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Redlands Daily Facts from Redlands, California • Page 4

Location:
Redlands, California
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Local Notes vm leave Jan 11 Coils stolen Three ignition coils from a 1972 Kawasaki motorcycle owned by Giles Warner, were reported stolen yesterday from the carport area of an apartment complex at 950 Pine avenue, police said. Loss was estimated at $45. 10 cents for Xerox copies Come in and see our Xerox machine at the Daily Facts. No coins needed, we do it for you. The more copies you want the less you pay.

Standard and larger copy sizes available. Mon. through Fri. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Apartment burglarized Thieves last weekend smashed a bedroom window to gain access to the apartment of J. A. Burke, 1000 Pine avenue, and escaped with two television sets, a clock radio and a portable sewing machine. The property is valued at $745, police said. DRD to meet Mario Perez, executive director of Pollution Control Research Institute of Riverside will present a program and film on the use of hydrogen fuel and the hydrogen prototype engines at the Wednesday luncheon meeting of the Downtown Redlands Division of the Chamber of Commerce at the Tartan Restaurant on Redlands boulevard.

Driver hurt when strikes rear of truck A 69-year-old Canoga Park man was injured early Monday when he struck a large truck rig from behind while traveling on westbound Interstate 10 near Yucaipa, according to the California Highway Patrol. CHP officers said John Joseph Lambert was following the truck, driven by Gerald Lee Fiscus of Fontana, in the third lane of westbound Interstate 10 just west of County Line road when he suddenly tail-ended the vehicle at about 6:30 a.m. Lambert was taken to Redlands Community Hospital for treatment of a forehead laceration, the CHP reported. Fiscus was not injured. Missed Papers For delivery correction phone Daily Facts 793-3221 before 6:30 p.m.

weekdays, 3:30 p.m. Saturdays. Founded Yur WILLIAM G. MOORE, Publisher. FRANK E.

MOORE, Editor. 700 Brookslde Ave. at Center, Redlands, Calif. 92373. Second class postage paid at Redlands, Calif.

Legal advertisements court decree 24980. Subscription Rates (in advance): By carrier per month $2.90, three months, $8.35, six months $14.60, one year $32.80. By mall per month $3.40, one year $40.80. Published dally except Sunday and Christmas. Funeral Services UNDER DIRECTION OF imiHOD HARTLETT MORTUARIES 793-2311 Redlands Chapel Center at Brookslde MRS.

BETTY L. LOGAN Services 2:00 p.m. today. ARCHIE L. BENNETT Services 2:00 p.m.

I Wednesday Temple) Baptist Church, Redlands. Yucaipa Chapel 35205 Yucaipa Blvd. WILLIAM R. GROSCHAN Recitation of the Rosary 8:00 p.m. today at the chapel.

Calimesa Chapel 1000 Calimesa Blvd. MRS. ANNA J. COLE Services 2:00 p.m. today Geo Boom Funeral Home, Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

ERNEST E. HOLLOWAY Services 10:00 a.m. Friday Desert Lawn Park. Friends may call at the chapel Thursday noon to 5 p.m. Loma Linda Chapel 24145 Barton Road 1 4 Local Mortuaries for your I Convenience and Economy.

LLU heart surgery team to go to Saudi Arabia The Loma Linda University Overseas Heart Surgery Team will leave for Saudi Arabia on January 11, according to Ellsworth E. Wareham, M.D., professor of surgery and co- director of the team. This will be the sixth time that the team has gone abroad to perform open-heart surgery. This highly specialized group is unique in that they have performed more heart surgeries in more countries of the world than any similar organization. Since 1963 when the heart team introduced open-heart surgery to the newly formed country of Pakistan, the Loma Linda University Overseas Heart Surgery Team has performed surgery in India, Thailand, Taiwan, Greece, and most recently in Vietnam.

"A continuing program in Greece was started in 1970," states Joan Coggin, M.D., associate dean for international programs in the School of Medicine and co-director of the team. "Through this affiliation at the Evangelismos Hospital in Athens, over 800 patients have received heart surgery. The Evangelismos Hospital is now recognized as the leading center in Greece for cardiac surgery." A similar developing program in South Vietnam was cut short by the collapse of the Saigon government last spring. The heart team left Vietnam in February 1975. "The concept practiced by the Loma Linda heart team is that the best way to develop surgery in a country where it has not been done before is to take the complete group of specialists who compose the team," Dr.

Wareham states. "This includes taking cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, nurses, laboratory technicians, respiratory therapists, and heart-lung machine technicians to that country. "We operate under the restricted conditions which they have, and perform various types of intracardiac procedures." By this method each particular specialist or technician observes and takes part in the work of his American counterpart. Thus they become familiar with the problems to be encountered and how they are cared for in their own hospital in their own country. "The teamwork required to perform this intricate type of surgery is learned," Dr.

