely — but 
still a possibility — if Richard 
M. Nixon wins the GOP nomina­ 
tion. 
Religious leaders are already 
discussing the argum ents for a 
party switch. 
The one whkh 
carries most weight with many 
of them is that a Republican 
President would be better able 
to extricate the United Stabs 
from the Vietnam m orass than 
President J o h n s o n , who is 
viewed as hem m ed in by the 
need to justify past decisions 
and policies. 


The Rev. Dr. R o b e r t Mc­ 
Afee Brown, professor of r< ii- 
gion at Stanford University, is 
typical of a large body of liber­ 
al clergym en for whom peace 
is the one overriding issue of 
the presidential cam paign. 
“ I have come to feel that the 
top 
priority 
for 
1968 
is 
the 
rem oval 
of 
Lyndon 
Johnson 
from the presidency, and along 
with him Vice President Hub­ 
ert Hum phrey and Secretary’ of 
State Dean Rusk,” Dr. Broun 
said recently. 
Although he is a close per­ 
sonal friend and great admirer 
of Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D- 
Minn., Dr. Brown conceded that 
M cCarthy’s campaign for the 
Dem ocratic presidential nomi­ 
nation has not gotten very far 
off the ground. 
Therefore, he said, opponents 
of the w ar must look to the 
Republican party for an “alter­ 
native” to Johnson’s 
Vietnam 
policy. 


“ Rockefeller would command 
the support of millions of un­ 
com mitted voters, even though 
little is known about his stand 
on Vietnam ,” he said. 
He said he would be dismayed 
if the Republicans nominated 
either Nixon or Gov. Ronald 
Reagan of California because he 
believes they would “escalate 
the w ar out of sight.” 
But he added that “any candi­ 
date save Mr. Johnson” would 
have the advantage of “maneu­ 
verability,” because he would 
not have to “ take responsibility 
for Mr. 
Johnson's horrendous 
m istakes” 
and 
could 
“start 
afresh in efforts to negotiate.” 
Suppose 
the 
Democrats re- 


(C o n tin u td on P a 0« 27) 


GOSSIP . . . By Doc Peirsol 


Ever since the day it was opened to automotive 
traffic, Kellogg Hill has been one of our more spec­ 
tacular highway death traps . . . With this in mind, 
a friend of mine sends this note: 
“Has anybody called to your attention the con­ 
notation of the sign on the San Bernardino Freeway 
near the top of Kellogg Hill?’’ he asks. “It reads 
‘FOREST LAWN NEXT EXIT.” 
Despite death and Injury statistics in which auto­ 
mobiles are involved, we have learned to live dan­ 
gerously here in America . . . and apparently rather 
enjoy it. W’hich is why nearly 9 million new car’s will 
be purchased in the United States this year. 


THE LIGHTER SIDE 


Computerized Ills 


By DICK WEST 
WASHINGTON 
(U P I)—Com- 
puters, which have been becom­ 
ing progressively more life-like, 
will soon reach a new stage in 
their 
humanitarian 
develop­ 
ment. 
Under a $215,000 grant from 
the U.S. Public Health Service, 
the University of Illinois will 
program a computer to be sick. 
1'he idea is to feed into the 
computer symptoms of various 
diseases so that it reacts as a 
patient. Then medical students 
and other trainees will examine 
it, 
make 
a 
diagnosis 
and 
prescribe therapy. 
For 
added 
realism, 
the 
computer will simulate heart 
sounds, but for the time being, 
apparently, 
bedpans 
will 
be 
unnecessary. 
On paper, at least, this sounds 
like a good way for students, 
interns , residents 
and young 
physicians 
to 
practice 
their 
computer-side 
manners 
and 
other aspects of the healing 
arts. 
But I’ll lay odds that within 
six 
months 
the 
computer 
becomes a hypochondriac. 
Any doctor will tell you that a 
goodly percentage of his pa­ 
tients’ ailments are psychoso­ 
matic. It is reasonable to expect 
the computer also will begin 


developing imaginary illnesses. 
It probably won’t be long 
before 
the 
computer 
starts 
calling up the medical dormito­ 
ry in the middle of the night. 
“ Could you come right over, 
doc?” it will say. “ My ulcer is 
acting up again.” 
But that also will be good 
training. For it will give the 
students experience in one of 
the m e d i c a l fundamentals. 
Which is how to say, “ Sorry, I 
don’t make house calls.” 
Students 
will 
communicate 
with the computer through a 
keyboard. I daresay a typical 
consultation will go something 
like this: 
A 
student 
approaches 
the 
keyboard and taps out, “ Well, 
Well. How are we feeling this 
morning?” 
“ Lousy, Doc,” the computer 
answers. 
“ I 
have 
a 
severe 
profrontal lobotomous stress in 
the anterior region and I...” 
“ Cool it,” the student says. 
“ I ’m 
just 
a 
second 
year 
student. 
My class 
has 
only 
gotten as far as runny noses.” 
The 
Public 
Health 
Service 
grant covers a two-year period. 
Which probably is long enough. 
By that time the computer will 
be applying for Medicare. And 
the 
students 
will 
all 
have 
answering services. 


DFBORAH JOHNSON 


Johnson-Vinson 
Miss Deborah Johnson will 
marry 
Sgt. 
H e n r y Vinson, 
USAF, on April 20. 
The betrothal was announced 
by the bride elect’s parents, Mr. 
and Mrs. LaVerne Johnson, 2184 
Avalon St. 
Miss Johnson graduated from 
Ganesha High School in 1967 
and attends college for IBM key­ 
punch training. 
Sgt. Vinson, son of Mrs. Ann 
Vinson, Brimingham, Ala , gra­ 
duated f r o m 
Marshal 
High 
School and attended Loop Junior 
College in Chicago, III. He en­ 
listed in the Air Force in 1965 
and is stationed at George Air 
Force Base. 


LU C ILLE 
GONZALES 


Gonzales-M artinez 
Mr. and Mrs. Tony E. Gonza­ 
les, 618 W. Grand Ave., an­ 
nounce the betrothal of their 
daughter, Lucille, to Arthur Mar­ 
tinez, son of Mr. and Mrs. Boni­ 
facio Martinez of Los Angeles. 
Miss Gonzales graduated from 
Garey High School in 1966 and 
is employed 
at 
Consolidated 
Laundries. 
Mr. Martinez, graduated from 
Pius X Catholic High School in 
Downey in 1964 and is employ­ 
ed by the Goodyear Tire and 
Rubber Company in Los Ange­ 
les. 
The wedding is set for April 
20 in the Sacred Heart Catholic 
Church. 


SHARON POLSTER 


Polster-Philabaum 
Miss Sharon Lee Polster will 
become the bride of Joseph E. 
Philabaum. 
The 
engagement 
was 
an­ 
nounced by the bride - elect’s 
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest 
Polster, 3926 Sumner Ave., Clar­ 
emont. 
Miss Polster graduated from 
Claremont High School in 1966 
and is employed as a psychatric 
technician trainee at 
Pacific 
State Hospital. 
Mr. Philabaum, son of Mrs. 
Helen Philabaum, 2311 Pattiglen 
Ave., La Verne, graduated from 
Ganesha High School in 1964 
and is employed by General 
Telephone Company. 


Protect Your Furniture 


(Haynes Photo) 


MR. AND MRS. LARRY HAMILTON 
Sharon Martina W eds 
In Chino Ceremony 


The Free Methodist Church in 
Chino was the setting for the 
double - ring nuptials uniting 
Miss Sharon I>ee Martina and 
Larry Lee Hamilton in mar­ 
riage. 
The biide is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Martina, 
1145512 
Albers St., 
and 
the 
groom is the son of Mr, and 
Mrs. A. A. Hamilton, 12933 Coz- 
zeas St., Chino. 
The f o r m e r Miss Martina 
wore a white floor-length gown 
fashioned with long sleeves and 
her veil was held by a pearl 
crown. She cat i ied a bouquet of 


white carnations. 
Mrs. 
Velores O’Brien 
was 
matron of honor. Bridesmaids 
were Mrs. Christaine Hamilton 
and Miss Linda Martina. 
L.A. Hamilton was best man. 
Ushers were Jim O'Brien and 
Don Bohnsok. 
Mrs. 
Nancy 
Farrar 
was 
organist, and Mrs. Faith Bruen- 
le was sollst. 
A reception at the church fol­ 
lowed the ceremony. 
After a honeymoon In San 
Francisco, the newlyweds will 
reside in Pomona« 


NEW 
Y O R K — (N EA) — 
Even with special finishes to 
protect the surfaces of furni­ 
ture it is still necessary to wor­ 
ry about cigarette bums, white 
rings left by sweaty glasses 
and general wear and tear on 
pieces dear to the heart. 
These may be antiques or 
merely old sideboards, desks, 
rockers or secretaries of rel­ 
atively fine wood that belonged 
to the family but definitely are 
not in the fine antique category. 
It is possible both to protect 
an investment in fine antiques 
and keep an heirloom looking 
respectable. 
A primary problem with older 
furniture is the damage to the 
wood and glues caused by insuf­ 
ficient moisture in a room’s at­ 
mosphere. Lack of moisture is 
among wood furniture’s worst 
enemies. 
It 
causes 
wood 
to 
shrink, split, loosens joints and 
even c a u s e s veneer to peel 
uway f r o m its base. During 
summer, high humidity causes 
swelling and warping of older 
wood furniiure. 
To maintain a proper balance 
of moisture in a home with fine 
wood furniture it may be neces­ 
sary to use a humidifier or rev­ 
ert to the old technqiue of plac­ 
ing pans of waier around during 
tl)e heating season. 


In addition to adding mois­ 
ture to a room’s atmosphere, 
immediate care of small acci­ 
dents to furniture surfaces helps 
relieve a homemaker's worry 
over long-range damage that 
results from a burn, alcohol 
ring, candle wax drips or wa­ 
ter stains. 
A home repair expert suggests 
quick RXs for superficial dam­ 
age: 
• For water spots — apply 
heat and moisture by placing 
a warm 
iron 
over a damp 
blotter on the area. Use brief 
applications and repeat 
until 
spot is gone. An alternate is to 
rub the spot gently with fine 
steel wool and then rewax sur­ 
face. 
• Alcohol spots — Rub aiea 
with finger dipped In pastewax, 
boiled linseed oil or silver pol­ 
ish. 
If 
deeper 
treatment 
is 
necessary, rub with rottenstone. 
• I oose pegs or screws — 
Remove. Put plastic steel in 
hole and replace peg or screw 
for more permanent repair. 
• Heat Marks — For light 
damage rub camphorated oil in­ 
to the spot with a lint-free 
cloth. For varnish or shellac 
finish, dampen cloth with spirits 
of camphor and rub on spot. Let 
dry for 30 minutes and rub with 
rottenstone and oil. 


• Candlewax — Chill w ax 
with piece of ice to make it 
easier to remove. 
Scrape off 
gently with a dull edge of a 
table knife. Apply polishing wax 
and rub well. 
• Loose veneer — Cut any 
blisters down the middle. Work 
knife under venner to work glue 
underneath. Apply glue sparing­ 
ly so it won’t squeeze out and 
injure the finish. Press down. 
Be certain all excess glue is 
wiped away. 
• Deep blemish or bum— 
R e m o v e damaged wood by 
scraping 
with 
razor 
blade. 
Clean a r e a w i t h naphtha. 
Smooth damage with fine steel 
wool and clean again. Fill with 
layers of stick shellac or wood 
filler stain 
to 
match 
finish. 
Smooth and wax. 
A good protection against the 
above damages is to keep furni­ 
ture clean and well-waxed. Miss 
King 
points 
out 
that 
many 
homemakers go overboard on 
such waxing. She suggest wax­ 
ing 
only 
once 
every 
three 
months. 


Storing E g gs 
Eggs stored at room tem­ 
perature will lose more qual­ 
ity ip one day than in a week 
in the refrigerator. 
\ 


m 


frogccsa-Bullctin 
omen a n d their activiti 


Engagements Announced 


Page 
5 
Progress-Builetìn, March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 1968 
Page 


ASK DR. BROTHERS 
That Time of Year 


By DR. JOYCE BROTHERS 


IT’S T H A T time of year again—the tail end of winter but spring still seems a long 
way off. 
We’ve just about had it with snow, cold, and icy winds. As we draw our coats 
tighter around us and sink our chins into the protective rim of collar and scarf, we 
begin to wonder if there ever really was a summer. 
We retreat into the confines of 
home, sinking into a friendly, reassuring armchair, reluctant to venture into the dreary 
Outside world. 
Co-workers, 
friends, family, 
and spouse all seem to have 
been bitten by the same bug. A 
mixture 
of 
restlessness 
and 
vague irritation fills the air. 
Everybody has 
something to 
complain about: a cold, a back­ 
ache, sleeplessness. Everywhere 
we hear the same comments: 
“ I don’t know what’s the mat­ 
ter,” " I ’m so bored I could 
scream,” or simply, “ I ’m de­ 
pressed.” 


THINGS probably aren’t quite 
this bleak. Most likely it is a 
case of the ordinary ups and 
downs of everyday life sudden­ 
ly seeming more important than 
they should. 
Simple little mistakes at work 
may become major issues. Or 
it’s the children who are get­ 
ting on your nerves. Maybe 
your in-laws seem more unrea­ 
sonable than ever. Or all of a 
sudden you wonder what you 
ever saw in your friends. Even 
your spouse may seem to be 
unusually moody. 
Looking in the mirror doesn’t 
help the picture at all. Far from 
it. What we see is a sallow, 
puffy face surrounded by limp- 
looking tendrils of hair and an 
undeniable 
lumpiness 
around 
the waist and hips. 
In the middle of the after­ 
noon we are suddenly taken by 


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an attack of the blues. Nothing 
seems 
very 
interesting 
any­ 
more, even sex. 
What’s wrong? Nothing seri­ 
ous, you’re probably just de­ 
pressed, something very com­ 
mon at this time of year. Bad 
moods seem to flourish in the 
months of January, February, 
and March. A study of the 
moods of college students re­ 
vealed that these months were 
the low point of the year for 
the average student. 


S O M E 
SCIENTISTS place 
the blame for this depressing 
state of affairs on the weather. 
In the winter, the body must 
gradually adjust itself to the 
l o w e r e d temperatures. The 
blood is thinner and the appe­ 
tite increases to prevent the 
body 
from 
becoming 
easily 
chilled. Storms and low pres­ 
sures seem to affect us physi­ 
cally, making us sluggish and 
irritable. 


Of course, individuals vary in 
their tolerance of heat and cold. 
There are always those staunch 
Spartans who insist that they 
thrive in cold, brisk weather. 
But the average person prefers 
warmth. 
Psychologically, 
w e 
assign 
values to heat and colci. Affec­ 
tion, happiness, and comfort are 
all “ warm” feelings. When we 
say someone is a “ cold” per­ 
son we mean that he is unlov­ 
ing, gloomy and unpleasant to 
be around. 
But we can’t place all the 
blame for winter blues on the 
weatherman. 
Sometimes, 
w e 
know for sure what is bother­ 
ing us: a disagreement with a 
loved one, worry about money, 
or perhaps illness. 


AT OTHER times, however, 
we just can’t seem to put our 
finger on what’s wrong. Without 
warning, when everything seems 
to be going along well, we sud­ 
denly 
find ourselves 
on 
the 


N e w Spring 
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downhill of an emotional roller 
coaster. Once it begins, there 
doesn’t seem to be much to do 
but wait until we reach the bot­ 
tom. And then, just as unex­ 
pectedly, the mood is gone. A 
shopping spree, an evening on 
the town, or a telephone chat 
may have been all that was 
needed. 
The trouble Is that winter 
makes it more difficult for us 
to escape from those blue feel­ 
ings. Outdoor activity is defi­ 
nitely limited. Only a few har­ 
dy souls are able to take out 
their frustrations by zooming 
down a ski slope or taking a 
long walk through the park. 
Even indoor activity is cur­ 
tailed. After the flurrv of Christ­ 
mas and New Year’s entertain­ 
ing, there is a marked lull in 
sociability. 
A fortunate few simply avoid 
the whole problem by hopping 
on a plane and emerging sev­ 
eral hours later in the warmth 
and friendliness of a tropical 
clime. They have no trouble in 
getting away from it all. 
For the rest of us, with vaca­ 
tion many months away, the 
best thing we can do is slush 
our way patiently through the 
rest of winter and try to forget 
about those w ho are lucky 
enough to be browning them­ 
selves in blissful oblivion. 


No one is completely honest 
at all times, but are you honest 
with yourself? For a self-reveal­ 
ing test, send 10c and a self- 
addressed, stamped envelope to 
Dr. Joyce Brothers, in care of 
this newspaper, and ask for her 
leaflet, “ Are You Honest with 
Yourself?” 


Trouble Brewing 


NEWCASTLE 
UPON TYNE, 
England (UPI)—-Man for man, 
Newcastle was the most drunk­ 
en city in England last year, 
according to figures compiled 
by the nation’s Chi f Constable. 
The city of 250,000 population, 
where they brew an ale known 
locally as “ Journey Into Space” 
or 
“ Idiot’s 
Broth,” 
reported 
1,444 prosecutions for drunken­ 
ness in 
1967, well ahead of 
towns of comparable si/e. 


The 
first 
p e n n y 
postage 
stamps in England were print­ 
ed in 1840 by Jacob Perkins. 


• Formait t Cocktail Dre «if » • Cambiate 
•rMoa A in d atm u d d rttta i A 
accattar ioa 
(T141 «?• 78 71 
tS S t R am ona Valle y C U ., R em ana C alif 


DR. G. T. CARDIFF 


GROUND FLOOR OFFICE 
• 
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NEW DENTURES 


EXTRACTION— SODIUM PENTOTHAL 


All Branches 
Dentistry at a 
W ork ing Man's 
Price 


REPAIRS & 
RELINES 
Whll* You Wmitl 


NO 
APPOINTMENT 
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H a v e you r D ental W o rk Done 
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FORMALS . STREET LENGTH - PARTY DRESSES 
1037 W.EÖÖTHILL BLVD 
Zeli 
iwfffl l F 
1 bile. E. of Mounfofa 
contuitont 
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FLO W E R S BLO O M on a bright n avy background, left, in this 
W e s tw a y Petites pantsdress. Two tiers of ruffles hide the pants. 
Look of the ’30s in seen, right, in double breasted jacket with 
short sleeves for w arm er days. 


DECORATED 
ICE CREAM SLICES 


FOR ALL OCCASIONS — ADVANCE NOTICE 


9 6 9 E. HOLT AVE., P O M O N A 


(Book Photo) 


MR, A N D MRS. WILLIAM CROSS 


Cross-Rexford Rituals 
Said in Baptist Church 


LET S ASK THE COOK 


by Nan Wiley 


Dear Nan: 
I recently found a recipe for 
bread that calls 
for graham 
flour 
but 
haven’t 
been 
able 
to find it in groceires. Would 
there be some dry cereal that 
could be crushed and substitut­ 
ed for the flour? 
L.M.S Columbia City 


I’m afraid not. While there 
are breads which do call for 
various dry cereals, 
in part, 
they 
wouldn’t 
be 
the 
same. 
However, whole wheat flour and 
graham flour have come to be 
synonymous. 
The name “graham ” became 
attached to 
it 
back in 
the 
1800s’ because of the Reverend 
Sylvester Graham who had his 
own ideas on nutrition, breads 
in 
particular. 
While 
he 
was 
sometimes ridiculed in his day, 
he built up such a following his 
name still stands in the annals 
of 
cooking 
history. 
Graham 
flour or whole wheat flour, 
it 
makes fine bread. 


Dear Nan: 
This summer we ate In a 
Mexican place where the food 
was delicious. Are there several 
kinds of Longhorn cheese? The 
kind 1 use doesn’t taste like 
what they had in their enchila­ 
das. 
Ethel M A. 


