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Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 4

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Santa Cruz, California
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4
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4 SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL-NEWS, SANTA CRUZ; CALIFORNIA Friday, February 7, 1947 PAGE FOUR PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Joe Gordon Lands Steelheads succeed in bringing a victory." Other teams have tried jjtallint; tactics against Kentucky and oth-ers have tried to mix it up with the 'Cats, but the team's record speaks for itself: Won 21, lost 1. IBracMiKDiHm WaMDp Beachcombers High Team In Open League The Beachcombers had the best total pin score of the evening as they won three games from the Wieland Beer bowlers in the 865 open league play Wednesday night at the local bowl. Cliff Culbertson paced the winners with a fine 592 series with a 228 high game for the best individual bowling of the Carter Stars As20-30ians Beat Jayvees With Sid Carter ringing up 16 points to take the lead in the Recreation league total point column, the 20-30 club cagers countered their first win in five starts, thumping the high school Jayvees 32 to 28 in the preliminary game at Turner gym. The Junior Varsity took an early 11 to 8 lead at the first quarter, but fell astern at half-time 19 to 15. The 20-30ians held the third period advantage of 26 to 20 and copped final honors, and an initial win of 32 to 28 in a photo finish.

Again the fastest thing on the court, Sid Carter ran up 11 points in the first half on five baskets and a free throw, proving equally successful on defense. Carter's game total of 16 digits put him in the league scoring lead with 72 points, ahead of Hoffman of the Eagles, who has 63 to his credit. Sharing honors for the 20-30ians was Charles' Johnson with six points. Harold Santos with five. Kratzenstein with two.

Hugas with two and Webber with a free throw. Towner, the Jayvee lanky cen IStaglles Outclassing the Eagles of the Recreation league, the Buckhorn Tavern cagers cinched second place in the first half play with a 46 to 21 victory Wednesday evening in the feature game at Turner gym. Ray Carpenter took scoring honors with 18 points as the Tavern quintet rode roughshod over the Eagles for four straight peri ods. Buckhorn led 16 to 3 at the end of the first quarter, 22 to 5 at halftime. 34 to 14 at the end of the third period, and climaxed a resounding 46 to 21 win.

Bagging 18 points, mostly under the basket. Carpenter moved into fourth place in the league scoring standings. Miller ran up 11 points for the Tavern team, while O'Neill countered seven. Bill Hoffman topped the defeated Eagles with 11 points, on four field goals and a trio from the free throw lino. Guyon was second with five digits, scoring one basket from the court, and countering three times with free throws.

The Buckhorn squad had things under control from the opening tip-off with an aggressive type of play. Their record of four wins and a lone defeat leaves them with the statistical chance of tying for first place with the Teachers, if the Teachers meet defeat in the game with the Junior Varsity Monday evening at the civic auditorium. Eagles Buckhorn fgfttp fgfttp Hoffman 4 3 Carpenter 7 4 18 Beatic 0 0 12 4 Gill 10 2 Miller 5 1 11 Lacazette 0 0 0 Costello 113 Major 0 0 0 O'Neill 2 3 7 Gu von 1 3 5 Holsev, 0 0 0 Holsier 0 2 2 Bergazzi 10 2 Roy 0 1 0 11 Totals 6 9 2li Totals 17 12 46 Halftime score: Buckhorn, 22, Eagles 5. eereatton Ejetgue Teachers .4 0 1.000 Buckhorn Tavern 4 1 .800 Boys' Club .3 2 .600 Junior Varsity 1 3 .250 Eagles 4 .200 20-30 Club 1 4 .200 ResuUs Wednesday Night Buckhorn Tavern 46, Eagles 21. 20-30 Club 32.

Junior Varsity 28. II 1 1 Cleveland Indian second baseman, -Joe Gordon (center) displays two steelhead caught on a fishing trip near Eugene, with Dick Strite (left) and Walt Hummel (right), who is Gordon's hardware store partner. Fishing is" part of Gordon's program to keep in shape for the baseball season. (AP Wirephoto) New 1947 mm s175 Plus Tax and Installation NOT REBUILT IIOIXAiVf MOTOR SAUES 340 Front St. Phone 41G3 ewcleis 124 PACIFIC AVE.

