Hi John...I went crazy one time when my 1970 280SE started having all kinds of ignition problems, until I found out that MB had used a whacky early for of electronic ignition where the points were used not to toggle the coil directly, but to activate a power transistor to ground...I removed it and installed a Pertronix ignition and it has never run better. Because you may not want to go that route, or have time to order parts, can you just get some alligator clip wires (cheap packs are at Harbor Freight) try running +12 to the coil and the other side momentarily to ground, with the high tension output wire laying about 1/4" from any ground surface and see if you get a spark? Then move on to trying the same thing through your distributor and the point, maybe rocking it so the lobes open and close the points? I usually run some fine emery cloth over the contacts of the points to make sure they are clean and make contact. If that is good, then try connecting the coil positive to your ignition circuit...if it doesn't work, you'll need to verify that the ballast resistor is good, obvious stuff like the fuse, relays and such...don't run straight from the battery long without a ballast resistor or it may draw too much current and cook the coil. (A Pertronix coil can be run without a ballast however.) A good thing to have is a portable ignition aid...this is a self-contained high voltage source you can just hook up to a battery and connect the output lead to your distributor and crank your engine to start. I keep one in every older car I have as an emergency backup...you can find them from time to time on ebay...you'll have to back off your timing, and without an advance system your car won't run great, but you can start and get home, and of course, run it to troubleshoot. I've attached a photo of one. Good luck with your car!