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Honolulu Star-Bulletin from Honolulu, Hawaii • 13

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 0mmmm0m Saturday, Nov. 21, 1964 He efulu Star-Bulletin 11 Demolition Gets Under Way On Lihue Store Building Crowd Cheers as Turkey Caught Downtown on Roof Mateo Pascua Graveside services for Mateo Pascua, 53," of 47-714-B Kamehameha will be held at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at Hawaiian Memorial Park. He died Tuesday at St. Francis Hospital.

Friends may call at Or-denstein's Mortuary between 10 a.m. and noon on Tuesday. Survivors include his wife, Flora, and his mother, Mrs. Paulina Pascua. Pearl City Funeral Home is in charge.

Kam Fat Lau Graveside services for Kam Fat Lau, 71, of 1179 Maunakea Street, will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at Hawaiian Memorial Park. He died Tuesday at Queen's Hospital. Mr. Lau had no known survivors.

Pearl City Funeral Home is in charge of John K. Chun Mass of the angels will be held for John K. Chun, 4 Vz-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence C.

K. Chun, of 624 University Avenue, at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Sacred Heart Church. He died yesterday of bronchial pneumonia at Kaiser Hospital. Friends may call at Williams Mortuary after 8 a.m.

Tuesday. Burial will be at Hawaiian Memorial Park. include: his parents; eight brothers, Bernard. James. Clarence, David, Mark, Thomas, Paul and Francis; two sisters, Mrs.

Margaret Liu and Cathy. Mrs. Albert Wong Traditional Chinese services for Mrs. Albert K. L.

(Rose) Wong, 50, of 1610 Mahani Loop, will be held between 9 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at Nuuanu Memorial Park Mortuary. She died Thursday at St. Francis Hospital.

Burial will be at Hawaiian Memorial Park. Friends may call at the climbed up, and were just reaching for the big bird, when it took off across the street to a roof behind M's Tavern. "Let's call the turkey down," a fireman suggested, and the crowd went "gobble, gobble" Ben Bond, vice-president of Territorial Savings and Loan Association, got a ladder for Loui. The latter, climbed several stories as firemen closed in on the turkey and the crowd cheered them on. "We all reached for the bird, and I got him!" Loui said.

He held a "lucky number" drawing among the restaurant employees, and Mrs. Tai, one of the waitresses, was the winner. the dollar-a-pound offer for the runaway birds. "He isn't worth much any more," mourned Mrs. Barbara a i of 1507 Liliha Street.

Eighteen other turkeys, part of the flock which escaped from a truck Wednesday at King and Bishop Streets, are still unaccounted for. Holiday Mart, which ordered the birds from Parker Ranch, offered rewards to the finders, and has paid $83 to eight persons. ON LEDGE One of he turkeys was first spotted up on a ledge of the Stangenwald Building at about 11 a.m., said Herbert Loui, manager of M's Coffee Tavern. Firemen raised a ladder, Obituaries Akira Hashimoto Services for Akira Hashimoto, 43, of 2445 Huene Street, will be held at 5 p.m. tomorrow at Hosoi Garden Mortuary.

Mr. Hashimoto, a civil engineer with the City and County of Honolulu, died yesterday at Kuakini Hospital. Burial with military honors will be at 10 a.m. Monday at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. He was a member of the 100th Infantry Battalion during World War II.

Survivors include: his wife, Taeko; a son, Garret; a daughter, Donna; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Manzu-chi Hashimoto; two sisters, Mrs. Motohiro Tanimura and Mrs. Yutaka Osumi.

Matsuichi Arakaki Services for Matsuichi Arakaki, 50, of 1733-B 10th Avenue, will be held at 4 p.m. today at Hosoi Garden Mortuary. Mr. Arakaki died as a result of self-inflicted burns yesterday at Kaiser Hospital. Cremation will follow the services.

Survivors include: his wife, Haruko; five sons, Harry, Allen, Dennis. Roy and Richard; two daughters, Sandra and Lillian; two listers, Mrs. Yasutara Nagamine and Mrs. Yoshi-ichi Miyahira. Mr.

