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Hopes fading for Pasadena youth lost on Mt. Baldy 


By TONY AULT 
P-B Staff Writer 
MT. BALDY — With temperatures 
still dipping below freezing on the 
slopes of Mt. Baldy and winds gusting 
to 40 miles per hour, hopes dimmed 
today for a 16-year-old Pasadena youth 
lost since Saturday. 
The search for Christian Anderson of 
2173 Crary St., Pasadena, resumed this 
morning with more than 25 members 
of Los Angeles and San Bernardino 
counties sheriffs’ search and rescue 
team s and three helicopters planning 
to participate. 
Anderson became separated Satur­ 
day from seven of his hiking compa­ 


nions, all members of the Sierra Club, 
after they trekked to the club’s cabin 
about seven miles from the Snow Crest 
Lodge. When the hikers reached the 
cabin, light rain was falling, according 
to the sheriff’s department. 
“The hikers were wet, and decided 
not to continue because of the bad 
weather closing in,” said Sgt. John 
Von Coin, a member of the West End 
Sheriff’s Search and Rescue Team. 
According to one member of the hik­ 
ing group, Marla Ross, Anderson wan­ 
ted to continue hiking to the top of Old 
Baldy. 
Miss Ross said despite the 
group’s warnings, Anderson would not 
return to the cabin with them. \ Von 


Coin said that the other members of 
the group told Anderson that he was 
ill-equipped to handle the cold weather 


and did not have enough experience to 
continue. Anderson, according to Miss 


Ross, decided to continue and 
fhe 
group returned to the cabin. 
Anderson was last seen walking west 
towards San Antonio Canyon that leads 
to the top of Mt. Baldy. He was wear­ 
ing a blue hooded sweater over a light­ 
er blue sweater, Levis, hiking boots 
and a small day pack. Deputies said 
that Anderson left his heavier pack 
and down clothing in his car at Snow 
Crest Lodge. 


A few hours after Anderson and the 
hiking group separated, snow began 


falling, making the trails in the area 
wet and slippery. A cold wind followed, 
putting a layer of ice over five inches 


of new snow. About noon Sunday, near­ 
ly 18 hours after Anderson was last 
seen, the Sierra Club members called 
the West End sheriff’s sub-station to 
report the missing hiker. 
Lt. Thomas Wickham, search co-or­ 
dinator for the West End Search team, 
said Monday as the search was se­ 
cured for the night, “ Considering what 
he’s (Anderson) dressed in, things look 
pretty dim.” 


Von Coin said this morning, “ His 


only chance might be to crawl into a 
cave somewhere and start a small 
fire.” 


Monday the hiker’s parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. Robert Anderson, were at the 
command post in Cow Canyon east of 
Mt. Baldy Village, anxiously awaiting 
any word from the searchers. Young 
Anderson’s sister was waiting at the 
Pasadena home, in case the lost hiker 
might call. 


Von Coin described the terrain on the 
mountain Monday as being, “slow for 
hiking, with loose rocks, ice, slippery 
logs, and freezing cold.” 


According to West End sheriffs de­ 


tectives, the young hiker had been a 


member of the Sierra Club for about a 
year, and had been hiking for about 


three years. The detectives said that 
young Anderson had only classroom 
survival classes and had in the past 
displayed some unpredictability. One 
deputy commented that they were af­ 
raid that the youth might try to hide 
from searchers if they got near. 
Today the searchers were planning 
to hike from Snow Crest Lodge to the 
Sierra Cabin and then into San Antonio 
Canyon in the hopes of finding the 
youth. 


Weather 


Increasing high cloudiness 
tonight and Wednesday. High 
today, 67; 
low tonight, 45; 
Wednesday’s high, 65. Mon­ 
day’s high was 62; low this 
morning, 40. Sunrise Wednes­ 
day at 6:29 a.m., sunset at 
4:44 p.m. 
îrojjcess-BttUetin 
Reagan welfare 


reform illegal, 


says court... A-2 


Vo. 98 
Number 294 
POMONA, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973 
2 Sections 
Prie* 10c P«r ropy 
Carrier Delivered *3 00 
MontS 


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A TV 


United P ïes* photo 
HE W OULD HAVE BEEN 49 


City's expansion 
plans threat to 
gentlemans pact 


Unanimous 
Panel to urge 
confirmation 
of Gerald Ford 


WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate 
Rules Committee voted unanimously 


today to recommend the confirmation 
of Rep. Gerald R. Ford as vice presi­ 


dent. 
All nine of the members were pre­ 
sent and voted for confirmation, Sen. 


Marlow Cook, R-Ky., said as he left 
the half-hour long private session of 


the panel. 
Cook said preparation of the formal 
committee report would be completed 
over the four-day Thanksgiving recess 
this week, and the Senate would start 
debate of the nomination on Monday 
with a vote expected Tuesday. 
The committee action had been ex­ 
pected. Ford. 60, the House Republican 
leader, underwent four days of hear­ 
ings and extensive investigations by 
the Senate panel. 
Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W. Va., the as­ 
sistant Democratic leader, made the 
motion for confirmation and Cook sec­ 
onded it. 
Byrd said there was little discussion 
and what there was centered on his re­ 
port to the panel that two FBI reports 
on Ford’s campaign contributions that 
were not completed by the last commit­ 
tee meeting were now available. 


Montclair man 
dies in cycle, 
truck collision 


ONTARIO — A 3l-year-old Montclair 
man was killed Monday when the mo­ 
torcycle he was riding ran into the side 
of a dump truck. 
The victim was Steve Soto Garci- 
duenas of 9802 Surrey Ave. The driver 
of the truck, Harold Curis Belt, 40, of 
Milipitas, was not injured. 
The accident occurred at the inter­ 
section 
of 
Slover 
and 
Winneville 
avenues about 3:30 p.m. 
A c c o r d i n g to authorities, Garci- 
duenas failed to obey posted signs and 
had driven through barricades on Slo­ 
ver Avenue, which had been put up to 
stop through traffic because of con­ 
struction work being done on the De­ 
vore Freeway. 
Belt’s truck was involved m the con­ 
struction work. 
Funeral arrangements are pending 
at 
Richardson-Peterson 
Mortuary in 
Ontario. 


BLANCHARD, Okla. (UPU) - Tor­ 
nadoes raked Kansas and Oklahoma 
Monday night, killing five persons in. 
Oklahoma, injuring 60 more and caus­ 
ing at least $6 million in property dam­ 
age to a number of cities and towns. 
Property damage was estimated at 
$3 million at Tonkawa, a northern Ok­ 
lahoma town near the Kansas border. 
The deaths and many of the injuries 
occurred in suburban areas of Okla­ 
hom a’s Heavily populated midsection. 
Two persons, 
a 
woman and 
her 
3-week-old child, were killed in Blan­ 
chard and three other persons died in 
Moore, Okla. 
Ray Saunders, 77, a security guard, 
was crushed under a concrete piling 
when winds or the Moore twister top­ 
ped the Oklahoma County warehouse 
just south of Oklahoma City. 


Ethel Kennedy prays at grave 
of her late husband, Sen. Robert 
F, Kennedy, in Arlington Na­ 
tional Cemetery today on 49th 


WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate Wa­ 
tergate committee staff members said 


today 
they 
would 
recommend 
that 


Inside today 


Sec. 
Pg 
Astrographs 
............................ A 
7 
Rombeck, Erm a 
A 
5 
Bridge 
B 
12 
Brothers, Joyce 
B 
4 
Child’s Puzzle 
A 
11 
Classified Ads ...............................B 
8-11 
Comics 
.................................... 
B 
7 
Editorial 
.................................... B 
2 
Entertainment 
........................ A 
6 
Financial 
B 
6 
Obituary 
.................................... A 
4 
Rattles & Straws........................ A 
12 
Sports 
................ 
A 
8-10 
Teen Forum .............................. B 
12 
Television 
............................. A 
U 
Vanderbilt, Amy ....................... B 
4 
Women 
...................................... B 
4 


Robbie Maynard, a 4-month-old child, 
was found in a mud puddle by a high­ 
way patrolman when rescue workers 
tried to clean up the royal park Mobile 
Home park, one of the most devastated 
areas in Moore. 


PHOTO, 


The second child killed in Nfoore was 
found 
about 
midnight 
when 
rescue 
workers lifted an overturned mobile 
home, one of a dozen heavily damaged 
trailers. Forty-five of the injured were 
in Moore. Most of them were treated 
for cuts and broken bones and released 
from three hospitals. 
Another 40 mobile homes were des­ 
troyed by the tornado, undersheriff 
Bob I amb said today. 
“ Just 
about 
everything was 
des­ 
troyed there,” he said. 


anniversary of his birth. With 
her are Kerry, 13; Rory, 4, and 
Chris, 10. 


President Nixon’s close friend Charles 
G. “ Bebe” Rebozo be called to testily 
in public hearings. 
“ We’re recommending he be called, 
and we think they’ll go along,” said a 
committee staff member, who asked 
not to be identified. 
Additionally, there were reports that 
former Treasury Secretary John 
P. 
Connaily also would be called in public 
hearings. 
Both Rebozo and Connaily have been 
interviewed in executive session by the 
committee. 
Rebozo has been asked about $100,000 
he admits he received on Nixon’s be­ 
half from Howard Hughes. Rebozo has 
told the committee he kept the money 
in a safe deposit box for three years, 
then returned it. 
Connaily was asked about his in­ 
volvement in campaign contributions 
totaling $227,500 from the milk industry 
to the Nixon campaign. He has denied 
charges he received $15,000 personally 
for arranging two administration deti- 


Fifty national guardsmen were called 
In to protect damaged areas from loot­ 
ing, which Lamb said had begun within 
an hour after the storm. 


A woman and her child were killed 
in Blanchard when, according to a spo­ 
kesman, 
“The 
tornado 
blew 
away 
about one-third of the town.” 
They were identified as Linda Hill 
and her son, David. 
Five of the injuries were reported at 
Blanchard, mostly from flying debris. 
The funnel that struck Blanchard 
knocked out all electrical power in the 
town. A trailer park received the brunt 
of the damage by the Moore tornado. 
“ We were watching television and all 
of a sudden the house started shaking 
and everything started going every­ 
where,” a resident of the park said. 


Bv TONY NAVARRO 
P-B Staff Writer 


POMONA 
- 
The 
City 
Council 
strongly hinted Monday night that Po­ 
mona may move to extend its annexa­ 
tion 
potential 
over 
unincorporated 
county territory north to the proposed 
Foothill Freeway, contrary to a “gen­ 
tleman’s agreement” 
reached 
years 
ti.0 with the neighboring city of Clare­ 
mont. 
The Local Agency Formation Com­ 
mission (LAFC) will conduct a hearing 
Nov. 28 in Los Angeles on a “ sphere of 
influence” 
study 
of 
unincorporated 
areas adjacent to Pomona’s northern 
boundaries and 
surrounded 
by 
the 
cities of La Verne and Claremont. 
Designation by LAFC of an area 
being within a city’s sphere of in­ 
fluence is a preliminary step before 
annexation proceedings to actually in­ 
clude that area within a municipality’s 
city limits. 
* 
The council reviewed a 1959 joint re- 
soluiion with La Verne and a 1966 
agreement with Claremont on future 


siors favorable to milk interests. 
The 
New 
York 
Times 
reported, 
meanwhile, that an FBI agent alleged­ 
ly cannot verify that the $100,000 Re­ 
bozo returned to Hughes was the same 
money he received. 


Young Kennedy gets 
his first exercise 
WASHINGTON 
(UPI) 
- 
Slowly 
working his way to recovery, 12-year- 
old Edward Moore Kennedy Jr. has 
walked for the first time with the aid 
of parallel bars. 
A spokesman for Georgetown Uni­ 
versity Hospital said the son of Sen. 
Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., worked 
Monday in physical therapy using pa­ 
rallel bars for the first time since the 
amputation of his cancerous right leg 
Saturday. 
No further details were available, ex­ 
cept that he was in “excellent spirits.” 


Between 
15 and 20 trailers were 
damaged. 
Hail and heavy rains accompanied 
the funnel clouds to Kansas and Okla­ 
homa. Many rural roads in Kansas 
were impassable. 
Tornadoes tore roofs from homes 
and uprooted trees around the Kansas 
communities ot Hutchinson, St. John, 
Ellinwood and Seward. 
Fire Chief Eddie Manley of Ton­ 
kawa, Okla., said a tornado struck his 
community causing thousands of dol­ 
lars in damage. 
“ All the power lines are down,” he 
said. “ We’ve got trailer houses turned 
over, rooftops are blown away. Both 
city warehouses are flat on the ground 
and the city trucks are covered with 
bricks.” 


common boundary lines, but rather 
than reaffirm those agreements, voted 
4-0 to hold the m atter over pending a 
city staff study on specific areas Po­ 
mona should aim for. 
In the 1959 resolution, La Verne and 
Pomona agreed that the future bourda- 
ty line north of Foothill 
Boulevard 
which would 
divide 
the two cities 
would be Williams 
Avenue 
running 
north-south from Foothill to the \ng- 
eles National Forest. 
In the agreement with Claremont, 
Pomona said it would not attem pt to 
extend its’ boundaries generally north 
of Briarcroft Road and west of Wil­ 
liams. 
T h e 
proposed 
east-west 
Foothill 
Freeway would run further up north 
near the Base Line Road alignment. 
Councilman Adrian T. Wright said it 
could be 1C years or more before the 
freeway is built and spoke of the de­ 
sirability of Pomona having control 
over the freeway’s proposed on-an-j off­ 
ramps at Garey Avenue, one of Po­ 
rn o n a ’ s main north-south arterial 
streets. 
Extension of the freeway from La 
Verne east through Claremont in the 
past drew heavy opposition in Clare­ 
m ont 
Wright said that in Pomona history, 
city leaders looked for any excuse to 
avoid annexing territory north of Po­ 
mona, adding that such areas would be 
suitable for executive-type housing. 
Councilmen were not specific about 
possible areas Pomona should include 
in its sphere of influence, saying they 
would prefer to wait for a city staff 
recommendation. 
Wright suggested as a 
"natural” 
boundary line the Thompson Wash, 
which runs in a northeast course from 
Foothill and Williams. 
When the freeway does come, Wright 
continued, the ramps at Garey could 
become one of Pomona’s main en- 
tranceways and land in the vicinity for 
shopping 
centers 
and 
other 
devel­ 
opments would be beneficial to the 
city. 
But Councilman R.T. French noted 
that annexation of inhabitated county 
territories would have to be put to a 
vote of the inhabitants, saying that the 
chances 
of 
this 
happening 
seemed 
slim. 
Before the council acted on the mat­ 
ter at its evening session, it heard 
from Public Works Director Ronald 
Kranzer, planner Sanford Sorenensen 
and water department Manager James 
Van Wagner at the council’s afternoon 
meeting. 
The three city staff heads spoke 
a b o u t 
the 
advantages 
and 
dis­ 
advantages of Pomona’s attempting to 
annex the northernmost areas from the 
standpoint of city services Pomona 
would have to provide. 
But Wright concluded that the advan­ 
tages to the city would outweigh the 
disadvantages from the standpoint of 
water services. Van Wagner said the 


Environment firm 
cancels stock sale 
MENLO PARK, Calif. (UPI) - En- 
virotech Corp. today announced it was 
canceling a stock offer of 1 million 
shares which had been planned. 
“ Unstable market conditions” were 
cited as the reason lor the cancella­ 
tion. 


county areas involved were not serv- 
ic2d by the Southern California Water 
Co. 
French said he agreed with Wright 
that it would be to Pomona’s advan­ 
tage to have some control and said 
that 
rather 
than arbitrarily 
decide 
what specific areas should be included 
in the city’s sphere, that the staff look 
into this for a recommendation. 
Kranzer said that in the meantime 
toe staff could advise LAFC of possible 
council considerations. 


Youth dies of 
burns; rearrest 
of trio sought 


CHINO — A 14-year-old Chino youth 
who police believe was set on fire in 
the restroom of a garage two weeks 
ago died this morning at Loma Linda 
University Medical Center, only hours 
after charges of mayhem and assault 
were dismissed against the three men 
accused of setting the fire. 


According to Chino police, Rodney 
Almaguer of 13263 Fourth St. died at 
8:10 at the hospital from bums over 50 
per cent of his body. 


Immediately after police were noti­ 
fied of the youth’s death, officers went 
out to rearrest the three men originally 
charged with mayhem and assault in 
the case. 


The charges against the trio — Jesse 
Alexander 
Ruiz, 
23. 
of 
13122 
Ros­ 
well Ave.; Steve Edmund Lope?. 20, of 
1448 Jacaranda St., and Rudy Arellano, 
22, of 1337 Mildred St. were dismissed 
Monday following a preliminary hear­ 
ing in West Valley Municipal Court. 
Deputy Dist. Atty. Charles Wolfe told 
Municipal Court Judge Martin Hildreth 
that his office wished to withdraw the 
charges of mayhem and assault with 
intent to commit a felony citing a lack 
of sufficient evidence. 


In the preliminary hearing a tape re­ 
cording of young Almaguer’s state­ 
ments taken at the hospital were ad­ 
mitted into evidence. The recording 
was witnessed by Judge Hildreth. In 
the tape, Almaguer said that he ran 
into the restroom of the White Garage, 
13216 Filth Ave., trying to get away 
from the three suspects. He said he 
saw gasoline come from underneath 
the door and it ignited. Almaguer, on 
the tape, said his clothes caught fire 
and he heard someone kicking on the 
door. He said he began yelling for help 
and that Ruiz kicked the door open. 
A Chino fireman at the scene of the 
fire on Oct. 26 said that the defendants 
had made statements about the fire. 
The statements from the defendants 
given to the Chino firemen were not 
admitted into evidence. Wolfe said af­ 
ter the hearing Monday that without 
the fireman’s statements there might 
not be enough evidence to put the 
three defendants at the service station 
before the fire. Wolfe said that his of­ 
fice intended to refile the charges 
against the trio. 
Now that the youth has died the 
charges, could be amended to read 
murder. 


As well as John Connaily 
Panel will ask Rebozo to testify 


At least 5 dead as tornadoes hit Kansas, Oklahoma 


Court knocks down Reagan 
welfare reorganization 


SACRAMENTO (UP1) - Gov. Ro­ 
nald Reagan’s proposed reorganization 
of welfare for the elderly, blind and 
disabled has been scuttled by a court 
whose ruling could increase taxpayer 
costs by $324 million a year. 
In a sweeping decision, the 3rd Dis­ 
trict Court of Appeal said the plan to 
implement grant increases without leg­ 
islative approval was illegal and also 
violated a 1945 state law requiring min­ 
imum levels of state financial support 
for adult recipients. 
State 
officials 
announced 
Monday 
they would seek a rehearing of the 
case. A spokesman for Reagan ex­ 
pressed “confidence” the issue would 
be appealed to 
the 
state 
Supreme 
Court. 
As they have throughout the pro­ 
longed 
controversy, 
Reagan 
adniin- 


istration officials sought to assure 500,- 
000 aged, blind and crippled recipients 
that 
their 
January' 
benefit 
checks 
would not be cut back. 
In a oreliminary estimate, the state 
Department of Social Welfare said the 
ruling would run about $300 million 
more a year in state welfare costs plus 
undetermined local costs. 
Legislative welfare sources figured it 
would mandate $268 million more a 
year in state and local costs above 
what Reagan’s plan would have tota­ 
led. The California Welfare Rights Or- 
o-m.i.zation figured the sum at $324 mil­ 
lion over current levels. 
In an opinion by Justice Bertram 
Janes, a Reagan appointee, the court 
held that effective Jan. 1, $130 a month 
in federal funds would be added to the 
state 
minimum 
support 
level 
per 


recipient —$320 for the disabled, $246 
for the elderly and $252 for the blind. 
Reagan had intended 
to 
increase 
giants for the elderly and disabled 
from a current average $212 a month 
to $221, and to $237 for the blind on 
Jan. 1, the day the federal government 
takes over administration of welfare 
for adult recipients. 
The court struck down the plan be­ 
cause the legislature had not given 
Reagan the authority to act to plug Cali­ 
fornia into the federal system. It also 
said the plan violated existing law re­ 
quiring minimum state contributions of 
$122 for the blind. $116 for the elderly 
and $100 average for the disabled. 
The lawsuit challenging the plan was 
filed by nine welfare rights and senior 
citizens organizations. 
State Controller Houston Flournoy, a 


Republican 
gubernatorial 
candidate 
and keeper of the state’s checkbooK, 
urged Reagan to forget further legal 
action and im m ediately call a special 
session of the legislature to head off 
what he called threatened “chaos.” 


But Democratic legislative leaders 


such as Assem blym an John Burton, 
D-San Francisco, were cool toward a 
special session. Burton said the court 
acted to “protect” welfare grants and 
the “need for legislative action is less 
urgent than otherwise would be the 
case.” 


On the last day of the 1973 session, 
the Senate by two votes killed a bi­ 
partisan welfare bill authored by Bur­ 
ton that would have increased grants 
of the aged and disabled to $230 and of 
the blind to $255. 


Both sides 
Sunday gas 


confident in 
Senate OKs crisis power 
auto talks 


TORNADO VICTIM 


An 
unidi'ntified 
Oklahoma 
highway patrolman carries in­ 
fant found laying beside a street 
in a .Moore, Okla., trailer park 


after tornado-like winds de­ 
molished 
dozens 
of 
mobile 
homes M onday. Two were re­ 
ported dead and 30-40 injured. 
About people 


Liddy is suspended 
by Supreme Court 


WASHINGTON (UP1) - Watergate 
conspirator G. Gordon Liddy was sus­ 
pended from practice before the Su­ 
preme Court Monday and given 4e 
days to show why he should not be dis­ 
barred. 
Liddy, who was admitted to the New 
York bar in 1957, was disbarred there 
earlier this year after disciplinary7 pro­ 
ceedings were brought by the Associa­ 
tion of the Bar ot the City of New 
York. 


Liz Taylor’s lost 
dog is returned 


Actor John Wayne, 
wife separate 


NEWPORT BEACH. Calif. (U P lI - 
John Wayne and his wife o! 19 years. 
Pilar, announced Monday they have 
separated. 
Mrs. Wayne, 37, who was born in 
Peru, was Wayne’s third wife. They 
had three children, aged 
17 
to 6. 
Wayne. 66. was previously married to 
Josephine Saenz, mother of his four 
grown children, and Esperanza Bauer. 
There are no immediate plans for a 
divorce, a family spokesman 'aid. No 
reason wax given for the separation, 
which was said to have surprLed most 
of their fnemls 


DEL MAR, Calif. (UP1) - Elizabeth 
Taylor got her little black and white 
dov. Daisy Mae, back Monday. 
The actress, who was released frem 
the Scripp> Clinic during the weekend 
after 
undergoing 
a 
physical 
exam­ 
ination, lost the dog at the beach Sun­ 
day. The dog, a rare Shih Tzu. was 
returned Monday to a fire station by a 
couple who asked not to be publicly 
identified. They turned down the $500 
reward oifered by Miss Taylor. 
A friend said Miss Taylor will un­ 
dergo more medical tests soon at the 
UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, 
but stressed, as did spokesmen 
for 
Miss Taylor several times last week, 
that the 41-year-old movie star is hot 
ill. 
“There i' 
nothing 
terribly 
wrong 
with Elizabeth, but she will take her 
record' from Scrinps for further Mudy 
and mors tests at UCLA,” the friend 
said. 


Mrs. W allace gives 
up cars for horses 


BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UP!) — The 
eneruv shortage has forced Cornelia 
Wallace, Alabama’s first lady, to give 
up race cars for horses. 
“ It’s an excellent wav to travel if 
you’re not in a hurry7,” Mrs. Wallace 
said Monda\ in a speet h to the local 
section of the National Council of Jew­ 
ish Women. Mrs, Wallac e, who has dri­ 
ven pace cars for >toek car rac^ and 
ridden in Phantom ietfighters. said she 
recenMv drove a harness team in r 
hor-^ show . 
TV* first ladv said if w o n v n are al­ 
lowed to fh wuth men on ‘-pace flights, 
the 
wives of 
the 
male 
j'tronmt' 
should g'*t the iob. 
“ One wom. n said she didn’t want 
her h"sband f'ying to the moon with a 
str*nve woman,” Mrs. Wallace said, 
“ and I can sym pathize with th a t.” 


Indira Gandhi marks 
her 56th birthday 


NEW DELHI (UPl) - Prime Min­ 
ister Indira Gandhi slipped aw«v Mon­ 
day to mark her 56th birthday private­ 
ly with members ol her family. 
Mrs. Gandhi told a women's meeting 
ai Lucknow Sunday, “ People in the 
age group of 50 to 80 need not cele­ 
brate their birthdays. It is the privi­ 
lege of the young and the very old.” 


DETROIT (UPl) — General Motors 
Corp. and the United Auto Workers 
Union 
today 
turned 
their 
attention 
ironi national to local issues, with both 
s i d e - 
expressing 
optimism 
about 
peacelul settlements at plants across 
the country. 
The shift in emphasis came after a 
tentative settlement Monday between 
the country’s biggest company and its 
second ’.argest union. 
The two sides reached agreement 
only 90 minutes hefore the start of a 
scheduled series of mini-strikes at 20 
s e l e c t e d GM targets across the 
country. 
It also wrapped up the auto industry 
negotiations until next Sept. 16. when a 
four-year national contract between the 
I AW and American Motors Corp. ex­ 
pires. AMC is the smallest of the “ Big 
Four” automakers. 
Details of the deal with General Mo­ 
tors were not disclosed. UAW Presi­ 
dent Leonard Woodcock said he would 
announce details 
next Tuesday but 
union and company said the pact pa­ 
ralleled earlier agreements with Chrys­ 
ler Corp. and Ford Motor Co. 
On the local level, only 31 of 147 
UAW locals have come to terms with 
GM. Woodcock, said the union could set 
strike deadlines if necessary to bring 
settlements at the plants. 


Worst day in 11 
years for W all St. 
NEW YORK (UPl) — Worries over 
the oil crisis gave Wall Street its worst 
day in 11 years Monday as a record 
n imber of stocks fell in price. 
The Dow Jones industrial average 
fell 2s.67 tf c:>2.0 \ It was the largest 
drop -ince Mav 28, 1962, when the av­ 
erage dropped 34.95 after President 
Kenned' s confrontation with the steel 
industry on pricing, and the fifth big­ 
gest decline since th 
DJIA was estab­ 
lished. 


WASHINGTON (IP!) - The Senate 
has voted President Nixon the sweep­ 
ing powers he requested to deal with 
the energy crisis, 
and the 
admin­ 
istration was reported considering a 
plan to ban Sunday gasoline sales. 
The Senate passed the e n e r g y 
emergency bill 78 to 6 Monday. If ap­ 
proved by the House it would allow Ni­ 
xon to ration gasoline and other fuels, 
limit energy use by business, relax 
clean air rules and curb oil exports. 
Meanwhile, a cabinet-level admin­ 
istration task force, was reported by 
The Washington Post to have recom­ 
mended to President Nixon Monday 
that he ban sale of gasoline from 9 
p.m. Saturdays until midnieht Sundays 
in order to discourage Sunday driving. 
The Post said the plan also called 
for a 10-gallon limit on gasoline sales 


Suit for $1 million 


per vehicle from midnight Fridays to 9 
p.m. Saturdays to make it harder to 
gas up ahead of time for a Sunday 
drive. The proposals were said to have 
been made by the Special Energy Ac­ 
tion Group, headed by Nixon’s energy 
adviser John A. Love. 
About 25 per cent of the nation’s 
gasoline consumption occurs on wee­ 
kends, according to the government. 
The Post quoted sources as saving 
Love would announce within 10 days a 
plan to allocate home heating oil to the 
nation’s 100,000 distributors. 
The Senate-nassed bill allows Nixon 
to order rationing of gasoline or any 
other fuel. He could ban export of any 
sca’r e fuel. He cfHkt erde'- certain oil 
wells to be allowed to flow faster than 
their rated efficient caoacitv. 
He could force power plants that can 


Case of devout mother of 7 
changing into sexpot begins 


SANTA ANA, Calif. (UPl) — Jury 
selection begins today in the $1 million 
damage suit by a woman who contends 
that she was changed from a “devout 
Catholic mother” into a promiscuous 
barroom 
pickup 
because 
she 
was 
trapoed in a sauna by a broken door 
handle. 
Attorney' for Maria Parsons, 47, of 
Anaheim, said they expect 
to call 
about 50 witnesses in the suit against 
the Holiday Health Spa. 
Mrs. Parsons maintains that because 
of her experience, trapoed in the sauna 
for an hour and a half, she became a 
sexually 
promiscuous 
woman, 
who 
prowls bars in miniskirts, picking up 
strangers and having sex with them. 
Superior Court Judge William Mur­ 


ray Monday ordered jury selection to 
begin today after attempts at an out of 
court settlement failed. 
Mrs. Parsons is represented by Mar­ 
vin Lewis, the lawyer who won a $50,- 
000 judgment in a similiar case, involv­ 
ing a San Francisco woman who said 
that a cable car crash increased her 
sexual appetite. 
Lewis 
said 
that before she 
was 
trapped in the sauna, Mrs. Parsons 
was “a devout catholic mother of se­ 
ven,” but that the incident caused her 
to develop separate personalities. 
One of the personalities is “Maria,” 
he said. She picks up strangers In 
bars. The other is “Betty," he said. 
She 
suffers 
remorse 
over 
Maria’s 
flings. 


switch from “clean” but scares fuels 
to “dirty” but plentiful ones to do so. 
He could ease up on clean-air re­ 
quirements. 
He could set a specific reduction of 
energy use by businesses. He could 
provide incentives for car pooling and 
use of mass transit. 
If the bill passes the House and Ni­ 
xon signs it, he would be required to 
outline a nationwide rationing and con­ 
servation plan able to cut energy use 
by 10 oer cent within 10 davs and at 
least 25 ner cent within a month. But 
he would not he renuired to i moose it. 
In other Washington energy devel­ 
opments Monday: 
—Love’s aide. Charles DiBona, told 
Congress’ Joint Economic Committee a 
natonwide ban on Sundav driving was 
among “very* real possibilities.” along 
with denial of fuel for private boats and 
airolanes, closing service stations and 
other businesses on Sundav. and clos­ 
ing public parks to automobiles. 
—Treasury 
Secretary 
George 
P. 
Shultz said his “instinct is against” ra­ 
tioning but “the problem is such that 
we will have to take some sharp and 
decisive action.” 
— T h e W h i t e 
House 
said 
its 
Christmas lighting will be sjjarely re­ 
duced. The Pentagon said its 10 assis­ 
tant secretaries of defense will give up 
their Chrvsler limousines 
for more 
economical cars. 
—Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz 
said it would be useless to cut off 
wheat sales to the Arab nations in re­ 
taliation for the oil bovcott. 
—Spokesmen for the transoortation 
industry7 said that despite the fuel 
shortage, Thanksgiving holiday trav­ 
elers 
should encounter “no special 
prob'em.” 
—Postmaster 
General 
Elmer 
T. 
Klassen told Congress the energy crisis 
crodd 
seriously 
disrupt 
delivery of 
Christmas mail. 


Lindsay aide held 
in marijuana case 


NEWTON, N.J. (UPl) - Tom Hoo­ 
ver, a former basketball player lor the 
New York Knickerbockers and cui- 
rentlv an aide to New York Mayor 
John V. l.indsay, was charged Monday 
with possession of what police said was 
$1.8 million worth of marijuana. 
The 6-foot-10 Hoover, 31, a center tor 
the Knicks from 1963 through 1965, was 
held in lieu of $100,(K)0 bail. The weed, 
1,590 pounds of it. was found in 70- 
pound burlap hags at a rented home in 
Vernon, N.J., Saturday. Hoover’s offi­ 
cial c ir was parked outside, officers 
siid. 


Spirit of America still there, 'explorers' find 


XT. LOUIS, Mo. (UPl) — Five young 
men 
retracing 
the 
3,800-mile 
trek 
which took Lewis and Clark acre-» 
America’s heartland said a: the end of 
their five-month journey Monday that 
Americans h ave not been bowed by the 
problems of their leaders in Washing­ 
ton, 


“They’re disgusted with Watergate, 
all right.” said Gary Kimxey of Inde- 
P ad, nee, Mo., “but the spirit is still 
there.” The five modern day “explo­ 
rer'“ left the Pacific Coast at Astoria, 
Ore., June 7 to re-enact the historic 
1803 journey in reverse. They were out 
of touch with the news for days and 
even weeks at a time. 


“We had been out for 14 days when I 
looked at a news magazine in Montana 
and saw something about Watergate,” 
said Mike Wein of Highland Park, 111. 
“ I asked somebody what it was, and 
he looked at me like I was a dummy.” 


“When we got to Sioux City,” added 
Mike Cochran, 29. 
Grand 
Junction, 
Colo., “we found out we didn’t have a 
vice president.” 


“That’s kind of ironic because that’s 
where Lewis and Clark asked a French 
trader about the state of politic' in the 
country,” Cochran said. 
But the five said they had the same 
optimism about the future of America 
that their earlier counterparts had af­ 


ter exploring the land and its natives. 
“From just reading about all the 
shocking events, you’d think America 
was about to fall apart,” Kimsey said. 
“ But we’ve met over 2,000 people— 
from bricklayers to housewives to gov­ 
ernors—and the attitude we’ve seen is 
one of optimism.” 
“People are very interested in histo­ 
ry,” Wein added, “in fact, they -were 
more interested in hearing about our 
journey than they were in relating to 
us the current events of the world.” 
The five paddled their kayak and two 
canoes through the Mississippi Monday 
to the levee below the Gateway Arch, 
where they were met b\ city officials, 
relatives and girl friends. 


Clay Asher oi Twin Falls, Idaho, at 
18 the youngest of the five, was pre­ 
sented with a bottle of champagne 
while Bob Miller of Albuquerque, N.M., 
was draped with a string of peppers by 
his mother. 


While the nearly five 
months 
in 
canoes resulted in cramped legs, the 
tan, lean explorers said the hardest 
part of their journey began in Lewis­ 
ton, Idaho, where they left the boats 
for a 435-mile hike through the Bitter­ 
root Mountains. 


They carried 65-pound packs loaded 
with freeze-dried foods and such neces­ 
sities as flour, sugar and peanut but­ 
ter. 
Edward not Wally s great love, biography reveals 


NEW YORK (UPl) — Kin;: EiJward 
VI11 was not Wallis Warfield Simp. on’s 
one great love, according to a new 


biography publish' d Monday. 


Ralph G. Martin, author oi “The 
Woman H<* Loved,” said the Duchess 


ot Windsor’s No. 1 passion was lelipe 
A. Espii, then the tirst secretary oi the 
Argentine Embassy in Washington. 


Martin 
said 
Eipil 
“had 
plumbed 
from within her the utmost potential ot 
her passion, and nobody else would get 
it again.. No one would ever do that to 
her again if she could help it, and she 
knew she* could. 


Excerpts from the book, based on in­ 
terviews with the Duchess and her 
friends and aS'Ociates in many parts of 
the 
world, 
were 
published 
in 
this 
m o n t h ’ s 
Ladies’ 
Home 
Journal. 
Martin s a i d Mrs. 
Simpson's chief 
hold on the then Prince oi Wales, in 
addition to showing interest in his work 
and bis comiorts, must have been se­ 


xual. He quotes a close friend, Lord 
Castlerosse: 
“She m ust have given him omething 
in bed that no other woman ever did. 
She must have made him feel more 
vital, 
more 
masculine, 
more 
satis­ 
fying.” 
This opinion was echoed by Lady 
Thelma i umess, one ot a number of 
older women with whom the Prince 
had atlairs beiore meeting Mrs. Sim­ 
pson. Martin ^aid Lady Furness told 
friends years later “th.a the Prince of 
Wales was a most unsatisfactory se­ 
xual partner” and described his prima­ 
ry problem as one of timing. 
“Walli' of course, had been married 
twice beiore,” the book said. “She had 
known many men, 
In her year in 
China, she had learned much about 
Chinese concepts of life and love. She 
knew what it was to be fulfilled.” 
The Duchess met Espil when she 
was separated from her first husband, 
Winfield Spencer, a Navy pilot who 
drank heavily and abused her. Martin 
FELIPE A. ESPIL 
DUCHESS OF WINDSOR 


said her great ambition was to marry 
the polished, dashing South American 
as soon as she could divorce Spencer 
but “Espil’s ambition did not include 
marriage with Wallis Warfield Sim­ 
pson,” 
“ He wanted to be the Argentine Am­ 
bassador to the United States and he 
would be,” he wrote. “ It would hardly 
help his career to marry a Protestant 
divorcee 
whose 
husband 
was 
still 
alive...One day he made it plain to 
Wallis: It was all o\er. Never had she 
been so crushed, so empty, so forlorn.” 
The Duchess, who had lived most of 
her young life on the bounty of wealthy 
relatives, tried a reconciliation with 
Spencer but finally divorced him in 
1927. Shortly after she married Ernest 
Simpson, whom she had met in New 
York with his wife, from whom he sub­ 
sequently was divorced. Mrs. Simpson 
said years later that she had liked 
Wallis, who was “much more clever 
than I.” 
The 
book 
pictures 
the 
Simpsons’ 


married life in London, where Simpson * 
was in business, as happy and upward- 
directed socially. 
After they became 
part of the Prince oi Wales’ circle, 
Simpson chose to iade into the back­ 
ground of his wife’s life as the Prince 
spent more and more time in their 
home. 
“ His withdrawal from their lives was 
the only option he felt he had,” the 
book said, “...talking about his person­ 
al dilemma with a close friend, Sim­ 
pson confided he felt as if he was liv­ 
ing in an armed truce, ‘as if I was 
meddling in English history’.” 


Martin said that when the Duchess 
was bore Bessie Wallis Warfield seven 
months after her parents’ marriage, 
her mother asked the doctor whether 
the baby was all right and he replied, 
“She’s perfect, in fact she’s fit for a 
king.” Martin said the Duchess first 
laid eyes on the Prince of Wales when 
he attended a ball at the Hotel del Coro­ 
nado in San Diego, Calif., where Spen­ 
cer was stationed, in 1920. 


L.V. open-space plan shrivels up 


Council heeds property owners 


TENNIS CHIMP — Bobby John 
may not be ready for tournament 
play, but the two-year-old chimp 
knows his way around a tennis court. 
He even can don a mean look to 


psyche out any opponent who dares 
to take him on. His owners are Mr. 
and Mrs. Frank Hichbom of Rock- 
ledge, Fla. 


Wounded 
man still 
‘critical’ 
POMONA — Ralph Peter 
Chloros, 34 who police said 
shot himself in the head after 
they 
stopped 
him 
Sunday 
night, remained in critical 
condition today in Pomona 
Valley Community Hospital. 
Chloros, 459 Valera St., and 
his wife, Cora Ann Chloros, 
were stopped in their car in 
the 1400 block of E. 
Holt 
Avenue by officers investigat­ 
ing an alleged kidnapping and 
r a p e i n c i d e n t in which 
Chloros 
had 
been 
named. 
They said he pulled out a .22- 
-caliber 
revolver 
and 
shot 
himself when ordered out of 
the car. 


Teacher council 
elects officers 
ONTARIO - The Certifi­ 
cated Employes Negotiating 
Council of the Chaffey School 
District has 
announced 
its 
newly elected officers for the 
1973-74 school year. 
They are 
Robert 
Haage, 
chairman; Sue Carlisle, vice 
chairman; 
Dave Davis, se­ 
cretary of research and fi­ 
nance; 
Paul 
Sage, 
corres­ 
p o n d i n g 
secretary; 
and 
Frances Townsell, recording 
secretary. 


School damage 
set at $50,000 


CUDAHY 
(UPI) 
- 
The 
p a r k 
Avenue 
Elementary 
School was closed Monday due 
to an estimated $50,000 dam­ 
age by vandals over the wee­ 
kend. 
Authorities said the vandals 
flooded 
the 
school’s 
main 
building, 
removed drawers, 
dumped papers and books on 
the floor and destroyed stu­ 
dent records. 


Takes tree's name 
First fire engine 
The pinon jay nests in the 
In 1830 the first fire engine 
pinon pine so exclusively that 
was purchased for Charlotte, 
it takes the same name. 
N.C., for $100. 


By BOB NAGEY 
P-B Staff Writer 
LA VERNE - Yielding to 
the pleas of property owners, 
the 
City 
Council 
Monday 
night crossed 220 acres of 
land 
designated 
for 
cpen 
space off its proposed general 
plan. 


The council return«! the 
proposal 
to 
the 
Planning 
Commission with instruction 
that the 
commission 
bring 
b a c k 
a 
recommendation 
changing the property back to 
its present land use designa­ 
tions. 
All but 80 acres of the par­ 
cels are outside the city but 
within the city’s sphere of in­ 
fluence. Those within the city 
include several 
parcels 
lo­ 
cated 
between 
Base 
Line 
Road and the proposed Foot­ 
hill Freeway and are gener­ 
ally zoned residential. 
Big parcels 
But the larger parcels are 
north and east of the city lim­ 
its. They include the 60 acres 
of property owned by D.J. 
W e b e r and Allen 
Oberly 
northwest of the intersection 
of Base Line and Emerald 
Avenue; the 40 acres of Paul 
De Winter at the northeast 
corner of 
Base 
Line 
and 
Wheeler Avenue; the 20-acre 
property of R.J. Arbuthnot at 


the northeast comer of Base 


^ , 1«. 
........... 
W i. v l 
I 
) 
a Lies owned by the Church of 
Jesus Christ of 
Latter-day 
SaifrtS at tne northeast corner 
ol Base Line and Wheeler. 
The proposed general plan 
had placed ail oi those par­ 
cels into an agricultural zone 
and would have designated 
them lor open space to pre­ 
serve green areas around the 
city. 


But the owners, mostly cit­ 
rus growers, objected, con­ 
tending that they could no 
longer farm their land proii- 
taoiy and were being forced 
to sell to suodividers because 
of high taxes. 


The present designation of 
the land under county juris­ 
diction is primarily residen- 
tiai-agricultural, with a lot of 
flexibility. 
Councilman Frank Johnson 
said he “could not support 
t a k i n g anybody’s property 
ana depriving him of making 
a living.” 
Toe costly tc buy 
“If we need open space, we 
should buy it,” Mayor Mike 
Morales 
agreed. 
“ But 
we 
don’t have $2 million.” 
Councilman Jack Russi said 
the only way the city could 


?,’V ' V * * * *v — 
rs 
through a bond issue. Referr- 


ing to the recent parks and 
recreation 
bond 
proposal 
which failed, and which did 
not include any open space, 
he added: 


“We did not even give the 
community a chance to de­ 
cide whether this is where 
they wanted to put their mo­ 
ney. I don’t feel it would have 
weakened the (bond) issue at 
all.” 


And Councilman Dan Lopez 
said it wasn’t fair to tell the 
property owners 
that they 
couldn’t use their land, after 
they had held on to the land 
ior years for possible future 
development. 
Open parcel survives 
The only open space land 
the council saved was a 30- 
acre p. tee at tne nortnem end 
of the city. The land is owned 
by the J & J Ranch, which 
operates a stable there, and 
was offered for open space in 
exchange for the approval of 
a 
residential 
development. 
The open space area would 
become part of the stables. 
The council, on another de­ 
cision involving the general 
plan north of Foothill Boule­ 
vard, turned down a request 
by developer Clyde Warren 
by a 3-2 vote to allow the con­ 
struction of a planned unit de­ 
velopment on the northwest 


corner of Wheeler and Base 
Line. 
Warren wanted to build a 
residential area with 8 units 
to the acre. The council ac­ 
cepted the recommendation of 
the Planning Ccmmissicn, re­ 
quiring 
Rl-10,000 
lots with 


three homes to the acre. 
Dissenting from the major­ 
ity were Johnson and Lopez. 
The council then approved 
a policy that would generally 
call for similar density every­ 
where above Base Line Road. 


Homeowners: 
if there’s anything ndvertised in 
toduy's paper you’d like to own, 
remember who con help 
you buy it 


o 


You may convert the built-up equity in your house into 
cash in your hands. Cash to do whatever you want to do, 
and pay back conveniently over a period of years. 


HOMEOWNER LOANS TO $25,000. 
Loans over $5,000 on a combination 
of Real Estate and Personal Property. 
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Judicated June 15. 1845. De- 
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Progress-Bulletin, Pom ona, California, Tuesday, N ovem ber 20, 1973 
/ 
# 


Paul L. Averell 
POMONA — Paul L. Ave­ 
rell of 1401 W. Ninth St. died 
Sunday evening in a local 
convalescent hospital follow­ 
ing a short illness. 
Mr. Averell was bom in Co- 
operstown, N.Y. on Sept. 14, 
1904, and moved to Pomona 
from New York in 1911. He 
had worked at Loud Machine 
Shop for 33 years before re­ 
tiring in 1970. 
Mr. Averell is survived by 
h is w i d o w , Florence; a 
daughter, Mrs. Joan Biewener 
of Pomona; and three grand­ 
children, Craig. Scott and Ka­ 
ren Biewener, all of Pomona. 
Funeral services will be 
held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. 
in Todd Memorial Chapel Po­ 
mona. The 
Rev. 
Paul 
B. 
Ryan of the First Baptist 
Church will officiate. Entomb­ 
ment will be made in Pomona 
Mausoleum. 


Cissy K. Zektzer 
POMONA -M rs. Cissy K. 
Zektzer of 729 E. Fourth St. 
died 
Saturday 
at 
Pomona 
Valley Community 
Hospital 
after a long period of failing 
health. 
Mrs. Zektzer was bom Nov. 
22, 1909, in London, England. 
She came to California from 
Detroit in 1949. and moved to 
Pomona from Covina about 
1970. 
Mrs. Zektzer is survived by 
a son, Andrew, Tampa, Fla.; 
and four sisters, Mrs. Joseph 
H. 
Zektzer, 
Tampa, 
Fla., 
Mrs. Hattie Slate, Toronto, 
Canada, Mrs. Ann Somers, 
Ottawa, Canada, and Mrs. 
Lillian Rouff, Miami, Fla. 
Services will be held Wed­ 
nesday at 4:30 p.m. at lodd 
Memorial 
Chapel 
Pomona. 
Private committal will 
be 
made. 


Alfred E. Carlson 
POMONA —Alfred E. Car­ 
lson of 397 S. Towne Ave. 
died Sunday at Pomona Val­ 
ley Community Hospital as 
the result of a traffic acci­ 
dent. 
Mr. Carlson was bom in 11- 
lnois Dec. 26, 1916. He came 
to the Pomona Valley in 1955. 
He is survived by two sons, 
Daniel and Jerry, both of Po­ 
mona; a daughter, Mrs. San­ 
dra Sailius of Camarillo, and 
seven grandchildren. 
Rosary will be recited at 
Blackman Mortuary Chapel , 
at 
7:30 
p.m. 
Wednesday. 
Mass of the Resurrection will 
be celebrated at St. Joseph 
Catholic Church at 9 a.m. Fri­ 
day. Burial will be in Holy 
Cross Cemetery. 


Hillsides 'don't belong to people/ 
says property owner in plan protest 


" 
. 
. 
1 
J o i. s ln n in n 
r»TV\ru%rt\r 
cfvnlW Lfl’t tn lfA n lflC P t h e r e . ” 
By LENORE WALLACE 
P-B Staff Writer 
SAN DIMAS — A property 
owner told planning 
com­ 
missioners Monday night that 
he doesn’t feel hillsides belong 
to the public as outlined in 
the general plan. 
“Hillsides belong to their 
owners,” Ed Hartman said 
during a 5J/2 hour general plan 
session. 
Hartman, a local resident 
and civil engineer, objected to 
a portion of the conservation 


element of the general plan 
that declares Way Hill as a 
conservation area with a den­ 
sity of one to four units per 
acre. 
He also objected to Way 
Hill being slated as a focal 
point of the community and of 
plans to landscape around the 
two huge water tanks that are 
at the top of the hill. 
Hartman, who said he owns 
the east end of Way Hill, said 
the 
conservation 
measures 
would just be another burden 


on developing the property. 
Marshall Linn, consultant 
from Lampmann and Asso­ 
ciates, who prepared the gen­ 
eral plan for the city, said 
nothing is “written” in the 
general plan that states that 
hillsides belong to the people 
but he said this was stated in 
his oral presentation and is 
his own personal feeling. 
“The city should take steps 
to preserve the natural envi­ 
ronment, but I didn’t mean to 
i m p l y t h a t development 


shouldn’t take place there.’ 
H e 
said 
positive 
steps 
should be taken to preserve 
the land form of hillsides and 
that landscaping the water 
tanks would not be detrimen­ 
tal in any way if done prop­ 
erly. 
Planning 
commissioners 
Monday approved the con­ 
servation and housing ele­ 
ments of the general plan and 
began testimony on the land 
use element. Commissioners 
hope to wrap up hearings on 


Recreation 


review slated 


SAN DIMAS — Members 
the Parks and 
RecreatioJ 
Commission will review till 
recreation element in the ger 
eral plan at its meeting t< 
night at 7 at city hall. 


The recreation element w; 
approved last week by 
Planning 
Commission 
an! 
will be before the City Cour 
cil for its consideration if 
early December. 


the plan tonight. No meetin 
is 
cheduled for Wednesda; 
night. 


Miss Inez Reade 
POMONA — Miss Inez E. 
Reade of Mt. San Antonio 
Gardens died Monday morn­ 
ing at the retirement commu­ 
nity’s medical unit. 
Miss Reade was bom on 
Sept. 1, 1880, in Jonesville. 
N. Y. She was a teacher in 
New York City for many 
years. Miss Reade moved to 
Mt. 
San 
Antonio 
Gardens 
from Pasadena in 1963. She 
was a member of the United 
C h u r c h 
of 
Christ, 
Con­ 
gregational, Claremont. 
Survivors include a half-sis­ 
ter. Mrs. Carrie Clute of Flo­ 
rida; and two nieces, Mrs. 
Dan Healy of Victor, N.Y., 
and Mrs. John E. Sewell of 
Latham, N. Y. 
Funeral services will be 
held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in 
Oak Park Cemetery', Clare­ 
mont, with Dr. Jess F. Perrin 
of Claremont officiating. Todd 
Memorial Chapel Pomona is 
in charge of arrangements. 
Friends may make memo- 
r i a 1 
contributions to 
the 
Lodge of the Mt. San Antonio 
Gardens, 
900 
E. 
Harrison 
Ave., Pomona, 91767. 


Religious figures 


There is no central figure in 
Hinduism occupying a place 
comparable to that of Jesus 
tn Christianity or Guatama 
Buddha in Buddhism. 


Mrs. Leigh Wargin 
C L A R E M O N T - Mrs. 
Leigh Lord Wargin of 750 W. 
San Jose Ave. died Saturday 
at a Los Angeles hospital af­ 
ter a long illness. 
Mrs. Wargin was born Aug. 
1, 1925, at Toronto, Canada. 
She moved to Glendale in 
1951, and lived in Upland be­ 
fore moving to Claremont in 
1967. She was a member of 
t h e 
Church 
of 
Religious 
Science, Claremont and of the 
Claremont League of Women 
Voters. 
She is survived by a son, 
James B., Claremont, and a 
brother, Bernard Lord, Down­ 
ers Grove, 111. 
Private services were held 
with Todd Memorial Chapel 
Pomona in charge of arrange­ 
ments. 


Minister will 
address Rotary 
CHINO — The Rev. Aaron 
Plueger of St. Stephen Luth­ 
eran Church will sneak on the 
topic “New fashioned Thanks­ 
giving” at the 12:15 p.m. 
meeting Wednesday of the 
Chino Rotary Club in the 
Community Building. 
Pastor Pluegar served a 
pastorate in Oakland before 
coming to the Chino church. 
Ordained in August 1953, he 
has also served churches in 
Yucaipa, Banning and Albu­ 
querque, N.M 


Donrey Media 


Group buys 
Vallejo paper 


VALLEJO, Calif. (UPI) 
Gibson 
Publications, 
publi­ 
sher of the Vallejo Times-He- 
rald and News-Chronicle, said 
today it has agreed to an as­ 
sociation and joint venture 
w i t h 
the 
Donrey 
Media 
Group. 
T h e announcement was 
made jointly by Sen. Luther 
E. Gibson, publisher and own­ 
er of the Vallejo newspapers, 
and Donald Reynolds, presi­ 
dent of the Donrey group, of 
Ft. Smith. Ark. 
Gibson will remain as publi­ 
sher of the papers and will di­ 
rect their editorial policies. 
The newspapers will draw on 
Donrev’s staff facilities for 
asrictanco in othe~ areas. Gib­ 
son, who is 79, founded the 
Vallejo Morning Herald in 
1922, and liter combined that 
paper and four others into 
Vallejo’s present Times-Her- 
als and News-Chronicle with 
a circulation of 28,939. He 
served five terms as a state 
senator in the California leg­ 
islature. 
D o n r e y owns 46 news- 
paoers, radio and television 
stations and outdoor advertis­ 
ing companies in 10 states. 


PUBLIC NOTICE 
BLACKMAN'S MORTUARY 


ALFRED (AL) CARLSON 
Chanel Rosary Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. 
Mass St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, 
Friday, 9:00 a.m. 


10/0 W . fu s io n , Porrortci. Ph. 


875 NORTH TOWNE AVENUE 


P O M O N A , C A L IF O R N IA 91767 


N A T IO N A L . 2-1361 


NOTICE OF T R U STE E ’S SALE 
Loan No. 100-41 hi*12450« 
File No. 11223 
Gaither, Diane L. 
On 
W ed n esd ay 
D ecem b er 
19, 
1973, at 
11:00 A .M .. 
R e a lty 
In 
co rp o ra ted 
a s 
d u ly 
ap p oin ted 
T ru stee 
under 
and 
p u rsu an t 
to 
D eed of T rust reco rd ed F eb ru a ry 
IS. 1972, as in str. N o. 1180, In b ook 
17427, 
p age 741, of O fficial 
Re- 
cord s in the o ffic e of th e C oun ty 
R ecord er of L os Angel* s C oun ty, 
S tate of C a liforn ia, 
w ill 
sell 
at 
p ub lic 
a u ction to h igh est bidder 
for ca sh (p a y a b le at tim e of sale 
in 
law fu l 
m on ey 
of th e 
U n ited 
S ta tes) on th e p u b lic »ld ew alk in 
front of the e n tra n ce to th e build ­ 
ing at 32-3 W est S ixth S treet, Los 
A n g ela s, C a liforn ia, all rig h t. U tle 
and inter* st c o n v ey e d to and nov. 


Todd 
em oria ( Chapel 


Todd and Smith, inc. 
FUNERAL DIRECTORS SINCE 1907 


PAUL L. AVERELL 
Services Pomona Chapel Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. 


MISS BERTHA P. ELLIOTT 
Services Pomona Chapel Wednesday. 11:00 a.m. 


EDWARD F. NACKER 
Arrangemenis Pending 


ELMER CHRIS RAUZ1 
Arrangements Pending 


h. id 
by it 
under 
satd 
D eed 
of 
T ru st in th e p rop erty situ a ted in 
-ciid C ounty an d S tate d escrib e d 
Lot 4, T ract 17811, In th e C ity of 
P o m on a, C ounty of L os A n g e les, 
| 
S tate of C aliforn ia, a> p er m ap 
record ed in Book 490 P a g e s 19 
to 22 in clu siv e of M aps, In th e 
¡ 
o ffic e of the C ounty R ecord er of 
said C ounty. 
T h e 
street 
a d d r ess 
and 
oth er 
co m m o n d esig n a tio n , if a n y , of the 
re a l p rop erty d escrib ed a b o v e is 
purported to b e: 1864 So. H am ilton 
B lv d ., P om on a, C aliforn ia. 
T h e 
u nd ersign ed 
T ru stee 
d is­ 
cla im s any lia b ility ior an y in cor- 
r o c tn ts s of th e street a d d r ess and 
nth* r com m on d esig n a tio n , if a n y , 
show n h erein . 
, 
... 
s,d d sa le w ill be m ad e, but w ith ­ 
out 
coven an t 
o r 
w a rran ty, 
ex- 
pi 
or im p lied , regard in g title , 
p os-esM on , or 
en cu m b ra n ces, 
to 
pay th e rem a in in g p rin cip al sum 
or 
th e 
n otei ->) 
secu red 
b y 
said 
De< d o f T ru st, to-w lt: $15,500.00, 
w ith in terest th ereo n , a s p rovid ed 
In said n o t é i s ) , a d v a n c es, if an y. 
I u nd er the term * of said D eed of 
T ru st, fe e s, c h a r g e s and ex p e n se s 
! of the T ru stee and of th e tru sts 
c rea ted by said D eed of T ru st. 
I he b en efic ia ry under said D eed 
! of T rust h ere to iu re ex e cu te d and 
I d- llvered to th e u n d ersign ed w rlt- 
; u-n D ecla ra tio n of D efault an d D e­ 
m and tor S ale, and a w ritten N o­ 
tic e of D efau lt 
and 
E lectio n 
to 
Sell 
T h e u nd ersign ed ca u sed said 
: N otice of D efau lt and E lection to 
11 to be record ed in th e cou n ty 
prop erty is lo ca ted . 
D ate: N o v em b er 13, 1973. 
w h ere the real 


R ea lty In corp orated 
a s sa id T ru stee 
B y: J a m e s M . O rendorff 
S ecr eta ry 
A u th orised S ign atu re 
(SPS-3M 23) 
NV-88 P om on a P-B 
Pub 
N ov. 20, 27, D ec, 4, 1973 


MISS INEZ E. READE 
Services Oak Park Cemetery, Claremont 
Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. 


JOSEPH A. SELL 
Rosary Pomona Chapel Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. 
Requiem Mass Holy Name of Mary Catholic Church 
San Dimas, Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. 


MRS, LEIGH LORD WARGIN 
Private Services 


MISS KATHERINE GLISAN TIFFANY WILEY 
Arrangements Pending 


MRS. CISSY K. ZEKTZER 
Services Pomona Chapel Wednesday, 4:30 p.m. 


Limit one per custom*? 


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includes the Camera! 


NOTICE OF HEARING 
OF PETITION FOR 
PROBATE o f w i l l 
AND FOR LI TT 1 RS 
1 1 SI AMI NT AH Y 
N o. LA P-10385 
In 
th e 
S u p erior C ourt 
of 
the 
Stdte of C aliforn ia for th e C ounty 
of Los A n g eles. 
In the M atter of 
th e L -.tat* o f G E O R G E P . M A R ­ 
SH A L L , D e cea sed . 
N otice is h ereb y g iv e n »hat th e 
p etition o f E le n o r t 
R. 
M arshal! 
and S herw ood H 
H an sen for th e 
F r o b .tu of the W ill o f th e a b ove- 
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-u a n ce 
ot 
L etters 
T esta m en ta ry 
th ereon 
to 
th e 
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to 
w hich referen ce is h ere b y 
m ade 
for 
furth er 
p a rtic u la rs, 
w ill 
be 
h eard at 9 o d o c k A M ., on N o­ 
vem b er 30, 1973, at the cou rt room 
I of D ep artm en t ! AST MA *\ of th e 
Superior C ourt of the S tate of Cal- 
i ltnrnia for th e C oun ty Of L os Ang- 
, tie s , City of P om on a. 
I 
D ated N o vem b er T, 1973. 
( l a r e n c e L. CAB ELL, 
I 
C ounty C lerk and C ierk of 
th e S u p erior C ourt of the 
I 
S la te of C aliforn ia for th e 
C ountv o f Los A n geles 
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NICH O LS, S I B A D , 
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By R 
S. H ick son 
A ttorn eys for P etition er 
, 
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Member by Invitation NATIONAL SELECTED MORTICIANS, h— 
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,2( 16, 20, 1973. 


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Progress-Bulletin, Pomona, California, Tuesday, November 20, 1973______ A-5 


Chino planners table Leadership 


20 zone change bids 
Erma 


CHINO 
— The 
Planning 
Commission 
Monday 
night 
tabled 20 zone changes to 
bring the zoning map into 
conformance with the city’s 
general plan until all con­ 
cerned property owners’ ques­ 
tions have been answered. 
The commission agreed to 
the delay until the Dec. 3 
m e e t i n g at the 
recom­ 
mendation of Gale Carr, di­ 
rector of building, planning 
and community development. 
Carr reported that the issue 
had been discussed at the 
Nov. 5 meeting of the com­ 
mission. 
Although »cveral residents 
have 
met 
with 
him 
and 
cleared up all matters con­ 
cerning their particular prop­ 
erties, several others remain 
undecided 
about 
the 
zone 
changes. 
Owners of seven 
parcels 
still in question will arrange 
meetings with Carr in order 
to come up with a recom­ 
mendation 
for 
commission 
consideration. 
Carr pointed out in his writ­ 
ten 
report 
that 
the 
zone 
changes “were necessary' in 
order to be consistent with 
the state law requirements 
requiring 
that the 
general 
plan and zoning ordinance of 
the city be consistent.” 


The commission also ap­ 
proved a plan adding an open 
space and conservation area 
to the general plan. It was re­ 
ported that 13 of 16 cities in 
the county had already voiced 
support of such a plan. 
L a t e r 
the 
commission 
adopted a resolution “which 
considers the necessary prop­ 
erty assessment practices in 
order that the plan be prop­ 
erly implemented.” 
This resolution will be for­ 
warded to other cities for re­ 
view and adoption, said Carr. 
In other action, the com­ 
mission approved site devel­ 
opment plans for a medical 
ciinic to be located an the 
southwest section of the 7.8 
acres of the Chino General 
Hospital at Walnut Avenue 
and 10th Street. 
The clinic will be on the 
northwest corner of Jeiierson 
Avenue and 10th Street and 
will provide offices lor Dr. 
George W. Wilson and Dr. 
Donald L. Morris who are 
both responsible for the oper­ 
ation of the hospital’s emer­ 
gency facilities on a 24-hour, 
365-day per year basis. 
Other doctors will also relo­ 
cate offices in the building at 
a later date. 
Architectural 
and irrigation plans are yet to 
be submitted. 


