Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne

The San Bernardino County Sun du lieu suivant : San Bernardino, California • Page 37

Lieu:
San Bernardino, California
Date de parution:
Page:
37
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

ft -iK i refill 'ivS5 WHERE THREE DIED Searchers look trough wreckagt of a C-47 Air Force transport which crashed near N.C., Airport early Saturday. Three of the four men aboard were killed. The fourth, T. Sgt. Edwin Matthus, staggered dazed and bleeding into the airport to report the crash.

The plane fell in Crabtree Creek State Park while trying for an emeg-gency landing in rain and dense fog. (AP Wirephoto) CD Plans for Food Facilities Are Discussed (This is the week's civil defense feature on teams being formed and trained in Region 8, Inyo, Mono, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, to protect residents in times of disaster, war-c a or natural. Coordinator C. T. Johnson in this article discusses emergency feeding.) Mass care food facilities are a most important part of pre-planned mass care centers in the event of a major disaster.

Such planning must include knowledge of the approximate number of people who must be fed, the personnel to serve and prepare the food, available equipment and a positive and identified source of bulk food supply. In setting up such facilities, existing school cafeterias, church and lodge hall kitchens and similar establishments can be readily adapted and extended for congregate feeding as a part of mass care operations. The responsibility for provision pf such feeding services is charged to city and county civil defense au thorities, and specifically to the mass care supervisor assigned by the welfare services chief. Exist jng organizations such as the -American Red Cross should be lised to organize and plan the city and county feeding services. EATING FACILITIES While an estimated 50 per cent atomic attack will be sheltered in private homes of relatives or friends, a large percentage must be fed in public eating facilities.

An additional segment of the traveling public must be fed in restaurants. Away irom the disaster area restaurants may be able to maintain normal operations if food supplies are adequate and they are not called upon to furnish emergency feeding services to evacuees. In mass care centers, restaurants and other public eating places, simplified menus would be the rule to conserve food and feed the increased number of refugees. Such menus would be dictated by the available food supply. Bulk food supply for mass care will be provided on requisition from the mass care chief, through county and municipal purchasing agents, acting as agents for the state director of finance.

These agents will receive authorization from the appropriate civil defense director, on authority from the regional co-ordinator. Re-supply for restaurants will be Get Absorbed in Your Work and You're 90 Before You Know If PHILADELPHIA (UP) Dr. Henry Augustus Pilsbry, 90-year-old scientist, says the secret of living long is "getting so absorbed in your work that it never entirely leaves you." For 64 years Pilsbry has been active as curator of mollusks at Philadelphia's famous Academy of Natural Sciences. He hasn't given a thought to quitting. "I've got 10 or 15 years' work stacked up in front of me now," said the white-haired scientist with the Van Dyke beard.

"When I get it finished, there will be just that much more waiting to be done." HIROHITO SOUGHT HIM Pilsbry observed his 90th birthday recently at work at his clut- He has explored the Andes, the Australian reefs, the South Seas and Central America during his long tareer as one of the world's leading authorities on mollusks. He has written 30 volumes during of the homeless occasioned by an! birth of Archbishop Phillippe- 'it unfit NUfi ATOOl'APD 11 in mm portrait of Laplene and a map of the territory appear on the stamp. Algeria's stamp is 12-franc brown and marks the 50th year" of the Sahara Companies. The heads of a camel, an Arab and a French soldier are depicted. Italv honors the 100th anniver sary of the birth of two artists Antonio Mancini and Vincenzo Gemito.

Both are 25-lire and both Initially obtained from retail food bear portraits of the artists. Ge- stocks which will be frozen to the public. Local pre-planning by the civil defense welfare services chief should include meal tickets for those without funds, until a standard meal ticket is provided by the state. Pending such issue local civil defense officials should arrange to reimburse public eating places for food served the needy. SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS Special arrangements should be made to provide necessary diets for expectant mothers, children and the infirm both through restaurants and mass care food centers.

