Skip to main content

Full text of "San Rafael Daily Independent Journal (1951-02-14)"

See other formats


WEATHER REPORT 
Bay Region: Occasional rain to­ 
night and Thursday, Little tem­ 
perature change. 
Gentle vari­ 
able winds, becoming southerly 
8-15 mph tonight. Low tonight 
45-50. 


DAILY 
Ést. 7861' 


S f ft V I N G 
A l l 
O f 
M A R I N 
C O V'N T Y 


SAN RAFAEL RAINFALL 
Total to d a te ----------------55.64 
This date last year 
97 0% 
Seasonal average ________23.94 
Temperature*! 
Noon today — ________ _ 58 
Yesterday. 
high 67; low 47 
90TH YEAR 
5c PER COPY 
SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1951 
$1.25 A MONTH BY CARRIER 
No. 277 
All Fund-Seekers 
Asked To Unite With 
Community Chest 


Business, Labor Chiefs Back 
'One For All, All For One' Plan 


One combined fund drive in 1951 for all welfare and youth 
groups in Marin, was the goal set at the annual meeting of the 
Marin county community chest which met in executive session 
in Boy Scout hall, San Rafael, last night. 


Immediate study of possibility of including all drives and 
campaigns in the Community Chest drive in 1951 was authorized 
by the executive committee of the Chest, which approved of 
the pattern being brought before the Chest’s budget and ad­ 
missions committee. 
The aim of consolidating all major fund-raising activities 
of the county’s welfare and youth ♦ 
groups not already a part of the qujc¿jy now to sell the people of 


Novato Sewer Chief Files 
$110,000 Slander Suit 


Community Chest, such as Marin 
Visiting Nurses Association, Ameri­ 
can Cancer Society of Marin, Guide 
Dogs for The Blind, March of Dimes, 
Amerclan Heart Association, would 
mean that residents of Marin would 
be asked to give only one contri­ 
bution annually. This systenj, it was 
pointed out, would replace the pres­ 
ent repetitive money-raising cam­ 
paigns. 
Harry Albert, president of Albert’s 
Inc., and a San Rafael councilman, 
as well as a committee member of 
the chest, strongly endorsed cen­ 
tralization of agencies and drives. 
Speaking from the merchants’ point 
of view, Albert said he wanted all 
the agencies in the chest, “even the 
Red Cross”, and said he believed 
many of the agencies not in the 
chest want to be in it. He said he 
was Influenced by the fact that 
merchants “are always being solici­ 
ted for some group”. 
ORGANIZED LABOR 


Agarin the meaning of the Com­ 
munity Chest for the welfare of all 
oí us. This is a year of decision not 
only for the chest but in a very 
real sense for all Americans. 
“NEW IMPETUS” 
“The red feather symbol of our 
work will be spread county-wide in 
the next few months so that every 
agency which benefits from the 
chest will be known to every man, 
woman and child. A new impetus 
will be given to the 1951 campaign 
which will go into high gear and 
travel at that speed all year ’round”. 
Sidney Braverman, of San Rafael, 
a San Anselmo business man, who I gula League of Communities to un- 
was reelected as a member of the dertake a study of a Tiburón metro- 
executive committee, called for a politan incorporated area, 
“projection of the work of the In- 
The ^ 
va, proposed as part 
dividual agencies who are members of a tet of projects the Chamber 
of the chest since as he said, 1 the i wiu 
on jpjj year> decided upon 
Community Chest Is the dollar sym- , ^ard o( directors meeting Mon- 
bol for the human welfare that t day night. It would include repre­ 
stems from the agencies, but the | s e n ta d , of Tiburón, Belveron 
Chest would mean nothing without, Gardens, Strawberry, Hllarita, Para 


ANOTHER OPEN WELL — Mrs. Myra L. Meyers, of 6 Roosevelt 
avenue, Santa Venetia, inspects an abandoned well near her home 
with the hope that it will soon be filled in. 
Mothers in Santa 
Venetia are protesting against this well and another in the area 
being left uncovered and unattended. After the Kathy Fiscus tragedy 
in San Marino, many unused wells throughout the county were 
filled in, but apparently these two were overlooked. 
(Independent-Joiirnal Photo) 


Bridge Directors 
Sidestep Question 
Of State's Loan 


Tiburón Businessmen 
Agree To Sponsor 
Incorporation Study 


Tiburón Chamber of Commerce 
plans to sponsor a Tiburón Penin- 


Speaking 
for 
organized 
labor I the work of the individual agencies^ dise Cove and other ^ 
from 
groups in the county, Omar E. Me- which give aid and comfort through- xiburon out to Highway 101. 
It 
Nally of San Rafael, business agent j out the county. 
wag suggested that the League, as 
of the AFL International associa— 
Braverman emphasized the need j p 
g 
r t of its study of incorporation, 
tioo of Machinists, No. 238, seconded j for an intensive and specialized ais0 gtudy extended 
fire, school’ 
Albert’s endorsement, and speaking “education and public 
informa- sanitation and recreation districts 
from the floor declared that trade tlon progrra" centajjly planned and 
projects'to be accomplished with- 
union groups would “welcome a uni- j directed, with the full oooiferation of . 
«n davs include* 
fled plan whereby the Community! the officers, directors and members 
Chest would serve as a real com- of each of the agencies In the chest. 
1—Development of a parking 
lot 
munity fund-raising body acting cn Approval of his program was given with cooperation of the First Na- 
behalf uf^Mf immty-wide welfare [by the board. 
rfídnáTfiank. 
and youth agencies.” 


Golden Gate Bridge 
legislation 
committee yesterday sidestepped the 
proposal to surrender the district’s 
f ht to borrow $5,000,000 from the 
state to build a new Marin approach 
road 
Instead, committee members wil 
recommend that the bridge board 
appoint a committee of two to meet 
with ^Charles Purcell, chairman of 
the state highway commission, in 
order to determine what the high 
way commission is willing to do on 
improvement of the Marin ap­ 
proach. 
\ 
The motion was made by Napa 
Director Peter Gasser who said he 
didn’t think the district should re­ 
linquish the right to borrow the 
and Musso’s to serve as a parking $5,000,000 without an assurance that 
lot and clear Main street of autos. tbe highway commission would “do 
3—Completion of residential light I «nmotMno- 
additions. 
4—Installation 
l i m i t 
of speed 
signs. 
5—Chamber assistance in com­ 
pleting the new fire house addition 
0—Ask Northwestern Pacific to 
clean up the old baseball field and 
fill their property east of the Tib- 


H&ht | something in return. 
Earlier, Marin Director 
¿eland 
Murphy had appeared before the 
committee as a guest to urge the 
committee to recommend return of 
the loan 
BAGSHAW OPINION 
Committee members also heard 
uron Highway and plant shrubs and this action recommended in a let- 
trees. 
ter from T. Fred Bagshaw, chair- 
7—Initiation of a civilian defense man of the Marin board of super-, 
program. 
* 
visors. Bagshaw wrote that Purcell 
Projects to be accomplished with- had repeatedly stated that the high- 
in six months Include: 
, way commission would not make 
1—Requesting the county to bulk- j any repairs or improvements on the 


McNally was elected one of the 


« V “ 
their reelected director, who attend 
C * * *t_ to»t- “2 5 Í I 
J ? I all chest meetings and can hold any 


AGENCY REPRESENTATIVES 
I 
2—Rocking of the Kashaw Ease 
The agencies of the chest and ment between the Angel Isle Cafe 


replaces Roy A. Brown, of San Ra- offices except on the budget and Blood Bank Holds 


Third Session Today 


replaces Brown 
committee. 
on 
The San Rafael blood bank, hold­ 
ing its third session today, and 


elected last night—Mrs. 
Lamb of Corte Madera, an insur­ 
ance representative; Eugene E. D. 
Crawford of Mill Valley, an archi­ 
tect, and chairman of the Mill Val- 


fael, publisher of the Independent-1 
. ,, 
. 
. 
Jhmn.l who resigned ^ e ^ l t i o n . 
" y T a m p Kre g irt 


i t r of “ . r ^ f a e f b ^ h ol £ £ M * ! f d 
í J" 
!Mr?- 
Samuel Archibald; Catholic 
o* America, el uirBctor ox trie Cncstf J 
¿ 
n ... 
al. 
Youth organization, Harry- Butter- 
worth; Catholic Social Service, Ed- 
T. raa 
,. 
J ward 
Ravlzza; 
Family 
Service . 
Three other new directors were A 
pfltriric nvrno* r nv 
now .established as a once-a-month 
lected Ust night—Mrs. L o u i s e 
blood procurement center, has re- 
Todaro: St. Vincent’s 
School for “ lved matiriaI assistance from the 
Boys, Conrad Johnson; Y.M.C.A., | American Legion and the College 
Dr. Alfred J. Schwarz. 
of Marin, according to Mrs. Robert 
u* 
ni.nninp rnmmkdftn- anH At i 
These directors, together with th e!Hll0tt* Red Cross 
blood procure- 
ley 
planning commission, and, Ar- . 
. 
. th ftffencw thev _.nrp- 
ment chairman. 
thur D. Church, of San Rafael, I 
t . 
™ 
agencies they repre- 
. 
. . 
n/vrfhKflv mart a apr nf PoHIIa 4^*a« ■ 
thC Ch6stf ^ ill gO ÍQtO A 
Dr* LOlllS L. RobUlSOIl Of th6 SSIl 
. -j,. 
_ 
series of executive discussions within ! Rafael Legion post, has promised 
and Electric Company. 
j the next 1Q dayg ^ promu]gate thelr the use of the Legion hall for the 
FIVE REELECTED 
¡ individual programs for the 
1951 monthly visit of the Irwin Mem- 
Five directors reelected were Irv- campaign and help formulate the orial bloodmoblle, along with 
con­ 
ing Chapman, executive of Albert’s i over-all program of the executive tributed light, heat 
and storage 
Inc.; Dagnall; Fred Smith IV, of committee. Mrs. Austin Is a mem- space 
Kent Woodlands, a San Francisco j ber of the chest executive commit- 
business man; K. K. Bechtel, Ross, tee as well as representative cf the 
of the Bechtel %International cor- [ Camp Fire girls. Others on the 
pora tlon of S.F.; and A. J. Bianchi, | executive committee are Thomas, as 
rancher of Pt. Reyes. Thirteen president; vice president Crawford; 
other directors’ terms don’t expire William P. Murray, president of the 
until the end of the year. 
j Bank . of San Rafael, treasurer; 
Leonard Thomas, San Rafael at- Albert, Dagnall and Braverman. 
tomey, president of the chest who 
LIST NOT COMPLETE 
Was reelected for 1951, keynoted the 
The complete list of those who 
future of the chest when he de- will be called into discussions which 
clared: “We must and will organize | , 
(Continued on Page Two) 


The College of Marin, through 
President Ward Austin, has donat­ 
ed and transported 16 beds and 
mattresses, essential equipment for 
the blood program. 
Mrs. Elliott stated that at next 
month’s blood bank, March 14, don­ 
ors who gave at the first one in 
December, would be able to con­ 
tribute again, since , the 
three 
months waiting period will be over 
at that time. 


head the section of Paradise Drive 
where slides threaten near the old 
toll gate tower and appeal to the 
federal government for aid because 
the road IS used by personnel from 
the Naval Net Depot. 
2—Completion of unfinished and 
unpaved streets In residential areas 
for acceptance and maintenance by 
the county. 
3—Expansion of fire protection by 
installation of an additional fire 
house in Belveron Gardens area 
4—Mail service through Tiburón 
Long term projects, aside from 
the League formation, include: 
1—Possible incorporation of Tib­ 
urón after exhaustive study. 
2—A municipal yacht harbor in 
the Tiburón water-front area and/or 
Reedport area. 
3—Eventual business development 
in the Tiburón state highway area 
4—Continued 
support for 
the 
Southern Marin Recreation Center, 
5—Encouragement of transient ac­ 
commodation for tourists and yacht- 
men, such as “an artistic motel” or 
hotel. 


Marin approach as long as 
the 
bridge directors had the right to 
borrow the money. 
The committee also decided not 


Jaques Charges 12 
Defamed His Name 


Twelve Novato residents were named defendants in a $110,000 
slander suit filed yesterday in Marin superior court by Frank 
M. Jaques, former president of the Novato Sanitary District board. 
The suit asks $10,000 for actual losses resulting from alleged 
slanderous statements made last February and $400,000 in puni­ 
tive damages. 
: 


Named as defendants are; 


Robert K. Hunter, Meredith L. Wilson, Thomas Shea, Henry 
mend that the bridge board write Laiu rUp, Anibel Azevedo, Ann Pike, E. R. Vogel, Lewis List- 


to make any recommendations at 
this timer on any legislative bills for 
acquisition or maintenance of the 
bridge district. 
They will recom- 


to all the boards of supervisors m | ^ 
Carrie A . Lfctman, 
Henry Braun, 
Bessie A. Braun, and 
the seven counties in the bridge p 
, rr.n|pv 
1 
district requesting their . attitude | 
Lawrence A. Cowen, attorney for jaques, said the incident 
occurred on February 14, 1950, after a public hearing of the 
Novato sanitary board. 
After the February meeting, held 


and instrtictions to the bridge board 
on the bills. 
APPROVES BILLS 
The committee will recommend 
approval of bills providing for the I to discuss the issuance of bonds for 
state to take over the Sausalito payment of special assessment in 
lateral for maintenance and 
the the district, Cowen said the group 
half mile from the end of the Mar- gathered in the meeting room and 
ina boulevard in San Francisco to loudly made the alleged slanderous 
the Richardson avenue approach to | statements, 
the bridge. 
j 
HONESTY, FIDELITY 
Napa Senator Nathan 
Coombs’ 
The compláint states Jaques has 
bill to give the right to the bridge “conducted and demeaned himself 
district to borrow $12,000,000 for a with honesty and fidelity and at all 
new low level approach 
through times while occupying said position 
Sausalito was 
recommended 
for has enjoyed a good reputation.” 
favorable action. 
His reputation was injured, the 
Before discussing Mils to give suit further states, to the extent of 
the state control over the bridge | $10,000. Details of the actual $10,000 


Peace Reigns As 


Mrs. Booth Halts 


Council Argument 


district, committee chairman W. 
Finlaw 
Gerry 
commented 
on 
Assemblyman Richard McCollis- 
ter’s recent claims that his form­ 
er bills did not get out of 
mittee because of the influence 
of bridge directors. 
“That’s not true ” said Geary, 
“we didn't raise a voice against 
those bills. McCoIlister never lift­ 
ed his hand to get them out of 
committee after he gave lip ser­ 
vice to the hills for the sake of 
political alms.” 


Mason's Successor May 
B*‘ Named Tonight 
Sausalito-Marin 
City 
sanitary 
board is expected to name a re­ 
placement to fill the seat of Wil­ 
liam Mason at a meeting in Sau­ 
salito City Hall tonight. 
Mason’s seat was declared vacant 
following an election contest suit 
brought by Sausalito Councilman 
Sylvester McAtee on the grounds 
that Mason is a resident of San 
Rafael. 


loss were not given in the complaint. 
Jaques complaint states he was 
slandered when 
the 
defendants 
through evil motives and malice 
and ill-will toward this 
plaintiff 
willfully, wickedly, wrongfuly, ma­ 
liciously and with Intent and design 
to injure, disgrace and defame this 
plaintiff and to bring him into pub­ 
lic discredit” spoke certain words, 
claimed to be slanderous. 
STATEMENT TOLD 
The statements said to have been 
made, are noted in thV complaint 
on file in the county clerk's office 
in the courthouse. 
Jaques is an insurance and real 
estate broker. He was president of 
the district board from its organi­ 
zation until last fall when three new 
bqard members were elected 
and 
the board was reorganized, he is 
still a board member. 
From the establishment of the 


Supervisors Finally Agree On 
Survey Of Jobs And Salaries 


Marin supervisors finally decided yesterday to let Kroeger and 
Associates, San Francisco personnel consultants, survey the administra 
tive procedures of county government and make a Job classification j district, board meetings have been 
and salary scale for every person in county employ. 
held in his offices 
.The decision was reached at the board’s meeting and Chairman 
The defendants are all residents 
T. Fred Bagshaw was authorized the agreement with the Kroeger 
Novato aiea and are active 
firm. It calls for payment of $7,800 for the complete job, $1,500 to 1x1 Novato civic affairs and as critics 
be paid by March 13, 11,500 by April 13, »1,500 by May 13, and the j 
iffn a T sh e l tTnre.ident of the 
remainder of $3,300 on submission of the final report, which is to be j N 
o v a t o T 
a x p a y e „ 
A 
s s 0 c l a t i 0 n w 
h 
l c h 
made not later than June 9. 
* 
i presently is pressing a reassessment 
Determination to make the survey and to hire the Kroeger firm suit against the sanitary district, 
came as a result of action by a4----------------------------------------------1 Paul Henley was elected to the 
joint grand jury-supervisor* com­ 
mittee. Each had started a survey 
separately until they jollied forces 
to study the problem, Emil Pohli 
is chairman of the grand jury com­ 
mittee and all the board members 
acted for the supervisors. 
DECISION REACHED 
Their meetings took several weeks 
and finally resulted in the decision 
lo hire the Kroeger outfit in prefer­ 
ence to other firms which submit­ 
ted bids. 
It also determined to 
conduct the administrative survey 
of all departments of county gov­ 
ernment rather than selecting Just 
a few for. special consideration. 
Marin Businessmen Get Advice On Problems Ahead 


By TOM WIEDER 
Productiveness based on individual 
efforts is the task of small business 
today, Richard Oddie, manager of 
Bank of America’s small business 
advisory service, told nearly 150 
Marin businessmen at the first an­ 
nual business conference last night 
at Marin College. 
Oddie told Marin merchants they 
hold the most valuable business 
asset, knowledge of their customers, 
which Is essential during the rough 
period ahead. 
WHO KNOWS BEST 
“Who knows the customer better 
than the independent small busi­ 
nessman?” Oddie demanded. “That 
knowledge is the most priceless as­ 
set, though it never appears on a 
balance sheet.” 
Oddie’s talk on “Business General­ 
ship” at the dinner which concluded 
a day of informative talks by Bay 
Area business authorities, summed 
up opinions that independent mer­ 
chants must lay plans now for the 
long fight ahead. 
Oddie cautioned against undue 
pessimism for the future, saying 
that no matter what happens 
business must sen the right goods 
at the right times, shortages or not. 
“Most money is spent In front of 
store windows,” Oddie explained. 


“But there are still too many 'dead 
flies’ in those windows, though not 
so much in Marin County* Many 
windows are merely walls which 
say ‘Keep Out’.” 
The conference got under way in 
the college library at 2 pjn. with 
the keynote speech of Rilea W. Doe, 
vice-president of Safeway Stores. 
Doe outlined what American citizens 
must do If we are to maintain sta­ 
bility in an artificial war economy. 
“The individual must vote at 
every election,” Doe said. “He can 
urge congressional support of the 
Hoover Commission for economy in 
government, at least those parts he 
favors. He should refuse (o ask for 
or accept any preferential help 
from the government for himself, 
his business, or his state ” 
PEOPLE MUST THINK 
In the future we can have unity 
but without uniformity,” Doe con­ 
cluded. “Stalin has uniformity. Let 
us get a toe-hold on government. If 
America is to be run by its people, 
It is the people who must think!” 
Conference visitors then heard a 
panel of two speakers on “Mer­ 
chandising Today.” T h e y were 
Charles Oadsby, of P. O. Ac E.’s ad­ 
vertising department, and Charles 
Dohrman, of the Palace Hardware 
Co. of San Francisco. 
Gadsby, a San Rafael resident, ex­ 


plained that there are many proper 
and profitable uses of advertising In 
a war economy. He quoted statistics 
and charts to show that Americans 
can raise their living standards in 
spite of mobilization requirements, 
but we will need unusual pro­ 
ductivity. Advertising must continue 
in full force. 
NEED ADVERTISING 
“Though Marin County’s popula­ 
tion is now 61 per cent over that of 
1940, the value of advertising has 
remained too small for the*1 bene­ 
ficial conditions existing for mer­ 
chants here. There is plenty of 
room for improvement in Marin 
advertising, both in quantity and 
quality.” 
Though subscribers to Marin’s 
only dally newspaper have nearly 
quadrupled since 1940, G a d s b y 
showed, Marin merchants have only 
doubled their use of its advertising 
facilities since that year. 
Dohrman, who lives at Ross, 
warned merchants against promo­ 
tion of “hard to get” items, or being 
talked into pushing these items in 
larger quantities than they would 
ordinarily buy. 
STOCK AVAILABLE 
“Merchandise will be available for 
a long time, and it has to be sold,” 
Dohrman said. 
“New employees must be properly* 


selected, trained, compensated, and t the White House in San Francisco 
they must be appreciated. We must j told his audience after Dr. Thai- 
buy right and sell right.” 
Dr. Margaret Thal-Larsen, area 
analyst for California Department 
of Employment, predicted difficulty 
for Marin county in bidding agaihst 
other areas for labor replacements 
as workers are funnelled into the 
Rrined forces. 
“Compensations c l a i m s h a v e 
dropped more in Marin than most 
other areas,” Dr. Thal-Larsen ex 
plained. 
MANPOWER 
“Our two problems are the draft 
and getting pcdple from outside the 
normal labor force to work in in­ 
dustry. But we must not damage in­ 
dustry, especially California agricul­ 
ture, and the service trades, for if 
that happens then people ask what 
they have been fighting for.” 
Dr. Thal-Larsen said t h o u g h 
Marin County will not necessarily 
have to recruit housewives, it wlñ 
have to bid in the open market 
against the rest of the Bay Area. 
Already the unemployment claims 
load in the area has dropped about 
60 per cent. Though we are in a 
slack season, labor shortages have 
not eased off as in former years 
“Modem business is going to have 
to take off its coat and go back to 
work,” George Hall, controller for. 


Larsen finished. 
TOO MUCH GOLF 
"There has been too much 'golf- 
playing*. Businessmen have much 
valuable experience which will have 
to be used, for the major problem I wage demands are met. 
in any store starts at the top of 


Kroeger agrees to study the duties board of directors last fall and was 
of each position in county service lflter forced to resign when it was 
and set forth detailed specifica- discovered his house was not wholly 
lions of duties, responsibilities, and | within the district boundaries 
desired qualifications for employees 
in each class. 
In addition ‘there 
will be an allocations list showing 
the class to which each employee 
is assigned. 
TTiis allocations list will be ar­ 
rived at by presentation of a ten­ 
tative list for consideration of the 
supervisors 
and the 
department j rines landed today at the big North 
heads. 
The final allocations list j Korean east coast port of Wonsan 
will be reached with as nearly as L^ a gurpri5e rajd under cover pf a 
possible complete agieement. 
strong allied naval bombardment. 
Tlie Kroeger firm aso will make 
Wonsan is 90 miles inside Red 
a thorough study of each depart- territory above parallel 38 on the* 
(Continued on Page Two) 
| sea of Japan. 
On the flaming central Korean 


ROK Marines Land 


Behind Red Lines 


TOKYO UP)—South Korean Ma- 


Greyhound Drivers 


Threaten Strike 


front, American, French and Dutch 
forces inflicted a staggering toll 
on Chinese and Red Korean divi­ 
sions striving for a breakthrough 
along a 20-mile-wide sector. 
A field dispatch said the allied 
defenders shattered two communist 
SAN 
FRANCISCO 
(U.R)—Some J divisions “in a welter of bloq¿, 
3,600 Pacific Greyhound bus drivers 
m d shellfire, the Chinese 
in seven western states voted today dead lay by the thousands on all 
on a proposal to strike unless théir sides of surrounded Chipyong.” 


that store.” 
Hall urged businessmen to keep 
all the basic records needed for the 
Office of Price Stabilization so they 
can be in tune with new mark-up 
regulations on merchandise they 
have sold in the past. 
* 
“I think a new mark-up fegula- 
tion will be out inside of 48 hours,” 
Hall said. “It has been ready for 
some time, but a few individuals in 
Washington had to be sold.” 
CREDIT PROBLEMS 
Consumer and retail credit were 
discussed by Elliot Swan, of the 
Federal Reserve Bank of San Fran­ 
cisco, and Frank Caldwell, general 
manager of the Retailers’ Credit As­ 
sociation. 
Swan explained Regulations W 
and X, which control consumer and 
real estate credit respectively. He 
warned businessmen not to be com­ 
placent about these controls. 
“Existence of controls Is a grave 
(Continued on Pag* Two) 


If the proposal carries, officials j 
C* M an AppllGS Fof 
of the AFL Amalgamated Associa- j SailSdlffO BUS Route 
tion of Street, Electric Railway and 
r . z . McCrosky of Marin City has 
Motor Coach Employees would be applied to the state public utilities 
authorized to call the bus drivers commission to establish a Marin 
off the job March 1, when the j city-Sausalito bus fine, 
present agreement expires. 
Hie company said it offered a 
two-year contract that included an 
increase of 7 cents a mile for driv­ 
ers and 10 cents for other em­ 
ployees, retroactive to last Novem­ 
ber and quarterly 
wage 
reviews 
based on the cost of living index. 
The union said the drivers are 
demanding an increase in the pres­ 
ent rate oí 6.6 cents a mile for 
drivers to 8 cents; a $50 monthly 
pay raise for station workers; a 
$16.48 daily pay guarantee in place 
of the current $11.92; and a con­ 
tinuing contract with a reopening 
provision on 60 days notice by 
either party. 
Negotiations will continue up to 
the deadline, the union said. 


San Anselmo’s Mayor Carmel 
Booth refused last night at a coun­ 
cil meeting to let an argument go 
on between Councilman Jack Skin­ 
ner and wire Chief Nello Marcucd 
and spoil that city council’s recent 
record of calm and quiet. 
A few fiery words were touched 
off when Marcucci told Skinner that 
he never took an Interest In the 
fire department. 
Skinner opposed and voted against 
a measure which granted $10 allot­ 
ments to Firemen William Sousa 
and Richard McLaren to do the 
city’s civil defense clerical 
work. 
Mrs. Booth proposed the mere since 
the men seemed* to want to take 
the work In their extra hour»—and 
since the city’s treasury does not al­ 
low the hiring of a full time clerk. 
The proposal was approved after 
a lengthy review of San Anselmo’» 
defense work by its coordinator 
Walter Langford. 
Langford 
said 
someone was needed to do typing 
and other small clerical jobs in con­ 
nection with the classification of 
the city’s civil defense personnel, 
recruited recently by questionnaires, 
CODIFICATION 
Langford said his own crew would 
do much of the codification but the 
information could be recorded by 
the firemen. 
Skinner objected, he said, on the 
“principle” oí the thing. He said 
that it was a dangerous thing to 
make specialties and that It would 
pave the way for others who could 
do things a little better to ask for 
more money. 
“The boys said they didn’t want 
the money if it was going to cause 
hard feelings,” the chief retorted, 
but Mrs. Booth refused to let the 
men argue and went on 16 other 
business which included: 
Setting a three dollar fee for cab 
drivers who drive cabs in San An­ 
selmo. 
Some 
of them are now 
operating uhder San Rafael license. 
Ordering a change in its dog or­ 
dinance to require a two dollar fine 
against owners of dogs picked up 
by the humane society on school 
grounds. 
Voting a nod of approval for the 
San Anselmo Rotary and Lions dubs 
biood donor work. 
Refusing to change back the name 
of the road extension of the Ala­ 
meda, to Old Jersey Road, ovar 
protest of four property owners. 
Calling for bids on two, four door 
low price police cars. 
Ordering dosed the entrance to 
the Miracle mile at Essex street. 


Reed Meets Tonight 
Reed school board of trustees will 
hold its regular meeting in th« 
Tiburón school at 8 p. m. today. 
During the meeting they will an­ 
swer questions 
from the 
Reed 
Mother’s dub on plans for the new 
school üi Tiburón. 


Want to 
GO INTO BUSINESS? 


New super type 9-pump Mobilgas station being 
erected on Highway 101. 
Maximum commute 
and local traffic. Prospective leasers now being 
interviewed by General Petroleum leasing offi­ 
cer at E. C. Wood Fuel Co., Francisco Boulevard, 
San Rafael, Phone 1475. 