Warehan says. "It has been our experience that heart surgery performed overseas in this way can be done with low mortality equal to the best centers in the United States." While the purpose of this trip is to develop open-heart surgery in Saudi Arabia, plans are also being made to do the same in the North African country of Morocco. Enroute to Saudi Arabia, the team directors, Vital Records BIRTHS THOMPSON Born, a daughter, Suzanne Annette, to Mr. and Mrs. Garnet D.

Thompson III, 2122 Chestnut street, San Bernardino, Jan. 6, 1976, at Redlands Community hospital. Maternal grandmother is Mrs. Irene Brown, Northglenn, Colo. Paternal grandparents are Mr.

and Mrs. Garnet D. Thompson Northglen, Colo. DEATHS in Riverside, Jan. 4,1976, Laurence B.

Shook, aged 49 years. Deceased is survived by his wife, Mary Shook, Riverside. Funeral services will be held Wednesday, Jan. 7, 10:30 a.m., at the Acheson Graham Garden of Prayer chapel, Rev. Harold Courts officiating.

Interment in Olivewood Cemetery. in Calimesa, Calif. Jan. 4, 1976, Ernest E. Holloway, 760 West Ave.

Calimesa, aged 89 Simplicity, beauty not extravagance UNDER DIRECTION OP JTi F.ARTHUR ORTNER SINCE 1904 221 BR00KSIDE AVE. Ph. 793-2353 MRS. GERTRUDE MILES Services 11:00 a.m., Thursday at the chapel. JOE S.

FORTIN Rosary services today, 8:00 p.m. at the chapel. Requiem Mass Wednesday, 11:00 a.m. at Sacred Heart church. A Cortner service is always a dignified, complete service within the means of all.

years, native of San Francisco, and resident of Calimesa for 15 years. Deceased is survived by his daughter, Carol Wilcox of Calimesa and a sister, Mrs. Hazel Mathieson of Daly City, Calif. Graveside services will be Friday, 10 a.m. at the Desert Lawn Rev.

George Smart, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Calimesa, officiating. Mr. Holloway was employed by American Pipe company as a watchman for 28 years before retiring. He served in the U.S. Army from 1911 to 1914.

Friends may call at the Calimesa Chapel from noori Thursday until 5 p.m. BENNETT in Redlands, Jan. 4, 1976, Archie L. Bennett, 739 County Line road, Calimesa, aged 49 years, native of Missouri and resident of Calimesa for eight years." Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Temple Baptist Church, Rev.

Wayne Nolen, pastor, officiating. Interment in Montecito Memorial Park, Emmerson-Bartlett Redlands Mortuary in charge. in Redlands, Jan. 6, 1976, Gertrude Miles, 515 South Center street, Redlands, aged 83 years, native of Aurora, Missouri and resident of Redlands for 61 years. Services will be 11 a.m.

Thursday at the F. Arthur Cortner chapel, Rev. David Beadles and Rev. Paul L. Kirk officiating.

Interment in Hillside Memorial Park. Dr. Wareham and Dr. Coggin; Dr. Bernard Brandstater, M.D., chairman of the department of anesthesia at Loma Linda University; and Lauvaun Sutton, cardiac nursing specialist, will visit the hospital site and interview Moroccan government health officials in preparation for a visit by the team later this year or early in 1977.

All the supplies and instruments necessary to perform open-heart surgery are supplied by the team, Dr. Coggin says. These include sutures, drapes, oxygenators, medicines, antibiotics, laboratory testing drugs, typing sera, blood bags, heart valves, intravenous infusion solutions and monitoring equipment. This equipment was sent early in December. The most valuable piece of equipment in the shipment is the $18,000 heart-lung machine.

However, there are many other instruments worth from $1,000 to $3,000. The total shipment is valued at $100,000 and weighs nearly six tons. Expenses for the Saudi Arabian trip are being paid for by the Whittaker Corporation of Los Angeles. They operate three hospitals in Saudi Arabia for the Saudi Arabian government. In July 1974, the Whittaker Corporation was awarded a multi-million dollar, three-year contract by the Saudi Arabian government to manage three newly built hospitals in Jiddah, Tabuk, and Khamis Mushayt.

Even though the Loma Linda team will be working at the 135-bed Khamis Mushayt hospital, which is located on a military reservation, they expect to operate on patients from ail over the country. Special arrangements have been made with the Saudi Arabian Air Force to fly patients from various points around the country to Khamis Mushayt which is located in the highlands of southern Arabia. Members of the Saudi Arabian heart team mission include directors Dr. Wareham and Dr. Coggin; Dr.

