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Redlands Daily Facts from Redlands, California • Page 5

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Redlands, California
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Page:
5
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LocdlNotes Begiimars through advanced. CaU Walt Anderson. 793-1338. SchMl tD Matt The Kedlands high school and elementary boards will hold a regular meeting this evening In the board room. Orange and Xu- gonia, starting at 7:30 p.m.

In addition to regular business, the superintendent will submit reports oa plans for Clement Junior on accreditation and on teacher resignations and leaves. Magnavm Springtime Specials on Stereo. Free records. Ends Saturday. Sliger's.

109 E. State, Jeln New For Summer Fun Walt Anderson's Edgehill family dub. Limited number memberships available. Large spark' ling pool, beautiful shaded surroundings, 793-1338. Fires Redlands firemen extinguished two small grass fires yesterday afternoon.

The first occurred about 2:15 p.m. at 804 Carlotta Court. The second broke out at the rear of 323 West Fern about 3:10 p.m. There was no damage at either fire. New Open New Sanitary Barber Shop Comer County line road and Calimesa Blvd.

Hours 8 p.m.: closed Suii. and Mon. Denzel Goss, Proprietor. CKambcr of Cemmwrca The Board of Directors of the Redlands Chamber of Commerce will hold a regular business meeting at noon tomorrow in the Chamber building on Orange street. Rant Pianas Now available.

HoUey and Jack' con. Highway 99 and New York St. Christian Science Reading Room in Masonic building. 131 Cajon, open to public Monday through Friday from 10-5 and Saturday from 10-1. Tonight the timing of the construction of the Feather Biver high line into this valley is expected to discussed by William E.

Wame, director of the State De- of Water Resources, at a public: meeting tonight, 7 p.m., at the Orange Show cafeteria. It is a no -host I event under auspieces of the VaUey Municipal Water district. Treasure Tenet Free Shop at Larry's Paint House, Winn Building, Colton at Orange. We give Green Stamps too! KaapTCeal Now, only $199.88 foi: 1 ton refrigerated air conditioner. Limited quantity.

Call-793-1822. Herman's Furniture, 320 E. State DaiiMeratic Club Meeting An meeting for a Mentbiie: Democratic club is for Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at 1603 Capri avenue. Mentone, with Mrs.

Warren Clingman as All interested persons are Jnyited. Obseleta Stock Sale Cabinet Shop, 620 E. Citrus;" See ad on page 7. Baauiy-Ceuntelars Sumnier Jamboree Sale now in final week. your counselor or 792-8051.

Bangle Funnral services lor Lemuel R. Bangle were conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at the F. Cortner chapel with Rev. Ronald V.

Sittser of officiating. Pallbearers were Emmet R. Herbert, Lemon Lee Iferbert, George W. Bangle, KenneOi Ihrig, Albert F. Bangle, Keith Bangle, M.

C. Thompson, J. Charles F. Bangle. Inteniient was in Hillside Memorial Park.

Mayau. Services Funeral services for Lewis A. Mayou were held Monday morn: ing at 11 o'clock fhim the F. Arthur Cortner chapel, with Rev. Willard Schurr, pastor of the First Methodist church, officiating.

Pallbearers were Clifford L. Beverly Hills firm sekded make study of cciral Redlands Victw Gruen Associates of erly Hills today was selected to do the comprehensive necessary to keep Redlands wdtknit commumty a central core area. This selection, which is still subject to City Council confirmation, was announced this mwnmg by Robert Van Roekel, who has been appointed publicity ichairman for the special 701 Study committee. This committee, established several months ago, takes its name from a section of a fedoral law which makes federal funds available to cities for plamung piuiws- es. Mr.

Van Roekd explained that the selection of a plannuig firm to do the study has bein the first order of busmess ever since the idea was conceived. If the City Council now approves, then federal approval will have to be received before any stupes actually conmtence. He expects this will take from four to six months. VM study itself is expected to take about one year to complete. It will be different than many other planning studies.

It will be done on a phase-by-phase basis so that the local committees can question, criticize and direct througtwut the study period. And, most important, Victor Gruen Associates will be required to come up with a study which not only will tell the community what it must do to retain a central area, but will stipulate how it can be accomplished from an economic standpoint. As Mr. Van Roeltel put it, "We don't want to come up with a beautiful picture for someone's wall at the end of the year. We must have a comprehensive plan which can be implemented." It was with this idea in mind that the conmuttee started its search for a firm to do the precise planning.