Initially, it may be anticipated that such arrangements will be incomplete and deficient but as order is restored, more effective arrangements can be effectuated. Mass feeding operations both in mass care centers and restaurants with increased loads, untrained personnel, improvised equipment, water supply and purification prob lems will all impose sanitation problems. The chance of power and fuel shortage in target areas and. transpdrtation of food will pre sent problems. 1 To combat these conditions a re- Prnvnpr Aiiominrd a micsinnarv that time and classified thousands of mollusks.

Emperor Hirohito, who wrote a book on Japanese marine shells before the war, put the U.S. Army to work in 1945 locating Pilsbry to present the dean of conchologists with a copy of his work. The Iowa-born "mollusk man" is known throughout the world. FORKING ON ECUADOR Pilsbry keeps busy every day. He walks one mile from his suburban Morton, home to the railroad station to go to work and frequently takes his "mollusk problems" home with him at night.

Some of his best solutions come to him while he is asleep. "Of course, you only get inspir- ations like that when vou are years. By SYD KRONISH jAziziye at Erzurim." The Rus- iap Newsfeatures) jsians were the adversaries. The mi tt 1 ii- 1 to the Comm. The 15-frane airmail stamps, reports rlcmVtn the Arphhkhnn Qnr! a vioiu York Stamp Co of a cathedral in the The colors are green, sepia and maroon.

West Africa's adhesive is a 40-franc red honoring Marcel Treich Laplene, a businessman who helped develop the Ivory Coast. A mito appears on the Mancini on the green. 17 i.v( net. vious cases of Italian stamps, these also were overprinted AMG-FTT for use in the Free Territory of Trieste. The Yugoslav sector of Tireste had issued a new 15-filler brown stamp.

Depicted on the stamp is a starfish surrounded by many other species of fish. A souvenir sheet for the Philatelic Exhibit in Koper repeats the design in green. Three new Turkish stamps honor the 75th anniversary of a famous battle in Turkish history. It is the battle of the "Redoubt of The 10-Markka plus green shows a titmouse. The 15-m-plus-3 magenta depicts 25-m-plus-5 blue pictures a swift.

Each stamp bears the anti-tu berculosis cross I if set of Fin- the New a pair of spotted flycatchers. The i of these adhesives goes to the Finnish Anti-Tuberculosis Society. The date 1952 also appears on each stamp. San Marino has issued two airmail stamps to honor a recent photographic survey taken of the little independent country. The 25- lk vSl 25, R-c.

Drown jrrppn shows a nlane flvincr hicrh As in pre-; over the mountains. The 75-lire gional food and advisory committee is contemplated, based upon a similar state-wide organization. It will be headed by a regional food administrator and will provide information, advice and recommendations as to the over-all food situation, supply, movements and control. It will operate through in- blue and brown depicts a framed view of a plane over the mountains. Suspect in Burglary Ordered for Hearing Jake Frederick Blum, accused of burglarizing a Santa Fe Railway tool shed at''Needles Dec.

8, was arraigned before Municipal Judge C. O. Thompson and ordered to appear for a preliminary hearing Jan. 16. San Bernardino Atty.

Charles E. Ward was appointed to represent Blum. Bail was set at $3000. Liquor Worth $72.55 Stolen From Store Liquor valued at $72.55 was stolen from a store at 334 S. Arrowhead Ave.

early Saturday, according to City police. Officers said that the loss was discovered after a neighbor re- dustry channels that normal food ported that the establishment's supply may be attained as closely burglar alarm was ringing, as practicable, consistant with the Police listed the victim as Ernest emergency situation. DiMasi of 2704 Serrano Rd. VOICE PEOPLE All Communications Should Be Sent to the Editor Of The Sun-Telegram and Must Be Signed. Names Will Be Withheld When Requested.

