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Paradise Post from Paradise, California • 5

Publication:
Paradise Posti
Location:
Paradise, California
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 PARADISE (CALIF.) POST Feb. 20, 1976 Page 5 and pump company for 24 years prior to retirement. Recently celebrating his 46th wedding anniversary, Mathis was a member of DeSabla Grange, Butte Pomona Grange and the Paradise Nazarene Church: He leaves his widow, Thelma of Magalia; three sons, the Rev. Bob of Mountain Home, Idaho, Jim of Sonora, John of Watsonville; two brothers, Halick and Paul, both of Phoenix, and three sisters, Velma Carpenter of Phoenix, Verna Barrett of southern California; and Opal Walker ot California. Rutherford OBITUARIES arrangements.

Born Dec. 6, 1907 in Chicago, Mrs. Gregg came to the ridge 14 years ago. She was a member of St. Thomas More Catholic Church.

She is survived by one sister, Velma Fattore of Willow Springs, Ill. Sheen Thirty-year Paradise resident Lloyd Carey Sheen died Feb. 10 at his home. He was 63. The Rev.

Norman Nelson, pastor of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Church, officiated at services conducted at Rose Chapel. Interment was in Paradise Cemetery. Born Oct. 12, 1912 in Dimock, Sheen operated a service station here for 11 years priop to retirement 14 years ago. He was a former member of Paradise anyone How to start saving: 1.

If you kick a costly habit, like smoking, save the cost. A packs-a-day smoker can wind up $400 a year richer. 2. When you get your next pretend you didn't. And stash amount in your savings account.

Every payday. 3. Each evening, hide away loose change. Once a month, your hoard in your savings account. 4.

If you buy your lunch, brown-bag it several days a week. 5. Spending a lot on movies? How about going to lower-cost 6. Spending a lot on records books? Visit your public library. 7.

Spending a lot at posh Newspaper columnists often cover inexpensive ethnic restaurants. many languages. 8. Easy way to be more all credit cards in a good, safe place one week each month. 9.

Save automatically. Tell how much, how often. Ask us we'll take it out of your UCB account, put it into savings. 10. Save that windfall money.

gifts from Uncle Fred. Tax refunds Uncle Sam. Bonuses. Dividends. 11.

When you make the last on the car, the furniture, the tinue the "payments" To your account. 12. Don't be a loosewad. less cash by carrying less. 13.

When you have lunch or "on the company," save what spent on yourself. 14. Try to get up a car pool. for every mile you don't drive. 15.

Some parents save at exchanges. They swap what's outgrown for another kid's outgrown. 16. Read the Thursday paper scissors in hand. Clip money-saving coupons out of weekend food 17.

Also, note which stores best specials on meat and canned Get Elks Lodge 2026. Sheen also belonged to the Paradise 'Men's Garden Club and was equipment manager for Paradise Little League. He leaves his widow, lone of Paradise; three sons, Mickey and Ron, both of Paradise, Terry of Weaverville; two sisters, Ruth Sheen and Meryl Smith, both of Dimock, and one grandchild. Deffenbaugh Kenneth Roland Magalia died Funeral nesday at Rose Lewis Langworthy, River Hospital, were also held with interment Cemetery there. Born June 28, With raise, that two- your deposit matinees? and restaurants? Dine in miserly: retire hiding UCB and checking Cash from Overtime.

payment loan, conUCB savings Squander dinner you'd have Bank used-clothing good but good-but- with Deffenbaugh, 66, of Feb. 10 at a local hospital. services were held Wed- Chapel with Elder chaplain at Feather officiating. Services in Vancouver, following in Park Hill 1909 in Plainview, Deffenbaugh worked as a custodian in the Moreland School District in San Jose for seven years. He came to the ridge in 1973.

Survivors are his widow, Mamie of Magalia; two sons, Kenneth of Vancouver, Jim of San Jose; six daughters, Jean Gonsalves, Beverly Suckling, Peggy Goodwin, Dorothy Dykgraaf, all of Vancouver, Pat Wooden, Kathy White, both of San Jose; one brother, Fred of South Dakota; two sisters, Delia Hill of Plainview, Lela Develin of Tennessee; 20 grandchildren; and one great -grandchild. Reed Jessie May Reed, 82, a native of Pennsylvania, died Feb. 15 at a local Funeral services were held Tuesday at Rose Chapel with the Rev. Daniel Immel, pastor of the First Christian Church, officiating. Burial was in Paradise Cemetery.