Emmersoh' StPiene AINERAL CHAPELS HARLOW, Selena M. 11:00 a.m. Today Valley Chapel BAYSINGEB, Truman M. 2:00 p.m. Today Redlands Chapel MILLS, Mary Jane Rosary: 7:30" p.m.

Tonight Redlands Chapel Reqmeip Mass: 9:00 a.m. Wednesday Sacred Heart Church JOHNS, Rose 2:00 p.m. Wednesday Yucaipa Chapd WHITTEN. JtOm Francis 10:00 a.m. Thursday Redlands Chapel AMOS, Mrs.

Anna Services Pending Yucaipa Chapel Phone PY BROOKSiOB AVE. AT CENTCR ACROSS FROM THI NIW DAILY FACTS BUILOINO The committee £rat: determined what firms in this field would be interested, then the principals were interviewed by a special subcommittee and eliminated one by one. Six such. coDcems were initially considered. The committee took into COB- sideration such things as the total makeup of the firm, it employed economic consultants and who, its experience with similar studies, its staff potential, whether a traffic engineer was employed, and iU attitude toward retaining the indiyiduaUty of the cominonity.

Mr. Van RocJcel pointed out that Victor Gruen Associates has a regular staff of 200 people ite Beverly Hills office with, varied professional competencies. And Victor Gruen Associates has also agreed to employ a Real Es; tate Research corporation to do the very first portion of the study. This will be an economic analysis of the city as it is now and what it can be expected to be in 1970 and in 1980. This study will form tiie framework for the reinauider of the planning.

Mr. Van Roekel emphasized that the study is designed to take in much more than the downtown business district. It will include the area between Texas street on the west to. Church street on the east and between Olive on the south to north of Colton on the north. He noted ttiat Uiis is ttie "core" of the city and that without it Redlands might face the community disintegration which ali-eady has afflicted such Orange county cities as FuUerton and Santa Ana.

Within the "core area" study tiiere will be an utensified look at the central Isusiness district itself and at the area now designated as civic center on the master plan. In regard to the main downtown area, Mr. Van Roekel said the study will cover such things as and adequate paiting and how to finance whatever is The committee would also, major deputment stire into tlw downtown area, using the econoraie study as a bams, Mr. Van Roekel said. The local cnmnittee will be retained entire course of the study and seven major phase meetings with Victw Gruen Associates are specifically ilated plus many other individual meetings.

Financing for the study will come primarily from federal fiinds with the city contributing some almost totally in services, and the Downtown Redlands assb- ciaijon furnishing Uie $4600 in cash requuied, according to Mr. Van Roekel. Downtown association, which has previously endorsed the overall idea, will hold a board meeting prior to next Tuesday's Council session to discuss how its share can be raised. The special 701 Study committee is composed of representatives of the city, downtown merchants and property owners and Uie Cham- twr of Commerce. Lloyd Hulbert, Charles Bruck- ait.

Bob Kahl, Paul Lohman and Everitt Helms represent the Downtown associatiwi. George Forsberg, A. T. Mae- Alistaire, Robert Van Roekel, Harold McMiUen and W. B.

Ma- in traffic crash A reaidentvot Mexico was in Redlands Coiniiiuw'ty hospital today recuperating from the effects of a iKjik accident OB Kghway 99 near cutoff yesterday evening which almost cost him his lie amdoit occurred at 7:43 p.m. when a car driven by Miguel P. Hernandez, 69, of Leon Gto, was bumped and overturned by a car be was pulling, according to the California Highway Patrol. The sirens were widely heard in the south part of Redlands since the fire department, California Highway Patrol and Royal ambulance all called to the scene. suffered a severe crushing of this left haiid when his ear was turned on its side.

Surgery Was required to repair three fractured bones in the liand plus extremely deep lacerations. His nephew, Francisco Vargas, 14, of Los Angeles, who Was in. the towed car, was unhurt. lone are from the Chamber of Commerce. Councilmen.

Waldo Burroughs, and Harry G. Wilson, with the assistance of Planning Director W. C. Schindler, represent tiie- city. Mayor Charles C.

