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Full text of "Pomona Progress Bulletin (1968-09-23)"

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Vol. 84 


It’s FAIR’ WEATHER 


Fair tonight. Sunny and warmer 
Tuesday 
Gusty north to northeast 
winds east of Pomona today, de­ 
creasing tonight. Expected high to­ 
day and Tuesday, 94; low tonight, 60. 


Number 237 
progtesö-Bulleti 


POMONA, CALIF., MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 2 


MAIL 


HOME EDITION 


PRICE 10c 


Corrier-delivered, $2.25 a month 


2 Sections 
24 Pages 
REA G A N SIGNS 
T BILL 


Pueblo Crew 
Will Get $65 
Extra in Pay 


SAN ANTONIO, Tex. if! — President Johnson 
signed a bill today providing for hostile fire pay of 
$65 a month extra for each of 81 military members 
of the crew of the USS Pueblo, captured by North 
Korea. 
The ship was captured last Jan. 23. The Texas 
White House said the pay increase will be retro­ 
active to Jan. 1. Actually, there were 83 men 
aboard the Pueblo, but two are civilian oceano­ 
graphers and do not come under this pay bill. 
Johnson also issued a president unit citation to 
the Army’s Third Brigade, 4th Infantry Division and 
its assigned and attached units for “extraordinary 
heroism” under massive ground attack by Viet Cong 
on March 21, 1967, in the Vietnam war. 
As he continued his ranch stay into the fifth day, 
Johnson signed several other bills, including a one- 
year extension of authority for more flexible regu­ 
lation of maximum rates of interest on deposits in 
Federal Reserve banks. 
The President also received the 1968 reports of 
the Board of Visitors to the U.S Naval Academy and 
the Air Force Academy. The naval school board 
recommended that “ every effort be made to attract 
more men from minority groups.” 


Winds Bring 
Clear Weather 


Santa Ana wind conditions brought beautiful 
weather to the Pomona Valley this weekend and to­ 
day and gusty winds to the Fontana area. 
The winds off the desert will raise temperatures 
in the valley to 94 degrees today and Tuesday, the 
weatherman predicted. They also brought clear 
skies and a view of the mountains. 
Santa Ana winds are responsible for the dry air 
and the many runaway grass fires that ignited in 
San Bernardino County Sunday. The winds are ex­ 
pected to decrease tonight. 
September, October and November are the months 
when Santa Ana conditions are common. 


Search by Copter 
Locates Children 


LA PUENTE — Two children, missing almost 
eight hours, were found unharmed here Sunday as 
the result of a helicopter search by sheriff's 
deputies. 
The children, Cynthia Boyd, 8, and Harold Boyd, 
6, were last seen at their home at 10 a.m. Their 
mother, Mrs. Eleanor Boyd, reported them missing 
and sheriff’s deputies began a door-to-door search 
of the area near their home at 1448 Kwis St., 
Hacienda Heights. 
Later helicopters were brought in. Deputies 
flew low and used bull horns to broadcast descrip­ 
tions of the children. In La Puente Park, Mrs. Joan 
1 urbeville, Huntington Beach, heard the description 
and spotted the children nearby. 


Willis Believed Lost 
MOSCOW (AP) — William Willis, the 75-year- 
old American who floated across the Pacific Ocean 
alone on a raft four years ago, is believed lost 
on his third attempt to cross the Atlantic. 
A Soviet fishery ship came upon a de-masted, 
deserted sailboat on which Willis’ passport, medi­ 
cal card, other documents and a dairy were found, 
Tass, the Soviet news agency, reported Sunday. 
The boat was found in the Atlantic about 400 
miles east of Ireland by a fisheries ship from 
the Latvian town of Leipaja. Tass said it was 
hoisted aboard the Soviet ship after a futile search 
for Willis, But the report did not indicate where 
the boat and the papers would be taken. 


V" , 
-:. V I 
Average of $49 
GM Boosts 
Auto Prices 


m mg 
to* • 
; M 
M i 


IN TODAY’S 


Auto News ..................... 


P-B 


Page 


Bridge 
.................... 
Child’s Puzzle ................... 
Classified Ads ................. 
College Series ................... 
Comics 
........................... 
C rossword 
....................... 
Jeane Dixon ...................... 
Doctor Comments ............. 
Editorial 
Entertainment 
.......... 
Financial 
....................... ........ 1 
Obituary 
........................ .....4 
Rallies & Straws .............. 
Secuity & Vets ................ 
Southland 
....................... 
Sports 
....... .................. .... 4-1 
TV & Radio ....................... 
Women 
......................... 


ALONG THE 


A U.S. Marine sniper and his spotter sit on the south bank of the Ben Hai River, the demarca­ 
tion line in the Vietnam demilitarized zone. Marines entered the area Sept. 17. 


Marines Capture Base Camp 
Reds Shoot Down 
Six Helicopters 


SAIGON 
(U PI)—Communist 
gunners shot down six 
U.S. 
helicopters, two of them sup­ 
porting U.S. Marines in and 
near the 
Demilitarized 
Zone 
(DMZ), 
military 
spokesmen 
said today. The losses raised 
the U.S. helicopter battle toil to 
869. 
The 
spokesman 
said 
six 
crewmen were listed as missing 
from a twin-rotor CH46 Marine 
Helicopter 
downed 
in 
the 
southern portion of the buffer 
zone Saturday while re-supply­ 
ing a 2,006-man Marine sweep 
there. 
They 
said the craft 
plunged into Red-held territory. 
A second helicopter was cut 
down Friday 
while 
supplying 
troops operating just below the 
Demilitarized strip between the 
two Vietnams, where U.S and 
government forces have mount­ 
ed a drive to scatter Commu­ 
nist troop concentrations and 
smash supply depots. 
Base Camp Captured 
Spokesmen 
today 
reported 
that U.S. Marines captured a 


North Vietnamese base camp 
with 
300 
foxholes and 
1,220 
mortar rounds in an unopposed 
seizure near where the second 
chopper crashed. Not far away, 
government troops killed 98 Red 
troops with “ light” losses. 
Two other helicopters were 
shot down near Pleiku in the 
Central 
Highlands, 
one 
was 
downed Sunday on the northern 
coast and the sixth went down 
Sunday 
18 
miles 
south 
of 
Saigon. 
A 
total 
of 
10 
GIs 
were 
wounded in the crashes and 
eight others rescued unharmed, 
in addition to the missing men, 
the spokesmen said. 
Apart from the DM action 
by 
Marines and 
government 
troops, ground action was light 
Sunday 
and 
today. 
South 
Vietnamese 
regional 
forces 
reported killing nine members 
of a Vieg Cong platoon four 
miles outside Saigon, without 
suffering a loss. 
U.S. troops reported killing 15 
Communists in a firefight in 


Quang N g a i province, where 
Communists earlier stormed a 
prisoner 
of 
war 
camp 
and 
executed 20 prisoners, without 
suffering a casualty. 


Poor Weather 
Spokesmen said poor weather 
held U.S. fighter-bombers to 76 
missions over North Vietnam 
Sunday where 
they 
reported 
destroying 
or 
damaging 
30 
supply boats. 
B52 bombers flew 11 missions 
throughout South Vietnam today 
and Sunday, pounding suspected 
troop concentrations near Sai­ 
gon with two million pounds of 
hi«h 
explosives 
and 
ranging 
over other infiltration areas and 
suspected Red lairs. 


The 
Marine 
unit 
probing 
country just six miles south of 
the 
DM described 
the base 
camp as a heavily fortified 
honeycomb 
of 
trenches 
that 
housed a troop graveyard as 
well as the weapon cache. It 
was 
the second 
base camp 
found in the area in two days. 


DETROIT (AP) - General 
Motors, giant of the auto indus­ 
try. today announced price in­ 
creases which averaged $49, or 
nearly 50 pur cent under figures 
announced 
by 
Chrysler 
last 
week. 


GM Board Chairman James 
M. Roche denied there had been 
any pressure from Washington 
sources to get General Motors 
to come in with a smaller figure 
than Chrysler had done as the 
1969 cars headed toward the 
market. 


“ There were 
frank 
discus­ 
sions in Washington, but I as­ 
sure you General Motors’ deci­ 
sion as usual was made by Gen­ 
eral Motors people before we 
even 
went 
to 
Washington,” 
Roche told a news conference. 
General Motors, in figuring 
out its $49, or 1.6 per cent per 
car price boost, used list price 
figures, those which the compa­ 
nies charge its dealers. Chrys­ 
ler, which was the first of the 
auto companies to post its new 
list prices had figured the in­ 
creases at $84, or 2.9 per cent 
over its 1968 list prices. 
Not Included 
The prices as announced by 
General Motors did not include 
federal excise tax and dealer 
handling 
and 
preparation 
charges. Those items are in­ 
cluded on the so-called sticker 
price which a buyer would find 
on a car in his dealer’s show­ 
room. 
Working 
from 
that 
sticker 
price, GM’s average increase 
would be $52 or 1.6 per cent, 
contrasted with an $89 or 2.5 per 
cent increase which Chrysler 
used on its sticker prices this 
year. 
Roche, in explaining GM’s de­ 
cision to use list prices in its 
formal 
announcement to the 
press, said “ confusion some­ 
times results from the various 
elements 
that 
are combined 
when ore is figuring out differ­ 
ent types of auto prices." 
Surprise Move 
In a surprise move. GM re­ 
versed its decision to have fed­ 
erally required headrests in­ 
cluded in its price tags on an­ 
nouncement day Thursday. 
“ We had announced that the 
headrests would be on all the 
cars and would be included in 


Bombing Halt Is Favored 
By U.N. Majority--Thant 


UNITED 
NATIONS, 
NY. 
* (AP) — U N. Secretary-General 
U Thant expressed belief today 
that a majority of the 124 mem­ 
bers 
of 
the 
United 
Nations 
would vote for an immediate 
cessation of U.S. bombing of 
North Vietnam if the issue were 
put to a test. 
He told a news conference he 
was convinced he was voicing 
the conscience of the world in 
continuing to urge a total bomb­ 
ing halt as an essential first 
step toward meaningful Viet­ 
nam peace talks. 
Thant added, however, that he 


didn't “ see any light at the end 
of the tunnel for another year or 
more." 
The 
secretary-general 
dealt 
with a wide range of world 
problems, including the Soviet 
intervention in Czechoslovakia, 
the Niuerian civil war, Red Chi­ 
na and Soviet claims that the 
U.N. 
Charter permits 
Soviet 
military intervention in West 
Germany to curb an alleged 
threat of Nazi resurgence. 
Thant declined to challenge 
the Soviet interpretation of the 
charter, but declared that it was 
the duty of all U N. members to 


L 


TODAY'S BRIGHT 


WATERVILLE, Maine if» — A moose lied up air traffic 
Sunday at Walerville Airport which serves a city of 20,000 in 
central Maine. 
Airport officials said the female moose ambled onto the 
runway and sat down, delaying landings and takeoffs until she 
meandered into nearby woods. 
A plane circled the airport waiting for the moose to leave, 
but finally landed at the other end of the 5,000 foot-long run­ 
way. 


seek peaceful settlement of dis­ 
putes rather than to take unilat­ 
eral action. 
On the Vietnam question, the 
secretary general suggested the 
wording of a resolution which 
might be put before the forth­ 
coming session of the General 
Assembly to test sentiment on a 
Vietnam bombing halt. But he 
said he was not suggesting that 
anv government ask to have the 
issue inscribed on the agenda or 
that the resolution actually be 
Introduced, 
Thant was pressed to Inter­ 
pret 
provisions of 
the 
U.N. 
Charter 
which 
the 
Russians 
claim give them authority to 
send 
military forces 
against 
West Germany to halt a resur­ 
gence of Nazism. He said he 
would give his interpretation on­ 
ly if asked by a member gov­ 
ernment or by a U N organ. 
He added, however, tint ha 
believed the Bonn govern men* 
was dealing with the problem 
and “ no unilateral action should 
find a place in such an eventual­ 
ity." 


Spaceship 


Feat Puts 


Russ Ahead 


MOSCOW (AP) - The Rus­ 
sians forged ahead in the space 
race again over the weekend by 
recovering an unmanned space­ 
ship that splashed down in the 
Indian Ocean after circling the 
moon. 
Sir Bernard Lovell, Britain’s 
top space expert, predic ted that 
the Soviets within months will 
make a manned shot around the 
moon. James E, Webb, outgoing 
head oljhe U.S. space program, 
said the latest Russian feat 
“ shows a capability that could 
change the basic structure and 
balance of power in the world." 
The spaceship, Zond 5, was 
launched on Sept. 14, It went 
into a holding orbit around the 
earth, then took off for the 
moon. It circled the moon on 
Wednesday, landed in the In­ 
dian Ocean Saturday night, and 
was picked up by a Russian re­ 
covery ship Sunday, 
Tass, the official Soviet news 
agency, said scientific instru­ 
ments aboard the space ship 
had been recovered with “ a 
vast body of scientific informa­ 
tion." 
Webb said the flight was “ the 
most significant demonstration 
ot its 
tim e," comparable to 
Spumik I, the first satellite to 
orbit the earth. 


the price, but for competitive 
reasons we have had to make 
them an option until Jan. 1, 
1969," Roche said. 
This referred to Chrysler’s 
marketing strategy in making 
the new safety headrests an op­ 
tional price item at $26 until the 
date the federal government 
says they have to be installed. 
General 
Motors 
undercut 
Chrysler’s price as it said they 
would be installed for an aver­ 
age of $16 per car. 
Conceding that many people 
may not like the headrests, 
which some consider to be un- 
slightly, Roche said GM would 
do its best through its dealers to 
convince all buyers to take the 
new safety item, 
Roche 
explained 
that 
the 
headrests have been installed on 
all 1969 GM cars built to date 
but he said that if a customer 
absolutely 
refuses 
to accept 
them before the federally re­ 
quired date, they will be re­ 
moved and the customer will he 
credited for that amount on his 
bill. 
Third Year 
GM’s 
new 
price 
schedule 
marked the third year in a row 
it had come in with smaller 
price increases than did Chrys­ 
ler, first of the auto firms to 
lead off the price parade in all 
three years. 
Chrysler came under heavy 
criticism last week from the 
White House, United Auto Work­ 
ers President Walter Reuther 
and other sources for its new 
price tags, and the big question 
in the wake of GM’s new figures 
was—Will Chrysler roll back its 
prices again? 
Ford and American Motors 
have not announced their 1969 
prices as yet. 
Roche said GM had taken the 
unusual step of calling a news 
conference to outline its new car 
prices because of what he called 
“ the complex problem of car 
pricing." 
He said that in approaching 
1969 car prices, General Motors 
had "considered the economy of 
the United States, inflationary 
pressures, and the war in Viet­ 
nam” as it sought to establish 
what he called “ a fair price pic­ 
ture." 
The GM chairman pointed to 
what he described as greatly in­ 
creased 
labor 
and 
materiel 
«Ms in the auto industry’s 1969 


Please turn to Page 2 


Final Say 
Left Up 
To Voters 


SACRAMENTO (AP) - Gov. 
Reagan signed today the $261 
million tax reduction bill put to­ 
gether by him and lawmakers 
during the special legislative 
session which ended Friday. 
This leaves it up to the voters 
at the Nov. 5 general election 
ballot. To trigger the tax relief 
proposal, they must vote for a 
separate constitutional amend­ 
ment—Prop. 1-a—and approve 
it by a larger margin than a 
competing tax proposition. 
The governor’s signature was 
a foregone conclusion, but vot­ 
er approval is not so certain 
because of the challenge from 
the Prop. 9, the Watson initia­ 
tive which would severely limit 
property tax levies for proper­ 
ty-related services and phase 
out use of that tax for support 
of education and welfare. 
Campaign Pledge 
As he signed the bill, Rea­ 
gan called it “ a major step 
toward fulfillment of one of our 
earlier campaign pledges." But 
he noted it wouldn’t have been 
possible without a spirit of com­ 
promise in the legislature. 
Despite the two-party support 
for the measure, only two Re­ 
publican legislators — Assem­ 
blyman Frank Lanterman and 
Robert T. Monagan — were 
present for the bill-signing cere­ 
mony in Reagan’s outer office. 
There were no Democratic law­ 
makers. 
Reagan said he was confident 
the people would approve Prop. 
1-a in November and reject 
Prop. 9. 
“ I just refuse to believe that 
Prop. 9 will pass,” Reagan said 
when asked to comment if he 
would call the legislature back 
into special session after the 
election if Prop. 9 did prevail. 
Reagan 
said 
approval 
of 
Prop. 9 would create “ fiscal 
chaos." 


Equitable Relief 
In a prepared press state­ 
ment, Sen. George Miller Jr., 
D-Martinez, said the legisla­ 
ture’s plan is “ equitable and 
gives relief where it is most 
needed ... Of all the property 
tax relief plans offered, this is 
the least likely to result in in­ 
creased spending by local tax­ 
ing units." 
Miller had blocked Reagan’s 
own plan during the regular 
session and came forth with the 


Please turn to Page 2 


Douglas Delays War 
Duty for Reservists 


WASHINGTON (AP) - For 
the second time in two weeks, 
Justice William O. Douglas has 
ordered the Army not to send 
groups of reservists to Vietnam 
until the Supreme Court consid­ 
ers whether to hear their objec­ 
tions to being called up for ac­ 
tive duty. 
In issuing the order Sunday, 
Douglas told the Army he was 
staying until at least Oct. 7 any 
orders to send the 448th Postal 
Unit and the 1018th Service Sup­ 
ply Company to Vietnam. 
Douglas, who acted one day 
alter Chief Justice Earl Warren 
refused to intervene, issued a 
similar order Sept 12 for the 
1002nd Combat Supply Compa­ 
ny. Warren and Justice Hugo 
Black also had declined to act In 
the earlier case. 
The postal unit is from New 
York City, while the supply 
company is from Schenectady, 
N.Y. Both units are stationed at 
Ft. Lee. Va. The 1002nd ts from 
Ohio 
and 
Stationed 
at 
Ft. 
Meade, Md. 
Thirteen members of the post­ 
al unit and 83 members of the 
supply company asked for the 
stay, Their case, as in the one 
from 113 members of the 1002nd 
company, Is based on the con­ 
tention that it is unconstitutional 


for the President to activate the 
reserves for extended duty with­ 
out the declaration of war or a 
national emergency. 
The 
units 
involved 
were 
among several reserve groups 
called to active duty by Presi­ 
dent Johnson under a 1966 law 
which provided he could take 
such action if it were in the na­ 
tional intersst. 
Although 
o n l y 
individuals 
asked (or the Supreme Court 
hearing, Douglas’ action applies 
to each unit as a whole. Actual­ 
ly, officials at Ft. Lee said or­ 
ders had already gone out to 
keep the units on base indefi­ 
nitely. 
In issuing the Sept. 12 stay, 
Douglas said only that the case 
brought up several substantial 
questions. As reported by court 
officials Sunday, Douglas made 
no comment on his latest order 
Several things could result 
from the court's Oct, 7 session, 
It could refuse to hear the 
cases, thus automatically dis­ 
solving the stays and making 
the units eligible for immediate 
shipment overseas. 
Or the court could agree to 
put the matter on its docket lor 
a hearing, which would mean 
extending the stays until a deci­ 
sion is reached. 


Progress-Bulletin, Pom ona, Calif. 
M on d ay fvonlng, Sogt. 33, 1968 
Page 2, Sec. 1 


Traffic Snarled 
Ventura Freeway 
Closed by Blaze 


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS traffic to the Pacific Coast High 
T hree brush fires in V entura way. 
County 
w ere contained 
today 
T raffic 
was snarled as 
far 
a fte r they blackened about 800 east as Agoura in Los Angeles^ 
acres, closed the V entura Free- County. 
w ay and produced a m onum en- 
Firem en called in 27 engine, 
tal traffic jam on the Pacific com panies, 
seven 
bulldozers' 
C oast Highway. 
and two a ir tankers to battle 
About 350 m en of the county the flam es, pushed by Santa 
fire d ep artm ent and the State Ana 
w inds 
through 
the 
dry 
Division of F orestry m anaged brush and w atershed. 
r to encircle the blazes northw est 
The C anejo G rade fire char-j 
of Thousand O aks late Sunday, red about 350 acres before it 
The m ajor fire, betw een T h o u -w as contained. 
A nother blaze 
sand Oaks and C am arillo in the burned about 250 acres near a 
rugged 
Cone jo 
G rade 
area, Shell Oil Co. reservation north j 
jum ped 
the 
six-lane 
V entura of V entura. The third fire bum - 
F reew ay and forced highw ay ed m ore than 20 acres near! 
patrolm en to close the artery Highway 33. 
tw ice. 
Firem en circled the Shell der- 
P atrolm en said an estim ated ricks to prevent flam es from 
lOidOO cars backed up 15 m iles touching off oil explosions and 
in one hour as officers rerouted no dam age was reported. 


Taunts Humphrey 
Nixon Campaign 
Emphasizes TV 


Fifty Arrested 
At L.A. Love-in 


LOS 
ANGELES 
(U P I)-T h e 
autum nal e q u i n o x 
festival, 
which 
brought 
thousands 
hippies 
and 
other 
youths 


Police said about 110 officers 
w ere 
assigned 
to 
the 
park 
of during the featival. 
to! 
The city recreation and parks 
Elysian 
P ark , 
ended 
Sunday com m ission last w eek overrode 
night with about 50 a rrests. 
sa 
staff 
recom m endation 
and 
Police 
said 
at 
least 
four denied a perm it to the F re e 
grass 
fires 
w ere 
deliberately P ress to sponsor the festival, 
set in the p ark just north of) 
The city attorney’s office bad 
D odger Stadium and police and, held 
the com m ission had 
no 
firem en w ere pelted with rocks right 
to 
prohibit 
a 
private 
and bottles. 
The 
largest 
blaze 
burned 


group from using the park. 
Com m ission 
president 
M rs. 


BRUSH FIRE N EAR REFINERY— A brush fire north of Ventura 
sends a curtain of smoke across the valley. It burned near a 


Shell Oil Co. refinery and a housing development, but did 
not threaten them. 
(A P W irephoto) 


Bia Toledo Crowd 


By W ALTER R. MF.ARS 
R obert Ellsw orth, Nixon’s na- 
NEW YORK (A P) — R ichard tional political director, charged 
M. Nixon, confident but cau- in an interview th at the Demo 
tious, is cam paigning for the c ra ts have a conscious strategy! 
W hite 
House 
from 
a 
script designed to do just that, 
w hich 
em phasizes 
television 
“T he D em ocrats are doing ev 
and devotes little public atten-jerything they can to build up 
Don to his two presidential oppo-W allace,” 
Ellsw orth said. 
He 
Rents. 
said they see in a House deci 


Humphrey Drive 
Getting Up Steam 


Tornado, Rain, Snow 
Come With Autumn 


about one acre of grass near Harold C. M orton said, “ I’m 
the police academ y on the edge bitterly opposed to the parks 
of the park. All the fires w ere being used for political reasons 
quickly controlled. 
-w h o e v e r they are. There are 
Art ' Kunkin, 
editor 
of 
the plenty of private places they 
¡Los 
Angeles 
F ree 
P ress, 
an could use. T here is no question 
underground 
new spaper, 
w as this would be disruptive to park 
am ong those arrested . He w as facilities.” 
booked on 
suspicion of inter­ 
fering with 
an 
a rre st. 
O ther 
charges ranged from drunken­ 
ness, and b attery on a police 
officer to indecent exposure and 
defam ation 
of 
an 
A m erican 
flag. 
The 
love-in 
celebrating 
the 
changing 
season 
started 
nor­ 
m ally enough for such affairs. 
A crowd estim ated by police at 
8,000 persons at its peak w as 
entertained 
during 
the 
after- 
S A N FRANCISCO (A P) — A 
¡noon by a series of rock b a n d s, raise in m inim um pay for 100,- 


Pay Increase 
Delayed for 
Court Order 


By HARRY KELLY 
upsets, H arry S. T rum an. 


bert H. H um phrey’s cam paign enough? 
H um phrey thinks he 
is showing sm oke if not fire.lean win by taking the offense 


W ary police set up a com­ 
m and post in the parking lot of 
the academ y but relations be- 
. 
. 
L 
L 
i 
« it « « ^ I tw een the revelers and author- 
By United P ress International 
three inches of ram fell. W 
i n 
d 
s wer e for the m o st p a rt 


A utum n’s violent a rriv al left of S2 m .p.h. hit the W ichita peecefu i_ 
p jve 
a rre sts 
m 
tornado scars and n ear floods in airport. 
Pow er 
lines 
w e re !m ade during the afternoon, 
any.-» iiu u ia u , 
¡Iowa, heavy rain and snow from flattened, m obile hom es w ere 


TOLEDO, Ohio (A P) - Hu-| 
Would 
all 
this 
activity 
be the M idwest to the fa r We s t * 
h 
m 
and cold 
from 
M innesota 
to buildings blown onto roads, but 
no injuries w ere reported. 


N early 1% inches of rain fell rocks and b o ttles.' One stone m inim um s of $1.65 for women 


000 wom en and children farm 
w orkers Is being delayed be­ 
cause the State Industrial WeF 
fare Division chief w ants a w rit­ 
ten court o rder to m ake it ef- 
w erelfective. 
The chief, M rs. V irginia Allee, 


N ixon’s 
stan d ard 
cam paign sion th eir best chance of deny- 
^ |S quest for the presiden- against Nixon on issues of per 
speech includes a set series of ing Nixon the presidency. 
L y in lts second week the Vice sonality, prosperity, by calling 
tau n ts a t Vice P resident H ubert 
Nixon’s cam paign pace is gen- president drew in Toledo w hat for civil justice as well as law 
H. H um phrey, the D em ocratic orally a leisurely one, with two gppeared 
t0 
^ 
the 
biggest and order and by trying to paint nation" hit with cold, rain and front stretching from M innesota talion chief M ark Scott, 59. He 
She replied th at “ 


K ansas today. 


Police said the first of the said liere Sunday an attorney 
;! series of fires w as set about gen eral’s m em orandum had ad- 
7 p.m . F rem en who arrived at vised h er to order m ost farm 
the 
scene 
w ere 
pelted 
w ith operators to pay the new hourly 


nom inee. 
lor three speeches a day, each crow ds 0f bis cam paign—and he Nixon as m ore of a haw k or for- snow 
felt 
that 
autum n 
w as to K ansas. Light thundershow ers w as not injured 
■ Nixon tells the crow ds—gener- virtually identical. T he schedule w as fiS obviously delighted as a eign policy h ardliner than Hum- w inter in disguise 
ally big o n e s -th a t a nation in; is shaped around television, and . 
w ith a dou51ft dip ice cream phrev> 
I 
T em D eratures 
sank 
trouble should not turn for le a d -th e 
question-and-answ er 
pro 
1 
-- 
- 
— 
• 
- 
- —* 
^ 
cone. 


preceded a cold 
to 
17 w est Texas. 
N or Is H um phrey relu ctan t to degrees in N evada and Wyom- 
------ 
ersh ip to a m em ber of the ad- gram s N :\on is staging in the 
*<7 ^3 ^ you, thank you very p o rtray him self as, if not the ing e a r|v Sunday and to the 30s 
m in ietra tin n th a t ont it thf»rP 
m a jo r S ta tes. 
I 
. . . . * 
. , , 
1_____ ________ __________. j 
____________________ & 
* 
" ! 
... . 
m inistration th at got it there. 
G eorge C. W allace, the third 
p a rty candidate, gets not a word ¡Ohio, 


m uch,” 
he s a i d 
beam ingly, best presidential candidate pos- in 
fduho> 
Colorado, 
U tah, 
T here have been four so far: 'p um ping hands as a hundred o r sible, at least a b etter alterna- W ashington and M ontana, which 
5f 
voiiiviiiia 
****** ] 
from Nixon on the cam paign Pennsylvania 


.... 
. 
pum ping nanus as a uuuuiwu u. muic, « 
a 
W ashington ana M oniana, wmcn 
Illinois, 
vauio rn id 
anu mQre p g j ^ g crow ded around tive than Nixon or G eorge C. receiVed about a half-foot of 


T here will be a t least a 
platform . T he R epublican nom i­ 
nee contends th a t would only dozen m ore. N ixon’s travels are 
build up W allace, so he never frequently 
structured 
around 
m entions the m an. 
N evertheless, 
W allace 


his c a r Sunday outside an ice ¡W allace 
cream p arlor. 
His biggest problem , and he 
H um phrey 
is 
behind 
a n d !knows ¡tf ¡s V ietnam . He is said i 


snow. 
Storm s kicked up heavy rains 
m m uch of the nation later 


GM Boosts 


Car Prices 


(Continued From Page 1) 
»v... 
j- , iliaivc W ine u iam au o gw vuiv 
uuwu m maiijr 
rw attor nf 
rr-.rp m tn Niv- ic 
a Hav nf rpisxq- is in short SU*W * thus his te,e* statem ent 
th at would 
divorce a tornado tore through the little PiC!ure anc! he said 
e w 0‘ 1 
s 
em'* «trarppistQ 
Thev 
hoHeve tin ! and nrpnar ition 
v*sion advertisin8 w as lale* E e him from the Johnson ad m in is-*lowa 
town 
of 
O range 
City. 
aut0 m an u factu n n 8 iirm 
Nixon ra n m aintain his currenti 
N ix o n 's ram nam n sneech fea- a,so ieels ,he turtm lence sur' tration’s 
V ietnam 
policy. 
It dam aging about 40 hom es but would haye T0 operate w uh ln- 
tw* .K . « n i l n nnitc 
obh ...L . 
tho 
rounding the Chicago conven- seem ed unlikely that he would, causing no serious injuries. 
creased effu icncies next y ear to 


and police decided to clea r the 
¡park of the youthful celebrants. 
Most of the arrests stem m ed 


is 
a 


»ho ram naion t*iPvkion shows knows il* He started la te a n d , to be under strong; pressu re to Sunday. They continued to beat 
Cft. hie crhpdnip F arh of thr-m s*ow- Even the m oneY» he sa Ys » m ake som e d ram atic gesture or down in m any places today, and 
So is his schedule. E ach of them 
. 
. 
. . 
, 
• 
v, 
u. h. 


lead in the opinion polls, and tures an appeal to the people 
tran slate it into victory over the 
candidate 
calls 
forgotten tion hurt him in the polls. 


Even before sum m er’s official 
r 
^ 
. 
farew ell at 7:26 p.m . 
EDT 
at M inneapolis, M inn., 
during a crashed through 
the re a r win- and $1.35 for m inors—up 35 
and 
Sunday 
m any p arts of 
the 
storm m oving in 
front of a cold 
dow 
of a 
c a r driven by 
bat- 25 cents, 
respectively. 
1 
...........................- 
- — ” 
^ -•—* **we need a 


w ritten court order..so 
we can 
front across 
The firem en w ere forced to enforce the law fairly and equit- 
re tre a t to the com m and post ably.” 
The 
State Appeal 
Court In 
Sacram ento upheld the higher 
m inim um pay two w eeks ago, 
from alleged disobeying of or- but grow ers have appealed the 
d ers to leave the p ark. O fficers ruling. 
w ere taunted by the 
crow d and 
C alifornia 
R ural Legal 
As- 
a rock w as throw n through the sistance, the farm w orkers’ aid 
window of a paddy 
wagon. No group th at won the ruling, has 
taken the position th at delay 
in 
ordering 
the higher mini­ 
m um s should apply only in the 
case of grow ers involved in the 
appeal litigation. 
D eputy Atty. Gen. Ja y Linter- 
m an said Miss Allee cannot en- 
But he is again hitting w ith 
Downpour 
soaked 
K ansas, 
But H um phrey, the 
cheerful 
‘ 
em phasis that while he M innesota 
and 
northw estern costs w ere not Passed a!on8 t0 
nuinpiircy. ou i m u j anaic aj/A iiiuniiins. 
i uu a ic ivcjjuuu j 
» *u- 
a! Laaa n 
H 
, 
, 
, 
ronsum prs 
fe a r th at W allace m ight win cans, you a re D em ocrats, you e xf>onent ° fJ h 
e 
rolPfi; »s only a vice president and a.Iow a, w here alm ost six inches 
_ 
enough electoral votes to deny a a re independents,” Nixon sa Ys dj tlf m a 
8 s 
candidate now and thus with no of j a m fell at ^oyal 


one w as reported injured. 


‘Lost Weekend’ 
Author Dies; 


Ruled SuiClde 
f0rce ^ 
higher m inim um w age 


NEW YORK (A P)—The death upon grow ers who filed Superior 


m ajo rity to eith er of the m ajor ‘You have been quiet. You have 
, 
. 
---------- 
. — 
. . . 
p a rty candidates, thus sending been going to work and you 
u u 
. put an end to the w ar on top of winds up to /0 m ues an h ur 
the election to the House of R ep -h a v e been paying your taxes h(,r> he 
UI! "° 
mftnAV|Ws priorities as president. 
battered K ansas, w here up to 
and supporting your schools.” 
all 
the 
Nixon 
m oney, 


control over events, he would 
Two storm s packing hail and 
Dead Hill Hospital? 


DEAD HILL, 
Italy 
(U P I )— cal exam iner M ichael Baden. 


; of C harles Jackson, author of Court suits to block th eir pay- 
‘The Lost W eekend,” h as been m ent a fter they w ere enacted 
ruled suicide by assistan t m edi- in F eb ru ary by the Industrial 
W elfare Com m ission. 


resen tatives. 
Tax Relief 
Bill Signed 


- 
t o « r T L T N i * » . these available. "W e’ro going to w in .-; 


quiet, forgotten A m ericans are he 
aroused and ready to speak out 
with votes on Nov. 5. 


No O rganization 
Although H um phrey w as the 


on 
The set speech's m ain assault i'™ Iru" n er- * * « “ »* 
convention w ithout m uch treas- 
vice 


(Continued From Page 1) 


H um phrey 
links 
the 
----------------- 
. 
. Unm_. 
president to th at adm in,stratlon. ury or orgam ra.ion 
And Hum; 
Leading in the publ.c opinion Phrev w as disappom ted in the 


Wallace Growing 
More Confident 


p o S iix o n has ^ s s e d T o h is|fi? ._week «, w , cam paign, 


core of the new proposal dunng cam paign staff a word of w am - 
the special session. 
i*nR a Ba *nst overconfidence. 
The legislative package con- 
His schedule is 
being kept 
tain s 
som ething 
for 
nearly flexjble, m ade up 10 days^to two 
^ 


everyone. 


By JU LES L O H 
MONTGOMERY, 
Ala. 


The residents of this town have 


long objected to its nam e but 


the clam or rose to crisis pitch 


when provincial authorities de­ 


cided 


¡sam e 


announced 


dedication 


H owever, 
L intem ian 
said, 
grow ers not involved in 
suits — and 
these 
em ­ 
ploy m ost of the affected work- 


and irritations that gnaw at „ 
(AP) great m any bew ildered Ameri- p 
He 
sprinted 
from 
coast 
to 


coast and back—w ith a tailw ind 
cam paign,” said a grin-¡cans, and an ability to speak of 
of disappointing crow ds, heck- 
L o n s C 
1 
,„ u b s from T exas 
^ 
(he 


Dr. Baden said Sunday that 
Jackson, 66, died in St. Vin- that 
cen t’s 
H ospital 
Saturday 
of the 
the clam or rose to crisis pitch acute b arb itu rate poisoning. 
A 
native of 
Sum m it, 
N .J., ers—should be ordered now to 
cided to locate a hospital of the Jackson worked In Chicago and pay the higher rates w ithout 
nam e 
here. 
A uthorities 
,York, .hen contracted tu- w aiting for a w rttlen sta .e court 
berculosis and w ent to D avos, ruling 
dissolving 
these 
suits, 
they 
would 
Sw itzerland, 
for 
his 
health. The paym ents should be retro- 
until townspeople 
There, he began w riting short active to F ebruary, L interm an 
stories and novels. 


NOTICE TO CREDITORS 
W allace to an them in sim ple, colorful term s, j 
n o e a m i « 
_ 
, 
_ . __, _ . . 
Estate Of A LLtN k TOR A WELLS 
Concerning law and order, for , ka a l l e n e t 
d ay , deceased.! 
other 


NOTICE OF 
HEARINO OF PETITION FOR 
PROBATE OF WILL 
No. EA P-62#4 


said. 


NOTICE INVITING 
SEALED QUOTATIONS 
Notice It hereby given that the 
City of Pomona will receive sealed 
,ervone 
weeks in advance, s o 'th a t the John c1‘>nna" X * n^ 
|a l'!“™ 
^ day, "rem in d s "m e of the old exam ple, t t e visceral issue o 
f 
| 
S 
j 
g 
J 
«8? S ^ i t e ' c i i J i S r a r S S ^ S L a ^ iS i g ^ * Eo~ " * S “ 
• * » 
F o r an estim ated 2.4 m illion nominee can devote his tim e to Jess«, U m uh. 
m ,v ;|oke th at begins, 'They laughed his cam paign. W allace says / r 
rners nt linete-fam ilv dwei- states in which his advisers be- well-publicised 
ora 
... 
when I sat down to play. . . ' 
D em ocratic 
and 
Republt 
ow ners of single-fam ily dwel 
lings, and about 300,000 ow ners Heve a cam paign nudge U need- 
of duplexes, the legislation calls ed 
for a $750 exem ption on the as- 


cues over the p arty ’s V ietnam 
plank and 
the w ithdraw al of 


the of Aliene 
n 
uu « 
T. Dav, deceased, to the Creditors 
R epublican of, and 
Y - 


Toia 
Wells aka 
AII«ne Angelas, 
ceased, to the Creditors 
In tha Matter of tha Estate of, 
U pei sons having claim s M ABEI H. KENNEDY, Deceased. 
• ----------- 
* 
---- 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 
“ W ell,” he said to the boom of candidates prom ised to enforce sent,lthem <*wifh^the n e c e s s a* r y ,the petition oi Edward L. Haslettj 


Cne (1) 
Chassis, wit] 
accordance 
10H68B 


%* ton Truck Cab and 
Itn Surveyor body, in 
with 
Specification 


__ 
T hat could include ex tra tele- troops from V tetnam 


sessed value of their property vision appearances in some key 
P ersons who ren t their hom es I states. 
. 
m 'c^ d p m r rmi'ld see th at th eir now.” 
would be able to double the 
While the word is out against 
— 
u u . 
a 
u/«i 
stan d ard 
deduction 
on 
their overconfidence, the word 


sta te incom e ta x returns. 
B usinessm en a re provided a 


. . . I - , , . - anri 
CO roam nf rph- 
the law but th at both of th e m , vouchcis, within Six months after for th< 
applause and the scream or reD~ 
in c uiw u u i u w i w i l l V 
, / the first pubUcution of this notice, above 
pi vpIIs 
“ not m anv D em ocrats 
by past policies, had heipeu to t0 the said Administrator at th« issuam 
' y „ 
I ¿ . L aS . . “ truta v ’c sn a r r h v •» I office of Byron .M. Graham 
11001 thereo, 


after f ir ti e Pr.ibate nf the Will of th e , JieciflcatkKta, guOtlÇoe I a * * 1 > 


° r 
Republicans 
are 
la u g h in g bring about “ today s an arch y .’ 


reply to th em ,” W allace 


issuance of Letters 
Testamentary 
thereon to Edward L 
Haslett to If*,. 
.,he 
East Valiev Mall, Suite 201. City which reference is hereby made for J?all. 506 So. Garey Ave^ Pomona, 
of El Monte. County of I os Ange- further particulars, will be heard 
. 
.„hmtrted on 
les, State of California, which said at » o’clock A M ., on October II, . 0 “°' 
o,» oVv^ hefnra 


out th at if the polls continue 
run as they have, Nixon will feel Hum phrey 
probably as sensitive as any- song 
More advance m en then w ere body’s, did not anticipate when forgiveness.’ ” 
15 per cent cut in the bu iin ex . tr w i n . ^ J ^ f a . i ^ d 
j o 
^ 
(0 
cam pal(!n |0 brm g ^ 
at^o u n ced 
his 
third-praiy 
Inventory tax. 
a n d lo r both pau.n m so m sta ra j 
irn te 
, 
scheduling candidacy in Ja n u a ry the de 
ntacoN TiN i 
hom eow ners 
and 
renm rs 
th e 
t r 
L a e 
or ^ w w a , shaken up. Fnough gree of success it would achieve 
a n o -o h a. 
personal property tax on such ¡cans 
running 
sennit* 
un 


first putillcation of this notice, In 
the offi 
re of the Clerk of the Su­ 
perior Court of the Stete of Cali­ 
fornia, In and for the County of 


the of Pomona 
Dated September 16, lr*68. 
WILLIAM G. SHARP 


House seats or governorships. 
‘You m ay see m ore of th at,” 
item s as refrig erato rs and tele 
vision sets would be elim inated , 
T here a re som e com plexities one Nixon adviser said. 


In the law , how ever, w here it 
overlaps with present law re ­ 
g arding veterans and senior c it­ 
izens. 
A veteran who now claim s the 
$1,000 v e teran s’ exem ption could 
not file also for the $750 exemp- 


Son of British 
Peer To Marry 
African Beauty 


money w as collected so that by late Septem ber. 
H um phrey could go ahead with 
his advertising. 
Endorsed by LBJ 
In addition, 
endorsed by President Johnson.¡ballots of 40 states at m ost 
And from the other side of thei 


CERTIFICATE OF 
INUANCE OF USP. 
ABANDONMENT 
_____ ____ 
flO U S NAME 
\ HKNbs JACK WELLS 
THE UNDERSIGNED do h-reby BYRON M. GRAHAM 
effective September 1, Attorney for Admin ist r i tor 
« —* 
Valley Mall 


County C lerk and Clerk of California. 


eg __ 
ment, Conference Room Three, City 
Hall, 505 So. Garey Ave., Pomona. 


forma. 
<Lo* Angeles 
Dated: September 13 1 DOR 
nhir.il f 
31/I ; I 


W allace, lor exam ple, expect- " " ''V i i S i i V k T to 
now 
, 
ed 
h i, 
-m ission 
Im poraihle” ¡ ¿ « « ¡ e 
task force of A labam a law yers p a \y at usos E 
ww ttier Bouie-| 
H um phrey w as to win for him a place on the vard^ 
ipc 
t 
<} 
of 
the 
following 
persona.] 
. 
. 
. 
. 
. 
whose names tn full and plat# of] 
Last week, when he m et tne >rt*Sicie-nc® 
is 
a* 
follows 
to-wit 


n o t ic i; o f s a l e o f 
RI AL PROPERTY (Guardian) 
No. EA PA2I7 


the Superior Court of the 
state of California for the 
County of Lot Angeles 
Bv J. De Priest. Deputy 
WALK, ETCHAJ50N. DAVIDSON 
& LI ESC H 
Attorney* for Petitioner 
602 N Euclid Ave. 
Ontario, California 
Pub. Sept. 19, 23. 27, 1968. 


NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE 
On 
October 
»1, 
PW8, 
at 
10 00 


I 
B. THOMAS 
City Clerk 
Pub. Sept. 23, 1968. 


NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE 
No. M-4M7 
On Tuesday, October 8, 1968, at 
10 00 
A M , 
DAYTON 
INVEST­ 
MENT CORPORATION a i duly ap- 
pointed Trustee under and pur»uant 
to 
Deed of Trust dated June 
2. 
1964, executed by Kenneth Richard 
Wesser 
and 
Kav Shirley W ester, 


STATE ÖF CALIFORNIA FOR THE as 
duly 
appointed 
and pursuant to 
Trustee 
under 
Vietnam issue, he von publ.c qualifications of the 50th state 
^ 
i ^ u te l. V y ^ /n fit 
j 
1 
■■ 
* 
Ohio 
rem a in s 
in Rowland Heights 
California 1*1-IV DOUGLAS M RODEWALD, im om LIP OBI HMAN and BARBARA J 
t 
__iFo!mer home address was 
128f»2 p^tenf 
^ c* doubt—-he began referring to the Hedin 
orive, ia Mirada, caiifur v N()1 
em braces from Sens. E dw ard —although 
.................................... 
M. 
Kennedy, 
G eorge 
S 


H ot Hea^ u l d r imve*to take one 
LO NDO N (A P ) — The hand- (,overn and W ayne M orse. H e;D em ocrats and R epublicans as 
f0r transaction of busi-j* 
tion. He w juid havt .o take o 
NI 
N 
. j 
ih e 
* 
a |s0 m ade a pilgrim age to see ¡»»the other two national 
p a r - nes* 
under jh e 
above 
fi.titmu* , 
som e son of a B ritish peer and “ *30 ‘ 


SI PER IOR C C) I R r jOF^ ID E 0 dock A M , W AITER & ,H *K8C1H aug|r,rtn<j and wil«* and recorded June 
12, I'«84, as tnstr. Ño. 3897. tn book 
13747. page 240 of Official Records 
m the office of the County Recorder 


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 
the undersigned, as guardian of the T4934, 
s 
estate o f ........................... 


» ;*IJLO »E*“ AN ana b a r m s * j- of lo% 
County, California. 
OBERMAN, Husband and Wife, und WM t SE[ f AT P U BLlc AUCTIOfi 
TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH 
ot.l, U,ViiS (payable at time of/ s a l a l a luwful 


(w the other. 
A senior citizen on w elfare the African beauty m et in a 
would not receive the $750 ex-j public library two years ago. 
em ption because under w elfare1 Now (hey plan to m arry , putting 
regulations this would be clas- her in line to becom e B ritain's; 
sifted a s outside incom e and first black African peeress, 
would be deducted from his wel 
F rjends sa id today the wed-! 
fare check. 


the D em ocrat who pulled off one tjes • 
of history’s best-known political 


. . . 
, i, 
..ncompetunt 
name, and affidavit of publication vatP sa|, 


ury 


Douglas M. Rod*weld, An in tha office of tha County »«cord* r^"nyey 
of 
the 
Urufcd 
states) 
at 
mt iVrbon, will beU at pri er of Los Angolib t ountv 
( ahfor- thjj 
entrancr to lhe 
u , . 
Angele. 
to the highest aad best nia.^W U l M U AT J,],!;!,'1,, ^ lM(D fountv Courthouse, 501 West l irst 
s.ntei 


Deed of Trust In the property slt- 


thereof, are on file In / e uft.ve bidder,' upon the tem is and condi 
11DN TO HIGHEST BIDDER IOR s tr e e t Io s Angeles, California, all 
hereinafter ^mentioned and sub- 'CASH, iP^iible^it^^tlm t^of •*{f4_ ^ right, 
title 
and interest 
crmveyed 
He says his campaign treas- / fs tt(-0Jn<tyn,yurvder kt5e prov ton* }J;,‘'rt!,4;' -rti'. mLtmn'by" • ild Super lawful money of the United States) to“‘and “now "held "bv it under said 
y I, in good condition, "but » - « a ' S ! ¡ L M 
U C3?. k i ““!1-. ■;!. ‘MS?? h 
--------------------------------- 
” 


.ding in London next m onth of 
But th , renlor cltlren , a llo w -Slephen po||ocki 22 
,0 F ; t o . 
ance for shelter wwild be In* 
. 
. . 
. ¡beth Vambe, 21, has changed 
creawd by the , am« «nourt-lstephen'. mind about renounc 
Srene m.ght beneht more by 
„u rl ht t0 the ,ltle. ^ 
takmx the double standard de- 
« he now talen(l5 ,0 
, 
ductton which a renter may ^ vlscounIcy evrntua„ , i„ the 


CIaim-______________________ 'hope It will help promote racial 
integration. 
Stephen’s parents, Lord and 
Lady Hanworth, and Elizabeth 
‘progrw s-'BuM n 


Most Americans don>t ^et the idea we re swim of 
f Y l O b T 
A A I I I C l i i w V - . . » 
in m o n e y „ and ^ plans 
CODY 


to elim inate many of the fund­ 
raising dinners that have been a 
staple of his campaign appear- 
Prefer National 
Primary 
PRIN CETON , N .J. (AP) — A ances. There also Is a rumor 
vast 
majority of 
Americans ¡that he soon will replace his 


1968. at in the lobby of tha Douglas Build 
WITNESS my 
hand thli 25th 
day 
tf,e hour of ten oVlo< a. or thereaft- 
ing. 
1360 S Sepulveda B lvd . Los ‘ ‘Jd 
9®* 
Atjn. 
er, 
within the time allowed by law *— *— 
*** “*'*“* 
A. WAYLAND 
at ths office of Robert D Andrews 
Signature*: 
NORHYRN 
KUYOOMJIAN 
SHEILA KUyOUMJIAN 
(338444) 
Pub. Sept. •, 1«, 23, SO, 1968. 


would like to see presidential 
candidates chosen in a nation­ 
wide primary instead of at con­ 
ventions, the Gallup Poll says 


NOTICE OI HEARING OP 
PETITION FOR PROUAII! 
OF WILL 
No. EA P «26« 
In the Superior Court of the State 


Attorney at Law, Suite 505 Home hHd by him 


II right, titUs 
interest conveyed to and now 
¡lowed by law, Angele*. California, 
and 


Savings'B uilding,' KM) Pomona Mall Trust 
l a the property situated in 


County 
and 
Stata 


West, 
P imona, California, all the said County and State dt**crlb« d as: 
right, title, Interest and estate ofj Lot II of Tract No. 25987. in the 
said Incompetent person, in and toi county of Los Angeles, state of 


?.! 
Of Pomona. Book 572, Page* 2 to 8 
inclusive of Maps, in 


all that certain real property sduate 
in the City of Pomona, County of 
Calif or ale 
a* per map 
In book 694, pages 24 
Los Angeh-i, S t a t e of California,I elusive of Map*, in the office of 
particularly described as foUows, to- 
the county recorder of said coun- 


h V c o ^ v x /i^ h o r n a s st_, Pomona reported to approvi the mar- nnmarv method. Only 13 per through the Northeast, Midwest ¡n^ 
t 
‘ a-1” of 
ihe 
s'up«rior ;>enoi court or delivered to said default ÿ B|e^ obUgattonj^ •e*lirM ! ^ 'e n d e n d n e 4 'to 
said property 
£ ^ ¿ 1788. feleptum es 822-1201 and;ria gg 
f-, ” *rwH 
IcccninL» 
theloM F a r West 
Court of the su y erf Ca>iforni,t for guardian personaily at any time aft thereby, heretofore eitecuted and de tntl wwa 
“ 
- 
v 
■* 


w w rb l^ P r^ S B ilfiS iV ib l't* ifather- Lawrence Vambe, are ^ 
of ih(m p o ^ favored the he will embark 
on 
a 
. 
- 
^ --------- —------i........... ................... — 
‘ * 
** per ¡through the N r-*1— 
(cent 
favored 
keeping 
the and Far West. 
►sent conven 
per cent had no opinion 
Ihe same poll also s 
that 66 per cent of those ques/with # 


prop-driven DC7 airplane with a 
speedier prop-jet model. 
He also plans to slow the pace 
of his campaign. Last Friday 
The poll organization reported ,completed 
^ 
... 
_ 
. 
„ 
Cunrtav thnf a nationwide Sam- throush the Southwest, Midwest abova-namfd d«cea«M and tor trie 
<ty of the United Statas. ¡»rovlde.l advances, If 
bunaay tnat a iuiuuuw 
irua k 
Issuance of letters 
Testamentary 
Bids and offers are Invited for the terms of said Dy 
Dim » taken in the first week of and South, and will not resume lhel(f0ll t0 ¡ ...mond <• 
Lamb to »m prog«!* and must be in writ 
chair» 
;n<t 
... .. ... . . th#r6bv 
fc 
r' 
m 
, 
I 
, 
,t« nav* VriH.iv when which reference is hereby made for ing and w¡ll be received at the i ru*tee and of the trusts cieated |¡, ,,„« *a the understaned a writ 
September found that <6 per again until rnxt r rid y, 
further particulars, win f»«- heard 
office of Robpyt p. Andrews.at- by^suid _peed of _ Tru*u 
^ tfn Sclera turn of DefiL 


NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G I V E N that! Columbia, Pomona, California). 
secured by said Deed 
a 
futicMiing 
sw in n ltb e i>etttion of Raymond O. Lamb 
Said sale will b f made upon the wit: |l*,TOI.54, with InWrfNt from 
a 
M u g u w i 
f )f ^ 
probata of the w ill ot tie following term s, cash In lawful mon- February 


in 
said 
described as: 
Lot 178, Tract 20848. In the City 
iges 
ps, in the office 
of the County Recorder 
County 
of L<>* Angeb * State of California. 
.Said sale wilt be made, but with­ 
out covenant or warranty, express 
¡or Implied, regarding titles, posses­ 
sion, or encumbrances, to pay the 
remaining principal sum of the note 
secured 
by said 
Deed 
of 
Trust, 
to wit: *14,865 99 with Interest from 
1968, a* In said note 
advances, If any, under 
of setd Deed of Trust, 
i . »»*•. charges end expenses of the 
. J . ¡ - i z l Trustee and of the trusts created 


recorded 
to 28 in- 


1. 1968 as In’ 


jy| _ 
_ ^ 
_ 
__ 
_ 
__ 
m ....... 
r - 
i Li 
___ 
office of Robert D. 
Andrews, at by said Deed of Trust 
trip *t 9 o’clock A M , ’ on Ocjober 11, torney tar_sn ld _fu ard ien t or may 


, 
by said Deed of Trust. 
„miH 
The beneficiary under said Deed 
ot Trust, by reason of a breath 
‘/t E * or default In the obligations secured 
L . 3 thereby, heretofore executed end de- 


ten Declaration of Default and De 


/D eU verv 
complaint closing 
time 
M l SS Vambe, daughter of a nj- 
fcrarar 
R hodratan 
new spaper J j 
pre-scnt convention system, and 
The secret of Wallace’s sue- o ftF«»n«na' 


... 
, . 
The* beneficiary under satd Deed m 
i for 
and written notice 
at the court room of Depart be filed with the Clerk of said Su. of Trust by reason of a breach or , / breach and of election to cau*e 
*“ 
— ..—a , 
. 
. . . . 
srty 
satisfy 
said 
obUgatlohs, 
and 
thereafter, 
on 
June 
S, 
198* 
the 
the 
County of Loe Angeles, 


cess has becom e clea r as his 
bmgie copy~price ioc. Delivered ipditor, cam e to B ritain w ith h«r 
T he sam e poll also showed traveling road show—com plete 
by earn er ft.A monuuy 
by mail 
.u. . 
«f 
«.ipu- 
* country band and two 
K « r .® * 5 M 5 ; T S n a . " h S K i fxm lly nine years ago. 
and Canada; |4 monthly foreign. 
Second class mail privileges m 
tboi i/#d at Pomona, Calif 
Adjudl- 
cated 
June 
15, 
1945, 
Decree 
No. 
Porno ( 606. 
Member of the Associeted Press . . 
. 
Member of Audit Bureau ot Ctrcu bird* 
latton, 
National 
advertisin 
iSU ck, brow n, red , yellow. 
¡proved ol th a t Idea. 
• 
a 


State of Callfot tile for the 
— 
. 
, , . 
. 
_ 
. 
, 
t ounty erf Los Angeles 
lioned favored doing aw ay with blonde vocalists—-the T aylor Sis-, 
l y 
b i Armstrueg 
-Ithe electoral college and select ters, M ona and L isa—has wound m CH 0I s ^ e X d , b o il e a u 
its w ay through 3i states. Wal- 
CaHforma tank Bldg. 
lace has dem onstrated an a cu te ' 
Pomona, California 
, 
t 
a 
- « ta a ~. 
Attorneys for Petitioner 
sense of the fundam ental le a r* |p ub 
¿3, 27, uxw 


City er first publication of this SOUce It tried to the undersigned a written 
iand before making the sale 
Haclaratlon of Default end Demand; 
Dated September IS 1888 
j Dated September 18, 1966. 
tor 
Sato, 
and 
written 
notice 
of 
WILLIAM Q . SHARP 
i 
KATHARINE P 
( ounty Cterk and i*lerk (rf: 
RODEWALD 
the Supermt Court of the 
Guardian pf _th* estate of 


undersigned caused said notice <rf 
breach and of election to be re­ 
in 
book M288I, 
page 263, 


T here a re only f a ir color pig­ 
m ents found in the leath ers of ing the president by 
popular 
in t h e U nited S la te s - vote. Only 19 p er cent disap- 


Dougias M 
Rodewald, an 
incom petent Person 
ROBERTD ANDREWS 
Attoi ne y at Lew 
Suite 305 Home Savings Bid«. 
100 Pomona Mall West 
Pomona, C'aliforma 
Tel: (714) 623 69t>! 
Attorney for Guardian 
Pub Sept. 19, 23. 27, 1968. 


bieach and of ele. non 10 cau-r tha¡"* d#d 
undersigned to sell *aid pruiwrty lo 
f 
d /„ fu 'iä i R e c o r d s/ 
satisfy »eld obhgaurms, d 
i p 
Dat«; September 6. 1988 
after, on Muv 22 
19»sX 
the under , 
, u .,. 
signed caused said notice of breach 
¡and of election to be recorded in 
book M2«7U, page 469, of said Offi 
Utal Records 
Date: September «, 196« 
WALTER 8 HIRSCH, 
as said Trustee 
(IP S 16765) 
1 Pub,. Sept, 16, 23, 30, 19(4. 


DAYTON INVESTMENT 
CORPORATION 
as satd 
trustee 
By: T. D 
Service Company. 
Agent 
Jam es A. Beckstrom 
Vice President 
(30610) 
Pub. Sept. 16. 23, 30, 1968. 


LBJ Confers ¡ 
Alm 
anac| 2 Columbian Jets 


With Mahon 


In Texas 


SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) - 
President Johnson met Sundays 
with Rep. George Mahon, chair*; 
man of the powerful House Ap-| 
nropriaMons Committee, on the 
eve of final congressional action 
on several key money bills. 
Mahon, 
a 
Texas 
Democrat, 
was not an 
announced ranch 
visitor, but he showed up in thej 
President’s church-going party 
on Sunday. 
His visit came at a time when; 
Congress is winding up actionj 
¡on 
defense 
and 
foreign 
aid) 
spending, with Johnson’s appro- 1 
priation requests facing cuts of 
] some $12 billion, 


j 
Presidential press spokesmen! 
confirmed Mahon’s presence at, 
the ranch over the weekend as 
“ a 
personal 
guest” , 
but 
hadi 
nothing to report on what was. 


T U R N IN G 
THE TABLES— G e ra ld Pulver, 11, is surrounded by 
a group of 
N e w Y o rk ’s 
East discussed. 


V illa g e hippies 
Sunday at 181st Street and Union 
Turnpike 
in 
Q ueens Borough 
of 
N e w 
However, with the monev bills 


York. T h . h ip pie,, tired P , suburban to 
visitinp their h au nt, 
decided to turn , h . 


tables and visit the suburbs, via a Sunday bus tour. Story on Page 5, Sect. 1. (AP Photo) 
jmp0secj spending cuts, Mahon’s 


a bit 
presence seemed to be 
more than coincidental. 
The President, meanwhile, de­ 
cided to 
continue 
his Texas 
ranch stay at least into today, 
with indications that he may re­ 
main even a day or two more. 
Joined by his wife, Lady Bird; 
daughter, Mrs. Patrick Nugent, 
and 
15-month-old grandson. 
Lyn, the President was enjoying 


WASHINGTON (AP) — The churches when the letter was 
As the dissent continued the warm, sunny weather and tour- 
Jitter dispute within the Wash- read. 
¡cardinal several days ago took mg the countryside. 
Ington Roman Catholic 
arch- 
The protest 
had been urged 
by disciplinary action against 13 
He 
*teppe 
up. 
1S p*' 
' 
jiocese has intensified in 
the two lay organizations 
support- 
priests. Action against 
the re- P°inP Sunday, a ing in 


Birth Control Dispute 
Walkout Features Protest 
Against Catholic Bishop 


By United Press International 
Today is Monday, Sept. 23, 
the 267th day of 1968 with 99 
to follow. 


The moon 
is 
between 
its 
new phase and first quarter. 


The morning star Is Mars. 


The evening stars are Sat­ 
urn and Venus. 


On this dav in history: 


In 1779, the USS Bonhome 
R i c h a r d , 
commanded by 
American naval hero J o h n 
Paul Jones, defeated the Brit­ 
ish frigate, Serapis, in a bat­ 
tle off the coast of Scotland. 


In 1926, Jack Dempsey lost 
the heavyweight boxing cham­ 
pionship to Gene Tunney in 
Philadelphia. 


In 1943, the United States, 
Britain, 
Russia 
and 
China 
established 
the 
United 
Na­ 
tions and Rehabilitation 
Ad­ 
ministration to help war-liber­ 
ated areas of the world. 
In 1950, 
Congress 
adopted 
the Internal Security Act, pro­ 
viding 
for 
registration 
of 
Communists. Communist reg­ 
istration later was ruled un­ 
constitutional by the U. S. Su­ 
preme Court. 
A 
thought 
for 
the 
day— 
Welsh poet Dylan T h o m a s 
once said: 
‘‘Do not go gentle into that 
good night. 
Old 
age 
should 
bum and rave at close of day 
—rage, rage against the dy­ 
ing of the light.” 


Hijacked to Cuba 


HAVANA (AP) — Two Colom- Colombia, 
bian airliners that took off two 
Capt. Alfonso Lopez of the 727 
hours apart from the same air- let said a short man in his 30s, 
port in Colombia were hijacked armed with a knife and gre- 
Sunday and flown to Cuba with nade, entered the cabin of his 
139 persons aboard. 
plane and “said we had to go to 


A Boeing 727 jet with 72 pas- Cuba.” The airline said all the 
sengers and a crew of six land- passengers were Colombians ex- 
ed 
in 
Camaguey, 
300 
miles cePl PoY Haag and Peter Vus- 
southeast 
of 
Havana, 
shortly ^a* whose nationality was not 
after noon. No one was injured known, 
and the plane was released Sun- 
Speaks One Word 
day night and returned to Bar- 
Th(. D c 4 (ook o(( (rom 


Don't Neglect Slipping 
FALSE TEETH 


Do fal*e teeth d ro p , »lip o r wobblt 
when you talk, eat, laugh or nneez*1 
Don’t be annoyed and embarrassed 
by such handicap«, PASTE1TH, an 
afknllne (nofc-aci«> powder to sprin­ 
kle on yourfclatea, keeps false teeth 
more firmly let. Olves confident feel­ 
ing of secunty and added comfort, 
No gummy, gooey taste or feeling. 
Dentures that fit are essential to 
health. See your dentist regularly. 
Oet FASTEETH at all drug counters. 


ranquilla. Colombia. 
The other plane, a DC4 with 
57 passengers and a crew of 
four, 
landed 
in 
Santiago 
de 


Bar- 
ranquilla two hours and 11 min­ 
utes after the jet. Its pilot, Al­ 
fredo Crisman, said a youth of 
18 or 20 knocked on the door to 
iO Ui 
MIUC l\CU U ll IIIC UVAfl 
Cuba. 
The 
Swiss 
Embassy. 
cockp;t> Pntered holding » 
which 
handles 
Colombian 
af- 
jst0, and spoke jugt one word 
fairs in ( uba, said all aboard _«.r- .Uj, *. ti,» airline said all 
were safe and the plane and 
those aboard would return to 
Colombia today. 


Given Asylum 


Cuban officials would not say, 
and Colombian officials had not 
determined yet if the twin hi- 


Cuba.” The airline said all 
the passengers on that plane 
were Colombians except Marty 
Bowman, whose nationality also 
could not be learned immediate­ 


ly* 
On Friday, an Eastern Air 
Lines jet bound from San Juan 


N E E D 


MORE 


O O M 


IN YOUR 


HO M E? 


ALGAR 


Cons^ispctMfn Co. 
«•» I. H o n , POMONA 
67 Y tí66* 


Your m u rin e * of Q u al­ 
ity C ra fttm tm h ip plut tht 
fi neat in matrri*!*. 


Arabs Cross 


Suez, Ambush 


linai O’Boyle, archbishop of the services that it was the first was to be read ‘‘without S a f r s i i r y » Israel Patrol 


wake of an unprecedented walk- 
>ut protest against Patrick Car­ 
ing the dissident priests. 
The cardinal said after 


maining 31 is pending. 
Catholic and Lutheran services i 
th* 
, 
u 
onn 
near his ranch and attending 
the 
in the 800 word letter, which . 
. .. 
.. „ 
. o npu/ 


jiocese 
time he had encountered such a ment or discussion,” Cardinal Wunibald Schneider, pastor of 
St. Francis Xavier Roman Cath­ 
olic 
church 
in 
neighboring 


Robert 
Lucey 
of 
San 
Antonio 
gave 
The curse mentioned in Deu- strong endorsement of the Pres- 


About 200 persons walked out protest in his 20 years as arch- O’Boyle told dissidents that con- 
jf st Matthew’s cathedral dur- hishop of Washington. ‘‘It is a tinued disobedience of the birth 
[ng masses Sunday as the cardi- ve ry 
emotional 
matter.” 
he control teaching might result in Stonewall 
nal rose to urge obedience to saic** Other church officials said their being struck by a curse 
^ ^ 
parsonage dedication. 
Pope Paul V i’s latest edict ban- ‘t was probably the first time mentioned in the Book of Deu- ^ 
r<Ad 
Archbishop 
ning use of artificial birth con- parishioners had taken such ac- teronomy 
|r0]K 
tion in any Catholic church. 
1 


The cardinal, who has been 
The dispute arose following is- teronorny 29: 
18-20 says “ the ¡dent's 
Vietnam 
policy, 
with 
challenged on his interpretation s'>ance of the Popes edict July wrath and the jealousy of the Johnson standing on the steps 
of the Pope’s encyclical by 44 
prohibiting the use of all LorcT would fall on a man who behind him and grandson Lyn 
area priests, had ordered a pas- forms of 
artificial contraceptive fo lio s his 
conscience 
over di- occasionally tugging at 
the 
toral letter criticizing the dis- devices, 
leaving 
only 
the vine law 
priest’s knee, 
senters read in all Roman Cath- rhythm method acceptable for 
Mention of the curse immedi- 
jh e archbishop told the crowd 
olic churches in his jurisdiction. Catholics. 
atejy 
brought 
criticism 
from 0f about 200 that the purpose of 
Cardinal O’Boyle himself read 
Ruling Challenged 
one of the 44 priests, the Rev. the Vietnam war was “ to teach 
the letter at three masses at St. 
Cardinal O’Boyle immediately James P. Kennelly, who said unjust 
aggressors that 
unjust 
Matthew’s, and watched without interpreted 
the 
encyclical 
as the cardinal quoted the passage aggression does not pay.” 
apparent emotion as the people binding on all Catholics. This out of context. 
In this, he said, Johnson fol- 
walked from the crowded cathe was challenged by a group of 51 
The cardinal “ is, if the words lowed a papa! peace program 
dral. Most returned after he fin- priests, later reduced to 44, who are applied literally, calling us enunciated in 1917, which stated 
ished reading the message. 
¡contend the Pope’s statement pagans,’’ because the quote re- “when unjust aggression begins 
200 Others Left 
¡leaves it up to individual Catho- ferred to nonbelievers 
who re- in this world of ours, the peace- 
It was estimated that at least 
lies to follow as a matter of per- 
jected 
the 
God of Israel, he 
loving nations must do some- 
another 200 persons left other sonal conscience. 
said. 
thing about it.” 


jackings were coincidental or to Miami was diverted to Cuba, 
part of a plot. Both hijackers ap- The plane’s 40 passengers were 
parently were Colombians, and flown to Miami Saturday, 
both 
presumably 
were 
given 
asylum in Cuba. 
Colombian 
Defense 
Minister 
Gerardo Ayerbe Chaux said he 
believed the double piracy was a 
Castroite plot directed from Ha- 
i vana. He said it seemed improb­ 
able that the two incidents could 
have been a coincidence. But 
the pilot of the jetliner said he 
thought his hijacker might have 
. been a smuggler in trouble with 
the government, which is crack- 
; ing down on illegal imports. 
The planes, both owned by j 
I Avianca Airlines, had taken off 
from 
Baranquilla, 
the 
coun­ 
try’s main port on the Carib­ 
bean, for hops to other towns in 


-1 


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Telephone 622-6991 


TEL AVIV, Nrael (AP) - A 
band of Egyptian commandos 
crossed the Suez Canal and laid 1° 
er 


The situation along the canal 
between 
Israel 
and 
in e au e£ v aiicti r im iaiu 
,____ , 
_______ 
. 
. . . 
. 
. 
. 
. 
Fgypt has been tense since Aug. 
an ambush for an Israeli patrol, 
■ ^ 
, imK, E 
the Israeli army charSed today u '„ ralders crossed the 
The raiders h,t an Israel, track 
)sraelj 
barooka 
f.re 
and 
hgbt 
^ 
f of( |m„ 
and 
light 
arms and injured an Israeli sol­ 
dier, a spokesman asserted. 
The ambush was laid on a 
waterside road in occupied Sin­ 
ai, about three miles south of 
Little Bitter Lake and 10 miles 
north of the city of Suez on the 
southern neck of the canal. Fir­ 
ing began a half hour before 
midnight. 
After the fight, “ clear signs 
were found of a few people who 
came from the direction of the 
canal...and retreated to the ca­ 
nal,” said the spokesman. 
U.N. ceasefire observers were 
notified and visited the scene. 


BIG SAVINGS ON 
BR0ADL00M CARPET 


GIST’S FURNITURE 


Egypt. 
The 
the charge. 
Egyptians 
denied 
400 P O M O N A MALL WEST 
D O W N T O W N 


Phone 623-1291 
228 Pomona Mall West 
D ow n tow n Pomona 


XEROX COPIES 


BIRTHS—-WILLS— SERVICE RECORDS 
DOCUMENTS 
MADE WHILE YOU WAIT 
\ H&H Photo. Inc. 


Pomona's Camera Center 


FRANCISCAN’S 
ANNUAL SALE! 
Save 20% on 16-pc. 
starter sets in our most 
popular patterns 


This is a wonderful opportunity to begin or add to your set of 


distinctive Franciscan earthenware. Franciscan isn’ t just beautiful. 


It s practical, too. It’ s oven-safe, detergent-proof and the patterns 


will never fade. Open stock is available in all designs. Each 


16-pc. set includes four each: dinner plates, bread and butters, 


cups and saucers. Madeira, reg. 23.95 . . . 18.95 Apple, Desert 


Rose, Hacienda Gold, Hacienda Green, reg. 2 1 . 9 5 . . . 16.95. 


Gifts and China 


P O M O N A • T OP OF T H E MAL L • P H O N E 6 2 3 - 4 3 2 1 • MON. , T H U R S . AND F R I. T I L L 9 : 0 0 • O T H E R D A Y S 1 0 : 0 0 - 5 : 3 0 


A<t>*f>v, 
clear 
Albuqu-rque. 
clear 
Atlanta, 
clear 
S 
ism ircfc, clear 
oise. 
clear 
...... 
Boston, clear 
...... 
Buffalo, 
cioudv 
Chicago, 
cloudy 
Cincinnati, clear 
^Cleveland, cloudy 
'enver, 
foe 
.... 
irs 
Moines, cloudy 
jelrolt, 
dear 
Fairbanks, 
snoer 
¡Fort 
Worth, 
cloudy 
Heiena, 
cloudy 
Honolulu, 
cloudv 
indianaocMs. 
d e a r 
K ansas 
City, 
rain 
Lcs 
Anaetes. 
clear 
L o u isv ille , clear 
Mem phis- ctear 
M iam i, 
clear 
Milwaukee 
clear 
.V p ls -S t. 
P , 
doudy 
New 
Orleans, 
de ar 
New 
York, 
clear 
Okla. City, 
clear 
Om aha, 
rain 
Philadelphia, 
celr 
• 
phoenix. 
clear 
i Pittsburgh, cloudy 
> Ptlnd., 
Me , clear 
A RT IST A T W O R K — 
Kimifusa Y otsum oto dem onstrates the m a k in g of stencil-dyed p ap e rs 
c% * ' cc, £ ? y 


during “ living Arts of J a p a n ” at the fine arts pavilion of the lo s A n g e le s C o u n ty Fair. 
ccf^ id y 
A n authority in the Serizow a 
school o f stencil-dye design, Y otsum oto 
is the author 
of the H » 
only book on the subject. 
H e gives daily dem onstrations._______ (P -B ph oto 
by 
Sid Fridkin) 
fa n .Fran.,, otaar 


LOS ANGELES (U P I)-T h e 
nationwide weather summary as 
prepared by the U.S. Weather 
Bureau: 
Mild to warm weather domin­ 
ated in the East and rather 
cool temperatures prevailed in 
the West this morning. 
Lows 
this 
morning 
ranged 
from a cold 16 degrees at Ev- 
,ston, Wyo., to a balmy 80 at 
both Miami, Fla., and Corpus 
Christi, Texas. McAllen, Texas, 
was the hottest spot in the na­ 
tion Sunday with a 95 degree 
reading. 
A cold front brought scattered 
showers 
and 
thundershowers 
from extreme eastern Minnesota 
across Kansas to southern New 
! Mexico. Nearly five inches of 
rain fell at Russell, Kan. 
A funnel cloud was sighted 
this morning near West Palm 
Beach, Fla. 
Early morning fog shrouded 
portions of 
the 
Appalachians 
and the Middle Atlantic Coast. 
Sunny skies were the rule 
west of the Rockies to the Pa­ 
cific Coast. Southern California 
was warm and sunny with gus­ 
ty winds. 


By T H E A S S O C IA T E D P R E S S 
Hiyh Low Pr 
.. M Y 
i 
»4 
55 
If IT 
65 
39 
. 
61 
43 


- H «9 
. 
17 
65 
.. 
73 66 
J l 
. 
17 
62 


• II H 
. 
63 45 
,26 
, 
7? 67 
.01 
N 63 
, 
43 
30 
T 
.. 
I I 71 
51 
43 
« 
77 
S6 64 
. 
53 
71 
.20 
., 
*7 61 
. . 
M 65 
nil 
H 61 
2.01 


P O T T E R 'N G A R O U N D — 
Ken A z u m o sh a p e s a vase on the 


potter's wheel at the Los A n g e le s C ou nty Fair. M a n y artists 


are at w ork daily in “ living Arts of J a p a n " in the Fine Arls 


Pavilion to Sept. 29. 
( P-B Photo by Sid Fridkin) 


Decision on Eld ridge 
A Personnel Matter1 
OuneraU 


William L. Reynolds 


Funeral services for William 
L. Reynolds of 338 Madison 
LQS 
ANGELES 
(U PI)-The 
Ave. will be held Tuesday at 3 decision to limit Black Panther 
p.m. in Todd Memorial Chapelj E idridge Cleaver to one lecture 
Pomona. The Rev. Johnston H. at ^ 
university of California 
Calhoun, pastor of the 
First 
- - - 
* 
Presbyterian Church will of- 


tu r tle , 
rain 
Tampa, citar 
Y,*ch:nqton 
Citar 
w Ìth-'p#*, cloudy 


Baker sf it id 
Brownsville 
I Fresno 
....... 
Las 
vegas 
■Oakland 
. . . . . . . 
i Red 
Bluff 
Reno 
Sacramento 
(faokine 
. . . . •• 
¡Thermal 
........... 


Games and Sports 


at Berkeley was a personnel 
-----✓------ 
. m atter not connected with the 
fidate. Burial will be made *n ,curriculum university president) 
Pnmnna ( pmeterv. 
Charles J. Hitch said Sunday. 


Answer to Previous Puzzle 


The 
Board 
of 
Regents, 
Sherwood H. Daniel governing body 
of the umversi- 
_ 
., 
. „ 
c w ty, Friday voted 10 to 8 to limit; 
Graveside services (or Sher » 
* 
( 
ow 
wood Herman 
Daniel of 1530 
6 
Baldv View Ave. will be held »PP™mnce 
per 
quarter 
to 
Z 
J. 
„ , 
_ ■ 
.||.tnu j courses given for credit. 
Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Bellevue 
, 
Cleaver, minister of informa- i¿Game 


ACROSS 
river 
1 Sport played 35 Not as much 
with ciubs 
37 Correlative 
5 Child's game 
of neither 
8 Horseback 
38 Eggs 
sport 
39 Gusto 
12 Personal 
. 41 Male cat 
(comb, form) 43 Apple seed* 
13 Lincoln's 
44 Produce a 
nickname 
design on 
14 Thin tin 
metal 
plate 
48 Tree 
15 Portray 
48 Landed 


B IG G E R CH RYSLER — 
N o t only is the 1969 Chrysler five 


inches longer than last year's models, it also has a b ro a d 


variety of new standard a n d o p tion al comfort a n d p erform ­ 


ance features. Above is the N e w p o rt Custom hardtop. 
Chrysler Cites 'Fuselage Styling' 


Cenielery, Ontario. The P „|i« k 
Panthers, 
had 
Mortuary » in charge ol ar- 
M 
,o 
rangements. 


property 


10 lectures on racism to an ^ proper 
experimental sociology class at 
condition 
M l$S Fay Georg© 
the Berkeley campus. When the 
(dial) 


Funeral services for Miss Fay wonl *“ «“!• " ^used a furor 
of r , V. V1« ^comln^r and “ 23«r, 
will be held Tuesday at 11 30, 
Hllch sa,d lhe 
d.d nol MKiplmc 


infringe on the faculty’s tradi­ 
tional power to develop courses. 
The Cleaver decision 
was a 
personnel 
m atter over which 
_ 
faculty and the regents have 34 Belgian 
“joint” control, he said. 
“The faculty still has authori­ 
ty over courses,” he said. “ It 
has not been affected in any 
manner.** 
Hitch advanced the plan to 
limit speakers as a compromise 
solution 
to 
the 
controversial 
Cleaver appointment. 


originated by 51 Comfort in 
Indians 
grief 
18 Acid-fonnlng 54 Outrage 
56 Keyed up 


5 Soft mineral 30 Snare 
6 Arabian. 
33 Brother (ab.) 
garment 
36 Thief 
7 Small lizard 40 Diminutive 


BLACKMAN’S 
MORTUARY 


"Eceunm y w ith D ignity” 


•’Truly, truly I say to you, 
he who hears my word 
and believes him who 
I 
sent me 
has eternal life.” 
John 5:24 


The glory of the 
Resurrection is reflected 
in our beautiful service, 
conducted m the 
tradition of the faith. 
1020 W. 5th St. 


P o m o n a • Ph. 622-1078 


character 
27 Small food 
fish 
31 Tavern brew 
32 Knave at 
cribbage 


8 Egyptian 
suffix 
astronomer 
42 Chine» 
n Hops’ kiln 
Communist 
57 Border * 
10 Feminine 
45 Pennies 
68 Twitching 
nickname 
47 Slope 
59 Bare 
11 Heavy blow 
48 Uniform 
60 Adjacent 
17 Borders, as 
49 Lateral part 
61 Be seated 
of glasses 
50 Roman robe 
62 Russian ruler 19 Writing fluid 51 Religious 
run*-*: 
22 Unruffled 
group 
23 Lett, for 
52 Concluding 
1 Colorado 
example 
passage 
River 
24 Athena 
(music) 
tributary 
26 Hostelry 
53 Elbe 
2 Of a poem 
28 Gullet 
tributary 
3 Boundless 
29 Jacob’s too 
(var.) 
4 Blended 
(Bib.) 
55 102 (Roman) 


The 1969 line of Chrysler cars try wagons -- go on sale today, vides such aspects as a big 
introduces a new concept of de- 
Nearly every interior dimen- wrap-around 
or 
looped 
front 
con r a 11 p h fi.ai.iaa* qfviina ®*on has been increased from bumper, 
concealed windshield 
c a M ed fuselage styling ^ 
^ 
^ 
comfort wipers and the s!eek hardtop 
which substantially increases in- and roominess inciuding three roofline on the two-door mod- 
terior room and gives the cars more inchef, of added iegr0om els. 
a different appearance. 
in the rear seats of four-door 
Articulated wipers extend by 
“The new styling is another sedans and even more in most some four inches the wiped 
giant step forward for the C hry-four' d 0 0 r hardt0Ps; greater area on the windshield lower 
, 
-, 
„ 
F whit* rear-seat ^nee 
and three comer of the driver’s side. On 
l i n e , 
e n n 
. 
' more inches of shoulder room.two-door models equipped with 
Chrysler-Plymouth Division gen- jn 
and rear 
air-conditioning, vent windows 
eral manager, said. “ In even- 
Jhe ^ 
compartment in wr, have been eliminated, 
respect, it embodies the con- g^ s has 
expanded t0 48 5 
Concealed headlights on the 
temporary styling and solid en- inches between wheel housings. 300 have a “ fail-safe” device 


a.m. in Pomona Mausoleum 
The Rev. Robert E. Henry, rec 
tor 
of 
St 
Paul’s 
Episcopal 
Church, will officiate. Todd Me 
mortal Chapel Pomona is in 
¡charge of arrangements 
Todd 
f e m o r t a t Chapel 


T o d i and S m ith , in c . 