PHONE 2540 IL.0 AM ON WAGE ASSIGNMENTS TVe Finance Tour Car, Home Appliances nj Furniture COMMUNITY LOAN INC. 17 cnuRcn si. TELEPHONE 88S Are you particular about your laundry? Bring your clothes-do them yourself. You can wash, dry and iron here. We do washing or if you wash at home let us dry for you.

IIKLP-U-SKLF Open 8 a.m. -6 p.m. Tucs. Fri. 8 a.m.-7 p.m.

611 Soquel Ave. Tel. 3C93-W Santa Cruz, Calif. 1 7f Ml 1 1 ter, picked up 11 points to lead the defeated high school team, while Rickard and Finta had four apiece, Glaum three. Young two, Dickson two and Adams a pair.

Carter was fouled on a break-ir. as the final horn sounded, and dropped his 16th point in the strings on a foul shot after the players had left the court. The officials were Homer Davir; and Chick Johnson. Six fouls were called against the 20-30ians, while the Jayvees suffered seven mishaps. Summary: Junior Varsity 20-30 Club is, tt tp lnfMp Towner 5 1 11 'Kratzenstein 1 0 2 Fancuf 0 0 Santos 2 1 5 Rickard 2 0 4 Carter 7 2 16 Young 1 0 3 0 6 Dickson 1 0 0 0 0 Odom 0-Huphs 0 2 2 Glaum 1 1 3iTard 0 0 0 Finta 2 4: Webber 0 1 1 Deitz 0 fli Adams 1 0 21 Aliberti 0 0 0j Totals 13 2 28! Totals 13 6 32 Halftime score: 20-30 Club 19, Junior Varsity 15.

goals for its 40-minute effort. The Kcntuckians won, 60 to 30. Rupp admits the slow type of game employed by Oklahoma A. and M. when the Aggies handed Kentucky its only defeat of the season, is most effective against the Wildcats.

"It's the most effective against any high-scoring team," he said. "It will always serve to hold down the score, but it will not always (CtflMeirs 6DDiieaimn TTeainini Paul Bixler New Colgate Coach Columbus, 0., Feb. 6 Paul O. Bixler resigned today as head football coach at Ohio State University to accept a similar post at Colgate university. Bixler said the decision to change jobs "was a tough one," and that it was made entirely on the basis of his relationships at Colgate, where he was assistant coach under Andy Kerr before he came to Ohio State and Paul Brown's assistant in 1941.

BUYS PLANT Washington, Feb. 6 (U.P). The Fall Creek ordnance plant at Indianapolis has been sold to the Food Machinery Corp. of San Jose, for $861,000, the war assets administration said today. PUBLIC NOTICE I HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing Ordinance was passed and adopted at a regular meeting of the Board of Aldermen of the City of Watsonville held on the 7th day of January, 1947, bv the following vote: AYES: ALDERMEN Anderson.

Crane. Pen-do, Peterson, Ramsay, Silva. Wright; NOES: ALDERMEN: None. ABSENT: ALDERMEN: Madesko. (SEAL) F.

J. O'BRIEN. Citv Clerk of the City of Watsonville. Approved this 7th day of January, 1SM7. C.

H. BAKER. Mayor of the City of Watsonville. Jan. 16-23-30.

Feb. 6 0attta (Cruz Published daily with a Morning Vrflitinn vfpnt MnnHavs anH an i Evening Edition, except Saturday and Sunday by the Sentinel Pub- lishing Company, at 25 Church I Street, Santa Cruz, California, Fred McPherson. Publisher. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Santa Cruz, California. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mail payable in advance.

One Month -f5 Six Months 4.50 One Year .00 evening. Pic Piccardo had a 540 for the winners with Charley Luce getting a 523, Al Perry led the losers with a I 518 while Bert Tuana and Pat Wapclhorst had 519 and 513 scores for the winners. The league leading Harris Bros, team won two games from the Crosby Squares as Fred Devins had a fine 58d series. Joe Parodi had a 561 for the winners With Doc Hombach getting a 548. Matt Chargin had a 5d8 for the losers with Joe Gosliner getting a 523.

Roy Reid had a 588 series for the second place DeMarco bowlei as they won three games from Has-lams to gain a gams on the leaders. Harry Youngs had a 549 for the winners with Mac McClintic getting a 519. Chub Kester had a 495 for the losers. Melvins won three games from the 10 and 15 as Andy Anderson had a 582 series. Ed Vollmer had a 548 for the winners with Bud Ray getting a 539.

