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The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California • Page 35

Location:
San Bernardino, California
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8-THE SUN Thursday, Jan. 28, 1971 Obituaries Obituaries Reinhold Nauck, San Bernardino Reinhold 0. Nauck, a retired San Bernardino carpenter, died yesterday in a San Bernardino hospital. He was 69. Nauck was born in Germany and was a 20 year resident of San Bernardino.

He resided at 6763 Valaria Drive, San Bernardino, and was a member of Highland Avenue Luthern Church. Survivors include his wi- dow, Charlotte; a son, Reinhard, of Highland; a daughter, Edelgard Goins of Sacramento; a brother, Ernest, of Germany; and six grandchildren. Private services will be held tomorrow afternoon in the Mark B. Shaw Garden Room with private inurnment following at Mt. View Cemetery.

Stanley Strong, Alta Loma Stanley Strong, son of Nathaniel Strong, an early San Bernardino setter, died Monday in an Upland hospital at the age of 78. A native of San Bernardino, he had resided in California all his life and had been a resident of Alta Loma for: a few months. He was a retired heavy equipment operator for the state Division of Highways. Homer J. Ewing, Colton Homer J.

Ewing, 62, of 735 Colton, died Sunday in a San Bernardino hospital. He was born in Missouri and was an eight-year resident of Colton. Ewing was a retired roofer. Survivors include a brother, Carl, of Missouri; a sister, Pearl Oakes of Escondido; two grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Graveside services will be held at 2:30 p.m.

tomorrow at Green Acres Memorial Gardens with Lord's Funeral Chapel directing. Laura Miller, San Bernardino Laura I. Miller, 72, of 2055 Porter San Bernardino, died Tuesday in a San Bernardino hospital. She was born. in Nebraska and was a 21-year resident of San Bernardino and a 36 year resident of California.

Mrs. Miller was a member of the Muscoy Women's Club and the Muscoy Senior Citizens Club. She also belonged to the Muscoy United Methodist Church. Survivors include three brothers, Arthur Weilage of Yucaipa, Clarence and Floyd Weilage, both of San Bernardino, and two sisters. Mrs.

Edna Mauldin and Mrs. Orena Dapro, both of San Bernardino. Services will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Bobbitt Memorial Chapel with burial following at Mt. View Cemetery.

The family requests that remembrances be in the form of donations to the Muscoy United Methodist Church or the Heart Fund. Maxine Crisp, San Bernardino Maxine E. Crisp, 79, of 745 W. Fifth San Bernardino, died Monday in her home. She was born in Washington and was a 25-year resident of San Bernardino.

She was a former employe of the Santa Fe Railway. Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Leone Edwards of Los Angeles and Mrs. Robert Barnes of a brother, Ben Crisp of Idaho; four sisters, Mrs. Emma Staley, Mrs.

Anna Knight and Mrs. Ella Fader, all of Washington, and Mrs. Lydia Larson of Utah; six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Graveside services will be held at 1 p.m. today at Montecito Memorial Park with Lord's Funeral Chapel directing.

Friends may call at the chapel after 9 a.m. today. John F. Affeldt, Loma Linda John F. Affeldt, 85, of 11533 Anderson Loma Linda, died yesterday in Loma Linda.

He was born in Michigan and was a four year resident of Loma Linda. Survivors include his widow, Pearl; two sons, Dr. John of Whittier, and Dr. Robert of Donner Lake; two daughters, Marjorie Zip- rick of Loma Linda and Betty J. Farley of Oregon; a brother, Ferdinand, of Michigan; a sister, Tina Thomas of Arizona; 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild.

Services will be held at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Hughes Loma Linda Chapel with burial following at Montecito Memorial Park. Alta V. Adelson, Vista Alta Virginia Adelson, 56, of 280 Alestar, Vista, died Tuesday in Loma Linda. She was a native of Michigan and lived in California 25 years.

Survivors include her husband, Robert and one daughter, Mrs. John Dey, Sacramento. Requiem Mass will be at 10 a.m. Friday at St. Francis Church, Vista.

Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City. Memorial contributions may be made to neurological tumor research at Loma Linda University Medical Center. Surviving is a brother, Ted Strong of Fontana. Services will be held at Friday noon at the Stone Funeral Home, 355 E. Ninth Upland.

Burial will follow at Mt. View Cemetery, San Bernardino. Friends may call at the mortuary from 7 to 9 p.m. today. Maj.