FUNERAL DIRECTORS SINCE 1907 


allowing emergency manual op­ 
eration of the headlight doors. 
Among the features in the 
Town & Country lines is an air 


gineering that has made Chrys- and the housings themselves in 
ler synonomous with quality In corporate three storage com- 
the automotive world.“ 
partments. 
The line* rf the new cars are 
Standard engine in the New- 
sleek and f l o w i n g 
Over all Port and Newport Custom is the deflector which deflects air over 
h h E 7 toche, fiv " in c t 3M<ubic-mch V-8. with a big .he rear window, keeping 
i. 
« t i g e r than the 
model. « 0 optional. In the 300 and New clean and preventing fumes and 
The 15 model, in five .e rie s- Yorker, the 440 is standard, wl.h dust from entering the rear win- 
Newport, Newport Custom, 300. a 
option. 
New Yorker and Town & Coun-I Chrysler styling for 1969 pro- 


dow when It Is open. 
Wagons 
also 
are 
equipped 


with dual action tailgates, which 
can be opened as a door or a 
tailgate. 


j 
An optional driver aid acces­ 
sory package is available, of­ 
fering a fasten seat belt re­ 
minder light, a door lock re­ 
minder light and « new warning 
buzzer to remind a driver leav­ 
ing his car that he has left his 
headlights on. 


Other refinements and new 
options on Chrysler line include 
ful 1-width rear seats in convert­ 
ible models; repositioned door 
locking button cm two-door mod­ 
els for greater ease of opera­ 
tion: f l o a t i n g caliper disc 
brakes and improved automatic 
brake adjusters; improvements 
in 
Sure-Grip differential, 
the 
cleaner air system and power 
steering pump; suspended ac­ 
celerator p e d a l to facilitate 
cleaning the front floor. 


Selecting a College 
Will Your Application Get You in School? 


(Ntnipapst ¿«Merprue 


DR. WALTON E. COLE 
Memorial Service Unitarian Society of Pomona 
Valley, Montclair, Wednesday, 8:00 p m. 
Private Committal 


MISS FAY GEORGE 
Services Pomona Mausoleum Tuesday, 11.30 p.m. 


MRS. HELEN HUGHES 
Rosary Our Lady of the Assumption Catholic 
Church, Claremont, Tuesday, 8:00 p.m. 
Requiem Mass Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. 


WILLIAM L. REYNOLDS 
Pomona Chapel Tuesday, 3:00 p.m. 
Interment Pomona Cemetery 


Pollock M o rtuary 


f o r p e r to n a liz e d s e r v ie s 


By ELLA MA7EL 
NEA Publications 


In considering any individual 
application the college admis­ 
sions officers evaluate the total 
picture presented by the combi­ 
nations of each student’s aver­ 
age, class rank, and test scores, 
along with all the other less 
measurable qualities they emph­ 
asize as being equally impor-i 
tant. 
Yet they do end up selecting 
a class, and one of the differ­ 
ences 
between 
the 
freshman 
class at Ashland College, to go 
back to an example In the 
previous 
article, 
as 
against 
that of Harvard is that the av­ 
erage verbal SAT score at Ash­ 
land is about 500, while for Har­ 
vard a 500 would be pretty near 
the bottom for a group whose 
scores average in the neighbor­ 
hood of 700. 
According to James Cass and 
Max Bimbaum, authors of the 
“Comparative Guide to Ameri­ 
can Colleges, 
the scholastic 


quality of the student body Is 
the single most important factor 
in determining the nature and 
the quality of the academic ex­ 
perience.” 
While comparisons b a s e d on 
SAT averages alone are not to 
be made universally or arbitrar­ 
ily, it must be true in general 
that institutions with stronger 
faculties and curricula attract, 
and are therefore in a position 
to select, student bodies with 
higher test averages — and that 
these averages, in turn, reflect 
the potential of the class as a 
whole to do more demanding 
work. 
In selecting a school, you can­ 
not simply say, “ I have an SAT 
verbal score of 532, therefore 1 
can only consider colleges in the 
525-575 range.” 
Why? Because these ranges 
show where the colleges’ aver­ 
ages fall, but each average is it­ 
self the result of a broad spread 
of figures. 
For example, If you looked at 
the “profile” of a college whose 


570 N. G ARE Y AVE. 
Pomona 
32T N INDIAN HILL 
Claremont 


IRA BATIEN 
^^Arrangem ents Pending 


SHERWOOD H. DANIEL 
Graveside Services Tuesday, 2 00 p m. 
Interment Bellevue Cemetery, Ontario 


Member by Invitation NATIONAL SELECTED M ORTICIANS 


Pitone 422-1217 


m 
' W 
m 
* & 


SAVE NOW 


A P r # .B u ild in g O lgdount I« now b eing otforod to t h e i e m illin g 


ro o o rv itio n « In th e now ad d itio n , » m i l l m o n th ly p e y m e n U w ith 


NO I N T i A E S T C H A A O I S . In » electing i r y p t i , on* p i t y do 


a m e n m in § a all e r r i n g e m e n t * foe « fa m ily m am aria», 


average freshman SAT score overcoming of handicaps — how 
was 500, you might find that would the two compare? 
while the highest concentration 
These are, in fact, some of the 
of its students had scores be- qualities on which your school is 
tween 450 and 550, increasingly asked to rate you, and this is 
smaller 
proportions 
would why test scores alone, averages 
string out along the line down- alone, or rank In class alone— 
ward into the 300s and upward or even all together — do not 
through the 600s. 
spell out the whole admissions 
A score of 532 would put you story, 
in a very favorable position 
If all this leaves you more con- 
with respect to Ashland, assum- fused than when you started, it’s 
ing you measured up to their because the judgment involved 
other standards. But with this in matching yourself to the col- 
same score you might still be leges is the single most difficult 
Harvard material as well. Col- aspect of college selection, 
leges at every level are looking 
For every statement one can 
for outstanding qualities beyond make about it, there seems to 
mere 
scholastic 
qchievement. be an “on the other hand” lurk- 
From their point of view, the ing in the shadows, 
fact that an applicant from an 
But take comfort. There are 
exclusive prep school may be some guidelines you can follow 
identified by a series of num- if you start with a typical case 
bers like 783 (SAT), 96 (aver- as a jumping-off point and then 
age), and 5 (rank In class) does make 
any 
necessary 
adjust- 
not necessarily make him a bet- ments for your own case —if it 
ter bet than another from a >s a special one in any respect. 
“high-risk” urban setting with 
-------- 
numbers like 532, 83, and 2 re-1 
(NEXT: H ttp i Yourself.) 
spectively. 
^ 
J. K. MATHIS AND SON 
Suppose numbers were assign- 
plumbing and heating. 24 hr 
ed to factors like leadership, «-rvice. NA 2-1571 or NA 2-740*. 
social responsibility, motivation, sdv. 


POMONA 
502 i. Franklin St. 
Phon* 622-0289 
PO M O NA 


FOREST LAWN MORTUARY 


U n d e rta k in g a n d Cem etery Together 


Beautiful Funeral Flowers from $5.00 


let Fore6t la w n Take C ore of Everything 


COVINA HILLS 
599-1236 


Pag« 4, Sec. 1 
Proflr*M-S«ll#tln, Pomona, Calif. 
Monday Evening, Sept. 23, IV»* 
r Nation's 
, Weathet 
m 


WÊÊÊBBBÊÊÊHBÊÊ 


Your Horoscope 
Jeane 
Dixon 


Hippies Tour Suburb To See Straight World 


IM H li 


TUESDAY, SEPT. 24 


Your 
birthday 
today: 
The 
year before you is one of ad­ 
venture. As an individual and 
at your own moments, you will 
encounter 
experiences 
t h a t 
would make good books. These 
happenings will come a little at 
a time. Today’s natives are in­ 
clined to have the best'inten­ 
tions. 


ARIES 
(M ar. 
21-Apr. 
19): 


There is (passing) s t r e s s in 
matters of work and health. Co­ 
operate where you can. Part­ 
nerships far moderately well. 
Consult experts this afternoon. 
Business 
surprises 
continue! 
Children require the greatest at­ 
tention. Harmony is not to be 
taken for granted, but some­ 
thing to work at day and night 


C.EMINI (May 21-June 20): 


Your attention m ay be demand 
ed for a number of medical, 
or quasi-medical, interests to­ 
day. Abide by your doctor; ask 
him all the questions. There is 
some new controversy to dis­ 
cuss tonight. 


CANCER (June 21-July 22): 


Pace your efforts, starting a bit 
early. Creative aspects of your 
work come into view. Make itj 
a full day, and then conserve 
energy. 


LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Home 
and family affairs need clari­ 
fication today. Take a definite 
stand, 
speak 
directly to the 
point. You are well compensat­ 
ed today. 


VIRGO 
(Aug. 
23-Sept. 
22): 


Short journeys and conferences 
tend to yield good results. There 
is an air of urgency. Meditate 
this evening, then set up some 
new plans. 
LIBRA 
(Sept. 
23-Oct. 
22): 
Travel arrangements work out 
easily if you are not in great 
haste. People prove congenial if 
you give them time to react. 


SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 


Your increased energy makes 
feasible a correction of condi­ 
tions. Personal plans come a 
long way forward with just a 
little help from your long-time 
friends. 


SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 
21): 
Prepare 
for 
disappoint­ 
ment, but it’s petty. Take it in 
stride, 
and 
learn 
something 
from the excuses offered. Focus 
attention on issues needing con­ 
sideration. 


CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 - Jan. 
19): Friends are there with help 
today. Practical ideas can be 
readily tested out at once near­ 
by. 


AQUARIUS (Jan 20 - Feb. 18): 


Job-hopping is not the proper 
course today, as too many peo­ 
ple are trying it. Vigorous ac­ 
tion within your present condi­ 
tion is likely to bring you a 
good advantage. 
__ 


NOTICE TO CREDITO RS 
NO EA P-4IS7 
Estate of IVAN E. LANDSTROM 
deceased. 
Notice is hereby given 
bv 
the 
undersigned 
Administrator 
With Will Annexed of the Eatate of 
I VAN E 
LANDSTROM. deceased j 
to the Creditor* of. and all person» 
having claim» against the said de j 
ceased, to present them with the 
necessary voucher*, w i t h i n 
six 
month# after the first publication i 
of this notice 
to the said Admin­ 
istrator With Will-Annexed at f irst 
National Bank and Truat Company. 
417 North Euclid Avenue 
City of 
Ontario. County of San Bernardino. 
State of California, which said of i 
flee the undersigned »elect* as a 
place of bii-one-s in 
all 
matters; 
connected with said estate, or to 
file them with tne necessary vouch 
crs, 
within six months after 
the 
first publication of this notice, in 
the office of the Clerk of the Su 
per lor Court of the State of Cali I 
forma, in and for the County of 
Los Angeles. 
Dated 
September 12, 1%» 
FIRSI NATIONAL BANK 
AND TRUST COMPANY 
By: LEW GSNGE. 
Trust officer, Administrator 
With-Will Annexed 
COVINGTON fc CROWE 
Attorney* at Law 
1047 West Sixth Street 
Ontario. California 
Attorney* for Administrator 
With-Will Annexed 
Pub. Sept. li. 23. 30, Oct. 1, 


C ER T IFIC A T E OF BU SIN E SS 
Fictitious Firm Name 
THE UNDERSIGNED does hereby 
certify that he is conducting n Tele­ 
vision R e p a i r business at '6804 
North Garey Avenue, City of Po­ 
mona, County of Lob Angela*, State 
of California, under the flctltlou* 
firm name of Patrick & Son and 
that said firm I* composed of the 
following persons whose names and 
addresses are as follows, to-w it; 
Jam es P Jacobs, 1585 Biscay Way, 
Pomona, California 
WITNESS my hand this |2th day 
of September, 1968. 
JAM ES P JACOBS 
STATE OF CALIFORNIA 
) 
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES 
) ss 
ON THIS 12th day of September 
A D , 
before me Dayton H 
Klmg a Notary Public in and for 
said Count /S* »nd State 
residing 
t h e r e i n d£K commissioned and 
swirn 
pecjsfmlly appealed Jam e* 
p Jacovelknown to me to the per 
son whose lam e i* subscribed tpl 
the within instrument, and acknowl­ 
edged to mf that he executed the 
“ T WITNESS WHEREOF I have | 
hereunto set my hand and affixed; 
my official »eat the dev and year 
in this certificate first <*bov* writ- 


,efl 
DAYTON H. KI.ING 
(SEAL) 
Notary Public in *nd for 
!,aid County and Stale 
Mv Commission Expire# 
August 6. 1970 
(§8 1 
) 
Pub Sept 23. 30 Oct 7, 14. ' « * 


PISCES (Feb. 19-M ar. 20): 


Go right to work with vigor. 
Set a steady pace with regular 
rest breaks so you can make 


NEW YORK (AP) — Tired of 


being gawked at by camera-tot­ 


ing tourists from the wilds of 


suburbia, a group of hippies 


from 
the 
Lower 
E ast 
Side 


turned the tables Sunday. 


They took their own tour and 


stared at the suburbanites. 


About 50 hippies, clad in their 
best beads and bells, paid $5 
each, then boarded a bus at St. 
Mark’s Place, in the heart of 
the East Village, and set off for 
a day in Queens, a predominant- 


The tour was the brainchild of 
Joe Skaggs, 23, an artist, who 
described the expedition as “ a 
put-on of middle class values 
. . . . a 
sort of cultural ex­ 
change.” 
The 
turned-on 
tourists 
got 
glimpses 
of 
such 
nonhippie 
strongholds as housing develop­ 
ments, bowling alleys, neatly 
manicured lawns and other mid- 


—eight "straight” patrons fled 
through a side door when the 
hippies walked in. 


Other Queens residents greet­ 
ed the expedition with a mixture 
of 
surprise, 
skepticism 
and 
amusement. 


lawns and reading the Sunday 
papers 


an effective day. A good show ly middle class borough of New 
tonight provides relief. 
York City. 
______________ 


There were 7,089 train accl-l 
Portugal has the world’s larg- 


dents In the U.S. In 1967, an in- est codfishing arm ada-66 ships 
crease of 71 per cent over 1961 and 5,400 men. 


Reproduction is the only adult 
Gold has been hammered Into 


Hey what do you do at night pabie of at birth 
around here?” one of the tour -------------------- 
group asked a woman. 
"Not much,” she said. "We go 
to sleep early.” 
The tour ended with a happen­ 
ing in the Nirvana Headshop—-a 
touch of hippiedom in Hillside, 


function that reptiles are inca- sheets as thin as 1-250,000th of 


an inch. 


We’re being invaded,” cried 
one housewife, as the hippies 
de-bussed near her house. "It 
, 
. 
. . . 
must be some kind of 
u n d e r - Queens—where four men and 
die class symbols which many 
d movje 
„ added her three 
women 
danced. 
nude, 
of the hippies left behind when ® 
whi]e an artist painted their 
they fled to the Village. 
k 
bodies. 
J 
During a stop In Jamaica Es- 
. 
Included in the tour were sev- tateSj 
the 
hippies 
wandered Bob Lake, who usually runs 
eral 
stops. During one of them around, 
snapping pictures 
of regular bus tours around Man- 
—at 
a restaurant for ice cream suburbanites 
watering 
their hattan, acted as tour guide. 


BR0ADL00M CARPET 
AT BIG SAYINGS 


— See Them At — 
GIST’S FURNITURE/ 


400 POMONA MALL W IST 
D O W N TO W N 


ftUMtlNO 
WOULD vou «rilevi? 
For 
mofttk» 
su- 
has x«o*<> 
á» officisi, *ko 
committal * «fimo 
to 
ow n* I* *n «Menti«* 
petition. 


URBAN R. ZIIGLIR 


In this age of gimcracks and chrome, 
is there a place for a car so'over-engineered" 
that 90 percent of its value is invisible? 


Mercedes-Benz thinks so. 


Y esterday's d ream boats had 
enormous tail fins. 
Today, it's fastbacks, racing 
stripes, and shark-m outhed chrome 
grilles. 
Obviously, there are millions 
every year who are willing to buy a car 
that's "in vogue"— even though they 
know new er gim cracks and stylin g 
quirks will soon erode their investment. 
But Mercedes-Benz refuses to 
play the "planned obsolescence" game. 
At Mercedes-Benz, iron-willed 
engineers, not stylists, rule the roost. 
And they insist on putting value where 
they think it belongs: at the heart of 
their machines. 
T h at's why M ercedes-B enz 
motor cars can cost anywhere from 
about $4,500 to $26,000 without, to 
some tastes, "lookin g" it. 


Form follows function 


Make no mistake. The perfec­ 
tionists at Mercedes-Benz do not apol­ 
ogize for those classic lines — free of 
faddish touches — that will still be 
handsome years from now. They sim­ 
ply think form should follow function 
instead of fashion. 
The contours of that 250 sedan 
at right were dictated by the need to 
provide proper headroom , hiproom, 
legroom and protective packaging for 
five adults. Dictated by the propor­ 
tions required for nimble maneuver­ 


ability. 
T he car is both shorter and 
leaner than its overweight rivals. Yet 
it bristles with sophisticated, ultra­ 
performance features available only as 
extra-cost options, if at all, on domes­ 
tic sedans. 


A superb machine 


"Over-engineered," some crit­ 
ics say. N onsense, retort M ercedes- 
Benz engineers. If a man can afford to 
invest thousands in a «uperb driving 
machine, he is entitled to get some­ 
thing superb. 


W hat he gets in a Mercedes- 
Benz is legendary in automotive circles 
An expert from Car and Driver 
tested the "new " 250 when it was re­ 
leased early in 1968 after an incuba­ 
tion period of five years. His verdict: 
"O ffhand, I can't think of any other 
4-door sedan in the w orld— with the 
p o ssib le excep tion of the M a se ra ti 
Quattroporte—that han­ 
dles, steers and stops like 
the M ercedes." 
S c r a p p in g the 
solid rear axle system of 
most domestic cars, the 
250 uses an all-indepen­ 
dent suspension — plus 
anti-sway bars front and 
rear. This endows it with 
the agility of a scram*» 
bling quarterback. 
You can blast it 
over rutted and potholed 
gravel lanes. It behaves 
with almost eerie calm. 
You can thread it through 
the corkscrew turns of a 
mountain road, and en­ 
joy yourself. 
There's no sloppy 
play in the steering. N o 
m ush in ess. W hen you 
hold the wheel, you "feel" the road. 
When you turn the wheel, the car darts 
instantly where you aim. Suddenly, 
you are a more confident driver. 


Heroic stopping power 


S to p p in g ? U nless you have 
driven a 180-mph Grand Prix raung 
car or a Mercedes-Benz, chances are 
you have never experienced the secur­ 
ity that comes from having really good 
brakes. 
Disc brakes. 
A few domestic cars have front- 
wheel disc brakes, and others offer 
fronf-wheel discs as an oprion. But 
every M ercedes-Benz comes with m as­ 
sive disc brakes on all four wheels. 
Standard. 
Result: You get more stopping 


power than you may ever need. But 
you sleep better at night. 


The pinnacle of safety 


As for safety, Mercedes-Benz 
engineers applaud the intent of the 
new U.S. Government regulations, and 
carry their protective measures beyond 


The neta Mercedes-Benz 250, To some, it doetn’flo o k '' worth $5,176*. Read why it is. 


the letter of these laws. 
The 250's best defense against 
blundering drivers is, of course, its un­ 
canny evasive ability. But, if the worst 
happens, your M ercedes-Benz is de­ 
signed to shield you. 
The entire passenger compart­ 
ment is built as a sturdy "safety zone." 
Doors are designed to stay closed on 
impact. The front and rear sections of 
the car are engineered to crumple in 
a violent crash at a controlled rate, ab­ 
sorbing shock and reducing the threat 
of serious injury. 
Car and Driver's sober conclu­ 
sion: O f all the world's motor cars, 
the current Mercedes-Benz line 'rep­ 
resents the present pinnacle in safe 
car engineering" 
Value. All of it concealed from 
the casual eye. But therej 
^ 
^ 
I 


And tHere's more. C onstruc­ 
tion of every Mercedes-Benz begins in 
a shower of sparks. Where conven­ 
tional cars use bolts to tie body and 
chassis together, Mercedes-Benz uses 
thousands of welds to create a single 
unit of immense strength. After 50,000 
miles or so, you may begin to wonder 
if your 250 will ever rattle. 
W hen w eld in g 
stops, the raw body is 
du n k ed w h ole, like a 
taffy apple, into a gigan­ 
tic v a t o f p rim e r. It 
emerges with 24 pounds 
of rust protection. 


More hidden value 


Every car gets 20 
more pounds of primer 
and paint. Even the in­ 
sides of the hub caps are 
coated. A sa final flourish 
in its armament against 
corrosion, each car gets a 
24-pound factory slath­ 
ering of undercoating. 
The six-cylinder, 
overhead cam engine of 
every 250 is bench tested 
before installation, for 
more than 60 minutes. A hint of trou­ 
ble in this gruelling test and the engine 
is tom down and rebuilt. Mercedes- 
Benz finds the lemons— not you. 


Revealing showroom tests 


Run a finger along the body of 
the 250. No "orange peel" texture. Slide 
in and open the glove compartment. 
Fully trim m ed. C lose the car door. 
Ka-ehunk. 
Now flex your back. This Is no 
m arshm allow seat. It supports you, 
mile after mile. It should: it was de­ 
signed with the guidance of orthope­ 
dic physicians, 
Crank the window and fiddle 
with some knobs."Everything worked 
with delightful precision, eliciting the 
same sort of satisfaction that tom es 


when the shutter mechanism crackles 
shut on a good reflex camera, "reported 
Car and Driver's expert. 
That's the beauty of the 250. 
It's built as if it were a 3,000-pound 
H asselblad cam era! 
Over-engineered? By conven­ 
tional standards, emphatically so. But 
Mercedes-Benz does not make conven­ 
tional cars— and never will. 


24-page brochure 


If you'd like more facts on this 
remarkable $5,176* machine, mail the 
coupon for a full-color brochure. 
O f course, the quickest way to 
verify the 250's virtues, both visible 
and invisible, is simply to test-drive 
it. Just ask for the keys. 
Other M ercedes-Benz m odels 
to ponder: 
280S Sedan — the m ost road­ 
worthy car you can buy in the luxury 
class, $6,106*. 
2805L Roadster— a sports car 
for grown-ups, combines soul-stirnng 
performance with comfort, $6,721 *. 
220 D ie se l— the only diesel 
M erce d e s-3 e n z m ak e s, g iv e s y o u 
small-car economy in a big, safe sedan 
that may well endure for half a million 
miles, $4,668*. 
300SEL— an understated lim­ 
ousine, $9,615*. 


Mercedes-Benz of North 
America, Inc. 
A m kw i Montclair 
f f é * Doit DoulrvarsJ 
Stmiii Uif, California 9176}®i 


Please *end me a 24-page, full-color 
brochure on the new generation of 
motor car* from Mercedes-Benz. 


M A M E 


a d d k e s s 


cm 
STATE 
zte 


€(, opyright i«M 
• San, of N o il* A m aru *, me. 


•West Coast ports of entry, exclusive of option«, state and local taxe«, if any. 


Autohaus Montclair 5566 Holt Boulevard, Montclair, California 91763 Phone: 714-624-0419 


■£rogtcsô-Bullctin 
inancia t 


M o n d a y ( w a n in g , l a g t . 1 3 . 
f l \ NY. Stocks Noon Prices 


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Page 6, Sec. 1 


Roger E. Spear’s 


Successful 


Investing 


N e * York Stock 
Con» ?■ .40# 
Lx'ch*r»t« *«!«ct«d 
noon p m co » 
CoM Mot 
40 
A 
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Ab#* Cp 
ACF ln3 2.20 
Ad M iltis ,?0 
Andrew 1.40 
Adm trtl 
AirWedfn 1.50 
¡AlcanAlom 
1 
Alle# Cp 
.10» 


ìlt t W f | 
AiiiedCn l 90 
' A l'te d S ir 
1 « 
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50 
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AM B AC .tó 
Amerada 3 
Am Airtin .00 
Am »des’ 1 60 
Am 
y 
AmC 
ss r 
Î4 
56 
$5'z 


Q—Because we need to provide for the future of 


our brain-injured son who m ay not be self-support­ 
ing, we have signed up to buy a m utual fund at $100 
a month for 15 years. W e also have another $1,000 
to invest. W hat do you suggest ?—D .D . 


A 
Fo r the benefit of others who m ay be con­ 
sidering a fund contractual plan I would like to com ­ 
m ent on these plans. A t present, typ ical contractual 
Plans deduct up to 50 per cent of the first y e a r’s 
paym ents for sales com m ission. This “ front-end load- 


m eans that you m ay pay the cost of acquiring 
mg 
In de- 
shares that you won’t own for m any years 
fense of the contract arrangem ent are the positive 
values of forced savings and “ dollar-cost averaging.” 


You h a w chosen a well-respected “ perform ance” 


fund, and despite the higher in itial fees you should 
accom plish your purpose if you stick w ith the pro­ 
gram . Y o u r additional money should be invested in 
equal dollar amounts of Southern N atural G as, rec­ 
ommended in recent colum ns, and F irst C harter fr1- 
nancial. This latter, one of the larger W est Coast 
savings and loan holding com panies, should continue 
to grow in view of the m ore favorable monetary 
clim ate that appears to be developing. 


! 
C*t I 60 


van 1 25 
A m E iP w 1-52 
A m trk a 1 30 
A Home 1 jo 
Am Homj 
22 
AmMPdy .90 
A M il Ci 1*0 
Am Myiors 
Am NalG»» 2 
Am N **% 1 
Am Phot .06« 
Am 5melt 3 
Am Sid 1 
Am TAT 2.40 
Am Too 1.90 
A M K Corp 
A M P Inc 
.40 
Ampex Corp 
Anacond 2.50 
Anker» Chem 
ArchDan 1.60 
Armco Stl 3 
Armour 160 
Arm Ck 1.40a 
Ashid it 
1.20 
Awd DG 1.20 
Atchison 1.60 
At I Rich 180 
Alas Ch .80 
Atlas Corp 
Avco Cp 1.20 
Avnet Inc 
40 
Avon Pd 1.60 


B a b c k W 136 
Balt G E 1.60 
Beat Fds 1.82 
Beckman .50 
Bencn A ir .75 
Bell How .60 
Bendix 1.40 
BenetFin 1.60 
B :ngupt 
Seth SU 1 60 
Boema 1 20 
BoisCas 
25b 
Borden 1 70 
BorgW ar 1.25 
B n s tM v 1.20 
Brunswick 
B u cyEr 
1.20 
Budd CO 
80 
Buluva 
80b 
Bunk Ramo 
Burl Ind 1.40 
Burroughs 1 


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Det Steel 
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28 
49'« 
40 5 
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168 
9 
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60 
169 
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96 105 
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80 
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$15% * Vi KanG E 
1.32 
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43h» — 1» KayserRo ,60 
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27*» . 
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kresge 5S .34 
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Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968 


Wooiworth 1 
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Macke Co .30 
8 
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Carrier Cp l 
artarW ,40a 


Since m y husband died I have no one to ask 
about m y investm ents so 1 am w riting to you* 1 am 
75 and need incom e. M y holdings include AC F Indus­ 
tries, C entral Hudson G as & Fle e ., C ities Service, 
E l Paso N atu ral G as $5 Convertible Preferred , In ter­ 
state Po w er Co., M ountain Fu el Supply, Northeast 
U tilities and also three bonds.—E .B . 
A —Y ou r three bonds c a rry B B B ratings, «are con­ 
sidered m edium grade and should bo held. I would 
also retain the preferred issue of E l Paso since the 
dividend appears se<*urc. Because of the adequate 
yields availab le, C entral Hudson, Interstate Pow er, 
'Mountain F u e l and Northeast U tilities are suitable 
holdings for vou. I would, however, switch C ities 
Service and A C F into equal dollar amounts of Ligget 
_ 


& M yers and U .S. Steel, each selling to yield about 


6 per cent. 


F o r Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful 


Investing (recen tly revised and in its 10th printing), 
send $i w ith nam e and address to Roger E . Spear, 
Progress-Bulletin, Box 1618, G rand C entral Station, 
New Y o rk, N .Y . 10017. 


CSM J l 
. 
, 
C#sN« Cook 1 
Cat»rTr J 20 
OlanebrCp 2 
Cenco Ins .*> 
C«n* SW 1 70 
C K ro 160b 
C?rEhed JO 
CetsnaA 1 40 
C FI Stl 
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Chm. Oh'0 4 
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iChiPn»u 
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I Chi R l Pac 
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Cities Svc 2 
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C ievElitl 1.92 
Coca Col 120 
Colo Pai 1.10 
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s i . 52 
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ConElecIricl 1 
CenFood I SO 
ConNarG l 70 
ConsPwr 1 90 
Contalnr 1 40 
ContAlrL .50 
Cont Ceti l 


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42'* •“ V«¡ Rohr C P .«0 
4 
42' 4 
47/t + 
RovCCola 
ft 
% 
Î 5 h i l * 
89'» 4 " Roy Gut. 
99r 
*120 
77 
76 * 
76'» -+ Î * • RydarSvs .80 
lès 
13»« U ‘4 


h 'I l i 'lit: '82 î ¡ ï i  * { 
ß « S 88 i f - m ’Isk r I p 
g ii S ! if1: 


— 
m 
i Sclentlt Data 
5 
27’ a 
27’% 27’ a 
i SCM Cp 
*0b 
. 
,71 
371« 
37’« — '«¡Scott Paper 1 
80 
28 * 28 
28' e 
+ ' * |bd CStL 2-20 
9 
70-8 69’'ï 
70’» 
4- 6«:Searl GD 130 
43 
57’ 2 
57'» 57'» 
. Sears Ro 1,20 
1, 
48’» 47' ! 477» - ’ « Seebura .M) 
10 4? 
41»* 
42 
iSharonSt 1.50 
183 27’» 27 
27V% 
! Shell O il, 2 .» 
12 
441» 43’ 2 
44»» 
+ 6» ShtrwnW m 2 
4 
46'2 46'» 
46’ a 
+ '« 6!Br tl C ç la 
71 
47’ » 46'» 
47 
E »4 ||hclair ? 80 
è 
43'* 43’ * 
43-V« 
V* SmucrCo 2.40 
V 
54’ a 537« 
54 
+ 4» Sm ithK 1.80a 
37 83M 83 
63’ *--- 1% SouCalE 1.40 
198 
46’ * 45'» 
46'» + 6» ; South Co 
21 
356» 34'» 
35’ * + ?»i SouNGas 
l.W 
in 
61 
23 
23 
— V«! Sou PaC 
1.60 
34 105*74 104’ 2 104’/» + '» South Ry 2 JO 
9 
93 
22'* 
226% — V« Soartan 
Ind 
204 
57’ 2 56 » 
56; s + "2 i S p ^ ry R 
,40e 
43 
36'« 36 « 3 6 '* — ’** SauareD 
,70a 
127 
536» 52'» 53'« 
’« 
StBrand 140 
A 
31 » 2 4- '-4 Std Kolts . » aP 
7 
30 
29'. 
30 
4- 1% ItOHCal 
2,70 
60 
39*4 38-4 
39 
-F Va StOillnd 
2 ? 
xio 124’* 124 
124'* + V-v StO jlN J 2.60e 


V » 
2234 23 ’ 
It Padtaging 


N - O 
S la u ttC h 
1 80 


69 V» 


5* O '* 
17 
l^V» + V« 


H ill: 1 H 
I S 


9 
35*» 35'* 
3V * —- a 
13 
<71* 476» 
47 ■« + V» 


— R— 


48 4 47V» 48’.« t 6» 
24 >4 24'2 
24"» + *4 
35'» 
35'. i 
45'% 
446» 
26'» 
25'/» 
16'% 
16 
43 
42'% 
86'** 86'% 


ait a ¡< 
' j y E £ 


24'/» . , 
35'/* — * 
Ji 
+ jo 
25’« - V; 
16’» - ’» 
^ t 4» 
\/4 
— V 


„ 
____ 536% — 1% 
2 
«6 ) 46 « 46' » — V» 


40 
3? V» 32 
14 
41 <£ 41 
30 
531* 537» 


90 
3b’» 30 
30'» + ’/% 
J 
49’ * 49V% 
49’ 4 
14 
53'4 52'» 
52' 2 -1 , 
105 
36' b 361% 
36’» f V» 
n s z I ; : I t v z 
15 
55 
53' » 
55 
+ 1 » 
15 
76 
75'» 
m » ~ % 
182 
85!/% 84’« 
851» + 
» 
111 
41 
39'* 
40'* f J t 
110 
306» 30'* 
30' « + 
* 
17 
50 
48’ * 
48’ * — 1 Va 
3 4 
38’ » 38 V* 
38J -i 
71 
69'* 68'» 
69-4 -E h • 
, f 
181 
35'» 346» 
35'» + 6» A-?rO|«T 
99 
45 
44 
45 
— ’» 
44 
68’« 67V« 
68 
- 1» 
9 
67' » 677% 
67’A —. ?« 
66 36’* 
36’» 
36'» P 
77 V9 


Sales 
fig u re s 
a re 
u no E flcial. 
U nless 
o th e rw is e 
M tftd . 
a n n u a l 
dends 
in th e fo re g o in g « • ! » 1 * r e atMW#» 
disbursements bared ,ofl 
8 
0» 
semi-annual 
declaration 
Special 
or 
extra dividends or pavmemts not desig^ 
nated as 
regular 
are 
identified 
in 
the 
following footnotes. 
. . . . 
a 
A ls o e x tra or e x tra * . b — A n n u « l ra te 
p lus 
stock 
d iv id e n d . 
« --L iq u id a tin g d- 
den d. 
d - D e c la r e d 
o r 
P iid 
In 1967 plus 
«tru-v 
d iv id e n d 
0—■ Q#c*gr®cl 
p t 
p fljd 
$0 
tlr^ this year 
f—Paya b le in stock during 


cssT s 
t 
paid 
in stock during J ^ 
’.,.n o H b u 
ca-h value on e x -d iv ld e n d or e x -d ls .rib u 
tion d a te . 


!rf5ttSJ2 x - F x dividend V— Ex dlvl- 
dend and sales in full. 


» 
i t h 
riBw l r r . n K ^ 
When d £ 
tfibjted. wi-~When issued. n d - N e x t day 


J V | V em ' b a n k ru p tc y 
o ; 
r e c e lv e r jiio 
or 


K t nV 
r 'S!c9«‘ r f e 
a s lu m e d b v such « m ' 
panfesT 
“ is s u e sJblect to in­ 
terest equaiitatlon tax. 
American 
Exchange 


SO» 
Air West 
Am Petr .32« 
ArkLGas 1.70 
r „ Asamera Oil 
4- SjiAssdOil & G 


Í6 
7r \ 
77’ » 77’% 
29 
«66% 45V* ^ 
z 
’ v î i M 
t t P w . l 
34 
33*» 
33s» 


,02 
391» 373« 
38; j + 6x 
^ 


StudeWorth 1 
Sun Oil 1 
Sunray 1.50 
SurvvFd .64« 
Swift Co .60 


Newberry 
N Eng 6 1 1 48 
Newmnt î 40 
Niag W P 1.10 
NorfolkWs, 6 


24«» 


5 
»2 
8?*% 


! 
L 
73*» 
6 
47'-» 47V» 


32'j + t/% Norwich 
8"» 


376 
— H-l— 
M 
64 
—6» 
35 
— V» 
436% +1 
78 * - *« 


80 
Occident 
40b 
W & 
i f* 
OkiaNGs 112 
QlinMat 1.20 
Omark 
l.Olt 
Ot s Elev 2 
Outbd M ar 1 
Owenslll 1 35 


14 
47'» 47 
47'» 
7 
55'» 5 5 '. 
,556% 
60 136 
1 j 5 
136 
+ 6% 
84 
47 
42'« 
42'% —IV* 
17 
40 
39’* 
40 
. 
4 
28' 2 28M 
28 V» + '» 
318 
SO* % 49’ « 
49’« — '* 
24 
73 
72’ » 
7 2 '» + ' * 
_ 
131 
71'» 20'« 
216% +1 
i 
H 
25 
65 
62’ » 
63 
T ^ 
Î î f f i l I 
m 
62 
4ò! * 45'» 
46’ » i Val í ^ í S ® , 1^ 8 
163 ìim ¿¡h 4i6% : w i r i f e i ’Ì 3 
’? r 
85! 82 ♦ . 
f â Î'S I io 
j 1* h fi/.U ïsh* f 
8 107'^ 106’* 1^4 -IV. TWCjkOl 40 
» I 
386» 38 V» 
— 
• 
20 
57» 57 
12ì 


8 Si i Si i f t iä k 
13 
39'A 3 8 '» 
3 9 '» + 6« 
20 
42 H 42 
42'» — V« 
13 
4 8 '« 48 
48V* + 6» 
278 
46'« *55» 
45* — '» 
:7?4 ..*»*. 


65 
28’A 
27?» 28’ i + ?» B rit Pe t 
44e 
on 
w/m 
j 52^ — 
Cam poi 
C.« 
Ili 1 9 39! 4 391 i 
! n C^*4' Jav^hn 


’ ?6 
?5*« 54’ « 
55 * ï l ^ Cînerama 


129 
4jHi 45'» 
456» + V» Data Cont 
% S ’* Üλ 45" + ’% R Ä trn l» 
9R6 
26 
2 5 'a 
25’» + W * Eq u itvC p 
33t 
H i 
65'. 65M 
65’ ! 
Felmont O-i 
1 7 » 
SA-! 56 
564% E 4% F ro n tie r A ir 
so 
77' ! 76Ü 
76'! + '» Gen Pivwood 
3ir 
l ì 
60«! 
6 0'! - ’ »¡Giant Yel .40 
™ 22tÜ ÎÎ8 ^ 
+m G?WBas Pet 


429 ^ 3 lo’4 r 
+ ^ f r n e r w ' s ? 
!?0 
55’ * 55-'« 
55’'2 + 
’» I Husky O 
30u 
9 74’% 74 
74 
27 
51’» 51»% 
SV 'f • 


59 
27’! 26'» 
Î4V * — 1 2 j ¡yrwñ_ C « J 
— T-U— 
. -- 
1 
76'» 26' « 
26'» + ’ » Midwest Fin 
18 100 
99’» 99 G t- ' 2 - Mohwk 
D j .1 
Il 100 
„ 
51 
27’ » 27» 27 
»7 i v i 
S'” » 
ri- , — 
NewPark Mn 
?? 
5) * 
S i,* 
09,; _ i 8 Ormand tnd 
106% + >* R ie Group 


38 * + 6% Tim k R B . l 80 


N E W YO R 
K (A P I 
- 
American Stock 
Exchange selected noon prices: 
N#f 


!“ • ’ SW 3“ 3*V " " 


105 
19’ » 
18?« 
19’ a +1 
12 
24’« 
24 2 
2464 . . .j . 
15 
38'» 
38’% 
3 8 ' . - » 
25 
74« 
76» 
74«+3-U 
71 
7' 1 
71% 
r * 
À 
k 
3 M 
3 M + ’» 


96 
3 5 '» 
34 
35 
+3 
73 
20 
1964 
1 9 ’ * — 6% 
35 
146» 
14’ » 
14’* — ’» 
21 
7’ . 7 9 16 7 9-16-5-1* 
50 
16'* 
1* 
1* 
- 
49 
10’ 2 
10’ « 
106% 
26 40 
39’ » 
40 
9 
164» 
16’a 
16?» + V% 
12 
29’ » 
2 9 ’ « 
2 9 ' 2 + 4% 
33 
17 
164* 
16'» 
58 
IV« 
b 
8'» — 
2 
22 
21’ « 
2164 - 
1% 
12 
15' » 
143« 
15 » 
16 
124» 
12'» 
12'» 
18 
1164 
111* 
1 16* — '% 
21 
114% 
11'« 
'« — V» 
99 
6s» 
6«a 
fc’s 
36 
221» 
22 
221» + %» 
5 
23>» 23’ * 
23'» . . . 
6 
254» 
2 5 « 
2 5 ' * — 
’% 
3 4'» 146% 144» 
10 
16'» 
164» 16'2 E '» 
2 3 
7« 2 
74 
74 ' t - f 6» 
37 
8 ' a 
8 4 * 
23 
21’» 
20’» 
15 
11'« 
10’ » 
51 
10'2 
10’ » 
324 
74'« 
7164 
20 
36'» 
354» 
127 
11'» 
114» 
5 
11'« 
11'. 
11 » 
18 
11'» 
lt ‘4 
116-4 + V4 
5 
72’* 
7? 
72 
t '» 
52 
38'» 
35’ » 
37»% - *» 
3 
32'» 
32'* 
32?« +, ’% 
59 
57?% 
57’ » 
67 ’ « + > » ! 
135 
381» 
37’ , 
38 a» + V5 


74 
E Vj'Hvcon 
Mfg 
1 Hvdromet I . 
Imper O», ?a 
Torp 
Kaiser 
Ind 
McCrory wt 


— ’ « Molvbden 


74«, , 
8«'2 + ‘% 
21’» 
11’ * E 64 
10’» — 5% 
74 Vj 
3 6' 2 E 
'*! 
Il'» + 6* 


57' * — 1* 


æ t w . y¡:+ ,s 
47’* 
46'« 
47'î + 1 


!i B. I" I . 


4 5 
30'1 « 
30 Í t G Í U n it Cp .60e 
21 
— ’» 


35V2 + ’» 


TransW Air 1 
Tran*am 
lb 
T ra m itro n 
T, 'Cont 7.7?e 
T RW Inc 1 . 
Twen Cent 1 
UMC Ind .72 
Un Carbide 2 
Un Eiec 1.20 
UnOHCal 1 «0 
UnîonPaci» 2 


74 29’ 2 29;- 


1 12S’! ’25’5 ’25'* 4 ' 8 icu??v afin* 
™ l i 82 f ? , ^ n | ! s mcPn 
73 
39'» 38'* 3fW -*1’ 
"H 
82i/4 ¿97! f f i l _ i ' » Copyrighted bv The Associated 


43 14’» 14’» 14’« 
2 3 
37’% 31'» 31? 
110 
50 
49’% 491 
B 34^0 
Ì%7% 
119 
25 * ?! 
ïV » 
• 
Compiled By The Associated rPresi 


Market Holds 
Up; Trading 
Is Moderate 


NEW YORK (AP) - The 
stock 
market held 
generally 
higher in moderating trading 
early Monday afternoon 
Volume in the first two hours 
was about 5 million shares. Adv­ 
ances were running at roughly 
3*to-2 over declines. 
Brokers said weekend reports 
of an upturn in new factory or­ 
ders last month bolstered confi­ 
dence. Follow-through strength 
from Friday’s late rally and the 
upswing of the past five sessions 
also was seen as a factor. 
The absence of many traders 
in observance of the high Jew­ 
ish holy day of Rosh Hashana 
contributed to a slack in vo­ 
lume. 
The Dow Jones industrial av­ 
erage of 30 stocks at noon was 
up 2.92 at 927.34. 
The Associated Press 60-stock 
average at noon was off .3 at 
343.8. 
Airlines, steels and motors 
were strong., TWA, recipient 
of a favorable ruling in its suit 
showed a gain of 1% at 46% aft- 
delayed opening n 20,000 
shares up 1%. Pan American 
World Airways was leading the 
most active list with an advance 
of t/4 at 72»/4. 
Steels strengthened 
against 
reports of a turndown in ship­ 
ments, with investors apparent­ 
ly cheered by forecasts of over­ 
all improvement for the year 
fifi iiíj « ¿ tsa r* TÍ,8î«S»*8£.»»!•«• output _*rf to* year. u s. 
i:j 
Stock Averages 


58%, ,2 
Hoiidvtnn .30 
Homestke 
30 
3 8 <* + i% Horeywi 1 10 
74' a 
HousehF 
1,10 
53 <t e i ' « ; H o u s R P 
+ 1 2 
65’» +1 
Howmet .70 
57 
— i» idahoPw .1.60 
si'* — '% ¡deal Ba»,c 1 
29’ s E i » ’ Imo 
— '* iîe*i Batic 
Cp Am 
28' a + ’ » INA Cp 1.40 
and 2 
Inland Stl t 


5 
88 
88 
19 
64’ « 63’» 
3 
35’ » 35 
74 
431» 42’* 


55 1*5 16’» 16 ! +Í» PacGEI 3 50 
8 631* 63 i 63' j — . P « cl-tg 1 -8® 
13 
72Vï 
71’* 
72'« + ’/* Pac Pf*t .15« 
65 172 
121 
122 
+1. 
H S 
8 
45’» 45 M 
456% — '« P a c T B T 170 


27 
42-2 4" » 61'» — '«.Pan A S u l 1.50 
41 
ïV * 35H 
35H + 1%i Pan *«C 
III 
54 
2015 


54 
32 ! 32 Î 
32' i + 6*1 Pênn/Un 1.4Ç 
137 
331’ ) 330 
330' -• — '» IP e n n z U n 
w i 


Ufiircval 1 20 
Un tAlrLin 1 
Uni’ Alrc 1 80 


m î;;: »T »¡: ? t s a r a i vs 
» r * 
“ *•+ '■ aiG,Bs ^ a 


Year ago 
1968 High 
1958 Low 


¿y-n 
ju- 
261.» 
27V 


r 
s 


46 
46 + 1% Penney 
JC 2 
36"a 
36’% 
36’i 
IP a P w L t 154 
Ä 
+ .... - 
- - 
330» 2 — ’» Pennz Un 
34 
,34'* — ’% PeovC o 
.90 
20V% 
20'j + 
'» ¡P e rfe c t Film 
47 
341» 
121 I 
_ 
123 
38»« 38’ , 
220 
34’» 34'» 
81 
5« ’* 
54' 7 
79 
626» 61'* 


38 Hi 
— 
34' J E V» 
54 « + 1% 
61'* - V5 


PflzerC 
1 20a 
PhelPsD 3 40 
Phlia E l 1.64 
PhilMorr 1 80 


X 34 
35’ » 
343» 
34»', — v% 
20 2 7 'i 
2 7 '* 
276% 
74 
23 
2 2 '» 
23 
. . . 
226» 
223-» — 1% 
231% 
23 « 
29*. 
SO1» + »« 
27’% E V* 
+ ’* 
— «» 
65 
«6 » E 
32' 1 33 
-E 
*» 
89 * 8 9 'z - 
’ 
30*% 303* S 
% 
7 187’ * 186’ J 186’ ; — ' 
4 
63' 4 6 2 "z 
63 
E 
? 
2« 
48 i 47’ * 
48’ « E 
8 
66' z 65 
661» +1 
16 
643» 64 
64 
19 
70’ * 7 0 'z 
7 0 '» 
— ’ 
41 
293* 29'« 2° * — * 
2 3 
53’ « 53’ * 
53’ * 
- 
5 


23 23 
24 
23’ « 


112$ ?7^ 
16 
37’» 
74 
26’% 
112 65’» 
76 
33 
33 
90 
47 
30’» 


U S indust 
40 
USPipe 120 
u S P iv C h 1.50 
US 
S m elt lb 
U S steel ? «0 
UnivO Pd .80 
Upiattn 1.60 


Varían Asso 
Vendo Co 60 
V a E IP w 
I 08 
W arnLam b 1 
Was Wat 1 20 
Westn A irL 1 
Wn Banc 1 70 
W nUTel 1 40 
W estgEI 1.80 
Weyerbr 1 40 
Whirl C p 160 
White Mo» 2 
WinnDtx 1.56 


194 
45 
44»* 
44 * 
29 
7V* 22, 
22 
Net change 
34 
66»* 66 » 
66-b 
— ■» Noor Mon. 
44 
56s* 56 
59 8 
, ,, Prev day 
37 
6r5 63’ * 
63'* 
+ ’ * vV’ek ago 
351 
44'« 43'« 
93’» — 9% Month ago 
42 
60 
59'» 
SO1« 
14 
133» 13 
13'» + 
» 
146 
5 P* 50'2 
51 »« +1’ * 
21 
38'* 37’ * 
38?» 
+ V»)1W7 Htgh 
4 
26 * 26 a 
26 « 
11967 Low 
30 
95 
94'» 
943« + ** 
83 
27’% 27 
27’ » 
E > » 
55 
30 
293» 
29 » 
+ 1» 
3 
69’* 693* 
69'z 
27 64'4 63H 
64'/% + 5», 
7*7 
43’ » 4l 3« 
43 
—IE. 
31 
43 
42%% 43 
+ V* Net change 
18 
47’» 46%» 
463« 
— ’»¡N oon Mon. 
V-W-X-Y-Z— 
|w£k ákv 
167 
27'« 26'z 
2«’ * 
+ ’» Month ago 
5 
27 
? * '. 
?* * — 1 
Y e a r a<3 
25 
31’ » 31« 
31*» — 9» 
1968 High 
50 
55' « 55 
55 
’968 LOW 
9 
22'* 22*% 
72'» .... 
1967 High 
18 
38 2 38’ * 
38’ z 
1967 L>w 
39V* 39’ 'i E V 


Steel clim bed to the most active 
I list, trading up l l/8 at A2Va. 
Bethlehem and Republic Steel 
- 5 ^—.3 added fractions. Jones & Laugh- 
15 


™ * 149.3 II»lllin was unchanged. 


20 
E .8 
495 2 
494.4 
202.7 
_____ 
_ 
. . . 
. 
. 
. 
. 
. 
. 


Î 7 5 9 194 4 
U 9 2 
332 9 1 
General Motors placed higher 
S tl 210 2 154.8 3500 price lags on its line of 1969 
% 7 209 6 159 1 & 6 models, 
but 
increased prices 
«n ! 
r .9.4 
H fe5 292 8 
tj,ose announced ear- 


15 
J 
A w xsaaeM A e 
lier by Chrysler. GM was up 1 
D O n d 
A 
v e r a g e s 
at g4i£ Chrysler ease %. Ford 


î0 
, 18 
J ! 
10 
10 added % and American Motors 
. 
TE.# 
12,61,4 
8 0ly4. 
66 0 
66 0 
66.1 
46 0 
HI 5 
66 1 
64 0 
73 0 
64 6 


8« 6 
89.5 
887 
88 ) 
90.7 
89 5 
86 3 
95 A 
86 1 


81 1 
80 8 
80 9 
•12 
i n 
78 4 
849 
78.0 


89 4 
89 4 
89 3 
(9,3 
92 0 
19 5 
88 0 
97 5 
89 1 


8! 8 
81.8 
Benguet gained V* at 12% fol- 
$2'j lowing news the Baham as gov- 
$ 5 em m ent had acquired an inter- 
78 4 est in a Grand Bahos gam bling 
real 
estate 
development 
ipport^d junion colleges in the being taken over by the Philip- 
» 
& ! W 
? ’»%! There are now 648 publicly-j and 


67 
70'» 69;* 
69+ —If* 
qt 


17 
48 ! ^ ! 2St : I United States. 
iptne mining com pany 
14 
3514 3S 
35 
— ' * 
_____ 


Noon Index 
D i v i d o n d s 


N E W Y O R K (A P ) — Noon N«»» York Mw,dav<* u t Dividends Declered 
Stock E xch a«« Index: 
Market 
................... 
Index 
. . . . . . . . 
T ran sp o rtatio n 
U tility 
................ . . . . 
F in a n c e 


+ 1 2 cents 
57,16 E 0.13 
53.63 
* 0 01 
44.44 4-0 03 
72 96 —$ 02 
CnnfVtPub 
I 
Filigree Fds 
Sv 


Pe- Stfc of Pay- ; 
Rate 
riadRecordable 
R E G U L A R 
12 
Q 10-31 
U’!* 
a 
0 10 » 
10-15) 


FREE LECTURE 


What does the 


Fall Market Outlook 


Offer You? 


TK« Economic Policy C ommittee of Bean W itter 
& Co. is about to iiiut a report on the economic 
and stock market outlook for the months ahead 
The Committee meets at our New York Research 
Center and publishes it» findings in an inuuv« 
document designed to help you apptai* your 


portfolio. 


Highlight* of thii «peeial conference will b« dis- 
Ctuscd at thii free levtur« delivered by a Dean 
W itter & C01 AcctHint Executive. I l>e topics cov­ 
ered will provide the Investor with important con- 
•iderations for planning hi» future inveitmcnt 
•trategy. 


Th« Ucture will U»t about an hour and a half and 
will b« followed by a half-hour discussion period. 
For reservations, phon« 1U ?-CiT41 or send in the 
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W 
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a 
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a 
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i 
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c 
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i 
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i 
s 
t 
h 
e 
o 
n 
l 
y 


7 
3 
7 
j 
e 
t 
s 
e 
r 
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DATlt 


TIMEi 


PLACii 


INSTtUCTO«: 


Tuesday, October I 


Starting at 7 : 3 0 p.m. 


Chino Community Building 
5 443 B Street, Chino 


Ned Scale, 
Account Executive 
\ 


D e a n W 
i t t e r a Co. 
IK C O iL P O R A TE D 
- 


Mambtr Naw YarB Btaak lK ch a "9* 


DEAN WITTER & CO., Inc. • 398 Wtxf 4th Str«ot # 


San ftomardmo 93401 


I—t , wmH 111. .. ...«u T— « M*'k« 
W- 


L—J tur« mi OeiaW» I. 


r— 1 
I ,m an »bit t* sttaadi |4<oae 
• ( , u corT ^ f<ra> 


L 
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r# fK > ft , r d a « . f y m% o f ib a f t * H 


V/ho oilers you America's newest jet, the 
Bogina 737 twinjet on every flight? 
Who offers you a choice of five nonstops, 
morning, afternoon and evening, to San 
Francisco? 
, 
. 
Who offers you the only one-plane service 
to Oakland? 
Who oilers you tjie only ibxough-service 


to Sacramento, tw’ce a day? 
Who offers you two flights to Los Angeles 
and two flights to Palm Sprinys?# 
Who offers you tho only one-aulme serv­ 
ice (check your luggage only once!) to 
Portland and Seattle/Tacoma? 
We hope you know the answer without 
peeking at our signature. 


\o 


K4MS 
. 


ADDJU51 


CITY, 
_ 


Your all-jot airline in O ntario 
WESTERN AIRLINES 
INTERNATIONAL 


Coll ut ot 623-6115, visit W eitern Airline* ot Ontario 


International Airport; or see your Trov«l Agent 


JHÖSM 


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N E W M U S T A N G — 
F o rd o ffic ia ls s a y th e n e w 1 9 6 9 M u s- 
c a r w ith th e p lu s h n e s s o f a lu x u ry c a r. T h e G r a n d e in c lu d e s 
i 
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t a n g 
G 
r a n d e 
c o m 
b i n e s th e h a n d lin g a n d fe e l o f a sp o rts 
t e a k w o o d g r a m in t e n o r trim a n d c lo th a n d v in y l s e a ts . 
K jp ill POIltlCIC IlClS ^ P lll P U H lp v ' LQOK^ 
L u x u r y M u s t a n g Is O f f e r e d b y F o r d 


.________* _____ i .. 
iiw *, o nAU> coHoc thP nerfnr. and loneer exteriors and a wider ovations and added safety are per level ventilation. 
Pfdk 
ine dn‘* 
. . i 
______ _____ 
h a a m 
l l / i l l 
D P T 1P 


FOUR-DOOR HARDTOP — Pontiac’s Bonneville series in- 
eludes this four-door hardtop. The Bonneville* have sepa­ 


rate and distinct front grille, a rear bumper with an Endura 
pad and a 428 cubic-inch V- 8 engine. 


l 
u 
a 
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y 
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y 
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» 
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¿ s t i x s s ;= s m s r a « .* “ ' 
~ »|FF e E E ? 3 w l S r S S 3 E 2 r w 5, 
- r s . r « r . « = 
Ford and Mustang lines - the vice president and Ford Div- ton said. 
feature a new Instrument pan 
styling 
highligh s 
include design of these n^ 
th,fke'r and contain ^ 
the and in so doing, both vehicles 


performance — oriented Mach 
I ision general manager. 
A new grille 
and a new tail cl, an energy-a sor i g 
• a new sp it urn per 
or amount of attention and ad- front and rear side markers in- will 
escape the 
full impact 
of 
and Cobra models and a luxury Mustang 
for 
1969 introduces lamp design highlight 
the 1969-and new engine optio 
! l T 
L 
0 !jnes and miration from the automotive legrated at each end 
of the the collision. 
Mustang Grande-new engines two new models - the Mach I fronf-to-rear Thunderbird modi- 
X L and LTD 
ff/ h v removal of vem windows from public/’ John Z. DeLorean, a molding. 
Pontiac rear ends^have ne 
and more comfort and conveni and the luxury car with sports fications. 
ia new front end highhgur« 
Catalina Executive and Bon-General Motors vice president 
Executive s t a t i o n wagons wide tail lamps incorp r 
g 
ence in all lines. 
car handling, 
the Grande. 
| 
The Falcon, Ford si economi- a classic, die-cast, hiden head- 
' 
ure and pontiac general manager. have an exterior walnut wood back - up lamps and reflex 
“ Our 1969 Ford Is an all new 
Economy, high performance cal family car, includes an op- ]amp grille. 
window visibility 
said. 
design which extends from the turn signals, 
car from the completely rede- and luxury' are available in the tional 220-horsepower engine. 
Hardtops 
and 
convertibles window visimmy 
Q( 
wbber. frJ 
fender ^ arward over the 
The BonnefOes have a spec- 
signed body to fhe .nrerior fHgh, F a iH a ^ „neup 
which 
In ,- 
Ford, 2. mode,, _w,.h iawer h ave ^ n d e , s id e ^ a , and ,be 
^ ^ ^ 
^ 
^ 
caii.d Ere 
„ ^ 
’/bumper 


now be opened l.ke a door With X . 
^ 
# r , # 
tlw 'bumpPr, * . « „ « a dominant ,e,k grained vinyl .a useo to tor « M W protection 
to tmpac 


the window up. 
^ 
-lven speciflc treatment 
in theme. It is painted in body col- complete the design. 
■ 
, • 
w 
The 
LTD and the Country 
features a 
s e p a r a t e or. Parking lamps are below the 
A ma|or advance In Pontiac s 
wagon« is a 
V o O 
n i e S T 
J C 
n 
e U 
U 
I C 
V 
I 
Squ.re 
W * J <* " , y l.h and distinct grlle. a rear hum- Lumper a. the outboard ends m „„a. - in safoty is a uel beam 
^ 
* 
may be 
V 
a 302 - cubic - >nch " ^ 
5~ 1>er W!th a rubber - like pad and the valance panel and dual, hoc- within each door which 
S e d . n die con vent,onal matn- 
u. 
add to the ed 
6 
Make certain that your the competitton are all expense men., 220 ■ horsepower W as P m 
^ 
^ 
y . , engine ,iunIal headlamp, complete the provlde g r e a t e r protection ™ “ 
be 
ope„. a 


uca,ioa„ T 
X 
f a n 
d 
^ 
^ 
r 
view mtrror is adfusted patd trips to 
a spring auto 
^ 
g 
S 
S 
S 
t 
e 
pre- ' t 
& 
i 
have a die cast S 
S 
M 
T 
T 
S 
T 
T 
! 
g 
sity students on the importance so that ,t g.ves a clear v.ew to show. 
c.i.d., 150-h.p. stxatylindor en- 
panels grille separate and distinct from ^ 
collision. 
s,de ot lhe bun!per 
of sage driving habits, the, Fiat the rear_at all n m e s .________________________ T 
g 
J 
Dec g-ne. The 4^ i . d . W cngme. 
with teavy ?he other models. 
ph. Mfegut 


For College Students 
Safe Driving Contest Scheduled 


S o m f c a T . '’announcwi 'tte 1 . 
express- run from Dot. I through D e, gm ^The 
* ith ^ 
" * Mher m 0Îe,!' 
establishment 
of 
an 
annual way or other high speed high 10. PubllC1^ 
^ h 
dver bird, is an «ddnd pertonnnnce 
• 
• 


“ i ec 
o 
H 
^ 
S 
COmPetit'° n : ^ d — 
rtf“ 
,USt y0Ur S - g «'selected C le g , news- option 


Competing 
for a 
Fiat 
Sport Spider, students at 


124 
8.CUAfter passing another dri- pape"rs. w.ll he used to assure- 
A l m 
M 
t ftwrinches longer and 


Sport sptaer, _ 
» ac ver, return to your lane only maximum Impact fOT the ^ 
^ 
“ 
g . f ^ . e r . t n 


¿ s s 
^ 
r ? h 
. 00™ ^ , , . ^ 
. « ¡ 0^ 
by 
new 


essay« of between 100 and 200 ; 9. Be estra alert at side roads may 
Fmt adddons or 
ttack de. 
words on the sub|ec. -Safety or 
mterseo.ion, 
for enter,ng ^ r s - ^ b y 
^ 
sBoof 
performance 


in Action.” 
¡cars. 


Advances in Science 
Depicted in Exhibits 


1 Detailing a personal exper- 
10. Do not exceed the legal non, Fifth Floor 
B 
y 
u..» 
nn 
mattpr Avenue. New York 
598 


1 
. 
c 
_ D __f 
r.g.rinrm inre m unveiling tne mysuneft ui ¡tvi 
Competi- sign 
Sports Roof 
Periorma 
^ 
universe( including those in and 
Madison model, is available with i 
p- 
M nloratian and ocean-w h 


eludes a boxlike steel beam 
positioned 
horizontally 
with­ 
in each door plus additional 
door - pillar reinforcements. 
The beam is designed to re­ 
duce the possibility of the stri- 
The advances made by science taking three pictures 
per second kmg vehicle 
riding over the 


unveHIng the mysteries 
of from an altitude 
of 10.000 
fee, - 


. built - in step for easier entry 
The safeguard, which is stand- -nt0 ^ 
jQad area 
ard on 'he new Pontiacs, »*,- 
--------- 


^ V o l k s w 
a g e n 
. 


jf[ Au temette Stkk, er 4-S|Nm# 
CATRON MOTORS 
800 I. Hall 
679 «765 


lence in which one or more speed 
limit, 
but 
no 
matter Avenue, New York, N Y 
safe driving habits prevented what the posted speed limit, 
or minimized an accident, the drive at a speed reasonable for 
essays are expected to make existing conditions, 
students think in depth on the j 
“ We fee! it imperative 
to 
subject. 
make young people aware of 
Ten thousand entry brochures what it takes to drive safely 
are being distributed 
around |*nd how important itMs,” ex- 


Buick Sales 
For Month Up 
26 Per Cent 


____ 
p e r m i t reproduction in 
H 
rnhra space exploration and ocean- w h i c h individual persons are 
tional 335-h.p. 
r ™ di opraphy; 
are depicted In the Identifiable. 
Jet Ram-Air engine, fhc Giran _ Sciftnce y S A. building. 
[ -The General Dynamics pres- 
is a super 
luxury moue 
The exhibits there are spon- entatlor. will show the full scope 
custom car touches msioe anu ^ ^ fcy thp {air association as 0f the firm’s corporate capabil- 
out. 
a co^cVative project with the tty, including work in the areas 
Outside, Mustang features a Southern 
California 
Industry 0f nuclear submarines, missiles, 
, 
inew grille constructed jn a ce - Education Councii. 
communications systems, atom- 
----- 
- 
. ; 
. . 
, 
. 
ic .. 
I 
FLINT, Mich. — Buick sales Hilar design with a low-g.o 
Exhibit« have been set up by ¡c reactors and aircraft. 
nre being distributed UW Bd 
„ '.baWi 
u «»aled 44.507 units during Au-black finish. 
Inside. Muatang 
• 
ics a n d 
j|( ,Hustratf, its worW. 
the countpt, each of whkh list, 
M 
W 
, 26 ^ 
ce„ t mcre.se has a ftmr-pod 
^ 
^ 
Agency. Genera. Dynam- 
and new prtx 
10 top safe driving rules. They 
J P 
« ^ 
c o m 
p e t W 
o n . 
over the 35.317 deliveries for ,er set directly in front of 
. 
TetephoBe, Scripps jec:s in undersea exploration. 


arc: 
• * 
..n 
-n„ -- pecav 
wp tiie same 
P61^0^ 
^ast 
Year* driver. 
I n s t i t u t e of Oceanography, 
Another exhibit will be a mock- 
l 
Always signal your Inten-^ 
By rg m n n g j^ e 
R(j)and 
g 
Wl,hers. 
general 
The car also contain, more 
Califom|, Edlson am, ^ o( |(w Mereur/ spBCe cap. 


tion to pass or chn^ 
' an*s; 
° 
. . k aV}0ut the ways sales mangaer, reported. 
hip, shoulder and rear leg t o o 
^ 
2Q 
Qther privatP 
constructed by four teen- 
2. Stay far enough behind the to really ^ 
a^ ut 1 
haWts 
Deliveries of 15,190 cars the as well as more room to enter firmSf gxhools and agencies of * v§ hoss working during th e 
car you follow - at least oneiin ^Wch thei 
lgst 1Q d 
oi the month set the rear seat passenger com- 
governments 
,immer without an instructor 
car length for every 10 miles 
an 11-year htgh for the period. partment. 
eAls0 on dlsplay are thf pr„ ¡ Z t e r adul, help. 
of sPeed- 
, 
5 ^ 
u,tth the rt.iesi Withers said. 
New Mustang en^in#* JilJclu eUects cf 32 top science students 
------------- 
3. Keep pace 
wtth 
traffic, [sands oftuudenb. w ttlit 
It brought retail sales since a new 4.1-Utre 
'^ ¡(ro m Southern California high 
only about 3 percent of the 
Avoid weaving m and out. 
of the roadi which ari.pr . d 
^ ^ m 
m 
BmCk’s,cylinder, new 
35l-c.i d 
V-8s 
^ 
produced 
in 
the 
United 
4. If you must stop your car. th jfn try broenures. 
;second best sales rate in his- with two-and four-barrel cerbur- 
exhibits this Stutes flavors food, the rest go- 
pull completely off the road-’ 
Designed by ^erRi”on^ 
naf*rt; tory and a 
20 
per cent 
in- ptors and the 428-c.i.d. fo u r- b ar- JT .? .■ - 
^ 
way. 
ina< ^ 
P.rize ctwiv 
a 
0Vg] 
5. Stay in the righthand lane has a 4 - cylinder engine, 
except when passing. 
1 Second 
prizes 


Punt-Pass-Kick Contest 
Registration Continues 


t 
etors and the 4 »-c.i a. 
i 
wjl, ^ 
crease over the 355,884 salestre| v-# with and without Ram * 
model oi 
jn through August last year. 
¿ir induction. 
When a weel goes over a bump: 
Fairlane’s 16 models for 1969 
■include the Fairlane. Fairlane 


A model of the Surveryo with 
a claw. 


mg to chemical industires. 


Texas farmers annually raise 
w,.v.. ---- 
. , 
, .......w..............- 
, 
_ A wingless, jet - propelled about 50 acres of greenhouse to- 
in the road, it tilts inward, crea ,lnc|udP the Fairlane. 
F a irla n e ^ _ ^ 
vehicle designed to mgujM worth $2 million, 
ting a force that tries to push 50^ Torino, Torino GT and the 
j * n d i n g s 
safe with 
- 
| 
_ 
the wheel in that direction. By new onP _ the Cobra. 
out Sp|ashdown 
/ L « .• ■ ■ « u u fin a 
changing the pivot points of the 
The Cobra, available in hard 
aerial camera capab!e of 
upper and lower control arms, 
top and SportsRoof models, dis 
the angle at which the wheel playg youthful lines and has ex- 
notice to c r i ditors 
Registration 
will 
continue 
Winners of zone competitions tJlts has been reduced, keeping tra handling charncteristics and 
through Oct. 4 at Norman Ford, 
will receive trophies and 
run- the whee| on its normal course. a 428-c.i.d. engine. 
611 
F, Holt Ave., Pomona, formers 
- up are awarded certitt- 
Buick enRineerg also have de- 
Thunderbird has three 
1969 
the 8th annual Punt, Pass and cates. Zone winners move to #igned a new air cleaner for the modpl> 
makt . ' 
Kick 
contest 
for 
boys eight district competitions where 216 ^ cubic irvch v - 8 engine with 
Tw0.d00r Landau models pro- 
WA^v^LANnsiRosi J « 
district 
champions 
will 
^ tw0 barrel 
carburetor which 
•* 
throuch 13 
W « * » 
v . « . « « . . ...... 
-- lW0 
Darrci 
taiuuiciui 
1 Thn rnm^t is sDonsored na- «wardêd tr0Phies and UR0 on 10 powers 
the 
Skylark 
Custom, 


,or 
area 
“ v * 
iw m 
* • * “ 
,nd 
USabre 


NO. EA 
. 


T « t a t * * o f M 
A R Y S 
L A N D S T R O M 
, 


i l i o 
k n o w n a 1* M 
A R Y 1- A N l i S T R O M . 


- 
d e c e a s e d . 
N « > ti< e 
i s 
h e r e b v 
g i v e n 
1969 b y 
the 
undersign« J 
A d m m ib ira to r 


W i t h Y V t ll A n n « * ' s q of T6 o 
K s ' s W 
o f 
M 
A R Y 
s 
L A N D S T R O M 
. a l b « k n o w n 


n , 
M A M Y 
I A N D M 
R O M 
d e t e « * ' - ' ' 
* 
--------- 
- 
t„ tin Creditors ■' and all P'1 " l, 
vide a more formal appoaranco a ..,,, 
and more privacy for back seat ne(.,,#fcttrv Vouci cr 
wi t hi n 
. 
>1 
1__aa/t . . t- 
hm il n t k t. 
f ( 
f ' 
! M É 


n\umnn 
f AFTI - BffAHS 
CCNTKRS 


National Football League. 
******----1« citv has been mcreasea uy iw wlder rear rnor piuars. 
North 
Bueiw a vem 
ir11 bv a parent 
guardian 
Louis or (A!,anta W^ rf J - per cent, providing this engine 
Thunderb,rd al^o offers a new Onudo/m'nG - ^ 


L 
_ y u no charee for registra- ilnahsts are chosen - six from with a power increase of 12 grille a n d taij ]Hmp design and rue 
t h e; u^ 
,/*f8ne<|n ^ 
tion 
All 
eauipment 
foStbullr^e NFL Ew ttm division m l ^ p o w e r . This advance, coup- an improved braking system. 
wtth «id esi 
and kickinR^ueesTaTe provided s,x ^ronv !^e N 
Western dtv- jed 
wUh 
|he 
new 
automatic 
NewP opti0ns include an e!ec- me 
a,ul 
’ 
. 
. 
ision. Winners are accompanit d transmiSsion .gives intermediate 
• 
■■ 
— ■-* 


• 
puwcis 
me 
‘JA.f 
--- - 
anu more 
~ 
-- 
net »*.u 
‘ 
. «„Vii. 
P compete 
for 
area 
champion- glatlon 
waROns 
and 
LeSabre pasfcengers by eliminating rear moegA Bftr 
tht u * 
p 
^dmin 
ships. Area champs travel to di- moddS( Thc air filtering capa- ouarter windows 
and 
adding ,.,rstor wu\w,,‘-A7 ™ 
( ** * } '* 
[. viiion events in NFL stadiums in 
b 
been increased by 100 wlder rear roof pillars. 
l0No>th 
u< u.i Avenue nfv of 
1 
o . 
. 
A t la n t a 
w h f r p 
12. 
J 
. 
. u . . 
. 
. 
. 
,r_ 
. . ______ 
t „,m tv of Ssti H afH R r4 ln o . 
1 Cl? "Sorti EÛcÏÏS ÀvtW* City of 
- 
- 
- 
ft (* r r t # r d in < > . 
h 
.«id of I 
lt * C t S 
a s 
a 
! 
all inaitet - 
ronnecled with said «’'•tate, or to 
• - 
necessarv v<ju< h 
........ 
leu 
WIUI tw 
..t 
- 
rsew opuun> Iiumut .... -- f.t 


Nn Iv.lv contact Is Involved. 
lslon w 'm e" aI* a“ omF‘,nl''' tnmsmlssion. « im mt«rmecli»te trtcalIy-powered 
son roof, 
an 
N 
their fathers to all area and i|zed Buicks an imponant in- electnCally*heated back window peinur t 


n a iid n a i 
ban k 


kubliii'ila. of tht* 
1 0. In 


Pom,, 
will be aw.itdcd tor by 0»lr f«thcrs_ to nil area nm> 
m M a a„ important in-:electrically*e«le<l b«ck window.^VuS'igw^f «;■ 
of distance the bull <11'"»'°" competitions. 
creasc in periorm.nee. company and a -headlight« on" wurmnp - 
¥■ 
truvel'. on the fly. with points! The twelve division winners go, hjfieiais satd. 
,lght. 
'>,“,V 7 »S ?1 i> *A 
.iihincted lur e a c h 
f i x a the b a l l ,with both parents, to the Oranpej 
, 
seven 
Falcon 
mmicls 
«dil 
J}f D ,»u«T roM.nANV 
n/, m re ht or Id , of a ten- Bowl In Miami. Fla., for the Na 
A n o th e r R e c o rd 
up !0 , 
ttne of rTOmy and eron 
. J 
{-..••• •*& 
.. 
(tr line 
' 
„ o 
n 
a l 
FmaU dormi, the annua M o n ,h fo r D o d g e 
omical family cars. High lights 
wunwdM m j»« 
When they register, boys re- N FL Play-Off Game. Then all 
()RANGF: _ 
n . 
Harris, for 1969 include an optional 220- A>it»rK» ¥l #i • 
ceive a free booklet of compe- U National finalists and their western #r8a gilllK minaSer for h.p. 302-c.i.d. V-8, a new safef> ^ 
ryi*‘stcJiiR rBt. ,r*e 
tition tips written by Green ptremi will go on ■ 
* 
Dodge care and trucks, has re-steering wheel and new ^de- ^ ^ y . ^ ^ i . ^ t f « . i 
Rav's star passer, Bart Starr, Champions 
to 
Washington, 
ted another record » a l e s marker lights. 
i-ub s«Dt. tb. 23 w, Oct r, 
^ ^ 
month for Dodge dealers in the 
¡12 western states. 
Louis Cardinal’s kicking leader, » ¡n c0 |n-M erC U ry 
Harns said that for the area 
Jim Bakken. The booklet in-; 
1 Q . ? 
car sales were up 32.1 per cent 
eludes exercises for better phy- Salts < JVBf 
IV O / 
for the momh of August 1988 
sical fitness oriented to boys of; 
lnroln.Mercury dealers 
do- over the same month in 1967. 
PP& K ’s competition ages 
d ri 
Truck sales for the saim- pe- 
Eighteen 
trophies 
will 
be “ ve r^ 
^ 
ricxl reflecM an in m M t of 27.8 


awarded 
locally 
by 
Norman 
^ 
for the s me month last P®1* cenl* lota^ units were m* 
Ford. Gold trophies go to first ' 1 * 
. M77« 
creased almost 2,500, he repor- 
place winners, silver to second V® r 
4'L 


HOME & OFFICE DESKS 


WALNUT — M AHOGANY — MAPLE 


LARGE SELECTION OF STYLESI 


See Them a t . .V 
GIST’S FURNITURE 


400 P O M O N A MALL W IST • D O W N T O W N 


SPECIAL PURCHASE 


Maa 
For# 
Chav. 
Pl*m, 
Matt OtMr Car« SI* R* 
SHOCK 
ABSORBERS 
4 « 
Far 
Sota» 
kmoethttr 
Driving 
IA. 
I *5 VtitM 


Day 3 ovat F“ — » 
— 
'I 
the Atlanta Falcon’s punting spe- D.C. 
cialist Billy Lothridge, and St. 


creased almost 2,500, he repor 
Q/| 
and bronze to third, with first] Deliveries of the ^orM nm al L 
place winners goin* on for fur- including Mark III and Monttgo 
5wr competition in zone ton-again ¡ed the — 
^ 
tests, 


ROVER s o o o T C 


W o r ld 's Safest C a r 
DltRlAY 4 DtÂONSTRATlOWf 


FRANK WHITE IMPORTS 


H 
O 
? 
W 
. 
H a l t 
A v a . 
Daman« 
418*71 it 


respectively. Continental 
sales 
were 2,506, and deliveries of the 
new intermediate were 9,980 
Mercury and Cougar sales in 
August were 8,936 and 8,645 re 
spectively. 
Division sales during August 
2141 were 12,743 compared to 
13.168 in the same period 
of 
1967. 
Sales since Jan. 1 total a5,- 
696, a gain of 13 per cent over 
sales of 251,844 during the first, 
eight months of last year. 


P 
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Ford’s 
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OFFICIAL 
COMPETITION 


BUY NO W ! 


During O ur Annual 
CLEAN-UP 
SALE! 


W e re clearing out all the '68 Chevy can and 


trucks to make room for the 1969 models. 


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937 W. MISSION 
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POMONA 
NA. 2-2226 


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# • 4 4 4 4 4 
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13.21 
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. 14.56 
13.97 
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• • • 4 4 4 « 


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44 4 4 4 


1.92 


2.06 


2.19 


2.35 


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2.36 


2 54 


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OPEN W EEK N lTEt ’TIL ti »AT. ’TIL »; »UN. 11 T 0 4 
NA 4-4VO 
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Monday thru Soturday 
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AU PRICil DIUS TAXIS A OLO TIRE l«OM YOU* CAR 


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785 W . MISSION 
622-4133 
POMONA 


Theresions 
Schedule 
Meeting w 


Îrogtcss-Bullctm 
omen an 


The Theresians of America 
will convene for a three-day 
national 
conference 
at 
the 
Statler-Hilton Hotel in Los An­ 
geles. 
“Communications” is t h e 
theme for the meeting which 
will begin on Oct. 25 and con­ 
tinue until Oct. 27. 
The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edward 
T. O’Meara, national director 
of the Society for the Propa­ 
gation of the Faith, and Sister 
Mary Grace Davis, clinical 
psychologist from Cincinnati, 
Ohio, will speak. 
The Theresians were found­ 
ed by the Rt. Rev. Msgr. El- 
wood C. Voss in 1961 as an 
organization of lay women 
wo m e n which assists the 
church. 


Monday Evening, September 23, 1968 
d lit eir activities 


Page 8, Sec. 1 


ASK DR. BROTHERS 
Couple Disagrees 


By DR. JOYCE BROTHERS 


Repairing Glass 
A cracked pane of glass can 
be temporarily held together 
and weather - proofed with a 
coat of fresh white shellac on 
the inside. Vision won’t be 
obstructed and breezes and 
rain will be kept out until the 
pane is replaced. 


MANDRELL-MclNTURF 


Wed in Local Church 


for those who 
PERSPIRE 
HEAVILY 


ft 
* • 
V 


^/¡itcAiurv 
Anti-Perspirani 


After a honeymoon in Palm 
Springs, Mr. and Mrs. Paul 
Harold Mandrell will reside 
at 10352 Ramona Ave,, Mont­ 
clair. 
The newlyweds were mar­ 
ried at St. Paul’s Episcopal 
Church. The Rev. Byron Mc- 
Kaig officiated at the dou­ 
ble-ring ceremony. 
The bride is the f o r m e r 
Retha Mae Mclnturf, daugh­ 
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 
L. Mclnturf, 897 Hyde Ave. 
She was escorted to the al­ 
tar by her father. She wore 
a floor-length gown of crepe 
with a chiffon overlay and 
a crepe organza train. Her 
illusion veil was held by a 
headpiece of pearls and lace. 
She 
carried 
a 
cascade 
of 
white carnations and b a b y 
roses. 
The groom is the son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Paul E. Mandrell, 
1479 Tulare Way, Upland. 
Mrs. Jim Mellard was ma­ 
tron 
of honor. 
Bridesmaids 
were Miss Robyn Rammey, 
Miss Laura Parisi and Miss 
Cindy 
Meek. 
C h r i s t i n e 
Workman was flower girl. 
Best 
man 
was 
Jerome 
James Mandrell and ushers 
were Bob 
Mandrell, 
Harold 
! Morin and Michael Huber. 
George Picardi was soloist. 
A reception at the church fol­ 
lowed the evening wedding. 


A new antiperspirant that really 
works! Solves underarm prob­ 
lems for many who had de­ 
sp aired o f e ffe c tiv e h elp . 
Mitchum Anti-Perspirant keeps 
underarms absolutely dry for 
thousands of grateful user*. 
Positive action coupled with 
complete gentleness to normal 
skin and clothing is made pos­ 
sible by a new type of formula 
produced by\he trustworthy 5 5- 
year-old Mitchum laboratories. 
ÎFully effectiveV* * deodorant, 


Chapter 


To Meet 


Thursday 


DEAR DR. BROTHERS: My husband and I both work, but because bis 
hours are longer and more irregular. I do most of the housework. The big prob­ 
lem is that we both have very different ideas about neatness and orderliness. 
M y husband is the kind of person who likes everything to be kept in its place; a 
dirty ashtray or an overflowing wastebasket drives him wild. 
Im not nearly 


as fussy and feel more com- 
nor personality differences in 
annoy and harass 
lortable with a little clutter; 
1 like to leave my sewing ma­ 
terials out and my painting 
supplies all set up. 
We are 
always arguing about 
this. 
-M rs. J.O’M. 


The Claremont Chapter of 
the City of Hope will meet at 
the home of Mrs. Jean Sami- 
da, 699 S. College Ave., Clare- 
Z 
. c 
T 
M 
Satisfaction I mon,, a, » p.m. on Thursday 
gu^amecd. 
it to .tore 
P'a"s <°r a 
sale W,U 
for immediate cash refund. 
Trade your perspiration worries 
for luxurious underarm dry­ 
ness. Get the positive protection 
of Mitchum Anti-Perspirant. 
Liquid or cream. 
90-day supply. $3.00 
Available at Your Favorite 
Drug or Toiletry Counter 


be discussed. Mis. Katherine 
Wilson, president, will preside 
at the meeting. 
Women interested in assist­ 
ing the City of Hope are in­ 
vited to attend the chapter 
meeting. For transportation, 
intersted persons may con­ 
tact Mrs. Samida. 