Extended bus route 


proposed for Upland 


By PATRICK SPENCER 
P-B Staff Writer 
UPLAND — An extended 
bus route has been proposed 
by a citizens committee. 
John Meyer, chairman of 
the Mayor’s Transportation 
Committee, who presented the 
new plan at Monday night’s 
council meeting, said the new 
route could provide service to 
up to 2,000 senior citizens who 
are not now adequately serv­ 
ed by the line. 
Tbe council accepted the 
proposed route and instructed 
City Manager Elwin Alder to 
enter into negotiations with 
the Southern California Rapid 
Transit District to implement 
the changes. 
The new route utilizes the 
present route to a large de­ 
gree. but shifts the northern 
run from Seventh Street east 
to Sultana Avenue. The bus 
continues along the old route 
to the San Antonio Commu­ 
nity Hospital area. 
Instead of returning directly 
from the hospital area along 
the old route, the bus will 
travel west on Arrow High­ 
way to Second Avenue, turn 
north to Foothill Boulevard 
and travel east to Campus 
Avenue. The bus will travel 
north on Campus 
to 
13th 
Street where it 
will 
turn 
around and retrace its route 
back through the city to On­ 
tario. 
Alder noted that the new 
route would undoubtedly in- 


Chaffey board 
and employes 
okay mediator 


O N T A R I O 
- 
Repre­ 
sentatives 
of 
the 
Chaffey 
school board and the Certifi­ 
cated Employes Negotiating 
Council will meet next Tues­ 
day with a mediator provided 
by 
the 
State 
Conciliation 
Service in hopes of resolving 
the impasse between the two 
sides over the establishment 
of a grievance procedure pol­ 
icy. 
The board unanimously ap­ 
proved the action 
Monday 
night, and, in doing so, de 
layed adoption of a procedure 
for the third time since July. 
The meeting will be held in 
closed session. 
The main point of con 
tention between the board and 
the CENC is over “third par­ 
ty review.” The board wants 
the 
final 
decision 
in 
the 
procedure to rest with a third 
party from within the district, 
while the CENC is asking that 
it be left up to a party from 
outside the district. 
In other business, the board 
commended the district staff 
for its financial contribution 
to the West End United Way 
campaign. District employes 
donated $8,943, which is al­ 
most $2,700 more than was 
contributed last year. 


crease the mileage traveled 
in Upland and thereby in­ 
crease the city’s share of the 
cost to possibly 50 per cent. 
'The city currently shares part 
of the funding of the line on 
45 per cent-50 per cent ratio 
with Ontario. 
Alder said he thought the 
increase in the cost would be 
worthwhile if the new route 
resulted In more use of the 
bus by residents. 
The revised route was de­ 
veloped by the transportation 
committee after the council 
took action to renew the bus 
s e r v i c e for another six 
months on Nov. 6. 
In other action, the council 
decided to delay lighting the 
city’s Christmas trees 
and 
other decorations an addition­ 
al week. The holiday trees 
and decorations will be lit 
from dark until 10 p.m. begin­ 
ning Dec. 8. 
To help conserve fuel and 
electricity, the council also 
decided to hold ail city ve­ 
hicles — except emergency 
vehicles — to a 50-miles per 
hour speed limit, curtail or 
eliminate entirely the flood­ 
lighting of public buildings 
and 
turn 
air 
conditioning 
thermostats down to a min­ 
imum of 68 degrees. 


asked in 
energy crisis 


By ED PRATHER 
P-B Staff Writer 
MONTCLAIR - The Mon­ 
tclair City Council turned to 
local congressmen for leader­ 
ship in dealing with the ener­ 
gy crisis Monday night, ask­ 
ing that guidelines be estab­ 
lished for conserving energy. 
A motion to send a letter to 
area congressmen asking for 
the guidelines was approved 
by the council at the sug'ies- 
t i o n of Councilman Tom 
McClure. 
“We’re acting like a bunch 
of chickens in a barnyard,” 
said McClure, citing the “to­ 
tal inconsistency” that has 
thus far characterized efforts 
to conserve fuels, in Southern 
California. 
On 
the 
one 
hand, 
said 
McClure, cities are consid­ 
ering cutting back on street 
lighting and residents are ur- 
"ed to curtail Christmas light­ 
ing, but in the meantime, 
large department stores have 
scores 
of 
color 
televisions 
operating hour after hour. 
“I don’t think people at our 
level can do much about it,” 
said McClure. 
Mayor Harold Hayes coun­ 
tered, however, that the city 
must do its “Own housekeep­ 
ing” with regard to the ener­ 
gy crisis. 
A staff report on possible 
energy saving steps is ex­ 
pected at the next council 
meeting on Dec. 3. 
In other business, the coun­ 
cil: 
— Called upon the State De­ 
partment of Aeronautics to 
hold a public hearing in the 
West End area on the future 
of Ontario International Air­ 
port. Hayes said the hearing 
should be held so residents 
can give their views on run­ 
way extensions at OLA and 
— Gave first reading ap­ 
proval to a zone change from 
R1 (single family residential) 
to R3 (multiple family resi­ 
dential) for 6.15 acres on the 
north side of San Jose Street 
at the Santonio Flood Control 
C h a n n e l . A 48-unit con­ 
dominium project is planned 
for the site. The project itself, 
however, has not been ap- 
oroved by the council. It will 
be considered at the next 
meeting. 
— Approved a resolution of 
condemnation for the 2.6 acre 
site west of Montclair High 
School where the city intends 
to build parking facilities for 
the proposed football stadium 
on the school campus. Cost of 
the site has still not been offi­ 
cially 
established, 
although 
City 
Administrator 
Lauren 
Wasserman has estimated a 
price tag of about $37,000. 
— Set for public hearing at 
the next council meeting an 
ordinance that would require 
oarages rather than carports 
on all future R3 zone projects. 


The most intriguing figure to come across my television 
screen in a long time has to be Euell Gibbon*. 
He’s the naturalist food expert who cooks and eats bushes 
and berries that I've dismissed as no more than something our 
dog favors on a potty break. 
Somehow it fascinates me ro end that while I’m breaking 
my back over a hot stove, Euell is out in a field somewhere 
grazing over a leisure y lunch. 
In a story the other day I read where at. the age of five, he 
pounded together hickory nuts and sweet blackberries to make 
a wild candy bar, and since then h;is gone on to cooking sour 
grass, unborn buds of dandelions, pigweed and cattails. 
My children at the age of five were eating normal things 
like car keys, library paste, pencils, plastic ducks, soap, goldf­ 
ish, mud and yellow snow. Ask them to eat a vegetable and 
they squint their eyes and ask. “Your t r ing to kill me?” 
To be perfectly honest, I'm probably responsible for this 
attitude as I’ve never been sure cucumbers were meant to be 
taken internally by humans and that if the Good Lord had 


meant for us to eat spinach, he would have put/ a space be­ 
tween each tooth. 
If Euell is to convert the world to nature’s foods that come 
out of the ground, he has my sympahties. He faces a world of 
prejudice again-t vegetation that began when we were born. 
Have you ever wondered what went through a child's mind 
when you heaped a mound of cold, green, strained peas on a 
spoon, shoved it into the child’s mouth, hurriedly pinched his 
nose so he would have to swallow and then smile, “ It’s good for 
you.” 
Or set a trough of greens in front of a hungry clubwoman 
and justifying it by saying, “It isn't fattening." (It >t isn'T fatten­ 
ing, why eat it?) 
Or eating a watermelon and have your mother want. “ You 
swallow the seeds and you knew what will happen.” (1 was 28 
years old before I realized watermellons weren't born live from 
unwed mothers.) 
I'm trying to keep an open mind about the feast nature 
provides. It would be nice to stamp out crab grass and get rid 
of your dinner obligations all in the same night. Or nibble at a 
Chinese eim and not be hungry two hours later. But 1 keep 
thinking about Adam and Eve. 
Maybe it’s no nice to fool with Mother Nature. 


Baldness hereditary 


Inheritance 
is 
the 
most 
common cause of baldness 
and it 
affects males more 
t h a n 
females. The exact 
causes of baldness 
ire not 
known. 


K 
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SURPLUS INC. S 


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SPECIAL 
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A tiny little device that will enable you to 
hear your radio and TV at normal volume. 
Pay only 29c when you receive it. SEND N O 
M O NEY OR STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON. 
Write to: Progress-Bulletin, Box 8669, 3rd 
and Thomas, Pomona 


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FOR THE HARD OF HEARING ONLY 


SUNDAY, 


NOVEMBER 25 


HEAR 


BARRY WOOD 


11 A.M. and 6 P.M. 


Services Nightly 


7:00 P.M. 


Monday, Novombtr 26; Tuesday, November 27; 
and W ednesday, November 28 


EVANGELIST BARRY WOOD 


Former Fort Worth, Texas, Evangelist 
-A Former Pastor of the First Baptist Church of Beverly 
Hills. A ministry dealing with Jews, single young 
adults and the “street people." 
^ “ Pastor of the Sunset Strip” because of his ministry 
with the “ street people.” 


■jf Presently serving on the staff of First Baptist Church 
of Van Nuys and the Van Nuys Christian College. 


BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH OF MONTCLAIR 
Benito and Monte Vista 


Ample parking — »pacial music nightly — nursery prevtdad 


miller’s 
outpost 
for ^233 
MAKE MILLER'S YOUR 
HEADQUARTERS 


USE OUR 
CONVENIENT 
CHRISTMAS 
LAY-A-WAY » 


r 


Levi's*4, for gals. New 
fashion arrivals "The 
Classy Classic". New 
version of the traditional 
bottle jacket. With 
matching pant in two 
styles. Your choice of 
cuffed or non-cuffed pants 


I \ 


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r 
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looking for jeans 
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DENIM BELLS 
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W e got 'em — LEVI'S 
Denim Bells. Tough 
pre-shrunk denim — 
lean LEVI'S fit — bell 
bottoms just the way 
you like 'em. Stock 
up on a pair or two 
today. 


Miller's O utpost has it, 
assorted g reat looVing 
a n d 
g r e a t 
f e e lin g 
slacks for the fashion - 
m inded man in a varie­ 
ty of plaids team ed 
with m any coordm at 
ing shirts an d vests. 
G e t y o u rs n o w a t 
Miller’s O utpost 


\san 
"Panatela; 


V) 


STORE HOURS 
DAILY 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. 
SAT. 9 A.M. to 8 P.M. 
SUN. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. 


WEST COVINA OPENING SOON! 


lumwuiuto 
UPLAND 
t t h A M ountain 
3 Blkt No. ef 
S a n Dernai 
Prwy 


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13030 Valley Blvd 
A t S Points 


POMONA 


4 1 6 1 Holt 
4 Blks la s t 
•f G arey 
Levis 


J E - * — 


A-6 
Progress-Bulletin, Pomona, California, Tuesday, Novembor 20, 1973 


N O R T H C O U N T R Y a„d 


■- 
■ 


i MAN Oft 
BEAST? 
»«I 0«»imw**ry 
^ 
Report on 
, Amanca* MysMroui' 
Mops»* 
£ 
ORE AT FAMILY ENTERTAIN««: NT! 
Ao *xciBng s 
i 
*1 Aits*» v 
a> 
apactacular w*Jerne» . 


advertised on TV 
f in a l d a y 
FAM ILY 
TWIN—San 
Btrnardino—862-1350 
Nor**' Rialto Twin II S. Bern. 874*1844 
Special limited cngagtment No passes accepted. 


ProiM d if t American National Entirprisas lac. 


CHICKEN SNACK DAY 
is WEDNESDAY 


• 2 urte pi#c«» o* breasted 
chicken (while or cork m i l) 
• Fresh E a*ed F o'.vc 
• 
French P'ies 
• Cho c» ot Cole Siar c- 
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O P E N D A IL Y 


11 am • M id nit*, fri.— Saf. til 1 am 


O'REILLY'S 


1051 W . HOLT BLVD. at Mountain 


ONTARIO 
984-4720 


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1? A 
l l PLATTER 0F¿ - 
J A 
I 
A 
\yfry 
sp ag h etti & 
A 
w 
t 


JAMES FAHRINGER 


Travel film 
scheduled 
at Garrison 


CLAREMONT - The film 
series of the Mt. Baldy Coun­ 
cil of the Pomona College 
Women’s Campus Club will 
present “ Scandinavian Med­ 
ley” in Garrison Theater of 
the Claremont Colleges at 2 
and 8 p.m. Friday. 
T h e 
American 
Cancer 
Society film festival was held 
in Garrison last Friday. 
“ Scandinavian Medley” will 
be narrated by Hjordis Parker. 


Music prof 


plans two 


programs 


James Fahringer, assistant 
professor of music at La 
Verne College, will conduct 
the Claremont Symphony Or­ 
chestra in a concert in Clare­ 
mont and give a song recital 
in La Verne next. week. 
The 
concert will 
be 
in 
Bridges Hall of Music, Po­ 
mona College, at 4 p.m. Sun­ 
day. The faculty recital will 
be held in the auditorium of 
Founders Hall, La Verne Col­ 
lege. at 8 p.m. Nov. 30. Ad­ 
mission to both programs is 
free. 
Fahringer has been soloist 
with the Roger Wagner Cho­ 
rale, the Los Angeles Opera 
Company, and other groups. 
He is assistant director of the 
Claremont Symphony and was 
recently named resident con­ 
ductor for the 1973-74 season. 
Music director George Denes 
is on a year’s leave of ab­ 
sence. 
Arend Koole will be piano 
soloist at the orchestra con­ 
cert. Harry Reifsnyder of the 
Pomona College music facul­ 
ty will be accompanist for the 
rectial. Fahringer will sing 
works by 
Purcell, 
Mozart, 
Faure. Brahms and Martinu. 


PVCCA to p re se n t O Îtogtws-Bulktin 
C ^ n t e r t a in m e n t 
mezzo-soprano 


ONTARIO - A vocal recit­ 
al by Marvelle Cariaga will 
open the 1973-74 season of the 
Pomona Vallsy Community 
Concert Association series in 
Spring Auditorium, Chaifey 
High School, at 8 p.m. Mon­ 
day. 
The young mezzo-soprano 
won attention last year when 
she sang the title role in 
Medea as a last hour replace­ 
ment for Irene Dalis in a per­ 
formance by the San Diego 
Opera Company. 


attractions this season, may 
contact Mrs. Stuart J. Brock­ 
way, secretary of the Pomona 
Valley 
Community 
Concert 
Association, 986-5789. 


f-PANABA 


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MEAT SAUCE 
(D(m In onty) 
Reviews of movies 


"N m t to J ay' s 
Auto U Ptiotstory" 


U S O I. Holt. Potnofto 
Chanele s 
FINE ITALIAN 
r 
v 
»mona 
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ALL DAY 
WEDNESDAY _____ ^ m r M 


NOW 5 LOCATIONS 
969 E. Holt, Pomono 
695 W . Foothill, Claremont 


Pomona Valloy Ctntor 
Foothill and Mountain, 
INoxt to Sears) 
Upland 
Grand nr. Alosta, Glendoro 
B i—■imimiuinim m iniiH aM i 


By SARAH SMILEY 


The movie version of rock 
opera “Jesus Christ Super- 
star” is a mixed blessing, to 
be sure, but one which is not 
entirely without its assets. 
Chief among the problems oi 
“ Superstar” is its shallow, 
one-sided view of the charac­ 
ter of Christ, who is made to 
seem egotistical and aloof (in 
order to make him fit the 
personality suggested by a 
pre-planned, catchy title?) at 
the expense of historical evi­ 
dence that suggests quite the 
opposite view. Another diffi­ 
culty is 
the self-conscious, 
“ Hollywood” treatment of the 
Sinai desert location in which 
the movie is set. The camera 
lingers too often and with a 
contrived sense of awe over 
Various “ Picturesque” 
on­ 
sets and “ striking” cloud for­ 
mations. Still, the music is 
exciting and the performer.- 
( n o t a b l y *1 ed Neeley as 
Christ, 
Car! 
Anderson 
as 
Judas, and Yvonne Elliman 
as Mary Magadler.e) wonder­ 
fully capable. You could do 
worse. At the Montclair Thea­ 
ter. 
“ Your Three Minutes Are 
I p” is an interesting, unpre­ 
tentious 
crisp little 
social 
comedy well worth seeing. It 
offers some telling insights 
into American middle class 
stagnation and the mindless, 
morally bankrupt rebellion it 
often spawns among those 


g m s u io id s 


LET GRISWOLD'S DO YOUR 
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No d«povt on Pit Tim 
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who grow weary of its smug 
monotony yet haven’t the in­ 
sight to find an intelligent alter­ 
native. An unmotivated, tacked* 
on ending spoils an otherwise 
fine film, 
but 
doesn't 
do 
enough damage to render it 
worthelss — not by a long 
shot. Beau Bridges and Ron 
Leibman star and are mar­ 
velous. Cinema II. 
H a r o l d 
Pinter’s 
“ The 
Homecoming,” 
the 
second 
film in the American Film 
Theater’s series, played last 
week at The Village in Clare­ 
mont, and once again attested 
to the extraordinarily hi gh 
quality of the productions in 
litis group. Never has Pinter 
loomed so large, so menac­ 
ing, and so horribly, precisely 
clear as he does in this super- 
b 1 y 
acted 
(Paul 
Rogers 
stands out in a brilliant cast), 
intelligently directed ( Peter 
Hall of the 
Royal Shakes­ 
peare Co.) film version of a 
play 
about, 
among 
other 
things, the destructiveness in­ 
herent in the institution of the 
modem family. 


Reagan failure 
to debate held 
key to defeat 
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - 
The campaign manager in the 
successful fight to overturn 
Proposition I today cited Gov. 
Ronald Reagan’s failure to 
debate its issues as a key to 
us defeat. 
C l e m 
Whitaker Jr. of 
Whitaker & Baxter, a firm 
which often has been an ally 
oi Reagan in past campaigns, 
asserted 
that 
“when 
res­ 
pected organizations and mdi- 
vidaals pointed out the flaws 
in the initiative ... the gover­ 
nor lost his cool and un­ 
leashed a vitriolic, personal 
attack upon his critics, in­ 
stead of try ing to defend his 
initiative, point by point, on a 
civili/ed basis. 


MARVELLEE CARIAGA 


Miss Cariaga 
made 
her 
operatic debut in die 
Los 
Angeles Shrine Auditorium in 
1.965 and sang leading roles on 
a number of West Cost stages 
since then. 
Th:< fall she will join the 
San Francisco Opera Compa­ 
ny and will make her fourth 
c r o s s-country recital tour 
January through April. 
In the three seasons begin­ 
ning in 1970, she gave over 65 
revitals for commuruiy con­ 
certs. 
Persons wishing to attend 
the concert, the first of four 


SHOW STARTS 
4:60 P.M. 
PROGRAM RATEO G 
»«US TWtaiHf.» 
Irox POMONA“ ! 


16771333 


-EN O S TONIGHT- 
“ NOtTH COUNTRY'' 
*'•10 FOOT” 
-STARTS WED.— 
DEADLY TRACKERS” 
'FO R A F E W DOLLARS 
MORE' 


I B S 


P U SSY C A T T H EA T R E S 


OPEN DAILY NOON-MIDNIGHT 


^ 
THE 


Open 6:39—Starts 3:00 


-EN D S TONIGHT— 


"SOY LINT OGt IN" 


ML Baldy Drive-in 
si j «Hin t»vr— 


Chiidr«n Under 12 F R E E 


—STARTS W ED.— 
MASH 


Plus— 
BLUEBEARD' 


OPEN 6:15 
Program Rated (R ) 
MAM) TMCánit« 


$4.5 billion royalties 
Louisiana property owners 
have received more than $4.5 
billion in royalties from crude 
oil since the discovery of oil 
in the state in 1901. 


"B A N G THE DRUM 
SLO W LY " 
W*ekoay»—7:30 Only 
Sat. S Su':. 
12:50-4:10-7:53 
—and— 
" O N I IS A LONELY 
N U M BER " 
W««Kd«v*—♦ 15 Onlv 
S4'. & Sen. -J: 13-4:0V»;35 


VILLAGE 
»I «.«OKU 
*9-281?) 


-EN D S TONIGHT. 
"SCARECRO W " 
"THE LAST OF SH EILA " 
—STARTS W ED.— 
" JE R E M Y ” 
HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" 


CANYO I] 
(ANTON SHOPPING < EN I IN 
Bonito Ay« , VAN OIAAAV VI? 734 
Thote Doberman:, A'e Back Again 
“THE DARiNG 
D O BERM A N S" 


"H A R R 
.4 YOUR 
PCZfvET" 
Wf . :y Tim* 
D. ii*-man—7:30 
I :k#t—9:10 
S ** r.''7 and Sunday 
DOM 
-12:43 4:23-8:00 
Pc 
7:25-6:00-9:43 
*11 
e n , 
41 
SHli 
’UC 
Canyon 
3P3F"' 
«•» «Hm 


ORIVI IN 
T H IA T tl 


POMONA Ml«**** m 
Ramona Ì U 4 S I1 


„Las 
Posadas 
CHRISTM AS IN MEXICO 
■ p/4 y with l nçhsh dialogua 


NOV. 14 thru J A N . 6 
Wed, Thurs. Frl, Sal... .8:30 pm 
Wed, Sat, Sun Matinees. 2:30 pm 
Reservation* (714) B1S-12IS 
Admlision 
........ $3.25 
Padua Hills Theatre 
NORTH OF CLAREMONT 


T H E A T R F 
4377 Holt Blvd. 


Fhont 624-9696 


aBB— 
r^ 
j rv w 
i 


and now 
tlie film... 


A NORMAN JEWTSON FJm 
JESUS 
CHRIST 
SUPERSTAR 


last Time tongmt 
ACAOtH V.0NA*. 
- Al SC - 
ooasûüAC- 


STARTS WBDNE8DAY 
START» W ED NEiD AT 


THAT 
DARN CAT" 
— AIM — 
DUMBO 


JEREMY’ 
— AIM — 
HARRY IN 
YOUR POCKET 


DELTACO 
■ W ED N ESD AY NIGHT*! 


G EN ERAL C IN EM A CORPORATION 


Plu* 


»««.mi 


DINNER ROLLS 


Assorted 
$.65 (i 
dot. 


Select Your favorite 


A GIFT FOR YOUR HOSTESS 


After Dinner Sweets 


GRISWOLD’S 
CANDIED FRUIT 
Apricot Orenfle Pesi 
end PineepplF 


GRISWOLD'S 
CHOCOLATES 


OR GIFTS 
trom Out Gift Stop 


I 


OPEN• 
7 A M 
Thmkwghmg 


PLACE 
ORDERS 
NOW 


Bakery SPECIALS 


PUMPKIN 


LOAF 


CRANBERRY 
„ 
LOAF $ .9 8 


$ .7 9 


THE 
t-m, 
CONCERT I— 


BANGLADESH _ 
.»»I. TOik mm.«,-»*. f.N.m 
IÖ 


hurt ft Nut Breed* 


Cinnamon Nut Rings 


415 W 
fo o th ill B lv d 
CLAREMONT 
17141 626-2411 
cnm uoLD « 


Hwy 
10 at ford ft. 
R POLANDS 
(714) 793-2151 


M ik t W e d n w d ty night your night to oat out* At 
T to ^ 
Wednesday night ieTaco Night. You get three tasty Del 
Tecot for Juet 99c. Thl» Wednetdey, drive thru for a (emfty 
•tie meal you won’t forget. A price* you'll find hard to beat 


2068 N. GAREY AVE.r POMONA 


South of La Verne Avenue 


520 Diamond lo r Blvd. 
at Sun*et Crowing In DIAMOND BAI* 


You are invited to enjoy 


THANKSGIVING DINNER AT PADUA HILLS 


Select the complete traditional Turkey Dinner or one of our ox- 


cellent Mexican Entrees with entertainment by Mexican Playors. 


Serving times: 1:00, 2 :3 0 , 5;30 and 7:00 p.m . 


f ß * T 
5740 Rivertide Dr. near Benton in CHINO 


PRICE 
* 4 .9 5 
PLUS TAX, INCLUDES SALAD, ENTREE, 
DESSERT I BEVERAGE 


Then see "LOS POSADAS" Christmas in Mexico 


at the Padua Hills Theatre. 


Matinee 2:30 
Evening 8:30 
Tickets $ 3 .2 5 


Reservations recommended for Theatre A dinner. Phone (714) 626*1288. 


ff cur guide te 


E 
S 
P 
I A 
U 
' S 
1542 W E S T H O L T A V E. 
P O M O N A 
• 
629-5417 


We Will Be 
CLOSED 
THANKSGIVING DAY 


Fortune tooNies 
General asks for return of star, medal 


STAND UP AND ANSWER 
C R I T I C I S M . ______ 


01(11 WITH OS 


Ttofksgairj fewt 
J 


N O V . 2 2 nd — 
11 A .M . to 7 P.M . 
COMPLETE TRADITIONAL 
THANKSGIVING DINNER 


Children 
6*o 10 yean $ 2 ^ 


75« 
Children 
Under 6 
INCLUDING 


DESERT 


rr.‘ 


1 


’* 


¡SÈQ C E n o m i l i 
Ì 


920 So. Grand Ave. (Just Off 210 Fwy. 


Glendora 
(2131 335*4001 


PILGRIMS 
¡aid 


their families are 


welcome at 
The Towers 


Each Year from 1 to 8 PM 


FOR SPECIAL 


Enjoy your holiday Roast Turkey or Ham Dinner 
with all the trimmings. Soup or salad, candied 


yams, cranberry sauce, gar* 
^ 
a ■ a 
nish, hot rolls and butter, 


For Wednesday, Nov. 21 
ARIES (March 21-April 19) 
Getting others to cooperate 
with you today isn’t going to 
be easy. What you want and 
what someone else wants are 
horses of different colors. 


TAURUS .April 20-May 20) 
Conditions that relate to your 
work continue to be 
prob­ 
lematical. Safety procedures 
must be observed and pacing 
yourself is importât to avoid 
excess tensions. 


GEMINI (May 21-June 20) 
A friend of yours will be very 
difficult to please today and 
you’ll feel like telling him off. 
Don’t do it; his anger will 
quickly fade. 
CANCER (June 21-July 22) 
You can 
expect 
the 
unex­ 
pected today from your fami­ 
ly. Your patience will be tes­ 
ted 
and 
your 
temper 
too. 
Side-step 
unnecessary 
fric­ 
tion. 
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your ! 
powers of concentration aren’t j 
as sharp as they should be to- ! 
day. Distractions will cause 
mistakes. 
Be 
careful 
what 
you put in writing. 
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) 
Finances must still be han­ 
dled prudently. Let no one 
pressure you into buying so­ 
mething you feel you shouldn't. 
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Be 
careful today you don’t get 
1 yourself into a situation that 
could later have legal eompli- 
| cations. Think all your moves 
I through before acting. 
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) 
Today you will be faced with 
an unusual problem. It’s so­ 
mething that could have been 
avoided. You are the source 
of vour own undoing. 
SAGG1TARIUS 
(No.v. 
23 
Dec. 21) Normally you get 
along quite well with almost 
ever*"'ne but today is an ex­ 
ception. You won’t take kin­ 
dly to the actions of one of 
your buddies. 
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 
19) You will receive a tem­ 
porary setback regarding so­ 
mething 
you’re 
anxious 
to 
achieve. Don’t let this stop or 
discourage you. 
AQUARIUS 
(Jan. 
20-Feb. 
19) Complications will occur 
today because you’ll fail to 
think things through. Be ex 
tra-attentive to what you’re 
doing, particularly when driv- 


! ing. 
PISCES (Feb. 20-M*rrh 20) 
You’re likely to be wasteful to­ 
day concerning your cwn re­ 
sources, as well as those of 


Should have 
let tapes go, 
says adviser 
H O N O L U L U (UPD 
Presidential 
adviser 
Anne 
Armstrong said recently that 
President Nixon should have 
released the Watergate tapes 
long ago to avoid a year of 
controversy. 
Mrs. Armstrong, a cabinet 
level adviser, said the public 
was 
“almost 
numb’ 
from 
Watergate developments, but 
“there’s not one shred of hard 
evidence” directly implicating 
Nixon. 


another. Be wary, your mis­ 
takes can prove costly. 


Your Birthday 
Nov. 21 
Your imagination can pro­ 


duce a nice profit for you this 


year if you follow through on 


things you start. Be patient 


and remember that rewards 
can only be collected on com­ 
pletion. 


I HEAR SOME OF YOU 
F E E L I V E B E E N 
PUTTING TOO MUCH 
E M P H A S IS ON 
THE BO W LIN G 
T E A M 
\ 


WASHINGTON 
(UPI) 
— 
second 
star 
and 
the 
Dir*- 
failed to investigate adequate* 
Brig. Gen. Samuel Koster has 
tinguished Service Medal he 
ly ‘he 1968 My Lai massacre, 
asked the Army to restore a 
lost in 1971 
on grounds he 
it was disclosed iOda>. 


BUCK HORN 
RESTAURANT 
HAM & YAM S 
OR 
TURKEY & DRESSING 
Both Complete Dinners 
MT. BALDY 
982-1107 


$ 4 9 5 


^ SMORGASBORD 


for Thanksgiving! 


Special Menu 
Turkey with D ^cseng 
Roast B -e f & W ine Sauce 
Sirloin T ip s 
Baked H aw w/Candied Yam s 
Swedish Meat Balls 
Children's P rk e s 
. 
W f f W 
1*« pcr vear of 
o n l y 
mm 
a*»r throu*fi 11. 


1055 E. Holt Ave.— Pomono 
Ph. 622-6064 


C L A R E M O I S ? 
Idepot^ H 
RESTAURANT 
Join Us for A 
Thanksgiving Feast 
llarvi»Nl T iikSp 
iVna|iS«*r* 
Hearts of Celery 
Pickled Baby Corn 
Ripe Olives 
Tiny Scallions 
Crisp Radishes 


Cream of Almond Soup 
or 
Chilled Apple Cider 


Mixed Garden Greens 
with Holiday Garniture 
Choice of Dressing 
Roast Young Tom Turkey 
Giblet Gravy 
Savory Dressing 
Fresh Candied Yams 
Fresh Fall Mushrooms & Brussel Sprouts 
Fresh Creamed Winter Onions & Peas 
Whole Cranberries 
C h o i« « o f O n« 
Fresh Pumpkin Pie 
Black Forest Cake 
Chocolate-Peppermint Ice Cream 
Champagne Sherbet 


Choice of Beverage 


Dinner Served 
12:00-10:00 P.M 


ADULTS $4.95 
CHILDREN $2.50 


6IVE THANKS TO TOUR 
W IFI... TAKE HER 
OUT TO DINNER. 


Sf RVIN6 FROM noon 


COMPLETE TRADITIONAL ROAST 
TURKEY DINNER: RELISHES, SOUP. 
SALAD. ENTREE, BEVERAGE AND 
DESSERT. 
ONLY 
$3.95 
FOR 
ADULTS. CHILDREN $1.50 LESS 
PLUS A SELECTION OF OTHER FA­ 
VORITE TRADITIONAL DISHES. 


restaurant! 


CMMO V FOOTHILL i EUCLID. (FLAM 
(714)1(3-1111 
M W rM M U U LU rtF M U T 


DINE COUNTRY CLUB STYLE ON 
THANKSGIVING 


Starting at 1 p.m. 
FEATURING 5 DELIGHTFUL 
THANKSGIVING DAY DINNERS 


Our Special Thanksgiving Menu 
offers You Five Selected Entrees 
$295 
from 
an 
up 


Special Children’s 


Menu 
On Clewn Me»k» 


S t . S O re $ 1 .65 


ALL FACILITIES OPEN 
TO THE PUBLIC 


A l» l S E R V E D W IT H Potato#« — Garden F r**h Vege­ 
table« du Jour — Appeti«era — Choice of Soupe: Cream 
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Bruins not afraid 


LOS ANGELES (UP1) - 
Kermil 
Johnson, the greatest ground gainer in 
UCLA football history, has a different 
feeling this time. 
“We all feel differently,” said the 
Bruins’ record-setting wishbone half­ 
back. 
The subject, of course, was UCLA’s 
Saturday crucial with University of 
Southern 
California, 
a 
game 
that 
means the Pacific-8 trip to the Rose 
Bowl. 


Kevin 
Cloe 


Progress-Bulletin 


Staff W riter 


win-innnrrir* — 


Pomona teams may 


be a little stronger 


Don’t be surprised if the three Po­ 
mona high schools seem a little stro­ 
nger in athletic competition within the 
next four years. 
And the way they’ve been playing 
the last few years, that could mean a 
lot of trouble for the rest of the San 
Antonio League teams. 
With the six Pomona junior high 
schools moving their ninth graders up 
to the senior highs next year for the 
first time; Pomona, Ganesha and Ga- 
rey highs will be gaining a freshman 
class. 
That means instead of introducing 
sophomores to the high school system 
for the first time, the three high 
schools will be able to work with the 
freshmen athletes a year earlier and 
hopefully have them better prepared 
for their senior years as varsity play­ 
ers. 
“We’ll have an extra year to work 
on skill with the freshmen,” com­ 
mented Pomona High athletic director 
Gene Abernathy. “ItTl take half the 
time to get them prepared, and they’ll 
be better when they’re sophomores. I 
don’t mean to take anything away 
from the coaching abilities at the jun­ 
ior highs, it’s just that the kids don’t 
get the opportunity to learn the high 
school system when they’re freshmen 
under the junior high system.” 
But Abernathy does feel that there 
are some disadvantages to the new 
switch. One in particular is the space 
problem. 
“One disadvantage I see is storage 
space,” he pointed out. “Right now our 
football players are having problems 
storing their gear. Where are we going 
to put the equipment for the fresh­ 
men—on the floor? 
“Also we’re going to need more mo­ 
ney for uniforms,” he added. “ It’s 
going to be mass confusion.” 
Garey High athletic director Simon 
Tolbert feels somewhat the same. “We 
have limited space as it is,” he said. 
“Now we’re going to have trouble fin­ 
ding a place to put the freshmen.” 


Problem not serious 
But Ganesha athletic director Gary 
Fulkerson sees things a little differ­ 
ently and doesn’t expect too many 
problems when the switch is made. 
He sees the same advantages to the 
new system as the other two A.D.s, but 
he doesn’t think the problem of space 
is going to hurt all that much. 
“I don’t see too much of a problem 
with 
space,” 
submitted 
Fulkerson. 
“ You see, when these schools were 
built, they weren’t built for an athletic 
program. So as a result we have 
t h e 
poorest athletic 
f a c i l i t i e s 
around—speaking of the three Pomona 
schools, of course. But I think we’ll 
have enough room for them.” 
Fulkerson thinks, though, that there 
are several advantages to the new 
change-over. 
Other than getting the athletes into 
the new program a year earlier, the 
first-year 
Ganesha 
athletic director 
said, “ Freshman year is a big year 
both physical and mentally as far a> 
change goes. The four-year system is 
definitely a different and better situa­ 
tion. The four-year schools usually end 
up with a balanced varsity team.” 
Fulkerson did make note that the av­ 
erage athlete in the junior highs gets 
discouraged easily because the excep­ 
tional athlete can go out for all sports 
simply because there is no overlapping 
of sports in the junior highs. 
But there is one sport in which the 
junior highs don’t field a team, and 
that has hurt the high school teams. 
That sport is baseball. 


Sharp enrollment drop 
Space shouldn’t really be a problem 
at the high schools, according the fig­ 
ures the 
Pomona 
District 
Admin­ 
istration have come with. 
According to those figures, the en­ 
rollment in the three Pomona schools 
had dropped off an average of 1,000 
students per year. And the district pro­ 
jects that the rate of decrease will con­ 
tinue to be the same through 1977. 
Therefore there should be enough 
room for the students, but the athletes 
do require more equipment and space 
as compared to the average students. 
Anyway, there is no doubt that the 
advantages of the new system will 
outweigh the disadvantages and the 
Pomona schools should show their true 
•trength in a few years. 


USC, the 1072 national champion, 
beat the Bruins 24-7 a year ago to earn 
the right to beat Woody Hayes in the 
Pasadena New Year’s Day classic. 
“Last year,” said Johnson, “we went 
info the game thinking we could win 
the game but we also thought it was 
going to take a break or two because 
SC was so good. No. 1 and all. 
“In other words, I think we were 
kind of afraid of them. Well, I don’t 
think we’re afraid of anyone this year. 
We’ve played together two years as a 
unit now and we’ve got a lot of con­ 
fidence in ourselves, our coaches and 
the wishbone.” 
After 10 games of his senior season, 
Johnson has a bundle of UCLA re­ 
cords. 
In a 56-14 romp over Oregon State 
last weekend, the Bruins’ 
Heisman 
Trophy candidate became the first 
UCLA back ever to gain more than 1,- 
000 yards in one season. He also reeled 
off three touchdowns, giving him 15 for 
the year to break Gary Beban’s school 
record of 14 for one season set in 1965. 
He has 1,022 yards rushing this sea­ 
son and a three-year total of 2,388 
yards. Plus 24 career TDs. 
A fluid-running, 6 - foot, 185-pounder, 
Johnson is proudest of breaking the 
late Kenny Washington’s UCLA all- 
time rushing mark of 1,915 yards. 
“I think,” he offered. “I cherish the 
career record the most.” 
Johnson feels his statistics stack up 
with those of any college football play­ 
er in America and believes he has a 
“good chance” to win the Heisman 
T rophy. 
He made a point about UCLA’s wish­ 
bone, an offense that has rolled up a 


Pac-8 record 4,251 yards on the ground 
this season. 
“When you run out of the wishbone 
set,” Johnson explained, “you’ve got 
four ball carriers not one like the I. Of 
course, you never know but 1 believe I 
would have gained more yards as a 
tailback in the 1 simply because I 
would have had the chance to carry 
the ball more.” 
A year ago, he would not have said 
that. But he’s more open in expressing 
himself as a senior. 
“ I never have thought I was exactly 
shy but I do speak my mind more 
now',” Johnson declared. “ I guess I 
have a certain peace of mind that I 
didn’t have before.” 


Cal poloists 


seeded first 


LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI) - The 
University of California was seeded 
first Monday in the NCAA Water Polo 
championships, which open here Fri­ 
day. 
The Golden Bears, who have a 23-1, 
record, face New Mexico in its first 
round match at the Belmont Plaza Ol­ 
ympic Pool. 
UC Irvine. 17-3, was seeded second 
followed, in order, by University of 
Southern California, 13-7; 
San Jose 
State, 14-3; UCLA, 12-5; UC Santa Bar­ 
bara, 17-8, host Cal State Long Beach, 
17-10-1, and New Mexico. 
The championship game Is scheduled 
Saturday night. 
STOPPED COLD 


Atlanta Falcons’ running back Eddie Ray (44) is 
stopped cold by Minnesota linebacker Wally Hilgen- 
berg (58) as Ray picks up 
20-14 victory over the Viking 


Photo by United Press 


yardage in Atlanta’s 
Bob Lee outscrambles Tarkenton 


ATLANTA (UPI) — Atlanta quarter­ 
back Bob Lee must have picked up a 
few pointers when he understudied 
Fran Tarkenton at 
Minnesota 
last 
year. 
Lee stole a page from Tarkenton’s 
book Monday night and his scrambling 
enabled the Falcons to hand the Vik­ 
ings their first loss of the season, a 20- 
14 upset that could vault Atlanta into 
the wildcard berth for the NFC play­ 
offs. 
Lee and Tarkenton both threw two 
touchdown passes in the contest. But 
the one that provided the winning 
points was a 39-yarder by Lee on a 
play that Tarkenton thought he had pa­ 
tented. 
The Falcon quarterback, apparently 
trapped at midfield, broke loose from 
two would-be tacklers, nearly lost his 
balance as he stumbled toward the 
sidelines, then lofted the ball to Eddie 
Ray to give Atlanta a 17-7 lead with 
1:10 left to play in the first half. 
“I really thought I was going to go 
down,” said Lee. “I saw Eddie stop 
and I wanted him to go on. I think I 
gave him a wave, I don’t even know 
that I remember hoping they wouldn’t 
notice him.” 


LOCAL-NATIONAL 
Sports 


Ray, who didn’t even know he’d be 
playing until he learned shortly before 
game time that Art Malone was still 
injured, caught the ball in the end 
zone. 
“I didn’t know what was going to 
happen.” said the 235 - pound fullback. 
“I just kept backing up and it turned 
out that Bob had enough time to get 
rid of the ball.” 
The win was the sixth straight for 
the Falcons, who are now 7-3 and trail 
Los Angeles by a game in the NFC 
West. The Vikings, 9-1, had already 
sewed up the NFC Central for the fifth 
time in six years. 


Atlanta’s chances ot catching the 
Rams appear slim, even if they win 
their four remaining games. But the 
Falcons are in a fight with Dallas and 
Washington, both also 7-3, for that wil­ 
dcard playoff berth as best runnerup. 
If the Falcons are the wildcard 
team, their first playoff foe would be 
the Vikings at Minnesota and Viking 
receiver John Gilliam hopes they make 
it because he wants another shot at 
them. 
“ I want to meet them again down 
the road,” said Gilliam, who caught 
one of the Vikings’ touchdown passes 
Monday night. “ I’m glad it happened 


(the loss) when it didn’t count. Tell 
'em to come on. I want them bad. I 
never look for no team but I want 
them to win that wild card.” 
Atlanta Coach Norm Van Brocklin, 
reluctant to talk about the Falcons’ 
playoff chances in the past, is also 
looking ahead. 
“We’re on our way up.” said Van 
Brocklin. “ We’re hungry and we want 
to go the Super Bowl. We had our 
backs to the wall (with a 1-3 start) but 
we've fought our way back.” 
“We’re thinking 
playoffs 
but we 
can’t overlook anyone along the way,” 
said Lee. “Otherwise, we negate our 
win over the Vikings. There are good 
times and bad times in pro football. 
We’re on the good times.” 
The Vikings. No. 2 in NFC rushing 
prior to Monday night, picked up only 
82 yards running against the Falcons 
and more than half of that came in the 
final period. Minnesota had only eight 
yards, that by passing, in the first pe­ 
riod and only 13 yards rushing in the 
first half. 
The Falcons had 275 of their 347 total 
yards in the first half and Van Brock­ 
lin said “We ran right at them with 
nothing fancy.” Dave Hampton, who 


Fred thinks it’s good omen 
McNeills will sit on UCLA side 


Bv DON BR \DLEY 
P-B Staff Writer 
LOS ANGELES — Fittingly enough, 
James McAlister of UCLA and Rod 
McNeill of USC were chosen Co-Play- 
ers of the Week in the University Divi­ 
sion at the weekly Southern California 
Football Writers Luncheon Monday. 
The two cross-town rivals meet this 
Saturday in another epic battle to de­ 
cide which team will represent the Pa- 
cific-8 in the Rose Bowl. Jan. 1. 
McAlister, coming back from a knee 
sprain, earned the ball 
11 
times, 
gained 108 yards and scored two touch­ 
downs as the Bruins romped over Ore­ 
gon St. 56-14. 
McNeill, a 6-4, 218-pound tailback, 
ran for 115 yards in 20 carries as the 
Troians came back from a third quar­ 
ter deficit to beat Washington 42-19. 
Rod and his brother, Fred, who plays 
defensive end for rival UCLA were lun­ 
cheon guests. Rod, who is the elder by 
14 months, said he thought Troy would 
have to go for the big play or at least 
be able to gain yardage consistently in 
order to defeat UCLA. 
Fred 
revealed 
that 
the 
boys’ 
parents sat on the USC side last year 
and USC won and that this vear the 
parents would be sitting on the UCLA 
lido, “ Maybe that’s an omen,” he 
grimed. 
When quesMoned about whv he chose 
a school other than the one his brother 
was attending, Fred replied, “ I’d like 
to play on the same team as Rod, but 
when I was trying to decide where to 
go to college I eliminated that factor 
and concentrated on picking the school 
that 1 felt was best for me,” 
Rod gaid his season had been disap­ 
pointing to him personally up until the 
last few pames. The big senior is just 
now regaining the form he flashed be­ 
fore a hip injury sidelined him for the 
‘71 season. 
“ I felt like I was running on eggs,” 
he revealed. “ 1 wasn't confident. Now 
I’m running well and having fun.” 


The brothers both said they would 
consider a pro career, but were not 
counting on playing pro ball. "Lots of 
good players didn’t make it in pro ball, 
F'red said, “and we think it’s best to 
have something else to go in to in case 
a pro career doesn’t work out. 


Fred is considering law and Rod is 
thinking about a business career. 
Center Ken Iman of the Rams was 
named Pro Player of the Week, and 
Derek Williams of UC Riverside took 
College Division Player of the Week 
honors. 


Flayes, Schembechler 
only putting on an act 


CHICAGO (UPI) — Ohio State Coach 
Woody Hayes and Michigan Coach Bo 
Schembechler acted relaxed but talked 
worried Monday as they began to pre­ 
pare their teams for Saturday’s Big 
Ten title showdown in Ann Arbor, 
Mich. 
Hayes said that, “a good general 
doesn’t announce his weaknesses, so 
we won’t announce our injuries.” 
Later, however, he said that every­ 
one who was in the starting lineup in 
last weekend’s 55-13 rout over Iowa 
would play for the No. 1-ranked Buck­ 
eyes in their bid for a second straight 
trip to the Rose Bowl. 
Hayes offered few words of awe for 
the Wolverines, but an assistant Buck­ 
eye coach, Ralph Staub, said the Mich­ 
igan defense is “awfully strong against 
the run”—which happens to be Ohio 
State’s strong point offensively. 
Schembechler sounded almost fearful 
of the Buckeyes, and refused to flatly 
predict a Wolverine victory as he did 
before his team dumned heavily favor­ 
ed Ohio State four years ago. 
“ Everything that’s been said and 
written about them is true,” Schem- 
beehler said calmly. “They’re better 
than they were in 1972 and 1971. 1 want 
to avoid comparing them with 1969 and 
1970. This year, they’re maybe a little 
more complete.” 


Schembechler said his chief concern 
is “how the defense does the job. 
“ I don’t want my offense sitting on 
the bench all the time,” 
he said. 
“We’re going to do whatever we can to 
win the game. We’re not saving any­ 
thing.” 
Tne game will be the sixth straight 
between the two teams in which either 
the Rose Bowl bid or Big Ten title or 
both were at stake. This, time, the win­ 
ner could also end up with the national 
championship. 
In other Big Ten regular season fi­ 
nales Saturday, Minnesota hosts Wis­ 
consin in hopes of holding sole posses­ 
sion of third place, Iowa gets a last 
chance to break up a winless season 
by hosting Michigan State, Indiana 
seeks its first league win at home 
against Purdue, and Illinois travels to 
Northwestern in another intrastate ri­ 
valry. 
Indiana Monday regained the serv­ 
ices of center Chuck Sukurs and defen­ 
sive back Marc Bailey after both reco­ 
vered from injuries. Coach Lee Corso 
said defensive back Steve Mason was 
questionable for Saturday because of a 
bruised back. 
Michigan State Coach Denny Stolz 
predicted his team “will have trouble 
with Iowa. It’s very difficult to go 11-0 
and very difficult to go 0-11,” he said. 


Williams carried the ball 17 times, 
gained 306 yards, and scored four 
touchdowns as UCR swamped USIU 76- 
28. 
"I really wish the rest of the team 
was here,” Williams said modestly in 
accepting the award. “They earned it 
as much as I did.” 
Williams said he had feelers from 
Washington and Oregon as a high 
school senior but they lost interest 
when ho fractured an ankle. He wound 
up nt City College of San Francisco 
and tranferred to UCR. 
Writers were polled on the USC- 
UCLA outcome. Twenty-five voted for 
UCLA while 11 picked USC. 
Those selecting UCLA had an aver­ 
age point spread of 7»/a points and the 
II picking USC had an average spread 
of 5| > points. 
Quoting the coaches: 
PEPPER RODGERS, UCLA - We 
won’t use any different plays than 
we’ve used all year . . . just put the 
ball in the fullback’s stomach. Some­ 
times he’ll wind up with it and some­ 
times he won’t. 
“We’re better defensively than we 
were a year ago and are blocking 
much better offensively,” he continued. 
“T i r e ’s no question Pat Haden is the 
best passer we’ve faced. He may be 
the premier passer in the country.” 
GRAIG FERTIG, USC ASSISTANT 
— “Our offtnse is in 
pretty good 
shape. Defensively Charlie Philiips and 
Marvin Cobb are doubtful for Satur­ 
day. The difference between UCLA’s 
wishbone and Oklahoma’s wishbone is 
that UCLA has four great backs.” 
ROY ANDERSON, CAL POLY - 
“ Our mal-functioning defense did play 
a good game Sunday against Fullerton. 
That probably was the difference in 
the game. We won by a field goal. 
Glad we got it when we did. Our kick­ 
er, Klaus Trettin, got hurt kicking the 
succeeding point after touchdown and 
can hardly walk today.” 


caught Lee’s first touchdown pass, 
paced all runners with 108 yards. 
Van 
Brocklin 
said the Lee-io-Ray 
touchdown was “kind of like getting 
money 
from 
mother 
without 
ask­ 
ing—the kind you don’t expect to get.’* 
Falcon rookie Nick Mike Mayer mis­ 
sed field goal tries of 46 and 26 yards 
during a scoreless first period but later 
added field goals of 25 and 49 yards 
(he’s hit on 23-of-31) and two con­ 
versions to raise his NFL-lending scor­ 
ing to 96 points. 
Viking Coach Bud Grant was upset 
by the officiating Monday night. He 
was m o t unhappv about a critical call 
late in the gonip after I ce’s fumble 
was recovered by the Vikings. Tar- 
ntr- 
ess.d P ] ard- ¡o Gilliam but 
it was ruled that he fumbled and At­ 
lanta recovered at its own 36. 
“ I was down,” said Gilliam. “The 
Atlanta players took the ball away.” 
“The plays the officials make are 
more important than the ones we 
make,” said Grant. “ I don’t mean that 
as a criticism, but it happens that 
way.” 


Sharks’ coach 


is suspended 


for five games 


LO> ANGELES (UPI) - Los Ang­ 
eles Shark-’ Coach Tern’ Slater has 
been suspended fcr five games and 
fined $500 for striking linesman Dennis 
Dahlmann following his club's 4-3 over­ 
time loss to Cleveland Friday night, it 
was announced Monday. 
The action was taken by World Hock- 
e y 
\ssociation 
executive 
director 
James W. Browitt. 
Slater started his suspension Sunday 
night, missing the Sharks’ 5-i loss at 
home 
against 
New 
Orleans. 
Ted 
McCa kill, the Los Angeles captain, 
will serve as the club’s interim coach. 
The Sharks, who are in last place in 
the WHA West with a 5-15 record, sent 
four players to their farm club at 
Greensboro, N. C., Monday. They were 
right wings Alton White and Don Gor­ 
don. center Fred Speck and defense- 
man Jim Watson. 
At the same time, they recalled right 
wing Mike Hyndman and left wing 
Earl Heiskala. 


Lakers, Knicks 


battle tonight 


NEW YORK (UPI) - Winners c 
four straight, the Los Angeles Laker 
open a three-game road trip tonigt 
again-t the New York Knicks. 
In their oniv meeting of the seasor 
New York h< if the Lakers 106-91 i 


KTLA (5), 6 p.m. 


Los \ngele Nov. 2 as the Knicks’ W^ 
Frazier poured in a career high 4 
points. 
The Lakers face the Capital Bullet 
Wednesday night and are at Portlan 
Saturday night. They’re home Sunda 
night against the Trail Blazers. 
Los Angeles has played five straigt 
games without Jerry West, who is su 
f e r i n g from a pulled abdomint 
muscle. 
Despite his absence, Los Angeles (1! 
6) leads the Pacific Division by tw 
games over Golden State (8-6). 


The Scoreboard 


By United Press international 
College grid 
standings 


NFL standings 


an Co 
East 


Pacific • 
Confi 


UCLA 
use 
Stan. 
WSU 
Ore 
Calif. 
OSU 
Wash. 


w I 
6 
1 
4 
3 3 
2 4 
2 4 
¿ 6 


•renca 
t of pa 
0 28«* 91 
0217111 
0 ISS 144 
0 127 164 
3 137113 
3 151 246 
m Wo 


vMlaml 
Buffalo 
NY Jets 
New Encilana 
Baltimore 


1102' 


Overall 
I t pf pa 
Ì ? 
14^ ¡ cìeveì^rSS' 
4 Ò 218 223 5 
6 0 198 2641 Cincinnati 
Î9Î 222 . Houston 
i 228 354 


Ë 192 2241 Kansas City 


x-Pacific Coast Athletic Association 
Conference 
w I t Pf pa 
3 
0 1 91 45 
2 
0 2 96 60 
2 
1 1 83 40 
0 
C 0 0 
0 
1 
3 5 27 121 


Denver 
Oa 


... I. t. 
pel pf 
pa 
9 
1 0 
.9J0 262 
54 
5 
5 
0 .500 147 180 
3 
7 0 
.300 163 203 
3 
7 0 
.300 170 231 
2 
8 0 
.200 158 281 
Central 
w. I. t. 
pet pf 
pa 
8 
2 0 
.800 235 f . 
6 
3 1 
.650 159 155 
6 
4 0 
.600 156 166 
1 
9 0 
.100 162 338 
West 
« . I. t. pet. pf 
pa 
6 
3 1 
650 
161 T15 
5 
3 2 
.603 271 
2^ 


S. D. St. 
San Jose 
Pacific 
L.A. St. 
Pres 
cStio 
L. Bth 
x-confererce 
race 
names remain 


1 9 0 94 2591 ft. Louis 
0 4 0 28 66 
1 9 1.117 168 ¡ Philadelphia 


_ 
4 
1 .550 186 
5 
7 
1 .250 137 250 
National Conference 
East 
w. I. t. 


7 
1 °0 


over—non-conferenci N.Y. Giants 


Alabama 
LSU 
Kentucky 
.Miss 
Florida 
Gnorqia 
Auburn 
Miss. St 
Tf-nn 
Vanbrblt 


w I 


Southeastern conference 
Conference 
w I t pf pa 
6 0 0 212 63 
S 0 0 1 49 51 
3 0 134114 
3 0 86127 
4 0 82 141 
3 4 0 128 114 
5 4 0 73105 
2 4 0 123 167 
1 3 0 91 105 
1 4 0 70 161 


11 tun 
akland 
Overall ia n D*«oo 
w I t pf pa 
7 
1 1 224 92 
4 
4 2 170 170 „ „ 
7 
2 1 279 1091 Dallas 
4 
5 1 254 284. Washington 
3 
6 
3 
6 
2 
7 
Central 
w. I. 
9 
1 
4 
5 


3 S7 
West 
w 
I. t. 
8 2 0 
7 
3 
0 
4 
6 
0 
___________________ 
„ 
3 
7 
0 
4 2 209 217 x-clirlfhed division title 


Overall 
t pf pa 
9 0 0 398 8’ 


y-Minnesota 
Detroit 
Green Bay 
Chicano 
9 
0 0 251 118 
5 
5 0 212 180 , 
5 
5 0 164 167 LOS Anqeles 
5 4 0117 1641 Atlanta 
5 
4 1 197 147 Nevi prleans 
6 
4 0 153 I24Ì '-'tin Francisco 
4 
.................. 


B"ise 
MSU 
Idaho 
Montana 
Weber 
N. A rir. 
Idaho St. 
x-conference 
race 
qames remain 


x-Blq Sky 
Conference 
w I t pf pa 


6 1 0 236 19P 
Monday's Results 
4 5 0 146 226 Atlanta 20 Minnesota 14 
■ nlv oarr.e scheduled! 
w f r # « . . . . . » v ä * } ? G,m“ 


í o 
tm n -I ? m 
f » | ( Ä * W ™ Ä < i i > i M ) 


4 7 C 262 312 
Sundsy's Games 
4 
6 0 1 52 721 I Buffalo af Baltimore 
3 
7 0 173 227 Kansas City at Denver 
3 
6 0 166 747 New Enoland at Houston 
2 
8 0 148 284 San Dieno at Oakland 


5 1 0 206 69 
3 2 0 118 107 
2 4 0 60 1 36 
2 4 lì 83 130 
1 
3 0 31 101 
0 5 0 75 1 64 
ever—non-conference 


Arizona 
AZU 
Utah 
Wvoming 
csu 
N.M. 
B Y U 
U T E P 


Tulsa 
No Tex. 
N.M. St. 
Lvl. 
Wichita 
W . Tex. 
Drake 


Oklahoma 
Nebraska 
Okla.St 
Kansas 
Missouri 
Colorado 
Kan. St. 


Western Athletic Conference 
Conference 
Overall 
w I t pf pa 
6 0 0 175 70 
5 1 0 287 10? 
4 1 0 225 1 30 
3 4 0 151 173 
2 3 0 144 1 72 
2 4 0 166 702 
1 4 0 111 159 
0 6 Ö 69 326 


Missouri Valley 
Conference 
w I I pf pa 
V 
0 0 1RS 48 
< 


w I t rf pa 
8 ? 0 767 158 
9 1 0 416 146 
7 3 0 357 291 
4 6 0 7 48 376 
5 5 0 237 303 
3 7 0 277 274 
3 6 0 725 226, 
0 10 0 1 42 48C 


Pittsburqh at Cleveland 
Chicnqo at Minnesota 
I os Anqeles at New Orleans 
N Y. Giants at Philadelphia 
Atlanta at N.Y. Jets „ 
St. Louis at Cincinnati 
(onlv qames scheduled) 
Monday's Games 
Green Bay at San Francisco 
(onlv qame scheduled) 


Falcons, 20-14 


Iowa 


O *in St. 
Michiqan 
Minn 
HR rol* 
Pvrdce 
W ir. 
Mich.St 
No'-thwsn 
Indiana 
Iowa 


Bid Eight 
C r ierenee 
w I t rf pa 
5 0 0 703 61 
1 I 148 83 
1 2 102 73 
2 1 103 119 
3 0 80 91 
4 0 107 146 
5 0 90 209 
5 0 96 148 


Biq Ten 
Conference 
• t 
Pf pa 
0 0 797 27 


Overall i M m ,"'sota 
f t nf pa I All nta 
3 <1223 130 
Ati 
FG M iki M ayer 25 
4 
i 144 IS ’ 
Minn—G illiam 
39 pass from Tarkenton 
6 
0 
°44 299 
(Cox kick) 
. 
..... 
£ 
0 
155119 
Ati—Hampton 19 pass from Lee 'Mlke- 
7 
P 
H8 261 
'/aver lick ) 
. 
8 
n 
106 28? 
Ati—Ray 
39 pass 
from 
Lee 
(Mlke- 
9 
0 
13? 269 
Maver ► xk) 
Ati 
P G M ke-Maver -*9 
Minn -B. 
Brown 2 pass from Tarken- 
«*"»« i« x 'iW da 
w I t of na 
8 0 1 3?8115 
ft 1 1 287 173 
5 2 2 272 113 
6 3 1 271 17». 
7 3 0 177 121 
5 5 0 226 733 
4 6 
3 6 


Pro football stats 


w 1 


ATLANTA 
(U P I) 
0 189 183 w‘,în''esc,a'A ,,ar1a Ie 
I First dewns 
« . , - „ 1. Rusrrs-yards 
* 
1 p i sina yards 
P.? ! Return yards 


JC cagers open season 


0 7 0 7 - 14 
0 17 3 0 — 20 


Statistics of the 


. 
. t R» . 
, 
7 
0 0 297 27 
9 0 0 361 33 ! 
} 
Û 0 r s 48 1 0 0 0 320 „58 
5 
? J f?4 182 
6 4 0 74Ï27R 
Fumbles-lort 


4 5 1172190 
^oolt.cs-yards 
4 6 0 1 99 2161 
4 6 0 100 1«<1 


4 3 0 121 100 
3 4 0 119 139 
f 4 0 121 142 
¿ 4 0 
54 102 
3 4 0 153 214 
0 7 0 
73 200 
0 7 0 
S3 331 


nail aame: 
Minn. 
Atlanta 
17 
18 
32-87 
41-176 _ 
209 
171 
4 
27 
17-30-1 
11-23-1 
5-408 
3-430 
3-2 
1-7 
5-54 
6-56 


3 7 0 181 201 
2 8 0 128 24? 
0 10 0 137 383 
Football ratings 


X Mid American conference 


xM1?mt 
Kent 
St. 
Bv.'lnq O. 
On'« U. 
Tnledn 
W 
MlCh. 
x-cont-renc« 
ccimcs rem an 


N E W 
YO RK 
(U P I) 
- 
The 
United 
Press 
International's 
Board of Coacnes 
conference 
Overall 
r ,aior 
collane 
football 
ratina- 
witr 
w 
i t pt pa 
w I 
t nf oa number 
of 
first 
place 
votes 
in 
5 
0 0 1 01 33 
to 0 
3 707 60 parentheses: 
4 1 0 156 65 
8 ? 0 771117 
(Tenth Week) 
? 
3 0 118 1 31 
7 3 0 166 209 Team 
2 
3 0 i"l0 3 
4 5 0 
210 1 
Chio State (4-0) <221 
1 
4 0 10* 1 '8 
3 7 M o« 25? ?. Alabama (9 3) '9) 
1 
4 0 68 127 
6 5 C 190 718 3. O-.LVioma (8 0-1) (3) 
race 
over—non-co ferpnee •* A 
binan (10-0} 


Points 
336 


Harvard 
r.rtmth 
Penr 
Yale 
Brown 
Cornell 
( olumbia 
Princetr 


Notre Dam e 
8-3* (1) 
Penn state (10-0) 
Ivy League 
^ 
. 
L S II (9-?) 
Conference 
Overall », 
i LA <9*11 
w I t" pf Pi’ vv I t Pf pa t S'uthcrn California (8-1-1) 
5 
1 0164 116 7 
1 0 124 129 1-, Nrbraska (8-l-T| 
5 
1 0 133 85 5 
3 0 1 4 ? 
95 i . Texas (7-2) 
4 
? 0 167 102 5 
3 0 208 13c 
Arizona State (9-1) 
4 
2 0 41 
9 ' 5 
3 0 178 141 15 Texas Tech (94) 
3 
3 0 126 129 3 
3 1 146 149116 
Houston <8-1) 
? 
4 0 106 95 3 
4 1 14« i n 15. Miami <0.1 <1<W>) 
1 
5 0 422w l é 
* 
44711 v . (Tie) Tulam (8-11 
0 
6 0 52 131 1 
7 0 103 191! 
(T el Kansas (6-3-1) 


29 
26* 
?<« 
7’2 
178 
149 


8 
10 
7 
6 
2Ì 


N.C St. _ 
Maryland 
C lemsor 
Viroinla 
N. Car. 
nuke 
Wke For. 


Atlantic Coast con'erenee 
Conference 
Overall 
* T t pf pa w I t pf »! 
5 0 Q145 80 
1 1 8173 5 
4 
2 0 147 179 
3 
5 0 12? 161 
1 
4 0 140 133 
0 
4 1 31 8? 
0 
4 1 25 


only <7 teams received votes 


i 142 


7 3 0 313 220 
7 3 0 287 115 
5 5 0 211 771 
4 7 0 199 300, 
4 6 0 737 7401 I'm »*»- 
1 8 1 105 194 
’earns. 
1 


The unbeaten 


NEW YORK (U P I) - The up-to-date 
list ot unbeaten-untied colleoe football 


8 1 60 274 
E(ori , N c \ 
Ten Victories 


Final Southern Conference 
. 
Conference 
Overall 
w i f t>! pi 
w I t o<_ JW 


Langston (Okla.) 
of Ohio 


F. Car. 
Richmond 
V/ 4M 
Furrran 
Aop. St. 
VMI . 
Citadel 
Davidson 


7 0 0 262 41 
5 1 0 169 61 
5 7 6 123 126 
3 3 OHS 80 
2 2 0 69 80 
7 4 0 81 164 
1 6 n 66 179 
1 6 0 86 240 


Miami 
Michiqep 
» ■> M a i o 
Northwestern (Iowa) 
I i 2 ■>£,?,' Penn State.. 
5 \ n ôaa ->8« 
Tennessee State 
* 5. 
,2,! Western Kentucky 
a t u í i i e William Jeweil (Mo.) 
S ( 0118 316 
N‘" * VI 
8 0 137?» 


GARY NA|H . . • MSAC’s 6-Ioot-10 center 


Seven Mounties voted 
to water polo team 


WALNUT — Seven Mt. San 
Antonio College players were 
named to the All-South Coast 
/ 
Conference Water Polo team 
selected this week by confer­ 
ence coaches. 
Three Mounties (Keith Val- 


Final prep 
standings 


San Antonio 


Alabama 
Fisk (Twin.) 