Berneva Adams, cardiology; Dr. Donald Anderson, anetthesiology; Reidun Asheim, operating room nurse; Dr. Leonard Bailey, cardiac surgery; Dr. Bernard Brandstater, anesthesiology; Glen Gee, respiratory care; Joyce Johnston, cardiac nurse; Dr. Roy Jutzy, cardiology; Dr.

George Kafrouni, cardiac surgery; Dr. Robert Pereyra, cardiology; Dr. B. B. Roberson, anesthesiology; Dr.

Frank Rogers, surgery; Donna Schmidt, cardiac nurse; Galen Smith, blood bank technologist; Lavaun Sutton; cardiac nurse; Judy White, heart-lung machine technician; and Ron Wirsz, respiratory care. The group will operate on approximately 40 patients and will return to Loma Linda about the first of March. Three small fire alarms answered Three small fire alarms were answered by firemen Monday, the first coming at 6:55 p.m. when fire broke out in a trash dumpster in the FedMart parking lot, 531 N. Orange street.

Firemen used 50 gallons of water to put out the fire and no damage was reported. Children with matches may be responsible, firemen said. One engine was sent to the corner of San Bernardino avenue and Orange street when fire broke out in a car owned by Cecil McCorkle, no given address. The flames burned only a few wires under the engine compartment and were put out before firemen arrived. Damage was estimated at $6.

Firemen were sent to the Department of Motor Vehicles when an unattended teapot started a small fire at 9:18 p.m. Someone put out the fire before firemen arrived, according to a fire department report. Damage was limited to a portion of the table where the pot was, firemen said. DAILY FACTS, Redlands, Calif. Tuesday, January 4 A.L.

Bennett of Calimesa dies at 49 Archie L. Bennett, 739 County Line road, Calimesa, a deacon of Temple Baptist church in Redlands, died here Sunday at the age of 49. Mr. Bennett was self employed as a dry-wall engineer and sub-contractor. A native of Missouri, he had lived in Calimesa for the last eight years.

He leaves his wife, Glenda R. Bennett; a son, Jamie Lee Bennett, and a daughter, Susan Darlene Bennett, both of Four brothers, J. C. Bennett of Missouri, Don and Leo of Elmhurst, and George of Sunnyvale, and four sisters, Dorothea Burkhart of Missouri, Opal Boose of Henry, Mildred Utsler of Decatur, 111., and Jane Hall of Atwood, 111. Services will be tomorrow at 2 p.m.

at Temple Baptist church with the pastor, Rev, Wayne Nolen, officiating. Interment will be in Montecito Memorial Park, Emmerson- Bartlett Redlands mortuary in charge. Redlands man held to answer stock charges A 37-year-old Redlands man was held to answer today to five counts of selling or offering to sell securities without a license or without a permit from the State Department of Corporations following completion of a preliminary hearing in San Bernardino Municipal Court. Commissioner Thomas C. Parry ordered Glenn H.

Choate, 1124 Cedar avenue, to return to San Bernardino Superior Court Jan. 16 to answer the charges. Prosecution witnesses testified during the hearing that Choate allegedly sold or offered to sell stock in an auto parts business. Weather Average January rainfall 2.4* Averaqe season for total rainfall 03 Rainfall Temp Hours Sea son Dec. 11.

Dec. 12. Dec. 13. Dec.

14. Dec. 15. Dec. 16.

Dec. 17. Dec. 18. Dec.

19. .59 .51 .56 .61 .67 .70 .71 .70 .70 Dec. 20 65 Dec. 21 64 Dec. 22 62 Dec.

23 66 Dec. 24 71 Dec. 25 74 Dec. 26 74 Dec. 27 79 Dec.

28 79 Dec. 29 73 Dec. 30 65 Dec. 31 56 Jan. 1 54 Jan.

3 57 Jan. 3 62 Jan. 4 69 Jan. 5 66 42 42 38 36 28 31 34 34 35 36 36 36 38 38 37 42 40 47 45 38 27 27 25 27 30 35 .05 .22 1.15 1.37 About People Mrs. Delia Moulton, 243 Fourth street, who was taken to Loma Linda Community hospital Friday following a fall, is now at home.

Owned and operated by the Cortner Family Who Has a birthday Jan. 7th Mark Beguelln Urban Derkum Patrick Haney Clive Hinckley Horace P. Hinckley Craig Ledbetter Oddie Martinez M.S. Mercer Frank Mills William Mills Grant Parrish Robert C. Rosenquist, M.D.