2 
INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL. Wed.. Feb. 14. 1951 
Marin Businessmen 
Get Advice On 
Problems* Ahead 


(Continued from Page One) 
mistake If they weaken our resolve 
to restrict credit and tax severely, 
checking Inflationary pressures. We 
will have excess purchasing power 
spilling over Into blgck markets.'’ 
Swan stressed that Regulations W 
and X are not separate from the 
rest of the anti-inflationary pro­ 
gram# Sound taxation and govern­ 
ment spending are even more im­ 
portant, he insisted. “Otherwise 
price celling, won’t he effective and 
need for them will not diminish.” 
TOO MUCH CREDIT 
Caldwell told his listeners that 
each businessman is directly con­ 
cerned with the credit of his cus­ 
tomers, saying that individual mer­ 
chants extend too much credit with­ 
out knowing about their customer’s 
ability to pay. 
“Too many customers are obligat­ 
ing themselves too heavily as the 
value of the dollar drops, without 
any idea of their fixed obligations,” 
Caldwell stated. 
He explained the functions of 
credit clearing houses, showing how 
merchants could save themselves 
much grief by checking into the 
records of prospective customers 
whose backgrounds are unknown to 
them. 
“As newcomers arrive in Cali­ 
fornia from all over the United 
States, this situation becomes more 
apparent. Your problem is not so 
much with the delinquent customer 
who perhaps has sickness in the 
family as it is with the careless and 
Improvident, many of whom would 
be insulted if you told them they 
were considered bad credit risks.” 
CLEARING HOUSE 
*1110 credit bureau is a clearing 
house of credit Information,” Cald­ 
well continued. I t is an odd and 
Interesting fact that where there Is 
a history of unpaid bills it usually 
follows a customer like a shadow. As 
such customers move, these leopards 
do not change their spots.” 
Conference members also heard 
the dinner speaker, Richard Oddle, 
describe contributions of the United 
States Department of Commerce 
through Itatexhaustlve supply of lit­ 
erature and services to small busi­ 
ness. . 
SUCCESS GUIDE 
Oddle filled in for Merrill Wood­ 
ruff, business consultant tor the 
Department of Commerce, who was 
suddenly called to Kansas City. 
“The department is the mer­ 
chant’s voice in business, for it pro­ 
vides a tremendous amount of in­ 
formation. It is a guide to the ins 
and outs of success in many fields,” 
Oddle said. 
Oddle informed his audience that 
the Department of Commerce could 


help them in procuring war con­ 
tracts by providing them with all 
needed information. He described 
regular bulletins that print synopses 
of all oontracts granted, but Oddle 
also warned businessmen to be on 
their guard. 
“Your government is a hard- 
boiled party to a contract,” Oddie 
admonished. “Don’t consider a war 
contract the pot of gold at the end 
of the rainbow, even though the 
United States is our biggest buyer of 
goods and services.” 
An elaborate display of small 
business aids was shown in the col­ 
lege cafeteria at the conference. Hie 
latest business machines were ex­ 
hibited by national and local con­ 
cerns, while the Department 'of 
Commerce showed many pamphlets 
and periodicals it publishes to aid 
beginners and veterans in the field 
of merchandising. 


Community Chest 


Asks Combined Drive 


Supervisors Agree 


On Surveys Of Jobs 


(Continued from Page One) 
ment and its administrative pro­ 
cedures. Findings of this study and 
recommendations on matters of ad­ 
ministrative organization and prac­ 
tices will be submitted from time 
to time as work on particular de­ 
partments is completed. 
In addition the existing pay prac­ 
tices will be surveyed, compared 
with comparable types of employ­ 
ment in other public and private 
places of employment and a pay 
plan recommended to make Marin 
county’s salary scale adequate and 
equitable. 
Proposed rules for Installation, 
interpretation and administration 
of the classifications and pay plan 
will be Included. 


(Continued from Page One» 
will determine the choice of new 
member agencies to participate in 
the 1951 campaign was not revealed 
at last night’s meeting. 
The theme of “one contribution 
for 1951” was given enthusiastic re­ 
ception by those who followed the 
long and detailed discussions which 
prolonged the meeting into a three- 
hour exposition of future planning 
Fred Smith, speaking as a long­ 
time affiliate of the YMCA project­ 
ed a revitalization or the Chest in 
Marin through a “one for all and 
all for one” appeal 
Mrs. Archi 
bald, speaking for 
Sunny 
Hills 
stressed the importance of the 
Chesf and pledged the support, as 
did Smith for the YMCA, of her 
organization 
for the 
immediate 
plans of the Chest, 
Ed Ravizza declared he would be 
gratified to “go all out in push­ 
ing forward the education and pub­ 
lic relations program as outlined 
by Thomas and approved by the 
board.” 
A sense of “home-front urgency” 
pervaded the meeting, with officer* 
and 
directors 
moving 
quickly 
through the formal business as­ 
pects to go into their executive 
session to hammer out the prob­ 
lems facing 
the 
community “in 
these critical times.” 
One member summed up 
the 
meaning of the Chest to every one 
in Marin when he said “We can 
freeze prices, and wages and pro­ 
duction but we can’t freeze the 
Chest because the heart that cares 
cant be turned into a cake of ice.” 


Mrs. Susan Donnan 
Memorial services for Mrs. Susan 
Donnan who died Monday in Mill 
Valley will be held at 5 pan. tomor­ 
row at the Mill Valley Community 
church. Private funeral services will 
be held tomorrow. 
Mrs. Donnan, who is survived by 
tour daughters, three sons, and sev­ 
eral grandchildren, was a resident 
of Marin since 1917 and was active 


Funeral Today For 


Retired Bridge 


Builder, G. Joost 


Funeral services will be held at 10 
ftjs. tomorrow at Keaton’s mortu 
try, San Rafael, for Gottfried Joost, 
TO, retired pile driver and bridge 
builder worker, who died yesterday 
after a long Illness at his home, 319 
G street, San Rafael. 
He leaves his widow, Mrs. Antonia 
Joost, and a sister Mrs. Johanna 
Boehne of San Rafael, and another 
sister, Mrs. Augusta Rath of San 
Francisco, and several nieces and 
nephews. 
* 
He lived in San Rafael for 30 
years and 
before 
his retirement 
worked on bridge building projects 
throughout the state. 
He was a member of Pile Drivers, 
Bridge, Wharf and Dock Builders' 
Union, Local No. 34 of California, 
and the Golden Gate Aerie, Eagles, 
No. §1 of San Francisco. 
Burlap will be at Mt. Tamalpais 
cemetery. 
• » • 
Mrs. Mary Alice Cooper 
Funeral services were to be held 
this afternoon at Russell and Gooch 
mortuary for Mrs. Mary Alice Coop­ 
er, 74, San Franacisco, who died in 
local hospital Monday. She was 
the aunt of Mrs. Conrad T. Han­ 
sen, 407 Monte Vista, Mill Valley. 
Mrs. Cooper was a native of Ma­ 
son, Mich. She is survived by two 
sisters in Los Angeles, and a sister 
and brother of Michigan. Inurn­ 
ment was to be private. 


DEATHS 


DONNAN—In MUI Valley, Febru­ 
ary 12, 1951, Susan Freeman, loving 
mother of Willis Donnan of San 
Carlos, A. McKie Donnan of Los 
Angeles, Mrs. Clarence Walkley, 
Miss Grace Donnan, Mrs. Donald C. 
Fowler of Mill Valley, and Mrs. Je­ 
rome Callahan of San Francisco, 
survived by nine grandchildren and 
four great-grandchildren; a native 
of New York, aged 82 years. 
Friends are Invited to attend a 
memorial servicé Thursday, Febru­ 
ary 15, 1951, at 5 p.m. at the Mill 
Valley Community church, Olive 
and Throckmorton avenue, Mill Val­ 
ley. (Russell Sc Gooch, funeral di­ 
rectors, Mill Valley.) 
(2/14) 
• • « 
JOOST—In San Rafael, February 
13, 1951, Gottfried Joost, beloved 


husband of Antonia Joost, brother 
of Augusta Rath and Johanna 
Boehme. uncle of eight nieces and 
nephews and eight great-nephews 
and nieces; a native of Germany, 
aged 70 years. A member of Pile 
Drivers, Bridge, Wharf and Dock 
Builders' Union, Local No. 34 of 
California, and Golden Gate Aerie 
F.OaE., No. 81, of San Francisco. 
Friends are invited to attend the 
funeral Thursday, February 15,1951, 
at 10 o’clock am. at Keaton’s mortu­ 
ary, San Rafael 
Interment, Mt. 
Tamalpais cemetery. 
(2/14) 


Mill Valley. (Detroit, Michigan, pa­ 
pers please copy.) 
Friends are invited to attend the 
funeral services Wednesday, Febru­ 


ary 14, 1951, at 2:30 p.mv at the 
Memorial Chapel of Russell Ss 
Gooch, 270 Miller avenue, Mill Val­ 
ley. Inurnment, private. 
(2/141 


I BIG SCREEN 
TELEVISION 


COOPER—In Mill Valley, Febru­ 
ary 13, 195ff Mary Alice (Mae) 
Cooper, mother of Arthur W. Foun­ 
tain of Detroit, Michigan, sister of 
Nita Borchers and Grace Gardner, 
both of Los Angeles, Hattie French 
and Clyde Lyon, both of Michigan 
aunt of Mrs. Conrad T. Hansen of 


DIVORCES FILED 


CORRECTION 
Robert Moore, 38, who fell 
down a 12-toot basement exca­ 
vation Sunday night in San An­ 
selmo, lives at 219 San Anselmo 
drive, San Anselmo. 
Moore’s address was incorrect­ 
ly given in yesterday's mdepen- 
dent-Jouraal as the home of an­ 
other Robert Moore. The Inde­ 
pendent Journal regrets the er­ 
ror. 


DEADLINE SET 
Work is to start immediately. 
Kroeger agrees to submit a tenta­ 
tive classification report by April 
9, a final classification and pay 
report by May 9 and to complete 
all studies and submit 50 mimeo­ 
graphed copies of a final report and 
recommendations by June 9. 
Supervisors Indicated that the 
two earlier reports would make it 
possible to use the report in pre­ 
paring the 1951-52 budget, which 
is scheduled for work starting not 
later than May 1. 
If administrative changes rec- 
commended in thes urvey are put 
into effect, Kroeger also will rec- 
commend modifications In the clas­ 
sification and pay plan to meet con­ 
ditions created created by the new 
administration. Supervisors must 


Graphite Is believed to have re­ 
placed metallic lead in pencils as 
early as the 10th century. 


CAMELLIAS 
$1.50 and up 
AZAIEAS_________75c and up 
DAPHNE 
$1.00 and $1.50 
Also Rhododendrons 


"From Grower to You • • . 
Save the, Differencef 


SMYTH CAMELLIA 
NURSERY 
Thomas Court, Lagunitas Road 
Boss, Phone 4684-W 
(Closed Thursdays) 


GORDON—Elizabeth Marie Diehl 
vs. Francis C., extreme cruelty. 
MILLER — Loraine vf. William 
Stewart, extreme cruelty. 
\( 


Advertisement 


make these administrative changes 
before September 9, however, in 
order to receive this service without 
extra cost. 
Heads of all county departments 
met yesterday with a representative 
of the Kroeger firm who explained 
the survey, how it would be con­ 
ducted and what was desired. He 
asked for cooperation of the depart­ 
ment heads 
and 
then answered 
questions about the survey. 


B E QUICK 
r, Trail M mnhhtis 
Chronic bronchitis may develop if your 
mngh, chest cold, cur acute bronchitis 
is not treated and you cannot afford 
to fa*» a chance with any medicine 
less potent than Creomulsion which 
goes right to the seat of the trouble to 
help loosen and expel germ laden 
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and 
heal raw, tender, inflamed, bronchial 
membranes. 
Creomulsion blends beechwood 
creosote by special process with other 
time tested medicines for coughs. It 
contains no narcotics. 
No matter how many medicines you 
have tried, Creomulsion is guaranteed 
to please you or druggist refunds 
money. Creomulsion has stood the 
tact of many millions of users (Adv.) 


/Matching Box Spring $44 


Snaly brings you your onco-a-ytar opportunity to 
save spectacularly! 


Check these features ym ’d expect to find only in 
higher priced mattresses, 


• Decorator designed damask cover 
• Body balanced innersprtng unit 
• Exclusive Sealy insulator construction 
• Pro-buift borders to prevent sagging 
• "Handi-grip" handle for easy turning 
Y 
• 8 oversize ventilators 


Bay on Convenient Budget Terms 


1 * Open Thursday 
Evenings by 
„ Nights 7 'til 9 
Appointment 


* We Specialize in Early American, Cotonía! and 
Provincial Furniture 


To Our Friends: 


We cordially invile you io .our first 


Anniversary of the PARKSIDE, in the city 


of SONOMA, 113 Napa Si., on February 16. 


WARREN and BARNEY 
' 


P. S.—Parkside Pilot$ Party, Feb. 23rd 


New Modern Styling! Rectangular 
215 Sq. Inch True-Focus Picture 


Philco Balanced Beam 20-inch TV is hailed every- 
‘where as bringing the truest, clearest, most spec­ 
tacular picture in all television# and it's yours now 
housed in a brand new cabinet, beautifully styled 
of selected woods. 
Complete with Electronic Built- 
in Atrial. Come in at once 
for immediate delivery. 
FtaTa 
— j 
* - 
M wimRf 


OTHER 
1 Q Q 9 5 
PHILCO 
MODELS 
no it) mí Mrmtr 


EASY TERMS 


1421 Fourth St. 


San Rafael - Phone 654 


475.00 


e 5 h/b b k s to payj 
0 


in - 
Specials for THURSDAY, FRIDAY ft SATURDAY at 
FOOD FAIR 
I 
Independent Home Owned Market 
701 San Anselmo Avenue 
San Anselmo 
Right Reserved To Limit — Subject To Stock On Hand 


Florida Gold 
GRAPEFRUIT 
Iona 
- 19* 
Large No. 2 
Cans_____ 


M.J.B. RICE 
Special Procesa 
Full 2-lb. 
Carton___ ______ _ dEi v 


Borden's 
Cdlaje CHEESE 
E L ........ 23* 
RBHi 


Yacht Club 
TOMATOES 
_ 19* 
Solid Pack 
No. 2 Can 


"BETTER QUALITY MEATS 


If 
All of Our Produce Is 
Guaranteed Unconditionally! 


BUTTER 


Firs! Unaliiy 
Solids 


Smoked, Half or Whole 
TURKEY 
Delicious Hot or Cold. 8 to 10-lb. avg. 


COFFEE 


Fresh Dressed, Fancy Colored 
FRYERS 


Monarch 


* ,, 
' jfi 
Triple Hefined Cottonseed 
F l l l l Q l l O f t 


Sweet Pickled Shoulders 
, 
, I CORNED PORK 


PEACHES 


Del Monte or Haai's 
Large 21 Can 


SMoin, Rib or T-Bone 
STEMS 


Grade “A" Steer Beef 


* Peas 
* Chopped and 
Leaf Spinach 
* Peas and 
Carrots 


Packages 


Large Eating 
ORANGES 


Sweet ft Juicy 


5 lbs 2 5 


Golden Ripe 
SANARAS 


(Not Mexican) 
2 lbs. 2 9 


Grade "A" Steer 
EGGS 


Gill Edge 
Large Grade "A" 
Doz 
C CORNED BEEF 
lb. 


LETTUCE 
Criap Large Heads 
2 
bead* 1 7 ^ 
CELERT 
Fancy Crisp 
each 15^ 


Boneless Brisket 
GRAPEFRUIT 
Large Sunklst 
each 5* 


\ 


Fairfax Community Church Plans For Growth 


I-J REPORTER HONORED — Don Davis, Inde- 
pendent-Jouroal reporter (right) receives “editorial 
citation” placque from Ed Fitzhugh, publisher of 
thq El Centro'Post-Press and nationally syndicated 
columnist who headed the California Newspaper 
Publisher Association’s 
J951 awards committee. 
Davis won the award for “best series of articles 
reflecting thorough, 
accurate investigation and 
interpretation of a situation which in the public 


Interest called for a presentaron cl facts, analysis 
and clarification.’* The series for which Davis 
won the citation was the Illustrated series of 
articles on the need for a major airport In Marin 
county. Fitzhugh said the judges considered “in­ 
dividual initiative in developing material.” The 
presentation was made at the CNPA's annual con­ 
vention In Sacramento fast week. , 


Mello Opposes Formation 
Fire District At Inverness 


By WOODY YVTLLIAMS 
The long dormant Inverness Pub­ 
lica Utilities District came to life 
Monday evening at the school house 
when it agreed to take the Inver­ 
ness Volunteer fire department un­ 
der its wing. 
The pubic meeting was called by 
the volunteers to determine taxpay­ 
ers reaction for such a move. The 
citizens present voted unanimously 
to support this action. 
■ County Fire Chief Camille 
Mello offered the only objection. 
He said that there were already 
six fire districts in the county 
and that only one of them is 
doing a good Job. That one was 
K ent field. For all the rest, Mello 
said, he had to send In equip­ 
ment to put out Hhelr fires. 
He proposed the organization of 
a county-wide fire district, but when 
questioned, he could offer no rea­ 
son why the formation of a district 
at Inverness would hamper the de­ 
velopment of such a project at a 
.later date. Mello also assured the 
'Inverness volunteers that, the coun- 
PREST 


ty would continue to furnish aid 
when needed, if “not busy with an­ 
other fire.” 
Inverness Fire Chief Elgin Baker, 
in turn, pledged the continued co­ 
operation of the volunteers with 
the county, but he pointed out that 
the Inverness fire fighters must dis­ 
band unless, additional funds are 
forthcoming. 
He said that up to date the vol­ 
unteers had achieved “fairly decent 
results as a private organization,” 
but in this growing community the 
matters of financing were “getting 
out of hand.” 
The Monday 
night 
agreement 
amended last year’s decision by the 
department to form a fire district, 
separate from the utility district. 
It was decided wiser to utilize the 
already existent taxing powers of 


the utilities district. 
Don Abelseth, utility district com­ 
missioner, read a letter from Dis­ 
trict Attorney Dick Sims, that ad­ 
vised Inverness to ‘hold a public 
election on an ordinance which 
would grant the utilities district 
permission to take over the volun­ 
teer department and to support it 
with tax funds. 
Gordon Buck, secretary of the 
volunteers estimated their yearly 
budget at $500. Both fire officials 
and utilities district officials pointed 
out that taxes to cover this amount, 
would mean very little to each in­ 
dividual taxpayer In the district. 
Inverness residents expressed the 
opinion that this would be a better 
method of insuring focal fire pro­ 
tection than the current practice 
of passing the hat. 


Speaker at the Fairfax Commun­ 
ity church Thursday evening will be 
Dr. Sidney Buckham, recently elect­ 
ed the presider . of the protestan! 
churches in northern California and 
Nevada. Dr. uckham, a “pediatri­ 
cian for growing churches,” will 
present to the friends and mem­ 
bers of the church a plan of help in 
its program of expansion. Formerly 
with a large church In San Mateo, 
he is now with the office of direc­ 
tor of church extensions. 
The new officers for the Fairfax 
Community church were installed 
at the regular services, Sunday. 
Election of the officers was held at 
the annual meeting of the congre­ 
gation in January. 


Marin City Parents 


Elect New Officers 


Members of Marin City Parent 
Education Program met at Tamal- 
pali High school Saturday night to 
lay plans for the spring term session 
and future activities. 
New officers for the spring term 
are: 
Mrs. Homer Harris, president: 
Mrs. John Wall, vice-president; Mrs. 
Erland Koski, secretary; Mrs. Wal­ 
ter Turner, treasurer; Mrs. L. N. 
Bailey, schedule chairman; 
Mrs 
Kenneth Howard, librarian; 
Mrs 
Edward L. Pierce, program chair­ 
man; Mrs. Martin Friedman, pub­ 
licity chairman; Mrs. Bruce Risley, 
hostess, chairman. 
Theme of the spring term will be 
“Emotional Security for the Marin 
City Family.” Members have de­ 
cided to discuss family attitudes 
toward the national ehiergency, pre­ 
paring the family for the new baby, 
recognition of normal behavior in 
children, among many other topics. 


Leaders of the church for' the 
year are: Rev. James Montgomery, 
pastor;' Everett Jensen, cabinet 
chairman ; Lloyd Morgan, financial 
secretary; 
Mrs. 
Thomas 
Teare, 
church clerk; Mrs. Charles Camp­ 
bell, church treasurer; Mrs. J. R. 
Ingram, music chairman; Mrs. Lin­ 
ton T. Pratt, outreach chairman; 
M'rs. Everett Jensen, publicity chair­ 
man; Frank Albert Sunday School 
superintendent; Mrs. Catherine Ve- 
tengle, Sunday School treasurer; 


Yankee Discovers Way 
To Handle Visiten 
BOSTON (U.R)—A Boston business 
executive has two chairs for callers. 
One is a normal chair. The seat 
of the other slants forward so sharp­ 
ly an occupant keeps sliding off. 
Welcome callers are guided to the 
good chair when the executive tosses 
a sheaf of important looking papers 
on the slanting seat In the case of 
unwelcome guests, he tosses. the 
papers on the good chair. 


Miss Henrietta 
Vetengle, Sunday 
School secretary; Mrs. Arleigh Wil­ 
liams, Pilgrim Fellowship leader and 
Linton Pratt, manse committee. 
Deacons will be Carl Benson, Jack 
Uhte, Ray Bishop and Thomas 
Teare, Jr. Deaconesses will be Mrs. 
Louis Dallara, Mrs. Leger B. Curtis, 
Mrs. Pauline Johns and Miss Matt 
Lou Hunter. 
The board of directors will be 
composed of Joseph Conterno and 
Rod Chisholm, who were elected for 
three years; Frbnk Ahlert, Jack Ci- 
mino and Linton Pratt, elected for 
two years, and Miss Geraldine John­ 
son and Thomas Teare, elected for 
one year. 


INDEPENDENT-JOURNAt, Wed.. Feb. 14, 1951 
3 


Largest Selection In All Marin 


SISTERS MATCH 
CORINTH, Miss. (U.R)—Mrs. B. B. 
Voyles and Mrs. Leroy South, each 
the mother of four children, were 
operated on for the same ailment on 
the same day by the same doctor 
and occupied the same hospital 
room. Incidentally, they’re sisters. 


n m i f a u n i H . 
PLATEAU • 
the suit with the weightless feel 


fabric by 
OacificMills 
* 
$60 to $85 


Marin'* Leading Clothier* 


San Rafael 
Novato 


STORE HOURS: 
8:30 A. M. TO 10 P. M. 
Sundays: 10 A. M. TO 0 P. M.Thurs. 
Sat., Feb. 15,16,17 
NO 


LIMIT RIGHTS 
RESERVED. 
SALES TO DEALERS 


00 THIS* 
When your child catches cold, relieve 
'distress even while he sleeps! Rub Ms . 
throat, chest and 
back at bedtime 
with wanning .,. ▼ V A P o R u W 


f «mb? 
n i'll 
t 
VISJÍS 


New! Clmie-Testeil 
Ingredients Safeguard 
Hair and Scalp 


FORMULA 
A-10 


DEPENDABLE SERVICE 
IS PRICELESS ! 


STOP! SHOP 


FOR BETTER VALUES SHOP BRAVERM AN'S FIRST 


FOR 'MEN 


CHECK 
THESE 
SYMPTOMS 
NOW 


1. ttchiness of scalp 


t. infactMHts dandruff 
3. scaliness of scatp 
4. dryness af scalp 
5. common fungus 
diseases of tne scatp 


ROW AVAILABLE... J1.ll Jin tax 


LOGS 


Burnt slowly, Ignitos easily, 
economically priced. Con­ 
veniently packed, m e s s - 
free bundles. 


INNERSPRING MATTRESS 


SIMMONS SPRING 


HOLLYWOOD STEEL FRAME 


A.LL 
FOR 
9 5 


GRAVEL A FU EL CO 
Third 81 
Phone 


ADVERTISEMENT 
No Charge For Delivery 


Hadacol 
New Mother 


HADACOL Supplies Vitamins B\ 
B*, Niacin and Iron in Which 
Her System Was Deficient 


Mrs. Lottie F. Edwards, who lives 
at Route 1, Inverness, Miss., has 
two careers . . . she Is a registered 
nurse and also a wife and mother 
of a new baby. 
Af ter her baby 
was bom, Mrs. 
Edwards felt 
run-down; she 
knew she had to 
do something to 
help overcome fl||| 
this condition so 
that she would 
feel up to her 
many duties. Mrs. Edwards began 
taking HADACOL and says it really 
helped her. Mrs. Edwards was suffer­ 
ing a deficiency of Vitamins Bi, B*, 
Niacin and Iron, which HADACOL 
contains. 
Here Is what Mrs. fedwards says: 
“I have taken one bottle of your 
HADACOL and am now on my 
second bottle, and I can say It has 
really helped me. After my baby 
came I didn’t feel like walking 
around, I had headaches and was 
very nervous, and even one bottle 
has helped me so much. I want to 
keep on taking your wonderful HAD­ 
ACOL. I will certainly recommend It 
to all patients I come in contact 
with, for I think HADACOL is just 
the formula needed for Vitamin and 
Mineral deficiency.’ 
Registered nurses, in increasing 
numbers, are showing a keen inter­ 
est In HADACOL and in the insults 
, that are being secured with this 
great modem formula. Requests have 
been received from many of these 
nurses for professional bottles of 
HADACOL and many of them indi­ 
cated that they recommended the 
HADACOL formula to their patients. 
HADACOL has helped folks of all 
ages when their condition waa due 
to a deficiency of Vitamins B«, Bn, 
Niacin and Iron, elements which are 
contained in HADACOL. 
(01951, The LeBianc Corporation 
i 


2.49 
Alarm Clock 
1.98 


Jse. 
You fust can't put a price 
on the dependable ser­ 
vice of a Pharmacist. To 
know that you can rely 
on him implicitly when 
you need him most is a 
great comfort. Our Pre­ 
scription Service IS de­ 
pendable • • • efficient, 
accurate and trust-wor­ 
thy. It HAS TO BE... 
because we have staked 
our reputation on its de­ 
pendability and accur­ 
acy. Bring your prescrip­ 
tion here with confi­ 
dence. 


GILBERT... 


1.47 Aluminum 
Percolator 
98' 
6 CUP_____ 


PEEL TUB CHAIRS 
S C 7 5 


No Charge For Delivery 


33c Cleansing 
TISSUES 
19* 
44$ SHEETS 
FACI ALETTE 


MODERN 
COCKTAIL CHAIRS 


75 


Mohair Covers In Choice Colors 


15c Paper 
NAPKINS 
9* 
PEG. OF 80. 


E V B R ID /M V A L U ÍS M 
D RU G S 
- COSM ETICS 


1/Z TvfBSM 
ImsTót/ 
Iw 
a r m 
■391 


USTEA/XE 
M T/SEPT/C 
79* 


MMDS 
He*aa 
4 -eesw eeze bottle A tJl 
Al*AS£lTZ£R cq, 
BOTTLE C* 
JO 
DR£ft£sMMPOO QfXl 
e - o z o o r r c e 
w 
i 
lt/STAE‘CA£Af£ V ) 
LL4/L? 0#£SS/tTG 
PACOU/Ulo7/o>/y¡^\ 
S/LAT/V SM T/AL-eg****} 


BUBBLE SATA! 
20 FLORAL1 PACKAGE'S 
CAA0/P Sv 
( 
TABLETS-/GO'S 


MOBESS 
NAHrm 
13911 
ÍS1 


8-oz 
Maes 
UEAVjWE 
9BI 
O S 
m 


O f AM.W4MT 
G 0 A O 
z s é i a 
; 
bale... IZFy 
PENNIES 
COUN 


9c Measuring 
SPOONS 
5* 


1| Sts. 
| E P SO M , 
I SA L T S I 


PLASTIC 
/aoSAYEP CQ 
S a s p /p / / / t a s s J J 


A90 
H IN K LE 
PILLS i 
1 9 c 
JYUXZEAff 


YOU CAN DO 
IN MARIN 
BETTER 


9c 
Panto 
Hangers 5* 


| M EA D S 
A8 Í.UM 
4 5 4 


No Bridge Tolls 


Free Perking 
» 


Fait Delivery 


Friendly Service 


Courteous Attention 


38c| 


208 GREENFIELD AVE. 
• 
PHONE 813 - 814 


Spring 
ClothesPins 
■ 
19* 


A tE P 
PONDS 
CREAMS 
5 5 f 


PKG. OF 36 
BOBB/ P1NCURL 
L • R O M E P E R M A N E N T 
W 
A 
i ' E 
R 
/ T 
- kY/TH , I *)\ 
6 0 S C B 3 Y P /N S $ I 


1.25 
HADACOL 
98* 
8-OZ. 
BOTTLE 


100 
PARK 
19* 
ASPIRIN 
TABLETS 


50c 
DR. LYONS 
.... 43c 
Tooth 
Powder 


90c 
IRONIZED 
Yeast 
Tablets 


50c 
FROSTILLA 


4 7 ' 
Beauty 
Lotion. 


50c 
PHILLIPS 
39* 
Milk 
Magnesia 


50c 
Barbasol 
39* 
SHAVING 
CREAM ... 


50c 
FEENAMINT 
43* 
Chewy 
Laxativd. 
I 


10c 
Dyanshine 
m m r 
PASTE 
POLISH 
I 


. , * ... 


Woman Missionary, 90, Recalls 
70 Years' Service To The Lord 


Mrs. Washington 
And Late Husband 
Visited Africa 


By DON DAVIS 
Mrs. Catherine Washington of San 
Rafael who will be 90 years old on 
March 1, still hopes to find a little 
place of her own where she can 
- write a book about her life of near­ 
ly 70 years of missionary work In 
America and in Africa. 
“Many people ask me about my 
¡ life," she says, “my life—it has been 
such a full life I wouldn't know 
where to begin. My life is like a 
grab bag. It's hard to bring it all 
up." 
Mrs. Washington started her life 
as a missionary when she was 17 
She was born in Calvert county, 
Maryland, about 60 miles from Bal 
timoro% 
LEARNED GEOGRAPHY 
“Before we learned to read the 
geographies,*’ she said, “we would 
call it ‘Colvert* county, but we later 
learned that was not correct.*’ 
The young Negro girl traveled 
through her native South for the 
first of her missionary trips for the 
African Methodist church. When 
she was 20 she married James 
Washington and ^oon after the 
couple went to Africa. 
She was to spend much of her 
time among the natives of Africa 
for the neat 52 years, preaching and 
teaching the Christian faith to chil­ 
dren. 
“When we went to Africa,” she 
said, “we both were missionaries for 
the Church of God and the Pillar and 
Ground of Truth—they paid a sal­ 
ary. 
“We made our headquarters at 
Monrovia. We had a house there 
and sometimes grew great American 
com. We would 'travel into the 'in­ 
terior and pitch tents, usually stay­ 
ing for seven days and we called 
it a furlough.” 


