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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • 18

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

it I il 1 i. i cials have agreed that the present Oakland A9. 12, C-l, I 2 school site is not large enough Religious Order Buys uuimi iv uaiiu iui to serve the needs. i I City Will Auctions Six Homes Aug. 27, Six homes which were bought by the! City of Oakland for th Of the approximately $500,000 Doalc Mansion at Oakville Urban Renewal Project needed for replacing the school, the Board of Education has only $200,000 available from the 11945 bond issue.

Plans call for con to make final arrangements for NAPA, Aug. 12 Sale bf the The Oakland City Council has long-discussed opening of Mather St. to Broadway at 51st St. will be auctioned off on 27. grounds for the new" school and a recreation center.

One block old Doak mansion at Oakville to ine mansion was built I in declared its intention to acquire additional property adjacent to struction of the new building in units as other funds become of 10th facing the school, the Carmelite Fathers for juse as 1921 by the late David, Perry The nouses must be moved off ranklin School as the nucleus would be closed. available. a seminary was reported nere today. I the property to clear the way for construction of the new City Planning Engineer Cor In other business, the council Doak, a multimillionaire steel magnate and banker. spent $250,000 on the house, li JT 4 l1 flirt v- i JrjVi, i of the city's first urban renewal project approved an amendment to the A deed filed in the county scheduled to start about Oct.

I i Under a resolution adopted by city's ordinance regulating close recorder's office shown the Catholic Order paid Mrs. Caro out sales which would provide the council yesterday, the city will request the Federal Hous win R. Mocine has estimated that the entire additional block could be bought for from to $300,000. Property facing the school on 10th Mocinf said, would cost about $150,000. The council's proposal will be additional funds for mvestiga ticn.

The present $25 license fee ing and Home; Finance Agency for aid in planning the com Doak died shortly after the mansion was completed and his wife, Freida Vocke Qoak, and her (daughter by a previous mar-riagje. Elizabeth DeHaen, continued to reside there. ISJrs. Doak later married Col. J.

McGill, USMC. Colonel McGill died, and a Louis Albert, auctioneer; of 1013 Clay has been retained by the; city to. sell the houses. The structures will be open Aug. 2p for inspection.

Houses which will be sold, their addresses and the auction times follow: 4430JView 1:30 p.m.; 4432 View 2 p.m.; 4434 View 2:30 p.m.; 4438 View presented to the Board of Edu bined school and recreation facility and in purchasing the necessary property. line Stelhng, wife of Martin Stelling wealthy San Francisco socialite, $60,000 for the house and 28 acres, The fathers will take possession immediately, moving approximately 20 priests and students into the mansion, father Edward Leahy, who directed the for conducting such sales will be upped to $100 with provision for additional $100 payments if deemed necessary by the Chief of police to continue the inves The city proposes to acquire cation Tuesday, together with a recommendation that plans for the new building to replace the condemned Franklin School be modified to conform with the tigation part or all of the block east of the old Franklinj School site, Consideration of the; city's shorit time after her daughter's death, Mrs. McGill sold the ranch to the Stellings. the 20- bounded by 9th and 10th Ave St, 3 p.m.; 4441 View 3:30 purchase negotiations, is due back here this week from the annual appropriation ordinance which would put the budget into nues, Foothill Blvd. and East larger site room mansion has beerif and 4406 Montgomery St, order's headquartersj in Encino 5th St.

to provide sufficient School and. city planning offi-eff ect, was postponed for 30 days. uupicu since ivirs. jvlcixui xett. 14 p.m.

When it comes to DIG SELECTION iiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitfflffliiii'iiiiiii! most everyone comes to Capwell's 4 ATOM SMASHER A 3.000,000-volt atom imaiiiu which will Installed at Shall Development Company's Emeryville laboratory will-be in a two-story building. The volt-oae Generating column will be on the upper floor and New give material being exppeed to radiation will past below. An 9 lectric charge prayed on a fasimoving belt (1) carried to the top of the column and transferred to a terminal (2). resulting in a great voltage difference between the upper and lower ends of the machine. Charged! particles leave the terminal through a heated cathode (3) and hurtle downward along the only possible escape route, the high vacuum tube (4).

where they are accelerated to almost the speed of light. A funnel-like attachment. (5) directs the particles precisely on to the material being Irradiated, which is passed through the beam on a conveyor belt (6). I I torso the campus ill 1 end twill EARLY BIRD COAST TO COAST Blind Pianist Refuses! a New Whalspim jersey Chance to Restore Sight dirQGGQS by EDebby By HY GARDNER co-ordinate, as expected, Iswil be free? to 'do a show on Broad each way one of these days. Thanks Thalspun (Orion -wool) zephyr jerseys 1 warm without weight! Keep pleats and shed Wash like a dream! Include red, brown, peacock.