D. N. Giggy, Highland B. Highland of Kansas; a brother, Kenneth of Texas; and a sister, Coza L. Penner of Illinois.

Services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Mark B. Shaw Memorial Chapel with burial following at Mt. View Cemetery. John Mills, 82, Fontana Citizen John Mills, 82, of 9558 Evergreen Lane, Fontana, died Sunday in Fontana.

A native of England, he was a 5-year resident of Fontana, and a 43-year resident of California. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Doris Jean Chiatovich of Fontana; 5 and 5 greatgrandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. today at Pollock Mortuary Chapel in Pomona, with the Rev.

John C. Keester officiating. Entombment will follow in Pomona Mausoleum. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT VOTE FOR Guhin Quimby Bill Seeks State Parks Land SACRAMENTO The City of San Bernardino's park system could be expanded by as much as 80 acres through legislation introduced by Assemblyman John P. Quimby, D-San Bernardino.

The measure authorizes the Department of General Services to lease for 55 years two pieces of state land to the city for parks purposes. "It is imperative that any available open space in or near 80 acres be Involved" herehe utilized for park and recreation purposes as undeveloped land in the urban areas is rare commodity," Quimby said. Thirty acres across from the San Gorgonio High School formerly was used as a farm for Patton Hospital. They city already i is constructing athletic fields on the property and it is being developed into a neighborhood park. The remaining 50 acres is separated from the 30 by Pacific Avenue.

Thare are no immediate plans for development of it but city, officials envision its eventual use for a community center type. "I am especially pleased about the prospects of the city obtaining this particular land as there are now no parks in that general area," Quimby added. Black Students Union Plans Film SI Showings Julia D. Coble, Highland Julia D. Coble, 95, of 6798 Victoria Highland, died yesterday in Highland.

She was born in Illinois and was a 53-year resident of San Bernardino County. Mrs. Coble was a member of the Pioneer Society of San Bernardino and the a Bernardino and the San Bernardino Valley Lighthouse for the Blind. Survivors include a son, Kenneth of Calimesa; two daughters, Ethel Neece of San Bernardino and Irene L. Taylor of Highland; two grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.

Graveside services will be held at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at Mt. View Cemetery with Mark B. Shaw Memorial Chapel directing. The family requests that remembrances be in the form of donations to the Lighthouse for the Blind.

Garvin Watson, San Bernardino Garvin E. Watson, 65, of 993 Third San Bernardino, died Tuesday in a Torrance hospital. He was born in Oklahoma and was an eightyear resident of San Bernardino. Watson was a heavy machinery mover. Survivors include three sons, Alfred, of Torrance, Robert, of Carson, and Eugene, of Redondo Beach; a daughter, Latrelle Sekrya of Nebraska; three brothers, Marvin Wallace, Charles Watson and Paul Watson, all of Oklahoma; 18 grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren.

Graveside services will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at Montecito Memorial Park with Mark B. Shaw Memorial Chapel directing. Friends may call at the chapel after 7 p.m. tomorrow.

Nels Gotfredson, Loma Linda Nels R. Gotfredson, 77, of 11177 San Juan Loma Linda, died Tuesday in Loma Linda. He was born in Iowa and was a 42-year resident of Loma Linda. He was the owner of Gotfredson Trailer Sales in Loma Linda for 13 years. Survivors include his widow, Addah; two brothers, Chancey, of Alhambra, and Ira, of Highland Park; and two sisters, Edith Lassen of Glendale and Ella M.

Wilkinson of Yucca Valley. Services will be held at: 3 p.m. tomorrow at Hughes Loma Linda Chapel with burial following at Montecito Memorial Park. Bobby Ficklin, Oakland Bobby Ficklin, 41, of 972 Stanford Oakland, died Tuesday in San Bernardino. He was born in Mississippi and was a 20-year resident of California.

Ficklin was a truck driver for the Vargas Co. Survivors include his widow, Ernestine, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Booker T. Ficklin of Mississippi.

Services and burial will be in Morton, with Mark B. Shaw Memorial Chapel in charge of local arragnements. MARK B. SHAW Service Reminders MEMORIAL CHAPEL 1525 North Waterman Avenue Bobby Ficklin Services: Morton, Mississippi Laura M. Sargent Thursdav.

10:30 A.M. Clara L. Aleman Rosary: Thursday, 7:30 P.M. Mass: Friday. 9:00 A.M.

St. Bernardine's Catholic Church Mtry I. Brown Fridav. 1:00 P.M. Julia D.

Coble Fridav. 3:30 P.M. Graveside Mt. View Cemetery Reinhold O. Nauck Private Services Fridav P.M.

