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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 14

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY MORNING. MAY 21. 1937. PART 14 THE MAY COMPANY SAN JOAQUIN NEWS Family Will Visit Duke Chest Backers Redbanks Acres DUCING OUR THREE DELICIOUS Sold at Visalia Kent and Sister May Join Windsor and Bride at Biarritz Hold Meeting Bokersfield Civic Committee Outlines Organization Plans 7 7) MONTS (France) May 20. (P) Members of the British royal family will meet the Duke of Part of Big Orchard Holdings Taken Oyer by Fresno Company VISALIA, May 20.

(Exclusive) Purchase of 1200 acres of the Redbanks Orchard Company tract by the Fruit Growers' Windsor and Mrs. Wallis War llji BAKERSFIELD, May 20. (Ex field on their honeymoon, a elusive) Further consideration friend of the former British of the Community Chest propos monarch said today. al was held tonight at a meet Although none of the Duke's ing of the civic committee named relatives will be at the wedding, Service Company of Fresno was disclosed today with the filing several weeks ago. By-laws pre set for June 3 at Monts, several pared by Superior Judge W.

L. of the deed. Revenue stamps in of them will see the couple dur Bradshaw were adopted. dicated the consideration was LIME ORANGE LEMON J. J.

Wilt is chairman of the $100,000. committee. Other members in- R. S. Thomas, secretary of the ing a three-day stay at Biarritz, French resort on the Bay of Biscay, this Informant said.

KENT EXPECTED He did not disclose what members of the House of 'Windsor elude Bruce Payne, Judge Fruit Growers' Service, will man Bradshaw, Alfred Harrell, Rev, age the property, located northeast of Ivanhoe. S. Donat, Paul Newell, S. Dillon, Asa Dimon, Max Shaf- Other large parcels of the frath, Mrs. E.

Symmes, Fred will be there, but it is thought probable that Edward's favorite brother, the Duke of Kent, will be "one of them. Patterson, John Compton, Wal ranch sold recently include the Natomas vineyard to Kasparian Brothers, growers and shippers, for approximately 160 ter Buaas, John R. Isaac, J. A. Dennis, Mrs.

S. A. McCormac, From Biarritz, the Duke and his bride will embark on a yacht Mrs. Margaret Follansbee, Mrs. acres unimproved land to L.

E. Parker and other tracts to truck for Jugoslav waters, visiting the Dalmatian coast, where their romance flowered last summer. gardeners. Theron McCuen, Mrs. Sidney II.

Greeley and Miss us tin a Ilendsch. The Redbanks ranch, formerly Then they will go to Wasser- one of the largest fruit holdings I in the San Joaquin Valley, com-1 Others included in the meeting tonight as representatives of civ prised 3700 acres. It was famous I ic organizations, were V. N. for early shipments of plums I Mickelberry, Otto R.

Kamprath, and peaches. Jerry Stowe, Ben Holloway, Frank Harrison, Mrs. Randall Sylvester, Charles Wakefield, Fred Nighbert, Harry Hetzler, Frank Estribou, II. A. Spindt, VISALIA SERVICE SETS MANY JOBS M.

T. Christiansen, Bill Hurley, Mrs. Robert J. Hodson, II. K.

Dickson, Gus Vercammen, Ray AT LOW COST RATE Carlisle, Glenn Stanfield, Louis J. Banducci, Miss Beth Dye, Mrs. Claude Blodgett and J. Ha- VISALIA, May 20. (Exclusive) berfelde.

leonburg Castle on the southern border of Austria, to remain three months, his friend said. WANT CHURCH RITES The Duke and Mrs. Warfield are not completely satisfied with having merely a civil ceremony and are seeking an ecclesiastic of the Church of England to marry them, said Herman L. Rogers, their spokesman. The civil service is to be conducted in the music room of the Chateau de Cande, where the two are staying, with Mayor Charles Mercier of Monts officiating.

If an Anglican churchman is found who will perform religious wedding, it will immediately follow the civil rites, Rogers said. RECTOR CONSIDERED Rev. C. H. D.