Mrs. Reed, born June 17, 1893 in Newcastle, was a teacher in that state for 23 years. She came to the ridge four years ago. She was a member of the Paradise First Christian Church, Westminster Presbyterian Church in Bell Gardens and the Mabel Wilson Lodge 567 of the Ladies Auxiliary to the United Railroad Men. Surviving are one son, Robert Reed of Paradise; four grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

Blanche Rutherford Wells, 83, a resident of Stirling City since 1943, died Feb. 9 in a local convalescent hospital. Funeral services were held Feb. 11 Paradise Chapel of the Pines with the Rev. Gerald Summers, pastor of the United Methodist Church, officiating.

Interment followed in Stirling City cemetery. Born Jan. 17, 1893 1 in Beatrice, Mrs. Wells came to California 48 years ago. She was a member of Paradise Senior Citizens and Senior Singles.

She leaves one sister, Lucille Steward of Beatrice, and numerous nieces and nephews. Simpson Ruth Ann Simpson, 62, a native of Illinois, died Feb. 12 at her home. Double funeral services were conducted Saturday for Mrs. Simpson and her husband, Ivan 58, who preceded her death Feb.

9 at a local hospital. The Rev. Earle Creamer, pastor of the First Baptist Church, officiated at her rites held at Paradise Chapel of the Pines. Interment followed in Paradise Cemetery. Born Nov.

26, 1913 in Fairfield, Mrs. Simpson came to the ridge 12 years ago from La Puente. Surviving are two sons, Ivan E. Jr. of Paradise, Bill of Aptos; one daughter, Luann Simpson of Seattle, two sisters, Josephine Vining of Yuma, Mary Robertson of Los Angeles; four grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren.

Tillitt Cherokee Cemetery is the final resting place for Ralph Eugene Tillitt, 71, of Cherokee, who died Feb. 11 at a Paradise hospital. Funeral services were conducted Saturday at Paradise Chapel of the Pines with the Rev. A. J.

Linden of the Chico Neighborhood Church officiating. Born Dec. 13, 1904 in Idaho, Tillitt came to this area 13 years ago from Oregon. He was last employed by an Oroville firm as a heavy equipment operator. Surviving are his widow, Delena of Cherokee; two sons, LeRoy of Portland, Glen of Wallowa, and two sisters, Wilma Bogan of Sacramento and Verla Mathewson of Boardman, Ore.

Mathis Magalia resident Raymond Chesley Mathis died Feb. 13 at a local hospital. He was 68. Funeral services were held Wednesday at Paradise Chapel of the Pines with the Rev. Virgil Hook, pastor of the Community Bible Church, officiating.

Burial was in Nimshew Cemetery. Born March 21, 1907 in Elm Springs, Mathis came to the upper ridge nearly five years ago. He worked as a foreman for a water Private funeral services were held yesterday (Thursday) for Richard Burr Rutherford, 84, who died Monday at a local hospital. The Rev. Gerald Summers, pastor of the United Methodist Church, officiated.

Interment was in Paradise Cemetery. Born April 11, 1891 in Beatrice, Rutherford came to Stirling City in 1959, moving to Paradise in 1969. He was a 43-year member of the Elks Lodge, affiliated with the local group, the National Retired Teacher's Association, Butte County Farm Bureau and sponsored the R. B. Rutherford award for Paradise Junior League Football.

Rutherford graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1917 where he was named an All-American. He lettered all four years in football, basketball, wrestling and gymnastics. His sister, Blanche Wells of Stirling City, died last week. Survivors include his widow, Evelyn of Paradise; one son, Phillip of Wrightwood; one daughter, Ann Davis of Danville; and one sister, Lucille Stewart of Beatrice, Neb. Lane Interment in Paradise Cemetery followed funeral services Wednesday for Eliza Lane, 79, who died Monday at a local nursing home.

Elder Lewis Langworthy, chaplain at Feather River Hospital, officiated at the rites conducted at Rose Chapel. Born Jan. 28, 1897 in Iowa, Mrs. Lane came to Paradise 24 years ago from Glendale. She has been a California resident since 1930 and was a member of the Paradise Seventh-day Adventist Church.

She leaves two sisters, Georgia Troutfetter of Paradise, Mary McCoy of Tujunga; and several nieces and nephews. Those who wish may contribute to the Voice of Prophecy 'radio program through the local SDA church. Gregg Graveside services were held yesterday at Paradise Cemetery for Virginia Katherine Gregg, who died Tuesday at a local hospital. She was 68. Msgr.

