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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • 16

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 Oakland Tribune, Monday, Nov. 1952 40 Deputized to 16 en (Uiium. nva i'lilh JflUiJ Keep Strike Peace what irovn rictcurasas aqs pbirio rmi i i i i TEHACHAPL Nov. 3-Forty II I WM.n 3 3 I residents, have been deputized by Hospital have been approved by district directors to avoid a de -I 4 i i i ii i i i i a i rv yv uuuuui- rz i lay in construction ached ules. Police Chief Roland Johnson to prevent further violence between The action was taken in antici pation that a $900,000 bond issue striking and non-striking cement workers here.

for the project will be approved tomorrow- by yjwnship voters. Some 400 members of the inde pendent Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers' Union walked ott their BEE HIVE CACHE vi Not. l-Donice B. Johnson, 40, of 1461 Mariposa Street, was arrested, here yesterday as a suspect in the $4700 robbery of a Marysville supermarket last Wednesday. Police said they found $250 in small change hidden in a bee hive at the rear of Johnson's home.

The coins were rolled in wrappers bearing the names of Marysville business houses, according to officers. PARK SURVEY DUE TOO MANY DUCKS jobs at the Monolith Portland Cement, plant five days ago. CENTERVTLLE, Nov. 3. Emil Anderson, 65, of 1537 Fruit? vale Avenue, Oakland, pleaded guilty to possession of seven duck over the legal limit and Since then non-strikers have Ono Call been beaten when they attempted to pass through picket lines and was fined $100 by Judge Allen G.

Norris at the Centerville Jus i .4 bricks, have been hurled into their homes. One non-striker re tice Court sponded to an attack on his home Does it All Wa rf th comptft feb, plus financing. All work Is fully prttctJ by written worronty. with a shotgun blast WALNUT CREEK, Nov. 3.

A county-wide park and recreation survey probably will begin announced today by Alvln Bur-shortly after November it was FOUTICAL, ADVERTISEMENT Officer Says Russ Threatened Him si! ton, Walnut Creek, chairman of BERLIN, Nov. 3. Ameri can First LieutWilliam Stone FUEE ESTIMATE and PWllim SERUIGE braker, 27, held for six days by the Russians after he wandered off the Berlin International OAKLAND 1 Mu w. 0 Itrttt 1 -toff IV SqV- aZT I BATH KITCHHi REM0DEUK6 SPKMlis Highway, said today the Soviets threatened to imprison him for life. 1 Stonebraker was arrested by the Russians October 26 when he made a wrong turn off the highway from Berlin.

He was released Friday night. the Contra Costa Park Council. The survey is to be financed with- an $8500 appropriation voted recently by the county Board of Supervisors. SCHOOL AGE LIMITS RICHMOND. Nov.

3. Children who reach school age after the first month of the semester cannot be accepted into classrooms. Dr. James H. Williams, deputy superintendent of schools, declared today.

SLIGHT OVERSIGHT MARTINEZ, Nov. 3 Clamor for enactment of a county curfew- ordinance ended today with discovery there has been one in effect for 33 years. mm YiUli stme liiis TAX LAW IGNORED Trlaaaa aaata Perform rs la St. Joph' Mother ChiVa "Autumn High Jink" wlH include (from left). Pat Griffin, Pat McDermatU Bunny Moral." Show wfll bo prntd 8 pun.

Saturday. MARTINEZ, Nov. 3. Twenty five of Contra Costa's 33 school districts are operating on tax mf rates exceeding the legally" al lowed 'maximums' due to con-1 ditions "resulting from Council of Blind Asks Bureau For Vocational Rehabilitation and increased enrollment, This was disclosed today by rn County Superintendent B. O.

mm Wilson in a eview of district tax vice-president; C. Fred Pearson, San Diego, second vice-president; and Walter Dorrance, Pasadena, corresponding secretary.1 rates. NEW CHURCH PLANNED RICHMOND, Nov. 3. Parish ioners of Holy Trinity Eplsco- i i- 1 a.