Guy Mclntyre had a 552 lor the losers with Augie Doeltz getting a 525 and Bobby Hughes a 514. The bowlers express their best wishes for Art Vargas in gaining a speedy recovery from his ill- ness at a local hospital. Vargas was a member of the Beachcombers bowling team. League standings: Harris Bros. 38 10 DeMarcos 32 16 Beachcombers 26 22 Melvin's Drug 25 Mac's 10 and 15 21 27 Wieland Beers 21 27 Crosby Squares 16 32 Haslams 33 Summary: Wielands Beer Joe Strohbeen 120 182 175477 Joe Evans 169 160 166495 Al Perry 162 172 184518 John Segarini 184 179 141504 Joe Alveraz 163 135 196494 Totals 793 828 862 2488 Beachcombers Chas.

Luce 152 204 167523 Pic Piccardo 182 190 168540 Pat Wapelhorst 135 179, 199513 Bert Tuana 182 180 157519 Cliff Culbertson 182 182 228592 Totals 833 935 919 2687 Harris Bros. Waldemar 171 147 163481 Hombach 226 156 166 548 Devins 185 204 199 538 Parodi 138 191 182561 Rodriguez 148 138 147433 Totals 91(T 836 857 2611 Crosby Square E. Dillon 123 162 164 449 G. Miller 159 192 123474 Carothers 171 156 167494 J. "Gosliner 192 167 164523 M.

Chargin 192 167558 Totals 844 869 792 2498 DeMarco's Mac McClintic 151 196 172519 Bill Brooks 164 130 189 483 Bill Sinkinson 153 168 178499 Harry Youngs 193 195 156549 Roy Reid 180 221 188588 Totals S46 910 883 2639 Haslams Harrv Smith 135 172 165472 Doug McNeill 157 186 149492 John Roveton 144 166 178 488 Chub Kester 147 153 190 495 Bert Ogle 16il 127 177472 Totals 751 809 859 2419 Melvin's Drag A. Anderson 188 191 203582 E. Vollmer -168 214 166548 W. Eink 211 179 125515 P. Carlile 163 163 160486 M.

Ray 178 185 176539 Totals 903 932 830 2670 10 15 Bob Hughes 172 170 172514 A Doeltz 177 189 159525 Paul Tallman 154 154 133441 Hal Rodriguez 167 167 167 50i Guy Mclntyre .187 201 16-1552 Totals 857 881 795 2533 Strangler Lewis Wrestles Hansen At Watsonville Ed "Strangler" Lewis, the grand old man of wrestling, will meet Billy Hansen, Pacific coast wrestling champ, in the main event of the regular Friday night wrestling card at the civic auditorium at Watsonville. Lewis, who was heavyweight champion of the world four different times, claims that he will take the coast crown away from Hansen in the two out of three falls main event. In the scmi-windup. Lucky Si-munovicli meets Hans Von Busing, while Pete Peterson wrestles Mike Browning in the curtain raiser. The show starts at 8:30 p.

m. SAXOPHONE 35.97 feet to a station on the Southwest line of Hushbeck Avenue and on the Northeast line of Lot 1 in Hall Subdivision as shown on the map filed April 24, 1942 in Volume 27 of Maps, Page 18, Santa Cruz County Records: thence, 56- 04' along said line, 85 feet, a little more or to the most Easterly corner of said lot thence, along the Southeast line of Lots 1 to 10 inclusive, in said Hall Subdivision, and along said line produced, 47" 11' 554.51 feet to a station on the Northeast boundary of the City of Watsonville from which the most Southerly corner of Lot 10 bears 47 11' 15.00 feet distant; thence along the Northeast boundary of the City of Watsonville. 42 34' 291.00 feet to a station from which the most Westerly corner of Lot 11 in said Subdivision bears 47 11' 15.00 feet distant: thence, to and along the Northwest line of Lots 11 to 17 inclusive. 47 11' 369.39 feet to an angle; thence. 87 40' along the Northwest line of Lot 18, 40.60 feet to an angle therein; thence, 35 56' to and along the Northwest line of Lot 19 and along said line produced.