Longhorn simply denotes a 
shape of American Cheddar of 
which there are many kinds of 
degrees of flavor, ranging all 
the way from mild to the kind 
that “bites back” at you. While 
the original Cheddar was a dis­ 
covery of 17th century England, 
we now have many fine ones in 
this country and each region 


For Dusting 


Save any old shaving brush 
that comes your way. It is just 
the thing to dust the pleats in 
lampshades and its fibers are 
so soft that it cannot harm the 
most fragile shade. You will al­ 
so find it ideal for dusting off 
small vases and figurines. 


îfrmtx attïi ffirllra 


r c O T M I l i . AT V A I . I , C l A M l H û N I 


featuring: 


• BRIDAL G O W N S 


• COCKTAIL DRLSSES 


• tODGE FORMALS 


Gou m Custom Dt signed 


for That 


"SPECIAL MOMENT" 


Phone 626-6226 
Mon, thru Fri. Noon til tiOO 
S A T . 10 tit 5:00 


seems to have its local pride. 


The Monterey Jack cheese of 
California, 
Tillamook 
cheese 
from Oregon, others from Wis­ 
consin or New York state, can 
all come under the heading of 
Cheddar even though they may 
vary in taste and texture. 


What you had in those enchi­ 
ladas may not have been Ched­ 
dar at all. It may have been the 
zippy Parm esan although the 
milder Monterey Jack is also 
used in some Mexican recipes. 


Nan Wiley regrets that she 
cannot 
provide 
personal 
an­ 
swers to your cooking questions, 
but questions of general interst 
will be answered in her column. 
Address your questions to Nan 
Wiley in care of this newspaper. 


Save Recipes 
To keep small recipes clipped 
from magazines or newspapers 
from b e i n g lost, mislaid, or 
soiled before you can copy them 
on file cards, place them in an 
envelope and glue the flap of the 
envelope to the back of an index 
card. Fold the envelope against 
the card and file in proper order. 


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WURUTZER 
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1366 N. GAREY, P O M O N A 
6 2 2 -1 7 3 7 
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U n usua l and Boutique Gifts for W o m e n 


O P E N D AILY (EXCEPT M O N . ) l O to 5:30 
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S U N D A Y 


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forever w i t h 
PHOTOGRAPHS 
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WEDDING 


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Wedding Photos 
Studio Portraits 


Invitations 


o f the finest q u a lity . , . PER SO N A E I Z | D 
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I rasher’s Bridal Studio will give you professional 
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Phone 
621 -1 4 1 2 


The Pomona Valley Baptist 
Church was the setting for the 
single-ring wedding uniting Miss 


N A R C E 
Luncheon 
Charted 


Pomona Chapter of National 
Association 
of 
Rt*tired 
Civil 
Employes 
has 
scheduled 
a 
luncheon at 1 p.m. Tuesday. 
Members will meet at the Bit 
of Sweden Restaurant, 1055 E. 
Holt Ave. 
During the business meeting, 
beginning at 2 p.m., officers will 
be elected and delegates will 
be assigned to attend the state 
federation convention at Mission 
Inn in Riverside, April 16-18. 
Delegates will also be named 
for the national NARCH conven­ 
tion to be held in the San Fran­ 
cisco Hilton Hotel, June 10-12. 


Roxann Rexford and William A. 
Cross in marriage. 
The bride is the daughter of 
Mrs 
Mildred 
Rexford, 
4790 
Bandera Ave., Montclair, and 
the groom is the son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Bernard Cross, 1738 Brea 
Canyon Rd. 
The 
former 
Miss 
Rexford 
wore a street-length gown of 
white slipper satin with a lace 
cover. She carried a bouquet of 
white 
carnations 
with 
laced 
ribbon. 
Mrs. Lloyd G. Rexford was 
matron of honor and Miss Kar­ 
en L, Kelly was bridesmaid. 
Lloyd G. Rexford was best 
man, and ushers were Robert 
Cross, Patrick Mason and Mack 
Mason Jr. 
A reception in the home of 
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Smithberg 
followed the ceremony. 
The newlyweds will reside at 
1514 W. 5th Ave. 


The study of mountains and 
mountain systems is called or­ 
ography. 


Page 
7 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Builetin, March 
9, 
1968 
Page 


co 


Condensed M ilk 


A 15-ounce can of condensed 
(sweetened) milk yields 1M 
cups. 
m m me 
tit* 
.] 


ASK FOR 


) /c'¿e(X"t (/y /X -J 


Curren 
And Baker 
Vows Said 


The Rev. Johnston H. Calhoun 
officiated at the double - ring 
nuptials 
uni'ing 
Miss 
Nikokd 
Valerie Baker and Seaman Stev­ 
en 
Wayne 
Curren 
in 
mar­ 
riage at the Ontario Chapel of 
the Bells. 
The bride is the daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Baker, 
2460 Ann Arbor Ave., and the 
groom is the son of 
Mr. and 
Mrs. Theron Curren, 1156 E. 
Franklin Ave. 
Given in 
marriage by her 
father, the former Miss Baker 
wore a rosepoint lace over satin 
gown designed and made by her 
mother. Her gown 
was 
fash­ 
ioned with long sleeves, chapti 
train and a tulle veil held by a 
crown of satin and seed pearls. 
She carried a bouquet of white 
and yellow gladioli. 
Miss Lee Anne Baker was 
maid of honor and Miss I.eora 
Mae Baker was flower girl. 
John 
C u r r e n 
was 
best 
man, and ushers were David 
Baker and A1 Hezelton. Timothy 
Baker was ring bearer. 
A reception 
at 
the 
chapel 
followed the ceremony. 
The newlyweds will reside at 
2111 Highland Ave., Apt. A, Na­ 
tional City. The groom is sta­ 
tioned in San Diego with 
the 
U.S. Navy. 
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Across from 
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§ Pomona Paint & Paper Co. M 


PITTSBURGH PAINTS 
N A 2-3521 


431 East Holt Ave,, Pomona 
= 
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(Holtrust Photo) 


S E A M A N A N D MRS. STEVEN CURREN 


STITCHIN’ TIME 
Make Miniature Models 


BY JUDY LOVE 
Children 
often 
are 
carbon 
copies of their parents in the 
way they look, act and dress. 
As a knitter, you no doubt turn 
out fashions for your favorite 
youngsters that are m iniature 
models of what you — or their 
p rents — are wearing. 
Back 
in 
the 
13th 
century, 
youngsters had 
special 
privi­ 
leges in the m atter of dress. 
Laws, designed to keep exces­ 
sive luxuries in check, did allow 
em broidery to be worn by boys 
up to the age of 12 and by un­ 
m arried girls. 
For the most part, however, 
children's 
fashions 
over 
the 
years reflected the styles worn 
by adults. In the 19th century, 
boys 
grew 
up 
almost 
over­ 
night. Until age 4 to 5, a boy 
wore skirts, then traded them in 
for long trousers and a tiny 
bowler hat just like daddy’s! 
The 19-century lad’s costume 
was simpler than his father’s 
but it was clumsy and confining 
for active games. Today’s little 
boy is luckier by far—with a 
rugged little he-man wardrobe 
that’s ready for action. 
The sweater I’m showing to­ 
day is designed 
to make a 
little boy every inch the sports­ 
man his father is. Rows of cable 
patterns are he-man handsome 
and the collar is shaped into an 
easy neckline for extra ccmfort 
in wearing and dressing. You 
can knit it in small, medium or 
large for sizes 4 to 14 (in Ber- 
nat’s Super Morshire). 
The pullover for moms or any 
grown-up girl plunges into a 
deep, deep V neckline. Knit a 
companion dickie that features 
a 
cabled 
pattern 
around a 
stand-up collar, or wear the 
topper with a crisp white or 
colored blouse. The sweater can 
be knitted in sizes 12 to IS in 
all-wool 
Sesame 
superknitt­ 
ing worsted, 
this 
yam 
has 
one of the largest color ranges 
on the market today. 
For your copy of knitting di­ 
rections for both pullover, send 
50 cents to Stitchin’ Time, c-o 
Progress-Bulletin P.O. Box 503, 
Radio City Station. New York, 
N.Y. 10019. Please ask for leaf­ 
let No. S137 and be sure to in­ 
clude your zip code with your 
name and address. 


KNIT KNACKS 
A new knitter, Miss LE from 
Saginaw, Mich., has written for 
an explanation of “yam over.’’ 
This is actually an increase 
stitch, often called for in direc­ 
tions for the openwork increases 
on raglan sleeve shaping«. It’s 
also used in lacy pattern 


O ro b e r 


Co m i d al O liv a 
FANCY FOODS & GIFTS 


YEAR A R O U N D SPECIALISTS in fancy food 


baskets end tasteful gifts for all occasions: 
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H A N D SO M E — Toppers are easy to knit for outdoor sports of 
all ages. Knitting directions for both the boy’s pullover in sizes 
4 to 14 and mom’s slimming V-neck sweater and dickie are 
available. 


02020201005348234823012302010001010100000102010201002300 


Texas Sh ows HemisFair Styles 


JENIE CARPET 
SERVICE 


W E DRY CLEAN 


& SH A M PO O 
IN O N E C LEA N IN G 
I 
CARPfT 
1 
CLEANERS, 


Radio Dispatched Tracts 


24 H O U R SERVICE 6 2 7 -2 7 3 3 


be held in the Southwest and 
translated it into fashions 
for 
Summer '68. 
To 
reflect 
the 
international 
emphasis of HemisFair, design­ 
ers borrowed from the historical 
costumes 
of 
other 
countries. 
From Spain they took the elab­ 
orate dress of the matador with 
its ruffled shirt, billowing cape 
and fitted bolero. Bright-colored 
dirndl skirts trimmed with em­ 
broidered ribbon suggest Alpine 
shepherdesses. 
The 
mandarin 
collar 
was 
imported from the 
Orient; 
Empress 
Josephine’s 
daring necklines and high waists 
reappear from France and En­ 
gland 
contributes 
the 
Gibson 
Girl collar. 
The site of HemisFair, 
its 
buildings and landscape, comes 
alive in the patterns of Texas 
sportswear. Its gardens blossom 
on bright, ruffled pantdresses. 
The ornate ironwork of its his­ 
toric 
buildings 
is 
printed 
on 
slack sets. Strong, angular pat­ 
terns imitate the modern archi­ 
tecture 
f o u n d 
in 
exhibit 
buildings and the gentle San 
Antonio river can be seen in 
soft, shady designs. 
When 
HemisFair 
opens 
in 
April, San Antonio will begin a 
six-month fiesta. Designers took 
this cue in creating a group of 
the 
m o s t 
extravagant even­ 
ing c l o t h e s shown in year«. 
They tied tiers of sheer organza 
with satin, ruffled creamy crepe 
with layers of luce and lavished 
jewels on heavy satin. 
In contrast to the ornate look 
for evening, the designers work­ 
ed on getting women to the fair. 
Realizing the rush of travel and 
hotel living involved, they con­ 
centrated on easy-care fabrics 
and trim styling. 
They 
designed 
sophisticated 
suits and ensembles for flying 
into San Antonio. They u s e d 
polyester knits and permanent- 
press fabrics for living out of a 
suitcase. 
The largest bi-lingual city in 
the United States, San Antonio 
exhibits 
a 
s t r o n g 
Latin - 
American 
feeling. 
This 
has 
strengthened the return of femi­ 
ninity in Texas fashions. Clothes 
follow the shape of the body. 
The waist, back in fashion now, 
is defined with belts, inserts or 
seams. 
Lower 
necklines 
are 
softened with ruffles and skirts 
swing in gores, pleats or the 
dirndl. 
The sex appeal of the ’30s 
turns up in at-home clothes with 
Bonnie and Clyde look. 
HemisFair ’68 displays strong 
contrasts in its 92 6 acres. These 
same contrasts are seen in the 
summer f a s h i o n collections. 
They echo HemisFair and its 
theme—the Confluence of Civili­ 
zations In the Americas. 


The Columbia University Col­ 
lege of Physicians and Surgeons 
m**dica! faculty numbers 1,764, 
of which 773 are assistant, asso­ 
ciate or full professors. 


OIL PAINTINGS 
.5 0 % 
O A S IS ART G A LLER Y 


SAVE 
UP TO 


(O n« block north 
•f Soar»; 
PO M O N A 


SAN ANTONIO - 
NFA 
- 
right through to fashion. 
the Texas Fashion Creators As- 
There s an international flavor 
With 
HemisFair 
providing 
sociation 
have 
captured 
the 
in Texas these days that carries 
inspiration, the designers from 
spirit of the first world’s fair to 


BOLD STRIPES of rich chocolate cleverly cut in Atnel triacetate and nylon, left, travels without a 
w rinkle. The feminine look, right, is of organza, trimmed with grosgrain. 
CradL Rot? 


P A R K A V E N U E HOSPITAL: 


BR O W N E - T o Mr. and Mrs. 
Dennis Edward Browne, 12054 
Roswell, Chino, a son, Dennis 
Edward, 7 lbs., 14 oz., born 
Feb. 10. 


B E R R Y —To Mr. and Mrs. 
Eddy Lawrence Berry, 4783 
State 
St., 
Ontario, 
a 
son, 
Michael Darrin, 9 lbs , 7 o/., 
bom Feb. 10 
T O L IV E R —To Mr. and Mrs. 
Roger D u a n e Toliver, 639 
Karish, Pomona, a son, Brad­ 
ley Carl, 7 lbs., 2 oz., born 
Feb. 10. 
M A RT IN —To Mr. and Mrs. 
Paul Leon Martin, 1189 Mindo 
Dr., Pomona, a son, Bradley 
Carl, 
7 
lbs., 
2 
oz., 
born 
Feb. 10. 
D A BN EY - T o Mr. and Mrs. 
Robert 
Lynn 
Dabney, 
2229 
Gambier Dr., Pomona, a ^on, 


Robert Lynn II, 7 lbs., bom 
Feb. 11. ' 
SEN N —To 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Raymond Alden Senn, 133 F:. 
Green, Claremont, a daughter, 
Charlene Rae, 9 lbs., 5 oz., 
born Feb. 16. 
C O RRA LES — To Mr. 
Mrs. Theodore C orrales. 
First St., La Verne, a 
Arthur Lyle, 7 lbs., l 'j 
born Feb. 16. 
H ERN A N D EZ—To Mr. 
Mrs. David Hernandez, 
W. Phillips, Apt, D. Pomona, 
a daughter, Paula Tabera, 6 
lbs., 13 oz., born Feb. 17. 
M ATTHEWS — To Mr. and 
Mrs. Gary Lee Matthews, 3039 
Hailander St., P o m o n a , a 
daughter, Melinda Kay, 8 lbs., 
7 oz., born Feb. 17. 
PA D ILLA —To Mr. and Mrs. 
Jesus Padilla, 1523 S. Sultana, 


and 
2445 
son, 
oz., 


and 
1453 


Spring into Spring u itb our 
FROSTING SPECIAL 


Reg. 22.50 Volue 
O N E W EEK O N LY 
(set Inc I. 


6 
O ffer Exp ires Sat. M arch 1i 
* 


piar 
foel.iHair 'JaAhicnA 


526 ST. PAUL STREET 
PO M O N A — (Next to Ron's Bars & Stools) 622-9417 


Ontario, a daughter. Sonya, 7 
lbs., 8 oz., born Feb. 17. 
TODD—To 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
William Harold Todd Jr., 222 
E. 
Foothill, 
Space 
15, Po­ 
mona, a son, William Harold 
III, 
9 lbs., 
1312 
oz., 
born 
Feb. 18. 
JO N ES—To Mr. and Mrs. 
Lovett Jones Jr., 735 W. 9th 
St., 
Apt. 
7, 
P o m o n a , 
a 
daughter, JaVian Michelle, 7 
lb;., 4 oz., bom Feb. 18. 
JORDAN—To Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas Jerry Jordan, 
2851 
Kimball Ave., Pomona, a son, 
Devin Kyle, 7 lbs., 
14 oz., 
bom Feb. 20. 
PR IM U S- T o Mr. and Mrs. 
Jeremiah Primus Jr., 1060 W. 
9th St., Pomona, a daughter, 
Melissa Denise, 6 lbs., 
oz., 
bom Feb. 20. 


RO E — To Mr. and Mrs. 
James C h a r l e s Roe, 2505 
Kathryn 
Ave., 
Pomona, 
a 
daughter, 
Lori 
Elizabeth, 
6 
lbs., 2 oz., born Feb. 21. 


CARRO LL — To Mr. and 
Mrs. Gilbert Michael Carroll, 
1142 Sheridan Ave., Pomona, 
a son, Gilbert Michael Jr., 8 
lbs., 10 oz., born Feb. 21. 


JA K U B IA K - To Mr. and 
Mrs. Peter Joseph Jakubiak, 
1384 
W. Orange 
Grove, 
B, 
Pomona, a son, Mark Joseph, 
8 lbs,, » j oz., born Feb. 21. 


H U B E R —To Mr. and Mrs. 
Michael Todd H u b e r, 5125 
Bandera, Apt. F, Montclair, 
a son, Jeffrey Todd, 8 lbs., 
7 oz., bom Feb. 22. 


SALE - SALE • SALE 


Í 


MISS JE A N N E ALl I N 


June 21 


W edd ing 


Planned 


The betrothal of Miss Jeanne 
Sue Allen and Larry B. McNall 
was announced by the bride- 
elect’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. 
Roy R. Allen of Fontana. 
lhe wedding is planned for 
June 21. 


M iss Allen will graduate from 
Bloomington 
High 
School 
in 
June. 


Mr. McNall, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. B. H. McNall. 1537 West 
E St., Ontario, graduated from 
Chaffey H i g h School in 1967 
and is employed by the South­ 
ern Counties Gas Company in 
the construction department. 


M irror Lights 


A id Toilette 


Lights 
about 
a 
mirror 
in 
theater-dressing-room style, or 
even projecting out from a wall 
mirror, can be a major assist­ 
ance to Milay’s toilette. A cera­ 
mic tile counter beneath, match­ 
ing the decor of floor and wall 
tiles, will also be an aid, elimi­ 
nating worries about stains from 
spilled cosmetics or misplaced 
lighted cigarettes. 


JOSEPHINE'S 


(Fashions for the Lady) 
BEST 
BARGAINS 
IN 
TOWN 


BE SURE TO CHECK OUR 
CLOSE-OUT RACK 
You II find real $$$$$ 
Savings. 


W o 
arm n o w r e c e i v i n g 
»hlp- 
m e n t s o f n e w s p r i n g m o r c h a n * 
d ic e 
that 
w ill 
e n h a n c e 
a n y 
w a r d r o b o . S t o p in t o d a y a n d 
b r o w s o . 


JOSEPHINE'S 


• • » M r « « * N. G ordon a n d N 
G o « « / 


m tm u n d »#>• tm m rn i b e h in d 
P o o k i C l e a n o r t 


Phono N A 2 -4 4 7 0 
126 W . K IN G S L E Y 


Page 
9 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


Progrcss-Bulletin# 
March 
9, 1968 
Page 
10 


Centraci ßridge 


Written by Oswald Jacoby for NEA Service 


Dorothy Hayden’s book entitl­ 
ed 
“ Bid Better, 
P lay B etter" 
has just appeared in a paper­ 
back 
edition. 
Like 
all 
bridge 
books, w e can ’t endorse every­ 
thing in it, but we can state 


N O R T H 
9 
• Q 4 2 
• Q 7 5 3 
♦ A 8 7 8 
4b K 6 
WEST 
EAST 
• 9 
A 1063 
V K 1092 
V A J 8 6 4 
♦ Q J 10 2 
4 94 3 
+ 7 5 3 2 
A 9 8 
SO U T H <D) 
A A K J 8 7 5 
V Void 
4 K 5 
4b A Q J 10 4 
Both vulnerable 
IVest 
North 
Last 
South 
2 A 
Tass 
3 A 
Pass 
4 4» 
Pass 
4 ♦ 
Pass 
4 V 
Pass 
5 4b 
Pass 
7 A 
Pass 
Pass 
Pass 
Opening lead— 4 Q 


that there is a great deal of 
good bi idge common sense in 
it. 