4. Last Rites Heidi for Daisy Brown Horst pa i nope xo siarc con-j i struction of a new $70,000 church by Easter of next year. HOPE FOR HOSPITAL CASTRO VALLEY, Nov. Last rites for Daisy Brown Horst, widow of Clemens Horst, were held today in her home at 31 Presidio Terrace, San Preliminary. plans for proposed sixth and seventh floors for Eden Francisco.

i 3 The widow of the wealthy hop grower and vintner, died yester day. The Horsts were married in DESKS Oak Walatf Exacwttva Sis SPECIAL Campbill Typawritir Co. 380 17h Strt, CL 1-3843 1893. Mr. Horsf died 12 years ago.

Surviving Mrs. Horst are two daughters, Helen Moya Del Pino and Beatrice Thys of Sacramento, and a son, E. Clemens Horst Jr. 1 taBHaBHBaaMBBMMI Passage of legislation establishing a separate bureau of vocational rehabilitation for potentially employable blind persons was advocated today by the California Council of the Blind. The -council also re-elected Dr.

Newell Perry, 78, retired director of advancedj studies at the California School for the Blind, as 'president at the "close of' a semi-annual convention at Fresno. Bccau.e of the difficult task placing blind persons in jobs, Dr. Perry said, the council feels a separate bureau should be set up. Meanwhile, C. Cope-land.

51. manager of the California Industries for the Blind in Oakland, described the councils demand for his ouster as "another step in a 15-year political fight" against him. They want a blind person in the Job," he The council had adopted a resolution demanding his dismissal on grounds of "Incompetence, misconduct and ineligibility for Since holds a state civil service position, the resolution-was directed to the State Personnel Board- If the board refuses to act. the resolution stated, "we will call upon the state attorney general and the Governor to institute appropriate proceedings in the courts. Copeland was suspended as superintendent of the Oakland Training Center for the Blind after a legislative inquiry last year.

Later he was given his present position. Dr. Perry, who lives at 2421 Woolsey Street, Berkeley, has headed the council since it was organized in 1934. Other officers named at the convention are: Jacobus Tenbroek, Berkeley, first PARTIAL LIST HERE'S WHAT THE GOUERHOR SAID in an official press release last Wednesday: 'THI A0T or PeoP'8 ty referendum would extend to non-I II I I profit private grade schools the same exemption from taxes now allowed to non-profit schools of collegiate grade under our State Constitution. GAS FURNACE I Warmth reaches every corner 0 room lt'9 c'rculatet heat.

1 COAST HEATING I 1 V. AND AIR CONDITIONING lit iJ -f 1915 Acftlin St. TW 3-9765 II "THE I rPICI ATlinr Psed the bill In 1951 with only three I lid LCUIOLH I UKk dissenting votes. (108 ayes, 3 noes.) "I SIGNED It as an act of simplo justice. "IT l'fAIII ll C01t tne Sfate $45,000,000 annually to educate the 1 1 WdUULIi 182,000 children these schools serve and over to construct classrooms for them.

only Q'B'KIU'JGSu" flies the luxurious '''Til ST TAT A I mounr 0T tsxes involved is not great, perhaps not I IIC I I HL more than a total of $750,000 in the entire "AAI ICnnrilA AnnriTCn a similar exemption to schools of VHIsllVIIIIIH UIIHU I bU collegiate grade many years ago. PARTIAL LIST Nat Levy Mrs. M. Lofton W. A.

Luetge Lor en C. Marriott' W. W. Matthews E. V.

McCoy Arthur J. Melka Leonard Miller Ralph Montali Dr. Thomas Nagy R. Wendell Nelson WeHer Noble John E. Morris Leo Ostaggi Mrs.

F. t. Romie Tony Rossi Albert T. Shine, Jr. Ted Springall Joseph H.

Ternes J. A. Walsh W. W. Wentner Elvira Wollitz Walter F.

Lynch Jack F. Bill James F. Carey 1 Oliver W. G. Conn John J.