M IS. CATHERINE WASHINGTON, 90 
70 Years a Missionary 


DANGERS OF TRAVEL 
The Washingtons went anywhere 
they were told, meeting curious but 
frightened and shy natives and 
sometimes traveling among the dan­ 
gers of poisonous snakes. 
Most of Mrs. Washington’s mis­ 
sionary work seems to have con­ 
cerned children and it was the chil­ 
dren of Africa to whom she and 
her husband talked. 
“When we went to see 'the chil 
dren,” she said, explaining that they 
would run after and catch the chil' 
dren, “the daddy and mommy would 
climb the trees because they could 
run faster. Then we would bring 
I Ra Ravas Collect 


j For Dimes Drive 


i At Courthouse 
Rained out of their shoe shining 
project for funds to fight polo last 
Saturday, Ra Ravas, San Rafael 
High school girls club, is collecting 
for the March of Dimes today and 
tomorrow in front of the courthouse 
on Fourth street, San Rafael, from 
3:30 to 6:00 p. m. 
A card table and signs will be set 
up and girls will collect with the 
Iron lung coin containers. Club 
members will take turns simulating 
polio victims sitting in a wheel chair. 
Total receipts of the Ra Ravas drive 
will be added to the high schooTs 
collection which will be finished to­ 
day.Girls taking part in the coEectlon 
at the courthouse are: Bonnie DoLe- 
mann, president of Ra Ravas; Jerry 
Wilder, Ra Ravas March of Dimes 
chairman; Mary ATllce Galvan, 
Carol Lewis, Carol More, Dee Dee 
Martin, Doris Scherini, Carole Wall­ 
ing, Alice Bognl. 


the children into our tents and talk 
to them through an Interpreter. 
“We gave the children candy- 
but they would spit it out and later 
pick it up and eat It. They were 
shown pictures and listened and 
watched our work at the black­ 
boards.” 
VISITS STATES 
Mrs. Washington came back to 
the states five times during the 5¡¡ 
year span of African work. All o' 
her children, three daughters, and 
three sons, were bom in the states, 
and all of them were reared by Mrs. 
Washington’s mother in Baltimore. 
Mrs. Washington survives them 
all. Her oldest son, a doctor, died 
In Florida In military service, dur­ 
ing World War I. In 1932 she came 
back to the states to live and to 
write a book. But first she traveled 
to see “what my own America was 
like.” 
She stayed for two weeks at Yel­ 
lowstone Park, .and spent much time 
in Colorado. In speaking of her 
travels she remembered an interlude 
in Wyoming on a visit to the states 
from Africa. It was at that time 
she opened a children’s home In 
Sheridan. James was dead, and it 
would be another ten years before 
Mrs. Washington would go back to 
missionary work in Africa. 
“BUFFALO BILL” 
“Bill Cody took interest in the 
shelter,” she recalls. “And ’Buffalo 
Bill’ was my main dollar and when 
he went to sleep X lost my dollar.” 
She explained that the life of the 
missionary was not one of money— 
“If I would get ten dollars, I would 
put five here and five yonder.” 
Finely she came to California 
and In 1943 she settled in Marin 
and now lives in a tiny apartment 
at 966 Lincoln avenue, San Rafael. 
For awhile she said she did some 
work in Marin but lately she has 
been ”» little crippled in the knees 
and It's hard to get around.” 
Nevertheless she keeps her own 
house and appears as lively as 
women many years hei junior. 
She came to California at last to 
write the book and put It on the 


market to help her In her "declining 
years.” She came with one thou­ 
sand dollars to put It on the market 
and perhaps to pay someone to help 
her write it—but the thousand dol­ 
lars were soon gone and only “one 
lady has typed a few pages.” 
SEEKS HOME 
Now she must soon find another 
place to live because she says the 
house she lives in ipust be torn down 
to make way for a place of business 
“And I want to live in a big house 
with lots, of people, because I did not 
come into the world alone and I 
don’t want to be alone now.” 
Mrs. Washington reads the Bible 
every day and her favorite quota­ 
tion begins, “The Lord is my Shep­ 
herd . . 
She reads the Psalm 
with dignity and calm with the feel­ 
ing that every word has true mean­ 
ing.She had just read the verse when 
she was asked a recipe for long life 
and she said: 
“Why, bless you, honey, I’ve just 
said it. Let the Lord be .your .shep­ 
herd. Deal honestly and be up­ 
right with every man—even though 
some people may say you are crazy.” 


You need more than a ‘salve’ 
mum 
CHEST C O IK ! 
to relieve coughs — sere muscles 
To bring fast, long-lasting relief, you 
need moro than fust an ordinary 
salve. You should rub on stimulating, 
pain-relieving Musterole. 
Muster ole not only promptly re­ 
lieves coughing but also helps check 
and break up that congestion in the 
upper bronchial tubes, noee and 
throat. No other nth gives fatter relief! 
Musterole is sold in 3 strengths. 
M u s t e r o l e 


THINGS EVENEI UF 
DETROIT (U.B—Tolvo Hulkkanen 
told the police officer who arrested 
him for drunken driving that he had 
just finished off IS bottles of beer. 
In court the defendant changed his 
story, admitting to only five beers. 
The judge compromised at 10 beers 
and gave Hulkkanen 10 days in jail 
to match the figure. 


GOSS 


SALES 


Before paying high prices check 
with GOSS. They always have a 
largs selection of used furniture, 
appliances, ruga, pianos and all 
tho necessary furnishings for tho 
homo and office. Some dead 
storage. Some sold on consign­ 
ment. Priced to move fast 
GOSS Buys — Sells — Trades. 
Phone San Rafael 4461 
t-ft Monday thrn Saturday 
Evenings and Sunday 
( By Appointment 
Free Delivery 
Terms 
Free Storage.. 


GIVE YOUR HOME A VALENTINE, TOO|! 
Your home is the heart of your family. Keep it in good con­ 
dition. We have all the materials and the expert advice 
you'll need to re-roof . .. insulate .. . add extra rooms . . . 
re-floor •. • modernize the Interior and exterior. Our friendly 
staff will help you with financing, too. 
Stop in— or phone SR. 1670-J for a FREE estimate 
on YOUR plans. 
Take advantage of our MarCo Easy Pay Plan. 
MATERIALS ARE AVAILABLE FOR ALL 
HOME IMPROVEMENT PLANS. 
MARIN COUNTY LUMBER CO. 
San Quantin Wya and 101 Highway 
Phan* S.R. 1670-J 
OPEN SATURDAYS 711 NOON 


Dominican Official Directs Research 


Project Aimed At Control Of Disease 


Dr. Edward P. Mumford, chair­ 
man of Dominican CoUegqfc biology 
department,. is directing a research 
project that could cut down a large 
part of the communicable diseases 
that plague man today, 
Working under the John Garber 
Memorial Fund, Dr. Mumford and 
his men are gathering information 
on the distribution of parasites and 
their carriers. 
Where the importance of Dr. 
Mumford’s work becomes most ap­ 
parent can be gathered from news 
reports of typhus epidemics among 
$orth Korean units along Korea’s 
east coast.WINS PLAUDITS 
Admiral C. A. Swanson, surgeon 
general of the Navy, has written 
the fund expressing his approval of 
results so far: 
“The investigations sponsored by 
this, activity,” Swanson wrote, “have 
been of invaluable assistance to the 
Navy’s Medical Department in car­ 
rying out its mission in the pre­ 
vention and treatment of disease.” 
Some 3500 copies of the Pacific 
Section of Dr. Mumford’s report 
were requested for 'distribution to 
“every naval, medical and HVS of­ 
ficer in the Pacific area recently, 
according to a recent Fund bulle­ 
tin. 
O XFORD GRADUATE 
Dr. Mumford, who lives in Palo 
.Alto, is a graduate of Oxford Uni­ 
versity. He came to this country 


on a Commonwealth Fund Fellow­ 
ship, given to outstanding men by 
a group organized to promote Anglo- 
American understanding. 
The Garber memorial fund was 
established by Mrs. Frank D. 
Stringham, daughter of the late 
Judge John Garber who was a lead­ 
ing figure of the San Francisco bar 
early in the century. 
At the request of the World 
Health Organization of the United 
Nations and various branches of 
the U. S., British, Canadian, and 
Australian armed forces, the Fund 
began its current work on distribu­ 
tion of parasites. 


Conveyor Bolt Conies 
Cod Under Mountain 
MORGANTOWN, W. VA., (U.R)— 
A conveyor belt tha transports 
coal two and a half miles under a 
mountain is in operation at the 
Weirton 8teel company’s “push but­ 
ton” mine near here. 
The endless belt transports 360 
tons of coal every hour from a 
washery, through the long tunnel 
and into waiting barges on the Mon- 
ongahela river for shipment to Weir­ 
ton. A lump of coal makes the trip 
in 36 minutes. 
On its journey through the moun­ 
tain tunnel the coal passes under 
three hills, a river bed and a high­ 
way. 


OPEN TO DISPUTE 
SYDNEY, Australia (UJPJ — Five 
men named E. J. Holloway turned 
up at the New South Wales state 
lottery office tp claim a $13,000 first 
prize. So far, lottery officials are 
not convinced that any of the claim­ 
ants is the true winner. 


4 
INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL, Wed.,, Feb. 14, 
16 IN If YEARS 
| JUDGE TAKES IT PERSONALLY 
MELBOURNE, Australia <U.E> — 
MT, CLEMENS, Mich. (U.E—Mu- 
Mrs. Olive May, 3$, has given birth nicipal Judge Donald J. Parent 
to her 16th child in 16 years.' There raised the fine for running a stop 
are three sets of twins among the sign from $3 to $5 after he was ln- 
sixteen children. 
I Jured at a “stop” intersection. 


Judged finest of aH at the California 
State Fair four years ia a row— 
that’s Borden's Cottage Cheese! 
And no wonder! Borden’s Cottage 
Cheese is made only of the finest 
Pasteurized milk, processed by the 
world’s most accomplished cheese 
makers. And it’s rushed to stores 
fresh every dey. 
Get Borden's prize-winning Cottage Cheese 
today. Your family will really go for itl 


& 
* 


</\y 


$ 


COTTAGE CHEESE 


IF IT'S BORDENS, IT'S GOT TO BE GOOD I 


A TABLE? 


■/:, / s>v - ^ 
íé ,■ P§8 ' '■ 
1Ü v,J 
j > í 
% & £ 
m. 
m * s I 1.1' * 


LIVINGROOM FURNITURE 
* 
Wes 
Now 
Modem Chib Chair................... 
79.75 
69.50 
Sectional Sofa.............................. 219.50 
189.50 
Cocktail and 2 End Tables____________ 94.85 
49,95 
Modem Chair in Red Frieze............... 
69.95 
49.50 
Extension Consola Tabla................... 
69.95 
55.00 
Modem Cocktail Table..................... 39.50 
19.95 
Studio Couches ........................... 
99.50 
79.50 
Rock Maple Cocktail Table............... 
24.95 
18.50 
Rock Maple End Table..................... 
19.95 
14.95 


CLEARANCE RATTAN SAMPLES 


THREE SEATED SOFA................ 
CLUB CHAIR ........................ 
EN D T' jftk ÍÍ 'Li lE'^E • m m m «I <1 
« Ml «I «1 ■ Mi Mi M'.Mi Mi m m * * * « • 
» >■ a .» Mi «1 M< m m m Mi m mi m 
TABLE LAMPS ______________ 
TABLE TOP DESK.................... 
EXTENSION TABLE AND 4 CHAIRS. 


Sofas and Chalis Hava Zip Covers 


Wes 
Now 
— 187.50 
149.50 
65.00 
... 29.75 
24.50 
... 27.50 
-12.95 
... 39.75 
29.50 
-225.55 
189.50 
... 52.50 
39.50 


MISCELLANEOUS 


HURRICANE LAMPJ, BRASS BASE... 
MAPLE TABLE LAMP, BRASS TRIM.... 
BRASS CHIMNEY FLOOR LAMP...... 
TABLE LAMP WITH RUFFLE SHADE. .. 
PICTURES. MEDIUM SIZE............... 
A FT. X 9 FT. GREEN BOUCLE RUG.... 
SIMMONS BOX SPRINGS, ODD TICKS 
FOAM RUBBER MATTRESS AND 
SOX SPRING .......a...........................*..... 


4.95 
19.95 
34.95 
16.95 
5.95 
55.00 
69.50 


Now 
2.50 
14.95 
12.50 
9.95 
3.50 
25.00 
49.50 


169.50 125.00 


BEDROOM FURNITURE 


Kling Rock Maple Chest Desk............... 109.50 
79.50 
Mengel 5-Piece Bedroom Suite............. 299.50 249.50 
Thomasville 5-Piece Bedroom Suite 
249.50 199.50 
Huntley 4-Piece Bedroom Suite............ 319.50 259.50 
Plastic Hollywood Headboard............. 26.95 
5.95 


DINING and DINETTE FURNITURE 


5-Pieco Chroma Set........................ 99.50 
79.50 
Odd Chrome Chairs........................ 10.00 
7.50 
Ladder Back Chairs in Maple............... 29.95 
19.95 
Windsor Chairs in Maple...____________ 26.95 1 19.50 


BUY ON EASY BUDGET TERMS 


Decorator Samples 
Large* Assortment 
Qualities ‘ 
Now 99c 


Carpet Samples 
27 Inch x 54 Inch 
Values to $18.00 
Now $5.00 


QUALITY FURNITURE AT LOW PRICES 


4th i B Streets • San Rafael 1434 


Lots Of Talk. No Action On Courthouse Parking 


Regulation of the two parking lots 
on the Marin county 
courthouse 
grounds, Insistently 
requested 
by 
county employees and 
courthouse 
visitors, was discussed by the board 
of supervisors 
yesterday, 
but no 
action w y taken. 
The board requested more Infor­ 
mation on the parking problem from 
its one-man committee, Supervisor 
George Whiteley. 
A resolution setting up parking 
regulations In the lots flanking the 


Silent 'Musketeers' 


Goes On Tonight 


At Art Center 


To swashbuckling piano accom­ 
paniment, the old silent film “The 
Three Musketeers" with Douglas 
Fairbanks will be shown tonight, 8 
pm. in the art gallery at the Marin 
Art and Garden Center, Ross. 
Lucille Zentner of Corte Madera 
will play,appropriate music. 
The picture, first of the annual 
series of Famous Ok' Films present­ 
ed by the Center, under the spon­ 
sorship of the Ross Valley Flayers, 
was borrowed with other popular old 
pictures, from the library of the 
New York Museum of Modem Art. 
There will be showing every Wed­ 
nesday night at the gallery until 
March 28. 
Tickets for the series have teen 
selling fast, according to Will Hink- 
$ ley of Kentfield, member of the RVP 
executive board in charge of the 
performances this year. The threat 
of television's showings of old films 
affecting sales did not materialize. 
Money gained from the shows goes 
toward maintenance of the Center. 


courthouse was heard by the board 
but was rejected as incomplete, ant 
was called “unworkable" by board 
Chairman Fred Bagshaw. 


Assigned parking pi-ces for coun 
ty employees and officials, with the 
remainder of the spaces 
reservec 
for use of persons with business in 
county offices was suggested 
resolution, drawn up by the district 
attorney’s office at the request of 
an unofficial committe of county 
employees. 
GET PLACARDS 
Citizens who were to be in the 
courthouse for only a short time 
would be required to rocure a pla­ 
card from the sheriff’s office per- 
mittting them to park as long as 
they were at the courthouse. 
They would also be given a park 
ing slip which would be validated 
by the county officer with whom 
they had business. 
Bagshaw feared that the public 
would not want to 'run back and 
forth to their cars carrying parking 
placards. He told Whiteley the plan 
would have to be changed. 
“Well what do you vant?" White­ 
ley asked, "I’m no Solomon." 
Supervisor 
William 
Fusselman 
wanted to see a plot plan of the 


Two Stafe Legionnaires 
Speak To MV Post 
Two state officers of the American 
Legion addressed the Mill Valley 
Post Monday night. 
They were 
Stanley Dunmier, California State 
Department commander, who spoke 
on Lincoln’s birthday, and Don Cave 
of Eureka, first area commander, 
who talked on membership goals of 
Legion. 
Earlier 30 post officers and past 
officers feted the two at a dinner 
at the Marvel Mar. 


parking lots. 
"Let's see how the 
spaces are going to be assigned." 
Fusselman pointed out that the 
busiest time at the courthouse was 
when taxes were being paid and 
many* persons were in the court­ 
house for only short periods of time. 
Any plan adopted, he said, should 
be flexible enough to include this 
type of parking as well as the reg­ 
ular hour or two visitor. 
Bagshaw further suggested that 
certain county officers, sheriff, pro- 
bailor officer, etc., and members of 
the press, should have preference 
for parking spaces. 
He added that county employees 
who presently park all day in the 
lot could easily park further up the 
hill since they leave their cars in 
one place all day long. 
It was a sad day when we took 
the grass out," the chairman mused. 
The supervisors also: 
Voted to accept an offer of A. Von 
Rotz for the county to purchase a 
1700-foot strip of railroad right of 
way near Manor for county road 
purposes. The county would pay $1 
per lineal foot for the land. 
Re­ 
port of two appraisers received at 
the meeting, placed th: value of the 
land at $5,900 or $3.50 per lineal foot. 
$50 fee for each appraiser was 
approved. 
But a suggestion by 
Whiteley that the board make a pol­ 
icy of always appraising land before 
purchasing it ran into opposition 
and was tabled when Bagshaw re­ 
marked: “Well take up each pur­ 
chase of its own merits." 
EXPRESS REGRET 
Approved 
action 
of Chairman 
Bagshaw in expressing regret to the 
legislative committee of the Golden 
Gate Bridge board for not attend­ 
ing a meeting this afternoon on the 
proposed revocation of a permission 
to borrow $5,000,000 from the state 
for approach construction. 
Bag­ 


shaw had written that because the 
txupd was meeting none of the 


I members could attend. 
But he 
reiterated the board's opposition to 
borrowing money for approach roads 
and expressed the conviction all ap­ 
proaches should be constructed by 
the state highway department out 
out gas tax funds. 
Referred to the health and wel­ 
fare committee a letter of complaint 
about treatment at the county farm 
by Harry -F. Walsh, a resident at 
the farm. 
BIDS REFERRED 
Referred to committee a report 
from the county farm and the audi­ 
tor that DeLong Chevrolet company 
had been low bidder on a dump 
mick which the farm proposes to 
buy. 
DeLong’s bid was $2,601.93. 
Fusselman said he would like to 
study all the bids because he did 
not think they were submitted on 
exactly the same type of vehicles. 
Heard letters from the child wel­ 
fare advisory committee and the 
Marin county council of cooperative 
nurseries urging 
employment of 
only the highest quality person in 
education and experie :e as county 
welfare director. 
Bagshaw pointed 
out the board was limited to the of­ 
ficial list of four prepared by the 
state personnel board. If two of the 


top three are not interested in the 
Job, it can then be opened to more 
applicants. The board Is interview­ 
ing the four persons on the list 
Monday afternoon. 
FUSSELMAN BELIEF 
Received a letter from the S&u- 
salito city council enclosing the rec­ 
ommendation of that city's planning 
board that the Golden Gate bridge 
be turned over to the state and that 
no new approach to the bridge be 
built east of the present approach. 
Fusselman declared his belief that 
the planning commission was ex­ 
ceeding its authority in delving into 
matters outside of the city limits. 
This brought a brief exchange of 
words between Fusselman and Bag­ 
shaw, who held that any body has 
the right to make recommendations 
on any matter. 
Approved use of the supervisors 
chambers for a meeting 
San Ra­ 
fael dty employees on Friday, Feb­ 
ruary 16. 
Received a letter from the Marin 
Coast Chamber of Commerce oppos­ 
ing transfeer of the county fire de­ 
partment to the state and opposing 
any change in the administration 
of the fire department. 
Agreed to adjourn in memorlam 
to Dr. O. W. Clark, who died Sat­ 
urday. 


(Who Seek Tire'- 


Mama's Hand Only 


'Thrill' To Tots 


Two small San Anselmo citizens 
pulled the switch on, an alarm box 
at Los Angeles and Monterey streets 
yesterday afternoon to see 
what 
would happen. 
When firemen arrived at the cor­ 
ner and found no fire, the two cul­ 
prits, aged 3 and 4, were still stand­ 
ing at the box, waiting for action. 
The only action the tiny thrill- 
seekers had was at the hands of 
their parents after firemen 
sent 
them home. 


INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL. Wed.. Feb. 14, I95 f 
S 


BOUNTIFUL IS BOUNTIFUL 
BOUNTIFUL, Utah (U.R>—Dr. D. 
Keith Barnes, county health com­ 
missioner, 
believes Davis county 
leads any section of the country in 


the vitaly index in the ratio of births 
over deaths. During 1950, there were 
970 birth and 120 deaths, a ratio of 
eight to one or about four times 
that of the national average of 220 
to 100. 


COULDN’T HAPPEN NOW 
BOSTON (U.R) — There was no 
housing problem in Boston a cen­ 
tury ago. On Jan. 24, 1851 the Bos­ 
ton Traveler published the follow­ 
ing advertisement: 
"To let, Mod­ 
em house of r rooms. $300 a year." 


PORTRAITS 
APPLICATION AND 
PASSPORT PICTURES 
GASBERG STUDIO 
Est. 1910 
1311 4tb SU 
San Rafael 


Helen Andrews of Oakland saved 
herself almost 40 hours the trst 
month sho used a Jet Tewtr Dish­ 
washer. In 100 yean she wilt 
•ave herself 3 ,0 0 0 days, ha 
younger than her actual age by 
more than nine years, and amaze 
all her friends. Youngstown Jet 
Tower Dishwasher will do the 
same for you. 


Prompt Delivery 
McPhail Fuel Co 
PHONE 1166 
THIRD & C STREETS 
SAN RAFAEL 


sight | sound ( 


fcLITtTOOD 


POST OFFICE BUILDING • SAN ANSELMO 
Marin Television Headquarters for 


FOURTH & D STREETS 
SAN RAFAEL 
Prices Effective ... THURS., FBI., SAT. 


ARMOUR’S STAR 
PICNIC STYLE 
' |b . 
HAM 


KINGAN'S RELIABLE 
BACON 
SpareRibs‘47 


(Paeáatd-úSe& GIANT 
INCH 


SLICED 


lb . 
1951 FOUNDER'S MASTERPIECE SERIES 


Small Sides, Meaty 


m 


Something The 
Whole Family 


| Fancy Utah Type Tender Crisp 
CELEBY 
u,,. 
.... 15* 1 


Fancy Sno-Ball 
1 
CAULIFLOWER 
All Sizes 
each 
1 5 ^ 
I 


We Wash and Clean 
(Ready to Cook) 
SPINACH 
- 
2.-15- 


Fancy Yellow Finn 
ONIONS 
4- 15- 


1 
Can Enjoy! 


AND PACKED FULL OF 


VITAMINS, TOO! 


Fancy Large (Salad Sise) 
AVOCADOS 
Fuerte (2 for 29c) 
1 5 ^ 
I 


WE HAVE PLENTY OF WATER CRESS, PARSLEY, 
RED LETTUCE, CHICORY, SCROLE AND ROMAINE LETTUCE! •! 
S-A-L-E 51 
EGGS 
GRADE "A" PREFERRED 
DOZEN 51* 
INSTANT COFFEE sszs, 
+OZ. 
JAR O W 1 


r 
r 
A 
C 
H 
c 
h 
UBBY'S, HALVES or SLICED 
■ 
■ ■ ■ *# 
NO. 
CAN 
2 
CANS 5 1 ^ 
Swift’s CLEANSER 
5“-51* 
STRING BEANS 
CANS 
CATSUP 
uun 
3| BOTTLES 
APPLE SAUCE ¿«s™ , 4 CANS 
CIGARETTES au p°pular hands 2 «OS- 51^ 


Prices Effective Thursday Through Saturday 
— 
Right Reserved to Limit Quantities 


Mahogany or Walnut 
95 
449 
flft d 


Slightly Higherv 


Including Excise Tax 


One Year Parts 


Including Excise Tax 


20" Mahogany Console 


y 


Movie Screen Television In custom decorator cabi­ 


nets styled for California living. Big screen per­ 


formance on a 215 sq. inch tube.. 


New 1951 features include: 


• Glare free picture. 


• Simplified tuning. 


High fidelity video system with AGC. 


• Large dynamic PM speaker with high 


gain audio amplifier. 


• All cabinets are on Packard-Bell's ex­ 


clusive casters (mar proof wheels). 


Moves at the touch o f finger tips. * 


Exquisitely beautiful cabinets in Mahogany, 


Walnut and Blonde Oak finishes. 


e, 


OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M. 
Sight & Sound 
POST OFFICE BLDG., SAN ANSELMO Packard-Bell Hdqrs, 


- r 
F 


6 
INDÉPENPENT-JOURNAL. Wed.. Feb. 14, 1951 


*3n One ¿dar e 
e 
e 
By Marjoiui T rumbull 
‘SATURDAY NIGHT IN MARIN' 
With the lir so very fresh after the rain (and a little rain 
left over) * - - v^Ith the season's second dinner dance at the 
Lagunitai Club in Ross the destination of so many cars 
driving carefully up Lagunitas Road. Braziers burning 
cheerily outside, and inside such wonderful music, excellent 
food and most of all the members who did not go skiifig 
turning up for a delightful even|ng. 
8 THERE—’The Harri- 


If jewá 
yyjarin Cdounty, Society, Ofuló and .Soria( Oryanizationó 
Florence Donnelly, Society Editor 
Far Away And Romantic Holiday Places 


WHO WAl 
son Dlbblees who entertained a 
group of friends at cocktails before 
hand. The Alex McAndrews, their 
daughter Jennifer McCone with 
her fiance, Albert Dibbles The 
Frank Newtons (pre-party hosts 
too)—Janie so fery pretty In a 
pink satin skirt, black velvet 
• topped—The Percival Scales, Rich- 
l ard Duff»—Jeanne so very smart 
in red net topped with navy lace. 
PETER PERVERE — receiving 
congratulations on the brand new 
twin daughters, currently residing 
with his wife, Joeie at U.C.—and 
born Thursday night. Their names? 
Undecided as yet. The Curtiss 
; Haydens—(bringing guests from 
their cocktail party)—AMie so chic 
in off-the-shoulder, red taffeta— 
* The Dolph O ra u p n e r* —Gwen, 
stunning in a strapless, white net 
gown. The Adrian Malones, and 
over from town the Rob Drewes, 
Paine Knickerbockers and Joseph 
Sellgmans. - 
THE NED BOSSANGES — Evvie 
In turquoise taffeta and wearing 
white hyacinths in her hair, the 
; Boris Lakustas, Joan and Paul 
Foster—celebrating the annivers­ 
ary of their engagement—Joan 
•»wearing orchids on her exquisite, 
white metallic gown. The Noble 
S Hamilton»—Peggy in so smart, 
! black and white, striped taffeta. 
The George Harts—and many, 
many others—admiring the Valen­ 
tine theme of the decor—enjoying 
as always seeing old friends and 
looking forward already, to the 
text—"Lagunitas Club Dance". 
* • * 
A WEEKEND IN THE SNOW— 
was spent by the entire Wallace 
family—including Dr. Bill, Jo, and 
the three young—Cressie, Topper 
and BUI. Wrapped up warm, with 
sleeping bags just in case—they 
left Saturday night In their brand 
new, and so practical station 
wagon, heading for Yosemlte. 
• 
• 
* 
MORE SKIIER8 —recently in­ 
cluded Kathy Kirk, and Sally 
Cook up with a group from Cal to 
Soda Springs. And speaking of the 
young, don't be surprised if the 


younger daughter of one of Marin's 
most prominent families follows 
her sister to the altar this sum­ 
mer. She's about to announce her 
engagement to a tall, handsome 
Marin boy—still in college, as is 
she. 
• • • 
"BACK HOME"—the John Wit­ 
ters of Ross who had a three week 
whirl in New York. They stopped 
in Spokane on their way home to 
visit their daughter Noel, married 
in October to Don Dickey. Their 
younger daughter "Lally" who 
went East with them is now back 
at Cal. 


• 
* 
• 
SUCH A PLEASANT PARTY— 
the "first" given by The Mother's 
Guild of the recently formed Boys' 
Choir of St. John’s Episcopal 
Church in Ross. Held on Shrove 
Tuesday, the traditional pancakes 
were on the supper menu for the 
party held in The Community 
House and attended by about 25 
young singers. Reverend Hallett 
and Peter Hunt, choirmaster were 
honored guests—and arrangements 
for the party were in the hands of 
Mrs. Rangvald Bernt, assisted by 
Mrs. Fred Wood, Mrs. W. E. Sea­ 
cock, and Mrs. Helen Rigsbee. 
* * * 
HOME MOVIES—that are really 
a smash hit—are those the Don 
Perrys took on their r e c e n t 
European tour—Saturday night a 
group of friends dined with the 
Perrys then watched the movies 
afterward—(and wanted more) — 
Included In the audience were the 
Rowland Chapmans (who were in 
Europe when the Perrys were) the 
James Welshes (also Europe-goers 
last year) the Sam Schonwassers 
and Robert Taylors. 