Today’s hand, taken from it, 
shows how to bid a grand slam 
by 
locating 
specific 
cards 
in 
partner's hand b> eu3 bids. 


Some 
players 
wouldn’t open 
the South hand w.th a forcing 
bid. The Jacobs s aren’t includ­ 


ed in that group. True, you can 
set up a North hand that won’t 
let 
South 
m ake 
gam e 
som e­ 
where, 
but 
b r i d g e 
players 
should not w ait for absolute cer­ 
tainties. 
Once 
South does 
open 
with 
two spades, North is interested 
in a slam but should not m ake 
any really aggressive m ove. In­ 
stead he should raise to three 
spades 
to 
show 
strength 
and 
spade support. 
At this point Smith assum es 
that there will be no losers in 
trum ps and wants to locate two 
key cards — the ace of dia­ 
monds and the king of clubs. 
Blackwood will let him find out 
how m any aces and kings North 
holds, but he doesn’t care about 
how m any. He needs to know 
about those two special cards. 
He bids four clubs and North 
should 
go 
to 
four 
diamonds. 
This bid clearly shows the ace. 
North has already set spades 
as the suit. South follows with 
four hearts to show first round 
heart control. It m akes no dif­ 
ference to North whether South 
is showing the ace or a void. 
North 
should 
bid 
five 
clubs. 
Once more, North isn’t trying 
to get into clubs. He is show­ 
ing second round control. 
This is enough for South. He 
eoes 
to 
the 
grand 
slam 
and 
spreads 
his 
hand 
as soon 
as 
E ast follows to the first trick. 


LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE 


IfeDOWÑ] 


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1 \ LARGE HEAD 
p 
LETTUCE.... A125 
Crisp A Fresh— Straight from the Farms 
1 


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424 W . Commercial St 
• 
Pomona 
• 
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• BANQUET FACILITIES (Atcommodattnq 25-250) 
• LUNCHEONS 
• COCKTAILS 
• DINNERS 
• DANCING 
lAcco'fmodaUns 25-250) 
BRUNCH . . . (very Sunday 
from 1 1 A M t« 2:00 P.M. 


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HOIT A V f., POMONA 
*22-1411 


ICE HOUSE 
Mt_Ba£dy 
FRI., SAT., & SUN. 
4 pc DANCE BAND 
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R ESER V A TIO N S 


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S U N D A Y 
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CLOSED M O N . 
J O b t. 


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Open Mon. 
Thru Sat. 


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• Privata Portia« 
• Reception* 


2317 D. St. La Verne 
For Reservations Phone 593-61 19 


The V ery Finest In 
Italian 
Cuisine & 
American 
Foods 
BX GEN 


FINE CUISINE 
!«S1 WEST FOOTHILL BLVD. |HWT 
*4) 
URLANO — Rhone* 029-9090 or 992-8445 
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2975 Foothill Blvd., Lo Vom* 
593-7209 


• 
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4620 Holt Bl y ci , MonteIfjlrei 


D AN C E Fri. & Sat. To The Music O f The 
JOE DARNELL FOUR 


• A C C O M M O D A T IO N S U P TO 450 
• AM PLE P A R K IN G 
§ N A 4-1913 


T H E 
T A C O K IT C H E N 


We Spa<lo!i»a In 


Spanish Oinnar« 


Hour«. 11:30-2:00 


5:00-9:00 
Sat. 5:00 9:00 


Sunday 
1:00-8 00 p m. 


Closed Tuesdays 


VI«M Our 


OH I Shop 


2911 Bonita, La Vorno 
593-1*11 


Restaurant 


Serving only the vary 
fin«*# In food* . . , 


N i h m o 'i O Ida it and M oif Renowned 
Ratfawranf — Sfme 1927 
LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS 
• PARTIES • RfCFPTIONS 
Su n d a y B u rrir 


ST 
CHARLES SPECIAL 
Sunday Buffet— Naan til 9 
................$2.25 
Children Under 1 2 .............................. $150 


158 W. Holt Pomona 622^565 


i'lis ii 'H 
STCHHS 'H X0B3ÏEP 
lücrçfyiLS 
USI tfiyTHSTKt * . 
Xuc^ü^GiJ, CHLIFûî^KIi 
■ fyoi(E 
SS2 -1I0 » 
' 
' 
(Formerly the Cm* d* Mayo) 
Tuoi. - Sun. 4:00 to 10:30 
Fri. A Sat. 'HI 11:30 — Closed Mon. 


mm mmmm 
a w n s i 
* 
* 
» x» 
É 


Not for Spending . . . 


I 


:s 


i 


send you a sm all container of 
silver crystals as 
they come 


F-Stops Grade Lens 
Openings of Camera 


S O THAT’S IT — The f-stop puzzles beginners: small n u m b e rs 
equal large tens openings; large numbers equal sm a ll a p e r ­ 
tures. It’s illustrated here by this child's f/2 wide-open e y e s 
and her f-16 closed down mouth. This photo of his d a u g h te r 
was m ade by the well known animal photographer W a lt e r 
C h an d o h a of Annandale, N.J. 


By MORT R E E D 
Special N FA Writer 


The new 1968 proof sets now 
being m ailed from the United 
States 
A ssay 
Office 
in 
San 
F ran cisco are 
the first 
to be 
issued by the T reasury since 
1964. During the first 14 days 
following the 
initial 
ordering 
date of Nov. 1, the A ssay Of­ 
fice received over 1.7 million or­ 
ders which is expected to be a 
sm all per cent of the total for 
this series. 


Not all of these orders are 
from 
num ism atists 
by 
any 
m eans. There are perhaps as 
m a n y noncollectors b u y i n g 
proofs as there are collectors 
and for various reasons. Som e 
buy them 
as 
m ementos 
for 
their fam ily and 
friends 
and 
others just invest in what has 
proven to be a very profitable 
com modity. 


The 1964 proof se t w as encas­ 
ed 
in 
a 
pliofilm 
envelope 
and sold through the 
Philadel­ 
phia 
mint 
for 
$2.10. 
Today 
that 
set 
is 
being 
bought 
by 
dealers for $10 and sold for 
$11.75. 


The 1968 sets are housed in a 
beautiful molded plexiglass hold­ 
er and are available from the 
U.S. 
A ssay Office at $5 per 
set which includes the fee for 
first-class, registered m ail. 
A 
m axim um of 20 sets are all 
anyone m ay order and requests 
for m ore than 20 will be re­ 
turned. 
This set is of particular inter­ 
est because of the num ber of 
“ firsts” it has established. It is 
the first proof set to be minted 
outside the 
Philadelphia mint, 
the first to be struck on the new 
clad cupro-nickel m aterial and 
the first to ever bear a mint 
m ark. 
The mint U tter “ S ” is located 
in the conventional spot on the 
one-cent piece 
and 
is 
to the 
right 
of 
the 
portrait on 
the 
nicked, dim e and quarter. The 
half-dollar shows it just below 
the trunction of the neck. 
* 
* 
* 
Mr. JMW , Provo, Utah: You 
m ay secure silver bullion from 
the United States A ssay Office 
for 
your 
silver 
certificates. 
There are som e outlets that will 


from the government, 
for 
a 
slight charge over and above 
the value of your certificate. 
W W W 
M iss HLT, Sequin, Tex: Your 
1843 Seated Liberty half-dollar 
lists from $4.50 in good con­ 
dition to approxim ately $65 un­ 
circulated. If the word L IB E R ­ 
TY is 
plainly 
visible 
on 
the 
shield held by Liberty send me 
a self-addressed stam ped enve­ 
lope and I will return the nam e 
of a person interested in your 
coin. 
★ 
★ 
★ 
Mr. KD, Wichita Falls, Tex. 
Your coin is a com m em orative 
half-dollar issued in 1892 and 
1893 and sold at the World’s Co­ 
lumbian Exposition at Chicago 
for $1. It is the first com m em or­ 
ative coin issued by the United 
States. The obverse was design­ 
ed by B arber and the reverse 
w as designed by Morgan. 
The 
ship is Colum bus’ flagship, the 
Santa 
M aria. 
Uncirculated 
specim ens of this piece are list­ 
ed as $5. 
★ 
★ 
★ 
M iss MS, Trenton, N .J.: There 
w as an article during the week 
of May 25, 
1967, dealing 
with 
the value of the 1942 over 1941 
M ercury dime. It is noticeable 
because the figure 1 closes the 
front of the figure 
2. 
It 
was 
caused by sinking the figure 2 
over the last digit in the 1941 
dies. This coin 
is still 
being 
found am ong other dim es and 
the value is very high. Better 
start looking at all those 10-cent 
pieces you say you have been 
saving. 


Glue Mounts 
Tile Fixtures 


Installing 
shelf 
brackets or 
towel racks in a tile bathroom 
is 
a 
tricky problem . 
Instead 
of trying to put a hole in the tile, 
the fixture can be attached with 
a super-strength epoxy glue. Ap­ 
ply the epoxy as directed and 
tape the fixture to the wall. Two 
hours 
later, rem ove the tape 
and 
you 
have 
a 
bracket 
so 
strong that hubby can chin him­ 
self on it. 


By IRVING D ESFO R 
AP New sfeatures 


A newcomer to photography 
startled me the other day with 
an easy question, “ What are f- 
sto p s?” 


It’s a sim ple question which 
generally 
gets 
a 
com plicated 
answ er. T hat’s because to be 
technically correct, the defini­ 
tion would go like this: An f-stop 
is a num erical expression of the 
relative aperture of a lens at its 
different openings. The f-stop or 
f-number is equal to the focal 
length of the lens divided by the 
effective diam eter of the lens 
opening. 
Such 
an 
explanation 
would 
leave any newcomer just as be­ 
wildered as before. And it will 
do very little even for old-tim­ 
ers, who have learned to live 
with f-stops and get the feel of 
f-numbers 
by 
taking 
pictures 
without the m athem atics of di­ 
viding 
the 
effective 
diam eter 
into the focal length 
Let’s talk about f-stops and 
som e of the 
things you 
will 
learn about them in time. 


Fraction Represented 


First of all they are num bers 
which refer to a specific lens 
opening or lens aperture and 
are written 
like 
this: 
f-2 or 
f-5.6 
or 
f-22. 
It 
m ay 
seem 
strange to a beginner that the 
sm aller the number, the larger 
the lens opening; and the larger 
the 
number, 
the 
sm aller 
the 
lens opening. 
That’s because the f-numbers 
represent a ratio or fraction. 
Replace the f with 1 and f-2 be­ 
com es 12; 
f-22 becom es 1-22. 
Now >ou can see why 1-2 of the 
focal length of a lens, instead of 
f-2, has a larger lens opening 
than l-22nd or f-22 of that focal 
length. 
And saying it the usual way, 
the lens at f-4 . . . 1-4 . . . is 
much larger than at f-16 . . . 1-16 
. . . 
so 
the 
expressions 
are: 
“ close down to f-16” or “ open 
up to f-4.” 
The system of f-numbers w as 
calculated so that theoretically 
all lenses transm it the sam e 
amount of light to the negative 
at the sam e f-stop if they face 
the sam e subject from the sam e 
distance and the exposure Is 
m ade at the sam e speed. Slight 
differences 
in 
each 
cam era's 
shutter operation or num ber of 
lens-reflecting 
surfaces 
m ay 
m ake 
the 
differences 
which 


link cry & G ift Shop 
622 BELLEVUE • P O M O N A 
6 23-3777 
Locat'd in Alpha Beta Centtr al r> Pomti 
O P E N S U N D A Y S — 
8 J O A M. 
to 5 30 P M. 
Open Daily 8 30 to 7 00 — Closed Mondays 
K M il t4 ITO 


show up in actual perform ance, 
however. 


Lens Speed Indicated 


The top f-number of a lens is 
a quick rating of its speed. The 
fastest lenses are those with the 
sm allest num bers because they 
have the largst openings and 
let in the m ost light. In this 
class are the f-1.4, f-1.9, f-2 and 
f-2.8 lenses. 
The speed rating of each good 
lens is engraved on 
the lens 
mount along with its particular 
design, focal length, m anufac­ 
turer 
and 
individual 
number. 
The lens opening is written as a 
ratio, a s for instance one of my 
f-2 ienses for a 35mm cam era: 
“ Planar 1:2 f equals 50m m .” 


The f-stops which are m arked 
on cam eras have a precise rela­ 
tionship with each other. E ach 
one transm its twice as much 
light a s the next larger num ber 
or half as much light as the next 
sm aller num ber. 
A list of f-stops found on cur­ 
rent 
cam eras 
m ay 
include 
these: 
f 1.4—2—2.8"—4 -5.fr—-8—* 
1 1 -1 6 -2 2 -3 2 —45—64. 
T h e r e 
are slight variations in som e 


m odels which m ay have f 3.2— 
4.5—6.3 etc., but each f stop’s 
ability to let in light is double 
that of its right hand neighbor 
and half that of its left-hand 
neighbor. 


The 
expression, 
therefore, 
“ open one stop” or “ close down 
a sto p " is a suggestion to let in 
twice a s much light or reduce 
the light by half. 


There are m any other ram ifi­ 
cations about f-stops but we’ve 
com e to a space-stop. As the 
lens cap goes back in place, per­ 
haps w e’ve opened up a stop or 
two, . . . that is, let in m ore 
light. 


G o o d Trick 


H ere’s a good trick to keep 
sm all 
rubbers 
and 
rainw ear 
from getting separated or m is­ 
laid: Give each child two sets 
of brightly painted clothespins, 
decorated with his initials in 
a contrasting color, to clip rub­ 
bers or boots in pairs, and rain 
hat to raincoat. 


The University of Maine, in 
Orono, w as founded in 1865. 


■OMO 
et I routes 


F o re ig n 
a n d D o m e stic Electronic 
C o m p o n e n t s 


W o Carry 
Ih o C o m - 
p io l o 
Lino of 


• Mtr- 


T r a m i t i « . » 
an d O t h « r 
C tm pontn lt 
fhm P o it % Shop tor Sor lout 
| , p , i i m » n l t r i , ond »•/totrmom 


IN S lo th 


A C o m - 


p io l o 
L in o of 
P a t i » for 
A L L 
rORIIGN 
MADE 
RADIOS 


O P I N : M o n d a y T h ro u g h S a t u r d a y 9 a, m. to 6 p. m. 


1090 So. G arey Ave, • Pom ona • 629-2862 


» r - r r 
r 
s t o p s 


ARE NOT 
A MYSTERY 
( 
despite the 
% 
above article I 
STOP IN 


W e ’ll Explain 


Them in 


Layman's Terms 


i i 


v 
&£ 
Ü 
I 


III 


H&H Photo, 


POMONA'S CAMERA CENTER 


2 2 8 P O M O N A MALL W IS T 


DOWNTOWN POMONA 
• 
613-1291 
$ REMEMBER THE DAY—WITH P IC T U R E S^ 


Page 
11 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 
Page 
12 


ÿ t Happened % Pmcna 


by J. K. "Doc" Peirsol 


The Cash and Carry Days 


What did Pomonans do b e f o r e 
credit cards were invented? Well, in 
the year 1893, at least, they paid 
cash—that’s what! And it wasn’t ex- 
a< tl\ because they wanted to, either. 
In October of 1893, the meat m ar­ 
ket proprietors in Pomona entered 
into an agreement not to give credit 
for meat under a penalty of a $200 
fine. Not to be outdone, several of 
Pomona’s grocery men also adopted 
the same plan and gave notice that 
they would sell for cash only. 
“In this way,” they pointed out, 
“we can do a w a y with the extra 
work required in keeping accounts; 
reduce the capital necessary to run 
our business; and avoid loss of some 
bad accounts.” 
And that’s how cash and c a r r y 
came to Pomona. It was probably 
a good thing, too, for the year 1893 
was not one noted for brisk business 
in this area. In fa c t, there was a 


bit of a depression going on. So much 
of a depression that an undertaker 
was advertising that he would bury 
the second twin for only 20 per cent 
more than his charge for the first 
one. 
However, then as now’- even though 
folks didn’t have money to pay their 
bills, there was always cash avail­ 
able for the get - rich - quick artists 
who abounded in these parts. Ac­ 
cording to The Pomona Progress: 
“The operations of patent medicine 
men, who sell their wares on our 
streets, net at least $100 a day. It 
is a poor fakir who can’t m a k e 
more in Pomona in one day out of 
selling some nostrum on the street 
than a laboring m an can make in 
a month at hard work.’’ 
Then t h e r e was the confidence 
man who was going about town get­ 
ting donations of from one to two 
dollars each from sympathetic Po­ 


mona ns in exchange for 15 - cent 
scarf pins. With a show of great sor­ 
row, he told his victims that the pin 
was a valuable one but that his wife 
was sick and he wanted to r a i s e 
money to go and see her. W h e n 
finally brought to justice, a large 
number of these scarf pins w e r e 
found on his person. 
Depression or not, Pomonans also 
managed to scrape up enough extra 
cash for a day at the circ us—a cir­ 
cus later described by The Pomona 
Progress as being “attended by the 
toughest gang of pickpockets, thieves 
and swindlers ever to follow a circus 
through this p a r t of the country. 
Many a man lost a $5 gold piece 
and not a few $20 pieces in trying 
to beat the professional gam blers.’’ 
Is it any wonder that the meat 
markets and grocery stores were de­ 
manding cash on the barrelhead? 


YOU GET MORE TH AN MONEY 
WHEN YOU INVEST WITH US 


You gel the security of a 75-year-old home operated financial institution as 


well as the courtesy, friendship and competence of employees such as Mary Ann 


Garciduenas. And you get much more. 


Why not stop in at any of our eight conveniently located offices and let us 


explain all the extra benefits you get when you deal with PFF. 


P O M O N A FIRST FEDERAL 
S A V I N G S A N D L O A N A S S O C I A T I O N 


I N S U M O S A V I N G S / M I M i u F|0|*AI M O M I 1,0AN BANK SYSTIM 
MARY ANN GARCIDUENAS 
TELLER 
SAN DIMAS OFFICE 


Girls Cord 


Backwards 
Fun W eek 


By MARTY TODD 


Pomona High Correspondent 
N ext w e e k will be annual 
Backwards W e e k at Pomona 
High School. Lots of fun and 
activities 
and 
money-raising 
events have been planned for 
each day of the week. 


Monday will feature a "gor­ 
geous gam s" contest to deter­ 
m ine the boy with the shapeli­ 
est legs. Students will be able 
to v o t e for the boy of their 
choice with a penny at the red 
booth 
during 
the 
break 
and 
both lunches. Linda Ketchum is 
in charge of Monday’s activi­ 
ties. 


Tuesday will be slave day. 
Boys can require girls to car­ 
ry their books and perform oth­ 
er m enial tasks by presenting 
a slave ticket which c a n be 
purchased for 5 cents or three 
for a dime in the red booth on 
Monday. 
G irls To Play Football 
A 
"powder 
puff" 
football 
gam e has been planned for aft­ 
er school on Tuesday, where 
the girls will challenge women 
teachers to play against them. 
P*Rf?y Carter is chairm an of 
Tuesday's events. 