Nine Victories 


Texas 
Tex. Trh 
Arkansas 
T ex. ABM 
Hice 
5 MU 
T 'U 
Bavlor 


Southwest Conference 
Conference 


2 8 0 125 341 j i_0nislána Siate 
OWn 


I f 
0 753 58 
0 169 9ft 
3 
2 1 
60 80 
3 
3 0 1 54 1 74 
2 3 0 7* 128 
1 3 1 72 141 
1 4 0 77 152 
3 5 0 8 7 172 


State 
.Vittenberq (C.) 
Eiqht Victories 
Overall 


? n ien i 5? 
Notre Damo 
Six Victories 
1 
5 0 285 1st Carroll (Mont.) 
3 
4 0 112 994 
4 
4 1 TO ’«7 
3 6 0 164?»5 
KIRA 
2 7 0 1 70 79' 
¡MBA 


Chino .. 
Pomona 
Gunesna 
Claremont 
Upland 
Damien 
Garey 
Montclair 


Final 
League 
Overall 
W L T P F P A W L T 
5 
2 0 
73 64 6 3 0 
- 
‘ 0 102 
77 5 
0 150 
97 6 
0 178 80 5 
0 
91 
91 4 
2 
49 87 2 
1 
41 
54 3 
1 
67 164 1 


Miior Independents 
y/ I t pt_ P* 
Air Frc« 
,- rmy 
fn * Cof. 
r;n. 
Cof rate 
fW lin 
Fla. t». 
C-* Te-h 
H Cr-«s 
Houston 
Marshall 
Miami 
Navy 
• tre Dme 
Penn. St 
P,tt 
H utners 
So. Car. 
so. ni 
So. WUs*. 
'■yracu't 
Tamoa 
Tempi« 
Tolane 
Utah St. 
vlllsnva 
Va. Teoh 
W 
- 


N H L 
East 


Bosten 
Toronto 
fsontreal 
Buffalo 
N Y. Ranoers 
Detroit 
Vancouver 
N.Y. Islanders 


Philadelphia 
Çhicaqo 
St. Louis 
Atlar ta 
Plttsburah 
uf 


E.iî*ern Conference 
Atlantic Divirion 
6 1 (1208 191 
W. I. PCI. q b. 
(1 9 0 67 131 ; Bosten 
W 
1 ? ? - 
s 4 0 7lfili9¡K9 
York 
11 
-6jJ 3 
4 6 
0 197 92¡Ruttalo 
8 1? -600 7 
4 5 0 251 264 Philadelphia 
„ . 
, ,5 12 .294 
8’ 2 
5 s 1 15« 796 
Central Division 
0 10 
0 98 7«? 
w. I. RCt. ».b. 
5 s 
0189 20' ¿tienta 
10 8 .556 — 
5 4 019! 169 cap tai 
| 
7 .5 » 
8 1 
0 246119 Houstor 
5 13 .278 
5 5 i) 216 278 cievelard 
4 15 211 
5 4 0 15618? 
Western Conference 
3 7 0 16429' 
Mia west Divis on 
8 
o 0 7M 51 
w. I. 
10 0 0 395 107 Mllw auk** 
15 u 
6 3 1 205 1 48 Chìcaao 
J4 4 
* 3 0 239.137 retreit 
11 I 
<C-Cmaha 
. 
6 12 .333 
Pacific Divisionw. I. pet o.b 
Anecies 
l f { 
- 


I 
7 .563 
0198 10' Se a ttir' 
7 14 .333 
7 3 0 722 149 pr.oenlx 
. 
. 
. _ 
< 
-335 
3 7 #1*9-78 
Monday's Results 
2 
9 0 
223 387 
(No armes r'heduled) 
s 
S 0 
194 9t- 
Toniqht's Games 
4 
5 1 
156 34' 
Phoenix at Buffalo 
w . 
I ns Ageteles ot Nnw York 
Portland at Chicaqo 
I Golden Slate at Milwaukee 
PnJadelohis 
vs. 
KC-Omaha at 
rity 
(only oamqs scheduled) 
w. I. t. pts ft «a 
14 
4 
1 29 95 5? 
8 
5 


Last week's results 
Pomona 10, Upland 7 
Ganesra 27, Claremont 23 
Chino 21, MooX:lair 7 
Garcv 0, D3micn 0 


Hacienda 


3 0 219 
_ 
4 C 315 
3 
6 1 7(4 2»< 
5 
4 1 195 1 «8 
7 
8 0 115 764 LOS ... 
. 
7 
7 0 214 27^ Golden State 
^ 
1 0 319 147 Portland 


prt. g.b, 


f i I 
.579 
4’j 
9 


6Vj 
7 'j 


R ovai Oak 
Bonita 
Aita Lom a 
Vs 
Srn D im as 
5 
Sierra Vista 
«'»i 
Gladstone 
Walnut 
Ontario 


Final 
League 
Overall 
W 
L PF PA W L 
. 
7 
0 200 83 
9 0 
... 
5 
? 126 103 6 
... 4 
3 204 86 6 
. . 4 
3 105 123 6 
3 
4 121 158 4 
„ 2 
5 
9C 186 3 
2 
5 127 169 4 
1 
6 118 173 1 
La i w eek's results 
R cv M Oak 77 Ontario 0 
Bonito 21, S ''T ra vista 14 
Alta Lom a 44, Walnut 13 
Gladstone 12, San D im as 10 


Montview 


lelv, Ron Strain and Bill Car- 
leton) earned first team hon­ 
ors while second team berths 
went to 
Henry 
Rodriquez, 
Steve 
Heavier 
and 
Marty 
Lewis. Oscar Rodriquez was 
an honorable mention selec­ 
tion. 
Fx>r Carleton and Peavler it 
was the second year in a row 
both have earnedi All-South 
Coast honors. 
Carleton led the team in 
scoring this season with 52 
goals, Strain and Henry Rodr­ 
iquez were second in scoring 
with 2a goals each. 
Strain was also the leading 
assist man for the Mounties 
and joined Vallely as the top 
defensive player on the team. 
South Coast coaches consid­ 
ered Strain, a La Puente pro­ 
duct, to be MSAC’s most 
dangerous player. 
Strain, Ciareton and Peav­ 
ler are all sophomores who 
propped at La Puente High. 
Vallely (Los Altos), Lewis 
(Rowland) and the Rodriquez 
brothers 
(La 
Puente) 
are 
freshmen. 


By MIKE RAWLINSON 
Pomona Valley community 
colleges — Mt. San Antonio, 
Chaffey and Citrus — open 
basketball 
season 
1973-74 
Thanksgiving weekend. 
MSAC kicks off its cam­ 
paign Wednesday night in the 
annual battle with the alumni 
which begins at 8 p.m. 
The Mounties will be in ac­ 
tion Friday at Glendale and 
will return home Saturday to 
meet cross-valley rival Citrus 
at 7:30 p.m. 
The Owls open the schedule 
Friday at East Los Angeles, 
while Chaffey hosts 
Pasa­ 
dena. The Panthers travel to 
Moorpark Saturday. 
All three will compete in 
the annual 16-team Chaffey 
I n v i t a t i o n a l Basketball 
Tournament, Dec. 12-15. Cit­ 
rus will host the Don Ed­ 
wards Memorial Tournament, 
Nov. 29-Dec. 1. 
This is how the 
teams 
shape up as season openers 
approach: 
CHAFFEY — The Panthers 
looked strong a year ago, but 
got oft to a disappointing 
start before rallying in the 
latter half of the season to 
finish 14-15 overall and 12-4 in 
Mission Conference play for 
third place. 
The Panthers look strong 
again in 1973-74. with Mission 
Conference 
Player 
of 
the 
Year Bob Kovach returning 
along with seven other leiter- 
men. 
Kovach, who earned all- 
state honors as well, is a 
6-foot-6 forward, who averag­ 
ed 20 points and 14 rebounds 
per game. 
The lettermen include start­ 
ing guard Pierre Rankin (6 2, 
165) and six others who saw 
plenty of action in center 
Randy Nickolei (6-8, 214), for­ 
ward Dave Sanders (6-5, 195) 
and guards Phil Merenda (6- 
1, 165), Myron Lutz (5-9, 150). 
Rick Peters (5-9, 148) and 
Ben Martin (6-3. 185). 
Nickolei looks like the start­ 
er at center this season, with 
Kovach, and a newcomer, 
Carleton Nelson (6-3, 180), at 
the forwards. Rankin and Me­ 
renda are likely starters at 
guard. 
Nelson may be the best find 
since 
head 
coach 
Barney 
Newlee greeted Kovach at 
last year’s initial workout. A 
28-yrar-old Vietnam veteran, 
Nelson plaved high 
school 
hall in Tampa. Fla. He’ll be 
the junior varsity basketball 
coach atGanesha High this 
year. 
“ I think we’ll be more com­ 
petitive early this year than 
we were a year aeo,” Newlee 
predicts. “ In the conference, 
Riverside went 28-6 last year 
and has many of the same 
people hack. Citrus and Palo- 
mar will be up there too.” 
The Panthers highlight an 
ambitious schedule Dec. 18-19 
with a two-game series with 
Hilo College in Hawaii. 


CITRUS — The Owls lost 
All-Mission Conference stars 
Willie 
Jackson 
and 
Larry 
Mann to graduation and head 
Neil Edwards will have to 
mold a team around 14 fresh­ 
men and three sophomore let­ 
termen. 
Center Tim Conklin (67, 
185), guard Godfrey Carter 
(6-2, 175) and forward Roy 
Hickman, (6-0, 190), an All- 
Mission candidate from the 
1970-71 squad, is the nucleus 
Edwards has to work with. 
. Top newcomers include for­ 
wards Rowland Allbright (6-2, 
207) and Ordale Newkirk (6-4, 
195), both of whom moved 
into the Citrus district from 
out of state. Allbright is from 
Brooklyn. N.Y. and Newkirk 
is from Detroit, Mich. 
Closer to home, the Ed­ 
wards expects to get a lot of 


mileage out of guard Ron 
McNary (5-10, 150, Azusa), 
forward Dave Weekly 
(6-5. 
205, Glendora) and forward 


at the valley’s largest com­ 
munity college. 
On l y t h r e e letterm* h 
greeted Victor foV.the begin- 
Dwight Dyke (6-3, 185), who 
ning of drills last"mont ; 
u/o«tAm 
ftniv one of that trjo was 
prepped at nearby Western 
on 
Christian High. 
The Owls will try to im­ 
prove on last year’s 13-18 ove­ 
rall record and 7-9 mark for 
fifth place in conference piav. 
An unknown quantity at this 
point, Citrus is being tabbed 
as an early season favorite in 
conference play. 
T he 
team’s 
strongpoim 
should be its offensive ability 
and good depth with inexpe­ 
rience and defensive inade­ 
quacies balancing the scale. 
MSAC — Big and eager this 
season, the Mounties will be 
lacking both experience and 
speed as head coach Gene 
Victor opens his 15th season 


Braves, Vikings 
win derby titles 


The Vikings allowed an av­ 
erage of only 8.9 points to 
their 
opponents 
this 
year. 
Chino, which will enter the 
CIF playoffs this weekend as 
SAL co-champ, finished sec 
ond defensively after giving 
up only 85 points this year 
an 
average 
of 9.4 
points 
scored against t hem this 
year. 
T O P T E N 
Offense 
Team (Record) 
Alta Lom al6 3i 
Royal Oak (9-0) 
Chaffey <6-31 
Webb (6-2) 
Ganeiha ( 6 0 
W alnut (4-1) 
Rowland (6-3) 
Bonita f**3) 


Alta Lome High finished 
the 1973 season as the Po­ 
mona Valley’s offensive lea­ 
der, and there was no doubt 
about it. 
The Braves not only cap­ 
tured the offensive race as a 
team by scoring an average 
of 31.2 points per game this 
year, but they had the top 
two 
individual 
scorers 
in 
quarterback Jamie Broecker 
and running back Kula Ku- 
resa. 
Broecker won the scoring 
derby going away, scoring 93 
points with 11 touchdowns, 24 
Ontario' ¡J-8 
* 
, . 
j 
San Dima* 16-3' 
extra points and one field 
goal. Kuresa bumped Bonita's 
Richard Ortega from second 
place and capped the year 
with 12 touchdowns (most by 
an individual this year) for 72 
points. 
Ortega finished third, and 
b?oecle ’ 'Ami'Loma 
_ 
, 
f 
Kuresa (Alta Loma) 
Royal Oaks John Ochoa n- 
ortega.(Booitaj 
nished fourth. 
Garey High, which had won 
only three games all year and 
finished seventh in the San 
Antonio League, slipped into 
the No. 1 spot defensively and 
won the valley’s defensive 
derby. 


Pt* Avg 
28 i 
31.x 
246 17 3 
226 25.1 
192 
?4 0 
202 
22.4 
181 
20.1 
i ,'9 i ; V 
1,9 17 7 
154 
17.0 
135 
ISO 
Defense 
G.irey (3-4-2).............. 
Chino (6 3) ...... 
Royal Oak 
Alta Lom a — 
Clarem ont (5-4) ...... .. 
Ganesha 
............. 
Pom on» (5*4) 
Rowland 
Webb .... .................. 
Damien 
Individual 
Player (School) 
t d s Xjits Fgs Pts 


80 
8 9 
65 
9 4 
89 
9,9 
99 
11.0 
101 11 ? 
104 11.6 
109 
121 
116 
12.9 
1)3 
14 1 
12b U fi 


one of that.trjo 
starter on the i972-7.: sqs; - 
which turned in a 13-16 recurd 
overall and 4-6 mYri^for thu J 
place in the rugged So i .1 
Const Conference.1" „ 
Gary Nash, a fr-i(> c< 
. r 
who Victor has'^bbed »-S 
starter back. As a rook,e ia-t 
season, Nash averaged mr.e 
points and eight rebounds a 
game. 
T he 
other lerterfflen 
are 
g u a r d Steve Arthur 
a d 
swingman Carl 
Williams:..!, 
both of whom wiire part time 
starters last seas^J 
Arthur, 5-10, 
m , was the 
Progress Bulletin!? prep p:ay­ 
er of the year two seasons 
ago at Charter Oak High. Wii- 
liamson, 6-2, 185, prepped at 
West Covina. 
Thev 
will be pressing a 
couple of non-letter winners 
trom last season,^Mark Gib* 
son (6-2, 185), and Chuck Flo­ 
wers (5-11, 155), fgr the start­ 
ing guard positions. Gib,sen 
prepped at Los £ltos High. 
Flowers, who rejoined 
the 
team this year áttiéi leaving 
it for personal reasons eany 
l a s t 
season, $atyed 
high 
school ball in Denver, Colo. 
At forward Dan ^Carroll ($* 
7, 205, Pomona Hi$h), Steve 
Funk <6-6, 175, Éishcp Amu.) 
and Kirk Herric^^^S, 2.1, 
Bishop Amat) are the frc it 
runners. 
*4J ^ 
Carroll was a 
non-letteir 
winner last year/ The others 
are freshmen. 
Backing them up. are Gary 
Melugin (6-6, 185t jGanesha) 
and Rodger Borg *(6-3, 173, 
Lo> Altos), who * are both 
freshmen. 
At center, behWtf’ Nash, 
Larry Cahoon (6-7, 21Q>, w o 
prepped at Edi$ftrP High in 
Huntington Beach. 


11 
24 
12 
II 10 
9 8 


Ochoa t Royal Q*k) 
Pfeil (Walnut) 
Van Hotwtyen (Ont.Christ) 
Zakem tw^br.). 
o 
Av,snt (Webb' 
8 
Dv. Pnarce (Row) 
9 
Ho..ard (Char,Oak; 
6 
R.¡thirds (sen Dim as) 
8 


★ 
★ 
★ 
,r»A. 1 
Mountie schedule 
A umnl; 28 «»wrt G ¡end. a; 
27 — L.A. South*- I; 
C — 


South Coast 


FIN AL 
Conference 
Overall 


Ncv. 
24 - Ci 
ut Fre vo 
. 
Ote. 
I - at Re-c <*r*'Mi — at u n 
Bernardino; 7 — Rii 
«niit e ; 3 - 
Ch.M“’-», 1.’ 15 — Chattev Tourney; 19 — 
la s t L.A. 
27-29 - 
Md 
T jr n t , 
Jan. 
2 
— 
at 
Long 
eeach. 
4 
— 
Bakersfield: 9 — S41.1 D>e*o M esa; 1* — 
ut O- ont • Cnast» 16 - C e m tcs, 19 — at 
Santa 
na, 26 - at -fcod#rton; 29 — 


w FebB i ìC 1 a l BakarsftqW/ 6 — at Sa n 
Dieqo M e ' >, 9 — 0 'a n t '‘f*6<iJt; 13 
U 
Carritc 
lo - Santa A m ; 20 
Fullef- 
fon. 


Final 


Rowland 
Baldw in Park 
No^thview 
'"/orkm an 
Bassett 
K an sas 
r harter Oak 
Noqales 
.. 
Azusa 


League 
Over ill 
W L PF PA W L 
5 2 127 84 
5 2 1 53 80 
5 2 119 4* 
5 2 114 42 
4 3 117 K 7 
3 4 87 95 
1 
6 43 16$ 
46 158 0 


Harness Handicap 
by Ernie Mason 


MMAAAMAMMAAMMAAA4AAAAMM 


Chino tickets 
now being sold 


CHINO — Presale tickets 
are now on sale for Chino 
High’s varsity football CIF 
playoff game with Villa Park. 
The tickets are being sold 
at the school’s student store 
at $2 for adults, $1 for stu­ 
dents and 50 cents for chil­ 
dren under 12. The store will 
be open Wednesday from 7:45 
a.m. to 8:30 a.m. and then 
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. It will 
not be open Thursday and 
Friday. 
The game 
against 
the 
Crestview i.eague champion 
will be held at Fred Kelly 
Stadium at El Modena High 
Friday night at 8 p.m. 


Fullerton 
Cerritos 
Oranqt Coast 
Santa A na 
M $ A £ 


w I t Pt 
i 0 0 107 
I 5 0 
76 
2 1 66 
2 
i 
37 
1 4 0 
91 
10? 
Di UBO Mesa I 
4 0 98 102 
Saluraa/'S Results 


w I 
9 0 


1 I 
2 6 
5 4 
5 4 


Panther schedule 


0,1? ; 27 
Dec 
I 


MSAC 28. Orante Ceas) 22 
Fullertor 17. Mesa 1 
„ 
Cernt:s 28. Santa Ana 3 


3 
Pasaderv ^ - îi, - at Moor* 
E a 'f L.A , lyW R h o em x . 
- Mesa, Anz»¡ 8 
- M5AC 
'2- 
T( u- ev; ’ ' 18 
at t- to 
27-29 
- at S/g^paauin CK la 


Mission 


•>an D ieoo 
SaddTet-ack 
Grossrront 
Clturs 
. 
Palomar.. 
Loutrwestern 
R iv *riid e .. .. 
Chatley 
San Bernardino 


FINAL 
Conference 
Overall 
w I t w I t 
.... 7 1 0 * 
... 
710 
5 2 1 
....?, 
530 


6 1 
8 0 
Saturday's Res ¡Its 
Sltrys 38, San Boranone 28 
hjftcy 19, Soutuwwestern 19 (t*e) 
ros'm ont 41. Riverside 21 
S sddlcback 14, Palomar 12 


Hawai 


Jan , 4 - at S vthwaafe.rn; 5 —„at Ri­ 
ver de? 9 — at Citrus»- ’I — Sar e- 
back; 12 - San Dieno Cjtju 19 - Pa:> 
ma-; 25 
- et San Brrna>-d(no; 26 — at 
Grcssmcnt; 30 - Ci»<-ys. 
Ft >. 
2 
- 
RivafiW «!*'* 
— So**th- 
westrrn 3 -- at Saddleback; 9 — a* Sat* 
Dit o C ity 13 — r.t Palomar; 20 - '¿m 
Bern trqlno, 23 — Groismont. 


Owl schedule 
Nov. 23 — at E n P 'C 2 > . 
1SAC; 29 — Dec. 1 — Do 
rial Tourney; 
24 
at 
on Edw ards 
a 
u y 
9 ï ï 
Mfc-ii till tourney; 
,1J 
b 
7 
Chanman J ’-IJ. U-1S — «t 
\ 
1 1 i 7 ? Chattcv Tourney; 19 -'ATWl-.'pe vat* v; 
? 
? J 
? 1 7 
29 
U ' Irvine frosh; 2/29 — at COÖ 


SCIAC 
20 


FIN AL 
Conference 


Redlands . 
La Varn# 
Whittier 
Clarem ont-M udd 
Occidental 
P xno!ia*Pitier 


w I pf pa 
5 
0 93 
4« 8 
3 
? 129 
66 4 
3 
2 90 
64 6 
7 3 
84 
78 3 
21 58 101 2 
0 
5 70 
170 1 


Overall 
w 


Last week's results 
Redland* 3, Whittier C 
La Verne 29 Claremont-7/udd 7 
Occidental 13, Pomona-Pitser ’0 


20 
UC Irvine frosh; 27 29 
T ournev 
fv 
jun 
a - st Saddleback; 5 •* at Str* 
Bernardine; 9 - Ch H 
11 
- San 
f 
, i? —. Gmssmont; 18 — at 
‘ 
ttier JV ; 23 — at t»*« :ide; 25 — 
P t o»:•.* . 26 — at S uih •.estern; 30 — 
3t O afffy; 
F - j ? 
s*n Bernardine; 6 — Sad : e- 
b irk ; 8 - at San Oîwio City; 
G rossm oi't; 16 
R verf de, ! 
Patom; : 23 — 5outnw#a|ern. 
’» 
- 
P0M0NA SPORTS CAR 
SPECIALIZtNO IN 
V W R E P À 3R S 


& OTHER FOREfON CARS 


1381 
W e s t H o lt 
R Z 't- ô S iiT 


Toniqht's Races 
CKar A Fast. First post 7:45 p.m « 
Exacta on 1st race. 55 exacta on 4th A 
7tn A 9th races 


SIXTH RACE — ONE M IL I. PAÇK. 


"T H E CITY OF HOPE P U R S E " — 500 
c l u b Ch a p t e r 


West 


11 8 
NBA leaders 
4 13 64 54 


\ n 41 
'1 Mnravlch, Ati 
7 it 14 » McAdoo, But 
7 11 34 au 
Ati 


t. pts of *a 
’ 2s 55 S 
6 20 » 29 
3 1? 49 36 
4 18 44 46 
^ OS Annrles 
Minnesota 
Calltorria 
I l f t 
Monday»* Results 
(No names 
Tonight's Games 
Toronto et N Y Islander* 
Los Angeles at Detroit 


NHL leaders 


The scorino leaders: 


Fsaoslto, Boston 
Orr, Bo tor 
Hod ie, Boston 
Martin, Buffalo 
Cashm an. B 'sto n 
tourney«"’, Montreal 
Ulln-K’ n, T>-rsnto 
I.»-»" irn. MontriM 
G o ld 'w o 'th y, Minnesota 
Park. NY Ranuers 


i B li 
6 12 47 61 


Hudson, Ati 
C notrrlcK I A 
Pntrie, Port 
Tomianovlch, Hou 
'cptt Pbce 
Jabbsr, Mil 
Havwond, Sea 
Chenier, Cap 


FO 
FT PTS AVG 
207 
111 515 
??.? 
ft 
« W 
194 
91 479 
177 
124 478 
177 
68 
180 
79 
162 
99 
191 
60 
195 116 
141 
76 


422 
439 
423 
442 


279 
26 6 
26.6 
26 4 
25.8 
24 9 
?4 6 
2"* 1 
23 9 


11 38 62i 


; x-Kentuckv 
; c arciina 
Nay,» York 
i Memjjhi$ 
j Viroima 


\ U \ Û iSdTan. 
ni^o10 


ABA 
East 


13 


West 


I. Pet. « I». 
3 
813 - 
Î 
— 
11 
389 
7 
12 .533 J 


16 
7 


5 l! .213 


Last weak'» results 
NO'thview 30 Rowland 6 
Btlciwln Pa-k 27, Azusa 7 . 
Workman 19 Noqales 7 
B.issett 19, Charter Oak 7 


Citrus Belt 


FIN AL 
League 
Overall 
w 
I Pf pa 
w I t 
Redlands 
. 7. ® , 23, L iS 
^ 1 
»ffey 
5 
2 185 92 
6 3 
Gorgonio 
.. 5 2 132 61 
7 2 


Ramona 
.... 3 4 
EiS9niW9Mtr 
1 1 
Riverside Poly 5. 5 
Fontana 
} 6 
Last week's results 
Redlands 35, Fortana 6 
i haff‘'v ^8. Ramona 15 
in '“-orqenlo 16, Pacific 6 
isenhower 20, Riverside Poly 14. 


F IR ST RA CE 
-’---JG '2 
C L A IM IN G „ . . . v * , , - , 
C L A IM IN G P R IC E $6u00. 
S2ÌÒ0 
Mi 


O NE M IL E . PACE. 
YO 
A 
U N D E R 
TOP 
I TO W IN N E R 


Driver 
Joe Thistle 1 Russell) .. 
Tony T_na (Desomer),. .. 
Shamrock Mill Beau (Grynd 
Rock Sprlnos C^q (Dennis) 


PP 


CiA-d R*. (in (C 'B i ien) 
Russ Butler (Cobb) 
(eretta (O Brien) 
IS ( M n 


«ver ente (Valli 
Little D.rççt a(LDWil 


Berettj (O '----------- 
. 
Native Excress (Dennis) 


PafW verV ííte (Va landlngham) 
Little Direct (L Williams) 
Millords Chie (Des mer) . 


’fe U S 4 
80 162 Í * 
æ i i Ì 
87 147 3 6 


* 1S-1 


Panache (D aullon). 
jack Addison (R. Williams) 
Bill Blame (Harper) 
.. 
. 
Pulix Kniqht (StUlmas) • 
Armbro Janie« (R. Williams) 
Irush Cam (Bruns) . 
In Error (Holt) 
LONGSHOT - 


SEC O N D 
R A CE 
— 
O N E 
M IL E . 
PACE C O N D IT IO N ED NW-2 TOR 5 Y 
A U N D ER THAT H AVE N E V E R WON 
T a l e s 
a f $ YO a 
u n d e r T h a . 
H AVE 
N E V E R 
WON 
$2560. 
P U R SE 
$2600. 


w. 
I. Pet. g.b. 
10 
* .625 
- 
10 
I -556 
1 
i 
9 .471 
7 i 
Ì 
13 .409 
4 
6 
12 .133 
5 


Sanaa Admiral (Conroy) 
Amigo R /y (Guhvl 
Tassels Bowl (O Bbrlqn) .. .. 
Taylor Pace (Vaileskev) 
undy) .. . 


CIF ratings 


Ma'iestie Beauty (Grun 
Williams# 
nee (Holt) 
Hobos Blacksmith (R. Williams) 


Arden Ed CL 
Diamonte P 


,5 l o ? ' : qames behind hand on .Ft place team 
Me’rday's Results 
,0 (no games scheduled] 


1110 fL 
1 1 *2 1 
Tonight's Games 
•nrolirs at Denver 
I Utah at Indlena 
! (only games scheduled) 


Nev England 
Quebec 
Chietino 
Cjeve'and 
Torm to 
New Ycrk 


idr 
Min •( - 
Wlnricn 
Hou to, 
Vancm 
Lee- m 


(No a i 
ÇJf. 
Mh 


-nt.'h 
c-scta 


ales 


and at E 
•seta at L 


W H A 
East 
w I t 
12 
7 
11 
9 
10 « 
9 
* 
« 11 
* 12 
West w. I. 
13 
3 
♦ 
7 
8 
9 
8 * 
6 11 
5 15 
Monday's Results 
[.rhedi'terll 
Tonight') femes 
dmonthn 
os Ann?ies 


ABA leaders 


W 5 
76 6* 
Th® *cr'rin8 
1 
23 88 71 |SW|, Kentucky 
1 
21 64 55 f evi on. New York 
2 20 61 57 r.ervi", Virginia 
3 1 5 
66 7>i j-nn'-n S»n 
O'eno 
2 14 
47 SC McGinnis, Indians 
1 'mn'oo Denver 
t. 
of* #* 8« W ise Utah 
0 
76 71 4? - 1 irnnr San Dieno 
1 
19 66 54mnrlnqham 
Carolina 
2 
' I *5 ‘‘î Neumann, Mamphis 
1 17 
60 47 
0 1? 
6’ 8< 
0 10 
49 80 


Final 


4-A 
1. 51. Paul (9-0) 19 
2. Santa An 1 v a lle y (9-0) I 
3. Crespi (9-0) 
4. Buena (94) 
. . .. . 
5. Redlands (8-0-1).. 
6. Seri-ite (7-1-1) .. 
....... 
7. Miiflkan (8 1 ) 
I. South Hills (9-0) 
9. Santa Monica 18-1) 
. 
10 Nev'port Harbor (8-1) 
Others rereivinq 10 0 


<g ft pts ava 
174 106 454 28 4 
19 / 99 499 *7.7 
14? 90 390 74 4 
155 43 394 77 1 
106 88 309 22 1 
141 4* 310 2? C 
15? 85 189 21 6 
121 «3 37» 19 9 
1M 100 415 19 8 
135 49 331 18 4 


199 
171 
138 
12« 
V 
90 
70 
46 
40 
. ............... , 
38 
or more points: 


Frostvs First IWinfers) 
Caband (Stiliina*! 


? 4s:? 
i11 S-l 
4 5-1 
7 6-1 


* $5-1 


Sharp Star (Ratchlord) 
uu, Minbar (Vollaro) 
, 
LONGSHOT — Andvs Laster 


SFVENTH 
RACE 
-• 
ONE 
PACE 
CLAIMING ALL AGES. 
CLAIM ING 
P R IC * 
$13.500 
$40f'J 
Lach (Bailey) .. 
Nellie Way (Vmlandlnaham) 
My Dough (W.nnters) .. 
JHfferson Speed (Bova) 
Hanxs Man (Dennis) 
Mlrams Bav (Bahouth) 
.. 
Graoe Time (Holt) .. 
Game Jack (Daultnn) . . .. 
Nevada Jack <Meyocks) 
Baron (Dokev) 
M 
Mi'S Melrm,c (Conrov) 
joct) 
Nevada Jack 
Bethany tayjfifoort) 
LONGSHOT 
---- 


A R E NON W IN N ERS OF A 


.lek I LVL. w 
LONGSHOT 


THIRD RACE 
CLAIMING 
HANOI. 
U | -- 


ONE M ILE. 
ICAP 
ALL 
BA SIC C L A IM IN G P R IC E S $7000 
Í9C30 PURSE $4000. 
brince fpby (Tpdd) 


Los Alios (8-i) 16, North Torrance. 
15, Pasadena (7-2) 14, Complon (8*) 
and Anaheim (6-2-1) 12 


1. Monrovia (9-0) 
2. St. John BosCQ (9-0) 5 
3. Villa Park (9-0) 
4. SB 


infs : 
Q 
rîi ? 


o'/i es FÎddleV TGrúndy) 
algary Lad (Dennis) 


J'G H TH 
•* 
A O F. 
1973. ÀE NON WIN 
197« T H A T --- 
«3200 
So Jo Butler (McGregor) . 
Hearths (¿uss).. .. 
Eennlla (OrfrW |» 
Jam bo Astra (WMbyrn) 
Pixies War Chief (W i m ) 
Family Boy (Cobb) 
Gallanq Hanoynr (Cartnel) 
Laoy Tar (Bailey 
k'ôy' Pace (Valleskey).. 
Pinelanu (Grundy).. 


193 
182 
1^ 
11 
i1 


ueens ______ 
ari H (Craig) 
v »• 
apart Pete (Williams) 
Florad»la (Vdlaro) 
Francis Sn''wion (Beithch) 
LONGSHOT - Floradola 


3 t! Ä 
$MU0 PUR/E SJ4Ç4/, 


9 h 


R A D IO -T V 


TONIGHT'S *A D '0 
B-SKET BA LL — * P m. K FI (640), 
I** m' 
($7-')' 
Sl,r sV nTBA LI4 — 8:30 P m. K FI (640), 
Ku is vs'. Red Wings (delayed). 


TONIGHT'S TJÉ‘-E '¡',SW | . {S! 
B A S K E T B A L L - 4 p m . X TLA »*'* 
LßKtrs vs Knicks. 


W EO N E5 D A Y 'S RAD IO 
BA SK ET B/LL 
6 p.m. KFI (640), 
L d k trs vs. Bullets 


Energy crisis 
halts Mint 400 


LAS VEGAS (UPI) - The 
Mint Hotel and Casino an­ 
nounced Monday the cancella­ 
tion of the $100,000 Mint 400 
Desert race, scheduled for 
March 17-20, due to energy 
crisis. 
Officials said the off-road 
automobile race will be res­ 
cheduled when conditions per­ 
mit. 


wfascerTa yalluv (8-1) ., 
5. Tho’jsano'Oaks (8-1) 
6. Blair (1-1) 
I fd ive rC lfv (8-1) 
" • S 
8 Lynwood (7-1-1) 
... 
. 
5? 
9 Burroughs (Burbank) (7-2) 
37 
10. La Mirada (6-12) 
. 
.3? 
Others re c’C/lng 10 or more points: 
Kennedy '7-2) 16, Santa M iria (6-f-1) 14, 
Mornincsida (7-2) 13, and Ratxho Alami- 
tors (7-2) 10 


ennls) 


FO U RTH 
RA CE 
— 
O NE 
M IL E . 
PA CE 
C L A IM IN G A LL 
A G ES 
CAL 
« r»I D p r e f _ t o p „c l a i m i n 6 P R IC E 


9 } -? 
11 
3-1 
6 3-1 
4 4-1 


5 $ 


Barcn 
Pf 


‘ 1 ’ ‘CO P U R SE *3800. 
Terry J^an«. Rocket (D¡ 


Glowlnn (B înnett) 
, 
Dele Phillip lO'Rrianl 
Passino Dream (B ’ l.ley) 
Rill Of Rinhts <L. 
Adio*. Carl (Miller) 
Bill Of Rinhts (L. Williams) 


Wuriny Elby <L Williams) 
B tmoooz (Ruiseil) 
•• 
Fashion Clcud (O 'Brlin) 
Îhainev iHult) .. 
huck Farr (Farr) 
ravata (Cartnal) 
Wortny Me„ul (Lu 
Haltyun Heri1 
Lam, Freight 


LO NG SH OT - ¿haIntv 


2 A 
1. Temple CHy (8-1 » 16 
7. Nef» '84-1) 3 
194 
175 
164 
131 
% 
a41 


Roy ni Cak <9-01 1--- 
. 
4 North (Riv ) (3-1) 
5 Anitlupe Valley (8-1).. 
1. Palm Sorlngs (7-1-1) 
7. Sonora <1-1 j 
8 Burrouf)»1' 'Ridqecrest) (8-1) 
9. Dn n le '7 2) 
3V 
10 RiO 7.v¡s i ('-?) 
. 2 « 
Other:. re^eiyina 
10 or more 
polnlt 
Aacura (7-2) 76, Indiu (7-1-1) 
22, and §1 
Dorado (7-2) 16 


1-A 
1. Perris (8 1) 
2 Paso Roble* (7-2) 
1. Techachapi (9-0) 
4 Carpintería (8-0-1) 
5. Baaumont (8 1) 
4 Imptr „1 (7 2) 
7. Brt lhrun (8-1) 
8 El Toro (8 0) 
9 Dese»♦ '8-11 
10 Big Bear (7-1) 


Soa eblnzer (5tífiines) 
Andys Gary (Havden) 
Poppa Rex (Joncs) 
Unele Tass (] 
LO N C SH O l 


(Jonc 
(Lono 
Uncle Tass (£onqo) 
Andys Gary 


12 81 
10 
101 
S i-i 
4 8 1 
5 15-1 
Masonfs specials 
B! ST B tT - Native s u r ¡n¡ fifth 
. 
B ST CH A N CE B LT 
Andy* Lest» 


O 
3-3 
0 If 


N F M IL F 
TR«OT. 
NON 
OtcmT IN N E D CD-5 YO & lip 
»MNFR5 or $6000 IN 1973 A f 3 YO & 
P NON W IN N F R S OF $12,0f« IN 1973 
fH A T A R E NON W IN N ER S OF S1700 
ciR ST M Q N *y IN I AST 4 STARTS & 
HOR5F'- THAT ARE NON V.'iNNERS 
OF 513r.O IN T H EIR LAST 4 STARTS 
P U R SE $3400 
Native Star (Dennis) 
- - 
Volk Hanver 'Huqan) 
Fallino Water (L Wilhams) 


P R E F E R R E D 
P A R L A Y 
• 
- 


J ^ L .O C K V ll 
T IP 
- 
Key 
P a c t 


•‘t x A G T A 
K E Y 
HORSE 
Black in ninth rack 


Gypsy l^ornan (R Williams) 
Neqctlatnr'Fisher) 
durât or (Balle,) 
üill 


Flawless (Richmond) 
... 
oçk (Guihwal 
Parnelli (B-vi -ss) 
ifiri 


Sissy Sp»*r (Stillinqs) 
SoeeiTy Have, (Brandt) 
LONGbHOT 
May 


4 41 
6 51 
7 *1 
it it’ 
1 10-1 
2 10-1 
10 1Ô-1 
1? 20 1 


am ity R e s t o w r a n t . 3 0 yp ars 
•TONY’S 


S fc o n d A S a n A n to n io 


Who can stop UCLA's dynasty? 


SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - 
Who is going to stop UCLA in 
college basketball this sea­ 
son? 
That’s a question experts 
and fans alike have been ask­ 
ing each year for the last 10 
years and only once in all 
that time have the Bruins 
been stopped. 
D o n ’ t bet anyone will 
handle them this season, just 
as long as center Bill Walton 
and forward 
Keith 
Wilkes 


stay healthy. In fact, most 
people think it will be another 
30-0 season and push the 
Bruins’ consecutive winning 
streak to 105. 
In the Pacific 8 Conference, 
at least, the Bruins seem un­ 
beatable. The past few sea­ 
sons that has caused a great 
pall to fall over the other se­ 
ven league schools. This year 
there is a new hope. Not to 
dethrone UCLA, but to finish 
second. 


So much for the Pac 8. 
In the West Coast Athletic 
Conference, the University of 
San Francisco shoots for its 
third straight league title with 
an expected tough challenge 
f r o m 
Nevada-Las 
Vegas, 
while in the Pacific Coast 
Athletic Association, everyone 
goes after Long Beach State, 
which figures as the favorite 
but not as overwhelmingly as 
in the last two seasons. 
Walton and Wilkes are the 


solid 
players 
on 
a 
star- 
studded UCLA team. Many 
think this will be the final 
season of basketball for Wal­ 
ton, the big Redhead who led 
the Bruins to national titles in 
the last two seasons. 
Walton, who never has been 
all that fired u p 1 about the 
game, although you’d never 
know it to watch him play, 
has indicated on several occa­ 
sions that he doesn’t plan to 
continue in the pros. 


SOCCER GOES COED — Girls are 
playing youth soccer in Pomona this 
year. Steven Mercado, 10, of the Po­ 
mona American Youth Soccer Or­ 
ganization (AY”SO) greets 12-year- 


old Tammy Marker to the sport. 
AYSO and the Pomona Parks and 
Recreation Department have joined 
forces to offer girls’ soccer. Games 
are played on Saturdays. 


TCU fires 
grid coach 
Billy Tohill 


FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) 
— Billy Tohill, who fought his 
way back from a near fatal 
auto accident last spring to 
Tesume his full time head 
football coaching duties at 
Texas Christian University, 
was fired Monday. 
“His accident has made his 
task at TCU more difficult,” 
¿aid TCU 
Chancellor 
Dr. 
James M. Moudy, “and has 
lessened the likelihood of its 
accomplishment. 
“It is our judgment that the 
interests of TCU must be 
paramount.” 
Tohill’s Homed Frogs had 
compiled a 3-6 season record 
and a 1-4 mark in the South­ 
west Conference. 
He had been voted as co- 
Southwest Conference coach 
of the year two seasons ago 
when, after the mid-season 
death of TCU coach Jim Pit­ 
tman, Tohill took over to 
guide the Homed Frogs to a 
6-4-1 year. 
Last March, in the early 
days of the Homed Frogs 
spring drills, Tohill’s car ran 
of! a Fort Worth freeway at 
high speed. He was in trac­ 
tion lor weeks and his right 
foot had to be amputated 
above the ankle. 
He vowed, 
however, 
he 
would return to the sidelines 
to coach this season and, with 
the aid of crutches, he kept 
his promise. 
But TCU was hard hit by 
injuries early in the season 
and speculation quickly began 
that despite his valiant come­ 
back Tohill would not be back 
as Homed Frog coach next 
year 


Mundine betters 
chances for title 


PARIS (UPI) — Australian 
Tony Mundine outpointed vet­ 
eran Emile Griffith of New 
York Monday in a 12-round 
b o u t a n d 
improved his 
chances of gaining a shot at 
the world middleweight title. 


Mundine, 22, was declared 
a winner on all three scoring 
cards after he battered, but 
failed 
to floor the 
expe­ 
rienced Griffith, former world 
w e l t e r w e i g h t and mid­ 
dleweight champion. Taking 
the advantage from the first 
round, the Australian used his 
longer reach to connect with 
a variety of punches against 
Griffith’s head. 


There were no knockdowns. 
Griffith sought to counter 
Mundine’s superior punch by 
working in close to his oppo­ 
nent’s body, though with little 
success since the Australian 
appeared unweakened at the 
end. Griffith, 35, tost points 
by clinching repeatedly and 
was warned four times by the 
referee. 
Mundine is currently second 
ranked to titleholder Carlos 
Monzon of Argentina who will 
defend his title here Dec. 8 
against 
world 
welterweight 
champion Jose Napoles of 
Mexico. 


Newspaper’s 
All-American 
teams picked 


DETROIT (UPI) — Ohio 
State and Southern California 
each placed three players on 
the 1973 Football News All 
American 
team, 
with 
the 
Buckeyes pacing the defen­ 
sive unit with two selections 
and the Trojans leading the 
offensive unit with a similar 
number. 
Ohio 
State 
placed 
line­ 
backer Randy Gradishar and 
end Van De Cree on the de­ 
fensive team and tackle John 
Hicks on the offensive unit. 
Southern California put end 
Lynn Swann and guard Boo­ 
ker Brown on the offense and 
linebacker Richard Wood on 
the defense. 
David Jaynes of Kansas 
was named the team’s quar­ 
terback with UCLA’s Kermit 
Johnson, Penn State’s John 
Cappelletti and Texas’ Roose­ 
velt Leaks rounding out the 
backfield. 


The offense: 
Ends: Lynn Swarm, South­ 
ern Cai, and Wayne Wheeler, 
A l a b a m a ; tackles: Daryl 
White, Nebraska, and John 
Hicks, Ohio State; 
guards: 
Booker Brown, Southern Cai, 
and Bill Yoest, North Caro­ 
lina State; center: Bill Wy­ 
man, 
Texas; 
quarterback: 
David Jaynes, Kansas; run­ 
ning backs: Kermit Johnson, 
U C L A ; 
John 
Cappelletti, 
Penn State, and Roosevelt 
Leaks, Texas. 


The defense: 
Ends: Roger Stillwell, Stan­ 
ford, and Van De Cree, Ohio 
State; tackles: Randy Crow­ 
der, Perm State, and John 
D u t t o n , Nebraska; middle 
guard: Lucious Selmon, Okla­ 
homa; 
linebackers: 
Randy 
Gradishar, Ohio State, Rich­ 
ard Wood, USC, and Rod 
S h o a t e , Oklahoma; backs: 
Mike Townsend, Notre Dame, 
Alvin Brown, Oklahoma State, 
and Eddie Brown, Tennessee. 
Mike Lantry of Michigan 
was named to the team as 
the nation’s top place kicker. 


Quarter horses preparing 
for Los Alamitos meeting 


LOS ALAMITOS - Many of 
the top quarter horses in the 
country are currently training 
at Los Alamitos Race Course 
in preparation for the second 
Horsemen’s 
Quarter 
Horse 
Racing Association meeting, a 
55-date meeting which will 
open Dec. 8, 1973 and run 
through Feb, 9, 1974. 
The second HQHRA meet­ 
ing will have a “new look” 
t h i s y e a r with several 
changes, including a 
split 
day-night 
meeting, 
Sunday 
racing and four Exactas, hav­ 
ing taken place in the 73-74 
format. 


Parker wins 
Pac-8 honor 


SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - 
Washington State fullback An­ 
drew Jones and Southern Cal­ 
ifornia rover Artimus Parker 
are the respective Offensive 
and Defensive Players of the 
Week this week in the Pacific 
8 Conference. 
Jones blasted for 155 yards 
on 26 carries, including a 31- 
yard TD gallop in the final 
quarter, Saturday in leading 
the Cougars to a 31-28 victory 
over California w'hile Parker 
intercepted three passes in 
helping USC break open a 
close game and win 42-19 over 
Washington. 
Jones has rushed for 441 
yards in his last three games. 
Before the Cal game he rush­ 
ed for 149 yards against Ore­ 
gon State and 137 against 
Oregon. It’s no coincidence 
WSU won all three games. 
The Trojans converted one 
of Parker’s interceptions into 
a field goal and another into 
a touchdown. The three thefts 
gave him 19 for his career, 
breaking the Pac 8 record 
held jointly by George Shaw 
of Oregon (1951-54) and Al 
Worley of Washington (1966- 
68). 


The first 14 days of the 
meeting (Dec. 8-Dec. 23) will 
be run on a daily basis, be­ 
ginning at 12:45 p.m. Tuesday 
through Sunday, followed by 
41 nights of racing beginning 
Dec. 25 with first post slated 
for 7:45 p.m. on a Monday 
through Saturday format. 
For the first time in its 23- 
year history, Los Alamitos 
Race Course will present Sun­ 
day racing with three ma­ 
tinee programs 
slated 
for 
Dec. 9, Dec. 16 and Dec. 23 
before the HQHRA goes back 
to racing under the stars on 
Christmas night. 
In addition, due to popular 
demand a fourth Exacta, a $5 
wager to be conducted on the 
eighth race, has been added 
to the $2 first race Exacta 
and $5 sixth and ninth race 
Exactas. 
The racing schedule remains 
virtually intact with one ex­ 
ception, the emergence of a 
unique $10,000 event, the St. 
Nicholas Express, to be run 
on Christmas night. The race 
will be conducted over the 
sprint distance of 300 yards 
and will be open to all ages, 
including 2-year-olds. 
Scheduled again this year 
will be the highly successful 
$50,000 Champion of Cham­ 
pions (Dec. 22), $12,000-added 
Inaugural (Dec. 8), $50,000-ad- 
ded El Primero Del Ano Der­ 
by (Jan. 12), $15,000-added 
Las Damas (Jan. 26), $10,000- 
added 49’er (Feb. 2), $15,000- 
added Bull Rastus (Feb. 8) 
and $35,000 HQHRA Cham­ 
pionship (Feb. 9). 
Once again this year, the 
caliber of horses expected to 
be on hand for the 55-date 
meeting is outstanding as top 
sprinters from 
around 
the 
country will be coming to the 
West Coast. Among the new­ 
comers will be Truckle Fea­ 


ture, 
Salty 
Talent, 
Azure 
Teen, Rocket Elaine, Mr. Go- 
bar, The Honker and A Gone 
Mama while 
Los Alamitos 
“regulars” such as All-Ameri­ 
can Futurity winner Timeto 
Thinkrich, Come Six, Osage 
Rocket, Charger Bar, Native 
Empress, Go Farther-faster, 
Lanty’s Jet and Don Guerro 
will return for another meet­ 
ing. 
Many of the top quarter 
horse riders throughout the 
nation will be back again with 
the likes of 18-year-old Steve 
T r e a s u r e , Terry Lipham, 
Ronnie Banks, Luke Myles 
and Charlie Smith trying to 
dethrone last year’s HQHRA 
j o c k e y champion Robert 
Adair. 
D. 
W a y n e 
Lukas 
will 
be back to defend his winter 
training 
championship 
but 
will 
face 
stiff 
competition 
from 
George 
Liblin, 
Gary 
Sherlock, Earl K. Holmes, 
Dan Francisco, Blane Scha- 
neveldt and Rodney Hart. 


USD selected 
for playoffs 


KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) 
— Wittenberg 
(Ohio), 
San 
Diego University, Bridgepot 
(Conn.) and Juniata (Pa.) 
were 
selected 
Monday 
to 
meet in the NCAA’s College 
Division III football playoffs. 
Wittenberg (16-0) will meet 
San Diego (8-2) at a site as 
yet to be determined, but pro­ 
bably at the home field of 
one, and Juniata (9-1) will 
play at Bridgeport (9-1) on 
Dec. 1. 
The two winners will ad­ 
vance to the national cham­ 
pionship game Dec. 8 in the 
Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl in 
Phenix City, Ala. 


Be that as it may, he’ll lead 
the Bruins again, and that’s 
saying a lot. Wilkes emerged 
as a star last year and indi­ 
cations are he should be even 
better this season. 
That leaves three jobs un­ 
decided but there are a host 
of proven candidates. Tommy 
Curtis seemingly has one of 
the guard jobs locked up with 
soph 
Andre 
McCarter 
the 
likely man for the other back- 
court spot. That leaves on» 
forward position open with 
Dave Meyers the indicated 
starter. 
Coach John Wooden, never 
one to sit on his laurels, beat 
his Pac 8 rivals to the punch 
on the recruiting trail since 
last season and his No. 1 sig- 
nee happens to be the most 
sought after youngster in the 
nation — 6-10 Richard Wash­ 
ington of Portland, Ore. Woo­ 
den has indicated he’ll put 
Washington on the varsity 
roster to get him ready as 
Walton’s replacement. 
“This could have been the 
year we made some progress, 
but what does Wooden do but 
go out and possibly have his 
best recruiting year ever,” 
moans California toach Dick 
Edwards. 
Stanford, 
tall and expe­ 
rienced, is picked by most to 
finish second in a five-team 
race with Oregon, 
Oregon 
State, Southern California and 
Washington. 
The 
Cardinals 
have three excellent players 
in seven-footer Rich Kelley, 
6-11 Tim Patterson and 6-9 
Mike Mann. 
USF has four of its first six 
players of a year ago coming 
back after a 23-5 season, 
which leads to considerable 
optimism. Kevin Restani and 
Phil Smith are the USF back­ 
bone. 
Jerry Tarkanian built Long 
Beach State into a national 
power, then quit the 49ers and 
the PCAA for Las Vegas and 
the WCAC. His coaching abil­ 
ity and the presence of Jim­ 
mie Baker and Bob Florence 
leads some to believe the 
WCAC fight will go down to 
the wire. 
The other s i x 
teams in the league don’t fig­ 
ure to beat either the Dons or 
the 
Rebels 
although 
there 
should be some anxious mo­ 
ments along the way. 
Winning 
the 
WCAC 
and 
PCAA titles doesn’t mean 
much, though, because there 
is still UCLA to contend with 
in the NCAA Playoffs. The 
Bruins have won nine of the 
last 10 NCAA Championship* 
and no one these days is bet­ 
ting they won’t make it 10 at 
11. 


‘W V y W m i m » > M A A M M W A A W W ( W W M y w 
W W y V W W M W ¥ V W W W W W 


Sports news in briet 


Water polo 
play begins 


WALNUT — The Southern 
California Community College 
Water 
Polo 
Championships 
get underway today and to­ 
night at Mt. San Antonio Col­ 
lege. 
Eight teams representing 
conferences in Southern Cali­ 
fornia will compete in the 
two-day event to determine 
tour representatives to the 
s t a t e championships next 
week. 
In first round games today, 
Golden West met Chaffey, 
Fullerton faced Cypress, host 
MS AC battled Orange Coast 
and Long Beach faced Gross- 
mont. Winners of the first two 
games were to meet winners 
oi the second two contests 
and losers were to face losers 
in tonight’s games. 
Admission to the tourna­ 
ment is $1. 


STAN SMITH, Erik Van 
Dillen, 
Tom 
Ciorman 
and 
Marty Riessen have been se­ 
lected to play in the 1973 
Davis Cup challenge round 
for the United States against 
Australia. 
The matches are to be held 
at Cleveland, Nov. 36-Dec. 1 


STEVE 
PREFONTA1NES 
of Oregon did exactly what he 
was expected to do Monday, 
win this third NCAA cross 
country individual champion­ 
ship and lead his team to an 
overall first place finish. 


UNIVERSITY 
OF 
VIR­ 
GINIA head football coach 
Don Lawrence, who guided 
the Cavaliers to three straight 
losing seasons, was fired late 
Monday. 
Lawrence, who took over 
for fired coach George Black­ 
burn at the end of the 1970 
season, was informed by ath­ 
letic director Gene Corrigan 
Monday night that his con­ 
tract would not be renewed. 


TOM THROWER, who had 
a 38-22-2 record in six seasons 
as head football coach at 
Southeast Missouri State Uni­ 
versity, resigned Monday in a 
dispute over regulations of 
Missouri Intercollegiate Ath­ 
letic Association. 
Thrower, 36, has been criti­ 
cal of the MlAA’s practice of 
playing spring football and 
limiting scholarships, 


FLOYD LITTLE, veteran 
running back of the Denver 
Broncos, will receive the an- 
n u a 1 YMCA-Bnan Piccolo 
Award Tuesday. 
The award is presented by 
th e N a t i o n a l Council of 
YMCAs to an outstanding ath­ 
letic for humanitarian serv­ 
ices. 


BOTH ROMAN GABRIEL 
a n d 
Philadelphia 
Eagles 
coach Mike McCormack were 
optimistic Monday that the 
veteran quarterback will be 
calling signals Sunday against 
the New York Giants. 
Gabriel was injured in Sun­ 
day’s 31-1C loss to Dallas 
when his right arm struck the 
helmet of Cowboy defensive 
tackle Jethro Pugh. X-rays on 
the injured arm proved nega­ 
tive Monday. 


JACK NICKLAUS and John- 
ny Miller are favorites to 
lake the two-man team title 
at the 21st World Cup Golf 
Tournament, which gets un­ 
der way Thursday at the 
Nueva Andalucia Golf Club on 
Spain’s Costa Del Sol, one of 
the fastest expanding year- 
round golf centers in Europe 


SHINICHI KADOTA, top- 
ranking Japanese lightweight, 
knocked out California light­ 
weight champion Jamie Rob­ 
ertson in the fourth round of 
a scheduled 
10-round 
bout 
Tuesday at the Nihon Uni­ 
versity Auditorium in Tokyo. 


Sagehen booters open 
play in NAIA finals 


CLAREMONT - Pomona- 
Pitzer faces Erskine College 
Wednesday in the opening 
game of the 15th 
Annual 
NAIA National Soccer Tour­ 
nament in Florissant, Mo., a 
suburb of Su Louis. 
The game is scheduled to 
begin at 10:15 a.m. (PST) at 
John F. Kennedy Field of the 
United 
Soccer 
Club. 
Sub­ 
sequent games are slated for 
Thanksgiving Day and Satur­ 
day. 
Winners 
of 
the 
opening 


round games will stay in the 
winners’ bracket. Losers go 
into the consolation bracket. 
Thus an opening game victo­ 
ry would assure the Sagehens 
of no worse than a fourth 
place finish. By the same to­ 
ken, a loss would preclude the 
possibility of finishing any 
higher than fifth. 
Erskine College, with an 
enrollment of 750, is located 
in Due West, South Carolina 
and represents Area Five in 
the NAIA. The team nick­ 
name is “Flying Feet.” 


Pairings announced 
for Redlands Tourney 


DICK BUTKUS says he ex­ 
pects to undergo surgery on 
his right knee this winter and 
if a problem can be cor­ 
rected, he says he’ll be play­ 
ing middle linebacker for the 
Chicago Bears again next 
year. 


NEW MEXICO STATE bas- 
ketball player Larry Knowles 
and three other persons were 
killed Monday in a car-truck 
collision. 
Knowles, considered one of 
the finest high school basket­ 
ball players to come out of 
New Mexico, was a member 
of the NMSU freshman team 
this fall. 


REDLANDS 
— Pairings 
have been announced for the 
26th annual Redlands Invita­ 
tional Basketball Tournament 
Nov. 29, 30, and Dec. 1. 
Claremont - Mudd, w h i c h 
won the event two years ago, 
will be pitted against Biola in 
the opening game at 2:30 
p.m. Thursday, Nov. 29. De­ 
fending champion Azusa Pa­ 
cific takes on Pacific Chris­ 
tian at 4:30 p.m. 
The evening round will see 


Redlands, which tost to A PC 
by two points, 65-63 in a 
double overtime in the title 
game last year, playing L A. 
Baptist. 
In the final game of the 
day, Cal Baptist plays South­ 
ern California College. Each 
team will play three games in 
the 
tourney 
with 
opening 
round winners moving into 
the championship bracket and 
the losers going into the con­ 
solation bracket. 


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The doctor comments 
Ulcerative colitis isn't an infection 


LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE 


By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D 


DEAR 
DR. 
LAMB—Read 
an article by you about the 
lady with diarrhea problems. 
1 have had a problem for 
about a year which has been 
diagnosed s ulcerative colitis. 
This problem bothers me pos­ 
sibly four or five times prior 
to 8:30 a.m., possibly once in 
t h e 
afternoon, 
and 
some 
times, 
but 
not 
always, 
a 
couple of times at night. 
1 would certainly appreciate 
any 
suggestions 
that 
you 
might have to correct this 
problem. In fact, there is not 
a word that would handle the 
appreciation. 
DEAR 
READ ER—And, 
I 
wish there were a ready solu­ 
tion to your difficulty as well 
as for all the many other 
people who have .his prob­ 
lem. Ulcerative colitis is a 
difficult problem to treat. 
I’m glad you are seeing a 
d o c t o r regularly. Not all 
cases of diarrhea are ulcera­ 
tive colitis, and it takes a 


good examination to be sure 
what the problem really is. 
Ulcerative 
colitis 
is 
not 
caused by an infection, in 
fact, its cause remains ob­ 
scure. 
Some 
doctors 
have 
considered the possible role of 
i n f e c t i o u s agents in con­ 
tributing to or causing the 
problem, but for the most 
part it is generally agreed 
that this is not the main con­ 
sideration in most cases. 


There are 
many compli­ 
cated facets to the treatment 
of ulcerative colitis. What's 
done depends upon the indivi­ 
dual 
case 
and how much 
trouble is actually occurring. 
I would only make a few 
suggestions that can be ge- 
eral comments for individuals 
with your problem. Eliminate 
all milk and milk products 
from your diet. For some rea­ 
son it seems to make these 
problems worse or actually 
precipitates attacks. Also, as 
a trial effort, eliminate all 
sources of gluten from your 


diet. That means all cereals 


except rice and corn. To do 


this right you will need to 
eliminate all foods that con­ 
tain gluten, specifically cold 


cuts that usually contain ce­ 
real, commercial Ice cream 
which usually contains flour, 
cream 
sauces 
and 
cream 
soups. The, avoid all spicy 
seasoning. 
Rarely a person will have 
Intolerance to gluten as a 
cause 
for 
a 
diarrhea-type 
problem. It w’on't hurt any­ 
thing to try it yourself. These 
measures, however, will not 
cure ulcerative colitis. The 
treatment is much more com­ 
plicated and will require the 
careful management of your 
doctor. 


waited to “ lick the bowl,” I’m 
happy to report it is perfectly 
safe, provided their little fing­ 
ers are clean. 


If you ate a lot of uncooked 
cake batter, you might feel a 
little gassy from the baking 
powder, as it releases carbon 
dioxide, but in these days of 
carbonated soft drinks by the 
case, I can’t imagine that 
would be a great change. 


Send your questions to Dr. 
Lamb, in care of the Prog­ 
ress-Bulletin, P.O. Box 1551, 
R a d i o City Station, New 
York, N.Y. 10019. For a copy 
of Dr. Lamb’s booklet on di- 
verticulosis, send 50 ccrts to 
the same address and ask tor 
“ Diverticulosis” booklet. 


DAILY 
Television 


Tuesday 


Evening 


NOVEM BER 20 


«10 i f 3~23 6 (2 * 8 )New* 
26, Lakeri Basketball L A. lak 
ers vs. N. Y. Knicks. 
® 
Courtship of Eddie's Father 
I The Lucy Show 
| The Ftintstones 
I Star Trek 
| Sim pl< mente Maria 
| Hodgepodge Lodge 
| Three Stooges 


0 (D fftl (3D Hogan's Heroes 
p 
Movie: 
(90) 
"Butterfield 


Harvey. Dina Merrill, 
n r 23 f j) <$* 3D) Hews 
Q Dick Van Oyke 
To Merv Griffin Show 
I Andy Griffith 
I School Discipline 
I Living Easy 
3 Novela 
I Desert Theetre 
© Little ftasceis 


iQ C D O ffiH e w s 
& Movie: (C) <2hr) "tm rn Shel­ 
ter" (mus) '70—The Rolling Stones. 
(T) Safari to Adventure 
§ 


fthaTs My Une? 
I Love Lucy 


I iM ciATUhf Thenksgnrhig That 
Almost Wesnt The animated story 
of tha first Thanksgiving. 
I 


ff) I Dream of Jaannie 
Esmeralda 


f|T) Dragnet 
Washington Straight Talk 


(79 8 ) Hee Hew 
00 El Primer Amor 
© Usted y le Poiide 
$ Speed Racer 


1:30 e 
< ® 0D> ® 
Hwr#ii Fhr ° IT “ 
Finishing Touch” The murder of • 
printer and the discovery of a forged 
municipal bond sends McGarrett to 
a highly respected documents ex­ 
pert for help In investigating a des­ 
tructive ring of forgeries, 
o NATALIE WOOD AND 
★ ROBERT WAGNER IN 
THE MOVIE OF THE 
YEAR— "TH E AFFAIR" 
O 
S ® 
© ABC Tuesday Mmrte 
(C) (90) "Affair (dra) 73—Natalie 
Wood. Robert Wagner. The tender 
story of a 32-year-old woman, crip­ 
pled since childhood by polio- 
experiences the joys and sorrows of 
love for the first time. 
© Novels 


DEAR 
DR. LAMB—Is it 
harmful for people to eat un­ 
baked cake batter? I once 
heard that the combination of 
ingredients in uncooked cake 
batter are in someway har­ 
mful to eat Would you com­ 
ment about this? 
DEAR 
READ ER—For all 
those youngsters who stood at 
their mommy’s knee an d 


It adds up 


Ahmes ine Moonborn, an 
Egyptian temple scribe, pro­ 
duced a handbook on arithe- 
metic, written on papyrus and 
showing examples of 
frac­ 
tions, 
linear equations and 
b a s i c geometric measure­ 
ments, 
almost 
4,000 
years 


Montreal U has a record 


The University of Montreal 
uage university outside 
of 


is the largest French-lang- 
France. 


’MOOD ’6 
'NHODV *8 '3NV1d > 'A ld M iin « I 'iO d H3MOU I 
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* 


Your Child Deserve* Music 
r* S3 il í i 
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LAY-A-WAY NOW 


FO R 
CHRISTMAS 


While our colections are complete. 


GUITARS $7*95 
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I 
H E A D Q U A R T E R S F O R B U N D Y Y A M A H A , 
I 
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| 


CC.vt-LETE R E P A IR DEPT. 
w i t h s u p e r v i s i o n of J i m m y M o o r e 
RUFFING'S J kSSUt 


" tvarythlng Una In M u sl< " 
391 N. GAREY, POMONA 
Ph. 622-8515 


Movie: 
(90) 
"Butterfield 
8" ».qq g-w 
® 
/Jg © The M agiciaa 
— Elizabeth Taylor, Laurencej 
..M#n on pjfe- Magician Anthony 
Blake uses a briefcase of 'flying 
dollar bills and the assistance d 
Danny Rytrson, a teenage magic 
student, to vindicate Danny s father, 
who is charged with murder. 
(D The Bold Ones 
t 


Carmine 
Noches Tapettee 


Tony Curtis guests as the ruthless 
owner of an illegal gambling club 
where John Shaft follows a trail of 
murder, extortion and theft invol­ 
ving gamblers and their debts. 
ID C H 5 5 Q Humperdinck Engel­ 
bert Humperdinck welcome* Ltne 
Horne and Joel Gray. 
S 


The Un touch a Wes 
Nana Part III "The Victim" 
Nana retires to her country house 
and entertains young Georges Hugon 
as well as Steiner, 
ff l Le Hlena 
© Festival Mexican« 
IMP O 3* 9 ) 0 © '«11«. «»»> 
"Collision Course 
An experimental 
program that places police men end 
together 
in 
petrol 
cere 
| P Treasure Hunt 
n f Hogan's Heroes 
Q 10 Hollywood Squares 
fg) Dusty's Trail 
C l Concentration 
CD ffi EspfViSn Santa dew Lena 
Parade Danny Thomas is this year $ 
Grand Marshal for the parade which 
features floats, marching bands, 
equestrian units and celebrities from 
the entertainment world. 