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DEAR MRS. O’M.: To the 
impartial 
observer, 
the 
sources of disagreement be­ 
tween a married couple may 
seem obvious and the solu­ 
tion would seem to be for 
you both to compromise: you 
should make more of an ef­ 
fort at neatness; and y o u r 
husband should learn to be 
more tolerant of 
a certain 
amount of disorder. 
But beneath 
the 
surface, 
the resolution may not be so 
simply arrived at. F o r one 
thing, as Dr. Edmund Berg- 
ler observes, 
an 
apparently 
minor aspect of a spouse’s 
behavior may be blown up to 
be a symbol of the partner’s 
failings 
in 
all 
areas 
a n d 
made into a focal point for 
complaint and c r i t i c i s m . 
Fights over one problem, such 
as different concepts of neat­ 
ness, may in reality originate 
from deeper, more significant 
conflicts between husband and 
wife, such as disagreement 
over 
the 
nature 
of 
each 
spouse’s marital role and re­ 
sponsibilities. 
It may also be that each 
of you capitalize on these mi- 


order to 
each other. You may purpose­ 
ly let clutter accumulate and 
dust pile up in order to re­ 
proach or punish your hus­ 
band. He, in turn, may ag­ 
gravate 
your 
housekeeping 
problems by willfully refusing 
to assist you with the work, 
making it more difficult for 
you to keep your home in the 
condition he demands. When 
you fail, he is able to repri­ 
mand and criticize you. 


Adv»rtla«m»nt* 


(DuVal photo) 


MR. AN D MRS. PAUL HAROLD MANDRELL 


Nurses Set 
Workshop 
On Saturday 


Comincj 
uents 


TUESDAY 


CLAREMONT LEAGUE of 
Women Voters, home of Mrs. 
Winfield Foster, 4161 Via Pa­ 
dova, Claremont, 10 a.m. to 1 
p.m. 
WOMEN’S S O C I E T Y of 
Christina 
Service, Montclair 
United Methodist Church, 10 
a.m. 
POMONA VALLEY Golden 
Age 
Club, 
Knights 
of 
Co­ 
lumbus Hall, 1472 W. H o l t 
Ave., 11 a.m. 
A M E R I C A N BAPTIST 
Women of Bethany 
Baptist 
Church, lasagne dinner, 6:30 
p.m. 
CHAFFEY 
COMMUNITY 
Art Association, honoring Yo- 
sitaka Korogi at home of Mr. 
and Mrs. Robert Seldon, 119 
E. Princeton St., Ontario, 7:30 
p.m. 
PARK 
AVENUE 
Hospital 
Auxiliary, hospital d i n i n g 
room, 7:30 p.m. 
WOMAN’S Auxiliary of the 
Pomona Postal Employes of 
Post Office 2395, Lytton Sav­ 
ings and Loan, 7:M p.m. 


H E L I O T R O P E Rebe- 
kah Lodge, Knights of Pythi­ 
as Hall, 239 E. Holt Ave., 8 
p.m. 
POMONA CHAPTER of the 
City of Hope, 1741 Yorba Dr., 
8 p.m. 
POMONA VALLEY Parents 
Without Partners, adult dis­ 
cussion, 325 Stillman, Apt. C, 
Upland, 8 p.m. 
R O Y A L NEIGHBORS of 
America, 1022 W. 2nd St., 8 
p.m. 
SWEET ADELINES, Clare­ 
mont Methodist Church, Foot­ 
hill Boulevard and Yale Ave­ 
nue, 8 p.m. 
VETERANS OF FOREIGN 
Wars Auxiliary, VFW Hall, 8 
p.m. 


The School Nurse Section of 
the California Nurses’ Associ­ 
ation will sponsor a workshop 
at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in 
Los Angeles at 9:15 a.m. on 
Saturday. 
“ Let’s Tell It Like It Is” 
is the theme of the day-long 
session planned to give t h e 
school nurse professional help, 
news of legislation affecting 
the profession, credential in­ 
formation and some of the le­ 
gal aspects of this kind of pa­ 
tient care. 
The workshop is open to all 
school nurses, members and 
non - members of the CNA. 
Registration fee includes a 
a luncheon at noon. 
For additional information, 
interested persons may con­ 
tact the CNA’s Los Angeles 
office, 1543 W. Olympic Blvd. 


THE TWO of you, probably 
because of different e a r l y 
t r a i n i n g and experiences, 
have 
developed 
antithetical 
attitudes toward neatness and 
order. You resist the restric­ 
tions of confining your belong­ 
ings to specific places, feel­ 
ing more comfortable to have 
your home obviously l o o k 
“lived in.” Your husband, be­ 
ing more cautious and 
ap­ 
preciative of neatness, may 
feel threatened by the loss 
of control over one’s environ­ 
ment that a messy room can 
represent. But personality dif­ 
ferences of this sort are not 
irreconcilable, provided 
they 
are handled with a modicum 
of affection and good-natured 
tolerance. Only when t h e r e 
are deeper conflicts within a 
marriage 
are 
these 
differ­ 
ences likely to balloon into 
major importance. 
Both of you should try to 
discover the hidden, more sig­ 
nificant meanings that 
your 
fights over neatness express. 
Your resistance of the role of 
housekeeper and 
resentment 
of shouldering the w h o l e 
burden may contribute to your 
lack of interest in keeping the 
house relatively neat. 
Y o u 
might consider the possibility 
of outside domestic help or 
further reliance on services 
such as professional laundry- 
ing to relieve the pressure on 
you, if you can afford it. 


high standards for yourself, 
which are impossible to ful­ 
fill and, consequently, tend to 
be ignored completely. An ov­ 
erly 
compulsive 
housewife- 
mother may have made you 
react 
strongly 
against 
all 
housework, while having suc­ 
cessfully convinced you that 
spotless perfection Is the only 
worthwhile goal. 
Hopefully, you and y o u r 
husband will be able to recog­ 
nize some of the basic points 
of dissension that contribute 
to your frequent fighting. 


None of us are perfect. But 
to find out how honest you 
really are, send a stamped, 
self - addressed envelope and 
a dime to Dr. Joyce Brothers 
and ask for her test, “ How 
Honest Are You?” 


Lemons 
For Beauty 


To keep ycur ikin clear and 
fair you need the natural 
cleansing and bleaching prop­ 
erties of lemon. Ask your 
druggist for a bottle of lemon 
Jelvyn, the latest type skin 
freshener that beautiful wo­ 
men throughout the world 
are now using. Lemon Jelvyn 
braces and conditions 
the 
skin to a beautiful new clar­ 
ity and fine grained texture; 
its excellent toning proper­ 
ties help stimulate the sur­ 
face ceils, clear out stub­ 
born, b»mish-inducing a n d 
pore-éloaglng particles and 
smootnjthe skin to beautiful 
clarity. Lemon Jelvyn is ideal 
for quick complexion cleans­ 
ing and two capfuls In your 
final shampoo rinse will give 
a sparkling shine to your 
hair. Lemon Jelvyn is a must 
for complexion beauty. 


YOUR HUSBAND may have 
an unrealistic idea of t h e 
amount of time required for 
housework, especially if he 
came from a home in which 
mother didn’t work and ca­ 
tered to her sons. And you 
may be setting ridiculously 


HEART OF THE MALL— D O W N T O W N P O M O N A 


FINAL WEEK! 
FASHION 
FABRIC 
BONANZA 


Removing Stains 


To remove stains from mar­ 
ble tabletops wash them then 
wipe with a solution of %*cup 
chlorine bleach to each gallon 
of warm water. Rmse, If stub­ 
born, keep wet 5 minutes and 
repeat treatment if necessary. 


Women Voters 
Schedule Meet 
The Claremont 
League of 
Women Voters will hold a pro­ 
gram and luncheon for pros­ 
pective members T u e s d a y 
from 10 to 1 p.m. at the homo 
of Mrs. Winfield Foster, 4161 
Via Padova, Claremont. 
Any woman interested in 
learning about league activi­ 
ties and membership should 
contact Mrs. Robert Pastor or 
Mrs. John Rae. 


shop 
at 
home 


call us 


23% -34% cff 
custom-made 
draperies 


FASHION BREAKTHROUGH 
2.29 yard 


reg. 2.99—3.49 yd. 


Hundreds and 
Hundreds of Yards 


of Fine Dress, 
Sportswear and 


Suit Fabrics 
Are Featured 


Dryaoo « 


New Way To Be 
Suddenly Slim 


Superb quality ray­ 
ons and cottons from 
one of the country's 
outstanding mills: 
At Greatly 


Reduced Prices! 


See A Com plete D em onstration at 


P o m o n a V a lle y 's O ldest M a y t a g D ealer 


Los Angeles: — Are you a science process and can- 


w om an whose figure is on not give or sag. Its sur- 
the good side but might rounded by a slimming 
look perfect? You’ll be 
thrilled by the new easy 
way science has discov­ 
ered for you to become 
Suddenly Slim and yet 
completely comfortable. 
If you're more than 15 
bUnd 
a ,iewpower 
pounds overweigh , yiv ncj consisting of nylon, 
your waistline is large/ 
than 32 inches, then this 
yHur 
w eight problem faln^ 
within this range, then - 
you can realize a new, 


kl antique 
six colors. 


rea 3 49 
2.29 yd. 


action border. A feather- 
stitched panel down each 
side of this girdle will 
contour your hips if they 
are a problem. 
The girdle itself is of a 
wonder” Lycra spandex 


Paradis, t e x t u r e d 
antique satin, seven 
decorator colors. 
SAVE 


req 3 49 
2.29 yd. 


Bankers heavy linen 
weave in five colors. 
50% to 75% 


of nylon, 
;x. It is 
comfortable, but has 


ICl CUilM j l 111^ *JI IlVlvlIlf 
poetate and spandex. It is 
reg. 2 
2.29 yd. 


idea is not ior you. If yhpr 
surh slimming strength, 


linoother figure today, 
without diet or exercise. 
Suddenly Slim is an all- 
new kind of 4-oz. girdle 


it gives your figure ev cry« 
thing that’s possible with 
a foundation. 
"Suddenly Slim,” in 
both girdle and pantv 
versions, is the peak 
achievement of the Cali- 


P . b b l . s versatile 
boucle in five colors. 


peg. 2.59 2.23 >d. 


i Easy-cort cottons, polished cottons, dotted 


swiss, no-iron voiles, rich rayons, polyester 


blends, glamorous lace, pure Irish linens, 


bonded orlon knits, 1 0 0 % w o o l s , wool 


blends. 
Many permanent-press fabrics in­ 


cluded. 


constructed of science 
fornia designer-genius, 
fibers. One startling inno- 
Olga. They are available 
vation is the sheer nylon 
at 
front panel. This is per­ 
manently stiffened by a 


For store - to • your- 
door 
s.rvic., cal l 
your nearest toll-free 
May Co. There's no 
charge or obhqation. 
may co custom 
fabrics 11 


Orig. 99c to 3.50 a yard 50 € to 1,44 


Paihion fabric Cantar—towar la*»al 


Buffums* Foundation 
Department, P o m o n a , 
623-4321. 


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O 
O 


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may co. »an bornraduto; 


tu 4 Sill 


SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK 


YOU'RE INVITED TO OUR 


C Y A r n Service 
£ # % W W Station 
GRAND & BONITA - LA VERNE 


INFORMATION ON: 
' L 
★ Paid Training 
/ 
★ Financing 
★ Locations 


Pan Am Sponsors 
New Travel Club 


The Pan 
American World 


Airways is taking the “alone” 


out of traveling with its New 


Horizons Club 
for traveling 


girls. 
The club enables girls who 
like to travel to get together 
with other girls for the pur­ 
pose 
of 
companionship 
and 
friendship. 
A file is kept of all pertinent 
information about the m em ­ 
bers of this exclusive club for 
women only. The club knows 
when and where the members 
want to travel. By becoming a 
member, 
you 
can 
obtain 
nam es of other girls with the 
sam e vacation time and des­ 
tination and plan your vaca­ 
tion together. 


There are now over 20,000 
m em bers in over 30 foreign 
countries. If you want to trav­ 
el alone, but don’t want to 
sightsee or shop by yourself, 
you can still obtain nam es of 
the NHC mem bers 
in those 
countries and plan to visit and 
plan these activities together. 
There’s a quarterly newslet­ 
ter to all NHC members with 
helpful hints on where, when 
and how to travel; what ward­ 
robe to carry; sights to see, 
and inside tips on where and 
how to shop. 
Write to New Horizons Club, 
Pan American Airways, Wom­ 
en’s Dept., Pan Am Building, 
New York, N.Y., 
10017, 
for 
further information about the 
club. 


Cal State 
Offers Topic 
Discussions 


A group of professionals has 
been gathered by California 
State College, Los Angeles, to 
lead 
group 
discussions 
on 
such topics as parent-child re­ 
lationships, marital problems 
and mental illness in private 
homes 
throughout 
Southern 
California beginning in Octo­ 
ber. 
Persons wishing to join a 
group 
discussion, 
f o r m 
a 
group, or offer a home for 
such a discussion should con­ 
tact the Office of Special Pro­ 
grams 
at 
Cal 
State 
L.A. 
Groups will be limited to 12 
adults each and will m eet for 
10 weeks. 
The group discussions will 
begin on Oct. 8. 


IN AFRICA 
Hospital Gets Help 


SAN FRANCISCO 
— Not 
every lady would be delighted 
to be given a dental chair. Not 
many have served as travel­ 
ing companion of an African 
gorilla. 


Madame 
R h e n a 
Eckert- 
Schweitzer, daughter of the 
late 
Dr. 
Albert 
Schweitzer, 
has done both. 
Administrator 
for 
t h r e e 
years since her father’s death 
of the hospital he established 
at Lambarene, Gabon, Mad­ 
ame 
Eckert - Schweitzer 
re­ 
cently accepted in San Fran­ 
cisco a dental chair for a new 
clinic there. 
The streamlined chair for 
children was presented by Te- 
or H. Atkinson, president of 
he American Pedodontic Pro- 
lucts Corp., Napa, Calif. 
“There are only two den- 
ists in all of Gabon,” Mad- 
ime 
Fckert-Schweitzer said, 
‘and they are both in big 
rities on the coast.” 
Gabon has a population of 
more than 500,000. 
The 475-bed Dr. A 1 be r t 
schweitzer Hospital has five 
doctors, each of a different 
nationality. They pmch-hit as 
dentists to the extent of fill­ 
ing and extracting teeth. 
They 
get 
occasional 
help 
from 
visiting 
dentists. 
But 
now the hospital has a den­ 
tist, a new arriv al who plans 
to stay two or three years, 
M adam e 
E ckert-Ssehw eitzer 


said. 
He is Dr. H orst-G unther Hil- 
gers, who gave up a private 
practice in D üsseldorf, G er­ 
m any, for the A frican mis­ 
sion. 
While perform ing dentistry 
of all kinds, he will train G a­ 
bonese technicians and con­ 
duct 
research 
on 
children s 
dental 
problem s. 
C hildren’s 
teeth are deteriorating badly. 
M adam e 
E ck ert - Schw eitzer 
said, while their e ld ers’ teeth 
are extraordinarily good. 
She said doctors at the hos­ 
pital performed 1.650 opera­ 
tions in their two-table surgi­ 
cal theater last year. The sur­ 
geons work from 8 a.m . to 6 
p.m . in two team s. One red 
letter day 
they 
repaired 
a 
record 27 hernias. 
M adam e 
Eckert-Schweitzer 
started w ork for her father in 
1958. Now she calls herself a 
“ delegate from L am barene.” 
She 
cam e 
to 
the 
United 
States she said, to deliver a 
gorilla 
to the 
world-famous 
zoo in San Diego. 


m 
••• 


HOME & OFFICE DESKS 


W ALNUT — M A H O G A N Y — MAPLE 


LARGE SELECTION OF STYLESI 


S e e Them a t . . . 
C y 
GIST'S FURNITUttE 


4 0 0 Pomona M all W est — Downtown 


FAIR TIME SPECIAL 


Lou Pearsalls Factory Outlet 


1 7 5 6 S o . G a r e y — 
P o m o n a — 
6 2 9 - 2 5 5 5 


up to 50% and more on New Fall 


Fashions. Coats — untrimmed and fur 


trimmed. Wool Knits — Suits and 


Costumes. 
(Alw ays) 


r 
Blouse and Skirt Ensemble. Cotton or 


r r c c 
Acetate Shifts with each purchase. 


(Fair O nly) 
($20.00 minimum). 


New Hours During Fair mon. !°J 
00 


SAT. 


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4 


NEEDED GIFT — Rheno Eckert-Schweitzer relaxe* in the 
new dentist chair, a gift which she will take to the hospital 
established by her father, Dr. Albert Schweitzer, in Africa. 


Speaking engagements and 
other comm itm ents will keep 
her in this country and Eur­ 
ope until the end of the year. 
Then she plans to return to 
Africa. 
Madame 
Eckert-Schweitzer 
told of a dream going far be­ 
yond the new dental chair. 
Most of the hospital's build­ 
ings are 40 y ears old. built 
by 
Dr. 
Schw eitzer 
him self, 


she said. They have no air 
conditioning, no running wa­ 
ter. 
She wants to replace them 
with a modem hospital that 
will cost an estimated $2 m il­ 
lion. Her “ secret” target date 
for completion of the project, 
for which donations will have 
to be raised, is 1975. That's 
the hundredth anniversary of 
her father’s birth. 


C ra JL 


INTER-COMMUNITY 
HOSPITAL OF COVINA 
PHILIP—To Mr. and Mrs. 
Bruce Philip, 7074 Linda Lane, 
La Verne, a daughter, Kimber­ 
ly Marie, bom Sept. 8. 
ROGER—To Mr. and Mrs. 
Jam es Rogers, 1776 Deerflats, 
San Dimas, a daughter, Ja­ 
mie Lvnn, bom Sept. 11. 
POMONA VALLEY 
COMMUNITY HOSPITAL: 
DOTSON—To Mr. and Mrs. 
Kenneth Jam es Dotson, 5184 
Bandera, Space 2, Montclair, 
a daughter, Amanda 
Lee, 8 


lbs., 7 oz., bom Sept. 15. 
BO M AR-To Mr. and Mrs. 
Jerry Lee Bomar, 930 E. 7th 
St., Pomona, a son, Daniel 
Lee, 7 lbs., 14 oz., bom Sept. 
15. 
NICOL — To Mr. and Mrs. 
William 
Henry 
Nicol, 
9530 
Camulos, Montclair, a 
s o n , 
David Nathan, 7 lbs., 8 oz., 
bom Sept. 15. 
HUNT—To Mr. and Mr s . 
Jam es Edward Hunt, 750 W. 
San Jose, Apt. V3, Claremont, 
a daughter, Lara Jean, 7 lbs., 
8 oz., bom Sept. 15. 


ROSE HILLS 
comfort 
is nearby 


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cart The serenity of incomparable beauty...the synv 
pathet c understanding of experienced counselors... 
the convenience of every possible service in one placet 
Mortuary, Cemetery, Chapels, Flower Shops, Mauso­ 
leums, Crematory, Columbarium. At time of need, call 
Rose Hills fir s t...so secluded, yet conveniently nearby. 


n r \ f - r - I III I f 
M U 3900 Workman Mill Road 
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Bom Free by Polrette shapes your figure... 
it’s your mo6t important fashion this fall 


The new fashion silhouettes for fall reveal more of your figure. 


Poirette's Born Free shapemakers are designed to control curves 


by gently shaping, naturally and comfortably. It's done with 


fine etasticized nylon tricot and nylon and Lycra’ spandex 


powernet. And, when you wear them, they'll make a 


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with low back, soft nylon Crepeset cups, lace- 


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U .N . With brief leg, 11.0*. Foundations 


Page 10, Sec. 1 
Progress-Bulletin, Pomona, CalSf. 
Monday |v*nlng, Sopt. 23, 1968 
BUGS BUNNY 


AS THE SAVING GOES: 
"THE BIGGER THEY 
ARE, THE HARDER THEY 


1:30 


TELEVISION LISTINGS 


M O N D A Y 


SEPT E M BE R 23 


E V E N I N G 


9:30 


1:00 0 Tha Big B u rr (€) (60) J«ny 
Dunphy. 
8 


Huntley-Brinkley Report (C) (30) 
Steve Allen Show: 
(C) 
(90) | 
Comedian Shelley Berman, singer 
Helen Reddy, the comedy team of 
Vk Grecco and Fred Willard, and 
Professor Julius Sumner Miller ere 
tonight’s guests. (R) 
o 
Six O’Clock Movie: "The Desert 
Fox" (adventure) '51-James Mason,! 
Sir Cedne Hardwicke. Inssica Tandy,; 
Luther Adler, George Macreedy, 
©Batm an: (O (30) "Smack In 
the Middle,” The demented prince 
of puzzles holds Robin hostage to 
lure Batman into a trap. 
© W h a t’s New? "Concord.” Tony 
Saletan visits the historical city of 
Concord during the Revolutionary 
period. 
Amor Sublime 
KNBC News Service (C) (60) 
The Groovy Show (C) (30) 
I Love Lucy (30) 
McHale’s Navy (30) 
The Perceptive Parent: 
"How 
the Child Sees Himself.” Hostess 
Betty Smith talks with a panel 
about the importance of a child’* 
sclf-concept. 
©Noticiero 34 (C) 
7:00 0 $9 8)C8S Evening New* <C> 
(30) Waiter Cronkite 
0 
F Troop: (C) (30) "from Karate 
With Love " When F Troop provides 
a refuge for a beautiful Japanese 
maiden, it faces the wrath of a 
free-swinging 
Karate killer. 
( D Password: (C) (30) Joan Fon­ 
taine and Jack Jonea are this week’s 
celebrity players 
© Gilligan’s Island (O (30) 
© T h e American Stage: "Always 
New.” Dr. Irwin Swerdlow looks at 
the preservation of American dra 
matic heritage on the stages of the 
Sixties. 
7:30 0 29 (8 NEW SEASON Gunsmoke: 
(C) (60) Marshal Dillon faces trouble 
from a former shentf-fnend of his 
when the latter arnves in Dodge i 
City with his son for a confronts 
tion with a one-time outlaw about 
tobe released from pr son. lame« 
Arness, 
MHburn 
Stone 
Amanda 
Blake. Ken Curtis, Buck Taylor and 
61enn Strange star. Morgan Wood 
ward plays Grant Lyie, Robert Pine 
portrays his son and Charlotte Con­ 
sume appears as Iris. 
0 1 Dream of Jeennic (C) (30) 
"Jeannie and the Wild Pipchichs” 
Strength • inducing 
cookies 
from 
Joannie’s mother get top priority 
from NASA, but Tony's attempt to 
recreate the reap« produces a sub 
stitute eausmg total loss of inhi­ 
bitions. Reta Shaw guests as Col* 
°nel Finch. 
g P 1 
0 Lost M Spec* (Cl (901 "The MfcOO 0 29 
Prisoners of Space ” The Robinsons 
ara tried by a mysterious tribunal 
for committing space crimes. 
O IT 
NEW SEASON The Avan 
gar* (€ 
(60) "Gama.” Bnstow, 
who has made his fortune as a era 
ator of children's game«, now de 
vises wry special games designed 
to do away with six members— in 
duding John Staed— of a World 
War II military tribunal that con 
vtcted him as a black marketeer at 
the and of the war. Patrick Macnee 
and Linda Thorson star. Peter Jeff 
rty guests 
Richard Hams wrote 
the script. 
O Million % Movie: (C) "The Re­ 
volt of Mamio Stover (drama) '56 
— Jane RusseH, Richard Egan, Joan 
Leslie. 
Q Truth or Consequences: (C) (30) 
Bob Barker hosts 
Pwry Mason (601 
Making Things Grow: (€) “Qua* 
tions and Anowws ” Thalassa grap 
plet with many problems described 
by her viewers. The Plant Lady pays 
particular attention to tips the audi 
•nee missed on the first 12 pro 
grams 
© Felipe Sondtee 


1 00 O * * * * * * Martin Laugh In: (C) 
(60) 
Eva Arden guests. 
Musical 
numbers include a Russian strip* 
teas« tuna by Miss Arden and the 
regulars plus a melodic salute to 
the telephone company by the an 
tire cast. Dan and Dick introduce 
the Discovery of the Week— the 
choir 
director 
of 
the 
Beautiful 
Downtown Burbank Glee Club. 
Hazol (C) (30) 
Rainbow Quest: Calypso is the 


tacuiar dances of Santa Ana do 
Petitlan highlight tonight’s show. 
Q ® G £ ) R * y t o n Place: (C) (301 
Carolyn cannot accept her parents’ 
break-up; Tom intercedes in Jill's 
baby’s custody case; Steven tells 
Susan that Tom wants a divorce. 
m Mem Griffin (C) (90) 
© W orld of Women (C) (30) 
© T V Musical Ossart 
*0 0 0 5$ 8 PREMIERE 
Mayberry 
RFD: (C) (30) Andy Griffith and Don 
Knotts are special guest stars as 
Andy marries his long time girl­ 
friend, Helen (Aneta Corsaut). Best 
man Barney is more nervous at the 
wedding 
than 
bridegroom 
Andy. 
After the newlyweds leave on their 
honeymoon, Aunt Bee must decide 
whether to move to the farm of 
widower Sam Jones (Ken Berry) to 
keep house for him and his son 
Mike (Buddy Foster), or to go away 
from Mayberry. 
0 
5 3 (6 Monday Night at the 
Movies: (C) ’The Art of Love” 
(comedy) ’65 — Dick Van Dyke, 
James Garner, Elke Sommer, Angie 
Dickinson, 
Ethel 
Merman, 
Carl 
Reiner. Paul Sloan is an American 
•itist who can’t sell a painting 
and Casey is an American author 
who can't sell 
what he wrries. 
Casey concocts a 
phony suicide 
scheme for Paul, which he hopes 
will boost the value of the artist’s 
paintings. 
O Here Come the Stars: (C) (60) 
George Jessel sets Mickey Rooney 
up for a "roast.” Participating are 
Professor Irwin Corey, Jim Backus, 
Paul 
Gilbert, 
Woody 
Woodbury, 
Kathryn Grayson and others. 
O ® 
® 
PREMIERE 
The 
Out 
casts: (C) 
(60) Earl Corey and 
Jemal David meet while compet­ 
ing 
a 
Fourth 
of 
July 
shooting 
contest, in which they tie for first 
place Corey, in need of money to 
buy a horse, reluctantly consents 
to help Jemal Devid capture a mur­ 
derer, Henderscn. who is working 
as a cook for a cavalry detachment 
guarding a gold shipment Don Mur­ 
ray and 
Otis Young 
star. Slim 
Pickens and Burr De Benriing guest. 
© Holiday: (C) (30) "Puerto Val­ 
eria the Hard Way." (R) 
© Ballot Power: Community af­ 
fairs newsmen Leo McElroy talks 
with 
backers 
and 
opponents of 
Proposition No 9 
8 


La Bruja Maldfta 
39 QP NEW 
SEASON 
Family 
Affair: (C) (30) At the urging of a 
sophisticated school chum, Buffy 
announces she’s tired 
of 
being 
treated like a baby and wants her 
own key She yearns tor less super­ 
vision at home— till she finds the 
drawbacks involved. Brian Keith, Se­ 
bastian Cabot. Kathy Garver, Amssa 
Jones and Johnnie Whitaker star. 
Susan Benjamin guests. 
Q News: (C) (30) Larry Burrell. 
© T h e Rogues (60) 
© NET Journal: ’lettvin vs. Leary " 
A 
psychedelic 
showdown 
debate 
complete with incense end light 
shows. (R) 


NEW 
SEASON 
Caref 
Remta Musical 


Burnett: (C) (60) Km Nabors joins 
the comedy and-music hi jinks of 
tha second 
season 
premiere 
of 
Carol's show. Carol Burnett stars, 
with Alice Ghostley, lyfe Waggon*. 
Vicki Lawrence, Harvey Korman and 
the Ernest Flatt dancers also ap­ 
pearing 
George Putnam New« (C) (60) 
IB®**#----- “ 
alley: <C) (60) 
8 
Vail 
NEW SEASON The Big 
‘In Silent Battle 
Ifajtr Jonathan Elliot, a famous 
war hero, saves the lives of Vic­ 
toria and Audra Barkley after an 
accident. Invited by Victoria to stay 
at the ranch while on a mission 
in the area, Elliot moves in with 
hw orderly, who knows the major 
is a compulsive murderer and uses 
It to hold his superior m bondage. 
Inflamed by drink, Elliot turns on 
Audra, and only Victoria in a wheel­ 
chair, stands between the murderer 
and her daughter 
Secret Agent (60) 
Jack Latham News (C) (60) 
La Meiata de Cordoba (C) 
New»: (O (301 Bill Johns. 
Washington in Review (O 
Donen 
llA O 0 Eleven O D o d Report: (C) (60) 
Jerry Dunphy. 
P 
KNBC New« Servtc* (C) (30) 
Torn Brokaw. 
Alfred Hitchcock (30) 
News: (C) (30) Baxter Ward. 
Movía: (C) "Pyro” (horror) 63 
Barry Sullivan. Martha Hyer. 
Donald O'Connor ( 0 (90) 
That Show: (C) (30) Joan Rivers 
U hostess 
Soupy Sales discusses 
women’s hats with expert, Mr. John. 
© Noticiero 34 (C) 


1*301 


beat as the Hi Lander Steel Band 11:15 © D r . Thee del Junco (C) 
plays music of Trinidad. Pete See 
M r's other guect is Herbert levy. 
© Cornices y Canctones 
8:30 0 29 8 NEW SEASON Hare’s Lu­ 
cy: (C) (30) Lucy asks her broth*, 
in law 
employer, 
Harrison 
Carter 
(Gale Gordon), to give her son Craig 
(Lucy’s real son, De-i Am« Jr.) 
and his musical group the »oh of 


11:30 0 Movie: 1 Accuse” (d ami) ’58 
— Jose Ferrer, Viveca Llndfors 
8 


28 TO The Tonight Show (O 
Movie: ”Samted Sisters” (dra­ 
ma) ’48— Veronica Lake, loan Caul­ 
field. 
117 3 Joey Bishop Show (O 
Movie: ‘The Big Tip-Off* (mys­ 
tery) ’56— Richard Conta, Constants 
Smith, 
playing tor a teenager’s birthday 
party. When Kim (Lucy s real daugh 12;J0 ^ ^ 
tar, Luaa), the band vocalist, suf- 
.. _ ,. 
^ 
f * s a temporary loss of voice, Lucy 12 
decides to save the job by substi 
4#r 
39 
Jeffrey Lynn, 
tuting for h * daught*. Doris Sin 
Pnscins lane 
gleton, Nancy Roth, Lew Parker, 
1:00 0 
Mom: "The legend 
Dooley” (adventure) ’59- 
Nancy Howa'd guest 
0 
Golden Veyege: (C) (30) “Four 
Wheels Thru Mexico." Jungle wild 
life, a visit with the primitive Hut 
choli Indians deep in the Sierra 
Madrt Mountains, and ths spec 


ef Tern 
Michael 
Landon, Jo Morrow. 
Speaking Frody (C) 
Community Bulletin Board 
News (C) 
Action Theatre: “Amazon Quest.' 


DAYTIME MOVIES 


1:30 O (C) 


(drama) 


Wymen. 


"Magnificent 
Obsession’' 


’54 — Rock Hudson. Jene 


O “Shaggy" (drama) 48— Robert 


Shayne “Young Man With a Hern” 


(drama) 50- Kirk Douglas. 


9:00 O -Out ef Thw World" (musical) 
'45— Eddie Brocken, V*onica Lake, 
Diana Lynn. 


12:30 © "Flight From Destiny” (drama) 
— Thomas Mitchell. ‘‘Aprd Showers” 


(musical) 48 -Ann Sothern. 


1:30 © “Hollow Triumph” (drama) 48 


— Paul Henr*d, Joan Bennett. 


4:30 0 (0 “Heft on Frfcce Bey" (ad­ 


venture) *55— Alan Ladd, 
Edward 
G Robinson. 


Q (C) ’The Fabulous Bare* Mun­ 


chausen" (drama) *62~-Milos Ke 
pecky. Jana Brajovs. 


^ ^ J O P E N DAILY 1 0 - 10; SAT. & SUN. 10-7 


m 
c 
a 
r 
^ 


ftogrcss-Bullrtîn 
J Citrus Opera Class 
Still Has Openings 
¿ 
i progrcss-BUUtnn 
ntertainm enf 


Monday Evening, Sept. 23, 1963 
Page 11, Sec. 1 


i 
A Division of the $. S. Kresge Company 


BIG WAYS TO 
SAVE AT K MART 


THESE COUPONS EFFECTIVE MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY 


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AZUSA - Citrus College still 
has openings in its opera pro­ 
duction class which will offer 
•The Maine Flute. “ My Fair 
I Lady,” and “ La Traviata” dur­ 
ing the 1968-89 academic year. 
Richard H. Kelley of El Mon­ 
te is musical director of the Cit­ 
rus 
College 
Community 
Op­ 
era Association which puts on 
the operas. The class meets 
from 7 to 10 p.m. Mondays and 
Wednesdays. 
Kelley, a music teacher at Ar­ 


royo High School in El Monte, is 
a graduate of the University of 
Southern California where he 
received 
his 
bachelor's 
and 
master’s 
degrees. 
He 
has 
coached singers in the US( op­ 
era department and served on 
the staff of the Idylwild Arts 
Foundation. 


The California Legislature of 
ficially adopted serpentine 
the state rock in 1965. 
as 


Vermont and New Hampshire 
had mountain lions until about 
1880. 


RITZ THEATRE 
Euclid at “ B” St, 
Ontario — YU. 4-9113 


Weekdays Conf. 7:00 


Sof. A Sun. Conf. 1:00 


BARBARA PARKINS 
"VAllEY OF 
THE DOLLS 


17A I. ft»« * 
t 
134* 


5 0 c 
a il seats 
5 0 c 
Op on 6i43 
Show Start* 7 :0 0 


c u m M srwooo 
“ HANG ’EM HIGH” 


JS 
A U I N AftffIN 


IE RUSSIANS 
IE COMING“ 


R u iil Vrt f:00— H«ng 9:25 


/ / 


HAS ‘NEW’ HAMLET— Actor Richard Harris, shown in cos­ 
tume when he played King Arthur in “ Camelot,” says he has 
a “ totally new concept” for playing Hamlet. 
(AP Photo) 
Richard Harris 
Has 'New' Hamlet 


// 


THE ROAD 
i i 


PROGRA 
L:g u id e 


NATIONAL GTNERAl CORPO«AtiOh 
/nN r n v WEST COAST 
V£i r U A THEATRES 


By BOB THOMAS 


H O L L Y W O O D (AP) 


Han Schell’s German version, 
plus the derivative “ Rozencranz 
n U L L i w u w u 
v n r ; 
— r 
_ 
_ 
,,, 


•There's no sense in playing a" Gu.idenstem are Dead 
on 
Hamlet unless you can do some- lhe staS<- •*» soon "> b* a f,lm >! 
thing different with it or shed 
“ But Hamlet is still one of the 
new 
light. 
Richard 
Burton’s greatest roles ever written and 
Hamlet was disgraceful; it had it deserves to be done again—if 
nothing to say. I have a totally you can bring something fresh 
new concept, something that and new to it. And I will. I have 
has never even been dreamed of been wrestling with this prob- 
before. It is going to oe sensa- lem for six years. Then one 
tiona| » 
night last year at Malibu after I 
There can be no doubt that had finished a days work on 
Richard Harris is Irish. The ‘Camelot, it came to me in a 
confirmation comes when you blinding flash, 
hear him spinning dreams about 
Harris imparted his find to a 
his playing Hamlet. Yet it ap- few writers, producers and di- 
parently is no dream. At least rectors; all were struck by the 
Paramount doesn’t think so, originality of it, he said. He 
having invested a million dol- won’t reveal what the concept 
lars so Harris can present his is. In fact, he plans to ban audi- 
own 
interpretation 
of 
the ences from preview perform- 
gloomy Dane to the London ances in London lest the secret 
stage and film audiences every- leak out. 
where. 
a key to the Harris Hamlet 
I 
Harris is a man to whom may ^ ¡n the choice of his 
nothing seems impossible. He ophelia-Faye Dunaway. Yes, 
¡decided he wanted to play King that’s right Faye Dunaway. 
Arthur in “ Camelot, 
and he 
«*Most 
Ophelias are 
weak, 
sold Warner Brothers and ( tree-w-gpy characters,” Harris re- 
tor Josh Logan on the idea 
e marked. “ Faye will be entirely 
wanted to enter the pop music 
an(j She wj|i be terrif- 
fteld, and he sold more than a 
Shg 
j 
been disuss_ 


mi!ll0,n raI I 5 , u 
lfS inr. *he play for two years—be- 
record, MacArthur Park. 
fore 
she 
did 
‘Bonnie 
and 
“ Hamlet’ seems like a more (,j . , „ 
formidable challenge. 
* 
, 
. 
' 
“ I admit it,” said the actor, 
Because both Hams and Miss 
covered with coal black for his Dunaway 
have 
film commit- 
role in “ The Molly Maguires.” 
ments that won t quit, they will 
“ An actor would be taking a be able to play “ Hamlet 
in 
terrible chance trying Hamlet London’s West End for only six 
at this particular time. David weeks beginning in March. Dur- 
Warner recently did it in Eng- ‘"8 the second week of the run, 
land, 
Burton’s 
Hamlet 
was Harris said, they will begin 
I wide y shown, and 
Laurence “ ming 
working in a studto 
Olivier’s film is still around.” 
10 to 4. 
he film version 
(Also, Christopher 
Plummer’s * l11 **’ slaKed like a movie, not 
TV effort at Klsinore. Maxim!- merely a photographed stage 
j presentation, as was Barton’s 
“ Hamlet.” 
“ I fully expect to get clob­ 
bered by the right-wing, tradi­ 
tionalist critics,” Harris admit­ 
ted. “ But those who come with 
an open mind will find some­ 
thing new and exciting.” 


CUKUONT 
VILLAGE 


IwuUrtHenaM 


624 2512 


CONT. 7:00 P.M. 
, 
“ PARENT 
TRAP” 


ALSO — 


"PRIVATE N AVY 


OF 
SGT. O FARRELL" 


ROTH COLOR 


OREN DAILY 6:45 


SAT. 5| SUN. 1 


“ DEADFALL” 


— P IU S — 


BANDOLERO’ 


S t . v . M *d u .«n 


f a y ¿><1 noway 


‘ T h o m a s Crown] 
> 
A ffa ir" 


75^0 - 10:30 


H E N R Y FONDA 
“ MADIGAN” 


I SO O N LY 
M atur« Audience* 


AGM presents An Allen Klein productiai 
.t>,mtTony Anthony 


THE STRANGER 


RETURNS 


METROCOLOR 


P IU S 2ND FEATURE 


o 
a 
n 
H 
o 
f I 


T 
H 
E 
sun 


RIVERSIDE GUIDE 


R U IIO O U X DRIVE-IN 


“ THE SW IM M ER 
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'A N Z jO ’ 


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01 ANZA 
• P O O t 
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DRIVE IN 
BU fOuH to 
5914*31 


Boo O ff!« . O p tn i 4:43 


Frank Sinatra 
“ THE 
DETECTIVE” 


— ALSO — 
“ HAMMER­ 
HEAD” 


lalh In C«l«r 


MAGNOLIA 


614-6900 
—FI«» 


SUN" 


*89-3344 


Flu» 
ADAM A E V E " 


ARLINOTON THEATRE 
649-0400 


“ ODD C O U PLE" 
Flu» 
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VAN B U R IN D RIVE-IN 
688 3460 


"STRAN GER RETU RN S" 
Flu»— "F IN K JU N G L E " 


DICK 
VAN O Y K I 


EDW ARD O. 
r RO BIN SO N IN 
C A N Y O N 
T H E A T R E * 6 9 9 - 2 3 4 5 


CANYON SHOPPING CENTER 
BONITA AVE. * SAN DIMAS 


WALT D ISN EY 'S 


"N EVER 
A 
DULL 


M OM ENT" 


w ith 


/ 
w ith Dorothy 


"S P E E D W A Y " 


w ith 


NANCY 
SINATRA 


I 
O FEN 
a 
MON.-TMURS.— 7:15 
^ 


FRI. 6 :4 S, SAT. A SUN. 12:4S 


A D M ISSIO N 
G IN E K A l 
TOO 
CHILDREN SO« 


Whila Quantitios Uaat 


p Oood Mon.-Tu»» -Wed., «o p t 2S-24-2S ■ ^ Good Mon"-T*uo#U" w • d^'sopt"^*1.24-^ 
J j ” 0 w d Mon.-Tuos-Wod., Sept 21-24-2» | 


I K-MART COUPON \ \ K MART COUPON *1 K-MART COUPON i 


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I VISCOSE TWEED 11 
6 Ft. TWEED 
11 
LADIES' 


Expert 
"M IXO LO GISTS" 


At Your Service 


Home of the famous 
Margareta Cocktail 


Cocktail Lownga Opon Dally 


Front 10 a.nt. to 11 p-*n. 
ESPIAU'S 


1S42 W . H O ll • PO M O NA 


N O T IC E 01 H E A R IN G OF 
PETITION FO R PROBATE! OF 
WILL AND FOR LETTER« 
1 I STAMUNTARY 
No. E A I* «274 
In the Suporior Court of tho Stole 
•if ( oltfornio for tho County of Loa 
Angeles 


In tho Matter of Ih* 
Fstate of 
M A R Y 
P H IL L IP S 
B R Y A N T , 
Do 
eeosod, 
NOT U E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N thot 
thi* potition of Helen Phillip» Low* 
f«>r tho 
Probate of the w ill and 
for Letter- Testamentary of t h e 
above named deceased and for the 
issuance «f I.ettore 
Te»tam«*nt»ry 
thereon to Helen PhiUipa Laws to 
Wh 
h refer* m t is Titreby made f : 
I further parttculard, will bo heard 
at 9 o’clock A ML on October II, 
|h«M. at the courtf roohr of Depart­ 
ment 
East 
" A " , J oy the 
Superior 
I 
t of the StatirQ f C a lifo rn ia for 


UNITED ARTISTS 


PP*«. 11 I1111 111 . 
Ij|i Wi : ^ 


CONTINUOUS 
7:00 P.M. 


COLUMBIA PICTURES a»d 
HORIZON PICTURES 
caster 
iwim m er 
TECHNICOLOR* ® 


HORIZON PICTURES F»w 
BurtLam 
JheSwiir 


2ND FEATURE 


m T j r r r i A 
r r D 
I ? 
X r u d i ^ v x ÈrCH j 


4177 IfMLT ItVB. 


the County 
of Pomona 


Dated Septem 


W IL I IA 
County 


io* Angele», 
City 


r 19 1968 
G SHARP 
_lerk and Clerk of 
the Superior Court of the 
State of California for the 
County of Lo» Angeles. 


Bv 
P Oardnr Deputy 


B ER G M A N N , D E N N IS 


Attorney« for PeUtioner. 
i 
213 Yale Ave 
' laremont CaUfontia 
Pub Sept 23 , 27, Oct 1, 1965. 


i f 
4 th HILARIOUS WEEK 


eaJWMOUNT fCtVhtS P O I» 
LcnmMoandWterl 
V 
are 
The Odd 
■ Coitole 


RUG 


• «A ft. by 11»/, ft 
1088 
Reg 
14 88 


W h ile Quantttle* Laet 


11 HALL RUNNERS . 
¡J 
ss 157 
H 


I 
W h ile Q uantise« Last 
■ i 


CAPRI SETS 


M any At8’t Style», Sise» S to I I 


Valu«« to zoo 
12.17 


_ 
W h ile Quentittee La«t 
* Good M ^ " 7 u m U-W ed'T’sepV'zS 24 75 | * Good Mon -Tue. W ed , Sept 23 24-25 ■ | Good Mon 
T u e .-W .o , Sept 23 24 
W hile Quantitiea Laet 


Oood Mort.-Tue# -Wed., Sept 2 3 24-25 


BROESTED CHICKEN 
......................1.29 
MONDAY NIT« IS CHICKEN N iT I....................... 1-00 


NEW YORK S1EAK . 
TUESDAY NITE IS STEAK NITE 
1.49 
...1,10 


SPAGHETTI - MEAT SAUCE 
. . . . 1.29 
THURSDAY NITE IS SPAGHETTI N ITE................... 100 


 
FAMILY RESTAURANT 
67S E. HOLT — POMONA 


iwMeK>r womoour* * rmmojfe hcng« I 


Special Added AffracHaa 


JAMES GARNER 
“ THE PINK JUNGLE” 


— Schodulo — 
m W eekday*— "JUNOIJ" 6:4S, I0 *0 
odd fo u P t l 
1 1 } Only 
Friday— "JUNOU" 7:00, 10:4»— 
"DOO COUPLE" S:»0 Only 


SATURDAY 


"JUNOU’ 1:20, 7:0S 4 lOtSO— "OOO COUPLI" 1:30, »¡IS, t:0 0 
SUNDAY 
“ JUNOU" 1:60, 6.3S A 10:20— ODD COUPLI" 1:00, 4:4S, S 30 
9400 .CENTRAL AVENUE - MONTCLAIR 


Security and You 
Elderly Prove Good Parkway Employes 


By 
M A R T IN E. SEGAL 
lion at the toll booths can be aleam $1680. 
:Aginq: “It’s good business for 
I 
While 
it k illegal to discrimi- real problem. The part-time old- 
Do older folks want part-time us to make use of this remark- 
nate in employment because of er workers have helped make a employment? This question Is ably effective work force 
We 
. 
. 
.t-i 
l.— 
answered by the fact that are not unmindful of the socio- 
there are 1500 applicants for the logical aspects of this question, 
toll collector assignments. 
but the Garden State Parkway, 
And it’s not only the older'like any other corporation, has 


Last year the U.S. Imported 
about 
V/2 
million 
Christmas 
1 trees, mostly from Canada. 


Only 22 universities in the 
country offer doctoral degrees 
in forestry. 


age, many older persons still 
find their search for employ­ 
ment blocked by myths about 
aging and its effect on employ­ 
ability. The experience of one 


dent in this problem 
There are now 87 senior cit­ 
izens employed in the program. 
They are paid $2.20 an hour 


We now have a federal law 
outlawing discrimination in em- 


H OSPITAL SAFETY A W A R D — Clifford H. Powers Jr., adm in­ 
istrator of Park Avenue Hospital, receives an aw ard for the 
outstanding accident prevention record at the hospital from 
Jack C. Hammer, left, representative of Argonaut Insurance 
Co., insurance carrier for the hospital. 
(P-B photo) 


Those who collect Social Secur- persons who benefit from the;3 responsibility to operate on 
employer, New Jersey’s Garden ity benefits, as most of them arrangement. The Parkway con- a se lf - su p po r ti ng basis without 
State 
Parkway, 
should 
blow do, were limited to an income siders the move to have been the use of tax funds. We hire 
that myth sky-high. 
of $1500 
l a s t year. 
Recent a good one. D. Louis Tonti, ex- senior citizens, therefore, oe- 
cn successful has been the amendments to the Social Secur- ecutive director, told the U. S.;cause it makes good business 
Parkwav’s 
senior citizen em- ily Jaw now a,low the men t0 Senate Special Committee on sense and not because of senti- 
Parkways 
senior citizen em 
j 
nt. We are not doing these 
ployment program that they are 
. W a v i l e G 
B r a n d s t a d t 
M D . 
’ 
m men a favor.” 
considered among the most valu- •. • " o y u c v * . u i i i i m i u u i , 
x. a 
. 
^ 
able and permanent members ’ 
r r ’t i 
r \ 
. 
/O f 
, 
t t SSKS5JTS|1 7 ,te Doctor Comments 


sey Highway Authority, opera- 
should my child have his in- increase 
although 
there 
has ™ J affected 
have to agree 
;tor of the superhighway. 
telligence quotient (IQ) tested? been no change in the child’s 
. 
t , general—with 
the 
The Garden 
State 
Parkway If donCf were the 
what basic Iearning ability. 
^ J n t V on which a law is 
employs older people as toll col- j had expected? Am I glad it; 
one good result of these tests 
;lectors. Everyone who has trav- was done? These are some of has been to show that s o m e 
elled this road has been im -the questions many parents are pupjis wh0 appear to have a 
pressed with t h e courtesy of askjng themselves. F i r s t de- seVere learning problem have a 
these 
employes. 
They 
never sjgned ¡n France by Alfred Bi- very high IQ and are simply 
seem to be too busy to give di- net> the test has ^ en widely too'bored by school work that 
reel ions 
and 
to 
say 
‘ thank used since 192o and has been offers no challenge to want to 
Y ou/' 
^ . 
. . ;subjected 
to 
many 
modifica- put 0ut their best effort. F o r 
From an efficiency standpoint, tjons The test purports t0 sh0w this reason, it is a great mis- 
there are many more plus fac- the age jevel a child’s mental take to use these tests to pre 
tors to this group. I here is less processes have achieved (men- diet a child’s potential. 


spiidor'^citizens*^ han 
moiig^the If* 
th'S is diVided 
Modern psychologists now be- Jersey’s pioneer effort is but 
v mnger men working full time 
a^e. an 
L,mUT!l l*eve that intelligence has many one more bit of tangible evi- 
ns Toll collectors 
^ ^ Y0U ^ave 
facets not 
necessarily 
related dence that 
older people can 
Five of the first eicht older 
test *s suPPosed 10 s^ow to one another. These include make a definite contribution to 
men hired when the program 
be- "°* " ¡» , * chl'd has ,ear^ f - verbal- numerical, spatial and the labor force 
If the appli- 
in 1960 are still employed. 
^ut w^at 
inherent capabili- ^rceptual ability, memory and cants are screened properly and 
All but seven of the over-60 ties are' 
authorities now inductive reasoning. E a c h re-the job qualifications are not 
believe that it does not do this quires its own specific test. The unrealistic, employers could be 
and that no test can accom- important thing to determine is delightfully surprised with the 
plish this purpose. It has been not so much how good y o u r many ways that senior workers 
shown, for example, that some Frankie is as compared to Joey can help solve their manpower 
children who are given the test next door but what special apti- problems. 
every year at the start of school ude your Frankie h 
a 
s 
. 
------------------------- 
have become “test wise” and 
During World War II, 
the 
make scores 
that 
indicate 
a 
Please send your questions Electric Boat yard in Groton,! 


HEARING TEST 


% 
In Your Home or Our Office 
^ 


Phone, come in or write to 


r 
SO N O T O N E---------, 


¡894 N. Garey Ave., Pomona Phone 623-59111 


) I would Ilk* a Pree H earing Te*t In the privacy of my home, j 


I No obligation of course. 
j 


I N a m e 
....................................................................................................................................... . . I 


* Addres* ......................................................................* 
\ r .. 
I 
, c "y 
...............................................................; ................................. , 
j S t a t e ............................................Z i p ....................... ^ 


based. And too many employers 
cling to the outmoded and un­ 
realistic ideas about the work 
abilities and 
habits 
of older 
people. 
Study after study has proved 
that older workers have better 
attendance records than young­ 
er workers, are more responsi­ 
ble, and have fewer rejects (in 
manufacturing operations). New 


Large Selection 
• Reasonable Prices 


— See Them At — 
GIST’S FURNITURE 
400 Pomona Mall West 
• 
Downtown 


toll collectors now on the job 
are over 65, and 32 of them are 
over 70 years old. 


Employ 87 Elderly 
I 
The decision to hire older per­ 
son began as an experiement* 
;There 
were 
doubts 
in 
some 
quarters about the prospects of higher IQ than they actually and comments to W a y n e G. Conn., turned out more than 
putting the older folk to work, possess. 
Brandstadt, M.D., in care of 70 submarines. 
These doubts have been dis- 
On the other hand, a normal- this paper. While 
Dr. 
Brand- 
-------- 
solved as a result of the pro- !y intelligent child may make stadt cannot answer individual 
The National Apple Institute 
gram’s success. 
a poor showing on the test be-,letters, he will answer letters of claims 
that eating an apple 
The original idea behind the cause the test bores him, be- general interest in future col- cleans teeth, massages gums 
| move was to obtain extra help cause the person giving the test umns. 
and removes bacteria, 
at parkway toll booths during has failed to gain his confi- 
peak traffic hours without in- dence or because he was feel- 
curring the cost of full-time hir-iing generally out of sorts when 
ing. Because the Garden State the test was given. Often when 
is a key route to many plants the test is repeated on such a 
as well as to the Jersey sea- child after three to six months, 
shore and race tracks, conges- the IQ will show a significant 


230 396630 
is all it will cost you 
to enjoy the Lurline 
to or from Hawaii 
this fall. 


There are twelve Lurline sailings to and 
from Paradise this fall. Take one and 
here's what your $230 ticket will include: 


• 5 festive days of carefree living at sea, 
with congenial fellow passengers in a spir­ 
ited Polynesian atmosphere. Days that are 
filled with pleasant diversions — if you 
want them. Like free Hula lessons, deck 
tennis tournaments and trapshooting. 


• 5 delightful nights filled with gala 
parties and entertainments. Like the Mad 
H itter’s Ball and the Captain’s Champagne 
party. 


• Exclusively First Class accommodations. 


• Fine food, served ’round-the-clock, 
whenever you’re hungry. 


• Superb service, from an attentive crew, 
trained to please the most discriminating 
traveler. 


Of course, you’ll also visit beautiful 
Hawaii at a beautiful time of the year— 
autumn *.vhen the weather is great and the 
crowds are gone Choice space is stiii 
available on all sailings, 


will buy a complete 
11-day Hawaiian 
vacation, including 
a cruise on the 
Lurline. 


Take our air/sea tour, “the Royal Polyne­ 
sian,” this fall and here's what you'll get: 


• Jet flight to Hawaii with lei greeting 
on arrival. 


• 6 days at Waikiki's new Holiday Isle 
Hotel. 


is the all-inclusive 
fare for two special 
15-day fall festival 
cruises to Hawaii’s 
four major islands. 


I 


i 


i 


/ 


Mr, Paul Thompioe, Cruis« Consultant 
Matson Unas, 523 West Sixth Straet 
Los Angelas, CA 90014 


Plaisa tell ma about your □ Sday cruise 


Q 11-day cruise tours 
Q 15-day cruises 


The perfect two-week vacation. Take the 
Whaling Spree Cruise Oct. 25 or the Maka- 
hiki Cruise Nov. 21 and all of the following 
features will be included in your fare: 


• Hawaii’s lovely islands of Oahu, Maul, 
Kauai and H a w a ii-a t their autumn best 
• A special Island festival. 


\ 
• The Lurline as your rasort hotel at e*ch 
i 
port of call as well as at sea. That means 
\ 
you’ll unpack just once for the entire 
\ 
vacation. 


' J ' • The luxurious seaborne way of life that 
has come to be known as the Grand Man­ 
ner of Matson. Excellent food, superb 
service, exclusively First Class accommo­ 
dations, and the countless amenities for 
which the Lurline is famous. 


Both cruises depart San Francisco and 
Los Angeles. 


SAFETY INFORMATION: SS Lurline regis- 
tered in the U. S., meets Inter­ 
national Safety Standards for 
_ 
_ 
new ships developed in I960. 
For all tha datailt on thasa ipacial vacations 
contact your travel «g«nt or ttnd In thii coupon. 


• Tours to Pearl Harbor and Mt. Tantalus. 


• Maiihini Night at the Princess Kaiulani 
Hotel. 


• 5-day cruise to either San Francisco or 
Los Angeles aboard the SS Lurline. 


The price of your ticket on this special 
autumn cruise-tour includes hotel, parties, 
transfers and transportation. It all adds to 
an exceptional travel bargain. 


AIRr V lg r » ® 
S u p e r S t r u c t u r a l 
MOBILE HOME AWNINGS 
8 * 1 
- ■ ^ — y 


I 
A ¡& :Y£tn 
1f 
" 
PATIO COVERS WHERE THE ACTION IS, RAIN OR SHINE 


\ 
\ 
PHONE TODAY or VISIT PATIO CITY 


OPEN 
DAILY AND 
SUNDAY 
V 


Nima_ 


Addrn* 


City 
_ 
Stata 
Zip 
iip ----------- 
Ml/W 


ALUMINUM AWNINGS 


rJLat'UcÚ P a llo S I .towroom in ^*trea 
.A, 
1485 West Mission 
623-5281 Pomona 


CHINO 
POMONA 
ARIA 


Ontario 
Cucam onga 
Araa 
984-4423 


La Puanta 
Cavino 
Araa 
339-5403 


Fire Bums 
100 Acres 
In Chino 


city Council 
291.219 See Fair 


CHINO—A fire believed start­ 
ed by a hunter burned nearly 
100 acres Sunday near Highway 
71 and Euclid Avenue before it 
was stopped by state and city 
firemen 
a n d 
three 
borate 
bombers. 
Both main roads were blocked 
for about an hour and traffic 
was routed through Santa Ana 
Canyon and to Pine Avenue. 
The 
fire 
burned 
only dry 
grass, 
brush 
and 
trees. 
No 
buildings were endangered. The 
area has been used as a pas­ 
ture and for farming. 
Highway 71 served as a fire 
break, said Chino Fire Chief 
Lester 
Hemstreet. 
The 
fire 
jumped the pavement in only 
one place, and it was quickly 
put out. 
Firemen were hampered in 


their work by Santa Ana winds 
which ranged from 15 to 30 
miles an hour. 
Some 40 firemen from Chino 
and the State Division of For­ 
estry attacked the blaze at the 
head and sides, while borate 
bombers dumped fire retardants 
from above. The three bombers 
each made two trips. 
Chino had two pumper trucks 
and command units there, and 
the state sent 10 trucks and 
three bulldozers. The firemen 
were at the location about five 
hours. 
A spent shotgun shell was 
found where the fire started, 
said Hemstreet. “ We believe a 
hunter had been smoking in the 
area and dropped a cigarette.” 
No hunters were seen in the 
area, he added. 


Safe-Cracking 
Suspect Caught 


Agenda: Mice, 
Paving, Land 


The sale of $332,705 in bonds 
for Vehicle Parking District No. 
2 will be one of the m atters 
brought up at a meeting of. the 
Pomona City Council at 8 to­ 
night. 


The council also will be asked 
for an advancement of $7/,000 
for the acquisition of property. 
Other items on the agenda in­ 
clude: 


—A citizens’ petition on the 
infestation of 
mice near the 
General Telephone Co. construc­ 
tion site near County Road and 
Towne Avenue. 
—The proposed improvement 
of 8th Street from Buena Vista 
to Oak Avenue. 
—Agreements 
for 
the 
pur­ 
chase of Canon Water Co. stock. 
—The awarding of contracts 
for the improvement of Grand 
Avenue from Hamilton Boule­ 
vard to San Antonio Avenue, 
and for the construction of ve­ 
hicle parking lots on 1st and 3rd 
streets, between Palomares and 
Gibbs streets, in Parking Dis­ 
trict No. 2. 


Over the Weekend 


Attendance at the 41st annual 
Los Angeles County Fair was 


pushed closer to the 
million 


m ark over the weekend with 


291,219 persons visiting the ex­ 
position Friday and Saturday. 


The figure for the s e c o n d 
weekend of the fair tradition­ 


ally the busiest time, brings this 


season’s total to 795,836, still 
running ahead of the 791,914 for 


the com parable period in 1967. 
With one week of the fair 
still to go, officials were hope­ 
ful that with good weather the 
all-time season attendance 
of 
1,265,095 set last year would be 
surpassed. 


The weekend figure, however, 
was below that for the same 
two days last year when 294,714 
passed through the gates. 
Large numbers of motorists 
headed for the fair were be­ 
lieved to have turned around 
and headed back after running 
into bottlenecks at turn-offs and 
construction sites on the San 
Bernardino Freeway. 
By 3:30 p.m. Saturday, the 
fair parking lots were filled to 
capacity and attendants direct­ 
ed cars to park on Brackett 
Field in La Verne, just west 
of the fairgrounds. 
One official predicted that if 
attendance 
continues 
at 
the 
same pace, that the millionth 


visitor to the fair would 
be 
counted on Thursday. 
“ If this thing on weather can 
hold. I’m sure we're 
coming 
ahead,” s a i d Phil Shepherd, 
general m anager. 
Saturday night marked t h e 
prem iere perform ance of t h e 
P o 1 a c k Bros. Circus at the 
grandstand. The free C i r c u s 
shows will continue n i g h t l y 
through the last day of the fair 
next Sunday. 
On Tuesday and Wednesday, 
the Equestrian Arts Association 
will present the third annual 
Festival of the Horse, “ Fantasy 
on Horseback,” at 8 p.m. at 
the Carnation Ring. There is 
no admission charge. 


"Progress-Bulletin 


M onday Evening, Septem ber 73, 1968 
Page 1, Sec. 2 


ALTA LOMA — A man was 
caught Sunday night trying to 
pry open a walk-in safe at Alta 
Loma H i g h School, sheriff’s 
deputies said. 
Roger Alan Keuhnau, 24, of 
San Bernardino was booked for 
investigation of burglary. 
The safe dial was knocked 
off and the door edges were 
bent, officers said. Tools were 
nearby. 


A janitor walked by the stu­ 
dent store and saw a man by 
the safe, officers said. He called 
the sheriff’s station. 
Deputies arrived and watched 


several minutes through a win­ 
dow as a man pried on the 


safe door, they said. 
The 
suspect apparently en­ 
tered the school by prying open 
an outside door, officers said. 


Crowd Expected 
At Council Meet 


SAN DIMAS - Although sev­ 
eral hundred residents of the 
Via Verde development are ex­ 
pected to attend tonight’s City 
Council 
meeting to hear the 
council’s decision on lot sizes in 
the tract, only 50 persons will 
be 
perm itted 
to 
enter 
City 
Council chambers. 
Ron Kranzer, director of pub­ 
lic works and acting city m an­ 
ager, said a fire m arshal will 
be at the door of the council 
cham bers to enforce fire de­ 
partm ent restrictions that only 
50 persons are perm itted inside 
the room. 
Kranzer said a public address 
system will be set up outside 
the building. 


The public hearing to deter­ 
mine if lot sizes in the develop­ 
ment should be reduced to 6,000- 
square foot was closed. Testi­ 
mony will be accepted only if 
m em bers of 
the council ask 
question of persons in the audi­ 
ence, according to Kranzer. 
Since the Sept. 9 public hear­ 


ing the council has contacted 
the Bonita Unified School Dis­ 


trict and requested that they 
respond officially to a charge 
by homeowners in Via Verde 
that sm aller lots would greatly 
increase the school tax burden. 
A letter sent to Supt. Robert 
Dickinson 
asked for the dis­ 
trict’s stand in the m atter. 


A N G R Y P A IN — 
Gerry Pickering, a student at la H abra High 
School, shows a look of angry pain while hitting the low note 
on his pipe. But he really enjoys playing. 


BREATHLESS— 
Don Richards of Covina, a pipe major, gives 
a breathless look as he hits a high note on the blow pipe. He 
is on engineer in private life. 
(Photos by Sid Fridkin) 


Windy, Wiry and Willing? 


Two Drivers Booked 
Band Beckons Bagpipers 
After Auto Crashes 


Two of three motorists in­ 
volved in accidents here early 
Sunday morning were arrested. 
At 2:30 a.m. police arrested 
Miguel R. Gonzales, 26, 830 E. 
Grand Ave. after his car collid­ 
ed with one driven by Jesus N. 
Navarro, 25, 830 E. G rard Ave. 
N avarro’s wife, M aria J. Na­ 
varro, had a cut lip and head 
but refused medical attention. 
The accident was at 
Phillips 
Boulevard and Garey Avenue. 
Gonzales was booked on suspi­ 
cion of felonious drunken driv­ 
ing. 
A young Vallejo man was ar­ 
rested after his car hit a car 
which was up on a jack on Ga- 
nesha Boulevard near the San 
Bernardino Freeway shortly af­ 
ter 2 a m,, j>olice reported. 
The car had had a flat tire 
which was being changed when 
it was hit. Several persons, all 
from Los Angeles, were injured 
slightly and declined medical 
attention. 
Police said Randall E. Corr.e- 


Woman Raped 
In Own Home 
By Intruder 


A 19-year-old woman told po­ 
licé early Sunday that a man 
slipped into her west-side apart­ 
ment bedroom and raped her. 
The woman, who’s newly bom 
child was in a crib nearby, was 
not Injured. She said she was 
awakened 
by 
the 
man 
who 
clamped 
his 
hand 
over 
her 
mouth and threatened to kill 
her. Her mother, asleep in the 
next room, wasn’t aware of the 
attack until called by the vic­ 
tim. 
The young woman said her 
attacker was tall and was in 
his late teens or early 20s. She 
said she thought he was drunk. 


lius, 20, Vallejo, drove off after 
the accident. He was arrested 
where he was visiting. 
At 4:15 a.m., a car driven by 
Joe B. Medina, 21, 4864 San 
Bernardino Ave., Montclair, hit 
a fire hydrant at Baldyview Av­ 
enue and Columbia Street. A 
passenger, Jam es H. Schroeder, 
21, 1433 Loranne Ave., was hurt 
but refused medical attention. 


Cycle-Car 
Crash Puts 2 
In Hospital 


COVINA — Two young men 
were hospitalized Sunday eve­ 
ning after the motorcycle they 
were riding collided with a car. 
Daniel David O'Malley, 20, of 
4756 Larkin Dr., the driver, and 
Jam es A. Ralston Jr., 20, of 
17713 E. Benbow, the passenger, 
were adm itted to Covina Inter­ 
community Hospital. Their con­ 
dition today was satisfactory. 
O’Malley suffered a dislocated 
right hip and cuts and bruises*. 
Raison 
received 
a 
compound 
fracture of the right lower leg. 
The driver of the car was Jef­ 
frey Albert, 16, of 963 W. Ben­ 
bow St. 
California Highway Patrol of­ 
ficers said the car and motor­ 
cycle were going opposite ways 
on Cypress near Con we 11, short­ 
ly after dusk. The motorcycle 
was traveling without lights and 
attem pted a left turn in front of 
the car, they said. 


Burning Permitted 
No smog is forecast for San 
Bernardino County Tuesday. Al­ 
lowable burning is permitted, 
according to the Air Pollution 
Control District. 


If you’ve got coordination and 
a lot of wind, there’s a group 
hereabouts who can use you. 
It’s the Glengarry Highland 
Band, which means bagpipes. 
Some 
people 
think 
bagpipe 
music is harsh and off key, but 
devotees find it melodic and 
stirring. 
One such person is John Lloyd 
of 116 Coulter Dr., Charter Oak. 
Lloyd may be a bit biased. 
His father was with the Seaforth 
Highlander 
Band 
in 
Canada, 
and bagpipe music has been a 
part of the family for years. 
Lloyd’s son, Brian, also plays. 
The Lloyds live in a trailer 
park, but the neighbors don't 
seem to mind the practicing. 
Quite a few of them are Scots. 
Lloyd himself is of Welsh des­ 
cent. Ron Mountain, the band 
drum m ajor, served in the Brit­ 
ish Army in 
World 
War 11. 
There are others of British Is­ 
lands stock. 
Background is not important; 
desire to play and the wind and 
coordination are all that are re­ 
quired, Lloyd said. 
The band usually practices 
Thursday n i g h t s at 7:30 in 
Building 5 on the Los Angeles 
County fairgrounds in Pomona. 
Lloyd and the band, which orig­ 
inated in West Covina but which 
is now recruiting in the Pomona 
area, would like to have Po- 
monans Join. 
The practice Is done on the 
chanter only. T hat’s the part 
that plays the melody. The cost 
of a chanter is $12 A song book 
costs another $2. The two are 
all that are required at the out­ 
set. 
Teaching 
Is done 
by band 
members. After three months 
a person should know if he has 
“ taken” to bagpipes and bag­ 
pipes to him. Out of Lloyd s 
class of five, he is the only 
survivor, however. 
It takes five years to become 
a good piper. The pipes cost 
$110; the uniform of the famous 
Black Watch Regiment tartan 


is another $225. The name of the 
band comes from the bonnet 
each m em ber wears. 
The band has 10 p i p e r s 
(anothe** io are wanted) and 10 
drum m ers plus dancers and a 
color guard. In its five-year ex­ 
istence it has played for clan 
gatherings, 
conventions 
a n d 
fairs and at Disneyland, the Col­ 
iseum, 
Hollywood 
Palladium, 
International 
Beauty 
Pageant 
and on tv. 
The pipe m ajor is D. E. Rich­ 
ards, who also started the band. 
He was with the bagpipe band 
at General Dynamics Pomona 
where he used to work. 
Tunes the group plays are the 
fam iliar ones, although listen­ 
ers sometimes are hard put to 
identify them. This is because 


of the grace notes — the wig­ 
gles, as it were. There are only 
nine notes and no sharps and 
flats. 
Compounding the seeming dis­ 
cordance are the two tenor and 
one bass notes em anating from 
the three drones slung over the 
bandsm an's left shoulder. 


“They 
give 
that 
aaarraa 


sound,” said Lloyd. 


While 
it’s 
the 
music 
that 
“ gets” the unattuned listener, 
it’s 
the 
coordination 
between 
blowing, 
fingering, 
squeezing 
and m a r c h i n g that “ gets” a 
bagpipe bandsman. 
If you can m aster these ele­ 
ments, and have good wind be­ 
sides, you can be a Glengarry 
Highland bandsman. 


Cyclist, 5, 
Injured; Car 


Driver Flees 


LA PUENTE — A 5-year-o!d 


bicycle rider suffered a concus­ 


sion and possible fractured skull 


here Sunday noon when he was 
struck by a car. The driver of 


the car fled the scene, the Cali­ 


fornia Highway Patrol reported. 


Anthony Roy Moran, of 133 S. 
Backton Ave., was adm itted to 
La Puente Community Hospital. 
His condition today was listed 
as good. 


The driver of the car was 
identified only as Bill McKinn- 
tuk, 21. 


The 
accident 
happened 
on 
Backton Avenue, north of Cal­ 
cutta Street. 


EVERYONE LIKES to toll about his va­ 
cation and show off a few souvenirs. 
But Bradley Stolz of Pomona has a bet­ 
ter excuse than most for rehashing his sum ­ 
m er travels. He will be lecturing his Spanish 
classes at Bishop Amat High School in La 
Puente. And we bet his audience won't get 
loo bored whim he brings out what he 
brought home. They include snakes and o th­ 
er reptiles Stolz gathered along the Amazon 
River in the jungles of South America. 
Stolz spent 33 days in Ecuador, Brazil, 
Peru and Panam a studying Indian tribes 
and anim al and plant life this sum m er. The 
trip was a celebration of his completion of 
work for a m aster’s degree and a way to 
enrich his knowledge about Spanish-speak­ 
ing people. He also worked in a tr ip to 
the Eucharist it* Congress at Bogota, Colom­ 
bia and braved the crushing throngs which 
turned out to see Pope Paul. 
While along the Amazon, Stolz went on 
an alligator hunt, spotted several and shot 
none. Electric eels with 300 volts of power, 
poisonous frogs and piranha, the tiny fish 
which a tta c k and devour anything in the 
water, gave him more to w orry about than 
alligators though. 
The snakes he brought home include a 
five-foot anaconda which, according to ex­ 
perts, when fully grown often m easures 
m ore than 20 feet in length and 25 inches 
in diam eter. Just the thing to drape across 
his desk at exam time. 
Stolz also brought back some interesting 
observations on young people’s hair styles. 
P arents upset with long-haired offspring 
here should visit some of the South Ameri­ 
can Indian tribes. 
For instance, the properly dressed Oc- 
tavalo Indian in Ecuador wears his in pig­ 
tails, Stolz says. 
As for the women, the Ticuna Indians 
of Brazil have an unusual treat for those 
who reach the age of puberty. To prepare 
them for the rigors of m arriage, the natives 
inebriate every girl on her 12th birthday 
and then pull out all of her hair. 
“That is why,” Stolz explains, “you very* 
rarely see a Ticuna bride with long h air.” 
Can’t argue that. We very rarely see a 
Ticuna. 


M ANY I P-TIG H T P A R E N T S were dis­ 
mayed last June when the cover of Time 
m agazine bore a photograph of the typical 
11)68 college graduate — a young m an with 
long hair, sideburns, and a m ustache. For 
Carl H. Lorbeer, longtime civic leader, 
it 
brought a reminiscent chuckle. He went 
back and dug out his college yearbook (Po­ 
mona ’06), and there were the sam e hair­ 
cut styles that are causing such consterna­ 
tion today. The wheel has come full circle. 


Local Family Day, 
Knitting at Fair 


Pomona Fam ily Day will be observed at the Los 
Angeles County Fair Tuesday. 
Special recognition will also be given to Pomona 
Valley Center, Alta Loma, Etiwanda and the Ex­ 
change Club among others. 
The Lady Nimhlefingers Knitting Contest will 
commence at 11 a.m. in the Domestic Arts build­ 
ing. China painting, rug making and bobbin weav­ 
ing demonstrations are given through the day. 
The Pomona Recreation Department will present 
a crafts dem onstration at 1:30 p.m. in the school 
exhibits stage. El Monte School District will present 
creative rhythm s at 12:15 p.m. 
The Equestrian Arts Association will present 
“ Fantasy on Horseback” at the Carnation Ring 
at 7:30 p.m. 


New Meeting Dates 


New meeting dates have been approved by the 
Board of Education of Pomona Unified School Dis­ 
trict. 
Starting next month, the board will meet the 
second and fourth Tuesdays of each month at 7:30 
p.m. in the board room at the Education Center, 
800 S. Garey Ave. 
The first Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. has been desig­ 
nated for study sessions. They are public meetings 
held to discuss school business, but the board may 
not act on items before it until the next regular 
meeting. 


Unitarian Pastor Walton Cole Dies 


A form er Pomona clergym an. 
Dr. Walton E. C o le ,'67, died 
Saturday 
at 
Pomona 
Valley 
Community Hospital 
after an 
illness of three weeks. 


DR, WALTON COLE 


Dr. Cole served as pastor of 
the 
Unitarian 
Society of Po­ 
mona Valley in Montclair from 
1961 
until 
he retired in No­ 
vem ber of 1966. 
After his retirement he and 
his 
wife, 
Mrs. 
Lorena 
Cole, 
lived at their home at 1460 In­ 
dian Hill Blvd., in Claremont. 
He continued to remain active 
in the work of Unitarian Society 
in the area. 


Consulting Minister 


Dr. Cole 
was 
bom 
in 
St. 
Louis, Nov. 27, 1900, He served 
churches 
in 
Chicago, 
Toledo, 
Boston and Detroit. After his 
retirem ent he preached at a 
number of 
Unitarian 
Fellow­ 
ships in the Pacific Southwest 
District and served as a con­ 
sulting m inister for three of 
them. 
He was named m inister em er­ 
itus of the M ontclair Unitarian 
Society when he retired. 
Dr. Cole was vice president 
of tlie Pomona Valley chapter 


of the United Nations Associa­ 
tion, and for three consecutive 
years lie served as chairm an of 
the Claremont United Nations 
observance. 


Unitarian Posts 


He w i s a m em ber of t h e 
board of trustees for the De 
Benneville Pines Inc., which is 
responsible for the Universalist 
Conference Center, 
He a l s o 
served on the board of the Trus­ 
tees of the Pacific Southwest 
District of the Unitarian Uni- 
w rsalist Association. 
Dr. Cole was a m em ber of the 
board of trustees of the Biats- 
dell 
Institute 
for 
Advanced 
Study of World Religions and 
Cultures, 
affiliated 
with 
the 
Claremont G raduate School. He 
served as a specialist on the 
culture 
and 
religion 
of 
the 
American Indians. 
He was president of the Po­ 
mona Valley Indian Affairs As­ 
sociation. 
During 
his 
minis­ 
try he worked individually and 


with civic groups on behalf of 
minority groups and the under­ 
privileged. 
Dr. Cole was a lecturer, radio 
and television speaker and the 
author of four bodes. 
Besides his widow he is sur­ 
vived by his m other, Mrs. Emi- 
lie Lam brecht of Claremont; a 
daughter, Mrs, Faith Conklin of 
Lam bertville, Mich.; two sons, 
Phillip 
Cole 
of 
Toledo 
and 
Bryce Cole of Maumee, Ohio; 
and 13 grandchildren. 
A mem orial service will be 
conducted Wednesday at 8 p.m. 
at the Unitarian Society of Po­ 
mona Valley with the Rev. E r­ 
nest L. Howard, m inister of the 
church, officiating. Dr, Harmon 
M, G e h r of Throop M emorial 
Church of Pasadena will assist 
him. Inurnm ent will follow. 
M emorial contributions m ay 
be m ade to the Walton E. Cole 
Scholarship, 300 S, Los Robles 
Ave , P asadena. Funds will be 
used for students at the S tart 
King School of the m inistry, 
r: 


Ïrogrcss-Bulletm 
DON MacLEAN 
But, Somehow or Other, It Still Keeps Flying 
J. K. (DOC) PEIRSOL 


Serving Pomona Valley for 83 Years 


Prwrss-Bullttln N W rW oj CowfWiy 


A. T. RICHARDSON, OwIrmanSof I 
tUES^T 
DONALD W. REYNOLDS, President 
CHARL 


the Beard 


1CHARDS0N, Publisher 


Managing Editor 
JOSEPH A. GENDRON 


l$lr*g Manager 
A W LilMANN 


IO CAU T OPïRATIO M IMW » 


lARLESvTyRm 
Muitiwr 
cMANiS JR. 
"jjp 
DON«rr MÏOIA OROUP 


High Court 
Also Subject 
To Review 


Circulation 
CHARLES A. McMANiS JR. 


M onday Evening, Sept. 23, 1968 
Page 2, Sec. 2 


EDITORIAL 
The Price We Pay 
For Record Crops 


Good old American Ingenuity and energy 
have done it again-causing chagrin in cer- 
tain quarters. 
It appears that we are in for a bumper 
harvest this year. Wheat, com and soybeans 


The Supreme Court may be 
the highest court in the land, 
but once again it is being re­ 
minded tha* it is not altogether 
supreme. True, while an indi­ 
vidual has no appeal from a Su­ 
prem e Court decision, the Court 
itself occasionally has its “ final 
decisions” reviewed by the Sen­ 
ate, 
That is as it should be, even 
though it sort of puts the Court 
in the same position as a minor 
judge who m ust stand for re- 
election every few years. Only 
a very bad one is more con­ 
cerned with the popularity of 
his decisions than with the jus­ 
tice of them. 
Chief Justice-designate A b e 
Fortas is going through just 
in particular a r e pointing toward record or 
sue, a prrçess » « p M h a t, in 
near-record yields. 
The s o u n d of rejoicing is not echoing 
through the farm belt, the halls of govern­ 
ment or the supermarket, however. No one 
is particularly happy about a situation that 
means falling prices for the farmer, more 
paid out in support prices by the govern­ 
ment and no compensating decline in the 
tab at the checkout counter for the taxpav- 
er-consumer, who in the end picks up die 
tab for price support. 
It wasn’t supposed to work out this way. 
Through its complex of f a r m programs, 
principally reduction of producing acreage 
linked to supports, the Agriculture Depart­ 
ment had hoped to keep production roughly 
in line with demand and payments to farm­ 
ers within manageable limits. 
But the American farm er has remained 
true to form. By continuing to increase per- 
acre vield through improved seed, fertilizer 
and technique, his output on 6.8 million few­ 
er acres than last year is exceeding all 
expectations. 
It’s all going to cost the government (i.e., 
taxpayer) plenty. President Johnson s esti­ 
mate is up to an extra $700 million. Other 
guesses run higher—to a total of $3.9 billion 
in support payments for the current fiscal 
year instead of the $2.9 billion budgeted. 
The American performance in agricul­ 
ture is truly phenomenal, a wonder of the 
modern world. In making the good earth 
steadily better, we are In a class by our­ 
selves, at once the hope, the envy and the 
despair of most of the rest of this planet. 
But our record in managing our bounty 
is something else again. We treat as an 
inconvenience what is basically a tragedy. 
While starvation is reality to millions, 
even within our own borders, we spend bil­ 
lions to take land out of production and 
keep crops off the market in a generally 
unsuccessful attempt to keep producer and 
consumer happy. 
There is certainly no simple solution to 
a very complex problem, but certainly there 
is a better approach than we have so far 
devised. 


the Senate are his electorate. 
He has been a party to some 
r a t h e r unpopular decisions. 
However, 
if 
he 
believes 
in 
them, he souldn’t mind defend­ 
ing them. And he should be 
willing to take bis chances on 
getting “elected.” 
The presidential appointment 
route for Supreme Court justic­ 
es and other high judicial posts 
was designed to put these men 
and their rulings beyond t b e 
reach of petty politics—but not 
beyond the reach of the people 
and their elected representa­ 
tives. 


Gossip for Today 


Every now and then I scan the Theatre Guide 
advertisements in the newspapers to see what the dou­ 
ble bill experts have thought up recently. I’m sure 
they do it purposely for whatever shock value such 
combinations may have on the theatre marquees. Here 
are a couple of recent examples: 
“ANGELS FROM HELL — THE MINI - SKIRT 
MOB.” 
“A SWEET SICKNESS — THE SUGAR EATERS.” 