Grimes, rector of an Anglican church in Vienna, has been under consideration, usually reliable sources said, although it is not known whether he will accept. It was in his church that the Duke read a scripture lesson from the lectern last December. Since its inc 'on in August, 1933, to the ot of this year, the National Re-employment Service employed 19,867 men New Police Board at Fresno Paves ij72 ptW Hello ors ond heoded tor says pleosmg comedio" Oron9i cod develop these colors dyed, si be. us Fabrics a resu. and women in Tulare county, with pay roll in excess of This report was made today by County Manager Floyd Way to Shake-up FRESNO, May 20.

(Exclusive) Rumors of a probable shake-up in the police department gained ground today as the City Commission confirmed Mayor Ho- Byrnes to the Board of Supervisors and Visalia. Chamber of Commerce directors. Per capita cost of these placements was considerably below the national average and amounted to only. 18 cents per job on the basis, of. cpntribu-tions by the county toward the expense of maintaining the mans appointment of a new TAILORED "wingstrut" suit in orange or lemon.

Also in orange blossom white. Man-tailored extremely smart. Model sketched 16.75 Tulare Employees Get Pay Restored has ev m. Police Commission, of which he serves as chairman. The new commissioners are F.

G. Everts, G. F. Thomas, Fred L. White, J.

E. Rodman and Louis Slater, all of whom were active in Homan's campaign. Homan's deputy, James B. Mayer, was appointed secretary. The City.

Commission also appointed Ward B. Minturn, F. W. Docker and J. E.

Welden to the Civil Service Commission. Frog Hunter Drowns MODESTO, May 20. (JP) Aaron Millard, 27 years of ace. VISALIA, May 20. (Exclusive) Tulare county employees today of Patterson, drowned late last night in the San Joaquin River when he fell from a rowboat while on a frog-hunting trip.

OBITUARY Third Lee Roy Polcar Mrs. Etta T. Kellogg Last rites for Mrs. Etta T. Kel Funeral services will be con ducted today in Santa Fe, N.

for Lee Roy Polcar, former Los logg of 1112 West Forty-seventh street, widow of Charles D. Kellogg, will be conducted today at Angeles newspaperman, who died there Wednesday evening. 2 p.m. at the Bramble Funeral Interment will be in Omaha, Home, 1816 Toberman street. In face partial restoration of salaries as the result of an ordinance just adopted by the County Board of Supervisors.

Increases in most instances amount to 50 per cent of the cut imposed in 1933 and become effective July 1, start of the 1937-S8 fiscal year. County officials predicted the salary raise will not add more than 3 cents to the tax rate. The slashes ranged from 414 to 33'4 per cent. Man Dies in Cliff Fall Chasing Hat GENERAL GRANT NATIONAL PARK, May 20. (Exclusive) Charles Boyle, 43-year-old worker, fell to his death over a 250-foot cliff in King's Canyon chasing his hat which blew off his head, authorities announced today.

Fellow -workers reported the hat-chasing episode and said they had seen Boyle on the edge of the cliff. His body was found on' a ledge halfway down the canyon. He leaves a brother in Los Angeles. terment will follow in Inglewood Park Cemetery. Resident of Los Angeles for nearlv a half rpn- where he started his newspaper career under his brother, the late Joseph Polcar, for many years managing editor of the Omaha World and the Omaha Bee.

tury, Mrs. Kellogg came to Los Angeles in 1888. She was born in Bedford, Iowa, January 1, 1864. Mrs. Kelloeir leaves two snns The widow, Mrs.

Hazel Tol-car of Alhambra, left yesterday for Santa Fe and Omaha. Mr. Polcar, a World War veteran, and four daughters, Joseph H. Keuogg and Charles D. Kellogg, Mrs.

Eiffel K. Bessonett, Mrs. Grace L. Beutler. Mrs.

Ruth r. held executive positions on Seat Turner and Mrs. Gladys K. CULOTTE SUIT with separata tailored shirt in rough linen. Can be had in tither lemon or lime.

An outstanding two-piece model is priced at gej L.emz, an or los Angeles. Noah Webster Beery Funeral rites for NTnah vh. 0 LINEN PLAY SUIT in orange, lemon or lime, in sketch at 3.95. With this a smart girl wears a flannel guayaberra shirt 7.95 ster Beerv. 86 vears of CROCHET CLOVES are very new.