Berm uda Day will be Wed­ 
nesday. It will be highlighted 
by 
a "Mr. 
Cool" 
contest in 
which t h e three class presi­ 
dents w ill test their endurance 
on a block of ice. During the 
break and both lunches, pop­ 
corn, cotton candy, and orange 
pop will be sold. Natalie Gif­ 
ford is the chairm an. 
W ednesday night PHS boys 
will model fem inine attire in 
a 
backwards 
fashion 
show. 
Kathy Finnegan has charge of 
the fashion show. 
Thursday will be flower pow­ 
er day. Students are urged to 
put 
flowers 
everywhere: 
on 
their books, their clothes and 
them selves. There will also be 
a 
"bean 
guess" 
contest, 
the 
winner of which 
will 
receive 
two f r e e tickets to Friday's 
dance. N ancy Turpin has m ade 
the arrangem ents for Thursday. 
Friday ends a week full of 
activities. 
It will be dress-up 
day. Red and white carnations 
w ill be sold during the day at 
the red booth. 
Nancy Page is 
chairm an of F riday’s activities. 
Dance Clim axing Week 
Backwards Week will com e 
to a clim ax Friday night in the 
gym with the semrformal back­ 
wards dance, to which the girls 
invite the boys. 
Couples will 
dance from 9 p.m . to midnight 
to m usic by the "Tvrods." The 
them e is "Bali Hai" and the 
price is 12 with an ASB card 
and $2.50 without. The back­ 
wards court consisting of five 
senior boys selected earlier in 
the week will be presented at 
the dance. Sharon Van Dyk is 
chairm an of the dance Stephan­ 
ie M asaki is in charge of the 
dance decorations. 
Backwards Week is sponsored 
by 
the 
PHS 
Girls 
le a g u e. 
Nancy Millam is general chair­ 
man for the entire week. Mich­ 
ele Morrison is publicity chair­ 
m an. 


The first Chicago to New York 
airm ail flight to be completed in 
one day was made on Sept. 10, 
1918. Flying tim e was 10 hours, 
5 m inutes. 


LIVE TUG OF W A R — Bill Shacklett, president of the Explorer Cabinet of O ld Baidy Council Boy 
Scouts of America, is the center of attraction as Cathy Sharpsteen, president of the Girl Scout 
Senior Planning Board, and Kathy Thomas, back, head of the Mt. San Antonio Council Camp 
Fire Girls, try to convince him to go their w ay. The occasion is the Mardi Gras des Amis party set 
for March 16 at the Palomares Community Center. 


Wi 
m m tsm m 
-nam 
m zm m 
Teen Scope 


Pullout Tab for Youth 


m t *,** mmmm w h êêüêêiêêêêêêm iiêî m m m sm m m m m m 


r 
! 


Youth Bid 
To Amity 
Fun Fete 


The Mount San Antonio Camp 
Fire Girls Council, Horizon Club 
cabinet w ill sponsor a party, 
"Mardi 
Gras 
des 
Amis" 
on 
March 16 from 8 to 11:30 p.m. 
in 
the 
Palom ares 
Community 
Center. 
All services and youth groups 
in the area have been invited 
to at end the Mardi Gras which 
is designed to promote friend­ 
ship among young people. Parti­ 
c i p a n t s will include m em bers of 
rise Horizon Club, Senior Girl 
Scouts, 
Explorer 
Scouts 
and 
YMC V teen-agers. 
Rock and roll, folk and dance 
com bo, will play during the ev­ 
ening for listening and dancing. 
Booths will be set up for the 
pure! isc of refreshm ents and 
for carnival - type gam es. 
Mardi Ciras chairman is Can - 
dy Calloway 
of 
Upland. 
The 
cabinet board adviser is Kathy 
I.anger of Covina. Debby Gil­ 
more 
of 
Covina 
is 
publicity 
chairm an. The club adviser is 
Mrs 
Beverly Inman. 
The Explorer Scouts of Old 
Bakly Council are assisting the 
cabinet in plans and prepara­ 
tions. 


G lend oran W ins 
Hom em aker Charm 
Susan M 
Mladjan has been 
named 1968 Homemaker of To­ 
morrow 
at 
Glendora 
High 
School on the basis of an e x a ­ 
mination taken by senior girls. 
Her score earned for her a 
silver 
c h a r m 
from General 
Mills and qualified her for fur­ 
ther Betty Crocker competition 
for state and national scholar­ 
ship awards. 


The National Archery Asso­ 
ciation. which was founded in 
M t , 
was 
the 
first 
am ateur 
sport organization in this coun­ 
try. 


BEST Y O U N G CITIZENS— These girls from Pomona Valley high 
schools ore winners of the 
G ood Citizens Awards 
p r e s e n t e d 
annually by the Daughters of the Am erkan Revolution. The 
honor is bestowed by Mrs. LeRoy Kaump, state organizing sec­ 
retory, on Debby Fausch of G an esh a, Etta M cDonald of Gorey, 


Barbara Searfoss of Chino and M ary Todd of Pomona high 
schools, for qualities of dependability, service, leadership and 
patriotism. The winners are now eligible to compete for awards 
in District Seven, state and national competitions. 
CP B Photo) 


Page 
13 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 1968 
Page 
14 


Chilean Youth, 15, 
Likes Chaff 'ey Life 


By RENE AND I- RSON 
age terms such as for good- 
A new face on the Chaffey 
looking 
girls. 
We 
call 
them 
High School campus is rapidly 
*Jhorse’.” 
blending into the active scene. 
Chaffey, 
over f o u r times 
He’s Guillermo Parr, a dark- 
larger than the school of some 
haired 15-year-old student from 
700 he attended in Chile, offers 
C hilian, Chile, who is living in 
a wide variety of educational 
Ontario with the Santo Regal- 
opportunities and activities for 
buto 
family, 
1541 
Kenmore 
Guillermo to participate in. 
Court, and studying this semes- 
He’s enrolled in English, Spa- 
ter at CHS. 
nish, u.S. history, civics, alge- 
CHS Senior His ‘Brother’ 
bra 
and 
physical 
education. 
Gary Regalbuto, Chaffey sen- 
Swimming and skiing are both 
ior, 
returned 
to 
the 
Chaffey 
available in the area. T h i s 
campus this term after living 
pleases and somewhat surpris- 
with the Parr family as an 
es him. 
American 
Field 
Service 
ex- 
Weather Great for Both 
change student in Chile and de- 
Chaffey’s pool fulfills his de­ 
veloping a warm 
brother 
re- 
sjre for swimming, and nearby 
lationship with Guillermo. Now 
Mount 
Bakly’s 
snowy 
slopes 
Guillermo is 
here under the 
appeals to his love for skiing. 
'i outh for 
Understanding Pro- 
The weather has cooperated in 
8 ram - 
providing both opportunities in 
B a s k e t b a l l 
homecom- 
recent weeks, 
ing, “American” English, teen- 
“ In Chile, we can swim in 
age talk, and a co-educational 
the summer only,” he com- 
system 
are 
all 
new 
to 
the 
mented. It’s summer now in 
young Chilean as he learns his 
Chile. When I go back, it will 
role in the life ot the chaffey 
be winter. 
It’s very cold in 
campus. It’s a role he enjoys 
Chilian but it doesn’t snow — 
and is playing well. 
it rains all the time.” 
Although he’s studied Fnglish 
Close to Chilian are the An- 
for several years, he 
is only 
des 
Mountains. Guillermo ex­ 
now “ really” 
learning it. 
He 
plained that the snow piles nine 
feels that what he learns will 
feet deep there and is a favor- 
help him in his ambition to be- 
ite spot of his in the winter, 
come an engineer. 
The son of Doctor Guillermo 
Fnglish Important to Him 
and Carmen Parr, he is at the 
“ In Chile if you are going in- 
age of 15 the eldest in a family 
to 
a 
business, you 
have 
to 
which also includes four young- 
know English,” he said. “ In the 
er sisters. His American fami- 
ur.iversities all the good books 
ly includes Gary and Bryan, a 
are written in English.” 
freshman, 
both 
Chaffey 
stu- 
Teen - age slang is 
some- 
dents, 
thing he didn't run across in 
Girl Schoolmates Novel 
his previous 
English 
studies. 
Chaffey’s 
recent 
Basketball 
But, he commented, “ I’m learn- 
homecoming 
activities 
includ­ 
ing. In Chile, 
we 
have teen- 
ing the selection of a queen 


Top Records of W e e k 
Three Leaders Hold 
Positions on Chart 


By NANCY GILBERT 
AP Newsfeatures 
The top three positions remain the same as last week. 
VALLEY OF THE DOLLS heads the list, followed by Paul 
Mauriat’s LOVE IS BLUE and in third place the Temptations’ 
I WISH IT WOULD RAIN. 
NEW ADDITIONS: Paul Revere and Raiders set the group 
back into motion with an up-tempoed blues-rocker titled TOO 
MUCH TALK. 
The First Edition adds another strange new sound to the 
pop record field with JUST DROPPED IN. 
Recently No. 1 in Great Britain, WORDS by the Bee Gees 
Is well on its way to capturing the same position here in the 
states. 
CARPET MAN is a snappy-paced ditty with out-of-the- 
ordinary lyrics and a smooth delivery from the 5th Dimension. 
PICK HIT OF THE WEEK; The American Breed turn on 
the GREEN LIGHT. 


w e e k s o n 
SONG AND RECORDING ARTISTS 
THE LIST 
Valley of the Dolls 
Dionne Warwick 
3 
Love Is Blue .................................................... Paul Mauriat 
5 
I Wish It Would Rain 
Temptations 
9 
Simon Says .......................................... 1910 Fruit Gum Co. 
2 
The Dock of the Bay .................................... Otis Redding 
3 
Walk Away Renee ............................................... Four Tops 
3 
Spooky ...................................................................Classics 
IV 7 
We’re a Winner 
Impressions 
2 
Bottle of Wine 
Fireballs 
5 
1 Wonder What She’s Doing 
T o n ig h t..................... Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart 
4 
I Thank Y o u ................................................. 
Sam and Dave 
2 
Green Tambourine ...................................... Lemon Pipers 
9 
Everything That Touches Y o u ......................... Association 
3 
Too Much Talk 
......... 
Paul Revere and Raiders 
1 
Baby, Now That I’ve Found Y o u 
Foundations 
6 
Just Dropped In 
First Edition 
1 
The End of Our Road 
Gladys Knight and Pips 
2 
Nobody But Me 
Human Beinz 
6 
Words 
Bee Gees 
1 


Garey Picks 
Rivals 
For Backwards Court 


GUILLERMO PARR 


court 
are 
definitely 
new 
to 
him. In Chile, he attended an 
all-boy Catholic school. 
He did admit that social activ­ 
ities weren’t really hampered. 
“ Near our school, about five 
hundred meters, is a school of 
girls.” 
When 
Guillermo returns 
to 
Chile at the end of the semes­ 
ter, 
he'll undoubtedly 
t a k e 
back an understanding of En­ 
glish and America which is the 
purpose of the program that 
has helped bring a new and 
welcome face to the Chaffey 
campus. 
7 Qualify 
For Merit 


By Richard Nagey 
Gary High Correspondent 
Semifinalists 
for 
the 
back­ 
wards court have been chosen 
at Garey High School. The king 
and his court will be announced 
at the backwards dance March 
22 in the Garey Viking Hall. It 
will be held from 
8 p.m. 
to 
midnight and tickets will cost 
$1 per couple and $1.50 for non­ 
costumed couples. 
“ Bonnie and Clyde” has been 
selected for the theme of the 
backwards dance. “ The Ballad 
of Bonnie and Clyde” is a po­ 
pular song in which Bonnie and 
Clyde 
were 
lovers 
and 
also 
gangsters of the 1930's. There­ 
fore costumes will be of the 
late 
1920’s 
a n d 
1930’s. 
The 
dance decorations will also be 
of that period. Prizes will be 
given at the dance for the best 
costumes. 


Finals 


Six Upland High School stud­ 
ents and one Montclair High 
School student have advanced to 
finalists status 
in the 1967-68 
National 
Merit 
Scholarship 
program. 
The Upland finalists are Steve 
Guyon, Douglas M. Hodell, Stev­ 
en Larson, Ronald Swisher, Car­ 
ol Torts, Marjorie Tucker. The 
Montclair finalist is Mike Bond. 
Approximately 14,000 finalists 
will compete for one-time $1,000 
scholarships and for 2,400 four- 
year continuing scholarships. 
All finalists are to be notified 
later this spring as to their com­ 
petitive scholarship standing. 


Girls High 
Sponsoring 
Art Fete 


By PAM STEWART 
PCGHS Correspondent 
Pomona Catholic Girls High 
School art students will demon­ 
strate their creativity and talent 
by sponsoring an art fete, Sun 
day from 2 to 3 p.m. 
Jam es Nastasia, an instructor 
at Fairfax High School and the 
University of Southern Califor­ 
nia, who recently returned from 
a 
sabbatical 
leave 
in 
Spain, 
will present a brief historical 
resume on contemporary art. 
The purpose of this event is 
to bring parents and students 
to a better understanding of the 
world of art. Through various 
forms of art the students will 
attempt to convey the ideas and 
achievements 
of 
the 
younger 
generation. 
On display will be water color 
and oil paintings, clay models, 
ceramics, 
polymer, tapestries, 
copper - tooling, tile mosaics, 
pencil sketches, wax cuts, and 
tissue paper collages. 


DAVE SAYS: 


THERE ARE THOSE 


DAYS W HEN 


NO TH IN G TURNS 


OUT RIG H T... 


Like today . . . I tried so 
hard to fly my kite. 


M y string U snarled and 
the braces broke. 
W h ile others zoomed 
mine just poked. 


Things will get better 
we're due for M arch gales. 
Things are a lw a y s better 
when you shop at Dale's. 


175 P O M O N A MALL EAST — N A 2-2532 


The Sto re That C o n f id e n t e Built 


Semifinalists 
are: 
Robert 
Bell, Jim 
Bland, 
R i c h a r d 
Coggins, Ron Dickey, William 
Gary, Tyler Mount. Flmo New­ 
ton, Tom Sargent, Kim Serra­ 
no and Lee Wilhs. Out of these 
semifinalists a king and court 
will be chosen and announced 
at the dance. 
The dance 
is 
sponsored by 
Girls League and is the climax 
of the observance of Backwards 
Week from March 18 through 
March 22. 
Committee 
heads 
for 
the 
dance are: Jean Jones, decora­ 
tions; Orlene 
Eklund, tickets; 
Carol F.kwall, band; and Jean­ 
ne Bryant and Darlene Kram­ 
er, court. 


Tapers 


Authentic tvy styling 


Of A«1 Tapers slacks.,, 


the campus favoritesi 


Neat N O -IRO N fabric» 


an<J pura Ivy colora. 


W • w e lc o m e SO D a y C h a r g e 


6 
M o n t h * 
B u d g e t 
A c c o u n t, 


D o w n t o w n P o m o n a 
C r e d it C a r d s 
B a n k A m e r lc a r d 
M a t t e r C h a r g e 


O p e n E v e ry N ig h t 
Till 9 th ru C h r is t m a s 
CjÙnd&ì 


STORE FOR M EN 
& Y O U N G M EN 


23 7 Pom ona M all East 


Dow ntow n Pom ona 


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> > * 
^ÜP?-^PS "' ^ 
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11 'wiriw 
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IT’S GETTING HARDER TO LOVE — Jim Baer of Pomona High 
School, displays the t r o p h y he won for t a k i n g first place in a 
Whittier speech tournam ent with a talk, entitled: "The G r o w ­ 
ing Inability of Americans to Love.” 
(P-B photo) 


PHS O r a to r Qualifies 


As a 
district 
National 
For­ 
ensic League winner in original 
oratory, 
Pomona 
High 
School 
student Jim Baer has qualified 
to compete with 80 other orators 
from across the nation for na­ 
tional honors next June at St. 
Paul. Minn. 
He took district honors recent­ 
ly at Whittier College in tourna­ 
ment competition 
with 
h i g h 
school students from a Southern 
California area 
including por­ 
tions of Los Angeles, San Diego, 
River ide and San Bernardino 
counties. 
The trophy 
winner 
is 
the 
son of 
Mrs. 
Celeste 
Baer 
of 


1564 Harienda Pi, 
Other 
Pomona 
High 
School 
contestants included in dramatic 
interpretation, Kirk Grossman, 
son of Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
Robert 
Grossman, 2282 Halcyon Wy.; in 
extemporaneous speaking, Bar­ 
ry siler, son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Sam Silver, 1894 Claremont PL; 
and a debate team of Chris In­ 
gram. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ches­ 
ter T. Ingram, 1507 Claremont 
PL, and Jim York, son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Richard G. York, 2127 
Spencer St. 
The PHS speech and debate 
teams 
are 
coached by 
Miss 
Barbara Haupt and John Webb. 


Damien Speaker Wins 


As first place regional winner 
in d r a m a t i c interpretation, 
Christopher M iller, a senior at 
Damien High School, qualified 
last weekend at W hittier College 
to compete in the National For­ 
ensic League finals next June 
in St. Paul, Minn. 
Chris is the son of M r, and 
Mrs. W illiam M iller of Ontario. 
Gregory Nelson, a Damien jun­ 
ior, placed second. 


John Rose came in second. 


In 
the debating division, a 


brother team of Edward and 


DATE-LINE 


By Eie and W alt Dulaney 


ra 1, hi 
m - ■ m m m m 


Dear Walt: 
Last night I was 
reading a book called the ‘‘Illus­ 
trated Encyclopedia of Sex.” 
I 
was 
in 
the 
bathroom 
at the 
time, then put it in the laundry 
and 
went 
in 
to 
take 
a 
shower. The book belongs to my 
father. It’s not a dirty book; it 
just tells facts and education. 
I'll be 15 next month. 
After I came out 
from 
the 
shower I forgot to put the book 
back in its proper place. This is 
not the first time I ’ve looked at 
it. Well,, my father used the 
bathroom r i g h t after me and 
when he was done he came in 
the kitchen and a^ked my mom, 
“ Who was reading this book?” 
My mother then replied, “ Oh, it 
must have been Ronald.” Then 
he went back into the shower 
room and sang. 
1 don’t know if his singing 
had any reaction to what hap- 


Glendorons 
Score Again 
As Speakers 


Winning in all rounds entered, 
Cheryl Kyle and Guy L e w i s , 
” B” debaters, and David Shap- 
pee, 
i m p r o m p t u 
speaker, 
brought home trophies for Glen­ 
dora High School from two re­ 
cent competitive tournaments. 
Glendora 
placed 
second 
in 
both novice and *‘B” debate at 
Bishop Amat High School. Craig 
Johnson and Tim Mangels rat­ 
ed superior certificates in *‘B ” 
debate and Fred Heacock and 
Dave Shappee. along with Ka­ 
thy 
Wagner and 
Mike 
Bader 
were awarded superior certifi­ 
cates in novice debate. 
Superior 
certificate 
winners 
at the West Covina High School 
tournament included Craig John­ 
son, original oratory; Fred Hea­ 
cock and Guy Lewis, extempo­ 
raneous speaking. 
Those 
rated 
excellent 
were 
Tim M a n g e l s and Ken Bor­ 
man, extemporaneous speaking; 
M ary Thatcher and Debbie Tur­ 
ner, 
dramatic 
interpretation; 
Mike Bader, humorous interpre­ 
tation; Fred Heacock, Ken Bor­ 
man 
and 
Ar.dry 
Krake, 
inv 
promptu speaking. ____________ 


Bell McClure Syndicat« 


-o 
Q 
tQ 


CO 


O 
to-1 


pened. I ’m just wondering. Any­ 
how, 
after 
he 
came 
out 
he 
talked to me in the usual way, 
not 
mentioning 
anything 
that 
happened. W alt, I ’m very ner­ 
vous as it 
must have 
been a 
terrible blow to him. Tell me 
what to do now. — Low and De­ 
pressed. 