☆ 
☆ 
☆ 
Thought for the day: Whatever became of such 
interesting entertainment as taffy pulls and hay rides? 
I 


RAY CROMLEY 
Soviet Writers Defy 
Kremlin Crackdown 


BRUCE BIOSSAT 


Of course, some say the Sen­ 
ate is overstepping its author- 


Don 


Maclean 


Eight Major States Vital to HHH 


If He Expects November Victory 


BY ONE OF US 
As We See It 


TWO YOUNG MEN, Ivan Allen II of 
Montclair and William Jochimsen of La 
Verne, received Wednesday night during 
special ceremonies at the Masonic Temple 
the Chevalier Degree conferred by the Su­ 
preme Council of the Order of De Molay. 
Jochimsen is serving in the Army but 
has had l few days on leave before he 
leaves for a tour of duty in Germany. Al­ 
len is a junior at San Diego State College. 
Both men have been active in De Molay for 
the past seven years and have served as 
past m aster councilors of the Pomona chap­ 
ter. The degree which they received is the 
order’s highest award. 
De Molay is an Order founded by a group 
of boys who met with a man named Frank 
S. Land in Kansas City, Mo., one day to 
discuss forming a club that would give them 
inspiration for better things in life; 
that 
would enable them to become better sons, 
better men, better citizens. They were talk­ 
ing the m atter over when Land suggested 
the names of a half a dozen who were 
well-known men and stood for high ideals. 
One of the names he mentioned was that of 
Jacques De Molay, who was the last Grand 
M aster of the medieval Knights Templar. 
De Molay was active as a Knights Templar 
in the 14th century . His prestige and wealth 
and the popularity of his crusades made 
Phillip, the King of France, jealous. Phil­ 
lip arrested him, tortured him but could not 
get him to name those who were other lead­ 
ers among the Knights. Finally, he had him 
burned at the stake in Paris. 
Land asked the boys to think the thing 
over before they selected the name, but 
they came back later enthusiastic for the 
name De Molay, and thus it was that a new 
youth group started the Order of De Molay. 
This Order has spread like w i l d f i r e 
throughout the world. It now numbers near­ 
ly three million active and senior De Mo- 
lavs. There are more than 2,500 chapters 
«{derating in the United States and in for­ 
eign countries. Many of the senior De M o 
lays are found high in the ranks of leader­ 
ship in the United States. Seniors are over 
21, but the age bracket for the Order of 
De Molay is 14 to 21 years of age. 


ity; it is m erely supposed to 
confirm or deny Supreme Court 
appointments and not drag out 
recent Court decisions for in­ 
stant review. Well, if this is not 
the time to question the Court, 
when should it be done, on Judg­ 
ment Day? 
The 
Supreme 
Court 
itself 
oversteps boundaries by m ak­ 
ing decisions which not only in­ 
terpret the Constitution, but al­ 
ter it by putting new laws on 
the books. I imagine the Sen­ 
ate might stop reviewing Court 
decisions if the Court w o u l d 
stop writing laws. 
The Court is lucky in one re­ 
spect: Justices have liftime ap­ 
pointments and therefore don’t 
have to run for “ re-election” 
again and again before the Sen­ 
ate. 
As 
things 
stand, 
some 
would never make it. Actually, 
unless 
he 
thinks 
he 
has 
a 
chance to become chief justice, 
the average justice need be lit­ 
tle concerned with popularity. 
Nevertheless, 
our 
justices, 
particularly those in the liber­ 
al majority, must realize they 
can’t ro too far with their lib­ 
eralism and become SO unpop­ 
ular that men of their stripe 
have absolutely no chance of 
being approved by a less-liber­ 
al Senate. Blessed be the sys­ 
tem of checks and balances. 
I think the Senate should re­ 
view Court decisions when the 
opportunity presents Itself. Af­ 
ter all, 1t doesn’t happen that 
often and in the years between 
reviews the Court goes its own 
way, unhindered and unchecked 
by anyone. 


Needing most of the big states 
to have any hope of winning in 
November, Vice President Hum­ 
phrey’s 
m anagers 
profess 
to 
see the glimmerings of f r e s h 
hope in New York, New Jersey, 
Pennsylvania and even a ray or 
two in California. 
They already have more than 
a little confidence, of course, 
over M assachusetts—usually the 
most heavily Democratic state 
among the eight most populous 
outside the solid South. 
On the other hand, key Hum­ 
phrey 
men 
acknowledge that 
m atters are quite difficult in 
Michigan and very, very uphill 
in Illinois and Ohio. 
If 
Humphrey s prospects — 
m easured against those of Rich­ 
ard Nixon and George Wallace 
—are that weak presently in Il­ 
linois and Ohio, there is at least 
a chance his strategists 
a r e 
overreading the signs of hope in 
the big eastern tier and in Cali­ 
fornia. 
For election experts point out 
that, with rare exceptions, the 
big ones (leaving out a typical 
Texas 
and 
Florida) 
tend 
in 
presidential 
elections 
to 
run 
pretty much to a pattern. 


Especially interesting is t h e 
way these big eight, with the oc­ 
casional exception of Massachu­ 
setts, tend to fall within a fairly 
narrow percentage range in a 
given presidential election. 
For instance, in winning all 
eight in 1952, Eisenhower found 
his vote percentages 
ranging 
from a low of 52.7 in Pennsyl­ 
vania to a high of 56.8 in New 
Jerjey and Ohio. His 1956 show­ 
ing produced winning percent­ 
ages varying from 55.4 in Cali­ 
fornia to 64.7 in New Jersey. 
Four of the big eight that year 


Bruce 


Biossat 


jar the historical pattern seri­ 
ously. 
With 
Henry 
Wallace’s 
third party candidacy muddying 
the w aters 
and 
the Truman- 
Dewey race 
extremely 
close 
anyway, 
Trum an 
won 
three 
states by percentages ranging 
from 47.6 to 50.1 (only Massa­ 
chusetts was easier), 
w h i l e 
Dewey took his four of the eight 
with m arks running from a bare 
46 per cent in New York to 50.9 
in Pennsylvania. 
At least one election special­ 
ist here believes that the lesson 
for Hubert Humphrey in t h i s 
historical record has almost the 
force of iron. He does not ac­ 
cept any contention that the 
vice president may be doing 
fairly well in New York but 
badly in Ohio and Illinois. 


Some aspects of the current 
unrest in the Soviet Union must 
be extrem eley disturbing to the 
men in the Kremlin. 
It is not prim arily the amount 
of dissent that is significant. It 
is rather the stubborn persist­ 
ency of the dissenters that must 
be taken very seriously. 
Unlike the old Stalin days, the 
dissenters haven’t abjectly con­ 
fessed when hauled into court. 
A 
significant 
num ber 
h a v e 
fought all the way, challenging 
the judges on every step. 
When he was put on trial, 
w riter Vladimir Bukovskii told 
the Soviet judges they were act­ 
ing like fascists and accused 
the K G B (secret police) a n d 
the court of 
attem pting 
to 
operate 
in 
secrecy 
to 
hide 
their Illegal acts. 
On learning 
his fate, he bluntly told the of­ 
iciáis, “ When I am free again, 
I shall again organize demon­ 
strations.” 
Even tough sentences haven’t 
seemed to discourage other dis­ 
senters. Each repressive deci­ 
sion has brought on new pro­ 
tests. 
The dissenters haven’t e v e n 
been 
frightened off by KGB 
threats. They've retaliated by 
publicly 
attacking 
the 
secret 
police. 


ces, some sent to insane asy­ 
lums, some subjected to official 
campaigns of personal slander. 
Some 
without 
trial, 
had 
all 
their writings banned from pub­ 
lication, even to the making of 
handwritten copies. Sometimes 
the police have raided a writ­ 
e r’s home, collected items of a 
highly 
personal, 
em barrasing 
nature and seen to their publi­ 
cation. 
This retaliation seems to have 
had little effect on the dissent­ 
ers. 


When the Soviet government 
sent 
writer-mathematician 
Al­ 
eksandr Esenin - Volpin in a 
mental hospital to keep him qui­ 
et, 95 scholars spoke out in hii 
favor, including several winner* 


In 1952 and 195C, Gen. Dwight 
Eisenhower swept all eight of 
them 
and 
in 
1964 
President 
Johnson did the sam e. In 1960. 
despite the 
closeness 
of the 
combat, the late John F. Ken­ 
nedy won six of the eight from 
Nixon. Only in the somewhat 
freakish 1948 election was there 
a close 
division, 
with 
Harry 


hung in the 59-61 percentage 
range, three were around 55-56. 
Lyndon Johnson’s 1964 sweep 
brought 
showings that scaled 
from a low of 59,1 in California 
to a high of 76.2 in Massachu­ 
setts. But five of the eight were 
clustered in the 63-68 percent­ 
age range. 


Trum an and Thomas E. Dewey 
each winning four. 


Except for a handsome 60.2 
per cent In M assachusetts. John 
Kennedy in 1960 won the bulk 
of the big eight with percent­ 
ages running from a scant 50- 
plus in Illinois to 52.5 per cent 
in New York. Nixon took Cali­ 
fornia with 50.1 and Ohio with 
53,3 in his only victories. 
Even freakish 1948 does not 


In his judgment, what under­ 
lies the close percentage simi­ 
larities in the big eight northern 
states in election after election 
is the simple fact that--even 
t h o u g h geographically they 
span the continent — they are 
quite alike in their social, eco­ 
nomical and political make-up. 
Any kind of tide running two 
or three of them is likely to 
be running in all. They do not 
exist in isolation from each oth­ 
er but in strong common bond. 
At this still early stage in the 
1968 race, the visible tide is go­ 
ing strongly aginst Humphrey. 
If he is to reverse it, possibly 
with the divisive help of George 
Wallace, he will have to find the 
encouraging signs in virtually 
all of the big eight states and 
not just a handfui. So far, that 
evidence is very much lacking. 


Valentyn Moroz, after being 
been sentenced, said, “ As al­ 
ways, they put people behind 
bars and, 
as always, deport 
them to the East. But this time 
these 
people 
did 
not 
sink 
into obscurity. To the great sur­ 
prise of the KGB, for the first 
time in the last decade, public 
opinion has risen; for the first 
tim e the KGB felt powerless to 
stifle all this.” 
The dissenters have openly 
advertised their discontent in 
the West instead of keeping it 
in the family. Secret trials have 
been exposed, not allowed to 
stay under cover. 
When Aleksandr Ginzburg and 
lurii Galanskov were convicted 
in a stacked court, Pavel Litvi­ 
nov, grandson of famed Maxim 
Litvinov, former Soviet foreign 
minister, addressed a letter to 
world opinion. Litvinov report­ 
edly has been arrested for his 
efforts, but that has not pre­ 
vented 
other 
Soviet 
writers 
from persisting in their efforts 
to inform the West of what is 
happening. 
The Kremlin has responded 
with a hodgepodge of counter­ 
attacks. Some writers have re­ 
ceived exceedingly stiff senten- 


of the Lenin prize and one full 
m em ber and six corresponding 
m em bers of the Soviet Acade­ 
my of Sciences. 
It 
is 
quite 
impossible, 
of 
course, 
to 
peer 
within 
t h e 
Kremlin and tally the degree of 
confusion caused by the stub­ 
born resistance of the w riters 
and their refusal to be cowed 
by 
traditional 
Soviet police- 
court methods. 
But the Kremlin’s m ental dis­ 
array can be m easured perhaps 
by the increasing num ber of 
stumbling and irresolute actions 
of the Red authorities, the in­ 
consistencies in their c r a c k - 
downs and the jerky on-again, 
off - again nature of some of 
their prosecutions. 
The Soviet government h a s 
borne down hard with 13- and 
15-year sentences at hard labor 
for some writers, but has hesi­ 
tated to bring charges against 
others 
equally 
active. 
Some­ 
tim es 
officials 
have 
limited 
themselves to sarcasm . 
One Soviet 
expert 
sees 
“a 
vast and powerful government 
dithering in irresolution in the 
face of a relatively small and 
basically quite powerless body 
of pets, novelists, and literary 
critics.” 
This is a situation in which 
totalitarian government m i gh t 
strike out blindly internally. 


PHIL NEWSOM 
Thought for Today 


M1CROSCOOPS 


Hubert has formed a “Task 
Force on Crime.” Oh, great— 
another committee when what 
we need are more police! 


Return of 'Big Minh' Opens New 


Line of Speculation in Saigon 


“ So you also, when you haie don* a11 that is commanded 
you, say, 'We are u n w o r t h y tenants; w t h ait only done what 
uas our d u ty' 
Luke ¡7:10. 


It is never safe to look into the future with eyes of fear.— 
Edward Henry Harriman, American capitalist and railroad ad­ 
ministrator. 


New car prices may be up, 
but, don’t forget, they’ll depre­ 
ciate faster, too! 


Yesterdays 


10 years ago 
Sept. 23, 1958 
Federal pensions for all wid­ 
ows of com batants in the Civil 
War, both Union and Confeder­ 
ate, were authorized by 
Con­ 
gress last spring. A l r e a d y 
more than 1,000 widows have 
filed for such aid. 


20 years ago 
Sept. 23, 1948 
The grand champion steer of 
the 1948 Los 
Angeles 
County 
Fair was sold at auction today 
for approxim ately $650, h i g h- 
lighting the morning program 
of the seventh day of the 17- 
day exposition which is expect­ 
ed to near the half-million at­ 
tendance m ark by tonight. 


Against a background of war- 
weariness among the people of 
both 
the 
United 
States 
and 
South Vietnam and the total 
lack of progress in the Paris 
talks, an interesting new line of 
speculation has opened up in 
Saigon. 
It was triggered by President 
Nguyen Van Thieu’s surprise 
announcement that be 
would 
ask Maj. Gen. Guong Van Minh 
to act as a presidential adviser 
when he returns from exile in 
Bangkok in November. 
The announcement was the 
more surprising since Thieu and 
Vice President Nguyen cao Ky 
had banned Minh from the 1967 
presidential elections, presum a­ 
bly on the grounds that 
he 
rem ained a suspected neutralist 
who favored negotiations with 
the Communists. 


posts, including those of pre­ 
m ier and chief of state. 
In 1965, he finally lost the 
power struggle and wound up m 
exile in Thailand. He rem ained, 
however, 
one 
of 
the 
most 
popular figures in South Viet­ 
nam, enjoying special support 
among 
the 
Buddhists. 
The 
Buddhists frequently criticized 
U.S. policy and accused the 
United States of being interest­ 
ed only in the elimination of 
Communists 
and 
not 
in 
the 
welfare of South Vietnam. 


THE ATTRACTIVE picnic tables under 
the grape arbor at the Adobe de Palomares 
at 491 E. Arrow Hwy. are in good de­ 
mand. During the year just ended, 5,710 
people took part in 154 picnics. It is wise to 
tek*phone for reservations. 
n 


30 years ago 
Sept. 23, 1938 
Opening what officials believe 
will be the greatest of its three 
weekend program s, the Los An­ 
geles County Fair today played 
host to thousands of s c h o o l 
children thruout the county in 
addition to 500 Future Farm er 
members. 


Thieu said in his announce­ 
ment that he wished to further 
“ a policy of national unity and 
reconciliation.” 
Minh, known as “ Big Minh” 
for the fact that he is nearly six 
feet tall, led the revolt which 
toppled 
the 
Ngo 
Dlnh 
Diem 
regime on Nov. 1, 1963. 
Through 
1964, 
a 
turbulent 
period 
which 
suw 
a 
dozen 
government 
coups, 
attem pted 
coups 
and 
g o v e r n m e n t 
shakeups, he served in various 


Thus 
Mlnh’i 
return 
could 
mean much or little. The North 
Vietnamese 
h a v e 
refrained 
from criticizing him and he has 
a brother reportedly high in 
Viet 
Cong 
ranks. 
President 
Thieu always has been luke­ 
warm toward the Paris talks 
and has given no indication he 
would accept a coalition govern- 


BARBS 


Another nice thing about your 
newspaper: The tubes don’t go 
blooey 24 hours after the 90 * 
day w arranty runs out. 


People who live in glass hou.-es 
have a lot more money than 
most of us. 


ment which would include the 
Viet Cong. 
He jailed the runner-up in the 
1967 
presidential 
e l e c t i o n , 
Truong Dinh Dzu, for urging a 
coalition government. 
There is a natural suspicion 
that within the Saigon leader­ 
ship there are those who have a 
vested interest in a continuation 
of the war, either because they 
have profited economically or 
because their own positions are 
at stake. 
But 
other 
forces 
also 
are 
being heard, although faintly. 
Militant 
Buddhists 
u n d e r 
Thich Tri 
Quang 
have 
been 
reported 
readying 
their 
own 
proposals for a coalition govern­ 
ment. 
Last June, the leaders of the 
largest student organization in 
South Vietnam urged an end to 
the war through negotiation to 
prevent the “ destruction of the 
people.” 
E arlier 
in 
the 
year, 
an 
anonymous 
group of 
intellec­ 
tuals, professors, lawyers and 
others, urged an end to the war 
through elections in which the 
Communist-led National Libera­ 
tion 
Front would be free to 
compete. 
These may not be straws in 
the wind. But as Gen. Maxwell 
Taylor o n c e rem arked: 
“ Ail 
wars end ua negotiations,” 


!% • b. NIA, lue V 


’'Love even thy bigoted neighbor!* 


Coming to 
Grips With 
Protesters 


Story a n d Photos 
b y 
L. T. 
R OGERS 


* * - 


<#& $ 
..• ' 
' 
I-» 


„ 
■ 
^ 
f * 
• 
. 


A g r o u p of demonstrators 
sat locked arm in arm on the 
porch of a small hotel. 
“ Hell no, we won’t go,” they 
chanted as police marched to­ 
ward them. 
“ Hey Gestapo, your face is 
torture enough," one protester 
shouted. 
"Cop, you’re a pig,” 
said another. 
The two squads of police stop­ 
ped in front of the hotel and a 
sergeant read a card which ad­ 
vised the demostrators there that 
they were involved in an un­ 
lawful assembly and asked that 
they leave peacefully. 
“ We won’t go, and you can’t 
make us," came the reply. 
Sgt. Jerry Frusher of Mont­ 
clair ordered his first squad to 
remove them. 
As the officers stepped onto 
the 
porch, 
several 
protesters 
grabbed 
one 
policeman 
and 
dragged him inside the hotel. 
Others took a gun and night 
stick from another patrolman. 
The officers, meanwhile, be­ 
gan “ peeling” the protesters a- 
part and carried them off the 
porch. 
Someone 
heaved 
a 
smoke 
bomb onto the porch and a dem­ 
onstrator inside the hotel dove 
through a window and landed 


outside. 
“ I thought it was a tear gas 
bomb.” he said. 
A whistle sounded in the dis­ 
tance, and officers and demons­ 
trators froze. 
The 
patrolmen 
then 
slowly 
withdrew to regroup, 
and the 
protesters retreated inside the 


hotel. 
The 
sit - 
in 
demonstration 


wasn’t real. It was part of a 


training exercise held at Camp 
Pendleton by members of the 
West End Special Enforcement 
Detail (SED ), made up of On- 
tarion and Montclair police of­ 
ficers. 
The unit was joined in the 
training 
by 
14 
officers 
from 
Baldwin Park. 
They 
were 
bemg 
instructed 
how to remove demonstrators 
involved in unlawful assembly. 
Police officers took turns act­ 
ing as the protesters. 
After 
the 
first 
clash, 
Sgt. 
Clyde Graham showed the as­ 
sembled officers pressure holds 
they can use to break 
apart 
demonstrators 
locked 
arm 
in 
arm. 
He said officers should start 
at the ends and “ peel” off the 
protesters one by one. 
“ Work 
as a team, not individuals,” he 
urged. 
Graham said the second squad 
should be alert and give pro­ 
tection 
to the first squad 
in­ 
volved in the physical removal 
of the demonstrators. 
“You’re 
not 
observers, 
but 
part of the detail,” he said. 
A second demonstration was 
staged in front of “ M a’s Cafe," 
with officers in the first assault 
becoming demonstrators. 
“ You 
look 
like 
apes,” 
they 
taunted the new group of of­ 
ficers. 
"Your mother wears 
combat boots," shouted one. 
The officers again formed two 
squads, and the first moved in 
to remove the protesters. How­ 
ever, they found it difficult be­ 
cause 
s e v e r a l 
demonstrat­ 
ors had handcuffed themselves 


together. 
One protester inside the cafe 
jumped out a window and grab­ 
bed a gun from an officer’s hol­ 
ster. A member of the back-up 
squad ran forward and pinned 
him against the wall with his 


nightstick 
A whistle blew and the two 
groups again backed off. 
“ We don’t want this to be­ 
come too realistic," said Police 
Lt. 
Edwin D u r a n , the SED 
commander. 
He said later he had instruct­ 
ed the demonstrators to grab 
guns and nightsticks and to kid­ 
nap the arresting officers. 
“They m ay have to encount­ 
er this in a real situation," he 


said. 
Another 
lecture 
was 
given, 
them the officers discussed their 


mistakes. 
“ We hope we never have to 
use this training,” said Duran. 
“ But we 
will 
be 
prepared if 
called.” 
The 
officers 
t h e n 
turned 
their attention 
to sniper con­ 


trol. 
One patrolman was selected 
to be a sniper inside the Marine 
assault village. He was handed 
a revolver, 
shotgun 
and 
tear 
gas 
bomb 
but 
no gas 
mask. 
Both sides used blank bullets. 
The other officers were divid­ 
ed into four - man search and 
were to locate and isolate the 
sniper. 
Sgt. Sid Peters, the Marine 
recruiter in Ontario who serves 
as 
SED 
instructor, 
said 
the 
best way to flush out a sniper 
is to force him downward in a 
building and out onto the street. 


The small units moved into 


the village and leap - frogged 
as 
they 
cleared 
one 
building 
and moved to the next. 
Finally, the sniper was locat­ 
ed in the second floor of a hotel. 
Several patrolmen were “ shot” 
as they tried to scale the wall 
to reach the roof. 
A volley of revolver and shot­ 
gun fire kept the sniper inside 
long enough for an officer arm ­ 
ed with a tear gas gun to reach 


the hotel. 
A 
metal cylinder was 
fired 
inside a window, and the sniper 
finally 
emerged 
from 
a 
side 
door, his gun firing. 
About a 
dozen 
other 
guns 
opened 
up 
from 
all 
directions, 
and 
the 
sniper fell to the ground. 
He 
quickly recovered. 
The SED was formed in Aug­ 
ust of 1966 to handle civil dis­ 
orders 
that n o r m a l 
patrols 
aren’t able to control. 
Its 
members 
meet 
twice 
a 
month for drills, for which they 
receive extra pay. They are in­ 
structed 
in 
the 
use 
of bayo­ 
nets and night sticks, hand - 
to - hand combat, and sniper 


control. 
The 
SED 
is 
equipped 
with 
plastic shields, 
shotguns, high 
powered 
rifles, 
tear 
gas 
and 
smoke bombs, plus their regu­ 


lar handguns. 
The 
unit is a volunteer or- 
be in good physical condition to 
qualify. The members are iden­ 
tified by yellow and blue pat­ 
ches they wear on their shoulder. 
Duran is a s s i s t e d by two 
squad leaders, Sgt. Frusher of 
Montclair 
and 
Sgt. 
Richard 
Frantom of Ontario. 


LVC Club To Honor 
Wife of President 


. . . 


Snipers 


HEY, 
UP 
HERE— A 
sniper 


peers out a w in d o w as tw o 


p o lic e officers seek a w a y to 


re a c h the second flo o r w i t h ­ 


ou t b e in g 
shot. 
The 
sniper 


w a s ch ase d ou tside. 


Monagan 
To Stump for 
Area GOP 


i 
Assemblyman Robert T. Mon­ 
agan, minority leader of t h e 


LA V E R N E — Mrs. Leland direction of Mrs. Earl M erritt, Assembly, will be in this area 


B. Newcomer, wife of the La professor of art at La Verne Tuesday and Wednesday in be- 
Verne College president, will be College and a member of the 
half of local candidates, 
honored 
tonight 
during 
t h e club. 
I 
At 
2:10 p.m. Tuesday, he will 
meeting of the La Verne College | 
New members and returning 
.face reporters 
and 
1,000 
stu- 
Women's Club. 
members w i 11 be greeted by dents of Pacific High School in 
The reception for Mrs. New- club officers. They are M r s . San Bernardino at a press con- 
comer will be held at 7:45 p.m 
George Arnold, president; Mrs. ference. with Republican candi- 
in the 
home of Mrs. 
Sharon Agler, vice president; and Mrs. date Jim Christensen, 72nd Dis- 
Agler 
4230 N. La Junta D r., Harold Mueller, secretary-treas- trict, also on the platform. 
Claremont. It is the club’s first urer. 
Monagan will spend Wednrs- 
meoun" of the season. 
Those who will serve refresh- day in the 58th Assembly Dis- 
Facuity women and wives of ments are Mrs. Mueller, Miss trict, meeting business and civ- 


f a e u l t y members will greet Mrs. Leola Ott, Mrs. Olive Corwin, ic leaders and the press in be- 
Newcömer during the evening. Mrs, James Blickenstaff a n d half of Gordon Brown, Republi-1 
Entertainment w ill be under the Mrs. John Jang. 
_______ can nominee in that district.__ 
RATTLES AND STRAWS 


PAUL T. HAVENS 


L.V. Lions 
Will Hear 
Governor 


LA V E R N E — Paul T. Havens, 
governor of District 4-L4, will 
speak at the Tuesday meeting 
of the La Verne Lions Club at 


noon. 


The club meets in Community ; 


Building next to City Hall. 


Havens w ill be accompanied 
j RueS!t Fm what you WOuld call a regu- 


by 
Larry 
Henderson, 
cabinet lar movie_goer. I go to a movie every five 
secretary; 
Homer 
F . 
Briggs. ycars ljke ca|endar-work. I ’m a fugitive from 
deputy district governor; 
Rus- ^ 
movie chain gang. 
sell Rytkm an, regional secre- 
For my money ($1.75) there is no more 


tary, and 
Richard A. 
Hynek, soothmg way to spend an evening than to 


zone chairman. 
slump down on a rump-sprung seat in. a dark- 
Havens of Anaheim is a lieu- ened theater redolent of perfume and stale 


Unmoved 
By Movies 


W E W O N ’T G O — 
Police a c tin g a * d e m o n s t ra to r * refuse to 


b u d g e fro m a mock sit-in d e m o n s t r a t io n ^ T h e s e protesters 


. j r - 
J 


h a n d c u f fe d 
them selv es 
t o g e t h e r 
to 
m a k e 
th eir 
re m o v a l 


m o re d iffic u lt. 
(P B p h o t o * ) 


Lectures Set 
On Mutuals, 
Mart Guide 


CIW, Chaffey Team 
Writers 
_ 
., 
. 
-, 
Workshop 
For Nursing Program 


1 


n a v r m * ui m m m n m 
en ea uscauri 
i r u w r m 
,...............— - 
- 
, 
. 
, 
. 
tenant colonel in the Marine Re- popcorn and doze off to the crackle of guns 
tercharg«* and Bank of America cards.) 
1 
_____ 
1 
. 
. 1. - 
_# 
«..«nil 
/-ml. 
w h \ 
c h n n M 
K . r h r i i 
CtrPUMnH 
;inrl 
O 
serve. He has served in mosi 
screen and the whines of small chil* 
of the offices of his local Lions dren ¡n the balcony. 
Club, and has served his dis- 
Who w O U LN D ’T desert a cozy fireside and 
trict as zone chairman, cabinet a p0(Kj mystery book for 
an evening 
like 


secretary, deputy district gov- (bat? 
emor, and he has served the en -1 
Maybe I ’m just the odd single. Since I 


tire Califomia-Nevada Lions as WOU|dn’t walk across the street to see a fhm, 
public relations chairman. 
He it.s a cinch j w ,n never drive to Los Angeles 


also holds numerous awards of (0 see one. M y firm conviction that no movie 
m erit. 
is worth more than 50 cents a seat argues 
— ------------------------ 
strongly against 
the chances of laying out 
$5 for ora*. (Cross my heart—some M O VIE 
tickets are actually selling for $5!) 


----------------- 
i 
ALTA LOMA - Chaffey Col- 
Mrs. Ruth Schindler, Chaffey; 
workshop for sell- 
“ Where Do Mutual Funds Fit le 
win help the California In- nursing chairman, authored the| 
_ 
Pomona Val- 
in” and “ Fall M arket P o lic y " L ilution (or women (C IW ) at proposal 
for 
the 
cooperative £ « 
^ 
are topics for two free invest- Frontera qUal,fy for an accred- program 
and 
volunteered 
to ’ M n Jean 
DoktQr o( pom(> 
ment lectures to be presented ited v0catl0na| nursing program, serve as its director. She char- - 
by Dean W itter and Co., Inc. 
Under the term s of a cooper 
acterized the Chaffey contribu- _ 


The first lecture is set for ative agreement, approved by tion to the program "as a ^erv- 
* wor S™P 
ir-tci v a u im , 
p.w.v.v/.v. 
7 
Tuesday at the San B er-,he Chaffey board, the college ice to society in the rehabilita ‘ 
P‘ 
P■ 
O rch, Bale., 
Orch. Loge. or Mezz. Loge, 
and nardjno off^e of Dean W itter, w,n assume responsibility 
for 
tion of women." 
|h^ process of 
ore- 


showing 
two alternate dates - the theater 
m w 4th ${ 
San Bernardino.lSUCh a nursing program 
for 
se- Those invo|ved in 
the selec- paring 
manuscripts 
she 
ex* 


Market policy will be discusseds,ected inmates 
tion of the students will be Mrs. 
pUuned. 
at 
7:30 
p.m . 
Oct. 
1, 
i t the 
Because of curriculum !im^ ;U c h m d le r, 
Robert 
Ledyard. 
M rs. Doktor invited 
all seri- 
( hino Community Bui ( ing, 
tions, ( IW s existing voce it a ( baifey's 
vocational 
education ous writers to join the group but 
B. St., Chino. 
nursing program was 
m 
c 
and Leonard Mather, she emphasized that it was no 
‘ 
Richard A. Smith and N e djcreditation by the S ate soara 
s m M couneetar. S trv- place for beginners. She said 
Seale, 
account 
executives 
ac- of Vocational Nurse I-.xaminers. ^ 
r iu / in t,n»/.trtr tnr th* •u .t »». 
*kj» momtwr. 


By JOSEPH H. FIRMAN 


and “ W ar and Peace,” starring Dr. Zhivago. 
You can get a good midweek seat to all 
six productions for about $25. Send in your 
reservations, 
indicating 
preference 
for 


)rch., I 
bowing 
manager will notify you when you will be 
permitted to attend. (They also accept Mas 


Why should Barbra Streisand and O m a r 
Sharif be worth $5.50 Fri*Sat e^es. and Hols, 
when you can catch them for as little as $2 
when you can eaten mem ior as nine as u 
t executives 
ac- of Vocational Nurse Examiners. 
” 
instructor for the »hat bv restrictmii the member 
(Wed. Mats)? How much better are the Mezz. 
, 
“r ' .. 
York Stock 
rhaffpv and a w officials be- ins as u ,, 
' 
«, V 
l? 
by 
memoe;. 
I 
»han 9nri Rale ■> Two rfnllar« h».f 
credited by the New York MOCK 
Chaney ana 
iw umv. a s 
course wjU 
^ 
Mrg 
Barbara ship to authors and writers with 
Loge seats than 2nd Balc.2 I wo dollars bet- 
w ill l e c t u r e . T helieve that a program foUowing 
„ J L ___a 


Photography 


Class Offered 


ter? That much closer to a 60-foot high Pana 
vision of Barbra’s left nostril? 
The most massive cinematic put-on was 
dreamed up by the Big Daddy of Czecho­ 
slovakia, which has sent us a brobdingnagian 
chunk of celluloid, “ W ar and 
Peace,” that 
takes two days to see. 


talks are open to the public, the college's vocational nursing 


the San Bernardino o f f i c e of tion status. 


Dean W itter and Co. 


O NLY AT T H E PO IN T of a gun will I 
ever go to see a 
movie that requires an 
1 intermission — or one that calls for reserved 
seats. Fancy getting a hard ticket reserva- 


A 
course 
in 
basic 
photo- tion for a lot of pictures 
splashed 
up on 


graphy is being offered in the a screen. 
Pomona Adult School program 
lt was then, 
as you can imagine, with 
this semester on Tuesdays at something less than uncontrollable excitement 
7 p.m. Edward Tea! of Ontario that I read in the movie ads this week of 


is instructor. 


The course will focus on ac 


six G R EA T 
NEW FILM S 
(they don’t 
call 


m r kwe-xr m u 
them "m ovies”) opening this “ <eason.” (They 
quainting the student with the are all (tala premieres, It goes without say- 


potential 
of 
his own ca m era,U ng) They are 
, 
whether it is an expensive type 
‘‘Star!" with Julie Andrews; 
1 unny 
itr , 
or a box Brownie. All that is with 
Barbra 
Streisand; 
“ O liver. 
starring 
required is a cam era, a crea- ( harles Dickens; 
‘ Ihe Shots of the his er 
• 
' 
. 
. 
. 
• 
k . 
— 
-------— 
«> 
D 
a m 
tivc imagination and willingness 
to learn, the instructor said. 


FACT. YOU CAN catch Part I ( “ W ar” ) 
Wednesday through next Tuesday, and if your 
patience and pocket book hold out, come back 
Oct. 2-8 and catch Part II ( “ Peace” ). 
Isn’t that a kick? Two days to see a mov­ 
ie, when two hours is 1 Vi hours too long. 
____— 
The Battle of Austerlitz didn’t last that long. Service Corps, will be g u e s t 
Tickets are 300 kopecks (Orch. Loge, Fri-Sat- speaker at a meeting of 
the Po- 
Hols). 
mona 
Human Relations Coun- 


When you 
add to the price of a couple cil at 8 p m. Tuesday 
in the 


of $5 tickets 
($10), the gas to drive in and City Council chambers, 


out of the city, parking, baby-sitter fees (Ah, | 
Flora will discuss the Job De 


advanced 
training, 
the 
com- 


and” reservations may be'm ade curriculum and used b>' 
g ™ P w u T te m o i f m eanm ^Tl 
by phoning 889-0741 or writing personnel would earn accredits- gi.tm must be within a > ar of ^ 
^ partk.ipants 


,release from l i w . 
According 
to 
M rs. 
Doktor 


many writers have occasional 
“slumps” and periods of "stag­ 
nancy" where their productivity 
drops. 
The 
workshop 
will 
be 
gered to minimize these lulls. 
Discussion 
of 
manuscripts 
in 
Job Program 
Head To Speak 
Parents, Teachers 


Pilgrim School Group M eeting 
____ _ _____ 


irirtpn Hirprtnr of the 
MONTCLAIR - Parents and teachers of Pilgrim School 
worg w,n au0w rarly and ef- 
Tnh liS o n m e n t P r o g r a m ! for oeuroiogically handicapped children will meet Tuesday at 
(ective 
“ polishing” 
and 
w i l l 
East San 
Gabriel 
Community 7:30 p.m. at the Montclair Christian Church, where the school 
serve as an incentive for great- 


is held. 
" 
Mrs. Richard Carr will speak. 
M arshall Executives To Convene 


The executive board of M arshall Junior High School PTA 
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p m 
in Room 102 at the school. 
New chairmen for the PTA include Mrs. James Fractious, 


er productivity. 
The group will meet Thursday 
evening, Writers 
interested in 
taking pari are invited to at­ 
tend. They may get additional 
information by calling 599-36$) 
or 626-0640. 


Average sale per customer m 


erm an," starring St. 
Peter; 
“ Fm ian’s Rain­ 


bow,” with Fred Astaire and Petula Clark; 


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Mason's 


’Cap 


See Page 6 


Îtogrcss-Bulletîn Rams Put It All Together 
In 45-10 Thrashing of Pitt 


Monday Evening, September 23, 1968 
Page 4, Sec. 2 


41-yard gain and a first and 
Gabriel bit 20 and 22 - yard! 
Plum had four P 
^ 
'or t t 
passes to Jack Snow and Bill yards, including a four-yard TD 
Truax to lead a 56-yard scoringjpass to Willie Ellison 
Ellison 


By JERRY MILES 
P-B Sports Editor 
goal at the Ram one midway 
LOS ANGELES — Mark the through the quarter. Earl Grog 
LUb 
— marK me inrougn me quanci. c-an vjiuj; nua* w .------------ 
- 
~ . 
_ 
,.0, hc nc hp 
date. Sept. 22, 1968. Ram fans, rammed over on the next play drive in the final two minutes of also rushed for 1 _ y 
.. 
it’s a day worth remembering, and Luseg’s PAT tied the score, the half. Bass broke through the and Plum.accounte 
Tt iust mav have been the day 10-10. 
middle for 10 yards and the 1 D yards in the dr e. 
the Rams discovered the com- 
Pittsburgh's g a m e - 
tieing with 13 seconds left 
to boost 
For tte 
plete game, 
which marked their score was the cue for Gabriel to L.A.’s lead to 31*10 at 
half i 
• 
„ 
fantastic season of ’67. but here shift the Rams’ attack into high 
Maxie Baughan s interception | bes ga 
a*vthing dis. 
tofore had 
evaded them th.s gear. He was a runaway there- and 13-yard return to the P tt- 
after. 
burgh 29 set up an early third appointing about our game to 
' It was all here Sunday as Los 
After 
Ron 
Smith’s 
44-yard quarter score for the Rams, day,” smiled A1 en. 
Angeles demolished Pittsburgh, kickoff return, Gabe fired a per* Tommy Mason, who continues to pm.iH.rfh......... 
45-10 
before 
49.647 Coliseum feet strike to Bernie C a s e y , run like the Mason of o k , 
a 
^ CaMy 5 PMS fr( 
fans’ 
who got behind Bob Hohn, for a 10 and nine yard runs in the 
» 
Sure, the Steelers aren’t the 55-yard touchdown. 
short scoring m a r c h . The touch- 
u - 
klcV, 
Colts, or the Packers, but the 
Three p l a y s later Roger down came on Gabriels one- 
p.» from t o w 
wav the Rams handled Pitts- Brown recovered Nix’s fumble yard pass to Bass. 
la - b«» 2« pa*. from o*ri#i 
burgh, indicated L A. definitely at the Steeler 28. On the first 
Bass surpassed the 5,0W-yara 
U 
W 
run ( Gotta tj kick) 
ourgri, inuiiait-fi i^.n. w w u k i; dI Lite ousci-:! wo. v«i 
■ 
third! l*A-~ B,s* 1 
from G*brl,‘ 
is the NFL title threat most piayt Gabriel lofted a pass to mark midway through me 
— . 
. • 
. 
.. t 
t\r\ * fmir-varri run. 
is 
m e 
n r u 
i h i b 
u i a y , 
u a u u c i 
« 
r ------— ------------ 
* 
. 
i 
4 P»S3 from Plum 
have felt along. But, until Sun- Bass, who broke away f r o m quarter on a -0l‘r y^rd 
• 
A^8u<7*id0* 
day, the Rams hadn’t been able linebacker 
John 
Campbell to 
Gabriel turnei 
t e qua, 
^ ^ 
8nJo 
to put the offense with the de take the strike in the end zone, backing over to Plum_ later m 
......... 
£ 
* 
fense for the complete perform- 
Two touchdown passes within the third quarter and ne aireci- * t ^ varc)iig, ........ 
u 
a 
a minute and a half sent the ed the Rams to third H 
n . l ® 
- 
= 
. . . . w j 
Memorable Day 
Steelers reeling. 
___wore _____ 
Yard* »naiutd ... 
??------ » 
Sunday certainly was a mem- 
DUIlUcty uciiannjf 
« ...v,... 
«**## 
orable day for halfback Dick T w o I n c h e s D i f f e r e n c e 
Bass and Roman Gabriel. 
—------------------ 
Bass became the first Ram 
back to ever gain 5,000 yards. 
The Scooter had 25 yards to; 
push his nine-year Ram rushing 
total to 5,010 yards. 
Gabriel hurled four t o u c h - 
downs in a near perfect after- 
Vikings Post Another Upset 
Over Green Bay Packers 


noon of quarterbacking for the 
AssortATFD PRESS as Detroit’s quarterback, didn’tjonds left In the half when Mor- 
Rams. Gabe completed 17 of 23 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
as he ^ 
^ 
a parallel pass t0 half. 


passes for 262 yards. 
Give the Minnesota Vlkin8s ; ^ ^ d0w npasses of 86 yards to back Tom 'Matte, who tossed 
On a day when M'^nesota^wias tw0 incheg and they’ll take 74 Md pan. and ^ and 15 tQ rookie back t0 Morrall, who threw 46 
shocking defending NFL cham- yards—and 
the 
Green 
Bay g arj jvlcCulloch. The Lions sti- yards to Jimmy Orr. 
pion Green 
Bay and Detroit Packers. 
, 
the 
offense with 
Dallas Scampers 
was embarrassing Chicago, the 
The packers got a taste of 
interceptions, one short of 
Defensive end Willie Townes 
Rams were gaining the confi- such ingratitude Sunday when £ 
^ 
Mjke w 
and ^ ,^ < 1 
quarterback 
Frank 
dence they’ll need for the show- ;he 
p ro v in g 
Vikings 
used ^ 
each~st0|e Three. 
¡Ryan’s fumble and rumbled 20 
those inches to spring the b.g- 
McCall became the fi 
Don McCall became the first yards for a touchdown and a 14- 
New Orleans back to gain more 0 lead for Dallas in the second 
100 yards in a game—he quarter, and Dan Reeves added 
ran for 127 and scored two two short scoring runs in to fi- 
times. Dave Whitsell blocked a nal half. 


D EA C O N NIXES N IX— Rams’ All-Pro defensive end Deacon 
Jones barrels past Pittsburgh blocker Dick Hoak to crash 
into the Steelers’ quarterback Kent Nix. Even so, Nix some­ 
how managed to get pass away. (P-B Photo/G. Schneider) 


downs ahead. 
...___ 
, r 
„ __ 
‘T m a not used to these laugh- 
upset of the young National 
ers.” said Ram P-R man Jack Football 
League 
season 
by tban 
Teele as he paraded through the upending the world champions 
press box. Neither were the 26-i3. 
L. A . fa n s , b u t w h o nevertheless 
The vikings decided they’d 
^ 
carried it four yards! j 0hn Brodie, who spent two 
hooped it up throughout. 
]ike th0Se two inches in the third fQr a scQre b!ocked a fjejd goal days in the hospital with a crick 
For the first time this season quarter after Green Bay had 
nd intercepted a pass lead- in his neck 
last week, fired 
Coach George Allen was able to scored and cut Minnesota’s lead 
* tQ a touchdown as the Saints three scoring passes for San 
give all available hands playing t0 
jh e Packers, their mo- stopped sonnv Jurgcnson until Francisco and set up a fourth 
time. Everyone was so effective mentum growing, had Minneso- ,he fourth 
with his passing. 
that 
it was difficult to tell ta stopped, fourth down and two ' £ari Morrall( again fniing in| 
pete Gogolak's second field 
whether Allen was going with mches needed for a first down f(jr injured 
j 0hnny 
Unitas.jgoal put the Giants ahear 
20-19 
his regulars or reserves. 
0n the Vikings’ 26 yard line. threw three interceptions and 
“We played a!! 40 of our play- 
But Coach Bud Grant dec‘ded Tiad one of three Baltimore fum- 
ers. 
said Allen, 
and h*it s the 
jj-y 
^nd cjuanerback Joe 
but he overcame the er* 
tvpe of experience you want to j^app crept two inches for a 
with three scoring passes 
Kapp crept two inches 
give your club. We haven’t been fjrst 
down, 
and 
then 
drove 


in the third quarter and Fran 
Tarkenton passed for a 27-19 
lead after A1 Haymond returned 
a kickoff 98 yards for the Eagles 


Owner Not Satisfied 


the 


O Malley Wants Winner 


in 
a 
position 
like 
this 
for Minnesota 74 
yards 
for 
awhile.” 
back-breaking touchdown. 
Gabriel put on a sensational 
More Surprise 
1 aerial show before giving way 
jn more minor surprises, the 


and set up another touchdown and Carl Lockhart brought bark 
with an 84-yard throw1. 
¡an interception 72 yards for 
The winning touchdown—for a New York. Three blocked extra 
21-20 lead—came with 39 sec- point tries set back the Eagles. 


LOS ANGELES (AP) — Own-lthem sole possession of seventh pitching Sunday of right-hander 
Sutton, 10-15, had 
______ 
. . 
i t 
1 I ______ . . . 
n 
. . 
» . L a U n » 
C t 
1 n n i o O A u i r t A r t f i n V»ic o r S3 
er Walter O Malley is cracking 
down on the Los Angeles Dod­ 
gers 


place in the National League. Don Sutton, who beat St. Louis 
But O Malley isn’t satisfied Ace Bob Gibson, thanks to ninth 
‘‘We've 
had 
players who inning relief help from left-han- 
*‘I 
won’t be satisfied 
with would get a scratch on their,der Jim Brewer, 
anything less than a winner and finger and be out of the lineup 
The Dodgers won the game run 
I don’t want any hypochrondiacs for two weeks,” he said. 
in the eighth inning when 
on the club,” O'Malley said be-! O’Malley said the club would Sudakis walked and was 
fore 
the Dodgers completed a take daily calisthenics next sea- ed to second. Paul Popovich 
sweep of a three game 
series son in hopes of being better;then hit a shallow fly to rookie 


to Milt Plum in the final half. Detroit Lions, bouncing back) 
Not 
only 
was 
Gabe's 
pass^^ after being shellacked 59-13 by; 
Ing pin-point, so was his play .Dallas last week, turned on the 
calling. 
favored Chicago Bears 42-0, and 
‘‘The play-action passes were the New Orleans Saints piled 
one-hit, wen executed," said Allen. “The past the Washington Redskins 


Bill 
bunt- 


2-0 victory in his grasp entering faking was excellent.” 
the eighth inning. But with two 
Gabricl’s five-yard pass to 
out, Dal Maxvill, Gibson and Bernie Casey put the Rams on 
Lou Brock hit singles for one lop 
on L A >, flrst series, 
and then Gibson tied 
jbut Booth Lusteg booted a 20- 
2-2, when he scored from third 
field goal for the Steelers 
on a balk. 
later in the quarter. 
The Dodgers won eight of 10 
Bnlce GosSe tf8 12-yard field 


37-17. 
Baltimore 
subdued 
Atlanta 
28-20, Los Angeles leveled Puts- 


Jets Control East 
By Beating Boston 


The Boston Patriots had their 
Cincinnati converted a pair of 
burgh 
45-10, 
and 
Dallas ¡home opener in Birmingham, second-half 
interceptions 
Into 
squashed Cleveland 28-7 as the Ala., the Patriots looking for touchdowns and handed Buffalo 
other NFL powerhouses rolled «ole control of the top spot in its third consecutive 
loss. AI 
on. In other games, San Fran- the Eastern Division and Bir- Beauchamp 
returned 
one 17 
cisco boat St 
Louis 35-17 and mingham iooking for a fran- yards 
and 
Charley 
King M 


Sunday against St. Louis, 3-2. It conditioned than this year, 
jright-fielder 
Joe 
Hague, who and will finish the season 
was the Dodgers’ 15th victory in 
Meanwhile, Manager Walter overthrew third for a two-base week, 
playing 
two games at 
their last 19 games and gave Alston 
was 
elated 
over tho error to let in the winning run.Thicago and three at Atlanta. 
- 
They 
drew 
1,581,093 fans at 
Rigney Plans Experiments 
During Angels' Final Week 


D iU v v v IU o jC U a *<£> J«»vs 
u ia v u 
c-» 
o 
r 
games on their final home stand goaj apajn cxtended the Rams’ the New York Giants outlasted chise in the American Football yards for another. 
thisilead to seven early in the sec- Philadelphia 34-25. 
League. 
ond quarter. 
Minnesota, which has beaten 
The Patriots suffered a com- 
Diving Catch 
the Packers four of their 
last plete disappointment 
and Bir- 
Pittsburgh used end J. 
R nine meetings, built a 16-0 
lead mingham at least a mild one.; 
* 
‘ 
*'* 
J 
" Boston is having difficulty find-i 
ing a suitable playing site, and 
the game was billed as a test to 


and 
drew 
( home 
this 
less than a year ago. 


★ ★ ★ 


NFL, AFL 
Standings 


»T touts 


Russell May Sign 
Richest NBA Pact 


ANAHEIM (AP)—The Califor->at tied the score. 
a poor showing this week, com 
nia Angel* have juat six home: 
Kealey, 0-1, took the loss and bined with a Chicago surge, 
games to play before the 196H Vicente Romo, 5-3, was the win- could dump the Angels Into 
American 
League 
season 
is ner. 
ninth. The White Sox trail the 
over. With none of the rush 
The defeat was the 90th of Angels by two games, 
and worry of road trips, M anag-the year for the eighth-place 
Minnesota, 8-7 against the An 
er Bill Rigney may do some Angels. One more will tie the gels this season, opens a three- 
experimenting. 
club record set in 1961 and 1963. game set tonight. The Twins 
He did just that Sunday In 
California trails seventh-place will send former Angel Dean 
Cleveland, starting pitcher Den- Minnesota by nine games so Chance, 
15-15, 
against Clyde 
nis Bennett, replacing him with they can climb no higher. But Wright, 10-5. 
__ 
Marty Pattin and finishing up 
with rookie Steve Kealey. And 
that trio pitched a three-hitter. 
But the Indians spoiled the 
strategy by taking a 2-1 victory 
when Lou Johnson singled home 
pincb-runner 
Tommy 
Harper 
with the winning run in the 


elTh.h Indians didn't get a hit 
BOSTON (AP) - Bill Russell Auerbach and Krisner negotiat- 
until Tony Horton home red in a 12-year National Basketball ed* 
the sixth. By the end of the Association veteran, is ready to 
game, the Angel pitchers had sign one of the richest contracts intm ber 
allowed 
six 
walks 
and 
two m NBA history to continue as dM»berlail» recently signed for 
teammates had committed 
er- player-coach of the Boston Cel- un estimated $3 rrulhon for pluy- 
rors, 
tics for another couple of years. 
tbe next 
five years with the 
The only bright spot was Tom 
A 
toU1 The Associated 1 os Angeles Lakers Oscar Rob- 
Satriano’s single and pinch-hit-lPltfSS Sunday night that RUSsell 
' 0i Cint'nnatl and JerrV 
ter Rick Reichardt s run-scor his aereed to terms in a two-iWest oi the Laker8 arc btdieved 
Ing double in the seventh Inning year contract calling for slightly in the $^,000 class. 
it ★ ★ 
more than $200,0«) a season. 
Although 


Brock If 
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Shannon 3b 
Gugltano 4b 
Manvill i» 
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LOS A M G C IC S 
ab r h bl 
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4 0 11 Crawford If 3 I 
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RADIO-TV 


Total 
St.Lowk 
Lot Anaalat 
P — Hegut 


j a p n l 
T O N IG H T 'S R A C IO 
3 0 0 1 R A C f 
R E S U L T S 
-- 4 30 
4 0 1 0 
(1220), Fairground*. 
3 0 0 0 B A S E B A L L - 
7,3S P.m. 
0 0 0 0 
Angei* v*. Twin* 
L I Z , " 
TUESDAY'S RADIO 
B A S E B A L L - 
11 05 
a m. 
KR1 


Lot A n**ia* I. 


year, about 
^¡iburn'S diving catch of quar-jby halftime on a safety and Bill 
terback Kent Nix’s pass for a Brown’s two scoring runs, but 
_______________ the issue siill uus in doubt when 
Kapp inched his way to the vital see how the AFL would draw in 
¡first down. 
Birmingham, 
j 
‘Tt 
was 
just 
an 
occasion , 
a crowd of 29,129 turned out 
▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ where we felt we had to take at Legion field, which seats 
the 
momentum 
away 
from about 70,000, Sunday to watch 
them,” Grant said of Minneso- the New York Jets and Boston, 
ta’s gamble, and Coach Phil sharing the lead in the East 
Bengtson of the Packers admit- with 1-0 records, 
ted it succeeded. 
New York won it 47-31 on Joe 
‘‘That fourth down play took a Namath’s passing and an alert 
I lot of steam out of us,” he said, defense, the Jets taking sole St. Louis 
<s>- 
Bill Munson, making his debut possession of the No. 1 position. Pittsburgh 
Bengals Win Again 
-------- 
Cincinnati beat Buffalo 34-23 
Western Conference 


pm . 
K K A R 


KAM»C 
(710), 


, 
Obdbert V*. Cub*. 
• 
# 0 1 1 1 « — j R A C E 
R g S U L T S 
- 
L B — St Lout* 


Gibton 
(1,21-*) 
. 
I 
Sutton (W.ia-IT) 
. 1 
S 
3 
} 
Brtwor 
. 
1 
0 
0 
0 


é:» 
(1220), Fairground*. 
B A S E B A L L — 7 35 p.m. 
v*. Twin*. 
T U E SD A Y 
~ m. 


H R —-CrawforS 
(31. 
BA SE BA 
IP 
H R E R B S S 
Angol* 
I 
7 
3 
2 
5 11 
T l ____ 
4 FO O T B A LL 
~ 
» 30 
P 
0 
Tom m y Proftwo show. 


(440). 


KKAR 


KMPC 
(710), 
p.m. 


NATIONAL LEAGUE 


E a s t e r n C o n f e r e n c e 


C a p i t a l D i v i s i o n 
W L 
New York 
2 0 
Dallas 
2 0 
Washington 
I 1 
Philadelphia 
0 2 
Century Divisimi 


T Pet. 
0 1.000 
0 1.000 
0 .500 
0 .000 


New Orleans 
Cleveland 
"'N 
KTLA 
0 0 


Russell is the second highest 
of 
the 
NBA. 
Wilt 


and Kansas City whipped Den- 
Coastal Division 
ver 34-2 in the other Sunday Los Angeles 
2 0 
¡games. San Diego topped Hous- Baltimore 
2 0 
¡ton 20-14 and Oakland stopped San Francisco 
1 1 
Atlanta 


Sunday'* Rttwit* 
Baiti mor# 7i, A tU ntg 20 
D etro it 42, Chicago 0 
allai Jl, Citveland 7 
M in n ® » !• ?*. Grgon B a y IS 
New York 34. Philadelphia 3* 
Lo» Angela» 45 P¡W**xirgh n 
tan Francisco 35- St lo u is 17 
Now Orleans 37, .Vashirgton 17 


1 o 


C A L IF O R N IA 
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O LE V IL A N O f h bl 


Russell, 
a 6^ foot-912 center 
who won All-American honors 
club spokesman iwQ girajgbt years at the Uni- 


/ Rpfjrga/ » 9 0 


a;said he had no knowledge of the ver8jjy 0y gan Francisco, led the 
aligning, tiiere was speculation u njted states to the Olympic 
* tka 
ti ws-------------- A 
1 “ 
“ 
be 
for gold medal In the 1956 Games 


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Total 
. 3/ 3 
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111* 
C E i u 
I H • • t 
I 
Saína» w, 
Johiwt**. 
Nfiion 
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L l-C a lifo rn ia 
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I 
2B ■IrK.hitdt 
p 'tm 
(14). 
SB 
«arpar 
Imam* 
bannob 
Fatiti) 
N W 


T 
O 
t » 


MR BB 


il A 
*. 


the 
announcement 
might 
made at a noon luncheon iui 
joining the Celtics. 
Russell and his teammates. 
j 
beCamP an immediate de- 
The agreement, which report- fenslve star and led the Celtics 
j edly includes salary and fringe t0 the NBA title. St. Louis edged 
e i»enefits, was worked out by Cel Boston for the title In 1958, but 
tics* 
General 
Manager 
Red r ussh | & Co. then stormed to 
\uerbach and Russell’s attor- an unprecedented eight straight 
» ney, Morris Kiisner of Boston championships. 


dh? during the past few weeks. 
jh e Philadelphia 76ers, led by 
Russell, who will be 35 in Feb Chamberlain, 
ended 
Boston’s 
ruary, received an estimated string in Russell’s first year as 
$150,000 as player-coach the last coach in 1967, but the Celtics got 
two years. He has shown little vengeance 
and 
regained 
the 
^concern over a new contract as crown last spring. 


Miami 47-21 Saturday night. 
Boston never led against New 
Central Division 
York, but the Patriots were Minnesota 
2 0 
threatening to make a game of Green Bay 
1 1 
it early in the third period when Detroit 
1 1 
Mel Witt intercepted a Namath Chicago 
0 2 
pass and returned it four yards 
for a touchdown, closing the gap 
to 20-17. 
But the Jets quickly put it out! 
of reach, scoring 17 points be­ 
fore the period was over, Mark 
Smolinski picked up a blocked 
punt and scored from three 
yards out. 
A fast Jet rush forced a shot 
punt, gave New York field posi­ 
tion and Namath capitalized on 
it with a 27 yard touchdown 
W 
pass, his second of the day. A New York 
2 
pass interception set up 
a 27¡Boston 
1 
yard field goal by Jim Turner, Houston 
1 
the Jets had a 37-17 lead and Miami 
0 


Sunday'» G am ** 
fianta at San Franose 
aitlmof# at Pim burgh 
hicago at M in n *tota 
iMat a t Philadelphia 
trolt at Green Bay 
S 
o* Angelas at C levglan* 
t t oui* at New Orleans 
►h.ngtc 
W âihiogion at New York 
AMERICAN LEAGUE 
Eastern Division 
L 
0 


T O U CH D O W N FOR U C IA -—left halfback G r*g Jonei of U C IA plunge* through the line 
from the five-yard line during Bruins’ 63-7 rout of Pittsburgh at the Coliseum Saturday 
night. For more on first weekend of college action, see story on page 5. (AP Wirephoto) 


were out of danger. 
; The heavily favored Chiefs 
couldn’t 
get 
started 
against 
Denver, managed only a 6-2 
halftime lead and coach Hank 
Stram made some changes. 
1 
He sent in second-string quar­ 
terback Jackie Lee, who hit on 
seven of eight passes for 99 
¡yards and two touchdowns, and 
third string running back Rob­ 
ert Holmes, who scored twice on 
runs of 17 and six yards as the 
•Chiefs made a rout of it. 


Buffalo 


T Pet. 
0 1.000 
0 .500 
0 .333 
0 .000 
0 .000 
Western Divisimi 
Oakland 
San Diego 
Kansas City 
Cincinnati 
Denver 
» R«»uH* 
S n Diego*io),,HÔuJio« 14 
kl and 47, Miam i 31 


Cincinnali Si, Buff 
Kant a * CM 


New York 
a to 23 
ly 34, D«nvttr 3 
Saturday * Goma 
Y al Miami, nl«N 
Kan toa City .. _ 
Sunday' 
B oaten at Oanv*- 
New York at Buffalo 


night 
t G am a* 


Oakland at Houston 
San 
Otago 
at 
CtocMnatt 


la Verne ‘Big Winner’ 
Valley College Gridders 
Debut With 3 Losses, 1 Tie 
Upsets Hit Colleges 


By BILL LANGLEY 
P-B Sports Writer 
La Verne College was the big 
winner among the local collegi­ 
ate football team s on the open­ 
ing weekend 
of 
the 
gridiron 
season. 
The Leopards still have a per­ 
fect record because Coach Ro­ 
land 
Ortmayer’s 
club 


Claremont-Mudd, 
starting 
a State Hayward took advantage 
gridiron comeback under new of six pass interceptions to hand 
mentor John Zinda, earned the the Broncos a convincing 61-23 
tie by rallying from an early whipping. Poly also lost quar- 
13-0 deficit to gain a 13-13 tie terback Rich Benson on an in- 
against St. Mary’s in Northern jury. 
California. 
Pomona College took a longer 
The Stags demonstrated a po- trip to Tacoma, Wash, but re­ 
tent passing offense behind vet- turned home with a 28-12 loss 
doesn’t eran quarterback Robin Jarvi, to Puget Sound. Tim Gafney 
start its campaign until Satur- 
who connected on 23 of 52 tosses scored both Sagehen touchdowns 
day at UC San Diego. 
for 283 yards. The C-M defense on a 24-yard pass trom Eric 
While 
La Verne enjoyed 
a also made three valiant goal Miller and a 93-yard punt re­ 
weekend off, the other four col- line stands in the second half I turn. 
lege squads began their sea- to protect the tie. 
Azusa 
Pacific 
stayed 
home 
sons with the total result of 
Cal Poly didn’t fare as well but the result was the sam e, 
three losses and a tie. |on its Bay Area trip as Cal 
A 
rugged 
Nevada 
Southern 
squad handed the Cougars a 29- 
8 defeat behind flanker Steve 
Buzick. 
In action involving the bigger 
small 
college clubs, UC Santa 
Barbara took a 18-7 loss from 
Tampa; 
Idaho 
State 
tripped 
Fresno State, 38-28; Sacramento 
... 
. 
... 
, 
State handed Cal Poly SLO a 
Citrus was idle but, like the 13.7 def 
and Sa„ p rancjsc0 
Mount.es and Panthers, 
faces 
, Sama c|ara 
19.7 
rough opposition 
this weekend.; 
J h f . s c u c clubs didn>t fare 
Citrus opens at home against ^ 
wed Besides the gam es in- 


Area J.C.S Enjoy 
Winning Debuts 


By GORDON VERRELL 
Assistant Sports Editor 
The past weekend was a big 
one for Pomona Valley Junior 
college football team s. Now, if 
the sam e thing is true after this 
next weekend, well, 1968 might 
be a pretty dandy year after all. 
Two of the area’s three jay- 
cees went to the post, both com ­ 
ing away winners. Mt. San An­ 
tonio College clipped Riverside 
City College, 21-9, to provide a 
successful debut for new Coach 
Don Greeley. And Chaffey Col­ 
lege put the boff on College of 
the Desert, 19-8, to put an end 
to a nine-gam e tailspin suffered 
last year by the Panthers. 


Antelope V a l l e y , a club it volving the 
local clubs, 
Red 
squeezed past last season, 20-1 k ,ands 
ated Chjc0 s 
Antelope 
V a l l e y 
tumbled 
w hi|e 0ccidental ,05t, 
Moorpark, 
13-0, in its opener1 
19-9, 
to UC Davis. 
Cal Lutheran showed its pow- 
t 
. 
u u .*i 
Mfc a 
* 
, er in blanking Pacific Lutheran, 
face tough battles 
MSAC Ira- 
Cal Western lost, 23- 
tmlr> 
1 A nn U o o r h » a m o u t th ft 
* 


last Saturday. 
M eantime, MSAC and Chaffey 


vels to Long Beach to m eet the 
City College Vikings, 30-13 vie- 20, to Simon Fraser in Canada. 
Plenty of action is on tap this 
tors over L A Ctty College las 
' 
V em e,s 
Saturday. And Chaffey opens at: 
Sacra. 
hom e agatnst Glendale which 
^ 
• 


Pro Football Stats 


■ ft I 


Giants 34, Eagles 25 


Santa Ana, 
Anaheim 
Impressive 


By PAUL HILL 
P-B Sports Writer 
Capsule 
view 
of 
the 
first 
weekend of prep football in the 
Southland: 
Anaiieim and Santa Ana, the 
Southland’s 
top ranked 
team s 
last fall, m ade im pressive de­ 
buts. Anaheim rolled to a 28-8 
win over Chaffey, white Santa 
Ana blitzed usually strong Ma­ 
ter Dei, 31-13. 
St. Paul and Lakewood scored 
victories over highly rated op­ 
ponents. St. Paul, ranked sev­ 
enth 
in 
one 
pre-season 
poll, 
storm ed to a 21-6 win over El 
Rancho, which w as rated No. 
3, Lakewood 
(No. 
6) 
slipped 
past W estminster (No. 9*. 21-12. 
Santa Barbara, ranked fifth, 
played to a scoreless tie with 
Servite of Anaheim. 
Tem ple City, the No. 1 ranked 
3-A team last fall, was a 12-6 
upset victim of San Gabriel. 
Among 
the 
Pomona 
Valley 
team s, Ganesha, Bonita, Pom o­ 
na and Chino m ade im pressive 
showings. 
Ganesha romped over Row 
land, 32-6. Bonita swamped Rio 
Hondo League contender Duar­ 
te, 32-0. Pomona blanked South 
Hills, 12-0. Chino bowed to West 
Covina, 7-0, but showed that it 
will be no pushover this sea­ 
son. 
Most 
of 
the 
Valley 
team s 
play their final non - league 
gam es this weekend before be­ 
ginning conference play Oct. 4 
Highlighting the schedule will 
be Ganesha at Victor Valley; 
Bonita vs. Gladstone at Citrus 
College; Chino at South Hills; 
Claremont 
at Temple C it y ; 
Lakewood at Chaffey; and Fon 
tana vs. Pomona at Mt. San 
Antonio College. 


was idle last week. 
MSAC will be hoping quarter­ 
back Larry M aucere will set to 
go full tilt at Long Beach. Mau­ 
cere pitched one TD pass and 
had another called back playing 
part - t i m e against Riverside. 
George Tovar shared the QB 
duties with Maucere, both turn­ 
ing in creditable perform ances 
Maucere has been bothered by 
an ailing ankle. 
Chaffey opened a 19-0 lead on 
Desert before the host club m an­ 
aged to get anything started 
Pat 
Quinn 
scored 
twice 
for 
Coach Bill Gable’s varsity and 
Art Perez ran back an inter 
ception 65 yards for the other 
TD. 
Besides 
MSAC, 
five 
other 
South Coast Conference team s 
enjoyed successful openers 
Fullerton, as expected, had 
little difficulty in romping past 
Cypress, 
48-0; 
Orange 
Coast 
laced Cerritos, 23-7; San Diego 
Mesa cuffed L. A. Valley, 6-0; 
Santa Ana dumped Pierce, 22-13 
and 
San 
Diego 
City 
College 
ripped Grossmont, 46-13. 
Rio Hondo and Golden West 
were the only losers. Rio Hondo 
bowed 
to 
Harbor. 
40-12, and 
East L. A. topped Golden West, 
27-19. 
Among the Southeastern Con­ 
ference clubs, Chaffey and Pal- 
omar were the lone winners. 
Palom ar trim m ed Mira Costa, 
15-8. 
San 
Bernardino 
and 
South­ 
western, along with Citrus, were 
idle. Grossmont, Riverside and 
Cypress all lost to SCC clubs. 


Claremont-Mudd 
hosts Colorado College and Po­ 
mona 
College 
greets 
Azusa 
Pacific. 


NOSE FIRST— Notre Dame’s Bob Gladieux (2 0 ) dives over 
the Oklahoma line into the end zone on the second of his 
three cne-vard touchdown plunges Saturday in South Bend. 
No. 3 rated Irish won handily, 45-21. 


O.J., Gilbert, 
Gipson Crisp 
In Openers 


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 


O.J. Simpson of Southern Cali­ 
fornia was a 
first team 
All- 
American 
halfback last year. 
Chris Gilbert of Texas and Paul 
Gipson of Houston only made 
the second team . 
On college football’s first big 
Saturday, Simpson scored four 
touchdowns and rambled for 236 
yards on 39 carries as second- 
ranked Southern California de­ 
feated Minnesota 29-29. 
O.J., however, did not over­ 
shadow the play of Gilbert and 
Gipson 
in what som e 
people 
called the championship gam e 
of the Southwest. Both had a lot 
to do with the 20-20 tie that re­ 
sulted from the clash between 
the nation's No. 4 team , Texas, 
and the No. 11 team . Houston. 
Big M ileage 
Gilbert ran for 195 yards on 21 
carries; 
Gipson 
gained 
173 
yards on 28 tries. Simpson’s av­ 
erage per carry was six yards, 
the sam e as Gipson’s 
Gilbert 
finished with a nine-yard aver­ 
age. 
Included 
in 
Gilbert’s 
gains 
were touchdowns runs of 57 and 
eight yards. Gipson scored all 
three of Houston’s touchdowns 
on runs of one, 66 and five 
yards. 
There w as one time, however, 
when 
T exas 
stopped 
Gipson, 
and that meant the difference 
between a tie and a Houston vic- 


Bengals 34, Bills 23 
At Cincinnati—14,045 
Bills 
Bengal* 
...................... ■ 
C*n~~FG Livingston 11 
in—M cVea 80 run (Livingston kick) 
Id 
7 7 
» 
0 10 14~-34 
At PhlladeiDhla--60,858 
_ 
Giants 
7 10 I lfc -g 
Eagles 
H 0 7 4—25 
i NY 
Minnear 2 run (Gogolak kick) 
1 Pha 
Havmond 98 kickoff return (kick 


,#Pha—Lang 23 pass trom Huarto (kick 


| M T —Lockhart 77 pass Interception (Go 
:golak kick) 
_ 
NY 
EG Gogolak 20 
. 
.. . . 
P h « - W o o d e s h ic V 3* run (Baker kick) 
N Y—FG Gogolak 30 
_ 
. 
NV—Morrison 12 pass from Tarkenton zon(f 
(Gogolak kick) 
, . . 
NY—Duhon ) run (Gogolak kick) 
P h a 
H a w k i n s 
»2 p a s s f r o m 
H ill 
( k i c k 


Individual Leaders 
Rushing - New York. Frederickson 1(V 
50, Philadelphia. Woodeshick 15-12». Lang 


9 deceivin g — New York, Morrison 6-24, 
Duhon 3 68; Philadelphia. Hawkins t-»2. 
, 
pa„ tng __ Buffalo. Darragh 14-35-3. 125 
Passing 
New Y o r ^ Tarkenton 14 20- 
ards 
Cincinnati. Stofa 8-19-1, 52. 
1, 
190 y a r d s ; 
Philadelphia, Huarta 3-9 2,, 
_______ 
45, Hill 1 5 -0 , 9 2. 


|gf—Anderson 14 run (M ercer kick) 
But—McDermott 5 run (M ercer kick) 
Cin— FG Livingston 3» 
Cin— Kirtg 32 pass interception (Livings­ 
ton k lek i 
Cin— Beaucham p 
12 
pas* 
Interception 
(Livingston kick) 
Buf 
Anderson 100 klckoff return (Men* 
cer kick) 
But—Safety, 
Robinson 
tackled 
In end 
une 
O n—Sm iley 1 run .(Llvh^ston kick) 


Rushln# 
_ 
Gregory 
7-34) 
Cincinnati, 
McVea 
Smilev 
13-42. 
Robinson 
9- 
mdev 13-42, Robinson »-2J. 


individual 
Buffato, 
Anderson 
___ 
Robinson 
»*25. 


Receiving — 
ters 4-42, Trapp 
Buffalo, M oses 3-14. 
2-28; Cincinnati. Sha¡ 


t f t 


Mas* 
rm in 


esr 
4- 
_!• 
I 
1/1 
chiefs 34, Broncos 2 
4 9 ers 3 5 . Cardinals 14 
At Kansas citv~45,§2i 
' 
B'PfKOO ................ 
Chiefs 
7 3 0 7 -1 7 
7 
7 
1 14-35 


5 
1 
7 21—34 
KC—FG Stenerud 47 
D en -S afety, Wilson tackled m end ion# 
K C -F G Stenerud 36 
KC—Holmes 17 run (Stenerud kick) 
KC—Holmes 6 run (Stenerud kick) 
KC—Taylor 20 pass from Leg (Ster.grud 
kick) 
KC—Taylor 14 pasa from Lag (Stenerud 


At San Francisco—27,5S7 
Cardinals 
............ 
- 


SF —Handle 29 pass from Brodie (Davis 
kick ) 
S*L 
Shivers 14 pass from Hart (Bakk- 
en *'c*> 
. 
„ .. 
SF—Crow 50 pass from 
Brodie (Davis 
kick) 
kick) 
StL—FG Bakken 27 
Individual 
Leaders 
SF—McNeil li pass from Brodle (Davis 
Rushing — 
Denver, Lynch 4-16» Kansaa 
kick) 
_ 
. 
. . . , 
iCIty. Holmes 11-70, Pitts 2-37. 
SF—Willard 1 (D avis kick 
I 
Receiving 
— 
Denver. 
Crabtree 7-113. 
StL 
Brumm 
17 
tumble 
recovery Van Heusen 5-5»; Kansas City, Taylor 5- 
(Bakken kick) 
82, Richardson 3-3» 
SF 
McFarland 
43 
pass 
from 
Mira 
P^JSpr,q 
Denver, Le Clair 14-25-3. 227 
(D avis kick) 
. 
yards, Kansas 
Cklv, Lee 7-8-0. 9», Da v* 
individual Leaders 
son ioi5-0, 137. 
Rushing 
— 
St 
Louis, 
Shivers 
13-55, 
.........— 
Crenshaw 
10-45; 
San Francisco, WHIardi 
24-91, Lewis 18-55 
Receiving — St. u w » , """."."Lì.'. " V 
Smith 2 40; San Francisco, McNen ,6 74. 
Louis, W illiams 7-9», J 
Jets 47, Patriots 31 
^mirn / w» 
n ouvi*»w ifivisv'' 
**■*■*« 
Crow 3-77. Randle 3 44. McFarland 2.50 . 
At Birm ingham . A la.-2»,t»2 
Passing - 
St. Lou.s, Hart 
J£»! Jet» 
......................... 
14 4 17 
yards. San Francisco, Brodie 16-27-2, 236. Patriots 
3 7 
7 


Cowboys 28, Browns 7 


At D allas-68.733 
Browns 


C0D af~B avnham 2 run (Clar£ kick) 


55 
pass 
from 
Ryan 


Dal—Bavnham 2 run (Clark kick) 
Dal—Townes 30 run with fumóle (Clark 
kick) 
Cle—Warfield 
(Cockrott kick) 
D al--R eeves 4 run (Clark k ck 
D al—Reeves 1 run (Clark kick 
Individual Leadtra 
Rushing — Cleveland, Kelly 13-SI; Dal­ 
las, R eeves 17 98 
. 
R eceiving — Cleveland, Warfield 3-85; 
Dallas, Rentzel 4 48 
Passing 
Cleveland, Meredith 10-17-0. 
156 yards; Dallas 
Rvan 10-17-0. 194. 


Vikings 26, Packers 13 


10 -4 7 
- - M l .. 
■ ■ 
H 
I . 
| 14-41 
NY 
Beverly 68 pass Interception (Tur. 
ner kick) 
Bos— FG Cappelletti 31 
NY—Maynard 
39 
pats 
from 
Namat»» 
(Turner kick) 
N Y -F G Turner 30 
NY—FG Turner 27 
Bos—Marsh 
70 
pass 
from 
Taliaferro 
(Cappelletti kick) 
B ov Witt 4 pass Interceohon (Capoti* 
letti kick) 


kick) 
NY— Smollnskt 3 blocked punt (Turner 


NY—Lam m ons 27 pass from Narrigli* 
(Turner kick) 
NY—F G Turner 27 
NY—Boozer 1 run (Tum or kick) 
Bos—Phiipott 10 fumble recovery (Cap­ 
pelletti kick) 
NY—FG Turner 48 
Bos—Thomas 1 run (Cappelletti klckl 
Individual Leaders 
Rushing 
— 
New 
York, 
Boozer 
8-52, 
Snell 1023; Boston. Nance 14-25 
Receiving 
- - 
New 
York, 
Sauer 5-75. 
Lammons 4-55, Maynard 1-39. Snell 1-14; 
Boston, 
Marsh 
4-140. 
Whalen 6-68, Col- 
clough 2-58. Graham 2-39. 
Passing — New York, Nam ath 13-25-4, 
196 yards; Boston, Taliaferro 17-30-2, 276. 


Rod Laver Wins ’Dream 
Match' for Tennis Crown 


M 
a j o r L 
e a g u e 


= 
L 
e 
a 
d 
e 
r 
s 
= 


AMERICAN LEAGUE 
BATTING 
(425 at b ats)—Yastrzem skt, 


i. 
, , 
. 
. 
, 
, . 
. . 
Af Atlanta—50,428 
LOS ANGELES (A P) — “This, Australian Ken Rosewall whom m em ber Clark Graebner, then hampered by a bruised right tup cotts^ 


At MlIwauke*—49,344 
Vikings . . . . . 
* 
7 » 10 8 -2 6 
P<ickcrs 
0 6 6 
Min- Brown 1 run (Cox kick 
Min—Brown 10 run (Cox ktck) 
Min— Sntety. Starr tackled In end zong 
GB—Starr 10 run 
(kick (ailed) 
M m -Jon es 4 run 
(Cox kick) 
(AP Wirephoto) 
tory. The Cougars had the ball 
c^Dale 70Xpala from starr ocramtr 
at the Texas two with a fourth|k,cK* 
(nitvuhwi LfWMte^rown v u 
down, 
and 
the 
Longhorns 
* » ’■ *#,(- ffWSST- H h 
stopped Gipson at the line. 
V7„7 «“T .” ?i3;W&'’JS'0S.y’::''S3(is^c.uli«.. 
o«, «, s..,w . 
Another 
1967 
All-American D«le 5 48, Dowier 3 4» 
Del 
a/; Tovar, Minn.^- *7, Y astrzem sk,, 
Passing Minnesota, Kaop 9-15-1, 138 Bost , 86; White, 
N Y„ 86. 
tOO- yardsrO reen Bay. Starr 14-22-2, 148. 
RUNS BATTED IN -K H a rrelso m B o st, 
t 
us, 
| t w . 
p,Howard, 
W ashu 
105; 
Northrup, 
Det., 
89; 
W.Horton, Oet., 
85; 
Powell, 
Bait., 84. 
HITS—Cem panerls, Oak., 
171; 
Tovar, 
Mmn , 
164; 
A pirlcio, 
Chic., 
163; 
IF Howard, 
W ash., 
15»; 
Y astrzem ski, 
< Bost., 154, 
14 7 
0 7—28 
DOUBLES — 
9 , Robinson, Balt., 78» 
7 3 
3 7— 20 R.Smith, Bost.. 32. Y astrjem ski, Bogt , 31 
Fr.Robinsn, Balt., 28 


back, 
Leroy 
Keyes 
of 
ranked 
Purdue, 
played 
only 
sparingly in the Boilerm akers’ 
44-7 rout of Virginia. Keyes was 
Colts 28, Falcons 20 


is the kind of match you always left-handed Laver demolished in won 6-2. 6-2 for the quarter-fi- hut still scored one touchdown I ^Baj—pettm* » pas* tmm Mo-r«n i 
w 
i 
c 
<atitnsni38aMcCraw, 
dream aobut.’’ Rod Laver exult- less than an hour to take the nals m atch. The following day on a three-hard burst and threw 
u p -ss trom 
® 
c 2 m ^ . 
ed, “ the kind you play at night $3,800 top prize in the $30,000 he 
trailed 
countryman 
Fred 12 yards to Bob Dillingham for 


in your sleep.” 
But Laver, a 


trailed 
countryman 
tournament. 
(Stolle before taking command 
lithe, 150-poundj 
The victory money lifted Lav- and winning 9-7, 6-3. 
Australian professional, played er’s total winnings to $56,169 
The women’s title went to 20- will be fully recovered 
ah" j<£nW i Vu« (ftt*r kick) 
Sunday’s final round of the Pa- and his com petitive record to year-old San Franciscan Rose-iSaturday s encounter with 
otre 
Bai 
Cmfwi 
» 
I 
. 
. 
• • 
* « • 
— .. 4. Cn..»k DamH 
Tn/4 
Ko i 
»..«kum _ 
ftammAr*. 
MITtC 


Long 71 pa»» from Johnson (E H tfia k ., 
w 
lltMrl 
* *' 
another. 
The Boilerm akers hope Keyes JChSei^k^k)” r'^' 
ill be fullv recovered for next i 
aIU fg IttSr 24 


All- 
Ikirk) 
I 
A H -F G Etter 14 
, 
Bai~-Orr 
46 
pas» from Morral! 
(Ml- 


HOME RUNS — F Howard, W ash., 43; 
W .Hortjn, D«t., 36; K Harr»l»on. Bost 
3 
R. 
Jackson 
O a k , 2i»j 
Cash, D«C. 24; 
Free' an. Dot , 24. 
STO LEN BASES—Cam panarl*. O ak., 57* 
ardenai, C lc v e . 39; 
T ovar, M inn., 33; 
oy 
Bost , 25; Butord, Ball , 25. 
P IT C H IN G 
(15 
Dec is to n s )-M cL ain , 
Det 
31-5. S6l; 
CulP. 
Bost , 
15-5, 
75*1; 


in the Sports Arena undoubtedly 
on Friday and Saturday, South 
Africa s 
Cliff 
Drysdale 
Delonged to fellow professional Laver began slowly, then roared anc* ^,reat Britain s Roger Tay- 
! ■ on to victory. Rosewall took the ,or 7 
^ ^ur 
men s ^ou^)les 
I first set 6-4. Then Laver m ade a title* 
I sham bles 
of 
Rosewall’s 
solid 
service and, with deadly accu- 


UOÊÊKBÊÊÊÊtBSBIÊÊÊtÊÊÊÊÊÊSKBÊ 
Valley 
Grid Menu 


Men's Single* 
Rod 
Lavnr. 
Australia, 
cfefeated 
Kan 
Rosewall, Australia, 4-6, 6-0, 6-0. 
racy and a superb top-spin, lit- 
Rosemary 
_San* Francisco, da 


Walnut High 
Posts 32-0 
Victory 


LA PUENTE - Walnut High 
its football debut a successful 
one with a 32-0 romp over Penn 
M ilitary of Hesperia here Sat­ 
urday night. 
Quarterback Mike Evans was 
the sparkplug for the Mustangs 
as he scored three touchdown 


’Bama, Bear 
Still No. 1 
In Alabama 


BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (A P) - 
This weekend showed that for 
the tim e being at least college 
football still is king in Birm­ 
ingham. 
When Alabama defeated Vir 
ginia Tech 14-7 Saturday night, 
63,759 were on hand in Legion 
Field. 
For Sunday’s American Foot­ 
ball League gam e between New 
York and Boston, 29,192 fans 
turned out. New York won 47-31 
The drop of more than 50 per 
cent in attendance from Satur­ 
day night to Sunday cam e de­ 
spite weeklong pleas by Mayor 
George Seibels for a large turn­ 
out for the pro gam e to help Bir 
mingham get an AFL franchise 
“ It points up what we knew 
that Birmingham is an Alabama 
town,” said Hugh Morrow III, 
and passed for two others. He head of a group of Birmingham 
also passed for one conversion businessm en 
seeking 
a 
fran- 
score. 
Evans’ scoring runs were 10, 
23, and 56 yards. His TD pass- 


chise. 
“ We 
thought 
the 
Alabama 
gam e would help us, with people 
es were 36 yards to Mike Gile staying over, and in a way it 
and 27 yards to Brian M yers, 
has, but the econom ics of the 
The M ustangs racked up 24 thing enter in. 
first downs and 151 yards rush­ 
ing. 
“ Many 
people 
apparently 
wouldn’t buy tickets for Satur- 


w4iHufM,,Harr 
i> * 4 f c a daY 
and Sunday too. They 
* « in u i — Evan» io run ip«»» tdiWdi 
m u l d n ’t a f f o r d It r c a llv ” 
Walnul — Gil« 36 past from Evan* 
.LUUIUO l a i i u i u 11 i 
a n y . 
(Mver» pass from 
F v«m ) 
_ 
; 
n u t 
M orrO W 
S a id h iS 
ETQUD 
Walnut — M /tr * 27 pa;6 trom ItfOfll 1 
D U l 
alv* * 3 
n v F 
(run f»lltd) 
1 S till 
Walnut -- Fv»n* 23 run (pats faiitd) 
Walnut - Evans 56 run ¿M anm .a run) f r a n c h i s e . 


