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The Press Democrat from Santa Rosa, California • 10

Location:
Santa Rosa, California
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Vital Statistics Births, Marriages, Divorces, Deaths BIRTHS STUMP To Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stump, Petaluma, in Sebastopol Palm Drive Hospital, Sept 17. 1958, a girl, 6 pounds, ounces. NESBIT To Mr Mrs.

John Nesbit, Ford, Sonoma County Hospital, Sept. 18, 1958, a girl, 6 ounces. RAWFORD To Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crawford, Santa Rosa, at Santa Memorial Hospital, Sept.

19,01858, a boy, 6 pounds, 141 ounces. To Mr. and Mrs. Roger Tokunaga, Santa Rosa, at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, Sept. 20, 1958, a girl, 6 pounds, 12 ounces.

ONAHUE- -To Mr. and Mrs. Russell Donahue, Santa Rosa, at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, Sept. 19, 1958. a boy, 7 pounds, 7 ounces.

PNER- To Mr. and Mrs. Hollie Tepner, Santa Rosa, at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, Sept. 19, 1958, a girl, 6 pounds, ounces. ODSON To Mr Mrs.

Earl Santa Rosa, at Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, Sept. 18, 1958, twin girls, 6 pounds and 7 pounds, ounces. ALVINO- TO Mr. and Mrs. Gene Malvino, Santa Rosa, at Santa Memorial Hospital, Sept.

19, 1958, a girl, 6 pounds, ounces. MARRIAGE LICENSES ENIADES-A'SKIN John Peter Beniades, 39, and Frances Anna Askin, 53. both of Santa Barbara. Isador Carlo Dotti, 26, of 1040 Irwin Lane, and Nola Marie Planer, 22, Foresville. Gay Frost, 72, El Paso, and Lucy Livania McBride.

69, of 612 Bobelaine Dr. KORZA-VILLARREAL Joseph Korza, 21, and Christine Shirley Villarreal, 20, both of Petaluma. D- Karle Linke Loveland, 42, of 62 Middle Rincon and Margaret Lane Keeley, 42. of 748 Church St. GRAHAM Clifford Leon Moyle, 21, and Shirley Jean Graham, 21, both of Cotati.

DIVORCE COMPLAINTS FILED CRAIN- Mary Jeannette vs. Chester Thomas. Grounds. cruelty. Couple married Nov.

28, 1957. Sparks, Nev. Plaintiff seeks custody of two children. DOKE Rose A. vs.

Jack C. A. Grounds, cruelty. Couple married FA MER'S DRUG STORE Democrat, Santa Rosa, Sept. 21, 1958 Funerals Aug.

2, 1952, Reno, Nev. Plaintiff seeks custody of child. THOMPSON 0. H. vs.

Mildred. Grounds, cruelty, Couple married 10, 1943, Reno, Nev. DAVIS- Bonnie vs. Robert, Grounds, cruelty. Couple married Feb.

27. 1955, El Verano, of SMITH- -In Healdsburg, Sept. 18, 1958. James Boyce Smith, beloved husband of Gertrude M. Smith Healdsburg, beloved brother of Mrs.

Reschen James of Chicago, Mrs. Gretchen McPhate of Alberquerque, N.M.. and Mrs. Gladys Curl of Louisville. Ky.

A native of Kansas. Age 62 years. Friends are invited to attend graveside services Monday morning. Sept. 22, 1958, at 11 o'clock at Sunset View Cemetery, Sunset Berkeley, Calif.

Interment Cemetery, Berkeley, Friends may call at the of Fred Young and Healdsburg until Sunday evening. CASSIDY- In Santa Rosa, Sept. 19, 1958, Michael Joseph Cassidy, beloved husband of Lucille B. Casof sidy, Anna Santa Mae Rosa; -Marschalk, loving Florence Worth, Verna Bell. and James Cassidy, all of Los Angeles; Catherine Marth, Chicago, Thomas Cassidy, Trevor.

and John Cassidy, St. Petersburg, a native of Kentucky. Friends are invited attend Funeral Monday, Sept. Assembling at the Eggen Lance Mortuary, thence to St. Eugene's Catholic Church where a Mass of Requiem will be offered for the Repose of his Soul.