APPRECIATION Editor of The Sun-Telegram: On behalf of the San Bernardino Red Cross ChaDter. as Christmas ob servance chairman of and for the chapter, I wish to express appreciation to all who contributed in any way to make such a success of our Chapter's Christmas for "the boys" and "the girls" in hospitals of military and naval installations in the San Bernardino area. The givers were many from all walks of life and contributed gifts and funds for Christmas purchases. These included gifts for servicemen and servicewomen and for children of dependents, also potted plants, wreaths, sprays of Christmas greenery for decorations, also nuts, candies, tray favors, nut cups, dates, cookies, and lights and decorations for Christmas trees given by the Forest Service. As Christmas chairman I had the opportunity of visiting the base hospital at Camp Irwin near Bar-stow and receiving expressions of appreciation from the patients and hospital staff for the lovely Christ mas the Desert Air Council, our Red Cross Chapter and its friends made possible.

I saw the effective use of the decorations with sprays of forest tree greens tied to the foot of each bed, wreaths and potted plants in every available spot, the decorated trees and the bright and cheerful faces of the patients, many of whom have been bedfast for a long time. All of our Red Cross officers, wokers. volunteers and others who helped in many ways join me in the heartfelt thanks to everyone who contributed in any way to brighten the days of "the boys" and "the girls" at hospitals at Norton AFB, March AFB at Riverside, Marine Base and Camp Irwin at Barstow, George AFB at Victorville and in Norco Naval Hospital. Thank vou all. Mrs.

J. ROSS MILLAR, Christmas chairman. Red Cross. CHURCH REMINDER gamzers would stana ior a di minishing overtime pay scale? If the present banking act officials want to drive all their employes into unions, and the more radical employes into communism, all they need is a little more of this type of legislation. I dare say none of the brain trusters who wrote the act ever consulted a teller at the neighborhood bank before they promoted this beneficial system.

If he objects to working till 7 p.m., he can alwavs find a defense job at The extra values 'double time for holidays, and let the next trainee clerk stand it for as long as he can, after he discovers his neighbor gets time and a half for the work the bank clerk may get $.75 per hour for, diminish ing on down in proportion to the hours he stays overtime as re quired, until he finally is working for nothing during rush seasons, as compared with the pay the defense workers may receive. I think the Golden Rule might well apply to this act. If the men who wrote it feel that it is just. and those who now administer it feel the same way, then let it apply to all men fairly and equally, in all businesses in the nation. I doubt if many of them would find much incentive under this particular system of "free" enterprise once it hit their pay checks.

The British found we wouldn't stand for too much unjust legislation, and I propose to start a personal tea-party with my congressmen since most of my fellow workers are too timid to organize a petition, ap parently for fear of losing their jobs. Shades of Paul Revere, you can call me comrade and take me back to Siberia, if it is too late to object to regulations in this here republic without facing an economic firing squad. MINUTE MAN BORN WITH REPUBLIC Editor of The Sun-Telegram: I was very much interested in a letter published recently in which W. L. Albertson called attention to proposals of- a County Charter group to take from the people the long enjoyed right of electing our officials.

I am in hearty agreement with Mr. Albertson's conclusions and would certainly vote against any scheme that deprived the people as a whole of a right to elect. Unfortunately too many voters do not become militantly alert when such a traditional right is threatened. In 'November I was surprised that more persons were not voluably against a proposed City Charter which attempted to do the same thing. Possibly because the City group only sought to "whittle rather than snatch away" as does the Coun ty group there was less alarm ex pressed.

The principle was the same, however. Popular government is a right our nation won by seven years of war, the Revolutionary War, in which we substituted ourselves for a king and decided we were a peo ple competent enough to choose our own officials. Back in the days of the Revolu tion and in the subsequent Constitutional Convention opinion was by no means unanimous. There was a large party who thought, and sincerely so, that the people could not be trusted. These persons sought to make the new Republic as unresponsive to popular will as possible.