Thursday 
High School 


Colton vs. Dam ien, MSAC, 
8 p.m . 
Friday 
High Schools 


Garey 
vs. 
Riverside 
North 
MSAC, 8 p.m. 
Ganesha at Victor Valley, 
8 p.m. 
Upland vs. Alta Loma, Chaf­ 
fey Coll., 8 p.m . 
Claremont at Tem ple City, 
8 p.m. 
Montclair vs. Elsenhower, 
Fontana High, 8 p.m. 
Bonita vs. Gladstone, Citrus 
College, 8 p.m. 
Walnut at L.A. Franklin, 
3:15 p.m. 
El Monte vs. N ogales, La 
Puente High, 8 p.m. 
Apple Valley at We’ob, 3 p.m. 
South Pasadena at Charter 
Oak, 8 p.m. 
Lakewood at Chaffey, 8 p.m. 
L.A. Baptist at Boys Repub­ 
lic, 3:15 p.m . 


Saturday 
High Schools 


Pomona vs. Fontana, MSAC, 


8 p.m . 
Chino vs. South Hills, Covina 
District Field, 8 p.m . 
Covina vs. Royal Oak, Char­ 
ter Oak High, 8 p.m . 
Duarte vs. Rowland, Los Al* 
tos High, 8 p.m. 
Ontario at El Dorado, 8 p.m. 


Colleges 


Cal Poly at Sacramento State, 


2 p.m. 
Colorado College at Clare­ 
mont-Mudd, 2 p.m. 
La Verne at UC San Diego, 


8 p.m . 
Azusa Pacific at Pomona, 
8 p.m. 
MSAC at Long Beach, 8 p.m. 
Glendale at Chaffey, 8 p.m . 
Antelope Valley at Citrus, 
8 p.m. 


erally ran his opponent off the. 
court to win with stunning 6-0, 
'tt^Dr J/di#St 


ftatetì M arla Bueno, Brazil, 6-4, 6-1. 
M*n'* Doublet 


¡Ruyer Taylor. England, 7 5, 6 1. 
6-0 sets. 
On 
Friday he 
dropped 
first set 6-2, to U.S. Davis 
A u *triila 7 and m .m BG*no, 


Women'» Double* 
♦ h e 
Fruncolsa Durr, France, and Ann Hay- 
U ic don Jones, 
England 
defeated 
M j^g aret 


Shifty Hulme Takes 
Canadian Grand Prix 


MONT TREMBLANT, Que. W fourth, and each now had 33 
—The Grand Prix of Canada jwith one race—the 
American 
proved to be a pretty shifty Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, 


and Gipson did individually, the 
L i o n s 4 2 , 
b e a r s U 
j 
r u n s --B ockert, cm c., ««; 
p ^ 
i, c.n 
r 
„ 
. 
. 
, 
| 
j t i; 
Brock, 
S f.l., 
f i l 
H oit, 
v.in.4 
•▼J 
I r is h c o m p i l e d s o m e i m p r e s s i v e 
Ai 
. . . . 
, 
s r . 


s t a t i s t i c s . 
s«*r* 
......................................... 5 ?i 
7 
7Z 42' 107; 
B W illiams, Chic.. 
98. 
P er**- CM., 
T h e y a m a s s e d a school record L'do! 
McCullough 
pass 
trom 
Munson 90H|STSn,OE A>;ci/,' An' ,^ 048rR2,se/c'»n., 207; 
* ik y a n in a 
a 
(DoPovster k lc k l 
wummn (Dr 
Beckerf. Ch,c.. 188; A.Jobnson, C.n., 183; 
D et—F a rr 86 p a** from Mun*on id « 
f 
st L . '82 
Poyster kick) 
! 
DOUBLES — Brock, St. L., 46; Bench, 


^ « W c f u l k t u c h 15 P » .. from Mun»on' 


tC8 5 Z t S M n y . V * (P ^ o v sM r kick) 
7> 
Ctn ' 


Rushing - 
• 
« 
F a r r* n 51, 
1 
^ 
* 
Ph L.- S 
touchdown passes for a career ,8-^ kop« 4:33Chica#0, Gordon r34. Den ! b.wmUms, c ^ » ; m-Aji«»..Atit, 2» 
total O f 14. one m ore than Leon 


» I f f 
17-S, 
.773; 
M a rk h a t, 
S F „ 
26 8. 
.765; 
■ 
• . 
. „ 
Ktme, Pitt., 11-4, .733; Gibson, St L., 21-9, 
Redskins 17 
7n)i R*3>an' Chic., lO-S, M 7 ; Bolin, S F 


35 first downs, ran for 357 yards 
and passed for 214 more, giving 
them a total offense of 571 
yards. End Jim Seymour also 
set 
a 
record, 
catching 
two 


total of 14, one more man 1.™ , f t » , coidiir*« Sanders 3 :1. f 
Hart had in his days with the Ir- 
oitr^ M ^nson^nT 


ish. 
U psets Many 
S a in t $ 3 7 
Oklahoma 
and 
M innesota; 
were not the only m em bers of ] 
Onoooo-iitu 


ullouch; 
STOLEN BASES — Brock. S». L., 60» 
r 2-93.¡W ills, 
Pit».. 
51; 
IMDavis, 
t A . 
34; 
4-U-3, H Aaron, 
AH., 
26» 
C-Jone*. 
N Y ., 
22; 


10-5, 
66 


the Top 20 to lose. Iowa edged s^ _ whlt^ )1 


piece of driving by Denis Hulme 
of New Zealand. 


Hulme, who said he had to ’ 
shift gears 20 tim es each lap 
while winning the 230.8 • mile 
race Sunday, also caused a shift 
in the standings of the world 
road -circu it driving champion­ 
ship by moving into a first-place 
tie with Graham Hill of Eng­ 
land. 
Hulme picked up nine points 
to three for Hill, who finished 


Colonists 
Top Chaffey 
In Opener 


N .Y., Oct. ft—of the 12 - race 
championship series remaining. 


MARTINSVILLE, V a .-P ly m - 
outh driver Richard Petty set 
a record in winning the $27,000 
Old Dominion 500 stock car race 
Sunday — and sim ultaneously 
saw another of his records brok­ 
en by the No. 2 finisher. 
Taking the lead for keeps on 
the 262nd lap of the 500-lap race 
at 
the 
half-m ile 
M artinsville 
Speedway track, Petty won by 
more than three laps and pock 
eted a total of $5,999. 


0 1 7 7 -1 7 
14 6 
7 10— 37 i 
4 btod(«<J punt r*cov«ry 


• run (Durkea kick) 
Wash 
FG Gogofak 13 
NO- FG Durk««- 17 
N O FG Durkee 28 . 
„ „ 
,_ 
N o McCall 4 pass from Kllmor (Dur- 
L fu* k irk 1 
W ash- Smith 23 pasa from Juraenson 


(^ 
idA b ram o w k* 43 p a « from Kilmer 


S T R IK E O U T S — Gibson, St. L „ 257» 
J«fikins, 
C h ic , 
24»; 
5m ger, 
L.A ., 
216; 
M arichal, S F , 213. Sadackt, S F , 196. 


eight-ranked Oregon State 21-20 
and 
Louisiana 
State, 
No. 20, 
nipped T exas A&M, No. 13, 13- 
12. 
Florida, No. 6, got past Air 
Force 22-20; seventh-ranked Al (D^ ® R.thirr 12 p«»» from jura«n*an 
abam a downed Virginia 
recb 
j^'-F^Surkoo « 
ic- 
14-7; 
10th-ranked 
Penn 
State 
Kuthlf>a 
* Washington 
Nebraska, ^,h^ M cc a *{ 14H27U' 'schultz Vi*!* McNoMI ^ 


Rent a New 
Chevrolet For Less! 


at COLLEGE CHEVROLET 
191 S. Indian Hill 
Claromonf— NA 4-4541 


TRENTON, N.J. — Mario An 
dretti outran a field of 25 other 
cars, including the controversial 
ANAHEIM 
— 
Top 
ranked,STP turbine and a new turbo- 
Anaheim High scored e a r I y charged Ford racer, Sunday to 
and went on to whip visiting win the seventh annual Tren 
Chaffey, 
28-8, 
here 
Saturday ton 200 at Trenton Speedway, 
night at La Palm a Stadium. 
The Nazareth, 
Pa., driver’ 
The Colonists, ranked No. 1 victory cam e before a standing 
in the state by som e p o l l s. room only crowd of about 32,000, 
scored twice In the first quar and brought Andretti $10,810 of 
ter and ended up with a 21-0 the total $45,613 purs*1, 
halftime lead. 
Anaheim added another score 
in the third period before Chaf­ 
fey got ot the scoreboard when 
q u a r t e r b a c k Steve Brown 
hurled a 40-yard scoring pass 
to Robbie M atthews. 
Rod Thormn paced the Col­ 
onists’ attack by catching two 
touchdown passes of 35 and 20 
yards. 


whipped Navy 31-6; 
;; 
No 14, crushed Utah 31-0; Indi- 
Receiving 
ana. No. 15. outslugged Baylor 
U T » 
40-36; 
and 
UCLA, 
tied 
with 
Minnesota 
for 
16th, 
sm ashed pnean*. ¿¡near 13.1-1, i»x swg**«** 2 3 


Pitt 63-7. 
It was obvious 
that UCLA 
didn’t 
m iss 
its 
All-America j 
quarterback, Gary Beban. Bill] 
Bolden, 
the 
Heisman 
Trophy 
winner’s successor, suffered a 
shoulder separation after lead­ 
ing the Bruins to three touch­ 
downs, but sophomore Jim Nad­ 
er took over and passed for four 
more scores. 


Wa*hlng*on, Richter 3-34, 
. I Smith 142j .Allen 3 33, 
New 


it. 7. 
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 


Late Saturday 
College Football 


Wett 
Arizona State 15, \Amron»ln 7 
P icn ic 71, Miami (Ohio) 70 
Idaho Stata 38, Freino State 21 
Sacrarrw-nto State 13, Cat Poly SLO 7 
Tampa 18, UC Santa Barbara 7 
Redlands 10, Chico State 7 
Montana State 17, Portland State 8 
Simon Fraser 23, Cal Western 20 
Whitman 47, George Fox 0 


Is determ ined to seek a 


(Reported by Bill G aray> 


Quality Costs Less At 
POMONA VALLEY 
TRANSMISSION SERVICE 
393 NO. EAST END — NA 3-1531 


I A U END ^FO M O N A 
INSTANT CREDIT 


fred perry 
Smart men who want to 
rate AA plus wear 
Hart Shaffner & Marx 
Clothes from: 
. 
EWART'S « - ■ »■>•• 
1550 Holt Drive - P.V.C. 


TEXACO 


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FOR A PERSON W HO IS INTERESTED 


IN A BUSINESS OF HIS O W N — BUSINESS 


★ GUARANTEED SALARY WHILE PREPARING 


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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT MR. CALL 


AT (213) 966-7111 OR (714) 624-1179 


Page 6, Sec. 2 
erogrgss-Bullgtin, iPomena, Calif. 
Monday Evening, Sept. 23, 1968 


Bob Nichols, 
Archer Land 
Team Crown 


'jab Handicap 


By ERNIE MASON k 
s 
k 


Selections for Tuesday. First Post 12:30 p.m. 
Quartarher*« I 
ile«l according 
m i* Maso«’* 
la# 
Breie 
appearing 


„ rece* er« 
petition with 
nei harnet* 
♦e poit 
pol 
ene-twethree selection* 
ft»# end ef «och race. 
HARNESS RACES 


OKLAHOMA 
CITY, 
Okla. 
(AP) 
— “ It 
beats 
packing 
baps,” said a beaming George! ^ 
Archer, who along with Bobby san 


tlJM, 
Hasti 
Bob 
Mit# 
Mint 
^ * i 


B A C I 
- 
ONB 
M ILE . 
PACE SECOND RACE - O N * M IL * . 
NicholS had jUSt f ir e d a blister- A tlanl* 
E V'C LAIM IN O fM # * . M A R IS 
A Ll AO*S. NON-WINNERS OP U.OOO 
ßc 
Chicago 
AGES. CLAI _ 
PURSE 
SLIM . 
(Jacobs 
< Luther j 
.......................... 
- 
tubato« 
’ Russell) 
, 
in to n a i 
Revenue 
(Jonc*) 
.................. 
Stormy Tes* 
(Lene! 
................... 
rownie Ceth (Mensen) 
................. 
a mous Freight 
(Morrison) 
.............. 
rlcie Abbe (Jungqulst) ...................... 
Kellv 
Direct 
(Grenier) 
...................... 
SELECTIONS — Stormy Tese. Tríele 
A t i t * , Lulleive. 


ALt 
AGES 
NON*wmni«ik * v r »•»wv 
c .,« 1^** vn ica fo 
Vn 1 *0 . PURSE 
ts .700. 
ling seven-under-par 65 Sunday ™tJk»r«h 


Uedv 
M ery 0 . 
(Rocchio) 
................... ’ to Win the PGA team Champion-Iphiad-ipha 


J r.) 


3 Quelette 
(lan e 
4 Widow M illie (Grenier) 
5 Montrose Hanover (Jensen 
« Kafv's 
Bert 
(M trrim a n ) 
.. 
7 Terport M art (Sherren) 
... 
* Peooer Tone (uas*) 
»¡Judy Freemen (Johnson) 
... 
SELECTIONS 
- 
Montrose 
Ketv's Bert, Pepper Tone. 


5 
è 
7 
I 
Hanovtr.i 


QUARTER HORSE RACES 


RACE 
NO , 
S1.000 


THIRD 
OADSgANb UP 


I ship by two strokes. 
Archer and Nichols divided 
the top prize of $40,000 in the 
best-ball tourney, which had a 
total purse of $200,000. 
J Nichols announced Sunday he 
— 4m yards, j year pourth rac* — 40# yaros. i year would participate in no n1or( 
IN GRADE A plus 
OLDS AND up IN GRAOi MA Mi; tourneys this year, 
on prim es* sAdeir) 114 ........... v nus. purs* si.ooo. 
1 ‘‘Stick a fork in me,” he said. 
Moolah 
BardeH 
(Llohem ) 
117 
......... 
f t 
Breeze Account (Robinson) 114 ......... 
3 D lobby 
Charger (Robinson) 11* . 
The Poltroon. (Wrjeht) 117 ................... 
4 Lufnpjaw (Smith) 117 ................... 
On The Beam (Codins) 117 . . . . 
TT hree Cookies (Banks) 11* ....... 
uc*. 
c m in *n « s, 
it# 
.. 
* pool Bar 
(A dair) 
11* 
............. 
• u s a w W eWT..?if..::::: » { ¡ ¡ s t £ *< 5 2 % m 
o 
u 
« 
u 
creek country ciub 
h ek I k f f w u » 
'tiS S w t Nm tSSwr) »« 
■ course m a 22-under-par 265 to 
ranm, H e S & cV 8 & _c i& £ * B" m- ,hr" win the tourney. 
i They bogeyed only one hole, 
THOROUGHBRED RACES 
1 


Tovar Plays Every Position 
In Leading Twins' 2-1 Win 


Cincinnati 


New York 
Houston 
. 
70 
X—Clinched pennant. 


Sunday’s Result* 


Los Angela» J. St. Louis I 
San Francisco ML Atlanta 2 
New York 5, Philadelphia 3 
Pittsburgh 5. Chicago 1 
Houiton 6, Cincinnati 1 


Today's Game* 
Cincinnati (Culver 11.1* and 
at Pittsburgh IV ta le 13-14 and 
141, 2, twl night 
Only game* scheduled. 


Bv United Press International which the A’s dropped in 13 
Gene Alley drove in two runs 
I 
V 
u 
■ 
innines 
with a homer and a single for 
» uTf h J til Rert Camoaneris 
In Other American League the 
Pirates 
as 
Bob 
Moose 
R. Walsh and Bert Camp, 
i 
eSi 
Washingt0n 
blanked picked up his eighth victory in 
the first malor* Detroit, 6-0, Boston downed New|18 decisions. 
York, 
5-1, 
Cleveland 
edged 
Ron Swoboda’s two-run single 
California, 2-1, and Baltimore and a squeeze bunt by Bud 


was 


ngtqn 
'■■itched peonan* 
Sunday'» Result* 
tosNngton *. Detroit 0 
«¡timore X Chicago 0 
¡leveiand 2, Ca 


one better. 
Walsh 
leaguer 
to 
positions 
in 
play 
all 
nine 
a 
full 
season, 


.aliform e 1 


Carroll 7-II 
Bunning 4- 


114 


rit (Robinson) 1)4 ............ 
3 
(W right) 117 
................. 
4 
T'flv WAtch (Kams) 112 
» 
Roval Ruckus (R.chards) 114 ........... 
* 
Trua Vandv 
(Smith) 117 
Reauested Chick (Collin*) 
Shuck 
Em iB ank*! 
)17 
M i* 


Bold Host (Robinson) 
t it t l* Obia 
(Kanis) 
120 


i “ I’m done. This is a good way 
* to end the year.” 
* 
The 
two 
veteran 
5 toured 
the 
rough 


Tuatday't Gama* 
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, night 


partners 
7,173-yard 


Los Angaies at Chicago 
San F farte ,»co at Houston. 
New York at Atlanta. nTght 
Philadelphia at St Lorn*, night 


night 


Bolton 5, New. York 1 
Mtn 


Campaneris was the first to do shut out 11 h!C^ 0;J n0', 
it in a single game and Tovar is 
In 
that 
, 
nnnti c, 
the only player •« H« it in a Houston whipped Cincinnati, 6-1, 
League, 
Harrelson sparked a three-run 
rally as Jim McAndrew gained 
his fourth win in 11 decisions 
for the Mets. 
Jim Wynn’s two home runs 
and Dennis Menke’s two-run 


k M I Quurt , 
wlnnin. caUse. 
‘° ^ “ “ '¡New York topped Philadelphia^ 
ottreit ( M r u l n B a l t i m o r e 1 The slick-fielding Venezuelan5*2» Pittsburgh beat 
ucago, 
' ® 
p S 
L - 
- w 
» * started Sunday s 2 1 Minnesota 1. 
San 
Francisco 
walloped 
' » 
S 
1, , , , , , « 
« 
- 
c.orv over Oakland on the Atlanta. 10-2 and Los Angeles double gave the Astros Mike 
Cuellar 
his 
seventh 
victory 
against 10 losses. 
Willie McCovey drove in four 
Willie Mays scored 


chicptp ^¡sher un *t Oakland (N«sh victory over Oakland on 
M .Vh^V (Chtnca 11-15) «t California pitcher’s mound. He struck outj01?!*^ st- Louis» ¿r¿' 
W ight ios», mah! 
L 
- 
,____ 
r * ______ 
i*,i«hJol1,r C o tc » 
OnFv games scheduled. 
Tuesday’s Gams 
Chicago at Oakland, nightnight 


& 
C re 


gston a» Ÿ a*h«gtw i, night 
é tro it at Baltimora, °i«He 
laveiand at New York. 2, tw l-oght 


W t. 
FF 
yaar old* 
H ort« 
Jockey 
FIFTH 
RACB 
- 4 
turlong». 
Claiming 
»rice »2,500. 
M ** * Pag (Durou***au) ........... 
Regal Enrre (Robinson) ......... 
Sho 
Em In 
(Campas) 
........... 
Tonya Misk (Piercai 
........... 
A rt l**ue (Banks) 
.................. 
Cloudy River (Yaner) 
.............. 
Shady Vea (M itchell) 
Move Rhumba (Ste*ger) ........ - 
Shun Him 
(Arterburn) 
............. 
Roman Riddle (M es) 
.. ........... 
E m Ajtain (H am s) 
.................... 
l j i 
# 
Tria l Fusion (H e rn a n d e i).............110 
7 
LONGSHOT — SHUN 
HIM 


SIXTH RACE — 1 1-14 m lla ^ I y w old* 
$1,700. Claiming price *5,000—$4,500. 
Cut Bank (Pierce) 
.......................... 
D? 


Comment 
* 
up. 
Claim ing. 
Prob- 
Odds 
Purse 
$3,000. 


!” 
110 
1” 
ID 
114 
111 
XÌW 
114 
*104 
D1 
110 


$ p « d to steal It all 
Much better than shown 
Ignore that last on# 
W ill close with a rush 
Back with own kind 
Give a local outing 
Likes this race track 
Threat if get* in raco 
May 
be the 
Sleeper 
Can run with thasa 
Tab tor the tutor# 
Needs to surprise 


'the 12th hole at Twin Hills Coun­ 
try Club across town, where 
players put In one round. 
They both three-putted that 


Major League Boxes 


Senators 6, Tigers 0 
Astros 6, Reds 1 


Mi 
5-2 j 
i \ , hole. 
ti| 
Rives McBee and Monty Ka- 
t! ser shot a three-under-par 69 


DETROIT 
WASHINGTON 
a b r h b t 
ab <■ h bi 
M A ulittg 2b 
2 0 0 0 Unser cf 
3 12 0 
1 0 0 0 Billings If 
> 1 1 
4 0 
^ 
0 0 0 0 Holman lb 
1 0 0 0 Aiyee rt 


CINCINNATI 


Oyler*» 
S'antey cf 
Kaime rf 
\'c'.\ahon p 
Mathew* ph 
Cash lb 
Chrstian lb 
Northrgp If 


McMuMn 3b 2 2 0 , 
F Howard lg 4 1 J 0 


Jones (LambeD) 
E arly 
(MHe*) 
k londika 
Khai Me ........... 
Checkpoint Charlie (Ltpnam) 
B rillian t Sun p(Bard*») 


D5 
X110 
DS 
11? 
Freddie D. 
P. (Robinson) 
............... I l l 
Eager (H erns) 
1)5 
Golden Balcony (A rterburn) 
......... 11$ 
Fast Gove (Pierce) . . . . . .... 
. 
D? 
Stale (Campaa) 
................. 
1J| 
Indian Heiress (Hernandai) ....... 
D2 
LONGSHOT — GOLDEN BALCONY 


brad 
in 
C alif. 
Claiming. 


T rie* much tounher field 
Aiway* a 
game 
gtfort 
Easy win in fast tim e 
Hard to »tgure last one 
Bear down in the drive 
M ight take It all 
Can run with th i* kind 
Heip force the pace 
Contention goes deep 
Need* an easier field 
Need* to surprise 


ser snot a 
]£j Sunday to win second place and ^ 
; nT,e 
5 ! $24,000 in the tournament, 
strokes behind 
Nichols 
and 
“ 
! A r e k a r 
! Pa!t#r*on P 
Purse Arcner. 
IG Brown lb 
Tom Weiskopf and R. H. Sikes 
also had a 69 Sunday for a tour­ 
nament 
total 
of 
268, 
good 
enough for third place and a cunt,an 
cash prize of $15,000. 


2 0 0 0 HAlien 2b 
I f ! 0 


! 8 
00 
^ I 
„ o # o 
10 10lit! 


asanova c 
rnkman ** 
ascuel p 


Rosa rf 
Pinson Cf 
AJohnson If 
Banch çm 
lb 
2b 
I I 
4 0 . 
3 0 0 0: Kelso 
P 
Mcçmn p 
! Pavtetich ph 
I Aberrsfhy p 


n i l t r a 
4 0 0 0 Run 
Cardenas »• 
Arrigo P 


ab r h bl 
4 0 1 0 
4 0 2 0iljj 
ijii 
4 0 0 0 
2 0 0 0 
0010 
0 0 0 0 


HOUSTON 


Harrera rf 
Torra* »» 
Wynn If 
S»aub 1b 
Meenke 2b 
Asprmnt# 3b 4 


4 
3 


Reggie Jackson, walked Danny! 
McNally Sets Record 
; Cater and balked when he tookj Dave McNally won his 21st 
a double stretch to hold Cater game of the year, setting a new runs and 
^ 
on first as he didn’t allow a ball Baltimore team record, as the three times as the Giants Boh 
out of the infield. 
Orioles blanked the White Sox. Bolin went the route picking up 
Tovar then switched 
to the|He tied another 
club record as his 10th victory against five 
catcher’s position and 
moved he pitched his 17th complete losses... 
his way around the infield on an game. 
> 
inning-by-inning basis. 
| Camilio Pascual pitched 
a F ir f l l D is C O V e r^ W f lV 
He pulled off a fielding gem four-hitter 
as 
the 
Senators L . 
, i « 
j V* 
the third at first base, snapped the Tiger’s 11-game | q 
n O lU D G n tU T G S 
l i H throwing out Jackson from his winning streak. Detroit Mana-| 
PH0EN1X A . 
0 knees and made a perfect throw ger Mayo Smith used Jhe game (jenta| jjrm 
,he MCre^ 


Çoîbe'-t t( 
Adlesh C 
Cuellar p 


A lEl 
5a? 
f!I ! 
8 1 
101 
12-1 
15-1 


Total 
trgit 
r- ° r , 0 


2B—A 


>10 4 0 
Oetrglt 
# • • 
Washington 
3 * 4 # 3 4 
E- F Howard. 
DP—Detroit 
Detroit 
5. 
Washington 
* 
. HR—Billings (1). Alva« ( 
IP 
H R El 
H iller 
(L.F4) 
........ 3 
4 
3 3 
. . 
. _ 
. 
i FaMer*on 
..............1 
3 
3 
3 
Nichols was red hot Sunday, McMghon 
^ 
i #4 
o o 


WP—H li* r . T—1:5«. A— 7.327. 


30 4 7 5 
0 « • — 0 
« • X — 4 


‘ 
WL"! 


Total 
Cincinnati 
Houston ....... 
E -Wynn. 
Cincinnati 
7, 
Staub, A,Johnson 
»taub. S—Menke. 


b r h bi in 
i 1 J 0 1,1 
4 f I ‘ 
? 
. 
, 
______ 
1 o 2 i from center in the eighth to stop j as a tuneup for his bullpen crew that holds dentures tight. Discovery 
o I o Campaneris from taking third which has been idle while 12 of of two imported powders led to 
, ! % » a sacrifice. He made a total 13 
Detroit 
starters 
pitched 
f°»- 
of six putouts and one a s s is t, icomplete games. 
superior to im^comm«rci«l prod* 
Walsh had played all nine 
Gerry Moses two-run homer ucts. Calling it Super Deut, off»- 
” 1 1 °g •T#0,o'o # • V#6I°i positions 
over 
a 
154-game ¡ignited a four-run third inning, cials said “Super Dent is so fantav 
lT - icheduie for the 1911 PhiladeU rally that carried Boston over £ folks can wt Bhnqit MY food 
p h i a 
Athletics. 
Campaneris New 
York. 
Dick 
EBsworth 
^ 
turned the trick for Kansas City scattered four hits for his 15th Super Dent is 


0 0 0 
0 0 0 


DP 


SEVENTH RACB 
Rgtphln* (A rterburn) 
H gvrail WiImuI (Pierce) .. 
Poona F e j (Hgrt»ck) 
.. .. 
JoHy Joy 
(Durou»*e«u) 
.. 
Hgppy Scamp (Robinson) 
Magic Reo (Yanet) 
Deumpty’* Red (Durousse* 
Picking 
Flcwer* (H ertack) 
Joyful Hostess (Robinson) 
te s te r Juncfior (H a rrit) , 
Blue Sfarteft (Hernandei) 
Fgmou* Label 
(Bgnk*) 
LONGSHOT — JOLLY 


fvrtongs. Melden 1 
114 
year eld Bilie*. Purse 5X50A 


Wt 
11* 
11* 
11* 
II* 
116 
11* 
11* 
114 
114 


Have her to catch 
Racing In tougn luck 
Last we* sharp effort 
'readv for e senesher 
Threat ail 
the 
way 
M ight tik e 
it all 
Tab lor fh« future 
Has benefit o* the ra il 
W ill oo iat«r on 
Fa.r rices to credit 
Not without e chance 
May be pieced too tow 


as he birdied the first three 
holes and saved a par on the 
18th to pull the team from a 
third-place tie after 54 holes to 


Arrigo 
(L.12-10) 
Kelso 
. . . . — 
BBS Mcginn 
3 
r 
> 1 Cueliar k 
0 
2 
HBP —Arrigo 
1 
4 (Cuellar). W P -C 


Abernathy 
(W.I-10) 


blessing for folks who 
could never enjov eating before." 
is at dr\ 
in a 1965 contest with California victory. 
irug counters now. 


5-2 
i ’l 
t] the championship. 


Orioles 3, White Sox 0 


61 
61 
McBee and Kaser held the 


BALTIMORE 
ao r h bi 
Buford cf 
2 2 
1 0 
B lair et 
’ i S 0 
Biefarv If 
4 0 2 0 
FrRoòn*n 
rf 
4 0 1 * 
Powell lb . 3 0 1 


ueliar, M cgitw. T- 


Giants 10, Braves 2 


Aparicio 
CMay If 
S 
.ephsn « 
m 1© 
■fton 3b 
Bradford rf 
Berry cf 


JOY 


iGi i lead after 54 holes with Dale 
f jJ o I 
jt! Douglass and Hale Irwin at 198, dj?™ 
x> * g ? o J g jr ’ - j 
,*'1 17-under-par. 
mcWbW 
and Kaser ended the 
■ IGHTH RACE — 4 furto»#*. 3 
prie» »I9AOO—Sf^OO. 
Watch Ma Ann (Durousstau) .. ... 
Aooutagio (Yan**) 
E qual Wtares 
(Pterco) 
........... 
Secolo ’ Lambert) 
.................... 
OH Tackle (H errls) 
.............. 
a Brown Giaof (Campa*) 
............. 
gag)« O* M in« (Lipham) 
........... 
Poadlvatv (ArterborR) 
............. 
Grogndim (Young) 
............. 
... 
Doc’s Goid (Robinson) 
.................. 
a-Navaio G ir! (Campa*) ............... 
Ktlraa (Harnat»d*i) 
...................... 
a -J . Fannlng-Tralned E nfry. 
LONGSHOT — GROUNDIM 


yaar old*. 
Claiming. 
Pur*# 
»4,200. 
Claiming 


117 
1 
J15 
> 
111 
5 
115 
3 
109 
7 
115 
11 


\ w 
10 
* 
112 
$ 
112 
4 
112 
9 
112 
13 


u « s 
Very best is 
Won as tf much basf 
M ight 
take 
it 
alt 
Comas oft sharp local win 
Giva a local outing 
Racing In sharp form 
Break in tha waight* 
Tab for »he future 
Can run w ith these 
Ha* plenty o< speed 
Give* entry »upporf 
Needs to surprise 


McBee 
tournament at 20-under-par 267,1 
JJ! while Douglass and Irwin re- 
tomi^ 
¿J mained at even par Sunday for cnuW 


$ 0 0 0 Hot *tnftf 
Kanwrthy 
Wood 
WA ila 


Jarvis p 
3ritton p 
Garr ph 


3 0 0 0 Bonds rf 
1 0 0 0 Mason 2b 
4 0 0 0 Mays cf 
3 1 1 1 Brown 
rf 
1 0 1 0 McCovev lb 
4 0 0 0 Hart 3b 
4 1 1 0 Davenprf 3b 
3 0 2 1 Diatz C 
3 0 0 0 Marshall If 
3 0 0 0 Lanier ss 
I 0 0 0 Bo 
0 0 0 0 
10 0 0 
0 0 0 0 


äoün p 


5 1 1 0 
4 3 2 
3 3 3 
Ì Ì Ì Ìi*r 
4 0 0 0 
3 0 0 0 
Voli 


7 7 
4 1 
61 
10 I 
10 1 
12-1 
4 1 
>0-1 
T 
2 24. A - 4 M l. 


NINTH 
RACE 
— 4 tu rto ig i. 
Claim»»* price #4,004. 
Spy Fex (M ills) 
.. ............... 
VI Hi Run (Lam bertt 
Together Again (Durousseau) 
Go ifeadv (Lam bert) 
Mister Rideabout 
M itchell) .. 
Soac O’ AAolion (Pierce) 
........ 


I year aids and 
up. 
Claiming. 
Purse 
$4 $00 


■ 
Ben 


Tort 
(Llpham ) 
If* K I X (M ills) 
(Sanchez’ 
iamdor m (Sanchez 
Ranagoog (H arris) 
LONGSHOT - SPEC O MOTION 


.. 115 
* 
... 113 
4 
... 113 
• 
. . 
114 
f 
... 10» 
1 
... 113 
3 
. . . 
117 
I 
... 11? 
... Ill 
. . . 
I l l 
10 


Hard to figura recant races 
Won easily m fast time 
May prove hard to catch 
Bear down at h e wire 
Has benefit of the rail 
M ight take ¡1 all 
Ready for 
a smasher 
Come* off fa ir effort 
Contention goes deep 
Needs to surprise 


17 under 
and a «ixth-p1a c e j|,W . 
tournament finish. 
¡B^ary. 
p 
H 
The teams of Sam Snead and McNativ tw ?i hd 
» 
# 
. 
j «*. 
Horten (L.D-14) 
6 
# 
Gardner Dickmson and Tommy wood 
| 
¿ 
Aaron and Charles Coody fin­ 
ished with an 18-under-par 269 
for fourth place. 
Nichols, 
former 
Southwest 
golfing 
A&M 


ATLANTA 
M 
SAN FRANCISCO 
CHICAGO 
ib r h bi 
ab r h b 
^ 
FAIflu 
cf 
** i a 1 8 Paker cf 
í S 
T Mütan 2b 
A a 1 n HAaron 
Ib 
< 9 1 8 TAaron Ib 
H 
H 
Frentona If 
\ 8 ? 2 Lum rf 
7 n ñ o Hrínidk C 
i n a n RJackson ss 
8 88 « a r« 30 
ph 1 0 1 o t 
o 
Ó $ 0 01 f 
WWliams 
ph 1 0 P 0 v-iiev D 
Priddv P 
0 0 0 0 RJohnst-1 
ph I 0 0 0 
33 1 9 3 
Total 
33 0 • 0¡ K #i,* r p 
0 0 0 0 
' 
» ' » °# • • # • I - 
0 
To's! ^ 2 
* \ 
Baltim ore 
2. 
Chicsqp 1. 
l-OB- 
o 0 4 4 0 
x l 
I 
f A loo 
LB 
Atlanta „ 3, 
(17). 
»— p rancisco 4 
7 p 
Mavs{ McCovny 
p r n a n u i Hert, HR —H.Agron (2«b McCovey 
0 
0 2 
* SB - Lamer. Masón 


? 
? ? 
y Jarvi* (L.1611) 
• 
t 
i 
i ü r iñbt* 
........ • 
* 
w 
' K al lev ................. 
IKáster 
Bonn (W,16S) 
----- 


Total 
0 # 9 
36 10 13 10 
• #00- 1 
2 0 0 X -1 # 


Twins 2, Athletics 1 


San 


$ 
Bolin. 
IP 
H R LR BB S 
3 2-3 7 
* 
6 
7 
5 
i H 
I 
I t 0 
0 2 
f 
5 
í 
2 
0 2 


TENTH RACE — 1 1-14 mila» 
Claim in» 
prica 
$5.000. 
Big Daddy 
B ill 
(Duroussaau) 
Daddv Bob (Lam bert) 
............. 
Caesar Cira (Campas) ............... 
Dettar (Hartack) 
............. 
Notoriety (H arris) 
.................... 
F nor «rig (Yanaz) 
Rosie’s Steel (Robinson) 
........ 
I ’m Tha Greatest (M ilas) ------ 
Provan (Ray) 
. . . . . 
Pride of Curragh (A rterburn) . 
Silver Score (Yane*) 
------- 
Blue September (Pierce) 
.......... 
LONGSHOT — ROSIE’S 


I year aids and up. Claiming. 
Purse 
$*,00#. 


O A K LA N D ^ 
h ^ 


champion 
” 4 0 1 0 
Cater )b 
2 
0 0 1 
BandO 3b 
¿ 8 9 2 
Hershbgr if 
2 
0 0 0 
Donaidsn ph 1 0 
0 0 
hole Sunday was the hardest. 
PSiRnii8! 4 
“ I was choking a little bit pSdf*1? ct 
down there,” he said, comment- ou%Tanp ph 


61 , 
t s Conference 
¿i while a student at Texas 
6j University, admitted the 18th 
§■1 
12 1 
161 


PH ILADELPH IA 
ah r h hi 


4 0 


:: « 
.. 
114 
.. 
113 
:: !!? 
:: .188 
.. x10# 
.. 
113 
.. 114 
.. 10# 


7 
45 
12 
13 I129 
1? 
4 


Distance only questto*» 
Strictly 
one to beat 
Tough with thig kind 
Comes off easy win 
A threat from behind 
Give 
a 
local outing 
A fina upset chance 
Tab tor the future 
Break in the weight* 
Can 
Improve last 
on* 
Contention goes deep 
May be placed too low 


7 2 
8 5 
I' 
6161 
61 
161 
12-1 
I” 
161 
61 
STEEL 


ELEVENTH RACB — 
1 1-14 mila*. F ilb t* 
Las Madrinas Handicap, 
"»urte *10,000 
$4.15#, 
Second 
»2,30#, 
third 
$13«, 
Back Again (Yanez) 
......................... 
122 
9 
Requited (Lam bert) 
............... 114 
I 
Pac tic Cross (Hertack) 
D * 
1 
Cricket (Harm atz) ......... 


», I year elds and up. The 
Gross $U,2S0. TO WINNER 


Orgy _____ , 
. 
§ 
-Forgiving (P itrca) 
lorica (RoLtfvwjn) 
Silver Rultah (Campas) 
e-TaHaBC 
Windsor 
krferi 
altagfa (Banks) 
tdsor Honav (Ai 
a -R 
L. Wheeter Trained Entry 
LONGSHOT — 
FLORICA 


rbum) 
-Tram* 


1” 
114 
109 
111 
113 
112 


A mares 
MEmL 
_ 
fourth $1,000, fifth $404, sixth *304. 
Back with own kind 
61 
Won 
Impressively oiher day 
9 5 
P 
i used 
last in sprint 
7 2 
oread to steady in last 
4 I 
Gats 
favorite distance 
3-1 
Ready tor a smasher 
Help set a swift pace 
11 
Ready 
tor top 
race 
3-1 
Threat in 
the drive 
161 


TW ELFTH 
RACE — 
1 
1-1# 
Claiming price $2,500. 
Choteau Kid (Yanez) 


m ite*. 
3 year etds and up. Claiming. Furs* $3,54# 
su 
Ì 
ady Trust 
lg Arnold 
ross Road 


Duroussaau) 
ambart) 
(Fierce! 
gtvaratle 
(Lam bert) 
r i 
AAarv 
King’s 
Mary 
(Young) 
Rare Occasion (Campet) 
Í 
haar leader 
a st Arrow 
...... 
Arkansas B ill 
(Hernandez) 


Banks) 
M ills) 


117 
4 
May hold 
Cieve edge 
>1 
” 1 
I 
D'OP* for 
thi* on« 
7-2 
114 
9 
W ill clo*a 
with a rush 
61 
114 
j 
Be*f race 
*t04/t Threat 
61 
111 
7 
Racine 
in 
improved torm 
A l 
10* 
1 
Figure* to 
weaken 
the weight» 
#• 1 
10* 
> 
Break In 
Com«» off 
10-1 
11? 
10 
good rtto rf 
61 
109 
5 
Need* to 
surprix* 
161 
109 
4 
Should be 
outrun 
361 


ing on Archer’s eight-foot per t^wed i 
putt which rimmed the cup and 
Totai 
left the team facing par only on £?nn**ot* 
Nichols two-foot putt. He sank 
it. 


Minnesota 
Mets 5, Phillies 2 


Tovar p 
T l t O 
N E W Y 0 * ' <h r h M 
RorCiark 3b 4 (i 0 0 
4b r * W 
N f Hies lb 
2 1 0 0 
J * 
* 0 1 fiCJone* If 
4 0 2 1 Shamtky lb 
2 0 10 Charles 3b 
f 0 0 0 Marlin c 
, , . . 
2 0 0 0 Swoboda 
rf 3 0 1 2 
C 0 Ô 0 Agee cf 
¿ 2 1 ? 
4 0 1 0 Harrelson s* 1 0 0 i 
0 0 0 0 Me A nd rw 
p 2 0 0 0 
3 0 0 0 Cardwell 
p 2 0 0 0 
0 0 0 0 


Allison I» 
Carew 2b 
Holt rf 
Hernundz SI 
0 0 Rririse 16 
o o Uhlaandr cf 
0 0 Look c 
1 0 Ò 0 Zimrman c 
1 0 10 THatl p 
0 1 0 0 Worthgtn P 
0 0 0 0 


5 7 2 0 Roías 7b 
4 0 11 Pera ss 
3 1 i 1 C y n i t W i Cf 
4 1 2 0 R Alien If 
3 10 0 Wh-.te lb 
3 0 1 2 Sutherlnd 1b 
Clemens rt 
Datrmpl# « 
Wise p 
Calllscn ph 
GJacksMi P 
Lock ph 
Farrgil P 


Whitworth 
Kings River 
Golf Winner 


4 0 0 0 
4 0 0 0, 
4 0 0 0 
4 1 1 0 
81} 5 
3 0 10 
7 0 0 1 
1 0 0 0 
0 0 0 0 
0 0 0 0 
1 0 0 0, 


■8 
' 
• o V o'o 0 a To - i 
Total 
33 5 » 5 
Total 
, « 2 5 7 
0 0 1 0 1# 0 0 * - 2 New York 
1 * 2 2 ? S i £ £ — J 
E—D Green, 
Pagharoni, 
T Hall 
DP— Philadelphia 
.. 
0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 — 2 
Minnesota 1 
LOB 
Oakland A, Minnesota 
DP—New York 1, Philadelphia 1 LOB— 
9 
3b 
Allison 
SB 
Tovar. Ron 
Clark. Nr-w York 5, Philadglphia 2. 2B—Chari*», 
“ 
‘ 
Odom, 
H oic Jones- Agae. IB —R Allan. S—Harralton. 
« . » . i » “ 
* 
re 
7 
J 
2 1 
2 
i McAndrew (W4-7) 
S 
' 
i 
f 
? 
? 
, 
Cardwell 
............. f 
a 
\ l m 
# (L.61S) 
I 
• 
A 
J n° «* 1 G Jackson 
............ I 
!.1J. 
6 0 0 
t Farrell 
................ 
1 


^ T . w !v 


Odom CL.1610) 
L indhtad 
....... 
Tprir 
.. • — 
T H«tl 
(W .M ) 
I 


S—Hernandez, 


wot 
ingon 
.» ,*.1 2 -3 Q 
0 
» 
• 
z Farrell 
HBP 
Odom 
, 
T. Hah i 
h b p -Wise 
(Monday) 
w H -T .H a ll. B a ik-T g va r. T - ¡ (Calrison). F 
Mo 
i l l 


H R ER BBSO 
i l i l t 
I f ? 0 2 
1 0 0 0 1 
(M artin), 
McAndrgw 
PB—Dalrymola 
T—2:16 


Pirates 5, Cubs 1 


BOSTON 


LONGSHOT — RARE OCCASION 
BEST ECT — Spy Fo* In nlnfh^, 
BEST CHANCE 
BBT — Shun 
Him In 
PREFERRED PARLAY — Spy Fox 
to 
BANKROLL SPECIAL - Magic Red 
In 
CLOCKER'S TIP — RaavltoS in eleventh 


fifth 
Back Again 
•eventh 


Tigers Target Of Pranksters 
WASHINGTON (AP) —A De-jafter their game Friday night driving 
troit Tigers spokesman said Sat­ 
urday 
several 
objects 
were 
thrown at an unmarked bus 


KINGSBURG, Calif. (AP) - 
Kathy Whitworth of Dallas Is £oVarfbn ,1 
closing in on Carol Manirfinan- iSg8**,b * 
cially- 
i K U p 
Miss Whitworth shot a final 
round 69 Sunday and finished 10 
strokes ahead of second place 
Sandra Haynie in the $15,000 
6i j Kings River Open Golf Tourna­ 
ment. And she won $2,071 more 
than Miss Mann. 
Her 54-hole score of 208 was 20 
,L>3) 
shots better than Miss Mann, 
the leading money-winner on 
the ladies tour with $47,381. But 
Miss Whitworth is in second and 


NEW YORK 
I 
ab r h bl 
M 
Alvarado *s 
4 1 1 0 C lark* 2b 
3 1 2 1 fre s h ss 
4 0 0 0 Vanti» lb 
3 0 0 0 White If 
4 0 12 WRobn .n J 
4 0 C 0 K o ko rf 
4 2 2 0 FernandZ C 
4 1 2 2C©x 
3b 
3 0 0 0 Downing 
p 
Verbamc 
o 
How**r ph 
Talbot p 
C Smith ph 
SHamiltn p 


3 0 0 0 Kolb rt 
4 0 0 0 ClndanOri 
4 2 0 0 AHev 2b 
1 0 0 0 Pagan if 
0 0 0 0 JMav c 
0 0 0 0 Moo*« p 
1 9 X 
#000 
10 0 0 
0 0 0 0 
1 0 0 0 
3ÍTTL 


PITTSBURGH 
ab r h bl 
4 0 11 
5 0 0 0 
4 0 10 
4 2 2 1 
0 0 0 0 
4 0 10 
4 13 2 
3 1 0 0i 
3 12 1 
3 0 10 
0 0 0 0 


lb 


“ “•“ rill.» » 


Red Sox 5, Yanlts 1 
1 
CHICAGO 
» . k i . i i 
ab r h W 
» « i 
n Ke*»lngrr *» 
4 0 2 0 W ill* 3b 
. n A 
S Spangler rf 4 1 1 1 Patek s* 
a 2 M 
BW illam * If 
4 0 ) 0 MAIod cf 
* 0 8 
9 Santo 
b 
2 0 0 0 ulamante rt 
a a ? E h#* 
------ 
< 0 1 0 Hundley C 
4 ? 
? P hillip* cf 
W 
H 
Arcla 2b 
a a 2 n CJone* ptl 
? ? ? 2 Larose 2b 
1 0 0 0 u p h a m ph 
I 0 0 0 Hpitzman 
o 
0 0 0 0 t « r.a fa * „ 
it ft a ft WSmifh ph 
_______ 
OOJ00 Paggn g 


Total 
33 5 8 5 
Tot*) 
M 1 4 » 
P>1 
Boston 
Total 
31 I 4 1 
Total 
New York 
, 
0 1 1 
0 i • • 0 # — 1 Chicaaa 
. 0 1 # 1 • • 
L 
Treyh, Foy, 
DP Boston 
1 
LOB 
P im buiah 
# l t 0 0 2 
B 
K 0 *< 0 
HR - 
( O B - C h ira q o 
* 
P ittsburgh 
P WllTigms 
iB - J M * y 
H R - Alley 
(4), 
R ER BB SC s p a n g irr 
'71, Clement« (II). 
56 -W ill*. 
I 
f >—OalCanfon. 
I 
1 Hoitzman (L.1614) 
1 
JiLam ab* 
0 0 Rftiwin 
W F - Moos« <W,»10) 
OalCanfon 


0 0 CelCaritn g 


Boston 5 
New York « 
21 
Mo*«* (2), Fernandez^fé). S 


Ellsworth 
(W ’ S 7) 
9 
4 
7 Í Í I 
4 
4 


345 11 
o s i ­ 
l o » - * 
9 
ÎB 


Talbot 
S Hamilton 
HBP • Verbanic 
Downing 
T -7 02 


fi s t i 
. 2 
0 0 
. . . 1 
10 
(Alvar«cto), 
A 
23.254. 


IP 
H 
5 1-3 7 
. 2-5 1 
241- 
2 2 


-A I 
l ì 


R ER BB SO 
4 
4 
3 
* 
0 0 0 1 
1 
1 
0 
3 
1 1 4 * 
» 0 1 1 


Fight Menu 
FIGHT RESULTS 


with the Washington Senators, j After winning $2,250 Sunday, 
The objects, either bottles or Miss Whitworth had rung up 
rocks, were thrown apparently $46,144 and she could surpass 


TUESDAY 


Americaniby youngsters along the ill-light-! Miss Mann with a victory in the! weight iflSTlout, *5' 
Fallbrook, Calif., 
Open next 
», La, v J P B p tiK r »w» r, 
weekend. 
I f t 
l , "“‘ 


transporting 
the 
League champions from D.C;jed route and broke several shat 
Stadium to their midtown hotel!ter-proof windows, he said. 


VENTURA, 
Calif ~L Oblio 
Montoya, 
AI H o w to i, Ö Ä toJtvaiaw K z, Houston. ¡J i’ »' 
. «utpototod-fen**# S trad a, 
y* 
Bobby Falttein, Niagara Fall*, n y 
u ‘ 
■ 
f^av»«» 1». At Baaumont T», 
»'-vH P#- 
M EXICO CITY — Octalrg “ Pamo*#" 
tjn. Beaumont, v* O W ^ f O . , ^ S jn to , Gom„ 
M fxico . t(opp#<) M as#uita Uno, 


Japan, 3, banfamweights; Julio Guarrero, 
Mexico, knocked out kyuzo 
H«*himoto, 
Japan, 3 bantamweights; Erubev "Chan 
oo" Carmcvi*, Meneo, knocked out N or» 
F rido, Japan, 2, 
lighfweignH 
Now you can 
jet to LasVegas 
from Ontario. 


Air West jets at 3:20 p.m 
There are also 14 other Jets to 
LasVegas from the greater Los Angeles area 
Call Air West or your Travel Agent 


Here's how to 
transfer your 
funds to 
Pomona 
First 
Federal! 


Simply bring us your passbook from any 
bank or savings institution anywhere in the 
United States, and we will take care of all 
details. You can start enjoying Pomona First 
Federal’s unsurpassed reputation for safetv 
and security right away, and your funds will 
receive the nation’s highest earning rates. 
You also receive instant eamings from date 
of receipt and from the first when funds are 
placed by the tenth of the month. Stop today 
at any of our eight convenient offices. Open 
your account with Pomona First Federal, 
now in our 76th year of service to the great 
Inland Empire. 
5% - 5.13% 


A t our current annua! rate of 5% your fund* och*» 
oily earn 5.13% when held for one year. 
POMONA 
FIRST FEDERAL 
SAVINGS 
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 


POMONA HEAD OFFICE 


POMONA DOWNTOWN 


CHINO OFFICE 


399 No. Garey 
623 6511 
260 So. Garey 
628-6511 
12801 Central Ave. 
628-5506 
CLAREMONT OFFICE £ 2 8 W.Foothlll Bivd 
6 2 3 6 5 1 1 
UPLANO OFFICE 
E, Foothill et Fifth 
982-1668 
POMONA-INDIAN HILL 
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623 6511 
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165 E»»* B oriti 
599 1281 
HI-DESERT OFFICE 
Yucca Valley 


5 6 6 6 9 T wontynine Palm» 365*3301 


Rookie* and training captains work together to put out a gutter 
fire (above). When the fiames are brought under control, the train­ 
ing captains back away and let their student s complete the job 
(beiow). 


I P * . 
'<% 


_ 
. 
_ HHHHH 
I 


N a business where errors can mean disaster, the more training 
a person receives the better his chances for survival. It is with 
this in mind that the County of Los Angeles Fire Department sends 
rookie firemen through an intensive seven-week training course to 
learn, through actual fire conditions, the dangers they’ll face on 
the job. 
The rookie, at the specially-prepared Oil F ire Training 
Grounds in Del Valle, California, is walked through red-hot flame3, 
choking smoke and unbearable heat behind a curtain 
of water from fog nozzles. With him, step by step, 
follows a soft-spoken training captain who guides, 
points and instructs on the “how” and “what” of 
safety and action. 
This program gives to each rookie the “feel” of 
the nozzle position and the back-up position in snuffing 
out such problems as a raging oil-tank fire, a flaming 
trail of gasoline in a gutter, a burning butane leak 
and the “Christmas Tree”, a maze of broken pipes all 
squirting flaming fuel. 
To do the job properly, he has a special fog nozzle, 
water and his own know-how, learned in both class­ 
room lectures and in the “pits”, where flames some­ 
time lap about his feet as he slowly advances to shut 
off a supply valve. 
When this training period is finished, the stu­ 
dents no longer can be considered “rookies”, but fire­ 
men trained to react, when dealing with the reality of 
actual fire, in a way that minimizes mistakes which 
might create disaster fbr all. 


■ 
I if 
As flam«* spurt from 
the “Christmas Tree”, 
which allows burning 
fuel to come from many 
spots at once, trainees 
move in to quench the 
fire (above) while (left) 
they allow their In­ 
structor to rsach be­ 
neath the flam es to 
switch off the supply 
valv«. 


After a session of fighting the problems at hand, trainees 
cool off by turning the hoses on themselves. 


A raging oil-tank fire confronts the trainees as one of thsir first 
problsms. 


At lunch break during classroom lectures, student train­ 
ees Steve Watson and Bob Hines relax and joke about 
outside interests. 


Under the guidance and train­ 
ing of men like Captain Tom 
Brosnan, the students learn 
their jobs quickly and effi­ 
ciently. 


I 


Two trainees move in carefully 
to check and quench the oil- 
tank fire blazing before them. 


TW« W ttk's PICTURE SHOW By AP Phote*rtph*r CfcorfS Brlch 


1 1 
Ì fl 
^ 
W 4 ' 
1 
; '-*• • -S If! 
M 
1 
.1 v 


M ft , 
f 


ìr o g r c s a - B u llc t in 
CLASSIFIED 


Page 8, See. 2 
THE PEOPLES MARKET PLACE FOR THE ENTIRE POMONA VALLEY 


I 
T elep ho n e 


6 2 2 - 1 2 0 1 


9 8 6 - 8 6 8 8 


M o n d a y E v g n in g , S e p t. 2 3 , 1 9 6 8 


ALPHABETICAL 


CLASSIFIED 


INDEX 
—• — 
Acreage * Ranch«* . . . . . . . . 
Aircraft 
......................... 
Antique Aut*>* 
................ 
Part* & Accessories 
Antique 
Furnishings 
................ 60A 
Appliance 
Sale* 
....................... 
*3 
Appliance 
Service 
...................... 
m 
Ante 
Repair 
................ 
Parts 
Accessories 
Auto* 
For 
Sate 
....................... »0 
Auto* 
Wanted 
....................... 7‘ 
_ * — 
Baby Slftlno Wanted 
... ............. 13 
Bicycles 
. 
_ 
, 
77 
Boat* 
Sport* Eautp. and 
Accessories 
Jr 
Building» To Move ............. 
77 
Building M aterial* 
.................... 
«7 
Business • industrial .................. " 
Sale or Lease 
_ 
Business Opportunity 
................ 
]£ 
Business Equipment ................... 5» 
_ C _ 
Camera* #"d Equipment . . . . . S4A 
Camper Repair 
Parts A Accessories 
71A 
Classified Business and Servlet 
Directory (See beginning of 
C’assif.ed Ad Section] 
Child Car* A Nursery Schools 
Licensed 
'* 
Coming 
F vents 
........... ••• 
1 


Educational 
6 Educational 
6 Educational 
6 Help Wanted 


MEN 
W O M E N 


Your 


Best 


Buys 


17 
Dressmaking 
.............. 


Educational 
Electric Cars 
—R— 
Found 
.................. 
Furnished 
House* 
... 
FurmsHsd 
Apartments 
Furn 
A Unfurn 
Apartments 
Furnished 
Rooms 
..................... 
- H — 
Hay • Grain 
...................... 
Feed A Pasture 
Help Wanted. Female .............. 
Help wanted. Male 
Help Wanted 
Male or Female 
Horse 
Ranches 
Hotel« ■ Motels 
.................... 
Houses 
For 
Sai# 
........... 
Household 
Furnishings 
Ho. sonoid Furnishing* Want*d 
Household Furnishings For Rent 62 


Imported Sport a Midget Cars 
79 
income 
Property 
24 
investment* 


I 
74 


S 
. 34 
34 
36 A 
3» 


10 
» 
I 
21 
41 
I I 
60 
61 


are 


in the 


30 


Lease or Rent 
Cars 
Trucks - Trailer» 
Listing* Wanted 
Livestock 
........................ 
Lost 
............................. 
Lots 
.................................. 
—M— 
Machinery 
Tools and 
Farm 
Equipment 
........... 
Meat A Product 
................ 
Miscellaneous 
••• — 
M iscellaneous 
Wanted 
MoDiie Home* & Trailers — 
Camper Sales or 
Rentals 
Money 
To 
Loan 
....... 
Money 
Wanted 
Musical Ins'ructton ................. 
Motor 
Homes 
Moh le Homes Trailer Perks 
Musical - Radio - TV 
Musical - Radio • TV Service 
—N— 
Nursery - Licensed 
. . . . . . 
ana Practical Nursing 
Nursery Stock 
............ 


7S 


je 
47 
4 
1* 


Progress- 


Bulletin 


Want Ads 


TRAIN 
NOW 


p a y 
l a t e r 


IB M 3 6 0 C o m p u te r 


P r o g r a m m in g 


IB M K e y P u n c h 


N C R B k p g . M a c h . 


S e c r e t a r ia l C o u rs e s 


P B X R e c e p tio n is t 


B o o k k e e p in g 


S h o r t h a n d in 6 w k s . 


D r a f t in g - I llu s t r a t in g 


F A L L C L A S S E S 


N O W F O R M IN G 


N A 9 - 2 5 3 4 


APPROVED FOR 
VETERANS 


A C C R E D IT E D 


ESTABLISHED 1916 
Sawyer College 


1021 E. HOLT * 


C la s s ifie d A d s G e t R e s u lts 


Our (Kiduêt*"» 
IH# 
SOI AR Ë L f CTÄONIC K H O O li 
(213) .15« 4156 
- 213 ‘ 446 6751 


P A T Q U I N L A N A G E N C Y 
P EN I HOUSE SUITE 
STARDUST PROF 
BLOG. 


8 Help Wanted 


M a le o r F e m a le 
8 Helo Wtd. Male 
9 Help Wtd. Male 


♦ + JM fiftR ttf® 
Ay p 
SPÆ M llï? l 599 s' Barranca, Cov 
12131 33Ì 0143 
school. 
No 
exper 
nec. 
Must 
be work. 985 5608 
O 
T 
O 
Æ 
S 
á L ü ü ^NORTH-WEST COLLEGE 5 S W Ä 
4« 
¥ "* ¿ 3 S YoTo.ÄrGR«smt» 
★ AIRLINE 


M a le o r F e m a le 
M a le o r F e m a le 
t r u c k 
mechanic 
trucks M o b ile H o m e S e rv ic e M a n 
__________ 
| 
ana rental yard. Must nave own 
PART tlm<' automobile drivers for u* Domestic help. 
Refined reliable 
tools. 
Wolte 
A 
Sons 
Sales 
Co., 
taking 
children 
to 
and 
from ; May^ 
live^ jn . 
May 
have 
other 
10611 Ramona Ave., Montclair.____ 
EXPERIENCED 
Injection " Moider 
— - 
_ 
, 
. . . . . 
Experienced 
couple. 
3 shifts 
Apply at_Globe 
Plas-j G R IL L 
A N D U T IL IT Y M A N 


Exper with class 1 chauffers lie. 
Full 
time employment. 
Montclair 
Mobile Home Center, 626-3517______ 


JOBS 
Ar# available to men and woman. 
19-35 
high school graduates. 
FREE T R A V E L 


A N D H IG H P A Y 
Day and eyer.ing classes, lowest 
tuition, tree Placement. 
visi r 
A IR L IN E C O L L E G E 
214 West * * I" St., Ontario 
983-2317 


Ot Medical A Dental Assistants 
MEDICAL SECRETARIAL 
Pomona or call NA 2-1313. 


7121 W Garvev Avenue 
E X P . 
FRY 
C O O K 
West Covjna 
i ï ï x L j f î à f * 5 
Must 
be 
fast 
and 
dependable. 
SEND FOR FREE BROCHURE 
Cock A-Doodle. 
12940 
C e n t r a l , 
Chino. 
___ 
_ _ _ 
________ 
Help Wanted 


M a le o r F e m a le 


IBM 


Offices 


. 61 
. 45 
56 
57 


• 
71 
32A 
32B 
6« 
70A 
70 
65 
65A 


16 


2ÎA 


PHONE 


622-1201 or 


986-8688 


-P— 
Pets A Supplies ...................... 
Pet* Wanted 
Poultry. Rabbit* A Supplies 
Poultry. Rabbits A Supplies 
Wanted 
............................... 
★ 


HAIR 
dresser 
wanted 
or 
r e n t 
space for the Pomona Valley Inn. 
686-5504 or 
686-6348 
ask 
for Mr. 
P ierre. 
Radiation Therapy Tech. 
Radiation therapy training cr ex­ 
perience 
preferred. 
Must 
be 
a 
registered X ray technician, regis­ 
tered 
nurse 
or 
registered 
radia­ 
tion 
therapist 
To 
work 
in 
an 
estaibished deot of an .accredited 
hospital 
noted 
for quality of its 
patient care. Excellent salary and 
benefit 
program. 
San 
Antonio 
Community Hospital, Upland, Per­ 
sonnel D eot. 
....... 
MOBILE home construc­ 
tion and assembly. Exper per­ 
sonnel, base rate to *2 75 per 
hr 
Plus 
incentive 
program, 
paid 
health 
and 
accident 
in­ 
surance, 
paid 
holidays, 
p a i d 
vacations 
and 
steady 
employ­ 
ment. 
Average 
hourly 
rate 
*3 85 
per 
hour. 
Also 
trainee 
program available to both men 
and 
women. 
A ppIv 
Blltm ore 
Mobile Homes, 
13821 
Redwood 
Ave , Chino. 
_________________ 


You can't de better than 
★ SCHWARZ ★ 
Employment Agency 
707 Indian Hill, Pomona 
6 2 3 - 6 4 2 1 


HARDING 


Personne! Agency 
623-3882 


10 older units 
Close in. 1 bedrrm tics, 1342 S. Signal Dr., Pomona 
furn 
apt, 
ofiis 
pd. 
Extras. 
Box! 623-2767 
_ 
6042 Progrest Bulletin. 
, ________ 
EARN 
as 
you 
learn. 
$433 
plus 
COUPLE for gardening And clear,-, commission 
not 
a 
draw. 
John 
ing. *200 per mo plus apt. 
I Hancock insurance Co. 423-6661 
__________ Call 593-7649_________________SALESMEN 
We train you to 
TEMPORARY JOBS 
: earn 
*70_JW 
more 
* 
per 
day. 


Steady 
day 
work 
for 
qualified 
man. 
Apply 
between 
8-10 
a.m ., 
Mel's D rlve-ln, 304 S. Holt, Pom. 


D ELIVER Y 
and 
Warehouse 
man, 
40 hour wk with group 
ins and 
pd vacations, etc. Apply 
in per- 
■ r*M aoo. ioio 
son, 
McMahan's 
Furnitc,ra 
Co.# 


71S N. lndianA H n i,WpEom. 
423*2583 MAINTENANCE and Yard man ' for 
J 
Q 
L 
~ * V 
tR n ih 
AUDIOMETR 1ST for school screen ! P nd'ave 
Pomona 
M G R 
T R N E E S 
★ 
$ 5 0 0 
ing 
and 
industrial 
testing. 
Part 
fcna 
~ . 
- — • • • - 
HI schl, sharp, neat, aggress, 
time Need S*ate Certification 
or MALE 
models, 
sizes 1416 
model 
»ee pd 
„ 
ena ble 
Call 629-1636 between 
2 
tall fashions and TV 
eomm s pert Q0B CALVERT 
(213) 963-4131 
and 4 
or full 
time. PAT, 
QUJNLAN 
a l OSTA PERSONNEL AGENCY 


Real Estate For Rent 


R eal Estate Wanted 
| Special Notices 
1 


Rentals*9 » She*«* 
7.7. ,7.' 34B AS OF 
SEPTEMBER 
38, 146«. 
1 
Resort Property 
Rent 
3» 
w ill no 
ongr- 
be responsible for 
Real Esta‘9 Exchange 
Resort Property ■ Sale 
Poem A Board 
Rest Home*. Sanitarium», 
Licensed 
... 
......... 


Scooters • Cycle* 
......... 
Swaps 
............. 
Special Notice» 
........... 
—T— 
Travel 
...................... 
Trader 
Space 
Trust 
Deeds 
Trucks For Sale 


27 
any debts other than my own 
23 
F redie 
Mathews 
40 
11227 Bolton St. 
________Ontario, California_______ 
IS -W HY WALK 
a l o n e ?" 
Personal 
introductions. 
622 2 504. 
Girls 
un- 
73 aer 
35 
free. 


Unfurnished Apts 
. . . . 
Unfurnished 
Houses 
—UN- 
Wanted To Rent 
Work Wanted. Female 
Work Wanted, Mel« .. 


D O R O T H Y R. J O R D A N 
Licensed Phvscial Therapist 
Massage, Steam Bath, Reducing 
490 W Orange Grove, Pom. 
Evenings 7 30-9 30 . 629-5460___ 
Cesh in 1 to 3 days tor homes 
In this area. W ill pav all cash 
net 
to 
you. 
My 
otter 
In 
20 
mln. 
G IL M O R E , 6 2 4 - 8 0 6 0 
It no enswer, call 985-726» 
WOULD YOU D k | TOJjCNOW 
YOUR BIBLE BETTER. 
IF SO CALL 623-6791 


Classified Ad 
Information 


WARNING 


SINGLE ADULTS 
YOU 
CAN 
M EET 
FROM 1 
TO 
10 NEW 
PEOPLE THIS MONTH 
AND EVERY MONTH FOR THE 
NEXT 
FIVE 
YEARS 
. 
. 
. 
. 
PRESELECTED 
TO 
PLEASE 
YOU, 
FOR 
AN 
INTERESTING 
RECORDED 
MESSAGE 
24 HRS 
A DAY DIAL 
m 
w 
i 
PREFERRED 
rate 
on 
auto 
Ins 
For adults with 
no tlx, no acc 
Bobb Agency, LY 3-4151 


CANT 
AFFORD 
JOB 
TRAINING? 


O H Y tS Y O U C A N ! 


W i t h 5 % 
r e g is t r a t io n 


f e e , t o t a l t r a in in g c o s t 


f in a n c e d . 


IBM-360 


Programmer 
Operator 


IBM Keypunch 


PBX Reception 


Ind Drafting 


Color TV 


'Tronic ’sembly 


Micro W elding 


Groc. Checking 


Auto Mechanic 


W elding 


E R M A 'S 
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 
S e e o u r S u n d a y a d 


1 1 3 W . C o lle g e 


C o v in a 
• 
E D 1 - 3 3 4 4 


Bus D river part tim e 
_ 
Management exp 
m u r a i r r arfU iSH » 
xuvCounter 
Oerk Trainee 
CONTk ACT AOMIN R 
to 6>0 r’ustcxFYier Service Rep 
1V, 
MAKE extra money 
N utrilite pro- 
Exp 
9?_V/L ^ ° !? !ra c ,i' *°m# pre~ Engine Lathe Cla'ss À *3.75 an hr 


"The booming computer indus­ 
try is 'uttering from a severe 
shortage ot programmers 
The 
result: Personnel Executives re 
port 
programmers 
ere 
now 
making an average of *18.000 
year vs 
*12,000 1 year a g o " 
(Source—Newsweek Nov, 13, '47) 


★ 360 COMPUTER 
PROGRAMMING 


★ COBOL 


★ RPG 
★ ASSEMBLER 
Longuages 


APPROVEO FOR 
VETERANS 


CALL 
NOW 
629-2534 


All Classes Conducted 
IN POMONA 


SAWYER COLLEGE 
ACCREDITED • 
EST 1916 
1021 E. HOLT 
CAN YOU 
Draw? 


Professional Draftsmen 
& Illustrators Earn 
$7,000-$12,000 yr. I ¡(Seper o?,0accountant 
Deqre9 pre- 


T 
' 
A 
» •* I a h 
K S * . 
C T 
Tor 
Train under the tutelage jpgpintmtrt.____________ 
of 
a 
design 
engineer 
JOLLY ROGERS 
from local industry with 
p p C T A U R A N T 
17 years experience. 
K tO I A U K A IN 


GIRL FRIDAY 
CASHIER CLERICAL 
LEGAL SECTy (free) 
. 
JR 
STENO 
TYP C L R K -P B X 
relief 
CLK TYPIST—CASHIE R 
ORDER DESK, 10 dev addr 
CONTROL OPTR 6-2 am 
DENTAL 
ASSISTANT 
MED RECEPTIONIST 
LEE REA 629-5512 
SALES 
L IFE 
INS 
SALESF.C 
INS 
SALES - PHARM 
ACCNT DFG (CPA firm ) 
FC BKPR 
ACCNT-JO B COST (free) 
SALES ADMIN Trne 
SALES REP 
TAIL 
FURN 
SALES 
SERV TRAINEE 
SERV REP Deo Reo'd 
INS ADJUSTER TRNE 


TEENAGERS. 
TV 
comml's 
for 
8425 
BOSS 
CITY, 
Sat 
6 
p.m. 
$31 10 
8375 per sh0W- p AT QUINLAN AGEN- 
CY, (213 ) 331-0143, Covina. 


$350 
S285 
$390 
$365 
S3 50 KIDWELL & KECK 


$375 
E M PtO Y M E N T AGENCY 
• PARTIAL LISTING • 


M A L E 


................ 
PAT 
QUINLAN 
AGENCY. 
(213 ) 
331-0143, 
Covjn«- 
SALESMEN 
- 
Direct 
sales 
for 
estab roofing mfg and contractor. 
Advancement as qualified. 
Phone 
for personal interview 
(213) 
263- 
5181. Ask for M r. Covell, or visit 
the Rigid Mfg Company, Exhibit 
Sp 8 and Sp 9, section E, Honne 
Show Bldg, 6, L.A. County Fair, 
Pomona 
or 
write 
factory 
Post 
Office Box 6782, L A. 22.________ 


SERVICE 
station 
attendant. 
Over 
21. Good pay and benefits. Apply 
Pomona 
Valley 
Shell. 
1681 
E 
Holt, Pomona. 
_______ 


620 W Aiosta, Glendora 


*650 
SASOi 
£,50 Servicemen Compresser 
*700 up 
is5o I Programm er 2 yrs exp *4.oo hr + 
__ 
y ,00 Mechanic apprentice 
*286 
UP MANAGE a Taco_Li,a 
Sal^ary^ plus 
S900 Maintenance electrical 
to S698 
%400 Warehouse 
S346 
S700 Mechanical 
Inspector 
$450+ 
$500 Lathe Opr 
Trainee 
$364 + 
*433: Upholstery 
Trainee 
S286 
$700iCustodian days 
S346 
$550 Sales 
.............*433 + 
15501 
PROJECT ENG. M E 
(free) Slfoo 
CPA or Accountant 
open 
DESIGN ENG M E (freel 
. S950 
Controller Retail (2 vrs ex) Open 
PROD PLANNER 
*650 M illing Machine Oper 
.... *606 
MECH DRAFTSMAN 
$650 Station Atiendant-Mechanlc 
S433 
STOCK 
CLERK 
*480 Spray 
Painter, exp 
to 3.04 hr 
FOREMAN 
SHEET 
METAL S1040;Dtesel Mechanic 
--------- $3.30 hr 
*286 
*2.00 hr 
*481 
.. 
open 
. . *433 
... *700 
*450 
. *6.50 + 
... *425 
... *520 
*550 
open 
*2.25 hr 
*2.50 hr 
. . *600 
*400 
to *1100 


MECH 
INSP Precision 
*760 Factory 
OTHER FREE AND FEE JOBS 
Shoe Saies 
exp 
11 5 West Center 
M ^ R etïf 
e*P 
(1 blk S 
of Holt V» blk W. 
Insurance Sales 
ot Garey! 
_____ Cost Account (Degree) 
¡Management Trainee 
. 
I Pharmaceutical 
Field Representative 
I Grocery Clerk exp sev 
Sales, retail exp 
EMPLOYMENT Agcy Purch, auto-parts. 


profit sharing 
Great 
growth 
po­ 
tential 
Phone 
for 
appointment 
623-7477 
______________ 
Full 


AUTO 
Mechanic. 
Opportunity 
for 
experienced mechanic 
Best work­ 
ing conditions 
Paid factory train­ 
ing offered. 
Authorized 
Mercedes 
Benz dealership in M ontclair. Ap­ 
ply In person or call 
(714 ) 
986- 
8416 or 624-04)9 
for 
appointment 
with M r. Kent Palmer. 5S66 Holt 
Blvd., Montclair. 
Brake & Alignment Men 
Inexperienced need not apply. 
t op Pav 
Call For Appointment 
F 4 H TIRE C a 
540 E. Holt. Pom. 629-3064 


AUTO 
parts 
counter 
men. 
tim e 
or 
weekends. 
Exper. 
Call 
H arry. ED 1 6456 
_____ _______ 
2 GENERAL 
industrial 
m aint­ 
enance mechanics. Apply at 1941 
White 
Ave., 
La 
Verne. 
Ask 
for 
Don Sauer______________ 


★ GAREY ★ 


ducts. 
Edith 
Rehnborg. 
Cosmetics 
629-7476 
P u r e 
legal background. 


INSTRUCTORS 
WANTED 
se» 
Keypunch Instructor 
Computer Instructor 
To Instruct 
part 
time 
nights 
3-5 
’& i£ lP DADl.CD- 
vears 
experience. 
Pomona 
Area.iSTENOGRAPHERS 
Cali Doris. 623 6454 _______ 
I - ' » 


, ¡Collection exp 
185 7 Counter 
Man 
LABORATORY TECH 
540 |7 r^ ice,A ° ,ent 


« D r ^el»BJl>l- ° f Chem- Pr®V- ^ 
M ilT W right 
GIRL* FRIDAY 
to 450 M#ch,ne 0per 


Top _sk|list e x p ^ H e x ib itity 


Type 60 (elee.), bkkq acctg. exp . . j g ’S P r 
CLERICAL SUPERVISOR 
447 ^ 5 i ,?*nicK 
Some 
college, 
supervisor exp., 
e 


(Browne and Sharpe) 


Type 45, sh. 80, 2 years exp. 
E C BOOKKEEPER 
College 
acct'g., exp. bkkg. 


Repair 
Sa'** and Delivery 
444 Automatic Screw Oper 


open 
to *900i 
*364 
*400 * > 
. 
*700 
... ssso! 


... 
*520: 


BUSBOY, short hours. 
11:30 a.m 
to 2:30 p m . 
5 days. 
Apply 
4-5 
p m . 
daily. 
1542 
W. 
Holt 
Ave 
Pomona 
_________ 
O. D. GRINDING OPR. 
SUNNER HONE OPR. 
5 Yrs. Exper. Required 
Pneu Draulics, Inc 
8961 CENTRAL, 
MONTCLAIR 
'An Equal Opportunity Employer 
LIFE INSURANCE 
AGENT WANTED 
New 
office. 
*500 
and 
up 
for 
month. Phone 623-2476 - 9 to 5 pm 
★ MACHINIST 


COUNTER-HOP 
¡CL^R^Y^siV tXP' bkk°‘ !l5 Typtst, exp, 70E w£nLE 
Good 
Working 
Conditions. 
pull 
Tvoe 45 (e ith e r).'1 vr. e*p 
' Exec 
Sectry 
tim e. 40 Hrs. Modern Meat m a M gni^K K E E P E R 
400 Office G irl, light bkkpr 
ket 
Excel, 
position 
for 
t0 T B 
w Hostess, exp 
With sales •xperience. Rapid ad ASS'T 
BOOKKEEPER 
to 400 Sales G irl, exp, mature 
vancement^ 
MyST 
HAVE 
F^X 
Gen. 
ledger 
posting, exp. 
» 
PL 
Part_time 
- b w —w 
4lS|Clerk Typists, part-time 
%all 
Tues. 
EX- 
thru 
, PERIENCE 
Thurs, 593-7913 
Snider’s Fine Meat* 
(A retell butcher »hop) . 
SMALL manufacturing, company 
ls 


CLERK TYPIST 
Typ* 45 i elee ). prefer some col- Waitresses, sharp^ appear 
legt* 
m e 6 i< 


Lost 


LOST: 
Female sealtwinf 
Siamese 
cat. 
Vic 
Elame 
and 
M ills. 
Re­ 
gard. 626-9753 


LOST : 
Shell 
gasoline 
presidential 
game 
coin. 
Warren 
G. 
Harding 
Reward *50 Call 626 68 79. 


M 
O 
^ 
O 
T 
i ^ 
T 
« 
NATURE OF WORK 
ASSEMBLY BILL 2112 
Adds Sec. 976 
end 977 to the 
1964 Civil Rights Law 


prohibits 
with certain exceptions. 
discrimination b e e « u s e of se* LoST: 
Bitocai 
glasses 
In 
d i r . 
Since some occupations ere con 
#ray case> Lost in vie. of Tudor 
»idered 
more 
aftractive 
to per- 
ancl Berkley, Holt and Town« 
sons 
of 
one 
»ex or 
the other, 
622 8894 
advertisements 
ere oleceo under 
_ 
_r 
— • 
the Ms I# or Female columns tor P j-M A C l 
color^ 
the convenience ot readers 
Such 
P 
t - . i * 11 - J * B . TsV 
listings ere not 
intended to ex 
í®V2La" l . ra, o t m t !Tr?evSia 
elude persons of either sex 
; " 
i 
w c m ii 
THIS newspaper 
strives te pro 
* " '• 
41 ^ 
tect 
Its 
reede'S 
against 
fraud LIGHT 
brown 
cat, 
"Tam m y 
deception 
or 
inlusflc»». 
Adver 
Miss ng 
Vic Westwood Apts 
(In-j 
tlsements 
which 
require 
cam 
dian H ill). Rwo ottered 
626-la?l,i 
bonas or Investments 
In 
stocks, 
aft 6 
temples equipment should be in 
vest ¡gated thoroughly. 
All edver- 
tismg statements must tie eecur-1 
ate 
All ads pertaining to sales 
must carry the word seies and 
must relate some nature of tarork 
involved and not dangned to mis 
lead the reader. Any ad reoulr- 


APPROVED FOR 
VETERANS 
629-2534 


A ll Classes Conducted 
IN POMONA 


h o u s e 'KEEPER-COMPANION . 300 Oerk “(Drug °p* p ) 
Live-in, Dd 
+ .rm ., car 
insurance Sectv 


• COOKS 
• WAITRESSES 
• COCKTAIL WAITRESSES 
P y r c h .* 
_ 
• BUS BOYS 
• DISHWASHERS 
• HOSTESSES 
• BARTENDERS 
• TRAINEE MANAGERS 
A ppIv Now 


GENERAL OFFICE 
300 Recept. Secretary 
Type (man.) 50, sh. helpful, w ill Clerk 
Typist 
................... 
train. 
¡Credit mgr 
■Advertising Sales exp 
— 
JV A L.» „ 
Sales-A Iterations 
exo 
PROJECT EN G IN EeR 
12K com puter Opr 
.............. 
Mech 
devices — syntr.ettcs 
Clerk Typist 
background. 
' X-ray and Dental Asst. 
SENIOR BUYER (Fee Pd) to W01 Exec Secretary 
D0E Medical Sectv Ins exp 


|P r 5 d' 
CONTROL MGR. . to W0 + ; 
SecrtyXP|ns 
P m U ______ 
BS 
Typist excel skills 
... 
s* you * .Secretary exp Ins 
.. 