(0 (3DTo T#H th* T0,1)1 
(31 
Let's M?ke A Deel 
© Cityw at chert 
© Stand Up and Cheer 
© The Ghoul Gang 


IMO 


ilo o 


¡1 Hilarious ’Peanuts' 
\r Fun-Feast! A CHARLIE 
BROWN THANKSGIVING 


0 (5 9 (3H)Qt)CEfSSDAcjwr 
Ik Brown Thankeiving When Pe* 
permint Patty invites herself a n t 
assorted friends to Thanksgiving 
dinner at Charlie Brown’s house K 
throws the hapless little 
Peenut^ 
into a penic. 
__ 
0 5 5 ® 5 9 © ChaM 
Rolled Dead” Chase pulls a 
bluff by setting himself up as head H ;J0 
of a class gambling ring ter J0d*frj 
patrons in competition with the: 
real criminal. Craig Stevens guests 
n 
y t ® 
© New Temperatures 
Rising "The Night Shift” More then 
ghosts and goblins haunt the wee 
hours In a hospital, as Or. Mercy 
♦ties working late— beset br buarre 
interruptions. 
o DEAN MARTIN TRIES TO 
+ "SAVE A MARRIAGE" 


women 
---- 
- , 
.. 
creates some problems for officerx 
Jean Culhane (Sue Ane langdon) 
and Vince Le Sorda (Hugh O’Brien). 


O 
S f a ^ M a r m Wetoy NLD. 
• Circles of Shame" A young patient 
ot Dr Welby postpones her merriege 
because she believes she I* prog* 
nant. 
O ^ News 
t 


Twilight Um 
C0 News 
Vka« en Confhde 


f IHglXTi Steembeth 
( I) 
A 
comedy about 12 characiers in whet 
first appears to be an ordinary 
staambath but which turns out to 
be a waiting room between ttee 
world and the next 
I Muskel Espectacular 
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check is eageiiy accepted at thousands of local stores. 


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This might, in the opinion 
of 
many 
diplomats, 
have 
avoided the situation in which 
Britain, West Germany and 
other NATO allies not only re­ 
fused to support the U.S. posi­ 
tion in backing Israel, but de­ 
nied landing rights to U.S. 
a i r c r a f t carrying military 
supplies to Israel. 
The expressions of disgust 
with the Allies subsequently 
voiced by Kissinger and other 
officials precluded the possi­ 
bility of a united front. 
Such a U.S.-European-Japa- 
nese front might have well 
deterred the Arabs from un­ 
dertaking an oil production 
slowdown or embargo, since 
Europe, the United States and 
Japan supply them with a 
large number erf items which 


Rattles & straws 
Gloria in 
ig rfl 
excelsis... 


By JOSEPH FIRMAN 
AI 


My otherwise routinely unimaginative and expensive mail 
was enlivened the other morning by a letter from Gloria Stei- 
nem, the ubiquitous feminist who thinks women are just as 
good as men. 
(I say my mail was expensive because at this time of year 
the outfall of third-class market ads. insurance come-ons and 
real estate promotions is increasingly leavened with appeals 
for funds from every' eleemosynary institution you ever heard 
of — and a lot you haven’t. South Dakota Home for Delinquent 
Left-Handed Boys, National Society To Fight Tennis Elbow, 
American Association for the Preservation of the Third 
Avenue El.) 
Miss Steinem’s pitch was for Ms. magazine, which I first 
took to be multiple sclerosis, but on reading further discovered 
it was "A magazine for female human beings.” Much the best 
kind. Human, that is. 
Gloria’s letter starts “Dear Person,” which I thought was 
sort of cute. One gets so tired of "Dear Sir” and “Dear Friend 
of the Home for Cross-Eyed Mongolian Refugees.” 
“Who are you?” Mrs. Steinem queried. "Who are WE? Ac­ 
cording to Conventional Wisdom (capitalized) we are less in­ 
telligent, ambitious and objective than men.” (Did I open my 
Wife’s mail by mistake?) 
"We are better suited to raising children, whose child-like 
ways we often adopt,” the letter went on. "We are less suited 
to positions of power and decision-making, especially if those 
are positions of power over men. We are less able to develop 
our own talents or control our owm lives.” 
What a confession! I was starting to — you know, blush. 
I still hadn’t gotten her point Wisdom is wisdom, isn’t it, 
whether conventional or unconventional. Maybe I should make 
out the check to the Multiple Sclerosis Society and forget the 
whole thing. But Mile. Steinem held me, like the Ancient Mari­ 
ner at the church door. 
"If we are beautiful, we are ornaments, objects,” she 
sniffed. "Any success is attributed to our looks.” 
This is bad? From her photographs Gloria is no Bella Ab- 
zug, but she’s never going to make Rose Bowl queen, either. 
While not a card-carrying Dirty Old Man, I have never been 
known to avert my eyes when a miniskirted secretary went to 
the bottom drawer of the files. As Burns said, "A person’s a 
person, for a’ th a t” 
"Ms.,” according to Madame Steinem, "is a forum for wom­ 
en who are finding ourselves.” (She slipped, didn’t she? She 
said "women.”) And since w'hen do women need another fo­ 
rum? The world has been their pulpit and agora since Eve 
first mounted the rostrum in Eden. 
And, with a final admonition for me to learn all about breast 
feeding, witches, the Southern belle and forced sterilization, 
Señora Steinem rang off with a cheery, "In sisterhood.” 
How do you spell multiple sclerosis? 


Except consumers 
Many will profit 
in energy crisis 


WASHINGTON (UPI) - Tc 
most Americans, a gasoline 
shortage and possible ration­ 
ing will be an annoying and 
perhaps expensive 
inconve­ 
nience. To some fast-buck 
operators, and even reputable 
businessmen, it will be a pro- 
fitmaker. 
As 
gasoline 
supplies 
go 
down, the "cream skimmers” 
will be in the market place 
with items to ease your mis­ 
fortune and at the same time 
turn a tidy profit for them­ 
selves. 
Their argument will 
run 
like this: 
If gas is short, you need to 
protect your supply, right? 
How do you do this? 
Why, buy a newly manufac- 
t u r e d gasoline tank cap 
equipped with an 
antilheft 
lock, of course. 
You can count on the huck­ 
sters to sell siphon hoses, too. 
Can the nation’s 100 million 
motorists afford to be without 
siphon hoses if gas is short? 
On a more menacing note, 
the threat of a black market 
is the handmaiden of any ra­ 
tioning plan. During World 
War II. the high profit mar­ 
gins 
created 
a 
flourishing 
black market in gasoline at 
the retail level. 
Some industries will profit 
In a legal way from the fuel 
crisis fallout. The airline in­ 
dustry is one. 
Plagued in rerent yenrs by 
massive lo^es, the airlines 
have blamed part of their fi­ 
nancial problem on excessive 
competition. 
Forbidden by antitrust laws 
to hold talks on joint flight 
ruts, and fearful that unila­ 
teral action would give their 
competitors an advantage, the 
airline* claim they were for- 


On military alert 
U.S. siili is awaiting Kissinger explanation 


WASHINGTON (UPI) - Se­ 
cretary of State Henry A. Kis­ 
singer promised the American 
press and people three weeks 
ago that “within a week” he 
would explain why the United 
States took certain ominous 
actions during the height of ’ 
the Arab-Israeli crisis. 
So far he has not done so. 
And his spokesmen at the 
State Department assert they 
are as much in the dark as 
the public. 
Some veteran officials re­ 
call that the late John Foster 
Dulles disclosed his plans to 


so few top officials even as­ 
sistant secretaries of state 
had to attend his press con­ 
ferences to learn about future 
U.S. foreign policy. 
It would be unfair, without 
knowing more about circums­ 
tances, to charge Kissinger 
with procrastination or bad 
faith. He has been engaged in 
so furious a round of negotia­ 
tions and hectic travel that 
Chinese Premier Chou En-Lal 
greeted him in Peking last 
weekend as the “Middle East 
cyclone.” 
In any event, officials here 


agree the seemingly tireless 
secreta-y, who also doubles 
as President Nixon-s national 
security adviser, has left a 
number of unanswered ques­ 
tions dangling. 
The 
first 
of 
these 
was 
posed at his Oct. 25 news con- 
fecence when he was asked 
why the United States, the 
night before, placed a large 
proportion of its military for­ 
ces, including nuclear ele­ 
ments, on "alert” because of 
some unexplained action by 
Russia in connection with the 
Arab-Israeli war. 


The need for an explanation 
is all the greater because 
while Kissinger said “we do 
not now consider ourselves in 
a confrontation with the So- 
v i e t 
Union,” 
Nixon 
sub­ 
sequently described the situa­ 
tion as the 
most 
perilous 
since the 1962 Cuban missile 
crisis. 
The second question Kissi­ 
nger has never answered is 
why the United States did not 
give its European allies and 
Japan at least a few hours 
advance notice of its planned 
"alert” and the reason for it. 


they cannot get from Moscow. 


Some officials 
feel there 
has been an inconsistency in 
Kissinger’s public statements 
about the Middle East. While 
refusing at all other times to 
assess 
the 
merits 
of 
the 
Middle East dispute, he said 
on Oct. 25 "the conditions 
that produced this war were 
clearly 
intolerable 
to 
the 
Arab nations ... and it will be 
necessary to make substantial 
concessions” — presumably 
by Israel. 
This has never been said 
directly to Israeli 
Premier 
Golda Meir, so far as can be 
determined here. Her prop­ 
agandists assert that having 
won the war, it is not up to 
them to make concessions. 


ced 
to 
keep 
money-losing 
flights in operation. 
But new the government 
has given the industry its 
blessing to hold flight cutback 
talks as a way to conserve 
fuel. The result: 400 flights a 
day have been cut from do­ 
mestic flight schedules, and 
Pan 
American 
and 
Trans 
World have been giving per­ 
mission to hold cutback talks 
with foreign airlines. 
Critics of the decision argue 
that the government is allow­ 
ing the airlines to avoid com­ 
petition and at the same time 
to cut the level of service pro­ 
vided the public. 
The same windfall 
could 
come to the tire industry 
which is now in the midst 
of a campaign to sell radial 
tires which provide better gas 
mileage, but also carry stiffer 
price tags compared to con- , 
ventional tires. 
In Congress, support for the 
Alaska pipeline —expected to 
be a profit bonanza for an oil 
company combine —increased 
rapidly as the fuel crisis wor­ 
sened 
On another front, Charles 
DiBona, deputy director of 
the White House Energy Pol­ 
icy Office, admitted he al­ 
ready had been approached 
by firms eager to take on the 
job of printing millions of gas 
rationing coupons, if needed. 
But if there is profit for 
some, there is absolutely none 
for the consumer. 
Not only will he get less 
gasoline for his car, but one 
of the possible strategies dis­ 
cussed to combat the short­ 
age is to tax the consumer 
substantially more (maybe up 
to 30 to 40 cents a gallon) for 
the gas he does get. 


□harsh 
■dry 


Change to menthol Salem 


Dean testimony said 
sufficient for charges 


When the weather takes a 
turn for the worse, your cigarette 
can give you a scratchy taste. 
If it does, turn to Salem. 
Salem's natural menthol blend 
tastes naturally smooth. Not 
harsh. Not hot. Weather or not! 


NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP!) 
— 
Abraham 
S. 
Goldstein, 
dean of the Yale Law School, 
Sunday said John Dean’s tes­ 
timony Is sufficient evidence 
to bring conspiracy charges 
against President Nixon. 
However, Yale Prof. Ale­ 
xander M. Bickel, an author­ 
ity on the constitution, said 
an impeachment inquiry by 
the House would be the better 
way to investigate allegations 
of abuse of power. 
In a panel discussion on 
channel WTNH-TV, Goldstein 
said charges against Nixon on 
the grounds of conspiracy to 


obstruct 
justice 
could 
be 
started immediately on the 
basis of testimony given by s 
Dean. 


"The credibility of the tes- 1 
timony is subject to chal­ 
lenge,” Goldstein said, "but 
is clearly admissible as evi­ 
dence under the 
prevailing 
conspiracy laws.” 
Salem smokes smooth. 
weather...or not. 


New commission leader 
Broader youth involvement in city doings sought 


CARL M. BRUNST of Clare­ 
mont has been promoted to the 
position of regional sales man­ 
ager with the Carr Paper Co. of 
Pomona. His promotion was an­ 
nounced by Ernest N. Taylor, 
Carr 
president. 
Brunst 
has 
been with Carr Paper four 
years. He and his wife, Cathy, 
have three children. 


Gas, vehicle licenses, cigarettes 
Valley cities share $391,000 taxes 


State Controller Houston Flournoy *e- 
ported the distribution of more than 
$391,000 among 10 Pomona Valley area 
cities as the October apportionments of 
highway users and cigarette taxes and 
of state-collected in-lieu motor vehicle 
license fees, 
The share for Los Angeles County 
government from the three sources 
was $6,129,192. Combined total for San 
Bernardino County government 
was 
$829,392. 
October’s apportionment of highway 
users 
taxes 
saw 
$18,483,785 
going 
directly to the counties, $13,912,979 to 
cities, $40,560,142 for expenditures on 
state highways, $13,912,979 to cities, 
$40,560,142 for expenditures on state 
highways, and $30,000 to the Bicycle 
Lane Account. 
The total available for the October 
apportionment 
was 
$8,716,574 
more 
than that for the prior month and $8,- 


318,128 more than that for the same 
month last year. 
The distribution locally was: 
Pomona, $77,526; 
Ontario, $51,447; 
Claremont, $22,377; 
Industry, $1,035; 
La Verne, $14,014; San Dimas, $15,515; 
Walnut, $5,872; Montclair, $18,026; Upl­ 
and, $28,297; and Chino, $17,481. 
Of the cigarette tax apportionment, 
the 58 counties shared $1,245,718 and 
$5,098,814 
was 
divided 
among 
the 
cities. 
This distribution represents 30 per 
cent of the revenue deposited in the 
cigarette tax fund during the month of 
September 1973, less the state’s admin­ 
istrative costs of $24,496 
Area communities received the fol­ 
lowing amounts: 
Pomona, $28,695; 
Ontario, $18,248; 
Walnut, 
$1,093; 
San 
Dimas, 
$3,794; 
Claremont, $5,334; 
Industry, $12,027; 
La Verne, $3,250; 
Montclair, $9,835; 


Upland, $9,346; and Chino, $5,514 
Th? 
apportionment 
to 
cities 
and 
counties from the In-lieu motor vehicle 
license fees totaled $4.572,517. 
The distribution represents the cities' 
and counties’ shares of license fees and 
other revenues deposited in the Motor 
Vehicle License Fee Account during 
September, 1973. 
The state excise tax at the rate ot $2 
per $100 ot market value takes the 
place of local property tax on motor 
vehicles. Except for that portion with­ 
held to cover administrative costs, the 
money is returned to local govern 
ments which may use thetr shares for 
general purposes. 
Locally, the distribution was; 
Pomona, 
$12,466; 
Ontario, 
$9.358; 
Claremont, $3,552; Industry, $103; La 
Verne. 
$2,200; 
Walnut, 
$884; 
San 
Dimas, $2,443; Montclair, $3,231; Upl­ 
and, $5,114; and Chino, $3,131. 


POMONA — The creation of a Youth 
Commission here is a step in the right 
direction but more can still be done to 
get th? city’s younger residents in­ 
volved in the community, says 
that 
commission’s first chairman. 
Bill Jones, 19-year-old sophomore at 
Mt. San Antonio College, was elected 
chairman of the newly created com­ 
mission at an organizational meeting 
last week. 
A student at Pomona College, Jam es 
E. Blancarte, 20, of 1275 W. Grand 
Ave., was elected vice chairman. 
The Youth Commission, said Jones, 
“ does fill a definite need, but in addi­ 
tion, I would like to see youths ap­ 
pointed to other city commissions be­ 
cause many young people want to be 
involved in the community at large, 
they want to participate as adults.” 
Jones, 
a native Pomonan, gradu­ 
ated last year from Pomona High 


That’s the way Jack Harris of Pomona explains his 
President Nixon. After many sketches, it took only 
r n n t r i h l l f o 
1 i n 
“Watergate” woodcarving of Sen. Sam Ervin and 
a week to carve the characters, said Harris. 
(All III lUUIv If V 
pints of blood 


POMONA — General Telephone Co. 
employes donated 178 pints of blood 
during a 
two-day 
blood 
drive 
last 
week. 
Joel Clifton, a PBX man in Pomona 
Division who has been with the compa­ 
ny since 1951, donated his 27th pint of 
blood. Clifton, a resident of Upland, 
has given three times as much blood 
as the normal body contains since he 
first began donating to the Pomona 
Blood Donor Center of the American 
Red Cross. 
With the beginning of the holiday 
season, the Pomona Blood Donor Cen­ 
ter anticipates a drop in the number of 
volunteer donors along with a rise in 
the need for blood by accident and ill­ 
ness victims. 
The center, at 420 N. Reservoir St., 
will be open Wednesday from 1:30 to 5 
p.m. The Blood Donor Center is also 
open every Tuesday from 3 to 6:30 
p.m. Appointments may be made by 
calling 629-7455. 


M all Commission 
postpones meeting 


POMONA — The next regular meet­ 
ing of the Mall Commission, has been 
postponed to Thursday, Dec. 27 at 9 
a.m. in the City Hall boards and com­ 
missions room. 
The November meeting date fell on 
Thanksgiving Day. 


School where he was student body 
president. He is the son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Daryll S. Jones, 469 Roosevelt 
Ave. 


He is a history major at MSAC and. 
after graduation from there, he plans 
to continue his education at a four-year 
institution. 


Jones said the commission has ex­ 
pressed a desire as one of its first 
goals to look into apprenticeship pro­ 
gram s for high school graduates with­ 
out vocational training, possibly work­ 
ing in cooperation with school officials. 
According to the city ordinance that 
created the commission, one of its 
tasks will be to organize an advisory 
group whose members would represent 
persons younger than 18. 


Persons not yet of voting age are 
prohibited by the City Charter from 
serving on commissions. 


The new commissioners have indi­ 
cated they would like to see the advis­ 
ory 
committees 
include 
two 
repre­ 
sentatives each from 
Pomona, 
Ga- 
nesha and Garey High Schools and one 
each from Park Avenue, Pomona Girls 
Catholic and Damien high schools. 


Commission members drew lots for 
term s of office at Tuesday’s meeting. 
Drawing one-year term s were Blan­ 
carte; Darwin Brown of 2250 Academy 
Ave.; 
and Judy Radocinski of 2450 
Lyndale Ave. 


Jones and the other three commissio­ 
ners drew term s that will expire in 
1975. The others are Lillian Alvarez of 
979 Barbara Lane; Shinichi Mori of 236 
W. Olive Ave., and Patty Winter of 564 
E. Alvarado St. 


The commission will hold its regular 
meeting on the second Thursday of 
each month at 3; 30 p.m. 


POMONA — In one of its shortest 
meetings, the City Council 
Monday 
night approved an agreement to un­ 
derwrite a portion of the cost for 
Christmas lighting on the downtown 
Pomona Mall and Pomona Valley Cen­ 
ter. 


Councilman R. T. French sa>d he 
would 
like 
to 
see 
this 
traditional 
agreement reviewed, adding that he 
was not necessarily stating his opposi­ 
tion but would like additional informa- 


tion from the city staff. 
Councilman Charles W. Bader asked 
that the m atter be brought up for dis­ 
cussion during the next budget ses­ 
sions. 
French said that in the future, it 
seemed “appropriate” to him to nave 
the 
agreement 
signed 
before 
the 
Christmas decorations are put in place. 
Some of the decorations already have 
been installed. City hall said this was 
due to an administrative oversight. 
The agreement, with the Pomona 
Chamber 
of Commerce, 
which 
is 
coordinating both Christmas lighting 
programs, calls for a city contribution 
not to exceed $4,500. It was approved 
by a 4-0 vote. 
In a letter to the council. Norman 
Williamson Jr., president of the cham ­ 
ber, said expenditures for decorations 
at PVC would amount to $7,740. City 
Clerk Larry Thomas said total cost for 
the Mall would be $4,000. 
Williamson 
said 
the 
city’s 
con­ 
tribution would be equally divided be­ 
tween the Central Business District 
and PVC. 
According to the agreement, among 
the decorations at PVC will be a 
Christmas tree 115 feet tall. 
On another m atter, the council, also 
by a 4-0 vote, gave its approval to a 
final application for participation in a 
juvenile diversion program that would 
involve, besides Pomona, the cities of 
La Verne, Claremont. San Dimas, Wal­ 
nut and other agencies. 
The application, to the California 
Council on Criminal Justice, is for a 
grant of $178,750, with an additional 
$8,250 to be supplied by the five cities 
plus $33,000 in in-kind services to be 
provided by seven of the local partici­ 
pating agencies. 
Project director for the program will 
be Clarence R. Webb of the Pomona 
Office of Community Relations. 
Among the other agencies exoected 
to participate are the Pomona Unified 
School 
District, 
Claremont 
Unified 
School District. Bonita Unified School 
District, Walnut Valley Unified School 
District and the La Veme-San Dimas 
Open Door,Inc. 


JUST FOR FUN 
Phone workers 


Watergate inspires wood carver to 
resume skill abandoned 30 years ago 


By ED PRATHER 
P-B Staff Writer 


POMONA — “That darn Watergate 
inspired a lot of people to do things,” 
>aid the graying mechanic with a grin. 
Perhaps so, but few can match the 
delightful 
inspiration 
that 
came 
to 
Jack Harris of 835 E. Columbia Ave., 
who revived a hobby he had abandoned 
more than 30 years ago. 
The result is an eight-inch wood car­ 
ving depicting a stern Sam Ervin con­ 
fronting an impish Richard Nixon, who 
refuses to give up his lollypop tapes. 
“ That’s the first carving I’d done in 
30 years,” said Harris, “and 1 don’t 
know where 1 got the idea tor it.” 
It’s not a political statement, says 
the 63-year-old Republican, as much as 
it’s a caricature exercise for the sake 
of fun alone. 
“ I used to carve a lot when 1 was - 
young. Most of the characters I’ve 


done are hillbillies or cowboys,” he 
said. 
“This is the first political carving 
I’ve tried,’' Harris explained. 
In order to get the proper effect, 
Harris made almost a hundred pencil 
drawings of Ervin while watching the 
Watergate hearings on television. 
“ It’s not easy either,” he admits, 
“ because they keep moving the ca­ 
m era from one person to another.” 
Harris sent a picture of the carving 
to Sen. Ervin in Washington, D.C. In 
return he received a note from the 
North 
Carolina 
Democrat 
thanking 
Harris for "sharing” his art work. 
Harris has been a resident of Po­ 
mona since 1934 when he moved here 
from Texas to work here in his uncle’s 
auto dealership. 
“ I started carving when 1 was about 
12. We lived near Abilene, Tex., and it 
was just something to do,” he said. 
After moving to Pomona, Harris en­ 
tered some of his works in the Los 
Angeles County Fair and won a blue 
ribbon in 1937. 
Many of the western pieces he has 
carved are on display in a small mu­ 
seum in Yucca Valley, where Harris 


and his wife, Bonnie, hope to retire. 
“ 1 guess I just got too busy,” Harris 
says of the 30 years he didn’t carve. 
“ But I plan to keep at it now,” he 
said, as he worked on a drawing of 
Henry Kissinger. 


City hiring policy 


guide to be reviewed 


POMONA — An affirmative action 
policy statement on city employment 
practices recommended 
to the City 
Council by th? Merit System Commis­ 
sion will be reviewed Wednesday at a 
meeting of the Community Life Com­ 
mission. 


The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. 
in the City Council Chambers. 


Also scheduled for the meeting are re­ 
ports on an adult offender diversion 
program, the planned nutritional pro­ 
gram for older Americans, the prop­ 
osed community center ip north Po­ 
mona. the juvenile diversion task force 
and the Community Facilitators Task 
Force. 


BILL JONES 


Deputy coroner says 
Choking viewed 
main cause of 
iailhouse death 


POMONA — A Los Angeles County 
deputy coroner testified Monday that 
Dell Wayne Kolar died from a combi­ 
nation of causes, the “ probable main 
one” being choking or “compression of 
the airways.” 
Dr. Gaston Herrera, who performed 
the autopsy on the young m an’s body, 
said that compression of the airways, a 
heart problem, drugs and exhaustion 
resulted in Kolar’s death the night of 
June 17, 1971, at the San Dimas sher­ 
iff’s station. 
Compression of the airways, Herrera 
said, deprives blood from going to the 
head and from obtaining fresh oxygen. 
H errera’s testimony came during a 
trial of a wrongful death suit filed by 
the Kolar family against the county. 
The plaintiffs contend that the 20-year- 
oid Kolar died as a result of a crushing 
force en route to the sheriff’s station 
from Glendora where he had been ta­ 
ken into custody as a prowler suspect. 
County’s case 
The county maintains he died as a 
result of other causes, including the 
combined use of drugs, alcohol and ex­ 
trem e exertion which resulted in his 
battling Sheriff’s Cadet Dennis Inger­ 
soll and two other deputies. 
Ingersoll testified Friday that he had 
attem pted to restrain Kolar during the 
balance of the ride by forcing his 
nightstick against the suspect’s chest, 
but several times the baton slipped off 
his chest and pushed against his neck. 
The Superior Court jury also heard 
testimony from two other officers in­ 
volved in the case — Deputies Alfred 
J. Meisel and Arthur K. Price. Meisel 
was the driver of the car in which Ing­ 
ersoll and Kolar were riding in the 
back seat. Price and a fourth deputy 
were in a backup car. 
In his 40-minute-long testimony, Her­ 
rera said that in the autopsy he found 
“ moderate hemorrhaging” in most of 
Kolar’s neck muscles. “ Hemorrhaging 
is evidence of compression,” he said. 
Just how long the compression oc­ 
curred or its severity is impossible to 
tell, Herrera testified. 
He also disclosed that Kolar had an 
enlarged heart, the result of an infec­ 
tion that had been cured, but which 
had left him susceptible to heart fail- 


Pomona yule parade 


ure in times of stress or extreme phys­ 
ical 
exertion. 
Under such circums­ 
tances, he added, Kolar required addi­ 
tional oxygen. 
T h e 
coroner 
acknowledged 
that 
traces of amphetamines had been found 
in the deceased’s bloodstream, but the 
amount, 
0.2 
milligrams, 
was 
not 
enough to prove fatal by iself. 
There were no signs of any other 
common drug or alcohol in Kolar’s sys­ 
tem. Herrera said. 
Earlier, Meisel testified that he ne­ 
ver 
advised 
Ingersoll 
to 
put 
the 
nightstick to Kolar’s throat, and did 
not remember Price instructing the ca­ 
det to do so either. 
In his testimony Friday. Ingersoll 
said Price had shown him how to hold 
the nightstick to restrain Kolar. 
Price admitted instructing Ingersoll 
how to use the hold, but denied telling 
him to use a choke-hold. He said he 
told the cadet to place his flashlight or 
baton diagonally across the suspect’s 
chest. 
“ The hold I showed him was not a 
choke-hold,” Price said. 
Witness testifies 
Later Monday, Danny Johnson, a 
full-time political science student at 
UC Santa Barbara, testified that he 
was in the San Dimas station holding 
cell when deputies carried Kolar in 
that night. He said one deputy had 
each leg and arm and that another, 
who had Kolar’s head, had a nightstick 
beneath his chin with Kolar’s head 
pressed against his stomach. 
"The guy’s face was purple,” John­ 
son said, “and his tongue was hanging 
out. It blew my mind. I yelled, ‘You’re 
choking him !’ but they didn’t respond. 
They were occupied. It looked like the 
guy was almost gone already.” 
Johnson, blond, bearded and long­ 
haired, said he was moved from the 
cell during the commotion which fol­ 
lowed Kolar’s death. 
When asked to describe the cell, 
Johnson said, “ 1 don’t know’. I’ve been 
in a few jails and it gets confusing.’ 
When asked to describe the deputy who 
was carrying Kolar, Johnson said, “ he 
was just a general run of the mill sher­ 
iff’s deputy.” 


Angels' pitcher is 
the grand marshal 


children, Randy and Jason, became 
the 12th pitcher in modem baseball 
history to win 20 games in one season 
in each of the two major leagues. 
He posted a 20-14 mark for the Ang­ 
els in 1973. He won 20 for the Los Ang­ 
eles Dodgers in 1969. 
Singer is only the fifth Angels’ pit­ 
cher 
(Dean Chance, 
Clyde 
Wright, 
Andy Messersmith and Nolan Ryan) to 
win 20 games in a season. He is 
teamed with Ryan for first pair in a 
season. 
He struck out 241 batters, only six 
below his 1969 total, and teamed with 
Ryan (.'183) for a major league record 
624 in one season by two teamm ates. 
The old record was 592 by Sandy 
Koulax (382) and Don Drysdale (210). 
While with the Dodgers, Singer pit­ 
ched a no-hitter against Philadelphia 
on July 20, 1970. 
Singer came to the Angels in a se­ 
ven-player deal in November of 1972. 
The Angels also acquired Frank Rob­ 
inson, Bob Valentine, Bill Grabarkew- 
itz and Mike Strahler for Andy Mes­ 
sersmith and Ken McMullen. 
Parade chairman Sam Russo said 
this year’s Christmas parade will begin 
at 6 p.m. and proceed east along Holt 
Avenue from Huntington Boulevard to 
Palomares Street. 


City to pay part 
of yule light bill 
for Mali PVC 


POMONA — California Angels’ pit­ 
cher Bill Singer will be grand marshal 
of the 21st annual Pomona Christmas 
parade Dec. 8. 
Singer, who lives in Diamond Bar 
with his wife, Teresa, and their two 


BILL SINGER 


EDITORIAL 
Opinion 


- - 
- 
^ 
Protecting schools 
is everyone's job 


During the Christmas vacation period the eyes of 
thousands of parents in the Pomona Unified School 
District will be literally focused 011 their children's 
schools. 
The plan ealled “Operation Sehoohvateh” is de­ 
signed to reduce the incidence of vandalism that is 
costing the school district — and ultimately the tax­ 
payer — thousands of dollars a year. 
in three years the school district has spent more 
than $60.000 just 
to replace broken windows in 
school plants. This sum would pay the salaries ot 
six school teachers for one year. 
Am major act of arson, such as the fire at M adi­ 
son school a w eek ago automatically costs the school 
district $10,000 to start with because that is the 
amount the insurance company will deduct before it 
starts figuring what it will pa\ to repair the d am ­ 
a ge. And the deductible applies to each and e v e n 
incident. 
Apparently vandalism is the work of unthinking 
juveniles who have an utter disregard for other 
people's property and who are unaware that the 
destruction they are causing is going to cost them 
or their parents. 
Parents of children who damage school property 
can be taken to small claims court and made to pay 
for their offspring’s vandalism. That is not a real 
solution, however. 
Pride in our public schools must be instilled at a 
very early age and reinforced at every stage of the 
way. Thè institutions that we hold dear, our very 
way of life is at stake. 
To many people, it is incomprehensible how any­ 
one can cause destruction to our public schools, 
knowing that the losers are the children, not the 
adults or the schools themselves. 
To be successful, “Operation Schoolwatch” will 
require the cooperation of even caie, young people 
and adults, who care enough about their schools to 
prevent and discourage acts of vandalism. 
The schools belong to the people so it is very 
appropriate for the people to take an active role in 
protecting that which is theirs. We urge everyone to 
do his part in this worthwhile effort. 


Mr. Lincoln's 
Thanksgiving prayer 


In a nation so torn and shaken by politicai and 
>ocial upheaval, is it possible to celebrate a reve­ 
rent and joyous Thanksgiving? In this republic of 
alarm, concern, and division, is there any legitimate 
place, am deep yearning for Thanksgiving? Those 
questions are proper, though painful, in this year of 
our Lord, 1973. 
It is essential and helpful to ret ail that Thanksgiv­ 
ing really got its national observance during the 
stress and anguish of the Civil war. Although we 
trace the first celebrations to the high excitement of 
Pilgrims and Indians at Plymouth Colony in 1621. 
the continuous national participation did not come 
until the urging of President Lincoln. And he was 
constrained to call a Thanksgiving Day (at the prop­ 
osal of Sara Hale) which would be a true festival 
for all citizens of every party and religious persua­ 
sion. 
The 
turmoil of civil conflict surrounded the 
•nianksgiving Proclamations issued by Lincoln in 
1863 and 1864. And how much we find the themes of 
true religion in all of the proclamations delivered by 
Lincoln while in ihe White House. 
Elton T rueblood. Q uaker scholar and theologian, 
notes the four qualities, that ra c e ihrough t lio e pub­ 
lic statem ents of a president joining a people before 
God: p u b lic p en iten c e, fasting, prayer, and thanks 
giving. A nd if these 
iis hour 
lien let 
“ W e h 


grow n hi 
it * 


t - 
be 


W 


hui 


entiments, so appropriate for 
t com in g fro m national leadership, 
u r fo rth fro m history. 
•n the recipients of the choicest 
H ea v en ; we have been preserved these 
prosperity; we have 
number*, wealth, and power as no other 
i. t-vei mown, But vv*e have forgotten God. 
* foraott* n th e g rac io u s hand which pre- 
- in jm tt*c and m u ltip lie d and enriched and 
*vd us, an d vv* have vainly imagined, in 
it ft dr« " of o u r hearts, that all these bless- 
e p ro d u ce d by >ome superior wisdom and 
f o u r ov *1 . . . It 
behoove> us, then, to 
o u rselv e s b efo re the o ffen d ed Power to con- 


11 tio n al -in s and to pruv tor clemency and 


So Lita-ola w ro te in \ O. H e. like us. c o n tin u e d to 
rec t'ist h elp g u id an ce, and su p p o rt d u rin g hours of 
sta g g e rin g d e -p a ir an d c o n sta n t tension. So it 
is 
wVh n* as a 1- « pie. And the co re of T h a n k sg iv in g 
w ith it - lifting up of h an d s a n d h e a rts , w a s o ffe re d 
for o ur tim e 8 - wt 11 a- 18*44 w hen L incoln w ro te : * It 
h as t«lea-* d A lm ig h ty God to p ro lo n g o u r n a tio n a l 
life a n o th e r y e a r ." 
T h at is c a u se for * « le b ra tio n , along w ith 
“ th e 
re a so n a b le h o p es oi an u ltim a te a n d h a p p y d eliv ­ 
e ra n c e from o u r dangers an d a fflic tio n s ." ' 


Thought for today 


Then the lord God 
be alare: ! will mal 


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JACK ANDERSO N 
No plan by Nixon to curtail travel 


WASHINGTON — To save critical 
tuels, President Nixon has called upon 
his fellow* Americans to turn down 
their thermostats. “That means in this 
room, too.” he said solemnly. 
He also cut back the allocations of 
jet fuel for aircrafts and asked gover­ 
nors to reduce highway speeds to 50 
miles per hour. Afterwards, he showed 
up late for a dinner honoring his wife 
Pat and cracked: "I'm sorry I’m late. 
I could drive only 50 miles an hour.” 
The truth is that the President and 
his aides haven’t been practicing the 
austerity they have been preaching. He 
drafted his public appeal in balmy Key» 
Biscayne, Fla., where the warm sun 
kept the temperatures comfortable. His 
luxury jet burned 8,000 gallons of fuel 
to make the round trip. 
The following weekend, he helicop­ 
tered to his Camp David retreat, which 
is only about an hour from the White 
House at 50 miles per hour. The round 
trip took an estimated 140 gallons of 
fuel. 
Dog must share 
The President has made a few minor 
concessions to the fuel pinch. On his 
*rip to Florida last weekend, he ordered 
■is jet to reduce speeds from 525 miles 
*er hour to 474, and he cancelled his 
ormal back-up plane flight. His Irish 
Setter. King Timahoe, who is a difficult 
h- copter passenger and used to follow 
tba President to Camp David in the back 
>e\t of a chauffeur-driven limousine, 
r _nv shares his car with low-ranking 
White House aides. 
For a man who ha? devoted a life- 


PAU l HARVEY 


time to striving to reach the White 
House, Richard Nixon spends less time 
there han any past president. But a 
spokesman told us the President has 
no plans to curtail his travel. 
The men around the President have 
also displayed little spirit of sacrifice. 
Energy czar John Love, who wants his 
fellow citizens to drive slower and 
drive less, is whisked around Washing­ 
ton in a Chrysler New Yorker from the 
White House motor pool. His chauffeur 
picks him up at his home in the morn­ 
ings and deposits him at his doorstep 
at night. 
Interior Secretary Rogers C.B. Mor­ 
ton declared on national television that 
"energy has been too cheap” in the 
United States. Gasoline is $1.35 a gal­ 
lon in Italy, he remarked, in an ob­ 
vious hint that American 
motorists 
should be paying more for their gas. 
His gas paid for 
The taxpayers, of course, pay for 
Morton’s gasoline. .As a concession, he 
has given up his White House Chrysler 
and now gets around in a government- 
owned Plymouth — chauffeur-driven, 
of course. 
When he flies, the six-foot-seven-inch 
Morton goes first class, courtesy of the 
taxpayers — because he is too big, he 
complains, "to fit into a coach seat.” 
He also makes use of Interior Depart­ 
ment airplanes, but only, said a spo- 
k e s m a n . “when his 
schedule 
is 
screwed up.” 
The Pentagon has also made a big 
show of reducing temperatures and 
cutting back fuel consumption. But this 


hasn’t cramped the lifestyle of the mi­ 
litary brass. The Pentagon still oper­ 
ates its sleek fleet of chauffeur-driven 
cars to ferry around the brass and 
their bigwig friends. 
The demand for VIP limousine serv­ 
ice is so great, in fact, that the Penta­ 
gon is forced to rent cars to supplement 
its motor pool. 
Junkets 
Nor has the military curtailed its 
personalized worldwide flight service 
for junketing congressmen and other 
assorted VIPs. Three days after the 
Pesident’s TV appeal to save fuel, the 
Army ferried 
a 
planeload of 
con­ 
gressmen and military officers to West 
Point for the Arrr.y-Miami University 
football game. 
Throughout the government, indeed, 
the bureaucrats are burning more gas 
than 
ever. 
Government 
automobiles 
burned 34 million more gallons of gaso­ 
line in 1973 than in 1972. .And despite 
the oil squeeze, the projected increase 
for 1974 is an additional 30 million-gal­ 
lon increase. 
Down the line, the bureaucrats ap­ 
parently take their example from the 
President who has his own fleet of five 
jetliners, 15 helicopters, 11 Jetstars, 23 
limousines and a yacht. 
Technically, the aircraft are owned 
by the military which has asked Con­ 
gress for money to buy 17 new chop­ 
pers to replace those now in use. Two 
more jumbo communications planes 
am also being outfitted and the White 
uouse is shopping for four more me- 
dium-range jets. 


Show people are a sorry lot 


You know what has to distress the 
dedicated phv-dcian or educator is to 


read about the astronomical incomes 


of some of today’s play aaors, rock 
-ingers and athletes. 
I guess it’s no wonder that, in de­ 
fiance of a court order to return to 
work, 8.000 striking Detroit schooltea­ 
chers paraded around chanting, "Hell 
no. we won’t go!” 
TV talk show> have focused public 
attention on some very enlightened in 
dividuals. 
Doubtless 
they’ve 
sowed 
some good seed. 
But most such programs tend most?v 
to showcase show people. W ith notable 
exceptions, show people are a sorry 
lot. A di'course with most such reveals 
his or her interests have a sran of no 
more dimension than his or hers. 


LETTERS FROM P-B READERS 


Preenirg as “stars’'—and some pre- 
>umptuouslv crown themselves “super­ 
stars”—the performer 
may 
impress 
the lonely housewife with his "im­ 
mense talent.” 
But to individuals of academic ac­ 
complishment, these gaudily wTapped 
empty packages are undeserv ing of the 
iionization and the disproportionate in­ 
comes which some command. 
As a 
professional 
parade-watcher. 
T’v e tried sometimes to put myself in 
the 'hoe' of the doctor or the teacheT, 
the farmer, the policeman 
or any 
wage-worker who must look upon these 
spotlighted few with a mixture of dis­ 
dain and envy. This has to generate in 
the scholar a temptation to “get even.” 
Yet. 
when 
Detroit 
schoolteachers 
strike and then disobey a court order 
in defiance of the law, surely they 


As others see it . 
. 
. letters 


*!t sc not good that th* m in should 
a helper fit for him." — Genesis 


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Marxist monstrosity 


In Senate Hearings on the Internal 
Revenue Service 1974 it is reported on 
p.«ge 5>1 that, “ The IRS clips every 
paper m the I’nited States. The IRS 
with us nui".-.«. and sustained public 
intern ation program doesn’t need cen­ 
sorship or control of the press when 
the r masMve program is 99 per cent 
effective. I or example if half of the 
approximately two million people au­ 
dited each year felt they were unfairly 
treated why aren’t as many of these 
stone' in the press as the number of 
IRs relea'C*-” : 
such as "IRS Chiei 
Seeks Punishment for Tax Dodgers.” 
Or how about reporting such cases 
a' the Drexler Case who in 1968, 1969. 
a?**! 1970 supplied or.ly his name ard 
address on hi> tax returns, and won an 
acquittal from the jurv 
that deltbe- 
ra’ed 15 minu’es. 
Because ot the Drexler Case, as well 
as other' which are rarely reported by 
the press, the IRS will avoid court con­ 
frontation with irate tax strikers as 
much as po«'*ble from now on. It is 
believed that the government will no 
longer prosecute anyone w’ho takes the 
Fifth Amendment on his income tax. 
This« dec ision occurred September 28, 
1973 and 1 read nothing about it in any 
newspaper 


The IRS is to America what the Ges­ 
tapo *v.* 
to Hitler’s Germany. And 90 
p r cent of the press releases support 
this u^cori'titutional 
Marxist 
monst- 
rosity. 
Hitler and 
StaHn 
would be 
proud of sue h subtle totalitarian tac­ 
tics. 
Legally, 
lawfully, 
a n d 
Con- 
stiiutioralty yours, — Clayton Stan­ 
hope, Pomona. 


Pensions 
Senator Javits of N.Y. looked so 
downcast at the thought of private pen­ 
sions it is lortunate he did not consid­ 
er social security. 
Private 
persons usually cost the 
worker nothing 
while social security 
will not give you enough to bury you 
decently. 
Private pensions invest your con­ 
tribution', 
substantially 
increasing 
your be net its. Social security spends 
your dough just about as fast as they 
get it. 
Your probability is far greater on 
collecting on a private pension. They 
will pay regardl**", while social secur­ 
ity cuts you off if you take other em­ 
ployment. 
Maybe in the long run it would be 
better to do away with both, spending 
our dough while the dollar is still 
worth a dime. — Ray O. Swanson, Po­ 
mona. 


compound our chronic national prob­ 
lem of "the bad example.” 
Generations of youngsters heretofore 
have been told it’s not proper and 
you’ll not be rewarded if you lie down 
on the sidewalk and kick up your heels 
and demand what you want under 
threar to hold your breath till you turn 
blue if you don’t get it 
Yet there were their teachers, in 
manv ways their most meaningful ex­ 
amples, employing the tantrum for­ 
mula for coercion: "Hell no, we won’t 
So!” 
Elementary 
schoolchildren, 
during 
critical formative years, thus have the 
tantrum 
syndrome 
burned 
indelibly 
into their awareness. 
I mav be reaching for a cause-and- 
effect relationship between the high sa- 
laries entertainers and other show offs 
command and the restiveness of pro­ 
fessional people and politicians to pick 
up 'ome fringe benefits for themselves, 
but maybe not. 
Just as America abolished the sweat­ 
shop 
w h e n 
that 
inequity 
became 
blatantly discriminatory, we may want 
to re-evaluate the so-called star system 
so that excellence is measured by ac­ 
complishment rather than endowment 
or veneer or brashness. 


Yesterdays 


Looking backward through the files 
ot this newspaper. 


10 years ago 
Nov. 20, 1063 
Relatives and friends in large num­ 
bers assembled at the Ontario Inter­ 
national Airport to welcome home Mrs. 
I llson F. Smith of Pomona, who was 
elected and installed as the first Cali­ 
fornian to serve as president of the Na­ 
tional Council of the Camp Fire Girls. 
20 years ago 
Nov. 20, 1053 
Roadbed construction of the four-tane 
section of the Ramona Freeway from 
the Los Angeles County line through 
the Ontario-Upland area is 36 per cent 
complete and the 
bridges through the 
area are practically finished, according 
to the State Division of Highways. 
70 years ago 
Nov. 20, 1003 
Los Angeles is to have another news­ 
paper, so reports from Los Angeles 
say. It is the long looked for and often 
predicted paper that Hearst has been 
expected to start. 


J . K . (D O C ) P E IR S O l 
Gossip for today 


The letter of the law is always subject to special 
interpretation. And as time goes on it is becoming 
more and more apparent that there can be no set 
rules to differentiate right from wrong. Grudgingly 
perhaps, but inevitably, the old concepts are being 
re-evaluated whenever necessity demands. In proof 
whereof I cite you a recent ruling handed down by 
some of the world’s leading moralists. They now 
find that, although it is still a sin to work on the 
Sabbath, it is OK to fight a war. 


IN SID E REPORT 
Higher taxes or 
coupon rationing 


By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak 


WASHINGTON — Having been turned down by President 
Nixon five times earlier this year for a 10-cents-a-galion feder­ 
al gasoline tax to conserve fuel, the Treasury is pushing him 
hard now for an even bigger tax as an alternative to coupon 
rationing. 


Faced with the Hobson’s choice of rationing or tax increases, 
Mr. Nixon may now reluctantly go along with the Treasury. 
But whereas Congress ten months ago might have acquiesced, 
anti-gas tax sentiment today is deeply embedded among Dem­ 
ocratic leaders on Capitol Hill. The problem: any impasse with 
Congress over how to cut gasoline consumption is intolerable in 
the face of the cut-off of Arab oil. 
Thus, at the eleventh hour with the last tanker sailing soon 
from the Mideast, the Nixon administration still has not made 
basic policy decisions on conserving energy. What’s worse, it 
has not yet even perfected decision-making machinery. Nobody 
is in charge of managing the energy crisis and the President 
remains characteristically aloof. 
Mr. Nixon was similarly aloof last winter when Wall Street 
investment banker William Simon, freshly installed as Deputy 
Secretary of the Treasury, proposed an extra 10-cents-a-gal!on 
gasoline tax (in addition to the present 4-cent federal tax). 
Although Simon’s primary intent was anti-inflationary, he also 
wanted to conserve fuel in the energy crisis which then 
seemed so distant to other administration officials. 


Nixon frozen to doctrine 


George Shultz, Secretary of the Treasury, fully concurred 
But not Richard M. Nixon, frozen to the doctrine that Ameri­ 
cans have reached the upper limits of their tax-paying ability. 


In the curiously detached manner of the Nixon WTiite House, 
there was no personal confrontation between the President and 
gas-tax proponents. In February’, Simon’s memorandum for a 
tax increase went up to the White House. It came back with 
presidential disapproval. Simon repeated the exercise in 
March, April. May and June. Four more times Mr. Nixon said 


to. Finally, in June. Shultz advised his deputy to desist. 
At that point, John Love resigned as governor of Colorado to 
become Mr. Nixon’s energy czar. But though the energy short­ 
age was clearer and the danger of Arab reprisals more simmi* 
nent. Love adopted no contingency plans. Only last Sunday did 
Love recognize the probability of coupon rationing. 
Meanwhile, the energy experts assembled at the Treasury 
by Simon (who have declined to join Love’s disjointed oper­ 
ation) have drafted a plan for conserving 2.7 million barrels of’ 
oil daily without coupon rationing. Everything from using cold- 
water detergents to mandatory 50-m.p.h. speed limits is in­ 
cluded. But the Treasury’s biggest single saving, 780,000 bar­ 
rels a day, would result from pooling passenger cars. 
How to force car pools without gasoline rationing? A huge 
gasoline tax. So, the Treasury is now pressing for an extra tax 
between 20 cents and 30 cents a gallon. Added to price in­ 
creases caused by short supplies, this would push a gallon of 
regular gasoline over one dollar this winter—steep enough to 
force car pools and discourage consumption. 


To Shultz and the Treasury’s other laissez-faire advocates, 
this is vastly preferable to installing a semi-permanent ration­ 
ing bureaucracy. The Treasury would compensate the impact 
on lower tax brackets by tinkering with other taxes—perhaps 
lowering the telephone excise, perhaps reducing income tax 
rates for those earning less than $15.000 a year. 


Inside the administration «t is believed Mr. Nixon has bela­ 
tedly come to realize that bitter medicine—higher taxes or 
coupon rationing—i' essential. Coenting on the President’s al­ 
lergy to rationing, dating from his World War II experience as 
an OPA (Office of Price Administration) bureaucrat, the 
Treasury is betting he will take the tax route. 
But it may be too late, considering the mood on Capitol HUI. 
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, just returned after back 
surgery, is inclined against higher gas taxes. So is Rep. A1 
I liman of Oregon, acting as chairman of the Ways and Means 
Committee in Mills’s absent \ Sen. Henry’ M. Jackson of Wash­ 
ington, top Senate spokesman on energy questions, vigorously, 
prefers rationing over taxes. 
Be- ides, no tax increase ha' yet been approved at the White 
House, where decision-making remains glacial despite the 
crbi'. Proposals to the President must be funneled through his 
chief of staff, the overworked Alexander Haig. Energy czar 
Love refuses to take command. The identical condition that 
produced inaction as the energy crisis approached inhibits ra­ 
pid action now that the crisis is here. 


Berry’s world 


C ttn h mu. h* 
"YA4 HOOl Fuel shortage! Early closing ot schob 
and businesses, 
“ 


'Classroom in the Sky may become MSAC property 


WALNUT — Mt. San Antonio College 
may retain the name of its annual pro­ 
gram, “Classroom in the Sky,” which 
it originated in 1965, after all. 
William B. Temple, president of the 
MSAC Board of Trustees, reports that 
all differences with United Air Lines, 
which cosponsors the program, have 
now been ironed out. 


“We have made tentative arrange­ 
ments to register the name for a gov­ 
ernment trademark.” he said. “If we 
are successful, the phrase ‘Classroom 
in the Sky’ will belong to Mt. San An­ 
tonio College for keeps.” 
The “classroom,” an annual charter 
flight for students, gained considerable 
prominence last summer when it flew 
around the world to view the eclipse of 


the sun in Africa. The party gained 
worldwide publicity wherever it lan­ 
ded. 
Subsequently, United Air Lines offi­ 
cials notified the college that they in­ 
tended to register the phrase and use 
it in promoting other similar excur­ 
sions, since the airline had been par­ 
ticipating in the flights since the incep­ 


tion of the “Classroom in the Sky” pro­ 
gram. 
MSAC trustees objected, fearing that 
the academic quality of the program 
might go down if the college did not 
have control. 
Thursday, Temple reported that he 
and other college officials have worked 
out an agreement with the airline. 


He said under the agreement, the col­ 
lege will retain control over the name 
and the quality of the program and will 
lease the name for one to three years 
to the airline for a token $1 consid­ 
eration. 
“That seems to satisfy the airline,” 
he said. 
As for the college, control is assured 


in that it can refuse to lease the name 
if the program deteriorates. 
“ I think we’re off to a good start 
without hurting any feelings,” Temple 
said. “ It will cost us about $375 to reg­ 
ister the name, but it will be worth it.” 
He said the name will become the 
property of the Mt. San Antonio Col­ 
lege Foundation, a nonprofit support 
organization of the college. 


Hair designer 
from Industry 
earns a trophy 


INDUSTRY — Mrs. Ramona Lucas, 
a student in hair design at the Valley 
Vocational School of Cosmetology, won 
a superior student trophy in a major 
hairstyling contest held recently at the 
Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. 
The contest was sponsored by the 
Coiffure Guild of Los Angeles and Hol- 
Ivwood and was a part of the 38th An­ 
nual Beauty Trade Seminar. 
Mrs. Lucas finished in the top eight 
of 20 finalists in the senior competition. 
It was the second major award she has 
received for her work in hair styling 
this year. 


Opportunities 
in electronics 
lecture topic 


WALNUT — Mercurio Motter, Mt. 
San Antonio College electronics instruc­ 
tor, will speak on “Today’s Opportu­ 
nities in Electronics” Wednesday at 11 
a.m. in the college library. 
Motter’s address is the first in a 
series of talks by business and industry 
men being sponsored by the college’s 
Career Guidance and Information Cen­ 
ter. 
Speakers in the program will be dis­ 
cussing current employment needs, 
training requirements and the job out­ 
look in their respective areas. 
The talks will be open to the public 
at no charge. 
The college’s newly opened guidance 
center, also serving district residents, 
provides career counseling and testing 
services, as well as a large selection erf 
current occupational information. 
The center, located in the college li­ 
brary. is open daily during class hours, 
and Mondays through Thursdays in the 
evening by appointment. 
Interested 
persons may make appointments by 
calling 595-2211, ext. 347. 


3 groups get city okay 
Environmental resources portion 
for fund-raising drives 
of general plan will be reviewed 


Sign ordinance 
amendment help 
to subdividers 


WALNUT — An amendment to city 
sign ordinances will allow builders of 
subdivisions to raise signs advertising 
their homes without seeking special 
permission from city agencies. 
Under the terms of an amendment 
passed by the City Council last week, a 
200-square-foot sign and three smaller 
signs will be permitted each developer. 
The amendment eases earlier restrict­ 
ions which had brought requests to the 
Planning Commission and council for 
time-consuming hearings and action. 
Still to receive a second reading for 
final approval, the amendment contin­ 
ues regulation by city staff. The larger 
sign would be located no higher than 
20 feet above ground within the subdi­ 
vision, while each of the 30-square-foot 
signs would not rise higher than 50 
feet. 
Each sign may not remain in view 
longer than 18 months or past the final 
sale 
in 
the 
subdivision, 
whichever 
comes first. However, the Development 
Relief Board could permit extensions 
if a property owner can show need. 


Water company 
officials going 
to convention 


WALNUT — Directors and staff of 
the Walnut Valley Water District will 
attend the 1973 fall convention of the 
A s s o c i a t i o n of California Water 
Agencies next Tuesday through Fri­ 
day at Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. 
Theme of the program is appropriate 
to the location: “The Wonderful World 
of Water.” Sen. Roman L. Hruska, 
R-Neb., will be the featured speaker on 
the program. 
Topics of discussions at the con­ 
vention include “Facing a Water short­ 
age—Growth or No Growth:” 
‘New 
Directions in Water District Philoso­ 
phy;” and “ Flood Control and Water 
Conservation.” The Sierra Club will 
present a program on “Water Prob­ 
lems and the Current Interest to Envi­ 
ronmental Organizations.” 
Hruska will address the Thursday 
general banquet on “Water 
Devel­ 
opment in the United States Versus 
World Food Supply.” 


WALNUT — Three groups have won 
city approval for 
fund-raising pro­ 
grams in November, December, and 
February. 
Suzanne 
Intermediate 
School 
stu- 


Mayo reappointed 
to advisory board 
HACIENDA 
HEIGHTS 
- 
Don 
A. 
Mayo, 17058 E. Pepper Brook Way, has 
been reappointed to the County Citizens’ 
Committee 
on 
Community 
Improve­ 
ments. 
Mayo was retained on the advisory 
board by appointment from Supervisors 
Chairman Peter Schabarum. 


dents are convassing neighborhoods to 
seU magazine subscriptions to benefit 
student awards and activity programs. 
They will continue through the end of 
the month. 
Advance Foundation, 
Inc., has a 
fund-raising program under way which 
will continue through Dec. 31. The or­ 
ganization says the campaign will sup­ 
port programs for mentally-retarded 
children between 3 and 15. 
Volunteer workers from the Los Ang­ 
eles' County Heart Association, backed 
up by a mailing program, newspaper, 
television and radio promotions, will be 
soliciting funds from Feb. 1 through 
Feb. 28, 1974. The campaign will start 
with Heart Sunday on Feb. 2. 


WALNUT — Planning Commission 
members Wednesday evening take up 
review of a 138-page document which 
’.sill have broad impact on the city’s 
future housing, parks, business and 
streets development. 
Tagged “ ERME,” the Environmental 
Resources Management Element of the 
city’s general plan is a combined state­ 
ment covering four sections the state 
has required all cities and counties to 
include in general plans. 
The commission session at 7:30 p.m. 
in city hall is a preliminary to calling 
a public hearing on the document In 
December. 
Conservation, recreation, scenic high­ 
ways and open space are the elements 


combined in the ERME, which by law 
must be approved before Jan. I, 1974. 
City Manager Andy C. Lazzaretto has 
said the combined approach is possible 
because so much of the community is 
yet to be developed. 
An ambitious program, ERME calls 
for acquisition by the city of hundreds 
of acres of land for open space and 
natural 
parklands, 
development 
of 
miles of trails for bicycles, equestrian 
use and hiking, and preservation of at­ 
tractive landscapes along “scenic high­ 
way” routes. 
A unique feature of the plan is pre­ 
servation of some hilltops and ridge 
lines in the city. Under the plan, says 
Lazzaretto, developers would not be al­ 


lowed to scrape off mountain tops for 
exclusive homesites, saving the view 
sites and dominating features of the 
city for all to enjoy. 
Eventually, the report states, about 
437 acres of parklands should be in 
city possession. These are subdivided 
according to park type “area” parks, 
such as suggested for the Winnett 
Ranch, “neighborhood,” “wildlife san­ 
ctuary,” and “visual corridors.” 
A requirement of die plan will be for 
new ordinances regulating hillside de­ 
velopments and land uses. Another 
part of ERME lists methods the city 
can employ to gain control of land for 
park and open space needs, and vari­ 
ous funding sources. 


SUPERIOR STUDENT 


Ramona Lucas of La Puente shows trophy won at seminar. 


Three firms vie for 
rubbish franchise 


Walnut schools gird 
for possible fuel cut 


By LANGE WINCKLER 
P-B Staff Writer 
WALNUT — There is no problem as 
yet, but officials of the Walnut school 
district are preparing for possible cuts 
in gasoline and diesel fuel for school 
buses. 
Effects of the energy crisis were 
among topics plumbed at the school 
board’s meeting Monday night, sharing 
space in a session that saw an hour- 
plus report on the Early Childhood 
Education (ECE) program at Vejar 
Elementary School, discussion of a 
hitch in plans for a proposed bond 
election, and a preliminary five-point 
request from teachers on salaries and 
assignments. 
Walnut’s fleet of buses was increased 
this year by two vehicles, Asst. Supt. 
of Fiscal and Facilities Management 
George Hartnett told trustees, while a 
fuel allocation program is based on the 
1972 calendar year consumption. 
At present, Walnut obtains its fuel 
from the Standard Oil Co. through Los 
Angeles County’s contract with the 
firm, he said. Allocations are being felt 
by the county but have not yet been 
passed on to the district. 
However, said Hartnett, the district 
could feel the pinch if the allocation 
program is imposed by the county on 
Walnut Buses are using about 2,000 
gallons per month of diesel fuel, and 
about 3,500 gallons of gasoline. There 
are eight gasoline-powered buses and 
six diesel-fueled vehicles in the fleet 
He said contingency plans are in the 
works to cope with possible shortages 
of fuel. While variations in fuel needs 
by growth and declining-enrollment 
districts could be taken into account by 


the county, he added, the federal allo­ 
cation program does not. 
Supt. David L. Brown told trustees 
that 11 per cent of fuel usage in the 
district is for other purposes than tak­ 
ing students from home to school and 
back, so that if the district were to 
suffer a 10 per cent cut in fuel, these 
uses might be reduced. He said a re­ 
port on the situation may be brought to 
the next board meeting. 
Sharon MacKenzie, coordinator of 
special 
programs 
and 
instructional 
media, detailed the status of the ECE 
program at Vejar. Her presentation, 
using slides, outlined the formation of 
the program, involvement of staff and 
teachers, budget data, and projections 
for its future. 
Bond election plans must be changed 
to comply with new state law, reported 
Supt. Brown. He related the impact of 
Senate Bill 230, to take effect Jan. 1, 
will force the election date to be set 
either March 5, in early June, or in 
November of 1974. 
Brown said the law will force the 
election, originally planned for Feb. 26, 
to be held concurrently with other local 
or state balloting. 
In the area where the district in­ 
cludes a portion of the City of West 
Covina and polling precincts could be 
outside the school district, he said, 
there will be a problem. Either there 
must be dual polling booths, one for 
the city election and one for the bond 
vote, or voters in the district must go 
to a separate polling place to vote on 
the bonds. 
Discussions are slated with West Co­ 
vina’s city clerk to see how the ques­ 
tion can be handled, he related. 


Teachers represented by the Certifi­ 
cated Employes Council presented to 
the panel five points they wish to raise 
in future “meet and confer” sessions. 
Although the item was an information 
listing, trustees questioned the prop­ 
osals vigorously. 
Topping the list was a request for a 
2.5 per cent salary hike. The CEC said 
this was a continuation of last year’s 
negotiations, based on a pledge by the 
board to take up the matter at this 
time. If the raise were granted, bring­ 
ing the year’s total salary hike to 7.5 
per cent, the cost would be around 
$75.000, estimated district officials. 
Second on the teachers’ list was a 
review of summer school salaries. The 
CEC argued that presently salaries are 
not based on an equitable relationship 
with regular school year stipends. 
Also, the group asked that the dis­ 
trict set a goal of a maximum student- 
teacher ratio of 22 to one, instead of 
the present 27.5 to one. The CEC said 
this would eliminate some of the 40- 
student classes now scheduled by the 
district. 
Trustees were also asked to gua­ 
rantee a teacher in summer school a 
full-term comract if attendance in class 
was at an “acceptable” level after the 
fourth day of class. The groups said 
this would insure a teacher stayed 
working as long as planned —since 
none would be able to get into summer 
classes or another type of job at that 
stage of the summer, said CEC. 
Finally, 
the teachers’ 
group 
re­ 
quested 
that 
teachers 
at 
Suzanne 
School be required to teach less time 
and thus bring them into parity with 
teachers at other schools. 


N E W S IN BRIEF 


The firm estimates a $450 return to the 
city monthly. 
C.V. Disposal would offer service at 
$2.10 per home and $1.80 per unit in 
multiple dwellings, charge $13 per 
commercial customer, and negotiate a 
return to the city to be passed on to all 
customers. It would not offer free serv­ 
ice to city parks and buildings or pick 
up larger items on a regular basis. 
Consolidated’s proposal shows a resi­ 
dential collection cost of $2.25, $2 for 
each unit in multiple dwellings, $12 for 
commercial collections, a 2 per cent 
return to the city, free service to city 
parks and buildings, and regular col­ 
lection of larger items on 24-hour ad­ 
vance 
notice 
from 
the 
customer. 
Monthly revenue to the city was fig­ 
ured at $80. 


D.B. man named 
by TV station 
as good citizen 


DIAMOND BAR - Citizens’ Band 
radio operator James Tupper will be 
the subject of KTTV Channel ll’s “So­ 
meone Who Cared” Sunday during the 
Metronews at 10 p.m. 
As part of his being named as the 
good citizen of the week by KTTV, 
Tupper will appear on the Ben Hunter 
Interviews at 3:10 p.m. on Monday to 
receive a Metromedia Television cita­ 
tion. His picture will also appear 
throughout the week in station identifi­ 
cation breaks. 
For organizing Citizens’ Band radio 
operators to help crippled children, the 
Hemophilia 
Foundation 
of Southern 
California and Metromedia Television’s 
KTTV Channel 11 chose Tupper for the 
“ Someone Who Cared” distinction, 


Decorating contest 
blanks available 


WALNUT — Entry blanks for the 
Community 
Coordinating 
Council’s 
Christmas Home Decorating Contest 
are available at city hall, the library, 
Walnut Liquorette, Miller’s Market, 
and the 7-11 Store on San Jose Hills 
Road. 
Lighting displays have been elimi­ 
nated from this year’s competition. 
Completed entry forms must be in the 
council’s possession by Dec. 18, while 
judging will be held Dec. 19-21. Win­ 
ners will be announced on Dec. 21. 


D.B. man to lead 
parade drill team 


DIAMOND BAR - Sgt. Richard C. 
Stoddard of Diamond Bar will command 
the Los Angeles Police Motorcycle Drill 
Team as it leads the 42nd annual Holly­ 
wood Santa Claus Lane Parade of Stars 
this evening. 
The drill team will perform on the Hol­ 
lywood Boulevard parade route for 20 
minutes prior to the parade’s official 
starting time of 7:30 p.m. 
Founded in 1924 as a community serv­ 
ice unit, the Los Angeles Police Mo­ 
torcycle Drill Team has become recog­ 
nized as the foremost motorcycle drill 
team comprised of active duty and veter­ 
an law enforcement officers. 
The team’s 26 officer-members have a 
combined experience of over 385 years 
as police motorcycle officers, according 
to Stoddard. 