ENJOYING THE TROPICAL WEATHER of the Hawaiian 
Islands are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Galbreath of Kentfield, while 
to the right is Miss Lorine Wilkey of San Rafael enjoying 
the snow at Sun Valley, Idaho. 


Hidden Talents Are Uncovered 
Through Woman Power Survey 


MARIE LATNO — one of the 
staunchest of Marin Red Cross 
workers—is , definitely practicing 
Red Cross nursing techniques these 
days—Her husband Arthur, who 
has been so seriously ill—is con­ 
valescing, and Marie is his compe­ 
tent nurse. 


Col. Fngelhart Speaks 
Tonight 
Col. Carl Engelhart will address 
the Mt. Carmel Women's Club on 
civilian defense, at their meeting,] 
today, at 8:30 p.m. in the Mill Val­ 
ley Golf Club. A short business 
meeting will be held before the talk. 


BASIC BOLERO DRESS 


Nan Morley Joins 
Marine Corps 
Eighteen-year-old N an Mor­ 
ley, daughter of Mrs. Frances 
Morley of San Rafael, left this 
morning for Parris Island, S.C., 
to begin six weeks'basic train­ 
ing with the Marine Corps. 
Nan was graduated from the 
San Rafael High school where 
she was editor of the Red *N* 
White and attended the College 
of Marin as a journalism major 
and was society editor of the 
Mariner. She was employed by 
the Independent-Journal. 


“Where do I fit into the pat­ 
tern? What can I do to help if 
my country needs me?" These are 
the questions which thousand! of 
women have been asking and many 
now know the answers. 
These 
women are the patriotic, forward- 
thinking ones who are registering 
in the Woman Power Survey being 
conducted in Marin . county. 
All kinds of hidden talents have 
already been uncovered in the sur­ 
vey. One woman is an electrician, 
another an airplane mechanic. One 
registrant has done industrial 
trucking, and several others can 
handle heavy vehicles. A number 
of machinists and factory workers 
are listed. Quantity cooking is the 
forte of a half a dozen or so reg­ 
istrants. Laboratory 
technicians, 
nurses, telephone operators have 
signified their Intention of doing 
their part during an. emergency. 
The survey is off to an auspicious 
start. But it must reach the goal, 
which is every able bodied woman, 
old and young, registered for some 
special work in case of disaster or 
other emergency. 
At the top of the opposite page 
is a registration blank. Fill it in 
now and mail to Miss Elolse Mays, 
P. O. Box 223, San Rafael. 
Miss Mays is chairman of the 


committee for the woman power 
survey, which is being held under 
the auspices of the Business and 
Professional Women's Club of Mar­ 
in County at the request of Col. 
Carl Engelhart, Marin county's 
civilian defense coordinator. 
The registration cards are being 
classified and filed with the assist­ 
ance of Wilfred C. Gruit of the 
State Department of Employment. 
The classified register will be avail­ 
able to all civilian defense organi­ 
zations in Marin county. Through 
this medium women can be placed 
immediately in jobe for which they 
are best fitted. 
Organizations which wish to have 
the survey explained in detail to 
their memberships 
can secure 
speakers by notifying Mrs. William 
D. ‘Fusselman of San Anselmo, who 
heads the speakers bureau. Mrs 
John T. Ross of Larkspur is con­ 
tact chairman and Mrs. James 
Grant of San Anselmo is in charge 
of staffing information booths. 
Record classification is the detail 
of the Misses Barbara Thomas and 
Bemadine McLeod. Dorothy Brown 
Letha Jenkins and Edna Lewis are 
on the budget committee. Florence 
Donnelly Is In charge of newspaper 
publicity, and Jean Brown Is pub­ 
licizing the survey over the radio. 


Stanford Convalescent Home Junior 
Auxiliary Elects Three Marin Women 


12-40 


THE SPRING-SUMMER 
ISSUE 


Presents 135 Pattern Designs 
, in exciting new fashions 


for 


(ALL SIZES - ALL AGES 
ALL OCCASIONS 


This dress is important in two 
ways! First, for its basic beauty- 
soft and flattering. Secondly, for 
the matching bolero Jacket which 
will give it double duty in your 
wardrobe. 
No. 2955 is cut In sizes 12, 14, 18, 
18, 20, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 
18, 4% yards 38-inch. 
Send 25c for PATTERN with 
Kame. A ddrt^ S ^ N u m ^ i ^ , p ^ hi0M 
tdvanced ^ 
SIM. Addresi PATTERN BUREAU, U , plan im irt wardrobe, lor the 
Independent-Jounul, 1028 B itreet, I entire season Uhead! All shown In 
Sen Rafael, Calif. 
practical pattern designa so easy to 
Patterns reedy to fill orders fan- make that even a beginner will have 
mediately. For special headline ef success. 
order vie first elees matt include 
Easter togs, Important year-round 
an extra 5c per pattern. 
separates, lovely blouses, young date 
Just off the press! The SPRING- end party clothes, styles for the 
SUMMER FASHION BOOK, fee- mature, and all* your Summer needs 
turlng the newest trends for 1851. to make 111 cottons —cap sleeved 
Over 135 practical pattern designs 
dai^ty styIe® ior 
‘sunbacks galore, home frocks, 
for all ages, all occasions, beauti­ 
fully illustrated In this season's 
smartest fabrics. Send now for this 
inspiring book that makes it easy 
for you to sew and save. Price just 
30c. 


Note To Subscribers: 
Fashion Book • . • . 20c 
(if desired). 
Patterns................. * 25c 


aprons, and pretty frocks and play- 
clothes for girls and children. 
It’s a wonderful book, beautifully 
illustrated, and with the most com­ 
prehensive collection you'll find in 
any pattern book. Order your copy 
early. Price just 20 cents. 
Address P A T T E R N BUREAU, 
Independent-Jouraal, 1028 B St., 
San Rafael, Calif. 
Pattern illustrated aoove is No. 
2182 and can be ordered in sizes 12 
to 40 at our regular pattern prices. 


Marin County Council Of Camp Fire Girls 
To Hold Cake Baking Contest March 3 
A chiffon cake baking contest will 
be sponsored by the Marin, county 
Council of Camp Fire Girls on Sat­ 
urday, March 3, at the Big Bear 
Market in Fairfax. 
After the judging, all cakes enter­ 
ed will be donated to thhe Camp 
Fire Girls to be sold for funds for 
their activities. 
Each contestant will be given a 
beautiful silver teaspoon by General 
Mills, Inc., and many handsome and 
useful awards are offered by the 
market and the milling company to 
the most skilful bakers. 
Three judges have been chosen to 
select the prize winners in the two 
contest divisions, the adult section, 
and the junior section for young 
cooks, 18 years and less. They are 
Mrs. June Madure, home advisor in 
the extension department of the 
University of California;,Mrs. Helen 
Cassidy, head of the home econo­ 
mics department of the College of 
Marin; and Mrs. Harry Willis, 


homemaker and excellent cook. 
Any resident of Marin county is 
eligible to enter excepting the em­ 
ployees of Big Bear Market, and of ¡ 
General Mills, Inc., and their fam­ 
ily members. 
The contest committee members 
are Mrs. Stewart Reid, chairman, 
Mrs. John T. Ross, president of the 
Marin County Council of Camp Fire ] 
Girls, and Miss Barbara Hatch, exe- j 
cutive director of CFG. 
Working in cooperation with the 
committee are Mr. Dreyer of Gen­ 
eral Mills, Inc., and James Dal Bon 
of the Big Bear Market. 


Among the twenty - two newly 
elected members of the San Fran­ 
cisco Junior Auxiliary to the Stan­ 
ford Convalescent Home, welcomed 
at the membership tea yesterday 
were three women prominent in Ma­ 
rin county social activities. 
They 
are Mrs. Floyd Gilman (Beatrice 
Whitney) , schooled at Miss Hamlin’s 
and Miss Harker’s. She Is president 
of Kentfield Guild and active In 
Sunny Hills Auxiliary, Ross Valley 
Players and Guide Dogs for the 
Blind. 
Airs. Robert F. Christian (Gloria 
Peggs), who is active in Dominican 
College alumnae association, and 
Mrs. Robert D. Riedy (Katherine 
Cassidy), educated at the Convent 
of the Sacred Heart and Dominican 
College. 
The tea was held at the San Fran- 


FMRFRX 
™ 
n IL» A u r f D 121A 


h 
.. . 


Rummage Sal* 
by * 
CORTE MADERA WOMEN’S 
IMPROVEMENT CLUB 
Feb. 14, 15, 16, at Flrehenae 
Donations can be left at 
145 Willow Ave., Corte Madefa 
(across from firthoisr), 


I James STEWART 
•m Josephine H u ll • 0h»ri« D ni* 


O i l M l » * t y • 
WWte • Wallace Ford 
Peggy Dow 
A UNIVERSy.-lIfTERííUIORALPKTURE _ 
— PLUS — 
Latest News — Selected 
Shorts — Color Cartoon 


NOW PLAYING 
AT BOTH THEATRES 


Mark Stevens 
Edmond O’Brien 
"Between Midnight And Dawn** 
A IP A IC 
IIL V W I'H H T K J 
I 


R-E-M-l-N-D-E-R 1 
Record Sale 
CO N TIN U ES 


Our 10-inch, 78 R.P.M. Albums 
Can still be purchased 
At Cost 


You'D Find AD Your Favorite 


Artists' Records Hora! 


JOHNSON'S MUSIC CENTER 


856 Fourth St. 
San Rafaol 


2 Shows Nightly 
WALT DISNEY'S 
FANTASIA 
i. TECHNICOLOR 
STOKOWSKI 
«üniir«iAMFicnna.Mt. t 
L 
A 
R 
K 
Phono S.R. 1300 


cotoft 9V 
T c cHNICOIDR 


THE 61M T STM T 


■ OF T |E GREAT 


SIOUX INDIAN 


UPRISING! 
i uni * i i Bn n o 
i Ffsm-fad hum* mi? n< ilex NICOL 


: MOVIE TIMES 
' For Tonight 
EL CAMINO: "Never A Dull. 
1 Moment" 7:27-10:18. "Expert-' 
! ment Alcatraz" 8:03. Last com- 
1 plete show 8:00. 
RAFAEL: "Harvey" 7:31-8:46. ¡ 
Last complete show 8:15. 
TAMALPAIS: "Tomahawk" 8:50 
only. “Stars In My Crown"; 
7:15-10:25. Last complete showi 
8:45. 
FAIRFAX: "Summer Stock" 8:42 
only. "Between Midnight Sc 
Dawn" 7:00-10:48. Last com-» 
plete show 8:38. 
SEQUOIA: "Tomahawk" 8:35. 
"Steel Helmet” 7:06-10:15. Last 
complete show 8:35. 
LARK: "Fantasia" 7:27-8:28. 
Last complete show 8:16. 


I FLUS • SECOND TOP 
TAMALPAIS ONLY HIT 
STARS 
jmu» 
fC to m 


cCREA 
DREW 
2nd FEATURE SEQUOIA ONLY 


TIM ELY 
AS TODAY'S 
ttlAfUNISl 


nwi 


Dominican Alumnae 
Change Tradition 
For Annual Ball 
Dominican alumnae have pu 
aside a tradition they established 
and will give their post-Lenten bal 
on Saturday, March 31, instead of on 
Easter Monday as they have done 
in the past. The fact that Easter 
comes very* early this year has 
something to do with the change 
and too, because so many members 
are away from home during Easter 
time, the committee decided on a 
later date. 
i 
The Colonial Ball Room and 
Italian Room of the Hotel St. Fran 
els in San Francisco have been 
chosen as the setting for the 10 
p.m. affair, which will be preceded 
by several cocktail and dinner 
gatherings. This will be another in­ 
novation for traditionally the party 
has been a dlnner-dance. Instead 
breakfast will be served from mid­ 
night until 2 am. 
Martha Berg, general chairman, 
called a meeting of her aides for to­ 
day at the home of Mrs. John 
Dicks. Assisting her will be gradu­ 
ates of both Dominican Convent 
and Dominican College. They are 
Mrs. John R. Sutthoff Jr. (Barbara 
Kirby), awards; Mrs. John Higgins 
(Eileen McDonough), reservations; 
Mrs. Ralph McCulloch (Patricia 
Patridge), finances; Mrs. G. Temple 
Bridgman Jr. (Jane Hum), enter­ 
tainment; Nancy Crowell, decora­ 
tions. Mrs. Dicks is in charge of pub­ 
licity, assisted by Eileen O’Toole. 
O O O 
M.V. Women's Golf £lub 
To Meet Friday 12:30 P.M. 
Mill Valley Women’s Golf Club 
will hold their regular luncheon 
meeting, Friday, at 12:30 pm. Dec­ 
orations will have a Valentine 
theme. Mrs. «John Greig will pre­ 
sent awards to the winners in the 
January duplicate bridge tourna­ 
ment. 


Marin Girl Scout In 
National Contest 


GWEN CUMMINGS 
(Bill Harris Photo) 
Sixteen-year-old Gwen Cum­ 
mings, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Harold Cummings of Belvedere has 
been selected as the Marin Girl 
Scout to be one of the contestants 
In the national competition for the 
chance to attend the International 
Encampment of Girl Scouts at 
Adelboden, Switzerland from July 
25 to August 15. 
The National Council will release 
on March 15 the names of the four 
girls chosen from the United States. 
Qualifications for the girls com­ 
peting include the knowledge of 
one foreign language, the use of 
camp and cooking equipment, abil­ 
ity to set up a primitive camp, and 
ability to teach crafts. 
Gwen is a Midship-mite first class 
of Mariner Troop 12 under the 
eadership of Mrs. W. S. Price of 
Mill Valley. She speaks and writes 
French and has three years scout 
camping experience in Huckleberry 
Woods in the Santa Cruz mountains 
and one year camping in Marin 
county. She has been a camp aids 
and teaches craf ts and dancing. 


* PHONE SAN RAFAEL 1 3 0 0 * 


STARTING 
TODAY 


cisco apartment of Mrs. kfark L. 
Sullivan, whose daughter, Mrs. Paul 
LeBaron, is president of the auxili­ 
ary. 
• * • 
Frances Starbuck, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood T. Starbuck 
of Five-Star Ranch, Nicasio, re­ 
cently reentered Denison Univer­ 
sity, Granville, O., where she is en­ 
rolled as a member of the sopho­ 
more class. 


C ow gM andth» SoddtewU* Cowpoke,! 


WKaoi Denarest - Andy Devioe - Gigi Pemae 


Second Hit. . . Terrific 
Mystery Insfd* Prison Walls! 


CNtKTS M K KITS! 
¿ ¡¡X p e ri/n e n t 


W 
Dent miss JUDY HOLLIDAY 
—everyone's favorite now star! 


" ‘Born Yesterday' has enough laughs to 
turn the greatest grouch in the world into 
a merry sunshine . . . We ail know that 
Broderick Crawford, who won last year's 
Academy Award, is a good actor and 
that William Holden will hold his own 
in any cast, but the great surprise is 
Judy Holliday . . . you'll love her." 
- Louella Parsons 


* 
COLUMBIA 
>W 
PICTURES Born 
Yesterday, 


Ju d u 
M ttU m 
E 
M 
M 
» 


STARTS SUNDAY 
AT ROTH THEATRES 
RAFAEL and SEQUOIA 
SAN RAFAEL 
MILL VALLEY 


Birthdays Of Two Presidents 
To Be Celebrated Saturday 


The birthdays of two illustrious* 
presidents, Abraham Lincoln and 
George Washington will be cele 
brated Saturday evening, at the tra 
ditional patriotic program sponsored 
by the members of Tamal Tribe No 
288, Improved Order of Red Men 
and Genessee Council No. 180, De 
gree of Pocahontas. Th? program 
which will begin at i o'clock will be 
given in the E street school audi­ 
torium, San Rafael. 
Harold Haley, San Rafael city at­ 
torney, will be the speaker of the 
evening. 
Ronald Cox will deliver 
the famous Gettysburg Address and 
David Del Tredici will play several 
piano selections and Patricia Aus­ 
tin (Pat Bortfeld) will sing. St. An­ 
selm’S Troop No. 19, Boy Scouts, will 
form the Honor Guard for the fra­ 
ternal societies 
as 
these present 
their colors. Musician for the cere­ 
mony will be Fred Guild, deputy 
great Sachem to Tamal Tribe. 
Members of the degree teams of 
the Council and Tribe will be dress­ 
ed in full Indian regalia and will do 
the escort work. George Hall is to 
be master of ceremonies. Chairmen 
are Mrs. August Kientz of Genessee 
Council and Fred * Kuhlken for 
Tamal Tribe. The public is cordial­ 
ly Invited to attend the ceremony. 


* 
* 
* 
/ 
Poached eggs on croutons instead 
of the usual toast will appeal to 
children as a breakfast dish. 


THS Girls Scheduled 


For Aliarward Treks 


Scheduled for altarward treks 
are two Tamalpals High school 
girls. 
Frances Faye, a senior 
student, is engaged to Sgt. 
Marion Wayne Duke, who is 
stationed at. Hamilton Field. 
Frances is the only daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Faye of 
Larkspur. M. W. Duke, of Nor­ 
wood, N. C. is the father of Sgt. 
Duke. 
Dorothy Nerviani, who is also 
to be graduated In June from 
Tamalpais High school, Is the 
fiancee of Louis Azevedo. She 
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Ernest 
Nerviani of 
Fairfax. 
Also residents of that commun­ 
ity are Louis’ parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. Silvio Azevedo. 
Neither couple has announced 
wedding plans. 


talfe C. Crokers Are 
3arents O f Daughter 
First child of Mr. and Mrs. 
Croker of San Rafael is 


TCWC Sections Plan 


Outstanding Events 
% 
Sections of the Tamalpais Centre 
Woman's {71ub are In the midst of 
preparations for several outstand­ 
ing events. All the groups will pre 
sent stunts or skits at the club's 
annual jinks. But in addition to 
this the drama section is presenting 
•The Mikado,” rehearsals for which 
have been held over a period of 
months. The drama group’s regu­ 
lar meeting, scheduled for next 
Monday, February 19, at the club­ 
house, has been cancelled and in­ 
stead the thespians will meet at 
10:30 that morning for a rehear­ 
sal at Betfy Rupe’s studio. 
The literary section, Mrs. Joseph 
W. Williams, the chairman, an­ 
nounces, is presenting the gifted 
playreader, Harriet Barnes on Feb­ 
ruary 23. 
Kay Eubanks, well known flower 
arranger, 
will 
be the featured 
speaker at the meeting of the club’s 
garden section on March 9. Mrs. 
Russell Wolcott, section chairman, 
announces that Robert Saxe of the 
San Francisco Men's Garden Club, 
will be. the speaker in April and 
as his talk will 
entertainment 
which both members and their hus­ 
bands will enjoy. The meeting will 
be held in the evening. 
* 
* 
* 


Women Asked To Register For War Emergency 


Women of Marin county are asked to register immediately listing skills and |ob experience 
so that in a war emergency they may be placed in jobs where they will be of the greatest 
value. They are asked to fill out the blank which appears below and send it to Miss Eloise 
Mays, chairman of the Marin County Power Survey, P. O. Box 223, San Rafael. 
The survey is being conducted at the request of Col. Carl Engelhart, Civilian Defense 
coordinator, under the auspices of the Business and Professional Women's Club of Marin 
county. When completed, the classified register will be available to all Civilian Defense 
organizations in the county. 


INDEPENOENT-JOURNAL, Wed., Feb. 14, 1951 
7 


Under 30.. 
Miss or Mrs__ 
Address_____ 
Children: Number.. 


Over 20. 
.Over 80. 
.Phone: home.. 
Other. 
Ages.... 


Mimeograph. 
(Please check ways you cogid help in an emergency) 
1. Clerical and skilled: Typing Shorthand.... 
pjjjc. 
Tabulating.. 
Telephone Operator.— «, Dictaphone 
Other_______________________ 
2. Food Preparation: Quantity Cooking. 
Dletluan. 
Helper____ 
3. Health Service: R. N 
Practical Nurse 
Nurses’ Aide 
First Aid 
Therapy.. 
4. Sewing: Machine— — Hand 
' • 
5. Technician: Specify_______________________ _______ ________ ________ ____________ 
6. Child Care: At home______ .______________ 
At Center. 
7. Driver: Passenger car.. 
9. Factory Experience.. 
10. Other Skills____ 


Heavy vehicle. 
Operate plane.. 
Agriculture__ 
Boat, type. 


Describe work you would prefer to do. 


Would you be available for full-time work? 
Part-time......... 
Are you active in an organized civil defense plan? Yes 
No. 
Where... 


C. 
Rolfe 
being 


FABRIC BAG 


welcomed by a large family group. 
The baby, a girl, who was bom yes­ 
terday morning at the Children's 
Hospital in fian Francisco, weighed 
nine pounds and one ounce. She is 
registered as Constance Marie Cro­ 
ker. 
Mother of the little one is the for­ 
mer Patricia • Mitsch, who Is the 
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. 
Mitsch of Corte Madera. Paternal 
grandparents of small Constance 
are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Croker 
Bayside Acres. 
of 


Jean Patricia Silveira 
Receives Nurse's Cap 
Jean Patricia Silveira was one of 
a group of 34 student nurses, who 
received her cap at a capping cere 
mony recently conducted at St 
Mary’s College of Nursing in San 
Francisco. 
Jeah Patricia, who is a graduate 
of Dominican Convent, entered the 
college of nursing last August. She 
is the daughter of Mrs. Mary E. 
Silveira of the Silveira Ranch on 
the Redwood Highway north of San 
Rafael, and the late Antonio F. Sil­ 
veira, who was founder of the 
Dairymen Milk Co., Ltd. (Marin 
Dell) and Its president at the time 
of his tragic death a number of 
years ago 


Tanners Are Dinner Hosts 
Dr. and Mrs. Lome Tanner of 
Paradise Cove were dinner hosts 
Sunday to Mr. and Mrs. Robert 
Boyer and their children, Sally and 
Dickey of San Leandro; Mrs. Na­ 
talie Holly, Mrs. Tanner’s mother 
A stunning spring bag at very lit- j and Dr. Tanner’s sister, Dr. Dora 
tie expense and very little sewing 1 Tanner and her husband, Dr. Va- 
time—or skill.! Buy y7 yard of up-1 ron Smith, of San .Anselmo 
holstery fabric, 44 inches wide, and 
preferably one with a metallic 
thread (gold or silver) in the mate­ 
rial itself! The bag illustrated is of 
lipstick red with a narrow gold 
stripe in it. So handsome that I am 
going to use the bag myself, with a 
heavy blue spring suit! Bag meas­ 
ures 10 by 11 inches. 
Send 25c for Actual Size Pattern, 
all sewing and finishing instructions 
for the UPHOLSTEY 
FABRIC 
BAG (Pattern No. 303) 
YOUR 
NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN 
NUMBER to CAROL CURTIS, In­ 
dependent - Journal, 1028 B street, 
San Rafael, Calif. 
Patterns ready to fill orders im­ 
mediately. For special handling of 
order via first class mail include an 
extra. 5© per pattern. 


Fairfax Woman's 
To Give 'Apron' Party 
The Fairfax Woman’s Club will 
hold an ‘‘apron” card party, follow­ 
ing the meeting, Tuesday afternoon, 
February 20. The members and 
guests will be served a 12:30 o’clock 
snack luncheon before cards. Mrs. 
T. J. Burger, club president, will 
preside at the meeting. 
Each guest is asked to bring an 
apron to stock the booth of the 
club's spring bazaar or to give the 
equivalent in money. 
Mrs. G. W. Jackson, chairman of 
the hostess committee, is being as­ 
sisted by M e s d a m e s Abraham 
Jacobs, George S. Jones and M. T. 
Anderson. 
• • • 


Two Speakers Address 
Officers Wives Club 
Lois Lapsley of th Zephy- Charm 
School spoke oh charm and poise 
when she addressed the luncheon 
meeting of the Officers’ Wives Club 
at Hamilton Field last Thursday, 
The second part of the program 
was presented by Mrs. Peter Autzen, 
representing Guide Dogs for the 
Blind Inc., who gave a demonstra­ 
tion of guide dog work. 
Mrs. Paul Greiner, club president, 
conducted the meeting. 


Salad Luncheon Tomorrow 
At Outdoor Art Club 
The monthly salad luncheon of 
the Outdoor Art Club of Mill Val­ 
ley is to be held tomorrow at the 
clubhouse, under the sponsorship 
of the ways and means committee. 
Mrs. Robert E. Loeck is chairman of 
the 12:30 pjn. event. Mrs. W. C. 
Kellers is in charge of decorations, 
Mrs. George V. Griffitts and Mrs. 
C. J. Brockhoff of reservations and 
Mrs. A. V. Osborne of tables. 
Guests will be received by Mes­ 
dames Lee Van Atta and Keith 
McLell&n. On the food and serving 
Committee are Mesdames W. B. 
Evans, Wesley M. Clark, James 
Bickford, Gordon Farnsworth, A, E. 
Poarch and Russell Mills. 


The Chrysanthemum is regarded 
as the flower for November and the 
topaz as the jewel. 


Several groups of Indians in New 
Mexico still worship the ancient gods 
of their forefathers. 


Vz off on Winfield China 


Famous Bamboo pattern by Winfield in fine China, 
fully vitrified, handprinted and oven proof. 
For 
a limited time only we are offering 16 piece starter 
sets at Vs off. 
Regularly priced at $30.00 you can 
now buy this set, consisting of 4 dinnerpfates, 4 
cups and saucers and 4 butterplates, at only $18.95. 
. This offer will be in effect only as long as our 
present supply lasts. 
0 
moderntrend 
1027 C St. 
San Rafael 


Hi There, Neighbor»! 
It*» whellbarrou) time again,* and 
rugged Denim goes glamorous when 
talented Stephanie Koret addt shell pink 
and oyster white to her collection of 
faded blue Koradenim 
“Pair Offs**. 
You can pair them 
as you like with skirts, 
shorts, halters, smarty 
pants, slacks, jackets 
and sun dresses. 
And of course 
Marin will love them 
because they are 
tubbable. 
Peggy 


T k (owrffo Store 
Next To Andy» Drive-In 
On Miracle Mile 


if 


By CAROL CURTIS 


Personal 
Paragraphs... 


Visiting Marin county and San 
Francisco from Honolulu are Mr. 
and Mrs. 
Robert H. 
Grosjean, 
formerly of San Rafael and Fair­ 
fax. While Mr. Grosjean is in New 
York on business this week, Mrs. 
Grosjean and daughter Patti-Lee 
are visiting Dr. and Mrs. E. E. Sim­ 
ará of San Rafael They will also 
visit Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Grosjean 
of San Francisco, formerly of San 
Rafael. 


St# 
a Free Demonstration 


of THE 
NECCHI 


WORLD S FINEST SEW ING MACHINE 


pronounced "NECK'-CE" 


• Moke I buttonhole» 
• Sew» on two-hole and 
Four-hole button» 
• Sew» Zig-Zag 
• Embroider» 
• Monogram» 
• Dorn» 
• Sews plain 
Forward and reverso 
Lifetime Guarantee 


We Also Repair AH 
Makes Machines 
McGOWAN'S 
Sewing Machines 
1114 4tli St. (next to Rafael 
Theatre) 
Phone 7570 


r P O P , 
way to get hot 
isn't there an easier 
water?" 


ü 
{California^ 
ingl 


Practical home making idem from the 
P. G. and E. Home Economic9 Dept 
If you want to make your family 
rave about your cooking, serve 
Banana Fritters for dinner some 
night! They’re sure-fire hits every 
time—they make the most simple 
meal into a feast. Serve with the 
meat course or for dessert, which­ 
ever suits your fancy. 
1 
* 
BANANA FRITTERS 
I 
■ 
Fill deep fry-kettle or sauce­ 
pan 
to % full with fat or 
Uoof fot to 97RO W 
fot» I 
oil. Heat fat to 375° F. {or 
until a 1-inch cube of bread 
browns in 40 seconds). Cut 4 
medium bananas crosswise in 
luarters or 1-inch chunks, 
in flour, then dip in, frit- 


LADIES! WAIT 
UNTIL FRIDAY,February16th 


Then we will ihow you the difference between TERRIFIC PRICE REDUC­ 
TIONS and empty quotations . . . LOOK FOR FULL PARTICULARS in our 
big announcement IN THIS NEW SPAPER T O M O R R O W NIGHT. 
/ exquisite 
FURS 


Pans and pans of steaming water 
Smalt son toted every mom. »■ 
Lest his father reach the office 
With his bearded chin unshorn. 


To satisfy every desire, 
every budget, entire $48,080 
stock to be SACRIFICED. 


From 40% 
To 


% 
60 
Make no other plans for 
Friday — attend the Sale 
and 
SAVE MONEY as 
you’ve never saved it be- 
off! 


ALL D A Y T O M O R R O W 


THURSDAY, to appraise, mark down prices and 're-arrange stocks 
for the greatest underpricing event of our long career In business! 
It's true! After 14 years Maury Phillips retires from the Fur Business. 


RETIRING SALE STARTS 


FRIDAY, FEB. 16 at 10 a. m. 


fore! 
AAaury PHILLIPS, Furrier 
910 FOURTH ST. 
Camino Theatre Bldg. 
.-------- - San Rafael 


Checked his chart on water heaters 
Bought the proper size and kind, 
Shaving! Showers! Washing/ Dishes! 
Water9s HOT now all the time. 


I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
J 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 
I 


Couldn't stand it any longer 
Saw a dealer who advised: 
M You've outgrown your wafer heater 
You need one of larger size.” 