Parker is an ex-officio member. The special subcommittee named to fuialize the scope of the coihnuttee and narrow the choice of planning consultants was head ed by Mn Van Roekel and included Mr. Kahl, Mr. Lohman and Mr. Malone.

What sort of people travel abroad? This question and many others can be answered statistics compiled from information United States citizens give when they apply for passports. During 1961, over hialf of these applicants listed their occupations in this group: student, teacher, tary, retired or housewife. Encydopedie Bdtanatea Brewster, A. E. Van Leuven, John Noordman, Albert J.

Weld, Neil Vander Stelt and Robert M. Scarborough. Interment was in side'Memorial Park. Alexaiider Funeral Funeral services for Edwin Lee Alexander were held Sunday at 2:00 p.m. from Emmerson-St.

Pierre Redlands chapel. Rev. J. M. Steddum, pastor of Oie Emmanuel Missionary Baptist church officiated.

Burial was at Green Acres Memorial Gardens in Bloommgton. Villa Funeral Requiem Mass for Ray Rodriguez Villa was held Monday at 10:00 a.m. at St. Mary's Catholic church. Rev.

Ricardo Meza, pastor, officiated. Burial was at Hillside Memorial Park. Announcement of Funeral Services ALBERT EUGENE CULVER Services 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, at thie F. Arthur Cortner Chapel. REV.

DWIGHT H. BALL Services 10:30 a.m., Wednesday, at thie F. Arthur Cortner Chapel. HORACE O. L.

STANIFORTH Services 3:00 p.m.. Wednesday, at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day 640 S. Center St. f.ttTHW CORTNER mimiBHsrL.RMm Quemoy-Matsu trouble flares up in cycles By PHIL NEWSOM UPl Foreign News Analyst The story of the nationalist-held Quemoy and Matsu islands off the Red CMnese mainland can be counted upon to flare up in roughly two-year cycles. The Reds carried out their first heavy bombardment of Quemoy in 1954.

In 1956, coinciding closely with a visit of Vice President Richard Nixon to Formosa, there were ominous reports of feverish Red activity, including the construction of a strategic railway into Amoy and of 10 new airfields opposite Formosa. In 1958, spurred by reports of a further Red Chmese buildup and Peiping radio broadcasts'that a 'landing on Quemoy is imminent," tiie United States placed Uie 7th Fleet and 5th Air Force on alert and began escortuig Nationalist supply ships mto Quemoy. Walcema for In 1960, the Communists welcomed a visit by President Eisenhower to-Formosa with a massive bombardment of Quemoy, labeled by ttie President "a deUb- erately aggressive act." This history of events involving tile tiny islands less than half a dozen miles oB the mauiland is recited now in relation to the ex- citemoit generated ovier the last week as result of the latest reports of a Red buildup in Fukien province. These reports said Uie Red Chinese had-massed ttie biggest military force since the Korean War on Uie coasUine opposite Formosa. The forces were estimated at 400,000 etoaod troops and 300 aircraft "mosUy of the fighter type." Early speculation was that Uie Reds were posing a new Uureat to Quemoy and the Matsus.

Later it was decided that Uie lack of any visible concentration of ship- pmg meuit that the Reds actually were preparing to defend selves against an invasion attempt by CluaBg Kai-shek forces from This latter line of. speculation, however, did not rule out a Red attack pa Ihe ofbhore islands'as a preventive measure. In early 1955 Eiwnhower asked and received from Congress approval in advance of any military measures he might have to take to protect Formosa and the Pescadores ui tiie Formosa Strait. Whether this was to include Quemoy and the Matsus remained an administration secret Smce then, flie Nationalists and Uie Reds have engaged in a propaganda war involving hot words but UtUe action. Any Nationalist, attack on Uie mamland scant vaSiay at present WiUiout ViS.

oppodtion. Uie Reds undoubtedly could take botii Quemoy and the Matsus but at some cost Vital Records DEATHS JOHNS Died in San Bernardino, June 24, 1962, Mrs. Rose, E. Johns, 12233 Adams street, Yucaipa; aged 80 years, native of California and resident of Yucaipa tor 16 years. Deceased is survived by one daughter, Mrs.

Lillian M. Lilbum, Alhambra; one Ben Seeman, Colorado; three sisters, Mrs. Ida Sisto, Mrs. Kate Weatherwax and Mrs. Hannah Tremains, all of Yucaipa.