Collection sites 
for toys announced 


Six collection sites in Walnut, Rowland 
Heights and Diamond Bar for the Toys 
for Tots program have been announced 
by the Walnut Valley Chamber of Com­ 
merce. 
The chamber, in cooperation with the 
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve and KCOP 
Television, endorses the program. 
Collection points have been established 
at the Chamber of Commerce office, 140 
Pierre Road, Walnut; Security Pacific 
Bank, 1661 
S. Nogales St., 
Rowland 
Heights; Bank of America, 2845 Diamond 
Bar Blvd., Diamond Bar; Bank of Amer­ 
ica, 152 Pierre Road, Walnut; Walnut 
Fire Station, 19711 E. Valley Blvd., Wal­ 
nut; and Ben Franklin Store, 18410 Co­ 
lima Road, Rowland Heights. 
Those wishing to contribute toys should 
take them to the collection points. 


Stokes and Repar 
returned to board 


DIAMOND BAR - Donald G. Stokes 
and John Repar have been re-elected to 
one-vear terms on the board of directors 
of the Diamond Bar Home Owners Asso­ 
ciation. 
Len Leger and George S. Rose were 
elected to two-year terms. 
Leger and Rose replace Jean Blaine 
and Donald Greeley on the board. 
Officers for 1974 will be elected at a 
later meeting. 


Stretching dollar 
objective of class 
LA PUENTE - How to stretch the 
food dollar is explained in a “Cooking 
for the Family” class being offered each 
Thursday by the La Puente Community 
Adult School. 
The class meets in Room 17 at La 
Puente High School from 6:45 to 10:15 
p.m. 
Students prepare balanced meals sui­ 
table for family or company using short 
cuts, inexpensive foods, gourmet tricks, 
new products and modem techniques. 
A complete meal is prepared at each 
class and eaten by students. 
Additional information on the cooking 
class may be obtained by calling the 
adult school at 213 968-8452. 


Walnut High School 
band has nut sale 
WALNUT — A nut sale Is being 
sponsored by the members of the Wal­ 
nut High School Band this week to 
raise funds for the hand’s trip to Na­ 
tional City in the spring. 
Band members will also sponsor a 
pauer drive cm Dec. 7 from 3 to 6 p.m. 
and througho'“ t’'e day on Dec. 8 in 
their effort to finance the trip. 


Chamber to publish 
map of the area 
WALNUT — A map of the area serv­ 
ed by the Walnut Valley Chamber of 
Commerce will be published in Febr­ 
uary, sponsored by the chamber. 


WALNUT — Three proposals have 
been submitted to the city for an ex­ 
clusive rubbish collection franchise. 
Griffith Disposal Co., La Puente, C-V 
Disposal 
Service, 
Inc., 
Santa 
Fe 
Springs, 
and 
Consolidated 
Disposal 
Service, Inc., Santa Fe Springs, were 
the bidders. City councilmen will re­ 
view each of the proposals on Dec. 5. 
Griffith, a long-time collector of rub­ 
bish in the city, offered to make week­ 
ly residential collections at $2.50 per 
month, and $1.50 for each unit in mul­ 
tiple residential dwellings. 
Commer­ 
cial fees would be negotiable. The firm 
would return 10 per cent of gross 
monthly receipts to the city, charge for 
collections at city buildings and parks, 
and take large items — like refrigera­ 
tors and couches,—on a regular basis. 


JAMES TUPPER 


Amy Vanderbilt 
Early invitations 


Ask Dr. Brothers 


D E A R MISS VANDER­ 
BILT: Last year when I gave 
a Christmas party and sent 
out invitations two weeks in 
advance, many people 1 wan­ 
ted very much to come al­ 
ready had engagements. This 
year I want to avoid that. Is 
it all right to send invitations 
to Christmas parities in No­ 
vember, or will people for- 
g e t ? 
Could 
I 
send 
my 
Christmas cards v’ery early 
and put the invitations in 
them? —Mrs. R.M., Staten Is­ 
land, N.Y.” 
There is indeed great com- 
p e t i t i o n 
for 
guests 
at 
Christmas parties. Many hos- 
t e s s e s send invitations a 
month to five weeks in ad­ 
vance and sometimes even 
^end reminder cards 
after 
that, once they have received 
acceptances. 
Some 
peoole 
phone their frierds to say 
that an invitation is in the 
mail and ask that the date be 
saved. 
If you decide to put your in­ 
vitations in Christmas cards 
sent early, it is a good idea to 
print on the outside “ Invita­ 
tion Enclosed.’' Some people 
put 
aside 
their 
Christmas 
cards to open close to the 
holiday and thus might miss 


PERSONALIZED : M 
B O O K K E E P IN G 
and vTÌtXr SERVICE 
M 


1 0 2 7 ;W . Hol», ¿T H > n a \ ^ 


such invitations. 
Remember, in sending any 
invitations 
or 
Christmas 
cards, to include the 
ZIP 
Code. This speeds the mad. 
Also put on your return ad­ 
dress, including ZIP Code, 
preferably an the face ot Live 
envelope, upper left. Return 
address stickers are useful for 
this. 
(Miss Amy Vanderbilt wel- 
c o m e s 
your 
letters 
and 
strives to answer all those of 
general interest in her co­ 
lumn. 
Send your questions 
and comments to Miss Van­ 
derbilt in care of (name of 
your paper).) 
( F o r 
Ann 
Vanderbilt's 
booklet, 
“ Table 
Manners,” 
send your name and adoress, 
nlus 7.1 cents in coin, to: Miss 
Amv 
Vanderbilt, 
Progress- 
Bulletin. P.O. Box 1066. West­ 
on. Conn. 088*0. requesting 
the booklet bv name.) 


TODAY'S 
Women 


Pamela Harris wed 


to William Trembly 


Healing the wounds 


NOW 


6 2 3 -6 0 5 3 


J o 
l l y 
I Time 
Ip Corn 


NUMBER 


sponsors 


new group 


Women in tne Claremont 
area are invited to join a con­ 
sciousness - raising 
g r o u p 
sponsored by 
the 
Pcmona 
Valley Chapten of the Nation­ 
al Organization for Women, 
O l d e r Women s Liberation 
Task Force. 
The new group structure is 
a forum for women to explore 
their 
feelings 
about 
them­ 
selves and other women in 
general. 
Focusing on the areas of 
particular interest to older 
women, the group’s topics for 
discussion will be chosen by 
its members. 
Information 
on 
meeting 
times and places may be ob­ 
tained by calling Agnes Gil- 
breth at 626-00S7, Mary St. 
Martin at 623-4638 or Katie 
Beamer at 629-3654. 


Family Snacl, 


Making their home in Mon­ 
tclair are newly wed Mr. and 
M r s . 
W i l l i a m 
Russell 
T remblv. 
The bride is the former Pa­ 
mela Kay Harris, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Har­ 
ris of Claremont. Parents of 
the groom are Mr. and Mrs. 
Harry- R. Trembly of Glen­ 
dora. 
The Very Rev. Msgr. Wil­ 
liam A. Barry- officiated at 
the afternoon rites at Our 
Lady of the Assumption Cath­ 
olic Church in Claremont. 
The bride chose a gown of 
satin organza fashioned with 
a tucked bodice, full circular 
skirt 
and 
cathedral 
train. 
Lace detailed the bodice and 
outlined the skirt. A Juliet 
headpiece held 
the bride’s 
silk illusion cathedral-length 
veil. 
Roses, 
chrysanthemums, 
daisies and carnations were 
arranged in the bride’s bou­ 
quet. 
Miss Lynne Holzinger was 
maid of honor. Bridesmaids 
were Mrs. Bruce Harris, Mrs. 
Larry White. Miss Loure Har­ 
ris and Mrs. Marsha McGar- 
ity. 
Kim and Dionne Reinhardt 
were flower girls and Kirk 
McGarity was ring bearer. 
Jeff Jedinak served as best 
man while Bruce Harris, Lar­ 
ry- White, Dave Davis and 
Tony Ascencio were ushers. 
A reception at the church 
parish hall honored the couple 
who honeymooned along the 
California coast. 


"vi,'-. I 
H 
I 


Christmas is Coming! 


Use Our Lay-A way 


Fabulous Rings & 14k Pierced Earrings 
"IN STAN T" F R E E ÖIET WRAP 
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Treasure IsBand Gifts 
26 9 Pom ona M a ll East 


HURRY-UP, HAIRDOS: 
CUT, BLOW 'N GO! 


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no rollers, no pins NO POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. AL­ 
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JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING 


FIP.ST AVF, ARCADIA 
PHONE 213-447-1526 
POMONA MAIL 
PHONE 622-8542 


ven 
WEDNESDAY 


CAMPUS WOMEN of the 
Claremont Colleges, 
Honold 
Library tour, main library en­ 
trance, 10:30 a.m. 
WOMEN’S 
COMMUNITY 
Club of Pomona Valley, Inc., 
meeting, 
clubhouse, 
noon: 
m o r n i n g 
and 
afternoon 
classes. 
YWCA OF Greater Pomona 
Valley, book review session, 
A Wing Parlor of East Hil- 
lcrest Homes, La Verne, 2:15 
p.m. 
ELKS LODGE, dinner, 6 
p.m.; meeting, 8 p.m. 
TOPS Club CA 1077, First 
Christian 
Church, 
1751 
N. 
Park Ave., 7 p.m. 
MIC MAC COUNCIL, De­ 
gree of Pocahontas, Women’s 
Community Center. 
172 W. 
Monterey Ave., 8 p.m. 


K ■ 


MRS. W ILLIAM TREM BLY 


Set book 


review 


sessions 


Third in a series of six book 
review sessions of the YWCA 
of Greater Pomona Valley 
will be held Wednesday at 
2:15 p.m. in the A Wing Par­ 
lor of East Hillcrest Homes, 
2705 Mountain View Drive, La 
Verne. 
Dr. Dorothy Merritt will re­ 
view books including “ Will 
Rogers — The Man and the 
Times” by Richard Ketchum, 
“ The School Maker” (on the 
life of Sawney Webb, father 
of the founder of Webb School 
for Boys in Claremont) by 
Lawrance McMillan, and “ O’ 
Susan” by Dr. James Augell. 


DEAR 
DR. 
BROTHERS: 
My wile and I adopted a 12- 
year-old boy recently because 
he was practically living on 
the street. Neither of his pat­ 
ents wanted him and they fi­ 
nally released him for adop­ 
tion. Once we knew that the 
adoption was legal, we moved 
to another area where the boy 
could get a fresh start. What 
we’re trying to do now is to 
show him that we love him 
and believe in him and that’s 
no easy task considering his 
background. 
He’s a bright youngster full 
of vitality but in the past he 
was twice involved in acts of 
juvenile delinquency. Both of 
these cases 
involved 
theft 
and, fortunately, no one was 
hurt. I believe in the boy be­ 
cause despite his rough back­ 
ground 
he 
isn’t cruel; 
at 
least, he’s never shown any 
traces of cruelty. He is gentle 
with us, with his friends and 
with animals. My wife and I 
are anxious to do everything 
we can to help him overcome 
the disadvantages of his past. 
Have you any helpful sugges­ 
tions? — M.O. 
Dear M.O.: It sounds as if 
you’re already off to a good 
start. One of the most impor­ 
tant things in raising a child 
is to let the child know he is 


Retirees 
Club fetes 
couples 


Couples who had observed 
their golden wedding anniver­ 
saries were honored at a Gol­ 
den Anniversary Tea spon­ 
sored by the General Dynam­ 
ics Retirees Club. 
Marking their 50th anni­ 
versary this year are Mr. and 
Mrs. James Gullo and Mrs. 
and Mrs. Louis Fedor. Other 
couples 
present 
who 
have 
celebrated their anniversary 
in the past were the Myron 
Galtups, Tom 
Lunns, 
Tom 
Freemans, Walter Bruntons, 
Elmer Bocks and Tom Tan- 
credis. 
Mrs. Walter Dupri sang two 
selections and a poem by Ha­ 
rold 
Reamer 
honored 
the 
celebrating couples. 
After a program of enter­ 
tainment refreshments were 
served by Mrs. Mattie Mad­ 
sen and Mrs. Ray Sears. De- 
c o r a t i o n s were by Mrs. 
Phyllis Grinager. 


wanted, needed and loved. In 
your case, this may be com­ 
ing very late in the life of 
your adopted son and undoub­ 
tedly this child has already 
r e c e i v e d some damaging 
blows. But what is essenial 


v w is that you try to reha­ 
bilitate him, try to heal the 
\ 
cis ot his earlier life and 
make him feel totally secure in 
hU new home. 
Even though you and your 
wife may be well aware of 
the inadequacies of your son’s 
natural parents, it’s impor­ 
tant to remember that he is 
siill a biological part of them. 
Even though he may hate 
them 
and 
want <to 
forget 
them, it’s important for nis 
own well-being and self-es- 
teem that he feels they had 
something of value. Just as a 
divorced parent should 
be 
careful not to destroy the oth­ 
er parent, so adoptive parents 
should take every precaution 
not to malign the natural par­ 
ents. 
Even’ child 
identifies 
in 


some way with his parents, if 
he feels that they are all evil 
and worthless, then he 
is ! 
more apt to view himself in I 
that way. For this reason, 
any excuse you can find lor 
his parents’ bad qualities will 
be helpful in bringim out the 
best in your son. When his 
natural parents come up in a 
conversation, 
try 
to 
con­ 
centrate on some good qua­ 
lities that the boy can emu­ 
late, or try to explain their 
behavior in a way that will 
leave the boy with some self- 
respect and some hope for no1 
reoeating their errors. 
Psychologists Francis Kelly 
and Daniel Baer cf Boston 
C o l l e g e in workin* 
with 
youthful offenders found that 
to change delinquent attitudes 
it was most beneficial to show 
a person that he can surpass 
physical challenges he would 
have thought far beyond the 
limits of his abilities, chal­ 
lenges 
more 
arduous 
than 
stealing from the local candy 
store. These professors helped 
young delinquent boys climb 
steep cliffs, survive in the 
wilds and at sea in good and 
bad weather. 


Vitamin E acts as a vi<J 
gical preservative of unsy 
rated fats. Sources ore \yh 
grain 
breads 
md 
m 
.i 
vegetable 
oils, 
nuts, J 
green leafy vegetables 
organ meats. 


fancy, 
frilly, 
french lace! 


Known the world over for 
ability to indn.iK > beail 
and romance, french lace I 
now mure pm i 
• t; an evi 
Some sa ’ it Vs changed I 
■ mrv of emit a r " i ns. t { 
nte :a! has a tradition 
' ping wvmm l&ok and !'q 
0 e beautiful and ferriinin 
a to m o n : t c, a, th ■; ml 
heart!!'* e.mvove. The shel 
e’im’e patterns are a 
light to look at, but- alas, M 
aren’t very durable to bar) 
wear. That’s probably wj 
nobody ever used lace 
make scat cover'. At Pommj 
Valiev Daisun on Holt in 
mona across from Zodys, 
can’t sell you a car wjl 
french lace seat covers, b| 
we can bring you some 
mance and beauty into yo 
life with Dafsun 610 and ne 
B-210 in such chic colors 
innocent white, blushing 
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ART FA IR 


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R u tta li • Haym son 
R eprod uction! on C an vas 
162 Pomona Mall East 


JILL CALVERT 


February 


wedding 


planned 


Feb. 9 is the date set for 
the marriage of Miss Jill 
Jeanine Calvert and Philip A. 
Valvo Jr. 
T h e i r betrothal is an­ 
nounced by parents of the 
bride-elect, 
Mr. 
and 
Mrs. 
John C. Calvert of Pomona. 
The groom-to-be is the son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Valvo 
of La Verne. 
A senior at Ganesha High 
School, Miss Calvert plans to 
graduate in January. She is 
e m p l o y e d at Griswold’s 
Smorgasboard in Claremont. 
Her fiance is a 1970 gradu­ 
ate of Damien High School 
and served two years in the 
Army. He is employed at Upl­ 
and Mobile Homes, Inc. 


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"M om m y! Did you give D addy a note sayin' why he 
was absent from w ork?” 


Invitations 


L:DGAR ROTHROCK 


PRINTING 
Since 1926 
351 S. Thomas, Pomona 
622-4546 


TT*- 


Ski lessons 
offered by 
valley YWCA 


The 
San 
Gabriel 
Valley 
YWCA is offering classes in 
beginning, intermediate and 
advanced skiing. Session be­ 
gin on Dec. 1 and will meet 
three Saturdays, with one dry 
land and two snow lessons 
planned 
Mike Martel! is the instruc­ 
tor. For additional informa­ 
tion, call the YWCA office, 
(213) 962-3209. 


ORDER NOW 
HO LIDAY SALE 


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with Butter V Love” 
IN B U IL T ,In MAYTAG 


Turkey time again. If the family 
is gathering at your home for 
Thanksgiving, you are busy plan­ 
ning, buying with one eye closed 
at the price marked on the tradi­ 
tional items you "have” to buy 
and the other eye on the budget 
alloted. Griswold's bakers and 
cooks are doing their preparation 
just as carefully! The Smorgas- 
bords are scheduling their tradi­ 
tional dinner menus so that 
guests will teel the dinner was 
“just what I wanted'. The Indian 
Hill and the Country House are 
taking reservations to be sure 
that guests are treated to a truly 
memorable dinner 


The bakeries are planning all 
night sessions to get the pies, 
rolls and decorated cakes out at 
"just the right time" for your 
orders. Everyone at Griswold's 
says, “happy Thanksgiving". 


See you at Griswold s 
Betty 


D iN N Kt MENU 


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» 
« 


In New Hampshire 


T o w n w ants full border station 
Shortage of Polish hotels is no joke 


PITTSBURG, N.H. (UPI) 
— Beatrice Little runs Bald­ 
win’s general store in this 
papermill town of 748. She 
worries that drugs and draft 
dodgers will 
start coming 
through the U.S. border sta­ 
tion 23 miles away now that it 
has cut back to winter hours. 
‘‘We’ve been asking to have 
that station manned for 24 
hours a day for as long as I 
can remember,” Mrs. Little 
said. “Washington won’t lis­ 
ten. They’ve got a big racket 
all their own. That’s what I 
think. 
“They say the reason they 
can’t keep that station open 
24 hours is because of money. 
Well, they’d have the money 
if they didn’t spend it on Wa­ 
tergate and all that foolish­ 
ness.” 


Israel claims 
evidence of 
POW torture 


JERUSALEM 
(UPI) 
- 
Health minister Victor Shem- 
lov said that Israel had evi­ 
dence that Syrian troops tor­ 
tured Israeli prisoners to ac­ 
quire information from them. 
“There are signs that we 
have of Syria torturing our 
soldiers in order to get infor­ 
mation,” the health minister 
said in an interview. 
Shemtov was asked to pro­ 
vide details of Prime Minister 
Lrolda Meir’s statement at a 
London news conference Mon­ 
day that she feared Israeli 
prisoners of war in Syria had 
b e e n k i l l e d during last 
month’s 17-day war. 
He said Israel does “not 
know exactly how many have 
been killed or wounded or 
how many are not wounded 
because the Syrians have not 
^iven us a list of POWs.” 
An Israeli complaint to the 
International Red Cross Sun­ 
day alleged that the bound 
bodies of 28 dead Israeli sol­ 
diers had been found at four 
spots on the Golan Heights af­ 
ter battles there with the Sy­ 
rians. 


The station is manned 16 
hours a day in the summer 
and eight hours a day Oct. 28 
to June. The Canadian station 
100 yards away for cars en­ 
tering Canada is open 24 
hours a day. 
The 
U.S. 
Border 
Patrol 
recently caught five Haitians 
and a Canadian coming into 
the United States illegally. 
Looking for work 
“I assume they were com­ 
ing in to find work,” said 
Chief Border Patrol Agent 
Peter Love joy. 
“This is one of the largest 
arrests for smuggling aliens 
into New Hampshire in sever­ 
al years,” Lovejoy said. He 
said aliens rather than drugs 
are the chief border patrol 
concern along the Canadian 
tine. 
Cars entering the United 
States when the U.S. station 
is closed are forced to drive 
30 miles on back roads to 
Beecher hails, Vt., to pass 
through a 24 hour station. 
Occasionally 
a 
Pittsburg 
resident is picked up by the 
border pairoi lor crossing 
wmie the station is closeu. 
Usually tines are placed on 
tile and not paid unless there 
is a second ini ruction. 
“Every time somebody is 
stopped it is a hot issue ior a 
couple of days and then ev­ 
ery oody iorgets it,” said Se­ 
lectman Burnham Judd Jr., 
part time custodian at the 
border station for the past de­ 
cade. “To us in the town it's 
a terribie inconvenience.” 
To little traffic 
Judd said that on an aver­ 
age summer day some 35 
cars pass through the station 
coming into the United Stales 
at New 
Hampshire’s 
only 
crossing point, in the winter 
the number drops off to one 
or two cars daily. Despite 
frequent letters to the state’s 
congressional delegation, the 
answer is always the same, 
Judd said: There is too little 
traffic for a 24 hour station. 
“1 cleaned out my desk of 
all the old correspondence or 
I’d show it to you,” he said. 
“I wish now I had kept it.” 


Car-truck collision 
hurts U p la n d w o m e n 


Judd, who also works as 
one of the town’s three part- 
time police oficers, said the 
fear of drugs coming in may 
spark action by government 
officials. Gov. Meldrim Thom­ 
son has recently cited the 
possibility 
of 
drug 
traffic 
flowing through the sometime 
unmanned border station. 
Judd said he didn’t believe 
in petitions but said he’d do 
“almost anything to get that 
station opened up.” 
Fear tor cnildren 
The owners of Camp Otter, 
the nearest business to the 
border—12 miles away—fear 
drugs coming in. Mrs. Doris 
wiuiund said she “wouiun’t 
know a drug person if 1 saw 
one,” but said she is upset. 
"1 thinK as upright citizens 
we are worried about the ef­ 
fect this might have on our 
cuiidren. We don’t want the 
drug problem here in Pills- 
mug/' she said. 
'I he leeling is pretty much 
the same down the road. 
“1 am vitally concerned,” 
said ivirs. Marina von Dojit- 
man, 
wnose 
lamiiy 
owns 
J aim's iodge and cabins, 14 
nines from me border on 
F i r s t 
Connecticut 
Lake. 
“Wnen that border sutuon 
isn’t maimed, it’s open to all 
kinds of contraband.” 
She said with more trailic 
on U.S. Rte. 3 to Quebec City 
and back, things are changing 
in the remote northern area. 
Just one car 
“We used to go out and 
leave our homes unattended 
and unlocked. Now you have 
to be increasingly concerned 
when you go out about those 
undesirable elements passing 
througn,” she said. 
“it just takes one car to 
come in and drop something, 
people here don’t want their 
children subjected to 
tins. 
People don’t care how much 
urainc there is into that sta­ 
tion. It only takes one car to 
peddle dope.” 
Winston Young, principal of 
the town’s only school, grades 
1-12, said there has been no 
increase 
in 
drug 
use 
at 
school. 
“I’m sure as far as the 
town is 
concerned 
nothing 
unusual has happened. 
It’s 
just if there’s going to be a 
station, it ought to be man- 


i ned.” 


WARSAW 
(UPI) 
- The 
telephone rang in an office at 
the U.S. Embassy one day 
recently and the caller identi­ 
fied himself as an employee 
of a Polish ministry. 
“Excuse me,” the embar­ 
rassed official told a diplomat 
friend, “But we have a dele­ 
gation coming to town on 
short notice and we were 
wondering if you could help 
us find them hotel rooms.” 
Perhaps the request was an 
indication of growing East- 
West detente. But it certainly 
was an illustration of how 
hard it is — for anyone — to 
find a hotel room in this coun­ 
try. 
New authorities are moving 
to relieve the shortage of 
overnight tourist accommoda­ 
tion with a $100 million hotel 
construction scheme — and 
they have turned to the West 
to carry it out. 
The high-priority plan calls 
for 16 new hotels with nearly 
7,000 beds to be built through­ 
out Poland by 1975. All will 
be so-called “turnkey” oper- j 
ations erected 
entirely by 
w e s t e r n companies and 
among the new facilities will 
be outlets of such known 
American chains as Inter­ 
continental and Holiday Inn. 
More hotels 
“Our government has ex­ 
amined possibilities for tour­ 
ist expansion and decided to 
catch up with Western Eur­ 
ope in hotels,” a spokesman 
for the Tourism and Sports 
Ministry told UPI. 
Poland has a long way to 
go. 
Warsaw, a city of 1.3 mil­ 
lion people, has the most crit­ 
ical situation. Only about half 
its 20,000 hotel beds are of 
high enough standard to suit 


western 
visitors 
and 
even 
luxury class hotels here are 
well below western norms. 
This is crucial at a time 
when Polish authorities are 
actively soliciting an expan­ 
sion of western tourism and 
when the number of visitors 
from the West is growing by 
15 per cent annually (ex­ 
pected 1973 total: 420,000). 
Consequently, rooms for the 
peak summer or holiday pe­ 


riods must be booked at least 
six months in advance in 
Warsaw. Those few who have 
“contacts” within the hotel 
system must be content to 
hand over bribes of liquor, 
western cigarettes or curren­ 
cy it they want a room on 
short notice. 
The situation should ease 
with the opening in Warsaw 
later this year of the first two 
hotels in the series — one of 


t h e m 
a 
1,500-bed 
Inter­ 
continental in the heart of the 
city. Both are being built by 
a Swedish firm, which also 
has won a contract to build a 


third Warsaw hotel nextyetr. 
Likewise, in the opening of 
a Holiday Inn In tourist-jam­ 
med Krakow next year will 
help there. 


C h e c k o u r d is c o u n t 
ra te s on A d v a n c e d 
o rd e rs o f 10 d o re n 
or m o r e . Y o u 'l l be 
s u rp ris e d 
a t 
th e 
s a v in g s . 
P H O N E 
623-2915 
nwf. JA 
■ 
B 
B 


T A Y L O R M A I D D O N U T S 
H 
</ n S B 
B 
l V 
Join us for 
Christmas 


UPLAND — A car collided 
broadside with a pickup truck 
Saturday on rain stick Moun­ 
tain Avenue at Arrow High­ 
way, 
injuring 
two 
Upland 
women, police reported. 
Debra Huffman, 20, of 493 
W. 25th St., Upland was taken 
to San Antonio Community 
Hospital shortly after the 2:17 
p.m. accident for treatment 
of minor injuries. She was la­ 
ter released. The other in­ 
jured woman, 
Mrs. 
Mary 
Schneider, 40, of 1394 W. llth 
St., Upland was also injured 
in the accident but refused 
medical treatment. 
Police said a car driven He- 


len Maria Wolfe 50, of 806 
Amber Court, Upland, col­ 
lided with the pickup truck 
driven 
by 
Joseph 
Harold 
Schneider, 42, of 1394 W. llth 
St. Mrs. Schneider and Miss 
Huffman were passengers in 
the vehicles. 


M 
L S 
E 
T 
E E T 
H 


ip tN e e d N o t E m b o rro » 
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Be our guest 
Join our 1974 — ----- 
Christmas Club and get a colorful, Better Homes and 
Gardens book that’s packed with beautitul Christinas 
ideas. It has suggestions lor decorating your home inside 
and out, creative ways to gift wrap, how to make cards 
and ornaments, plus fantastic holiday recipes. 
This year, suggestions. Next year, money. Open your 
Christmas Club Account now and next year we 
send 
vou a check for the amount you’ve saved plus interest. 
To make it easier, you can even have automatic deposits 
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still want suggestions, we’ll give you the free book if you 
open a regular Banksafe Savings Account for $50 or more. 
Join now and avoid the rush. Come in to any of the nearly 
100 offices of First Western Bank—The Money Factory. 
Open a Christmas Club Account and you’ll have a 
merrier Christmas. This year and next. 


F ir s t 
western 
B an k 


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1095 N. Garey Ave. 


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557-1893 


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y 


H e x b u d d y , ..t h a t g u y 


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A S T O R M Ì 
W E M IÖ V 4 T 
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FRANK AND ERNEST 


FRANK & M IL'S 
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DISAPPOINTED IF HEYHCU5HT HI* 
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NO PRC3LEM! 
DiDn T WCRKi 
AFTER I RIP OUT OUR 
BURiSLAR a l a r m WE'LL WW<E. i P P P l / y . 
UNCLE BUL6Y.' WE LL TELL HIM 4 T T 
} A 1 
WE HEARD A NOISE. CAME POVsN 
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ACROSS 
I K*'nohke gam« 
SOliionver 
II K m brllisba 
13 Homily 
14 Kindol bound 
lb Hub 
16 Certain 
railways 
(roll.) 
17 Spring bird 
19 Numbers <ab.) 
20 Acquiesces 
22 Farm building 
25 Droop 
26 Old Testament 
objects 
30 Encourage 
31 Ore pit 
32 Luxuriant 
33 Bryophytic 
plant 
34 Feminine 
suffix 
35 Possessive 
pronoun 
38 Girl’s name 
39 Much sm aller 


42 Female sheep 
45 Duct (anaL) 
46 601 (K om is) 
49 District 
51 Lovers 
53 Neglected 
54 Epochal 
55 Ceases 
56 Puff up 


DOWN 
1 Implement 
( comb, form) 
I Of land 
ownership 
(law ) 
3 Hurl 
4 Transposes 
(ab.) 
SHeavybtowf 
• Intended 
TMascuiint 
nickname 
t Prayer ending 
• Philippine 
Moslem 
10 Hostelrie* 
12 Opposed to lee 


(gaol.) 
13 Bee’s defense 
If Feminine 
nickname 
10 Hymn of 
praise 
21 Season of the 
▼ear 
22 Cotton bundle 
23 Border oa 
24 Take a 
breather 
27 Tumult 
a Present month 
lab.) 
» Hat-topped 
MU 


35 Silly 
36 W rneenk 
37 Fixed look 
40 Portrait 
statues 
41 Abscond 
43 Small sMaMi 
43 Lack 
44 Within (comb, 
form) 
40Ten Prafix) 
47 Outer 
garm ent 
40 Small island 
10 Spinning toy 
22 Unit o( wire 
measurement 


O U T 
O U R 
W A Y 


\'t> FEEUWô WELL EMOUÆrt Y HE AIN'T/ WE Fl? Ugg YOU 
BE OVER JOYEP AT óETT INC» ) CAN'T CHAN6EJ« STER PAY, 
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THE TRUTH OF THE MATTER 
il-a? f / T lT. 
«NMwara» »Türmst ammi 


P ro g re s s - B u lle tin , Pomona, California, Tuesday, November 20, 1973 
LOOKING FOR AN EXPERT? 
PUBLIC NOTICE 
PUBLIC NOTICE 
1 0— Help Wanted 
10— Help Wanted 


N O T IC E O F T R U S T E E ’S S A L E 
No. 1070-1-83 
On Decem ber 21, 1073, at 11:00 
A.M.. U F M F IN A N C IA L CORPO- 
R A T I O N , 
as 
duly 
appointed 
Trustee 
under 
and 
pursuant 
to 
Deed of Trust recorded October 
24, 1972, as instr. No. 2693. in book ; 
T7865, pace 593. of Official 
Re- j 
cords in the office of the County ; 
Recorder of Lo* Angeles County, 
State of California, 
ssill 
sell 
at 
public auction to highest bidder 
for cash (payable at time of sale 
in lawful 
money of 
the 
United 
States) at the front lobby entrance 
to the 
building located 
at 
6960 
W est 
Manchester 
Avenue. 
Los , 
Angeles, California, all riRht title { 
and interest conveyed to and now 
held bv it 
under 
said 
Deed 
of 
Trust in the property situated in 
said County and State described 
as: 
Lot 62 of T ract 19874 In the C ity 
| 
of Pomona, Countv of Los Ang- 
* 
cies, State of California, as per 
1 
mao 
recorded 
in 
Book 
510, 
pages 3 to 7, inclusive, of Maps 
In the office of the County Re­ 
corder of said county. 
The street 
address 
and 
other ; 
common designation, if any, of the 
real property described abone is . 
purported to he: 228 R andy Street, 
Pom ona, California 91766. 
The 
undersigned 
Trustee 
dis­ 
claim s an 'r liability for any incor­ 
rectness of the street address and 
other common designation, if any, ; 
shown herein. 
Said 
sale 
will 
be 
made, 
but j 
without covenant or w arran ty, ex- ! 
press or implied, regarding title, ; 
nosse«sion, or 
encumbrances, to 
pay the remaining prlncinal sum 
of the 
notefs) 
secured 
b' 
said 
D«ed of Trust, to-wit: $15,TVL09, 
with interest thereon, as provided j 
in said notefs). advances, it anv. ( 
under the terms of said Deed of 
Trust, fees, charges and expenses 
of t**e Trustee and of the »rusts 
created b v said Deed of Trust. 
The beneficiarv under said I>ecd 
of Trust heretofore executed and 
delivered to 
the 
undersigned 
a 
w ritten Dec’aration of Default and 
Demand for Sale, and a written 
Notice of Default and Election ro 
-p.,, undersigned caused said 
Notice of Default and Election to j 
Sell to he recorded in the county 1 
where the real propertv is located. 
Date: Novem ber. 20. 1973. 
U F M F IN A N C IA L 
C O R P O R A T IO N . 
as said Trustee 
B v : Sam L. M cCorm ac 
Attorney for Trustee 
610 Newport Center D rive 
N ewport Beach, 
C alifornia 92660 
(SPS-38437) 
NV-89 Pom ona P-B 
Pub. Nov. 20, 27, Dec. 4, 1973 


N O T IC E O F M A R S H A L ’S S A L E 
California Computerized, Plain t­ 
iff, 
vs. 
W alker. 
Defendant. 
No. 
19902. 
^ 
B v virtue of an execution issued 
on Septem ber 6, 1973 by the M uni­ 
cipal Court. Pomona Ju d icial Dis­ 
trict, Countv of Los Angeles, State 
of C alifornia, upon a judgment en­ 
tered in favor of California Com­ 
puterized Financial Services, Inc, 
A Corporation, dba Coast-RMC.A 
a s 
udgment 
cred itor(s) 
and 
acalm t Pearl J . W alker as Judg­ 
ment debtons), showing a net ba­ 
lance of Sl.llu.21 actually due on 
-aM 
udgment on the date of the 
issuance of said execution, I have i 
levied upon all the right, title and , 
interest 
of 
said 
judgment 
deb­ 
tor*'at in the property in the Coun- ! 
ty of Los Angeles, State of Califor­ 
nia. descr bed as follows: 
Lot C3, T ract 19950, M ap Bo^k 
520, Page 
11-14. Street address 
is purported to be: 2519 Cathy 
Ave., Pomona, Calif. 91767. 
N O T IC E 
IS H E R E B Y 
G IV E N , 
that 
<m 
December 
26, 
1973, 
at i 
11:00 o’clock A.M . at Los Angeles 
Countv Courthouse, 110 N. G rand 
Ave., G rand Ave. 
En t., City of 
I.os Angeles. County of Los Ang- 
- !es State of California. I w ill sell 
at public auction to the highest 
bidder for each tn lawtu! money 
of the United States, all the right, 
title and interest of «aid judgment 
debtor! s) in the above described 
property. nr so much thereof as 
vrav be necessarv to satisfy said 
execution, 
with accrued interest 
and costs. 
Dated at Los Angeles, C alifor­ 
nia, October 9, 1973. 
T IM O T H Y S P E R L ; 
M Y R S H A L 
M unicipal C ourt1. 
Los Angel« s Countv 
B '-: Robert E . Sime, 
Set. Deputv 
C U T L E R A N D C U T L E R 
P la in b 'f's Attorney 
One W lP h ird Bidg 
Los Angeles, Ca. 30017 Ste 618 
(8344) 
OC-160 Pom ona P-B 
pub. Oct. 30 Nov. 6, 13, 20, 1973 


N O T IC E OF H E A R IN G 
O F P E T IT IO N FO R 
P R O B A T E OF W IL L 
A N D FO R IS S U A N C E 
O F L E T T E R S 
T E S T A M E N T A R Y 
No. E A P - 10378 
In the Sunerior Court of the 
State of California for the County 
of Los Angeles. In the M atter of 
the Estate of M E L V IN E . R A L ­ 
STO N , Deceased. 
Notice is hereby given that the 
pe’itmn of Dorothv G . Ralston for 
the Prohate of the W ill 
of the 
above-named deceased and for the 
issuance of Letters Testam entary 
th* reon to the petitioner, to which 
reference is hereby made for fur­ 
ther particulars, will be heard at 
9 oTock A M ., on 
December 7, 
* 
1973. at the court room of Depart­ 
ment E A S T “ A ", of the Superior 
> 
Court of the State of California for 
’ 
the County ot Los Angeles, City of 
Pomona. 
Dated November 13, 1973. 
C L A R E N C E E . C A B E L L , 
County Clerk and Clerk of 
the Superior Court of the 
State of California for the 
County of Los Angeles 
Bv a M Peterson, Deputy 
N lf H O LS, S T E A D . 
B O IL E A U & L A M B 
B y : t . Burdette Boileao 
Atiornev* for Petitioner 
403 United California 
Hank Building 
P.O. Box 244* 
Pomona, California 9I7M 
714 623-1441 
NV-70 Pomona P-B 
Pub. Nov. 16, 20, 24. 1973. 


O R D IN A N C E NO. 2W5 
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E CO UN ­ 
C IL O F T H E C IT Y O F PO M O N A, 
C A L IF O R N IA , 
A M E N D IN G 
OR- 
D 1 N A N C L 
NO 
1673, 
A LSO 
KN O W N A S T H E C O D E O F ¡'H E 
C IT Y 
O F PO M O N A. 
C A L IF O R ­ 
N IA , B Y A D D IN G A N E W S E C ­ 
TIO N. TO B E N U M B E R E D S E C ­ 
T IO N 2-3. 1, D E S IG N A T IN G C E R ­ 
T A IN D A Y S AS H O LID A Y S. AN D 
R E P E A L IN G 
O R D IN A N C E 
NO. 
2451 D E S IG N A T IN G H O L ID A Y S . 
B E IT O R D A IN E D by the Coun­ 
cil of the City of Pomona, C alifor­ 
nia, as follows: 
S E C T IO N 1 That Ordinance No. 
1673 of the City of Pomona, C ali­ 
fornia, also known as the Code of 
the C ity of Pomona, California, is 
hereby*amended by adding a new 
.section, to be numbered Section 
2-3.1, to read as follow's: 
“ Sec. 2-3.1. The following holi­ 
days shall be 
considered to 
be 
holidays in the C ity: 
(a ) Ja n u a ry 1st. 
(h) February 12th, known as 
•‘Lincoln Day. 
<c) The third Monday in Fe b r­ 
uary. 
(D ) The Inst Monday in M ay. 
(e) Ju lv 4th. 
( F ) The first Monday in Sep­ 
tember. 
<c) September 9th, known as 
“ Admission D ay” . 
(h) November 11th, known as 
“ Veterans’ D ay” . 
(i) The Thursday in Novem ­ 
ber appointed as “ Thanksgiving 
D av” . 
(I) December 25th, 
<ki Good Frid ay from 12 noon 
until 3 p.m. 
If Ja n u a ry 1st, Feb ru ary 12th, 
Ju lv 4th. September 9th. Novem ­ 
ber 11th. or December 25th falls 
uoon a Sunday, the M onday fol­ 
lowing is to he considered 
a 
holiday. If, however, these days 
fa’.i on a Satui ia . tlt< 
Ft *2 *v 
prior to such holiday shall be 
considered a holiday.’ 
S E C T IO N 2. That Ordinance No. 
1451 of the City of Pomona desig­ 
nating certain days as holidays is 
hereby repealed. 
S E C T IO N 
3. The 
C ity 
Clerk 
shall certify to the passage and 
adoption of this ordinance, caus­ 
ing it to be published as required 
bv law and it shall thereafter he 
!n full force and effect thirv days 
from the date of its final --eading. 
A P P R O V E D . 
P A S S E D 
A N D 
A D O P T E D this 5th day of Novem ­ 
ber, 1973. 
A T T E S T ; 
L B. TH OMAS 
C itv Clerk 
T H E C IT Y O F PO M O N A 
B Y R A Y J . L E D IR E 
M ayo r 
A P P R O V E D A S TO F O R M : 
P A T R IC K J . SA M PS O N 
C itv Attorney 
S T A T E O F C A L IF O R N IA 
) 
C O U N T Y O F LO S A N G E L E S ) SS. 
I. L B. T H O M A S. Citv Clerk of 
the C itv of Pomona. 
Cabfornla, 
DO H E R E B Y C E R T IF Y that the 
foregoing 
Ordinance 
was 
intro­ 
duced at a regular meeting of the 
Council of ?-aid City, held on the 
29th dav of October, 
1 73: 
and 
thereafter at a regular meeting of 
said Council held on the 5th day of 
November, 1973, was reread, and 
was approved and adopted by the 
following vote, to wit: 
A Y E S : Councflmen: French, 
W right. 
O-hoa, 
Bader, 
(M a yo r) 
Lepire 
L B TH O M A S 
C itv Clerk 
sjv.eg pbm ora P B 
Pub. Nov. 20, 1973 


LE A R N A TRA DE 
X-RAY 
TRUCK D R IV ER 
CLERIC AL 
Call the National Guard 
Consult The Progress Bulletin 


10 People Will Be 
Trained for Our Local 
EXPANSION 
of facilities, 
iobs will include 
sales service-pfflce. A qreat oo-i 
portunitv to be part of a giant 
national manufacturer. 
Martina pav with 
wrrltten work aqreement 
$120 to $210 wk 
Coll to-day, 623-2671 
Start to-morrow 


MEDICAL RECORDS* 
tran scriber 
PERM A N EN T FU LL TIME 
th P 0 S,J ' 0 NS REQUIRING 
Thorough knowledqe of medical 
Terminology, 
exo 
transcribing' 
operative 
reports, 
consultations, 
patholoqv# histories, clinical or dis-i 
charqe summeries. Tues thru Sat 
dav shift. Contact personnel dept. 
San Antonio Community Hospital, 
f r a r 
u‘>,an“ 
SPECIAL OFFICER 
PO LICE DEPT, 
u- KSAeL A RY-S47> to $583 
Hiqh 
Schcol 
Grad 
or 
3 b.D. 
desirable. Aae 18 to 55, Calif 
Driver's 
Lie 
required. 
Under 
qeneral 
supervision, 
pericrms 
varied responsible tasks perta n- 
inq 
to 
neneral 
Police 
Dept 
Work. Apply Administrative Of­ 
fice, Citv Hall, 5111 Benito, Mon­ 
tclair, 624-8571. Closinq date 5 
P.m., Nov. 30, 1973. 
An Equal Opportunity Employer 
OUR National Company will start 
V°u 
a guaranteed salary of $600 
to 51200 monthly, and qive you a 
thorough 3 year sales training pro­ 
gram while on full salary, with 
provisions for monthly increases 
after the first 2 months. Fine op- 
eprtunJPL J or 
s^les 
managment. 
Call 626-0412. 
Equal opportunity employer 


Us« This Handy Guide and Get The Job Done 


1— Special Notices_____ 


BOYS hilr cuts under 12 vrs, req $1 
Lin Brook Hardware 9055 Central, 
across 
from 
Mtcl 
Plaza, 
Mon­ 
tclair. 


HAVING EMOTION A LP R O B LE M S? 
CALL THE CRISIS CEN TER 
24 Hours 986-1141__________ 
Divorce-Do Your Own-$55 
Attorney trained counselors. 
Complete 6 month service. 
Calif Wave Proiect 629-3398 
Pomona and 18 other cities. 


— Acoustical Ceilings 
— Gardening 


Why Pay More? 
Accoustical ceilinq S25 room. 629-9745 


— Painting 


„ 
BRUSH -RO U JSPRAY 
Residential or comm 
Int or fixt, 
lie 277018. 624-239? aft 6 pnr_____ 


CUSTOM PAINTING Interior Exte­ 
rior Work Guaranteed. Reas rate*. 
By Hr or contract. 629-3264 
Reliable painter 
Reasonable 
4??-5504 
PAINTING interior and exterior, 23 
years experience, J .ck Dewoody. 
626-5034 
PAINTING 
As low as $15 a room. 
Acoustic Ceilinqs Spraved 
Lie contr. No. 262888 
622-1576 


E X P E R IE N C E D 
qaroening 
and 
clean 
up. 
Dependable 
service 
Free estimate, van 599 3344. 
$25 A ROOM, MOVE NO FU R N I­ 
TURE 
Free estimate, 
Licensed 
and insured. 985-5613 
NEW SPR A YED acoustic ceilings, 
I 
expertly done or redone. Also air- 
: 
less spray paint. Free Est. 
686-3899. call collect. 
______ 
ACOUSTIC C EILIN G S 
Dry 
wall 
ana 
tuo,ng. 
Lie 
No 
229/42. call 62/-6067. 


General Cleanup 


T R E E Trimming, Trash Haul., Yard 
Clean up. Odd lubs. Hee fcsl. (213) 
337-5778, aft 5 (714) 627-1362. 
AT ONCE 
NO EXPERIENCE 


Alcoholics Anonymous 
-4415 
986-3801 
BANKRUPTCY 
DIVORCE ★ $55 
Complete 6 Mos Service. 
Credit Terms Available 
CALL LEE WAY 
We have the experience. 
(714) 599-3016 
DIVORCE 
without an a»tr-nev 
CALIF. DIVDRCF COUNCIL 
Pomona, <?3 5?»0 


General Repair 
•Awnings 


G EN ER A L R EPA IR 
Reasonable and reliable 
599-5290 
Start 
a 
new 
pleasant 
future with a dist. firm 
for a 


NATIONAL 
MANUFACTURER 
i 
of electrical Power Tools 
and maintenance 
equip­ 
ment with a written pay 
and bonus agreement. 
$120-$210 WK. 
You will be qiven free training in 
all phases of our business includ- 
inq sales-service-office procedures 
and manaament for willinq work­ 
ers who want steady employment. 
Call 


Custom work-low prices 
Lie Cent B-256636 Ph 628-7390 
C&T Discount Patio Co, 
—Paper Hanging 


PA PER h a n g e r 
Since 1949. Local references 
24 hr answering service. 593-1087. 


THE EXTRA HANDS hume repairs, 
painting, 
re-sc ree nina, 
miscel­ 
laneous 987-3093 evenings. 
■Carpentry 
PLA STERIN G, piumbmq, electrical, 
carpentry, protessional work, no 
iob too small. 984-0398 or 986-8608, 
ask for Don or Bob. 
ROOM Additions, Remodeling, Con- 
creie Work. No ioo tuo small. Lie. 
No. 284666 628-9742 or 628-0064 
— Plastering 


p a t c h ING—Accoustical cell's. Rep- 
“ *able plasterer. Free est. Lie. No. 
103312. R tas. Aft. 7 p.m. 624-0348. 
ACOUSTIC Ceilinqs, Patching, Int. 
626-0177 
S,UCC0- Llc No- 25392S- 


PLA STE (T PATCHING 
NO JO B TOO SMALL 
Free estimates. 622-2020 


GEN. HOME R EPA IR MAINT. 
Painting, Plumbing. Etc. 
Reas. _ 
Call 629-3555 
COM PLETE home repairs, new car­ 
pentry, piast, plumb, quai, econ, 
prompt 623-849/ or 624-5338. 
F 'X IT FR ED . Carpentry, plumbing, 
painting, all types masonary, roof- 
inq and tiling. 
Romooelinq and 
rocm additions. No iob too small. 
Free est 628-7532 


H A N D Y 
ANDY. 
Small 
repairs, 
r e m o d t , u n i. door: paneling, 
patching, openings *244543 __ 
CUSTOM cabinets 
Woodwork made to fit vour needs. 
Free est. 624 2738 
WOOD 
ARTS, 
cabinets, 
qeneral 
wcodshou, snop and cower tools. 
Shoo 622-5032 Home 624-9970. 


"HOME OF THE BIG BOY” 
FAMILY RESTAURANTS 


Now Interviewing for 


WAITRESSES 
WAITERS 


No Experience Necessary 


Apply 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. 


221 W. HOLT, POMONA 


No Phone Calls Plea*e 
Equal Opportunity Em ployer 
R AND D 
Model Maker-Machinist 
A new R and D program has 
created an immed need in our en­ 
gineering deot for a person to as­ 
sist designers and enGneers in 
modetmq and 
assembling 
small 
plastic and metal parts Die mak­ 
ing Is not necessary, however ex­ 
perience on mill and lath** is pre- 
'erred. We are non-cef-xrse emplo­ 
ye- and offe*’ xint waqes and 
frlnoe 
benefits. 
F e 
immediate 
conside-atlcn, 
please 
call 
Mrs. 
Coon at (213t 799-0881. An Eoual 
Opportunity Employer 
_________ 
TEM PO RA RY 
stock rlerks, 
man 
and woman. S2.40 per hr. 10 p.m. 
to 7 a.m A p p Iv In Person 
Payless Drug 
300 S. Diamond Bar Blvd. 


2— Personals 


AS Op November 17, 1973, I will 
longer 
>» 
responsible 
fer 
i 
debts other than my own. 
ViNa Sterling 
P 0 Box £07 
“ omc.ia 
■Plumbing 
Carpet Cleaning 
■Handyman 
★ PLUMBING it 
Plumning -Repairs-itoonaqes 
24 Hr Emergency iervlce No. 276367 
Stan Yamamoto 
629-3319 
595-0719 


"NOT THE C HEAPEST 
JU ST THE BE S T " 
LIVING RM & HALL ONLY $16.95 
No Gimmicks—Guar Quality Work 
Ideal Carpet & Uphol. Cleaners 
Call 599-6313. (2131 967-3838 
3— Rummage-Garage 
& Yard Sales 


PAINTING, Carpentry, Paper Hang­ 
ing, Paneling Odd Jobs. Clean-up 
and Hauling. Reliable. 626-6048. 


PAINTING, 
plumbinq, 
sprinklers, 
yard work, paper, panel, remodel­ 
ing, etc. Spec in com house re­ 
pair. 
Reasonable. 593-2284. 
Frm: 
i 
est. 


STEAM EXTRACTION 
We rt'move the soil "thats the dif­ 
ference", Professional Care. 5?3- 
SS11 


GARAGE S A L E—Fri., Sat. 10 am to 
5 nn*. 259 W Willow 
Pom. Chil­ 
dren's tevs, bikes, desk, chairs, 
clothes andJCnjck-Knacks. 


GARAGE 
SA LE: 
Nov. 24, 
4 pc. 
walnut bedroom set. 9x12 qold run, 
sinqle manle head and foot beard, 
deluxe,, reiaxaclzer, Oil Painting 
from Europe, loads of linens. In-1 
fant swinq, hinhchair and car scat, 
clothes and Knlck - Knacks, plus 
misc. 653 Geneva. Clmt. Ph. 626-2678 


DOCTORS HOSPITAL 
OF MONTCLAIR 
RN’S 
FU LL TIM E 3-11 
M ED 
SURG; 
LABOR; 
D ELIV ­ 
E R Y ; 
PED S 
11-7 
M ED SURG: ICU CCU; PED S 
PART T IM E 3-11 
M ED SURG; LABOR & D ELIV ; 
% S 
M ED SURG; 
LABOR 
& 
D E LIV ­ 
E R Y ; 
PED S; EM ER G EN C Y ROOM 


Roofing 
C ARPET Man Cet. Cleaners. Avq 
liv rm and hall 513.50. Bdrm s7. 
Will make cpt repairs. 628-0962 __ 
WORLD Carpet Installations. Clean­ 
ing, install, Repair. Call 987-4521. 
Free Estimates. 


■Hauling 
_ . 
ROOF LEA K , 
Call 622-0083 for estimate for repair 
orjreroofmq. 


W EST COAST ROOFING, INC 
r i i i ^ r u i o , ROOFING R EPA IR 
CALL C H A RLEY 
626-6613 


A iic.NTa9.2M 39t6 M n * 
i ' 
__________ Phone 623-0Q45.___________ 


BIG SAVINGS 
with not sc biq company. 
Lie 277469, 621-0884 
REROOFING, all types, I need fha 
work Insured 
fin avail, lie C-30 
246*33. 674-?9!>? 


Skip Loader— Dump Truck 
Black too-lvy removal. Demolition- 
Gen hauling. Free est. 622-6815 
■Cement W ork 
LIGHT moving appliances, lurniture 
and traah. Reas., fast service*. 629- 
*964 or 986-1978 
Block and Brick Work 
Rea.,. 
622-8774 or 622-7321 
~ PATIO—SLABS D RIVEW A YS 
* 626-3028 ★ 
C E RAM1C T IL E —BLOCK W ALLS 
D RIVEW AYS, 
patios, 
sidewalks, 
oiock wall repair. Cement cutting. 
Brick work. Phone 622-6590, 


MOVING 
Our van will move you anywhere 
reasonably. 623-2052 
LlGHT-Heavy 
property 
clean 
up- 
haulira. Also weed r moval, mow­ 
ing, Reas Est. 627-4012- 623-0982. 
M ILL PICK UP trash or haul away j 
anything. 
Fee 
est., 
reasonable 
_629-5670.___________________________ 
DUMP truck, skip loader and scra­ 
per. Blacktop, ivy removal, gener-i 
al yard work, hauling. 627-30/3 
G EN ER A L Liaht Hauling Rubbish 
yard and qaraqe clean uo. Free 
est. Ed Dorris 628-1742. 
LIGHT or heavy rubbish, garage 
and yard eleaninq Fast se: vice, 
reasonable Free Est 622-7878, 593- 
! 
7986 


LOST 11:15 (B*q Mac: Jacket with 
rmq of kevs in nocket, Reward for 
return of keys. 593-519].__________ 
LOST on Nov. 1st, nrav and black 
tiger strlood cot, vlcimfv of Tcwre 
and Syracuse Ave. 674-7079._______ 


LOST 14 vr old Beanie. Near Moun-1 
tain and Bonita. Wearinq red col-i 
lar Anv information call 624-1003. 
R EW A R D .__________ 
GERMAN Shepherd (Older Dog) tan 
and black, vie of N Claremont An- 
! 
swers to Liz. 624-2251______________ 
I W HITE lonq fur male doq, 2 vrs old, 
name Bonzo, aporox 15 lbs. In Vic 
I 
of N. Park Ave. 623-5184 anytime 
a" * r * om-______________________ 
LOST Female Irish setter vie of 7th 
and wmte, La Verne. Answers to 
: 
Brandy" 593-6819__ 
¡LOST: 9 vear old female Irish S*t- 
I 
Wearing Coronado tags. 595 
6142 after 5. Vic. D. Bar. Reward. 
j SMALL female basset hound, 6 vrs, 
I 
y/hit" chest, 4 white feet Answers 
i 
to Dinky. Lest July ?9th. STILL 
HOPING. Reward 623-360]________ 
REW ARD, Irish setter, 1 yr. old, has 
anyone In vour area obtained one 
since Nov. 2nd’ She mav be mine 
Child's pet. P lease call. 624 0643 
'SONNY" Australian shepherd, 11- 
months old 
blue merle. Hocked 
tail. Walnut vicinity. 595-0578 anv- 


N O T IC E O F T R U S T E E ’S S A L E 
M ortgagor: Thomas, Ruby 
File No. 11222 
Loan No.: 100-4181-131583 
On 
Thursday, 
Decem ber 
20, 
1973, at 
11:00 A.M ., 
R ealt; 
In ­ 
corporated 
as 
duly 
appointed 
Trustee 
under 
and 
oursuant 
to 
Deed of Trust recorded Ja n u a ry 
19, 1972. as instr. No. 2660. 
book 
T7387, page 233. of Official R e ­ 
cords in the office of the County 
Recorder of Los Angeles County, 
State of California, 
w ill 
sell a*, 
public auction to highest bidder 
for cash < payable at time of sale 
in lawful money of the United 
States) 
on 
the 
public 
-id fw alk 
In front of the entrance to the 
building at 3223 West Sixth street, 
California, all right. 


O PERATING RCOM 
E x p in scrubbing, must take calls, 
• CEMENT WORK 
Patios, 
driveways, 
blcck 
walls, 
and carpentry. New ana rtmooel 
mq. Fred est. NA 6-4926 


JOHNS ceramic tile walls, ttoors, 
showes, kitchen sinks, tree esti- 
Cali „ ' v*ninai John Panos 
986-5423 or 982 6263. 
3-11 and 11-7 FU L L TIM E 
M ED SURG 
C EM EN T and Masonarv Contractor 
drive wavs, patios, pool decks, 
block and slump stone walls. 14 
years experience, satisfied custo­ 
mers, Call 599 1076. 
ASSISTANT MGR COUPLE 
No Children or Pets. Man for 
Maintenance and Gsrdenlnq wife 
to Clean Aots and A**i-1 in Office 
Apt P I us S aja rv. 623-1090__________ 
DO-NUT MAKER " 
Good shop, 
steady work, 
must 
have exo. Anplv In person, 2512 N. 
Towne Ave., Pom 


FU LL TIM E 3-11 
PSYCHIATRIC UNIT 
PATIOS, 
driveways, 
pool 
decks, 
sidewalks, 18 vrs exp Fine work­ 
manship. Lowest prices 627-5583. 
ORGANIC SOIL M IXING 
REDWOOD SHAVINGS, R ED ­ 
WOOD BARK, S T EER FE R T I 
LIZER . SAND AND G RAVEL. 
BAG OR BULK 
628-1630 
Closed Sun. 
986-4 
11726 Benson, Ontario 


■Home Improvem ent 
PART TIM E 8, NIGHT CALL, <-x- 
perienced in all maior cases plus 
orthaoedic. 


BU SIN ESS O FFIC E 
Immediate Openinq for E X P C R E ­ 
DIT C LERK. Exp in 
Insurance 
Billing. 


M EDICARE-M EDICAL INS B IL ­ 
LER 


FU L L T IM E PBX OPERATOR 


FU LL T IM E NCR OPERATOR, 
Hospital exo desired 


FU LL TIM E E X P COOK 
5000 San Bernardino Rd. 
Montclair 
621-3880 


ALL T Y PES CEM EN T WORK 
L. W. Howard. Lie 19895J. 
Free estimates 
*21-6582 
FA M ILY Rms, 7 Story Addition, Ga­ 
rage Conversion. Bath and Kitchen 
Remodeling Speicaiist 
Free Esti­ 
mate. Will Finance. Reasonable. 
B 1215673. (213) 579-7450 


Los AnRfJe^. California, all right, 
title and interest ronveved to and 
now* held bv It under said Deed of 
Trust vn the propertv situated in 
said County and State described 
as: 
Lot 56, T ract 
In the C ity 
of Pomona, Countv of Los Ane- 
eles. State of California, as per 
map recorded in Bnnk 520 Page* 
1! to 14 tnetusiv* of Maps, in the 
ofNce of the County Recorder of 
( 
anid County. 
The 
street address and 
other 
common designation, if any. of the 
real propert* 
described above is 
purported to be: 2557 C ath ", Po­ 
mona, California 
The 
undersigned 
Trustee 
dis­ 
claim s anv liability for anv incor­ 
rectness of the street address and 
other common designation, if any, 
Shown herein. 
Said sale 
w ill 
be 
made, 
but 
without covenant or w arranty, ex- 
pre*-s or implied, regarding title, 
possession, or encumbrances, to 
p ay the remaining princtnal sum 
of th»- note is) 
secured by 
sn*d 
Deed of Trust, to-wit: $16,586 27, 
with interest thereon, as provided 
in said notefs), advances, if anv, 
under the terms of said Deed of 
Trust, fees, charges anH t-xpenses 
of th** Trustee and of t v trusts 
created bv said Deed of Tru'd. 
T he benefm larv under said Deed 
of Trust heretofore executed and 
delivered to 
th " 
undr-rsigued 
a 
written Declaration of Default and 
Demand for «ole, and .a written 
N otice of Default and Election to 
Sell. The und- rsigned caused said 
Notice of Defnult and Election to 
Sell to be recorded in the county 
where the real property is located. 
Date: Novem ber IS. 1973 
R E A L T Y IN C O R P O R A T E D 
as said Tru-tee 
B v : Ja m es ML Orendorff 
Secretary 
Authorized Signature 
(SPS-38433) 
NV-90 Pum ona P-B 
Pub. Nov. 20, 27. Dec. 4. 1973 


N O T IC E O l IN T I N I ION 
IO C R E A T E S E C U R IT Y 
IN T E R E S T 
(Secs. 8101—8107 U.C .C .) 
N O T IC E Is hereby given to the 
Creditor» ot Ju an J . 
I-ernandez 
dba 
SO U TH 
P A R K 
A V E N U E 
M A R K E T , D ebtor(s) 
whose busi­ 
ness 
address 
is 
510 
West 
7th 
Street, 
Pomona, 
County of 
Lo 
Angeles, state of California, that a 
security interest ts about to 
be 
created by Debtor and granted to 
S M A L l 
B U S IN E S S 
A D M IN ­ 
IS T R A T IO N , Secured P a rt(y ) (its ), 
whose 
business, 
address 
is 
84* 
South 
Broadw ay, 
I os 
Angeles, 
( nunty of Los Angeles, Stare of 
( al'forn i. 
The property in which the Se­ 
curity interest will be created is. 
In general, ail fixtures m achinery 
equipment, furniture and furnish­ 
ing» of Debtor covering property 
now 
located 
at 
510 
Wr.-jt 
7tn 
5'reet, 
Pomona, 
County 
of 
Lox 
Angeles, State of California, and 
business knoan us SO U T H P A R K 
A V E N U E M A R K E T 
The 
af*>r* said 
security 
trans­ 
action w ill be consummated on or 
after the 3rd dav of D*-cembcr, 
1M73. 
lit S M A L L BUSINESS AD­ 
M IN IS T R A T IO N . 649 South Broad- 
w a v, Lox Angele», Ca. 90014 in in­ 
stallm ent 
by 
U S , 
Government 
Checks. 
So far as known to the Secured 
P a rty , all business name» and ad­ 
dresses used by the Debtor for the 
t h * v e a r s last post, are same. 
D A T F D 
Novem ber 14, 1973 
.SM ALL B U S IN E S S 
A O M IN IS ! RA I ION 
Steuben P. Tlhx 
AUornev 
S M A L L B U S IN E S S 
A D V U N IS T R A l ION 
649 Viuth Bro ad w ay 
Los Angeles, California 90014 
8th floor Legal 
(01740) 
N v ui Pom ona P-B 
Pub. Nov. 20, 1973 


S T O C K H O L D E R S M E E T IN G 
The 
annual 
meeting 
of 
the 
stockholders of the Orange G rove 
T ra c t W a trr Com pany (Pom ona, 
C alifo rnia) for the purpose of elec­ 
ting five <5) directors to serve for 
the 
ensuing 
year, 
and 
for 
the 
transaction of an v other business 
that 
m av properly 
come 
before 
th*- m- eting, will be h*-ld Thurs­ 
d ay, 
Decem ber 6, 1973, 
at 7:30 
p M. 
at 
the 
Peace 
Lutheran 
C hurch 
1101 
Glen 
Avenue, 
Po ­ 
mona, California 
Yvonne Scholtes 
Secretary 
O R A N G E G R O V E T R A C T 
W A T E R C O M P A N Y 
NV-76 Po m «** P-B 
Pub. Nov. 19 20 21, 1973 


Drafting 


ELECTRC-Mech, 
Arch, 
P.E.R T 
avstems, Advertising layout. 7U 
623-2197. 
_______________ 
— TV Service 


TV CALLS $5 with this ad only. Free 
est when set is brought in. 472 E. 
Holt, 9-9 and Sun. 629-3801 
TV Service Call Soeci-il *9.50. all 
work done bv certified electronic 
technicians, 
Ron's 
TV, 
52? 
W. 
t^clt^ Pomona, 629-2414.___________ 
COLOR TV Repair $9 95 plus Darts. 
Fixed in vour Home or no charae 
Dependable 593-7242 or 599-6421. 