Do you have plenty of hot water 24 hours a day? 


If not, and your home needs it, ask your dealer 


about the new /properly-sized automatic ga s 


water heaters which operate on round-the-clock 


efficiency for mere pennies- Building? Buying? Re­ 


modeling? In any case, a modern ga s water heater 


will more than pay for itself in the time and work 


it savesl 


Hot water is a thrifty, everyday comfort here in Northern and 
Central California because P. G. and E gas rates are among the 
lowest in the nation. Enjoy plenty of it. 


quar 
Roll 
ter batter, coating each piece 
completely. Fry in hot fat 4 
to 6 minutes or until brown 
and tender. Drain on unglazéd 
paper. Serve hot Serves 6-8. 
Fritter Batter: 
1 cup sifted flour 
14 cup sugar 
1 Vi teaspoons salt 
2 teaspoons baking 
powder 
1 egg, well beaten 
Vs cup milk 
2 teaspoons melted fat 
or oil 
Sift flour, suga^, salt and bak­ 
ing powder together. Combine 
beaten egg and milk; /idd I 
gradually to dry ingredients, j 
stirring until batter is smooth, f 
Stir in fat. 


You* ve been robbed if you don’t 
get HOT water the instant you 
turn on the faucet. But there’s a 
reason! The farther hot water 
travels to reach that faucet, the 
more heat it loses along the way. 
You can outwit this thievery by: 
(1) locating your water heater as 
close as possible to the places of 
most frequent use, (2) keeping 
pipe «iw to a m inim um , (3) in­ 
sulating hot water pipes. 
Smart gals clean vegetables in 
warm water: dirt comes off faster, 
temperature is kinder to hands. 
How much hot water do you 
need every day? More than you 
think! Over 80% of all gallons of 
water your family uses are HOT. 
Discounting baths, showers, dishes 
and laundry, there are still 136 
other uses for HOT water in the 
home. Now’s the time to 
replace worn-out or too- 
^small water heaters. Your 
'dealer has a sizing chart 
that tells approximately 
how much HOT water 
your family needs, Ask 
him about it! 
Gelatin molds stick? To 
unmold gelatin smoothly, 
evenly, easily, dip entire 
mold quickly in hot water 
from tap. 


I 
I 
I '■ 
I * 


JW-O-251 
PACIFIC GAS AND FIECTKIC COMPANY 
UPRIGHT M□ DCL. 


8 
INDEPENDENT.-JOURNAl, Wed.. Feb. 14. 1951 
*7 wholly disapprove of what you say but will defend to the death your right to say it.**-VOLT A IRE 
EDITORIALS AND FEATURES 
*r 
Wafer To Help Teeth? 
, Considerations for putting a tooth saving 
chemical in most of Marin's water are,now being 
made by two Marin water companies. 
The move to get the water chemically treated 
so that youngsters' teeth may be better preserved 
is being made by the Marin County Dental 
Society. 
Th' chemical is known as sodium fluoride and 
the process of treating water with it is known 
as "fluoridation" and not the more commonly 
used "fluorination." 
The outcome Of such planning—that is the 
actual part it may play in Marin—may not be 
known for some time. 
The dental society has recommended the use 
of the chemical to the Marin Municipal Water 
DisH-irt and the North Marin Water District. 
The municipal district, according to Dr. William 
Upton, member of the society's dental health 
and education committee, now has a special tech­ 
nician working on the fluoridation process. 
The northern district has taken the dental 
society's recommendation under consideration. 
The work on the project has been under the 
guidance of the society since November. 
The society believes that use of the compound 
in water will help materially to reduce the rate 
of tooth decay among Marinites. 
It is feared because of the advanced develop­ 
ment of adult teeth, that the process may not 
have a great effect on the grown-ups-but for 
children it is a different story. 
The fluoridation process .coming to young 
teeth in drinking water will form into the teeth 
the decay fighting chemical as the child grows— 
and hence help save youngsters from teeth blight. 
This is worth the effort. 


SASSY VALENTINES 


Thai Poor Lincoln Boy 


Mease don 't,we&&R.S.V.R 
m 


TfHCy SAY the WAGE FREEZE 
©OESN't BOTHER YO^FEUER.- 


^ 
@F THAT COAL IN YER CELLAR.? 


[F oe 
* « S é - 
J 


Ú /Íen you holdhandswith CommyJOC 
Rem em ber M oscow ’s f íc k c c - 
T h AT'S n ot HiS arm around Vour ÑCCK 
) It'S a c tu a lly h is s i c k l e f 


Qó Mt,/NOlA ñiJrÍNl/tfltHs — ^ 
' V ' I 
Wfe HEAR YOÜ ARE 
R y jL * 
e la stic cuys- 
«jUa» 
Y ou p u ll or Stretch x \f0 p e * 
To ANY SIZE - 
i f u/ith REDS 
/1 2 > jr) 
0 you compromise, 
C-(L 
Y o u 'll fino yoür 
i 


VULCANIZE!£ p $ S ? L f\. 


Res— Man n i w G -Ís^r^'' 
1 


To S taun 


udstié LOVE, 


Looking At The World. . . 
OUT OF THE PAST Independent Files 


TWENTY YEARS AGO 
What Price Kings? 


What Do They 
. 


Do, and Why? 


No American story js better known than the 
«to , of Abraham Lincoln. 
Abraham Lincoln's parents were poor. There 
was no county welfare department to help them. 
He* was mostly self-educated. No school bus 
passed his parents' cabin. He studied by fire­ 
light No one had heard of TVA. He split- 
rails and clerked in a country store. There was 
no minimum wage, social security, unemploy­ 
ment or disability insurance. 
A boy growing up today as Lincoln did would 
be considered very much abused and under­ 
privileged. Yet Lincoln merely became the 
greatest president America ever had. 


Movie Nudes OK, But French 


Censors Keep Crime Taboo 


The three-winged chicken is an interesting 
novelty but if the scientists really want to be­ 
come popular they'd better come through with 
a four-drumsticked turkey. 
• 
Other Editors' Opinions 
Preparing For Disaster ' 
Residents of strategic areas in this country are 
currently giving thought to the question of civil 
defense. The problem this time is greater than 
in World War II, when first aid instruction and 
casualty squad training covered the ground. 
First aid included instructions for the treatment 
of victims of various gases, and these were mem­ 
orized without much conviction that they would 
ever be needed! 
Now the presence of the atomic bomb threat, 
with its devastating effects and their modifica­ 
tion by distance requires a new program of 
education. The possibility that germ warfare 
and poison gases may be utilized by an enemy it 
deemed not too remote by the experts, and 
familiarity with their effects must be achieved 
by education also. Red Cross officials are said 
to favor the use of schools and colleges for train­ 
ing centers whose trainees can then be called on 
to instruct community groups. 
Citizens who are equipped to deal with disas­ 
trous occurences are likely to be calm in the face 
of them. Ignorance leads to panic and unneces­ 
sary casualties.—Turlock Daily Journal, 


By CARL HARTMAN 
PARIS-(AV-Movies with nudes 
are okay to French censors, but 
they won’t stand tor brass knuckle 
crime and gangster stuff. 
“We think it does less harm." / 
aaid an information ministry of­ 
ficial, “for children to see a nude 
woman than to see tn efficiently 
performed crime." 
He recalled a recent French 
» movie licensed for general show­ 
ing despite a scene that shows the 
star actress stepping Into a bath­ 
tub.The same picture — wjtlch isn’t 
likely to reach the U.S. — has 
some bedroom and underwear 
scenes so warm they are practi­ 
cally fire hazards. The French 
find them cute, in an innocent 
sort of way. 
The official mentioned another 
picture from which the censors 
Insisted on cutting views of a 
murderer pushing the head of 
an unconscious victim into a gas 
oven. 
French movie censorship is In 
the hands of an* 18-man com- 
mittee for the supervision of 
cinematograph films. It includes 
high ranking government officials 
and representatives of the Industry 
and 
public. Decisions are made 
in secret by majority vote, but 
information minister Albert Gazier 
has to make the final judgement 
in tough cases. His rulings are 
subject to discussion in parliament 
and can be made a political issue. 
Few movies are entirely prohibí- 


LIFE IN THE USA 


ted. Producers an d Importers 
know pretty well what the censors 
are likely to consider “contrary 
to morality or capable of disturb­ 
ing public order." 
The last American film to be 
flatly barred was called “Street 
Comer.” The French thought it 
dealt too frankly with abortion. 
That was under information mini­ 
ster Pierre-Henry Teitgen, a de- 
vout member of the Catholic 
Popular Republican movement 
(MRP)”. Gazier, a Socialist, is 
* considered more lenient. 
The French generally dislike the 
Idea of censorship. Cartoonists 
like to depict it in the form of a 
black-clad old maid called An­ 
astasia, with a long pair of scis­ 
sors and an even longer nose. 
Many pictures, Including most 
American gangster stories, are 
therefore released as “forbidden to 
children under 18.” There is some 
dispute whether this label helps 
a film by advertising It as spicy, 
or cuts down business by barring 
an imporant part of the audience. 
Exhibitors in the strongly Catholic 
communities of such regions as 
Alsace and Brittany find It un­ 
profitable to books films of this 
kind.French churches regularly post 
the ratings they establish on the 
“moral value" of films being 
shown locally. They are more 
severe than the official censors 
and in many districts can make 
or break a movie. 
The official censors often im­ 


pose cuts and even require pro­ 
ducers to reshoot objectionable 
scenes. An American movie about 
venereal disease was held up until 
the importers removed some scenes 
showing the effects of syphilis. 
Another measure the censors can 
take against a film is to forbid 
its exportation. Naturally, this is 
only effective against pictures 
made in France. 
Controls were tightened after 
the Russians had a propaganda 
field day with a French picture 
called “Clochemerle.” This is a 
broad comedy about the building 
of a public comfort station in the 
middle of a French village, and 
the political and social complica­ 
tions that result. 
It tickled the French for some 
20 years as a novel before ap­ 
pearing on the screen. Some re­ 
ligious groups were annoyed when 
it did and succeeded in having it 
banned in some localities — not 
because of the basic theme, but 
because it made fun of the local 
priest and his friends. It was 
widely shown nevertheless. 
When the Russians got hold of 
it, they doctored it with subtitles 
into a full-scale attack on the 
alleged corruptions of bourgeois 
democracy. 
By this time a lot of people in 
France were sorry the whole thing 
ever came up. They resolved to 
see in the future that pictures 
painting French life in colors too 
unfavorable are kept exclusively 
for home consumption. 


By DEWITT MACKENZIE 
AF Foreign Affair* Analyst 


King George of England is having a tough 
time to make ends meet these days—even as you 
and I—and things have got so tough that the gov­ 
ernment has had to boost his allowance a bit. 
His majes try’s regular pay is 410,000 pounds 
sterling annually. At the normal rate of ex­ 
change that would be about $2,050,000, but it 
now is worth $1,148,000. In addition there are 
annuities for other members of the royal family. 
■ That’s a tidy little income, say you, and you 
are right. But it takes a lot of shillings to main­ 
tain several palaces, and all the other trappings 
that go with monarchy, including golden coaches 
with prancing white horses. 
So what price royalty? What is the value of a 
monarch superimposed on a government headed 
by a prime minister who is the real chief of 
state? 


WELL, IN THE FIRST PLACE, the ruler is 
the symbol which, more than any other, binds 
together the world-wide arms of the British 
Commonwealth. It isn't the British government 
or the British flag which holds these countries 
together, but the throne. 
However, I believe the thing oBts deeper than 
that. The king not only is the non-political 
symbol of state, but his people look to him as 
the symbol of British ideals and way of life. The 
fact that he now is encountering difficulties with 
the cost of living will make his loyal subjects nod 
and say:—‘He is one of us." 
Then there is another important aspect of the 
Whereas prime ministers change fre­ 
quently, the king is on the throne for life, and 
even as he dies his successor is saluted by the 
home secretary with the age-old words: "The 
king is dead, long live the king." 
So governments come and go, but the king 
goes on forever. Years ago when I was the guest 
of one of India’s great ruling princes, the Maha­ 
rajah of Gwalior, I raised the question of how 
these proud potentates felt towards the govern­ 
ment of England to which they were responsible. 
He smiled and based his reply on the structure 
of the English pound, which is 20 shillings. # He 
put it like this: 
"I should say that the princes are fifteen shill­ 
ings m the pound for the king-emperor and five 
shillings in the pound for the government." 


TEN YEARS AGO 
San Quentin prison's debating 
team gained a tie with Stanford 
University debaters in a match 
held at San Quentin. Convicts up­ 
held the affirmative of the ques­ 
tion: “Resolved, that the nations 
of the Western Hemisphere should 
form a permanent union.” Debate 
was first of a series arranged by 
Warden Clinton Duffy. 
• » * 
Mill Valley Rotarlans, 75 of 
them, traded Valentines at a 
unique dinner party. Program 
chairman was M. D. Murphy, as­ 
sisted by Harry King, Richard 
Danford, and Richard Bennett. 
President Tom Ludke presided. 
• » * 
At a meeting of the Marin Mo­ 
tion Picture Council at the Rafael 
Theater a new evaluation commit­ 
tee was named composed of Mrs. 
George Niven, chairman: Mrs. 
Lloyd Grandi, and Mrs. Claude 
Mason. 


James A. Johnston, former war­ 
den of San Quentin, and member 
of the state department of peno­ 
logy, spoke at the meeting of Wil­ 
kins Post, American Legion, which 
was held at the San Rafael Im­ 
provement Club. Delmar Turney, 
commander, presided at the meet­ 
ing. 
• • • 
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. MacGregor 
entertained at their home in No­ 
vato. Their guests were Mr. and 
Mrs. C. E. Carlile, Mr. and Mrs. 
Roland Anderson and Mr. and 
Mrs. William Hanen. 
• * * 
With milk selling as low as five 
cents a quart in San Francisco, 
Marin county dairymen were suf­ 
fering severe losses, it was report­ 
ed. 
• • • 
Mr. and Mrs. E. Wcstlund of No­ 
vato entertained at a party in 
honor of her mother, Mrs. P. A. 
Johnson who was celebrating her 
birthday. 


YOUR HEALTH H. N. Bundesen, M. D. 


I 
case. 


How Will W« Knew 
When We Have Won 
Victory In Korea? 


Whai Our Readers Say 
The Independent-Joumal welcome* contributions 
to “What Our Readers Bay.** Letters should be 
held to moderate length. They must be signed, 
but name* will be withhold on request The editor 


Why Movies Are As They Are 
Editor, Independent-Joumal:' 
Mr. A. Blumenfeld’s splendidly reasoned letter about 
“movies" good and bad struck a responsive note in 
my heart and mind. I have never been moved by the 
synthetic “highbrowiems" of those who clamor for 
“good pictures” while consistently patronizing the 
“bad pictures” which producers drop into the lape of 
exhibitors. 
It so happens that a very close associate of mine 
manages a theatre. He is a man of culture and of 
education —a rare combination you will admit Yet 
he tells me that what the critics and, censors call the 
“best pictures" almost invariably don’t pay in our 
smaller cities. And If a picture dees not pay hew can 
It bo shown? In short, the people get what they want 
on the whole: the kind of thing that the majoriy 
lisen to through their radios. 
Of course, if “we the people ’ really want to raise 
the level of our taste in entertainment the producers 
will be swift to respond. But let’s have lots of real 
comedy in these hours of tension. Laurel is Hardy, 
“Will ye no come back again?" 


Francisco 


Sincerely, 
ERIC MONTIZAMBERT 
Canon, Grace Cathedral 


NEW YORK OP)—“How will we 
know when we have won a victory 
in Korea?" 
That question was put to me 
recently by a housewife whose two 
young sons were sailing for service 
in the Far East. 
Her query looks naive on the 
surface. But it is one that has the 
diplomats and professional sol­ 
diers scratching their heads. 
For there is no easy answer to 
it: There may never be a clearcut 
military victory for either side. 
The Korean campaign has been a 
pig In the poke, in some ways, for 
eveiybody concerned. 
All the nations Involved in it 
have taken turns at the great Ori­ 
ental game of losing face—and 
everywhere you look you see a 
black eye in a mask of dignity. 
The North Korean government 
lost face by failing to win the 
war it started last June 25. It also 
lost most of its army. 
The South Korean government 
lost face several times by the un­ 
impressive showing of its troops 
against the enemy. 
The United Nations —including 
the United States —lost face be­ 
cause It has been unable to carry 
free, Independent and united 
Korea. 
China has lost face because so 
far it has failed to carry out its 
pledge to throw the Allies off the 
Korean peninsula. 
Even Soviet Russia, which 
stayed out of the formal 


of the conflict, has lost some face. 
Its behind-the-scenes power grab 
to bring all Asia under commu­ 
nism has been rebuffed in battle. 
This leaves the polite Japanese 
as the only major race In the area 
with their features still Intact. 
And they are deriving some inno­ 
cent pleasure out of watching the 
other nations fumble around the 
floor in an effort to pick up their 
fallen faces and put them back on 
straight. 
But it’s hard to see how any 
nation can now emerge wearing 
the same unscarred expression. 
The campaign is now, after 
eight bitter months, about back 
where it was a few days after it 
started. There have been well over 
a million casualties, and the forces 
in the field are getting larger 
rather than smaller. 
The North Korean Reds began 
the war with 200,000 troops. The 
South Koreans tried to stop'them 
with 100,000 troops. Today there 
are roughly about 500,000 Chinese 
and North Korean Reds in the 
combat zone, and an estimated 
1,000,000 other Chinese soldiers 
are believed grouped along the 
Manchurian border. The United 
Nations forces in Korea new num­ 
ber about 400,000. 
The North Koreans originally 
wanted to take all their country. 
The United Nations defeated them 
decisively. But the entrance of the 
Chinese compelled the allies to 
abandon their own attempt to 
unify Korea. 
Gaining back lost territory is 
now a subsidiary goal of the al­ 
lied army. Its chief aim is to kill 
as many enemy Reds as It can 
while preserving itself from any 


By Hal Boyle 


mass counter offensive that might 
destroy it. 
In a surprisingly «successful 
“limited offensive" it has driven 
back to Seoul and inflicted 61,000 
casualties. 
Suppose it keeps up its success 
and drives the shattered Reds 
back to the Yalu river? Would the 
Chinese then launch a fresh army 
of 1,000,000 men across that fron­ 
tier? That would almost certainly 
compel another allied pullback 
down the same roads they have 
come .up twice before. 
Where is victory in this checker­ 
board pattern of retreat and at­ 
tack, counterattack and with­ 
drawal? Who knows when who 
has won? The soldiers of the bat- 
tleline—as well as the housewife 
who is sending her two young sons 
over there—would like an answer.. 
That answer may be a tacit 
stalemate, with the two armies 
permanently probing at each other 
in patrol forays from some defen­ 
sive line near the old 38th paral­ 
lel. Or the diplomats may come 
up with a compromise to save 
faces all around—so far as that 
can be done. 
But short of the launching of 
an all out third world war, there 
seems little likelihood of a deci­ 
sive military victory for any df 
the forces now fighting amid 
Korea’s barren snowy hills. 
• • • j 
DEAN IS PRACTICAL 
BOSTON (U.R>—The Very Rev. Ed­ 
win J. Van Etten, dean of St. PauTs 
(Episcopal) Cathedral, bought two 
farms so his city-bred choir boys 
could learn about rural life. 


OF COURSE THE SOME 600 bejewcled 
princes, most of whom had the power of life and 
death over their subjects, have lost their thrones 
* in the political changes of the Indian peninsula. 
But it was king-emperor who held their strongest 
loyalty. 
As a constitutional monarch, the king has no 
authority to interfere with government. How­ 
ever, his (or her) majesty is an invaluable source 
ot advice for prime ministers and other members 
of the cabinet. This is true because of the inten­ 
sive training which an heir to the throne under­ 
goes, including a study of the different branches 
of the commonwealth and their peoples. 
But does the ruler ever venture to interfere? 
Sometimes in the past that certainly has hap­ 
pened. They say Queen Victoria used to voice 
her own ideas, and certainly her son, Edward 
VII was a positive sort of king. So was his son, 
George V, father of the present king. 
George V had a mind of his own, as witness 
an event during the great general strike of 1926. 
That was the first general strike in any country, 
and things looked bad for a time, as I can testify, 
since I was stationed in London then for the A.P. 
The government got tough, and armored cars 
were patrolling the streets with machine guns. 
It was unofficially reported that King George 
sent for the home secretary, whose pigeon this 
strike was, and warned him to go easy, saying 


Bone Marrow Infection 
Can Be Cured Quickly 
To Prevent Damage 
One disease whose outlook has 
been entirely changed by the dis­ 
covery of the antibiotic drugs, 
such as penicillin, is osteomyelitis 
or infection of the bone marrow. 
In former years this was truly 
a dreadful disorder, requiring 
months and even years to heal, 
and resulting in much pain and 
crippling. Today, if promptly di-( 
agnosed and properly treated, it* 
can readily be cured in time to 
prevent widespread damage to 
the bone. For this result, however, 
the disorder must be recognized 
early. 
INFECTED WOUND 
The infection may reach the 
bone from an infected wound or 
a boil. In other cases, the germs 
may be brought to the bone 
through the blood stream from 
an infection elsewhere in the body. 
Children are the most frequent 
victims of this disorder, and pain, 
which rapidly becomes severe and 
throbbing, is its first symptom. 
The affected leg or arm Is held 
in a bent position. Depending 
upon the severity of the infection, 
the child may also have fever, look 
sick and feel sick. The number of 
white cells in the blood is greatly 
increased. Early in the disorder, 
X-ray does not show any changes: 
however, as the bone destruction 
continues, the affected area can 
be seen in the X-ray plate. 
The type of treatment to be 
used will depend upon how early 
it is started. To begin with, the 
youngster must always be kept at 
complete rest and given plenty 
of fluids, if necessary by injection 


into a vwfc. The pain may be re­ 
lieved by proper drugs. Injections 
of whole blood into a vein may 
also help in building resistance. 
RESISTANT TO PENICILLIN 
Of the antibiotic drugs, peni­ 
cillin is usually tried first. If the 
germs causing the infection are 
resistant to penicillin, then one of 
the other antibiotic^ should be 
employed, such as streptomycin 
or aureomycin. The sulfonamide 
drugs are also of value in those 
cases in which the germs are re­ 
sistant to the penicillin. 
» 
Surgical treatment is necessary 
in some cases, particularly after 
pus has formed which cannot 
otherwise be drained. 
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 
. ARM.: What treatment should 
be given for a sinus ailment that 
has occurred for 46 years? 
Answer: In chronic sinus infec­ 
tion, a solution containing adren­ 
alin or ephedrin dropped Into the 
nose may give temporary relief. 
In most cases, however, It will be 
necessary to have the infected 
material in the sinuses pumped 
out with a suction pump or to 
have the sinuses washed out In 
cases where the infection contin­ 
ues, a more radical type of opera­ 
tion may be require^. 
This condition should always be 
treated under the direction oí the 
physician. An effort should 
made to build up the general 
health and strength by means of 
fresh air, sunshine, rest and sleep, 
arid by taking cod-liver oil. 
Recently, various forms of aero­ 
sol penicillin have been found 
helpful in treating this condition; 
this is penicllin in the form of a 
mist, vapor or dust. 
It would be well to consult a 
nose and throat specialist con­ 
cerning this matter. 


TRY AND STOP ME 
By Bennett Cerf 


Colonel James Cokesbury Al­ 
bright, the pride of Dallas, says 
that when it comes to gallantry, 
Texans cannot be beat. He cites 
as an example a rough old gaffer 
from the oil fields who was just 
preparing to dig into a succulent 
piece of roast pig at a barbecue 
when someone careened into him 
from behind and knocked his plate 
to the ground. In a rage he bel­ 
lowed, “You hawg! 
You want 
all the space there is?” and then 
he percieved the offender was 
the dignified wife of his host. 
Without a second thought he 
amended his statement, “Lady 
hawg, that is, ma’am.” 


A grim-faced woman approached 
the teller of a Wisconsin bank 
and announced, “My husband — 
the worm! — has an account here, 
and I want to know how much 


money he drew out of it in the 
past month." The teller regarded 
her with obvious disapproval and 
snapped, “Madam, I’m the pay­ 
ing teller of this bank — cot the 
telling teller." 


MODEST M AIDEN S 


"I will not have my people manhandled." 
His majesty was exceeding his constitutional 
rights, but the government took his "advice”— 
because it was good advice. George was earning 
his allowance. 
You're Telling Me... 
By WILLIAM RITT 
Central Press Writer 
The human bay window, it seems, is doomed 
to follow the one that adorned our homes into 
oblivion. 
. • • 
• • 
v 
* 
A midwestern university has added a baseball 
course and lessons in fishing. School more and 
more resembles vacation. 
• • 
• • 
A midwestern burglar swiped a stove with a 
fire in it. We knew it was rugged but didn’t 
realize it was THAT cold! 
• • 
• # 
California scientists, we read, have developed 
a three-winged chicken. A sort of barnyard heli­ 
copter? 


a l * m 
— 
» — *— 
/HH7 


l o * lT¿ JitCr )fou, henry! ITH0U6HT itw a C a s is 
box of can py 


INDEPENDENT.JOURNAL W ed.. Feb. 14. 1951 


FRONTLINE TOUR — Gen. Douglas MacArthur, bundled against 
the Korean cold, arrives at Kimpo Airport near Seoul for a tour 
of the front. NEA-Acme Radio-Telephoto by Staff photographer 
Walter Lea. 
(Acme Radlo-Telephoto) 


Loyalty Oath For Defense Workers 


All civil defense workers in Marin 
county, whether under the county 
organisation or that of any muni­ 
cipality within the county, are re­ 
quired by California law to take the 
“loyalty oath/ Col. E. Carl Engel- 
harfc in making this announcement 
said that his office will furnish 
blank forms upon request of indivi­ 
dual volunteer workers or of cities 
In the space on the loyalty oath 
Movie Lon Preserved 
In College Display 
ITHACA, N. Y. 0J.FD — The history 
of American motion pictures from 
1110 to the present is depicted in 
a growing collection of “stills" as­ 
sembled by the Cornell University 
Theatre. 
The library contains about 6,000 
pictures, about half of which came 
to the university recently in a col­ 
lection made by the late Frank H. 
Chase, Syracuse drama critic. It 
represents virtually every prom­ 
inent star who has taken part in 
American films. 
Prof. Walter H. Stainton, ex­ 
ecutive director of the University 
Theatre, began the collection casu­ 
ally in 1936 by saving the stills 
which accompanied the films con­ 
tracted for by the theatre. The 
addition of the Chase collection 
fills in the period beginning in 1910. 


form marked “Name of Public 
Agency,” the designation of the civil 
defense corps should be entered, 
as, for example, “Mill Valley Civil 
Defense Corps.” The oath must be 
subscribed to before an officer em­ 
powered by state law to administer 
oaths, such as a notary public. Pay­ 
ment of a fee is prohibited by law. 
Engelhart requests that unincor­ 
porated communities forward com­ 
pleted forms to his office in San 
Rafael with informatipn written on 
the back as to name, address, date 
enrolled and civil defense job as­ 
signment. 


Tomasmi Applies For Renewal 
Of Permits For Marin Bridges 
T. H. Tomasini, of San Francisco, 
has applied for a time extension for 
beginning construction of two au* 
thorized bridges on San Francisco 
Bay, Colonel K. M. Moore of the 
Army Engineers announces. 
One bridge would cross the bay 
between Point Fleming, in Albany, 
and Bluff Point, in Marin county. 
This would link Alameda and Marin 
counties. 
The other would cross Richard­ 
son Bay, from the north end of 
Belvedere Island to Sausalito, 'both 
in the southern portion of Marin 
county. 


parties to submit their objections to 
the project, In triplicate. The de­ 
cision of whether or not to Issue 
a permit will rest on possible ef­ 
fects upon navigation by the pro­ 
posed bridges. Objections must 
reach Moore's office by February 
17, 1951. 
Col. Moore explained that a per­ 
mit issued by the Department of 
the Army does not give any prop­ 
erty rights or authorise by-passing 
of any laws. A permit by his of­ 
fice merely means that no detri­ 
mental effect on navigation is ex­ 
pected by the projects under con- 1 
sideration. 