Funeral services will be held Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. at Uie Emmerson-St. Pierre Yucaipa Mortuary. Rev. William Sloan, pastor of the First Baptist church of Yucaipa, officiating.

Inteniient Hillside Memorial Park. WHITTEN Died San Bernardino, June 25, 1962, John Francis Whitten, 268 East Seventh street, San Bernardino; aged five years, native of Redlands, and resident of San Bernardino for four months. Deceased is survived by his mother, Mrs. Helen Dehtan, San Bernardino; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Lloyd Twry of Palm Springs; paternal grandfather, Harry Huck of Redlands; one brother, Edward G. Dehtah of San Bernardino. Funeral services will, be held 10:00 a.m. Thursday at Uie Redlands St. Pierre Redlands chapr el.

Rev. R. E. Wiseman, pastor of Uie Central Assembly of God Interment in Hillside Memorial Park. Poultry and Eggs LOS ANGELES, Juna (UFI) Vholcule, uneandlcd to vta- dueer, larfa unquoted, AA mtdium unquoted, AA imaU unquoted.

Prices to letailen fo.b. dlttributor plant! (deUvered cenU higberl: AA extra large A extra targe AA Urge SSK-SSK, A large large AA medium A medium AA smaU ITA-iVA. A amaU Prices to conaumeri in cartons: AA large 33-51, AA medium 39-43, AA imall 29-39, A large 33-49, A medium 3S-40, A smaU 37-40. Poultty: Fryers at randi 18-lS, roasters 31-25. Ught type hens wtd.

avg. S.74, hens cross SH-S wid. avg. 5.91; turkeys: fryer roasters 31, young toms 17-17V4. Weather May 25 May May 27 May 28 May 29 May 30 Hay 31 June 1 June 2 June' 3 June 4 June 5 June June 7 June a June 9 June 10 June 11 June June' 14 Jmk 18 June 17 June 18 June 19 June 20 June 21 June 23 June 33 June 34 June-2S June 3S Balnlan Tenia.

34 10 51 85 50 .07 61 48 .03 68 49 Tr. 78 54 73 51 S4 55 90 53 93 55 .72 55 12.78 12.81 13.81 75 55 73 52 78 53 78 55 82 55 81 53 78 83 55 81 51 78 34 61 S3. 52 91 48 103 58 103 .60 -J00 60 99 59 -99 -103 57 .99 103 80 Oalb LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Secretary of State Frank Jordan today certified a total of signatures for the Mtiative Reappor- tiounent Amendment, guaranteeing it a space on the Nov. ballot wnSUAH e. HOORB.

Publislicr. nCulK E. MOOBE. Cditsr. Pnbllalied ever; ereniog (except Sunday) at Facta buUding.

TOO Brook- sMe at Centtr. IMluids, Cdifomia. rounded October 33. imo, 72ad year. Entered as aceond dass matter October 33.

1890. at tbe Post Office at Redlands, California, under act of March 3. 1878. BATS (In Advance) By Carrier DeUTcry One Mealk 1.58 Ibiee Mmiha tM 0mm Tear 18.48 Lt Col. Jesse C.

Davis Jo Norton post IL CoL Jesse C. Davis has been assigned to the maintenance branch of the materiel iaspectioo division. Directorate of Support Service Inspection at Norton Air Force base, it was' anoouoced today by Maj. Gen. Charles W.

Schott, deputy inspector general for inqiectian. COL Davis and bis wife, Christiana, have selected a home at 213 Anita court- in Redlands where ttiey wiU Uve wiUi their prize German Shepherd dog, "Baron." Col. Davis entered Uie Air Force from Beknt. Wise, in 1940, but BOW considers Bakersfield, as home. After graduating from flying school at Kelly AFB, Texas, he was assigned to March AFB, Calif, flying tiie 38 "Lightning." During World War he served in Europe, completing 88 missions while flying Uie P-47.

Following World War CoL Davis' varied career uiduded assignments in Germany; at Hq'9Ui Air Force, Shaw Air Force Base. Soutti Carolina; as professor of air science and Uctics at University of North Dakota for five years; and in Okinawa, where he com- LT. COL. JESSE C. DAVIS manded an F-lOO fighter squadron, and was on extended assignment as chief of maintenance.