Secty-Bkpr—w ill train 
*300 
_ ICAL 
ASSISTANT ........... 37$ LVN, sev pos, state He 
open 
6 x p „ also X-ray 
¡Full charge bkpr 
*450 + 
MEDICAL 
RECEPTIONIST 
150 Medical Assis 3 yrs exp 
open 
Typing, 
Insur. exp., 
gen. 
ofc. Receptionist 
................................ 
*350 
med. 
¡Bookkeeper ......... 
*3 » 
CLERK-TYPI5T 
.................. 
. 
387 Bank 
Teller 
*350 
Type 50 (elect ), exp. p .o .», in 
Typist (70 wpm) 
*350 
Secretary Shorthd 85 Type 
60 *450 
*2*6 
*400 
. 
*435 
. . . . 
*300 
. . . . *390] 
open 
*300 
*3 50 hr 
*295 
.. 
*350-r 
... 
*600 
*425 
*430 
*1.75 hr 
. to 6600. 
*400 - 


PRECISION MILL 
^ - J years experience. Must b*> 
•Jfn 
1 thoroughly capable of making own 
**00+ 
setups 
and 
be 
quality 
oriented^ 
1606 Close tolerance work in proto and 
short run production. Prior exper­ 
ience in 
aerospace 
Industries 
of 
tooling desirable. Wages commem 
suratn 
with 
experience. 
N i g h t 
shift. Fringe benefits. 
„ 3 d 
MAURY 
ra K ] 
m ic r o w a v e 


open 
*500 


10373 
M ills, 
M ontclair 
626 7975 
An Equal Opportunity Employer' 


s r F ' a c c o u n t a n t 
i f pQ P i í d ) 
ACCOUNTANT 
* k 
• PARTIAL LISTING • 
445 N. G artv 
629 2 531; 
(in same oidg as M orris Plan, 
Vi Block So of Holt 


Cost--Stat. 
analysis—Budget 
ACCOUNTANT 
TRAINEE 
st 621 
Degreed — 2 vr. Trainin# prog 
SALES 
ST AT. 
, 
St. 600 
Degree reg., mgm t 
potential _ . . , 
. . . . 
. . 
■ 
FIE LD SERVICE TECH 
st 433 U g U j W * A 
M a e 
Trainee electr^_back_ground 
_ 
ilC lf J 
I 9 I U . IV Id lC 


WORKING 
LEADMAN 
2 years 
supervisory 
e*per 
In 
pre cast and pre-stress concrete 
proaucts 
Salary commensurate 
with ability. 


★ ★ ★ 


Experienced 
Pattern Maker*, also 
Interpace 


2855 W, Pomona Blvd. 
Pomona, Calif. 91766 
An Equal Opportunity Employer 


SAWYER COLLEGE S '« ^ .tl& ,dK5.1iE,,ns 
m 
ACCREDITED • ■ IT W M 
. 
J°SV«Y 
SSnÌf,!.? S«i-*S T w .p v ) 
1021 E. HOLT 


Educational 


. r r .d* , y ] 
Food 
Pharmaceuticals • 
Beau 
Plaza Cane. (Next to Broadwayn, 
?y Ajds _ Bus. Machines—Liquors 
pus. Forms — Ins. 
iE 
.. 
st 600 
M arried — Sales, M gmt. exper. 
ASSIST. MGR. TRAINEE .. 
400+ 
6 Educational 


~ I 
Computers 
__ 
A MGMT 
TRAINEE 
« 
M arrla 


Inside Sales 
MGMT. TRAINEE 
425 


NOTICE TO FINDER 
The aerai cede et California pre- 
Ine a tuition »or study cours* is 
no* 
consioereo 
• 
help 
wrnted 
ed end snoud oe In classifica 
t!on 6 "Educational." 


Ítf» tT'Wf 
, wnw »mo» m mm' 
ids tender cirewnnt»->ca* which 
«Iva him meens ot mouiry es te 
>« true owr • 
end who »earopri 
•t** such property for nie own nee 
i Ki « 
. . . . . . 
. _ , . u 
w theut first making • ressoesbi* 
*4° . H 1L F 
WANJ ED 
AD CAN 
«ffprt to find the owner It guilty ; 
ST iP U LAI E OR INF FR A 
of larceny 
D I F IN H fc AMOUNT W H IN 
1 
— - 
r. 
»tsrting 
pay 
Is 
commission 
be- GF RX AN 
SHEPHERD. 
269-8.19 I 
sit 
Report any gxceptlon to this 
1»«/ 
w 
utu? 
c' , « 1 
rui# ti 
me C asslfied Advert.s.r* 
1 1‘ 
" ’ t 
p r' 
manager. 
NA M I61 
OntarldUelimd A re a -Y U 6-1686 
Tha 
Progress Bulletin 
resar,*s 
the rlfh* fe reltc* or re edit «nv 
advertisements for the protection 
of the advertiser and reader. 


Educational 
6 


★ HIGH ¿CHOOL ★ 
Register *d 
with 
California 
ttete 
Depertment at Educatien 
Finish 
et noma m spar* tlm* 
Write ter 
tree 
brochure, 
American 
School. 
Bo* 582 5 Progress BglleHn. Pomona 
CREATIVE 
WIG 
COLLEGE 
167 
Cl 


WESÏ 


COAST 


VOCATIONAL COLLEGE 


POMONA 


6 2 9 - 5 3 7 8 


1050 N. GAREY 


*AN 
BERNARDINO 
1932 North 
- 
-- 
‘ E " It. 


F 
Rowland. 
Covina. 
.«rfified 


YOU READ YOUR AD 
Upon First Publication 


Rhone NA M ID I regarding any w ig s ty lis t" '^ T " i G . 
Day» "o r 
Tvpogrgphlca 
error 
Adlustment 
l? wks Evas. Call (213 ) 332-9110 
due 1« typograph ta i error on th* 
io * m 
to 
ID p m. 
Course 
Ap 
part 
at 
the 
Progress Bulletin 
proved. 
Calif 
Dept of 
e ducation 


* * - 0 ^ *sp ac*^» e d * to^'pdvef^M 
T R L yA L l e V DRIVING SCHOOL 
cost 
the Item which .Poeer» In *rro r| 
jR^ t£ h Ina®he whé í " 623 ?^T 
and th* adlustment w ill be made 
oniv 
on 
the 
first incorrect 
In­ 
sertion. 


Deadline-New Ads 
And Cancellations 


N • w Pdt and cancellations must 
be received not later than 3 P.m 
day betor* publication (p .m Fri. 
fcr Sun 
Befor* 12 noon ia t. for 
Mon 
and 
10 
a m 
day 
be­ 
for# a 
legal holiday 
Ads must 
run one m»trt|©n betor# ch«na# 
of ceor 
or 
cancellation can b# 
made 
D | a DUNE tor single col 
commercial ads with larger than 
eaate 
typ* 
3 
p m . 
Friday 
fur 
lunuay 
MULTIPLE 
COLUMNS 
] col 
wide 
1 
inch 
deep 
mini 
mum 
t,««aline 2 days prior to 
publication. T h u r s d a y I a.m. 
deadline tor Sunday 


C L O fiD SUNDAYS 
AND FROM 12 NOON SATURDAY 


Private Party 
(Famttv Ad) 
Non C o m m t r c ia l 
RATES 
I avarage words per Imp 
Mini 
lines 
Mimmum chaig* 
discount fgr cash wflh 


RIVERSIDE 
3701 
Merrill 


O NTARIO 


986-3801 


Special Notices 
Y (Special Notices 
1 


mum of ) lines M inimum char 


tu or 
Ca«n with copy an a't week 
»7 » 


Per Line-Per Time 


:* 
if? 


wan red eda. 


1 I 1 time« 
3 tima* 
....... 
4 tim a* 
, 
5 tim p* 
.. .. 
k ttrn** 
.... 
/ time« .. .. 
18 tima» 
, ,, 
10 timas 
.... 


C on sec ut ¡«» 
ttrr*» 
•- 
Ne 
csat 
Chang* 
other 
raie» 
arid 
contract 
rat** 
net 
shawm 
#hevt 
upon 
r* 
dunst. 
Phene NA 
M ID I, 
Ontarlw 


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A 
Í 
THINK CAREER 
* 


* 


* 


* 


♦ 


* 


* 


• F 


♦ 
■¥ 
* 
* 
■F 


« 


* 


* 


♦ 


THINK TEXACO 


You're Invited 


to our Open House 


Tuesday, Sept. 24 and 


Wednesday, Sept. 


1:00 P.M. to 8:00 P 


TEXACO Service Stati 


Bonita A Grand, La Verne 


INFORMATION ON 


it PAID TRAINING 


* FINANCING 


* LOCATIONS 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


* 


♦ 


♦ 


♦ 


* 
* 


♦ 


♦ 


INDUSTRY WANTS 
SOUR STUDENTS 


If you really have a sincere detire to learn 


a high paying skill — learn the Solar W ay. 


★ HIGHEST QUALITY INSTRUCTION 


★ LATEST TRAINING TECHNIQUES 


★ MODERN SPAGE AGE 
EQUIPMENT 


Electromech Drafting— 
• 


IBM Keypunch— 
r 


Radio and Television— 
p 


Electronics Technicians— 
t 


Instrumentation Technicians— i 


Computer Technicians— 
• 


Microwelding— 
n 


Electronic Assembly— 
• 


Spray Painting— 


Approved for Veterans | 


SOLAR 


ELECTRONIC SCHOOLS 


DIVISION OF COMPUTING SOFTWARE, INC. 


426 WEST DUARTE ROAD 


e, r, ♦, i, c, m, a, * 


4 4 5 -4 9 5 0 


Coil, pret 
— good growth opty 
M ILLW RIGHT 
to 154 wk. 
Ind. sheet metal — B 'F Interpré­ 
tation 
TOOL CRIB ATTENDANT It 93 wk 
Jr. poiltion 
ESSENGER ................. 
*t 2 00 hr 


HOME SAVINGS BUILDING 
Suite 503 
1 00 Pomona M ail W. 
714—623-4391 


PART TIME 
EVENINGS 
5:30 TO 9 P.M. DAILY 
Need 2 mature men to work In 
office only. Earn *2-*4 hr. Guar­ 
antied salary 
plus 
bonuses. 
For 
interview call LCC 623-3518 after 
3 P.ITV________ ________________ 
Drivers Warded 
Full or Part Time 
Paid Bonus 
Tropical Ice Cream 
Reservoir end Second St. 


PARTS MAN 
Automotive 
experience 
necessary. 
Salary open. Best working condi­ 
tions. 
Call 
M r 
Baum. 
Catron 
Motor» VW, NA 9-9765 
________ 
SALES 
— 
Management 
opportu­ 
nity, 
50 
v r 
old 
Insurance 
Co. 
opening 
office 
tn 
area. 
Looking 
for 
men 
who 
can 
sell, 
rec»uit, 
train and want to earn top pay 
We have oar, no per, H and A, 
Proup. etc. 75% agents contract, 
manclng, 
age 
or 
handicap 
no 
barrier. 
No gimmtcks, 
iusf hard 
work—good pay. Call M r. Moore, 
(213 
„8140____________________ 
Sales— Air Conditioning 
Wholesale for Retail and Builder 
Contact 
Area 
Pomona 
— 
East 
to 
Indio. 
Must 
have 
A-C 
Sales 
experience. Product Fedders. Call 
Von Kahr* (213) 72>7761 


MACHINIST 
Engine Lathe " A ” 


EMPLOYMENT Opportunity — now 
taking 
applications 
for 
men 
for 
employment 
In 
Chino 
Industrial 
Plant 
Report 
tor 
Interview 
at 
13351 12th St „C h in o from 9 r m . 
to 
3 
p m . 
Tues 
thru 
Friday. 
■An Equal Opportunity Employer 


Electronic Tech. 


Turret Lathe " A " 


Drill Press " A ” 


Grinders Tooling 


Tool & Cutter 
Grinders 


Boring Machine 


Opr. Semi-Auto 
(Heald Exp.) 


Grinders Prod “ A M 
(I.D. and O.D. experience) 
GENERAL 
DYNAMICS 
POMONA DIVISION 
3675 W. MISSION 


Monday thru Friday 8 to 4 
U S Citizenship Required 
_An Equal Opportunity Em ployer t 


Progress-Bulletin 
CLASSIFIED 
ADVERTISING 
OUTSIDE SALES 


Needs Salesman to han­ 
dle account* in th« Po­ 
mona Valley area. Must 
be aggressiv« and hav« 
som« layout experience. 
Sales 
experience 
pre­ 
ferred. Must have car. 
Many company benefits. 
Call Mr. E. J. Jone* be­ 
tween 
9:30 
A.M, 
and 
4 P.M. for appointment. 
622-1201________ 
(Continued Next Pago) 


CLASSIFIED 3 
DIRECTORY 


IN A 2 -1 1 0 1 
O ntario* Opfernd A rta TU 6-8461 


-Asphalt Driveways 
and Paving 
— Carpmntry 
- —Gardening 
— Plattmrlng 


CARPENTER 
WORK. 
A ll 
types YARD Care 
Landscaping, D iscing/ . « m . ( T c b a i T r u i x i n . ^ 
____ 
______________ 
Hourly 
rates, power tool*. 
Fully 
Lot and 
field 
cleaning, 
Hauling. 
^ m P L A 5 T c R P A T L H I N G ^ ^ 
ASPHALT and Seal Coating 
drive- 
experienced 
Call 
NA 7-2947 
628 7149 
Accoustical ceillnot 
Int-ext 6)6-0177 
E iVV T i? iror'nM a 
8r,dinB CARPENTRY - cabinets - Piaster 
"G ood Japanese Gardening Serv 
- 
. 
, 
. 
‘ 
NA 2-3314 or NA 
.< 
3 __________patching 
Plumb.r-g 
repa rs 
Lawn Mowing edg ng, trim m ing 
Plast. ★ Patch ★ Remodel 
-------- 
tJ" ' ' 
S” 
194' 
Free esf. Call_NA.2 5046 
Acoustical 
Ceiling, 
Patching. 
Ll- 
Bath 
A M a n a g e 
Of NERAL 
Carpentry 
Work 
Cjib- nevV I AWNS. CLEAN UP. LAND 
censed 624 1857 or 735-4688 
1 .nets 
remodeling 
repair 
No 
lob 
SCAPING S P R I N K L E R S . N A ------------------- 
RUBIDOUX MASSAGE SALON 
too 
small 
or 
too 
large. 
629 6171 
4 145/ or NA +0290_______________ 
Famous 
body 
shampoo, 
5 
mas 
, 
I 
»fuse 
Da y 
1211, 
Sunday _ 12-fc 
C o m e i l f Work 
I t y o u r g a r d e n n e e d s it 
“*■ " 
We do it — expertly 624^834__ 
- 
— 
- 
. . y r m i )N F Y 1 
I LANDSCAPING, 
new 
lawns,) 
■Brick Work 
" A V C 
'y" - 7f>*CT» 
»prlrklfng 
system, 
FREE 
FS3I- 
---------------------- — ---------- 
Deal with a licensed contractor 
MATE Call after 5. 599 1381. 
F IREPi_ACES 
_ln_ your 
present 
Cemm t and carpenter work 
--------- — SSS—VSSSL I 


PLASTER PATCHING 
No Job Too Small 
Free estimates. 
624 4085 


5563 
Mission, 
Riverside. 
612 5461 


home, 
patio 
BBQ, 
all 
types 
of Mike 
Medrano 
masonry 
Fin free est reas. 423- 
1135 


WORK, 
new 
lawns 
629 8455iTRACTOR 
®/v 
Renovat.r . 
^ 
_ 
OUR 
specialty 
patios, 
drive*ays | weeds. Cleanup. NA J-1914 
pool decks, 
ail kinds ot cernent ^ ,¡« 1 . . y . _ . . , , , , 
a««* «ouio 
work 
Free 
est 
Reas 
622 7267 
QUALITY lawn, care, 
Best equip 


Renovating. 
Cut 
high 
grass 
and; 
- - y.)i~ 


—Hooting 


fO O F I! RÓOFÜ1 
7~ 
Checken r#oeir*d replaced 
r*on»l service. 
NA 2 2188 


•Sandblasting 
B’jild ln g Contractor» Bl o c ^ 
aT 
p r e c is io n 
cabinet 
sandblast- 


"JOHNS CONST. Quality room 
mates. _ NA 2:9468 _ ........... 
Handy M an 
[ 
A tR » 
ESTf'stite 'uo\7inv 9- 
FREE EST. ON ANY JOB 
° Y 
________ 
_ 
. 
| 
p r ic fj from 27c so ft, NA 9 6288 
.PRUNING, 
light 
repairing, 
gen-— 
Sorfnk/er Syitmm 
ROOM ADDITIONS 
- 
rra l 
dean 
UP 
tim e 
R. asonabe 


REMODELING 
B u v -»fü­ 
llt It 
• CEMENT WORK _ - _ i 
, Patloe, 
driveways, 
block 
wails, _____________ — 
GARAGES, PATIOS, 
; garages and cerpentry. New 
and '’—Hauling 
FIREPLACES, ETC. 
remodeling 
Free 
Est. 
NA +4926 ------ 
—----------------- . , , 
Quality construction at a v*ry 
— = 
„ . . y N0VW 
~ 
i 
H aullng-cleanup, any kind 
reasonable 
price 
100% 
flnanc- 
. 
n 
. 
Trash, sklploader work 
Ing 
l i e , Ins 
Call for a free 
C la s s ifie d A d * G e t R esu lts 
Fra# est, turn moving, 422-7160 
pian and estimate 
RUBBISH HAULING 
POMONA V ALLEY 
— 
« 
Minimum charut $5, fra t tsflm a t 
h o m e im p r o v e m e n t c o . 
— Drafting Service 
« ios« 
n a 2-22i«| t v , *ince 1949 «a+3766 
679-99'B 
416 E. Mission, 
Pomona 
w 
1 
1 


O 
^ n l f l ^ K 
r t f Ä 
i Ä 
n » . 
and hundred* o» ether wavs to 
•re th 


•TV Service 


FOR 
the best color and blk and 
estimates 
white 
television 
service, Courtesy 


TRUCK & MEN-CLEANUP 
Hauling, yard work, gar, 627-618* 
★ ADD ★ 
LAYMAN & COMPANY 
Remodel, 
completa 
lob or 
any 
Otters 
« 
. 
i 
r 
« 
. 
. . 
T 
T 
. 
' V n A ™ , ', Ä 
:;n « 5 : 
0 « lg n & 
Orottmg S.rvice | fu rn ltur. 
V«m_Typ. 
Truck 
K iA 0 o o f i ' 
»4 Years experience in 
N A /- Y Ö U 4 
A#ro SpaCP industry 
------------------- 
59 5 2722 
Estimate* 
_ 
Heco Construction 
Remodeling, room additions, kltch 
tns or bafhs. 100 per cent financ 
ina, nothing down, • yrs to p a f.l 
Ask for oyr unlim ited list of sat 
isfied 
ctistomers. 
Lk 


NA 24)117 


— tlmctrlcal W ork 


ELECTRICIAN 
_jeensed 
and NA 
9-0520 
24 
hrs 
N4 
41521 
bowled "fo r"'y o u r 
protection 
pay SMALL 
or 
large 
electricei 
lobti 
or night call 428 7629 or 986-1068 dryer range 
hookups 
Call 
anv- 
SS ADD A ROOM 
— floor C o ve rin g , 


raas p n c . ^ 
| 
linoleum , Cptg.( oft 
Algar Conitruction Co. 
fM E Holt, Pam 
622 I668 anytime 
ED’S SERVICE CO. 
+ r e m o d e l « r e p a i r 
— Gardening 
it Alteration-! * Add On * Masonrv 
• Cement 
Work # Patios ♦ C 
20 Yr 
Gen. Contractor 
Phone 98a »686 


Rubbish Hauling 622-2076 
ANY KIND A N Y T IM E ___ 
LIGHT 
HAULING. 
fu/n-rubbhh 
Yard, garage cleanup / Free est. 
R*l Ed Dorris, 62b 1742' 


- —Home and 
Cleaning 
uph0|| 
perfection. 
Rates 1 
■ Est free Ca/t62H843 
NÜ 


ffk e 


cleaned 
to NA «-1.30 
month. 


—Top Soil 


• TOP SOIL • “ 
PLAIN OR M IX E D 
STEER FERTILIZER 
Bulk 
or 
bag 
at 
plant, 
*3.90 
yd. 
Delivered 
Is 
*5 
yd. 
Min 
of 
3 
rds. 
Sand, 
gravel 
and 
decorative 
bark. 
Closed 
Sun­ 
days. 


O. F. WOLFINBARGER 
Cor of Francis and Benson, On! 
YU 64)363 


|U - A d V L rfA i L WASHING 
n o m # s 
T c o s ts I ESS 
595-2643 o / l / 5 2967 
LINOIEUM -TIU: SERVICE 
50% dite. Free E*t, 9*5 1»? 


•Tractor W ork, 
Grading, Bolldowlng 


Back Hole ’bigger Trenching 
Lots Cleared -Treas Removed. 
Sewer Connection 
NA 2-966« 


Carport 
Maw Edge, Hedge's T rim . 
Power equip, reas, tree astimates 
427 1 086 
. ____________ 622-44J9 
Reliable Gardening Serylcf 
"Our Nama is Our Motto" 
Experienced 
Refarences 
and] 
____________629 3291 
___________ 
Ja p a n e s e g ar d e n e r s 
Commercial and Residential 
5 9 3 - 5 5 2 3 
Call mornings or evenings 
0 1 
Sprinklers, 
___________ 
cktan'ng. 
Cabinets - Patios 
Fences Barns 
; 623 6095 
628 4457 
or 
984 *144 cAWN mowing, edging 
end trim 
******* 
mino homes or apartments 


— Carpentry 


H lM O p f U N G — 
Cgrggntry* 
cement. Gereges. patio and drive 
wev 
additions 
No 
ioo 
too un 
599 n o t 
EXPER 
carpenter 
needs 
w o r k . 
Remod, 
cabinets, 
adciitigris, 
any- 
thing 
in 
gen. 
1« 
vrs_ in 
Pom 


L FOUNDATIONPS Debris end Trees 
¡INTING interior-extenor, 
FREE 
Removed 
lots cleared 
THOMAS 
ESTIMATES 
v e r v 
reasonable 
HOUSE MOVERS. 622 *313 
rates, quality 
work 
guar., refer- 
•nces 
479 340» 
_____ ________ 
O RELIABLE PAIN TINO • 
A ll types, low rates Free eyt. 
30 yrs quai work NA 4 5698^ 
*99 AVER STUCCO WALLS 
*26 Aver rm Materials, In ti 
LIC, INSURED. Free est NA 4-0113 


•Tree Service 


TREE 
S e rvi« , 
T o p rin g ~ p ru n in g , 
removing Free estimates. 
599 297? 
_______ 


° * y l‘ 9U PLANT new Lewns — replace 
6355 Eve 
_ 
one* before the rains 
Spr Ink I 
Carpentry Remodeling 
trash 
hauling, 
garage 
clean 


ODOM'S 


PAINTING 
BRUSH 
ORwi $P *A Y NePrur^ 
' , T< 
Experincad — 
Reasonable 
ra te r 
Special 
rates 
and 
attention 
to. 
. . . 
, . 
apt owners, c a ll «23 2287 
— Wrecking 
Aver room *20, Outside stucco, *70 


TREE SERVICE 
* “w 
S , Ä 


Also small repair iob* 
Neat, clean, exp 422 1574 
BUILDINGS 
wrecked 
ed 
and 
If ve led 
F 
THOMAS HOUSE MOVER 
422 8313 


clear- 
E fT . 


Classified Ad* Get Results 
£lghWT .C r 
'é’¿'i: cia*»ifi«d Ad* Get Result* * EB*¿PwW wrecÄnV 
mie 
rates. 
Atter 
4 30 
LY 
p r ^E 
ESTIM ATE* 
428-6Í' 
428 6574 


1050 N . G a re y, R om ana 
m è, k 


(714) B23-1S1B 


F R E E P L A C E M E N T A S S I t T A N C « 


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 


A Quick Reference Directory 
For All Your Help Wanted Needs 
They Are As Near To You As Your Telephone 


/1a 


> 


R O B IN M A L O N E 
Houses 
18 


« 
r a 
# 
• i 


W H IL ff A O U A Ô C ie W T 'lô f P Ê R ^ X 'P g L L 5 H O W & 
R00ÍW TH£ MALONE PEEP5EA KELP-Pl?OCEá5 A,PEA 


Houses 
M 
P r o g r « * * -iu ll* ttn , P o m # n o , C w llf. 
• 
• 
a 


M o n d o / ( v t n in g , Sap». 23» 1 9 6 8 
r O Q C 
* , 
u € C . 
* 


Help Wtd. Male 


(Continued from 
Previous Page) 


EXP liquor 
store’ eterk. 
F u ll’ or 
i ne«r‘ — ‘ 
-m i 


G A R D E N E R 


9 Help Wtd. Male 


SALES MANAGEMENT 
Oopor'unirv 
for 
In 
management 
for 
and 
disability 
salesman. 
Please 
phon« Colin Danaher 986 2045 


G E N E R A L 


M T . B A L D Y H O M E 
5 Bdrm , gerage, workshop, »22,000 
Can see anytime. YU 2-»2f2____ 
H U N D R E D S 
OF 
RESALES — 
all painted — repaired — easy 
to huv 
- 2 to 4 bedrooms — 
»8900 
to 
»35,000 - 
M A N Y 
NO 
DOWN 
P A Y M E N T 
all 


* rP CjILM O P E R E A L T Y , INC. 
4710 E. Holt Blvd . Montclair 
»24-8060 Or 985 7265 till 8 P m. _ 
I 
have 
a 
buyer 
for 
4 
bedrm 
home 
on a large lot. '>* to Vi 
acre. Priced 
about 
*30,000. 
Call 
W ait 
W itt, for 
details 
Ontario 
Realty, 
*23 4 583 
till 
I 
p m, 
REPOSSESSIONS 


OFFER 
2-3-4 Bedroom Hornet 
*0 year oans 
A N Y O N E C A N BUY 
Ne point» or 'oan fees 
N O E S C R O W FEES 
No 
down 
payment 
on 
manv 
Frethiv 
decorated 
Intlde 
and 
out 


C H IN O 


N e w 1 9 6 8 H o m e * 
Exciting 
patio kitchen», 
cathe- 
> 
drai calling», 
FH A VA. C *i Vet 
fnancm g 
New 
unit 
»tarting, 
wilt 
customize 
tor 
you 
4 
model 
homa*. 
'2*58 
Ramona 
A ve. 
____________ 
DOLL HOUSE —* 2 bedroom — 
; 
large kitchen — formal dmino 
room 
— carpet» — 
hardwood 
floor* 
all 
on 
V» _fcr#_ 
HAS 
CUT 
BUILDINGS 
AND 
FENCES — asking 
*14,950 — 
1 
nothing 
down 
to 
Veterans 
— 
»450 
down 
FHA 
or 
trade 
— 
! 
G ILM O R E R E A L T Y , IN C , 
j 
4710 E Holt Blvd ■ Montclair 
624 8060 or 985-7265 till 8 P.m. 


Houses 
18 


CLAREMONT 


SO NICE - 3 bedrooms — full 
bath 
with 
SHOWER 
- 
new 
carpet» — deluxe HI-LOW CAB­ 
INETS 
- 
2 
car 
garage 
- 
deep lot — 
FRUIT_YREES „ ^ 
asking 
*14.050 
- 
Prefer 
0*Y 
down 
— 
owner 
will 
consider 
no down V A — 
_ 
GILMORE REALTY, INC 
4710 E Holt BWd , Montclair 
624-80*0 or »85-72*5 till 8 P m 
SPACIOUS Mod ranch style home 
Above 
Bateime, 
One 
third 
acre 
landscaped, 
extra 
if* 
PStoJ-'-"h 
3 BDRM. 
2 bath, 
carpet, 
drapes.) closed 
for 
vr round »wtmmi 
g 
air. 
fenced 
near 
school* 
and I 624-2*46..... 
............,r 
------------- 
shop cent_ By owner. * 21-8538 
ROSEMOUNT ESTATES 


KEY C H E A P 
j n i O T e n ' w « * * 
Sprawling ranch homa, detailed 
_ 
824-5851 
----------- 
styling on huge lot, 
180 ft to 
. 
, 
. 
alley 
W de 
lawns, 
lye 
trees 
R p n u t l l U i C, d i C m O n * 
ncing. 
deluxe 
3 
bedrm 
o e u u i i i v i 


part time Wages negotiable, 
622-5* 


9 Help Wtd. Female 
10 Help Wtd. Female 
10 Lie. Rest Homes 


w tm a a . 
~ a n t h 5 n y 'S“ h « 
F 
ie n s T S t i.U tfR a c tiv E jflri* « 
S 
& S a n ita riu m s 


p 
s 
. 
* 
« 
Foolh> 
. 
e'i ^ 
S 
Per h o a r ,*PA;v # o Qdi ? . N W Lf f i L Y o 
u 
» 
« 
f 
e 
. i 
s s 
_________________ ^ r 98A2045 
~ 
LVN'S 
S i ^ Y . ^ m 
331-0,43. 
Covina 
*23-78t7_or «3 48J* £ 
Wtthou* bi»cr?minat1*n 


A U T O 
U N E 
M E C H A N I C 
S S f P ^ v E ' M 
S t ' Y l & T . , ^ " 
« 
i r 
I 
AY 
" 
“ 
’L 
, 
# 
T “ A J 
o 
i , 
r w 
food 
Place to work 
See service 
C a V 983 3913 
ing In a 
counseling 
oHice. 
Re- 
Meate with, o w n e r s 629 8553 
Advance Realty C O . 
nTnaoe' 
Pomona Dodoe 
_ 
_ f 
----------------------■r— 
cepticnist 
bookkeeping 
and 
gen- p r i v a t e 
quiet home 
Ambulatory 
' 


N o w Is Th e T im e To Buy! 
From »8,000 
VA se !s It* property 


minimum of 2 vrs experience In. 
. 
Commercial 
gardening 
or 
land- 
Casualty no exper, comm, fee ad 
scaping. 
Apply 
at 
Personnel 
Of BOB CALVERT 
(2131 963-4131 
fice San Antonio Community Hos-i 
ALOSTA PERSONNEL AGENCY 
oital. Upland 
\___ 
<20 W Alosta, Glendora____ 
CUSTODIAN wanted 
5 davs week. 
8 
hr 
dav, 
for 
Claremont 
Col­ 
leges Salary Open. *21-1213______ 


ä— SSL 
C r i i r l e X A / m m o n 4L 
êral "office 'work. 
Mus* 
be 
me- rladies."SooJ’food’ xlnt care 
Prf-i 
$ 6 5 0 
▼ 
IM S " W O r n C il 
,ure ¡,ncl self-reliant. /0 » t Rfevlotf» 
v ,*0 and semi-private ^nd^ couples. 
N A 4 -0 0 1 4 


P a rt T im e 


E xp . H a y Truck D rivers 
NA 8 5150 or »84 1437 


SALES & SERVICE 
Local opening »433 mo guar plus 
! immediate 
comm. 
Paid 
vacation 


employment, 
education 
and 
n* 
q A$ welcome. (213) ED 1-7508 
perience. 
Salary »426, Wri.e Box ¡ 
- 
6048 Progress-Bulletin. 
immediate openings for mor 
*048 projress-o u iig i^ . 
— 
1 7 
mg »tuft 
9-1 P' eve shift 
5-9 
EXPER 
NURSERY 
S C H O O L D r 6 S S m 3 K W n 
1 / 
pm 
*1>5 hr. phone work lor 
| TEACHER 
Permanent 
position. 
» 
national 
concern, 
no 
exper, 
must be 
able to read 
with 
enthusiasm. Permanent work— 
no 
layoff'. 
Apply 
4702 Brooks 


WANTED — Ambitious young men 
over 
18 
for 
assistant 
manager 
training 
Able to work full time, 


plus bonu», all fringe benefits. For 
Sf 
"Montclair.' 'Cross' 
street, 
appointment 593-1595______________Ramona. 9-1 
p.m. or 5-9 pm . 
only. 


TEACHER. 
. 
Call 
593-4*72 
for 
interview ap­ 
point. 
....... 
_ ......... 
_ 
PBX Operators 


Alteration, dressmaking 
form a!* 
Reasonable. 
NA 9 9269 


O P P O R T U N IT Y 
PART T IM E K E Y P U N C H IN G 
Use 
your 
Spare 
time 
to 
write 
.....ity .»tractive o t*fr tor Sat 
Auto, and 
Fire 
Insurance, 
while* 
¿ £ kaC,£ o A Key 
Punch- 
training 
tor 
future 
career 
One; ? 
r r ’ 
, , , , Bfen|t0, M ontclair, 
experienced 
m ulti-line 
Agent 
ur- 
° t n 'T0<J ™ " " ’. " ' 
grntly 
needed 
now 
¿t>A D M !N Sec V ^ o r cienorninatiorval 


x 
s 
r u 
r f i i a 
. 
"' f a r m e r s i n s u r a n c e 3“ i H 
S s H 
s - $ x % 
z 
’t 
a 
,» 
R « « W 
i S K 
r « 5 B 
W 
f t 
G R O U P 
S . c C T U « 
» 
f e 
n 
» 
J S .« f e A » 
nstallation 
and 
contract 
supervi-; 


s i. 
— 
,, . 
- 
ja c o . 1925 W Holt, Pomona 


P L A N T 
E N G IN E E R 


A N S W E R IN G SERVICE 


E XP E R IE N C E O N L Y 
CALL 627-1591 


Widow 
who 
enîovs 
mother 
our 
bov 
7 


A lté râ t io n s -D re s s m a k in g 


Ma be l__N ugent *22-0430 or *22 ;0140 
Taiioring & Alterations 
62* 473 *____________ 


b u y 
n o w ' 
Quick Action W ant M \ 


Real Estate For Sale 


g o v e r n m e n t 
o w n e d 


H O M E S 
F O R 
S A L E 


V A - F H A 


Redecorated 
inside and 
out. 
to w 
down payments 
low Interest rates 
low monthly payments 
Ail govern 
ment 
owred 
homes 
sold 
w'*hout 
discrimination 
Call 
tor 
Informa 
tion, NA 3 3441. 


and 
fenclni, 
___ , . 
pian 
Lee 
formal 
living 
room 
Rich 
ww 
carpeting 
deliglifful 
Queens 
kitchen 
ooem 
to 
spa­ 
cious 
oark '¡ke 
ground* 
Real 
value 
$13.950. 
No 
Down 
P ay­ 
ment VA, Normal costs 
Entire 
bai 
payable »93 15 per 
mo in­ 
cluding both P and I 
D E LA N E Y REALTY 


6 2 7 - 3 5 2 9 


a 
s 
1» 
« 
a r k e t . n g s y s t e m s i n c S S r K f f J B S Ä » r e s i n i C o lt o » « • 
7 ¡ í 7 ä 
? E . V 1 * 
e l e c t r o n i c t e s t t e c h 
- 8 5 . 
• 
N « d . • 
Pomona, Caljf. 
. 
^ 
_ 
Check 
out, 
adiust, 
and_ reoair areyLirui. 
oer and 3 personal ref's 
secretaries 
with 
^harthecd. 
dictêphont 


* 
Houses " 
' 
” 
18 B 
O 
f f l ^ 
S û 
S 
signing materials^ for. program ^ln- 
------------------— « ------------- jg 
n O U a c a 
f j V V 
U 
H D V k r » I • 


G E N E R A L 


Pomona, Calif. 
I Check 
out, 
»diust, 
and 
reoair 
artiund,' exper and Y personal ref's, 
Secretaries 
An Equal Opportunity E m ployer 
digital < e<tr0nic eou pt. Prefer 2, 
progress Bulletin Box 60S0 
| 
&e 
i* K r * i— 
¿rfeirii 
seek* 
9 
salesmen I yrs 
«xperience 
as 
electronic 
tes* 
w 
I 
L£ 
i i Lb * » " » n r * ‘ 
‘ K , . ' 
ffS , 
* K S , S i t 5 ' G I R I S 
t r a v e l 
g i r l s 
•® O T 5 jj*S S 
M « K T n i(5 i « 5 , ' " * “ SSui 
» * i 
i j j a »» I " « ; . «1j g 
g 
ftclds 
Must 
L>® __marrii?o 
o^iwffcn 
ff-»L iic m s r \ c \ / c i a d 
cities 
Fior <t 
N pw 
ij j 
b E N I U K u c V t l U r . 
I t v . i l 
covering 
resort 
and 
accadem.c | 
New cars and all expense* 
Electro-mechanical 
breadboardlng 
areas. 
- - - - 
, „ 
and 
prototype 
testing 
Systems 
furnished 
No 
experience 
neces 
Documentation 
Exp In digital and 
sary 
*ti 
““ 
We 
train 
you. 
Permanent 


age 
21 
end 
45. 
Resident 
this 
area 2 or more year*. Willing to 
*tudv 
hard 
to 
learn 
professional 
f eld. Salary and bonus for those 
that Qualify. Send resume to 8ox 
6043, 
Progress Bulletin. 
_____ 


DRIVERS 
Now 
hiring 
full 
time 
drivers, 
commission 
with 
weekly 
ouar, 
good 
group Insurance 
Plan. 
Must 


record^ N o #nexpe*Ve nec°^ 
Yellow; t r o - nniechanlcal 
background 
help-1 commission. 
Upland 
area. 
Cab, 1416 E 
Mission, Pomona 
fut 
1 982 9919 


lecretarv 
w i t h 
Clerk 
Typists. 
Good 
fringe 
benefits. 
Pleasant w c kmg con­ 
dition* 
App!v in oarson to the 
Pendleton 
Business 
Bids, 
Mon- 
F ri, 
9 11 
a tv., 
1 30 3 30 
P m. 
,-47 
N 
Oartmouth, 
Claremont 
NA 6-8511 e*t 3191. 


$13.950 
Best 
deal yet 
— 
3 
1*4 baths — deep 
bedrooms 
. . - 
lot 
good 
area 
tor 
kid* 
no 
down 
Vet* 
- 
low 
down 


FH G IL M O R E R E A L T Y . INC 
4710 E 
Holt Blvd., M ontclair 
634-80*0 or 985-7265 till I P.m. 
|3 
BD RM 
home, 
pool, 
Westmont 
' < re t*rv 
area, hdwd firs, s o m e cpt 
and 
for'electro-m echanical systems re-. |« jtlo n .w it h ,ef*jVng * Negre^Wb *o manage Ddental ^ fc e 
Mug*»» ^ ps-' nr s c h o o l/» lS J O O ^ 622. J731 


a c v >C TCiuiC 
n c c i r W F K IP 
lishers. 
Apply 
Mon 
thru 
Wed, 
10, m ature 
‘incl. . m ’eii'sent- 
D*'r’,2' 
i r \ T C 
/^ \C 
I I V I N l ’ 
S Y S T E M S 
D E S I G N E N G . 
arr> 
!o 
s pen, Miss 
Langford. At 
exper desirable 
but not nec. 
Ap 
L v ? 1 O 
v J l 
L I Y I I N 
KiPVA/ 
steirtinq 
on 
tfiR M 6Vf6ir Hottl. 
plic^hts 
$hOU!Ci 
list 
pffViOUS 
„ 
small 
electro-mechanical 
digital; 
Equal Opportunity..Em ployer _ 
giovment. 
education 
and^ 
e^per^ 
systems * 3 or' more 
Yrs 
t ' X ^ / ; B E A U T ir ,CAN 
to work 
full 
tim e 
{’-/Jl®r1vBS “um and^CaUf 
° <! U 
or 
system 
design 
required- 
fle c -| or 
part 
tim e 
Guarantee Plus b0* '8^ uoli 0 
Calt E X P E R IE N C E D 
telephone 
soil 


S W IM M IN G POOL 


PA RT 
tim e delivery 
holp, 
»2 
per 
s ji a r^ s 
commensurate, 
with 
exp 
H o u s e k e e p e r L iv e - In 
hr to start. Phone M r 
Berg, Fui- 
and 
c a p a b lìte s 
Excel 
opportuni- 
r Ka,h 
T v 
■ 
~ 
- 
'213 ) 335-103* or (213) 
Sdvancemen? with a young 
Pvt 
* ' thir1b^ 
_____________ ! and progressive industrial electro-; nnod*^ ^ 
cl.''" « S ' 
M E N 
t O 
work 
from 
service 
me 
systems. co^_App|v 
In f e r f On] trsttewt_8nd_r8f r * f . _ U 7~ 
446 8248 


truck. 
Drivers 
and 
helpers 
need- 


Well built 6 room home with 3 
bedrms 
and 
expanded 
paneled 
------- „ — . 
den and cargeting too. 
chors to wo-x from ot»r office In 
From the patio, step up to this 


ed 
T op 
starting 
wages 
Every-■' System* 
Inc 
475) 
thing 
furnished. 
9*4 
E. 
Holt. 
M om Clair, Calif, t l 7*8».*2 *-|*5 l 
Pomona._______________ 
¡TE A C H E R S 


Ava., 


S T O C K C L E R K 


»480 
*584 
One 
vear 
exper. 
Pass 
written 
clerical. tvp<? 
40 wpm 
Operate 
10 
key 
adding 
machine 
Pos­ 
sess 
valid 
Calif 
D river's 
lie. 
Able to do heavy manual work. 
Hlph School graduate. 


Apply In Person 
C A L IF O R N IA STATE 
P O L Y T E C H N IC ^ O L L E G E 


C o ffe e S h o p M a n a g e r 
Modern 
fast 
food 
exper 
re­ 
quired 
For 
chain 
operation 
Full 
benefits, 
our 
employee* 
know of this opportunity. Reply 
Bo* 6047, Progresa-Bulletln. 


E X P E R 
service 
station 
attend, 
over 
21 
Days 
and 
eves 
Apply 
at *9« 
E. 
Holt, 
Pom. 
bet 6 :3 0 - 
7:30 P m. _ 
_____ 
L 


M A R K E T I N G S Y S T E M S I N C . 
F IE L D S E R V IC E 
E N G IN E E R S 


R E C R E A T IO N 


A N D 


P H Y S IC A L 


E D U C A T IO N 


TE A C H ER 


evenings. Salary plus commission 
Only 
m ature 
women need 
apply 
6 2 3 - 4 3 5 3 ___________ 
... 


| X S H O W A V O N 


m°c^W. PSeil rBaum*ntovi M N o 
d e lj B E A U T IF U L ^ 
OsrtStmas 
G I I t 
very 
Car 
nec. 
We train. 
NA Line! 
Earn 
to 
SS 
or 


m 
» 
» ' ' “ 'M 
w 5 !* ;, 
B 
S 
a 
f 
f 
% 
V 
p a r,y -------------------- — 
------------------ 7 ' t a il" call 
*29 2587 or 986-660___ 
to 


send 
Resume 
to 
M arketing p l ANS 
for 
wives 
and 
mother 
to 


HAIR 
StvTist Experience with 
fol- 


16 
x 
30 
pool 
on 
the 
terrace. 
BU Y 
TH E 
HOME 
and 
Pool 
n o w 
— 
before 
the 
prices 
go up, 
O N L Y $ 1 7 ,9 5 0 
No down to Vets, with month­ 
ly 
payments of 
*116 70 
includ­ 
ing principal and interest 
Non vets easy FH A terms 


REALTORS 
N A 3 - 3 4 4 1 


N O W Y O U C A N 


BUY 
GOVT. OWNED 
Repossessions 


These homes are available to 
anyone 
without 
discrimination. 
With 
very 
little 
or 
no 
down 
payment. 
We 
have 
2 3 
and 
4 
bedrm 
homes completely 
repainted in­ 
side and out 
In all 
araas of 
the entire Pomona Valley 
- - I n 
all 
price ranges — 
tow Inter­ 
est 
rate 
no 
loan 
fees 
or 
escrow charges — and vou get 
th - deed 
We keen a dally re­ 
vised 
list 
of 
these 
properties 
available 
< 
II 
us 
or come In 
NOV, 
Call 
anytime 
— 24 hrs 
day. 
U N IT E D REAL ESTATE 
985-2731 
NA 8*1*1* 
8111 Foothill at Grove 


• 
CARLISLE M A N O R • 
In 
CHINO 3 Br, 2 
Ba. Concrete 
Or 
Balance 
power 
blt-ins, 
snake 
roof 
10*4" 
setback 
in 
reer 
vd. 
Insul, ample ciosets, from »18,950. 
628 4444, 628 46**.________________ 


Onlv 
*12.500 
— 
3 
bedmom 
D E L U X E — hardwood floors - 
floors 
— 
2 
car 
garage 
— 
D E E P 
RU RA L 
T Y P E 
LOT 
— 
nice 
street 
— 
no 
down 
7A , 
low down FH A — 
G ILM O R E R E A L T Y , INC 
4710 E 
Holt Blvd 
Montclair 
624-8060 or 985 7265 till 3 P.m. 
AUTUMN CHARM 


5 1 5 ,9 5 0 
No Down Payment 
SH EER 
B E A U TY ! 
The 
autumm 
leaves 
are 
falling 
from the big trees that seclude 
this beautiful semi ranch style 
home 
Gabled 
cedar 
shingled 
roof 
enhances 
the 
charm 
of 
colorful 
stucco 
exterior. 
Strik­ 
ing brickwork, picture window, 
coachmans lamp etc. 
You 
will 
marvel 
at the 
de­ 
luxe 
floor 
plan 
with 
its 
thick 
rich, 
w w 
carpeting, 
ever 
lus­ 
trous hdwd floors. Golden tone 
expens.ve 
drepes 
all 
fasfeiutlv 


4 
B ed rm !— W h y N o f? 


D o w n P a y m e n t o f $ 5 0 0 
F O R E V E R 
YOURS! 
Pictur­ 
esque 
r u g g e d 
ar chlteclu’-., 
heavy 
lew 
cut 
cedar 
shtngied 
roof 
with 
band 
saw 
rafters. 
Strikingly 
decorated 
c a n a r y 
yellow 
stucco 
exterior. 
Eartv 
American 
diamond 
pare 
win­ 
dow 
and door styling. 
Window 
boxes, etc. 
Wide 
sprawling 
7 
room, 
4 
bedrm . 2 bath floor oian_ Bui>t 
to fit the b>g wide tot. 
Deluxe 
Interior 
features 
F-A 
heab 
Early 
American 
spindles, 
Y all 
of 
floor 
to 
ceiling 
wardrobes 
in 
large 
bright, 
cheery 
b«d- 
rie j. 
Serviced 
off 
center 
hall 
bv 
two 
ige 
pullman 
baths, 
Boastmg 
of 
cetored 
fixtures 
and 
ct ortul 
tile 
work. 
The 
dream k.tchen is really a w in­ 
ner. Quality Western Holty blt- 
ins, 
loaded 
with 
natural 
cabi­ 
nets 
and 
real 
ceremtc 
nto. 
Pantry 
and 
breakfast 
bar 
of 
course' 
Dining 
area 
must 
be 
12 X 18 long! 
Looks thru wall 
of sliding glass to covered pa­ 
tio and enclosed grounds. Home 
ha* 
lust 
been 
completely 
re­ 
decorated 
in 
end out. 
It s 
vacant and ready! 
Charming, quiet. 
Ideal Clare­ 
mont 
location, 
not far 
from 
the 
colleges. 
May we 
show 
you? 
Full 
price 
$19 950 
Down 
payment 
o f 
$500 
to 
anyone. 
Vet or Non Vet. 
Monthly pay­ 
ment 
of 
$126 15 
P 
and 
I 
In­ 
cluded, 
VA 
sen* 
its 
property 
without discrimination. 


Houses 
18 


O N T A R IO 
-g. $16,950 
3 BEDROOM. Lltrge 
lot, 2 patios, b!t-in range and 
oven, 
fireplace, 
hardwood 
floors, 
no down to *•?$. 
low 
down 
FHA 
LOO«!*» NA 
3*7^51 
Of YU A7512 
____ _ 
N E W ON T h e m a r k e Y 
~ 
l.area 
3-bdrm, dining roiwn, fire­ 
place, 
frnjlt 
and 
shade 
trees 
In 
r#ar 
yard, 
completely 
*nc ^ored 
with block wall* 
AM tor 
No 
Down 
to 
VA 
buyer. 
Agent. 
624 8511 or 98* * 
1 
1 
3 
, _______ 
15 
x 
30 
BLT 
IN 
POOL 
— 
J 
bedroom 
RANCH 
HO M E 
- 
spacious 
kitchen 
— 
* 8XdfjH> 
patio 
— 
a 
lanal 
— 
cross- 


rSthtno d o w n ^ A or »50 * down 


P O M O N A 


o l d e r 
3 
bedrm 
home, 
from 
Emerson 
J r 
Hi, 
Columbia. 814,509. 
*29-3*41 
? .. 
blks 
i . 


3 B D RM 
Home 
eomp 
decorated. 
Inside and out. New W-W carpet 
throughout. 1-An barhs, double car 
gcrage. 
fenced 
back 
yard. 
F m a 
loan Can 985 1 47* anytime.________ 
NO 
DN 
G l, 
FH A, 
Must 
IflH 2 
br, 
2479 
S 
San 
Antor.io. Collect 
(213) 272 4512, _*72-9*55___________ _ 
O LD E R " 2, Story 
4 
bedrm 
home 
with 
pool 
and 
atom^num 
siding, excel toe 
L h ^ n -fm e re o n 
sc hi. 
Upper *30 s. 
71* C. Jetter- 
son, Pomona. *89-2177 
SAC’ 2 bedr. den. 
1M 
baths, 
carpet 
deluxe kitchen, lje_ »enced 
yd 
Nr freeway 
»13.100 
er will accept second. No points, 
*29 7149 for appt. _ 
____ _ 
H U N D R E D S ' OF 
RESA LES 
- 
all pa.med — repehred --e a s y 
to buy - 
bedr°om , 
v 
to 
*3^,000 
M A N ▼ 
NO 
DOW N 
P A Y M E N T 
- 
ell 


‘ G I L M O R E R E A L T Y , INC 
471o E 
Holt Blvd. Montclair 
*24 8060 or 985-72*5 till S um 


626-1241 


5SS!»;r* 
^ 
¡ 
O 
p 
e 
n 
Every D a y & S u n d a y 


O p e n 9 a .m . to 8 p .m . 


6 2 8 - 6 6 1 8 
6 2 4 - 0 0 1 4 
towing 
A IM o w ra to r tor Sundays'LIVE 
In 
housekeeper, 
*40 
wk n 
or.P’d l i ™ 
_ 
J^rt 
i r^ 
r* 
^ 
t.ch,gd.2267d O p e n E very D a y & S u n d a y 
V A N T F D 
B a r m a id 
m a k e 
up 
to 
” 
, 5 


9 a .m . to 8 :3 0 p .m . 


W A N T E D : 
Barm aid 
. _ _ 
*W0. 
1471 
W. 
Mission 
Blvd , 
Pomona 
*23 9!40_________ 
*600 P E R M O N TH m inim um com- e a r n 
extra 
Incom» 
by 
tnicphore 
LA D IE S 


Im m ediate 
career 
. . . mission, 
Judv 
Lee 
Jewels 
ex 
opportunity 
pandlng 
In 
Los 
Angeles 
area 
.i.i.rA .i 
•». _ 
¡»iferview 
call 
with ¿he 
State 
of 
Calitornia 
at 
Por 
confidential 


g " » ° W « ' ] H 
FOOD SERVICE 


on 
an 
Individual 
and 
g r o u P i 
basis, 
to 
teach 
recreaton 
and 
physical education classes and to, 
coach var.ous sports. 


SA LA R Y 
R A N G E 


$ 8 ,9 5 2 - $ 1 1 ,9 7 6 
Entrance 
salary 
depends 
upon 
academ ic 
attainments 
and 
ere 
dr-ntials. 
Further 
incentive 
In 
creases are possible with Increas­ 
ed 
form al 
education 
at 
college 
r _ . 
Wivei 
Live- n 
housekeeper. 
Good 
; Call anytim e. (2131 369-7095 
Requires a valid California 
! v iA fU R E 
babysitter 
wanted 
in; 
*£L<-runriA rv r»' 8 lltm # rtirv CT0 1 V 
___ * 
A 
tv. . . 
4 AP 1 


ADVANCE 


Supervisor 
In 
colino# 
'»od 
service. 
Salary 
ow?n. 
Apply 
Pendleton Business BldO., Ciare- 
mont 
Colieges, 
747 
N. 
p a rt- 
mouth. 
Claremont. 
NA 
*8511 
ext 3191 
Mon F ri. 9 a m. to 11 
a.m . or 1-4 p.m. 


soliciting 
from 
your 
home 
ini 
there 
areas 
La 
Verne, 
Clare-, 
mont, 
Pomona, 
Diamond 
Bar. 
Ontario, 
Chtno. 
and 
Cucamonga 
Fo- information calf 629 2983;______ 
LAB MESSENGER 


Full 
tim e 
9 
a m —6 
p m 
Must 
have 
valid 
Cali* 
drivers 
Hcense.i 
Contact Personnel dept 
4 7 3 0 H o lt Blvd., M o n tclair 
Inter-C o m m un ity H o sp ital ^J_r .J _ r 
— 
- - 
G O V E R N M E N T O W N E D 
REPOSSESSIONS 


REALTY 


(Covina 
,(H 3 ) 
331-H31 
An Equal Opportunity Employer 


. . . . . . 
i . i ' . i m 
u w 
i u 
W O R K IN G 
mother reeds part-tim e 
W A N T E D IM M E D IA T E L Y 
, ham ekkew er 
tor 
3 
children 
ages 
Live in 
housekeeper 
Good 
pay 
11. 
12- 
* 
«<• 
H r*. 
3,10 
to 6^ 0 
Call anvtimg. (213 , 359-7095 
_ 
' ^ 
p m 


! 
F A SC i NAT ING PROFESSION 
F IE L D SERVIC E 
E N G i N t E « 
, ir d secondary O' elem entary ere - ^ 
Own trans 
2 or 3 «vii 
FA S C IN A TIN G PR OFESSIO N 
install 
and 
m aintain 
data 
trans , 
with a m alor or m inor in 
_ 
_ 
_ 
w**.k 
593 50’ 3 
Eves 
W ill t. ain right women In field 
mission 
recording 
and 
receiving 
” d 
physical 
educa 
c ',v?. 
— _. 
3 
makeup 
technique 
This 
Is 
- 
' * 
— 
- 
¡»— mu«"« 
recreation 
ano 
pnys.c.i 
I 
consultant 
*r00 
month 
^L» 
5oor 
to 
door 
or 
partv 
guaranteed, 
if 
you 
meet 
our 
r r 
, 
C a„ 
Wrs 
Curtis, 
599- 
quiremants 
Call 
(213) 
335-1036 
J7y3 _r {2, 3) 96* 9381. 
for Interview .^------------------------------------ V IV IA N E 
W OODARD 


equipt in the L.A. area. Positions 
also avail in hi# midwest, south-; 
east, 
and 
San 
Francisco 
area.! 
Pret 2 vrs exp In E D P 
eouiot 
Salary 
commensurate 
with 
exp 
Excel 
op Port 


For Interview appointment, 
please contact. 


with 
a 
young 
E iectronlc 
Svstf 
person, call 
me 
to 
M an 
4751 Holt Ave 


send Resu 
^ 
Ask 
tor 
Dick 
Anderson 
or 
Ed 
Lee. 


collect, o» 
•ketlng 
Systems 
e„ Tet. (714) 
- 


8dv,r1 îr» ? 5 M R . T O M M O N T G O M E R Y 
Assistant Superintendent 
Youth Training School 


for 
and 
prog T__ 
ems Co. 
Apply 
in 


626-24 
151*0 Euclid Av*nue 
Chino. California 91710 
(714) 628-4781 


_____________ 
V IV IA N E 
W OO DARD 
C O SM ETIC S' 
★ E x p . M a n ic u ris ts ★ 
Le Cherl# Beaut» *29-2608 
W O T K 
W 
t d . 
M a l e 
I 1 
YO UN G 
women 
tor 
general 
work 
In 
stort. 
E xp 
in 
sewing 
pre- 
fgrred CaM NA 9 8139 
_ 
, .— 
. 
W A N T E D 
maid 
for 
apartm ent, 
Reasonjble Ra es 
n a ^ -------- 
motel, 
good 
working 
conditions p AtNT!NG. Interior, 
axtertor. 
E r 
1360 W 3rd St.. Pomona. 
; pprt, 
Reliable, Precise, 
Rat. Free 
w 
. „(T T E R 
with 
B S S v a t t a n 
estimate. *29-54*3 
— 
I 
Apply 
In 
person 
V ln .t Man 
Car 
w P 
------ 
; cand 
ra^ rences 
needed. 
7 30 
to 
W A LL’ c t E A S IN G p a i n T IN G 
Wash, 1200 E. Holt. Pomona. 
H O U S E K E E P E R W A N T E D to Live 
3 3 0 Tues thru Fr.dav by 
Teach 
Freg Estimates 
BUS— BOY, 
I in and 
care for } 
Xfces ?• er 
Light 
housekeeping_^and 
eargj 
593-4380 Eves 


a s s t . M G R . t r a i n e e s 
H e lp 
W t d . F e m a le 
1 0 1 ^ 
, ' Â 
Ï W 
, 
^ 
., 
* 
i rwiwrannpt 
f % 
S 
7 ' 30 


• C AR PE N f É R W OR K • 
Repair lot« and 


A quick dec talon will ta t you 
one of these 
3 c 
4 
bedroom 
gov't owned 
homes with small 
down payment or no down pay­ 
ment 
Low interest rates «0 •>_ 
crow cha get 
You eet 
FIR S T 
TR U 8T D E E D , no second», no 
balloon 
payments 
We now have 
a wide selection of these homes 
which have been redecorated In- 
s de and out. 


v a salt* Its property 
Without 
Discrimination 


P o m 
o n a 
R e a l t y 
C o 


N A 3 - 4 3 8 1 


No Dn. Anyone 


V ETE R A N S A D M . O W N E D 


3 8 4 BR 
built-in», newly de-ek 
rated, fenced. 2 car garee« 
•** 
and 
up 
per 
month 
Nominal 
closing cost and impounds 
Why 
pay 
rent? 
you got dggd from 
Go v e r n m e n t 
(Located throughout Veliev) 
VA sells without discrimination 
RUBY REALTY 
105 S 
Garey 
Pomora 
429 9444 
DISTRESS SALE 


You 
Will fall 
In 
love 
at 
first 
sight 
with 
this 
lovely 
home 
Has 
practically 
new deep 
pile 
cptg 
over 
oak 
hdwd 
floors. 
Beautiful 
draperies 
and 
has 
everything 
tor 
eniovabte 
liv­ 
ing 
Located 
on t 
lined 
street 
of 
_ 
homes. 
E X C E P T IO N A L 
BAR 
G AIN 
TOO! 
Coiy 
living 
area 
with 
real 
log 
burning 
fire ­ 
place, 
fam ily 
style 
xitchen 
is 
pretty 
as 
a 
picture, 
3 
twin 
steed 
bedrooms, 
serviced 
bv 
well 
designed 
m aster, 
2 
car 
detached 
garage 
Jumbo 
sued 
tots 
with 
m ature 
shade 
trees 
Full 
puce 
*14,950. 
No 
down 
G l, 
payments 
*97 
per 
mo 
in­ 
cluding both P and I. 


wide m antie, etc 
Roomy walk 
In 
Closets 
In 
bright 
hedrms, 
master 
must 
be 
at 
least 
14' 
, 
long, 
Serviced 
by 
stylish 
pull- 
! 
man m aster both, 
loaded with 
colorful 
ceramic tile 
Her own 
Queens 
kitchen, 
beautiful targe 
paneled 
dining 
area. 
E arly 
American 
wall 
paper. 
etc 
Loads 
of 
cabinets 
and 
long 
t ie counter tops. Separate serv­ 
it» 
porch 
Hos 
everyth.ng! 
Livtno 
leads 
*0 
big 
tcrYen<*d 
tn oatio den. (Must be IS x 25' 
long). 
Situtated 
among 
big 
trees 
and 
exotic 
shrub» 
of 
every 
description 
Eve'Vthlng 
enclosed 
with 
high 
redwood 
fencing 
for 
seclusion. 
One 
of 
our 
fine 
residential 
locations 
Walk to shopping. Lat 


Ÿ°FÛII price 
»15,450 
No 
payment 
to 
Veterans. 
Monthly 
payment 
just $103.48 
P 
and 
t 
included 
Ex 
Veterans 
pay 
$150 down. Non Vats p«v 
$550 
dawn. 


UNITED 


★ REAL ESTATE ★ 


5 6 0 E. F o o th ill, P o m o n a 
Between Garey 8 Towne 


LA VERNE 
US »how 
cO N D Ô M iN iÜ M 3~bedrm, 2 
I« 
i tireplc. Ge’d Medallion. Pt#v 
POOIS, »29.5U0. *93-4140 


baths, 
area 


S.E. 
PO M 
By 
owner. 
3 bdrm 
1 
bath, 
hardwd 
41. 
Lot ~Z.r 
Fenced 
rear 
yd. 
Dble gar. 
* u , 
000 
F H A or VA term s. N r Phil. 
Sch Dist. 2220 5 
San Antonio. 
__ 
FOR 
SALE 
bv 
o w n er 
3 
bedrm. 
1«, 
baths, 
Fenced 
yard, 
I 54* 
La 
V ita St., Pom 
622 8925 
SPECTACULAR 
BUY! 


★ POOL ★ 
N E S T L E D 
A M O N G 
T A L L 
T R E E S YOU W IL L F IN D T H f 
P R IV A C Y 
Y O U ’VE 
ALW AYS 
W A N TE D . 
Large ram bling home with 2000 
so ft with 4 bedrm, FO R M A L 
D IN IN G 
and dsn 
A 
F A M IL Y 
S T Y LE 
K ITC H E N 
leading 
out 
to C O V E R E D ° A T I0 
For your 
enloym enf 
you 
w ill 
hnd 
an 
inviting 
I I 
x 
38 
POOL, 
25k 
car 
garage with 
parking 
area 
tor 
Doat 
or 
trailer 
with 
al­ 
ley 
entrance 
All 
of this 
and 
more 
on 
a 
T R E A *" NDOUS 
LOT 
of 
*8 
* 
200 
This 
one 
vou 
must 
see 
Call 
today! 
Priced at $24 »50 
Submit your 
down and farms. 


M O N T C L A I R 


4 
BEDROOMS 
down 
any 
V#t 
1 **\ £ 
1 n i 1 
I 
LI SHED 
AREA 
626-1241 
w 
,« 


O p e n E very D a , & S u n d a y 
« % . , " 0NT.2se « X H 
h »“ : 
G ILM O R E R E A L T Y . INC 
O p e n 9 a .m . to 8 p .m . 
UNITED 


★ REAL ESTATE ★ 


5 6 0 E. F o o th ill, P o m o n a 
Be*ween G arey 8 Towne 


C O U N T R Y ESTATE 


NA 3-4381 


ESTA8- 
; 
ltfx‘ uDle” 
O p e n E very D a y & S u n d a y 
9 a .m . to 8 : 3 0 p .m . 


W e T ra d e & Buy E q u ities 


Large 
farm 
style 
home, 
fine 
' a, 
bii 
„ v e .. 
ge 
coui... _ 
_ 
. 
mat living room, plaster wails, 
3 bedrms and 
den, 
beautifully 


uçiion, 
cup 
spreading 
attractive 
tree». 
Large 
country 
lot, 
for- 
------- 
---« .JyJjj, 


decorated. 
Waif» 
of 
natural 
wood 
paneling, 
tite, 
etc 
ige 
enclosed 
uorch 
„and 
Pftfo- 
Good 
locatio» 
Full price 
*12,- 
450 
Pay 
»5.84 
per 
mo 
in­ 
clu d es both P and 1 
D E L A N E Y REALTY 


6 2 7 - 3 5 2 9 


4710 E 
Holt Blvd., Montclair 
624 80*0 or 98' 7265 till 8 P m __ i 
A PLEASANT 
WALK 


$1 PA YS ALL FO R VETS 
j 
To 
schools 
and 
shopping. 
Lovalv 
corner lot with many *,haoe trees\ 
and fenced yard 
im agine 
oood; 
sized bedrooms with 16« baths on 
the 
central 
hell 
plan. 
Queen's! 
kitchen 
with 
long 
tile 
counters,, 
plus a formal dining room 
Easy 
access 
tor 
your 
boat, 
cameer 
etc. 
Full 
price »14,500. 
No down 
V e tt. 
»94 0* 
per 
month 
Includes 
both principal and interest. 
LEW IS R E A L T Y 
4791 Holt Blvd , Montclair 
*268597 or Y U 4G761______ 


POMONA 
REALTY CO. 


‘ G O O D PEOPLE T O 


D O B U S IN E S S W IT H ” 


4 5 0 N . G a r e y a t H o lt 


dishwasher, exper 
Call M r. Zink at *22-3545 


in and care for 
2 girl*. 
Ages ?, 
_____________ ______ 
8. 6. Weekends o ff Phone after 5 
0f 10 mo. old girl. «33-33*9 


$14,950 


M O V E IN N O W 


B O Y S 
TR A VEL 
Naat, 1» to 24 
Travel all m alor 
cities- Florida, New York, Chicago 
covering 
resort 
and 
academic 
areas 
New cars and all expense# 
furnished 
No 
experience 
neces­ 
sary. 
We 
train 
vou. 
Perm anent 
position 
with 
fast 
advancement 
representing 
leading 
Negro 
pub- 
Mon 
thru Wed, 
10 
am 
to 5 
pm . 
M l#* Langford, 
at 
the M avfair Hotel 
Equal Opportunity Em ployer 


p m 
599-3503. 


B O Y S 
P R O G R E S S -B U LL E T IN 


C la s s ifie d A d v e rtis in g 
SALES POSITION 


______________________________ 
Sparkling 
citan 
newly 
radtc- 
«5SÜSS w 
i r y r s ® Work Wtd. Female 12¡ 
Honey" 


Wholesale* 
distributing ^'concern. I 
EXPER IEN C ED PRACTICAL 
s s . s s r & i Ä 6 ü ” b ä a 
* . 
io Calif 
Parmanent 
full 
tlma 
employ­ 
ment. 
Must 
he 
able to type, 
and have wood telephone voice 
representing 
leaning 
negrg 
w » - 
some 
Ushers. Apply Mon_ t b r u j^ d . f t 
^ 
» 
( ¿ 
T 
^ 
t l ^ 
Ä 
^ 
r I 


FULL TIM E 
Ontario ar^a 
Must h»t tjtPtrienct # + 
4 


S A LE S M E N 
F U L L T IM E 
I t , 
Licensed, msorunce 
1 and 
r*terence. 
Tired of battling traffic? Looking 
Progress Bulletin__ 
PI ospects’ 
We need 
2 sharp b a qyS1TTERS 
and 
for Pomona Valiev or R iv*^ 
needed 
Must drive 
Work bv a pot only thru our 
„ 


NOW HIRING for part time dish­ 
washer. 
evening 
work, 
machine 
Apply 
Betsy 
Ross 
Ice 
Cream. 
9*9 E Holt, P om on a 
_ 
LADY 
who only 
wants i3 hours 
preferred can Mr t 
j . jooev 
work per diy 
Bookk«*epmg 
max 
v in o w w th 2 children age- 
6221201 between 9 a m 
and 4 
; ir9 
up 
deposits, etc. 
Must 
^ ' T r ^ U r e to 
Hve in 
and 
pm for appointment 
____ 1 ref's 
Call in person, 445 W. Holt! I <Wd 11 
8M»re ip nve 


sitied advertising exper 
preferred Call M r E f. Jorws 
“ J 


L ADY 
to 
do 
pood ” 
grooming 
1rs( £®TÏPnrt 
Ontario area 
Must list 


COUPLE wilt clean vacant apart- 
Of 
Houses. 
Cêlt 
5ff*2770e 
after 5 p m . 
...............---------------- 


h o u s e k e e p i n g 
w a n t e d 
References 
6290*07 
_________ _ 


Write 
Box 


tor pro 
men for . _ _ _ _ _ _ 
side 
Work by apnt only mru uur 
h 
# 
own 
ph0,,e 
_ 


a s a , S J 8 S " i f c S " l J S 7 y . 2 : ! c . . . A W « , ; ? » « » 
perse, plus comm, age 28-50. good 
rets 
Good 
car, 
and 
hungry.| 
Phone *24-1518, 9 am 
tor personal interview^ ___ ____ 
CAR Wash: Help wanted over ¡8 
gas attendant 
and 
general 
help. 
Apply J200 E. Holt- 


keep house. *23-8358 


. . 
M A TU R E housekeeper 
30 40 
' ¿ f t ' / '¡¿i V P t i c E 
*041 V s , live In. 
car« Of 3 Children 
10 
i sal open 985-4879 
1 ____ — _ 
— ^ 3 » . ’------- — 
housecleaners SECRETARIAL 
pwt'itibn 
Tn 
pur A * 
L^ ° Y h0^ ''* 1 -c*.rr d * run 
er 
own car and 
chasng 
dept, 
of 
local 
business *]"<*. 
1 
Apply 
at 
Wee 
firm 
Shorthand 
r>®3 
required 
rands, etc. 
NA * 3**a * * 
Sand resume 
to Post Off tee Bo* 
— 
1 353, Ontario. Calif,___________ 
1 
M A R K E R C H EC K ER 


ESTABLISHED routes, salary *476 
»¡585 
per 
mo 
plu# 
commlsíten. 1 
Call NA *-3595 __ 
EXPERIENCED service station a»- 
tendant 
wanted 
Apply 
in 
par­ 
son, Jl OS N. Town#, Pomona. 
M A IN T E N A N C E 


M E C H A N IC S 


( 1) * p m .—12:30 a m, 


F uh ' 1 1 me ^ x pe rÎê nc iT Req 
Contact Personnel 15ept 
In te rc o m m u n ity H o s p ita l 
Covina 
(213) 331-7331 
covine. 
. 
«•—S|y g, 


RN'SI l.V N .’S! 
PRACTICAL NURSES 
AppIv now for full or 
part time nursmg 
PROFESSIONAL AND 
VOCATIONAL 
NURSES' REGISTRY 
1027 E 4th St, Ontario 
__ 
483-3913 
M A T U R E 
fir tor 
per 
pre' 
APPiV 
mc" rri, 
1 
pjti 13254 Central Ave., Chino 
FULL 
TIME 


older. 
3309 


_ ____ 
LVN part t im e 
B*toy Sitting Wtd. 
13 


/.t £ " " 
a g a n r s f f l ¡ s s - i e s s a g ;'. 
« -f e 
. 


EXP Cook Wanted. Apgiy M ,g fr ' * 
‘ 
son morn at King Cnickan, 10380 
C e n tra l, M o n t. iN of H olt)__________ 
GIRLS 
Must 
be 
21 
years ot 
age 
WHI 
train 
with 
proper 
aptitude^ 
Ap­ 
ply 
Henry# 
Restaurant, 
107 
E 
Foothill, Pomona; 
_ 
TG IRL 
Office 
Bookkeeper 
recep­ 
tionist. Apply between 9 a.m. and 
1 
p.m. 
8444 
Rodchester, 
Cuca­ 
monga 


aue 
rate# 
week 
Infants 
M u r a l D riv e 
_ 
....................... 
BABYSIT f INC W ANTED 
Full or Part Time 
Days Only 620 0502 
BABYSITTING WANTED 
Montclair Area. Day»; 624-2335 
BABYSITTING 
WANTED. 
Nr. 
emm Sf.HI 
uood ref 
Charge v*ry 
reasonably. 
Avail. 
* am , 
p.m. 626-04*8 
to « 


Child Care 
14 


recepì ion iaf 
tor 
3 
doctor 
office. 
Experience 
neces- 
refer- 
sary 
Send 
reasume 
and 
re 
enee# 
to 
Bo* 
*044, 
Progress- 
Bu I let in 
tor e we 


Help Wtd. Male 
'vm dœ m m sm m tH tm 
9 Help Wtd. Male 
m w m - 


SEASIDE OIL CO. 
MANAGER TRAINEE 


S«v«ral opening* exist in Ontario, Chino, Pomo­ 


na, Fontona Area for young men seriously in­ 


terested in a Sale* Career with Seaiide O ! Co. 


minimum 
of 
*5 
wem . 
Calf 
NA 
*3505 
tor 
appt. 
Equal 
Opportu­ 
nity Employer. 
_________ _ 
B A B Y S ITTE R with own »ran# 
For Los Serranos 
_ 
_*2? 2597 
__ ______ 
¡PHONE G irl, m ature woman, part 
tim e 
evenings, 
sal 
Rluf 
P0011!**: 
No 
e»p«r 
neces 
wilt 
t-am . 
Call 
- y ,i . 
M r* 
T»*ta 423-6487 1CF2. 
: ¿ail 
or 
wrtte 
to *he 
Division 
•* 
JbSS- '8» ia, 423-Ma 
• 
— 
Child 
W eitare 
Service 
*37 
North 


# 
623-45/4 
c h il d 
CARE 
m my ttonre, O 
..............* 
’ ' 
| back-' Ib fa n tj tg 4 


& Nursery School* 


im p o r t a n t n o t ic e 
Caring tor ONE CHILD or more 
ill aged per son in your 
retired) 
WITHOUT A 
ICENSE is a miademgan-l 
home (net re'ffo®.) 
' 
il p us 
bonus*» 
STATE LICENSE t# a 
. . . 
will 
train. 
Call 
or and it iub *ct to fr*»_#cu ion 


Lunch *15 wk 
i 
« !>® s 1j s , HO£ i i , ' ' s 
r 
« 
r 
o 
‘ n 
i M 
i r 
ë 
ï i i & 
 
-s^%aNi 


New w w 
carpe»» 
and 
drapes 
Included 
A homemakers dream 
of 
a 
kitchen, 
with 
loads 
of 
cupboards 
find 
counter 
space. 
Roomy 
bedrooms 
wltft 
large 
cioftets 
and 
1 
bath 
oft 
the 
master 
bedrm 
Large 
yard 
with 
2 
car 
detached 
garage 
in the 
rear. 
Backyard 
fenced 
tor privacy 
*200 total 
Invest, 
ment 
to 
any 
Veteran«, 
low 
down FHA, 
JR. EXECUTIVE 


D R E A M 
Home 
wtih 
quality, 
charactor 
and 
distinction 
tor the 
discri­ 
minating 
buyer. 
Lovely 
en­ 
ter .or, 
nice 
lawns, 
arbor 
en­ 
trance, tieiutlful artiftic living 
room, 
indirect 
hunting 
with 
rock 
raised 
(.replace 
M o s t 
aop-altng 
kitchen 
with 
btt-in 
range 
and 
oren, 
and 
dish­ 
washer 
Large sep dining area, 
with sliding doors opening onto 
patio 
and 
extra 
large 
rear 
yaru 
Breathtaking, 
gorgeous 
4 iarge bedrooms serviced bv 
3 bathrooms 
F inanctal distress 
sate at only 
$ 3 1 ,5 0 0 
On FHA or VA Term* 


SPLIT LEVEL 
Foreclosure 


$50 Total to Vet* 
Spacious 
homo 
for 
spacious 
l,v!r.« 
with 
ail 
modern 
con­ 
venience#, 
located 
in 
Alta 


Featuring 
4 
large 
bedrm», 
2 
baths, 
fireplace, 
F A 
heating. 
bit ms, 
new 
w w 
Can»«?* 
and 
toads 
ot 
extras 
including 
a 
hug# 
family 
room 
or 
plav- 
rcom over the oversized 3 car 
attached garage 
Oniv $21-560. With a total 
in 
vestmeni 
to 
qualified 
Gl ( of 


Few—Low down to anyone else 


O p e n E very D a y 4. S u n d a y 


SWIM TIME 
You 
cen 
realty . keep 
cool 
here. Take a dip In the luxu­ 
rious 
custom 
pool 
and re'a* 
wit* the CENTRAL AIR CON- 
DITIONING. 
3 
big 
bedrm», 
serviced oft central hall Plan 
with gorgeous m a s t e r bam. 
Enclosed lanal with bio BBQ. 
B g 
2 car garage 
Alley 
en­ 
trance 
with 
room 
for 
BOAT 
OR TRAILER. Relax la «Olid 
comfort 
in 
this 
beaut 
home. 
FP $19,500 
No down Gl, low 
down FHA term# 


FORCED SALE 


4 B e d ro o m s — 
$ 1 8 .9 5 0 
SHier 
ha# 
bought 
another 
home and Is forced to vac««. 
Beautiful is m# word for it! 
4 
big 
hedrms, 
2 
gorgeous 
baths, huge 
living 
area 
w-fh 
stld r.g glass opening 
»0 fully 
enclosed rear yard. Queen til­ 
ed kitchen has all the bit ins, 
2 car 
attached 
garage, since 
the 
cot« 
was 
slightly 
wore, 
the 
owner 
wilt 
replace 
with 
new 
carpet ng 
COtor 
Of 
vour 
<n«iire 
No down Gl, Paym-n's 
$I0 2 » 0 
Including both 
P 
and 
I. 
low 
FHA 
tof.ns. 


Big and Beautiful 


Best A re a 
4 
Big 
bedrms 
Plus 
family 
room, 
has 
2 
pullman 
baths, 
plus 
carpeting 
thruout, 
iaroe 
living area has floor to felt­ 
ing fireplace with sliding glass 
opening to fully enclosed gar­ 
den setting rear yard. Beauti­ 
ful 
kitchen 
area has 
all 
fho 
blt-ins 
plus dishwasher, 
locat­ 
ed 
on 
magnificent 
s'reet 
of 
well 
kept 
homgs. 
f p 
323*00 
No down VA, low down FHA 
terms 


CLAREMONT 


H A V E Y O U H E A R D ? 


A B O U T T H E N E W 
4 
BEDROOM 
home* 
built 
b 
Olln 
Construction 
In 
me beaut 
toi 
Holmov 
Estates. 
Check 
on 
these, 
they 
have 
formal 
dining 
rms„ 
family 
rm s, 
ige 
tan. 
Ï 
bams and priced at only 831.150 
Truly a tremendous bov In mis 
tocotion. 
For 
information 
call 
O L IN C O N S T R U C T IO N 
777 E. Foothill. Pomona 
- 
Sat 8 Sun 593 85*5 
*24-357* 
GOLDEN 
OPPORTUNITIES! 
Salected from our laree Clare 
mont 
inventory 
to tempi 
the 
really "hard to pleas»" buyer. 
Prices have been cut to tn# 
bon»' 
Here 
are some money 
saving 
"SUPER 
MARKET 
lU Y a M 
3 
tjndrrm — !*• ba, »15.588 
submit vour down and terms 


I«« family roam 
FOOL COV 


kW TREMENDOUS VALUE. 3 t»d- 
room Farrt Rm all built In kit- 
r u i t c t * K i n i K i r ' ^ 
then 
arge service porch, 
oreter- 
★ O U T S T A N D IN G w 
Ous 
storage 
ereas 
1800 
59 
It 
4 
BORMS 
•— 
dining 
rm , 
b u ilt-, gracious living, including 
J bath*, 
in 
Rare«, 
Oven 
& 
0 ; si:wisher 
pool, 
absolute 
yard privacy. 
Top 
l"« Baths, C E N TR A L AIR CONDI , quality 
construction, 
close 
to 
all 
- 
C»»«**« 
h r i M i . Fenc- 
schools 
and 
shop» ng 
Ready 
tor 


Joseph O. Beck 


H o m o a n d B e a u ty S a lo n 
3 BR, * room Norm side home. 
Carpets, 
drapes, 
inctode«. .ait 
shop »quipment 
Onfy *17.000. 


ed 
Ccvered Patio - 
ioc :ed cor, 
immedL 
occupancy. 
Rrkad 
to 
v»nientlv 
*o New Plate. 
PRICE 
»ell *33.000. terms open. Call tor 
RfcD UCLD to *22,500. 
BeMo Real- krmod 
am r m 
tv 624-7674 or 982 3844 ____________ Joseph D. Beck 
*29 7*22 


O n e in a Million 


$ 4 5 0 D o w n to A n y o n » 


3 B ed rm — 
2 B a th * 
SWEET 
DRIVE 
leeds you to 
this 
striking home. 
Low 
cut 
sweeping 
«rchltecture 
wim 
glass 
to 
gabies 
tor 
soft 
in­ 
terior lighting 
Colorful eluml- 
num 
siding 
exterior 
enhanc­ 
ed by fi»'d#tone front. Taste­ 
fully 
landscaped, 
big^ tree#. « 
room. 3 bedroom, 2 bath floor 
plan, features hardwood parque 
floors, camedrai 
b»amx 
Plen­ 
ty 
of 
sliding 
door 
wardrobes 
I 
in bright bedrms. 2 cotorfui for­ 
mica bams, show« 
fine work­ 
manship 
and 
design, 
Q *-ens 
kitchen, lots of cabinets, loads 
I 
of eve 
catching 
real 
ceramic 
tile 
work. 
Breakfast 
bar 
ad- 
"lOins biu paneled dining area 


* |* ( per mo Wim *3000 down. 
J. L, GUNNER SON Realtor 
194 k 
Garey NA 2 3968. NA 2 0149 


St. 
Joseph 
School, 
too 
family 
nome, 4 bedrm, 2 bath», many 
many extra*. ¿2,900 FHA or Gl. 


NE ioc tovetv I bedrm I bem, 
bit ins. 
cov 
P#*«h 
hdwd 
ftoors, 
many extras. $19.750. Seva ** by 
assuming present 
loen 
at #W%. 


looking tor something beautltoiT 
Check with us on mis beautiful 
home 
4’ j vrs old. nr Ganesha 
park 
Owners withrg to sacrifice 
now. FHA or Gl term*. 