Arakaki was a member of Onaha Club. A restaurant manager won a downtown roof-climbing race to capture a turkey, cheered by a crowd of hundreds, at Merchant and Fort Streets shortly after noon yesterday. A waitress later won the gobbler in a raffle and had him in her refrigerator last night, ready for Thanksgiving, before she heard about Dr. Ho-ching Yang NEW YORK (AP) Dr. Ho-ching Yang, 64, a stock broker and board president of the China Institute in America, is dead.

Dr. Yang was forced out of his native China by the Japanese invasion and was prevented from returning by the Communist regime following World War II. He became an American citizen in 1953 and maintained residences in Manhattan and at Rye, New York. He was a physician and medical researcher who chose a financial career late in his life to support his wife and seven children. The Kauai Civil Defense Agency has expressed interest in transforming the basement into a civilian disaster shelter with a new concrete roof.

However, the timetable for the shopping center's development is so far advanced and so tightly knit that it is not believed the shelter program can be fitted in. Diabetes Survey On Garden Isle LIHUE, Kauai Lions on the Garden Island will conduct the annual diabetes detection survey from December 7 through 12. The Lions will be assisted by members of the Kauai County Medical Society, nurses and other volunteers. The survey will be carried out during the afternoons and evenings Monday, December 7, through Friday, December 11, and all day on Saturday, December 12. Plans call for clinics Monday at Waimea, Tuesday at Eleele, Wednesday at Koloa, Thursday at Kapaa, Friday at Hanalei and Kilauea, and all day Saturday in Lihue.

Chuck Matsuwaki, zone chairman for Kauai's Lions Clubs, and Francis Abreu of Wailua are in charge of the LIHUE, Kauai Contractor E. F. Nilson began work Friday on the demolition of the shell of the old Lihue Store building. The reinforced concrete building was an architectural wonder when it was built more than 50 years ago. It has been the center of Li-hue's business district and a major landmark for half a century.

The two-story building will be razed and its basement may be filled in to make room for the next development of the Lihue Shopping Center. The old building lies athwart the site of the proposed pedestrian mall which will be the heart of the $3 million shopping center complex. Man Sur Chung Services for Man Sur Chung, 88, of 1078-A Kinau Street, will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at Nuuanu Memorial Park Mortuary. He died Thursday at St.

Francis Hospital. Friends may call at the mortuary between 7 and 9 p.m. tomorrow and after 9 a.m. Monday. Survivors include: his wife, Un Kyung Kim; three sons, David, Major Donald and Frank Chung; three daughters, Mrs.

Samuel Yoon, Mrs. John Lee and Mrs. Richard Ho. REWARD Mrs. C.

R. Frazier Mrs. Charles R. (Fannie) Frazier, 88, of 1600 Mokulua Drive, Lanikai, died yesterday at Queen's Hospital. She was the widow of Charles Frazier, one time business and civic leader of Hawaii.

Mr. Frazier died in 1954. Services for will be private, the family says. Williams Mortuary is in mortuary after 9 a.m. tomorrow.

The procession will leave the mortuary for the cemetery at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow. Survivors include: her husband, Albert; two sons, Leonard and Bernard: four daughters, Mrs. Alberta Worthy, Elaine, Roberta and Aileen Wong; three brothers, Philip, Harold and Albert Lau; one sister, Mrs. Helen Choo.

LOST NOV. 16, 1964 STRAND OF PEARLS Approx. 108 pearls. Great sentimental value. Vicinity of First Nat'I Bank, Waikiki or Waialae Kahala area Kealaolu Mao St.

or Kahala-Hilton Hotel. Ample Reward. Call Al Hummel 993-911 days or 565-869 evenings charge project. 0l 'Si IITjgiS9iM ii IW r' iir f'" li 1 1 A CONDOMINIUM BEACHFRONT INVESDLLNT OPfTirrsT KUNAPUI pwupi mmmmmsjimmfmmiummjfm TOWZRS 5500 vj-: i OCEANS1DE PROPERTIES. INC.