Joe W. Warder Happy Birthday from 11 E. State. Ph. 793-2505 Ah-ooga! Toot your own horn! A low-cost Auto Loan puts you in the driver's seat.

Easy. Convenient. Check it our today, Toots. even on SATURDAYS, 9 a.m. to 1 (itank ly.llaiuh) 200 E.

CITRUS REDLANDS 825-9500 MEMBER FDIC Yburnextdoor neighbor. MENTONE-CRAFT By H.Y.REYNOLDS This Thursday morning and every morning next week (Jan. 12 through 16) Mentone School principal, Orv Nease will be showing the Formula Phonics Video Tapes. This showing is by popular demand and for the benefit of the parents as well as community minded citizens in Mentone. The Formula Phonics program started as an experiment in the school last year and was so hugely successful recording nearly two years reading growth in only one that the entire student body, grades two through, six are currently involved in it.

Mr. Nease feels it would be very worthwhile to share knowledge of how we may better help our children in developing their reading ability and at the same time become something of a "reading community" ourselves. There will be two tapes shown each morning beginning at 8:50 with a brief break between. This will take slightly over an hour and promises to be time well spent, for anyone interested in attending. There will be an E.C.E.

Parent Advisory meeting held tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. in the Faculty room. County Health Nurse Cathy Cunnington will speak on the availability and varied selection of Health Services open to the children of Mentone School. Mr. and Mrs.

Sam Bury, 1317 Tourmaline avenue, arrived home Saturday from a wonderful vacation in the West Indies, their itinerary terminating at the island of St. Thomas on the Virgin Islands. They were gone two weeks and spent 11 days on St. Thomas. They went by air to Atlanta, Georgia, then to Miami, Florida and San Juan, Puerto Rico.

They found San Juan to be of special interest There are several islands in the Virgin Islands group. St Thomas and St. John are the principal ones. On the going trip there were several plane changes, but on the return trip they had a break with practically no changes. On St.

Thomas the Burys were guests of former Mentone residents, Leon and Martha Mulkey and his mother, Alta. The Mulkeys lived in the 900 block of Alta street in Redlands about 1931 and Sam lived with them when he first came to Redlands. The Mulkeys moved to Eugene, Oregon and then to the Virgin Islands, where he owns a boat concession for ferrying passengers from island to island. I had a special interest in the Burys' trip to the Virgin Islands, because I have a niece living there. I had given Sam her address and hoped he would be able to contact her.

The niece, Mrs. Albert (Myra Linn Peck), a former Riverside girl, lives on the opposite end of the island to where the Burys were, but he called her on the telephone and talked with her for half an hour. Mrs. Floyd Harper passed away in a Glendale convalescent hospital September 22. Private burial services were held at Montecito Memorial Park, Loma Linda.

One son, Homer Harper, lives in Glendale. A daughter, Edna Hepburn, lives in North Brunswick, New Jersey. There are four grandchildren. Mrs. Harper and her late husband, Floyd, lived for many years at Agate avenue, Mentone.

He worked as a custodian for Redlands High School until the retirement age. Mrs. Harper, due to ill 1 health, had to leave her home three years ago and lived with her daughter until June, 1975, when a terminal illness confined her to the hospital. Her daughter lived in Oakland until her recent move to New Jersey, due to her husband Jim's job transfer. The Billy Graham motion picture, "Time to will be shown at the Mentone Baptist Church next Sunday evening, January 11.

It is a family film and the public is invited. Mentone Woman's club will hold its first meeting of the new year on Tuesday, January 13. The board will meet at 10 a.m., with a business session at. 11 o'clock. There will be a luncheon at noon and the program will include a game period.

Hostesses for the day will be Erma Robinson, Edna Sams, Sue Newman and Sunnell Starr. Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Balxer and children, Becky and Buddy, returned home Friday from a trip in their Commander motor home which took them into several states. They left on December 20 and stopped at Kingman, Arizona to visit a friend. At Flagstaff they unloaded the articles which the women of the Mentone Baptist Church had made for the Navajo Mission. Continuing on to Yuba City, they went to Cortez in Colorado where they visited friends. At Durango they also visited friends, then turned south to Albuquerque, New Mexico.