Pool plus a park 
lik# 
vard. 
) 
sg room 
Pius 
»v 
cov 
patio, 
E mgr son 


»king 
______ _ 
__ 
___ 
_ . 
chool 
No exper 
nec. 
Mult 
be 
over 21 and have a good drev ¡ 
Ing record 
Apply 
1*1* 
E 
Mis ¡ 
sion, Pomona or call NA t-1313. 


T e le p h o n e A n s w e rin g 
reception 
and 
light 
bookkeeping. 
I?! Must know Pomona f'mterlo «rea I 
I 


Be able to work weekends 
Apply 
! 1416 E Miss Ion , Pomona 
g 
PART time 
collaction, 
mostly The George Deets Junior 


telephone. Local 
retail firm. *29 10055 W. White, f’omona. *22-/X)J 
( 5018 Mr Rpeenkran# 
....... _ 
«rHO O L 
I " J f f V 'S * ? 
xT««»**#»« 
1 
S 



A 
Pumona^ ..*?2_9s: 7, 
Befor„ and an « f School Cere, 
ftrt* 
- 
— • and Halt Day Srs^ons 
State 
L k 


* BLUE BIRD SCHOOL ♦ 
Open Mon thru Friday 7T 30 
640 E Pasadena, NA 9 8440 
Day Care, Age 2 and Up 
MY HOME 
629 39*4 
___ 
LICfNSf D CiMLD CAR« 
g i l l F o o th ill a t G ro v e 
Tn My Home N Pomona 
j 
n ts e n **'» » 
Caii 624 8*67 
_ 
N A 6 - 1 4 1 8 
9 8 5 * 2 7 3 1 
UMITEEI 


* I I K A I . I I H T A T K ♦ 


N A 3-4381 


O p e n E very D a y & S u n d a y 


9 a .m . to 8 : 3 0 p .m . 
i 


W e T ra d e & B uy E qu ities 
POMONA 
REALTY CO. 


• G O O D PEO PLE T O 


D O B U S IN E S S W IT H ” 


4 5 0 N . G a r e y a t H o lt 


2 Bedrms 
or 
Iret 
bedrm. 
___ 
PATIO 
Orest cally 
reduced 
to »>• 600 q d o w n v e t s 
- LOW DOWN FHA 


c r n t S Íl" / ? '® r o n l/i ffoNiNG 
Large 
aHiminum 
cov 
patio, 
new 
carpets, 
blt-ins. 
firepl, 
*23 950. Suiariut vour teims. 


NORTH OF* FOOTHILL 
Presi ee area 
Custom 
e*ecv- 
hve 
r bedrms, 1 
uaths, Ige 
comer 
2* x 
I* llv rm. Pro­ 
fessionally 
dec 
in 
and 
out 
R-duced 
to 
*29 500. 
Submit 
vour down and terms 
When you're tired of shopping 
see us. let us help you end 
the search. 
NA 4-4591 
OPEN EVERY DAY 8 SUNDAY 
9 p.m. to • p m, 
CLAREMONT 


REALTY COMPANY 
333 W . Bonita Avenue 


CLAREMONT NORTH 
J bdrm, 2 bam, Ige tarn, rm, dual 
' fires,Is | reened pat», 1800 so. ft. 
' *1? 000_ *26-toV3__________ _ _ _ 
*14,281 
J BDRM 
carpets. ®rapes, 
I air rand 
5'.« FHA 
419 Cakdai* 
Dr 624 ?5t4 or 985 ?!07 


r a X J S r W 
r c i bedrm/ dining' room 
plus 
guest 
big 
trees 
that 
enchance 
the 
charm ot the wide 
tot 
Fto# 
6Aontclair 
location 
Not 
tar 
from 
the May 
Co 
Lot 
us 
show 
vool 
Full 
prie# $14,750, 
Non vets pay *450 djwn, less 
down 
to Vets 
or 
Ex 
Vets. 
/.»onthly 
payment 
lust 
*100 64 
P and I Included. 
626-1241 


room. Id« _ 
school *22,900. 


FHA-VA $200 «town puts VOU In 
th.s 
3 
bedrm 
ige 
corner 
to», 
i Loads of extras, *t»,7*0. 


Older 
home 
present 
tenants 
I 
i vr*, 
recently painted Inside and 
1 out 
Lt« 
rooms, 
nr 
downtown 
; end Alpha Beta Only »0900 


Lb* X l lot IS.B4 Kim a I« " !, 
O p e n E very D a y 1 S u n d a y , 
“K 5 U T K S A T T , 


O p e n 9 a .m . to 8 p .m . 
5 « ; 
U , B ...B , 
W*«l !«■ JJfWT »1» 
outdoors «quipment. *19,500 FHA 
or VA. 


Vorbg school S bedrm. too Ilyin* 
room and family room« oxcel toe. 
UNITED 
$20.500. Sae fhi* on# I 


★ REAL ESTATE ★ 


5 6 0 E. F o o th ill, P o m o n a 


lof close to downtown 
tonant», no »ac- 


_ 
. j 
Bedrm. 
poof, 
redecorated 
ln- 
__ I » * » » J f f r 
------ 
side and owt, new carpeting •w’u- 
8 Y OWNER. Save *» 
3 bedrms, ovt, nr St 
JoM ph't. *15 900 FHA 
V i 
bams, 
toundrv, 
carpeted. , qr Q|, 
Slfy?*'*!.788$ t«| po>«g»gioi». 
M A B E L M . J O N E S 


S P IC A N D S P A N 
629 4401 
24 HOUIS 
Wida Green lawns and tali shado 
'222 LAUR1L-------------_ 
t «« . 
pro» tda 
a 
»« erne 
s e tt' u I 
lor this lovely nrw»r house 
T * i 1 
e.te-ior tumbin## a tasteful com 
bmetlon pt brick end tntt 
Newly 
pjirtr-d 
in 
and out. 
to'fro! 
an 
ir us wav to roomv living room 
witti ww carnet and tor cad heat 
1 sostoie s.ied baorms and 
iNi ! 
bath 
etf 
the 
centra! 
halt 
plan 
,af and bright kitchen with a 
ige dining araa snd many cab. 
net*. Yard lemed front and rear 
tor 
ptivacy 
FuM 
price 
*14,950 
ST R E IT 
ESTABLISHED 1935’ 


3 
BDPM_ 
den,, 
giec 
Med_aHlp«>! tnctudas botoP e n d ^ Ty 


_________ 
, 
P R IC E D R IG H T 
no 
down 
Veto 
H f J 
por 
m® j a» Stucco home, ceramic hie 


We offer complete S«rv»ce Station Manager* 
training program* which require* no experi­ 
ence*. If you ore between the age* of 20-35 x 


U A M TR E S S wanted to do gMgr-i <jr„ 
ÉÌ atloni ani torn* tfrtis maklna in Ave* 
2 !0 
é 30 
J® 
I 
shop Call attor I p m 
NA M*15 é X) p m. Bai program 
Individuai 
? 
n 
' 
j I 
I attention. 
Registered 


with minimum HI School Education and po*»e* 
ambition and willingne** to work and learn it 
would pay you to investigate thi* career op­ 
portunity a* a permanent employee with Sea­ 


side Co. Sole* Department. 


Salary Range— $450 to $500 plu* commi*sion( 
company benefit«, etc. 
Only men of good 


character need apply. 


Call 


Mr. Pomidoro 


or Mr. Steele 


at (714) 622-3591 for appointment 


P 
Nurses 
For tu ' new expansion 
Eve­ 
ning» and ruehts tn t C,U 
Or­ 
thopaedist, Pediatrics and Mad* 
kal and 
Surekaj 
Deets. 
Sa - 


saiarie» 
tor 
Charge 
poehfen» 
í m l w 


1 
p a r t t im e 
Newspaper Circulation 
Work 
Chine 
Claremont 
Montçtolr 
! Mu#t havr tar — work out ot 
Apply 300 I,/Tnom as Sf,, 


LICENSED 
NufVffy School 
teach^ 
rr wishes 
to 
tare ter 1-3 
or 4 
yr old 
Vic. 
Garey and Foolhlti, 
(»Y 3-OIF 
i „n 
n- 
— - 
F lA Y M A îE ' PRC SCHOOL 
Nursery 
schl .and 
child 
hmg.__ Mntctr 
U 
toil 


i X i / LOVING care. Fenced yard 
riches 


henna. 


Maps 
2-4 yrs 
L»C 
«rem 
2 
rear» 
and 
yd. 
Hot 
lunch, snati». Nr 
St. Made^utos 
a n j Kingsiav fthiA .P om 
622 «460 
Day care/ i.e. intanfì to 5 vrs 
Mr* 6 a.rr 
to 5 p m N^af ^<- |rs 
1JJI East Alvarado St NA 9 0132 
“ THE BEST FOR LESS" 


A .rM H » j ^ t j H 
A 
* ' 1— 
1 
rwnw. 
- , 
State 
tic, 
exp 
teachers 
planned 
PgrrT 
or 
cell 
*22 1201 
and 
ask; activities, 
new 
«qu'ornent 
and 
tor Mr. H a lf 
; nice 
lawn 
Come 
and 
compara 
u iy ir n o / a r r r r 
r i c D K 
m E 
A rr0^ H w ¥' Po" ’ W 
BKKPR/ 
ttal a„d ». PETER PIPER PRE-SCHO OL|g28-6618 


BLUE RIBBON 


$ 1 4 ,9 5 0 
*450 down — less tor Vets 
Don i 
w ad to see this winner 
on 
a 
toee 
Ik e d 
»treat 
The 
w-w rptg 
is brand new thru 
out 
this 
to# 
home, 
3 
Kina- 
siza 
bedrms 
w tn 
ige 
ward­ 
robe 
enter». 
Fam ily 
»izsd 
kifchgtt, loaded with cupboards. 
Fenced front and rear. 
DON'T MISS THIS 
Only *182 33 monthly 
Including both f* end I. 


4 BEDROOM 
On a short quiet street with a 
country »etting 
Long low west­ 
ern styling befit» this 4 bedrr.i 
home 
*tth hdwd 
floors 
Spa­ 
cious 
living 
room 
with 
fire­ 
place 
mao* lust tor yew 
Slid­ 
ing glass door» lead to cover­ 
ed patio PLUS a hidden play­ 
house tor the children _ 
Only II * 950 with 


Home. 
Beaut 
landsc. 
«tetokter», 
farwad vd 
cust (trap## and. plyth 626 8597 
»hag 
carpal» 
823,508. 
*Va% 
int ; — —— 
YU 4-1761 


ALTA LO M A ___ 


HOMEABILITY PROBLEM 
Solved »«ren you tee thi» four 
bdrm 
with 
huge 
family 
room 
upstairs 
Bit 
in 
kitfhen 
and 
attractive 
fireplace 
in 
living 
room 
Buver 
has 
choit a 
of 
carpeting 
color. 
Home 
in 
Ilka 
New 
condition 
Landar 
rapd- 
■Alii 
sa'i 
FHA, 
VA. 
ate 
, Good terms. 


eve 626-4341 


no orwn *6 Veteran# 
*250 DOWN TO » X .V lT S 
*11393 month tv Including 
both P • « A i . . . 
EASY FHA TER M * 


»hag 
NA 4 7002 
_ _ 
I 
Q uality Executive Home* 
NEW 5 BEDRMS. 
JV* 
bath», 
formal 
dining 
rooms, 
family 
rooms, 
ever size 
garage»,! 
block 
walled 
rear 
yards 
Friend 
below 
replarement 
cos« 
at 
to 
d a y » 
m arket. 
Trade 
in v o o r s 
present 
home 
(it located jn thJs 
vicinity). 
Located north of Base 
line 
R*#<) 
in 
Claremont 
Only, 
two 
available 
For 
information 
call: 
O liN CONSTRUCTION 
pWkWte» « , FouthIM Pomon* 
weekdays 626 1575 
Sat 8 Sun 593-85^ 
mi^ _ 
$950 


TOTAL COST 
MOVES YOU IN 


$ 2 4 ,5 0 0 
CLAREMONT HOMES 
6 2 6 2718 
# 6 BATHS # 
1 


• 
75 FOOT POOL 
• 


O N T A R IO 


h u n d b f d s 
o f 
f iü S A L lî 
ail painted 
repaired 
__ „____ 
. y * f — » 
3 4 ”» iJ m • “f e 
* 
DOWN 
PAYMENT 
- 


* ' e 0 lL M O R i REALTY, INC 
a/18 I Holt Blvd., Montclair 
•)4 xwao Of 9»> 7265 tHf l a m 
5 Bedrooms 
2 Story 
2 Baths 


NO 
•H 


kitchan 
with 
corner 
amk, 
fenced 
yard 
Omy 4 vrs o.d 
N' Madixcm 
school 
L'Stnd *1? 45C. Terms 
Ne 
down Gl or *400 FHA 
Mel 
Kern 
Eve«: 
#29-3233 


BARGAIN HUNTERS 
S BEDROOMS 
Thi# tovate 2 story 
chdtce N E. area 
home in 
naads • 
‘arge 


*w 
car- 
S4NK-KM4S 


r*%dC°Bu»iln»si#i. 
G ii" Oh ice. I Day our¡*rr and klndargartan ad- 
“ 
1! 
i& n ^Led m ru ^T r% ]l| ucationeHy 
ptenn«d_ acTrvi’les _9or 
< 
AP 
Payroti 
palanca See 
_ 
ilth ST. Uetond 
RN's 
ond LVN’* 
RN'* aito LVN’s needed tuli time 
for 7 k 3 and 3 to II shift» Liberal 
trmne benefits, ct 
Central 
Memoria 
San Bernardino St , Muntdair. 


; 
s 
í v 
x 
í 
o 
P . . . t » . r y o u y & S u n d a y 
State 
ensed 
B e /e n r 
S andtrf 
Nailsarv—Owner 
f C l N . 
H u ntin gton 
NA 9 9)84 _____ 


Rik n6H V ltl^ 
BUY THIS A N D GET 
A N EXTRA LOT FREE 
6 2 4 -0 0 1 4 
J J X 
i m 
Ä 
- * 
« 
windows 
on 2 
o.aiy lot» com 


Charming hug« older trame heme 
th ot Basi ne 
Ha» 4 bedrms , 
den. 
a 
sewing 
room 
a 
tormgl 
0 2 J - A J Ö J 
i north Ot 
I den, 
* 
sewing 
a 
... - 
dtnmg 
rqom 
} 
secluded 
catto*, 
yith 
toree 
tree# 
and 
shruba 


A 
huge 
tot, 
new 
petit»« 
thrwuut 
the 
seeci 
heme. 
Dark 
mahogany 
pan«» 
mg tn Hvmg room accents the 
i age fireplace 
Kitchan has alt 
bit re 
MKiudni« 
dish*«»her 
leg 
dining 
ere a 
Outs 1« 
trance 
to 
bath 
making 
ideal 
pool 
set 
up 
2 
car 
tached garage, completely ten­ 
to huge Leckverd 
Easy 
walk 
to 
schools 
and 
»tor* 
*2 »58 
no down aayneat to vat 
pay 
ment 
llaa 
gar 
mo 
including 
both P and i, 


__ 
_ . I 8 
_____ _ 
tarn.,y 
»mo 
W ill 
fove 
the 
com 
tort of 2800 ft a* Itv n * teoodom 
2 
bath», 
modern 
kitchen 
with 
bit-Mto. 
Hdw 
Moor*, 
cor p«t 
and 
dragas 
PLUS 
eueat house 
w*ai 
tor 
Ntothgr 
and 
Dad 
or 
college 


(¿ fi.^ G A T O V 
«ves: **h»71 


INCO M E OR IN -LA W S 
Three 
bdrm 
home 
flu * 
mttoh 4 
rm heute 
Ouod location r«)rth at 
lat 
afreet. 
Both 
houses 
rented 
tone 
time 
tenant# 
Income 
*1e0 
month. 
__ 
*14 9 » 
*29 8823 
« y * * : 


s 


K 
p 
Hate i 
McEechen 


2 HOUSES O N 1 LOT 
FULL PRICE »1?J08 
Exceltotit 
.r com# 
gu pertv 
In 
good Northwest area nea' 
Rode» 
vett 
8 
St 
Jeteph s 
»< hoois 
» 
room older home gius 3 bdrm 2 
bath home. 
Vary i 
Further into, e<ae*e 
i¥ I (Ayers 
E ‘ 
,K tV 


try ciean acoger*?. 
i **« 
ye# 
NA 2 2424 


n o a e te re e . 
O L D E R 
2 
S T O R Y 
9 8 4 - 3 3 6 / 
Grectoua frame eotvstructed 


t S f 


"HO! 
U » S tlT U U 
FOR f e X P i R l i N C i l " 
Pomona Valley C hriitlan Scheel# 
C H R I S T I A N 
PRE S C H O O L 


9 a.m. to 8:30 p m. 


«tv xF* r »re 
„ _ _ 
K IN D E R G A R T E N 
. 
WANTED •A B Y ilT T E E 
1 
a D m t e n 2 6 Stata L k 
Táidt«, tHru Pfi 
3 Dm 
to S 
r “#1 *'• 
5»^ 
Í 
r i , ' 
V m 
. 
h *.« 
1 9 3/ 
*i»o_®re«« I * Ex<in care, transe ADVANCE 


BgtaTv 
tenc**<i 
Shaded 
setting 
of 
iga 
trees, 
attractive 
floor 
plan 
All 
bdrm, 
c losrte, 
etc. 
otf master hath 
Formica tops 


with 
larga 
P rk# *42 » 8 


• SE E M E • 


and bit in cabinets in jMaNgn, 
F 


K lf“ T rtÄ “T i..a F ‘ w 
a 
î. C 
no 
dowt’ 
P»yn rn! 
Pur 
V66 -4 
per mo ifKludmg both P and I. 
j 
DELANEY REALTY 
627-3529 


4 
large 
bedrms, 
J 
bah»*, , com 
i<*.e 
bonito 
kitchen 
Large; 
yard. 
Cnaoarre! 
»chooi 
Intere*» 
GT 
voan 
Price 
*23.500. 
Vacant. 
To 
#ee 
call 
ONTARIO 


located 
« 
'he 
d if. F eaturte* 4 
King* lev 
tthoo* 
targe bdrm# and 
full 
bath 
ugstetrs 
Downataus 
there 
is 
a 
den 
with 
te , 
bg* 
tlxing 
rm, 
(ormai 
dtwn« 
rm. 
k.K-en. service och and to Beth 
A 
tot of llvmg tor omy Itf.ISC 
Terms avail 
Wan Arngid 
Evwa: NA 9*881 


BUY A R f POSSESSION 


I 
»rn 
child 
in 
my 
home 
Caditlac Dr 
Pom 
B A B Y S IT T E » 
« i weekday», 
my 
m * 1 
Chino 
427-2718 


R F A L T Y 
C O 
M O V I N G O U T O F S T A T E 
8 
t l r : 
“ ontctair 
Leh.gn 
L - S,ory ^ olon^ ,'i 
« 
30 
s*y 
Homa. 4 7 3 0 Holt Blvd.( Montclair f e S T ^ * By ^ ¡n ir. NA ^»45! 
Wheeler-Steffen 


R E A L T Y C O . 
|M 2 W, 4th ST , O N T ^ IIQ 


B Y O W N E R 
I VA 8 
FHA nome» 
rocond ttoned 
r- re sa 
uwr r C S he 
onto H»arkTt«g ctoOO. 
Lew 
down 
get 
C 8 M Home 
N w Ont 
2 br irre 
m tertM . 
monthly 
gymts 


liTf*. ® ílr2ii 
JL 
rm 
din 
LfeS* 
r,m1 
NO SOWtS 
toan 
* 1,h î; *titc tÄ i"% w d ttrT*c?!S 
r ä * . . i r r t e * * “ * * 


wanted 
afternoor»s, U lf 
child 
care, 
Mantslgir 
home 
preterred.l schl 
area 
7 30 1 
Call *26 ¿101 


*78« ^ 
, 
and drod 
net» thrvout 
yard, 
wa 
Grammar 
sçhooi» 
aft » P m , Hi 3373 


natural dews arto tabi I 
5 T R E IT 
R E A L T Y 
A S S O C 


Ï 1, i f 
i f 
t 
Í 
N 
p,r% 
PwmoM 
- *” 
î551 
»ioioc 
a (Continued N ext ra g e ) 


P r o g r e s s - B u II« tin , P o m o n o , C o lif. 
InCOIDG P tOD. 
Poge 10, Sec. 2 
M o n d a y E v e n in g , S e p t . 2 3 , 1 9 6 8 
1 


Houses 
18 Houses 
18 


24 Business Oppor. 
26 Re.il Estate Wtd. 
28 Unfurnished Houses 35 Furn. & Unf. Apts. 36A Pets and Supplies 
52 Swaps 
.. v. 
. I.. 
v 
r r w , ‘ 
» T . l ----------------- 
- 
________ s s s s ------- r - 'T H M t v v ~ x r a r *T g a a s — 
7 z ; z z - --------- „ «s...«» 
I / l l v a / e c t 
, a k c Toy Poodle* at stud. " M a t o i s w a p 
I 


P O M O N A 


(Continued from 
Previous P age) 


‘ ' *03 s S m I 
r s e t 
' 


622-4919 
G O L D M IN E ! - tor T L C and a 
little 
cash 
N early 
*5000 
a n ­ 
nual 
return — 
low 
down 
— 
property 
con sist* 
of 2— 3 bed* 


B Y 
O W N E R , 
3 
bedrm , 
1-« 
ba, 
I^ T ^ b e d r o o m ** units 
— 
fam 
rm , cov 
patio. 
blt-ins, 
pool A D E Q U A T E 
parking 
- 
near 
. ¡ » 
nius lot 
Carpets, drps, prim e 
D O W N T O W N O N T A R IO — ask- 


i A P T * , bv 
ownr. 
G m d 
Hr 
^ ‘¡ B U S I N E S S O P P O R T U N I T I E S 
turn 
Com m . 
Ow nr 
retiring. 
In- 
com e *430 m o F P *23,500 
— - 
- 


U P L A N D 
FOX 


13 
B D R M f r o n t 
duplex, 
cejpets 
.- - 
— 
- 
------------------- 
washer dryer 
hookup, 
fenced 
yd. 
1 C ash 
in 24 hrs or »ess, 
get the 
$110 
694 M u ir 
JN A 9-9132. 
If no 
I facts 
before 
vou 
sen 
not 
after > answ e r call N A 9-5386 


WE BUT EQUITIES 


58 


Ä K ? 
Tnv~PÖ odtes at studT- ?*« "to ' » W A P 
m F I T " 
Mteaio« 
^ rlv e ln 
| w . m , 
a h colors ..in c lu d in g dark 
H 
i 
! apricot. Also puppies. 628 


size Plus lot 
Carpets, drps. prim e 
m i U Pi iOC *?0,50C. 985 1014 
subm it 
j 
U 
• 
e 
— 
Ideal fam 
hom e 3 bd'rm 3 bath 
f H O O 
n O C o m 
e r 
S 
c 
and 
Spa- 
Best 
schools 
Agt 
v J " i u y ^ 
633-603? — 679 497» n it« .________ 
' n o r t h e a s t 
A R E A 
— newer 
4 bedrooms — family room — 
C U S T O M 
baths 
— 
m odern 


Ing 
price 
*29,950 
down or trade — 
G IL M O R E R E A L T Y 
INC 
4710 E. HOft Blvd , M ontclair 
624 R060 or 985 7265 till 8j> m. 


built-in kitchen 
F IR E P L A C E 
wood 
shingle 
roof 
— 
*100 
total m oves in qualified Vet — 
low down F H A 
■ 
G IL M O R E R E A L T Y , IN C 
4710 E 
Holt Blvd . M ontclair 
62*-8060 or 985-7265 till 8 P.m. 
j 
!>* N O D O W N — G l 
D E L U X E 
ne.?r new cust 
3 bedrm; 
honi» 
- 
2209 
S P E N C E R 
M ust 
sell now. 
W ill 
take your 
present 
home 
in 
trade 
10 
per 
cynt 
an 
anyone, 
no 
points. 
Reduced 
to 
$78.500. Owner-agent, 
6 2 6 - 6 8 8 2 


W E S T M O N T 
~ 
3 
bedrm . 
flrepl. j 
hdwd 
Hrs, 
carpeting, 
cov 
pat.o, 
m any extra*. *15,500 622-5137 
* 
4 
B E D R M , 
fam 
rm, 
2 
ioe 
baths 
2 
fireplaces, 
bit ins, 
dish­ 
washer. Patio, fncd. *25.800. 
____________ 626-4601___ ___ 


a n o t h e r bell r in g e r 
Lge 
sfvlish 
3 
bedrm 
home, 
com pletely fenced lot that goes 
j 
ail the w ay back to an alley. 
Double 
garage 
Lovely 
trees. 
, 
Show s 
quality 
form al 
living 
room. 
Lottiy 
open 
beam 
ceil­ 
ing. hdwd floors then also has 
open 
beams, 
form ica 
kitchen, 
flagstone 
patio 
m any, 
m any 
extras 
*oo 
num erous 
to 
men- 
I 
tion. 
H ighly 
desirable 
location 
Full 
pi-ice 
*14 503 
No 
dbW£ 
paym ent V A 
Any one with 90 
oav m ilitary service. *200 down. 
Entire 
bai 
payable 
$99.80 
per 
mo including both P and I 
DELANEY REALTY 


6 2 7 - 3 5 2 9 


3 Spacious bedroom s Plus fam 
— 
_ ---------a; .¡¿a. 
. x 
room 
Deluxe 
m odern 
kitchen 
+ + T IM E P A S S E S * * 
, 
with 
alt 
bit-ins, 
hdwd 
floors 
! Tenants pay tor It, som eday it Is 
cov with w-w carpeting 
P a h ?, 
; VOurs! 
12 
units 
North 
Central! 
fenced 
rear 
yard. 
Hom e 
is 
Pom ona 
Never a vacancy 
Beau-, 
clean, landscaping is nice. *2000 
ttfufIv 
kept 
property, 
m inim u m ! 


• BEER TAVERN # 
*2500 
per 
month 


Individual 
building 
with 
p a rk­ 
ing all around. O w ner entering 
hospital 
for 
m ajor 
surgery. 
Located on m ain thoroughfare. 
*2000 down handles. E a sy term s 
or, balance. 


We Have Fo r Sale 
All Types of Business: 
Down pavm nt to anyone $23,500 
up keep. 
_ 
, 
Beer taverns 
Beauty salons 
A 'i 'i 
__ 
9 R 4 - 3 3 6 7 
All one bdrm nicely furr,. Tenants cocktail lunges 
Laundrom ats 
0 2 J - 4 J O O 
t o ** v w 
' 
nJlv 
utiiitie* 
except 
water 
Lndv d .«*a i,r«ntt 
Tax services 
ONTARIO 


REALTY CO. 
1057 w 4th ST., O N T A R IO ___ 
FORECLOSURE 


n o r t h o f f o o t h il l 


4 BDRM., 1 3/a BATH 


pay 
utilities 
except 
water. 
Lndv 
rm . Selling for *90,00« 
Financing 
! negotiable. 
__ 
Hazel 
M c Ea c h e n 
eves: 
629-88,3 


Restaurants 
D rive ins 


Paint stores 


Tax services 
Slenderizing 
salons 
C ess pool 
pum ping 
Rest hom es 
M a rke ts 


We can offer you an alm ost 
new 
building with 4 aots — you 
can 
live in a 
beautiful 3 bed­ 
rm. 
l >«. 
bath, 
l 
story, 
front 
unit 
for 
your p rivacy and rent 
oui 
the other 
3 units — p a y­ 
ing for yours. 
2 units have 2 bedrm s and 2 
r.t» e -c r,e »»ixir* 
I . . 
. 
. r s T . - " - . . 
i 
baths each, and one unit has 1 
P E A C E O F M IN D 
Liquor store 
Rest hom es 
bedrm. 
E ach 
unit 
has 
lge 
Duplex 
excehent 
location 
n e a t Boat sales 
M a rke ts 
kitchen 
with 
bit m 
r a n g e 
and 
clean. 
One 
side 
ow rer 
oc 
a d 
oven 
p .A 
heaiing, 
air 
cupied carpet and drapes 
Loyel,V 
* W E H E L P F IN A N C E ¥ 
conditioning, 
lots 
of 
closet 
paneling 
Stove 
and J ^ fc l8 t 
Urn 
W 
H o l t 
6 2 3 - 6 5 4 4 
space 
Fireplace 
too 
Beautiful 
tenant 
occup.«d 
income, 
*75. 
0 4 0 
^ 
n c m 
T_ . 
carpets 
and 
drapes 
included. 
Listed price 
s i b .mw 
. 
, , , , r i T i n u 
r u i u r u u i t c 
Located 
in 
exclusive 
neighbor- 
Hazel 
M c E a rh e n 
eves 
¿89-8*23 R A ^ S i 
|«corrw 
Sm a 11 In 
N °* Foothill B lvd 


ST R E IT R E A L T Y 
! vestment. Phone i213> 980 3i06 


^ B E E R Restaurant 
B v owner. Serv 
_ _ 
nq ¡unch and 
dinner. No 
ton 
Business-Industrial 
25 
ict on 


DrfOrt 
VOU 
Sen 
noi 
9TT*r 
an^wrr can pspa t-jjp o. 
_______ 
^ 
in m«nv_ _ * r/ » c v >n^ « ; * z | A V A T L Oct. 1, 2 bdrm duplex cot 
t j m * - P P Js6tt® T _ 
627-2412; 
hardw ood 
kitchen 
cabinets, 
big 
rm s, 
w alk 
in 
closets, 
new 
paint, stove, fenced vd, gar, *85 
427 N. Grove, Ontario. Y U 3-3405 
: '* ?P _ ans9ver cal1 NA 9-53<6 __ 
A V A IL 
Oct. 
1, 
3 
bdr, 
I t e b a t h 
1 house, 
carpets, 
drapes, 
bit ins, 
i dressin g 
rm , 
w alking 
in 
closet, 
separate 
laundry 
rm , 
2 car gar, 
i fenced vd. N ear P V C H . *150 
Re 
I frig w asher dryer available. Drive 
! by ther call N A 9-5386 for appoint 
m ent 
1924 E^villa 
P lace.______ 
lie» 
A V A IL A B L E 
about 
Oct. 
1st 
Spacious 
De 
Luxe 
2 
B r 
Duplex 
i P x 
bath, 
F A 
heat 
carpet 
ever 
v/ood 
floors, 
built 
in 
R-O. 
air 
' cond , 
laund ry 
room, 
garage, 
! Good 
environm ent 
Adults 
only 
*135 
per 
m o 
Call 
M r. 
Beck 
- 679 7522 ________ 
_ _ 
3 
B D R M , 
1 
H 
bath 
house. 
Car 
pets, 
stove, 
fenced yard, 
garage. 
*135 
m o 
W asher 
and 
refrig 
avail. 
1403 
S 
Reservoir 
N A 
2- 
4798 
If 
no 
ans 
Call 
N A 
9 5386 
C L A R E M O N T 
*425, 
lease 
or 
lease with opt“7r to buy 
* bed 
rm , den, 
20x20 playrm 
Sep din­ 
ing 
rm , 
lg e 
htd 
and 
filtered 
pool, gardener Incl. A ustin Price, 


Buv 
any 
....... 
r p w n m - . 
--- 
or^ 627 2319. 799-100« aft 6 P .m. 
IMMEDIATE 
$$ CASH $$ 
For your equity 
1 DAY SERVICE 
C A L L U N iT E D R E A L T Y 
626-1241 


Investor* Dream 


SCHNAUZERS, MIN. 
A K C Reg. Shot... *65 626-2395 


K O N A KAI WEST 
1111 E. 7th St. 
2 
Bd rm s, 
carpels, 
drapes, 
«ir i 
cond 
Pool 
Attractive 
629 0109___ 
F U R nT s h E D 
or 
unturn 
Exe cu tive ' 
T 
r . , . j c _ r v :r _ 
home, 3 bdrm , 2 bath, bit tn m as 
I O y o t U a O C t V t c e 
ter bdrm. Hr eel, hardwood 
floors,; Silver 
3 'i 
lbs also 
sm all 
white 
carpeted. 
brfcS 
P«tlO, 
la« 
pool.! or 
cate-au-laif. Choice 
p u p s for 
AH fenced, appro» 1 > » n r 
M o n E , vale 
or trade. 
Y U 
2-7496 
or 
finest 
area 
le a se 
*?S0. 
Call; *26-4165 
N A 4 99*6 


E ve ry 
le t 
* u " _ 7_ a m 
to 


Business Equip. 
and Furnishingt 
59 


_ _ 
. 
R E G IS T E R E D 
G erm an 
snepnerc 
KIN G 'S COURT Apts “¡¡gST 
¿ i 
• 
\/ lakes, Aotarirt 
0A4.7f\A1 
Air C o n d i t i o n t d 


Shepherd 
ex- 
_ 
_ 
____ _ 
____ 
Bon 
View, O ntario. 
914-70*2___________ 
,2 
B E A U T IF U L 
A K C 
Registered 
F u rn 
n r U n f u r n i s h r d 
! Toy 
Pood1® 
Pup* ' , *, 
wks ,°ld- 
r u m . 
o r u n r u r n i i n w a 
R -asonable 
price Call 
anytim e 
Bachelor* 
I » d tm 
2 B d rm 
| 
_____________ 593 8707______________ 
D x s n t 
4 s ? 4 l 
A K C 
P O O D L E 
pups, 1 
females, 
K c 
m T 
T l O m 
apricot, 
9 w ks old, 
excel 
breed 
- - 
-, 
apricot, 
9 w ks old, 
excel 
breed- 
Short w a its 
to 
shoppm e 
centers, 
ing Best offer 
982 0746 
elem 
(Public 
and 
Parochial) 
Jr ‘ 
and Sr HI School» 
17831 Yorba Ave, Chino 
Phone 628-0625 


B u s s M o l e C h i h u a h u a 
very good stud 595-7682 
C O C K E R P U P P IE S . 6 W K S 
N o papers. Reasonable 
T " “? : ----- j ------ 1------ZL---------- . 
x 
1 
593-3385 
_ _ _ _ _ _ 
★ 
G a r d e n A p a r t m e n t s w 
s i l v e r Poodles, sm all M in, 10-11" 
Im m aculate, clean aots. w w car-; fall. 
A K C 
reg 
*35. 
2 
m ales, 
1 
pet 
drapes, 
heated 
pool, 
p v t ! fe m jje ^ 627 4246, NA_9-2793 
patios. 
See 
m gr 
1150 
E . M is 
slon, or call 623 


B u r r o u g h s a d d i n g m a c h i n * 
like new, *35 
626-1109. 
V IC T O R 
10 
key 
e le c t'” B urrow s 
full 
key 
m anual. 
Check 
protec­ 
tor 628-3444, evenings. 
D E L IC A T E S S E N , 
W ard 
M onterey 
7 tt 
4 ft high, 3 ft deep. 
*300. 
Call P h v lis Hagw 
N A 9-9765 
se* 
S A V E 
50 
oer 
cant 
or 
better 
bv 
buying 
office 
furniture 
at 
Patton Sales, 811 
S 
Sultana, On­ 
tario 
D e sks *39 95, 4 draw er fUes. 
$29.95. Thousands of genum e ba- 
gains. 
986-8904_________________ 


$ 2 1 , 5 0 0 F U L L P R I C E 
(N o Down to Veterans) 


S a l e — 
L e a s e — 
W a n t e d 


A verage 
over 
50 
kegs 
Per 
mo. 
- 
M ust sell 
because of 
health 
rea- N A 
6-1418 
son». 
A sk in g 
$70,000 
N o _agenis 
W rite 
Box 6045, P ro gre ss Bulletin 


W E S T M O N T 
3 B D R M 
T z B A T H 


1600 
SO 
F T 
concrete 
block 
bldg 
770 
and 
110 
w iring. 
Overhead 
door. 
$90 
M tclr 
Industrial Pk,; 
Lender 
has 
ius* 
foreclosed 
on 
984-1829. 986-8285 
this excellent hom a jotgW B 
on 
a 
f o r 
S A L E : 
Com m ercial pro 


s ' L s s i i " « » . “ 
f « . . ™ " 
m « s 
» ¿ » v 
b “,“ w » 
'! 


S * * r . n 9 . #t!!F .| 5h w *d ,« fU ? brtck N E W B L O C K b u lW lm rV r cornm tr- 
«replace -- F A heat 
oversized 
cail 
Industrial 
or 
M anufacfuring, 
double garage 
cool s.ze fenced 
avail. 
NO W 
Floor 
spact 
irom 
near 
yard 
H U R R Y 
T N 
T H IS 
2800 
to 
33 600 
16“ 
ceiling 
O N E 
M O N T 
L A S T 
T H E 
L O A D IN G 
D O C K . 
Heated, 
air 
S 
p f k e n D " 
i conditioned 
officas 
Restroom 
fa- 
L E W IS 
R E A L T Y 
c h . 
plenty 
of parking 
See 
at 
Atta-ps« 
Y U 4 1761 
1339 
W 
B R O O K S , 
O N T A R IO 
or 
626-8597------------ or 
— 
= 
ca i| 629 0681. 986-8867 


32 
x 
70* 
A IR 
cond 
store, 
glass 
front, 
pvt 
alley 
at 
rear 
2 
rest 
rm s, wilt redecorate to suit. $275 
243 E 
M issio n 
(5th Ave.) 
Pom o 
Q L V U 
| na. 
N A 9-5316_____________________ 
. 
j 
y u u 
rR | 


snac 
Cal ve t qua^ home, 
2 
biks 
T 
h% 
U 
S | 
M l t l i s n a n d S a n A n t o n i o , 
? S » « l 
« E N i u . V f m 
:.. 6 
r> 
..-i6 
tit. U..... Ld m a e __ anv Jk I 


S A C R IF IC E 
H A M B U R G E R 
D R IV E IN 
Out of 
town 
owner 
m ust 
sell 
this 
in 
and 
out 
type 
h a m ­ 
burger 
drive 
in 
with 
large 
shaded 
grounds 
and 
picnic 
tables 
I d e a l 
for 
owner 
m anager, 
F U L L 
P R IC E 
O N L Y 
$3950. 
T h is 
could 
be 
a 
real 
m oney 
m aker. 
Good 
O ntario 
location. A 9 t, 622-1121.____________ 


nooo tv oi ro sin iii m vw 
627-2814 
F u ll 
P r i c e 
O n l y $ 4 3 , 0 0 0 
O V E R 
40? Quiet 
2 
bdrm 
duplex. 
N o Dow n to Veterans 
'riv* t* 
ya ^ t . 
J 2 S S 
Low Dow n to Anyone Else 
t 
children 
or 
P ttL 
United Real Estate 
.d ra p e s, 
built - ms. 
*90. 
W afer, 
8111 Foothill At G rove 
trash, and J a w n care mcl. 984-3723 
985-2731 j B E D R M 
duplex, 
carpets, 
flrepl, 
IK I 
A 
r i 
1 c u 
air cond, 
blt-ins, 
pvt 
lawn, 
gar, 
L-ASH IN A PI AbH lust redec, nr M tclr Plaza, Teens 
i i 
i i ^ 
Q K 
622 1361 


D o n 't r u i n y o u r c r e d i t 
W * w ill buv 
hom es in 
the en­ 
tire 
Pom ona Valley — 
ogr ot­ 
ter within hours of your 
call. 
All fees and costs paid bv us 
we 
will 
buy 
regardless 
If 


r B E A U T IF U L 
wire 
haired 
terrier 
« T Q 
pups. 
A K C 
registered 
Shots. 
7 
S P A C IO U S , 
1 
bdrm , 
patio, 
pool, 
m ales, 
$50 each 
1 
temale 
*65 
carpels, 
drapes, 
gas 
and 
water 
6 w ks old. o29 8846 


prtx,io 5H7i n v ? 0' 
A Gl<nwooa t 
A K C D O B E R M A N S 
_ ____—_ 
Whelped 
8 - 8 - '68. Line 
bred 
to 
A h R T A L , Show hom es pref. 
*135 
Rfsntak 
Tn ^harp 
3 6 B and up 622 0269____________ 
K e n T a i S 
1 0 j n a r e 
O D D 
Expert Poodle Groom inq 


W O R K IN G 
g irl 
w ants” s h ir e 
nice 
AKCA 
^ S V 
' t Ì ì ' w Ì ì?14r#* 


3 B D R M S . 2Vj bM h. (arn rrT1i bif. 
! ins, 
Chino. 
*200 
a 
mo. 
1 
yrs 
. lease. 
1st 
end 
last 
m o 
In 
ad 
I vance. 
P lu s $100 security deposit. 
N A 6-0729 after 6 P.m 


2 bedrm apt with same. 
626 5935 
W O R K IN G L A D Y TO S H A R E 
B E A U T IF U L A P T . W IT H S A M E . 
626 892? 


A K C Tov Studs. Tel 983-1214 
Ruth's. 1019 E, 4th St. Ont 
R O L L E R 
Canaries, 
W ild 
Turkey, 
C hukars, Quail. 265 Cannon Ave., 
San D im a s 599-1156 
G L A D S O N 'S 


BIG SLEEPER 


n o r t h 
o 
f 
f o o t h i l l 


B L V D . 


s p b c 
u a i-ve i 
qual 
* 
• 
*14,750 
to 
grd 
scM 
and 
shop 
Ctr. 


TEXACO 
Station for lease 


vou 're behind in your paym ents 
or your home is being foreclos­ 
ed. 
Call 
anytim e. 
24 
h rs 
e 
day. 985 7731. N A 6-1418 
United Real Estate 
8111 Foothill At G rove ______ 


ij L M U J V n w 
« 
I I 
• L 
J 
A 
a 
0 7 P O O D L E 
P U P P IE S — S T U D 
S E R V - 
Unfurnished Apts. 
37, ¡ce 
o°„° » • « «■ ’s' "■ 


W ANTED 


L E A S E 
— 
Option, 
A.lontclair 
3 
■ bedrm , 
2 
baths, 
fam ily 
ro o m ,l..iJL - . . "-^,. 
..i-w— 
hdwd Hoo'-s. blt-ins and fireplace V f R Y C I e a n 1 
Fenced 
yard. 
C h iid re i 
and 
nets 
a J .S fiT & ir T S ?' fife e trl? 
i okay. 
Best 
neighborhood 
*150. 
*•£»»"}•*. all U tilitiM oo (ew ctrl&| 


pd“ « s.3 “ TnT: 
c,';- »,««10» 
ffisc-^FiSSt 


s S . 
s 
f 
S 
a 
i 
r 
4 
® 
paid 
987-5171. 
10353 
Am herst, 
S ^ i x t w ^ j j _ anq_2_p.m ;------------ 
J 
B E D R M 
duplex, 
private 
pat;o.i 
UNDER $15,000 


FO RE S l ?W E R W P R IC E D Y H Ç <M E S < S M A L L 
2 
bedrm 
house, 
newly 
d? aP2 
N O C O S T S T O Y O U 
F R E 
r * 
-------- 


HU 
UL 
9 5386__ 
DESIGNED 
FOR HAPPY LIVING 


T his 
im m aculate 
3 
b^drm . 
I 3- 
bath with 
select hardwood 
floors, 
beautiful 
built 
in 
uphholstered 
breakfast 
nook 
Plu*- 
15 
x 
25 
sceetted and roofed cabana from 
living 
rm 
Block 
walied 
r e a r 
yard 
and 
fiont 
court 
yard 
er, 
closed gives fam ily 
privacy. Two 
blocks 
to 
H arrison 
gram m ar 


Offices— Stores 
25A 


J B u r n 
i - * 
,|S? «.w ii doors, com presser, hoist, 
230 volt 
Pe ghtful 
home 
with 
modernize 
udrm s 
Plus 
X 
W l» « lti-w rp 
vuirina 
for 
elect wider. 
C 4 zone, 
kitchen 
(new 
buiit-lns» 
carpets, 
rm Wjfh 4 bit m bunks, U * bath 
union. 
Pom . 
N A 
9-5386 
or 
e.K*Des, 
pullm an 
bath 
laundry 
«repi, 
hdwd 
firs. 
F A 
Heat 
ige 
N A 2^ 7A1 
______ ______ 
room 
large 
rooted 
and 
screened 
iti*cts 
with 
bit ins 
1650 
a 
ft 
c 
tK.r»iicT|?i*i 
scace 
ideal 
for 
nxdio 
Close 
to 
W estm ont 
school 
delightful fam home plus 16 x 26 
t r ib a l 
scace, 
io ai 
tor 
and 
adi 
to 
Phillips 
R a n c h 
Cov 
patio. 
W alled 
vd, 
la n d sc .fo r 
*m all w r a t w . Ctos.e in 
»35. Agt. 
Hom es of *20,000 to $25,000 va lu e s1 m ,nim um 
care 
Lots 
for 
$22,000. 
M. g a u v , w 5 rei, w w 
now 
under 
construction. 
F H A 
or 
¡_o 
dn 
F H A , 
or 
assum e 
4 , -, 
no 
dow r 
V A term s. 
Agent. 
N A 
Loan 
O W N F R 
will 
show 
Sun 
1 
to 5. 1121 Alta 982-5456 ____________ 
' U P L A N D 
B A R G A IN 
— like 
new, 
3 
large 
bedroom s 
—- 
central 
bath 
- 
large 
mastejr 
bath 
A W A R D 
W IN N IN G 
K iT C H E N — P L U S H Carpets — 
S T O N E F IR E P L A C E 
- R O O M 
f o r 
POOL 
t o o 1 
asking 
*21 950 
nothing down 
Vet­ 
erans 
— 
low 
down 
F H A 
or 


m a G IL M O P E R F A L T Y , INC 
4?10 E 
Holt Blvd . M ontclair 
674 80*0 or 985-7265 tilt 8 P m 


O F F IC E S 
for 
psychiatrists 
and 
psychologists 
avail 
Oct. 
1 
nr 
P V C H Call 626-1609 eves 


P o m o n a 
D oing 25,000 gallons oer month 
Som e financing available 


C A L L M R . J E N K I N S 


6 2 4 - 7 6 5 8 a n y t i m e 


Real Estate Exch. 


IE S S M A L L 
2 
bedrm 
house, 
r.ewly 
Ns'° v ^ 
^90**040° 624 7441? 


A P - 
torC° "w o r k in g * o u p Ie00 „ S f S w H ! ! 


We buv H om es — any area — 
P ° r o f f A C E 
Slbo ^ R a n o e M ^ court 
* R o o m y , 
has 
serv. 
any condition — •v * n4 back 
,n 
porch 
Near 
Lib rary. 
Civic 
paym ents - a I cash to you — 
and 
^ * r l « , 
2 bed, m s, 
new 
ca 
C{,nter 
W kts Adults 


m ?y wfe nhe1pnyoau ? aP P r" S#' 
“ 
653 S ' Lo cu s' 
^ 
G llm o-e Realty, Inc 
V E R Y 
nice 7 B d rm m bath 
Stud. 7 
B E D R M S . 
Adults. 
No 
d0|*4 
674 8060 or 915-7265__________ 
dup 
Carpets, 
drapes, 
aiz-cond.i E {0!!S',rsrti San 
D ,m as. 
inquire 
W IL L 
S W A P 
N E W 
F U R N 
Car 
range. 
W -T 
pd. 
Infant 
O.K. 
Nr. 
W .J h lfd . 


B E A G L E 
2 yr. old. V e ry Reasonable. 
_ _ _ _ _ 
628-1506.__________ 
“ 
DOG 
OBEDIENCE 


A 
special 
class 
for 
those 
who 
w ant 
their 
doas 
to 
obey 
what 
they are told to do. 
Nine Com plete Lessons 
Special attention to prbolem dogs 
C h o ir? of dav or night c ass 
C n l! (714 ) 671-2136 for nf 
F IR S T L E S S O N F R E E 


p ir& B S 'nd ^Draperies "in ^exchange j W ayne mfg. *95. 593-1824 ' 
2 
B D R M S tu d io . Iff* 
for 
equity 
in 
hom es 
land, 
trust G R A C IO U S 
home, 
w-w 
carpeting,) Pf* 
i{ ~ . 
a r e a l l 1^9 06^3 
deeds 
or 
what 
have 
you. 
Call 
walled yard, 
pool 
*245 a m o on 
Ham ilton, Pom ona or call 6,9 06.J 
« • - « « 
I lease W a te re d 
985-7335 _________ 
2 
B E D R O O M 
apt. 
*95 
a 
month 


Miscellaneous 
5 6 


Quick Action W ent AH* 


H o u s e h o l d 
F u r n . 
6 0 


r 
S O F A 
& 
M atch In« 
love 
seat 
custom 
quilted, scotchgarded. 
Re- 
versibte 
Foflm 
cushions# 
hrass 
casters. 
Reg, 
*289 —- Sal# 
Pr*ce 
*175 
Buy 
D IR E C T 
F R O M 
F A C T O R Y 
A M D 
S A V E ! 
A rrow 
Furniture 
Factory, 
730 
A rro w 
Hwv., 
L s 
Verne. 
Open W e «*d a vs 
11 a m. to 8 p.m. — Sat 8. Sun. 
11 a m. to 5 pm.. T E R M S A V A IL 
._______ 599-1814___________ __ 
7 E A R L Y Am erican Sofa & M a tch ­ 
ing Chair, 
Hi W ing 
back, 
m aple 
trim . 
Choice 
of 
heavy 
tweed 
or 
naughahyde 
F a b ric 
Reg. 
*329 
— 
Sale Price . . . *149.95. B u y direct 
from 
Factory 
and 
S A V E ! 
A rrow 
F urniture Factory, 730 A rro w H w y 
La 
Verne. 
Open 
w eekdays 
11 
a m 
to 8 p m 
- Sat 8, Sund ays 
11 a.m. to 5 P.m. 
T E R M S 
A V A IL . 
__JI*?-1814 
I F T E A R L Y A m erican Sofa and 
chair, 
custom 
quilted , *cotch- 
gardcxf. 
never 
used. 
Pvt. 
party 
$200 . 599-5301 
___ 
M O D E R N 
T 
Sola 
4 
M atching 
Chairs, 
reversible 
zipoer 
cu sh ­ 
ions 
brass caster*. 
H eavy tweed 
fabric. 
Reg 
. 
$’99 
— 
¿a le 
Price 
. 
$115. 
B u v 
D IR E C T 
F R O M 
F A C T O R Y 
A N D 
S A V E . 
A rro w Furniture Factory, 730 A r ­ 
row Hwv.. La Verne 
Open W eek­ 
days 
11 
a.m. 
to 8 P.m., 
Sat 
& 
Sun 11 a m. to 5 P.m. 
T E R M s 
A V A IL _____________ 599-1814 
K IN G size 8' E a rly A m erican Sofa 
8. 
M atching 
Chair. 
Custom quilt­ 
ed, 
floral 
pattern, 
scotchgarded 
Reg 
$329 — Sale P rice . 
$725 
B U Y 
D IR E C T 
F R O M 
F A C T O R Y 
A N D S A V E 
A rro w Furniture F a c ­ 
tory, 730 A rrow 
H w v 
La Verne 
Open W eekdays 11 a m. to 8 P m 
Sat 
& 
Sun 
II 
a.m. 
to 
5 
p;m 
T E R M S 
A V A IL ___________ 
599 1814 


M A P L E 
H U T C H 
$ 4 5 
______________ 984-3723____ _________ 
E L E C stove, com pl auto, like new 


d ¿*k " 7 : T R A D E 
»TU?» 
in 
older 
7 
o c , 
L Í S t i n O S W t d . 
T. 
hOr?”’- 
1 ' 
Laths. Can 
fee duplex. I, I J M I T 
file cab, 12 c a ¿*ar®y 
^72'330? for moblt» home. NA *0974. 
j 


2 9 


1 9 
blocks 
to H arrison 
grarnm m . 
school 
and 
convenient 
to 
shop 
pn g . 
Only 
*850 
down, 
balance 
F H A term s. 
M U S T 
sacrifice. 
Aita 
Lom a 
area 


. „H0i RT REAlTL 
~ 
- 
— 
- 
5”o t " e . . « D R M B E A U J .V 
^ n i f i c i e n ^ O o K . « 
V i e w 


B e n in 
lot' $1030 dn 
bol 
$50 
per M O D E R N 
O F F IC E 
E X 
LO C . 
600 D n a | T c f a f P W t d 
ino (7141499-3844 01 497 1210 
>11 ft at 25c 
ft 
W ater, heat 
K 8 d l 
C S T d T c 
V V T O . 
in 
inK 
in a r cond, 
furn 
parking. 
S T R E IT , 
O R E G O N 
property. 
10 
lots 
in 
w 
p » rk 
Aue 
673-2551 
C h n sfrra s Valiev 
B v owner 
Post 
*44/331 


1, 
2, 
3 
B E D R M S 
$75—$95. 622 9952 or 622 3333 


bate 
894 
H 
Ga.ey 
62 2 330?. 
_ 
W E BUY EQUITIES 
C Adu ifs * OMy? ^Water P a id 
673 0257 
DELUXE near new^custom,3 ^d- Cash in 24 hours o, |„v Get j NA 3 2058 or NA 2 3490 aft A pm. 
FURN , Air Cwd., Util Pd , *35- Tm 
tv>r^ 
— «rt2509vnilSr 
the fads before vou sell not DELUXE 2 bdrm, 2 bath, lease. 
$65-*l75 894 N 
Garey. Pomona 
Trade equity fo; your present 
. 
B 
. 
area 
any. 
arountl 0ct 1 Broker 
NA 2-3302. YU 2-8187, 673 0252, 
Am a l£ tome, 
incorne property X r e anytime 
AV8" *f°U 0 593 6115 
2 WODEF?n offices, good loed 
' 
‘ 
DELANEY REALTY 
i BEDRM 
Pom 
$135 mo 
1st 
,on one *95 .« ff *50 
421-423 «UN^vour^wn busmess & , * » 
DELANE¡YR ALIT 
, 
| ^ a ^ 
pool Plus guest home on lge C-3 
Oi f JD /y 
] Chddren OK _ (2J3) ,46 8000.---- 
lot Asking $85 000 Will trade for ----------— 
•• 277 LAUREL, Pomona. 3 bed 
units Agent 672 4039 
Don 
t Do It! 
rm, 2 bath, huge added tarmiv 
WE make trades aavwhara, anv- Don't list or sell your progerh room. Le»»» for 
_ 
place any «me. Phone us dey o* in you -elk to us 
We will buy 
Call WHEELER-STEFFEN 
night Mktropoiitan Ree'tv Harry your property cash or sell It for 
Messenger. Realtor, 622-4039 


F R E E F IR E W O O D . 
Large 
4 ft 
logs 
2 
B E D R O O M 
apt 
$95 
a 
month 
920 W ashington, Pom ona 
E L E C stove, com pi auro. uxe new 
10333 
Pradera. 
M ontclair, 
near L A W N m q W E R 
Like new 
Used 7 
$50. 
Sears 
Call 
after 
4 p.m. 
629-1432 
«¡it down 
style 
*150 
M o w e % 
$25. ^Other^ m isc 
items. 
C A N O G A N 'a P T S 
2-3 
B E D R O O M S : _ 
_ 
628-1506.______________ 
1 and 2 baths. $95 up. 4622 C ano-‘M O V IN G M ust Sell at once 
Drapes, 
ga, Mont. M g r. 624-6133____ 
_____ 
bedroom 
set, 
coffee 
and 
end 
a , / -j a D F A A O K l T ^ 
tables and m isc. CaH 629-6017.__ 
W 
L m t v C / V i W 
te» N E W crop raw unfiitered wnd 
2 
and 3 
Bdrm .. New 
paint, 
car- 
f|0wW- honey. 5 lbs. $1 39 
lu a o u s 


M ow e-, 
$25 
Other 
m isc 
items. 
_______________629 2968_______________ 
D A R K 
W alnut 
Dining 
room 
set. 
Hutch, 
table 
and 
chairs. 
$750. 
Gibson 
Deluxe Fro st-Free 
Refrig, 
coppertone 
2 
dr, 
*150. 
Other 
m isc. items, all excel cond. 
624-5479 


N Garev. N A 2-5769 
Professional offices, corner loc­ 
ation 
on 
m aior 
boulevard. 
Plenty 
of 
parking. 
Each 
of 
tice 
com pletely 
n e w l y 
re­ 
decorated 
A ir 
cond 
Private 
bathroom 
and 
show er 
Rent 


i and 3 
Bd rm . 
New 
paint, C8r*i tiower nonev. o ios, ------- ---------- 
pets, 
drapes, 
Dult-ins, 
air-cond, 
natural 
soft 
dates, 
3 
lbs.. 
*1 
m w iN r - rnom 
Tabt(. 
A leaves 
- 
•«’- »*"0’ " m v . I» 1: 
‘ ' S m T* £ 3 .* a » V "2 ; 
and 
. 
690 
W 
San 
Jose 
626 5418 
HOLLY APTS. 


! liou« Stylé. MOB. 626-5559 


, H as 
. „ r . Â 
i L ' ï , « ¡II 
sail 
.< * 0* L N,UT,o 
T 
K , 
S L 
A 
! cost, tree home 
F 'nar,f- 
M7 d e 
bv 
Brow n 
Salfm an. *90. 
mg available, 
&76 67V\_____________ ] ” 
626 6314 
D R A P E S 
la rg e 
2 
bedrm 
aots. 
Carpets,; 
dr ipes, 
air 
conditioned, 
built-in- 
, K r' " r.t '', 
enclo.ed 
car 
ports. 
F ro m 
*110 , Choice 
of 
500 
latest 
colors 
and 
s > ,<» 
r~ 
nu ii 
A.,* 
A 
Dnnuin;» 
njttqmt 
C llCtrtfT) 
(iFlllVF 
I ArtOT 


huge 
living 
room 
*-- 
form al 
d ining room - 
2 both — Dig 
m odern 
kitchen 
— 
U T IL IT Y 
B O A R D 5 — 2 car garage with 
private entry 
— nice area ■— 
a sking 
*16,200 
— 
*700 
toNM 
down 
any 
Veteran 
— 
*600 
down F H A — 
G IL M O R E R E A L T Y , IN C 
4710 E 
Holt, M ontclair 
624-8060 or 985 7265 till 8 P.m 
POMONA 
NO DOWN 
PAYMENT 


4 B d rm s, 2 Bat«», refinished 
in and out 
M U S T S E L L 
S U B M IT L A B O R F O R D O W N 
F irst 
tim e 
ottered— Paym e n t 
ap 
rroxim atp iv 
$ U 0 
per 
M o, 
in 
clwees principal and interest 
.. 
n 
i 
m e e t v t 
a t t h e p r o p e r t y 
» ( o r s e R a n c h e s 
331 RANDY S 
T 
. 
_______________ 


vo u r,Uprop«rty ' ca*h o r"se ll "it "for 
” 
624 1617 
i nclosed 
car 
ports 
F rom 
I I 10 
Lnoire 
Of 
suu 
taiesr 
coiurs 
on« 
‘ m V 'S n y o ^ . l l U ^ o r S M H O U S E , lge fenced yard. Good 
A p ’ 
A 
P0m 0na 
proof, call Ut. 
loc, 
$89 
dn, 
$89 
per 
mo, 
F H A 
N A y-6BU4 
home est 
626-6701 
o o 
C O K E L E Y R E A L E S T A T E 
Buy. A b d e ii* Realtor. 622-0742 
9 
L A V E R N E ’S F IN E S T • 
- 
Z O . . . 
_ 
. , _ . 
u n 
, » n s c L A R G E 2 bedrm and fam Iv room 
u 
^ 
____,____ 
L A K L O L A K r C l 
v_/ai$c 
. . . 
e . , , « , 
V I I 
, « * 1 )1 L A R G E 2 bedrm and fam .lv room 
N A 2 - 1 1 2 1 
O r Y U 6 - 3 8 2 1 
Carpets 
drapes. 
$115 
m o 
L IS T IN G wanted. 
H ave Latin and 
• « » "* 
™ 


; Office Box 763. Pom ona, 
_______, 


a t t e n t i o n 
b l d r s . 
m v E S T O P k B u s i n e s s O o o o r . 
Choice 
Bldg 
sites, 
2 
im proved w u a i u c o o 
lots 
r-K h 
85' 
x 
182'- 
1 Tbik 
to 
Central 
near 
new 
M O N T C L A IR 
P L A Z A 
*6 300 
ea, 
term s 
avail 
Call 
N 
Gatov, 
Agt, 
623 2551. 
E v e s 629-9079 


A m srica n buyers. Alt areas 
^ , 
Fran k S Diaz, Realtor 
2 6 
593 8717 
! 
have 
a 
buyer 
for 
4 bedrm 
hom e on a large lot, 
to ’ ? 
acre. Priced about *38,800. C all 
W alt Witt, tor 
details, 
Ontario 


Ä 
.m. I P V C 
Hospital 
A T T E N T I O N : M O N T C L A I R 
$9 3-5 7 *7 
330 
W 
N ear 
Artesia. 
K o n a L o a G a r d e n s 
H ave 
special 
Introductory 
offer. 
2 Bedroom s, 2 Baths, *150 
$6 50 
per 
room. 
No 
u p s 
Call 
828 
M A R IA 
• 
599-2825 
for appointm ent 623-4787 


6' SO F A , C H A IR S E T 
8' S O F A A N D O CC C H A IR 
678-3444 evenings______ 
” 
T W O C O U C H E S 
O ne off-white, one green. 
M a ke Offer 
985 4626 
21" R C A deluxe B-W T V $£h 
W estinghouse auto w asher *25 
624-7841________ 


''■ '■ e e n e — 
R a n c h e s 
2 0 


W A R N IN G 
w ait 
w in , tor 
oeiaiis, 
R e a d C o n t r a c t s T h o r o u g h l y 
Realty, 623-4583 tm 8 p.m. 
A M D 
HAW *? 
rührst* wuith 
mnrw*V 
tf 


I N V E S T I G A T E 


B E F O R E Y O U 
I N V E S T 
TO B U Y 
TO S E L L 
B IL L M U R P H Y CO R F A L T Y 


X * 
' ,r,lK 
Dr 
N A ^ M i l ? 
8, »t* insoactor* tad iave'f>«#fort 
N A 
8 4*96 
m 
N A 
1 SSI7 
Section 17*00 at th# 
B Y 
O W N E R 
40 
acres 
oft B isin e w 
end 
P -o 'e » * on« 
cede 
Calico 
GhO'-t 
Town 
Rd, 
loc San *m c h reed* (In eerti as tot lews 
Bdno Co 
Nr Y e n n o Post Offic» 
It ic unlewful to eublltn e«v ad 
Pox 763 P c m 
__ 
_______________ 
ve rm in « wPich is untrue or naie- 
ue 
1 
A C R E 
n 
Hesperia Only ¡• ifiT 9 , * " ! . " ¡ l e m M m F rm am Z 
! %> 0110 
$»?« 
■■ a' ■ 
phis 
$ 5 pe- vmlch tjy m e were *e_o___ 


H A V E 
clients with m oney to buy; 
sm all 
or 
large 
ranches 
in 
o r ; 
out 
of 
state 
Phone 
Metropolitan; 
Realty 
622-4039 
P R IV A T E 
party 
w ill 
l o a n 
money on your hom e or will pur 
chase 
even If 
,n 
foreclosure 
Q n Y o u r H o u s e 


H 
O 
M 
E 
O 
W 
N 
E 
R 
S 
™ 
“ f ’Ì I ì " ¿ ■ 
« 
i l 
» 
Ä 
» 
M i i c e l F l i r n - 
5 9 R a m b l e r 


t 
x 
. 
w 
* . » 
. ^ r . n o 
. „ B 4 r , 
M O ï a 
1? Ä 
- m 5 £ i “,i S S « . * w Ä " l w T K 
m " 1« » « . « 
y 
e l . 
O N .r V 
g jjg . ¿ I » e - 


*,55syTas-rt3s. ? Ä 
5R 1 v«sraiM J’- * 
— 
~ 
••• 


'MUT 
'»«iyw 
h « "r 
a 
VZZ 
for hom e* in vour aree 
Liât with 
u* end start o e ck ln - Call Advance 
Peaitv at N A 4-0014 iodav'_ 


2 1 


P O M O N A 
12 P m. till 6 P.m. 
Call TU 9 9886 
coiteci 
P a r t h e n o n B u ild e r s , In c . 
HORSE 


RANCHES 
TOP LOCATION 


3 b e d r m - 2 b a t h * 


$ 1 7 , 9 5 0 
Thit home It In beautiful con- 
dition 
thruout. 
Large 
and 
roomy. 3 bedrm home, qualify 
hdwd 
floors, 
ennanced 
bv 
near 
new expensive w w car­ 
pe: i 
Huge 
kitchen 
with 
big 
family 
dining 
area, 
wall* 
of 
roomy 
cabinet* 
plus 
blt-ln 
oven and range Reversible style 
living 
room 
looks 
thru 
over­ 
sized giass Hiding doors to a 
fabulous 
covered 
patio 
Weal 
tor summer outdoor entertain­ 
ing and big fenced rear yard. 
This 
home 
has 
been 
recently 
redecorated 
and 
is 
sharp 
as 
tnev 
come 
Close 
to 
schools 
and all conveniences and priced 
to sell!I 
F U L L P R IC E $ 1 7 , 9 5 0 
NO 
DOW N 
P A Y M E N T _ TO 
V E T S 
LOW 
DOWN 
PAY- 
m e n Y t o 
a n y o n é 
m o n t h ­ 
l y 
P A Y M E N T S 
OF 
O N LY 
* ’17 
P E R 
MO IN C L U D IN G 
BOTH P A N D I. 
4 BEDROOMS 


N o r t h w e s t C h i n o 
With 
hardwood 
floors, 
w w car 
, 
-------— ----- — 
r - 
pets 
thruout 
bit in 
range 
and B Y O W N F R — 
14 un.f motel with 
oven 
Room 
aplenty 
lor 
that pool 
Close in. 
New ly decorated 
grow ing 
fam ily. 
Oversized 
2 car. I p * vac an cy _ factor 
Pull 
price 
garage 
Sifting on a larga corner; *65,000^^ 
dow n' 
E * 11 
679 
¡ot 
l ocated 
in 
good 
school dis- 1157 
or 
593 3011.. 
.... 
... 
t«-ict, 
and 
Chino High 
School 
Home* 
like 
mis art 
hard 
to 
come by, it won't last 
A T O N L Y 
$ 1 6 , 5 0 0 
O F F E R E D 
AT 
FH A 
OR VA, 
T ER M S. NO DOWN TO Gl. LOW 
DOWN 
TO 
A N Y O N E. 
W ITH 
M O N T H LY 
P A Y M E N T 
OF 
AP 
P R O X 
*107 
P F R MO 
IN C L U D ­ 
ING BOTH P A N D I. 


• 
R A N C H E R S • 
ThH Is no bull! 
Hundred* of 
tons of every conceivable Item 
needed on the farm, home or 
factory. 
Fence 
posts, 
sucker 
, 
rods, 
pipe, 
structural 
steel, 
; 
chain, 
rope. 
tools. 
welding 
1 
supplies, 
wheels, vices, hoists. 
> 
ana iecks. 
P a t t o n S a l e s a n d S u r p lu s 
Corner of Sultana and M ission 


Resort Prop. Sale 
23 


N E S T L E D 
in 
the 
high 
pines 
at 
Crestline, 
border* 
on 
2 
roads 
Forest 
Crest 
Dr. 
and 
Skyland 
Co*v 
natural 
wood 
cabin 
s^eps 
6. 
cltv 
water, 
gas. 
electricity, 
I pertly furnished on 3 lots 
*13,- 
! 500. 
*5.000 
down. 
Owner 
carry 
! papers at 7“<. 
MABEL M. JONES 


6 2 9 - 4 4 0 1 
2 4 H O U R S 
1393 L A U R E L 


able ra re ehotld be knew-» V> be 
ueWge or m ieieedtno 
T>e P ro g 
1 im AwHottn atrlv«« »• pretoef Its 
readers 
aea net eueh 
advertising 
and 
e*ee»tlo« to m l* 
should 
be 
reported 
to ma C l#tailed adver- 
tlete« 
maeaee« 
im m edlatatv 
by 
on on mo B A 1-1881 ____________ 
P A R T N E R 
Wanted 
lor 
brer 
bar 
with food to go and on premises 
f nmale pret 
Sml invest 
Partner 
can work and draw salary. Please 
I Call 593-7649 tor appt.____________ 


I 
S M A L L I N V E S T M E N T — 


H I G H R E T U R N 


N E W 
A N D 
U S E D 
F U R N IT U R E 
STO RE 
In 
good 
location 
Full 
i price 
83,500 
Includes 
business, 
lease, 
furniture, 
fixtures 
and 
I stock 
cn 
hand. 
Owner 
willing 
I to spend 30 days with new owner! 
to acquaint 
him 
with 
the 
busi­ 
ness. 
Good 
operator 
should 
net 
at 
least 
*10,000 
per 
year. 
For 
more 
details, 
call 
Jim 
Odom. 
623 3441 or evenings. 593-2310 


4 Locations to Serve You 
Main Office 200 W. Holt, Pomona 
2030 N. G A R E Y . PO M O N A 
700 E. FO O TH ILL. PO M O N A 
8970 C E N T R A L 
AVE. M T C LR . 


(714) 776-52 2 0 . ____________ 


$ 
_ 
$ 
_ 
$ 
CASH NO W 
FOR YOUR HOME 
Free A p praisal-F a st Service 
C a l l 
N A 
7 - 1 5 0 6 
(United Reel Estate) 


s — 
s — 
s 


$$ CASH SS 


F o r Y o u r E q u it y 


ir H o u s e — 
2 4 H rs . 
C A L L A C E N T 


627-1030 
601 A HOUSE 
TO SELL 


__________ (7)4) 539 1146 


R E N T — 
P U R C H A S E 
Vacan* 
and 
ready 
2 
bedrm 
and 
den 
New 
ww 
carpets, 
completely 
redecorated 
inside 
and out 
Big lot backs up to 
vacant hills 
Pay *90 per mo 
for 
3 
mos 
then 
*50 
down 
paymt. 
immediate 
possession, 
upon credit approval 
D E L A N E Y R E A L T Y 


6 2 7 - 3 5 2 9 


m onths to pay 
M A P L E B U D G E T 
flrepl, 
also 
one 
I 
oorm , 
v n r 
r 
. 
- 
B 
, 
- 
- 
: 
: 
— -------- 
; S H O P 
Corner W hittier B lvd 
and 
large. 
Adults 
only. 
L an d is 
Aots 
F O R S A L E thru Oct. 4 
Furniture., Hadley 
St 
in W hittier 
One mile 
4694 Bandera, M tcL 
toys, 
m isc 
Cheap 
452 
Jansu east 
Of 605 
F re e w a v ____ O P E N 
+ *100 uo, 1 and 2 bedrm s + 
P ia c e ^ P o m o n a _ J ?lj4 6 9 
-------- 
N l O M W 
'»H 
* 
V " D E L I V E R Y 
Pool, air cond. bit ins 
U S E D 
Cal 
Poly 
Books. 
Eng, 
Scl S U N 
til 6. 
F R E E . 
O B I 
For tun loving adults. 25-45 
I »nr» 
»nri 
Snrial 
sriene» 
M aiora 
1/131 U * 5 9 n s 
4830 Canpga. M ontclair 624 0ia9_ 
Port, typewriter, 2 22 rifles 
LA 
V E R N E . 
Plush 
2 
bedrm, 
2 
_____________ g M M ----------- 
baths. Bit ins, washer, dryer, dish 
R O C K H O U N D S 
washer. 
Fireplace, 
carpets, 


le» Bunk Bed and Youth Beds 
Antique Desk s, Bkcse comb, 
se» 2 Antique Chairs 
G I S T ’S 
NA 2 7277 
washer. 
u re o ia ce. 
carun-», 
-----— 
------- — 
drapes, poo! 
*140 
oer 
mo 
Near Rock 
polish»r* cutters, g.inders. 
C LM T 
3 bedrm 
carpet 
drapes. 
Whit# 
and 
Foothill. 
See 
at 
2511 tompiete supplies 
for 
the 
rock- OO Pom oog M ttl West 
k lk h with N M n s? *17* ^ d u it oniy 
Hayes or ca.! 593-_764*_____________ ^ 
r v ai'opal 
'iade, 
t u ^ ^ . 
M C M A H A N ' S 
Agt N A 6 0953 
----------------- 
_ 
Pom ona 
Rock 
and 
la p id a ry. 
355 
N Clark 
Pom ona 679-930? 
; 
Resort Prop.— Rent 38 
Furnished Apts. 
36 b g 8#ar Lak/ nc# mod duplex 


» 
¡ 
g 
® 
; na. 624-3127 


I 
s 
QUICK CASH 
FO R YO U R HOUSE 
We pay all costs 
A D V A N C E R E A L T Y C O 
NA 4 0014 


* A T T R A C T IV E 2 B E D R M * 
Cash offer for your equity in 24 
Excel 
loc. 
free_ w «h . 
Util 
pd, 
hours. Call us immediately. Agent 
*110. 629-743? or 6?6-4fe? 


6 2 7 - 3 5 6 7 
” 
......................... 


Trust Deeds 


"The Latest Audition to Pom ona" 
Dallv, Weekly or 
Monthly 
Rates 
T O W N H O U S E 
P O M O N A 


:urnished Rooms 
39 


STUDENTS PREFERRED 


U S E D F U R N IT U R E A N D 
■ _________________________ 
. 
A P P L IA N C E S 
u 
C u , ; . « C 
2 piece living room set 
H e a v y D u t y S w i n g S e t 
§ arteii Aoacht 
98? 4972 
Elect guitar and amp 
21-INCH W E ST IN G H O U SE TV 
Eri 9j daLr* 
N»w picture tube *40 
* Drawer dresser 


»79 95 


*59 95 
*79 95 


626 3766 
Electric 


Home phone privileges. 
Close to colleges 
98 5 5608 


G E N E R A L 
Electric 
TV. 
maple; 
cabinet. 
Student 
size 
accordion. 
Naugahyde R ecliner. 629-2927 
■ 
M U ST "sell. Lge Oak Office Desk, 
excel 
cond, 
*35. 
Twin 
bed 
and 


Bas«, walnut 
No cash down, free delivery 
629 3031 


*49 9$ 


M 
i 
.v e X X , , . 
U r * A ■ 
, 
I 
other m isc items. 623-2703 


3 1 
» » 
r 
v 
¥ 
i 
r 
1” 
11 


$ — 
$ 
CASH NOV.’ 


S P A N I S H F U R N I T U R E 
All new model home furniture 
at less than dealers cost 


3 
R o o m s - • • 
- $ 4 8 f8 h. 


v i^ V i it a M 500 'S E C O N D 
trust“ ”d e e iT ^ M V S fC L fiiN »Ingle “apt. *55. Close in. 
( °in^ 
‘a 
w w’I 
' 
evenfnqs^nd weekend*6 
* n9Sl* v 
!"g iudtote ** seat- 
3 
Sf«nish 
OaK 


_ 
YU 
t 
e 
. - w 
f c 
W 
- - - . * ? : 
s s l- . i w 
r 
a 
u 
r 
: 
C 
t 
e 
a 
’ i 
r 
s 


l \ c a l K B i a i C L U B i i b 
V * 
locked. 628-3978______________________ 
S A H A R A M U I C l 
iqc*! 
consum er 
affairs. 
W rite 
¡ . i 
M » io r c * 
6 
pc 
dinette. 
You 
Assoc_Of Pom VaHey fw isum er^ 
w o u M expect to pay *1188 for this 
group *25 dn, *28 mo for 18 mot 
i i e s x i e u n 
~ FO R R EN T. 
House trailer. Clean 
N E E D M O N E Y ? 
and comfortable 
In Valiev 
Ran- 
FO? YOUR HOME 
1st 
or 
2nd. 
Rea! 
Estate 
Loans I cho Park Phwte^ W3J614 


Frea Appraiaai— Fast Jarv ce 
MarvTn M cClyre-BrokeV"'4780 'M is ; “ 1 B E D R M , A L L u fT L 'P A ID . 


C a l l N A 3 4 3 8 1 
(Pomona Realty Company) 


$ 
- 
$ — 
a 


sion B lvd. 
627-1112 
2nd trust Daed Loans 
Rev L e v in . Broker 
Gerev 
Pi 


*85 MO 'A l LO CATIO N 
NA 4-5633 


Clean rooma, ihowar 
TV, laundry I Assoc of Pom Vall«nr 
room heated oooi WaeKtv. monthl 
Post Office Box 2207. MtcL 91763 
ly. 
447 
W 
Monterev 
6*2 914$ A N D E R S O N Executive desk 
Beau 
PO M O N A D U N E S by day or week 
tlfut 
walnut. 
33x60. 
P e n « *. WS, 
Clean 
rooms, 
pool. 
TV, 
reason 
565 Sycamore, Claremont. 624-1371 
able 
1274 W 
2nd, 623-9255. 
I anytime 


•We Buy Homes 


Money To Loan 


- 
clOIr 
147« »» 
»HU. wad 
, 
-..- -- 
1 
B E D R M 
apt 
with 
garage. 
N o ^ 0 o m 
close in, 
private 
entrance.; 
j l . S e w ;n a M a c h i n e * ★ 
4 0 4*1» 
children no pets 
P ick up key at 
^ an 
A p P |V 
cottag# in rear,I w a e w t n g m u c m n c a w 
911 E. 6th St, Pom ona. 
6j 7_w 4th St., P om.________________ 
O O A N I C E L Y 
furn 
1 
B d rm 
Apt C a D Y 
room er of 
good 
character 
O ZA \~ y- 
*- 
“----- 
'*•.... - 
---- " — *- — 


R E A L T O R S 
N A 
3 - 3 4 4 1 


H A V IN G Money Troubles» Por 'at 
amI 2nd TO loam 
Call Fatterllng 
Realty, 629 4094 anytime 
• im m ediate 
confidential 
v - v ie c 
• No 
m atter 
how 
far 
back 
to »« 
•»»___ 
hefaui* 
Money Wanted 
• w e pav #M cost 
I 
I 
.. 


Cell D a y or Nleht 
624 1597 or YU 4 1761 
t FW IS R E A L T Y CO 
P O M O N A 


32B 


Walk 
to 
shop, 
library, 
No 
one 
abova 
you. 
Onlvi ^et, and 
mature adults apply please. 
653 S Locust or 622-5657 


/ ^ L A D » 
fvvni'rt 
vt 
»va.« v . * ' 
• 
J?u? i Kitchen privileges 
Close to mar- 
“ “ 
bus line. 593-1284 


Room and Board 
40 


Oil approved credit. Will split group 
for quick sale 
O P E N 7 D A Y S _ 
C E N T R A L F U R N IT U R E CO. 
140 E Foothill Blvd. Mzusa 
(10 m n from Pomona) 
(213) 334-2511, call collect 
Repossession ★ 


E S T A B L IS H E D 
business 
*25 000 to build another slor» 
1 
Phone 983 2079 


Income Prop. 
24 Business Oppor. 
26 Business Oppor. 


QUALITY PLUS 


VETS 
$49 PAYS ALL 
DUPLEX 
R F N T O N E - L IV E IN T H E _ 
O T H ER , CHFAF»ER TH A N R E N T 
Spec ious 
2 
bedrm 
units 
w,th 
rang# and oven and with rich 
w w 
carpeting. 
Loads 
of 
na 
turel 
cabinets 
See 
laundry 
rooms 
Only 
*18,500 
and 
no 
down for V e ts.____ 
Paymenta of 8120 monthly In­ 
cluding both principal and 
in­ 
terest. Low down for Ex vets. 
81250 down to Non Vet*. 


628-6618 
624-0014 


3 Bedrm — 2 Baths *14 500 
Top 
location 
in 
Chino 
K.d* 
c#n walk 
to school from tnis 
lovely 
California 
Ranch 
mod 
*m 
home 
3 
big bedrms 
ail 
with 
spacious cio*«ts and ex- 
tra 
storage 
area. 
2 
COforM 
bathrooms, 
one 
otf 
the 
mas- 
i 
SM Xcm xTi TTH*xK'«ou,,s 
Open Evx,y Day & Sunday 
Near 
new 
quality 
w w 
car* 
pets. 
Included 
in 
sale 
«net. 
Wait 
until 
you 
see 
the huge 
F U L L Y 
E N C L O S E D 
PA TIO , 
ideal for outdoor 
entertaining 
; 
Fully fenced rear yard 
beau 
, 
tlful landscaping and wide 
ar 
I 
ray 
ot 
plants, 
shrubs 
and 
j 
vartou» shade and frgtt trees 
! 
H U R R Y , T H IS W O N ’T L A S T H f 
j 
FULL PRICE $14,500 
V A 
O R 
FH A 
T E R M S OKAY, 
i 
8*h 81 
P E R 
M O N T H 
IN C L U D - 
1 
. . 
. 
. 
IN G 
b -ith 
p I . n c i p a l 
A N D 
4730 Holt Blvd., Montclair 
»NT E F ?E * •. 


9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. 
ADVANCE 
REALTY CO. 