Major Donald Giggy Saturdav. 11:00 A.M. PENDING Lynn Bashan Samuel McKee Jr. John Thomas Milliken Joseph Imbleau Helen Pinion Garvin Watson KREMER CHAPEL 1446 North Mt. Vernon Jesus G.

Martinez Rosary: Thursday, 8:00 P.M. Mass: Friday, 9:30 A.M. Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church HIGHLAND CHAPEL 26985 East Baseline Carolyn W. Perod Fridav. 11:00 A.M.

Eva N. Ryan Fridav. 2:30 P.M. SELECTED SAN BERNARDINO Additions and revisions to the schedule of events being planned in celebration of Black Culture Week have been announced by the activities' organizers. The following schedule has been set for events sponsored by the Black Students Union of San Bernardino Valley College: On Feb.

8, the film "Stag. ger Lee" will be shown at 7 p.m. at Franklin Junior High School. The following day, the film "No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger" will be shown twice at the college at 2 p.m. in LA 100 and at 7 p.m.

in PS 201. Three films, "Tribute to Malcolm Is the Time" and "Listen will be shown at 7 p.m. Feb. 10 at Franklin, and again at a 3 p.m. the following day in PS 201 at the college.

An original studentproduced play, "Of Hot Summer Nights and Black Revolution," will be preesnted with a film, "Black Roots," at 6 p.m. Feb. 11 in the college auditorium. The same program will be presented again at 6 p.m. Feb.

12 at Franklin. Program organizers said there will be no admission charge for the Black Students Union-sponsored events. Other events relating to Black Culture Week will include displays at all branches of the City Library during the entire month of February. Les Jeune Amies has announced that the admission Centralized Computer Gives Doctor Advice LOMA LINDA A fiveyear research project providing the capability for a physician to telephone in health information from distant locations, have it processed by a computer, and have the results displayed back in his office instantaneously on screen of a small television set is being sponsored by Regional Medical Programs. This health service is being made available in San Bernardino, Riverside, and Mono counties.

Dr. Richard T. Walden, coordinator of Regional Medical Programs in Area VI, said the system analyzes medical information. Further, doctors who know nothing of computers can use it to automate diagnostic and treatment procedures. Some of the medical tasks the terminal can perform in a doctor's office or hospital, were demonstrated to about 100 medical researchers at a recent conference held in Loma Linda, said Dr.

Walden. They saw how it could be SAN BERNARDINO Esther Washington, a member of the National Welfare Rights Organization and as social worker for over 10 years, has opened "Lady Esther's Candle Shoppe" at 1046 W. Highland Ave. Mrs. Washington, who was doing freelance social work when the WRO came into being in 1967, said she will continue her social work in a small office at the candle shop.

The new shop will offer seven-day beeswax candles of original design, including one in the shape of a birthday cake, scented candles, incense, oils and other items. PICT SAVE GRAND 24 STORE BATTERY 39c DRIPLESS CANDLES ACTION OPERATED TOYS 12 dipped in. smokeless, hand CHAIN WIDE CELEBRATION PIC' 1.29 odorless, YOUR dripless PR. RET. $2.98 many and spouts 15 in.

into water, swims walks on land, dives colors colorfast $2 WELDWOOD SAVE CLIMBING stream of OLLIE OCTOPUS FURNITURE FINISH water. BEETLE 6 oz. up giant eerie and fun down creature for all! wall climbs AUTO Weldwood just wipe foam off! CAN on easy to ON EVERYTHING TOUCH apply furniture Cain FRUITWOOD stain in six wood finishes! HAIRS 89c BRIEF PANTY EACH TREAT smooth, lustrous rayon cotton blend soft, lemon $1.19 absorbent, quick ENZYME DUCO drying! CANADA SHAMpOO SPRAY ENAMEL $2-3 BRAS CHOICE PRE- LAUNDRY SOAK automotive colors for Pic' cotton or quick touch-up lace contour fit oz, lucite or natural, ENZYME spray black, white, 49c ZODIAC ASHTRAY $1.19 HALF- GALLON pastels and amber glass embossed with LAUNORY floral prints. signs of the zodiac! BRION PRE SHAMPOO lemon creme WAIST SHAPER extra rich ACCAWARE made by PUREX castile SAVE safe for colors, permanent T- -V ADV. TRIM- 1.98 egg press! MASTER takes enzyme pre-soak inches off your waist without exercise or diet 39c REGULAR with 12 leather grain vinyl belt built in copper offers 1.19 2 KING lb.