116.00 feet to a station in the centerline of Hushbeck Avenue; thence, along said centerline, 56 04 font to a station from which the most Northerly corner of Lot 63 bears fc 47 41 -a. ieei uisuuu, thence, leaving the centerline of Hushbeck Avenue, to and along the Northwest line of Lots 63. 62, 61, and 60, 47 41' 238.40 feet to the most Westerly corner of Lot 60; thence, along the Southwest line of Lot 60 and along said line produced 42' 43' 172.0 feet to a station in the centerline of Center Street; thence, along said centerline 47a 47' 114.89 feet to a station on the Northeast boundary of the Citv of W'atsonvillet thence, along said boundarv 42 34' 157.53 feet to an angle therein; thence, continuing along said boundary 47a 44' 305.8 feet, a little more or less to an angle therein: thence, continuing along said boundary 42" 16' 177.18 feet to the point of beginning. Section 4: That the qualified electors residing in said territory, in Section 3 of this Ordinance particularly described, be, and they are hereby invited to vote upon the proposition of the annexation of said territory to the said City of Watsonville; and the said proposition shall appear and be printed upon the ballots to be used at said election in the following form, to-wit: Shall the "Hushbeck Addition to the City of Watsonville" be annexed to the City of Watsonville? Yes. Shall the "Hushbeck Addition to the City of Watsonville" be annexed to the City of Watsonville? No.

The outstanding bonded indebtedness of the said City of Watsonville for improvement, or improvements, on the date of the publication of this Ordinance, is as follows, to-wit: 1910 Sewer Bond, issued for sewer construction in the City of Watsonville; balance outstanding, $2,200.00 bearing interest at 5 per cent per annum. 1910 Convention Hall Bond, issued for the purpose of construction of a municipal auditorium. Balance outstanding $1,600.00. bearing interest at the rate of 4'? per cent per annum. 1922 Municipal Water bonds issued for the purpose of purchasing Watsonville City Water Works: balance outstanding, $9,000.00, bearing interest at 5 per cent per annum.

1925 Sewer Bond issued for sewer improvement purposes; balance outstanding $60,000.00 bearing interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum. 1929 City of Watsonville Water Works bonds, balance outstanding $30,000.00 bearing interest at the rate of 4'2 per cent per annum. 1936 Water Works Extension Bond; balance outstanding $40,000.00, bearing interest at the rate of 23A per cent per annum. 1937 Municipal Improvement Bonds; balance outstanding $20,000.00, bearing interest at the rate of 2 per cent per-annum. 1938 Municipal Improvement Bonds; issued for- the purpose of constructing levy; balance outstanding $14,000 00.

bearing interest at the rate of 2 per cent per annum. 1941 Municipal Sewer Bonds; balance outstanding $30,000.00, bearing interest at the rate of IV4 per cent-per annum. 1942 Municipal Improvement bond, balance outstanding $150,000.00. bearing interest at 3 per cent per annum on $5,000.00 payable June 15, 1946 to 1947 inclusive; 2 per cent interest on $5,000.00 payable on June 15, 1948 to 1952, inclusive; 2 per cent interest on $10,000.00 payable on June 15, 1953 to 1956 inclusive; I3 per cent interest on $10,000.00 payable on June 15, 1957 to 1958 inclusive; 13,4 per cent interest on $15,000.00 payable on June 15. 1959 to 1962 inclu sive, interest payable June and December 15th.

That there is no bonded indebtedness of the said City other than that hereinbefore mentioned, and that there are no -bonds of the said City authorized which, have not been issued except as hereinbefore specifically mentioned. Section 5: That said special election, hereby ordered and called, shall be held in said territory so proposed to be annexed on the 18th day of February, 1947 and the polls at the polling place hereinafter described shall be open 5rom 7 o'clock in the morning of said day and shall be kept open continuously thereafter until 7 clock in the avening of said day, when said polls shall be closed and the election officers then proceed to canvass the ballots cast thereat and the ballots used it such election and the holding and jonducting of said election shall be in conformity as near as may be with the laws of the State of California concerning general elections. The returns of such special election shall be made and signed by the officers of said election and shall be by them deposited with the City Clerk of the said City of Watsonville: and the Board of Aldermen shall meet and canvass said returns at its regular meeting next after the expiration of three days from and after the date of said election. And if, after such canvass, it shall be found that a majority of the qualified voters of the said territory sought to be annexed, voting at said special election, voted in favor of said proposition. then said proposition shall be deemed ratified and carried.