At Enid, Oklahoma they visited a brother, then cousins in Newton, Kansas. Their itinerary ended at Kremlin, Oklahoma, where Mr. Baker attended the 35th class reunion of his high school; 11 of the original 16 students were there and one teacher. Enroute home the Balzers attended a family reunion at Hooker, Oklahoma. John Edmond Mason, of Anchorage, Alaska, where he is in the employ of Procter Gamble, wanted to come with his family to Mentone for the holidays, to visit his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Edmond Mason, of 1352 Tourmaline avenue, but he couldn't get reservations on any airline. He was finally able to get transportation to Seattle where they spent the holidays. Mae DeLange and Dixie Dixon visited a sister of Dixie in Las Vegas over the holidays. Mr.

and Mrs. R. K. Ocas (Nettie Hutto) of San Diego, accompanied by their two children, Cindy and Kevin, were here for four days during the holidays visiting Mrs. Ochs' parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Loren Hutto, of 1323 Tourmaline avenue. Mr. Ochs is a boiler technician in the United States Navy. Mrs.

Lucille a lien, 1455 Soffel street, returned home New Year's eve from a 15-day visit in Carlsbad with her son, Dr. Herman Wallen. She made the trip by plane. Dr. Wallen grew up in Mentone and was a practicing chiropractor in Redlands for several years.

His wife is the former Gladys Sutherland, daughter of Claude Sutherland, of Mentone. Dr. Wallen now conducts a chiropractic health center in Carlsbad. This Thursday at 1:30 o'clock at the Mentone Congregational Church, Dr. Anna Dederer, a missionary in Micronesia for 36 years, will be the speaker.

Mrs. Leah Schmitke, who operates a guest home at 2233 Mentone boulevard, recently spent several weeks in Honduras. She hopes to establish an REDLANDS FAMILY NIGHT IS WEDNESDAY At Shakey 's SMORGASBORD NIGHT Skelletti-Pizza-Chicken-Salad-Potatoes El $2.25 Per Adult 5:30 to 7:30 P.M. Children under 12 years 15c per year of age SATURDAY SMORGASBORD Regular weekly prices tefli Served Prom 11:30 to 1:30 836 W. Cotton Phone 793-2351 orphanage in that American country.

The Honduras government has promised to give Her up to a thousand acres of land if shfe will build the orphanage. She plans to build with cement blocks, which she can get in Honduras for 20 cents each, and which cost 60 cents here. She will take asphalt tile from here for her floors. Mrs. Schmitke's protege; Walter Lutz, who is the director of a school for underprivileged boys and girls in Honduras, is due here with a truckload of honey: The proceeds from the sale of honey is one of the chief benefits for the school.

Mr. Lutz needs everything for his school: water pipe, a generator, school equipment, playground equipment. Anyone having things they would donate should call Mrs. Schmitke at 794-1945. I had a brief visit with Gen Schmidt yesterday.

She looked pretty well considering the serious surgery she had been through. I asked her if she was about ready to go back to work and she wouldn't say yes and she wouldn't say no. Don and Gen and their son, Delbert and wife and son Glenn, attended family holiday gatherings with a niece in Upland and a nephew in Ontario. Others coming for the holidays were a nephew of Gen, Mr. and Mrs.

Randy Walker, of Council Bluffs, Iowa. Greens pot Woman's Club will hold its first meeting of the new year on Friday at 1 p.m. Program for the day is playing Bingo. Universal-Rundle resumes work in Mentone plant Universal-Rundle Corporation, a manufacturer of vitreous china fixtures for the; plumbing trade, resumed production in its Mentone plant yesterday after its annual two-! week closure for the Christmas and New Year's holidays. That is the reason for the' noticeable lack of merchandise awaiting- shipment from Universal's loading docks' observed by some area residents, according to Charles C.

Wright, plant manager. Tony Jacinto SAYS: WHYTNSURANCE PREMIUMS ARE GOING UP Our current Inflation Is hitting automobile In-' surance with unusual particularly physical' damage coverages. Auto rates are based on projectlons of repair costs' a year or more In the future, In the past 18 months these costs have: gone up In a spurt of. unanticipated double digit, Inflation. General auto repair costs went up 10.3pd.

In 1974 but. the increase for So-called crash parts was up 31 pd. (crash parts are bumpers, fenders and quarter panels). In 1975 Insurance com-- panles have been playing "Catch but repair, costs have continued to keep ahead of them. By the' end of 1975 repair costs' were expeded to Increase more than 12 pd.

When the cost of" repairing collision damage; goes up, Insurance companies are impeded with, special force, as they pay for most of the accident" damage In the United. States. WHAT IS THE ANSWER: One way Is to driver, more cautiously, par-j ticularly In backing out of parking spaces. The "fender-bender" no longer; exists. Today, a door, fender and quarter panel I damage begin at SawyerCook Issiraace SireU Boids if 12 W.

State, Phone 793-2814 REDLANDS, CALIFORNIA ,1 it A.

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About Redlands Daily Facts Archive

Pages Available:
224,550
Years Available:
1892-1982