commencing at 9:30 o'clock Recitation of Rosary at the Mortuary Sunday night at 8 o'clock Interment and concluding services at Golden Gate National Cemetery, San Bruno, at 11:45 a.m. BUTZ- -In Santa Rosa, Sept. 18, 1958, Herman Butz, dearly beloved husband of Martha Butz of Santa Rosa, devoted father of Alfred Butz of Santa Rosa and Walter Butz of Kingston, Jamaica, British West Indies, loving brother of Albert Butz of Wisconsin and a sister in Arkansas. Also survived by five grandchildren. A native of Germany.

Friends are respectfully invited attend funeral services Saturday, Sept. 20 at 10 a.m. from the Santa Rosa Memorial Park Mausoleum Chapel. Interment in the family plot, Odd Fellows Lawn Cemetery, the Rev. Harry Miller officiating.

Arrangements under the direction of Lafferty Smith Memorial Chapel. DAYTON-In Sebastopol, Sept, 20, 1958. Jack Dayton of Sebastopol, beloved husband of Gertie P. Dayton of Sebastopol; loving father of Stanley J. Dayton of Santa Rosa; Wallace E.

Dayton and Wilmer W. Dayton, both of Sebastopol, and Mrs. Vivian G. Carr of San Quentin; loving brother of W. K.

Dayton of Monterey. Mrs. Hazel Rego Sac- of Santa Clara and Mrs. E. rider of Castro Valley.

A native of Duncans Mills, age 64 years. Friends are invited to attend funeral services Tuesday, Sept. 23, at 1:30 p.m. from the chapel of the O'Leary Funeral Home in Sebastopol. Interment, Sebastopol Cemetery.

Jack Dayton SEBASTOPOL -Funeral services will be held Tuesday for Jack Dayton, 64, who died yesterday in a Sebastopol Hospital. Mr. Dayton was a native of Duncans Mills. He was the husband of Gertie P. Dayton, Sebastopol, and father of Stanley J.

Dayton, Santa Rosa; Wallace E. Dayton and Wilmer W. Dayton, both of Sebastopol, and Mrs. Vivian G. Carr, San Quentin; brother of W.

K. Dayton, Monterey: Mrs. Hazel Rego, Santa Clara, and Mrs. E. Sacrider, Castro Valley.

Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday from the chapel of the O'Leary Funeral Home in Sebastopol. Burial will be in Sebastopol Cemetery. Erwin Wiesner Funeral services were held last week in Oakland for Erwin L. Wiesner, 72 year old Sebastopol real estate broker who died in Sebastopol Sept.

9. Mr. Wiesner, a former resident of Petaluma, had lived in Sebastopol for five years. His home was at 1902 Gravenstein Highway South. He was the husband of Mrs.

Anna Wiesner, Sebastopol, and father of Warner Wiesner, Mrs. Ray Slingluff and Mrs. Harvey Tucey, all of Oakland. Silas Thompson UKIAH-Services will be held in Pomona for Silas Marion Thompson, 71, who died Tuesday in a Ukiah hotel of a heart ailment. Mr.

Thompson is survived by his wife Grace and four sons: Lloyd and Hadley Thompson, Detroit; Clyde Thompson, San Pedro, and Earl Thompson, Banning. A retired miner, he was born in Hot Springs, Ark. Burial will be in Memorial Cemetery, Los Angeles. The Zimmerman Mortuary, Ukiah, was in charge of local arrangements. Trucker Killed Near Willits WILLITS A 37-year-old Eureka truck driver was killed Friday when his loaded lumber rig crashed into a runaway construetion trailer about 13 miles north of here.

Dead was Joseph F. Luis, a driver for the Don Adison hauling firm of Eureka. The California Highway Patrol said the lumber rig was southbound in a construction zone when it approached a northbound dump truck--towing an oiler-trailer. The trailer broke loose from the dump, truck and swerved into the southbound lane, striking the lumber rig head-on. Mr.