Wear lemon with lime or orange; lima with lemon or orange; era ge with lemon or lima or any one with white. "ycj eran Missouri police offirpr anH father of Wallace and Noah SMs tle and New York papers after leaving Los Angeles four years ago. Dr. Theodore Kemp Dr. Theodore Kemp, 69-year-old retired Methodist Episcopal minister and former president of Illinois 1 a University, Bloomineton, 111., died yesterday at the Methodist Hospital after an illness of ten months.

He leaves one sister, Mrs. Julius II. Winkler, and two nieces, Mrs. Lois W. Koehler and Mrs.

Ta-coma W. Ford. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Little Church of the Flowers, followed by interment at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Beery, motion-picture actors, will be conducted at 10:30 a.m.

today from the Wee Kirk o' the Heath-er, with interment following in Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Beery died Wodnosdnv at New Highway Approved PORTERVILLE, May 20. (Ex-elusive) The City Council today is on record approving a new northern highway approach Into Porterville, submitted by the State Division of Highways. The new biennium budget carried some $40,000 for the project, connecting Main street with Sunny-side avenue on a wide curve. vr home, 1120 North Hudson ave nue, lie was for twenty-six years a police officer in Kansas City, retiring in 1916.

He had lived In California, twenty-two years. He leaves three sons, Wallace, Noah and William Beery, all of Beverly Hills. Mrs. Bessie B. Benjamin KING REVIEWS NAVAL POWER; AMERICAN WARSHIP STANDS BY Last rites for Mrs rtnacu Benjamin, 40 years of age, club FRUIT BLOSSOM bouton-nitres combine many types of fruit In which orange, lemon and lima add the real flavor.

A number of styles priced tjQc woman ana native daughter, will Victoria and Albert for the re ne conducted today at 3 p.m. from Grace Chapel, Inglewood Park Cemetery. Ruppe morticians will be in charge. Mrs. Benjamin died Tuesday at her home, 1105 West Fifty-ninth Place.

Shu W39 nrftuA try Woman's Republic Club, and ran tor city council in the south-west district during the past year, view. Beside him were Queen Elizabeth and their 11-year-old daughter, Princess Elizabeth. The King wore the uniform of an admiral of the fleet The yacht made a two-hour Journey to receive the salutes of 140 British war vessels and seventeen forelga fighting ships, headed by the United States battleship New York. MANY OTHERS There were 300 other' craft, moored In nine long lines. Admiral Hugh Rodman, member of American commission to the coronation, was among the foreign admirals who were received bv the Kna la for nnH Elizabeth M.

Conrad Elizabeth M. Conrad. 4S" LINEN IACS art extrem.ly smart in the new citrus shades of lemon or lima. A clavtr ae cent to orange blossom whit and priced at PORTSMOUTH (Eng.) May 20. W)Klng George VI, who knows Bea life at first hand, reviewed his navy today in the colorful and thunderous pageantry of flagged warships, royal gun salutes and the cheers of an estimated 1,000,000 spectators.

It was a return to the formality and ceremony of the days of the monarch's father, the late King George and a departure from the breezy, informal manner in which Edward VIII, now puke of took such tasks. STANDS OX JIRIDGE The King who was a eub-lieutenant on a warship in the World War's greatest naval battle at Jutland in 1916 stood on th brldgn of th royal yacht Of age Of 4620 Ancrff. Vlcta Boulevard, died yesterday. A resident or los Angeles for twenty-five years; she was active In missionary work and the Parent-Teacher Association. he leaves her husband, Pcb R.

Co rad: two sons, Edward and Don, and one sister, Mrs. W. E. Con TWO-WAY stretch swim suits set off your tanned skin to excellent advantage. Available In citrus colors of orange or lemon 6.95 SLACK SUIT In "wingstrut" in lemon or orange blossom white.

Outstanding model with jiggar coat. a a a not sketched 10.95 to 14.75. Model sketched 17.75 PALTER DE LIS0 toeleti and heellets tie oxford in fabric The model In orange blossom white is 13.75. In any citrus Color, dyad, priced tj presented with medals commemorating the coronation. rad.

Funeral sen-ices will be private..

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