■Home Maintenance 


HOME R EPA IR S, plumbing, paint­ 
ing, caioentry, tiling, electrical, 
reasonable. (714) 624-7/38 
Drywali 


DRY W ALL PLA STER R E PA IR S 
All Work Dono Myself. 
628-8335 
■Homemaker 


HOMEMAKERS IS HELP 
H O U SEK EEPER S. PRAC. NURSES 
Live in or out 
HOME HEALTH AIDS 
All employees bonded and insured 
HOM EM AKERS UPJOHN 
623-06*3 


•Electrical W ork 


PART Collie and Shepherd puppy. 
Found Vic of La Verne Heights. 
Dark Brown, male, with collar. 
ORANGE striped cat, blue collar 
with 
silver 
heart. 
Found 
near 
Monte Vista and Ca noga. 624-20*3) 
LARGE 
!ong hair, black, female 
don, vinlrdv of Foothill and R- rh. 
ester. Call and ident. (213) 964-1583 
FOUND small white Doodie. Chino 
»•^a jdentlfy and pay for ad. Call 
628-5751 


■Tractor W ork 
WANTED, couple over 40, wife to 
help In the house, husband outside, 
in exchange for modern 3 rm cot­ 
tage. Husband may be employed. 
628-4363 
For Lowest Rate 
Adser Associates 
Electrical Coiitracotrs. 
Residential and Commercial, 
Free Est 629-2718 LiC No 2/9660 _ 
ELEC T R IC A L all kinds, state* lie 
No. 239631, 24 hr emergency serv­ 
ice. 624-5166. 
____________ 
PA G E Electrical Contractor, 
Low 
priced, no iob too small. State lie 
283008. Anytime, 984-/996. 


TRACTOR wofk and hauling, gi 
clean too soil, digqing, sewer I 
work, rubbish hauling. 622-6590 
•Iron W ork 


IRON Work, Free Estimate. Doors, 
Windows, Gates, Decorations. 629- 
7760 
REAL ESTATE SALES 
ARE YOU READY NOW 
TO MAKE REAL MONEY 
IN REAL ESTATE? 
New or veteran licensees pay at­ 
tention! Our bonus period begins 
Dec 1. Already we have 17 per­ 
sons earning extra bonus on every 
dollar earned 
(2 of them from 
Mav 1 s t We otter frc-e mailing i 
pieces PLUS 3 multitude of other 
aids PLUS direct in field helD (If 
you want it) PLUS heavy effective 
advertising. Our pros enigy the 
good reputation built bv COLBY 
over pa't vears 
We have avail­ 
able desk space in all our offices. 
YOU NEED US!! 
Call Mr. Lotbv for aopointment to 
discuss the possibility of joining 
the most rewarded qroup in tie 
Valiev. CALL 963-4111. 


•Tree Service 


•Junk Cars 
C D. T R EE Toopina — trash haul­ 
ing, stump removal, 
reasonable 
prices, free est. Call anytime *86- 
8300;________ 
________ 
T R E E removal and toooinq. trash 
pickup, and 
firewood 
delivered. 
Free estimate, reasonable 599-1635 
, P E T E 'S T R E E S E R V IC E 
Trimming, Toppinq, Removal. 
___ 
628 5/92 
_ _____ 


„ CDOM S 7 RF.E S E R V IC E 
Pruning, ToDDinq and Removal. 
93 3020 
24 Hr Call 
: Dependable Tree Service 
1 
Lie and ins. Free est. Toopinq, 
pruning and removal. All power 
eaulpment including boom truck. 
_622-25% 622-0912 
________ 


! 
, , 
J C. T R E E S E R V IC E 
Trimming, Topping and Removal. 
629 3760 


i BUY Junk-Cars 
Free Tow Away. 622-1706. 
Highest prices paid. 
7— Dressmaking 
& Tailoring 
it ELECTRICIAN it 
NA9-0520 ___ 
______ 
ELEC TRIC IA N ~ 110-220 
free 
est, 
worx guaranteed. Reaso 'abie. Liu 
.83214, DO i (714) 599-645/ 


•Landscaping 


Alterations & Restyling 
y*n" fittings, your home 
622-3489 
ft Dressmaking-Alterations 
Mrs. Nugent, after Nov. 25. 622-0430 


Landscaping, 
«prinkler 
syst, 
iobs plus clean ups. Reas 
Free Est. 595-4704 or 983-5026 
•Furnace Service 
y ; RD A M e's’ Call Mike! Lands 
coping, maintenance, cleun-uu and 
tree’ . 213) 335 8458 
W ALL 
HEATERS. 
FLOOR 
FU R ­ 
N A C E S , FORCED AIR FUR- 
N ACE'i. New und used heatmq 
equipment, free est. 626-9617. Lie 
No. 103317. 
■Moving 
8— Child Core 
Nur’sy Schools (Lic.I 
LARGE Furn Van For Fast Moving 
of Anything to Anvwher*. Reas 
rates. 593-0420 
■Gardening 
M o th e r with education maior has, 
ocenm .s for aoes 2 thru 7 vrs. 
Meals, lots of extras, lots of love, 1 
reasonable 599-5191 
■Painting 
P. Bryant lawn and gardenini 
service. Call 9-4, trimming, haul 
ing trash. 623-7823.____________ 
■Typewriter 
Service 
PAINTING 
Interior and Exterior. 
$15 up per room. Apt painting Spe- 
cials 626-9536 
PU R C ELL 
PAINTING. 
Free esti 
mates 
No ioo too small or too 
large Lie 631047 Call 626-7373;___ 
R E L IA B L E painting Lie All types 
commercial Low rates. Free est. 
32 vrs quahtv work^624-5691 
CLEANING-oainting 
Aots-Houses- 
Small Buss. Int or axt. Reas rates 
Liu's, *24-5508 
QUALITY painting, complete Inter- 
ext or small iobs. Reas, reliable. 
628 3094 
_________ 
BARGAIN SEASON " 
Resident-,nl painting. 1 story house, 
S?89; 
2 
story, 
5389 
Lie 
Ins. 
, 
1 homos an Bros. 623 8497, 624 5338 


LIT T LE TOTS—LFA RN LOTS 
Pomosa Valiev Christian Schools 
6 a.m to 6 P m. Ages 2-6. State Lie. 
Also Gr 1-8. Exten care, trans 
845 E Arrow, Pom. (nr Towne). 
LITTLE PEOPLE TOWN 
624*1678 


LAWN and shrub maint Residential 
and commercial. Reas. Reliable. 
Free est 597-1993 
ROTOTILLING, NEW LAWNS 
AND SPR IN K LER S. SAVE SS 
CALL LOU 629 9934__ 
E X P 
G A RD EN ER, general 
and 
clean up Free estimate. Call after 
6 p m., (714) 599-3331. 


Cleanina, adiustlna and repairing 
All model». 
622-1452 
Realtor 


— -Upholstering 


*S3K£WSw 
L^NCH-M USIC 


n or y* dav, ÎVi-4. 
Phllllm Bivd 
Pom. 


F R E E ESTIM ATES 
On Custom Upholstery 
Reasonable rates. 626-7283 
LUDDEN & SONS, tree est on cpt, 
drps and reuoholstery. 4788 Holt, 
Montclair, 624 6918 


JA PA N ESE GA RD EN ER 
MONTHLY AND CLEAN UP 
CALL AFT 6, 5W-414T___ 
GARDENING service, maintenance, 
sprinklers, new lawns, trimming 
clean ups. Free estimate 629-7760 
Vinyl Repair 


ACTION VIN YL R E PA IR " 
Repair, renew and recolor 
593-40** 


JA PA N ESE aardener, general clean 
up and ma ntennnce Experienced. 
Free estimate 983-2876 
_________ 
Arrow Christian Pre-School 
305 E- Arrow Hwv.. Pom. 621-191P 
Better educational oroqram Qual, 
fied educational teachers designs < 
to stimulate physical, mental, sc 
clal and spiritual growth 
A wail 
rounded 
program 
meeting 
th- 
needs of the Individual and th 
flroup. 


N O T IC E OE H E A R IN G 
O F P E T IT IO N FO R 
PR O B A T E. OF W IL L 
A N D I OR L E T T E R S 
11 S I A M I M A R Y 
No. E A P 10374 
In the 
Superior Court of 
the 
State of California for the County 
of Lo? Angele». In the M atter of 
t h e 
Estate 
of 
M A R IO N 
t.. 
A D AM S 
aka 
M A R IO N 
L O U IS E 
A D A M S, Deceased. 
Notice is hereby given that the 
petition of Stanley F 
Adams, for 
the 
Probate of the 
W ill 
ol 
the 
above nameu deceased and for the 
issuance of Letters Testam entary 
thereon to the p*-tition< r, to which 
reference is hereby made for fu r­ 
ther particular*, wdl be heard at ft 
o’clock 
A.M , 
on 
December 
7, 
1U73, at the court room of Depart­ 
ment F A S T “ A ” , of the Sup-nor 
Court of the State of California for 
the County of Los Angeles, City of 
Pomona. 
Dated Novem ber 12, 1973. 
CLARENCE E, CABELL, 
County Clerk and Clerk of 
the Superior Court of th* 
State of California for the 
( ounty of Los Angeles 
By A M. Prterson, Deputy 
A l I AMD, S H E L T O N 
& O C O N N O R 
B j : Ferdinand F. I ernandez 
Attorneys tor Petitioner 
Pomona M all W est, 
Sixth Floor 
Pomona, Caliiornta 9I7M 
714-822-1841 
NV-71 Pomona P-B 
Pub, Nov. 16, 20, 24. 1973 


PAINTING, exterior and interior 
Free estimate. 30 vears exo 62b 
0049 or 627-4873. 
Lawn Care 
20 a month 
W o od W orking 
TEDS Gardeninq, montnly service, 
clean 
ups and hauling. 
Prompt 
tree est 626-7141 


PAINTING 
All types. Professional 
work, honest prices. 
Free esti­ 
mate. 629 4964 or 986 1978 
OOD WORKING, 
shelves, 
eabi 
nets, formica tops, signs etc. Call 
eves, wknds, davs (714 ) 595-0719 
WANT 
A 
GOOD 
PAINT 
JO B 5 
Reasonable rates Satisfaction qua 
ranteed Phene 599 3656 
INTERIO R AND EX1 ERIOR 
Houses and ants, also 
homes shingled 621-4529 


it JOHN’S GARDENING 
_ 
627-5668 
DENNIS LAWN SERVIC E 
Once a wk $25 mo, twice a mo $15 
912 804) 


10— Help Wanted 
ieii it now with • low-cost 
'rogress-Builetm Want Ad. 
Phone 622-1201 
MAN interested in good sales cer- 
reer, 
no 
experience 
necessary, 
sale- >n automotive education cell 
624-3585 tor appointment. 
Advance Tooling Planner 
7 )0 vears proven experience In 
progressive die, deep drawing or 
automatic punch press tooling 
G E N E R A L 
E L E C T R IC C O . 
234 E. Main St., Ontario 
986-3861, Ex t 228 
Equal Opportunity Employer 


TOOL & DIE 
MAKERS A 
The power of 
the Want Ads it 
with th« people. 
Want Ada are 
people ottering 
goods and 
aervices to 
other people. 
Really, people 
helping people. 
Can we help 
you? 


3 LINES ONLY 81c oer Day— Min. 3 Lines- 
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO 
234 E. Main St., Ontario 
986-3861, Ext 228 
Equal Opportunity Employer 
ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS 
in this Directory 
TODAY 
6: 


ASSAYER WANTED 
Exp not necessary if you have 
background in chemistry. Send re­ 
sume to Box 104. Ontario 9) 761 ■ 
REAL ESTATE 
SALES TRAINEE 
Wanted, full or part time. Comm, 
No educational requirement*. 
No 
sales exp necessarv 
Call Mon , 
Tues , Wed. »or personal interview 
ASK FOR MY ATER 
621*4789 


GENERAL COOK 
days. Apply after 12 noon. Magic 
.amp 
Inn, 
8189 Foothill 
Blvd., 
!u cam o rig a_________________ 
RNs, LVNs 
NURSES AIDES 
also live-in* 
Exp 
only. 
AH 
shifts. Call for 
appt between 8 am 4 pm (714) 622 
1006 Pomona Valiev Licensed Nur * 
es' Registry & Agency. 
__ 
I 
ADVANCED MFG. ENG. 1 
Responsible ior »ecurinq and plac i 
Ina 
in 
operation 
manufacturma ■ 
t 
*rocessus and equipment of latest, 
echnolrov; Includmq, process *e : 
lection 
development 
and Imple­ 
mentation. 3-5 vears diversified ex-| 
perence 
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. 
234 6 . Main St , Ontario 
986-3861, Ext 228 
Equal Opportunity Em p lo yer__ 


LOCAL CHURCH desires couple (or 
custodial and around maintenince 
work. Home plus nominal waqes 
Apply 
lo 
Proqress-Bulletin 
Box 
866L _______ 
____ 


10— Help Wanted 
10— Heip Wanted 
10— Help Wonted 


SIS IE M ('U .i« R Y SERVICE 
Has a Job for You! 
615 N. Euclid Ont. 984 2738 
ACCOUNTS Payable — mature 
male. D.eiarawv with 
ome 
counting machine experience, 
time 
Call 915-1846 for 
app. 
ment Cc quip Inc., 1369 W 
St., Uplanc 


Men or Women for 
Telephone Sales. 
Plan 
now 
for 
extra 
CHRISTMAS money — 
Sell 
subscriptions 
for 
Pomona's leading news­ 
paper. Our fall chari* 
ty program will be in 
full swing, $1.65 per 
hour or high commis­ 
sions. 
Interviewing any dav 9 am. 
300 S. Thomas St., 
Pomona 
Room 320 
Mr. Phair 
622-0613 


BREAKFAST COOK 
t home, 6 am to 2:30 
Cafeteria Worker 
Work in salad department and on 
sei xinq line, 4 hr» per day. Make 
appointment witti Nancy Murphy 
Cat Poly Foundation 5v8 4380. An 
Equal Opportunity Employer. 


ALES 
Get your bills “PAID” 
Creditor A Ft Problem? 
We offer a plan to get you OUT OF DEBT 
No Loan»--No Security—No CoMaker» 
F R E E dl»cus*ion of your problem» 
All you need I» steady income 
And a sincere desire to Solve your problems 
PROFESSIONAL BUDGET 
571 S. San Jose, Covina 
Call Anytime Day or Night 12131 967-6276 


.F IC T IT IO U S B U S IN F S S N A M E 
STATEMENT 
The following persons are doing 
business 
as: 
P L A N I A SIA , 
324 
South Diamond B a r HI , Diamond 
Bar, CA 917t>6 Angel Ram iro Cha. 
vez I w*l W Ph illips Dr , Pomona, 
CA 91766; Esperanzu A 
Chavez, 
1991 w. Phillips Dr , Pomona. C A 
9176E 
This business is conducted by a 
gen* ral partnership. 
.Signed: Angel R 
Chavez 
This statement was filed with 
the County Clerk of Los Angeles 
County on Nov 5, 1973. 
(F ile No. 73-28429) 
NV-151 Pomona P B 
Pub. NOV. 13, 20, 27, Dec. 4, 1973 


Hag openino for 
exper sales person 
Work bv appointment from lead: 
on commission 
Average $800 to $18,000 
Encyclopedia Britannica. 
Call B. McMasters for Appointment 
623-1250 
_ 
, 
MANPOWER, INC. 
Temporary Help Office ( abor Fact 
m INDIAN HILL, 
623 2513 


FUj. L or part time couple end Indi­ 
viduals for local sales work, oo- 
r-orbmit / to earn S4S6.50 an hr. 


Custom jtiocovers. 
dr aoes, 
reu- 
phoisterlng, Liberal benefits. 
Apply lower level 
Interview Toes Wed, Frl 
10-12 and 1-4 
Personnel office 
MONTCLAIR PLAZA 
Eaual opportunity employer 


Retired or semi retired man and 
wife in qood health, over 50, for 3C 
units In Pomona Should have loc­ 
al exp. references, good personal­ 
ity and maint ability 
Unfyrn 2 
bdrm apt 
utils bd plus $200 mo 
salary. Call 10-5 p.m., Mon Frl. 
(213 ) 634 3849 or write qualifica 
tlons to Box 7421 Paramount, Ca. 
90723. 


-AiCSMAN full or part time, slain- 
less steel cookware, make $30-140 
* 58' 
O tw tgnity for manar r 
Oten. 627-3904 


Progress-Bulletin, Pofoona, California, Tuesday, November 20, 1973 


BLAC K AN D W H ITE TV, $35. 
______________ 622-0575 
___ 


C O LO NIAL GOLD SOFA BED. $25. 
___ 595-6798 
A N T IQ U E tea ca rt, walnut, 


GE 
D isrwasher, 
qood $45, Í29 03O6 


595-028') 
coopertone, 
run? 


ONE tw in bed box sorinqs used once 
$35 629-2761 


SOFA 9 foot B erkshire Hour,e $100 
593-2312. 


CHEST of drawers, 
various sizes, 
like new, $30. 623 2990 
________ 


PIANO FOR SALE, S80. 
599-3791 


5 ;jP E tD C rate Schwinn b ik t, sSS. 
215 G a ttn ty , ¿an Dim as. 


LOOSE WEAVE DRAPES; GREEN, 
S50. 102x04. 624 9434 


P O RTABLE 
typ e w rite r 
Smith 
. ona like r e * $?'> 628-3915 
Co- 


$65 
BEDROOM set walnut 


BLUE and white flo ra l sofa $75. 
7869 
593- 


COLCR TV, $100. 
622-0575 
.IV IN G room set, 4 oicce_, desk, 
jin q le bed, ¿65. 628-7506 
GREEN 
1100 
NAUG AHYDE COUCH 
593-7869 
GREEN NAUG AHYDE CHAIR 
i5 0 ______ 


NAUG/ 
; m a iic dinette S< t 
»40. 593-7869 
.aM BER qlass lamps, 
for $25. 624-9434. 
sell both N A U G A H Y D i: 
and 
chair s50. 593-7849 
m aple 
rockino 


T R IP L E action exercise bike, n e a r,23" W ALN U T TV excellent modern 
new, i50. 629-0306 


KENM OR E Washer, qood condition: 
623-7334 i 
S45. 628-4033 
C O FFE E table w a lnut 6 toot. Quality 
$35 593-2312. 


M A Y T A G ‘ 'M in i" washer, 24" spin 
d rye r. L ike new $100 624-8242. 
SOFA, soft 
d iticn $ ’ 5. 624-8,l42. 


POWER vacuum, qas 4 hp qood con- 
d tion, $100. 628-549?, eves. 


tireen «old, 
624-1------ 


AUTOMATIC washer, M aytag, per­ 
fect condition, Í35. 597-1640 
flood con- 3 PIEC E W alnut 
626-2678 
Bedroom set, $95. 


L IV IN G room c h .ii;, swivel rocker 1 I FR E E to qood home Germ an She* 
v— r QW $7» 6 4-8242. 
___________ 
pherd lom alo pup. 626-7941 
TWO 
door 
re frio e ra to r 
cross 
top 
freezer $75 629-0585 
BE A U TY or stvle chair, qood con- 
_ 
oition, «25. 628-^492, eve'. 
MAGNAVOX_ Ty,__remcte control, 18 29? FORD 
rebored block, pistons. 
inch, $65. Call 597-2207.__________ 


COPPFRTONE F rlq ld a ire retrlqera- 
to r, $50. 62" 8307.________________ 


36" W H ITE O 'Keefe 8. 
__ range, $30. 
_ 
623-S307 


“ HOTPOINT 
ELECTR IC STOVE 
SSO. 597-3331 


rods $40. 984-1087 


G IR L'S 26 
¿20. 
5 Si.eed bike, 
623 7907 


__¿enith $45. 59s 5719 


BLUE V E L V E T CLUB CHAIR 
. 
786« 


19 r, C h D '/ ’ i LE ’ ■ 
speed 
transm ission, $100. 986-8052 


1955 CH EVRO LET Vi ton fro n t MM, 
lit I I j. 986-60S3 


SKI BOOTS, Koflach, six» 9M, oood 
condition, $25. 982-7739 


C AMERA, 35mm Pentax, w ith lig h t 
meter new, 85. 98“ -7739 
____ 


B IK E , SCHWINN ’ 0 SPEED, NEW, 
22", $65. C A LL 9 8 ? - 7 7 3 ^ _____ 


O FFIi E DESK. W OODEN, 3<5, 
982 7739 
40. 


.961 
R E N A U LT, qas 
savor, 
head qasket S10C. 986-8052 
needs 


LA D IE S wool coat suit, si?? 1? 
$7. 
593-760« 
1955 FORD 1 
TOM PICKUP. 
RUNS. S1C0. 98', 8052 
DRAPES 
avacado 
used, $25 623-1130. 


PO RTABLE TV, 
BlnrK and W hite 
excellent, $60. 599-6593 _ 


8M M M OVIE Cam era, excellent con- 
dition $10 Phone 624-'332 
; 


F R E E 
lovable 
orange 
spayed 
fe­ 
m ale cat. 593-0173 
i 


16 MM KODAK Mcvit* Camera, ne­ 
ver used $100. 624-1801. 


Sell it now w ith a low-cost 
Progress-Bulletin W ant Ad. 
Phone 622 1201 


never BA R B IE doll house custom c 
istruc 
teil and fu rn ished, VIS. 627-5091. 
B LU E corner qroup, good condition 
$65. 623-2844. 
CHILDS bunk bed' very qood con­ 
dition $25. 674-4839 


M APLE d ire tta $25. 593-1482, 3727 N 
Equation No. 117, Pomona. 


the BARGAIN BOX 
P.O. Box 2708, Pomona, Calif. 91766 
BARGAIN BOX 2 LINES 3 DAYS ^ 1 
UNIS 


PAYMENT WITH ORDER 


D o lla r 


NAME 


STREET 


PHONE 


CITY 


1. ONE ITEM ONLY, INCLUDE PRICE and PHONE NUMBER. 
2. PRICE MUST NOT EXCEED $100 
3. No ABBREVIATIONS — NO COPY CHANGES 
4. AD MAY BE EDITED TO CONFORM TO RULES 
5. NO REFUNDS FOR EARLY CANCELLATION 
6. PRIVATE PARTIES ONLY — NO BUSINESS VENTURES 
7. NO PETS — UNLESS FREE 
8. AD WILL APPEAR IN THE NEXT 3 EDITIONS OF PROG­ 
RESS-BULLETIN AFTER IT IS RECEIVED. 


Print Your Ad Here: 1 Space per Letter. 


Allow 1 Blank Space between Each Word. 


J U S T 


D I A L 
6 
2 
2 
- 
1 
2 
0 
1 


Classified Ad Information 


SERVICE A REPAIRS 


A—Business Director» 


ANNOUNCEMENTS 


1—special Notices 
2—Personals 
3—Run.ni. it Oarage- 
Yard Sal# 
«—Travel 
$—Los! 
i— r-o'v o 
7— Dressmaking- Tailoring 
Ciiild Care & Nursery 
Schools (Lie.) 
»—Rest Hrmos and 
Sanitariums (Lie.) 


EMPLOYMENT 


10—Help Wai.ted 
U —Help Wanteo M ale 
12— H..ip Wan,'cd Pernal# 
13—Situation v.« 'ted Mai# 
14— Situation Wanted Female 
15— Baby-Sitting Wanted 


INSTRUCTIONS 


16—tcu ca lio n a i 
17—Music Dancing-Dram atics 


M ISCELLAN EOU S 


18 
Good Jr.mris To feat 
19—-Sreas-Pian?s-Flowers 
20—H.n-Gram ^eeo Pasture 
21—Miscellaneous For Sal# 
22—TV-Radio-S:orc<- 
23— Musical Instruments 
24— Hovsehtld G^ods Sal# 
25— Fur:;^sitings Antiques 
2«— Furniiurc For Rent 
27—Appli3r ccs-Sal# 
28—Miscellaneous Wanted 
29—s\,aps 
30— M achinery * Tool* 
31—Farm Equipment 


PETS A LIVESTO CK 


32— Tropical Fish A Supplia» 
33— Pels-Pcultry-Rabbits 
& Supplies 
34— Livestock bal# 
35— Pcts-Poultry-Livestoch 
& Supplies Wanted 


REAL ESTATE SALES 


Houses For Sal# 
3/—to is-A crta a e Sal# 
a»— F.-'rms, ka i chcs sal# 
3»—M ountstn, death Desert 
Properly Sale 
40— Incone Property Sai# 
41—Busiress-lnlustrial 
S ite Trad 
Lias# 
42— Otuces, Stores 
Sale-lraae-Lease 
4J— Buildings To Mov# 
44— Weal Estate fcxchanM 
45— Real Estate Wanted 
44— Business Opportunities 
47—Businesses Want#d 


F IN A N C IA L 


4fc--kc«i Estate Loans 
4»—Moris*««.* Trust Deeds 
50—ft sncy To Loan 
51—StocK'-Bonds- 
Investments 
52—Loans Wanted 


REAL ESTATE RENTALS 


53—Furniiheo House? 
54— Unturmshed Houses 
55— Furnisiied Apartments 
56—Unfurnished Apartments 
57—Furnished & Unturnisned 
Apartments 
16 ■ Wc.itals I o Share 
59— Roorr. With Board 
40—Sleeping Room Rent 
41—Motels-Hotels 
42— Mountain 
Beach, Desert 
Property Rent 
43—Miscellaneous To R#nt 
44—Wanted To Rent 


SPORT EQUIPMENT 


45—Boals-Motors-Acc#ssorl#s 
Sales-Service 


K E C R E A iiO N A L VEHICLES 
46— Travel T ra ile r— 
Campers—U tility 
47—.% vtor Homes 
68— fcisctric Cars 
t i —Dune- Bu<i<nes 
7U—-f.'.vlorcydcs 
71—Bicycles 
72—A ircralt Rent-S#l#s 


M O B ILE HOMES 
73—Space & Parts 
74—Mobile Homes 
Sales Service-Supplin 


A U T O M O T IV E 


;s—Acces cnes-Tires-Parts 
76—Auto kepairs-Service 
77—Autos-Trueks Wanteo 
78—Trucks For Sal# 
79—Car, Truck Lease-Rent 
80—lm por'ed, Sport 
81— Antique Autos 
81 A—4 Wheel Driv# Ven.cie* 
82—Autos For Sale 


CLASSIFIED RATES 


E;fect*ve A pril 1, l9/\* 


Non Commercial 
PRIVATE PARTY 
5 uverase wards per lin t. M ini 
m um of 3 lines. M inim um charyc 
Î/.50. 
Cash 
w.ih 
copy 
on 
ail 
AC*rk wanted eds. 


I Time 
2-3 Times 
4-6 Times 
7-14 Times 
15 Times 


tic 
58c 
3tc 
33 c 
i;c 


CARD OF THANKS 
M em orials, 
ODiiuaries. 
Fun#r#i 
Notices, 54C per line. Fiv# nn# 
m inim um . 


READERS: 


56c per line. Four line m inim um 


BOX NUMBER 


Charae ot *2.00 oer bo« 


Deadline-New Ads 


And Cancellations 


New «ids end cancellations must 
be received not later than 3 p.m. 
day 
before publication. 
10 a.m. 
F ri. for Sat. 1 p.m. F ri. for Sun 
Before 12 noon Sat. for Mon 


Ads must run on# insertion be 
tore 
char.ye ot copy or cancel 
lation can oe made. THE PROG 
RESS-BULLETIN W ILL BE RE 
SPONSIBLE 
FOR 
ONLY 
ONE 
INCORRECT 
INSEKTIO N . 
All 
claim s for adjustments must cc 
made w ithin 10 days ot public* 
tior- 
D E A D LIN E for single col. 
com m ercial ads w ith larger than 
aaate type 
11 
a.m. 
Friday 
tor 
Sunday. 
M U LTIP LE 
COLUMNS: 
2 col. wide. 2 inch deep m inim um . 
Deadline 2 days prior to pubf'ca 
t.on. Thursday ? p.m. deadline for 
Sunday 


WARNING 
ASSEMBLY BILL 2112 


Adds Sec. »7* and 977 to the 
1964 Civil Rights Law 


P rohibits w ith certain exceptions, 
d scrim ination because of sex 
Since some occupations are con­ 
sidered more attractive to persoru 
ot one sex or th# other advertise­ 
ments are placed under the Male 
or Fem ale column* for the con 
venience of readers. Such listings 
ate not intendeoed to excluae per 
son of either sex. 
This newspdpef strives to protect 
it; reader, auainst fraud, de;.ep- 
t 
n or i’'iustic#s. Advertisements 
v.rucri 
require 
cash 
be ids 
or 
Is 
in 
stocks, 
s< n 
I# 
should 
^ 
thoroughly. A ll advertising state 
nu> * 
m ust o# accurate 
A ll ad', 
pp 
mng to 
sales 
must 
relate 
>" 
nature of work involved and 
not designed to rrislead the read 
er. An ad requiring a tuition fcr 
study 
courses 
is not considered 
a help wanted ad and m ould be 
n classification 14 "E d c 
tional. 


NO H E LP W ANTED AD CAN 
STIPU LATE OR INFER A 
D E F IN IT E AMOUNT WHEN1 
starting pay is com m isiioii basis 
Repcr* any exception to this rule 
to Classified Advertising Wa»?qer 
NA 2-1201 


The ProMtess-buiietui f t tr» e * tne 
rignt to re ie u or r#-ed t any ad 
vertlsemen* for the protection ot 
,,’e »dv#rtis#t and reader. 


E X P 
short 
n e e d e d 
Brooks St., 


arc 
or 
h*?li 
welder HOME 
A dair 
W eldina, 
4644 
Are 
M tcl. 424-0717 


H E ALTH A ID E for C o 'ina M> 
rea. Home Health Aaencv. Must 
be C e rti'ied. (213) 339-S323 


FURE 
th car. 
ûd for 
SERVICE STATION 
Part tim e helo needed for wee- ’ 
kends. Good iob for student nerd 
ina finan cial assistant, 
.'usf have 
recent experience in fu ll 
-. rv ic r 
operation. See Charlev or Don at 
El 
Rancho 
Shell. 
3177 
T e m p le ,1 
Pom. 


A.R 
WASH 
Helo 
Wanted 
Full 
Time. 
Inquire 
M in i! 
Man 
C a r1 
Wash, 1200 E. Holt. Pomona. A d- 
olv in person 


COCK man 
• . 2 5 experienced in 
dinner co' <inq. salary and meals, 
live in optional, 
nuc! 
employee 
benefit«. 
M cK inley 
H one 
For 
G o v. C h in 
KimbeM 
(714) Y>9 
3518 


SALES 
DISPLAY 
FULL TIME 
HELP 
WANTED 
We r * ’ c* 2S men to w o rt 
in our 
advertising and display dept 
$640 to S820 month 
NO E X r ER NECESSARY 
WE TR A IN 
FOR IN T E R V IE W CALL 
MON., rU ES ., W ED. ONLY 
n ♦*"» A P ,V. 
98 3-5 980 


SSRVICE station attendant 
p art tim e. Exp preferred. 
Phillips 
Foothill and Garey, Pomona. 
person, 
66, 


F ull or 
A odIv in 
corner 
ot 
... 
. 
An 
«dual opportunity emDloyer. 


ACCOUNTANT st, $12K 
E xp in public acctg, taxes 
DOE 
G AREY E m ploym ent Aoencv 
637 North Park 
«23-4391 


Maintenance Mechanic 
M inim um 3 years experience in 
general m aintenance w ith proven 
a b ility to operate lathes, m ills and 
arc weldinq equipm ent. 
FMC CORP 
Industrial Brush 
Operation 
1250 E. Philadelphia Pomona 
An Equal O pportunity Em ployer 
EXPERIENCED ' 
LIQUOR CLERK 


To take brand 
liquor inventory 
FULL TIME 
DAY WORK 
PERMANENT 
( 21 3) 3 3 9-1 622 


DISHW ASHER 
P art tim e eveninqs. The B arrister 
Restaurant, 500 W. Mission. Porn. 


Personnel Specialist 
j 
Responsible for interview s, recru M 
tinq, personnel records, etc. Call 
(714) 622-1328 tor confidential 
in 
tervlew s. Salary b»sed on expe­ 
rience. 


12— Help Wanted Fem. 


WANT someone to help w ith house­ 
w ork. Own transportation. 622-0726. 
M iddle age pfeter. 


11— Help Wanted Male 
11— Help Wanted Male 
i 1— Help Wanted Male 


USHER 
P a rt tim e 17 yrs or older. 
Canyon Theater, 
165 San 
Cvn Rd., San Oimas. 


H AND 
Dishwasher. 
M ust be t#st. 
A va il fro m ! i 
i d a y i 
A p o lY _________ 
626-9091 
D im as 
i ( QR w ilh v.n e i j i 
iiui.nlancc | 
_______: 
ex.). N ight.. A rp lv 1-4 pm . P crro.v 
nei O itice. G risovjlds Old School 
-------- - 
^ 
ç 1;, r 


E X P 
:L R V I(.E 
STATION 
W AN TED 
^A R T 
,-|M E. 
.. 
HAVE LOC. REFS. C A LL 628-7311 STENO 


M AN 
v u a 


N E E D live in or out sitter, litt le 
Housework. 
9970 
Lindero, M on­ 
tc la ir, *24-4)10. 
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
i E X P E R IE N C E D coon, 
niqhts 
for 
dinner 
house 
featu ing 
M exican 
1ood appiy 1 4 pm personnel office, 
G risw old'- Old School House, <15 
W. Foothill, C larem ont. 


A TTEN D AN T for self-serve gas sta­ 
tion, fu ll and oart tim e. Good sala­ 
ry and ch-ince for advancemivi?. 
Apply in Person, J iffy Self Serve, 
corner of P hiladelphia and Garr-v, 
Pomona, an equal opportunity em ­ 
p lo y e r . 


TELEPHONE OPERATOR 
For answering service, exo pre­ 
ferred, niqht shift 623-2151 
PRODUCTION CLERK 
EXPERIENCED 
Experience must include o rodtc- 
tion deot costing, Inventory control 
and production reports. X lnt growth 
opportunity and company pd bene­ 
fits. Call M r. Johnson. 984-202) for 
a opt. 


R E L IA B L E 
babysitter, 
m V home. 
Shift 
hours. 
Own 
t, ansoortaticm. 
Chino. Phone 627-5080, 


\ S G O G O WAITRESS 
M ust be 21. 
622-4574 


Cocktail Waitress 
Exp. 6J6-8662 a fte r 12 noon. 


B A R M A ID , 
single, 
attractive. 
No 
exeorience necessary. 
AppIv 
124 
E 
Bonita. San Dimas. 
UP to 52.25 Hr. Sew m achines, ex­ 
perienced operators wanted. I liana 
Garm ents, 10792 Vernon, O ntario 
627-4815. 


G R O U P 
counselor house 
parent 
Women age 2>-£0, supervise 9 to 12 
boys fu ll tim e. Sal 3433 to start 
593-258) 
HOUSEKEEPER 


Live 
in-take 
charge for 
working parents. 2 chil- 
ren 
4 V2 
and 
7 Vi, 
in 
school. Private room plus 
salary, in lovely home. 
Mrs. Leventhal 
62 4-9 074 


R E COR DS C L K . 
T o T 500 
If 
you 
e n i o y 
keeping 
arc. 
records yo u 'll love this, and it's* 
FE E NEGOT. BA KER PERSON 
N E L AG EN CY, 1371 
N 
Gordon,, 
Pom., 623-6361 (1 blk E. of Garey 
by fw y ). Ont. is 9*3-1895, 306 W. E 
1 
St._______________________________ 


For extra Christmas 
money, let TEMPO help 
COME IN TODAY 
WORK TOMORROW 
TEMPO needs "U " 
★ 
se c r e t a r ia l 
LE G A L PERSONNEL 
SA LES -E XEC U TIVE 
REPRO TYPIST 
You can make top SSS. Long or 
short te rm assignments. You de 


★ G EN’L OFFICE 
Good typing. 
FC 
A receptionist 
plus all around office skills. Long 
short assionemnt. 
★ BOOKKEEPER 
‘ ESCAPE FROM 
THE O R D IN A R Y " 
Assist busy vouno controller 
F C-or Assist. 
★ FACT. PACKERS 
NE VE R A FE E AT TEM PO 
Call 623-1466 M a rylu Kathy 
rt MPO Tem norury Help _ 


Bar Maids W anted 
Day a-xi eve hrs. Aues 21-30 
No 
exp necessary. Call (2’ 3) 384-9659 
aft i s m , 


k -e rcr 
c c .ro >n 
te room acd b n *': 
o jr t / . Reference 


sekeepina ?nd co-f 
Lice n ce d ' drivn 
8668 Pro«'ess Bui 


NEED lioht hm 
panion 
live-ir 
preferred, R01 
letin, Pomona 
_ 
★ R.N. ★ ' 
Pu'i time P.M. shift 5 
differ­ 
ential. 
l 
year 
experience 
pre­ 
ferred. Excellent frlnqe benefits. 
a..uly in person 
CASA CO LIN^ 
255 E Bonita Ave, Pomona 
RUBBERMAID 


PARTY PLAJH 
¿round fioor opportunity for exp 


also. World's fastest growing, no 
collecting, no delivering. For !>er- 
sonal in!v 
>11 B^’ h Rampo, R-g. 


GEN'L 'o f f ,-SEC 
«.TO S567 
Leadin« tech firm needs girl to 
helo deot rw.r, ^hd tyoe 50. Rustv 
' - I fe SH OK 
BAKER PERSON­ 
NEL AGENCY. 1371 N.-.Gordon, 
Pom.. 6^3 6361 
l elk E. of Garev 
by fwy). On! is 983 1895, 306 W. B 


EXP W om an for Deburring 


PNEU-DRAULICS INC. 
8961 Central Ave , M o nl^si- 
An Equal Opportunity Employer 


13— Sit. W anted ^Aqle 


Painter Needs Work 
629-493S___ ^ t * 
YOUNG MAN needs a C ^k's 
ob. 
Please contact Fred, room Q Roy­ 
al 
Palms 
Motet. 
4780 
Mission 
Blvd., Ontario _ 
GARDENING SERVICE ~ 
QUICK AND RELIABLE 
599-4850 or 593-5319 


14— Sk. W anted Female 


W ILL CARE FOR E L D E R L Y 
D A IL Y OR H O UR LY i^A JE 
623-7024___ __________ 


apt cleaning done w ith 
HOUSE and apt cleani iq p< 
references. Call Jane. 623-i7429 


W A N TE D : HOUSEWORK. 
M IN IM U M S9 FOR 3 HOURS. 
CALL E V eN N i£ 
. «MS 
PPAC TK 4L 
N u rje , 
p> iv s f^ duty, 
belief 1 iv 
tiiah!. 624 «HI Ki.T4 
ant* unocr'i* . ^ ¡ 1«. ic dr<w$r. 
E X f- 
R 16 N' 
D seam str « v ces res 
work in shop 
624-5316 a fte r 5..,,,v 


15— Baby Sitting W onted 


Baby Sitting In My Home 
593-2733 


16— Educational 


chooi 
iru College. 


CAREER INS IIT U T E of A M E R IC A 
2-iéj N. Towne Ave. 
Psmons 
624-3'9t 
? n j-ÿ '7 234« 


ST. 


Honre, 415 W. Focthil 
irc m c n t. 


CLERK, 11 PM to 7 AM 
tiring fo r ! 
part tim e. 
Stop N Go M arke t, hiring fo r Sev- 
j l l and part tim e. 311 
cu n ta n Ontario. 986-9383 
erai store:,, fu ll an 
PROD. T R A IN E E 
Good entry s,,ot fur le ll^w w-mech 
PER??NVN li“ AnSE ® ’: ,% ken" Duplicator op $545 - Doe 
Gordon, Pom., 623-6361 (1 blk W. 
Gff-set 
exper.ence, 
prefer 
some 
of Garey by fw y). Ont. is 983-i095,i 
0 « ,m< 
- moo.mo. 
306 W. B St. 
Garuy Em ploym ent Agency 
---- ------— — 
,------- ------------ ~ 
— 1637 Nor. h Paris 
E a r ly Morning Paper R te 
ASSISTANT M anager fo r smorgas- c , 1 P t 
m b t t i a a * 
7 day week. Economy car. Pom., 
0 
ntis mi. we^Keno 
g.'-od 4 A L t> — k a k 1-1 i/v \t 
com pany b*netits apply 
1-4 
prri 
personnel 
office, 
G riswolds 
Old 
school 
House, 
415 
W. 
Foothill, 
Claremont. 


Cement Setup & Finish 
Experienced 
pool 
deck, 
-teadv 
w o o 
tot 
nay. 
213) «64 7^8? .o n 
(213: 964-4573. 


_____ 
. 
S456 
Another rare one! 35 h r w k, piush 
off & the best bw ieflts. BAKERS 
PERSON NEL AGENCY'. 1371 
N .| 
Gordon, Pom., 623-6361 
(1 blk P 
of G arey by f.w ). Ont. Is 983-1895, 
3C6 W , ft i f . ______________________ 
C H ILD Care for 2 vear old in our 
C larem ont Home, w ith or without 
housekeeping. A t least 11-4, Five 
days a wk. Salary and duties neso- i 
tiable. 624 M73 


POWER seeing m achine o o e ra tcr; 
on ladies dresses, exper onlv r»ed 
applv. W ii M ohilef of C alif. 1247 
W. Brooks, Onl. 


BO O K K E E P E R , 
heavy 
exi; 
accts payable, general background 
I 


ln cost and statem ent or.-paration 
located In V /h itti« r area 
Call 
J 
W ackerm an. 1213) 69ÎÎ-0631. E cval 
O ocortunlty Em ployer m -f. 


RYDER.:: 


' t »it- 


MEDICAL 
D r’S 
g irl 
F 
B fPS C 
Gordi 
of Gar 
305 W. 


La Verne or San Dimas. 599-2901 


E X P E R IE N C E D sheet m etal lavout 
m an, m ust have own tools, J. L. 
M a lla rd Co., 10590 Silicon, 
Mon­ 
tc la ir. 
Cal. 
(714 ) 
626-1248 
An 
Eguai O oporutnity Em ployer. 
MECHANIC 


For extra Christmas 
money, let TEMPO help 
COME IN TO DAY 
WORK TOMORROW 
TEMPO needs "U" 
GROWTH OPPTYM 
JOBS 
JOBS 
JOBS 


New and rapid ly expanding indust­ 
ria l plant, rig h t u z * company is, 
establishing solid operations 
G<t 
in on the ground floor and ad­ 
vance. 
INDST FIBERGLASS 


Class A Mechanic 50°, of all w ork. 
BAKER 
PERSON NEL AGENCY 
Î 37; 
.. Gordon, Pom., 623-63Í1 fl 
bii 
r 
ol G arey dv fw y . Ont. I 
95, 306JW. B S t___ 
SALES 
M AN 
BUSY E X E C U T IV E 
NEEDS M AN F R ID A Y 


M Y 
BUSI 
Blven 


One item costing $100 Of less may be placed in a 2 line ad *or 3 con­ 


secutive days for $1. Ads must be paid in advance, no copy changes, 


no retund fcr cancellation. Private pat ties only— no business ventures. 
FOR INFORMATION CALL 
PROGRESS BULLETIN 
Classified Dept. 


LABORERS 
E L E C T R IC IA N S 1 
C A BIN E T M A K E R S ! 
D R AFTSM EN 
W ELD ER S 
PUNCH PRESS OPR ! 
■ ■ SHEET M E T A L BOY' 


TO LEARS' 
E V E R Y 
PHASE 
OF 
FiESI 
Men '"le r.te d w ill be M v tfl 
the opportunity to eern. 
$700 
per m . 
'w ssible 
to stnrt. M ore 
when ablg 1o assume 
resDOn ib- 
lities 
Mu>t be availab le t- start 
Im m ediately. 
Some 
tra ve l. 
For 
confidential in te rvie w phone: 
6 2 2 -1 3 2 8 


NEED 


5 0 
MEN 


We 
have 
sev'l 
oosn's 
fice-s-back 
ofc 
receot 
etc $t to 5450. B A K £R 
N E L AGENCY, 1371 
N. 
Pom., 623-6361 (1 blk W 
bv fw y). Ont. is 963 1895. 
St. 


Clerical Assistant 
S tart 5405 mo, 1 year oeneral of­ 
fice 
experience, 
type 
45 
wpn- 
M ake 
appointm ent 
w ith 
Nancy 
M urphy Cal Poly Foundation 593 
4jfi0. An Equal O pportunity cn> 
plover. 
- 
‘ 


F U L L and p a rt tim e housekeeprs 
A oolv in person. 
HOLIDAY IN N 
1801 E. "G ” St., O ntario 


EXP. NURSES AIDE 
Bella Vista Convalescent H< 


T r .1 1 n s 
tra c tc r-tra il 
C om bination home ;tutf« 'B T 1 r s si 
dent 
tra irin c 
at 
c y rw tC A L lF . 
T R A IN IN G 
= N T E P 
BAY 
/•R EA. A 
-( v e t \',r vc* W is edu­ 
cation 
f ' ' 
tiv 
i ■ r 
»"*4 assis­ 
tance prov ded. Cali now :... 
(714) 98-1-7954 
r y d e r Tr 
m m ' c a . . r fT i r u t e 
Post O ffice Box 1213* 
O ntario, C ilif. 9176f- 


1 7 - 


DAY 
thru 
hous 


BUS 
BOY 
10:30-3:30 
Mond 
F rida y. A pply in person Pire 
è Inn 99B N. G arev, Pomona 


6 
2 
2 
- 
1 
2 
0 
1 


10— Help W anted____ 


(Continued from 
Previous Page) 


10— Help W anted 
10— Help W anted 


HAIRDRESSER 
wanteo with soov 
allow inq. 
624-0119 or 622-0162 


M A iU R E 
adult, 23 uni 
le 
10 
manage 
all 
lig h t m aintenance. 
_ Call collect (213) >79-270»._________ j 
W AN TED Power 
:ew lng 
m a c iiin u 1 
c-nerators. 
O verlock 
¿nd 
single | 
needle 
Vacations, 
Holidays 
a n a , 
M cuical insurance. Tim e rate a n d ; 
piece w ork. 245 San Lorenzo. Po- 
rr.cna, *23-3*13 between Reservoir 1 
and East End.____________________ 


MACHINISTS 
EXP 


E N G IN E LATH E 
H A R D IN G E CHUCKER 
W AR N tR -S W A S E Y 
BR ID G EPO RT M IL L 


Too Wases 
Co. Pa; 
Periiion Plan 
Co. Paid L ife and Health Ins 
Lonq T erm Em ploym ent and 
uood Clean W orking Conds 


PNEU-DRAULICS INC. 
896) C entral Ave., M ontclair 
An Equal O pportunity Em ployer 


H O U b tK E E H tR -C O O K 
or 
mamte- 
nancii-cook. m ale or fem ale, aqe 
40 60, sm all rt .r home. 593-1211___ __________ 
APT 
M AN A G E R 
needed, 
C hina! c O U P L t to nianaoy 
area, rei t, ut litie ^ plus tee. Sub- j 
park, and 8 rental 
rnlt 
resume 
to 
1400 
Huntington 
I 
D r., S Pasadena 9)030.___________ 
KITCHEN CLEANUP 
6 days. Apply after 12 noon. Ma«lc 
Lam p 
Inn, 
8189 
Foothill 
Blvd., 
C u c a m o n g a _______________ 


WHILE 
Y O U ’VE BEEN 
JOB HUNTING 


Today's A rm y 
got a 
pay 
raise! 
In 
today's 
A rm y 
you 
start 
at 
$324.10 
a 
month. 
Find 
out 
if. 
you can Qualify 
Men and Women | 
between 18 to 34 can choose the 
iob, the fra in in o and the 
piacci 
they want to serve. E nlist tor 2, 3 
or 4 years. Yonr local A rm y repre­ 
sentative has the fa rts see him at: 


Ave, M ontclair 


67 Spat>. 
park, a n i 8 rental cottage*. In P - 
mona. Coach not necessary. Salary 
plus 
space. 
W ilkinson 
Co., 
Mrs. 
JuUqe. (213) 378-9301 


W ELLS FARG U BANK. 


N E VER A FE E AT TEM PO 
623-1466 for a.jnt M a rvlu -K a ttiy 
TEM PO Tem porary Help 


LARG E 
volum e Toyota 
dealership 
noeds 
A -l 
line 
technician 
w îfh i 
Class A smoq license. Good pay! 
and benefit*. A ply In person. See 
service M qr. (213) 967-1475 
, 
ROGERS TOYOTA 
17V5 S. Grand Ave., G lendora 
SPRAY 1 
PAINTER 


wanted kitchen help and de 
1‘very 
evenings 
and 
we»ke'»ds 
Appiy In person only 20*6 S Garev 


SH IP 'G SUPV'R 
T ru ly choice pos'n for 
one who 
knows wood rnoldnq, finish-atl ma 
terials 
whse, etc. St ss 
or, 
DOF. 
B A K E R PERSON NEL 
AGENCY 
1371 N. Gordon, Pom. 
623-6jo 1 
1 
blk 
E . ot 
Garev 
by 
fw v). Ont 
9B3-1895, 306 W. B_St 


AM BITIO U S 
salesman, 
clean 
cut, 
m anager 
potential, 
hlqh 
school 
grad. s<jme experience preferred, 
w ill tr.iin . A p ply in person. Ws 
terbe 
H ill B lvd., Pomona. 


W ork fo r hydro-air cleansing d iv i­ 
sion 
cf 
L ghting 
Company 
cf 
A fre r ca. No experience required 
«.« y.e Irain. 
$640 to 820 
Plus incentive as per agreem ent. 
CALL 
MON., TUES., A N D WED- O NLY. 
9 A.M . to 6 P.M. 
9 8 3-5 9 8 0 


★ GAREV ★ 


EMPLOYMENT AGENCY 
SR. ELECTR TECH st 800 
2 yrs coll, some xp read 
DOE 
MANAGEMENT TRN st 700 
2 yrs coll. some xp read 
DOE 
TV REPAIR 
st 610 
Experienced, 40 hr ^k M -F. 
DOE 
JR DRAFTS TRNE 
to 600 


ta l 
«.3 E, Deodar, O ntario, 915-2731 


RN SUPERVISOR 
FOR 


LICENSED NURSES 
RN SUPERVISOR 


2 nites per week 


LVN 


Part time and Full time 
3-11:30 


NURSES AIDES 
7-3:30 
3-11:30 
Experienced only 
Full time and part time 
APPLY 
JULENE CONVALESCENT 
CENTER 
1550 N. Park 
Pomona 
623-0791 


W anted: Cook's Helper 
W e have m an/ varied 
w 
Jobs on file 
Call us to see ii we nave yours! 
HARDING ]/• 
Personnel Agency 
N. Center, Pomona 
*23-167 


-Music-Dancing, 
Dramatics 
., 
.............. .. 


ja rtic-, Dj í » or tr 
<•.85-7876 . 


R F A C IL IT Y 591 


Nurses' Aide 
F u ll tim e for m ental retarded nu^ 
sing hom»>. Call 593 4951. An Equal 
O pportunity Em olover 


OPERATORS 
wanteo 
on 
cacris, 
tin g le needle overlock machine* 
Apply at R M L Sportswear, 1756 
S G arev, Pomona 


TRI Chem 
structors 
available 


Liouic 
needed 
593-7653 


GOOD danceabl 
hons or xm as 
Call 626-3032_c 
________ 
PRiVATc LESSONS 
. 
G u ita r—C larinet - 'ru m p # *-F lu te 
P ia n o -S a x —O rgan *etc. 
D U G A N ’S MUS1JTCO. 
5065 South Piaze 
AAo*tc 1 
Plazaiq 
'"****■ 


18— Things to Eat 


A VO C A D O S ' 
8 for SI CO, San Dmas t7W*599-5301 


21— Misc. For Scie T 


BAILEY FABRIC^ 
Top Q uality Polyester 
a •nt*er»wl se ltM L a s 
yes ter Xe 1- oricfc- 
Jose, C im t 


lv? . 


127 E. 


K IR B Y 


Antonio's 
Reslaccant, 
154° 
Holt, O ntd'io App'y In person. 
N E ED TE M P O R AR Y W O R K ?" 
Never a Fee at Bak«r 
t em oorarv O ffice Service 
1371 N Gordon, Pomona. 623-6361 
(1 blk W. of Garey by fw v.) 
Ont. is 983-IB9Í. 306 W. B St. 


nfa 


DOWN? 


624-5963 
actory> autho- 
KJ up. 1 year 
ts in d labor 
985-iSH 
Let us r»- 
new 
Faftier 
d 
i am wock^679-3374 


*■ et and 'eiti, • pay- 
II Like v ie 
. Can 
'>a*. 
_______ 


AVON MAKES CHRISTMAS 
The Season To Be Jolly 


11s 
21* N, Palm 


YOUNG man approx. 18 vrs of aoe 
to le arn 
all 
phases 
of 
drapery 
i>u.,nest. M ust be acte to drive. 
W ill pay w eekly salary. A pply in 
p* son. O ntario D ra o trie s, 117 E. 
Holt, Ont. 


Some school trainin o, w ill train, 
DOE 


frin g e benefits and prom olio al 00- 
porunities avallabit 
For fu tn ii 1 
form ation please call W illa rd Siaub 
1714) 629-6015. 


Has im m ediate opening for a c e Looking for a iob with se- 
g it secretary in the Pomona Con- 
3 
1 
tra c t 
Center, 
e per 
prçf. J t j n t purity, good pay and ex­ 


cellent benefits? W e have 
excellent opportunities for 
people with experience on 
automated 
lines on both 
day and swing shift. 


Compare your present job 


E arn extra monev fo r gifts 
AVON 
Representative 
spare tim e. C all: 629 2 587 
M NA G M N T TRNE . . to 600 r e c e p t 
P rev m t.m t exp preferred 
DOE, 
helotu?' not 
_____ ASST MGR TRAIN st 537 
-F U R N IT U R E STORE 
Am btious, meet public well. 
DOE 
(M ale) 40 hr. week, stock rm and O P D P D 1 Y 
« t 
S H 7 
g e n ia l store work 
Age 5C to 60 ^ 
51 
J U / 
preferred 
J 
H .'B IG G A R , 160 E 
M ust be experienced. 
DOE 
H°H P om on, 
........... 
_ CLERK 
( l i b r a r y ) 
2.40 
h r 


„ Ow 
* 
____ *M-. _ 
^ GAREY ^ 


E M P L O Y M E N T A G E N C Y 


yooa tynin^ Som*' 'H P R O G R A M M E R 
1 0 0 0 
w 
i. 
Exp data ot. DE ' DOC. progr 


7 5 0 4 


etc 
Also in 


Ì.RPET 
PRICE 


stall, repair 
, Si82 4602 
BEAI 
ANV 
9uar. Fin a* 
S6Í30 *24 /ÌÌ9 


$ W A N T E D $ 
I f nl. 
Hr. ; 


SON NEL AGENCY/ 1371 N 
Go 


Eoual ODPC/ur.ily employer 


S« IOE SALESMEN 
Experienced, full time only. 
KANDEL 
SHOES, 960 
E. 
Pom. 
___ _ 


Apoly 
Holt, 


W e have many varied 
Jobs on file 
Call us to see If we have yoursi 
O ' HARDING 1^ 


Personnel Agency 
Center, Pomona 
P alm O ntario 
62J «671 
'’13-5971 


$200 PER WEEK 


1066Î MI 
( 7 1 4 ) 
6 2 1 - 4 2 1 9 


BOYS! BOYS! BOYS! 


Boys wanted to work getting new customers for 
Pomona Valleys leading newspaper. “ This is not 
a paper route — no collections or deliveries 


required." 
EARN! EARN! EARN! 


Most boys earn 10-S30 weekly — and others 
who aren’t afraid fo work earn $3 0-5 60 weekly. 
You are paid top $ $ $ for every new customer 


you receive. 


W IN ! W IN ! W IN ! 
Cash prizes, trophies, bikes and trips to such 
fabulous 
places 
as 
Lake 
Tahoe, 
Pondeiosa 
Ranch, Mexico City and many more. 


• Complete Supervision 
• 24 Hour Accio nt Insurance 
• Transportation Furnished 
• Complete Trainu a 


IF? 


1. At)« 1 2*16 
2 . N e a t ft Polite 
3. A ble To W o rk iv o ry Day A ftor School A Saturdays 
4 . W illin g To H av« A lo t O l Fun And £arn Big $$ 


CALL NOW 
4 00 A 5-00 p m 
or 685-3518 


ASK FOR MR. GORDON 


And more is 
you can 
supervise boys 
12-16 after school and 
Saturdays, while they are 
getting new customers for 
some 
of Southern 
C ali­ 
fornia’s 
finest 
newspa­ 


pers. 


Your job will be to re­ 
cruit, interview, train and 
supervise t h e s e youn£ 
men. No experience nec- 
esasry as we train you in 
all aspects of our busi­ 
ness. But a large vehicle 
is 
necessary 
and 
insur­ 
ance is a must. 


Opportunity for advanc­ 
ement to an exciting po­ 
sition and exciting plac 
es can be as quick as 
you make it. 


Call now 6 8 5 -3 51 8 , ask 
for Mr. Gordon. No part- 
timers please. 


11— Help Wanted Male 


possible if t0 what we can offerl 


SSOO. DANCE COURSE FREE 
To Be ounce .earner \t accept 
For part time *ve U 
98 
Call 1 pm to 10 pm *29-74>3 


Our Spray Painters: 
• W ork only 172 days 
per year! 
worK four in hour davf (Î hoi.' 
per <jay paid overtim e) then have 
4 O' vs f if. 
® Have medical and 
dental coverage 
# Participate in excel­ 
lent retirement and 
stock purchase plan. 
• Enjoy 10 paid holidays 
per year. 
# Receive sick leave 
attendance pay. 
INTERESTED? 


A L S O 
N E E D 
Sander Finisher 


will train. 
Come in and 


Compare 
BECKMAN 


INSTRUMENTS 
2500 N. HARBOR BLVD. 
FULLERTON 
North ot Imperial Hwy 
*n e«uai opportunity employer 


TELEVISION 


TECHNICIANS 


Xlnl opportunity for trained field 
s e r v ic e technicians. Conoemal 
w 0 r k I n Q conditions Immediate , 
Employee Discounts, Haul Vaca 
t '.I and Holidays, p ro fit Shd-'inq, 
Hospital, Surqical. M aior Medical i 
a-d Life Insurance, Tools a d Uni­ 
forms Furnished 
Earmnys up to SS 65 hour. 


SEARS CENTRAL 
SERVICE 
10/70 M ill* Ave 
Montclair 
An tciual Opportunity Emolover 


INSIDE SALES DESK 
Oood com pany benefits 
M or.tcio • 
624-804« 


FO REIG N 
car 
m echanic. 
A' 
Ii 
cen>e required, S m all shop, plenty 
ot .vork Catron Porsche Audi 
m k 
for Mr, M iller or Wally Stark 
6/1 
c m , 
M A114 T E ,N A N C E M i C H A nTc 
Mechanical 
and 
electrical 
skills 
needed. Plumbina and caroentry 
«kills helpful 
must 
have exo:r 
and rood track record. Many Co 
uaid benefits Wage» eoual to e* 
per. iJ e dre an Equal Opportunity 
Emolover 
Call M r 
Lambert at 
ths? Kellv Moore Paint Co. In On- 
Jario. (71j) 984 7021 
JR 
ACCT...............$800 
Ltadmo local m fr needs Jr acct 
w- yr e*n P E t NfcGOT. BAKER 
^tR S O N N E t AGENCV. 13/1 
N. 
Go; don, pom. 623-6361 (I blk E. of, 
Garey t>* fyvv.) Ont. Is 913-1895 
306 W. B St. 
, COMPE fb N T 
V VV 
lineman-wili. 
tcols ^ereksary. Refer to 665 VV. 
_Secc-io_ Pomona Apnly in person. 
sALEb 
★ DRIVERS W ANTED i f 
Pull or liarf time 
★ PAID BONUS ★ 
TROPICAL ICE CREAM 
, 
150 N 
Reservoir, Pom. 
I 
Comer of Price St., rtr R R 


Eveninqs-weekends 23 hr*. 


637 North Park 
____ 
_ 42J-43” 
NEED 5 


OUTSTANDING MEN 
FOR 
SALES CAREER 
OPPORTUNITY 


Experience not required 
Income during training 
Work near home 
For interview call 
FOREST LAWN 
Mr. Westover 
(213) 966 3671 or (714) 621-3049 


don, Pom., 623-676f ft blk E 
Garev bv fw v). Ont is 983-1895 , 306 
W. B St. 
GENERAL OFFICE 
Good with tlaures, typino 50 to 60 
WPM, fllino, knowledge of office 
machines, 
billina e*per. 
helofui 
Salary *450. COLUMBIA RIBBO*. 
AND CARBON. 8855 Bauer Avt- . 
Cucamoriaa. 
Cal 
Ph 
985 ?7l9. 
Ar\ Equal Opportunity Employer 


# LVN Needed 


FULL 
Ex per 
C H G E 
BKPR 
all phases, const 


to 6 5 0 


Midninht 
Ont«rir> Nursi*'-' Hnm< 
1661 Soyth Euclid. 984 i 


E X E C S EC R E TA R Y 
Type 60. SH 90, prev tsp. 
M E D . B O O K K E E P E R to 6 5 0 
Must be exp NCR Dos 
S E C R E T A R Y 
Exec typist sh 80, ext 
G IR L F R ID A Y 
Type 55 It sh, varied 
to 


5 5 0 


5 5 0 
constr 


71 ; 
FEMALE 
CASHIER 
AND 
TES«-Miist 
be 
r-i/er 
1* 
i 
Service Station ir>»T Valley 
La Puente 
964 9233. 
BOTH nr^-*i'hor>l teacher 
and cook needed. 983-6718 


SAI ES FASHION COUNSFLOR 
GREEDY WOMEN WANT 
D 
MA<E FABULOUS I t t SHOWING 
QUEENSWAV FASHIONS 
No Investment, free train’s. 621-8016 


SECRETARY (2 ) 
to 
Ty»e 50, lite sh, like detail. 
MED. ASSISTANT 


HOUSEKEEPER wanted, oen* 
in 
salary 
« 9 5611. 
ed, 
five 
room and board, 


Classified Ads 


CALL 


6 
2 
2 
- 
1 
2 
0 
1 


Sail It now with a low-cost 


Progress-Bulletin Want Ad 


Pnone 622-1201 


NOTE TELLER 
Must hav' prev exp 
PERSONNEL CLERK 
Type 50, 2 yrs exp like d< 
CLERY TYPIST 
Type 50, tike Dkkg, some 
MEDICAL OFFICE 
Heavy tones, type like p 


MED. BACK OFF 
ature oerson, 


500 


500 


450 


450 


400 


to 450 


stano sjO w ii ;nc*ude fijh and al 


DRAPERY SALE 


CUSTOM MADE DRAPES 
FLOOH TO CEILING 7?'‘ WIDE 
Only $49.50 


lor' appt r .tll’ 626*0407 


springs 
F r-m 
S69.9S. 
««11 
Hoi 


FIRFWOOD * 


New Shoi 
:fds 


MANAGER 


B E A U T I C I A N S 


$120 
Wk. 
Plus liberal 
BEAUTICIANS 


guaranteed 
, liberal coi 
per * k 
ions. 
SHAMPOO GIRLS 


LICENSEO 
For beautiful new First Lady 
Beauty 
Salon, to ooer< 
ocn 
at 
1041 
W. 
Foothill 
Bivd 
Claremont, Calif. 