Luis' truck rolled over once, then veered to the right and left the roadway. The driver was thrown. A passenger in the lumber truck -Paul Patterson, 28-year-old Coast Guardsman station at Alamedawas slightly injured. The CHP said the northbound dump truck was driven by John D. Robbins, 24, Arcata, driver for the Eureka construction firm of Mercer-Frasier, a firm engaged in road construction work at the accident scene.

Mr. Robbins was unhurt. Funeral arrangements for Mr. Luis are being made in Eureka. Radiological Detection Class Graduates An ambitious program to train (federal employes to operate radiological detection instruments got off to a start in Santa Rosa this week as 26 federal employes completed a monitoring course at the western regional office of Civil Defense and Mobilization.

The graduating class is qualified to teach others to operate radiological monitoring equipment. Eventually, said OCDM. regional director Philip Batson, thousands of federal employes will be capable of operating instruments in case of national emergency. "Radiological defense is now a top-priority program," he said. Instructors were Thomas Huff and Joseph McBride, both of Redwood City, and regional staff members.

Piled Lumber Burns at Mill A fire believed started by a spark from a mill burner destroyed some $235 worth piled lumber at the Omholt Mill, Lone Redwood on Sonoma County Airport property at 3:18 p.m. Friday. The State Division of Forestry units from Santa Rosa and one from Healdsburg controlled the blaze. Joseph Fanucchi Joseph A. Fanucchi, 53-year-old ranch foreman, died early yesterday at his home, 2573 Laguna Santa Rosa, following a brief illness.

A native of Italy, Mr. Fanucchi had been living near Santa Rosa four years. He was the foreman at the Holiday Ranch near Trenton. The Sonoma County coroner's office is investigating the cause of death. He was the husband of Ella Mary Fanucchi, Santa Rosa, father of Gino J.

Fanucchi and Joseph A. Fanucchi, both of Santa Rosa. He also is survived by a I brother and two sisters in Italy and a sister in South America. Services are tentatively arranged for Wednesday from the Lincoln Mortuary in South San Francisco. Local arrangements are being made by the Fewel Mortuary, Guerneville.

US Nose Cone Being Displayed DETROIT (UPI) A Jupiter missile nose cone that was recovered from the Atlantic Ocean after being fired 1,500 miles was placed on public display for the first time Wednesday at the American Rocket Society meeting. SINCE CHAPEL of the ROSES Santa Rosa's Newest Funeral Home Now in Our New Location Private Parking for 100 Cars MEMBER 1225 SONOMA AVENUE National Seictics AT DOYLE PARK DRIVE SANTA ROSA INVITATION Telephone LI 5-0880 REDS OFFER SIX US Asks Return of 17 Airmen From Russia WASHINGTON (UPI) A Department spokesman said yesterday the United States will press again for return of all 17 American airmen downed in Russia this month--not just the six bodies Russia has agreed to return. There has been no indication whether the other 11 men are dead or alive. Russia agreed in a note Friday night to return the bodies of six of the men who were aboard an unarmed Air Force transport that crashed in southwest Russia Sept. 2 after being intercepted by Russian fighters.

But the Russians said that they have. "no information" on the 11 other men. The note -handed to Richard Davis, ranking U.S. diplomat in Moscow repeated a Russian charge that the plane violated Russian airspace, and denied that Russian planes intercepted it. Merchant G.

E. Demeo Dies at 69 UPPER LAKE- Gilbert Ernest Demeo, 69-year-old Mendocino and Lake county businessman and former Santa Rosan, died early yesterday at his home in Upper Lake. Mr. Demeo, owner of Demeo's Department Store, Ukiah, and Demeo's Shoe Store and Demeo's Ready to Wear Store, both in Lakeport, died about 3:30 a.m. at his home.

An autopsy was performed yesterday but was not expected to be completed until Monday. He had been suffering from what was apparently a throat infection. Mr. Demeo, a native of New York, came to Santa Rosa in 1907 where his father, Nicholas Demeo, established The Togger 405 Fourth men's wearing apparel store. Mr.