The President was to be chosen by electors. The senators were to be named by the State Legislators. Only the House of Representatives was to be named by popular will. There was a political party at first which adhered to this philoso phy. Its members called themselves Federalists and their most voluble spokesman was Alexan der Hamilton.

Long after the Fed eralist party ceased to exist the Hamiltonian theories lived to be expressed again and again by well meaning persons who prided themselves on a superior knowledge, a mental endowment that permitted them to see "what was good for the people" far better than the people could see for themselves at least that was what they thought. Opposed to this group was an-otherparty called the Republicans whose most able writer was Editor of The Sun-Telegram: To Thomas Jefferson. The Republi- curb moral delinquency and help! cans, who later became known as i the moral re-armament program let us keep reminding the public there are churches they may join and be baptized any day. WILLIAM R. SULLIVAN PROTESTS REGULATION Editor of THe Sun-Telegram: I would like to protest an unjust federal regulation known as the di- tered desk in the Academy, writ-, thoroughly soaked with the sub-' minishing overtime scale which ing busily with a quill pen and'ject," he admits.

I was part of the federal banking act Democratic Republicans and still later as just Democrats, were the party that believed the people were able to do their own choosing of public officials. It took a long time but after nearly 100 years the people were allowed to elect their own U.S. tial electors became nothing more than rubber stamps Looking back a bit philosophical- studying the snails, clams, oysters Right now, Pilsbry is working on passed by the New Deal during the Cn the long struggle we as a and other mollusks which are his a paper dealing with land and depression days to encourage hiring nation have had to elect our of- specialty. fresh-water snails of Ecuador, 'of additional employes. The motive Ificials.

it does seem a bit odd that Then he'll take up Ecuador's ma-(was probably good, but it failed right down on the local govern-rine shells. He has no expeditions 'to control the employer, who canlment levels we should find com- to aid in relieving unemployment. 1 tors, coroners, auditors and If this was necessary for de- ers. Bi nave imui uisiincuveiy jucim-u vww oi ine name sue. trjes Wn pick on financial irms? designed stamps.

jThe 40-k olive displays a pano- Can you imagine how long some Equatorial Africa stamp corn-; ramie view of the area. he unionized workers under the memorates the centenary of the nt inhn t. thP rrn nr. of a u. til 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 kp inp an.

pearance on a new oth- service. We have been enjoying these rights so long many of us had forgotten about them. But, in the future, don't try to take them away. U.S. SHOULD ACT FRANK JUSTUS.

Editor of The Sun-Telegram: An item in Time Magazine, Dec. 22, calls attention to the heated conflict on the question of racial segregation in American public schools. The basis for the non-segregation movement is that the Negroes desire the opportunity for an education equal to that provided for the whites. A decision on this issue is now pending in the United States Supreme Court on the ballot, then No. 11 would have passed.

There may be an effort by the Legislature to destroy the initiative in California using George McLain as the club for that purpose. Tbe people of Washington were recently tricked into curtailing their own democratic powers. They failed to realize that the cure for democ racy's mistakes is more democ racy. We learn to do by doing. Now McLain proposes to upset the Townsend plan of co-operative national insurance, a method far superior to his own, for the Town send plan provides a method of financial support on a pay-as-go basis, while McLain's plan depends on legislative appropriations.

Recently Myrtle Williams, the McLain secretary-treasurer, said his plan calls for no special levy and will work within the regular tax structure. That sounds disarm- ingly simple but since she also says the McLain movement win become national in scope. Congress will want to know where the money is to be raised McLain is also critical of the Townsend plan's provision that pension money received be all spent within the month. Dr. Town-send feels that the hoarding of pension money would provoke rather than prevent depressions.

His original idea of a one month limit on expenditures was for this very purpose. It would keep dollars circulating thereby averting shrinking markets, unemployment and depression. McLain has made a botch of his efforts to help California's ased and disabled. Now there is a danger that he will botch national co operative insurance. He needs to be told of the superiority of the Townsend plan.