MARIN 
General Stores 
643 LINDARO STREET 
SAN RAFAEL 
PHONE 7635 


OBJECTIONS INVITED 
j “A permit issued by the Depert- 
. Col Moore, chief of his engineer- ment of the Army does not give any 
tag district, invites all interested 


Surgery Tried Out 


On Defectives 


S. F. Dairy Markets 
BAN FRANCISCO CU.R) — D a ir y 
market: 
Butter: A 93 score 74; A 92 score 
74; B 90 score 72. 
Cheese: Grade A loaf 47 - 49; 
grade A singles daisies 46-48. 
Eggs: Grade A large 48-4814; me­ 
dium A 46-46!*; small A ¿2-42 
Central Dairy: Grade AA 51; large 
A 50; medium A 48; small A 44. 
Western Dairy: Large A 50, me­ 
dium A 48; small A 44. 


property rights, either in real es­ 
tate or materials,” Moore explained. 
It does not give any exclusive 
privileges or authorise injury to pri­ 
vate property or invasion .of pri­ 
vate rights, nor Infringement of 
federal, state or local laws. Nor 
dodfe it obviate the necessity of ob- 
tátatag state assent to the work au- 
CHICAGO (U.P)—Attempts are be-1 thorized. It merely expresses the 
ng made at two Chicago hospitals j assent of the federal government 
to raise the intelligence quotient of 
M concerns public rights 
mentally-retarded children through j oi navigation," he also stated 
surgery but early results have not 
been encouraging. 
. 
Dr. Meyer A. Perlstein, co-ordtaa- 
reflO III AllfO 
tor for the project, said one favor- TOO Much FOP Cop 
able result was noted, however, in 
that some children with previously- 
uncontrolled epileptic seizures are 
improved. 
The surgery is being done at 
Michael Reese Hospital by Dr. 5 
A. Mackler and at Cook County Hos-1 
pital by Dr. Egbert H. Fell. 
ai~ s “ce 
, 
. , 
K 
' 
A motorcycle patrolman, Murdock 
The surgeons cut the jugular vein Lloyd, probably wouldn’t nave given 
and attach it to the carotid artery, Harris a second look but for one 
thus reversing the flow of blood so Í thing 
that more reaches the brain from 
**i ¿eard Harris, coming for three 
the heart. 
blocks before I ever raw him," he 
The operation was developed at j said. 
Western Reserve University in 
Inside the car was a four-piece 
Cleveland, About 20 patients have band, equipped with trumpet and 
been treated in Chicago, most of bass drj/>\ which was giving forth 
them victims of cerebral palsy. 
' with sch 'ol songs. 


BUFFALO, N. Y. (U.PJ—An im­ 
promptu concert in his car ended 
on a sad note for 17-year-old ftus- 
sell Harris. 
The youth was fined 910 for driv 
tag after dark With a junior oper 


FRAMES — FRAMING 
.Largest' Assortment of Frames. 
Framed Fletares and Fletare 
Moldings in Marin County. 
GASBERG STUDIO 
Est 1910 
U ll 4U> St. Sao Balad 


MORE THAN 
28 YEARS IN MARIN 
SUPERIOR SERVICE A® 
• • • On Everything Electrical 
Wiring, Appliances, Heating, Motor 
Salee and Service. Pumps and Water 
Systems. Skilled Workmen and Com­ 
plete Shop Facilities - Reasonable Prices. 


* 
MOTORS 
NORTH BAY 
ELECTRIC 
WORKS 
INC 
US FRANCISCO BLVD. 
"X-X- Mmm SAN RAF AH 417 
H o r n o of 
"NortheP* F Food 


DOHiiir. 2wj-sssr 


SWOIANTt.Answer yes, or no-didn’t you suddenly 
leave the city one day recently in a ’51 Ford 7 
HANCOCK! Yes. 
SEROUNTi And with utter disregard for perform* 
ance-you made all legal stops, traveled at a brisk 
pace? You took a route that involved hill climbing 
-met most of the driving conditions faced by the 
average motorist Didn’t you 7 
HANCOCK! Yes. 
SUOKRNTi Tell me—wasn’t there trick driving or 
coasting on this performance test 7 
HANCOCK: No—No—and NO! 


9 ,f>,-T»»w*W»is« ata ts uwbt mw ba^fcrmio^ 


SERGEANT: And yet you got 28.3 miles per gallon 
in that Ford-that proves it! 
HANCOCK: Ye-e-s. 
SERGEANT: Proves that you're Public Saver No. I! 
You're only interested in people getting iheir 
money's worth. You're undeniably a Mileage 
Booster Rooster! 


Next To Carpenter*b Union Hall 
OPEN SUNDAY 9 a.m. TO 6 p.m. 
OPEN MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY. 9 A.M. TO i P.M. 
FRIDAY UNTIL B P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 
Prict» Effectiva Thursday Through Monday 
Right to Limit Rowrvod 


I 
*4 Cyt. OvorCrtvg 
HANCOCK 
G A S O L I N E 


SUGAR 
C&H 
P u r Cane 
lbs.39c 


MARGARINE 
ALLSWEET . , 
Ju i 
Colored 
ID . ^ U 
RICE 
Special Process 2*>29 
COFFEE 


Folger's Regular or 
, E V - ^ ^ | 
Drip Grind 
||} M 
2 lbs. 
1.57 
7- 
FILLING and CRUST 
Each package makes a big family size pie 
LEMON, CHOCOLATE and COCONUT 
10 oz. Pkg. 
DOG FOOD 
Animal Fare 
No. I tall can 
3 “»2S> 
STEWED TOMATOES 
Del Monte 
No. 2 can 
23e 
SALMON 
Red King 
Crown Brand 
7 % oz. can 29* 
CRAB MEAT 
Bobeo Brand. 696-m. Can 
65*|SPI 
ArmadAGHETTI 
2 
a, With Sanee and Cheese, 15 H-o*- Can 
for 


SHRIMP 
Seabeaeh, Small, Wet Pack, 5-oz. Can 
37* CO 
CloverTTAGE CHEESE |b25* 
SARDINES 
American, Nepco, Flat Can 
4 r 25c P0I 
Van CaIK & Bl 
mp’s, No. Z% Can EANS2 for 0 0 0 


TUNA 
Solid Pack, Fancy, Light Meat — Namrod, H Can 
2 f®r 53* 
TOMATO SAUCE 
Del Monte 
6 <« 35* 


B E E F S T E W 
With vegetables and Gravy, Armada 
15 !* oz. 
PEACHES 
Freestone—Blue Winner, No) 1 Tall Can 
9du t or Om w 
FRUIT COCKTAIL 
D«l Monte, No. 1 Tail Can 
for 4 5 ^ 


P O P C O R N 
Princeton Farms, 19-os. Can 
2 ~ 35* 
CAME & MAPLE SYRUP 
2... 29* 
FACIAL TISSUE Hollywood, the Finest and1 the Softest 
*** one 
count ¿g 


'g o o d « 
o 
r 
SOUP 
mUHKU. 


21 KINDS TO 
CHOOSE FROM FM 


CAMPBELL'S SOUPS 
Mushroom, Citieken Noodle, 
Cream of Chicken, Vegetable Beef, 
Beef, Beef and Noodle 
2 for 2Vc 


Vegetable, Os Tall, Bean and Bacon 
2 for 25e 


to m a to sour 
CARNATION MILK 
TALL CANS 


Household Needs— Hardware 


MARKET PLACE 
LB. 
Wheia Roast 
2 lbs. U S ' 
3 lbs. 1.T9 


California Pottery 
Cups and Saucers, Dinner Plates, 
Luncheon Plates, Salad Plates 
ahd Bread and Butter Plates 
each 


COFFEE MUGS.. 19c each, 2 for 35c I 12" CHOP PLATE 
AA 
39c 


BOWLS 
• 
• 
• 
10c and 25c | BEAN POT 
SPECIALS FOR THURS., FRI., SAT. AND SUN. ONLY 


• 
• 
• 
• • • • • • 
jagg 
97c 


\ 


Wildcats Down Cadet Quint In 


% 
* 
# 
¿ 
' . I # . ' 
•' 
1 
1 
* / 
Second Game Of Series, 35-22 


HOW HIGH IS UP? 
By Alan Mover ' Catholics Pile 


Up 22-2 Lead 
In 1st Quarter 


Marin Catholic High swept a two 
game series with San Rafael Mili­ 
tary Academy by defeating 
the 
Cadets yesterday 
35-22 
on 
the 
Greenbrae court. Previous win over 
the cross-town cagers was register­ 
ed Jan. 23 and consisted of a 52- 
28 rout. 
Wildcat record'now stands at 18 
wins against seven losses. 
Starting as if they were going to 
walk away with the 
game, 
Jim 
Schmaltz and Buzz Keaton hit four 
of their first five suots. Keaton add­ 
ed two charity tosses and the Wild­ 
cats held a 12-2 margin. 
On a fast breaking offense, Marin 
shot to an amazing 22-2 lead half 
way in the fix ;t quarter. Substitutes 
tooV: .over and score at half time 
was 22-6. 


FOOTBALL REUNION — Notre Dame’s famous 
‘Tour Horsemen” of the gridiron show how they 
- lined up 25 years or so ago, when they met this 
week at the first annual sports banquet at the du 


Pont Country Club, Wilmington, Del. Prom left 
to right are: halfback Don Miller, fullback Elmer 
Layden, halfback Jimmy Crowley and quarterback 
Harry Stuhidreher. 
<AP Wirephoto) 


VAULT- 0UT M3 
1 3 f T if/Aft 7 6 /N O t£& 
6 W O f TWZ ///POOR RfCORP 
o f c o K /ffi/a e 
WARAffRPAM W/tO A/1 APR r /f f 
f/R sr 43 fífreeM 'fo oreR o / 


DtoMbvUi » f « w Fmtmm Syndicate 


SRAA TOURNEY SIGN-UP 


BEGINS TOMORROW NIGHT 


Basketball teams are invited to enter the Second Annual 
San Rafael Athletic Association Marin county tournament, 
to be played at the San Rafael High gym March 4-10. 


Meeting of all interested will be held tomorrow night 
In the Albert Field administration building at 8 p. m. 


Tournament, which was a great success last year, will 
be of the double elimination type. First round losers will 
go into a consolation bracket, thereby guaranteeing each 
team two games and possibly three. 


Twelve teams fought it out last year. 
Organizations 
which entered or sponsored teams were: 
S.R.A.A., Alpine 
Market, San Rafael 20-50, Brown’s Home Furnishings, Toby’s 
Trucker Service, Company C Marines, Novato Merchants, 
Maggi's Florist, St. Rita’s Men’s Club, Taveggia and Brusati, 
Ghilotti Brothers, and Independent-Journal 


SRAA Hoopsfers 


Play Final Loop 


Game Tonight 


Ban Rafael Athletic Association 
plays Its last regular Central Cali­ 
fornia League caga tilt tonight in 
the San Rafael High gym against 
West 
Coast Industries. 
Starting 
time la scheduled for 8:45 p. m. 
West Coast and SR.A.A-aje cur­ 
rently tied for fifth place with 
South San Francisco and will be 
trying to edge each other out of the 
apot. All three teams have 1-4 re­ 
cords. 
Big center Don Kinsella will be 
leading his team from the pivot spot 
against the invaders. He is in fifth 
place In CCBL individual scoring 
with a 13 point game average. 
Preliminary game will see SR.A.A. 
Juniors, leaders of the Teen-Age 
League, meet St. Vincent’s In the 
seventh game of league play. 


Salmon Biting 
This Morning 


It took only two hours for sev- 
’ en San Rafael anglers to get 
their limit of salmon this morn­ 
ing. 
• 
Reaving Sausaltio at 6:45’ a. 
m. in “Fisher No. 1” they re­ 
ported over ship-to-shore serv­ 
ice at 8:45 that they had al­ 
ready taken their limit of three 
salmon per man from a beau­ 
tiful, clear ocean. 


Those on the board were: Col. 
Joe Derham, Emil Roesling, 
Glen Thompson, Milt Fisher, 
Paul McClure, Barney Everts, 
and Oats Thomas. 


2ND HALF 
Cadets outscored Marin in 
the 
second half 16-13 before finally be­ 
ing submerged. Wildcats left their 
shooting eyes in the locker room and 
played ragged ban after the inter 
mission, while Dink Artal was lead­ 
ing the Cadets’ rally with nine 
points. 
Buzz Reaton racked up 19 points 
for the winners to run his season 
total to 319 or an average of 12.8 
per game. 
, 
In the preliminary game Marin 
routed the Cadet B’s 43-11. Den 
Chapman set the pace with nine 
digits. Scoring was evenly divided 
among the Wildcats. 
Friday night Marin will host St. 
Vincent’s of Vallejo in their fifth 
league contest In the Greenbrae 
gym. 
Epiphany Peanuts, featuring the 
Stars versus the Stripes, will enter­ 
tain at halftlme with their “basket­ 
ball in miniature.” 


S 
P 
O 
R 
T 
S 


10 
INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL. Wed., Feb. 14, 195 


Schools To Run 


SA Recreation 


FIRST APPEARANCE 
COLUMBIA, S.C.—(tP)—When the 
University of South Carolina bas­ 
ketball team came up north to I 
play Long Island University at Ma­ 
dison 
Square 
Garden 
on 
New 
Year’s Day, it marked the first ap­ 
pearance in history of a team from 
this state in the famous New York 
Athletic arena. 


High Game, Series 
N. 
Paul Bucklin rolled both* high 
game and high series at Marin Bowl 
last night as he led Atwell Realty 
to a 2-1 win over Charlie’s Mar­ 
ket in the 750 Scratch League. 
Starting off with a 226, he then 
bowled 155 and 174 to bring his 
total pins to 555. Russ Reynolds’ 
507 was tops for the losers. 
Cazassa’s Men’s Shop (John Klo- 
_ 
_ 
tovich, 542) took a 2-1 match from 
work with park and recreation com- [ Independent 
Order of 
Foresters 


San Anselmo 
city 
council last 
night decided to turn the city’s rec­ 
reation program for the summer 
over to the Son Anselmo schools 
and voted to give the schools $2,000 
to run the -program. 
“We hope that this year the pro­ 
gram will be better and bigger than 
ever,” said Mayor Carmel Booth. 
A committee was appointed to 


The box score: 


George D. Widenert Battlefield 
one of the favorites for the 1951 
Kentucky derby, beat Big Stretch in 
the Belmont Futurity and another 
derby hopeful, Uncle Miltie, ran sec­ 
ond to Battlefield in the Sapling 
Stakes at Monmouth Park. 


'Sugar* Gata Odds 
For Ring Boat Tonight 
CHICAGO UP)—'Welter king Su­ 
gar Ray Robinson, a symphony of 
power and skill in the ring, tonight 
shoots for the middleweight crown 
of Jake La Motta, a barbaric rough- 
houser by comparison. 
It’s a finely-tuned machine col­ 
liding with a fireplug—a contrast of 
fighting styles that promises to be 
one of the best scrape of the post­ 
war era. 
Robinson, who decisioned body- 
sledging Jake four out of five tim 
whoi the Bronx Bull was a middle­ 
weight contender instead of the 
champion, rules a 3-1 >to 4-1 favor­ 
ite for the Chicago stadium show­ 
down, starting at 9 pm. central 
standard time. Such odds are un­ 
precedented for a challenger of the 
middleweight bauble. 


Oakland B And G Wins 
Ovar Chavs, 49-48 
NA*fc (U.R) — The Oakland Blue 
and Gold basketball team edged 
Francisco Stewart Chevrolet! 49 to 
46 last night 
' Each of the two nati/mai indus­ 
trial league teams has won three 
games in their six-gams series. 
The Blue and Gelds led 29 to 23 
at the half. They jumped to a 10- 
point lead shortly after the second 
half began. , 


kGREAT DAYS! 
I U Fit. 20-25 « TUES. thru SUN. 


* n5nnuV 
n a t i o n a l 


n 
r i A 
n 
o 
r 
r n 
YvuADSiFAr 


s h o w 
a 


I 


AMERICA 1 FiMiiST* s i i t f i l u k e . a n d c u s t o v 
OAKLAND SV.WÍS 
f t • TAX (N O . a K tD tfO * 


Marin 
jr g 
F 
Buzz Keaton,.f ___ ___8 
3 
Jim Schmaltz, f __ 
___4 
0 
Bill Corrigan, c ___.__ 0 
2 
John Bell, g _________ 0 
0 
Harry Ghiringhelli, g __3 
0 
Barney Chapman, f .__ 0 
0 
Waliy Smith, c — ____ 0 
0 
Don Sawyer, f __„___ 0 
0 
Bruce Clement, f ..... __ 0 
0 
Ed Laurentzen, g .....__ 0 
0 
15 
5 


Fg 
F 
Dink Cartal, f _______4 
1 
Cal Romero, f _______ 1 
0 
Manuel Romero, c _ __1 
2 
Zane Lilly, g ______ ___1 
1 
Lhi fJharlair g ----- .... 2 
0 
Allen Zock, f ________0 
0 
Dave Traitel, g _____ — 0 
0 
TOTALS __ ______ 
9 
4 


Marin B’s 
' 
Fg 
F 
Ken Bell, f _______ __ 3 
0 
Owney Clahan, c ....... ... 2 
0 
Len Chapman, t __-._ 4 
1 
Bob Finn, g ___ ____ 
0 
0 
Jim Cart.y, f *--------- — 2 
I 
Charlie Butter, c ____ — 2 
0 
John O’Connell, f ..... ... 2 
2 
.Tmtv Hpfnz f 
..... 2 
1 
Jim Clahan, g _____ .... 1 
0 
Doug Mulligan, g ....... ... 1 
0 
Tony Caetano, g ____ 0 
0 
Claudio Casartelll, g .— 0 
0 
TOTALS --- TM..-1— r-r-—19 
5 


S.R.M.A. B’s 
Fg 
F 
Octarlo Miranda, f __— 1 
0 
John Kyne. f ______— 0 
I 
A1 Evans, c ------ ------_ 1 
0 
Bob Varona, c ______. . 1 
2 
Townsend Van Fleet, g — 0 
0 
Ronnie Gilcrest, g ___ 
0 
0 
Augustin Lizaro, g __— 1 
0 
Keith Carroll, f ....... - 0 
0 
Attilio Canoza, g ___ ... 0 
0 
Carlos Varaona, g __ _ 0 
0 
TOTALS ......................... 4 
3 


Tp 
19 
8 
2 
0 
6 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
35 


Tp 
9 
2 
A 
3 
4 
0 
0 
22 


Tp 
6 
4 
9 
0 
5 
4 
6 
5* 
2 
2 
0 
0 
43 


Tp 
2 
1 
2 
4 
0 
0 
2 
0 
0 
0 
11 


mittee members to draw up plans 
for the new program and a meeting 
is scheduled to be held sometime 
later this week, the mayor said. 
The program operates in the non­ 
school months of July and August. 
Councilmen Art Smith and Sam 
Knoles were appointed from the 
park and recreation committee to 
work out new plans with: 
Joe Crean, Mrs. Jack Sward, and 
Rev. Frank Watkins, and Superin- 


(John Furchak, 511) and Central 
Pharmacy (Francois Addenin, 516) 
beat JSagles Lodge (Clete Thillen, 
530) 2-1. * 
In the P. S. E. A. League Han­ 
ford Roderick’s 553 series enabled 
the Alley Cats to win four against 
the T-Babs 
(Bonnie Benz, 358). 
Swami’s, led by Skip Moran’s 496, 
took a sweep in their match with 
the Four Aces (Ed Tipper, 509). 
Slip Shods (Bill Hamilton, 439) 
tendent of Schools Robert U. Rick- won 3-1 from Andy’s Gang (Bemie 
lefs. 
The old park recreation committee 
Bergiund, 439). 
And the Okays 
(Walt Benz, 539) rolled to a 2-2 
will still work In an advisory ca- tie with the Rockets (Dick Hollis, 
pacity. The program formerly was 
handled by the city. 


Bo Raiseh Now Prexy 
Of ‘Betas' At Stanford 
Bo Raisch of Sleepy Hollow was 
elected president of Beta Theta P! 
fraternity at Stanford University. 
He is a 1948 graduate of Tam Bí&h 
and a junior at Stanford now. Son 
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Raisch, 
he was a tackle oh Ceach Chuck 
Taylor’s freshman football team. 


421). 


The American League will play 
197 night baseball games this year. 
Washington has scheduled the most 
nocturnal games, having listed 44. 


. GOOD fO O U 
• family prices 


• FA ST 
CO U RTEO US SER V IC E 
HA VI S' 
ILL VALLEY 
grill 


.C O M P L E T E D IN N E R S i d 0 0 
"toup. To dew rt ’ r 1 


Boys — Sail This 


Beal Windjammer! 


Safe, seaworthy — this husky 
ship 
sailed 
through two ty­ 
phoons crossing 
the 
Pacific I 
Join the fun sailing her—daily, 
week-ends, or summer cruises. 
Handle sails, learn to row, steer 
a compass course. Cost is low 
on group plan. Ages 13 to 18 
desired. For information send 
name and address to: 


CAPT. T. J. MORRIS 
Box 392 
SAUSALITO, CALIF. 


l a 
C a l i f o r n i a , t o o . . . 


J É 


BUILDERS’ 
HARDWARE 


We Have Complete Stocks Of 
SARGENT • DEXTER 
OLYMPIC & OTHER 
LOCKS 


Fairfax Lamber Co. 
Phone 2608 


Open 'Til Noon Saturdays 


NEW LOCATION 
& We've Moved! 


I 
« 
s 532 B St 
r 


Naar Albert's FlaM at 1st and I 
({«am ir located, on M lncl. HU.) 
Same Phone 7790 
COOK’S PLUMBING 


•5 


1 


is die Most Bpular 
STRAIGHT BOURBON? 


In C alifornia—*where you have the best to choose from— 
no other Bourbon enjoys the popularity of Early Times. 
Once you’ve enjoyed the smooth, well-rounded flavor of 
. an Early Times highball or cocktail, you, too, will be an 
Early Times "regular.” 
It's ilrst choice of Californians. 
# 
Every Ounce a 
Man's Whisky! 


KCHWCKYÍFAVORITE STRAIGHT BOURBON 


THIS WHISKY IS 4 YEARS OLD • 86 PROOF • EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY CO. 
LOUISVILLE 1, KY. 
■ 
M 
H 
é 
a 


Hamilton Cagers 


Rack Up 20th 


Win Of Season 


Hamilton Field cagers won their 
20th game in 30 starts this season 
when they took a 65-61 win from the 
M ci r w Island Apprentices in' a non- 
league home game last night. 
Locals raced to an 8-0 lead and 
then pushed it up to 45-34 at the 
half. Mare Island outscored them 
27-20 in a second half rally, but 
Hamilton held on and were never 
headed. 
George 
Shaffer, 
Mare • Island 
guard, aqd Hamilton forward John 
Morant were tied tor high scorer 
with 17 points. 
Alameda 
Naval 
Air 
Station's 
Hellcats come to the Air Force base 
fr- an 8 p. m. game tomorrow night. 


San Matao Unseats 
Modesto, 53-50 
SAN MATEO (U.R) — San Mateo 
Junior College unseated 
Modesto 
from first place in the Big Seven 
basketball conference last night by 
defeating them 53-50. 
San Mateo led 27-22 at the half. 
Modesto narrowed an 11-point gap 
to three as the final gun went off. 
High scorer was San Mateo’s 
guard Irv Bonner with 24. Bill Cone 
led Modesto with 17. 


The unit in weighing gold is 
troy ounce. 
the 


De Molay Ploys Host 


To Other Chapters 


Marin Chapter, Order of DeMo- 
lay, played host to other chapters 
in the Redwood Empire, Division 
last Sunday, with basketball games 
in the morning and a luncheon and 
division meeting in the afternoon. 


Three 
basketball 
games 
were 
played in the College of Marin gym, 
at which Marin was defending her 
thrice won championship title. The 
first game was played at 9:30 when 
Marin defeated Santa Rosa Chapter 
in Marin’s first game of the sea­ 
son, 78-62. 
Vallejo Chapter de­ 
feated Petaluma at 10:30; and Se­ 
bastopol Chapter 
defeated 
Napa 
Chapter to conclude the momihg’s 
events. 


A luncheon followed at the San 
Rafael Masonic Temple, served by 
the Marin Chapter Mother’s Club, 
under Mrs. Hubert Reynolds, presi­ 
dent. A regular R. E. D. business 
meeting followed in the afternoon, 
at which Master Councilor of the 
division, Tom Hodge of Eureka, 
presided. 


Other chapters 
attending 
the 
meeting besides those playing, were 
Healdsburg, St. Helena, and Wil- 
11 ts Chapters. 
The newly-elected 
Master Councilor of Marin Chapter 
is A1 Reynolds. 


The University of Washington 
athletic pavilion seats 12,000 per­ 
sons. The largest crowd was 11,915 
for the Oregon State basketball 
game, Jan. 27, 1947. 


Far Spring Leisure 


From The Largest To Smallest, 


You'll Find Your Size In 
# 
New Spring Styles O f----- 
LEISURE 
WEAR 


At Schwartz Bros. 


Sport coats, sport shirts and 
slacks. Combine them and 
* 
you have a spring outfit 
that'll send your morale 
soaring sky-high. See them 
tomorrow at Schwartz Bros. 


100% Wool 
SPORT COATS 


Choose tweed, camel's hair 
or many other popular des- 
signs and fabrics. Sizes 35 
to 46 in longs, shorts and 
regulars. 


25.00 to 49.50 


Long Sleeve, Washable 
SPORT SHIRTS 


Hundreds in our new spring 
s e l e c t i o n of gabardine, 
sharkskin, rayon, c o t t o n 
and 100% wool fabrics. 
Sizes: small, medium, large 
and extra large. 


4.95 to 17.95 


100% Wool 
SLACKS 


Pick your favorite slacks 
from 'this group of latest 
patterns and weaves. Gab­ 
ardine, flannel, w o r s t e d 
and tweed. Sizes 28 to 46. 


9.95 to 26.95 


909 Fourth Stroot 
Open 9 cum. to 6 


IKIDEPENDENT-JOURNAL. Wed., Feb. 14. 1951 
11 
Noted Briton To Speak Again 
For Marin Town Hall Tonight 
Dr. Leslie Llpson, the British po­ 
litical scientist, will be on the San 
Rafael High school platform tonight 
at 8:15 when the seventh Marin 
Town HaO session begins. ^ 
J jddlng Carter, originally sched­ 
uled for this date, has been unavoid­ 
ably detained In the East, according 
to a telegram received by Lauriaton 
Tardy, director of the series. Career 
wi11 speak here on February 28, ex­ 
changing engagements with Llpson. 
Llpson, an Englishman by birth, 
received his education at Oxford. 
Awarded the British equivalent of 
a Rhodes Scholarship, Upson earn­ 
ed a doctorate in political science 
at the University of Chicago. 
On the recommendation of Har­ 
old Laski, famous British writer, 
Upson 'was chosen to1 initiate and 


W1KEL 


INCOME 
TAX FAX 
By PETER JAMES WIKEL 
Public Accountant, Larkspur 
Copyright 1851 P. J, A fc* C. Wikei 
Did you pay any taxes in 1.f$0? 
State county and local taxes that 
you had to pay are deductible If: 
1—They were 
. . ordinary anc 
necessary expenses paid or Incurred 
during the taxa­ 
ble year in . . * 
A*—Tour busi­ 
ness or profes­ 
sion.B — Producing 
or collecting 
rents. 
C — Producing 
or collecting 
royalties. 
D — Producing 
or collecting 
other taxable in­ 
come, 1 
2—They were a part of your costs 
of travel and lodging while away 
from home. 
8—They were reimbursed by your 
employer. 
4—Many of these are deductible 
even if they were a personal ex­ 
pense. 
Personal taxes are deductible only 
If you report on long form 1040 and 
Itemize your deductions. 
Taxes, generally, to be deductible, 
must be Imposed on you, and you 
must have paid them. 
Common 
types of deductible taxes are: state 
and city tales taxes, state Income 
tax, personal property tax, real es­ 
tate tax, automobile license fees, un­ 
employment insurance contribution! 
The code specifically states you 
cannot deduct the following types 
of ¿ixet. Federal Income taxes, fed 
eral excise taxes,- (such as telephone, 
telegraph, cosmetics, furs, jewelry, 
luggage, theater and amusement 
taxes, transportation taxes, etc.» 
federal stamp taxes, estate and gift 
taxss and taxes assessed for local 
Improvements which tend to in­ 
crease the value of your property. 
Automobile registration fees, fed­ 
eral social security taxes, hunting 
and fishing licenses, taxes, and fees 
are not deductible, nor are dog li­ 
censes. 
Gasoline taxes are not deductible 
in California although they are In 
many other states. 
If you cannot deduct the tax as 
In 1, 3 or 3 above, and the tax 
Is a deductible tax, then take the 
deduction on page 3 under taxes. 
If there is not enough room on 
the tax return form to list all your 
deductible taxes, then make a 8Cp- 
arate schedule. Total the amounts 
paid and enter the total under taxes 
on page 3 of the tax return form. 
Be sure to mark on the form to 
“please see schedule atttached” so 
the Uncle Sam will know what you 
are doing. 


administer a political science divls 
ion in the University of New Zea 
land. 
, 
Establishing an International rep 
utatlon as an expert on the Brit­ 
ish Commonwealth of Nations, Up­ 
son was offered a position 
Swarthmore College In the United 
States. In 1049 he was invited to 
be a visiting professor at the Uni 
versity of California. In 1980 he 
anent member. 
Upson's reputation is based on 
his acute observation and analysis 
of current affairs, according to 
Tardy. “He is a brilliant analyst 
whose predictions on the British 
elections and their aftermath were 
a ‘hit’ in the 1949 Town Hall series. 
He is here again because of the 
number of requests for his rt-ap- 
pearance." 
“America's Spiritual Allies: The 
Democracies of the British Com­ 
monwealth" is Upson’s local subject 
Residents of , Marin county are en­ 
couraged to attend and to partid 
pate In the question and answer 
period that follows the talk, in­ 
dividual registrations, under the 
San Rafael Evening school pro­ 
gram, may be made at the door, 
according to E. B. Gearhart, school 
administrator. 
Speakers to appear on the re­ 
mainder of the series are: Hodding 
Carter, on February 28, “The South 
Looks Ahead;” Dr. Oscar Waldemar 
Junek, March 14, “Behavior De­ 
pends Upon Women and Dr. Doug­ 
las Kelley, March 28, “Psychiatry 
and Religion—Twin Paths to Peace.” 