1 0-1 8 in group. ior your interest. oi Calling all college gals! Capwell's Hat Box has Just the hats to makejyou happy! Cloches, fezzes, derbies with high eye-cue in fabrics you love to touch, and wear! Chenilles, velvets; and beavers. In fall colors dark to brilliant! Come, see what a new and knowing array that anticipatesyour every wish! OAKLAND, HAT BOX, SECOND FLOOR WALNUT CREEK, MILLINERY, SECOND FLOOR 8.99 I fI -Vil THE frIP-OFF: "The Depart ment of Htalth, Education and Welfare will import $300,000 casual Presses, capwell's fashion floor the second, 10th stores worth of rhesus monkeys from Pakistan for use in the Salk for Us 4cryUt tbtt CHECK-UP: "There are; no plans, so far as I know, to pur NEW YORK; Aug. 12 THE TIP-OFF: "Pianist George Shearing has rejected an open ation that, he was told, would almost certainly restore his sicht" THE CHECK-UP: "Yes, it's true," he admits.

"I have my wife, my daughter, my business, and I'm happy with them, so it wouldn't make much difference. As I am now.j I meet people and I can judge them by their characters, not by the color of their skin. I can tell now whether they are black or white inside and it doesn't matter that I can't see what they are on the outside." .1 I THE TIP-QFF: "Justin Turner, who collects rare manuscripts in Washington, paid $2,000 for ex-President Truman's blistering letter to "Washington Post" music critic Paul Hume, who criticized daughter Margaret's THE CHECK-UP: "Sorry to say I never heard of chase monkeys from Pakistan for the department in i the ML amount of $500,000," informs Carl L. Larson, director of the Division of Biologies Standards "with present or even antici pated facilities, the quantity monkeys purchasable for this sum woiild far exceed our abil ity to handle them. It is possible of course, that the State, Depart ment may be negotiating on behalf of interested purchasers but whether this is) actually so or not, I do not know." ooo THE TIP-OFF: "Maria Riva Justin Turner," advises Paul.

"Must be nothing in the report" THE TIP-OFF: 'The F.B.I, had a profit of more than 1 i actress daughter of Marlene Dietrich who is now in summer hits a full schedule for the fall but. Ays she; can hardly I OAKLAND ONLY 000,000 last year; one of the few government agencies to show a wait for the day. when she quit show business." THE CHECK-UP: "Yes, that's what I'd love to do," Miss Riva agrees "When I'll have enough money to quit acting and just sit bac Made to cling! DuaafllreD'-bcacCx and live that will be the day profit." THE CHECK-UP: "As i result of F.B.I, investigative efforts in the fiscal year of 1954, an amount of $82,283,130 was returned to taxpayers in the form of fines, savings, recoveries and Renegotiation Act claims adjusted in favor of the government. This amount exceeded our expenditures from appropriated funds for last year by $5,291,588. With every good In the meantime, however, I'll Smart back line do TV work in the fall, have movie pending, and there's.

expect to bring: out a line dresses in the fall fthat I de new suede pumps signed and which will bear my name. ooo! each IaS: I THE TIP-OFF; "Dr. Norman Vincent Peale' (whose column appears in the Tribune on Sun pair days) has a new potential seller up his sleeve; titled- 'In EDirinc Messages fori Daily Liv ing, it Will be published by Prentice Hall in September. THE CHECK-UP: I "Yes, it Fall hails this as the soasbini's (pelT cocafi' You'll love the loo the feel, the price of this(coat with new true," agrees Miss Julie Harris (not the actress), of Prentice Hall, "the approximate date of wish. Sincerely, (signed, J.

Edgar Hoover." THE TIP-OFF: "The Los An- gelcs Society for ths Prevention of Cruelty 10 Animals offers free psychoanalysis to canines." THE CHECK-UP: wish to inform you that we have no such type of set-up in the organization," writes George M. Crosier, general manager of the society's Los Angeles branch. "Some agp we contemplated such a department, but found it not easmle, and consequently dropped the whole program." ooo THE TIP-OFF: 'Television's Our Miss Brooks Eve Arden, is mulling over a Broadway play." THE CHECK-UP: "I -can say that I have been looking for play which would be right for me," notes Miss "but such properties are not easily found. Do you have any suggestions? At present I am shooting Brocadt 10.95 Cling's the thing Foot Flair pumps do beautifully! "Brocade" and "Eyelet" two open, airy flatterers from Capwell's exclusive new fall collection. Sleek and chic in black suede halter-back style that clings at every step.

CAPWELL'S SHOE BOX, STREET FLOOR OAKLAND ONLY publication is 19. Davy Got a Bad Vot large collar and push-up sleeves! in shiny black Velgdra Vel-Va plush, or cashmere-wool Kash-Ora in honey blue, grey or camel. 5 to 15. i In Congress Race MEMPHIS, 12 U.S. Marshal John T.

Wjl liams confesses that he had 1 COLLEGIENNC COATS, CAPWELL'S FASHION FLOOR THE SECOND, I0TH STORES great-uncle who' was a lawbreaker. The kinsman voted when he was only 18 for Davy Crockett. Williams said the uncle, Bob Hall, who later hunted and Wlten it comes to TSJtv -HAin STYLING most everyone comes to Capwell's, both stores the feature motion picture of fought with Crockett, told iff Oiir Miss we expect io his autobiography of voting for itnish that just in time to start Crockett when the frontiersman ran for Congress, although Hall Oakland: Monday, p.m.; other days, Broadway at 20th; TE 2-1111 Jilminf the new season s. However, my STORE HOURS: p.m., Walnut Creek: Fridays other days, South Brodway; YE S-111I wss not of voting age. hopes, plans nd commitmenU i.

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
2,392,182
Years Available:
1874-2016