Full or Part Time 


Interview 
will 
be 
held 
in 
Salon Nov 
28< 
between the 
hours S» P.M. Salon locafed 
t#w doors from Stater Bros 


FIRST LADY 
BEAUTY SALON 


»00 E uclid Ave.« Room 202 
Cleveland, Ohio, 44415 


blood 
NE L 
Pcm 
by F 
B St 


etc, 
BA KÊR 
PÉR, f c 
AG EN CY 
1371 N. Gord 
e í U ie l (1 bik t 
of Qa 
wv) Ont, is 983-1895, 306 


HO US EK EEP ER 
iof que st heme. 
■ive-in if possit 
R e fe rs <:es 622-3 85 


M E C) ir AL RE CE PTIO N IS T 
Ful 
tim e Dc ctcr's office 
Call 62 ’ ■600<). 
E X P E R I E N C E O 0 yertock and - in 
needle o o f'a ltrb 
Top oay 
32e 
_ H o lt Oi 


rV LÍS T fe r wig shop. 
P aas«nt su rroundinas. 


Ofc N IA L 
assistai •t 
tor 
ch a irs 


(C-M 


,t h 
> for 
RN 


Im m o la te ooemng 
I 1-7:30 
Full Time— 
ICU-CCU 
Full Time & Part Time 
Med - Surg 
Shift Differential 
please conta<1 
INTERCO M M UN ITY 
HOSPITAL 
a p p l y p e r s o n n e l D E P I 
155 W. Cwleoe Covina 
(213 331 7331 
¿rt eoual oooorlunitv employer 


P R £ ? A P t 


FO R A 


FUTURE 


> Now enrolling 


CLASSES FOR 
BOOKKEEPING 
AK«0 
- 
GIRL FRIDAY 


ACT N O W !! 


LIMITED OPENINGS 


BUSINESS COLLEGE 


360 E. HOLT 


POMONA 
623*6454 


> 


B-10 
Progress-Bulletin, Pomona, Colifornia, Tuesday, November 20, 1973 


21— Misc. For Sale 


(Continued from 
Previous Page) 


CAGfe, $25. 627-5252 ............ ......... 
ROOF REPA IRS 25 Y E ARS 
E X PE R IEN C E CALL RED. 
629-8920. POM 
___ 
* 
ROLL TOP DESK ‘V OAK $500. 
Good Cond. 983-6084 


2 7 - ~ A p p l ia ^ 


STOVE, GAS, NEW 
Avacado Color $100. 
626-4013 


36— Houses For Sale 


GENERAL 


W H I T E 
Frlgldalre 
refrigerator. 
Cvclamatic, larqe freezer. 
Runs 
good S1C0. 622-33S7.______________ 
Gas dryer for sale, $40 
622-6702 
LARGE Westinahouse refrigerator, 
coDoertooc double doors. Call Af- 
_ ter 5. 628-2226._______________ ____ 
FOR SALE, FRIG ID A IR 8 . iL B C * 
TRIC DRYER. Xlnt cond, $65. Call 
aft 6 p.m., 593-1268. 


Dr , 
HIM 


PPV (people powered vehicle), also 
concession-cnest tyoe^ ice cream 
f r c 6 i c i* f 53Vz 
W x >Jj 
*-* 
,fcor0ds“ iona(1 r^wina^cfd^r ^'tvpe^ | q $— MiscellaneousWant. 


Wr« 
T 
Claremont (between Indian 
and Mills, corner of Abilene)._____ 


E dLouEbfe.T w l e V 'o a l e ^ n w * and CASH tor old dolls, cuM«la_ss Je w e l 
pressure# elec beby disn# 
skf,- wooden planter, 
water! 
Relaxacisor. ! 


Household furnishings 
WANTED. 629-3517. 


ry. dishes, turn anything over 30 
years old. 599-2723 
______ 
626-7467 
SOFA and Icveseat; Tapoan Ranae, j 
Full size box soring and mMtrt.^ , 
wheadboard and two dressers. At-, 
ter 4:00 595 7184 All or part. 
I 
NEW WcGreggor 1973 irons 
St.ft 
shafts. D14, 
PW. 
SW, 
sizo or; 
best Offer. 985-4610._______________ 
MUST 
SELL. 
Couch 
.'ove 
seat,: 
2 tables, lamps, crib. mis^. 629-7360. 


SAVE ¥uel-Burn Firewood-Cut, 
split, delivered $55 a cord 
or any amount 599-3890.______ | 


A D M IR A L 


Air conditioner 
0 spi' 
lace A l 
wrk cond 
Must Sell. 
Make offer 628-1004 aft 3 om.___ 
À-1 BED divan $35 kitchen dinette J 
chairs $20, cui marble coffee »able, 
$35 photo enlaraer, draperies $20 
_ (213)332-7096......... 
................... 
20C-300 GAL galvanized water tank 
*30 Also military cook stove and! 
oven with cooking oofs for servino _ 
large groups of people $95 or best 
oHer. 984-1858.___________ ..._____ 
. j 
GAS- TANKS 
50 oal oauge. neck, 
and cao, never u**d. 27 . 
wide. 
42” long, 11 
deep, $35. (213 ) 964-;, 
2102 
_ 
_ 
- 
! 
MEN'S 14"karat s' ' SbPPtnre with 4 
oiamftnds Dtnkie rino. $200 or test 
oifer. 628-092) 
i 
30'x*C7 ALL steel building 
$3780 Other sizes available. 
*85 51« 
_____ 
T o AM RU BBER cOAM PLASTIC 
Lowest prices largest se.ee-ion 
M iljersjtt* fc. Welt. Pomona___ 
WHAT EV ER YOU WANT 
YOU'LL FIND IT AT 
THE MISSION SWAP M EET 
NOW 5 Blu» DAYS___ 


I BUY 
Refrlg, aas stoves, household fur­ 
niture I PICK UP. Day 629-9319, 
nite, NA 8-8541, 
__ 
CASH FOR DISCARDS"~ 
1 ITEM OR GARAGE FULL. 
________ 629-0160 
_________ 
ORIENTAL RUGS 


PRIVATE PARTY NEEDS 
SEVERAL USED RUGS 
AND TAPESTRY 
CALL COLLECT 
644 5326 or 675-8773 


WANTED 


Refrig., Stoves, Furniture 
623-7241 
j 


Let a Progres$-Bullefln Want Ad j 
find buyers tor you. Phone 622-1201! 


29— Swops 


MISSION D RIVE IN 
SWAP M EET 
NOW 5 BIG D AYS 
_ 
7HURSDAY-FRIDAY F R E E 


30— Mochinery & Tools 


TOOL boxes tor small pickup. $75 \ 
; 
After 5:30 624-7831 or 984-4034. 


^ Used your VA once! 
Well 
it 
Is back 
aqain, 
up 
to 
$50.000—No Down!! Contact us for 
information. 
RED VEST REALTY 
984 2471 _ 
________ 


GOVERNMENT 
REPOSSESSION SALE 
VA S E IL S ITS PR O PER T IES 
WI1HOUT DISCRIMINATION 
2, 3 and 4 Bedrooms 
SOME AS LIT T LE AS 
$100 Moves You in 
ANYONE CAN BUY 
SE HABLA ESPANOl 
CALL LEWIS REALTY 
626-859 7 


36— House* For Sale 


CHINO 
LIKE NEW 


1 foot In the country here, fine 
Chino location, lust off Riverside 
Dr, near Mountain, but you're on 
the Freeway in minutes. 3 bed­ 
rooms, plus family room, 2 baths, 
sDarkllno kitchen with all built-ins, 
beautiful f¡repined. Good Gl lean, 
car, be a*“ m - Only $29,950, full 
price. Mako otter. 
CHINO REALTY 
627-3595 


CLAREMONT 


CHINO 
CORNER LOT 


Icvelv home with lots of charm 
Bio living room with fireplace, 
a'so a den, 2 bedrooms, breakfast 
rocm eft kitchen size dining room, 
block walls, 
bio 
trees, 
lots of 
ROSES. Onlv $18,500 
CHINO REALTY 


1 
627-3595_______ 


IMMACULATE 3 bdrms, new cus­ 
tom drapes and carpets, fireplace. 
Near school and park. Beautifully 
landscaped 628-9486______________ 


BY OWNER, must sell Heatherwood 
Addition, 1 year old 3 br, 2 baths, 
llv rm w-frpl, formal din, fam rm, 
kitcn 
with 
blt-lns. 
Sha? 
cotg 
throughout, drapes, cent air cond. 
Lndscod with sprinklrs, rear vd 
fenced Assume 7% VA loan. Ph. 
_628-]929_for appt 
_ ___ 


LARGE FAMILY 


home has lots cf rocm tor all the 
family. 4 bedrccm, 2'. baths, fam­ 
ily room, dining area, tirpp'ace in 
llvinq room, 
built ins, intercom, 
wan to wall caroetinq and draoes. 
$32,000. 


LEA SE with option to duv. *300 per 
month. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, family 
rcum. fireplace, new shaq carpet- 
ino 'ervice pc-rh, all bullt-ins. N 
of Foothill In Clart-mont. 
ROSA SCHWARTZ Realty 
621-4741 


★ ★ 1st listing Claraboya 
3,000 sq ft of luxurious living, 4 
bdtni, formal dining , living and 
family rms, 
breakfast rm, wet 
bar, pooi, air cond. Many extras. 
Pvt party. 624-5058, 624-1172. 
___ 
BAKE A PUMPKIN PIE 
IN THE STEP-SAVING KITCH­ 
EN ot our newly listed Clare­ 
mont beauty Freshly decorated, 
now caroetinq, central air, large 
family room, 3 bdrms, I 1* baths. 
Convenient to Colleges. 
$26,500 
FAMILY REAL ESTATE 
593^4567 
___ 


3 LARGE bdrms, den, 1*41 baths, blt- 
lns, lots of cabinet space, frpl, 
h.,rdwcod 
firs, 
cool 
tree-shaded 
lot. $24,600. Owner. 624-8190. 


CUCAMONGA 


FOR SALE B Y OWNER 
Older heme, remodeled, larqe lot, 
2 large aaraaes, central air, w-w 
cot, centrallv located. Owner will 
carry trust deed to oual 
er. Price $37,500. 987-2912 


F R E E ! 
Eucalyptus 
cut and haut. Fo 
firewood-vou 
-or Info can after 5 
pTm7, 597-2169._______ ___________ „ ! 
RENT WASHER Sl.50-S2.25 WJC Re 
uairs tree, 
TVs, Refrías, 
Dryers too. 1-(213) 339-41.5 


Vs ACRE 


22— Tv-Radio-Stei^o_____ 


PACKARD Bell stereo, am-fm, auto- 
mafic turn table, 4 • ^ 
console 
$50 or make otter. 595-7541 Ext. 
925. aft 5 pm 626-3667._____________ 


TVS FOR SALE $20 $75, $50 
Excelin»t Condhion 
1357 W. Holt, Pomona, PIT. 


wk, 
buy. 
Holt, 


TV RENTALS 
Cheaper to rent than tobuv. Nev 
comers welcome 
Color 
$5 
btack-white S3 wk Option to 
Hrs 9-9 and Sunday. 472 E. 
Pomona 629-j 8C1___________ 


TOP CASH FO R COLOR SE T S 
and black and white portables. 
477 E. HOlt. Pomona. 629-3801. 


' R EN T , $6 MO, COLOR TV 
Also stereos, washers d'-yers. ref- 
r gs. option to buy. (714) 595-0047. 
USED TV’s 
We Take Trades 
RENTALS 
CLIFF KING TV 
2)48 N. Garey, Pcmona 
593-9617 or 593-1048 
(Jenkins M ift Shopping Center)___ 


T 
n E F O TV's W O RK IN G OR NOT. 
Also colors and stereos. 
*23-4740 
_____ _ 


USED TV’s, COLOR B & W 
SOME LIK E NEW 
RENT WITH OPTION 
Bill S TV— SINCE 1958 
183 W Holt, Pom. 
*22-3331 
Open Fri. tlMJB: 30 Sat. till 4 30 _ 
i f COIOR TV. Sioo excellent con 
dltien 1327 W. Holt. Pomone. *22 
*740. Dir. 
_ ________________ 
RECENT REPOSSESSIONS 
16 Color TVs 
RCA. Zenith. Motorola, Portable 
console* and combos,, ail with nee 
oicture tuPes, 2 year warranty 
plus 30 dav trial exchanged, once a k c 
from $159.95. 
TEX BARRETT’S TV 
.1949 Helt. Mtcl, 
624-3505 


STEAM 
Cleaners 
Sales and Service 
Hi-Pressure Washer 
New and Used Equipment 
We Repair All Makes 
F and W Steam Equipment 
_____________622-7029_______________ | 
NEW Victor Acetylene welding and 
cuftino outfit, with cylinders and 
cart, $U9 Complete and a Miller j 
180 airo ac welder with leads, $76 
complete. Victor California. 915 S. 
Grove, 
corner 
cf 
Mission 
and, 
Grove Ontario. 983-0471 


31— Form Equipment 


1957 CASE sklploader. model 210 
Dual range transmission, shuttle 
forward and reverse and power 
steering. $2,000. 622-3686 


33— Pets-Poultry-Robits 
& Supplies 


Mixed puppies for sale 
5«-1406________________ I 
Free 2 young healthy cats 
595-0770_______________ , 
AKC ST 
BERNARD P U P P IE S 4 
wks old, show aualify. All male.! 
Wcrk oavs 987-4*2i eves wxendsi 
987-4870._____________________________ I 
AKC GERMAN~Shepherd 17 months! 


Unusually light and bright. Has 3 
bedrooms, master bedrccm and 
family room have cathedral ceil- 
inq and large floor to celling win­ 
dows, shaq caroettnq, all newly 
decorated in excellent taste. Laroe 
brfaht kitchen has lots of cup­ 
boards. Can have 2 animals in 
fenced back yard with 3 stall barn 
and tack rocm. $34,000. 


R i p H a g e n 


V - v * ’ r e a l t y 
5365 R iverside Dr., Chino 
628-5547 


For Sale By Owner 
Save Real Estate Fees 
3 bdrm, 2 baths, forced air heaf 
Tng-alr cond., 
tile roof, 
heated 
pool, 
covered 
patio, 
aas 
bbq, 
beautifully landscaped sprinklers, 
many extras, must see to appre­ 
ciate, by appointment only 987-5977 
afte- 5 Dm. 


LA VERNE 


36—-Houses For Sale 


P O M O N A 


FOR Sale by owner 3 bdrm, wall to 
wall cots, and draoes. Mav As­ 
sume y% FHA loan. Aft 5 pm. 624- 


S IN C E 
1 9 2 3 


CHARM, WARMTH AND GOOD 
TASTE in this attractive 3 bed­ 
room 
and 
family 
room 
home 
Freshly painted and waiting for Its 
new owner. Walk to St. Madeline's 
Church. All terms. 
$27,500 
Refer No 1140A 
624-3561 
624-3521 
CLAREMONT 
CLAREMONT 
974 w. Foothill 
145 N. Indian Hill 
623-8771 
345 E. Holt Ave, Pomona 


RENT BEATER 


B e 
in 
your 
own 
home 
bv 
Christmas, cute rustic 2 bedroom 
home. Landscaped and fenced in 
b a c k - t h ic k 
wall-wall 
caroet, 
stepsaver kitchen with 
easy 
to 
reach cabinets. Well designed floor 


S ^ 
m f h L v * T e r m s “ ’" 
LEWIS REALTY 


4791 HOLT BLVD., MONTCLAIR 
626-8597 
VETERAN 


Close to excellent elementary 
school, 3 bedroom and full mas­ 
ter bath, w-w carpet and draoes, 
and air cond unit Built-In range 
and oven In family sire kitchen, 
2 car attached garage and fen­ 
ced yard Is real privacy to patio. 
Nice corner lot. Seller will pay 
veterans closlnq cost over $100 
Price only $18,700 
M R K R E A L E S T A T E 
623-0655 
$100 PAYS ALL 


3*— How«» For Sol« 


UPLAND 
MONEY MAKER 
7% INTEREST 
4-PLEX 


FHA or 10% DN. 


Beautiful UPLAND area, 
all 
2 
bedroems- air conditioned, built- 
Ins, eareetina, drapes, 
oarages 
Let us show vou the best taxrhel- 
iered investment today. This is no 
"come-on", we can prove it!! 
POMONA VALLEY1 


REA LTY 
623-6773 


44— Real Estate Exch. 
54— Unfurnished Houses 


$13,000 EQTY. 3U, Pomona, 7%-$46.- 
0U0 1st—Want land or TDs. (714) 
523-4363 


$185. .3 BDRM, 2 bath, cpt, drps, 
ranqe, air concf 
10421 Amherst, 
Montclair. 626-0125. 
SALE OR TRADE 
t 
br nlus den, near Arrow and 
owne, cpts, drapes, new paint. 
Best offer. 624-1678 or (714) 866^ 
3574 


R EA L Estate Exchanges made here, 
there, anywhere In the U.S. YES, 
trade what vou have for what vou 
want and where vou want it. 
METROPOLITAN R EA LT Y 
Dav 8, Night Service 
Harry & Opal Messanger, Brokers 
622-4039 
622-4004 


4 5 — 
R e a l E s t a t e W a n t e d 


37— lots-Acreage Sale 


HOW DOES THIS GRAB YOU 
'a acre, view lot in Alta Loma. 
Only $1900 down and assume low 
6’ r 
loan. To see dial 593-6185 
f 86x150,1 100x150. PADUA AVE., 
Claremont. Trade for truck, cam­ 
per or trailer for down. 626-1883 
CORNER 
LOT, 
N.W. 
Chino, xlnt 
area. A-l, 130x180. Ready to build 
$9,500. Owner. 627-3973 


38— Farms-Ronches Sale 


MANY small end tarcer Ranches to 
choose from, even vacant la'.d. 
METROPOLITAN R EA LTY 
DAY 8. NIGHT SER VIC E. 
622-4039 
622-4004 


40— Income Prop. Sale 


LIKE NEW 4 BDRM 
13# bath, lovely |aroe kitchen, din­ 
ing area. Assumable 7% loan. 
SARA CAREY 
593-1306 


EXTRA! 
EXTRA! 


Not empty just vacant 
On 
quiet 
cul-de-sac, 
3 
bdrm, 
l 3# bath, blt-ins. harowocd tioors, 
cozv used orick fireplace, waitlna 
tc be a home bv Christmas. 
RED VEST REALTY 
«a-'M;!. or Pam 985-6112. 


LO S S E R R A N O S 


A veteran can buy this lovely 
home for SI00 total cost. 2 baths, 4 
n i c e 
bedrooms 
plus 
separate 
laundry 
area 
plus 
patio. 
This 
home shows pride of owner, is Im­ 
maculate and a terrific buy. Call 
now. This one can't last. 


POMONA VALLEY 


R EA LT Y 
623-6773 


LISTED below assessed value. Store 
and 2 rentals on commercial Holt 
Ave lot. Out of town owner. $19,000 
PAT AN TEN-Realtor 
623-4448 
$26.000 3 HOUSES on one lot Good 
income. Exlnf., for retired couole. 
Private party. Phone (213 
963- 
5924. 


CASH 


FOR YOUR REAL 
ESTATE EQUITY 


Will Trade You 


Up or Down 


623-6773 


450 No. Garey 


POMONA VALLEY 


REA LT Y 
We Buy Homes 


Immediate Confidential Service 
No matter how far back to default 
we oav all costs. 


Call Dav or Nlqht 
626-8597 
LEW IS R EA LT Y CO. 


$115 ROOMY 2 bdrm, qar, enclosed 
yd. kids, pets, many more! Fee 
Aat. 
BILLBO ARD RENTALS 
623-2551 
OLD ER HOME. 
CENTRAL LOCATION. 
A BD ELLA REALTOR, 622-0742^ 


$145, 3 BDRM appi, cpts, drps, qar, 
fned vd for kids, pots. Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERSjir623-6731 


QUIET country llv, cln, 2 br, fned 
yd, qar, stv, pots and tots ok. $150 
mo. 762-64 W. Fornicai. 629-6492 


54— Unfurnished Houses 


3 BR, upper Los Serranos, chain link 
(enee, recently repainted, $175, $50 
cleaning deooslt. 628-3411 _ _ _ _ _ _ 
FOR REN T OR LEA SE 
3 bedroom house, S180. 23f,4 Loaan 
2 bedroom house with pool, 
962 
Casa 
Vista 
St., 
xlnt 


For rent or buy like rent 
2 bdrm. 1822 Buffington, Pom. _ 
$90 SMALL home, dbl gar, kids, 
pets. Fee Aat. 
BILLBO ARD R E N TALS 
623 2551 
FOR RENT or lease, unfurn 4 bdrm, 
near Euclid and 15th St., Upland. 
Air cond, $250 mo. Call Dr. Law­ 
son (714) 548-8502. 


neighborhoods, redecorated. 2 car 
f 
araqes, (213 ) 665-5815, (213 ) 255- 
889 eves and w e e k e n d s .______ 
$115, larqe 1 bdrm, apol, qar, vd for 
tam, see today Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


LA V ER N E 2 bdrm, clean, fully car­ 
peted, air cond, fenced tot lot, qa- 
raqe, near downtown, 2nd and G. 
$165. (213) 963-2021________________ 
• 3 BDRM, POOL— $165 
Beautiful 
carpeted 
and 
draped 
home with built-ins. Kids, 
1st and 
sec. 245^ 
SAN DIMAS 3 bdrm, r _ . . v .... 
lace, 
patio, carpetinq, 
drapes, 
pullt-ins, air cond. $250. first 
last month plus $100 (714) 894-1 


2 BDRM, 2 bath, den, frol, air cond 
end garage, end yrd. Exclusive 
area $250. (714) 825-6774 ______ 
$135, VACANT, move today, 2 bdrm, 
appl, qar, fned tor lam. Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS^623-6731 


3 BR HOUSE, $145. Fenced yd, new­ 
ly painted. 1219 Fernleaf St. 623- 
2973, If no answer call »»22-)751. 
3 BDRM or 2 and den. W-W carpets, 
nice In anr out, fenced vard. Va­ 
cant, $170 mo. 


G D C X 3 L R eah y 
M f - f S f f 


707 N. Indian Hill, Pomona 


. 
pets ok, 
last months rent plus $50 
453 Alder St^, Pomona^ ___ 
.... 
jdrm, 2 battv flre- 
alace, 
patio, carpetinq, 


2 BEDROOM HOUSE 
HORSE PRO PERTY. $210. 
599-4592 
3 Bdrm Hous« 
S190_____________________ 
599-4392 
$86.50, very pvt, 1 bdrm, plus porch, 
appl, fned for fam. Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


3 BR, N. POMONA. 
ADULTS. $150. 
624-1678 or (714 ) 866-3574 


3 BDRM, 1 bath, w-w cpt, fen vd, no 
pets, $165, 1st and last, $50 clean 
ing deposit. La Verne, 593-6029. 
$170 4 BDRM, 2 bath, qaraqe, kids 
pets others avail.! Fee Agt. 
BILLBO ARD REN TALS 
*23-2551 


TAX WRITE-OFF 
12 units or 3 fourplexes must be 
sold before the end of the year 
Price has been reduced to $44 500 
per fourplex. All vou need Is )0Do 
down—-we can make arrangements 
for the balance. They are located 
In prime Ontario area 
Call 621- 
3924. 
ALLIED REAL ESTATE 
9469 Central Ave., Montclair 
621-3924 


SEE US FIRST! 


W E W ILL BUY YOUR EQUITY. 
NC COST TO YOU EVEN IF IN 
D EFAULT 
IM M ED IA TE 
CASH 
FOR A C CEPTA BLE PR O PER T Y. 


MILLER & SONS 


Office 624-9034 
624-1428, 626-9894, 984-1966 


4 6 — 
B u s . O p p o r t u n itie s 


3 bdrms 1 % bath 


only $18,950 


Queen 
floors, 
yard. 
62ÓP 


size kitchen, 
hardwood 
FA heat, patio, fenced 


AMERICAN HOME 


REALTOR 


621-4845 
982-8864 


POMONA 


96 UNITS 


Dissenting partners, sudden high 
vacancy, due to absence of ma­ 
nagement. IDENTICAL project ad­ 
jacent, sold this year for $1,006,- 
500. Partners will sacrifice subiect 
prooerfw to first offer of $830 000 
and ASSUM ABLE 7% First TD of 
$614,000. Aik 
for 
Kathv 
Frere, 
Georqe Elkins Co, Exclusive Aqent 
(213) B<--23456. 


1 BR HOUSE, SMALL BARN. 
2 LOTS, $9,250. CASH’ 


MONTCLAIR 


SALE OR TRADE 
3 br plus den, near Arrow and 
Towne. Cpts, drapes, new oalnt. 
Best offer. 624-1678 or (714) 866 
3574. 


female, 
watch do 
F R E E to 


ved, 
QOOd 
too hon 


shots, 
excellent! 
with children, 
le, 628-7631. 
AKC Pom duds 


GREAT DANE 
Bri 


FIN E Q 
P o o c 
Christ 


hamoi 
Id 
le, 2 years 


jatity AKC 
Reg. Stande 
le 
P u p s . 
Perfect 
i 
nas $150 and $200. *29-72 


23— Musicol Instruments 


42 MARTIN 0-17, hard cast, schai 
ly T O $ 3 0 0 sotfe r.6 
^ 


IEASE A PIANO 
$10 a montn. (71# 
825 1544 
’ 
HIGHEST CASH PAID 
j___ 
For Used Pianos and Organs 
(714) 9$4 148? 
_ _ _ _ _ 
USED* GRAND BARGAINS | — 
M*»ldOff 4' Id" w aln ut................ $7?5 
iturck 5*3" wainut 
... 
|L*a< t «--• v l.k . new 
28» 
a ’l 
models 
ot 
rew 
Yamaha, s t i 
Knight & Grotrian-Stelnv-eg from 
t 


£i^7i 
OPEN SUNDAY 
RALPH PIERCE MUSIC 
435 E . HOLT AVE 
POMONA 
_ f 
623-5525 


LOVE FOR SALE, 
lalmatian, a k c re«. $75. 
(2*3> 964-» 134 
____ 
IRISH 
SETTER 
PU PPIES, 
sired by Field Trial Champion, i 
shots, vvcrmed anci dew claws re-1 
moved. Very reasonable. 987-7632 
, 
P U R E Black Lab Puppies 
Females only, $20. 
_______ 
_628-Q190 
: 
P EK E A POO PU P PIES 
5 W E E K S W EA N ED , $25. 
_______ 
629-3164_ 
Shelty puppies AKC $50 
snd up 
(714) 593-7643 
2 AKC COLLI 


C REG. C 
PU PP El 
175 AND ( 


IPS, 12 
LCRS. 


PRIVA TE PARTY WANTS TO BU 
PIANO FOR CASH. 
__________623-2541______________ 
*~ K IW ELECT ROMC ORGANS 
LOW AS $415 
_______ 
17147 *25 S3M dir 
_____ 


PIANOS LTD 


THE Discount 
Piano Warehouse 
RENTALS & SALES 
624-5314 
5U4 Holt Blvd , Mon^lair 
BEHIND Koopman* Furniture Cc 
BALDWIN PIANOS-ORGANS 
Select your Baldwin 
PIANO or ORGAN 


Great Dane Pups “ Gian) 


each C2S-46Q/ 
Australian Shepherd 
Reg puoi. (213) 339-1580 
:R E E to good home Ooxie, Terr, 
mixed, nr ale Full De# t feme 
Age I I mo. 622-9482. 


34— Livestock-Sale 


1968 JA 
i 
Tang* 


You won't believe this immaculate 
------------------- „ _ ,,,, 
3 tedrtom can have all these ex- BKR 
597-1111 
t'd'- 
- . formal o -na rocn 
wmm 
new carpet and draoes 
covered! 
patio w;th 
built-in 
brick 
BBQ ,! 
larqe family room bv oool e re a .i^ ^ ^ 
> 
-a i -.n 
This is a heme 
that yen will love to entertain in.! 
Priced to sell at $29,500, 5»« down. 
CHINO REALTY 


627-3595 
____ 


V e te ran s 


IMPORTANT 
VETERAN 
i ■ --- 
— 
f . w 
ELIGIBILITY 
INFORMATION 
Anyone who has used 
their veterans eligibility 
prior to 
MAY 1, 1968 
May buy a home again 
NO DOWN 
VA UP TO 
$50,000 
c a ll 
VILLA REALTY 
_ 
627-1558 
_____ __________________________ 


^ l ^ ^ - ^ O 
U R COME ON AD 


Quit 
l o c a t i o n — refurbished,! 
!»ke new condition 
Vacant, rustic 
paneling, country style kitchen, 2, 
bdrms and a well 
placed 
living 
room attached garage, and a Texas 
I 
If 
is 
bad 
again, up to size backyard Full price $16.500-no 
O, 
',o O wn!1 Contact us for out on1 FHA-VA Terms 
Red' y«»t Realty 
LEWIS REALTY 
*•5-4-2471 f ' P „ ' 985-6112 
4791 HOLT BLVD., MONTCLAIR 
--— 
- — 1 
626-8597 
2 BDRM by Owner. M-l zone. $17,950 
good cond, central air and heating 
■ 
428-4733.___________________________ 
E X C EL ioc on cui-de sac, 4 br, IK»! 
baths, reduced $24,750 to $23.200. 
Assume FHA loan. Consider leave 
i 
with option 985-9585 


ACT FAST! 


Just on the market. In a country 
settinq rustic 3 bdrm home with 
carpeting, cozv kitchen, and a for­ 
mal living room, close to schools 
and 
transportation. 
Full 
price. 
$18,000. FHA-VA terms. 


LEWIS REALTY 


4791 HOLT BLVD., MONTCLAIR 
626-8597 
_______ 
MUST SELL 
4 Bdrm • $21,950 


Home has been completely deco­ 
rated 
Huae living room with air 
conditioner, sole and :oan kitchen 
and eating area. New shag caroet- 
ing, livina room. hall, master bed­ 
room and entry, vacant and des­ 
cérate seller. Cali now!! 
POMONA VALLEY 


REA LTY 
623-6773 


Distress Sale 


Sharo and clean!! That should be 
enough to describe this 3 bedroom 
beauty, but I could oo on and on. 
Come In ind let us show vou this, 
fine heme, priced at $19,500, w ith: 
all terms. 
623-6773 
POMS* 


Probate Sale 
3 BDRM $24,900 
s ch 
led 
i fruì 


CEMENT VAULTS 
Business, equipment, truck and In­ 
ventory. Corner lot, room for ex­ 
pansion. 
Profitable, 
uniaue, 
48 
years in business. Owner retlrina. 
Yearly gross, $45,000. 
MACHINE SHOP 
Owner wilt sell Property and build­ 
ing only, or will sell with eouio- 
ment. Yard is completely fenced. 


R i p H a g e n 
" REALTY ’’ 


5365 R ive rsid e Dr., Chino 
628-5547 


Nice 1 Bdrm, $120 mo. 
1051 Pasadena, Pum._983-3722___ 
$200, V# ACRE, 4 bdrm, patio, dbl 
par, kids, pets, chickens, etc. Fee 


HOMEFINDERS^623-6731 


3 BDRM, 2 bath, new shag cot, blf- 
ins, retriq, laundry rm. $185. 10393 
Amherst. Montclair 595-3887. 
4 BDRM, 2 Vi bath, exec home with 
pool. 
Lease, 
$350 
Water-trash 
Dald. 599-3166 oi^623-8197. 
2 BDRM duplex with patio, stove, 
garbage disposal, air cond. 
628-8791 
$170,_ GOOD A R EA ,. 3 bdrm, cpts, 
pi 
dbl qar, fned fir kids, 
Bkr. 
pets. 


WARNING 


INVESTIGATE 
BEFORE YOU INVEST 


State inspectors and investigators 
are enforcina Section 17800 of the 
Business 
and 
Professions 
Code 
which reads (In part! as follows: 
It is unlawful to publish any ad­ 
vertising which Is untrue or mis­ 
leading and which is known or 
which bv the exercise of reaso­ 
nable care should be known to be 
untrue or misleading. The Proq- 
ress-Bulletln strives to protect its 
readers aaainst such advertising 
and exceDtlons to this should be 
reported to the Classified Advertis­ 
ing Manager immediately bv phon­ 
ing NA2-1201. 


55 — 
F u rn w h ^ 


BACHELOR APT, upstairs, In excel­ 
lent NW, close fo markets and 
ces. Mature, older person pre­ 
ferred 
No drinking or smoking, 
plus refundable security depo- 


services. Mature, older person 
ferr 
$80 
. 
sit, all utilities paid. 


w - JEN K IN S, Realtor 
935 N. Park 
629-1314 anvlim« 


FU RN ISH ED 1 bedrm apts. Adult* 
Only- Np Pets. MOTEL T R ELLA , 
4200 E. Mission, Pomona. 
984-5319 
LO VELY, quiet, 1 bdrm apts. 6as> 
water paid- Mature adults pre­ 
ferred. 206 E. Alvarado, Pom. 
CLEAN, close in, 3 room upstairs 
apartment, adults, 480 W. Center, 
______________Pomona.______________ 
MONTCLAIR, larqe, ciean, 2 bdrm” 
built-ins, w-w, drps, laundrv room. 
Closed qaraoe avail. 
624-7163 after 4 p m. 
Reasonable. 


HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


$95 1 B ED ROOM ~H O USE IN ON- 
TARIO, LA RGE YARD. PHONE 
EV E S (714) 870-4871 ___________ 
$105 LA RGE 2 bdrm, fenced for 
kids, pets. Fee aat. 
B IL L BOARD REN TALS_____ 623-2551 
1 BEDROOM $115. Carpets, drapes, 
stove, biq vard. Closed qaraqe. no 
pets. 1388 W 11th, Pom. 623-4255 
2 BEDROOM home for rent, qood 
area. Only $160 a month. 1st i nd 
last and references 
Call aaent, 
623-6773. 


Bach, 1 BR, 2 BR, $95-125 
Utils od. 
760 E. 2nd 
Adulta 
, 
, W E LFA R E TENANTS 
Special Provisions—Let Us Hi 
1 Bdrm Funlshed or Unfurn 
$99 50 
elo You 
urnished 


3 BDRM, large fenced yard, 
carpets and drapes, garage, 
dren ok. 627-1434 


new 
chil- 


$130, QUIET AREA , 2 bdrm, blt-lns, 
patio, gar, fned yd for kids. Fee 


HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 
BURGER DRIVE INN 
$80,000 gross In '72. Owner nets 
16°o on short hours. Top Chino lo­ 
cation. 


GROWING PAINS? 
M l“ 
3,000 sg ft building. Suitable d i^ i nraAon p p n i t a i s 
xsaoxsi 
tor cabinet shon. nlnmblng Shoo nr BILLBO A RD R EN TA LS 
623-2551 
? Full price $14,500. Owner will ¡LA R G E 2 bdrm, at 708 Wisconsin, 
carry with 20% down. 


2 BDRM duplex with stove, CDts, 
draoes, qaraqe, small vard $145. 2 
kids 
no pets. 699 Muir, Pomona, 
623-2973. If no answer call 
NA 
I 
2-1751_____________________________ 
$140 3 BDRM plus trailer for extra 
> 
room, kids, pets, many more! Fee 
Agt. 


1 BDRM furnished cottaqe apt, car­ 
pets and draoes, no children, no 
pets. Cltanina deposit 
required, 
see at 963 E. Monterey. 
W E will move vou free to our mod­ 
ern one bedroom units with prl* 
vatq entrance 
and 
all 
utilities 
paid. Private off-street parking. 
Only $119.50. See at 1449 E a s t --- 
Street or call 984-8121. 
"D '1 


BEA U T IFU L larqe 1 bdrm, privacy, 
adults only. 919 N. Gibbs, Pomona. 
Call 629-3747. 
REA SO N A BLE—furnished, walk to 
shopping 
Prefer 
sinote 
retired 
seniors 
Inquire Apt. 2, 375 W. 
Monterey, Pomona. 
FURN 1 bdrm and 2 bdrm apt. 
$90—$130. Water-trash paid 957 and 
957's 
Hawthrone 
Place, 
Pom. 
Wed.-Fri. call aft 6 om. 595-4400 
1 BEDROOM 
CLOSE TO SHOPS. 
LaV ER N E. $125. 593-8455 


1530 White, La Verne 
593-8717! 
carpeted, FA heat, fireplace, a 
beauty, $150 To see call 621-4475 


* í r a n k 5 . D i a ^ R lt r l* 


ESTABLISH ED business bv owner, 
tire and wneel speed shop, selllnq 
for health reasons, $3500 olus In­ 
ventory and fixtures. 623-1692 


POMONA 3 bdrm unfurnished, 2 
baths, blt-ln stove, garbaqe dlso 
central air co-d-h-atinq, fenced 
vard $155 mo. 624-9838 


COMMERCIAL STQRES 
All occupied and brinqing in $6780 
per year. Lease 'till 1979. Good tax 
I 
helter on east Holt, Pomona, Mr. 
febfcins, LE G T E R S R EA LT Y CO.. 
_629-5219.______________ 
_____ 
BY OWNER, four 
modem 
units, 
$42,000. All 3 bdrms, l 3# baths. $5,- 
000 down. 624-8324. 


arm- 


Four Bedrooms 
Completely refurbished, vacant 8, 
readv Excellent location, close toi 
schools & shocnina. A real tarqaini 
at only $21,950. 
ALLIED 
DC At 
ATP 
*469 Central Ave , Montclair 
621-3924 


ONTARIO 


Name your terms on this 
ino 3 bdrm cottace, NestL. 
huge lot, surrounded bv a fruit or- i 
chard. O-down to veterans and li­ 
beral terms to others Call todav 
to see this dream heme 
RONSON REALTY INC. 
(714) 870-6500 


5 BEDROOM, 2 bath, older 2 story 
home 
Interior remodeled 
Laroe 
corner lot, lovely home for grow­ 
ing family. $31.950 
FAMILY REAL ESTATE 
593-4567 


Larqe 
firsT 
TD. 
lot. 
O LD ER 12 units, furn. 
Good 
Income. 
Carry 
___ 
Take trade. 622-9605. 673-0252 wkends 


N E. CORNER of Center St. and 
White Ave. 3 bedroom, 1 bath shag 
carpet, new paint. Very clean and 
sharp 
Future commercial value. 
Priced at onlv $14,000 
CLYDE WARREN CO. 
622-1063 


41 — Business-Industrial 
Sale-Trade-lease 


2 BUILDINGS, 4400 and 2800 sa ft, 
available, M-2 offices, etc, 16 ft 
ceilings. Call 982-4602. 


NOW LEASING 


Class A-1 building, M-l offlces, alr, 
220 pewer, ioin #10 Fwy. 3000 ft 
and also two 1800 ft, 10c a ft. 
Augies Industriai. San Dimas 
599-2106 
COM M ERCIAL stores and larae^in- 


MUST SELL— 2 BDRM. 
Minor fixer upper. To highest bid» 
der over $14,500. Area value $16, 
995. 1822 Buffington. (213) 892-4067. 
IN FORECLOSURE 


Heah 
tot, N, 


3 bdrm Claremont 
s pooi, Ç-A C, larqe 
of Foothill. $36,500 


What 
home, 
nearly 
wall, excellent 


buvll 
Roman 


Used your VA once! 


OWNER 
NEEDS SALE 


new shaq 
landscapi/v 
Claremont. Priced to sell 


dustrial bldgs for lease. Mr. 
Ins. L EG T ER S CO., 629-5219 


Pom 


M-l 


622-2230 


FOR RENT 
AND U P 
omona 
629-2700 


if TRUCK RENTAL 
NETS $68,000 PER YEAR 
Health reason forces owner of 29 
vears to sell this xlnt business. 
Has 16 trucks on short and lonq 
term commercial lease. Others on 
weekly and daily run. Also has 
commençai gas station, no semi's. 
Has always been good money ma­ 
ker. 
• FLORIST SHOP 
NETS $1000 MONTH 
No close competition. Has new slid- 
Inq door walk in refriqerator show 
case. Owner had auto accident in 
July and can not remain on feet 
for long periods Just acauired Gift 
America 
Franchise. 
Low r e n t 
terms. 
• GO CARTS & TRACKS 
NETS $1200 MONTH 
Short short hours, only about 4 


CUSTOM BUILT 2 br. family rm with 
fireplace, built-in ranae and ovens 
2 
car 
aaraqe.fenced 
yrd. 
new 
paint, $215. First and last. $50. 
Cleaning. Ref required. San Dimas 
area. 599-7502 
2 BDRM home, all util od, $130 1352 
S. Thomas .Pomona. 
(714) 684-4732 
S120. SPACIOUS 2 bdrm, oatlo, fen­ 
ced yd for family. Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


FOR Lease 3 bdrm spotless, $300 
montr. First and last and $50 se­ 
curity. 624 8968 
$120 V E R Y NICE 2 odrm, kids, oets 
I 
fine. Fee aqt. 
I B 1H B O A R D R E N TALS_____ 623-255) 
EXTRA clean 2 bdrm home with qa­ 
raqe 
water furnished 
$135 per 
month. Mr. Canfield 623-4716. 
$59 P E R week buys 
$27,900 Montclair Home, 
622-0742. 
VACANT $150 MONTH, 3 bedrooms, 
2 bath, 20 x 20 family room, car- 


hours a dav has 15 carts, 2 tracks, 
purchaser should be mechanically 
handy, welding etc. or eager to 


Now for Christmas Del■ very 
$777 SALE 
w e BUY AND RENT PIANOS 
BAUER-BALDWIN 


47*7 He t Blvd., Mtdr. 
624-7171 


HAMMOND OF COVINA 
HAMMOND P IP E R , *910 
____ 
<213) 531-076» 


W URLIT2ER Reed Organ, $575 full 
price, for a $700 Christmas pre­ 
sent. 
Percussion, 
vibrato. 


Circle S, Boarding Stable 
627-4124 
__________ 
BEA UTIFUL rea horses ana colts, 
paiornmos and chestnuts; reg ponv 
mare, sell or trade 628 '»726_ 
CUSTOM BUTCHERING 
Fast service. 
*27-4*80 


Priced 


:e 3 bedroom, 2 bath home, 
iliy decorated inside, bio! 
>th tree, in back. Owner! 
•ret Smali dcr.r payment, 
♦or quick sale, $21,500. 
CHINO REALTY 


YL AR C 
Gentle, 
l o q u a r t e r h o r s e 
$300 or best offer. 
591-2878 
627-3595 


Vacant & Ready 
3 bdrm. 2 baths, new carpets, 
built-ins, 2-car attached aaraqe, 
large corner fenced lot. A real 
bargain at $21,950 $950 Days wll 
Move-in on opDroval of credit. 
ALLIED 
_ 
R E L ESTATE 
9469 Central Ave , Montclair 
621-3924 


HORSE 5 FOR SALE 
Quarter Hors« 
4 p m 628-9775 


1 The 
and i 
'Ouflh 
ithers 


4 YEAR OLD. air conditioned home 
! 
in good Chino location. $32.500.! 
Phone 677 4 779. 
! 
POM ONA 


echo Beautiful instrument, 
toy Pvt pty. 623-1155 
%0' 


FOR 
SALE, 
Mendelssohn 
console 
piano, walnut finish, nearly new,, 
$550 Call 624-9534 
SILV ER ÎO N E electric organ, dual’ 
keyboard, seoerate switches $300 
excellent condition. Call after 5i 
Dm *24-4036 


24— Household Goods 
Sole 


7AAPLE furniture hke new. dining 
room table, coffee and end tables.! 
Call 982-7956.__ 
j 
4 Pc. Ktoehler Sectional 
excellent condition. 697 23*4 
9x12* X£NT $35 
CompM? twin bed 
$25 Latae Avon collection. Bwv 1 
oP m 623-2755 ____ ______________ 
* " • 'w h a t e v e r YOU WANT 
YOU'LL FIND IT AT 
THE MISSION SWAP M EET, 


24-A— Office Equipment 
_______Sole - lease______ 


USED NCR ELECTRIC CASH PEG 
IS T E R GOOD CONDITION. $1». I 
__________ 
599-*731 
30#000 Sq. Ft. of Display 
New and U$ed—Offic* Furniture 
At Discount Prices 
* ABE CORP * 
701 § 2nd St., Pomona 
623-1545 
§96- E. Garyev, Roseme-»d 
1213) 331 5*63 or 2b0 6544 


UTA't SADDLE HORSES 
Gent 1« broke tor tniidre t or aatlli. 
Will sell or trade 913 7 727 
HORSE-weil trained Sorrel Gelding. 
Quarter .,nci trr^osnured, Gymk- 
hen 1 winner excellent trail bors* 
$250, 593-2282 or 593-5511. 
PAINT HORSE AUCTION 
7 p.m Nov. 24, L A. Co Fairgrds 


36— Houses For Sale 


2 Bdrm. 
Club Dri 
$16,000 
15450 Country 
1-4130. 
BIG 
PARTY ROOM 


j LQOKING for a good buy? Here it 
is 3 bedroom and family room, 
onlv $17,500. Payments like rent. 
CLYDE WARREN CO. 
622-1063 


Lovely 3 
Ddrm 
stone 
flreolace, 
carpeting, block 
andscaoina. near 
_d to sell fast at 
$26,500 
CALIFORNIA PREFERRED 
PROPERTIES 
75 W. Foothill Blvd., Upland 
_ 
985-2771 


SAVE YOUR MONEY 


VETS $10 is all you need to buy 
tnis lovely 3 bedroom, modern 
home, 2 car garage, large lot on 
corner, 
over 100 ft 
frontage, 
room tor boat or camper. Fen­ 
ced yard $15,000, no down, $117 
per month including P and I. 
480U 
AMERICAN HOME 


REALTOR 


982-8864 
621-4845 
$22,500— ALL TERMS 
481 
Muloerry. 
Sparkling 
clean, 
new 
carpeting, 
vinyl 
wax-free 
tioors, 3 bedrooms, p« bath, patio 
Call any tirre to see Walking div 
tance to Harrison school. 
SARA CAREY 


NEED M-1 SPACE? 


1300 sq ft .... 
. 
... 
$150 month 
4400 so ft 
................ 
$350 month 
6300 sq ft 
...... 
$500 month 
137000 sa ft 
$1000 month 
Excellent Pomona location. 
960 E 1st St. 
OWNER (213) 388-2241 


lr Fwy 
2-1590. 


learn. Could make more with long 
er hours. Aue no barrier. 
ALL TYPES OF BUSINESS 
LISTED GIVE US A CALL. 


UBI POMONA 


623-6544 


840 W. Holt, Pomona 
MOBIL 
SACRIFICE 5 % Acre 
3 ac M-l, 2VS ac C-4. Nr F 
J213) 962 1088, Aqt, J213 ) 332______ 
*NEW INDUST. BLDG.'il 
8400 sg. ft. Montclair, with Alr-cond 
offices, high cell. « 2 8844 
_____ 
| 
5000 SQ FT bock bldg for lease. 
M-2, 220 3-phase A C offices, new.! 
Days «6-4521. eves 986 9660 
__ 
19,000' MACH-SHOP FA C ILIT IES 
977 E. 2nd St., POMONA 
OW NER 
(213) 388-2241 


42— Office», Stores 
Sale-T rade-Lease 


Has service station available in 
Pomona area Excellent profit op­ 
portunity with good aas allocation 
and back room business. Be your 
own bass. Moderate investment re­ 
quired Paid trainino proqram and 
mgmt assistance provided. 
Contact Joe Wright 
Days (213) 896-6418 
Eves (213) 579-0892 


pets, draoes, 
vered patio, fi 
new built-ins, co­ 
lo, fenced yard. Rent can 
be aDDlv to closing costs. 622-1161 
bkr. 
3 BDRM, large family room, I*'# 
bath, patio, d - car garage. 1535 
Dmsmore^ Pom, 629-9083. ___ 
$«, WON'T last, 2 bdrm, apol, vd 
for family. Fee Bkr 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


LARGE 3 bedroom, in Chino, 
near neighbors, 3 children max , 
r e f e r e n c e s required. $2r0 oer 
month Call T H R EE WORLDS RE 
ALTOWS, 628-5511 ______________ 
$140 V* ACRES 1 bdrm plus extra 
room HORSES OK. Fee Agt. 
BILLBO ARD RENTALS 
623-2551 
SW ONTARIO, 2 bedroom, 
1 bath home, on extra large lot. 
$160 a month. Agent, 623-6773 


ADULTS ONLY 
Cheerfully furn 2 bdrm apts. In g 
neiahborhood of friendly privacy. 
Lirae 
rooms, 
Bia Big 
Closets, 
pool, pstfr, pvt storage and ga­ 
rage 
Students Ok, $135 per m a 
986-666*___________________________ 


5TH AVE. APTS. 


WK $27 
MO $108 
FREE UTILITIES 


r w 
Furnished Bachelors, 
bdrm, Swimming pod 
ing, no pets No lease 
1514 W. Mission No, 1 
629-2815. 


Adul 


1 AND 2 bdrm, pool, centrally lo­ 
cated. Adult», small net OK. 694 
N Park. Pomona. 629-0612 
BACHELOR APT. 
Util paid, $95 month. 
0280258 or 629-8211 
POMONA 1 bdrm duplex 
Newly painted, adults only, 
S10C 
Call (213) 336-5701 
if $95 if 
Singles, 1 
bedroom, 
compfetetv 
furnished and refurbished 
Olym­ 
pic sized pool Adults onlv. 812 I. 
Dudltv, 622-7416 


MONTCLAIR. 2 and a den or 3 bed­ 
room, close to shopping, fenced, 
comer lot. $190 a month. Aqt, 623- 
6773______________________________ 
3 bdrm, 2 bath houses 
983 3722 or 622-3333 


30X 70 B E E R BAR 
No license San Bernardino area. 
_627-232|______________________ ___ 
EARTH WORMS: Raise »worms for 
B's Red Worm Farm, 4447 Walnut 
Ave . Chino. We buy back at $2 
per lb. Prompt delivery, 628-3422 


GENERAL 


, IV, baths, nice 
Si, hariqlna lamp, 
i 
beautiful 
back 
123,000. 


tL l 
(7)4) 595-3115 FOR 
BKRS.i 
Mt SSAGE FBQUr HOM ES FOR 
s a l e b y t h e ir o w n e r s . 
FREE LIST 
GOV’T HOMES 
$100 moves you in on most of: 
these newly reconditioned 2, 3 ana 
4 bedroom homes, all areas Call1 
or come in tor your tree list No! 
obligation, no d, .crimination, 
CASTRO REALTY 
*99 W. Mission, Pomona 
622 5612 
PUBLIC NOTICE 
U.S Gov't otters 3 and 4 bedrm; 
homes for sale to the nubile AH 
areos and prices Low down. Tell! 
us what you need, we give voo au 
dresses, prices, terms and dlrec 
Lons to 
properties 
Phone for 
complete info. COLUMBIA RLTY, 
622-5419 


GOVERNMENT HOMES 


CHINO REALTY 
627-3595 


W E STILL NEED 
listings in Chino Area 


Have b u y e rs for« 


593-1306 


FOR 
RENT. 
Available 1 
Dec. 3 
rooms, carpeted, office bldo 
Ex­ 
tra oarkina. See at 4732 Holt, Mon­ 
tclair. Rent $135 month!v._»?9^014_ 
O FFICE- building, suitable^ for in­ 
surance, real estate, etc. San Ber­ 
nardino area. 627-2328. 
_ 
TOP LOC A IR COND. NEW FURN, 
PVT BATH, $25, $35, $75 89# N 
G arev *73 0252, 622 9*05, *22 3302 


NEW stor«rfn °estab1?sHed center. 
Retell or office space avail. Cor­ 
ner Foothill and Garey Ave. 
R us HIbbard f 714 ) 557-8220 
Ite, 288 So ft air cond, ex- 


Ch ar 2 fwdroom, on 
♦or horses 
acre, zoned i 


]3 beoroom. on ’# acre, A-) zone. 


2 fcHK3fOOm# 
der. 


4 bedroom, up 
or 2000 sq ft 


on 1 acre, 835,000 or un­ 


to $36,000, about 1800 ! 


2 bedroom, on V; acre, M-1 zona. 


bedroom 
540 000 
and family room, up to 


|3 beoroom ang family room, 
! h $3o70CO 


13 bedroom on 1 acre, 
horses 
zoned A-1 for, 


IjtrOUfl 
25— Furnishings Antique 
^ 


FU R N ITU RF stripping wood or met 
«♦, Dip N Strip 442 N 1st St., Co- 
vR>â._Cal (2'3) 966 5010 ________ 
SMALL antigua dining room set. 
fuur spindle back chairs, excellent 
condition, 628-8771 


128,000 
* bdrms, repossed homes 
I low as $100 moves you In. 
f them have been redeco- 
md carpeted and are i.ust 


and^prtito*)*buiI♦°int>S T hese i Ni£* *cu># ^ 1 *cr«' A > 
are vacant and ready to 


S S R & l t e s s i s i f c ' , ! “ . ; 1 * « « • » " “ »••' *-• ' “ »■ 


6». « 4 1 * » t a / U S L 5 1 !1 e - f i J g ; 
-»»»■ <»»« «->-1 


IMMEDIATE 
POSSESSION 


$500 DOWN 


Roosevelt St. address. This cute 2 
bedroom plus family room is a 
dandy Hardwood floors, plush car­ 
peting Vacant and ready. Take a 
look at this beauty and you will 
buy it 
POMONA VALLEY 
REA LTY 
623-6773______ 


"HARMING older home nr Lincoln 
Pk in Potn. 2 Ige bdrms, trplc, dm 
rm, panld serv porch, Ige yd. tui 
Iv fned with dble oates Avocado 
ana lemon tree Close to school* 
Full price $18,009 
Pay $3300 to 
FHA loan of $14,709, assume pymis 
$127 incl taxes 572 E 
Columbia, 
423 4 
6 
5 
8 
. ________________ 
$23,000 


WILL LEASE 
WITH OPTION 


$193)00 


JUST AROUND 
THE CORNER 


FROM EVERYTHING 


Very convenient to schools and 
shopping on north side treeway. 3 
bdrms w-2 t„,th*„ bit-m kitchen 
and ample dining area 
Redwood 
♦•nced yard. Don't miss this at 
S M ? 'P ° i r « FH * 0R YA. Terms 
ok -CALL NOW! 


• 
x 
W 
y 


Realtor 
496 E. HOLT 
POMONA 
623-6711 


O FFIC E suite, 288 
cel lent location 
adlacent to Sa/i 
Bernardino Fwy $125 per mo. 623 
8614. 
O FFIC E conference room. Beautiful 
view of mountains. Center of val- 
ley. $85 mo. 982 0424. 
_ 
VA LUA BLE downtown Claremont lo­ 
cation on Yale Ave Ideal for pro- 
v*> . 
. 
—— — 
use 
Anoroxl- 
avall Feb, I, 


49— Mortage-Trust Deeds 


★ ★ CASH P A 
For 1st and 2nd T D Loans 
Arranaed Fast A Confidentially 
Investors Loan Serv. 623-1*11 


50— Money to Loan 


WE HAVE MONEY 
We have m«?nev tor your 1st 8. 2nd 
’ 
d loans. Call Marty Pt 
Fetferling 
Realty. 
629 
trust deed Ic 
terman, 
4094. 


$132.50, 2 BDRM, app!, cots, drps. 
q.ir, fned for kl-fs, pets Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


R r N T A L S r ALL SIZES, ALL 
P R I C E S 
INFORMATION ON 
U.S. 
G OVFPNM FNT 
P R O - 
ORACAS O FFFR IN G NO DOWN 
PAYM ENT ON 
HOME 
SFt FC- 
TION6 
EOUAI. OPPORTUNITY 
HOUSING O FFIC E. NO F E E . 


C 
O 
C 
3 
s N o Hv 
m 
- t f i i 


•^■Immediate Occupancy^ 
Rent or lease with option ~ 4 
bdrms, 
family 
room, 
carpets 
draoes, fireplaces, blt-ins. Near all 
schools and shopping. 
275 E. La Verne Ave. 
BY OWNER 
$252 Mo 
*23-2)87 
626-0611 
2 BDRM, HOUSE, garage and large 
wash room, $110 Dor mo. 1247 W. 
Mission. Pomona 622-2745__ 
$100, ALL UTIL PD. 1 bdrm, appl, 
cots, dros. yd for fam. Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 
Bach § 1 bdrm. *115 mo up. All 
full kitchen ana baths. Utils r>d 
Air cond, haated oool Adults onhr. 
No eels. 
1360 W. Third St. Pomona 


FLEUR-DE-LIS 


.. 1 Bdrm 
£ 
Bdrm 
Pom. 


$115 
$125 
Exceptionally lovely apts 
626-4667 
BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED 
BfCh 8, 1 bdrm, $120 mo up. All 
full kitchen and baths 
utils od, 
Air cond, heated pod. Aults onlv. 
No oets 
1379 W. Mission, Pomona 
TOWNHOUSE POMONA 


2 RM and bath apt. 
Senior Citzen, Male $100. 
__________ util, pd. 629-1171 _____ 
1 BDRM turn apt, gas, water and 
62?S8327 
d 
Downtown 
Pomona, 


$80 La 'rg e cozy single ants com- 
pletelv (urn. Gas paid. After 6 pm, 
4396591 
FURN ISH ED Apt 1 Mrnt 
utilities paid 
W l__________ 
983-7342. 
2 BEDROOM 
GARDEN APT.-—$200 
with patio, covered parking 
storage locker. Sauna, Pool, — 
reatlpn Room. Adult Complex. 1 
storage locker, 
reatlpn Room. _____ ____ 
small house pet considered 
KONA KAI VILLAGE 
12191 Telephone Ave. 
North of Pomona Freewav 
Montclair Exit 
628-2611 


with 
Rec- 


53— Furnished Houses 


(essional or retail 
matelv 1200 so ft 
1974. Call 626-3545. 
EXECUTIVE 
OFFICE SPACE 
$200-225 Per Month 
Includes Receptionist, 
Answering Service, 
Duplicating, 
And Many Other F R E E 
Services 
EXECUTIVE 
SUPPORT 
SERVICES 
Suite 717 
THE SpeTdel Bldg. 
(714) 623 2197 


N EED quick action 
room wltn fireplace 
bdrm, llvinq 
dining room, 


423-4448 


26— Furniture For Rent 


pic* up one 
your fa 
RODRIQUEZ REALTY 
T721JW. Holt. Pomona 
623-2588 
3 BDRM— $1*8,500 
hardwood floors, beautiful 


rvesma amia ran beultiul trees in 
« 
n'ce secMea 
location 
CON­ 
VEN IEN T to Corona Exores-swav, 
all shops 8. schools A real lamily 
home, offers 4 bdrms, extra bath, 
bit in ranqe 4 oven in kitchen, 
brick trpl in liy room, w w cpts 4 
drapes, room air cond, rov'd oatlo 
in hune rear yard, w vegetable 
garden and «-ep fenced Doughboy 
swim pool $23,000—xlnt terms . . . 
AS 1C U S! 


« a m a s s i^ ’* ___________ 
$1.00 CASH 
And this 3 br, 2 bath dolt house 
♦liT uz ?S»rs' se!itr 
F** 55 
♦ ''V A Cost oc all allowable FHA 
cost to qualify buyer bootless *n»i 
and out, gorgeous swimming j 


f>L5 
R E F R IG E R A TORS 
Ift, CHAIRS, TAB 
RPNTALS 
RANÍ 
CHAIRS, TABLE 5, ETC 
GIST'S 
4M ßmmm* MaU West 
na i 72771 -'50 


to 
wall 
caipeH, 
custcm 
I, 
roomy 
kitchen, 
fenced 
quod 
neianborhood 
near 
s and shaping. Small down, 
ents like rent, 
FOWLER 
$93-7491 


B R i p H a g e n 


W - 
; R E A L T Y 
5J6-X R . . e .j.d c Dr., Chine 
628-5547 ‘ 
! 
vo&y 


Realtor 
786 N. GAREY 
'I POMONA 
623-3481 


side ana out 
k" » J M J lYy ” '| and 
^aotjd 
.A Apprai'.al prici 


FORECAST REALTY 
_____ «1-5985 
BY OWNFR 
3 bedroom home, assumable 
loan Call *28 2409 
* 4 
Bell-Ringer 
3 bdrms, 2<ar g^raqe. Nice cut* 
rt\«SS.*are an 
t>™l4fl«*ohla school 
district Full nnce 518 950 
ALLIED 
oxxo 
e s t a t e 
9469 Centr.,! Ave «On 
621 3924 _____ 
FHA OR VA 
$200 ALL NEEDED 
3 borm, 2 bath, newly naintad In- 
out, new Carnet „ml -rreJni Call 
eolieef, (213) 870 7827.“ 
*• 


PLEASE READ 


YOUR AD 


UPON 


1st PUBLICATION 


FOR LADY OR MAN 
hoUie, shower, lovely kltch, refrig, I 
cpt, drps, beaut turn. No oets. 741 
E. Monterey. Owner.______________ 
ilOOT ATTRACTIVE 
1 bdrm, plus | 
dininq, oarage, fned yd Fee Bkr. 
HOMEFINDERS*-623-6731» 


$100 U TILITY PAID mobile home' 
pots, pet other places available all 
areas. 
Fee Agt. 
_ _ 
1 
B IL L BOARD R tN T A LS 
623-2551 
$135, 2 burm, qaraqe, 
water-trash paid. Nu nets. 
i 
5590 Mission, 595-1438 
! 
COTTAGES, clean l bdrm, yard, qa 
raqu, adults, horse ok $125 629-1453 
By Owner. 
CLEAN Modern furn house. Liv, din, 
1 bdrm, tile kit. bth, qar, yrd 
care. Adults, no p«tts. Inauire at 
1342 W. 2nd St., Pom. 
$95^ ALL UTIL PD, ciean, 1 bdrm, 
patio, nice vd. Fee Bkr 
j HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


2 BDRM, close to bus and shoooinq. 
Mature couole, 
no 
children 
or 
pets. $135. 333 E. Pearl 


54— Unfurnished Houses 


Large 2 bdrm Duplex 
Garage, $110. 
1070 W llth. 985 3911 


i V ER Y nice 3 bdrm, fireplace, cen­ 
tral heat and air, carpet, draoes, 
washer end drver, water and gar­ 
dener na)d. N*’ar Baseline and Ar­ 
chibald Ave 985-2554 or 984-2464 
3 BDRM, drapes, new wall-to-wall 
attractive sm‘ 
carpets, fenced yard 
629-1473 
Deluxe duplex home 
2 bdrm, xlnt kitchen and dining 
area, air cond, carpet, drapes, 
locked qar, priv rear vrd with coy 
patio, gardener, N. Pomona. $185. 
6 2 2 - 8 5 4 8 ________________ 
2, 3 and 4 bedrm homes $125 and 
up. New paint ano rpfs, Kids and 
Pets Welcome! No fee Bkr. (213) 
449-4857 
$110, 
g » 
SHARP 2 bdrm, 
, fned, smt pets cl stove, cpts 
Fee Bkr. 