6 SIZE firm body support! undetectable under all clothes, can self stick worn dishwasher safe $1 SNACK TRAY be day! sonic-welded 19e plush closures assure unbreakable $1 INSULATED 10 oz. TUMBLER RET. tailor-made fit! T-SHIRT OR INSULATED HOT MUG $1.19 PRICE TRIMMED or BRIEF all purpose DOWN FROM 79c $9.95 CEREAL OR SALAD BOWL FORMULA FOR for 8 jobs EA. BOYS OR 40 9 409 GIRLS SAVE ON EVERYTHING! ALL PuRred HOUSEHOLD 2.79 ROUSEMOL 120 ez CLENME 00) CLEANER SET QUART RET. $5 9-24 mos.

PLAYSETS 1-3x, 2-4. FOR LITTLE PEOPLE easy care corduroy 79c LIQUID capris with color DETERGENT mated striped cotton t-shirt! EXCEL for gripper crotch dishes button shoulder. 54" EXPANDED fine fabrics. UPHOLSTERY Excel VINYL YARDAGE MEN'S UNDERWEAR QUART DISHWASHING supported vinyl breathes! cotton LIQUID double comfortable crotch cotton brief knit with knit backing, wipe-clean facing! easy to use for home or auto in textured Pic' some wide crew elastic or sleeveless v-neck waistband. YOU'RE solids, tweeds FACING and woodgrain yd.

finishes! ELSEWHERE! 79c BON AMI reinforced shoulder neck tape! S-M-L-XL. DUST'N WAX IF PERFECT YOU'D PAY ST. MARY'S $1.25 ea. DECORATOR RUG luxuriously thick MEN'S NO- -IRON PR. polyester pile so resilent it MEN'S HI- BULK springs back to erase CASUAL SLACKS footsteps! machine 3.98 casual carload and purchase dress of better slacks by quality kitten ORLON soft, HOSE one size 2.98 carved wash'n dry! Madrid dimensional pattern spray cleans polishes on- and WAX.

DUST. name you'll know! all permanent fits all! Dozens of FIRST non-slip foam back, lemPRE-MARKED press polyester blends. Pic' colors. QUALITY many colors! on oil! BY MAKER AT stripes or solids in flares, straight PRE-MARKED ERASE $4.95 RET. PRICE POLISH FURNITURE leg, belted or continental styles.

$1.50 WITH Cuna nIl. FONTANA SAN BERNARDINO RIVERSIDE 17575 FOOTHILL BLVD. 424 ORANGE SHOW ROAD TYLER AT MAGNOLIA Open 9-9 9-6 Opp. White Front DOWNTOWN 9th MAIN Open Daily 10-10; Sunday 10-7 Open 9.9 9-6 to its Afro Ball will be $2.50 per person. The ball will be held Feb.

13 at the Silver Queen Club, 345 W. Seventh beginning at 5 p.m. An additional entrant, Patricia Griffin, is among young ladies competing in the Miss Natural Beauty contest. The winner of the contest will preside over several 1 of the cultural week's events. ESTHER WASHINGTON lighting a candle New Candle Shop Opens used, for instance, to help the physician diagnose heart patients those with pulmonary or hormonal problems.

The conference was called by the Biotechnology Resources Branch of the National Institute of Health. This system will speed up diagnoses and make possible faster treatment in emergency, as well as reducing the patient's bill. For example, it takes a cardiologist 4 hours or more to analyze a complex electrocardiogram and the results may not be available to the patient's doctor for more than 24 hours. Using the computer graphics terminal this time can be reduced to seconds. It costs at least $25 to have the cardiologist manually interpret results, whereas the computer can perform this service for approximately $1.50.

As more physicians find more uses for the pictured will reduce the drawing graphics terminals we in the future, added Dr. Walden. pay, Maj. Donald N. Giggy, 38, of 7795 Peacock Highland, died yesterday in a San Bernardino hospital.

He was born in Kansas and was a four-year resident of Highland. Giggy was a retired major of the U.S. Air Force. He was a member of the Episcopal Church. Survivors include his widow: Velda; three daughters, Lavonda L.

Eckenrod, Susan L. Giggy and Dee Ann Giggy, all of Highland; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. K.

Giggy Police Shoot, Kill L.A. Holdup Suspect LOS ANGELES -A holdup suspect was shot to death last night at the El Corado Motel here. Officers maintaining surveillance at the motel because of a rash of robberies ordered the unidentified man to freeze. When he whirled and fired at officers, he was killed by a shotgun blast..

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About The San Bernardino County Sun Archive

Pages Available:
1,350,050
Years Available:
1894-1998