Dear Depressed: 
Cheer up! 
Your dad had good reason to 
sing, (a) He found out you had 
a normal interest in sex; (b) He 
was reassured that you are get­ 
ting 
needed 
information 
from 
m aterial he’d planted for your 
study; (c) He relaxed knowing 
he wouldn’t have to launch an 
awkward ‘‘birds ’n’ bees” lec­ 
ture in the near future. 


If you’d like to become closer 
to your dad, ask him to help you 
understand any of the points 
that are not clear to you. Open­ 
ing words: ‘‘Dad, that sex ency­ 
clopedia s a y s that . . . does 
that mean . . . or what?” — 
Walt. 
W W W 
L liC K Y KIDS 
Dear 
Ele 
and 
Walt: 
T h e 
adopted g i r l who wanted to 
know her real parents is only 
normal. 
I 
have 
adopted t w 0 
children and w ill not feel hurt 
when they ask to see their natu­ 
ral mothers. I love the mothers 
of my children for giving them 
life instead of having abortions. 
I know 
that 
they 
love 
these 
babies as much as I do, and 
that they only gave them up to 
keep society from placing an 
ugly m ark on their lives. 
M y adopted children will be 
m o t h e r s 
and 
w ill 
not 
be 
taught 
to 
love 
their 
natural 
kept 
from seeing them 
later. 
Even 
now 
when 
one 
of 
the 
babies 
does 
something 
extra 
cute, I shed a tear because his 
natural mother cannot share the 
happiness. — Loves N a t u r a l 
Mother. 
Dear 
Loves: 
Your 
children 
are 
blessed to have a mother 
like you. They’ll 
learn f r o m 
your example that honest love is 
not possessive or jealous, but 
open 
and 
understanding. 
You 
have our respect — Ele 
and 
W alt 
w 
* 
w 
Dear Dulaneys: This concerns 


me and m y junior prom date. 
He’s the only boy in the fam ily 
and 
his 
mother 
babies 
him 
something awful. He asked me 
out a few weeks ago and on the 
way home we stopped to help a 
lady with a flat tire and got 
home later than we scheduled. 


The next morning his mother 
phoned me and cross-examined 
me so thoroughly 
I thought 
I 
was on trial for murder. Maybe 
he didn’t explain well enough to 
her, but I didn’t have the heart 
to tell him his mother had call­ 
ed. 
Now his mother has told my 
girlfriend’s mother that she ex­ 
pects him 
home at 
12:30 af­ 
ter our prom date. The prom is 
not over by 11:30 so by the time 
we leave it will be close to mid­ 
night, and then 
everyone has 
made 
arrangements 
for 
an 
after 
- 
prom snack 
together, 
which 
means we’ll 
get home 
after 1:30. 
So, what should I do? Should 
I tell him 1 have 10 be home by 
12.30 and spoil the evenmg for 
both of us? — Worry ing 
Dear Worrying: 
It was very 
thoughtful of you to 
save the 
boy 
embarrassment 
by 
not 
publicizing 
his 
mom’s 
phone 
prosecution. There’s little he can 
do to transform her attitudes, 
so if you’d have a good time 
with him at the prom, urge a 
pre-prom snack or a raincheck 
m eal instead of dtfying her cur­ 


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C o m in g u p . . . 
Easter 
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Both are D re s s - 


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f i n d u h a t 
yo u 're lo oking 


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YOUNG MEN'S STORE H 


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How much can you take? 
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Wholesale —— Retoil 
F o r e ig n — D o m e * He 


PO M O N A GENERATOR 
623-2133 


Find out in the Peace Corps 


234 N, 
Reservoir 
Published a» a public service in cooperation with The Adverti*mg Council and the International Newspaper Advertising Executives. 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1963 
Pag« 
16. 


Dance Crowns Ganesha Backwards Week King 


PATRICIA FERN 


School Picks 
Girl Student 


Body Leader 


Patricia Fern has been elect­ 
ed student body president at 
Vernon Junior High School at 
Montclair for the spring semes­ 
ter. 
Other officers are Cindy Al- 
way, vice president; Pam Belle- 
gante, secretary; Mike Jaeger, 
treasurer; Denise Pierce, sev­ 
enth grade president; and Bill 
Davidson, eighth grade presi - 
dent. 
6 Schools 
Sing Out 
Tonight 


By DIANNE HAGA 
Rowland High Correspondent 
Rowland High School’s three 
choral groups will take part in 
the 
La 
Puente 
Union 
High 
School district’s annual music 
festival at 8 tonight at Nogales 
High School. 
Singers 
from 
the 
district's 
five other schools La Puente, 
Nogales, Wilson, Workman and 
Los Altos also will take part. 
Rowlands 
Choraliers 
will 
present “ The Heavens Are Tell­ 
ing,’’ “ Lord to Thee We Turn,’’ 
“ Go Down the Wishin’ Road” 
and “ Everytime 1 Feel the Spi­ 
rit,” as an a cappella group. 
The Chantiers girls glee club 
and the boys glee club each 
have four selections to present. 
As 
a 
finale 
the 
combined 
groups will sing “ Song Triump- 
ant.” 
Rowland’s choral department 
h a s already begun work on 
“ Camelot1’ as the year’s musi­ 
cal production. Leading roles 
have b e e n assigned to Pat 
Law, loan Miller, Randy Dale, 
Beverly Wright and Jim McAl­ 
lister. 
The Choraliers and Chantiers 
will combine to form the pro­ 
duction’s chorus. 


JO E COREY 
By Charlotte Perry 
Ganesha High Correspondent 
The coronation of Joe Corey 
as king last night climaxed a 
week of Backwards Week fest - 
ivities at Ganesha High School. 
Joe and the other members of 
his court, David Cortez, Alvin 
Dave, Steve Dishno and John 
Southwick, were crowned at the 
dance. “ Daisy Mae’s Dilemna,” 
which was held from 8:30 to 
11 30 p.m. in the school gym. 
The Z Club of Ganesha spon­ 
sored 
the 
annual 
turnabout 
week which included a surprise 
sale on Tuesday, a backwards 
fashion show on Wednesday, a 
Color Clash Bermuda Day on 
Thursday, and a week - long 
moustache growing “ Bush Lip - 
per’’ contest. The winner of the 
Bush Lipper competition was 
announced at the dance. 
Athletes Reign 
Joe, the son of Mr. and Mrs. 
Joseph Corey, 1009 Lewis St., 
was a member of the varsity 
football team, captain of the 
v a r s i t y wrestling team, the 
fourth 
best 
wrestler 
in 
his 
weight class in the CTF, and 
was chosen Ganesha’s “ Most 
Valuable Wrestler.” He is a 
member of the school Senate, 
and Letterman’s Chib. 
David Cortez was captain of 
the varsity football team, is 
president of Letterman’s Club 
and sports editor of the school 


Girls M odel 
Styles LJsed 
In M ovie 


By PAM STEWART 
PCGHS Correspondent 
Styles inspired by the motion 
picture, “ Dr. Zhivago," high­ 
lighted the annual fashion show 
sponsored 
by 
the 
Usherettes 
Club of Pomona Catholic Girls 
High School. 
To the theme “ Swing Along 
With Spring,” members of the 
Usherettes modeled clothes pro­ 
vided by Fallis’ of Ontario. The 
fashions 
ranged 
from 
fancy 
dresses patterned from those of 
the 1930’s, to pant dresses and 
to the latest style in playwear— 
the romper. 
In charge of the presentation 
under the supervision of Sister 
Mary Luey were the Usherette 
Clug officers; 
Patricia 
Zem- 
enick, president; Janis Bonessa, 
vice president; Patricia Sharp, 
secretary; Alice Felix, treasur­ 
er; and Unamarie CUbon, civil 
service chairman. 
Proceeds for the annual af­ 
fair will be awarded to students 
as school scholarships. 


Iron on Patch 
An e a s y , effective way to 
mend small holes in knitwear is 
by 
applying 1 r o n - o n sock 
patches. These come in assorted 
colors, are washable, and have 
the same stretchabihty as the 
garment itself. 


newspaper. He was Ganesha’s 
“ Most 
Improved 
Wrestler,” 
winning first place in the SAL 
in his weight class, and third in 
C IF 
semifinals. 
David 
Is 
a 
member of Club Council, Inter­ 
act, Spanish Club and Coronets. 
He is the son of Mrs. Esther 
Cortez, 1278 Buena Vista. 
ASB Vice President A1 Dave, 
another member of the court, 
was formerly senior class vice 
president, president of Interact 
Chib, 
and a member of Club 
Council, and Letterman’s Club. 
Al 
was 
the 
“ Most 
Valuable 
Player” on the varsity football 
team and is a member of the 
varsity track team. His parents 
are Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Dave of 
1211 Cornelia St. 
Steve Dishno, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Douglas Dishno, 1225 Hill­ 
side Drive, was voted “ Most 
Handsome Boy” by his class. He 
is a member of Letterman’s 
Club and the varsity baseball 
team. 
ASB President John Southwick 
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dal­ 
las Southwick. 710 S. Oak St. 
Besides 
leading the 
Ganesha 
student body. John is a mem - 
ber of Letterman’s Club, Art 
Club and the varsity gymnastics 
team. 
Dogpalch Costumes Worn 
The dance was a departure 
from the traditional semiformal 
affair as participants dressed in 
costumes 
following the 
Dog - 
Club Tours 
Crime Lab 


Damien High School s Science 
Club students recently toured 
the Los Angeles Police Depart­ 
ment’s crime detection lab and 
were 
shown 
how 
chemists 
matched a bit of paint matched 
a larger section and involved a 
car in a hit-and-run accident. 
Students 
were 
also 
shown 
quantities of marijuana. LSD 
and heroin seized in different 
raids. 
The club excursion was head­ 
ed by senior John Kaipa, presi­ 
dent, and Howard Teitelbaum, 
director. Members accompany­ 
ing them were Bob Gurney, Dan 
Cronin, Franz Brown, Dennis 
Loudon. Craig Bertrand, Larry 
Cronin, Frank Bums, Mike Grif­ 
fin, Tom Eckstein, Paul Mauj- 
okaitis, Bill Archibald, Terry 
White, Charles Broman, Jose 
Cisneros, 
Jerry 
Ochetti 
and 
John Knipe. 


‘L ig h t’ C reatures 
Krill, close relatives to the 
shrimp family, are noted for 
their remarkable luminescence. 
A dozen of these creatures in a 
glass jar will emit a light com­ 
parable to that of a small gas 
lantern. 


Christ The Victor Lutheran Church 


Pomona 
Thomas E. Mails, Pastor 
is presently broadcasting its Sunday Service “live" 
at 10:00 A.M. 


KKAR— -1220 kc— P O M O N A 


This Sunday's Sermon: “LIMPING BETWEEN TWO OPINIONS” 


patch theme. Music was provid- 
<*d by “ The Clique,” and Wayne 
Book Studios handled photogra­ 
phy. 
Betty Poe, Z Club president, 
and 
Wanda 
Courey, 
social 
chairman, were general chair­ 


men for Backwards Week. Oth­ 
er chairmen were Gay Drax- 
ler, Bush Lipper Contest; Terry 
Grounds, 
publicity; 
Nancy 
Coons, 
decorations; 
Karen 
Shull, pictures; Charlotte Perry, 
bids; and Susan Snyder, voting. 


Tennessee was the last state 
to secede from the union (June 
8, 1861) and the first to be re­ 
admitted (Ju ly 24, 1866). 


R A D IO S E L E C T IO N 
] 


e NIGHT RADIO—SATUi 


« 
» Si 
Y AA P M 
tDAY • 


9:10 P.M. 
KABC— New* 
KBtG— So*. Soronoda 
KFAC—-Conc*ft CKnn4 
KFI— Po?Vo Parade 
KFWB— Bob Hmlion 
KGBS— George Richey 
KGER— Hour of Hop# 
K H I— Don Steele 
KIEV— Tom Brennan/ 
Sonto Anita Recoil 
KLAC—-Eva Border 
KMPC— Gory Owen* 
KNX— Hockey 
Kino» v*. Penguin* 
6:00 P M. 
K B B Q — Horry Ntwrnon 
K F A C — Now«, Soloist 
R G B S— A on frwm 
KGER— Bock to the Bible 
K L A C — V k to rw |om n 
K M P C — Sport*/New* 
Prsd Vonderhurst 
• 1 0 P.M. 
KFA C — Ballot Tima 
KGER— Church Shows 
KMPC— Roger CarroR 


KABC-—Roy Br *m 
KFAC— Ste'SO 
KFW B— Dove C am and 
KHJ — Mumble Horvs 
7:15 P M . 
K F I— News 
7 10 P M. 
KFAC— M i*'« bom |apan 
8 OO P M. 
K»AC— Iverung 
Concsrt 
K G t« —Socred- Hebrew 
C hm t ran 
K L A C — 8 ohh**ho'l 
USC vs. UCLA 
KMPC — Bmket boll 
U C LA vs USC 
8 10 P M. 
K F I— Party Tim« 
KGER— P-isorwr'i B.tV 
K N X — Bask etboil 
Laker, vs. W o n ort 
8 00 P M. 
K FI— Benny Strong 
KGER— Great |#ru*olem/ 
Gospel Army 


KABC— Steve AUlfon 
10:00 P-M 
KFA C — Newt, 
Boston 
Symphony 
KFI- CXh Stob.le 
KGER— Newe/Circl* 
Mission 
KPOL— David Woods 
10 30 P.M. 
KFI— Pcrty Tim# 
KG ER— Bobby WiRlome 
l i d » P M 
KABC— As We See ft 
K F i— CKx.lt Foster 
KGER— Ckwence Wslch 
11 JO P.M. 
KFI— Porty T>m* 
K N X — Music T 'II Dawn 
12 M ID M IG H T 
KABC— Ray Bhem 
X BBQ— Eddie Brtggs 
KFAC— Night Musi# 
KFI— Ron McCoy 
KFWB—-Rag» Christian 
K 'jB S — •»• lenkine 
K m |— Johnny William* 
K M P C — Choni* (ohnson 
• RADIO-SUNDAY 


8 :0 0 A.M. 
KABC— Nowswotch 
K B B Q — Religion 
KBIG— Musi* 
K DAY— Tem pi* T>me 
KFAC— Fed. of Church** 
KFI— News, Musi« 
KFW»— PubH* Affair, 
KG BS— Rsitgtous 
M usi* 
KGER— Hour of Faith 
K H l— Revival Hour 
KIEV— W orld Church 
K i AC— faith 
KMPC— BUfy Grohom 
KN X— N *w t/R *lig on 
8 :1 1 A M . 
KFAC— M o n e y 
TofVi 
KFI— Bob Catron 
8 10 A M . 
KDAY— Sound of M ink 
KFAC— Worship In Wsn 
K38S— Bibi* Study 
KGER— World LRerotur# 
KIEV— Heoth/Theoeopby 
KLAC— Louts! Martin 
KMPC— Church Annex/ 
The Bible Sp#oke 
KPOL— Church of the Ah> 
8:00 A.M. 
KDAY— Gospel In long 
KG8 S— I mmoculate 
Conception Church 
KHJ— Chari» Tuna 
KIEV— ftnt Method tt 
Church, Glenda's 
KMPC— News, 
W hitt inghill 
KPOir— Gary Brandt 
• ¡IS A.M. 
KABC— Stuart V an 
KN X— *cott O'Neil 
8:10 A M. 
KD A Y— Sound of Music 
KGER— Bible Services 
10 00 A M . 
KBBQ— Corky Mayberry 
KFAC— Mu* ft 
K G B S— -Gospel Hour 
KIEV— FVtt Method!»! 
C h u rm 
Burbank 
KMPC— New*, Ira Cook 
1 0 :1 0 A M , 
KGBS— Perspective. USC 
KIEV— Pint Mefbodht 
Church, LA . 


11 00 A.M. 
K D A Y — lit Congrego- 
t tono I Church 
K FA C — Sur-Orr» Showccse 
K F W R -B .II Tovicr 
K.GBS — -Chris* Unity 
K IE V — Luthe-an Church 
KPO L— Dav-d W-od» 
12 N O O N 
K A B C — Nm»» 
K D A Y — Sound at M tsic 
KGBS— Top 30 Show 
Don Eliott 
KGFR— Aw ai e, 
Am erko 
K IIV — The Cruc:f»d 
vi AC— )>H Schory 
K N X — N r nr» 
P O I— Gory 
Brandt 
12:15 
P M . 
K A B C — Pnb Fitipotrick 
1 2 1 0 
F M. 
KFAC— Boston Peps 
KGER— Continuou* 
Religio US Pr<-grame 
1:03 F M 
K IE V— Vo ce of Prorhecy 
A N X — K N X oer.ment 
1 10 F M 
K FA C — Sur 
Theater 
K IIV — Chu- h 
el the 
Covenant 
2 :00 F M. 
K IE V —,Wc-! ! 
I trrafure 
K M P C — M '' 
* M ognu* 
2:10 P M. 
KFAC— M u rum Concert 
K IIV — Scandir c v«o 
1:00 P M. 
K B B Q — B«t> ¡ac«wn 
KFW B— R-ger Chr.*lton 
KHJ— Bobby Tr-rr 
K I I V — ShomrtKk 
K L A C — Ive Benner 
K P O L 
Bab Harr • 
S O S P M . 
K FA C — N Y. Pi ' art 
S 10 P M. 
K I I V — L O S /M u s » 
4-.00 P.M. 
K A B C — N i wswotch 
K F I— New*. Monitor 
K IE V — St 
Gern a n 
Dr. Fife'd |r. 