Here is an example. In 1949 Eastman Kodak grossed over 532 mil lion a month. Three per cent of this gross would have been $975,000 a month or nearly 512 million a year. Instead of this 3 per cent required by the Townsend plan, Eastman paid out over $37 million for employe insurance, so cial security and relief. With the Townsend plan in operation East man would have saved over $25 million in 1949.

If McLain has a genuine desire to help the aged why does he not co-operate with the Townsend plan and with the Townsend organiza- enemies of pensions for our aged will seize upon his diversion to the final disadvantage of our oldsters? FRANK DEFRAY. 'OLD EQUIPMENT Editor of How many budgets come and The Sun-Telegram businessmen would contain any needed trucks. San Bernardino has a fine fiEe department. We have six fire sta tions and are about to get a seventh. We have good hose carts and pumpers but no blaze in a major building can be fought properly without ladder equipment and that is where we fall down.

The next time there is a downtown fire, just stop and watch the engines go past. There will be large modern pumpers capable of a coughing old engine trying its It seems that a court decision in best to keep in sight. It will be the 1896 ruled that segregation is con-j City's 1926 ladder truck, our one stitutional, if the facilities for only groes are equal to those for whites The impression given by Time Magazine, same issue, is that the segregated facilities have not been on an equal basis and that such would be financially impossible, although some Southern states have launched long-range programs for raising the standards of Negro schools. South Carolina and Georgia, the most violent proponents of segregation, propose to abandon the public school system if the Supreme Court rules against segregation. In the opinion of this writer, there is only one way to" deal with the resulting situation, if Mr.

Byrnes and Mr. Talmadge carry out their threats to abandon the public schools of South Carolina and Georgia. The federal government must seize the public schools of these two states and create from them a non-segregated, federally supported system of free educa tion. HENRY HARDY. BACKFIRE HURTS Editor of The Sun-Telegram: George McLain's effort to get revenge on the Chambers of Commerce for lobbying against his pension measures has backfired to the disadvantage of the needy.

While a majority of the people might have disapproved of Chambers of Commerce using public funds, or of some of their lobby efforts there was an ex post facto feature of McLain's Proposition No. 10 requiring the paying back of money formerly spent. This latter feature struck many people as being unfair. I believe that had No. 10 been forgotten, or never put Jan.

4, 1953 SAN BERNARDINO SUN-TELEGRAM 37 A HONORED Maj. Leo V. Gross, right, of 3615 Arrowhead is presented the Air Medal and a medal signifying the Let ter of Commendation for action in Korea by Maj. Gen. Robert H.

Pepper, left, commander of the 3rd Marine Division. The presentation was made at Camp Pendleton. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry C.

Gross, of the San Bernardino address. Manslaughter Hearing Slated On charges of manslaughter with gross negligence, Gus Chirchirillo, 22-year-old Arcacia stable hand, was arraigned Deiore iviunicipai Judge C. O. Thompson. Chirchirillo was ordered to appear for a preliminary hearing on the accusation Jan.

19. According to the complaint, Chirchirillo was the driver of a car in which Ronald Eugene Hoard, victim of a fatal Twenty- agers, were hurt in the crash. The complaining witness is California Highway Patrolman O. D. Wilkins.

Wilkins said that the car went out of control on the Pi-oneertown Road Dec. 28. Chirchirillo is being held under 52,000 bail. He told the court that he would hire an attorney. commandments with two corn- tion which is already national in mandments "Thou shalt love the scope? Does not he realize that thel thy with all thy heart and "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." It is necessary for man to love God.

Man needs the love and care of God, his Creator. If man loves broken heart. Love is kind, healeth the wounds of the a Love spirit and the wounds of the soul. Love is to be desired above all things else. Love is supreme.

People don't love God because they don't realize His existence. People do. love God when they do realize His existence. When our hearts are broken, God's heart is broken. God loves us.