Demeo worked there until 1912, when he went to Pittsburg, where he opened a clothing store which he operated for 20 years. In 1933 he returned to Santa Rosa and later to Lower Lake, where he purchased the Big Oaks Cafe, which he operated for five years. In 1938 he opened the Lakeport to wear store and for a period operated the Upper Lake Cafe. shoe store was opened in 1947 and in 1953 the Ukiah store was established. Mr.

Demeo was a member of the Lakeport Rotary Club, the Footprinters of Ukiah and the Knights of Pythias, Lake County. He was the husband of Edith Demeo, Upper Lake; father of Nicholas Demeo, Half Moon Bay; Mrs. Lillian Sullivan, Mrs. Nancy Benefield, both of Lakeport; brother of Mario Demeo and Amerigo Demeo, both of Santa Rosa; Amadeo Demeo, Oakland, and Rose Demeo, Santa Rosa. Five grandchildren also survive.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday from the Jones Mortuary in Lakeport with the Rev. Wilder V. Immel of Lakeport Christian Church, and the Knights of Pythias officiating. Entombment will be in the Upper Lake Cemetery.

Electrical Bureau Meets Tomorrow Residential lighting is the topic of a study and discussion course sponsored by the Northern California Electrical Bureau which opens tomorrow night in Ignacio. The Academy of Lighting Arts will include eight two-hour Monday night meetings, drawing enrollees from Sonoma, Marin and Napa counties. The first meeting will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Rickey's El Rancho. Officer Sure He Wasn't Drunk GATESHEAD, England (UPD)James Scott, charged with drivling his roadsweeper while drunk, was acquitted Wednesday although he admitted in court he drank 13 pints of beer the night he was arrested.

"But it would take 15 pints to put me under the influence," Scott explained. A police sergeant testified Scott was "well used to taking drink" so the judge let him off. Appropriate Services for families of religions faiths. VINO Lafferty Smith Memorial Chapel 415 Street, Santa Rosa DIAL LI 5-2921 Longvale Crash Takes Second Life By Staff Correspondent WILLITS A Tuesday-evening highway accident near Longvale has claimed its second victim. Larry L.

Simonin, 16-driver of a borrowed car which careened off Highway 101 and into the Eel River near Longvale about 6 p. m. Tuesday- -died Friday night in a Willits hospital. Another of the car's three teenage ocupants-Teddy Taft Tollisen, 18-year-old Laytonville millworker -was killed in the crash. Mr.

Simonin, also of Laytonville, suffered internal injuries in the accident and remained in critical condition until his death. The third occupant, Norris Ronon ald Crane, 19, Laytonville, suffered a fractured leg. The car, southbound on Highway 101 in a construction zone, apparently went out of control and a plunged over a 20-foot embankment to the riverbank, where it overturned on large rocks. The three occupants were thrown out. The accident occurred about a mile north of Longvale.

Young Simonin, son of Helen Kennedy of Marin City and Roy Simonin, Missouri, was employed by a Laytonville lumber firm. Funeral arrangements are being made at the Anker Mortuary here. Fred Hammell Dies at Age 85 PETALUMA Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow for Fred R. Hammell, 85-year-old Two Rock rancher who died early yesterday in a Petaluma hospital.

Mr. Hammell has been ill sev-. eral years. A native of the Two Rock area, he attended Walker School and Petaluma High School. He operated the Hammell ranch on Meacham Rd.

and, at one time, served as county road master in his portion of the county. He was a member of Petaluma Lodge 30, IOOF, for more than 50 years. He is survived by his wife, Penelope Hammell, Petaluma; his daughters, Doris Brown, Petaluma, and Lois Ottinger, San Francisco; his son, Marion Hammell, Cotati, and his brother and sister, L. B. Hammell and Mrs.

Etta Davis, both of Petaluma. Services will be from the chapel of the Sorensen Funeral Home with burial at Cypress Hill Memorial Park. Building Code On Agenda The Sonoma County Supervisors will try again on the building code issue Tuesday, the last day they can place it on the November four general election ballot. The supervisors eemed almost hopelesly divided last week when they abandoned a debate on the type of county building regulations to consider, the extent of their application and the way they should be adopted -by referendum or by board action.But the matter is on their agenda for a 3 p.m. discussion Tuesday.