KNX— Hockey 
Ktngs v i Rangers 
5 OO P.M. 
KFI — USC Notebook 
KIEV— Watt * Club 
• 00 P.M. 
KFi — N ews. M onitor 
K M P C — Sports/New* 
KPOL— Fred Vondsrhurst 
« 2 0 PA L 
KMPC— Pel# Smith 
« 1 0 P.M. 
KABC— ¡«sues end 
Answer* 
KFi— Meet the Pres* 
KLAC— V eter a lame* 
7-00 P M . 
K A B C — Ne ».»/Religion 
X B BQ — M ik e Parker 
KFI — New», Am erican 
W ay 
KFWB— Gen* Weed 
KNX — SasketfeoN 
Laker* vt 
Búllete 
7:10 P M . 
KFI— New* 
MacGregor 
8:00 PM. 
KFI— New*. Toscanini 
KMl— Frank Terry 
KPOL — Hwd. Presb. 
Church 
8 80 P.M. 
xF»Q— Unrversrty Hour 
KFAC— Sunday Concert 
KFI— CothrfK 
Hour 
KGBS— Doteltne Compus 
K MPC— Ne ws/Publ e 
Service 
KPOI 
David W ood* 
9 :1 0 P M. 
KFI— Eternal Light 
KGBS— Hugh Cherry 
KNX— Foc* ti» Notion 
10.-00 PM. 
K A B C — News 
KFAC— Mosterworks et 
Mu»*c 
K F I— News. Mude 
KGBS— 1 ngukv / Music 
KGER— Eprt Ot. of God 
KLAC— khn I. Anthony 
KNX— Newt 
10 10 P M . 
KMPC— Pet* South 


I FO R M IN A W O M E N OF A U A G IS 


LEARN 
^ 
|f SHORTHAND 
\ 


jp , * . 
w war 
; 
6 W ttK S 
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V 
____________/ 


Gregg Shorthand 
pee d w rilt nff 


P R O F E S S IO N A L 
SECRETARY 
L e g a l • M e d ic a l • E x e c u tiv e 


B 
NCR 
A U T O M A T IO N 
A C C O U N T IN G * 


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C om puter P ro g ra m m in g 


• 
B U SIN E SS 
M A N A G E R * 


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OFFICE 
M A N A G E R * 


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SCHOOLS OF 
r BUSINESS 
I 
2534 
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SCHOOLS OF 
r BUSINESS 


“OVER H O ,« » STUDENTS SINCE 1914" 
C j 
1021 E. Holt, Pomona NA 9-J 


Mew W a r Scholarship 
Exonerates Longstreet 


The Ghost in the M achine’ 


I ! E AND LONGSTREET AT 
GETTYSBURG. By Glen Tuck­ 
er. Bobbs-Merrill. $6. 
If there was a villain in the 
Battle of G ettysburg, 
popular 
fancy problably would nominate 
Lt, Gen. J a m e s Longstreet of 
the Confederate States of Am eri­ 
ca. Over a period of years, the 
consensus of history was that 
Longstreet frittered 
aw ay 
the 
South's chance of victory by his 
delays in obeying orders and by 
a ‘.tuhbom attem pt to impose 
his own private strategy upon 
the army. 
Specially 
and 
principally, 
Longstreet 
was 
charged 
with 
delaying his assault of July 2, 
1863, upon the Union left from 
"sunrise” until past 4 p.m. He 
was accused also of undue slow- 
nesi in bringing his corps to the 
field and aligning it for battle, 
and for dragging his feet in pre­ 
paration for the attack of July 3 
which cam e to be known as 
Pickett’s Charge. 
In recent years, a reassess­ 
ment of Longstreet’s role has 
emerged. Historians have come 


to the view that ‘‘Old Pete” was 
less at fault than other com­ 
m anders on the field, not ex­ 
cluding 
Robert 
E. 
Lee. 
The 
process is brought to climax in 
Glenn Tucker’s "Lee and Longs­ 
treet at Gettysburg.” 
Tucker 
not 
only exonerates 
Longstreet; 
he 
transfers 
the 
cloak of villainy to Maj. Gen. 
Jubal Early and Brig. Gen. W l- 
liam N. Pendleton. To that pair, 
he attributes the inception of the 
cam paign to defame Longstreet, 
ascribing it to desire to divert 
attention from their own mis­ 
takes and a mistaken view that, 
by criticizing Longstreet, they 
were defending Lee—who needed 
no defending. 
Significantly, Tucker m akes a 
strong case for the fact that the 
Early-Pendleton criticisms did 
not em erge until after (1) Lee’s 
death and (2) I.ongstreet’s ac­ 
ceptance of Reconstruction, and 
avowal 
of 
Republican 
princi­ 
ples, 
actions 
which 
aroused 
much wrath in the South. He 
m akes a strong point of the 
friendship 
and 
understanding 
between the Confederate com ­ 
m ander 
and 
the 
lieutenant 
whom he called affectionately, 
“ My old w ar horse.” 


Other Confederate chieftains, 
notably Lafayette McLaws and 
George 
Pickett, 
benefit 
by 
Tucker’s research. But the main 
focus never strays far from the 
controversies 
surrounding 
Longstreet. In that area, “ Lee 
and Longstreet at Gettysburg” 
earns rating as historical schol­ 
arship of high order. 
Robert D. Price 


Little Girl Stacked 
Joins Bachelors Two 


DOWNSTAIRS 
AT 
RAM- 
Sl Y’S. By J a m e s Leigh. Har­ 
per $4.95. 
fhe focal point of this little 
fictional caper is that a gent 
named Hardy B rew ster takes a 
bit of com euppance rath er than 
surrender an inch on his one 
firm principle about women. 
Brewster, at 37, has vague 
pretensions of being a writer, 
but is m ore interested in a sim ­ 
ple hedonistic life. Have decided 
after one brief brush with m a r­ 
riage that he is allergic to the 
connubial bond, he accom m o­ 
dates himself to a succession of 
mistresses. He tells them quite 
frankly 
of 
his 
principle—no 
m arriage. 
He 
loves 
’em 
and 
leaves ’em . 
This contrasts with the ideas 
of his artist friend Jim Long, 
who shares his lodgings. Long, 
who seems to think all passions 
Giould be grand, is haunted by 
tin1 wife who has divorced him, 
and has just been jilted by a 
fickle female. 
Suddenly 
there 
is a crisis. 
Brewster's 
current 
mistress, 


Rita, is killed in an accident, 
and her will nam es Brewster 
and Long as guardians of her 
daughter Delilah. Brewster ac­ 
cepts 
the 
responsibility, 
but 
Long dares not. Delilah joins 
their household. 
It just happens that Delilah is 
“ a 14-year-old with a 19-year-old 
build and the emotional develop­ 
ment of a 10-year-old, if that.” 
A Lolita undt r the sam e roof 
with two pseudo-bachelors? You 
can imagine what is bound to 
develop in such a situation. 
This novel isn’t likely to cauf e 
any great stir in literary circles. 
But it does have its m erits as 
smotth 
entertainm ent, 
profes­ 
sionally polished. The writing is 
deft, the dialogue has am using 
touches, 
and 
the 
scenes 
are 
well-paced. 
Miles A. Smith 
h 
1 
1 - 
Particleboard, first m anufac­ 
tured about 15 years ago from 
sawmill waste, is used as core 
in 88 per cent of furniture and 
also has application as floor, 
wall and ceiling coverings. 


RENTALS 


Office 
E q u i p m e n t 


★ TYPEWRITERS 


ELECTRIC'S - STANDARDS 
»ImHiml fntal applltt ** pvntmêm 


Part of the Brain Hasn’t Kept Up 


THE GHOST IN TH E MA­ 
CHINE. 
By 
Arthur 
Koestler. 
Macmillan. $6.95. 


We live in an apocalyptic age, 
ringed by perils and doubts. The 
clock on 
the 
bulletin of 
the 
atomic scientists shows a few 
minutes to midnight. And many 
others profess to see the hand­ 
writing on the wall. 


The latest to decipher the om ­ 
inous graffiti is Arthur Koestler, 
who works out the nature and 
destiny of m an in a scientific- 
philosophical way and has pro- 


Difficulties 


O f Becoming 


M iddle Aged 


MRS. BENEKER. By Violet 
Weingarten. Simon & Schuster. 
$4.50. 
On the surface this is a rather 
brightly humorous novel about a 
scatterbrained suburban house­ 
wife who is entering middle age. 
Mrs. 
Beneker 
goes 
through 
the 
usual 
motions 
taking 
an 
adult education course (in reli­ 
gion), visiting the sick a pa­ 
thetically eccentric old woman 
and fussing at her psychiatrist. 
In the process of becoming a 
grandm other, she is bewildered 
by her daughter’s insistence on 
natural childbirth, but is deter­ 
mined not to interfere. 
She is appalled (mistakenly) 
at the possibility that her hus­ 
band m ay be having an affair. 
She is baffled when she visits 
her retired parents and finds 
they are trying to imitate the jet 
set. 
Mrs. 
Beneker’s 
ups 
and 
downs, related with considera­ 
ble wit and flavor, am ount to a 
portrait of a bumbling woman 
Whose good intentions are not 
enough to keep her from m ess­ 
ing up her own and other peo­ 
ple’s lives. 
But under the surface there is 
a less comic aspect of the story. 
Her son Tom m y is a college 
dropout, 
trying 
to 
run 
away 
from 
life, 
and 
Mr. 
Beneker, 
quite bitterly, has given up on 
him. And T om m y’s girl friend is 
a horror. So there is more than 
comedy here What em erges are 
some unsettling reactions to the 
way things seem to go wrong in 
the generation gap departm ent. 
Miles A. Smith 


I I Controversy 
I I 


f w n t In 


K -W O W 
1600 O N YOUR DIAL 


Every S u n d a y 


9 - 1 0 P . M . 


$w b|«ct; "I* »!«• hwmcM« h * « rt tra n s ­ 


p la n t in A m arica m a ra lly right?** 


Presented by 


Toastmasters 


Club 1583 of Corona 
and Club 116 of Azusa 


T hi s A d v t r t i t e m t n t S p o n t o r t d 
• • • P u b l i c S e r v . c « by 


P O M O N A FIRST FEDERAL 
S A V IN G S & LO AN ASSN. 


duced an altogether fascinating 
book. 


“ The Ghost in the M achine” 
is sure to draw fire from some 
scientists, especially those who 
resent the intrusions of a m a ­ 
teurs, however gifted. There are 
som e broad generalizations and 
besides, Koestler gores m any an 
establishm ent ox. 
One of the 
liveliest sections of his book is a 
sardonic offensive against the 
behaviorists. 
Reports 
of 
the 
death of their influence, as he 
shows, have been greatly exag­ 
gerated. 
What Koestler arrives at in 
his 
readable 
and 
far-ranging 
investigation is that “ sweet rea­ 
son has failed.” This is hardly a 
revolutionary verdict except for 
its prem ise that the failure was 
inevitable and is, for the present 
at least, final; that it is biologi­ 
cally conditioned and the result 
of an evolutionary derailm ent. 
A basic m aladjustm ent of the 
newer and older parts of the hu­ 
m an brain, he holds, is beyond 
cure by moral preachm ent, reli­ 
gious sanction, or faith in r a ­ 
tionalism. 


We have, in short, a mentally 
sick species, a term Koestler 
m eans to be taken literally. A 
delusional streak which 
Koes­ 
tler finds in mankind is due 
to 
the basic cerebral 
m aladjust­ 
ment. 
The 
neocorlex 
evolved 
rapidly 
and 
outdistanced 
the 
older and m ore primitive parts 
of the brain, which rem ain the 
seat of instinct, emotion, and 
the senses of touch and smell; 
the neocortex is the seat of con­ 
ceptual thinking and language. 
The two parts 
don’t 
really 
mesh. They are not functional­ 


ly integrated into the “ open hi­ 
e ra rc h y ” 
which 
Koestler 
re­ 
gards as the basic structure of 
life, and indeed the universe it­ 
self. 
It will be apparent that Koes­ 
tler opposes 
the 
mechanistic- 
atom istic view which generally 
predom inates am ong scientists, 
just as he opposes the neo-Dar­ 
winian concept of random m u ta­ 
tion as a basic evolutionary fac­ 
tor. Evolution has its own lim i­ 
tations, he contends, and rath er 
than experim ent in a realm of 
infinite possibility, plays certain 
archetypal 
them es 
over 
and 
over. 
Evolution, m oreover, is c ap a­ 
ble of rectifying some m istakes, 
can break out of cul-de-sacs. 
But that takes time, and m an in 
the nuclear age m ay not have 
m uch time. 
But if natural self-repair of 
the “ two b rain s” is ruled out, 
then how to resolve the predica­ 
m ent? Koestler has a solution of 
sorts, but it com es almost as an 
after thought. 
A drug m ay be 
devised, he suggests, which will 
harm onize the split cerebrum 
som ewhat 
in 
the 
m an n er 
of 
tranquilizers which have proven 
valuable in the therapy of m en­ 
tal patients. 
A drug to tam e homo sapiens 
cannot be ruled out, but it re­ 
m ains 
a 
highly 
speculative 
proposition beset by difficulties. 
It seem s m ore likely that we 
shall have to rely on the neocor­ 
tex to preserve the species, plus 
a good deal of luck. That m an is 
on a dangerous journey m ay not 
be new, 
but 
it 
is 
brilliantly 
pointed up in Koestler’s work. 
R. J. Cappon 


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17 
Progress-Bulletin, 
March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 
Pag# 
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Progress Bulletin, 
March 
9, 
1968 


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CACHUMA 


A M aster-Planned Lake 


Stor> and pictures by JOHN VALTERZA 


SANTA BARBARA — Highway 154 winds and climbs quickly 
through the- mountains behind Santa Barbara, giving the traveler 
ghmpses of the sea and the Channel Islands. Then it travels inward 
to what has to be the most master-planned of new California recre­ 
ation areas. 


Lake Cachuma, whose original and continuing role is to provide 
drinking water for the area, of late has assumed importance in other 
respects. 


The large, cool, clear lake is most attractive for the pickup 
camper set and the bass and trout fisherman. 


The lake follows little ravines and valleys *o make many fin­ 
gers where in some instances visitors are allowed to moor boats, 
fish, picnic, or simply nap under a moss-covered oak. 


F ish abound in Lake Cachuma — trout, largemouth bass, < rap- 
pie and other species — and as we drove into the boat-launching 
area this past sunny weekend fishermen were cleaning their catches 
in a m aster planned fish cleaning area. The catch included several 
large bass limits and some messes of trout. 


Fees abound at Cachuma, but if you plan an active stay the cost 
is well worth it. Day use costs $1 per car. Pet regulations are strin­ 
gent — no dogs in boats or within 300 feet of the water. 


After your stay at Cachuma is over, you have the alternative of 
retracing your path to Santa Barbara, or heading north to Santa 
Ynez and Solvang — about 15 miles away. 


The entire urea is gorgeous for scenery buffs; provident for the 
fisherman; and especially comfortable for the camper and picnicker. 


The most significant aspect of the area, however, is Its master 
planning.^ It may be hard to accept, but that’s the theme of Califor­ 
nia’s future recreation areas. 


SCAN TOUR CAR: DODGE M ON ACO 


This week's trip car was provided by Po­ 
mona Dodge, 1111 L. Holt Ave., which donated 
an elegant Dodge Monaco station wagon with 
every available extra. 
The car is truly an elegant piece of ma­ 
chinery, despite its functional purpose. Of the 
dozens of extras, the most intriguing is a tiny 
button on the end of the light signal bar. 
The contrivance is an ingenious speed lock 


system which lets the driver accelerate to a 
chosen speed, depress the button, then relax 
his tight foot. The car stays at the set speed 
lip hills or down, until the driver touches the 
brake. Then the setting is canceled; or he can 
accelerate, then relax again and the chosen 
speed stays — marvelous for long trips in a 
powerful car that can “creep” past the speed 
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“The Home of Sincere Service 
1111 EAST HOLT, POMONA 
623-3181 


Page 
21 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 1968 
Page 
22 


H 
OUT on the TOWN 


IN THE VALLEY 


(Item s fo r O u t on the Tou n 
should be rteeii ed by the Prog- 
rtss-B ulletin on W edneidty be­ 
fore tfw date of publication.) 


The Mt. Sun Antonio College 
Players will present “ Six Char­ 
acters in Search of an Author” 
in the campus Little Theatre 
at 8:15 tonight. 


Valiev 
Community 
Theater 
will give its final performance 
of “ A Shot 
in the Dark” at 
8:30 tonight at 877 W. 4th St., 
Pomona. 
The Agatha Christie 
mystery' play, “ The Mousetrap,” 
opens 
Thursday 
to 
play 
tor 
three weekends. 


The 
mystery, 
“ Laura,” 
is 
playing 
at 
the 
Castle, 
C 
and Lemon streets, Ontario, per­ 
formed by the Garrick Players. 


The Carousel Theatre in West 
Covina offers the Sid Caesar- 
Imogene Coca 
revue through 
Sunday at 8:30 p.m. 


The Pomona College Sympho­ 
ny Orchestra will give a con­ 
cert at 8:15 p m. Sunday in 
Bridges 
Hall 
of 
Music. 
The 
Loewenguth String Quartet of 
France will perform in Bridges 
Hall at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday. 


The Devil’s Disciples of Po­ 
mona High School will present 
“ Purlie Victorious’’ at 3:30 p.m. 
on Thursday and March 28. One 


EX PO R T 
—— This 
swinging 
singer, Jo sie Katz, w as born 
in 
Pittsburgh 
but w ent to 
Israel and joined a singing 
group 
called 
“ The 
H i g h 
W in d o w s .” 


evening performance on March 
21 at 8. The production is direct­ 
ed by John R. Alberts. 


Kelley 
Stevens 
and 
Tom 
and The 
Piper’s 
Son appear 
nightly at The Band Box, 4280 
Holt Blvd., Montclair. 


The Abode de Palomares, 491 
E. Arrow Hwy., Pomona. Au­ 
thentically 
restored 
13 - room 
house built from 1850 to 1854. 
The house is open from 2 to 5 
p.m. every day but Monday. 


Tami 
Lynn 
and 
the 
Soul 
Sounds entertain nightly at the 
Bowlium from 9 to 2 a.m. at 
4666 E. Holt Ave., Montclair. 


“ The Art of the Middle Ages” 
is on display daily from 1:30 to 
5 p.m. through Wednesday at 
the Lang Art Gallery, 
Scripps 
College, 9th Street near Colum­ 
bia Avenue. 


Padua 
Hills Theater, Clare­ 
mont, presents “ Dona Merca- 
dia’s C u r e - A l l " Wednesday 
through Saturday at 8:30 p.m. 
Matinees Wednesday and Sat­ 
urday at 2:30 p.m. 


AND AROUND 


M ELO D YLAND 
T H EA TER , 
Anaheim — Jefferson Airplane 
and Friends will appear tonight 
at 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. 
Reni 
Stantoni 
opens 
Tuesday 
in 
“ Enter Laughing.” 


MUSIC CFNTF.R, Ahmanson 
Theater — The Center Theater 
Group will present a new musi­ 
cal, “ Catch My Soul,” through 
April 13. 135 N. Grand Ave. 


HUNTINGTON 
HARTFORD 
TH EA TER , 
Hollywood — An­ 
thony Perkins stars in 
“ The 
Star-Spangled G irl” nightly at 
8:30. Matinees Wednesday and 
Saturday at 2:30 p.m. 1615 Vine 
St. 


COUNTY M USEUM OF ART, 
Los Angeles — Over 200 photo­ 
graphs by Dorthea Lange will 
be displayed through April 21. 
5905 Wilshire Blvd. 


DISNEYLAND. 
Anaheim — 
Attractions for all ages includ­ 
ing Pirates of the Caribbean and 
the $25 million Tomorrowland, 
Open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 
p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. until 7 
p.m. 


LAS 
VEG AS 
C L U B S — 
ALADDIN — Pat Collins, Curtis 
6 Tracy. CAESARS PALACE — 


(C o n tin u e d on P a g e 23) 


M IM E 
IN 
C LA R EM O N T — M arcel 
M arceau , 
the celeb rated 
French pantomimist, w ill give a perform ance in Bridges A u d i­ 
torium, Clarem ont colleges cam pus, at 8 15 p.m. M arch 19. 


t h e I M H B H 


S ER V IN G BREAKFAST FRO M 2:30 A. M. TO 11 
M . 


STEA K ’n ’ EG G S 


B R EA K FA S T 
SPECIAL m43 


SUNDAY 


DINNER 


660 Bellevue 
$]35 
RAVIOLI or 


REGATONI 


Pomona • 


IN C L U O t S 
Up to 4 EGGS 
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Choice of H AM , 
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MASH U O W N S 
TOAST 
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R O L L 
623-9149 


lo c a te d in A lp h a Bota Cantor at 5 Point» 
O P E N 2 4 HRS. 


im 


U N D ER 
W R A P S 
— 
C o m e­ 
dienne Lucille B all bundles 
up under a fur cap e as she 
arrives at London airport, 


RENTAL 


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M E E T IN G S , 


W E D D IN G R EC EPT IO N S, 


D A N C ES 
O Reasonable Rates 0 


American Legion Hall 


N A 8-2030— A fter 4 p.m. 


13130 C EN TRA L A V E. 
C H IN O 


The Ontario Air Museum at 
Ontario 
International 
Airport 
features aircraft from W o r l d 
War I to the present. The mu­ 
seum is open from 10 a.m. to 
5 p.m. 