Raymond Renwald of St. Thomas More Catholic Church conducted the services. Interment followed. Rose Chapel directed the Dave Harter's BICENTENNIAL QUIZ Did you that during World War I Mrs. Woodrow Wilson pastured 20 sheep on White House turf? that on New Year's Day, 1907, Theodore Roosevelt shook hands 8,513 times? that President Taft once became firmly wedged in his bathtub and had to summon help? that according to the AAA the Toyota Celica GT has the nice quality of a Grand Prix sports car the taut feel of an Alfa or Porsche but enough room for two adults both in front and in why the country's largest insurance company has such nice things to say about the Celica GT.

Come in and see me or any of our Toyota family here at Oro Dam Motors, Inc. 3378 Myers St. -1- Oroville -f- Ph. 534-1532 USED CAR SALES No. 2 550 MONTGOMERY ST.

(ACROSS from SAMBOS) 534-1535 We offer free pick-up and delivery service by our Paradise employees. Only in a car can you go where you like, when you like and with whom you like! Juvenile charged Sheriff's deputies report the arrest of a 17-year-old Paradise youth or suspicion of possession of stoler property, violation of curfew and tampering with and entering a vehicle. Officers say the youth was observed at 12:15 a.m. Feb. 12 in a parking lot a the high school allegedly tampering with several vehicles.

A reserve deputy reported watching the suspect try to open two parked car: in the south parking lot. these ideas, can save money. Even you. 18. Can you take your vacation after the summer peak has passed? And avoid peak prices as well as the crowds? 19.

Nobody budgets any more. Except some of the most successful savers. Try it. 20. Follow upcoming local events in the paper.

Substitute things that are free and fun for expensive entertainment. 21. Some retired couples put all Medicare refund checks into savings. They've paid the doctor and can spare the cash. 22.

If you're delayed turning in your expense account, maybe you can bank that money when you get it. 23. Try a "No" Week every so often. No dining out. No socializing after work.

No bowling night. Instead, curl up with a good book, enjoy a fatter nest egg. 24. Can you embroider, crochet, knit, weave, carve, draw, paint or photograph your Christmas gifts? 25. Family idea: celebrate all birthdays with a contribution to a special savings fund: for ads.

26. Bookstores to-fix-it guides. Even you may be able to the family vacation. have some neat how- Please note notice. And if you're all thumbs, for penalty fix a leaky faucet, or weatherstrip a door.

27. Plant boutiques have how-togrow-it guides. Maybe one of your thumbs is green. Start your own plant cuttings and save plenty of greenbacks. 28.

Plan your buying to take advantage of sales. Like winter clothes, linens, toys after Christmas. And furs, air-conditioners and summer clothes in August. 29. Always eat before you go grocery shopping.

You'll buy less. 30. Have your savings account in a have the bank near your home or office. Like any of goods. UCB's 260 branches up and down California.

it straight from How much should you save? You know why you should save life has a way of surprising all of us. How much you should save depends on what you have salted away in good investments. How well shielded you are with medical and life insurance, and employee benefits like pension money. How easily your spouse could get a job. And whether there's a Daddy Warbucks among your relatives.

But enough hedging. Most financial experts think you should have at least two months' pay tucked away where: 1) It's safe; 2) It's immediately reachable; 3) It earns its keep with good interest. Where should you save? Consider a UCB Regular Savings Account for your emergency fund. Why? At UCB, your money earns annually, with interest earned and compounded dail No minimum opening deposit is required. There's no charge for withdrawals.

And you can have automatic deposits made regularly from your UCB checking account How can your money earn more? After you've built up a solid rainy day fund, it's smart to save for sunnier days. And to invest the additional money where it'll sit longer and earn more. For example one of our time-deposit plans. With each Time CD (Certificate of Deposit), you invest a minimum sum for a specific time 30 days to 10 years. Here's our current Time Time CD lineup: Annual Minimum How Long You Interest Amount Per Agree to Leave Rate Certificate the Money.

$500 30 to 90 days $500 90 days to 1 year $500 1 to years $500 to 4 years $1,000 4 to 10 years $1,000 6 to 10 years that interest rates can be changed without that Federal law requires a substantial interes early withdrawal. What are you waiting for? We've tried to tell you more about saving than you ever found in a bank before. Why not try some of the tips Then, when you find you really can you might bring some of the moola in one of our 260 branches. We're trying get ahead in the world, too. UNITED EB BANK CALIFORNIA Member F.D.I.C., ad above save, to to.

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About Paradise Post Archive

Pages Available:
136,124
Years Available:
1946-2003