★ ATTRACTIVE * 
Cle*n 1 bedrm, pool, excellent lo- 
cation. Adults, No oets, $125 mo. 
Call 426-1057 or 676-2634. 
SENIOR CITIZENS ONLY* 
$94.50 
No cleaning 
deposit. Attractive one bedroom 
apartments with built-ins and dis­ 
posal. Conveniently located 
Uti­ 
lities paid. F R E E 
Call 984-8121. 


security 
bedr 


move service# 


HOMEFINDERS*623-6731 


2 BEDROOM duplex, carport, cot, 
s t o v e , 
refriqerator 
Montclair 
area $125 Aft 4 o m 982 844L___ 
3 BDRM new paint Inside, nr Kina-i 
slev School. $170 1st last mo, $50i 
security deposit 623-5*26 
$125 3 BDRM. 2 bath, mobile home, j 
alone on lot, kid» 
oets, chickens.: 
rabbits, horse ok Fee Agt. 
BILLBOARD RENTALS 
623-25511 


SIN G LE cottage aot, lc>rne vsrd, all 
util paid 
$85 ofys aeoosit. Close 
In io?8 N. S in Antonio, Pomona, 
Manager, everlnqs. ______________ 
1 BDRM turn apt downstairs, w-w 
cpt, disposal, util pd, laundry faci­ 
lities, cleanlnq fee $45, rent $130. 
Adults, no pets. Call after 1:38 
pm., 623 2240. 828 Hawthorne FL, 
Pom.____________________________ 
1 BEDROOM 
GARDEN APT. — $155 
4.. — 
,— -IflS 1 
storaqe locker, Sauna Pool, Ri 
Miat 


with patio, covered parking with 
*tf» aqe locker, Sauna Pool, Rec 
ation 
Room 
Adult. Complex. 
cecre- 
„ ---- ---- . 
ex. 1 
small house pet considered 
KONA KAI VILLAGE 
12191 Teleohone Ave. 
North of Pomona Freewav 
Montclair Exit 
628 2611 
__________ 
ATTRACTIVE FURN APT* 
Children OK No pets $20 wk UD 
»390 F Mîisîôn, Pon?onn 
★ N O R EN T A L FEE 
★ DEiuxt r en t á is 
br, unf, blt-ins c pts, air-c 
1 br, unf, bit ns, cpts, air-c 
, hr uni Salé !«« 
t _ _ 
to landlords and tenants. 
All areas All prices. 
We speci«i> in ♦’•"•'ly rentals. 
C A L L NOW! 
BRUCE M U LH fARN REALTORS 
(213) 968-5651 


5 br, Unf_ bit-in»,^c'nts, air-c 
982 8844 
626-5867 


»112 
I ’l l 
$135 


1 AND 2 br apt 
____ 
Ics. Adults, No pefs 
Near Gen Dvnam- 
... pefs child under 2 
considered 1414 Velar Pomone. 


4 BDRM, 2 bath, fenced back vard, 
2 car garage. Located <»t 2490 B„r 
jud Ave , Pom $175 mo. Call for 
act Available Dec. 1st. 982 1383 or 
«7-5676._________ 
3 BDRM 2 rath, dbl carahe. fenced, 
available at once, $187,50 
C O C ito o ltv 


707_lnd'an Hi«* SI vd., Pomona 
$150 3 BDRM nice enclosed yd kids, 


BILLBO ARD RENTALS 
pets, just a sample! Fee Aqt 
QA“ 
_ 
ur rent. 
. _ J baths. 
.. . 
CTose to schools, $175 mo. 


623-2551 
HOUSE 
bdrms 
fur rent, option to buy. 4 
2 baths, w-w carpeting. 
RODRIQUEZ REALTY 
623-2588 


$150. EXTRA clean 2 bdrm, stove, 
qar, (need tor kids, Dels Fee Bkr 
HOMEFINDERS*623-673l 


COLLEGE CLOSE 


Spacious 2 & 3 Bdrm., 2 bath Apts. 
Furnished & Unfurnished. 
Carpets & Drapes 
2 Pools 
Built-ins 
Private Patios & BBO’S 
lush 
Park-like’’ Surroundings 


From 
< 1 6 0 


Special 
$50 
move-ln 
allowance 
er 13th month F R E E 
Claremont Lanai 
750 San Jose, Claremont 
624-7800 


Prograss-Bulletin, Pomona, California, Tuesday, November 20, 1973 
H 
l 
Z 


56— Unfurnished 


Apartments 


PARTYL furn 1 bdrm opt. No çhll- 
dren, pets or drinkers, from *75 uo 


C YPRESS 1 BR, $115-2 BR »133— 3 
PR $140. Most with 
fireplaces. 
Rent freeze is off. our rents are 
still LOW. 429-4104 
CLEAN 1 br apt near Civic Center. 
Water and trash pd. Adults over 
25. MO. 622-6471 or 644771^._____ 
UNFURNISHED 2 br. *1 
.ill utilities pd. Wall to 
drapes, air cond. Conl 
ger. 421 4252._____________________ 


1 STORY deluxe. 3 br, family rm, 2 
baths, forced «tir-cond, shaa cot. 
Town» Ave., 


$150 per mo, 
wall cot», 
ontact mana- 


5220. Adults. 506 N. 
Claremont. 624W29 
LA V E R N E 2 bdrm condominium, 
carpets, drapes, pool. 1st and last 
month. 3051 Knollwood, $185. 595- 
4033.___________________________ 
FURN ISHED 
or 
unfurnishedqne 
•x'droom <»01 with laundromat and 
' all util pd. Much to offer. 984-8121 


2 AND 3 bedroom Townhouse apts. 
Pool, air, carport and drapes. 
ALL UTIL*TIES PAID. 
Appliances color co-ordinated 
670 W. San Jose Blvd. 
Claremont AAanager Apt. 24 624-837:’ 
or Assistant Manager Apt. 4 624-4343 


56— Unfurnished 


Apartments 


$150 AND UP 


Studio Apts, 2 and 3 bdrm, 1'* 
bath. Central Air, Drapes, Car- 
pels, Enclosed Patio, Pool. 1170 
Murchnon. Pomona. 622-5340 
2 BDRM STUDIO, IV? baths, forced 
air heat, air conc, Dvt patio, child- 
fUtc I r V a f '“ 3° Klmi'" ï ' 


★ ★ CARDINAL ISLES -*•* 
2 bdrms—$135, 3 bdrms-$155. Pool, 
built ms, drapes, w-w shaa cots, 
innen h£ ?'’ , 
cond- Clean. 
SKvr- A?350. Klmberlv. Mtcl. E. of 
Mnr a iti Yt 
0,f ^'naslev. 
Mnr Apt. 12, 621-4093 


57— Fum. A Unfum. 


LARGE 
clean 2 
bdrm, 
drapes, stove, air and 
and unfyrn. Starring 
mgr, 877 i . ‘ 


m, 
carpets. 
J pool. Furn 
_ at J115. See 
Monterey, pom. 623- 


LOVE AT FIRST BITE 


Larae, beautiful 2 bedroom, w- 
s 
a 
. w r f e &*»■ 
mona 


MODERN 
1 
bedroom 
Ith 
— 
r 
, „oartment 
graces, built-ms and disposal. 
Laundromat on premises. $99.50. 
812) 
or 


Very Quiet— Very Clean 
2 bdrm, 2 bath *160 unfum, $175 
furnished. 
Utilities 
pd, 
carpets, 
drapes, pool, centre! air, no pets, 
no children. 1 blk N. of Kinaslev, 1 
bfk E. cf Mills. 4205 Evart, Mon­ 
tclair. 626-0715 


66— Travel Trailer* 


Ccmpers-Utility 


70 CHEVY 
ton, 9'/? ft cabover 
camper with toilet, aood cond, 
$3800. 621-2802 
___________ 
^Camper Shells-il 29.95 
1024 E. FOOTHILL, CLAREMONT 
985-3318 
CHEVY 
c h a s 
loaded. 


34 ton, 10 ft Lazy Daze, 
s is mount, self-contained, 
626-0822 


DIAMOND BA£ 


C_ 1 MONTH F R E E RENT 
SPACIOUS 2 bdrm aots, air cond, 
w-w cots, drapes, buflt-lns, pvt 
patio. From *130 per mo. Small 
Pet or infant ok! Call 985-0554. 


? befrm, 1' ? baths, 
central air, 2 qaraoes, shao car­ 
pets, sound proof, $215 per month. 
565-0747. Corner of Diamond Bar 
ojvd and E. Sunset Crossing Rocct. 
LOOK NO FURTHER 
$130 month 
Spacious and delightful 2 bdrm 
4 clex, cpts, 
drapes and 
many 
i iore 
feature-;. 
195 
Armr,tronq i 
Way, Upland (off Mountain Ave. 1 
,,nd 8th) (7,4) 985-6400 


LUXURIOUS EL DORADO 
Private patios, rec. room, heated 
pool and therapy pool, 1-2 bdrms, 
fireplaces. 
555 
E. 
Bonita, 
San 
Cjmas. 599-6577, no rent raises in 


2 
BDRM, 
stove, refrpool, 
. — 
— 
fa, a 
986-0901 or 982-3896. 


carpets, 
drape:, 
air. Montclair, *135. 


1 & 2 bdrm 
Ground floor, nr Pus and shopp 
new pa'nt, pool, bulit-i- s. 1(55 
Pasadena 629-0731, 620-7829. 


hold it” 


ONTARIO, Loe ? bdrm, r.ewly deco 
rated,, cots,. drapes. blt-lns, air-1*135 2 


Don’t 
rent until 
you 
see 
this 
spacious 2 bdrm apt, xlnt value at 
T120. Call Mr. Adams, 629-8775 


POM A TIKI APTS 
1800-1900 W. Orange Grove 
Adult apts. 1 and 2 bdrms, turn 
and unfurn, air cond, htd pool, 
sauna, rec rooms, cpts, drapes. 
Under new Mamt 


HARO TO FIND 
1968 Terry 22' self-contained, sleeps 
8. 8x14 outside room. 
Excellent 
cond. Only *2250. 
UPLAND MOBILE HOMES 
1425 W. Foothill Blvd. 
Between Mountain A Benson 
985-2703 


67— Motor Homes 


74-Mobile Homes 


^ ^ a le s - S e r v - S « ^ 


M O B I L E home, 1961 
Detroiter, 
10x54, expando, shaq cpt, paneled, 
1 bdrm. $3900 or make offer. 628- 
0071 
M.OBILE Home for Sale or rent 
12x60, 2 br and bath, within wal 
kinq distance of Cal Polv. Adults, 
No pets. 628-7032 or 595-2121. 


74— Mobile Homes 
Soles-Serv.-Supplies 


M O BILE HOMES 
REPOS 
Must sacrifice. Romene First Fed 
era). 423-6511, axt 312 


76— Auto Repqirs-Serv. 
77— Autos-Trucks Wanted 


VAN-VERSIONS 


Consign Your Mobile Homes 
TO US. 
Valiev Mobile Home Sales 


B E D R O O M duplex, carpets, 
drapes, air, refrfa, stove enclosed 
S age. xlnt ccnd. Children pets 
1 662-E. 7th, Pom. 623-7904 or 
624-5916. 
$132.50, unfum. 
$16C, fum 
1 BDRM 
..*120 
Util paid, boot, select children 
318 W. Artesia, Pomona 
622-4858______ 626-4667 
423-8111 
$95. Quiet 1 bdrm 
No pets, walk to Civic Center, 623 
623-0631. 
“ 


1970 WINNEBAGO 18' self contained 
_ 
_ 
ssis, 110 volts 
oir, economical 


...... 
-1 Jf 
on Dodge Chassis, 110 
318 cu 
$5950. 985-5689 
In 
_ auto 
enqine 


9880, if no answer 
South Locust. Pom. 
631 


1 MONTH FREE RENT 
Large, beautiful 2 bedroom, w-w 
caroets, air conditioner, pool, aa- 
raq«. *145. 1111 E- 7th St., Po­ 
mona. 622-0466 


I O 
VPwi Vi ! L.J 
Ji ut I 
Ol 
cond, loe patio. $125 per. 983-1971 
BDRM, H'a bath, cpt, dr 


5 AND 4 bdrm, co-op apt, $150, all 
util Included, dros, r?trIqerator, $115. 
• love, disposal. Mon.-Fri. 9-5, (714)j 
599-3417. 
1 


air cond, blt-lns. 
See 
mqr 
Pine, Apt. B., Upland. 985-5639 ?1S4 


2 BEDROOM 
GARDEN APT. — $180 \ 
with patio, covered parxing with 
storage locker, Sauna, Pool, Rec­ 
reation Room. Adult complex. 1: 
small house net considered. 
KONA KAI VILLAGE 


Nort12191 Telephone Ave. 
rth of Pomona Freew; 
Montclair Exit 
678 2611 


D ..? JIORM apt, newly decorated. 
Bullt-ins, adulfs onlv. See at 1230 
W-3rd. Or call 622-3539. _________ 
For 1 Adult 
1 bdrm unfurnished duplex, in­ 
cludes . stove, refrin, water and 
gardening 
Near PVCH $<>0 mo 
9S7 6427 eves. 
FROM $145. 2 bdrm, central air and 
heat, 2 both, children ok. Private 
oatios, oark like qrounds. Ontario 
apt, W. 6th St. and Elderberry 
984 2506 


B E R K E L E Y MANOR 
Lovely, large, 1 and 2 bdrm aots, 
turn and unfurn, with w-w carpet 
_and drapes. 1660 Berkeley Ave. 
GORDON APARTMENTS 
*107.50 Per Montlv 
Fumbhed-Unfumlshed 
1 bedrm w-w carpeting, drapes, 
blt-ln ranqe, disposal, air cond. 
Close to churches, stores, banks. 
Walking distance to Mall. 
No lease Required. 
No Pets 
Adults Onlv 
New apts react/ soon between San 
Bernardino 
and 
Pomona 
Free- 
wavs. 
. . . . 
, 
Manaqer-790 N. Gordon, Apt. No. 1 
Pomona 
629-6080 


'67 BEACHWOOD 2(7, 6 cylinder 292 
Chew auto, sleeps 6, 60 qallon wa­ 
ter 80 qallon fuel, roof air. new 
4,000 Watt Generator, new brakes 
new tires. $6,000 or make offer. Ph 
_624 4806_or 626-4486._______________ 
FOP RENT, '72 Wlnnebaoo. 
20 ft, fully contained. 
Privately owned Ph 621-23^3....... 
FOR Rent" New '73 Harvest 24 Ft., 
Self contained. Winter rates. 
626-6368. 
_ _ _ 


Foothill at Central 
. „ 
985-6913 
985-5413 
PRICES POSTED! 
15 years bank financing 
10% down OAC 
Life Time Service 
We Take Trades 


Check our prices 


ALAMO M' 
O MO 
.____ 
Homo of "Charlgy Çares" 
1200 W. Mission. Ontario 


B IL E H_OMES 
rl ¿ 
— 
ssion, Ontarli 


1972 
24x60 
A-C, 
ewnlr 
Indscpd,. Adults, .pets 
inqs, 
auits, oets. 11250 
mone, Mtcl. 628-4063, 628-7616 'it 


HOME on the beach 12' wide Fleet­ 
wood, 2 bdrm, porch, awnings, in 
tdult pa'-k i h'k *">m Huntlnaton 
each. $6000. 624-3360 
1966 FLAMINGO 
Expando Living Room, 55 x 10 
(714) 984-7453 


12 inch port holes, $60 oalr In­ 
stalled. 12" bubble heart, $75 
pair. 8 track stereo free vJth any 
complete 
van 
interior. 
Custom 
palnflnq bv Bobbo. 4750 Ca Mis 
slon Blvd. between Ramena end 
Monte Vista, 627-4614. 
REBUILT ENGINES 
Save Middleman Profits 
26 YEA RS SAME LOCATION 
Buy on crudit 6 12 arid 24 mo to 
pay WOAC, short blocks. Falcon 6 
144 cu, $109.50 ex; Chev V I 265 
cu, $139.50 ex. Other models priced 
‘ all collect Dandy Auto 


FOR RENT 
_ 
1972 24 Ft. Commander. Self con 
tained, roof air conditioning. 4000 
Waft qenerator. 624-9490 aft. 5 Pm. 
NEW 23’ motor home for rent. Fully 
self contained. Private party. 624- 
1421________________ 
MOTOR HOME, fu’lv eQuiped-for 
rent $25 per day, 5c mile. 985-8864 
O- 621-3282 


ALLEY 
MOBILE HOMES 
Foothill at Central 
985-5413 
985-6913 


IM M EDIATE CASH FOR 
Your frailer or Mobile Home 
(714) 624^1614 


OWNER DIED, MUST S E LL THIS~ 
LO VELY 1965 DETROITER 
PR IC E HAS BEEN 
REDUCED TO $3390.00. 
SO CALL 621-3974 RIGHT NOW. 


to sell Call collect Dandv 
Sales. 213 444-0584 or 283-1368 


WE PAY TOP PRIC ES FOR JUNK 


AR623 83of- “ OMONA1 
WE BUY 


USED 


TOYOTAS 


Highest Prices Paid 
TOYOTA of POMONA 
398 W. Holt, Pemona 
623-2656 


1972 PINTO 2 dr sedan 4 soefd, 
radio and heater low miles. Lie 
R and G Auto Sales, 


VW EN GIN ES R FBU ILT 
by 
student 
mechanic 
tor 
less, 
Guar. Call 74 hours, 629-1413. 


77— Autos-Trucks Wanted 


M O BILE HOME 
barqaln, 12x60 
patios, landscaped. Located In All 
Adult Cicneqa Valley Estates. Wil- 
■ 
to sell for balance of loan, 
. 


like new, fantcsy 
expando. porcheSj 


plus small cash or something 
of value. ( dooI table, motorcycle, 
furniture, etc). Call (714) 599-5655 
aft 5:30 cr all ctav wk ends. 


__________________ 
$99 Month TOTAL 
★ 
4 r 
-Ar 
-A- 
-A- 
-A- 
-A' 
m o b ile hom e p a y m e n t 
k 
m 
n 
n 
n 
n 
a n d p a r k r e n t 


PRIVA TE PARTY HAS „ 
MOTOR HOMES FOR RENT. 
R E A 
........... 
;ASONABLE. 627-33C6 
72 TIOGA Motor Home, fullv self 
contained S7S0 and take over pav- 
ments. 627-4357 after 5.____________ 
BUS converted to motor coach. Ex­ 
cellent condition. Call 
628-0288 
24 
S L E E P S 9 Ideal, for 2 families. 
Availibi" Thank-'-lvinr £$ a day, 
plus 5 cents a mile. 623-4750 


2 BDRM apt, water, stove, rotrig. E. . 
Lexinqton, Pomona. Adults $100 
mo. 983 5792 
FURN ISH ED APARTMENT 
avail- 1 
*ble Dec. t, 2 rooms, elderly lady. 


ADULTS, *105, Montclair _____ 
. 
bdrm, cots, draoes, blt-lns, heated 
pool Days 421-3970. eves 599-3045 


3 BEDROOM duplex, all extras in­ 
cluding enclosed aaraae. Children, 
pets ok. Optional utilities. All 


C29-1085. 


2 Bedroom— $135 
Wefl-maneged, 
all 
conveniences 
incl pool and laundry. 622-5968. 


2 EDRM STUDIO APTS, air cond, 
nvt patio, oar, cpr Ihruout. 4694 
Bandera, Apt B, MJcl._t21-'i'97 
1 BDRM apt, carpets, drapes, air 
cond, no pets. SW Pomona. 628-1 
0:48______________ 
| 
LA RGE 2 bdrm furn-unfurn, pool1 
air cond, near shopping area and 


N **^1 6»ft?542 af* 
^W n°- 


n Tc e AREA-LARGE~APTS 
2 
bdrm 
unfurnished, 
*120-*125, 
carpets, drapes thruout, copper- 
tone stove, garbage disp, air cond, 
enclosed 
garage. 
876 
Richland, 
Apt a. Onterlo. 985-4314. 
$50 MOVE IN BONUS 
or last months Rent Free 
ON 6 months lease— 
YOUR CHOICE 
2 bedrooms, carpeted, air con­ 
ditioner, chiHren welcome. Rent 
$110. Call 623 8978. 


* DELUXE RENTALS 
1 
br, unf, blt-lns, cots, alr-c .. 
1 br, turn, blt-lns, cpts, alr-c .. 
2 br, unf, blt-ins, cnts, air c .. 
982-8844 OR 626-5867 
$160 ATTRACTIVE 3 bdrm. 1 
V4 
bath, near Chino High, cpts, drps, 
air cond, 98Í-2881. 
3 BDRM, 2 bath, w-w shag, drapes, 
frDl, private n*t|o. child and pet 
ok, $175. 
10330 Kimberly, Mon 
tclalr. 626-5649. 


Dtted. *145 unfurn, $160 furn. 
E. 7th, Pomona. 623-7904 or 
59)6 
_____ 


car- 69— Dune Buggies 


624- 


$140 Monthly 
(weekly rates avail.) 


—Studios Avail 
-1 Bedrooms Avail 
—ADULTS ONLY 
—Free Linens 
- F R E E Utilities 
—F R E E Phone Service 
............... 
ts Avail 


c o r v a .r R^ 
ob ru ,gf ’u l l c a g e . 
$450 AS IS. 983-6527 


70— Motorcycles 


1970 m ARLEY Davidson, xlnt cond. 
new engme. Tuli dress, $1950. or i 
best otter. 621 -2051 or 621-1054.__ 


EXTRA NICE 2 bdrm in Pomona, l 
child ck, drps, w-w cpts, blt-in 
range, Pvt patio, air 595-3551. ____ 
2 MONTHS FREE 
TRIPLEX APTS. 


10% DISCOUNT 
off 1st month rent tor »enlor eltl 
zens 50 and u p . 2 bdrm s, 1 and 2 
baths, central air, 2 pools, beauti­ 
ful grounds. Polynesian Gardens 
150 W. 
Foothill 
Blvd, 
Pomona. 
593-6130____________________ 
LARGE 2 BDRM, $125 
Pool, 
quiet, 
new carpets, 
rear 
floor, air, adults, no pets. Applica­ 
tion, 1446 Laurel, Pom. 


7th and 11th month tree rent. 
2 bdrms, private patios, carpets, 
drapes, garbage disposal, built In 
stoves, air cond, seperate oarages, 
close to schools, $130 per m o, wa­ 
ter trash paid. 
1337-A 
Packard 
Drive, Pomona. ¿23-3000. BRING 
THIS AD. 


57— Furn. & Unfurn. 


1 ROOM studio, 
ideal for voung 
single or pensioner. 
Kitchenette 
and bath Call 986-K81. 


- F U L L Kitchens Available 
—Heated Poo1 
—Air Conditioned 
—Laundry Facilities 
—TV Available 
—Maid Service Avell 
—BBQ's and Rec Rm 
—Regular Bus Stoo 
ROYAL SUITES 


310 E. Foothill Blvd. 
Pomona 
593-7617 


1971 
650 YAMAHA, excellent con­ 
dition, low mileage, $750. extras. | 
597-3385. 
_______________ 
1973 YAMAHA 100 MX 
L IK E NEW COND. $400. 
629-0753 
1973 Honda 350 
200 miles. $800._________ 
627-5683 
500 HONDA. JUST L IK E NEW. 
1300 ORIGINAL M ILES. 
624-5633 
_____ 


KARRIS 


MOBILE 


HOMES 


ONCE 
A YEAR! 
!SALE! 


CASH FOR YOUR 
it Import Car ★ 
Arry Make Any Model 
(Paid for or NOT!) 
Pomona Valley Datsun 
1375 E Holt Ave. 


78— Trucks For Sale 


‘66 FORD 2 ton flatbed. 20 ft long, 
new front fires, engine etc, excel 
cond, 4 plus 2 trans, Call Aft 6 pm 
597 2Ò46 
'68 FORD Ranchero, 390, factory 
air, p-s, p-b, tonneau cover. Plus 
maos »950. Must sell, call 626-2188 
or 621-2095. 


LOW DOWN PAYMENT. 
NICE p Vp k 
(714) 621-4791 


-Accessories- 
T:res-Parts 


73 CHEVY enqine 350 with automat­ 
ic trans $600 firm 
Miah' t-.-de? 
Enainn has 8,000 miles. 639-8323 or 
593-4175 
SHORT BLOCKS 
Low as $99. Buv Direct 
Save $*$ Free Delivery 
JACOBS EN GIN F R c ALDING 
NO SAT. PLEA SE 
627-5276 eves end Sun. 
(Jt ll 44’ -a"4 
B of A, MC 
100% Financing O.A.C. 


N EED car, new or used or lca,ed. 
Short on down, had repo or Ban­ 
kruptcy. Call anytime 963-7576 Dir. 
WE BUY lunk cars and trucks. Pav 
highest price 
Men thru Set. 1-5 
PM 
* 627-5010 ★ ___ 
Cash $$$ 
Money 
For Import Cars. All makes and 
models. We line convertibles espe 
ciallv clean FIAT 850s and 124 Spi- 


- 
" ‘ “ 
a 
» 
! 
» 
VOLVO and FIAT 
New 8, Used 
Frank White Imports 
1407 W. Holt, Pomona 
623-2689 


74 CHEV. % ton pickup, 350 4 
speed, p.s., p.b., fact, air, camper 
special, aux. tank, 9.50 tires. C 
tom deluxe. Many extras. 
Brand new. Choose from 
0747. Dir. (213) 289-3571. _ _ _ _ _ 
1952 W HITE STAKE BED TRUCK. 
Small Lft, qooo cond. $550. 
Ev 


FAIR CITY t=ORD 
CLEAN Used Cars bought for CASH 
611 E Holt Pomona 
621-2101 


^EXCEPTIONAL VALUE* 
1 and 2 bedrms, cpts, drps, air 
cond, Pvt patio, htd pool, • child 
ok. Mtcl From *125. 626-0144 


58—-Rental» To Share 


2 R ESPO N SIBLE colleqe Qlr's need 
another qirl to fhare Iqe beaut 3 
bdrm, 2 bath turn apt 
Near b'rt 
and SB Fwy $70 mo Will consider 
working qirl with some colleqe, 
age 20 h 25. 622-2339 


2 BDRM duplexes, country area, 
Ont. Large yards, 2 children OK, 
no pets. MS 


bdrm, IVj bath, oarage, 
_ _ jK, $135 per mo. 974- E. Mon­ 
terey, Pom. 983-4273. 


LA RG E 2 
no pets, $135 


2 BDRM, carpetinq, built-in oven, 
very clean, oaraoe, no pets. 622- 
7641 
. 


LARGE 
drapes, 
built-in 


63-4575. 
2 br apt with w-w. cpt., 
air 
cond. 
Disoosal 
ranae, water «inc trash 
$120 per mo 
No oe*s. 10390 ' . 
non. /Montclair. (Nr. Central and 
Holt) 621-3623. 
AFFORDABLE 
LUXURY 
2 BDRM. large rcoms, cpt«, drps, 
refrigerator, 
stove, 
$125. 
10393 
Amherst. Montclair. 595-3887 
2~bDRM~2 -V)th, private patio, lock­ 
ed qarage. Dishwasher, new 3*aq, 
draoes, 
air. 
Near 
S B . 
Frwv. 
¿quits no pets $130. 622-2336________ 
1 BEDROOM 
GARDEN APT. — 
$140 
with patto, covered parxinq with 
storaoe locker. Sauna, Pool .R ec­ 
reation Room. Adult COM PLEX 
SM. HOUSE PE T CONSIDERED 
KONA KAI VILLAGE 
12191 Telephone Ave. 
North of Pomona Freeway 
Montclair Exit 
628-2611_________________ 
„ 
2 bdrm apt 
carpets, 
laundry 
fac 
Fltles, air cond, pool, $I20-*125. 1 
small child accooted. Special rate 
to senior citizens. Shernr Plaza: 
Apartments. 548 E. Phcilips, Mgr 
apt 16.___________ 
.. 
1 AND 2 bdrm near Cal Polv and; 
Mt. Sac Crpts drp», blt-lns, oogl. 
Quiet congenial tenants, »ml child 


Spacious 2 and 
featuring 


60— Sledping Roam Rant 


'63 TRIUM PH 650 stock, new enq, 
ne-v tires, xlnt cond. 53.6 ml per 
gal. 621-1054 
____________ 
1971 Y AMA H A 9Ç H T1-M> X 
RUNS XLN T , EXTRAS. $200. 
623 1331 
71 YAMAHA 175 Enduro 
Concourse Condition. 
(714 ) 628-5424______ 
HONDA 350, Chopper, 
motor, cu*tom paint. *950» 624-0588 
anytime. 
1*971 HONDA CB 350, low ml $500. Or 
otter. Cell aft 6 ^ . 7 ____________ 


ROOM Close m, private 
entrance, men only "***• 
617 W. 4th St.. Pom. 
ROOM with kitchen privileges. Pri­ 
vate bath, entrance. Wasner-dryer. 
Phone 623-5452. 
__ _____________ 
NICE warm first floor room, 
sober employed man. Central 
tion. 622-073 _______________ 


3ulet 
loca- 


N EW LY decorated 
built-lns, 
t\ 


_ 3 bdrm, 2 bath 
apts, featuring 
carpets, 
drapes, 
blt-lns, 2 pools and lush "p a rk . 
like" 
surroundings. 
From 
»165.; 
Special $50 mova-<n allowance or 
13th month free 
CLAREMONT LANAI 
750 San Jose Clmt. 624-7800 
Eleaant and new 
Los Arbolitos 
Deluxe Adult aoartments 
A few cho:ce 2 bedrooms left. 
See our unique split level 
Focl-Gas 
BBQs-Cebanas 
New furniture available 
(small oddltional cost) 
Drive bv todav— 


1849 Foothill, la Verne 


Your prestige address. 


if 3 


Room 
QUIET Comfortable 
T! For Emploved Pen 
624-7137 


CHRISTMAS SPECIALS 
Yamaha of Montclair 
5462 Holt ____ 
624-9651 
'71 YAMAHA 250 ENDURO 
GOOD CON DITI ON> 
CALL 595-4572. 
$400 


7 3 — Space ft Parks 


Mobile Homes 


9 5-86*8 


ok. $115-8135. See mgr Apt. 5. 
W. Laurel, Pom.________ __ 
1435 


ATTRACTIVE 2 # rm «et,.carpets 
and drapes, 
all 
utils furnished | 
Convenient location, UMzndrv fad- 
titles av ail. $145. 622-3930 _ _ _ _ _ 


$130 LA RG E 2 ^ rm',nc,S!*VdrAti*.V 
ranOe, refrioeralor. 10421 Amherst, 
Montclair. 626-9125 
____ 


blt-lns, ] 
re- i 
™ 
^ 
and 
$135 and *140, 993-1252 • 


* BACHELOR APT. * 
$11 to $15____________________ 


SAHARA HOTEL 


CM rms, evi bath, indnr rm, m w . 
Wklv-mo. 447 W. Montera* 421 914$ 


61— Motels-Hotels 


awav 
VOUr 
level», swim 


POMONA 
Clean Rooms 
1274 •*' 


DUNES. Bv day or »Week. 
neble 


62— Mountain, Beach, 


D e s e r t P r o g e r t ^ J t e n ^ 


A^oÄ l ^ v n r^ dütq an , 
ti% "A .“ 
s 
' Ä 
h 
ä 
or 429-PSS. 
_________ 


ins, fen 
vdt 
‘ 624-2608 or 624-8056 


bit- 
ok. 
Mtcl. 
UPLAND WOODS 
« ;* . i r r S ^ t ó s S : 
¡no this ad tor a sped, 
-y$. $15 
or brino this ad tor a special d 
coum Students welcome. $150.uj 


We 
C«!• 


850 N. Benson 
985 


M O N TEREY APTS 8.1* ___ 
Montclair area, 2 M'TJ« 
carpets, dreoas- built *,12%»« 
patio Oavs 621 1970, eves 599-3045 
-HOLT APTS. 615 N Erie. Pom. j 
Adult Living, 1, _2^,3 pB r^ Gym. 
E R IE 


Rec Rm, Sauna, Pooh 
$105 QUIET 1 BDRM 
1676 E. Kingsley. Pma. 624-1435^ 
AIR COND apartment. >bdrmA ^ 
bath, shaa carpets, 
pool. $170.: 
593 /891 envtlrne - ntfr at 3109 
Abbott. Pom A ^ l j l ^ b l k ^ . ot, 


^ P lu n v T r c c 


HAS IT ALL 
TOGETHER! 


Family 8, adult living at Its 
best. 7 floor Plans. Spacious 
Jr, 1, 1, 2 I, 3 bedrooms to 
choose from. Air conditioned. 
Sound conditioned. Thick shag 
carpeting. 
Custom 
drapes. 
Contemporary 
furniture 
ex­ 
pressly 
designed 
for 
Plum 
Tree. From only $16$. 


Have a ball! In the 2 pools. 
Sauna 8, 
Jacuzzi. Volleyball 
court. 
2 
clubhouses. 
Teen 
Lounge- 
Children's 
center. 
Specially equipped Tot Lots 
monitored 
by 
closed 
circuit 
T.V. system. AND M O REI 


Get yourself together A visit 
Brand 
New 
Plum Tree to­ 
day! 
Ask 
about 
our 
rent 
concession. 
Tt. Apt, 1 (1 
Garey. and 1 blk $■ o f 
...... _ 
' CHILDREN WELCOME 


tlt-lns. drapes, carpets, endosad 
» 629-4804 
garages 
LA RGE 909 SO 
blt-lns 


ft. 


drps e 
to *130 
eial St 
tion 490 E 


7 bdrm, cp*î 
■I air cond 
$130 2 cMlSfenrS k f Sçacj*' 
il Ser uri tv r#tes. in Adujts 


$125! 
Sa- 


1 BE 


, ... 
tMK, 
7th St - Upland 985-3414 
Pom., 
î l n 
/•h. 
¿ s ì a - , . , , 
gas od. *1M mo. 1 pat ok. 9B4-3115 
OVER 40? 2 BDRM 
Luxury apartment, a c clim a ta i 


tw cari 
aer**n, 
3, Pom< 


V 
i / 


12450 Marshall Ara. 


Chino 


627-3543 


proximatelv 
_....na room. 2 
batns. 'all f-lectnc. ccMnpletfciy r/v ( 
decorated 'hdutlinq new carp 
and drapery . Ap p Iv Mt perswv, 2011 
Las Veaas Ave , Apt. 3, Pomona. 
Rent »200 per month.___ 
VERY ATTRACTIVE 
2 story, 2 bdrm, IV? baUi> e'ect 
iX Z . 
*■’ 
mona 
_____ 
1 BEDROOM 
ONLY $115 
Charming. 1 atorv. Ojrden 
Urge private patio, pool, oet Uh- 
1135 E 7th St.. Pomona, fb lk S 
of MKsinn off Reservoir. 429 7476[ 
and 623 4767 


BIG BEA R AREA, 2 bdrm Chalet, 
f e îW 5 liW 
Reîen/# no"- 


KINGDOM 
WITH SECURITY, located 
from 
street. Just Sit 
porch, in whirlpool, blcs 
shoot oool, cr tennis. 
CHAPARRAL HEIGHTS 
M O BILE HOME PA RK 
Alta Lorn# 
6880 Archibalo 
Vitw Bites from 
________ 9I7»3I3C 
N EW OW NERSHIP 8. MGT. 
3 MONTHS 
FREE RENT 
UPLAND CASCADE 
iD EL U X E ADULT & FA M ILY PARK 
3 mo. Free Rent 
to every new resident in Upland s 
finest adu't 'emlly park. 
UPLAND CASCADE 
1350 San Bernardino Rd. 
985-9711 -Or*« Park 


63— Miscellaneous 


To tent 


f e n c e d , 
llghttd trailer 
stpr««*- 
any slza, »ow e» $5.^4J61 Brooks St. 
Mtclr. 424-5819. 424-7039. 


64—-Wanted To Rent 


• LANDLORDS FREE • 


CALL TOOAY 
REN T TODAY 


• BILLBOARD 623-2551# 


FA M ILY 
desires *o 
lease 
large 
home 
Would 
»{»J? 
north«»*» or 
northwest area. (213) 752-1520 


OUR BEAUTIFUL 
1973 DISPLAY 
MODELS 
MUST GO! 


TO M AKE ROOM FOR 
NEW MODELS 


A LL O F FE R S CONSIDERED 
BUY NOW! 


BEA T THE 1974 


PRICE IN C REA SES 


F R E E STORAGE FOR 6 MOS 


F R E E D E L IV E R Y AND SET UP 


OUR 18TH YEAR 


M O BILE HOME OWNERS A G R EE 
W E HAVE THE BEST SER VIC E 
AND CUSTOMER RELATIONS 
SEE THE NEW 


TRIPLE-WIDE 
Fits on Double Wide Space 
1 USED 24 WIDE 
1 USED 12 WIDE 
2 REPOS 
REAL ESTATE 
EXCHANGES 
Southeast Comer of Holt Blvd 
and Rose Ave. 
(1 blk East of Central) 
621-4791 


★ ATTENTION ★ 


FRANK WHITE 
IMPORTS 
Sell! or Lease 
VOLVO; 


It F IA T 


Overseas Delivery 
OUR 
SPECIALTY 


~T / ' -ir -• 
Choice Trade-in 
Bargains 
48 Mo. Financing 
Available 


C 2 3 - 2 6 S 9 


1407 W. Hoil, Pomona 


Pß'' 
Call 623-2656 


FOR H IGH EST PKlCES FOP 
YOUR USED LATE MODEL 
CARS AND TRUCKS SEF 
W. R. RUNDLE 


628 W. Holt, ONTARIO 
YU 4-7117 


White Space 


Attract» 


Attention 


FOR 
AUTO 
LEASE 
OR RENTAL 


Call or See one of the following Dealers 


for a plan to fit your Budget! 


’67 Chev. % Ton 
Heavy Duty Pickup 
V-8, automatic trans, uower strer 
ing and brakes, split rim wheels 
75034N. Ide I for large camDer, 
S1595 
W.B. RUNDLE 


628 W. Holt, Ontario 
YU 4-7112 


2— Auto» for Sale 


NO. 4Q8ÉPH. ____ ^ 
1400 E. Mission. 623-5400. 
C H EV ELLE 283, AUTOMATIC 
power steering, factory air, $495. 
Phone 984-0508. 
70 BLAZER 4x4, CST 350 V-8. a-C 
and power. Many, many extra* 
xlnt, mint cond, $3500 or trade. 
5566 Armslev, Mtcl, 986-5709 
_ 
*500 
1967 Dodge Poiara Wagon. P-t, 
auto, p-o, air, 107,000 miles. Excel­ 
lent condition 593-9590 
RACE 
Car—'70 Chew 
Nova, 
402 
built engine, 4 sod. Not street leg­ 
al. $1900. 638-3124 
'61 CADILLAC 
Very qood condition. 
Air, $275. 597-2371 
'68 IMPALA 4 dr, V-8, p-S, air. S7,- 
000 ml, auto, $800 Under biuebook. 
595-1914 
1 OWNER, 1968 Ford LTD, excellent 
CE*'$650 
M rtv' 3AC*I* 
621-3176. 
'65 MUSTANG. radlo-Heater, 
_V8. automatic, power steerinq. 
$995. 
426-MI» 
'67 CHEVY Biscayne 6 cvHhders. 
good condition, must sell qolnq 
back home. $450 Call Ike 622-5585. 
5ERCURY Marauls and Montesos. 
1 year mechanical insurance avail­ 
able. 
★ HERTZ CORP. 
(714) 778-4050 __ 
1972 240Z, MAGS, air co 
excellent condition. 
Offer. 624-0476 


it? OtlO 


1955 FORD CROWN VICTORIA 
Oriqlnal, $200 or otter. 
622-4422 


MUST SELL * * * 
1972’/$ Datsun plckup-extras—$50 
cash and assume balance of loan. 
Call Steve, 593-2977 


i. Cus 
$4385 
5. No. 


:ves 985-6576. 
ANO 3 axle qas tractors and bob- 
tail vans. Davs (714) 822-C81!. eves 
J714I 627-1850. P 8, M Truck Co. 
1969 CHEVY Panel, 
air cond, stereo, ins 
$2000. 985-1256 


1966 RA M BLER American Wagon, 
$400, must sell this week. Auto, 
o-s, p-b, call after_3 p.m. 672-0642. 
WE carry our own contracts. No 
credit needed. T.D. Auto Seles, 
915 E. Mission. 623-8301. 9 am to 
_6 pin. 
__________________ 
FOR sale 1966 Ford Country Sedan 
waqon ,352 engine, radio, heater, 
auto trans, excellent cond $575. 
626-7833____________ 
PRIVA TE Party 72 Mercurv Mar­ 
quis Brghm., full power, air, auto 
windows, xlnt cond, $2,500. 624- 
1172._______________________ 
1970 FORC Torino, excellent cog- 
q.tlon, near new motor and traris 
t less than 5.000 miles), p-s. power 
disc brakes, factory air, radio and 
heate-. Asking $1395. Call (714) 
623-1451. 
one of a kind, 
tide unfinished. 


73 CHEVY LUV, air. maos, camper 
shell, carpeting, $3000. 624-01)9 or 
622-0162. 
it ECONOMY 
Alhambra, Ca 
CHEVROLET 
(213) 289 3571 
63 FORD ’ > ton pickup. New heavy 
duty tires Recent overhaul. Elee 
trie brakes. Hookuo to tow. 
0069 
626- 


74 r HEVY - ton P U.. 
H” drn 
P-B, fac air, $3685 NEW. Serial 
No. 3170. Dir. (213) 289-3578. 
1973 1 TON DODGE MAXI VAN. 
many extras, $350 cash, take over 
payments. $1)5 mo. 626-6262 
'62 VAN $595 
18' X4 ton step van, eoulo for cam 
ptnq A'ter 5 p.m., 623 9287. 


[veryone deserves 
PLEA SE NOTE: 
a better car! 
Come to College 
Chevrolet in Claremont durino our 
used car stock reduction sale!___ 
1565 MUSTANG 289, TRW 12.5, Hol­ 
ley, I sky, Shelby, 
Accel, 
Edal- 
b-'Ck, Appliance. Ross* C 4 with 
3500 converter, 9 Incn 89 to 1, 4.86 
to 1, rear end. The best of everv- 
Ihinq 4,000 miles on car. $4,000 in- 
vested. $1 195 firm! 624-3681_______ 
i will sell your 
car, truck, 
sell __ 
torcvcle, etc. 1 da 
Auto Sales 915 E 
9 am to 6 pm. 


your 
ear, truck, 
ay service. T.D. -- 
Mission 623-8308. 
- 


’73 LTDs, Galaxies, Torino«, Mus­ 
tangs 1 yr mechanical insurance 
available. 
★ HERTZ CORP. ★ 
(714) 778-4050 or 986-OHO 


'62 FORD P.U., 8 ft bed, clean, new 
orakes. t -e- radio, xlnt condition- 
paint. 593-6227. 
59 FORD pickup. Sharp, exceptio­ 
nally clean. Excellent body and 
running cond. New tires and batte­ 
ry. Can't aet a better truck for the 
money, $600 622-4810 
CH EVY VANS 
New 74 Vans Best Selection In 
Town. Starting at $3595. Dir (213) 
289-3571. 


Upland Eldorado 
0 Mobile Home Buyers 
New Uttre-modern 
5 STAR ADULT 
MOBILE HOME PARK 
Superb Recreational 
Facilities 
1400 W. 13th St., Upland 
985-9011 
JURUPA HILLS CASCADE 


"W e’re the Key 
to Your Happiness" 


YOU HAVE A DEALER 
WITH: 


Deluxe 5 star mobile home com 
munltv is ofjerlnqto all new res'-: 
dents until 12-31-73: 3 m0 F R E E I 
j 
REN T and F R E E GOLF M EM ­ 
BER SH IP. Come oul t«lnv and 
tour our beautiful park_«nd PLAY 


65-—Boots-Motor»-Sale»- 


AcctMories-Servite 


MILLERS LANDING 


Pomona Veliev's lergest boat dealer 
turing ihe alt new Thumlerbird 
venger, Chaperal. Crestlfaer 


Year» of Experience 
Mobile Home Service 
and Set-Up! 
(We do all of our own work 
including the carpet laying) 


74— Mobile Home» 


^ ^ S a l e » - S e r v - S u p j » l i ^ 


10x60 2 BORM, turn, $3900 151?, E 
5th Street, Sp 58, Onterlo. 595-911$, 
eves 984-3944. 
_________ ____ 
» y in s . r , v n .y . . .. , > . .. ™ - 
I ÌcX55 
DOUBLE 
EXPANOO 
'h 
Mercury, Even rude Dealer 
fx3o screened oorch 
landscaped. 
Parts and service on ell makes 
. — 
— —• 
------ ~ ~ 
1965 KENT TROJAN, 10x40, good lo 
cation. 627 2402 or 628-1327, after- 
301 N. Garay 
Open 7 days a week. 


6232488 


noons or weekends. 


it '74 Chollenger Jet» ir 
1 Week delivery on stock units. 
FOOTHILL MARINE 
65« West Holt, Ontario 
913-6217 


66— Travel Trailer* 


Campers-Utility 


ITIOH 


'72 
FORD ^4 ton Camper Special, 
390 
V$ 
enq 
with 
auto 
mission, ps. P-b. air cond. 20,000 
mission. PS. P-0.a*r com 
ml with 11 H Cai I torn ¡on 
*lnt cond. Extras. $93-3900 
Ian Camper, 


T*KEN 


Lowest Price» Anywhere 


a r t i s t i c ; F IR E B A L L ... 
Lots of Ilk* new used bargain*. 
Carl’» Acrei of Trailer* 
1223 w. Mission. Onterfa 984-44)3 


1223 W Mission Ontario 984 $413 


WE MAKE HOME 
OWNERSHIP 
HAPPEN 


WITH 
LOW MARK-UP 


AND 
HIGH VOLUME 
SALES 


^ One of the 
largest Displays of 
QUALITY MOBILE HOMES 
in the are*. 


(X A COMPLETE PRICE 
(not a base price) 
that Includes all of 
vow exterior accessories. 


LIFETIME SERVICE 
POLICY 


EXPERIENCED AND 
FRIENDLY 
SALES & SERVICE 
PERSONNEL 
To serve you I 


r Tremendous Savings 
ON A LL 
1973 LOT MODELS 


SEE OUR 
FACTORY BUILT 
MOBILE/MODULAR 
HOMES 


CAR-TRUCK 
LEASING 


CHECK OUR 
COMPETITIVE 


PRICES 


M.K. SMITH 
CHEVROLET 
CHINO 
628-8961 


SAr R IF r E '63 Fo-d Eco-oline Van 
A'/t" 289 and extras $975. Able at 
629-8901.________________________ 
1971 CHEVY 
t o n 
P-S, P-B, S T rK . AIR .MAGS. 
627-1106 


69 HODGE RT, 440 Magnum ram 
eir, auto, ps, maos. Xlnt cono. 
Must sell, $1100. 529-0682 
Impala SS con- 
cel- 
TRADE ‘64 Chew 
vertible, new tires, new top. exce 
lent condition, for pick up truck of 
ccual value 628-4102 after 5.______ 
CHEVROLET 1573 Munte Carlo, ful­ 
ly eauiored. air, am-fm, siereo. 
SSCC and take over my payments 
of $109 mo. 629-295/ 
1968 TORONADO. I k* new, full po­ 
wer, air, exc-lient c-'id. New b*l- 
ted tires. Xlnt buy. Wholesale. 9*3- 
7231_______________________________ 
auto, air disc 
'67 TAMARO 350 S$ 
*129 
Dir. 624-6365 
brakes, 
ps, 
*T295._ Ng_ money 


73 DODGF v 'N Wi tnn. V * r tn 
P-s, p-b, headers, trans-cooler, hvy : 
ej./t« ev-'t^lnn, eu't Int. MUST! 
SEE. 621-2180 or 986-2155. 


down on 1_______ 
___________ 
'69 E L CAM IN 5, V*. 
automatic, r h, air cond $1500 
cr best o*'*r 622-2136 
'73 BUICK Century, MUST S E L L 
A-C, p-s, p-b, auto-frans 
am-fm, $3500. or be'.t. 626-0405 
’50 Ford P.U. Olds Engine 
$500 
628-6501 
1972 DODGE Van am-fm 8 track, pa­ 
neled, shaq cot. mao« 
318 V-8, 
autn-natic, 628-2138 or 983-9468;___ 
1951 CHEVY 1'? ton C»b overtruck, 
$500 or trade. 
984-1858 


80— Imported, Sport 


Small Cars 


*61 CHEVY Impala, 283, 4 sc, hvoo. 
Tuck-roll, $450, or best offer, excel 
cond. 627-1154. 
'59 FORD station wagon, good mo- 
tor, $150. 533 N. Second Ave., Upl­ 
and 982-2602 
'55 CHRYSLER 
Xlnt transoortation, oood tires 
$140 Cash! 
622-5055 


73 DATSUN 240 Z - Original con­ 
dition. Under warranty. Loaded, 
call before 2 pm 985 2377. 
’71 Datsun 240 Z 
Many extras. $379$. 599-3C54 
CORVETTE 
9 Fasfback 
„ __________ has al 
tires and new paint, 
or 985-8116. 


all ooflons. new 
$3295. 985-9767 


PORSCHE-AUDI & 
FOX — In Pomona 
SAI E5 SER V IC EU EA SIN O 


W EEK 
PEN 7 DAYS 
AYS 'TfLL » 00 P M 
770 W HOLT ¿»0621 
'A tR O N 


1971 CORVETTE 350 4 spd, AM-FM 
with taoe. maqs and pipes, make 
offer, 593-9820.____________________ 
CLEAN low rider. 1966'Pontiac Le- 
Mans, $350. Chrome rims. MECH­ 
ANIC SPEC IAL 1966 Pontiac L* 
Mans, rebuilt enqine and 
(car).needs to be out.baçk_toae; 
trans. 
is to be put back toaelh- 
$275. 6240240 or 629-85*7 10129 
Galena, Mtcl. 
FOR SALE. '69 Grand Prix, r*w 
tires, enqine goofl, one owner. 
628-3139 
70 C H EV ELLE 396, 375 HP, black 
inside and out, 4 sod, must see. 
_ $2000 firm. 593-8402 ______________— 
73 CHEVY Impales and Monte Car--■ 
los. 
i 
yr mechanical 
nsuranca 
available. 
★ HERTZ CORP. ★ 
986-011* 


LEASE 


•n 
AUDI 


•r 
PORSCHE 
Catron 


Porsche-Audi 


770 W. Holt Ave. 
Pomona 623-0621 


’58 VW good cond $400 
or best 627-3320. 


(714) 778-4050 
or__________ 
'68 RANCHERO 389, p-s, p-b, eir, 
autcm'tic. Gem too Camper shell, 
_626-636* 
. . 
71 
FIR E B IR D 
Trans 
AM. 
Low 
miles, auto, air, sharp and very 
clean Must sell, $2950. 627-3121 


1967 VW BUG 
Very good running condition 
$400. 624 8396 
WANTED 
Volvo-Peuqot-VW or 
under $500 595-5872 


to buy 
VW 
Foreiqn 
sedan, 
eterred. Cash 


TAKE OVER PAYMENTS 
73 DODGE MONACO 
623-0116, 623-9932 
73 PONTIAC Grand 
_ 
wer, vinyl top, radial tires, 1 
miles, $3600. 624-2513 


PM*, f u l ! ^ 


1969 AUSTIN H EALY SPR IT E 
Runs good, needs naint lob. 
'895. 985-0482 


LEASE-ACAR 


RENT-A-CAR 


COLLEGE 
CHEVROLET 


191 S. Indian Hill Bl. 
Claremont 624-4541 


Leasing made Easy! 


See Us! 


Daily Rentals 
As Lew As 
$6 plus Mileaqe 
FAIR CITY 
FORD 


611 E. Holt, Pomona 


623-2101 


# Open Sundays * 


'69 VW Beetle 
‘69 VW Camner Poo Too 
'72 Datsun A Pak Cabover 
Storage lot 12018 Central Chine 
172 VOLVO 142 I , air cond, 4 spd. 
radiolf, exlnt cond. After 7 cm. 
! 
593-2139 
_____ 
______________ 
" WE BUY IMPORTS 
TOP DOLLAR 
CATRON MOTORS 
Ask for Perry 
700 E. Holt-Pomona 
629-5794 


)?.— Autos For Sale 


TAKE over payments ot 1973 Pinto. 
Will take vour gas hoq In trade tor 
my economy 987-7570. 


1961 PLYMOUTH Conv, new tires, 
r-n, air cond, p-s, p-b. Good cond, 
»500 Call eves 629-0476.___________ 
68 G0i-D Cad Sedan De Villa, low 
m i l e a g e , new radial«, am-fm 
stereo, xlnt cond- 983-4523^ 622-7000 
'68 T-BIRD, 2 DOOR ' HAR DTOP, 
full power and air, low mileaqe, 
»1200. 983-8488 ___________________ 
SACRIFICE 
1971 
Camero. 
wide 
tires, mag wheels, beautiful con­ 
dition. «28-5179 
)9«8 MUSTANG 
condition, runs good 
6273289 


air, aut« p-s, good 
$850. 


Lease the Best! 
CADILLACS 


LOAOEOI 


BRAND NEW! 


RANCHO DEL CHINO 
LUXURY APARTMENTS 


FURNISHED 
▼ I DD 
AVAILABLE 


CLEANING DEPOSIT 
SECURITY DEPOSIT 


LEASE REQUIRED 


from 


NO OTHER 


ADVERTISING MEDIA 


CAN OFFER »0 MUCH 


PAR SO LITTLE A* 


PRO O RM S-tULLETIN . 


U H |T OFTEN! 


air 
deep *het c«rpets, tutlv draped, dishwashers, 
disposals, vinyl well paper .H khcnens and beths cerpeted, 
double *ound proofing, all G.E. applicences. 
PLUS 
Recreation center, rvm, »eune, heeted m t*. pleyground, 
m s BBQ t pet. allowed. 
___ 


9 
rent concession 


NEW 
RANCHO DEL CHINO 


OPEN DAILY 9 AM 
9 PM 


12835 10th St., Chino 


(Close to shopping, school* end Chine General Hospital) 


Phone (714) 627-321« 


Com« in and $«e what 
our 
brand 
n«w 
1974 
models offer you! 


Deal 
direct 
owners - 
involved. 
no 
with 
the 
salesman 


Excellent dealer set - up 
and service dept, with 
many years of experience 
Lifetime Service 
AVAILABLE 
1 2’ wide* from $4995 
24* wide from $8695 
FEATURING 
Riti - Craft Concord 
Sunnybrook, Lancer, 
Granada 


WHITING CO. 
MOBILE HOMES 
2777 FooHiill Blvd. 
la Varna 
593-7441 


!P YOU WANT YOUR 
MOVE INTO A M O BILE 
HOME TO BE A HAPPY 
EXPF-RIENCF- COME IN 
AND S E E US! 


“OPEN DAILY" 


UPLAND MOBILE 
HOMES 
1425 W. Foothill Blvd. 
Between Mountain A Benson 
985-2703 


TATE CADILLAC 


788 E Holt, Pomona 


629-9661 


'50 CHEVY SACRIFICE 
2 dr deluxe must see to believe 
exlnt eond, asking $500, 624-3946 or 
628-4196. ] 
_ 
'69 MUSTANG, Mach I, air, stereo- 
i 
am-fm, mays, Auto, Ion. System. 
tmmaculate!_S1500 595-7104 
1953 BUICK 2 dr. H T. new tires, 
brakes, oalnt 
10b, xlnt running 
jcond. $750 or Jaest offer. 626-C655^ 
‘47 CAMEÉO. Rally Sport, 
327, full equlmed, rebuilt enqine. 
|_____________ 985 1 519______________ 
i '65 FORO Ctrv So. 9 pass, new tires 
elee f-srat, enn A1, heavy dutv 
I 
Irani. $475. 626 7167. 


1963 FORD Waoon o-s, new brakes, 
new shock*, new belted tire*, air 
cond, luQoaqe rack, qcod endin* 
$400 9*4 5334 after » pm__________ 
73 FORD Country Sedan waaons, 
'73 Mercurv and Monterey wagons. 
1 year mechanical Insurance avail- 


d ★ HERTZ CORP. ★ 
(714) 778 4050 or 9*4-0110______ 
COLLECTORS 
item 
Carroiseria 
Gnia Tornlo convertible, make Of- 
ter_231 E Arrow Hwv, Upland. 
1970 E L CAM I NO SS 396. 
4 Sp. maq wheels. 5HARP1 $1900. 
_______ 
621-2184_____________ _ 
73 CAD Sad Dev, lo ml, like new, 
leaded, leather, vinyl t-y . *t»rco. 
Gorgeous sac pricr 624-7022 
*69 CAMARO, 3C7 auto, vinyl top. 
p-s, p-b 
radio, new paint, $1350. 


D ir. 634-HH ______ __________________ 


TAKE over payments $36 6* New 
Yorker r hrv5len. xlnt cond. Ba 
lance $648. 424 1531 


mileage 
I in su ra n t available. 
LOW 
1 
yr 


OFFERS 
A UNIQUE 
LEASE PLAN 


All Mokas A Models 
CALL USI 
1100 E. Holt 
POMONA 
623-2431 


73 CAPRIS 
mechen 
★ HERTZ CORP. ★ 
(714) 778-4050 
Or 
986-01 )0 
'64 OLDSMOBILE 8 pavsenger Ua-I 
tion wagon, air cond, p-s rrlgirtal 
owner, asxlnq $650 98« 79^6 
_ 
'69 DO DO E CHARGER 
uO Magnum, *1000 cr best offer. 
1 
983 8209 ______ 
WHITE 1973 Chew Imoala, 9 pa' 
senaer 
station wanon, 
r-h, 
air 
cond. o-s and n-b L e " tha- 5 VY 
1 
Call 624 r f t 9 tc 12 - m a >tf * ’ • 
4 n m 


1967 
4 DOOR CHEVY CAPRICE, 
STEREO, LANDAU TOP. TERMS, 
$750. CALP 986-1745. 
__________ 
1972 FCPD G 'tn Tn-lnn, 2 d- hard 
j 
top, automatic, radio & heater, air 
cond, vinyl top, 
power steering 
and brakes low miles. Lie. No. 
ft EPG R G. Aute Seles 1400 E. 
| 
Mission 423 5400 
___ ___ ______ 
| DODGE 
ChalTenqer 
70. 
RT 383, 
auto, 
vin vl 
roof 
«-s, 
o-h 
atr,* 
radio, xlnt cend. $1950. 624 4S39 
I '73 PINTOS 
! 
warort' 1 
: 
available. 
HFRTZ CORP. ★ 
t v 4' 778 4'$0 or 9*40110 


. sedans, runabouts and 
yr mtchanical Insurance 


SURPRISE THE FAMILY 


WITH A CAR PURCHASE 


THROUGH THE 


PROGRESS-BULLETIN 


WANT ADS 


POMONA DODGE 


WILL LEASf A 


NEW 1973 
DART 


FOR A l LOW AS 
597‘ L . 


C AU >OR FULL DITAILS 
1111 E. Holt 
POMONA 
623-3111 


MAZDA 


Your best car 
to L«a<e 
Tha one with the 
ROTARY ZNGINt 
24 & 36 month 
open end leases 
Ask tor Charles R. Moore 
621-4721 or 983 7202 


UNIVERSITY 
MAZDA 


10440 Centrol Ave. 
Montclair 


1969 PONTIAC 
GTO 


V I engine, power steer« 
mag wheel*. Blue hnlsl 
Lie. 974-GXP. 


i. 4 speed transmission, radio 6 heater, 
with matching Interior. A Sharp Car. 


LEASE a 


1974 IMPERIAL 
leBARON 
(Loaded) 
24 Mo. lease 
183.82 per mo. 
Call Fleet Dept. 


6 2 9 - 9 7 1 1 


POMONA 
Chrysler-Ptymouth 


*1799 
DELAHOYDE 
PONTIAC 


COMPLETE SALES & SERVICE 
5200 HOLT BLVD. 


MONTCLAIR 
CORNER 
HOLT A 
CENTRAL 
6214854 


e s s a - s r — ^ 
1 


S 
' " L ^ ’s ,;...> •■ 


O ^ 
cct |\n*^''cd Ae 


* -* !S S S ? i3?>;S 
gto»'”'® L on o"<he L vii* ' »°". Law 
'0Pr l oneov»'^'SV ,* ^ '* Q 


K , né* 


d «A* “ * 
st,t'<\* ,.v cUS 


ai ê14" 
„ s 
«n0“nC 


•tnwowo»*^, 


Bridge 


Pessimism 
with payoff 


By Oswald & James Jacoby 


Pessimistic 
Pete 
looked 
over the dummy and 
re­ 
marked, “I’m glad a trump 
wasn’t opened. A lucky player 
would be able to set up dum­ 
my’s 
clubs; 
pick 
up 
the 
trumps and make seven. I’m 
going to try to play as safely 
as possible for six.” 
It was well that he didn’t 
try for seven. Actually the 
least bit of careless play on 
his part and he might not 
have made six. 
Pete won the diamond in 
dummy and promptly played 
the ace of clubs. Then he 
cashed his ace and king of 
behrts and led a third heart. 


NORTH 
» 
4 A 108 
f 76 
♦ K 8 
♦ A10 8 6 4 2 
WEST 
EAST 
4 Q532 
44 
? J 4 
V Q10952 
♦ QJ10932 
4 65 
♦ Q 
+KJ 97 S 
SOUTH (D) 
4 KJ976 
t AK83 
4 A74 
♦ 3 
North-South vulnerable 
Weal North 
East 
South 
14 
Past 24 
Pass 
24 
Pass 34 
Pass 
44 
Pas 54 
Pass 
64 
Pass Pass 
Pass 
Opening lead—Q4 


West discarded a diamond 
and pete ruffed in dummy. 
He returned to his hand by 
leading a diamond to his ace 
and ruffed his last heart. He 
led a low club from dummy 
and ruffed it with his king of 
trumps. His last diamond was 
ruffed by the ace of trumps. 
This series of plays had es­ 
tablished West’s queen as the 
high trump but that high 
trump was the only trick for 
the defense. 
A trump 
lead 
by 
West 
w o u l d have defeated the 
slam, but as it was Pete only 
made it because of his pes­ 
simism. 
He has to cash dummy’s 
ace of clubs before leading 
the third heart. Otherwise, 
West would have been able to 
discard his one club and ruff 
the ace. He also had to ruff 
the first club with his king of 
trumps to keep West from 
overruffing 
and 
leading 
a 
trump back. 


Teen Forum 
........ ........... ■ ■ ii— « .— 
i— — !■■■— ■ « 
Best friends 
are hooked; 
now what? 


By JEAN ADAMS 


DRUGS; (Q) I really won­ 
dered how to put this into 
words but here it is. Many of 
my truly best friends are into 
drugs. They turn on right in 
school. 
This is a senior high. T 
can’t tell a counselor or any­ 
one in school because people 
hate finks. If you were in a 
situation like this, what would 
you do? — Worried in Pen­ 
nsylvania. 
(A.) I would hunt for new 
friends who are not into drugs 
and not about to be. I have no 
doubt the school authorities 
knowr 
without 
your 
telling 
them what is going on. Being 
too close to those involved 
might 
case 
suspicion 
onto 
you. 


CHAUVINISM: (Comment! 
Nowadays if a man or boy 
doesn’t agree 100 per cent 
with female liberation, he is 
nlied a male chavinist pig. I 
know a few girls I think 
should to called chauvinist 


5 o w s . 
T h e y 
a r e 
aw­ 
ful.—Disgusted in Delaware. 
(A.) The word “chauvin­ 
ism” 
comes 
from 
Nicolas 
Chauvin, a soldier who over­ 
did his allegiance to and ad­ 
miration for Nepoleon. 
A 
chauvinist 
overdoes 
things. Girls as well as boys 
can overdo things. Girls as 
well as boys should avoid 
overdoing things. 
I wish I knew what your 
specific complaint about these 
specific girls is. 


Slow boat trip 


A ship travels a little more 
than 50 miles in about eight 
tours from the Atlantic to the 
pacific Ocean, through the 
Panama Canal. 


\Ntovi 


¿v a 
\ SD 


wc»tvoos; ; ; - 


I M A 
S 
" 
1' 
* “ 
g A N P 
c a n D l M , L r rt- ' v' " " ^ V" 
► 
v wt <* 
« a -1 ‘" 
!usV 
, i \ t v t 
, 
uw\‘ 
O '- * * ' 'L L y - '* 11* , »»»'»■*'“ . c„«v. t> 
“ 
L \k‘>'n.°L i"""a 


. n 
Savtf* * spnc*à{0<Por«}°“*'S''’ 
Se\ecU° 
' 
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If you're looking for money, 
remember 
there's a new place 
to get it. 


Get There Virsi 


First Up In The Morning. . . Last home at night That’s Air California’s Sacramento service. Air California 
also offers you the only direct flight from Ontario to Oakland. And the best of all services from Ontario to 
San Jo se. 
Want to spend a full business day in the Capitol and still get home In time for dinner? Only Air Cal can do Itl 
Ask your travel agent.