God is love. We bring no money with us into this world when we come, and take none with us when we leave. The only values worth while that we throwing 750 gallons of water un-find in tnis world that we can take aer nign pressure, inese moaerr. with us are the Ioves of our rea. engines will whiz by to the Diaze.tives and our friends; and, above a coupie oi diocks later win come al, me ove of God is love F.

J. "God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." GOD, LOVE ESSIE H- BOWERMAN Editor of The Sun-Telegram TOO MANY DRIVES God is love that what the Bible Editor of The Sun-Telegram: says I John IV :8 and God! in answer to Kitty Peeling's letter said: "Let's make man in our own image." So God made a body for man and gave him a mind that he in Voice of the People, and to those of the charity groups that are sure to criticize her, I want might have knowledge; and in that to say there is an answer to this way man was in the image of God. i problem. This solution has long Then God made a woman, and God been in use in other cities, one loved the man and the woman that! industry. Some of the larger pres- He had made.

sure groups may not like it but Thev listened to another and did many of the smaller and often what God had told them not to do, and incurred the sentence of death. But God still loved them. He immediately promised that He would send His own Son to redeem them. In due time that Son came. He made the blind to see, the lame to walk, cured the sick, healed the lepers, raised the dead, died and arose from the dead.

He paid the debt for the sins of men that men might be pardoned and set free.) If you had a son and a daughter who became lost, and you had another son capable of finding them and bringing them safely home, would you send him to rescue them? That is what God did. God's earthly children became lost and God sent His Son from Heaven to find them and bring them home and save their lives. God is no respecter of persons. We do not like a father or a mother that is partial we do not like a teacher or an officer that is par tial. God is not partial.

God is ready to listen to any soul who will call to Him He loves one and all. God is love. Jesus summed up the law of the more deserving ones approve. It is a iair ana more etticient ar rangement. With co-operation and organization it can work in San Bernardino.

The information is available to any qualified group that is interested. C. V. MERO. BALKY OFFICIAL Editor of The Sun-Telegram: The Coimty Board of Supervisors has recently lifted its no shooting law to permit hunting in dis tricts where habitation will not be harmed.

The action came after two new members were elected to the Board and the new majority de cided to go along with the State plan. Earlier the State had aban doned much of its old game refuge in the interest of conservation, it was said. Some of the old refuge took in mountain districts with considerable population. These the County refused to open to hunters, and properly so. However there was a great uninhabited district along the face of the mountain opened.

One supervisor took issue with the sportsmen and demanded his Maj. Leo Gross Awarded Medal Maj. Leo V. Gross, ,31, son of Harry C. Gross San Bernardino jewelry store owner, and Mrs.

Gross, was awarded the Air Medal for artillery observation flights in Korea, with the Marine Corps. He also holds the Commendation Medal for logistical service during the training of South Korean Marines. Coming from a family of Marines, Maj. Gross has a brother, Maurice, who is a major in nine Palms crash, was a passen-rlc ul ger. Five other occupants, all teen- nlcaA gr0up ndJT" phone Company legal department.

Another brother, Harry C. Gross former Associated Telephone Company employe in San Bernardino and now assisting his father in the jewelry business, was a first sergeant in the Marines in World War II. Maj. Gross visited his family in San Bernardino during the New Year's holiday. His wife, Nellie, and daughters, Marcy and Cather- God, he will realize that God loves u' him.

If man loves God, he will be Per- commander of the 3rd Ma- staU-P mch a i able to contact God by prayer; and senators, and even the presiden-: motor equipment they had bought isuable t0 1 41 .1 Tlim iqo 0 uicaa 111c man nu iuvca xiiiii. 111 -Lju anu umicu cvtri aiiice Well, that is just what San Ber- "Love thy neighbor as thyself." nardino does daily in fire de- Man is supposed to love himself, partment. We could joke about itHe should love himself because if the situation were not so down-jGod created him. If man did not right serious. This City owns a himself very much then gle ladder truck.