Cox Dr. Wm. G. Donald F. X.

Flood Norman Gill, D.D.S. Dr. P. C. Hartman John Charles Houlihan Dr.

D. E. Jeffry Rev. Cecil J. Lowry Edward H.

Morrill Osgood Murdock George Nye 1 S. E. Remhard Emile W. Serpa Vince Spooner Cy Stulting 1 Dr. R.

T. Suracl James J. Sweeney, Jr. William M. Valva Henry J.

Weber Mrs. Daisy P. Windsor George Dynan Thomas da rdiner Sol Gilberg Dr. William E.Grenfel! M. Hester Ed Hdgarty Dr.

Robert S. Leet Dr. Harold P. Maloney Dr. Gertrude Moore John J.

Mulvany Philip Murphy Frank Packwood Mrs. T. Rosenberg Dr. Bernard F. Ryan Bernard Silverstein Fred H.

Squire, Jr. Dr. J. J. Sullivan Sherwood Swan Dr.

Chas. A. Sweet H. Waring Dr. Lynn White 'v' Raymond Hall Edwin Heafey I see no'real distinction.

Dr. John H. Bajuk A. T. Beckett Robert A.

Blacow Leroy A. Brown Dr. Roll in Bunch J. A. Cianciarulo Dr.

Walter Colorobe Enrico Dell'Osso F. J. Federighi H. D. Gaeta Raymond C.

Gericke Dr. Riley Green Dr. Carl Hartwig Dr. Lester High Henry Irwin Harvey Johnson Peter D. Juhl N.

Kirsch Emil Kudrna H. "Abe" Lincoln Dr. J. C. Lopes Joe Luke Lukanish H.

Russel Matthew J. E. Mattox James Joseph Mendel G. Minudrf Dr. Boliver B.

Moore W. E. Neilson Dr. H. C.

Nixon Allen G. Norris J. Clayton Orr Harry J. Robinson Alan Rosenbaum Henry Scott Y. Soda John John Valim G.

A. Wardhaugh Ralph Westlake 1 Robert Osborne Dr. John E. Adams Albert R. Bercovich John M.

Bryan Dr. Max A. X. Clark Dr. Robert E.

Cornish Julian Davis Gilbert D. Eaton Wood row W. Alfred J. F. Barrett Dr.

Aldred Berkove Dr, Nat John M. Bryan Felix Chlalvo Leon A. Clarke Lyle Cook Harry Fazakerley Eugene Flood Sam Garfinkle Robert A. Golden Rev. A.

Grlsmore E. B. Hodges Dr. T. Hughes George E.

Jacopettl Paul L. Jones Dr. Wm. J. Kennedy -Frederick J.

Koster Earl Twomey John Keary John Donovan 'ClfLCnV OTATC tne Union except California now exempts from ft.UK. Ml UIHIL taxation the property of these schools. the fast est trans-Pacific STQATOCRUISER SERVICE MATTU TKOta SAN FEANCISCO 6gI am of the opinion now as I was in 1951ihat the action of the State Legislature should he sustained? lJ "SIL1PLE JUSTICE" OAKLANO Why tb Northwest Airfines Rout is shorter Northwest flls th "Great CJrc" rotrt across th Pacific from Sttl to Tokyo, and on to other OfWrrt ctttas. This rout savos mil as and hours, with con-venlant airports and spectacular scenery along the way. UXUry Is the word for travel en the fadusKe northwest Air-Ras "Orient Express-.

Double deck luxury Stratocrujers from SeetOe to Tokyo the world's finest aimners. a tffl rout TEAVtt AO INT, yeer ceeeacXag Airtlne NOCTHWIST AIKUNIS 210 Port Street keeet Ydme 6-4135 ie cw.rt. faw tm SeaMtar flur.iEDAuou;TY CALIFGRIIIANS FOR JUSTICE KI 333 13th Street, Oakland, California FmuI J. Cushinf, Chairmaa).

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1874-2016