Municipal Into Old The Santa Rosa Municipal Court IN has moved in its entirety into the old Board of Supervisors quarters in the first floor of the courthouse. Beginning tomorrow all Municipal Court business will be transacted in the former supervisors' business office. Court will convene in the supervisors' chamber, revamped to suit courtroom needs. Municipal Court Judge F. Leslie Manker has moved his office from downstairs to County Administrator Neal Smith's former office.

Mrs. Virginia Harlan, a clerk, will Five Hurt In County Accidents Ramon Jones, 30-year-old Graton millworker, was in "fair" condition last night with injuries suffered about 1 p.m. yesterday in an accident southeast of Forestville on Highway 12. He was confined at Palm Drive Hospital, Sebastopol, with a fractured right foot, cuts and bruises, and a possible head injury. The California Highway Patrol said Mr.

Jones' southbound car crossed the center line and collided, head-on, with a northbound car driven by Charles Logan, 17, Forestville. Young Logan, an Analy High School student, and his passenger, Sandra Williamson, 14, Forestville, were injured but not hospitalized. The crash is still under investigation. Two persons suffered minor injuries yesterday in a pair of onecar accidents on Highway 1. Emmett Herod, 48, Vallejo, was injured when the car in which he was riding left the highway, just south of Fort Ross, and plunged 75 feet down an embankment.

The driver of the northbound car -Richard Vance 20, Vallejowas uninjured. Carol Ann Ball, 20, of 720 Cherry Santa Rosa, was treated at Santa Rosa General Hospital for minor injuries suffered about noon when the sports car in which she was riding struck a bank near Portuguese Beach. The CHP said the driver, Vernon Ball, 21, same address, drove over the crest of a hill, saw another car stopped in the roadway, applied his brakes, and slid into the bank. Mr. Ball was uninjured.

Gas Explodes, Boy, 10, Burned A 10-year-old Santa Rosa boy suffered burns yesterday afternoon when a gasoline can with which he was playing exploded. The boy, Frank Fawcett, son of Mrs. Lane, Margaret Fawcett, treated 1009 Santa more was at Rosa General Hospital for firstdegree burns of the face and second burn and third-degree burns on his shoulders and arms. The explosion apparently resulted when a match was lighted near the can. Court Moves Board Room also act as receptionist to the judge and switchboard operator, an addition to the court set-up.

The new courtroom's space is nearly double that of the old cramped-up courtroom downstairs. The clerks now have more breathling space and the new arrangement will elminnate congestion by customers. The State Department asked the Russians Sept. 13 to press a search for the 11 missing men. The Soviets reported earlier that they had found only six bodies in the plane.

The United States has made public the names of all 1 17 men aboard the four-engine plane. But the Defense Department has said it does not know which six were killed. The new Russian note did not give the names of the dead men. It also did not specify how the bodies were to be returned. Quesada May Head Air Agency WASHINGTON (UPI) President Eisenhower will appoint his personal adviser on aviation matters, Lt.

Gen. Elwood R. (Pete) Queseda, to be administrator of the new Federal Aviation Agency (FAA), authoritative sources said yesterday. He also will name James T. Pyle, head of the Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA), deputy administrator.

The appointments will be announced soon, perhaps this week. The new agency, created by Congress earlier this year, in a drive to make civilian military flying safer, will supplant the CAA and the Airways Modernization Board. Queseda, a retired Air Force general, heads both the modernization board and the President's Air Co-Ordinating Committee. Congress established the FAA in the wake of two collisions between civilian airlines and military jets that took 60 lives. The staff of the new agency will include both civilian and military aviation experts to permit more centralized control over commercial, military and private flying.

The FAA also will assume some functions now assigned to the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) principally writing safety rules and standards. Quesada, 54, enlisted in the army as a private in 1924. After graduating from flying school he was commissioned a second lieutenant and in 1951 retired with the rank of lieutenant general. Alice Adams, Petaluma Pioneer, Dies Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow for Alice J.

Adams, 92-year-old pioneer of the Petaluma area who died Thursday at her home at 124 Purvine Rd. Mrs. Adams, a native of Chileno Valley, was the widow of William F. Adams. She is survived by her nephews and nieces, Robert H.