K a b \ SI mm‘ llroii/inil 
11«i I i i *i I I»v ( o j»111 i 11 *t 11 


A LL rS«?CES 
R E D U C E D 
I.VST [ ; u T<> 
ohi>i k i-1 a J. 1^1 


1 0 % 


The Overland Telegraph Com­ 
pany established communication 
between San Francisco and New 
York, October 4, 188!. 


Copper (ih« metal w d to A* 
8RON-5HOE 9mm) |Mt 100% 
to the rf*f**M of oor country 
March Hi and no aao con to! 
how noon Ogata it wiM bo avail* 
abb for civifiaa 9km. 


7 
clear ©ut owr I o r m ventor^( 
of baby shoo monntinft wo ora 
reducing our on tiro lino and pmo* 
ing the caving* on to yoo. Now 
tbomandi of RSof^tocs 
hava boon ptonning “Soma Day” 
to preservo Baby's procious «boos 


w IH soito this tost opportunity to 
AsbuMiitMB' J 'n a a SUa 
* JIL i., 
«1WWW TPHVIW W4F1WP llW W W lW rwilJr * «< % 
tottingfy . , . of substantial sav­ 
ings. ft wiH bo wito to ardor aow 
for 
that 
Castor 
Gift . . . or 
Mather's Day, Father's Day . . . 
Unmounted now 13.37, ashtray 
16.20, bookends, «0.85, desk set 
$8.95, miniature portrait stand 
$11.25, 8x10 portrait stand 
$1145 (illustrated). 
"b^ 
nZ 
s h o e 


Guaranteed Foreotr 
ITS NOW . 
Of' N-JT AT 


NO' O*0f* \ AC I (H I b 
f. U • f I ■ » u * * i" J 4 


Leonard C. Frederick 
JEWELER 


1213 Fourth Stroot 


^ } ( o o r ó o i& 
ó ió t in c t io n 
by 
PALMQUlST-mSER CO. 


• CARPET 
Gulliston, Firth, Artloom, Hardwick, Magia, Rax- 
bury, Boattto, Geodalt, Flaxtex 


• LINOLEUM 
Armstrong, Nairn, Sloan, Pabco 


• VINYL PLASTICS 
Flor Ever, Sanaliti, Bonny Maid Virsatlli, Good 
Ytar 


• RUBBER TILE 
Armstrong, Pabco, Sunset, Amtico, Hood, Dan­ 
bury, (Cintilo 
• ASPHALT TILE 
Armstrong, Kentili, Till Tix, Matico 
• CORK TILE 
Kinmdy, Dodge, Corinco 


• SHADES & VENETIAN BLINDS 
Bamboo and Reed drapes 


216 Greenfield 
Son Anselmo 
Phone 2108 


' 
Navajo Indian Children Learn Music 
BRIGHAM CITY, Utah (U.FD—The 
Intermountain Indian school here 
has an addition of which it is proud 
—a 59-piece band composed entirely 
of Navajo Indian children. 
Ordinarily, Navajos can’t tell a 
tuba from a trombone because 
American music is completely foreign 
to them in Its melody and rythm. 
Max Morrison, a graduate of Okla­ 
homa Northeastern College, intro­ 
duced his pupils to band music by 
inviting the Box Elder high school 


musical organization to give a con­ 
cert at the Indian school. 
Then he picked 50 of the most 
promising boys and girls, ranging 
from 12 to 16 years of age and 
patiently taught them the instru­ 
ments that make up a band. 
The first appearance of the group 
was at a school assembly and the 
students are eagerly rehearsing for 
more concerts. 
The tune they play best is “Ameri­ 
ca,” according to Morrison. 


Fairfax Church To Host 
Box Social Saturday 
A box social, followed by square 
dancing will be the order of events 
Saturday night when members of 
the Fairfax Community Church give 
their benefit party, which is open 
to the public. 
Mrs. Uoyd Morgan, chairman, is 
being assisted by Mesdames James 
Montgomery and Unton T. Pratt 
Thomas Teare will be the auctioneer 
of the box suppers. 
The state flower of Louisiana is 
the magnolia. 


Scouts To Hold Leadership 
Workshop Tomorrow 
A basic leadership training class 
for new Browniew Scout and Girl 
Scout leaders tomorrow will be held 
at the San Rafael Scout Hall from 
10 a.m. to 12 noon. This meeting 
is for Northern Marin. 
There will be a workshop for 
neighborhood and district chairmen 
Friday, also at Scout Hall from 
10 am. to noon. 


California vineyards produce only 
two per cent of the world's wine 
grapes. 


How To Say It Right Is Full-Time Job 
FORT WORTH, Tex. OJ.PB-Letter 
writing is big business for M. P. 
Brown. 
Brown composes many of the notes 
that firms send you during the holi­ 
days thanking you for your patron­ 
age and wishing you “the best.” 
It’s a tough business. Brown labors 
over three paragraphs sometimes for 
three days, getting the “right touch.” 
During the year, Brown will turn 
out some 30-million business letters 
and other items. Among these are 


reminders to tardy customer» of 
their nwpofij hiii*. 
These ranga from a polite Dole 
to a legal-lobkSnf 
Mwtog at 
court action, depending upon the 
obstinacy of the customer. 
Best attention-gettcr is goldeo- 
rod-colored paper, Brown saya. 
While Brown sends out some 8*- 
000,000 letters annually seeking busi­ 
ness, family letter writing la a hone 
of a different color. That, he assigns 
to his wife. 
Announcing Big Bear Market s 


_ OSINS 


g t t C & o c t a - 
CHIFFON CAKE 
RECIPES 
ON H4CKAM O , 
SOFTASILK 


c o n t e s t ! 
SAT., MARCH 3, 1951 
Sponsored by: 
Camp Fire 
Girltof Marin County 
if ©ot Centos* Rules at Big 
■ 
Beer Market 
★ Prizes WiH Be Announced 


Specials are far Thursday, 
Friday, Saturday, Sunday — 
February 15, 18, 17, 18. Right 
ret i red to limit quantities. 
Items subject to stoek so 
hand. Store hours: 8 a. m. to 
• p. m. ON WEEKDAYS. 9 a. 
m. to 7 p. m. ON SUNDAYS. 
We invito yen to shop In the 
evening HI • o’clock. 
COFFEE 
S & W BRAND, 2-LB. LIMIT 
lb.75c 
MAYONNAISE 
BEST FOODS 
q t67 


21 


5l KINDS' 
W 
O 
T 


S O 
v r fim 
m 
jT 
i 


With Meat. 
Can 15c I With Veg. 
Cfcn 13c 
TOMATO SOUP 
. 
. 
. 
. 
3 css» 
— LENTEN FOODS 
COTTAGE CHEESE 


BETTY CROCKER 
CHIFFON CAMS 
RICfPf ON 
fACKAQS 


SOAP 


Marin Dell 
1-L%. Carton 19* 
CAKES 
BAM 
Can 23* 
CLAMS 
Snow’s 
Can 27* 
BEARS & CHIU 
Mario, 
No. 1 tall can Mm Cans 
2 ^ 2 5 * 


2 
LGE. 
BOXES 


WITH 
COUPON 


SPAGHETTIS CHEESE 2 
Mario, No. 1 Tall Can 


H U R R Y - 
SAVE MONEY 


GIN BIG BEAR LIQUORS 
LGE. 
BOXES 
Silver Wedding 
5th 2.00 


COCKTAILS 
Manhattan or Martini 
Old Boston 
5th 1.98 


RUM 
Old St. Crotx 
5th 2.89 59c 


WITH 
[COUPON 


■fj "¿L 


BUTTER **««“— -73 
EGGS 
Large, Grade "A" 
Golden Whites 
d o z . 51 
MARGARINE 
Lady's Choice, 
i l 
Colored, Cubes 29 


OLD CROW 
199 Proof, Bottled In Bond 
5th 


COSBY'S WHISKEY 
A Blend 
5th 
IMPEHUL WHISKEY 


LATA SOAP 
15* 
3*55 


A Blend 
5 th 3 .57 


KEG. 
BARS 


CALIT. CHAMPAGNE 
Chalón 
4/5 Qt. 
VISTA OI ORO VINE 
Our Popular Brand 6 0 ^ 
Tos I PALMOLIVE 
15* 
REG. 
BARS 


MARSALA WINE 
Italian Imported 
« mu 
1931 Vintage 
5th leS fi 


SWEET VERMOUTH 
Vallarino, Imported 
FI Of* 
Italian 
5th aJU* 


FOUNTAIN GROYE WINE Burgundy 
m e g 
Sauterne — 5th *•!«! 
BUY A CASE — SAVE 10% 


ZEE 
Relied Towels 
2 - 27* 


STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 
Tea Garden, 20 oz. Jar 
43' 
Cut Green Beansi 
Open House, No. 2 Can 
Leam29c 
\ 
PEACHES 
N* * ,/’ e- 25c 
Lazy Daisy, Sliced Freestones, 
BABY FOOD - 
3 
Strained or Junior 


c a n s 
U 
C 


wmmm 
Rib Steaks 79 
Jrej/t FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 


A D D I C O 
Newton Pippins 
4% 
ArrLto X '-' 0 


• 
ib* 
2 
5 
c 
O R A N G E S 5i b . 2 9 c 
LETTUCE ------- 
- 
‘ h 7 
c 
POTATOES^-! 0|b« 
3 
9 
c 


Grade "A" Steer 
BACON 


Even Slices 42 lb. 
Spare Ribs 48 
■ 
Small Meaty Sides 
lieID. 
Boiling Beef 3 9 
Lean Meaty Platos 
Beef Roast 63 lb. 
Cantor Cuts Grade "A" Chuck 
BIG BEAR M A R K E T *» 
1966 Sir Frucii Drain Blvd. 
Tekpbn 1140-J 
THUBSOAT. FBIDAT, SATDBDAT, SUNDAY SPECIALS 


F A IB F A X 
PLENTY OF FIEE PARKING 


Sally's Sallies 


BUCK ROGERS 
Barton and Murphy Anderson 


ETTA KETT 
By Paul Robinson 


ELLA CINDERS 
0 


BARBARA, IF 1 HAP ANV 
IPEA5 ABOUT BEIM© 
INVOLVE? IN A RO ' 
MANTIC TRIANSU 
I CAN FORSET 
TUCM t 
- 
V 


By Charlas Plumb and Fred Fox 


SUPERMAN 
Drawn by Wayne Borin? 


rOOP$~Mft TYPEWRITER'S 
RUNOOWNo b etter g et back 
10 MY IDENTITY AS KENT 
BEFORE MY VISITOR OUTSIDE 
STARTS THINKING THINGS. 


MM MM1, KENTS QUIT TYPING. 
MEBBE SAM'S RIGHT. ME BBC 
KENT'S SNEAKING OUT THE BACK 
WAY AS SUPERMAN. 


id 
n i l 


uimm 
& 


n THOUGHT I 
HE ARP SOME0OPY 
OUTSIPE. ARE YOU*< 
LOOKING FOR 
SOMETHING 1 


I-ER - HELLO* MR. 
KENT. I BEEN 
TAKIN' UP KNITTIN' 
AND I THOUGHT ‘ 
E R - DROPPED A 
STITCH S0MEWHERE5 
AROUND HERE. 


BIG SISTER 
By Los Forgravo 


:DAD,VOU CANT MEAN (iCBRTWNLV DO. 
. YOU'RE GONG TO LET] IT WILL DO 
¡¿PECK SPEND "WE t- HIMAWOBLD 
'NIGHT IN JAIL.* Yf 
OF GOOD. 


! CAN'T BELIEVE VOU'D 
DO SUCH A THING 
I'M AS A6HAMED 
AS I CAN BE 


WELL, OF ALL­ 
NOW, WHAT 
DO YOU MAKE 
OF THAT?.' 


AFTER THE WAY THAT FELLOW 
HA6 BEHAVED, SHELL STILL 
SPEAK UP IN HIS BEHALF. 
I CAN'T EXPLAIN " 
T 


MUGGS MeGINNIS 


m 


By Wafly Bishop 


¿TÍ17 
I 


jL , 
I 
» '* 
% 
■ 
****1 
A 
-A® 


6 0 HAVE F U F f / V V bvE 
J 
L 
f t THEB 
I WOULONTTHrNK \ NEW JOB ¡2 GLORIA 


O 
F 
>OU TWO GIVING J s A ID SK E'D H ^ 
1 
H A . HA-. L- 
S A r \ ít ííM e a ü P X 
w p q C ^ O F IR E VOU 
ea ch o th er _ 
ON HY ACCOUNT.- 


By Fred Herman 


- (YOU IDIOT* 
BONG LEO ENtRY-// « j T m 
THlteG* ANO IT II FINJSHTH 


“ ^SKÍ<g* 


' )b U KlILL H O T ! 
I'LL GET SOfAEONl 
ELSE ID HELP E 
TAKE OMER- WT , 
V4ID0VÍ TAAS0K5] 
RANCH' 


.?■'+ 
MICKEY FINN 


■ant n 


R E t),lW tU K E 
TO ENDANGER THE 
6 0 1L CONSERVATION 
VJORK WE'VE DONE 
HERE/ XVE GOT A 
ALAN 
STOP IRO iiBlFj 
without g u n s/ 


AS LONS A5 
riOOKER HAS 
ATrtRTOEj 
iVJE'LLHAOE 
TROUBLE^ 
5JT*W 
/s /r 


X T I *>. 
X 


■OV-O-BW.m F «AHÍIJjMjFWip 
. LOW AT THAT *\T H ER E WONT BE 
RAIN COME DOWN; ) MANY AT THAT 
W * 
MICKEY.1 ^ S P E C IA L MEETING V 
OF UNCLE PHIL S 
A S 
LODGE TONIGHT/ 4ÑÜ 


rw 


N V / BVÍi 
OAKY DOAKES 


PHILS CERTAINLY 
SETTING VERY 
OBLIGING ALL OF A 
SUDDEN,MRS. FINN 
-CALLING UP ALL 
THOSE MEN ANP 
OFFERING TO DRIVE 
THEM TO THE LODGE/ 


THERE'S A 
REASON, FLOSSIE* 
THEY'VE A ll PROMISED 
TO VOTE W FAVOR 
OF HAVING THE 
CONVENTION/ 


TAkt HIM WTO 
TH' HOUSE AU> 
SEARCH 
HIM/ 


" / / I ' 
DICKIE DARE 


IN THE OLD DAYS I 7 - 
COULD ALWAVÓ COUNT 
ON DAN AND 
V7- / ,- * ) 
W AGS...THEY 
f - f ¿ i 
W ERE 
- - - 1 » .-^ 7vw/M 


M t N £ ..* 


y * 


By R. B. Fuller 


1/ NOW i KNOW i wasnT^. 
* DREAM IUG, NELLIE/ IT'S THE ( 
SAME HOUSE I 
SAW THIS 
morning/, 


By Odin Burvik 


o 
o 
o 
tf* 
&& „ 
BRICK BRADFORD 


* BRICK AMATES THE GALLERY 
WITH HIS SMOOTH STROKE. 
AND PERFECT POSITION PLAYING* 


wx > O SE s^j 
By William Pitt and Clarence Gray 


•SHELLY'S LETHARGY IS 
SHAKEN»* BUT NOT HIS CONCEIT 
A S BRICK WINS* 


¡7 PPFJTY g^OQD gAME.CHUMi 
Know how about onewth 
{ SOMETHING ON THE €10610 
MAKE IT INTERESTING ly > 
X —— — é. .■ m 
— 
— 


IF YOU MEAN A WAGER»* j 
I DON'T THINK IT J 
WOULD B E F A I R ^ V V ^ * 
BECAU SE 1 CAN^HOWSTHAT 
BEAT NOU/ T ^ T FELLOWS?, 


it m w o.. • 


Ifio o o M SH T V r a j e s s s o / l T c M U B . O H M V / y ^4T! d S i S t ,7 f i i e l ' 
VOU COWS UPj 
I 
ATSiX INTHEjCPNGOVERj 


iiv---- —yj NEW GAL/ 


S o u - 1 1 i/ c F C o c e s e r t i m ! V 
O H 
¿ Y w a tW 
at » 
w 
« w t N - - 


PaMo 
Static„KTIM 


THE OLD HOME TOWN 
- By STANLEY 


THURSDAY'S PROGRAM 


1510 ON YOUR DIAL 
7:00—Breakfast with Ollie 
-7:50—Yawn Patrol 
8:0O-Sirength for the Day 
8:15-Coffee Club 
8:30—5 Golden Moments 
8:35—Today's Favorites 
8:45—KTIM Newspaper of Air 
9:00—Richmond Review 
9:30-North Bay Rhythm 
"Ranch 
10:00—Portuguese Voice of 
Marin 
10:30—North Bay Music Shop 
11:00—Kitty Oppenheimer 
ll:30-M orning Magazine 
12:00—KTIM Newspaper of Air 


12:15—Novato News 
12:20—Farm and Home 
12:50—Marin Man on the Street 
12:45—KTIM Luncheon 
Interlude 
1:00— Memories in Melody 
1:30— (azzland 
3:30—Cross Bay Concerto 
4:00-KTlM Newspaper of Air 
4:15—Pop Concert 
4:20—Welcome Wagon 
4:25—Movie News 
4:30—Aunt Ginny and 
Little Tim 
4:45—Evening Serenade 
5:30—Today's News Digest 
5:45—Sign Off. 


AN INVITATION FROM KTIM 


D o JAe ■ O u r G u est 
|lr 


o r n i n g s d l / 1 : 0 0 


W 
.X c it, IJc 


^Jo morrow Iflili 


^Jor O u r 2 ) a i / y p ro g ra m O 
f lfV \u \icf 


J)nlereóting j^ eo p ié, 
s d n d ^.Jhincjá 


S i g n e d O C itly & 
P e t * 


The Woman’s Page. 11:00- 11:30 A.M., Mon.-FrL 


KCBS 
KNBC 
KFSO 
KFRC 
KGO . 


740 KLX ... .. 910 KYA . ....1260 
689 KROW . .. 960 KHUB 
.. 1340 
5 JO KV3M .. . .1050 KSRO ....1350 
61# KJB9 .. ..1 1 0 0 
KRE 
....1400 
810 KLOK 
..1170 KVON .... 1440-1 


K8AN . . . .141# 
KDON ... .lit# 
KTIM ...151» 
K8MO ....U S# 
KSJO ... IS## 


Th . following programs are complied, from reporta provided by the bro*dcaaV* 
era. We assume no responsibility for last minute changes on their part.—T JJI. 


WEDNESDAY P. M. 
5:0# P. M. 
KSFO-KYA—News 
KFSO—Mark TraU 
KNBC—Jolly Bill 
KOO —Jon and Sparkle 
KCBS—Ed B. Murrow 
KLX—News, Cactus Jack 
SOON—Music, 2 Hours 
ft:IS 
KSFO—Curtain Call 
KNBC—Our Bandstand 
KCBS—Jane Todd 
KYA—Vocals 
1:39 
K9FO—Bing Crosby 
KFRC—Clyde Beatty 
KNBC—Joe Gillespie 
News 
KCBS—eh tt Huntley 
KGO—Black Hawk 
9:45 
KNBC—Elmer Peterson 
KCBS—Frank Goss 
KTA—B. G. Swing 
5:0# P. M. 
K3FO-KOO— News 
KFRC—Gabriel Heatter 
KNBC—Music 
KCBS—1 
CBS—Harold Peary 
KLX—News. Funnies 
KYA—Sport* 
9:15 
KSFO—Twilight Time 
KPRO—Newsreel 
KGO—Elmer Darla * 
KLX—Sports 
C:3t 
KSFO—Music to S 
KFRC—Behind the Story 
KCBS—Bing Crosby 
KNBC—Halls of Ivy 
KGO—Met. Auditions 
KTA—Play By Flay Spts. 
9:45 
KFRC—Sam Hayes 


7:00 P. M. 
KSFO—Music 
KFRC—John Steele 
KNBC—Big Story 
KCBS—Fights: 
LaMotta-Roblnaon 
KGO umeRttugei 
KLX—James Abbe 
KDON—Music to 12 
7:39 
KFRC—Cisco Kid 
KNBC—N B C. Theater 
KGO—Amer. Agent 
KCBS—Orch. 
8:00 P. M. 
KSFO-KYA—New* 
KFRC—Name That Song 
KNBC—l Man'a Family 
KGO—Fat Man 
KCBS—Lowell Thomas 
KLX—News 
8:15 
KSFO—Baseball Note- 
book 
KNBc—M Beatty Newa 
KCBS—Jack Smith 
KLX—Music 
KYA—Platter Party 
S:39 
KSFO—Man With Band 
KFRC—Family Theater 
KNBC—GUdersleeve 
KCBS—Dr Christian 
KGO—Rogues Gallery 
KYA—Request 
9:00 P. M. 
KSFO—Melody Hour 
KNBC—Greucho Mars 
KFRC- News 
KCBS—Mr. Chameleon 
KGO—Crime Does Not 
Pay 
KLX—Bud Foster 
9:15 
KFRC—Fulton Lewie 


9:39 
KFRC—International 
Airport 
KCBS—Beulah 
KNBC—Mr D A. 
KGO—Revue 
KYA—Dance Time 
9:45 
KFRC—Music 
KCBS—Club IS 
10:00 P. M. 
KSFO—Take It Easy 
KNBC—Reporter 
KFRC—I Love a Mystery 
KCBS—Grant Holcomb 
KGO—Newa 
KYA—Dance Time 
19:11 
KFRO—Fraud Fd wards 
KNBC—Bob Letts 
KCBS—Sport* 
KGO—More Out of Ufe 
KLX—Music 
19:99 
KFRC—Dancing Discs 
KNBC—Acma Hop 
KCBS—Lewie Martin 
KGO—J. B. Kennedy, 
Orchestra 
n:00 P. M. 
KSFO* KYA—Music 
KGO—News. Ira Blue 
KLX—News. Music 
KTA—Dance Time 
11:39 
KNBC—Freddie Martin 
KCBS—Lonesome Gal 
KUO—Orchestra 
11:49 
KCBS—You and World 
IS MIDNIGHT 
KFRC—Let» Dance 
KSFO- KCBS—Newt 
KNBO—Diacapadas 
KYA—Caravan 


FREQUENCY 
MODULATION 
KNBC—Ch 251.7 1 
Sams as Dally Schedule 
KOO—Ch 291. 206.1 Meg. 
Same as Daily Schedule 
KLX—Ch 297.101J Meg. 
Same as Daily Schedule 


KCBS*PM—Ch 279, 103 7» 
Meg. 
Same as Daily Schedule 
KJBS—Ch 225. 98 9 Meg. 
5:00*8 XHt—Muaic 
10:00—Music to 3 a. m. 
KSFH-Ch. 235. 94 9 Meg. 


KGFS—Ch 247 97 J Mag. 
KDFO—Ch 271 102.1 
Meg. 
KSJO—Ch 337. 95 3 Mag. 
KRPO—92.3 Meg. 
KSBR—100 5 Meg. 
KRE—102.9 Meg. 


TELEVISION 
KPI 
Channel 5 
1:00—Time for Beany 
8:15—Film 
5:39—Rumpus Room 
9:30—News. W. Winter 
6:45—Telereel 
7:00—Mystery Theater 
7:15—Telenews 
7:30—Design on Living 
7:45—Perry Como 
8:00—Art Godfrey 
9:00—Watch & Win 
9 30—8. Maughn Thtr., 
10:00—Boxing 
11 A0—Telenews 
TOMORROW 
1:30—Kitchen 
2:30—Del Courtney 
4:30—Film 
Kt»**—Channel 7 
I.DO—Sandy Strong 


5:15—Lea Malloy 
6:15—Space Cadet 
6:30—Copper Kitchen 
7:00—In Public Eye 
7:15—Faye Emerson 
7 30—Chance of Life­ 
time 
8 *00—Hoffman Hayrtde 
8 AO—Sport* 
9:00—Don McNeill 
10:00—Rainier Basalto* 
11.00—Andy Ss Della 
Russell, News 
TOMORROW 
4 30—Mall Bag 
4:45—Film 
KRON—Channel I 
5:00—News Ticker 
5:15—Gabby Hayes 
5:30—Howdy Do-fiv 
6:00—“Miracle Rider" 
6:20—Capt. Peta 


6.35—Crusader Rabbit 
6 40—Telenews 
7:00—Bizarre Bazaar 
7 A0—Roberta Quinlan 
7:45—Stranger Than 
Fiction 
9:00—Tele-Theater, 
■'Spring Green" 
9:00—1 Man s Family 
9 30—Sweeps tase* 
10 00—Look at Books 
10 30—Club 4 
11:00—Broadway Open 
House 
12 A0—Telenews 
TOMORROW 
1:00—News 
1:30—Man on Mission 
2:00—Kate Smith 
2:30—For Leisure 
3:00—Your Home 
4 A0—Marg Trumbull 


THURSDAY A. M. 
7:00 A. M. 
KSFO-KCBS—News 
KFRC—Hern lngway 
KGO—Chuck Vagna 
KNBC—M. Mueller 
KLX—News Music 
KYA—News, Cowboy 
T :1S 
KSFO—Top of Morning 
KFRO—Breakfast Gang 
KNBC—C. Lelaura 
KCBS—Music 
KGO—Ne ws7:39 
KNBC—Howdy Neighbor* 
KCBS—News 
KOO—Bob Garred 
7:45 
KSFO—Prayer Hour 
KNBC-KFRC—News ^ 
KCBS—Harry Babbitt 
KUO—Zeke Manners 
8:0# A. M. 
KSFO—News 
KFRC—Cecil Brown 
KNBC—Serenade 
KCBS—This la 8 F. 
KOO—Bkfst. Club. 1 Hr. 
KYA—Newa, Cowboy 
KLX—News. Music 
1:15 
KSFO—Request Primea, 
KFRC—News. Besa B y**. 
KCBS—Npwa 
2:39 
KFRC—Haven of Rest 
KNBO—Jack Bercb 
K CBS—Ora n d Slam 
8:45 
KSFO—Faye Stewart . 
4 
KNBC—Dava Garroway 
KCBS—Rosemary 
9:## A. M. 
KFSO—Ben Sweetland 
KFRC—K Smith Speak* 
KNBC—News, Music 
KCBS—Wendy Warren 
KGO—Lunch Club 
KYA—Kath. Kerry 
KLX—News. Muslo 
9:15 
KFRO—Garden Guide 
KCBS—News 
KOO—March A Sweeney 
9:39 
KSFO—Nob Hill 
KFRC—Emily Barton 
KNBO—Woman’s Mag. 
KCBS—Helen Trent 
KOO—Quick as a Flash 
KYA—Matinee 
•ill 
KCBS—Gal Sunday 
1#:## A. M. 
KFRC—News 
KNBC—Tones in Blue 
KCBS—Big Slater 
<0&=5K 
~ 


KLX—News. Music 
19:15 
KFRC—TeU-o-Te»t 
K c ts —Ma Perkins 
KGO—Baukhag* 
19 J* 
KFRC—Sweeney 
KNBC—Melodies 
KCBS—Dr. Malone 
KOO—True Story 
19:45 
KSFO—Glenn Miller 
KCBS—Guiding Light 
11:00 A. M. 
KSFO—Songs 
KFRC—Ladles Pair 
KNBC—Dble. or Nothing 
KCBS—2nd Mrs. Burton 
KGO—Betty Crocker 
KLX—Newa. Music 
KYA—Sports 
11:15 
KCBS—Perry Mason 
KGO—For Listening 
11:39 
KSFO—'Plano 
KFRC -Queen for Day 
KNBC—Live Like Mil­ 
lionaire 
KCBS—Nora Drake 
KGO—J. B Kennedy 
11:45 
KSFO—Latin Rhythms 
KCBS—Brighter Day 
KGO—Music 
12 NOON 
K8FO-KLX—New* 
KFRC-KCBS—New* 
KNBC—Clarence Leisure 
* Newa 
KGO—Musical 
12:15 
KSFO—Man with Band 
KFRC—Man on Street 
KNBC—Road of Life 
KGO—Bav New - 
KCBS—HUltop House * 
KLX—Bing Ciosoy 
12:39 
KNBC—Pepper Young 
KCBS—House Pert? 
KGO—Modern Romance 
KYA—Dude Martin 
12:45 
KSFO—Farm Page 
KFRC—Spice of Life 
KNBO—iMPulnefs Right 
KGO—David Amity 
1:00 P. Aft. 
KSFO—Science of Mind 
KFRC—Jack Kirkwood 
KNBC—Backstage Wife 
KCBS—Bill Weaver 
KGO—Surprise Package 
KLX—Newa. Cactus Jack 
1:15 
KSFO—To Vets 
KNBC—Stella Dallas 


W Q zW & V M 


KFRC—Double or 
Nothing 
KNBO—Lorenzo Jonee 
KCBS—Protect League 
KGO—Welcome to 
Hollywood 
BY A—News. B an Ro ws 
* 
1:45 
KNBC—Widder Brows 
2:00 P. ML 
KFSO—Aloha 
KFRO—Newa 
KNBC—Girl Marries 
KCBS—St. Louis Matlned 
Koo—Borne Instituto 
KLX—News. Music 
2:15 
KSFO—Music, Nob Hill 
knbc—Portia 
KFRC—Flying Discs 
KCBS—Geo. Ffther 
KYA—1260 Club' 
2:39 
KSFO—At Sack 
KNBO—Plain Bill 
KCBS—Art Godfrey 
KGO—Benny Rubin 
4:45 
KFRC—Carm n Cavallare 
KNBC—Frt. Pge Farrell 
3:00 P. M. 
KSFO—Vaughn Monroe 
KFRC—Chuckle Wagon 
KNBC—Welcome Trvlm 
KGO—Hannibal Cobb 
KLX-KYA —New». Muslo 
3:15 
KGO—Talk Back 
KYA—Bert Winn 
3:39 
KSFO—Artie Shaw 
KFRC—Bing Croeby 
KNBC—Aunt Mary 
KGO—News 
3:45 
KNBO— Love & Learn 
KGO—Ted Melon* 
KYA*4George McLain 
4:00 P. M. 
KSFO—Shopper’* Mat. 
KFRC—Fulton Lewis 
KNBO—Woman’s Secret 
KCBS—Curt Massey 
KLX—Newa. Music 
KOO—Ann Holden 
4:15 
KFRC—Hemingway 
KNBO—Life Beautiful 
KCBS—8trtk* It R1eb 
4:39 
KFRC—Dick Haymee 
KNBO—Dr Paul 
4:45 
KFRO—Sam Have* 
KNBC—News. Jr. EdlttSB 
iff'PS Anace 
KGO—Music 
( 0 —1951 by Universal 
Radio Feature! Syndicate 
h 


California’s 


SCOTT'S SGRAP BOOK 


Ail 
M tM 
dREE 
KAHCAROO 
AirtJwatA 
SfLMDS tfS 
LIFE IK 
dREES. 