N X 7 1506 
6 
Unilt, 
all 
7 
bedrms. 
all 
rented 
Good 
income 
area 
of 
| Ontario 
*39.500, 
*7400 
down 


O p e n E v e r y D a y & S u n d a y 
o w n ?* m U t " £ c °r i 
1 
h e * 
Call 
623 4581 
pr 
W4-3367 
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. 
IÏÏNITEBI 
tJSS& SSSSA 


if) 
8 " p m 
fin tar» 
Realty, 
185? W 6th St., Ontario 


F A M I L Y - I N C O M E 
\ S 


u n it s 
Pius 
Owners 
Ali 
” R n c ì n a t t O n n n r 
X I N I 
cond 
Good 
Inc ome 
valt D U S I l i c S S U p p O l . 
able M O N T C LA lR 
C O M M E R C IA I ................... 
..... 
FRONT A G i 
Businaa* 
and 
pro­ 
perty 
855,008. 
Bello 
Realty 
— 
624 7674, 982 8844 eves 982 5194 


★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 
A, 
sL 
■¥ 
T H I N K 
C A R E E R 
♦wL 
•K 
* 
T H I N K 
T E X A C O 
♦ 
¥ 
* 
¥ 
You're Invited 
* 
¥ 
•k 
to our Open Houie 
♦ 
* 
¥ 
Tuesday, Sept. 24 ond 
4- 
¥ 
Wednesday, Sept. 25 
♦ 


* 
1:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. \ 
* \ 
Jr 
* 
TEXACO Service Station 
\ 


* 
Bonita & Grand, La Verne 
Jr 
4- 
* 
INFORMATION ON 
♦ 
4- 
¥ 
★ PAID TRAINING 
* 
¥ 
if FINANCING 
♦ 
¥ 
if LOCATIONS 
♦ 
¥ 
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 


Real Estate— Rent 
Partly Furnished _____ 


S M A L L 
höü*#. 
i 
small 
bedrm 


1 BDRM. D U P L E X 
______ 
492 E 
9th, Pom 
622-6659 , 624 2370 
W H Y L IV E A L O N E ? Lge 
rm, tob- 
. . a rc , 
, -lv u ,_ 
t», H.n »nt * x, bv, TV 
fireoi, maid service 
*100 
L A R G E 
3 bedrm 
SiUfliO OP*« ww 
... « 
r«rn Ont 98A~^2S7 
carpets, lg* garage, 
heated pool. ; ° _p 
I. 
679-061?_____________ 


a t t r a c t iv e f u r n a p t H o te ls— M o te ls 
41 
Children OK No P?t* 


S U M s l ^ R r S l * p p R e i f x T Se L E 
Straight, 
zigzag 
and 
automa­ 
tic. 
Mostly Singer and White 
All expertly reconditioned, guar- 
Finance C o orders sold: 
anteed 
tor 
5 
y rt^ priced 
to 
3 
Room s 
E uFp ',ur# 
nc ud.ng 
• 
1 
A 
‘ 1 
Sota 
Chair, Tables, L am p s 
5 pc 
Dine ft* 
Range, 
Dish#*, 
Dresser, 
M irro r, 
Nile 
Stands. 
Haadboard. 
Sox 
Soring*. 
M attress. 
Fram e», 
an be bought on 
E a sy Tarm s, 
See at 


aruaeo 
tor 
s 
yrs 
p h w o 
to 
suit vour budget. Tarms avail­ 
able. 
$18 - $48.50 
immediata 
dalivary, 
call 
any­ 
time for tra# horn# demonstra­ 
tion 
NA 
4-3304 
+ 
Y U 
3 3811 
O Q 
Xi? « UD ldf ?9 0 °eK vission* Pom 
P E R 
WK 
and 
up 
Furnished ST A Y 
P R E S S 
Civis, 
bo«>ts, 
moc- 
O O JKLS.JgP. 
UTO- ? 
0 1 
rms 675 E Holt 622 4621 
caains, 
sad<t1es 
haltars 
o * h e r 
iTAY 
P R E S S 
Ltvis, 
boots, 
moc- , n r . 
. . . 
n 
i. 
...... 
— 
casms. 
saddles 
halters 
o ‘ h f r 
W 
. 
h O I 
C l e a n B a c h e l o r a n d 
I 
»eataurant ______ 
fack. 
l 
c . 
»after, 
5226 
D 
St, 
One bedrm apt. 622-0923 
D U N E S 
__Bv. 
day 
or 
Chino 
PO M O NA 
- - - - - - - 


Fenced yard*'^Small ‘chdd ok‘<3**C C O M P L E T E L Y PurnHhad Bacheie- 
^ a W e C 'V 2 7 4 r w mS2nd °°623-9255 


_ 
i r . 
. 
a 
«k 
* 
E F F IC IE N C Y 
Apt, 
tor 
male 
oc-isunsat Motel, 1183 E 
Mission Pom 
Real Eitat* for Rent 
| 
f« ® * * « S - ~ 
r T 
C 
T 
^ ------ 7-x 
Furnished Houses 
34 
C<,H 
O LIN C O N ST RU C T IO N 
WifltOfl TO K<llt____ 
N A 6-3575 
Sat A Sun 593-8585 ^ 
M A L E 
grad 
student 
seeks 


Hub Warehouse 
Pom. 


623-4396 
Have An Auction compl bdrm set *.* mat 
tress 
and 
springs 
*150 
New 
Spanish 
style 
dinett* 
set, 
*100 
C all aft 5 30. 626-2581________________ 
A Nifty For Th# Thrifty 
l i v i n « 
r o o m 
s u i t e 
- 
»«»a 
bad 
and 
choir, 
I 
fabtea 
A ll 
7 
a aoa* 
new 


lie « 


and 
3 
Only 


The Bast W ay to Sail 
Call for Inform ation 
C u l l u m A u c t i o n S e r v i c e 
2437 Kellogg P a rk D rive 
Pom ona, Calif 
fS J & w 1 
® j f M 
r u . L j W g | « j 
S W A M 
t 
hdrrn 
w a sh a rT n ia rd n r 
I n r n e 1 b e d r o o m f u r n i s h e d 
* 
" 1x IL "í^ J o ca " o n • 
U P H O L S T E R Y 
run d ow n? 
Lat us 
lam ps 
and 
taWes. 
21“ 
m aple 
s " * . h L 
k Q r V e A o e a r o o m x u r n is n e a 
___________622-3398 ______________racover 
it 
like 
new 
Father 
and; color TV, m a p i* U *drm set. comp, 
x w 
i 
m h 
Pom 
A lf conditioned, heated R«el. cegV 
40n 
w t ^ w r 0WT1 worK 
599-M74 
W alnut twin bed set, m isc items. 


2 B D R M 
in d ^ t e x ," fenced yard 
park°Ave, Pomon#,_ A ptl‘ 
N Meat and Produce 
4 5 : 
- 7 4 
Itack-oyot. 
1 
™ 
C Z 
A I 
T O P LO C, *175 mo. 7 desk, 2 file 
m 
Pom ona. 
C op s 
Capri 
A p t*,' 
7 
rab, 
12 
chrs, 
air-cond, 
pvt 
ba 
31» W. Artesia, 629-0131 
894 
N 
Garev. 
622-3302, 
673-0252 1 ------------------------------------------------------- 
628-2181 
KIRBY VA CU U M CLEANER 


PÌa*tic-Re*in Classe* 
Le e rn 
# 
profitable 
hobby 


2 
? ' J a « 2 2 t ' 
K 
S S e j g ' 
!a l 4 f K i y ,.- l e « 
Y « I p R A ~qr~ i el Rebuilt 
like 
new - only 
»27 50 
8,4 
N ._ D arey . '_ J ^ : 33Wr-J t7C 075? 
) 
B E D R M , 
air 
conditioned 
eof, « A C i t ^ i r d B B M * 
ott 
f « ! ; 2 years guerentee. 1213 
E. 
Holt. 
C t E P N 
1 
bdrm , 
liv 
rm 
dinette 
s n 
utilities 
pd. 
See 
at 
1449 
i . 
» O L j d f v *i s fk C ucinitw.aa 
Pom ona er 
101 
E 
Holt, Ontario. 
tile kit. bath, se rv porch. Adults , " D " or call 984-8121. *89 50 per m ol Fr_?nc a 
at 
5. 
Cocam o«.ga.; -_ s _ — 
- — 
- — 
---------- 
Owner 1370 W. 2nd St 
A IR C O N D T t i O N E D ~~ 1 b e d r m ~ ‘aet 
I 
P l n . t . r . R e i i n C l o s s e s 
• 
2 
B E D R M 
Apt, 
1 
child 
O K 
i 
child 
O.K., 
complete 
laundry . 
. 
. 
. - 
W asher 
and dryer 
conven 
252 S facilities, 
located 
in 
a 
quiet I i w A c t f i f K 
4 7 
Buena Vista N A 2-8078 ________ _ 
neighborhood Call 984-8121 
_ _ 
T R A IL E R . 
$89 
A ll 
utH 
m 
M . See A1_ l 
U T IL IT IE S 
P A ID , 
(e iw trk , P E R M 
re« A Q H A 
Palom ino «eld- 
at 
4400 W 
Holt, 
M ontclair. 
Un oas. water, yard care) 
In this 1 ¡00 
show w pleasure, good 
disp 
locked. 420 3978 
_____ j bedrm , air 
corwiitioned f ft , IM f r j 3 bar stock 
627 4201 
1 B E O R M T R I P L E X 
*90 
« W B 'I PJ» < * 
aP 
Convenient, central location 
. L r 
— 
______ ____ 
___________ 
____- 
_ 
422 6244 
T X T Z 3 -------T ~ ! *250. Call 626 6879 
____________ 
W A N T E D . 
. A - . ™ 
- 
« *100 u p , 1 and 2 bedrm * + 
k n^ 7 5 h S ~ t i« r S p 
for storage. Chuck Payna, 
“ >1, air-cond. blt-ins 
j 
« » C d ity t B d d rd ln t^ 8 » UP 
62A3312 


_ 
1 


2h,fxEDWMT V 
r 
p” e T i l <ter’* C p T ! 
4830 C a n o .., !M im c l. ir 424 0149 
HO RESH O EIN G $8 UP 
181 N 
Huntington *8 5 62 2 3500 
I 
B E D R M 
m odern 
Ctean 
duplex D ick C lay 
N A 
8 6531 
•> 
b o d x x 
Ki« ¡« 
nu»» 
«no 
f .n a . 
*or 
one 
m ature 
adult 
P a rk 
m j ^ 
h e n 
turkeys 
— on« 
Tom .I 


lot C all 626 9503 
* 
IM M A C U L A T E 
1 
bedreom , 
All 
>vv *•«>/ 


Household Furnt 
Wanted— 


i H R P T 


61 


FURNITURE 


a n y a m o u n t 


________________________ E V E R E T T O rfatro n 
C urti* AAathli 
St 
B E A u T I F U L 9 ~ v r old M a r# .' G #n-I com bination TV- 
»tereo 
tie 
disposition 
G v m k h a n g 
exp 


X m es gift*, 
«raoes 
lam ps 
triv- D ev »22 9243 
Night N A 8-8541 
Dir 
ets. 
Reservations 
tl 
oer 
le sso n 1 
plus 
m aterials. 
B £ ? in 
Oct. 
1. 
M arion Lefferdink, 622 6759 
WANTED 


.. 
. 
» I 
* « » 
*» r 
Pool- eir-cond blt-ins 
Unfurnished Houses 35 
F o r F u n l o v i n g A d u l t » 
mrnm-mm 
■... — i i n i'." r" 
- I 
H I Ztl 


3 
B *L 
2 
B A T H 
axecutiy« 
hom a 
d races 


reliable 
fam ily 
for 
Ü83,. w ater 


Carpet», 
drapea, 
Available 
Oct 
1< 


■ufK - 
built-in», 
etc, 
Will 
rent 
to 


26 Business 
26 


★ 
S T A R T Y O U R E S T A T E ★ 
W IT H 
T H IS 4 P i C X 
\ 
B E D R M 
5 6 0 6 R i v e r , i d . D r „ _ C h m o 
¡ ( ¡ » T l y 
e 5 , c | g « i o m i . 


4 B R . P I U S F A M . R M . 
' 
* ° * 
B Y O W N E R 
» T U H H M 
A T T R A C tT V l 
duple* 
plus 
afits 
Near new split-tevei executiye-tvp« Choice A 'e * 
near all. 266 I , tin- 
hom e. 2270 so tt, north ot Hu it 
Cgln 
Pom ona 
»22 2493 
jpseph-s' 
. - 
L 
and" RÔ o'iééîïr'TThooiS," jfT iit h s 'i* V NIJ , 


: « r 
“ ' u v r . ’i Y ,ix î s i w 
V 
^ 
) ™ 
« 
« 
q í f e q s , 
m any other 
rytrat 
priced below 
I Utlft« flfM 
V».*9RP 
m any 
otner 
rxtras, 
priced 
u-w w 
{tf. I >6 000 
»10,808 to right oar 
cos! at *28.500 
Phone 629 7614 « 
\ * 
'«« fW R . *9°^ 
A«f * . 
it*' 
476-1331 
1 te apts 
and 6 ov*rni«Mefs 
*7*,. 
............................................1 000 
170,000 down 
M oney 
m aker 
SA N D IM A S 


G l N O down 
Country club living 
Near Golf c o u t 4 
bedrm. 
’ *». 
L«tn», 
bll-ins, 
custom 
cabinets 
P a neted 
dw> 
W-w 
c«rpets, 
au7 
Of as-.i reek D rive 599 4/0? 
^ , 
SA N D IM A S 
Am azut« 
o l d e r 
horn«. 
Inside 
charm trw ly 
remodteed. 
Stainless. 
steal kitchen sbsks, lots of oenet-• 
ing. 
carpeting, 
? b d rm s and den 
*11.500 
Out of »tat« owner 
M grryi 
on 
this 
one1 
H*iva 
Realty. 
On-i 
tarlo 
(714) 986 275” 


H as 
m anager 
Owner 
111 
Cali 
622 1670 
$h«wn bv appt 
____ 


2 0 — 
2 B D R M . U N I T S 
815.008 dn , 7% , 25 yrs on bal­ 
an,« 
Show s 
excellent 
return 
and tu» polenti#! 


DELUXE 


UPLAND 


15 
units 
elu» 
pool 
AI# 
COnd 
Carpeted draped 
R en’s 
827 000 
yr 
Try 
*70 008 
down. 
Could 
trade for tm eiier hom«, 


4 U nit* »I’d elaborate 7 room 
home 
custom 
built. 
A: wav» 
rented tt# 080 dn. 


flrepl, 
CBt 
A ll bit 
gar 
with 
bit in 
*lor 
fin fcitch, 
w w carpet 


2 In 
bit it, 


M 
B au m an 
ave 
623 4929 


año 
heritage 
»hutier» 
thruout 
Beaotitut 
patio 
and waited 
yard 
a biks to grade and H<gh 
Set < 
823,508 
574 
8>rrh 
Ave . 
Upland 
Cail 982 5514 anrhme 
to 
see 
U P IA N D . 
BY O W N ER 
T b^jrm, 
1550 
\o 
ft 
5 . . 
loan 
tan 
be 
is**,rr,td or 
will 
refinance 
F H A 
*71,508. 
985 2541, 
*72 
A/or# 
Ct 
Upland. 


. F a m i l y 
ff Amt f4*e*i 
I 
591*51» 


★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 
★ 


* 
* 


{ 
T E X A C O 
{ 
* 
t 
^ 
offer* a unique business opportunity 
for «p 


a person who ii interested 
in a business 
^ 


^ of 
his 
own. 
Business and 
guaranteed 


salary while preparing to lease thit Texaco 


Service Station. 
I 
^ Promotions 
to 
create 
large 


^ 
volume paid for by Texaco. 


-F 


* 


■¥ 


FINANCING AVAILABLE V 
- 


■¥ 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 
* 


■¥ 


■¥ 


966-7111 
or (714) 624-1179 * 


CONTACT MR. CALL AT 


Î 
(213) 


* 
• ¥ 


i r k i r k ' k ' k i r k i r k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k ' k 


paid 
Driv# bv 1758 Russell Place, 
Pomona 
and 
if 
interested 
write 
to S 
P 
Edber g. 
365 M . A v e , 
Apt 
1, San Francisco 94118 
DO; 
NOT D IS T U R B Tenant_________ ; 


★ 
4 u 
w . M c K i n l e y ★ 
| 
New 
rugs 
paint. 
Adults 
only.; 
N A 2 6710, N A 2 3689 
; 


# 
« 
IM M A C U L A T E 
1 
bedroom. 
All 599 


JA Y L. JAY 
1 BEDRM . APT. 


$89.50 PER MO. 
ALSO WEEKLY RATES 


626-8258 
# Furniture • Appliance» 
i 
to reef # C o | o f T V j # $ t e f e o | # 


. .gii.L. ■ j » . - i j n 
— 
i Houseful» Our Specialty. 
USED TIRES 
$3.95 
nj a 
'J A A \ 1 
D ir 
Sfanyor B Edm ondson 141 W Holt i | N A 
J - 4 4 I I 
U l r . 
M ACUN-CALDW ELL 
AU CTIO N C O M P A N Y 
AUCTION 


REM IN D ER 


For Lease 
CLAREM ONT LO CATIO N 
5 BEDRM. H O M E 
F#m lly rm and formal dm in# rm I 
3Vj baths 
Olin Construction 
6283575 
Sat 
and SuO; 
624 8 310 
3 
B D R M , 
bath, 
Wt ins 
cony 
toe 
in 
Westmont 
Avail 
Oct 
1. 
*140 per mo Call 629 4818 
I 
L A 
V E R N E , 
worg 
1st 
2 
bedrm, "_ZL! 
enclosed 
patio 
big 
garage 
workshop, 
tented 
yard 
Do 
own 
cleanup 
and 
move 
Immed 
with; 
fret 
rent 
until 
first 
of 
month 
and no cleanup dopo.if. 182 8283 
1 


e F U R N IS H E D 
• A IR C O N D IT IO N E D 
8 A L L U T IL IT IE S P A ID 


e C O M P L E T E l a u n d r y 
i m f l i IG H BO RH O O O 


J k & à ï ï ï S E R V IC E 
1449 E. “D ” ST., 
O NTARIO, 984-8121 


O L D Mere. 1 
yr old cod 
both 
out 
b* 
excel 
stock. Older 
Morgan 
Geldmg 
excel 
child's 
horse, B»st offer for any or ail.i 
3924 tltrello. Chino. 
Hoof Trim. - Horse Hauling 
Teeth Floating 
917-3843______________ 
' 
PO N Y 
broke, very gentle 
Cali 627-P7S «Nor 8 
Alfalfa Hay, $38 ton 
I 
P IC K 
u p at M cCov's Feed, 11044 
! Pipeline A v t . Pom 
Open 7 day» | 
__ 
422-4753_____________ 
J 
P U R E B R E D 
Hampshire 
Pig*. 
! No papers available. Average BS; 
lbs, »45 each. On« Chester w N e, 
200 lbs , *170 
595-8445. >16 Catt« j 
hill J ) r I W alnut. 
w w w — » 
.— 
— . 
— 
------ 
W E S T E R N 
Clothing, 
boots, 
mot 
Rent a «aw 
19*8 sawin« 
ma 
casms. 
saddles, 
halter 
o t h e r 
chine 
O nly_ 8* pm 
rrwnfh. 
tack. 
L 
C. 
Stellar, 
5226 D 
it, 
»freight ititch er it# zee 
Free 
Chin«, 
___________ 
_______ 
pickup «nd ««Itypry 
C ill «ny 
I UT AH Saddle horses 
gentle broke 
8 J » 4 er 
r U k t n . 
i for 
children or 
adults 
Will 
seih 9*r 
1 or trade 428^909 
CHI 


629-9745 
U»«cf Furnitur« and Ap< 
plianc«», 
Tool», 
mise«!. 
Top $$ paid. 24 hri. 
I/» 986-6671 
★Wanted 


E V E R Y T U S I - O N T A R IO 
E V E R Y TM U RS - Colton 
Y U 4-5131 
T R Inity 78798 
M A N » 
3 
c*re t' oriental 
celseye 
ring 
with 
side 
diamonds, 
8350. 
Alt 4 P.m 
623-4681 
__ 
_ _____ 
P O M O N A G U N SHOP 
I Purnlture and appliances, New or 
Hundreds of new and used puna 
u*e«L I I?tec* 
ul 
1 p,y 
Gunsmith on premises 
J " ? 8?. N LAW l^or *29__9745__________ 
Hunting Hcgnsti 
is : w _ H o« t 
Household Furn. 
62 
W ANT TO B U Y 
P O W ER LAW N E D G E R 
N A 9-0742 
Sowing Mochín« R«ntol 
Per le g» 
R E N T A W A S M1 1 * 
K E E P IT IN Y O U R H U M « 
»i j» | | t j r a | X ¿ 
M A M ELL»..*..*. 
450 Pomona Mall West 
NA 3 75/1 
A — 
w i n d o w & 
a p i c : 
Reniate- ^ 
» 
f 
haire— i ebtee 
" 
Ä 
^ - ^ ^ r r . - iB R U N S W lC K POOL TABLES 488 
^ 
- - ? - r 
H O R S E S , O E N T L I 
t fu M O D IL * 
all ecu 
188 Pgr Can* fina« . ¿fi 
Swap 
M«*t. 


1967 MO D K L S. all »««eeeriee, 887* . 
. 
. 
» 
• 
Ili Pgr Cm? Hm*.. ¿^4^ ”***★ I AppiliflCeS— Silt 
63 


Furn. & Unf. Apts. 36A 
ANGELA MANOR _ 
^ 
rnnn ny cfy»nw y x w ,»,, 
— 
i 
. 
W all Trained *125-8250 


M o r y w o o d C o n d o m i n i u m 
1 
. 
2 
, 
3 
B d r m 
Api* I , 
ln T f M / ^ y ~ TF r ' - swap 
w « n 
■ * 
r - i i D C U A k i T 
, 
| 
_ 
| 
, 
_ 
J « 
|. 
rn 
Aeak ends 
Spact* avail 
*1 
Clean M A Y T A G 
late model eyto washer 
C l a r e m o n t 
i 
a n c j 
o 
b a t h 
P e t s a n d S u d d l i e s 
5 2 
qv* w »*'•«• and 
come 
ut 
*85, 
Kenm or* 
srm. 
n d 
Bedroom 
2 Bath 
Fam ily Rogm 
1 
° 
n U 
X 
M U I I I 
T B I I 8 » ! # B | » p « T « e 
m 
Baals 
Resaryat>ons ceil be 
A I cond 
M A T l I* 
3 pouls 2 car attach garage 
i • Newly Carpeted draped 
•- *x x ü s«.í •»»--— 
--.--iI ■>**• 
w a# ¿»art. 
1 
block 
i X i u i T t a i « i l i t e i l A i l i f s 
Lux Living, No »v)ai,;ftnunce 
, f Built in, air-cond 
*265 Month A r 'o w H ighw ay, 628.Í/90 
• Near E la m , J r Ml, H I $chl 


C L A R E M O N T 
Lovely 3 bdrm lux 
t f Í L t e ^ í p r l I l t t e a 
ury 
suite 
in 
garden 
atrTw.phere 
• Lau n d ry F a c iiim » 
Pool 
air cond, 
carpet*, 
drapes 
Adults 
No Ptta. 8200 
580 Buck 
air 
cond, 
carpets, 
drapes 
20». I 


. _ 
»miry 
? 
bath, 
ail 
eiec 'h o m e 
L A V E R N E Area 
Luxury I bdrm, 
2 
bath, 
all 
eiec 
home. Bn ins, 
dishwasher, 
washer 
and 
drver. 
air 
cond, 
w « 
carpet«, 
dr a 
garden servi 
plan 
Access 
green 
*210 . 
and week end» 
L E A S E 
- 
*135 per m« 
First and 
last 
Horses okay 
Walnut 1 bed 
rm Att 4 
628 6490 


234a / n g cii 
Api 1, Pom 
Coil 627- 4231 


NA 8 3535 
‘ __ 
Lorr*ne Pomoesg. 
Heve e c»l« epe'a’e« e*tc wean*' 
A 
9 
M O N ' old 
mele 
dog 
M alt,M O V IN G must sell 
Piano, dinetta! m R * R ^ 
" #m# 
M O N .. d_ 
«og_ 
J M 
nsOW 


patio turn, and other mite. 
H U B S 
622-5 41 


. 
» U N 
U1U 
m oie 
MUD 
n o n 
colite and Heinz. Fr«« to a f«ml- 
ly_of_4 or 5 
67V 6900_ 


»'tell 
«HU 
rw»4 
nd 
w w 
carpets, 
drapes. 
service 
An Atrium 
floor; 
kecess to pool end putting, 
*210 a me 
593 298Í ev#s 


PEKINGESE PUPS 


C H F R R Y P I A 7 À *i*?jr1^ I ^ ~ W '^an— 
j i l L n n I 
i L A l A 
pr_.LaJí^ »_iU ¿:______m 
„ 
^ 
m ^ « ju»t ♦ *f» c?a^ « 


B A I v ’ T t R M A 
('«»er AA¿B#d 
A > 
T J i T a fÔ R 8H Ô P 
■ 
P « m «n« 
Bankrup t stock 
Kid« 


$30 UP 
m m w jÈtnt 
A R P f T I A O R A P R » 


3 B D R M with 1 m aster new car 
pets thru-out, cust 
drapes, new ly 
redec 
? car 
garage, 
ige 
lanced 


C A R P . . . _ __ — 
PO O L 
A IR C O N D , 


’ h A ^ N Ï S S IS a J ^ O L É - P Ï Ï P - I « “ * ' - 
¿ I g 
f c 
— 
] L f ^ e . ' * iitm c . T 
l t i ï T 
Still 


Mu°IWbg1oonwd 
624-479? 
^ 
^ 
o n l y " ^ » ^ ^ ^ T t e r m s ^ t d 


g r e a t 
D a n , 
p ^ m 
t i g 
« 
M i $ c t l l « n e o u $ Wtd. 57 S . 27 
... 


b u i l t -i n » 


i r h 
'A 
« P U P e * * ! t B n KvI M 
H 
I 


ia~Hil 
! A U N D R Y 
P A C !. U V 
* | p a d u l t S r c h o n 


i gistered 
will 
..... 
— 
: anything r t value 9*7 4426 
B F Á G L E 
P U P S 


nr> . 
. 
1^ .:. V• M u ls FurnT- 
rure 
12634 
Central 
Ava. 
Chino, 


W A N T E D "C a m p in g 
Equip! 
Pack. 
— 
^ 
a 
ba# W H lR l PO O L 
D ive r, 
eiec, 
2 
m os 
Old 
»IKS 
W hirlpool 
w ash t' 
|e0 


person 
*160 a m© 
H .iora 4 p m 
Cali (21Î) W * 38*90 alt«r * pm 
cail 593 3017 
N A 2-3701 
M « r— A M 1* 
848 • Phliilpa 


r.u. .iw wir> -» u.I. ,11,.- I —- | y y #41« I «.S# 
%. WI llP „ _ «, __ , 
r 
^ 
A K C 
Registered 
tram ? 
down 
fitted, 
sleeping 
The 
perfect fam ily 
pet 
Esp ecial 
prefer m um m y .tyle 676 0179 
• ■--» 
wi r r ' mn 
, 
„ « 
* 
, 
„ 
..I . i i . . « # A I I o l d C o i n , . j „ w . l r y A 
“ 
°l 


•hri ' 
m IIL (Cs>ntinued N a x f Pag«) 
C A T B O A R D IN G AT 
B E T T IN A S . Tender 
loving cart 
983 4127 
,nver dollar» 
op 
Pay 


Appliances—Sale 


(Continued from 
Previous Page) 


6 3 M o b ile H o m e s 
Trainers-Campers 
Sales or Rent 


7 1 T r u c k s f o r 
S a le 
7 7 * \ u t c s f o r S a le 
8 0 A u t o s f o r S a le 
8 0 A u t o s f o r S a le 
80 


~ 
WASHER. $45 
STOVE. $25 


628 8075 
■ 
FRIGIDAIRE 12 cu ft refrió. Top 
freezer, 
deluxe 
$75. Call 
bafore 
8 p m 
NA 6 4832 ........ 
...................... 
for SALE or trade Servel refrig 
aood eond. 
Inauire 
before 
3 at 
. 
W#V( 


SMALL TEARDROP 
camping trailer . »*75 
629-3405 


We Pav Top Dollar 
For Your Ça. 
For Your car 
NORMAN FORD SALES 
222 E Holt, Pomona 
NA 3-2104 NA 3-2105 


80 Autos for Sa le _______ 


’62 CADILt-AC. With original own- '67 
FORD 
IFA!RLANE 
2 
DCJOR. 
'¿ 2 F o rd , G o o d C o n d . 
^ * ^ , E dual ' quaÄ’, excal^cond 
er 
Fact. A r, tuli-power. 
SIIy0. 
8. ral.o. heater, automatic .ran* 
„««a 
987-A127 
*500 Baf Noon and aft 10 p.m. 
628-1981 
New 
paint 
lob. 
Low 
mi it age 
oood transp, *250 W -aaa» 
»sou. net noon 
'67 IMPALA Suoer Sport. Landau 
condition. 
$650. 
Call <6j 0 LDS. CutlaM. Buckets, Auto 
too, full power, air, am-fm radio. 


\S 
’ 6 8 C L E A R A N C E SALE 
All models. at 15*’ . disc. ShaMa, 
Ideai, Rolls, 
Piowler, 
Alrstream. 
CASWELLS TRAILER SALES 


137 ” Armstrong 
Apt C, 
__________ 
Gf frost, free rjtfrig, freezer 


if ELLS 
950 W. Foothill - 626-3874 


FOR H IG H E S T PRICES F O R . 
™ 
s„ 
Y O U R USED LATE M O D c l to appreciate 
*350. Call 622-5370 
_ 
r r r or 672*1825. 
C A R S 
A N D TR U C K S S E . 63 ss" im p a la 
13285 
East 
End 
Ave, 
Chino 
Attar 6 p.m.____________________ 


599 2432 
63 
CHRYSLER 
Newport, 
4 
$925, Beaut .eond. 605 N. Grand. 


P-S, 
new 
paint, 
dr, i offer 622 5744 
$450 
b#*t 


La_Verne, 599 292»___ 
'68 
CAD Coupe 
de 
Ville, 
7 


T i 65^?5S7V^ ® c^ 
o£^S? 
good eond, 
Pomona 


M o n d a y E vening , Sagt. 2 3 , 1 9 6 8 


P ro g re s e -B u lletin , P o m o n a, C a lif. 
Page 11, Sec. 2 


Autos for Sale 
80 Autos for Sale 
80 


c o r v ì t t i l « « m 
k ; - » 
a 
s 


"across the bottom 
Yellow. 
626-1 lOv. 
IIOU. 
Mont* 6 2 g w 
H o ,f 


YU 4-711» 


Upland. APACHE T«nt Trailer* - 
Rental* 
and 
*ala* 
M 
and 
M 
Camping 
Outfitter* 
10379 Mill* Ave 
clalr. 424 5109 
COMPL setup. 4’ 2 star a d u lt___________ 
park, 
next 
to 
Broadway, 
May . , 
r y / M 
. i A i IN IC 
Co, fine eond 
Sac 
624-7425 
___ 
6 7 
E C O N O U N t 
CLEAR lot at Salton Sea — value 
r 
.. 
$3500 
WIH trade for 
66 and up 
S u p e r V a n 


i J L S d ’ IxcH 2S .d, r M4 49i8 
150 HP Eng'n' CfU 
m a VYAg SERVICE 
??ntajined E_xce co 
4941 
Heater etc 
‘ E -iiv v e r y 
n i c e - 
Sowing .Mach.nes Repaired 
ton truck 
many extras 
$24-8 


.... 
AM-FM 
Stereo, 
air, 
tilt 
wheel 
4 *pd, p-j, $950 
candau top, excel eond. $5,7U0 or 
best offer 
Mr. Haas. Offlc# 623- 
6541. Home 626-0830 


tOPS 
H f* rtrf 127. 
A M -r Ari 
r®a«0, 
^ 
#. 


; ^ g d , “ " iii» “ p f f i , ” 
413 


4 
g s s t u i ’i s s & 
^ ' s î w 
i i r ' i s * “ v e r « » ' ' » » ' ! » h 
ä 
, 6 3 F o rd F o lc o n ' , 0 0 ° 


Bast of 
f ex­ 
change) 


'63 COR VA IR Monza Cpe 
Beautiful A Excellent 
i .. WkndJi 
$25 Dn only $26 Mo on low bal1 or te®ES*i 


Must *eî|IOWCaHIU628-Yl40 after I:30| 


Anoliance Service 
6 4 


RuS 
j 
.M 
t 
p 
e 
w 
w 
y 
i 


x8 WILLYS Overland 
Rebuilt V-8 *43 
MERCURY 
Montclair 
hdto 
* 
o/ \ A 
« 
l . _ 
Very pood condition. See Excel ,„conct^ full 
pwr 
and 
air A u tO S fO T S S IC 
8 0 A u tO S lO f 5 1 1 # 


98A-3940 


P S . it , ta d lo !1E4C*t”tond 
I 4.11 


5» EL 
CAMINO 
763 Vettai 
ang 


w5 
FAIRLANE, 
GTA, 
ÎM 
OO. 
R H, PS black Int and ext. 11850, 
Alt 4 pm , 624-8761 
T w o * barrel. 4 *p 
Hurst »hitter '63’ > FORD G AL AX I f 
rua'r" end; *650 cash. 
(213), 
w^en^dT 
dr hrdtP, 
day*. 


V-6 excel 
con­ 
dition. Many extra*. *2300. 
618 M40 
_____ 


55f T y p M . 'n Y«yr TeasohnTbÍe¡ REEDS MOBILE /HOME _SE PVK E 


Char0eS- 
672-7597 


M u s ic a l- R a d io - T V 


Complete 
m o b i l e home maint­ 
enance and 
repairs. 
Free 
level-! 
ins check with estimate. 626 2215 
or 985 7115. 
A C '66 TRAVEL Traile- 
Serro"'Scot tv. 
Stove, ice refrig, sink, water and 
g u lb ra n s o n 
p ia n o 
AND! 
f ä ? cond- * 
Mahogany. Excel. Cond 
af t *‘ 
..Pj. *TO- 
BENCH. 
$395629-7333 
San Dima« 


S 1995^ 


FOR THE FINEST _ 
FOR SALE ANYWHERE 
W. B. Rundie 


engine 
Very g<— — --------- 
. ... 
at 
Standard Chevron 
Station 
at cond,J27 3254 
corner 
of 
Foothill 
and 
Garcv je e p , 
CJ-5 '66 
Ave. 
*64 
EL 
CAMINO, 
horn* 
m a d e ____________ 
camper 
shell 
Best 
offer 
After -4j IMPALA V-8 
Good Condition 
5 u rn , or wknds. 3926 Estralla. *335 Take over pavment* of $400, 
Chino 
J at $45 a mo. 628-1688 
■ 3 BU'CK Skylark 
tic, 
air-cond 
Rat z 
_ 
. . 
Plymouth, 
4 
door 
wagon, auto 


80 Autos for Sale 


m u s t 
s e l l 
2 dr 
Automo- 
Radlo and Heater, 
low mi. Excel Con, $1200. 
>61 
Plymouth, 
4 
door 
station 
626 321» 
____ wagon, auto, R H, beautiful cond. 
# '66 CHEVY Impala coupe, full $375 
626:2378---------- 
--------- 
, nwr, » ' cond, excel cond 
$22 . 
'62 COUNTRY SQUARE 
NA 6-321$ 
'62 IMPALA. 2 DR., 
auto, one owner. 
$650 Call 599 4044. _ 


S tu d e n t V io lin a n d C a se 
Good Cond, $65 . 628 4 300 
★ SHOW TIME 


CLARINET, 
Schrlber 
and 
Son 
Germany, 
with 
chrome 
music 
stand, $7$. 624-7464 
i 


T h is W e e k s S p e c ia l 


The World of Mobile Homes 
New Models up to 60' 
Hwy. 60 East of Pomona 
4187 and 5553 MlMlOn Blvd 


6 2 8 W . H o lt, O N T A R IO i 
_ 
YU 4 7112__________ , 
¡'41 
INTERNATIONAL 
Mr 
ton J 9 6 8 R A M B LE R A M E R IC A N '61 
NASH 


★ 
N E W 
★ 


Staion Waoon *600 
Phone 623-7871________ 
• WAGON • 
Comet 4 dr Automatic. Economy 
family car 
Very well cared for. 
$599 
HOUSE 
OF 
IMPORTS, 217 
S. Brea, Brea. 529 1967_________ 


truck. 
Good 
engine 
and 
Good work truck. 628 046) 
tires. 


'56 
'3 TON 
Chevy 
Custom 
cab, 
truck mirrors 
heavy duty bum­ 
pers Good cond 
NA 2-6710 
___ 
Used Everett Console 
Like new, Light Wajnut 
*r0t ‘ pending liv 
rm , carpeted, cooler, 
63 GMC V4 TON PICKUP 
Like new, c u m wom ui 
$ w , 
, ,.(ipl 
jioys 
furn 0r unfurn. Call 
Long !> I 
Ex Ccnd 
$?5 Dn $»J 
New Story and Clark Console 
a fte r’ 4 30 week days and all 
day 1 Mo 
Bat 
ol $1087 
p us 
tax 
& 
Rental 
Return 
$^5 on 
week ends 
983 4245 . 
850 
W 
lie on approv credit. Credit OK d 
W urlitzer E lec'rtc Piano 
_ 
$39- Mission 
5p 
B 53. 
O rfarjo 
: by pbon* 
R a lp h P ie rc e M u s ic 
¡3Jy 
Your 
moblie 
nom* 
fgctory 
623-5525; direct 
For 
Inf', 
w rit* 
Post Of 
ce Sox 692 Corona Calif 
___ 


American, 
Clean 
in 
_ _ ^ „ terlor. Needs Work. *50, or make 
S i 9 9 5 
o,,er 
623 2993________ ________ 
▼ 
-64 
<“ ar 
E c o n o m y R a m b le r 


435 E 
Holt 
TAKE over payments on near new 
TV 
Full 
console. 
AH 
factory 
warranty still in effect. 885-6917 _ 


2 4 3 E. H o lt 
P o m o n a 
50, GUARANTEE—or 5 years 
679 9 69) 
'66 MUSTANG 789 
623 1816, 
stick and new wide ovals 
$1600 
. 
624-241! 


„ 
CADILLAC 
Sed 
DeV. 
Full 
pwr. air cond 
Loaded with xtras. 
clean. Private party. 622-0282 


6 4 C H E V Y , 3 2 7 SS 
4 Spd 624-3177 
*8 BUiCK Special Conv. AT, R H, 
-harp 
$250 
Pvt party. 
629 829* 
or 593-2301 aft 5. 


B ra n d N e w C o lo r TV 
Rent, leas# or purchase 


i f 
$ 7 
P E R 
M O . 
★ 


M E D A L L IO N 


M O B IL E H O M E ? '? 


Free 
delivery 
and 
Installation. 
Free 
color 
antenna 
Fr»e 
tac 
tory service. (213 ) 335-0558, (714 
885-6917._______ ______ ________ _ 
Previously Owned Stereos 
Scott - Grundlg - 
voice of Music 
Excel cond Real savings! 


Yes. 
Fuiiv 
alectric. 
tor 
"really, 
clean" living. Top duality. ''Cus-: 
tom ', Paramount. 12 x 57 double 
exp with many plus extras 
All 
set 
up in new park In San Di 
mas 
1 
Child O.K 
$10 500 
Can 
714 623 2323 or 714—737 1262. Ask 
for Jim for Appoint.______ 


3i T. PU & C A M P E R 
Must sell, like new 628-0268 
*8 
IMPERIAL 
USED P IA N O S & O R G A N S h o m e j bedrm 
Several Stvtes and Finishes 
, 68 Porr 
From $95 to $2995 
'61 CORVAIR van, camper, sleeps 
G r e e n ’ s M u s ic C o m p a n y 
3 
so ib ice box, etc Must »?n 
» » H»w bivo. 


' u s ed TV'S 
★ HARRIS-^ 
n f w d e m o n s t r a t o r s 
Coior Combos—B & W 
ONE-THIRD OFF 
Bring m your old TV 
for FREE CHECK UP 
We like people! 


L e a s e o r R e n t 
7 8 
Cars - Truckf - Trailers 


O R D ER Y O U R S N O W ! 


’ 6 9 C a d illa c s — 
P o n tia c * 


E L D O R A D O L E A S IN G 


N A 9 -9 6 6 1 


8 8 8 E. H o lt, P o m o n a 


Automa- 
' ¡ r 
« « 
Cond $200 626-3766 
New paint. $1250. 623-8775 
___ 
56 CHEVY" 2 dr h d tr Reblt eng 
Stick shift trans. Good tires. $325 
★ S T U D E B A K E R — P A R T S '* 
Sales-Service 
Carnahan A Norton 
or best offer. 626-7158 __ 
319 1st St Cl AREMON't __ I 
-64 d o dGE POLARA 500 HT. 
- * & -------- 
62 PLYMOUTH station wagon, 
around good cond. *550. 
624-3238 


all 


We Lease All Makes 


Loaded A Gorgeous 
$25 Dn. only $45 Mo, on full bal 
of $1186 plus tax A Lie on approv 
credit, Credit OK'd by Phone. 


MUST SELL '68 fo n tlic Flrebirtf, » 
. 
°atmna 
Pri* 
stereo 
1900 miles, *100 down. Take over ¿2 P °NTI^ C Grand 
Pnx, 
»•er'*0 
payments. NA 9 8842 
_ 
speakers, 4 spd trans, 389 cu in. 
60 "DODGE 
Wagon, 
new 
auto 
___ 


S»e 


»84 2678 
★ 
Q u a lit y 


M O B IL E H O M E S 


O u r P o p u la r O p e n E nd 


Le a se P la n 


W IL L S A V E Y O U M O N E Y 
In 
now 


offer 10140 
Fauna) 436-2150 
*65 CHEVY SS, $'700 
Moving Most Sell 
12674 Roswell, Chino 628-8141 
A u t o s 
f o r 
S a le 


while 


B I L L ’ S 
T V 


ESTABLISHED 11 VRS 
IN MONTCLAIR 


Turn 
your 
car 
latest model! 
Highest cash price ter your ca.. 
CALL TODAY 
INLAND LEASING 
Subsidiary of 


183 W. Holt 
S S T S it 
A5Î-3Î31 
629 2248 
Open Mon. and Fri. Nights 
j 
P R 5 f ESSIO~ÑAL 
Color 
antenna 
i m p 
u u e 
. Aiwnlataiu 
ifTS 
UHF, 
VHF. 
ComDle’ e'v 
Installed 
in your homa. Guaranteed recsp 
fion 
849.95 
8H5-6917. 
Master 
Charge or B of A. 
| 


Trade-in 
YOUR! 
REAL ESTATE 


# F^ 
x 
Ä 
BC°oNndE. ^ 5 h 
E xc e lle n t 
626-4757 eves 


case 


HOWARD GRANDS new $1925 uPl 
B 
aldwin Soinet $676 UP' 
irro r upright S145-S185 
Easy 6% financing, 10% down 
VAN LANDINGHAM'S 


(PAID FOR OR NOT) 
FOR A 
MOBILE HOME 
OP YOUR CHOICE 
with 
Q UALITY INSTALLATION 
and 
U NEXCELLED SERVICE 
AFTER THE SALE 


LIBERTY FORD 
SAN DIMAS 
"Short Drive to Greatar Ssv¡nos" 
100 W 
Bonita 
& D 
W 1221 
College 


Bros.! 
NEED A CAR? 


$99— $999 
'61 Chevrolet Bel Air 


Ovar 100 cars In Ï locations 
We carry most 0f our contracts 
1100 E. HOLT 
NA 3-2431 
YU 4-6017 
CORONA AUTO SALES 
201 W. Holt, Ontario 
984-7611 


V .8 
E n g in e , 
A u to m a tic 
T ra n a , 
R a d io , H e a te r, A ir 
C o n d itio n in g , P o w e r S te e r, 
in g , E x c e lle n t C o n d itio n , 


» a m. to 5:15 P m. 
Closed Sundays 
or by appointment 
Ü 
I W U H tT tZ R SPIN 636-7215 Days 
Eve 626 7727 


Baldwin Pianos & Or8?*ri,, 
4767 Holt, Montc la ir—624-7171 
RENT • .— 
ET PIANO, »10 Mo 
Apply rent to 
PurcAaae. 
DUGAN’S MUSIC STORE 
1*1 E 
Holt 
NA » **»» q 
VIOLINS 
44 size with case. *?5 1 > 
full 
size. 
GrenaDcus model, 
t x 
celient cond. $90 639-7732 ________ 


Holt Blvd. at Central Ave 
M ontclair (At the Valley 
Drive-in Theatre) 


POMONA 
. 
. 
. 
........................ 
W W - A 
'67 MUSTANG GTA, 360 HP, 
p S 
8jr> 
d|SCi 
poti, 
cam, BUtO. 


I m p o r t e d - S p o r t 
7 9 
,67 RED c a m a r o 
I „ ■ J 
. <- 
Auto 
trans excel cond, tape deck, 
and Midget Cars 
*2295 593-4314 
New 
fixes ~7ui- '¿A 
PONTIAC Tempest, *605. R-H, 
New 
fires, 
us. 
w 
New rear tlrt» . Very good 
nstde and out Mu ,t Sell. 599 *408 
— - 
. 
. 
'65 
GTO, P-S, 
4 spd, 
dark 
blue 
1 9 6 7 V W Squareback 
and 
btack ¡nt. (%ood 
cond 
*1875. 
W ill 
take 
older car 
in 
sell. 
$1900. 428-3657 


$ 4 9 5 


#63 Impala Sedan 


Bake 
"¿>ñe "ow ner, 
excel 
•66 VW 
gage 
rad... 
__ 
cond $1825. 626 3989 


V -8 E n g in e , R a d io , H e a te r, 
A u to m a t.c 
T ra n s m is s io n , 
P o w e r 
S t e e r i n g , 
L o w 
m ile s . A o n e -o w n e r c a r. 


Must 
$ 1 1 9 5 


icicles 
72 


TAKE OVER 
PAYMENTS 


COATES BICYCLES 
1)0 E. 2nd $1., Pom 
*2» 1471 


Foothill, Pom 
*24 841 » 
1140 1 


fonsol(Ul Ah*Cwood Cabinet t Wide Scooters—Cycles 
7.3 
Kits 
ra th 
» 
là 
• 
___ ___ 


trade ^Private Partv. 593 6 267 
'47 TR 4 A ROADSTER 
A ll Extras, $2350 
636 4079 ____________ 
'66 VW, all the extras inc! 
AM- 
FM radio and sunroof, excel cond 
*1,350 
628-0605 _____ ___________ 
*68 VW BY OWNER 
excel cond. used only 9 mos 
Call 595-7735__________ 
68 
VW ," fully 
euqipped. 
$1900 


V .8 E n g in e , 
R ad o, 
H e a t­ 
e r, 
A u to m a tic 
T ra n s m is 
s io n , T w o T o n g S h a rp ! 


'56 CHEVY. 2-dr 
Hardtop 
Rebuilt 
'66 Malibu Spt. Cpe. 
engine. New tires 
New Rear and ■ 
r 
_ r 
Make otter 
628-8594 
___ 
DODGE 
Dart '66 
2 
dr 
coupe, 
6 
cvi 
r-h, 
air 
cond, 
exceptionally 
Clean $1695 628-2577 
'62 FORD Falcon Rar.chero, extra 
clean, $675 
Davs NA 2 6333, eves 
NA 2-2824 ______ 
'58 CORVETTE, blue with chrome 
rim *. Eng run* good. Need* int 
11674 Roswell, 
$575 NA 2-0423 
'63 
CORVAIR, 


$ 1 9 9 5 


s p d " 
e x c e l 


for Frank »85-1311 
FOR 
the best color and blh 
and HARLEY 
sportster, 
wf de 
television service, 
Courtexv 
cond:fion. 
Lots 
o* 
chrome. 
TV, since 194V 626-3766 
tras 962 James Pi. NA 9 5401 
H 
i 


Excel 
good 


Movmg must sell 
screen 
No 
cash 
needed! 
36 
- ___ ~ f T 
______ m 
I Chino. 628-8)41 
______________ 
^ 
____ 
pm t* at *15.33. W ill deliver 
with + 
-66 
HONDA 
M0 
dream, 
met *6j 
6AGB, 
m int 
condition 
One 
CONDITION. CLEAN $595. 
new color 
antenna Included. Ask 
eiec 
starter. 
Excel 
cond 
Take owner. 
LOW 
mileage. 
Many ex- 
____ _____ 63»-2055 
......... 
ove* pvmts. $17 24 mo 595-7965 
tras 
NA 9 0920 
i . j j 
MUSTANG, 
2 
Plus 
2 
900cc 
Excel '47 
DATSUN 
1600 . 
7,000 m i. Soft, 
cond 
4 
sod, 
V-8, 
very 
Ex I top Excel. Cono $1925. 
tires. Low m il. 427-)253 
_____ 599 18,6---------------------- >4; 
FORD 
Gal 
Sta 
Wgn 
_ 
W u rlltie r 
4100, >6g 
HONDA 
350 Scrambler, 
must <57 
v w , 
new 
trans 
Good 
tires 
country sedan. A ir, r-h, auf 
very little, $775. 
sell 
**00 
and 
take 
over pay 
r .h 
Clean inside and out. 
$500 
af>{j pp, excal cond, 622-4920 
624-5479 
ments 
or 
$550 
Crsh. 
Fh 
629 
626-8177 
'Tn r AD IL LAC Conv. A ll Luxurie* 
HAMMOND CORD ORGAN 
. 1-J ^ v ,4 uiL 'ln ,na'Ì 0lSdn^weekends 
° f '58 VW CAM PER J u t „Excel con- 
Needs V8|V# job. Maka offar 
Good Cond. $2» 
1 ? 5 30T»_evemngs an3 weekends. 
dt»i0n, $650 
626-3774 
97*4 Lehigh 
629-1026 
10231 Pràderà, Montclair 
-4$ 
HONDA 
305 
Scrambler, 
take 
Ave., Mcmcla-r 
USED PIANOS & ORGANS 
¡ t f ”* 
***°' ft 


62 Chevrolet Impala 
S ta tio n 
W a g o n , 
V -8 
En 
m e, 
R ad io , 
H e a te r, 
A u - 
o m i l i t 
T ra n s m is s io n , 
F a c to ry A ir , P o w a r S te e r­ 
in g 


SPINET 
Organ, 
Walnut. Used ' 


$ 1 0 9 5 


'64 Chev. V2 T. P.U. 


1 
—--------- 
r 
1*3 FORD 
x L , 2 dr. Ht 
4 spd 
vega 
2 
• 
2 Couoe 
6/ ¡r 
H 
No Dealar. W U trade 
r' 
Crw,ar 
Must Sell. Aft. 4 p m. NA 8-7336 


sud, 


Several 
styles 
10 
choose 
from, 
from 
$99 
Choice 
of 
* 
Grand 
Pianos. $475 
Piano rentals from 
*i_Ef'lL rT0 i§ ! E Hpit. 629 9 3n___ 
*64 
MOTOROLA 
Color 
TV, 
0Hg 
*650 
Take 
over 
bal 
of 
*180. 
Fius *195cash. Call 627 192» 


Top Co*h for Cycle* 
(213) 
334 1788 
Dir 


Ihrys Hemi 
n>ags 


8 
Cylinder, 
S t a n d a r d 
T ra n » m is t'o n . L o w m ile s , 
lo n g 
bad, fle e t 
side, new 
p a in t, r u n t Aood 


'64 HONDA 160, setup for dirt, good 
cond, $30Û or beet offer. 
593 8881._____________ 


Musical Instruction 66 
Honda 50, Road bike, 
3,000 (tli, $100 
O H 629-19.j 


' p ia n o le sso n s 
§ « f 
int, *3 
626-47Ç7 eves 
PIANO 
Lessens 
pianist 


HONDA 55 


T 2 Î-9^f Or K7 
ordir ion » 


Osborne 
Reaoer, 
composer. 
Now 
taking 


TOTE G O ir 
A. V 
FRAME 
and wnee . ETC. 
626-4409 after 4 30 


G-God cond. $1100 
__ 
. 982-5167 
j 
Y i 
PORSCHE 
Roadster. 
*21» » 
w ill 
trade 
for 
VW, 
421-1969 
or ¡ 
626-4951 _ 
........................ 
'68 VW, $1904 O' *500. 'ake over 
pavmts c‘ 
$46 80 mo tor approx 
29 mos. 62*-1362 aft 5 
, „,rf___ J 
• AUTOMATIC • 
'66 
Renault 
8 
_F lawless 
I Don 
217 


•60 THUNDERBIRD g o l d 
*450 cash. NA 4-5314 
Before 2 P.m 
’57 CHEVY— $295 
V -l 4 bri. Sta won. PB PS, 
R H 1 awner. N A 3-2310 
'59 CHEVY 
impala. All power. 4 


Renault 
8 
Flawless 
çondi- 
* « 4 J i t C0WÖ' 817 
or 
* 
$1096 
HOUSE OF IMPORTS, 
otter 629 roos^ 
5 
Brea. 
Brea. 
$79-1967 
** “ 


•6 6 V o lk s w a g e n 
Convert, r-h, like n^w $1350 
students 
Beginning, Intermed 
ad- *4 
HONDA 
S tra m b a r 
338 
CC 
« anced 
theo-’v 
Member 
M T AC 
8*tra 
pa"» 
lee 
to 
HONOA 
------- . 
r . 
_______ 
. . . . a 
part*, 
S»e 
to 
appreciate 
2934 Rockmont, Claremont 424-4157 
4;* »468 alter 5 p m 
- 
,a hON0 A jo* Scrambler 
Machinery, Tools, 
68 
5CTf o f r . r 


NA 6-3218 
• FARINA • 


MUST 
sell 
'64 
Plymouth 
Sport 
Fury. 
PB, 
PS- 
fact 
air, 
very 
dean. *1,000. 
622-7437 or 
622 0986 
•65 CHRYSLER New Yorker 
2-dr, 


*63 F at Farina Roadster. A beau­ 
ty 
*799 
HOUSE 
OF 
IMPORTS, 


bucket 
seats, 
fact 
air, 
posw. 
*t 
and brakes, new tires. Excel con 
One owner *2150 624 «8 8 


'59 Ford Fairlane 500 
V -8 
E n g in e 
A u to m a tic 
T ra n a ., P o w e r S te e rin g , 1 
o w n e r. C le a n . 
$ 3 9 5 
191 S. Indian Hill Blvd. 
COLLEGE CHEV, 


NA 4-4543 


Tv 
»/“V 
rl u J*C 
’r 
I v> r 
1 mm ^ -w -w 
-w — — — 
# # » | 
zft.F 
J im - 
Autos for Sale 
80 flutos for Sale 


Farm Equipment 
REPOSSESSIONS 
Sunbeam 
Alpine 
HOUSE O f IMPORTS, 


JOHN 
Deere 
20'0 
Diesel 
tractor, 
850 
hrs. 
Like 
new 
longer needed (2)3) 634^820 


Finance Company 
Says M utt Be Sotdl 
68 BSA îlOcc 
(stock No. 41)27 
PORTABLE w e l d in g 
$8 per hour and up 
Ç!*w-----------------------------------TmTjTv 
’** Triumph 650c 
Wt’-'fy 
(stock no 6032; 
^ '61 Honda Scram 
______ 
___ 
— I 
(stock no. 40712) 
666 LE TOURNE AU Westinghouta, |'68 
Honda 
35ÛCC 
motor 
grader, sliding 
and 
tilt 
n®* 
m o’dboard, good cond $5500. 
'64 Yamaha 250 cc 
i2 4 4 tS , 424-6107 
(stock no 68473) 


• SPORTS • 
60 


2IJt''S M5%rea7 "Brea.’ 529 Î967 
■66 
MGB 
Roadster, 
Immaculate 
$49« 
cond 
Sacrifice 
*7)00 
or 
belt 
599 2986 


80 


*699 


*3»9 


otter 
C*h 
att 
i 
P-m%. 
• SPORTS • 
Austin 
Sedan. 


i7 
CATRON MOTORS 


'65 
Don 
$499 
HOUSE O! 
52»- 
$4»9 
2)7 S Brea, tre a 
19_67 


$299 
_ 2 PLUS 2 . 
*67 JAGUAR 
Automatic. 


Boats Sport Equip. 
and Acctfsori«» 
69 


Many mwe. 
Ne reasonable offer refused 


M ÿft 
Or 
'66 
Roadster 
TV, J if I 


BERT S MOTORCYCLES 


o r 
im p o r t i 
£2» 196/ 
. 
• XKË • 
'43 
JAGUAR 
?.* 
MK 


Superb 
HOUSE 
Brea, Brea 


LGE 
WHEEL 
Home-made Trailer 
for 14' boat. «8-13*1 all day week- 


DRIVE A LITTLE 
SAVE A LOT 
»1$ W. Foothill BWd. A nna 
(213 ) 334-1288 
ends or aft 4 on weekdy* 
, 
BY"OW NER - 20* Katch with in / \ y f 0 
R e p a i r 
bon'd 
auxiliary eng 
excel cond 
B 


_ 
II. 
T ru ly ¡ 
concourse 
*23»9 
HOUSE OF 
IM 
PORTS. 217 I Brea, Brea. 
_____ 529-1^7 
'$* 
MCA 
COÏÏPË 
Compì 
rebuilt 
still m break-ln 
Walnut Int 


Poet 
" s ir 
Calif 
PERKY 


Oft ice 
263 
Pomona 
p a r t , . Acce**ori**-Tlre* 


2 
tt 
ryn-a-bouf, 
trailer, 
end 'è xce na HP Èvterude $1*5 
628-23»» 


$3695 
MOU 
_ 
Engm* 
and 
tvef'-d 
917 S Brea, Brea I2 M H 7 


_ 
I '65 
Mercedes 
Benz 
Diesel, 
lo w 
hole miles 
Beautiful 
ÿ iS * - „ I 22 . 
hew 
HOUSE 
OF 
IM PO RTlT 
217 
S 
★ NEW 1969 ★ 
Mercury Outboards and 
Stern Drive* 
HORI/ON j e t b o a t s 
T H U k B fe M lJ O 
x o x e u t A 


Acttoncratt SK's and 
Starcraft Boats 
So. C alifornia'* O'desi 
Mercury Dealar 
SALES AND SERVICE 
O w n Sunday 
Open Mon $ F ri Eves 
NEW & USED 
ta n k Terms 
Pratt Bros. Sporting Good» 
372 W . Highland Av*. 
San Bernardino 


- . erg, Stri in 
7 5 $8ix) 595- J3C 
* 
• TIGER • " 
67 
Sunbeam 
Tteer 
Showroom 
new. *369! 
HOUSE p F IMPORTS, 
57 
PONTIAC 
4 spd hydro 
Many extra tear* 
parts _426 2«65 
__ 
_ 
T R U C K 
and 
C ar Paris 
4 - 5 
. 
split rlms 
and 
tires 
47 Chevy, -„■ --'--« „r-- 
truck p a rti, 
‘50 
Ford 
k* 
tor Bri*a# Brea 53f'»947 
truck parts 
'59 Chew 
automa»,c 
« I.OTUS • 
tram, rear 
end, 
and front 
erti *47 Lotus Cortina 
QT. 
3 - 2 Ford Engine 
'47 Dodge truck 
and , or course 
part* 
'54 Bulck parts 
4—8 how 
650x14 
wheels 
and 
tires 
Much 


• DIESEL • 
Benz . Diesel. 


Magnificent 
HOUSE OF 


i more 628-046) 
40» engin* part-- p jw frg lld e 
Chevrote» Body 
628 8775 
• USED TRUCK PARTS • 
Como'esvors Wr durs, 
Equipment. 
SHERMAN 
SALES, 
1141 
E 
Mis 
s on Pom 62? 39*4 
__________ 


• Gl 
concourse, t p 
l 
. . 
ÌMPORTS, 217 S. Brea, Brea 
. 
529-1 $»7______ 
4,4r 
‘40 
MGA 
rdstr, 
less 
»han 
50») mi on n#w eng. Beaut car 
*700 Pvt p*y 599 2 583 * 
* 
_____ 
'43 TR 
3 
Red with black interior 
Excel 
rpnntnq 
rcsnd 
Must 
Sell 
Make offer 624-33$» 


’67 MERCURY “ Cougar” ............... S 2 7 7 7 


H A R D T O P C O U P E 
P O W ER 
{ y l ^ V n y l 
R a d io , 
H e a te r. 
T a p a 
D eck. 
W S W 
T»re», F u n 
v m y i 
Bucket Seat Interior 


’67 CHEVROLET “ Comaro ” / J 
$2666 


?AACTD0TR°VP i,°R U c Ô n ^ . S Â Î n T ' p ' o WEdp ° ’ StH^ ? f : ; ; 
L a nclau 
T o p 
F u ll V in y l B u c k a t S eat in te r io r . 
N e a r 
N e w W id e O v a l W S W Ttrea- 


Parts for Volkswagen » 
used and reblt, cvi heads çrank 
», Bi 


S $ REWARD $ $ 


shafts, fly whig, motors, trans 
,. gen, »tartars 
lues 
w fjn 
4722 M istión Blvd 62« 4212 


For 
Volkswagens, 
Wrecked or running 
any 
cond 
628 421)7 
$ 2 1 1 1 


. 
,M G i '66 W 
wheel*. SRG. Radio, 
axels, gen, starterj, tires 
wh s, etci yv walls 
Very 
clean 
throughout 
Otter 
624-9858 


•66 OLDSMOBILE ‘•Cutlass’ 
„ cfORY AIR 


T lro a . 


'43 MGB Red RoaÄter 
e .re l cond 
Low mileage, Michiein tire*. First 


and trader like new 
Joe to ap 
prec 
987 1435 


in Tiñe V-dnve 
Tandem trader 


Top tt * For Useo Ci 
or NOT 
Paid ter 


Cover Very good rond *1*95 
623-541! or 623 5637 


ra?ler U H O L T -B A H E R 


Mobile Home 
Spacat & Park« 
70 


ONTARIO 
740 W . Holt 
629 5952 
YU 4-3625 


tim e 
ufteied 
at 
113*5 
after 
6 
p m 
622 3465 
67 DELUXE VW Bus. 
sun roof 
*1895 
59' 198* 


split »eats 


80 


BOB HICKS C H EV R O LET 
319 W. HOLT, ONTARIO 


986-2081 
622-0512 


C O N D IT IO N IN G , P O W t * S te e ririfl 
V ,n y l 
B u c k e t S eat m ta rio r, C onaoia, N E W 
vVSW 


•66 MUSTANG 
............................................ . $ 1 7 7 7 
xxr&tfW"'0™ 
» • < > » ' T " - ' 


a i d w v s i i t 


NEW 5 * Mobile Pk, lee »aces 
' s. 1630 Covina BJvd 


•a 


f r a n k w h ít e I m p o r t s 
14(17 West Hod. Pomona 


'61 
DODGE. 
V 6 
Straight 
stick 
transmission. *1*1. Call after 4 30 
*27-3798 
___ 


’65 MERCURY “Caliente” 
....................$ 1 7 7 7 
H A R D T O P C O U P *. F A C T O R Y A IR C O N oJ t IO N IN G . 
P O W E R 
S te a n n g , 
B ra k e s , 
VS, 
A u to m a tic , 
R a d io , 
H e a te r. F u ll V in y l B u c k a t S eet In ta rto r. W $ W T ira s 


65 


San 
low rat#*, . — — 
..... 
Dimas, brochures 
132 240/ 
ONLY *5 Month Spaces — T rail­ 
ers, 
camper». 
Boats? 
Fenced 
4163 Holt Blv^J.. MONTCLAIR 


WE BUY CARS 
Chevrolet 
1*1 
I 


•tick Ihiff good cond 
62s 6594 


Cui lece 
— ------- 
Hill ITvd 
o ire m o n t 


BY 
OWNER 
'66 
Dodge 
Corone* 
indiar 
soo 4 dr, fully equipped Includine 
I «ir cond. P », r-h Call 595-7735 


’65 DODGE “Polara” . 
s e d a n , 
P O W E R 
S te e rin g , 
H eater, W SW Tira». 
V i. 
$1444 
A utom atic, 
Radio, 


26 3710 
FOOTHILL TRAILER PARK 
WE BUY JUNK CARS 
F ra t tewing, 982 4624 


Cell after S. 626-839* 
i _ 
. 
. 
- 
, 
IT U C K S 
l O f 
b i l e 


*65 BUICK 
Skylork Coupe 


Mobile Homes 
Trainers-Campers 
Sale» or Rent 


71 
'66 I Ton 8 « tu stakt, 
ow 
H eaitr 
Gyn 


Moo i» Home Show 
14450 E 
6!h St 
C 
(714)733-1262 
8* Camper Shell 
MAKE OFFER 622-7435 
Hause Trailer, 10x50 
$1200 62 7 3157____ 
1 le t of New Camper jocks, 
used one time $50 
Cad 


% 
c. T v . trans, duals, r-h, very 
V inyl Infor 
low 
mlfT like 
new 
math 
com) 
*30» Pr.v. Party 
May taka small 
car part tracia 0 J*s9S7 
I '63 
CHE V " S 
Ton "w ith 
camper 
corona 
Calit 
»hell- 
6 
cyl, 
htr, 
red««, 
split 
Closed ia tw rday* 
h ™ «xcel cone yea asS* 
_. -=*5 
T ITS,, 
PORO W te l p.ckue. Big cx-o 
New Thomas engine. New or eke, 
Top condition M îî LY 3 237* 
6? 
CHEV 
ton, 
V-8. 
aufci 
trans, rad.fi, htr. .jig ltt 


77 FACTORY 
AIR 
CONDITIONING, 
' 
i Lanoau to p 
Autom alic, R a d i o - 
ow 
H> a'ar 
Gun 
M*-!<i! 
Grey, 
B a x 
lerior. WSW lira s 
REAL SHARP! 


’64 PLYMOUTH “ Savoy” 
. 
. 
. 
. 
. 
$ 
9 9 9 
Sedan V8, Heater, Radio, A IR C O N D IT IO N IN G , Stick 
S h ift. 


ftee$»ide 
lip. 
Exe 
xcal $» 


SI 895 ★ 


FOR THE FINEST 
FOR SALE ANYWHERE 
W. B. Rundie 


'64 FORD “ Galaxie 500” 
.....................$ 1 1 1 1 
H a rd to p Sadan. P O W ER Steering, Breka», V», Auto- 
m a tic , R a d io , H e a te r W SW T ire » 


*21 1508 


58 FORO V» T V8 stick, 8 ft box. 
completely reblt engtrw and run 
n ng gear *550 
672 sNI 
628 W . Holt, ONTARIO 
VU 4-7113_____ 


CO '■B '/s y 
YE s 
1321 W Molt, On! t$4C j) 2 __ 
ACRES o f b a r g a in s 
am maxes 
Ti 


49 FORD Pickup 
'5* mot. 
pai,it 
and new tires 
Rgr 
Radio 
»84 512? 


or. New 
uns yood 
'63 CONTINENTAL, loaded 
SHARP 
» »5 
Privale Party 
NA 9 149? 


tuMy 
• TRUCK SERVICI • 


★ SHOW TIME1 n ^ 


64 FORD Fairlane Itatton Wator. 
Automatic. E xtra sharp. *69* 
916 1774 


Th World pf Mobile Homes 
New Models ue to 68' 


'19 
C H E W 
1 a 
ton 
pickup 
A-I.i 
New motor, trans 
brakes, clutch. 
Over 
spungy 
and 
shocks, 
split 
r .ms Pvt P*y, FP $600 
626 868? 


Shown 
at 
MONTCl A li 


2 Biks East ¥4575*4580 
Hot 
OPEN HAH Y 
•60 VW CAMPER 
63 erigine low mil $658 
623 5111 
57 
THIS home has egffV 


CASH FOR YOUR 
★ IMPORT CAR ★ 


thing 
Fine 
location. 
Markets 
.. 
— 
1*%.; 
alt 'Cal! m 8906 or 59 I 7164 
HAVASU CAMPE R 
Custom Built for '68 El Camine 
627 2171 


Any Make —- Any Model 
Paid For or Not 
FRANk W HtlE $ 
EUROPEAN MOTORS 


1375 fc. Holt Ave. 


1965 PONTIAC TEMPEST 
excel cond, reas. $95 768? 
'63 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 dr 
$92$ 
Beaut cond. 605 N Grand, 
t e Verne — 5V0 292».______ 
'62 OLDS Cutlass ip # 
Auto. P S 
Beautiful I Excel ant 
$25 Dn 
*30 AAo 
on low 
Sal of 
*786 
Plus 
lax 
L j k 
on 
approv 
credit Credit OK'd by pt'one 
36 Mo> 
dealer 
623 1#H 
IT * FORD ' station wav in 
V», rww 
rings 
and 
valve 
grind 
Very 
clean, eood tire ' 
«4-9924 
‘$3 CHEVY 
pickup, 
good 
moloi 
rubaer 
and 
tmo, $310 
Alsu 
'63 
Cushman 
Trailster, 
goud 
COnd 
Totefote 
fype 
for 
quick 
salt 
POMONA 
NA f 9108 
*110 LY 3.405 


63 CHEVROLET “ Impala” SS 
$ 1 2 2 2 
H A R D T O P COURE, H eater, R id ie ROW E F S teering, 
Brakes. V *. A u to m a te , F u ll V m y l B u cke t Seat In . 
te n o r. Console. 


62 VOLKSWAGEN “ Convertible” $ 8 8 8 
4 Speed, Radio, H « *ta r. F u ll V in y l In ttn o r 


MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM 


FINAL 
CLEARANCE 


I I 
OF A LL "BRAND NEW 
6 8 C H E V R O L E T 
CARS AN D TRUCKS! 


68 MAUBU 


4 DOOR SF0RTS SEDAN 


ONLY 
$2453 
47 


FULL PRICE 
STOCK NO. X-338 


Equipped 
with 
fm tad 
q ’4»s. 
doluxo 
seat belt*, V8 enqina, 4 taason air 
conditioning, 
powor brakes, 
Powar- 
qlide transmission, 
power staerinq 
wheal covar», 
whit# sidewall tire*, 
radio, heater and fu ll safety equip­ 
ment. Seafrost qraan finish with match- 
inq intarior, 


Pius tax, lleenaa * option« 


68 CAPRICE 


2 DOOR HARDTOP 


ONLY 
$2729 26 


FULL PRICE 
STOCK NO. 148 


Equipped 
with 
tinted 
q'asi, 
deluxe 


seat baits, power brakes, Turbofir# V I 


anqina, Turbo Hydram atic transmission 


powor (footing, white «¡dewall tires 


radio and fu ll safety equipment. W M e 


finish with color kayad interior. 


Plus tax, license 6 opt orw. 


68 MAUBU 


STATION WAGON 


ONLY 
$2659 


FULL PRICE 


Equipped w ith tin te d q le tt, pow er reer 
window, V I Turbofire enqine, Power- 
glide 
tran*mi*sion, 
power 
steering, 
wheel 
«over*, 
white »¡dewell tire», 
radio with rear *aa t speaker, luggage 
rack, deluxe seat b a it group end fu ll 
*a fe ty 
equipm ent. 
B utternut ye llo w 
w ith co lo r kayad vinyl in te rio r. 


Ptue fax i,cansa A osisene. 
USED C ARS 


THESE MUST GO! WE NEED ROOM! 


63 BEL AIR 
1 door by Chevrote». V» anoint, auto- 
matic transmission, radio, heater, Powor 
steering, wh >• tiOewajl tires, tinted ^laea 
end tax tor y air carxiit.oning. Full 
$1099 
$M DN $34.11 MO. 
Plus Tax h Licansa 


66 OPEL 
KADETTi sport couoe Sise*-», tew «"'Jf 
eg« car! 
Rao 
m color with Week tn- 
ttrior. Fuk Price 
$1399 


I f f DN. $ 4 4 .f4 M O . 
Pius Tax A L ctnse 


65 FORD 
9 PASSENGER STATION WAGON wtth 
a V» enume, autem*r c trvwmiMlan ro­ 
dio heater power steering, power brakes 
and mr condibonln« Vette» *» « e r wttN 
black interior 
Full price. 
$1499 


66 LINCOLN 
64 BUICK 


J , t ON. JS 0S S MO. 
Plus Tex A Uanse 


CONTINENTAL 2 door hardtoo with pow­ 
er sieermg. ponrr braxe», power J * 1,"; 
dow%, 
uuwar 
v#r4 
w ndowr 
o<>of 
locks, 
power 
»eel, 
automatic 
MH 
»»terme 
wheel, rinvi roof, full vinyl inter)w, fK - 
torv 
air 
tondit oning 
LO AD ED^ Tur 
4UO sa in color with Week root and tur- 
quoise Interior 
$3499 
Plus Tax A Licansa 
$444 DN. $101 MO. 


Skylark 
with 
a 
V8 
engin«, 
automatic 
transm «con. radio, heetar,. " " I 1! . I 16* 
wail tires and tinte« elass »HARPI Bue- 
gundy finish * te whit# 
intarior 
Pull 
Price 
$1099 
Plus Tax $ License 
$yy DN. $34.11 MO. 


64 PONTIAC 
BONNEVILLE with a V» angina, radte, 
he»'er 
automatic 
transmission, 
tinted 
• lass, white ».deerail tires 
whoa! covar» 
and 
factory 
a r 
cond * x»ng 
B'u* 
in 
coior 
with 
mafchine 
interior. 
Ptm 
Price 
$ 1 )9 9 


62 IMPALA 


Piu* Te* A L eans* 
$yy ON 
134.72 MO. 


66 MERCURY 
PAR KLANt 
4 door 
hardtop 
w te tell 
power, factory a-r condltlenlnu ’ • s -er- 
ine wheel snd a vinyl roof. V W mi e». 
Burgundy finish with matching inttnor. 
Fun price . . • 


Cauee by Chevreiat V* mome * jtomet e 
transmission 
'ad'O, haeter, 
white ».da 
wall tire», eowe- stearine, 
factory an" cendlflonine GokJ finish with 
metchm* intarler 
Full once . , , 


64 IMPALA SS 


$2399 


matchme 
$1099 
PiUt Tax A License 
$yy DN. $3411 MO $ 


Coupe with V» orten», autemat.« frene- 
mission radio, heetor, tinted «las*, white 
».dew»!! tires, whet, cover* and factory 
«ir 
Tyrtuos# 
coAor with 
wHft# intfKior 
Pot! 
. . • 
$1599 


Plus Tax A Licaesae 
$99 DN 
$13.0$ MO. 
67 CHEVY PICKUP 


Pius Tax A Lítente 
$yy on. $$4.14 MO. 


62 IMPALA 
Her (Poe whh V8 engine, automatic tr#ns- 
m ss on, radio and heatar, S'ivar musa 
finish with matchine W arier. Pull Price 


PLUS 10* cab over cernee' 
Automat« 
transmission, 
power 
steer "9, 
oomor 
brekes 
end 
factory 
Ca m p e r 
c o m p l e t e l v 
»e l f 
c o n­ 
t a in e d »cd is like new 
Refneerator, 
»foxe end tele» 
Full P r« b . . . 


63 CHEVY V i TON 
Pickup With a V* enema, racho, heatar, 
6 ply bras and new paint. Blue bl «Olor, 
»teck Ne. I9«a 
Pun Pnce . . . 


$1199 
Plus Tax A License 
$yy dn, 
$34,11 m o . 


64 CHEVY »/a TON 
Pickup 
with 
a 
V» 
aneme, 
radi# and 
hearer 
SHARP! Pee oreen finish. Dock 
No 
X495A. Pull Price 
$1299 
Plus Tax A L canee 
$yy DN. 
$43.33 MO. 


$3999 
Pis« Tex A Hcenae 


66 CHARGER 


maihc teen ^ S s h r n'ra*«c', h ^ '» ^ w w 
•« aerine, 
white 
sMswail 
fires, 
tinted 
»;a»s. 
whte 
covar» 
and bocfcH Mete. 
burtunav 
in 
coior 
with 
matching 
In­ 
terior. Pull P ric e .,, 
$2199 
Plu« Tax A I k erne 
$yy ON 
$72.22 MO. 


•Used car payments ere 1. eu red an 38 month ftnencin# 


$1199 
Pius Tex A Lkente 
$yy DN. 
$39 72 MO. 


65 IMPALA 
Coupe with • V I enelne, autom ehr 
m s«ior 
power »teer.ne, tinted glass, 
do 
heater and wheel ewers 
Turquoise 
in color wfth match,ng inferior 
A low, 
low mileage «er 
Fuit P ric e ... 
$1699 
Plus Tex A L «cange 
|yy DN 
$17.77 MO. 
BOB HICKS 


Catron Motors, Inc. 
700 E. HOLT AVE. 


P O M O N A @ 
N A 9 -5 7 9 6 J 
| 9 8 6 - 2 0 8 1 
CHEVROLET 
300 BLOCK W. HOLT 
ONTARIO 
622-0512 


cú' 


v. 


Contract 
Sridqe 


Bv Oswald and 
James Jacoby 


Oswald: “ In the analysis of 
this hand from the continent- 
wide Olympiad Fund, the panel 
of experts point out that seven 
diamonds can be made if de 
Clarer ruffs three clubs before 
touching trumps, provided, of: 
course, that a heart is led to the! 
10 when declarer plays t he, 
heart suit. I know you made 
seven diamonds but I imagine1 
you found a better way to play 
the hand.” 
Jim : “ Yes, at least I think 
my way was superior to that 
suggested. My problem was to j 
give myself the safest play for 
six w i t h o u t giving up the 
chance for the overtrick. Six 
made would be a good score. 
The overtrick would change it 
to a probable top. I ruffed the 
spade 
lead 
in 
dummy 
and 
played a diamond to my hand 
as a starter. Then I lead a 
heart and finessed dummy’s 10 
This risked an immediate set if 
West 
had 
held 
a 
singleton 
small 
heart 
but his opening 
spade bid had almost s u r e l y 
placed the king of hearts in his 
hand.” 
Oswald: “ One disadvantage of 
weak opening bids—not that I 
wouldn’t have opened the West 
hand had I held it.” 
Jim ; “ I know your story. You 
are getting old and want to get 


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NO RTH 
A Void 
V A I O 
4 K J 6 5 2 
A A K J 6 4 2 
EAST 
A Q J d 
V 9 7 5 3 
♦ 3 
A Q 9 8 5 3 


WEST (D) 
* A K 8 7 5 4 
V K 2 
4 10 8 7 
♦ 10 7 
SOUTH 
A 1093 2 
V Q J 8 6 4 
4 A Q 9 4 
A Void 
North-South vulnerable 
West 
North East 
South 
1 A 
2 N.T. Pass 4 4 
Pass 
6 4 
Pass Pass 
Pass 
Opening lead—A K 


in as many bids as you can. 
Anyway, when the 10 of hearts 
held, there was no further prob­ 
lem about the play. I cashed 
dummy’s king of diamonds and 
ace 
of 
hearts. 
West’s 
king 
dropped, whereupon I 
played 
one more round of trumps to 
take care of the last one out 
and claimed 13 tricks — five 
hearts, two clubs and trumps.” 


Oswald: “ The bidding of the 
hand is interesting. Bobby Wolff 
chose the unusual no-trump to 
show 
his 
strong 
minor-s u i t 
hand. That got you two to the 
slam in a hurry. Some Norths 
may have tried take-out doubles 
or simple overcails.” 


Jim : “ They did. Then there 
were East players who man­ 
aged to raise spades and some 
East-West pairs saved at s i x' 
Either save was a good one. 
because six diamonds vulner­ 
able scores l^ O .” 


Bird Flies 
Escort for 
Automobile 


BA R BO U R V ILLE, Ky. (A P) 
— Robert Sherwood was driving 
along the highway when a pi­ 
geon swooped down beside him 
The bird flew along just out­ 
side 
the 
right 
window, 
then 
zipped across to the left side 
and finally took a position about 
a foot in front of the hood. 
Sherwood first thought the pi­ 
geon was caught in the car’s air 
draft but about that time it 
soared some 500 feet above the 
car only to drift back into posi­ 
tion. 
The bird continued to escort 
the car—traveling at 50 miles 
per hour—for several minutes, 
then disappeared. 
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SINGER* zig-zag sewing 
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machine with case. 
and cabinet. 
• Darn*, mends, mono- O R • Heavy duty, sew* on ail 
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types of fabrics, 
buttonholes. 
• Quiet, smooth sewing for* 
• Quiet and vibration-free, 
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has full range speed control. 


SAVE! ON SINGER 
CLEAN TEAM 


Two SIN G ER* vacuums 
• Canister for above the 
floor cleaning, plus 
upright for rugs 
and carpets. 


BOTH FOR 


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f t JT i 


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$88 


i 


HI-8122 
A budget priced portable 
wjfh built-in SINGER quality. 
lA-41-inch picture, 
/neasured diagonally 
• Auto-lock tuning with 
built-in antenna 
• Earphone jack for private 
listening 


c 10a 
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only*88 


Prices art reduced on every new portable and 
cabinet $INGER*sewing machine. 


Cook up great Italian dinners at 
home with “The Art of Italian Cook­ 
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SINBER 
IT A LIA N _ 
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B0°* 4 4 c 


252 


Pomona Mall East 


Downtown Pomona 


Phono 622-4005 


5030 


Montclair Piaza Lana 


Montclair Piaza 


Phone 626-2428 


Ask about our cradit plan—designed to fit your budget 


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Moving up in the fashion world 


on curvy heels, these sophisticates 


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The collared pump, navy calf, black 


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Saffian calf, black or brown, 22.00. 


Matching Handbags available 


Fashion Shoes, 8 


MONTCLAIR 


5200 MONTCLAIR PLAZA LANE 


Pomona 621-301 1 . . . Ontario 985-7221 


Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.