Trumbell, Kentfield; Mrs. Wilbur Kimble, Sacramento; Mrs. George Fitztaves, Long Beach; Ester Waite, San Francisco, and Charles Wooford, Hayward, and her cousins, Dr. Sam Brown and Arthur W. Parent, both of Petaluma.

Services will be at the Parent Funeral chapel with private burial services at Cypress Hill Memorial Park. Pt. Arena Boys Sentenced On Extortion UKIAH-Three Point Arena boys, who admitted attempting to extort $75 from a 51-year-old Gualala man, have been fined $25 each and placed on probation for six months. The boys, ages 15 and 16, admitted in juvenile court Friday they placed an extortion note i in a car owned by Jerry Gilmore, a Mendocino County road department employe. Gilmore was charged with contributing to the delinquency of minors.

The charge was later reduced to that of furnishing alcoholic beverage to minors, a charge he now faces in Arena Judicial Court. Juvenile Judge Lilburn Gibson ordered that the boys observe a 6 p.m. curfew, report regularly to the probation officer, and pay their $25 fines at the rate of $5 a month. County Thefts Are Investigated Sheriff's deputies are investigating burglaries in Glen Ellen and Guernewood Park that netted thieves an estimated $250. In Glen Ellen, deputies said, the front door of the Rustic Inn was broken in sometime early yesterday and $100 in change stolen from mechanical game machines.

And at the Guernewood Park Grocery a rear-door entry was used by thieves who took liquor and watches valued at $150. Only Three Cases On Disease List Only three cases of communicable diseases were reported by the Sonoma County Health Department for the week ended Friday. They were one each German measles, measles and scarlet fever. Accidents to 12 children treated in two hospitals in the county in the period Sept. 8 through 14 were: Three involving automobiles; one for ingestion of thyroid tablets; two burns; two falls and one each snake bite, dog bite, hand injury and cuts.

Weather Summary SANTA ROSA: High yesterday, 96 degrees; low, 50. Rainfall: To date, .025 inch; this time last year, trace; normal, 0.37. PETALUMA: High yesterday 95 degrees, low 49. Rainfall: season to date, none; this time last year, none. UKIAH: High yesterday 98 degrees, low 48.

Rainfall: season to date, .51 inch; this time last year, none. Prescriptions LI 5-5404 647 FOURTH STREET FLOWERS from TONY express your CAMPIGLIA'S sentiment SHOPS THE FLOWER SHOP 150 Santa Rosa Avenue LI 6-3465 In Sebastopol APPLE BLOSSOM FLORIST 154 North Main Street VA 3-6015 In the Solemn Hours. Flowers are more comforting than words no tribute can be more eloquent or more sincere. In the beauty of flowers is an affirmation of the faith which sustains all who have suffered loss. Sympathy flowers can be sent anywhere by our FTD Flowers-byWire Service.

Dial LI 6-2788 jon's Flower Shop ET 530 Fifth St. Santa Rosa MARKERS MONUMENTS QUALITY with ECONOMY SANFORD Serving the Redwood Empire PISANI BROS. MONUMENT CO. 1475 Santa Rosa Avenue LI 2-6656 Santa Rosa Before Need Experience has proven that it is wiser to purchase cemetery property for cremation, lawn burial or entombment before the time of actual need. How to conveniently make such arrangem ents will be explained to you without obligation on your part by one of our trained counselors.

Just phone or write SANTA ROSA MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY ODD FELLOWS CEMETERY ASSN. Franklin at Silva Avenue Santa Rosa, Calif. Phone LI 2-1580 ZENITH 3D BINAURAI HEARING AIDS DISTANCE! DIRECTION! DISCRIMINATION! HEAR WITH BOTH EARS With Zenith's at-the-ear hearing can enjoy the depth of "binaural" or "bothcar" hearing. By wearing an instrument at each ear, you can better judge the distance and direction of sound -better discriminate the sounds you want to hear. Ideal for many people who have a loss in both ears.

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About The Press Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
914,648
Years Available:
1923-1997