Section 6: The territory so proposed to be annexed shall be and constitute one election precinct and shall be numbered Precinct No. 1. Section 7: The Board of Election for said election precinct shall be composed of three qualified electors of the said territory sought to be annexed to consist of one inspector, and two judges; who shall conduct the said election as required by law. Section 8: For the purpose of said election the following electors of the said territory sought to be annexed are hereby elected and named as the election officers to constitute the election board for the said election precinct No. 1.

and the place for holding said election in the said precinct is hereby specified, to-wit: Election officers for said Precinct-No 1: One inspector: Mrs. C. R. Hushbeck. Two Judges: Mrs.

Ruth Harmer and Mrs. Verne Jones. and the polling places for holding said election in said Precinct No. 1 shall be the C. Hushbeck residence at 296 Hushbeck Avenue, Watsonville, California, which said polling place is the same as that commonly used as the voting place within such territory: and fhe persons appointed as election officers are hereby found and declared to he legally qualified for their respective positions.

Section 9: The Clerk of said City is hereby instructed to prepare and cause to be printed on the proper kind of paper a sufficient number of the indices to the Great Register, tally sheets, and other supplies for the said election, and a sufficient number of ballots, and to furnish the same for the use of the voters at said special election: said I ballot shall be prepared as required by law. Section 10: This ordinance shall be oublished'in the Watsonville Register-Paiaronian and Morning Sun. a news-oaper printed and published in the City of Watsonville, for one insertion prior to the date of said election and shall be published at least once a week for a period of four successive weeks next preceding the date of election in the Santa Cruz Sentinel-News, a newspaper of general circulation published in the Citv of Santa Cruz, in the County of Santa Cruz. State of California, said place of publication of said Santa Cruz Sentinel-News being without the Citv of Watsonville, and the County of 'Santa Cruz, the County in which said territory sought to be annexed is located. J.

And the publication of said Ordinance in the. said Santa Cruz Sentinel News, as hereinbefore provided, shall constitute notice of said election. This ordinance shall take effect upon its passage approval and publication in the watsonville Register-Pajaronian and Morning Sua, as hereinbefore directed. ORDINANCE NO. 451 (New Charier Series) AN ORDINANCE OVERRULING PROTESTS AND CALLING FOR AND GIVING NOTICE OF A SPECIAL ELECTION TO BE HELD IN.

THE TERRITORY DESCRIBED IN AND PROPOSED TO BE ANNEXED TO THE CITY OF WATSONVILLE BY THAT CERTAIN PETITION RECEIVED BY THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN OF SAID CITY AND FILED WITH THE CITY CLERK THEREOF ON THE 3RD DAY OF DECEMBER, 1946. THE PEOPLE OF THE CITY OF WAT-- SONVILLE DO ORDAIN AS FOL- LOWS: "Whereas, there was received by the Board of Aldermen of the City of Watsonville and filed with the City Clerk of said City on the 3rd day of December, 194b. a petition asking that the territory therein and hereinafter particularly described be annexed to, incorporated in and made a part of the City of Watsonville; And Whereas, said petition came on regularly for hearing before said Board of Aldermen on the 10th day of December, 1946; And Whereas, on said last named date, to-wit: December 10, 1946, the said Board of Aldermen passed its Resolution No. 3697 giving notice of the intention of the Board of Aldermen of the City of Watsonville to call a special election in the territory described in and proposed by the said petition for the annexation of the territory described in said petition, which said Resolution is on file with the City Clerk of said City and is hereby referred to and made a part hereof; And Whereas, the said Resolution did, by its terms, fix Tuesday, the 7th day of Januarv. 1947, at the hour of 7:30 o'clock P.