Developers of these condominium sell-outs fr-i-iriiSiirii iimif hiit' iWiw aitF iryrTiyrraiirgl ni in-m ihltnl Si liiiftL. IHllip 4 It i4f4 ten 1 i 1 tii IS ill LJ rsUif CONDOMINIUM 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT-HOMES ideally located, beautifully designed and priced from $22,950 3 1 (H lj r'i FT1! I 41 a I rZ2 r3 1 lMi fez arau j-Ji Ufa jc flu vli cuas ing price; however, additional financing may be arranged permitting down payments as low as $500 on certain units. Purchasers of apartment-homes make no further payments of any nature until after the completed building is available for occupancy. All funds deposited in escrow will earn interest at the rate of 6. On the basis of a normal 20 down payment, the total estimated monthly carrying charges for a typical apartment range from $203 to $255..

This figure includes payment of principal, interest, monthly maintenance costs, lease rental, and estimated real property taxes. Occupancy is planned for Spring 1966. PROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT. Marina Towers will be maintained and managed by a professional property management organization, Aaron M. Chaney, under contract to the Association of Apartment Owners.

YOU'RE INVITED to see decorator color schemes of appliances, carpeting, counter tops and wall colors from which purchasers will make their selections, and to see a scale model in the Display Center at the site of Marina Towers. Look for the signs at Ala Wai Blvd. and Lipeepee between Kalakaua Ave. and Ala Moana Blvd. LOCATION.

A 65-year lease has been negotiated for this prime location, equally close to both Ala Moana Blvd. and Kalakaua at Ala Wai Blvd. and Lipeepee St. A. condominium development by 0CEANSIDE PROPERTIES, INC.

ISLAND ARCHITECTS ENGINEERS, ARCHITECTS WALTER LUM ASSOCIATES, STRUCTURAL ENGINEER WALKER-MOODY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL CONTRACTOR SALES AGENT HUGH MENEFEE, INC. PHONE 962-177 CONVENIENT LOCATION. The four, 16-story courtyard garden towers of Marina Towers occupy a corner location on Ala Wai Boulevard between Kalakaua Avenue and Ala Moana Boulevard which overlooks the Ala Wai and the Yacht Harbor, with panoramic views Ewa, of the city, the sea and Waikiki and the Koolau mountains. Here is "in town" living convenience. Owner-residents of Marina Towers are.

within minutes of employment, shopping areas, swimming and sailing, beaches, parks, churches and the varied entertainment Waikiki offers. Children 10 years of age and older are welcome in Marina Towers. THOUGHTFUL PLANNING. To provide maximum value and living area, the 109 apartment-homes are exclusively two-bedroom, Vz bath units. The master bedroom is air-conditioned and the second bedroom has its own private lanai.

The spacious living-dining room measures approximately 18' 20'. The designers have incorporated every conceivable convenience, fixture and design into plans to provide the finest, carefree, most enjoyable living possible. The electric kitchen is completely equipped with the latest available appliances. In addition to generous storage areas in the apartments themselves, there is a convenient storage room on the ground floor. The ground level area also contains one parking stall per apartment, a meeting-social area and a secluded, generous sized swimming pool.

LOW, LOW PRICES. Marina Towers apartment-homes are priced from as low as $22,950. Price includes the apartment itself, carpets, draperies, ten electrical appliances (built-in range, oven, dishwasher, disposal, water heater, refrigerator-freezer, washer, dryer, Nutone food center and master bedroom air-conditioner), one parking stall, common storage room and all closing costs. FINANCING. 25-year Financing has been arranged with a basic loan on each unit of approximately 80 of the sell bill LI Hi 1,.

ha nai 'ilinMM iimntii. Full Housepower Ll9ht for Livin t58-, I.

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About Honolulu Star-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
1,993,314
Years Available:
1912-2010