It is a piece of loved his neighbor as he loved equipment that dates so far back mmseir, ne wouia not love nis nned up beyond wintering in now force his employes to work mittees of able, respected citizens it was originally equipped with old neighbor very much. Man should Florida but thinks he "might" several hours of overtime at a so unconcerned with the right of jsolid rubber tires Tnis truck an.iove himself and try to be a kind, explore Europe a bit one of these! progressively diminishing rate as self government that they are in th loving, righteous being. Then he STAMPS IN THE NEWS needed to complete his duties. Thei willing to toss overboard these itown district as it has done f0r'shuld love his as he employe naturally has no interest a i i a 1 American privi- neary 30 years There is no other loves himself. in staying as was intended, but; leges and start substituting ap-ii-ridpr Hn thp 1 Without love, man is nothing.

someone forgot to write into the pointment for election of our city amj nas been none since 'Where there is love, there is hope act the requirement that the em- and county clerks, our city and an old converted horse-drawn truck and faitn- Where there is love, plover hire extra neip tor tnis worKj county treasurers, our tax conec was scrapped several years ago. Inere is joy. nere mere is love, The fire department vear after there is no despair there may be year has asked for a new ladder suffering and sorrow, but not de- inree rrencn colonies n-esiMuu i snows a nana would have no Maybe, however, these charter vfiremen The lack of deserved love Africa. Eauatonal Africa and Al-ihand combat scene. The 20-k 11,1, dui apparently uremen aon 1 1 mi 1 i 3 1 out let us appiy 10 an lnuus-iiuiiiiniuccs nave imuj uunc us niit nn the stmnpcf aremmpnt Dnng aooui aespair ana ine, reside with the major parents at 3615 Arrowhead Ave.

He is now stationed at Camp Pendleton with the logistics section of the 9th Marine Corps. The Air Medal was awarded Maj. 11V12)1U11. University Man Victim of Polio Philip I. Brooks, 24, a native of San Bernardino who had been attending the University of Nevada, died Saturday in Reno, a victim of a sudden polio attack.

The son of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Brooks, 1391 Tippecanoe he married Donna Lee Bromilow of San Bernardino last August and entered the Nevada university in September. He was on leave of absence from Santa Fe Railroad where he served as an inspector. He was graduated from San Bernardino High School in 1945 and attended Valley College.

He served with the U.S. Army during World War and in the Korean theater. A member of the First Christian Church and 'Neighbors of Woodcraft Lodge, he was a past president of the California Youth Federation in the City. Survivors include his wife and parents; a brother, Keith Brooks, Oakland; and relatives in Wichita and Garden City, Kan. Funeral services are pending until the arrival of Mrs.

Brooks from Reno. Election Planned By GOP Women Election and installation of 1953 officers will keynote the Tuesday evening session of the Arrow head Federation of Republican Women, President Mrs. A. E. Cameron announced.

Heading the executive slate to be presented by the nominating committee are Mrs. W. R. Hol-comb, president; Mrs. Bert Lunce-ford, vice president; Mrs.

Charles Hoy, treasurer; and Mrs. Edith McDaniels, secretary. Program Chairman Mrs. Eugene S. Doerr reported an installation ceremony will be held in lieu of a special event.

She stated committee reports on club activities throughout the past year will be given to conclude the meeting. Exploration Company Files Firm Papers Paradise Springs Exploration Company has filed its articles of incorporation with County Clerk Harry L. Allison. Purpose of the concern, according to information contained in the articles, is to develop mining claims and prospect for new prop? erties. part of the County be kept closed The ranchers came and urged f2 opening after this supervisor had claimed he was acting in their Icu terest.

This didn't seem to botligj the lone official, however. It is a sad commentary whea one supervisor can prevent urgs formity in the entire County dI spite the expressed win of its resE dents. CECIL COCHRANE-Z.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

À propos de la collection The San Bernardino County Sun

Pages disponibles:
1 350 050
Années disponibles:
1894-1998