in the council chambers of the Board" of Aldermen as the time and place when and where any person owning real property within such territory so proposed to be annexed and having any objections to the proposed annexation may appear before the said Board of Aldermen and show cause whv such territory should not be so annexed and further giving notice that any time not later than the hour set for hearing objections to the proposed election any owners of property within iKo orrttnrv nrnno5Pd to be so an nexed might make written protest against the proposed election, providing that all protests must be in writing and shall state the name or names of the owner or owners of the property affected therebv and the location and area ox sucn property ju gcntia vci And Whereas, said Resolution and notice was duly published at least once a week tvr twn snrppssivp weeks Drior to the date fixed for said hearing in the Watsonville Register-Pajaronian, a newspaper of general circulation published i- 117.. hnina ill UiC VilV UL Cl L.Ut 1 lilt, 1 1 no such newspaper in the territory proposed to be annexed; And Whereas, no protests were filed by icmtnrv to be annexed and the Board of Aldermen did proceed on the date of said hearing as fixed by said resolution, to-wit: January 7th, 1947, to request anv owner or owners of property located in the territory proposed to be annexed to file their written protests, and there being no written protests filed or offered to be filed, and the hour of 7:30 o'clock P. M. having arrived, the Aldermen hereby formally overrule any protests and objections; And Whereas, it appears from the said rtetition and the said Board of Alder men did find and determine, and doesJ hereby find and determine, that said petition contains a sufficient description of the territory therein prayed to be annexed to, incorporated in. and made a part of the said City, and that it is signed by more than one-fourth in number of the qualified electors residing within the territory described therein as shown by the register of voters of the County in which said territory is situate; And Whereas, the said petition, so filed as aforesaid, contained a request that the question to be submitted to the electors residing in the territory proposed by such petition to be annexed shall be whether such new territory shall be annexed to, incorporated in, and made a part of said municipal corporation, and the property therein, be, after such annexation subject to taxation equally with the property within such municipal corporation to pay all the bonded indebtedness of such municipal corporation outstanding at the date of said annexation or theretofore authorized: NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED: Section 1: That a special election be, and the same is hereby ordered and called, and shall be held in the said territory proposed to be annexed to said City, as in said petition and hereinafter described, on the 18th day of February, 1947? for the purpose of determining whether said territory so proposed to be annexed in said petition, and hereinafter particularly described, shall be annexed to.

incorporated in, and made a part of said City as re--quested in said petition, and in accordance with an act of the legislature of the State of California entitled "An Act to provide for the alteration of the boundaries of and for the annexation of territory to municipal corpora-tinns. fnr the incorporation of such annexed territory in and as a parr thereof, and for the districting, government and municipal control of sucr annexed territory referred to in saic act and designated therein as the "Annexation Act of 1913" and Amendments thereto. Section 2: That notice be, and it is liereby given, that a special election has been ordered and called, and wili. be held in the said territory proposed bv said petition for "Annexation of territory to the City of Watsonville," marked as filed by the Clerk of said Citv on the 3rd day of December, 1946, and which territory is in said petition and hereinafter particularly described on the 18th day of February, 1947, for the purpose of determining whether the said territory in said petition, and hereinafter described, shall be annexed to. incorporated in, and made a part of said City of Watsonville in accordance with the said "Annexation act of 1913 and Amendments thereto," and as requested by said petition; and thai said territory described in said petition, and hereinafter described, and soucht bv the said petition to be in corporated in and made a part of the said City of Watsonville, which said territory has been in said Resolution designated for all the purposes of said election, and in all notices thereof, Addition to the City of Watsonville." by which said designation such territory is hereby referred to and indicated upon the ballots to be used at the election at which the question of such annexation is submitted.

Section 3: That said special election is ordered and called for the purpose of submitting to the electors residing in the said territory proposed to be annexed to the said City, and which territorv is in this section described, the question whether said territory Ehall be annexed to, incorporated in and made a part of said municipal corporation, and the property therein be, after such annexation, subject to taxation equallv with the property within such municipal corporation, to pay all the bonded indebtedness or such municipal corporation outstanding, or theretofore authorized. That said territorv so proposed to be annexed to, incorporated in and made a part of the Citv of Watsonville, is situate in the Couhtv of Santa Cruz, State of California, and bounded and particularly described as follows: A portion of the Rancho Bolsa del Pajaro. Santa Cruz County. California, bounded by a line particularly described as follows: Beginning at the intersection of the present Northeast boundary of the City of Watsonville with the centerline ot East Lake Avenue and running thence, from said point of beginning along the renterlme of East I-ake Avenue 47 44' 350.9 feet, a little more or i to an angle; thence 14 20' 592.85 feet to a station on the produced Northeast line of Hushbeck Subdivision as shown on the map filed June mirt i rttma OR tt Mans. Pace 41.