Bonita at Harvard 
CiM.mcflt • NA. 4 2412 


CONT. SAT. 4:15 


SUNDAY 
2:00 


WEEKDAYS 7:30 


EU ZA BfT M TAYLOR 


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“TAMING 
OF THE 
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— PLUS — 
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OUT on the TOWN 


( C o n t i n u e d 
F r o m 
P a g e 2 2 ) 


•»Fiddler on the Roof,” Theo­ 
dore 
B i k e 1. 
Nero’s 
Nook: 
Earthn Kitt, Kirby Stone Four, 
Milt Trenier, Micki Lynn. D ES­ 
ERT 
IN N — “ Pzazz! 
‘68.” 
Lounge: "Tom Jones” musical. 
DUNES — "Casino de Paris,” 
Rouvaun. “ Vive 
Las 
Girls.” 
Russ Morgan Orchestra, Chet 
McIntyre. 
E L CORTEZ-Mod- 
emesians. FLAM INGO — Leslie 
Uggam s, John Bvner. Lounge: 
Fats Domino. FR EM O N T—Mills 
Brothers, Taf A r n o l d . 
HA­ 


CIENDA — Hank Henry, Bur­ 
lesque Show, Ink Spots. MINT— 
Londonaires, Jerry Sun. Four 
Tunes, Wanieta Vess. RI VI ERA 
— “ Funny Girl,” Mini Hines, 
Phil Ford. L o u n g e : 
Shecky 
Greene. 


SANDS—Jack Jones. Lounge: 
Buddy 
Greco, 
April 
Stevens, 
Nino Tempo. SHOWBOAT-Eva- 
lani Polynesian Revue, Johnny 
Paul. SILV ER S L IP P E R —Bar­ 
ry Ashton’s. "Wonderful World 
of Burlesque.” STARDUST — 


On the Table 
Privious Pun!® 


(12 
Si 
r, 
i & 
; 2? 
S'* 
40 
4! 


AC ROSS 


— — of coffee 
—— of prune! 
I f a — 
Dined 
Against 
t.enus of true 


f'perated 
Mate of want 
Dram« s home 
\rboreal homes 
i ravat 
Or -umes, as 
f«.od 
Stray» 
C< n bread 
Health r«-t rt 
District in 
\ enk e 
Hung In folds 
i hanges 
T'mbminUhed 
observe 
Employs 
Obligation 
Binds 
Ind: Id »at 


42 Confused 
mixture 
45 Site of the 
Round Tab!« 
4^ I ¡ben again 
51 Guido's high 
note 
52 Dismounted 
53 Nat closed 
54 Indian weight 
55 Offers 
56 Afternoon SOtial 
events 
57 Drunkard 


DOWN 


1 Chari t, for 
instance 
2 W estern «tat# 
3 Enter 
4 Italian wiiter 
c 1265-13211 
5 Arrow poison 
6 Solid icomb. 
fotrnl 
7 Con» ealed 
H skeletal parts 
9 Malt brews 


10 For fear that 
11 Young woman 
17 Seme gate and 


detain 
t9 Bridal path 
23 Perm lan 
mountains 
24 Ages 
25 Vex fecll ) 
2d Sheriffs party 
27 Limp 


truth 
3.3 Make amend# 
36 (let free of 


danger 
4c* Blows, as a horn 
41 Foretokens 
42 « 'rustacean 
4.3 Biblic al name 
44 Ibtmg to the 


taste 
46 Diane surface 
28 South Ameiican 47 Bread spread 
nation 
48 Small pastry 
f9 Fruit drinks 
50 Utensil used 
in 
1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
7 
8 
9 
10 
11 
I'2 
13 
14 


15 
16 
17 


18 
19 
20 
1 
m 
22 
23 
ii 
25 
ElR 
27 
28 
29 


30 
31 
32 
33 


34 
35 


36 
Jm 
3 7 
38 
39 
! 
40 
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42™ 43 
44 
46 
47 
48 


49 
50 
51 


52 


■mmmm 53 
54 


55 
56 
57 
9 


{Newspaper interprne Ann.) 


fea turing 
This 


a Saturday night 


( H i 


I f 


40 PLUS 
FEATURES 


from 


M P M to 2 a m 
MY SIN 


C o i l > f a i U 
725 East 5th Street 
Pom ona 


4 
94» 
W444 
4 


44 
i4 
4 
444 
4444 
4 
44 
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f e a t u r in g 
} 


S a tu r d a y N i l ! l i t 
* 
“ FRENCHY” \ 
“ BRENDA” * 
“ JEAN” 
“ JUNE” 
“ VIDA” 


A t T h e 
ALIBI! 


Corner of 
® 
PA RK A V I. & SECOND 
In Pomona 


- 
'.«-K 
^ 
Jfcg 


1G68— Edition * Lido de Paris.” 
Lounge: 
Don Cornell, Johnny 
P u l e o 
TH U N D ER BIRD 
— 
"Thoroughly Modern Minsky.” 
Lounge: 
Kings 4, Fall Guys. 
TROPICANA - 1968 Edition, 
"Folies Bergere.” Lounge: Al­ 
lan Sherman, Si Zentner Or­ 
chestra, "Color Me Groovy,” 
Judy West. 


Author Tells 
About Charms 
O f Solitude 
PLANT DREAMING D EEP. 
By May Sarton. Norton. $5. 
The early part of this book de­ 
scribes how the author, in 1958 
when she was 46, found a dilapi­ 
dated 18th century farmhouse in 
a quiet comer of New Hamp­ 
shire, settled in it, and began 
putting down new roots. 
It was the first property Miss 
Sarton ever had owned. The re­ 
habilitation of the house and the 
problems of furnishing it strike 
a familiar theme—so many oth­ 
er writers have described simi­ 
lar experiences. Yet she gives 
the account a fresh, individual­ 
istic touch. 
The remainder of the book is 
a series of essays, describing 
her reactions to her new envi­ 
ronment. She loved the silence 
and 
solitude 
of 
her 
retreat, 
which enabled her to get on with 
her work as a poet and novelist. 
The other side of the coin was 
the 
times 
of 
loneliness 
and 
doubt, the self-probing thoughts 
that arrive in middle age. 
There are other essays about 
her neighbors, some of whom 
had been wanderers like her­ 
self; the guests who came to 
visit her; the handyman she en­ 
joyed having work around the 
place; the flowers she planted; 
the troubles she had with wood­ 
chucks and drought; her appre­ 
ciation of nature. 
Miss 
Sarton’s 
clarity 
of 
thought and the gentle charm of 
her prose make this the sort of 
book you would give to a favor­ 
ite friend. 
Miles A. Smith 


Seat Belts 
Save Lives 
D ES MOINES, Iowa (U P !)— 
More than a fourth of the per­ 
sons killed in motor vehicle ac­ 
cidents in Iowa in 1967 would 
have been 
saved if 
they had 
been wearing seat belts, a sur­ 
vey by the Department of Pub­ 
lic Safety says. 
Safety 
Commissioner 
Jack 
M. Fulton said of the 814 per­ 
sons 
who lost 
their 
lives 
in 
traffic 
crashes 
in 
1947, 
240 
could have been saved if they 
had worn seat belts. 


L IQ U O R S 
DELICATESSEN 


A il Y ou r Tovor l t o 


B e e r • Wines * 
Liq u or J 
Ice C o ld K e g Be er 
P a rty S u p p lie s, Etc. 


O S I N D A I L Y • A. M. . M I D N I G H T 
LOU’S 
LIQUOR 


9666 Central 
M o n tcla ir 


( I» o. Carla fin frj 


EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT! 
& WATUSI CONTEST 
W e e k ly Cash Prizes 
if Las V e ga s Tri 


4 6 6 6 East Holt 
M ontclair 
N A 6 -3 5 2 8 
YU 6 -9 5 6 3 


PARIS PRIZE — Rod Steiger admires the trophy he received at 
a reception in Paris for his role in “ The Paw nbroker." 


# 
N o w F e atu ring 


* 
“ T A M I L Y N N 
# 
and the 
• SOUL SOUNDS” 


Ofe 
A v e ry entertaining m usical 
group 
for 
young 
and 
old 
alike. T h ey have entertained 
audience* in m any d ifferent 
areas. It i* a M U S T to S E E 
T H E M 
. . 
. 
It w ill be an 
A 
evening 
to 
rem em ber! 


9 P. M. • 1 A. M. 
Music 7 Nites a Week 


IN T R O D U C IN G 
KELLEY STEVENS 


A SENSATIONAL SINGER FROM NEW YORK 
TO BE FEATURED NIGHTLY WITH 
Tom & The Piper's Son 


"THE BIG BAND SO UND“________ 


LADIES NIGHT EVERY TUESDAY 


DANCING SUNDAY 
From 6 P.M. to ??? 
| THE BAND BOX 1 
J 
4280 HOLT BLVD., M O N TCLAIR 
J 
r 
(aero** from the Montclair Theatre) Phonei NA 4-9812 
jj 


~o 
o 
to<8 
to 
CO 


o 
to 
"1<D 


CP 
Ç 
<tT 
5' 


£o■n 
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Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1963 
Page 
24 


STRETCHED R O O M — Red areo with simulated sunburst design 
sets key for single room. Black-and-white sofas set at right 
angles, along with two stools covered in gold velvet, create 
a conversational area. 


Space Expanded 
Dual-Use Furniture 
Stretches Apartment 


NEW 
YORK — 
(NEA) — 
Color, judicious use 
of dual- 
purpose furniture and unusual 
arrangement of wall 
shelves 
help a small room put on large- 
room airs. 


A classic use of twin sofas 
cornered in 
a room make a 
start in two settings. A one- 
room apartment, for example, 
leads many lives with a small 
white-brick terrace and clay- 
potted plants extending its liv­ 
ing space. 
The room appears to grow 
through use of a monochromatic 
color scheme that avoids chopp­ 
ing up an area. In keeping with 
the leaning to pineapples shades 
this season, the walls are a 
sunny yellow and the color is 
echoed in window shades and a 
notched canopy-type valance. In 
pineapple yellow are steel-based 
love seats. These were designed 
for Ch< .sapeake-Siegel-Land in 
deeply tufted chenille velvet. 
Again au coo rant is the soft- 
bt ige we!tless design using latex 
foam rubber cushioning. The so­ 
fas convert to comfortable beds. 


Dining Area Screened 
Further expanding the area 
for living - bedroom - dining life 
is the use of smoke glass pan­ 
eled screens in the dining area 
comer. 
In this ¡pace, interior design­ 
er Don Russell of Stem Bros, 
used a desk-table that houses 
two 
upholstered 
ottomans. 
Then* § I a j n l e s s steelbase- 
€M plt»rei nre for thning or ex­ 


tra seating. When not in use, 
they s l i d e back 
into 
the 
unit and avoid cluttering the 
comer. 
A staggered arrangement of 


wood shelves combines with a 
painting to form an Intriguing 
wall design. The shelves hold 
books and bibelots but take up 
absolutely no floor space. 


Color Deftly Employed 


Another room using sofas set 
at 
right angles 
and off-the- 
floor shelving units does lean 
on two bright color notes. The 
main one acts to pull the small 
area together, though, w h e n 
used with neutral-toned furnish­ 
ings (John Stuart) and p a l e 
gray walls. This is a red sun­ 
burst effect area rug by Eget- 
uepper surrounded by a black- 
and-white sofa. Bright gold vel­ 
vet to«s-pillows accent the sofa, 
and stools in the same fabric 
act as frames for tl*e con versa 
tion area. Again the economy of 
furniture pieces is seen with 
merely a few solid white, and 
solid b l a c k chairs used else­ 
where in the room. 
Both rooms are designed for a 
lot of pleasant living. 


Turn Dividers 
Into Counters 


Make your room divider do 
double duty. It’s an excellent 
place for a built-in bar or serv­ 
ing counter surfaced in a decor­ 
ative, waterproof material like 
ctmmic tile. 


Here’s Where You 


Will Find The 


Finest In ... 


HOME 
DECORATING 
HINTS and SERVICES 


Stevens Custom 


Upholstery & Interiors 


S P E C I A L I Z I N G IN C U S T O M B U I L T 
F U R N I T U R E A N T I Q U E S • 
R E - S T Y L I N G A N D R E P A I R S • C A R P E T S 
• D R A P E S • L I N O L E U M • T I L E 


G U A R A N T E E D 
F I N E S T 
W O R K M A N S H I P 
402 E A S T * * C " S T R E E T 
U P L A N O , C A L I F O R N I A 


W A L T E R R. S T E V E N S 
(714) 982 OOM 


• Professional Interior 


Design Service 


• 1 Ionic I urnisliings 


RMSTRONG'S 
P O M O N A VA LLEY 


T - u r n i t u r E CO . 


1 3 0 C a tt 3 r d S t., P o m o n a 
• 
N A 3 - 4 3 3 9 


Bufmns 


INTERIOR DESK.N < / S T ER 


G iuiara Dcugn and Dci»ralMMl 


for the 1 m m interior» 


Created and I urrmlicd In Our 


Highly Skilled Mai* 
Pb,m r f Of Com 
( < >t * #1 ftitttH9 
Top of the Mali 
6 2 3 - 4 3 2 1 


UPLAND 
FUPNITUPE G 


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SOON rua.IO AvekUPLANO 
» .» o P M. 
ph 9 « i a m 


W Al I PAPER 


T h f 


C U STO M P A IN T S 


167 EAST H O LT AVE. 
POMONA . . . NA 3-302Î 


CO M PLETE IN T E R IO R D E C O R A T IN G 


W INDOW SH A D ES 
D R A P ER IES 


F I N E 
H O M E 
F U R N I S H I N G S 


I N T E R I O R 
D E C O R A T I O N 


MjISUKWU 


CALL 6 2 9 3 026 


P O M O N A : HOLT, EAST O F G AREY 


jf^omona 


FLOOR COVERINGS INC. 


— Sf«<r 1920 — 


Pomon* Vtllty’i Lsryrtt CombintJ Shou roam 
of Qn*hty i trprtt, Unolfmm H Floor Til*. 
Cm/om Drsptnn, Window Shsdei, *nJ Formic* 


Phone 622-4305 
230 W. Holt • Pomona 


Modern Decorators 


Deluxe Draperies 


Furniture — Carpeting 


Upholstery — Accessories 


161 No. Second Ave. 
Upland, California 
Phone 985-1212 


Wmm 


T ï - è ¥ " * ^ 


CCD33XCCOI 


PLAN NO 31007 
» 
V 
1259 SQUARE FEET 


Small But Adequate 


By HIAWATHA ESTES 
Here is a good small home that 
offers adequate living space p l u s 
numerous up-to-date design features 
and is narrow enough to be built 
on a 50-foot lot. 
The distinctive exterior has been 
achieved by complementing the shin­ 
gle roof by using both vertical and 
horizontal siding with field s t o n e 
veneer for the chimney and to form 
the low planter which flanks t h e 
front porch. Large pieces of wood 
have been used to form a f r a m e 
around each of the windows facing 
the street. 
There is direct access from the 
entry to the living room and bed­ 
room hall. A convenient guest closet 
opens to the entry while a general 
storage closet, furnace closet and a 
linen open to the hall. 
Bedrooms Isolated 
For privacy, the three bedrooms 
are well isolated from the remainder 
of the house. Each of the bedrooms 
has a wide wardrobe. There a r e 
drawers, 12 inches high, completely 
across the bottom of each of these 
special wardrobes. The master bed­ 
room has access to the patio through 
sliding glass doors. If preferred, a 
wide window could be substituted for 
these doors and the patio eliminate 
during the construction of the home. 
The family bath offers a tub with 
shower over and a pullman lavator>. 
A second bath with a large s t a 1 1 
Shower is accessible from either 
a 
service or 
be* Irwin* 
,. 


The living room-dining is particu­ 
larly spacious. A big log - burning 
fireplace offers a dramatic accent 
to the room and is the first thing 
to catch the eye as one enters the 
room. 
This is a well equipped, efficient 
and step-saving kitchen. Two of the 
interesting features are the break­ 
fast nook and the corner sink sur­ 
rounded by windows. A broom closet 
and the door to the dining are locat­ 
ed so as to not interfere with the 
nook. 
Laundry facilities, with wall cabinets 
above, and a water heater are in 
the service. 
(iarage Plans Supplied 
Plans for a double car garage are 
furnished w i t h the plans for the 
home. 
Complete working drawings for 
this plan can be purchased at a cost 
of $9.98 lor the first set and $5.25 
for ea< h additional set when ordered 
at the sam e time. This plan will be 
available at these prices until July 
10, 1968. Please allow two to three 
w e e k s for delivery. The following 
home plan books are also available: 
T o w n & Country Homes — $1.05; 
Prize Homes — $1.05; Homes by Hi­ 
awatha — $1.05; Hallmark Homes 
— $1.05; Distinctive Homes — $1.05; 
Ranch & Modern Homes — $2.10. 
All books — a $7.35 value — only 
$5.25. Send all orders for e i t h e r 
plans or books to: Hiawatha Estes, 
P.O. Box 404-ro, Northridge, Calif. 
91324. All prices include 5 per oent 
jvtaJKi’ * * s I « Ì 
« t t t fc « 


I 


♦ i i * 


ADDITIONS 
Customized additions and home improve­ 
ments. 17 years in Pomona. References. 
Working contractor, 
LYNN WAGGENER 
Day or Evenings NA 2 9804 


PAYNE AIR CONDITIONING 
HOME — BUSINESS — INDUSTRY 
Gas or Electric 'SPECIALISTS' 
Evening Surveys - Easy Bank Terms 
WRIGHT MFG. CO. 
10837 Ramona Ave., Montclair. 629 0171 
J 


APPLIANCES 
Washerr Dryers, Ranges, Refrigerators, Air Con­ 
ditioners 
Free / rs. 
Dishwashers. Choose 
from 
Maytag, Frigidaire, Tappan, O'Keefe <5 Merritt, 
Easy, Carrier. 
THE AGITATOR SHOP 
423« E. 5th St. (M ission) P om ona - 628 8926 - 984 9134 


FLOOR COVERINGS 
Vinyl, Linoleum, Tile, Carpet, Formica 
Free 
Estimates — Custom Installations. 
All Work Guaranteed 
Claremont Floor Covering Co. 
1236 E. 5th A t».. Pomona. 629-2006 


GLASS FOR ALL PURPOSES 
Mirrors, Plate Glass, Window Glass, Auto Glass, 
Tub Enclosures, Shower Doors. Free Estimates. 
'NO JOB TOO SMALL' — 624-1878 
CITRUS BELT GLASS CO. 
1255 E. Pries. Pomona. 622 2104 or 629 2350 


HOUSE CLEANERS 
WINDOWS — WALLS — FLOORS 
Upholstery & Carpet Cleaning. Floor and win­ 
dow service available on bi-weekly or month­ 
ly basis. 
R <5> M CLEANING and MAINT. 
Pomona 
Phone 622 8670 


INLAID LINOLEUM 
Nationally Known Brands. Large Selection to 
choose from. N< w Brands, For all your needs, 
as i jw as $2.95 sq. yd. with terms to fit 
your budget. 
WRIGHT BROS. <5. RICE 
252 S. Main St., Pomona. NA 2-1015 


LIGHTING FIXTURES 
"We carry a complete line including the 
new decorative swag lite.** 
Complete Wiring Service 
IDEAL ELECTRIC CO. 
246 East Center, Pomona 
NA 9 3924 


PLUMBING and HEATING 
Industrial 
Commercial — Residential 
Let us bid your new w.-rk and repair, quality work 
manship. 24 hour t mer jency service, radio dispatch* d 
for qui-k service < n y ur furnace, heater or disposal. 
BRINDERSON PLUMBING 4 HEATING 
352 E. MONTEREY 
- 
POMONA 
- 
629 3515 


SWIMMING POOL SUPPLIES 
• Chemicals 
• Equipment 
• Maintenance 
• Portable Pools and a complete line ofjpgrti. 
Pool Repair 


10621 Ramona Ave.. Montclair 
(Vk Blk. So. of Holt Ave.) 
107 W est Foothill. Upland 
(Just East of Mountain) 


Refrigeration Repair & Service 
Home and Business 
Service 5 repair lor all type of refrigeration equip­ 
ment. See our complete line of Gibson Refn j*r it* is 
and Free» rs, ana r. m air conditioners. 
RIES REFRIGERATION CO. 
601 N. Town«, Pomona 
NA 2 6923 


TOOL RENTALS 
Tillers, Mowers. Tractors, Paint Sprayers Floor 
Poll,.hors & Sand, rs, Tiucks 
at, i 
Trailers, 
Dollies, Tools, Ledders. Hoists, etc. 
SLOAN RENTALS 
4077 Holt • 2 Blks. East of Ssars. Montclair 624 9615 


WATER SOFTENER 
Culliqan fully automatic Water Softener. Life 
time guarantee. $7,41 per month. Tiade in your 
old water softener. Your Sal.-s and Service D*-al- 
or for 23 Y< tars. 
CULLIGAN WATER SOFTENER 
NA 9 527« 
YU 3 2316 


WINDOW SHADES 
Bring in your old rollers. Custom made 
while you wail. Let us fevers# y ur 
old shades. Choice of colors. In our 
houseware* dept. 
WRIGHT BROS. 4 RICE 
252 8. Main St. Pomona 
NA 2 1015 


Page 
25 
Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 


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£ 


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w. 
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COOLS IN SUMMER 
HEATS IN WINTER 


GLASS FOR ALL PURPOSES 


NO JOB IS TOO SMALL 


MIRRORS — PLATE GLASS 
W IN D O W GLASS — TUB ENCLOSURES 
SHOWER DO ORS 


COMPLETE AUTO GLASS SERVICE 


Lot tU y Ou ned Stnct 1927 
Citrus Belt Gloss Co. 