Among his decorations is the Distinguished Flying.Cross with two Oak Leaf Clusters. mergers seen after shoe victory WASHINGTON (UPD- Sharply increased Justice Department activity against business mergers was suggested today by a resounding government victory in Uie Supreme Court in a shoe in- dusti'y case. The ruling was part et a voluminous outpouring of opinions and various other actions which brought the high courts' 1961-62 term to a close Monday. The court acted on lunch counter sit-ins, sale and mailing of obscene material; congressional contempt narcotics addiction and school segregation. It also handed down one of the most far-reaching religious freedom decisions in recent times by ouUawing use of an official state prayer in New York public schools.

The justices now disperse for the summer. Barring a special emergency term, they will not return to the bench until Oct. 1. Besides the shoe industry decision, ttie government also won an antitrust ruling that officials acting for corporations are subject to the stiff penalties of the Sherman antitrust law as well as the less severe Clayton antimonopoly law. The Supreme Court reinstated several Sherman Act charges against corporation officers which were dismissed by lower courts.

Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote 51 pages in the shoe case, analyzing for the first time 1950 amendments to the Clayton Act designed to plug loopholes in the 1914 statute and brhig it up to date. Warren declared it was the intent to Congress- to curb "tendencies toward concentration in industry" in their beginnings, "particularly when those tendencies are being accelerated through giant steps striding across a hundred cities at a time." The opinion said the court agreed wiUi the government Uiat so far as the shoe industry was concerned "this is an appropriate place at which to call a halt." The judgment means divorcement of the Brown Shoe Co. of Famed actress dies dt 83 NEW YORK (UPD-Lucile Watson, 83, an actress famous for her roles of formidable dowagers, died Sunday. Her 60-year career spanned the theater, fibns and television. She appeared in 50 plafys on Broadway Viand developed what actors now call "Lucile Watson parts" the smooth, overly sophisticated society woman in smart drawing room comedies.

St. Louis and the G. R. Kinney the nation's largest retail chain. The Justice Department also won a victory of sorts in.

a price discrimination case involving two big milk disfributors in Uie Chicago iarea Bowman Dairy Co. and Uie Borden CO. A lower court had accepted the cpmpahies' cost justification for price discounts to New York Stocks NEW YORK (UPD Stocks rallied smarUy in the first hour today but lost their gains later on to close showmg litUe change in tbe popular averages. Brokers closed up shop for. Uie day in a dejected.mood, wonied by the rapidity with which Uie bears and short sellers poUnced on the early rally and snuffed it out Among the blue chips Procter Gamble and Union Carbide fell more than a pomt hut Alcoa, United Aircraft and held around point gains.

Rails and utilities finished mixed along with the chemicals, oils stayed a trifle high and so did most motors except for Ford which dipped nearly 2. Leading steels were fractionally mixed. Electi-cnics and growUi stocks turned decisively lower in the final frades, IBM sliding more than 12 and Zaith and Texas Instruments among others more than 2. Polaroid tumbled around 7 and Xerox roughly Vii. Dow Jones Stock Averages High Lew Close Chngs SOInds 548.61 533.46 535.76 off 1.01 20 Rrs 118.56115.61116.05 up 0.09 ISUUs 105.17 102.88 103.33 up 0.28 65 Stks 191.54 186.62 187.41 off 0.04 Sales today were about 4.36 million shares compared wiUi 7.09 million shares Monday.

Aeiiva Stacks Service. Ceartesy Lester, Ryani A E. Stats Vslame Clssa Chnr. M.4«« PoltfaU Hi Amer. T.

Ti General Maters tSVt Xersx UUen 1 ATca 47,588 Braaswlek I.B.M. 48,580 81. on N.J..:- 39,588 General Tel. nncb. 19 COUNTERS CANT SWAT MIAMI (UPI )- Mosquito con- tivl chief Fred Stutz insists on one unbreakable rule for his $300- a-monUi "mosquito counters" no swatting allowed.

StuU said Friday Uiat his department detemunes when to be- gui spraymg by employing counters to go to various chedqpointe. "They don't get bitten very much," he said, "but there's no swatting allowed. They're too busy counting chain stores but the Supreme Court ordered more proceedings. The case is 11 years old. In tiie field of obscenity, the court did not act the way the Justice Department suggested.