Santa Cruz County Records; thence. Ibie produced 64 Of feet to a station from which the East corner of Hushbeck Subdivision Dears in 01' -W 200.74 feet distant: thence, fa 30 55' parallel with and distant 200.00 feet at right angles from the Southeast line of Hall Avenue 44.87 feet to the produced Northeast line of Hushbeck Avenue: thence, 04 along said proouttu nnc a station from which the East corner of Hushbeck Avenue and Hall Avenue bears 56' 04' 49.77 feet distant; thence, across the end of Hushbeck Avenue as shown on the above mentioned map of Hushbeck Subdivision 30 55' 15.02 feet and 47 13 KILLED IN CRASH South San Francisco, Feb. 6 (U.R) Jack H. Cooper, 39, of Santa Mon ica, died early today in South San Francisco hospital of injuries suffered in a three-car collision on the Bayshore highway in Brisbane last night. In tlie first airplane flight at Kitty Hawk 1903, Orville Wright flew 120 feet less than the wing-spread of a large modern airplane.

FEBRUARY TIDES By U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (Heights in feet) HIGH LOW 8 0:57 4.7 6:15 1.7 12:20 4.9 18:42 9 1:36 4.8 7:13 1.5 13:18 4.3 19:20 0.5 10 2:15 4.8 8:16 1.3 14:24 3 8 20:00 1.2 11 2:55 4.8 9:24 1.1 15:4 3 4 1,7 12 3:39 4.7 10:34 17:07 3 2 21:31 2.2 13 4:27 4.7 11:40 0.6 18:30 3.3 22:34 2.7 14 5:19 4.7 12:41 0.4 19:33 3.5 23:40 2.8 15 6:12 4.7 13:31 0.1 20:32 3.7 LOW HIGH 16 0:45 2.8 7:02 4.9 14:14 21:15 A 3.9 17 1:38 2.8 7:46 i 4.9 14:52 21:53 4.0 18 2:21 2.7 8:28 5.0 15:27 22:28 4.0 19 3:01 2.5 9:05 5.1 15:59 22:53 4.1 20 3:37 2.3 9:42 5.1 16:30 23:27 i 4.1 21 4:15 2.1 10:20 i 5.0 17:01 23:52 4.2 22 4:55 1.8 11:00 4.9 17:32 0-0 HIGH LOW 23 0:17 4 3 5:40 1.5 11:46 4 6 18:04 0.4 24 0:42 6:30 1.2 12:41 4 2 18:37 0.8 25 1:13 4.6 7:24 0.9 13:43 3.8 19:15 1.3 26 1:43 4.8 8.26 0.6 15:04 3.4 19:59 1.9 28 3:22 4.9 10:51 16:40 3.2 20:52 2.3 27 2:28 4.9 9:36 0.4 18:11 3.3 22:00 2.7 JO 9 3 111 I 1 ft 'fr 1 'til By Kyle Vance Lexington. Feb. 6 (P) Kentucky Basketball Coach Adolph Rupp is convinced he has a team without a misfit a "dream team," comparable in many respects to the heydey Yankees of baseball.

Rupp relaxed yesterday upon returning from his outfit's two most notable victories of the season, the lopsided lashing of top-ranking Notre Dame and the 11-point squeeze past previously unbeaten Alabama, and he was in no mood to snare the superlatives on his "kids." He was asked straightforwardly: "What makes this team tick?" He answered straightforwardly: "Heads, hearts, height and speed." Then: "What does this Kentucky team do differently than others?" His reply: "Nothing. It plays straight basketball but is equipped to do a little better than some." "This team," said Rupp, "is composed of players adapted to the positions in our style of plays. We can rebound and we have the speed. We have a bunch of clever kids, and they possess, a fine spirit." The quality Kentucky emphasizes above the others is its speed. Paced by two exceedingly fast guards.

Ralph Beard and Ken Rollins, the Wildcats literally stampede when they gain the ball on defense. More often than not, a goal has been registered before the opponent can set up a defense. "I was reading the other day about the old New York Yankees," Rupp said. "The players rarely spoke to each other during a game. They just walked to the plate and knocked the ball away.

"Our team is equipped much the same way in basketball. Wc go into a game, get the ball any way we can and fire away when we have the opportunity." At getting the ball, Kentucky is especially adept. As often as it gains possession on rebounds, it takes the ball away from foe players. Each man snatches at the ball when in snatching distance. He is ready to intercept a poorly-timed pass.

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About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
909,325
Years Available:
1884-2005