1 255 Price St., Pomona 
6 2 2 - 2 1 0 4 - 6 2 9 - 2 3 5 0 


r 
V 


CAN BE ADDED TO YOUR HOME 
FUff ENGINEERED ESTIMATES 


■•«k Tor*» $28.70 mo. Mo Payment til May 1 


Mfg. Inc. 
Estab. 1946 
WRIGHTS 


MONTCLAIR 
629-0171 


W e Sell Gas Air Cond and Electric Air Cond. 
The American Ornithologists 
Union, a 
bird study society, 
was founded in 1883. 


CALL NOW FOR FREE 
PLAN AND ESTIMATE 


N o o b lig a tio n ol t o ursef 


DAY o r N IG H T. PHONE 
629-9910 


USABLE ANY PLACE — D o il-y o u rs e lfe rs 
lik e this c a b in e t’» 
s‘<ze o n d w idth so m uch, th e y b u ild it fo r a n y room . 


Closet Fits 
O ther Needs 
If you’re lucky enough to have 
more t h a n enough closets in 
your home, you might consider 
living without one of them and 
turning it into that needed sew­ 
ing area, laundry comer or bar. 
Surfacing walls and floors with 
ceramic tile will make water- 
use no problem and cleaning 
easy. 


Here’s the Answer 


Question: We are considering 
purchasing a housa made of 
wooden 
shakes. 
Its 
an 
old 
house, and somewhere along the 
line one of the owners decided 
to paint the shakes a dull red 


c o !q % which we aren’t too crazy 
about. Would it be too much of a 
job to take off the paint, get the 
wo d down to its natural color 
an I then apply a very light 
stain? 
Answer: It sure would. If you 
don’t 
like the present color, 
you’d better plan on living with 
it or repainting the shakes a col­ 
or cf your choice. 


a long, stamped, self-addressed 
Box 
477, 
Huntington, 
N.Y. 
11743. 
envelope to Know-How, 
P.O. 


I 
CARPETING 
■ 


■ 


■ 


■ 


NYLONS — WOOLS — HERCULON 
A U REASONABLY PRICED! 


GIST’S FURNITURE 


4 0 0 P om on a M all W tit 
4 2 2 - 7 2 7 7 


I 
-Bn 


■ 


Cabinet Easily Adapted 
To Multiple Home Uses 


Question: I plan to build a 
kind ci tiu h cabinet to place 
outside our kitchen door, which 
is at the back of our house. My 
idea is to put plywood on the top 
and bottom of the cabinet, with 
ordinary 1 by 2s for the fram e­ 
work. 
My 
first 
question 
is 
wh ther plywood will stand up 
in al! kinds of weather. Should it 
have legs on it or can the ply­ 
wood 
rest 
directly 
on 
the 
ground? 
Answer: Be sure you get exte­ 
rior plywood and, for extra pro- 
tcc ion against 
the elements, 
seal it with paint, especially 
along the edges. Legs can be au­ 
tomatically provided merely by 
ev tending the four upright parts 
of the framework a couple of 
inches below the plywood bot­ 
tom Or, to put it another way, 
set the plywood in place a cou­ 
ple of inches from the bottom of 
the framework. 


Question: I have just complet­ 
ed a wooden awning to be hung 
over cur back door in a few 
weeks. It is made of white pine. 
Can it bo left as is, or should I 
put a finish on it? 
Answer: It can be left as is, 
but will look better and last 
longer if it is painted. 


Qiiv ;tion: 
It took me some 
time, but I finally got the tar- 
m h off a brass doorknob. What 
should I use to refintsh it? 
Answer: Three or four coats 
of lacquer, mixed half and half 
With ’acquer thinner. 


(You can get Andy Lang’s 
bookl t, “Wood Finishing in the 
Home,” by sending 25 cents and 


Ry DONA1 I> K. BRANN 
When 
we 
designed 
t h i s 
cabinet, it was planned as a 
wardrobe for a child's room. 
Drawers were placed on one 
side with space for clothes in 
the other half. 
Folks liked the unit so much 
we began receiving letters—lots 
of letters — telling us they had 
built a second unit as a record 
cabinet, bar or hi-fi cabinet. 
Measuring 43” wide, 13’’ deep 
and 48" high, the cabinet can be 
used to store china, silver or 
linens as readily as hi-fi com­ 
ponents. The amplifier, record 
changer, radio can be placed on 
one side while the other half 
provides space for speakers or 
a 
tape 
recorder. 
Where 
a 
separate speaker cabinet is pre­ 
ferred, space can be used for 
i-ecord storage. 
The 
pattern offered 
below 
takes all the mystery out of 
building. The material list tolls 
what to buy and where each is 
used. Simplified step-by-step di 
rections are written in langu­ 
age everyone can clearly under- 


stand. Best of all, no special 
tools or skills are required. 
S« nd 75c in coin, check or 
money order for Chifiorobe Pat­ 
ti rn No. 193 to the Progress - 
Bulletin, P. 0. Box 215, Briar- 
cliff Manor, N.Y. 10510. Add 35c 
if you wish special handling. 
Send additional 75c for new 160- 
paee c a t a 1 og illustrating 300 
other 
bui Id-it-yourself 
pattern 
projects and home improvement 
books. Be sure to include your 
Zip Code. 


SAM’S AUTO WRECKING 


/ utnom mu paots 
C inc/UlM Mivtcc .. 
. 
5 0 0 
.* * 


WUKA« WHim 


CALL US FIRST 


SAVE TIME AND MONEY. WE 
ARE WRECKING ALL MODELS. 


O u r tntwork phone K r « u t u n 


I ck jtc it in .10 m in u te * 
N A 9 -3 6 3 5 


I 
FOREIGN CAR PARTS AVAILABLE 
SAM'S AUTO WRECKING 


113 S. PLEASANT AVE., ONTARIO — YU 3 -2 6 7 8 
5 Block* East o f Euclid A v*. an d *A Block South of H olt Btvd 


My guarantee to you— 


No m atfar h ow »m all or largo 
you r 
job, 
I 
g u a ra n to a 
you 
th a t 
w o 
w ill 
h an d lo 
all 
p la n ­ 
n in g, d o slg n in g and ob tain 
all 
n a cesta ry p an n it». O nly q u ality 
craftsm ansh ip w ill g o in to your 
job an d w ith tho g u a ra n te e that 
it 
w ill bo 
fin ish ed 
w h en 
w o 
say 
it will bo. 
W o 
aro com ­ 
p le te ly 
licen sed 
and 
insu. ed 
on d o ff or you 
1 9 0 % 
finan cin g 
an d 
no 
m o n ey 
cicw n. 
Local 
resid en t far ov » r 25 y ea rs. 
Buz F. ench 
Cm 


D o m o n a v a lle y h o m e 
r 
IMPROVEMENT CO. r 
c , . 
* 4 1 6 I. 5th ifriä, Pq’fiio n a 
L. 
' 
• 
■ 
■ ■ 
’.¿ "J ■ ’ 
• 
» 


ft* 
- * 


Casse/s on Religion 


(C ontinued F ro m Peg« * ) 


nominate Johnson and the Re­ 
publicans nominate Nixon — the 
cHitcome which many political 
observers now regard as most 
probable. 
What 
would 
liberal 
clergymen do then? 
“I 
don't 
know,” 
said 
Dr. 
Brown. " I ’d be torn indeed by 
that choice.” 


Christianity 
and 
Crisis, 
an 
interdenominational 
Protestant 


Spread Ballads 


Seditious and designing men 
never 
fail 
to 
spread 
ballads 
among the poeple with a view 
to gaining them over to their 
.side, according to the first edi­ 
tion of the Encyclopaedia Brit- 
annica, published in 1768. 


journal of small circulation but 
great influence, says in its cur­ 
rent issue that America will be 
‘‘in very- deep 
trouble” if the 
coming election fails to offer 
clergymen, professors, students 
and 
other 
dissenting 
intellec­ 
tuals a chance to vote their con­ 
viction that ‘‘some way out of 
the Vietnam disaster must be 
found that does not involve fur­ 
ther escalation.” 
“ It is part of the nation’s poli- 


Add Sesame Seeds 


Yeast bakers take note: those 
loaves of French bread will be 
extra interesting if you sprinkle 
them with sesame seeds before 
you put them in the oven. Brush 
the loaves with water before you 
do the sprinkling. 


- m 


I V D A IL Y i m 
1 


M l 


S A T U R D A Y 


MARCH 0 


E V E N I N G 


1:00 O T h « Big News: (C) (60 m ln) 
23 6 Saturday News (O 
Grand 01« Opry: (C) (30 min.) 
Boss City (C) (60 min.) 
Combat! (C) (60 mln.) 
Gospel 
Mission 
Obsesion 
• 30 
Melody Ranch: 
(C) (60 min.) 
Mike 
Douglas: 
(C) 
(60 min.) 
12 O’Clock High (C) (60 min.)j 
World o( Youth 
Arriba oi Norte 
M 
l l S 
8 ) CBS Evening News: (C) 
KNBC Survey (C) (30 mm.) 
F Troop (C) (30 m in) 
I Love Lucy (30 min.) 
Revivsl Fires 
Playing the Guitar 
££) El Mund* Esta loco 
7:30 
f t 29 
8 Jackie Gleason (C) 
0 
2% 6 
The 
Saint: 
(C) 
(60 
min.) “The 
Power Artist." 
8 


Musical Varieties: (O (60 mln.) 
17) (33 Thu Dating Game: (CV 
8 


The 
Bad 
Guys: 
(90 m ln.)’ 
Lowell Thomas (C) (30 min.) 
I J ) Ripcoid (30 mln ) 
1 ^ Dr. Hudson’s Secret Journal 
Off-Ramp 
1:00 


1941 to Its demise In the smolder­ 
ing ruins of bombed-out Berlin In 
1945. 
I D Joe Pyne (C) (30 min.) 
© 
LHli Palmer Theatre 
0 “) Box de Mexico 
10:G© O 
2 * ( I Mannix: (C) (60 mln.) 
A famous mystery writer asks Man- 
nix to unravel the mystery of why 
his life has been threatened— and 
tha detective himself faces death 
at the hands of a hulking dullard. 
Michael Strong. Patti Chandler, Paul 
Petersen, Ted Cassidy guest. 
( H News: (C) (30 m in) Larry Bur­ 
rell, Bob Rhodes. 
© 
Marquee 
22: 
"Is 
Everybody 
Happy?" 
0 3 By Demand 
10:30 
O 
“ IL MONDO”! JUNGLE 
* PRIMITIVES PERFORM 
DANCE OF DEATH! 
O H Mondo: (C) (30 m in) "The 
Dance of Death " Prehistoric Indi­ 
ans in Brasil perform a complicated 
dance aa pari ot the ceremoniea 
honoring their deed, 
m toe Pyne (O (2 hours) 
11:00 O 
Eleven 
O’Clock 
Report: 
(C) 
Clete Roberts. 
O 
Mevie: “T-Men" (mystery) '47 
— Dennis 0 Keefe. 
News (C) 
News (C) (30 min.) 
Cine en Su Cese 
11:05 O 
News 
i ? lC Î The 
Newlywed 
Game: . . ; 15 
Michael B.od efUC) (9 0 m m .) 
& DORIS DAY AND ROCK 
<C) 
f 


Country 
Musk 
Show 
Yancy Derringer 
NET Journal 


ÇD D Usurpador 


8 25 
Q UNITED AIR LINES 
if Present* Lakers vs. 
San Francisco Warriors 


if HUDSON IN “ PILLOW 
TALK” - IN COLOR! 
52 mevie: (C) "Pil­ 
low Talk" (comedy) *59 — Rock 
Hudson, Doris Day, Tony Randall. 
O T h e l lt k Hour Newst (C) (30 
mm.) Jack Latham. 
Q L A. TV DEBUT! Robert 
8:30 0 * 2 9 
$ My Three Sons: (C) (30 
a Mitchum, Gregory Peck 
m ln) 
The 
f rst 
time 
Katie 
and 
" 
Robbie entertain at home they Im 
peril the marriage of their friends 
Larry and Denise 
O 
2 3 b Get 
Smart: 
(C) 
(30 
min ) "Spy, Spy Birdie " 
§ 


Lakers 
Basketball: 
(C) 
[)f; (J Lawrence Welk (C) 


Peter Gunn 
El Der echo de Nacer 


• 00 
9 Hogan’s Heroes: (C) 


11:30 
8 


’TV 
| ; Hogan’s Heroes: (C) 
'T5—Dorothy lamour. 
¡2 $ 
5 Saturday Night ft * • l|j4 5 O 
Ttw Tonight Show (C) 
Movies: 
(C) "Moment to Moment l2;30 f K An-Night Movies: (C) 
"Bird of 
(drama) *65— Jean 
Sobarg _Sean 
Pm b4Im " 
(adventure) 
'5 1 — Louis 


STAR IN 'CAPE FEAR'! 
O 
Saturday 
Night 
Movis: 
"Capo 
Faor" (suspense) '62— Gregory Peck 
Robort Mrtchum, Polly Bergen, lori 
Martin, Martin Balsam, Jack Kru- 
achen. 
O Movie: “ Shake Hands With the 
Devil’’ (drama) 
59— James Cagney, 
Don Murrey Dana Wyntar. 
Movis: ‘lu cky Stiff*' (mystary) 


Garrison, 
Honor 
Blackman, 
Arthur 
HMl. 
. . 
o 
Cinema IX Movie: “A Taste el 
Honey'' (drama) ’62- Rita Tushmg 
ham, Dora Bryan 
Robert Stephens 
© 
African Patrol 
© N E T Fastwal 
F D Estolaree 34 
1:30 F I 2 9 rf ) Petticoat Junction: 
(C) 
O 17 
“J > ! J ! ! ! 
and Fall of tiie ih ird Reich 
(C) 
(6 0 
m ln ) 
"G o tterd am m erw n g . 
Third 
and 
last of three specials 
this 
week 
based 
on 
William 
L 
Shirer's history of Natl Germany 
Part III covers the Third Reich 


P«Silise" 
(adventura) 
’51 
l i Jts 
Jourdan. "UFO” (science fiction) 56 
— Tom Powers, "five Fingers'* (dra­ 
ma) ’52—-Jamea Mason "The Guilt 
oi Janet Ames’’ (drsms) ’47~Ro»a- 
Und Russell. 
1.00 CD Movie. 
"Beware, 
Spooks!” 
(comedy) ’39—-Joe E. Brown. 


1:15 O 
Movre; "No Sod Songs lor Me” 
(drama) '50 — Margarot Sullivan, 
Wendell Corey. 
8 


News (C) 
Manhunt 


1:20 O 
"DtlfN ®* *■" Q»»*"*' " 
(mama) '53— Paul Kalfy, Maureen 
O'Sullivan. 


Southland A M Radio 


KBIG........ 740 K F W f .... ? 8 0 
K H J 
KABC 
790 KG ER .. I 3 9 0 
KFAC . 
1330 K F O X - 1 2 8 0 
Kjpi 
__ ¿ 4 0 RGBS » 1 0 2 0 
K B B Q -1500- 
KSOM- 1 5 1 0 


.. 930 
KIEV ...... 870 
KLAC ..... 570 
KMPC 
710 


KNX .... 1070 
KDAY .. 1580 
KPOL . . T 540 
KRKD .-1 1 5 0 


tical 
frustration 
that we 
are 
forced to argue in terms of 
whether it Is more important to 
defeat Mr. Johnson and remove 
Dean Rusk, or to suffer both of 
them to prevent the election of 
Richard 
Nixon 
or 
Ronald 
Reagan,” it said. 


Dennen 


(Continued From Page 4) 


Committee. He is in daily con­ 
tact 
with 
dozens 
of 
sick 
or 
w o u n d e d Veitnamese men, 
women and children. 
Dr. Araujo asserts, “ If the or­ 
dinary 
Vietnamese 
had 
to 
choose between surrender to the 
Communists 
a n d 
continuing 
their fight for freedom and in­ 
dependence they would choose 
to fight.” 


The 
South 
Vietnamese 
of­ 
ficials acted in a primitive man­ 
ner when they banned the news 
magazine that printed the half- 
baked report They still have to 
learn that censorship of any 
kind is self-defeating. 
In a partisan world it is fool­ 
ish to expect that the reporter 
alone should be nonpartisan. 
But competent newsmen—and 
this is true of the majority of 
American correspondents — al­ 
ways guard themselves against 
exaggerations that are likely to 
distort the truth. They m a k e 
their own fair contribution to 
that continuing debate that is 
the heart of the democratic sys­ 
tem which is served best when 
officials and others “keep their 
cool.” 


A!</y Your House a Home 


W itJ> Al a t e n a is F t a m 


“ft ,<H thi WUW/ il ttmmtofilscS' 


C l u r e I n o l i t 


N u r s e r i e s 


4 5 6 W . F o o th ill, C la re m o n t 


Tires String Along 
AKRON, Ohio (U P I) — There 
is about one mile of cord in the 
average 
passenger 
car 
tire. 


according to The C«cc 
r lire 
t j 
& Rubber Company. The cord 
£ 
is used to make the carcass, or • 
body, of the tire. 


Rich Don’t 


Buy Yachts 


NEW YORK (U P I) — Mil- 


lionaires aren’t the chief buy­ 
ers of yachts, as is generally 
believed. The typical yacht buy­ 
er is the smaller industrialist 
or 
businessman—the self-made 
man — and the purchase usual­ 
ly is the realization of a boy­ 
hood dream. 
That’s the word from David 
R. Parker, Jr., of High Point, 
N.C., president of the Hatteras 
Yacht Co., who says “the very 
rich seldom buy, they normally 
charter yachts.” Parker should 
know. His firm exhibited 
the 
mosf expensive yacht at the re­ 
cent 
National 
Boat 
Show. 


P ric e ? $95,000. 


i HOME DESKS 
• 


BIRCH — M A H O G A N Y — W ALN UT 
_ 
R 
ALL REASONABLY PRICED! 
I 


I 
G IST’S FURNITURE 
I 


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< 
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2 


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Have you been 


in Recently? 


Visit our 
ODDS & ENDS SECTION 
for terrific bargains 


«— For Example— 


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A-MART e A-MART • A-MART • A-MART 


Progress-Bulletin, March 
9, 
1968 
Page 
28 


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