Instead, it set aside a post office order barring from the mails three magazines appealing to male homosextials. The court ruled that the were not offensive or indecent enougli to be obscene. A minority of three even said the postmaster general did not have authority from Congress to determine what is too obscene to be mailed. The court agreed to examine next term a book publishers' challenge to a Rhode Island coimnis- sion established in 1956 to discourage sales of obscene literature. Ilie publishers are Bantam Books, Dell Publishuig, Pocket Books, and the New American Library of World Literature, Inc.

About People W. H. Them, 214 West Cypress avenue, has had as guests during Uie past week Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Merchant and sons, David and Phillip, and daughter, Mary Lee, of St Cloud, Minnesota; and Mrs.

William Saunders and Miss Elsie Kuiberi; of Palo Alto. Marine Frederick R. Bowie, sen of Mrs. Helien M. Bowie.

1315 Alessandro road, was recenUy promoted to the rank -of major when he reported to Headquarters Marine Corps in Washington, D.C. The 33-year-old major entered the Marine Corps upon graduation from the University of souri in June 1951. He is a veteran of the Korean conflict and will now assume duties in the Mobilization and Joint Action branch at Marine Headquarters. Miss Mary Lee Gardner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Nelson Gardner, 703 West Fern avenue, has been accepted for admission to David Lipscomb college in Nashville, Tetin. A graduate of Redlands High school, she begin her frdhman progrim at Lipscomb in the summer quarter. She plans to major home economics. Citrus Market LOS ANGELES, June 26 (UPD- RepresentaUve prices by size and grade all orange auction markets: 728 Us 1138 1388 First grade 5.65 3.95 3.21 3.15 Second gfade ..3.63 2.83 2.46 Trend: Slightly higher. facts? Tuesday, June 5 Williqm Chovsesf dies in San William B.

Chaves, formerly Redlands and educated lands schools, died yesterday his home in San Bemardino- where he had been living for years. He was 58 years old. Mr. Chaves was born in set. Massachusetts, and came Redlands with his family when he was one year old.

After leav- ing Redlands as a young man, he lived in Colton and then in San Bernardino. He was self-em- ployed in Uie insurance and nancing business. He was a member of Uie Elks lodge. He leaves his widow, Agnes, of San Bernardino; his moUier, Mary Chaves, also of San Ber nardino, and two sisters, Mrs. D.

Tale Sr. of Mentone and Lillian Richardson of Yucaipa; and several nieces and will be recited a't 8 p.m.. tomorrow at the Mark B. Shaw chapel in San Bernardino. side services will be at 10 a.m.

Thursday in Hillside Memorial Park, Redlands. The family suggests that friends' who wish may make memorial contributions to the Heart Association. YOU'RE A MAN, NOT A MANIKIN TO US We recognize the difference with Rs: Personal Service Every, family has different instir- needs. To plan the rifht protection for jsn family artd keep It up-to-date requires the kind of attwtion vt im. And you need help, you get it tts than window dreeing P.S.

Personal iService. Sawyer REDLANDS, CALIFORNIA hsunaa iSttnljfBaii 12 W. State PhoiiePY 3-2814 acuoeMnK JOM asmn IHtUIMNCE On Oum Ttv By KiU How emtMs car have so b9 almost low-priced? nam, styling, Yet its price isrigbtelose to many models cf the "hw-prieed" Mmyw d9 my bttyingtCom mhew little extra it costs to get all tbe extra nlues included in USabre'ssarpHsiaglyhw price. Seme front safest made! A 401'CU. in.

Advanced Thrast engineering that moves the engine xforanrd-'gimyea straight tnckiegfffafeereemg'-andaMarly flat front floor! Turbine Drive autO' matie there is! And lets mere you'd never guess LeSabre gives you. Your Buiek BUCK WE BUY Tops in along wHh evening, NBC-TV. Brought ta.yetu ij Buick on behalf of your authorized Buick deolsr BERT S. HATFIELD BUICK 112 West State St. "SEE THE FAIUIOUS lOS ANGELES HOME SHOW JUNE 21 JULY I I.

A. MEMOWAl SPORTS ARENA".

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About Redlands Daily Facts Archive

Pages Available:
224,550
Years Available:
1892-1982