A SHARKS 
<EE<rt 
* POlH< 
BACKWARD. 
IK K i MOUtH. 


By R. J. SCOTT 


rSCOApy. 


liow Lomu does A 
'ki oíARAcíkftüdK 
CLOUD CR£A<U>,B/'íta. 
LMPJjOAION of AH Ad&Mli 
BOMB 40 REACH AM 
M.dVfilDI *F lO/OOO 
Fttf 
y 


& 
0* A SECOND. 


Capitol Week 


By WALTER L. BARKDULL 
United Prese Staff Correspondent 
SACRAMENTO (U.PJ—The political 
stage 
was 
spread 
statewide 
in 
California last week. 
Before entering a San Francisco 
hospital for treatment of án ailing 
arm, Gov. Earl Warren appealed to 
President Truman for more money 
for flood control, authorized spend­ 
ing of state money for flood repairs 
and appointed a Democrat to a 
$12,000 a year state job. 
Warren asked Mr. Truman for 
$12,100,000 at once for five urgently 
needed flood control projects. He 
said he was /firmly convinced the 
projects were vital to national de­ 
fense. 
Warren asked $5,000,000 for Fol­ 
som dam, $3,000,000 for the Wittier 
Narrows dam, $3,900,000 for the 
Isabella dam, $900,000 for the Mer­ 
ced steam group and $200,000 for 
Farmington dam. 
Then Warren signed into a law 
a bill by Sen. Verne Hoffman, R. 
Acampo, providing $1,500,000 on a 


Touring Vandals 


Blast Street Lights 


SALT LAKE CITY (U.R>—Young 
vandals In “souped-up** hot-rods are 
giving Salt Lake police a new worry. 
Numerous reports of touring van­ 
dals using 22-caliber rifles to blast 
street lights have been filed with 
the public safety department. As 
many as 25 street lights in scattered 
sections of the city have been dark­ 
ened by the teen-age thrill-seekers. 
Aired P. Ball, street lighting fore­ 
man for the* Utah Power & Light 
Company, said outer globes for street 
lights are in short supply and some 
of them may not be replaced during 
the current emergency. Some 50 
street lights were without outer 
globes became of vandalism. 


Bey Pranksters Felled 
By Hostile Mice 
AKRON, O. (U.R) — Boys will be 
boys but this prank back-fired. 
A dozen grade school boys at 
Margaret Park school decided to 
catch some field mice with which 
to frighten the girls. 


INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL, Wed., Feb. 14, 1951 
13 


at 913 Fourth Street, San Rafael, 
Marin County, California, heretofore 
and now operated under the firm 
name and style of “SAN RAFAEL 
JOE’S," including all of Seller’s in­ 
terest in the good will and trade 
name of said business, in the lease­ 
hold interest thereof and in and to 
all restaurant and kitchen furniture, 
furnishings, fixtures and equipment, 
and in and to all and sundry the 
appliances and appurtenances there­ 
to, and in and to ail liquors, beers, 
wines and other beverages, mer­ 
chandise, foodstuffs and all other 
stock on hand and inventory of 
whatever kind or character owned 
in connection wittw said business, 
and in and to that certain Cali­ 
fornia On Sale Beer and Wine Li­ 
cense No. A-2946-F issued by the 
State Board of equalization of the 
State of California, and in and to 
any and all other transferable li­ 
censes issued to or used in connec­ 
tion with said business. 
Such 3&le will be held and con­ 
ducted at the offices of JEROME A. 
DUFFY, ESQ., attorney-at-law, 1011 
C Street, San Rafael, California, on 
Saturday, February 24, 1951, at the 
hour of ten o’clock a.m. of said day. 


However, the mice bit the young- 
matching basis for repair of flood st€rs so badly that all 12 required 


at which time and place the con- 
safe wi 
February 
JOHN BOCCIGNONE 


sideration for said 
DATED: Feb: 
will be paid. 
13th, 1951. 


ROSE BOCCIGNONE 
No. 116-51—Feb. 14, 1951 


amount in each of two sizes, 


oiF^fnch O. D. x. No. 10 Oa„ 
and 
<b) 6 inch G. D. x. No. 10 Ga. 
Pipe to be double dipped and 
wrapped; joints to be bell and 
spigot type designed for field 
welding. 
Pipe to be delivered 
and stacked at Bolinas. 
# 
2. 50 O. D. Dresser Type Couplings 
for ouch pipe; bid to be for full 
amount In each of two size* 
namely: 
(a) 5 inch and 
(b> « inch. 
Bids for one size only will be con­ 
sidered and are invited. The other 
conditions and terms of bidding and 
purchase and the specifications for 
the pipe and the forms for bids, con­ 
tract and bonds are available in the 
Office of the Clerk of the District 
at Bolipas, California; and such 
articles are to be delivered at such 
times and in such quantities and in 
such manner as the Board of Di­ 
rectors of the District may desig­ 
nate in agreement with the bidder. 
Bids will be received at the Offlca 
of tbs District In the Holrup Build­ 
ing, in the Town of Bolinas, Marin 
prior to 7:30 
ary 26, 1951, at which 
time and place all bids then re­ 
ceived will fee opened. 
The District reserves the right to 
reject any and all proposals and 
will not accept any bid that is not 
made by a responsible bidden 
The issuance of general obligation 
bonds, in a sum ample to cover the 
total purchase price, has been au­ 
thorized at an election heretofore 


County, California, 
PJM.# on Fetffua 


damaged property. 


Warren named a former Sacra­ 
mento Assemblyman, Edward Cain, 
to the California E m p l o y m e n t 
Stabilization Commission. Cain also 
becomes a member of the California 
Unemployment Insurance Appeals 
Board. 


treatment from the public health 
nurse, who then advised that they 
get anti-tetanus shots. 


Phillip A. Kennedy, Attorney 
NOTICE OF PROBATE 
State of California, 
County of Marin 
ss. 
In the Superior Court of the State 
„ . 
«i of California, in and for the County 
Cam replaces Peter E. Mitchell of | 0f Marin. 
In the Matter of the Estate of 
WILLIAM J. B. GRAM, Deceased. 
No. 9662. 
Notice of time set for proving 
Will, etc., and Application for Let- 


Sacramento. He was recently ap­ 
pointed to the Public Utilities Com 
mission. 


4 0 Ao MARKEf OH K LEASH to 
POR<- AU- SPAIN , -fklH1 DAP • 
Of, Wi. Kaf FafWri t/uOam. Iw. »«l* «I 
DAILY CROSSWORD 


ACROSS 
1. Stupors 
6. River (Fr.) 
11. Genus of 
herbs 
12. Unit of 
electrical 
capacity 
13. East Indian 
palm 
15. Stannum 
16. Malt 
beverage 
17. Beset 
20. French 
article 
21. Norwegian 
writer 
22. All correct 
(abbr.) 
23. Portion of * 
grain to be 
ground 
24. Enemy 
25. Gloss 
21. Reduces In 
thickness 
29. Permit 
30. Girl's name 
32. Rough lava 
33. Variety of 
willow 
34. Type 
measure 
36. A small 
window 
over 
a door 
38. Honey- 
gathering 
insect 
39. Those in 
office 
40. Stairway 
posts 
42. Come in 
44. Memoranda 
45. A marble 
46. Weepy 


DOWN 
14. Headland * 
1. A shade 
18. A colonized 
of red 
region 
t 
2. Silk scarf 
19. Pieces out 
(Eccl) 
21. Anger 
3. Officer of a 
23. Obtain # 
merchant 
24. Paddle-like 
vessel 
process 
4, Perform 
25. Flap, as 
5. Thread­ 
sails 
bareness 
26. A judicial 
6 . Whether 
trial 
7. A glossy 
28. Feminine 
silk fabric 
pronoun 
8 . American 
31. Tawny 
Indian 
beast (Afr.) 
9. Capital of 
33. Beginning 
Burma 
34. Lamprey 
10. Man’s 
fisherman 
nickname 
35. Untidy 


U U lIt# G3HHM 
E1RMWÍ3 ni-JROM 
nnuura aaciHH 
rana rana ranu 
aa annaii o n 
a r a m ia o h b iu w 
lili 
íin 
aorann nnnnra 
rara ofliaun kii 
nnr d ram i um ra1 
G JH iiinn i i u a n n 
ranranra n a a m w 
raanra araran 
414 
Yesterday’s Answer 


37. A pilaster 
38. Greek letter 
41. Sorrow 
42. Water god 
(Babyl.) 
43. Music 
note 


The Governor’s painful illness 
forced cancellations of a series of 
scheduled addresses, including a 
talk before the California News­ 
paper Publishers Association con­ 
vention and a Lincoln Day address 


ters Testamentary. 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 
a petition for the probate of the 
will of WILLIAM J. B. GRAM, de­ 
ceased, and for the issuance to 
DOROTHY GRAM JAMIESON of 
letters testamentary thereon has 
been filed In this Court, and that 
before the Missouri Republican Aa- j™ » * % % ^0Ck ^ .<Mi rt?2idAd?y: 
soclation at Kansas City. 
Competent political observers took 
the Kansas City invitation as evi­ 
dence of the national Interest taken 
in Warren as a key figure in the 
1952 Presidential campaign. 
Warren continued his policy of 
refusing, to comment of possible 
political plans, but he did turn down 
feelers advanced in connection with 
possibly naming him baseball’s czar. 


Meeting in Fresno, Democratic 
leaders from throughout California 
Joined in condemning the state's 


at the courtroom of said Court, at 
the Court House, In the City of San 
Rafael, has been set for hearing of 
said petition, when and where any 
person interesed may appear and 
contest the same, and show cause, if 
any they have, why laid petition 
should not be granted. 
C BEáM 
- 
GEO. S. JONES, Clerk 
By GEO. GNOSS, Deputy Clerk 
Filed Feb. 7. 1951. 
_ t 
GEO. S. JONES, County Clerk 
By Geo. Gnoss, Deputy 
PHILLIP A. KENNEDY 
428 Albert Bidg. 
San Rafael. Calif. 
No. 114-51—Feb. 14. 15, 16, 17, 19 
20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 1951 


NOTICE OF INTENDED SALE 
OF STOCK IN TRADE 
Given Pursuant to 
Civil Code Section No. 3440 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN of | held in the District, 
the intended sale on February 23, 
1951, by the Seller, DEWITT M. 
BROWNLEE, Box 661, Novato, Cali­ 
fornia, to the Purchaser, WALTER 
E. BALDWIN, Box 326, Novato 
California, of gasoline, lubricating 
oil, greases, and other petroleum 
Products, tires, batteries, automo- 
ile accessories, and personally own 
ed equipment, all of which are lo 
cated at SHELL STATION, 1011 
NOTICE OF PROBATE 
Highway and Olive Avenue, Novato, state of California. 
California. The purchase price shall County of Marin 
be paid at Shell Station, 101 High­ 
way and Olive Avenue, Novato, Cali­ 
fornia, on February 23,1951, at 12:00 
noon. 
Dated February 13, 1961. 
DEWITT M. BROWNLEE 
Seller 
No. 112-51—Feb. 14, 1951 


DATED: Feb. 5, 1951. 
By order of the 
Board of Directors 
VIOLETl'E G. MILLER 
Clerk of Bolinas Public 
Utility District 
No. 102-51—Feb. 9, 10/ 12, 13, 14, 
1951_____________________ 
’ 


Natalie J. Holly. Attorney____ 


Natalie J. Holly, Attorney 


No. 1434 
CERTIFICATE OF TRANSACTING 
BUSINESS UNDER A 
FICTITIOUS NAME 
BE IT KNOWN 
BY 
THESE 
PRESENTS THAT I, JOHN B 
CROSMAN, the undersigned, hereby 
certify that my place of residence 
is 103 East Manor Drive, Mill Val­ 
ley, Marin County, California. 
That I further certify that I am 
transacting business in the City 
of San Anselmo, County of Marin, 
State of California, under the firm 


;y c 
In the Superior Court of the State 
of California, in and for the County 
of Marin. 
In the Matter of the Estate of 
AMEUE LANE GUBBINS, Deceas­ 
ed. 
No. 9660, Dept. No. 1. 
Notice of time set ft#»* proving 
Will, etc., and Application for Let­ 
ters Testamentary. 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 
that a petition for the probate of 
the will of AMEUE LANE GUB­ 
BINS, deceased, and for the issu­ 
ance to FLORENCE MILLER of let­ 
ters testamentary thereon has been 
filed in this Court, and that Friday, 
the second day of March, AJ>., 1951, 
at 10 o’clock AM. of said day, at 
the courtroom of said County, at 
the Court House, in the City or San 
Rafael, has been set for hearing of 
said petition .when and where any 
person interested may appear and 
contest the same, and show cause, if 


County of Marin 
-------------------------------------- 
on this 9th day 
--------------------...., 
unique system of cross-filing in po- Leonard A. Thomas, Esq., Attorney before me, NATALIE J. HOLLY, a 
litical campaigns 
I_________________ 
1 Notary Public in and fór the County j 
NOTICE TO CREDITORS 


2?>T^r,*n w J íilf 
«"y they heve. why eaid peUtlon 
SOUND , located at 333A San An-1 should not be granted, 
selmo Avenue, San Anselmo, Marin) (SEAL) 
GEO. S. JONES, Clerk 
Bv Jos. Henneberry, Deputy Clerk 
Filed Feb. 6, 1951. 
GEO. 8 . JONES, County Clerk 


NATAL§rjJ 04bSÜrneben7' ^ 
Holly Building 
834 Fifth Street 
San Rafael, California 
No. 96-51—Feb. 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, If, 14, 


County, California. 
Signed this 9th day of February 
1951. 
JOHN B. CROSMAN 
State of Galifomia 


of Marin, State of California, resid* 
And they invited republicans to I 
in the Matter of the Estate of I ing therein, duly commissioned and 115" ftf if 19SI 
join them in what they called the MARIE LOUISE TORBERT, also sworn, personally appeared JOHN B. ~--------------- 
“non Dsrtlsan'1 camnaim tn *nH I known as LULU M. TORBERT, and CROSMAN, known to me to be the 
as LULU TORBERT, ^^cceased* 
j pe 
non partisan” campaign to end 
the system. The Democrats labeled 
cross-filing as un-American and 
charged it was breaking down the 
nation’s traditional two party sys­ 
tem. 


rson whose name1 S^sutocribed ¡ CEn ív S í.AI r c ? í * í ? í S S ! f R® 
No. 9644. 
the within instrument and ack- 
DOING BUSINESS UNDER 
FICTITIOUS NAME 


i 
1 T 4* 5 Wá 
6 
7 8 
t 
i© 


ll 
ñ 
12 


13 
4 
IS 


16 
IT 
i 
11 
10 
m 
21 
% 
22 
W/%a 
m 
24 
25 24 
m 
27 28 


21 
3© 31 
I 
i 
32 
m 
33 
34 35 


34 
37 
i 
38 


I I 
3t 
m 
40 
41 
42 
43 
1 
44 
45 
w44 


1**4 
D A IL Y CRYPTOQUOTE^—H ere's how , to w ork it: 
A X Y D L B A A X R 
Is L O N G F E L L O W 
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used 
for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apos* 
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. 
Each day the code letters are different. 


A Cryptogram Quotation 


R B M J 
T F R 
J O R 
Q K G M V 
K Q 
V N K - 


X J B V C M V , 
S K 
L F I V 
S J V 
J V F G V G R 


L K G V 
M K C M V G C V X 
S J F C 
J V 
S J F S 


R Y F I V — X V C J F L . 


* Yesterday’» Cryptoquote: 
OUR COUNTRY S WELFARE IS 
OUR FIRST CONCERN—HAVARD. 


annexed of the Estate of MARIE hereunto set my hand and affixed 
LOUISE TORBERT also known_ as j my official seal in the County of I CARROLL 
We, the undersigned, CHRISTIAN 
JOHN PEETZ DVM and VERNON 
Glenn* Anderson, 
Los 
Angeles i LU¿Ü M. TORBERT, andas LULU | Marin the dayand yearin this'cer-1 h ^ ^ c e r t i f r AULS° N DVM* d° 
. 
. .. 
’ 
*/» th e credit- tifieate first above w ritten. 
uenw y 
. 
Chairman of the «tete centi-i 
1 TORBERT, deceased, to the credit- 
airman of the state cential com- ors 0f and ajj persons having claims 
mlttee, Indicated Warren might be against the said decedent, to file 
asked to call a special election to them, with the necessary vouchers. 
within six months after the first | 
publication of this notice, in the of­ 
fice of the clerk of the Superior 
Court of the State of California in 
and for the County of Marin, or 
to present them, with the necessary 
vouchers, within six months after 
the first publication of this notice 
to the said Administrator at the of­ 
fice of LEONARD A. THOMAS. At­ 
torney at Law. Room 317 Albert 


tifieate first above written. 
NATALIE J. HOLLY 
That are are copartners transact- 
Nnfarv Public in and fnr ihm ,n* 
in the 8 Ute Of Callfor- 
Notary Public, in and for th e! nia múcr the iictitiou, name ^ 


decide th# fate of anti-cross filing 
initiative. 
The initiative was denounced by 
the Senate during its recent session 
and apparently allowed to go on to 
the next ballot for a decision by the 
voters. 
The Democrats charged that the 
Republican majority .of the state 
assembly committee considering re- 
apportionment of a s s e m b l y and 
congressional districts has not in­ 
formed 
the democratic minority 
what sort of plans It is making. 
Mrs. Susie Clifton, Southern Cali­ 
fornia committee chairman, urged 
that the assembly committee be ex­ 
panded to Include one member 
from each congressional district. 
Anderson appointed a four mem­ 
ber committee to coordinate the 
party’s 
Northern 
and 
Southern 
groups policy on reapportionment. 


At weeks end some 450 delegates 
representing 40,000 state employees 
aegan a two-day convention at San 
Francisco to thrash out policy for 
the coming year. 
Among 120 proposed resolutions 
was one that would give state em­ 
ployees time and a half for over­ 
time instead of the straight time 
now paid for such work. 
Another proposal would ban the 
making of building repairs during 
office hours. 


g & 
o f ^ c o m m lL io n 
“ 
« « ■ » * 
H06PTOE; 
expires^Aprll 
-the Principal, place of burin— 
Filed Feb, 13, 1951. _ 
Jo^Hraneberrv Deoutv l m U1C l'uwlJ u* 
mauera, ^uuxiiy 
Nn 114 41 w*h la 
i t ' Mar / 
Marin, State of Cafilomia, anil 
1951 
' 
* 
’ 
7* I that the ’names in fufl of all the 


Myers & Carter, Attorney» 
NOTICE TO CREDITORS 
ñiifiriincr mui “71” stre e t S an Ra-1 - 
the Matter of the Estate of j 
S T c a U f H .. toe £m e Stag hla | HARRY t JOHNSON, Deceaaed. 
place of business in all matters con­ 
nected with said estate of MARIE 
LOUISE TORBERT, also known as 
LULU M. TORBERT .and as LULU 
TORBERT, deceased. 
Dated February 9th, 1951. 
JAMES F. TORBERT, 
Administrator with the will 
annexed of the estate of Marie 
Louise Torbert, also known as 
Lulu M. Torbert. and as Lulu 
Torbert, deceased. 
LEONARD A. THOMAS, ESQ. 
317 Albert Building 
1010 “B“ St. 
San Rafael, California 
Attorney for Administrator 
with the will annexed 
GEO. S. JONES. County Clerk 
No. 113-51—Feb. 14, 21, 28, Mar. 7, 
14, 1951 


Dept. 1. 
No. 9611. 


Chriltian John Peetz DVM 
Same as above 
Vernon Carroll Paulson DVM 
14 Broadview Court, San Rafael 
IN WITNESS WHEREOF we have 
hereunto set our hands this Thir- 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by hereunto set our hands ti 
the undersigned ETHEL JOHNSON, tieth day of ^ n u p v 1951 
Administratrix with the Will An- 
CHRISTIAN JOHN F 
Administratrix with the Will An . 
„ _______ 
nexed of the Estate of HARRY 
V. C. PAULSON 
JOHNSON, deceased, to the credit- 
State of California 
ors of and all persons having claims | County of ^Marin 
against the said decedent, to file 
them, with the necessary vouchers, 
within six months, after the first 
publication of this notice, in the 
office of the clerk of the Superior 
Court of the State of California in 
and for the County of Marin, or to 
present them, with the necessary 
vouchers, within six months after 
the first publication of this notice 
to the said Administratrix with the 
Will Annexed, at the law offices of 


PEETZ 


Albert H. Gommo. Jr., Attorney 


Coal is Kentucky's principal min 
eral resource. 
As much as $160,- 
000,000 worth has been mined in 
year. 


THERE OUGHT TO BE A LAW! 


A a THE TIME YOU'PE 
DRESSED LIKE A DOLL, 
NOBOOV'S AROUND- 


By Fagaly and Shorten 


lir r i* i£ I 


B u t let nursie 
UNDRESS TOU FOR 
A SPONGE BATH 
. 
AND OBOT! TOUYE 
GOT ALL THE 
PRIVACY. OF A 
GOLDFISH! 


'fk u ü u .tr 


loca m u * # 1*36' 
ern .foxtsf, 
uiLWAUKee.wtK 


1 * 


MYERS in CARTER. 404 Son An- 
selmo Ave., San Anselmo, Calif., the 
same being her place of business in 
all matters connected with said es­ 
tate of HARIfY JOHNSON, deceas 
ed. 


a 


Dated January 26. 1951. 
ETHEL JOHNSON 
Administratrix with the Will 
Annexed of the Estate of 
Harry Johnson, deceased. 
MYERS 6c CARTER 
Attorneys for Administratrix 
GEO. S. JONES. County Clerk 
No. 77-51—Jan. 31, Feb. 7,14, 21, 28. 
1951 
Freitas & Freitas, Attorneys 


NOTICE TO CREDITORS 
In the Matter of the Estate of 
EUPHEMIA 
CHRISTMAN, 
alias, 
Deceased. 
No. 9686. 
__ 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN b 
the undersigned C H A R L E S 
CHRISTMAN, Administrator with 
the will annexed of the Estate of 
EUPHEMIA 
CHRISTMAN, 
also 
known as EUPHEMIA DUKICH 
CHRISTMAN, also known as EU­ 
PHEMIA 
D. 
CHRISTMAN, 
also 
known as MRS. E. D. CHRISTMAN, 
also known as EUPHEMIA DU- 
NOTICE OF PROBATE 
KICH, deceased, to the creditors of state of california, 
and 
all 
persons 
having claüns Colinty of Marin 
ss 
against the said decedent, to file 
the Superior Court of the State 
them, with the necessary vouchers, [ of california, in and for the County 
within six months after the first 0y Marin 
publication of this notice, in the of-1 
jn the Matter of the Estate of 
fice of the clerk of the Superior i j u u u s CANTIERI, Deceased. 
Court of the State of California in 
No 
and for the County of Marin, or to 
Notice of time set for proving 
present them, with the necessary 
. AnniiraUon for Let- 
vouchers, within six months after 
will, 
#na.Application ior Le 
the first publication of this notice kcvttpf ts h fr e b y GIVEN that 


business in all m atters^nnected 
o ^ lirie re ^ ta m e r^ ry 
with said estate ot m F H W M §M gjinW « M p g g 


On this thirtieth day of January 
in the year one thousand nine hun­ 
dred 
and 
fifty-one, 
before 
me, 
DESSE L. IRISH, a Notaiy Public 
in and for the County of Marin, 
State of California, residing therein, 
duly commissioned and sworn, per­ 
sonally appeared V. C. PAULsON 
and CHRISTIAN JOHN PEETZ, 
known to me to be the persons 
whose names are subscribed to the 
foregoing instrument and acknowl­ 
edged to me that they executed the 
same. 
IN WITNES' WHEREOF I have 
hereunto set my hand and affixed 
my official seal at my office in the 
County of Marin, the day and year 
in this certificate first above writ­ 
ten. 
'• 
(SEAL)DESSE L. IRISH 
Notary Public in and for the 
County of Marin. State of 
California. 
My commission 
expires Sept. 27, 1952. 
Filed Jan. 30. 1951. 
GEO. S. JONES. County Clerk 


No. 
1951 


By T. E. Stockfleth 
78-51—Jan. 31, Feb 
»th. Deputy 
. i 14. 21. 


ADVERTISEMENT 


Fiery, Smarting Itch 
off Common Skin Ristiot 
Don’t stand auch torment another hour I 
Just smooth Reainol Ointment on your 
irritated skin at once. See how quickly 
its medically proven ingredient* in lan­ 
olin bring blissful, long-lasting relid. 


CHRISTMAN, also known as EU- 
of 
PHEMIA DUKICH CHRISTMAN. I ™U U»t Friday, th , I6U1 day 


cmiSTM AN also to w ^ a s líM .' 
¿a!<< 
•!* $ • ' ““G™0™ 
E .^ C T O IS T O A N ^ E T tooO FSs of 
» A | 
JajBt't Ml 
V V s fiats isa! SuaHs 
EUPHEMIA DUKICH, deceased. 
Dated January 22, 1951. 
CHARLES G. CHRISTMAN 
Administrator of the Estate of 
Euphemia Christman, 
deceased. 
ALBERT H. GOMMO, JR. 
709 Central Tower 
San Francisco, Calif. 
Attorney for Administrator 
GEO. S. JONES, County Clerk 
No. '50-51—Jan. 24, 31, Feb. 7, 14, 21, 
1951 
Jerome A. Duffy, Attorney 
NOTICE OF INTENDED SALE.. 
(Sec. 3440, Civil Code of Califomia) 
THE 
UNDERSIGNED. 
JOHN 
BOCCIGNONE and ROSE BOC­ 
CIGNONE, his wife, whose address 
Avila Street, San Francisco, 


NANCY RUBINI, his wife, whose 
address is 39 Hawthorne Street, San 
Anselmo, County of Marin, Califor­ 
nia, intended vendees, all of their 
right, title and interest in and to 
that certain 
restaurant 
business 
heretofore and now owmed by Seller 
and Buyer on-the premises located 


set for the hearing of said petition, 
when and where any person inter* 
id contest 
same, am 
the 
ested may appear ant 
id show cause, if any they 
have, why said petition should not 
be granted. 
_ 
. 
GEO. S. JONES, Clerk 
By Dante J. Pattarga, Deputy Clerk 
Filed Feb. 2, 1951. 
GEO. S. JONES, County Clerk 
By Dante J. Pattarga, Deputy 
FREITAS & FREITAS 
Freitas Building 
San Rafael, California 
Attorneys for Petitioner 
No. 87-51—Feb. 5, 6, 7, 8, ». 10, 12, 
13, 14. 15. 1951 
BOLINAS PUBLIC UTILITY 
DISTRICT 
CALL FOR BIDS TO SUPPLY 
PIPE AND COUPLINGS FOR 
MAIN TRANSMISSION LINE 


BOLINAS 
PUBLIC 
UTILITY 
DISTRICT hereby calls for 
bids for 
ing su 
sion p 
_ 
1. 840* pieces, in 30 foot lengths. 
welded sheet steel 
water pipe; bids to be for full 


Fidgeting, now-picking and a tor­ 
menting rectal itch are often t*U- 
♦ele signa of JJin*Worm*... ugiy 
parasites that medical experta say 
infest on* out oj every tkroo per­ 
sons examined. Entire families 
may be 'victims and not know it. 
To get rid of Pin-Worma. thee# 
pests must not only be killed, but 
killed in the large intestine where 
they live and multiply. That’* ex­ 
actly what Jayne*» P-W tablet* do 
.. . and here’* how they do it: 
First—a 'Scientific coating ear* 
rise the tablets into the bowels be­ 
fore they dissolve. Then- Jayne** 
modern, medically-approved ^ In­ 
gredient goes right to work-MU* 
Pin-Worms quickly end easily. 
Don't take chancee with this 
dangerous, highly contagious con* 
dition. At the first sign of Pin- 
Worms, ask yw r druggist for 
genuine Jayne s P-W Vemufogt... 
the small, easy-to-take tablets per­ 
fected by famous Dr. D. Jayne A 
Son, specialists in worm remedie* 
for over 100 year* 


or furnishing to it the follow- 
ipplies for its mein transmis- 
plpe line— 
84CT pieces, 
of fusion 
f JAYNE S 
U r - 
1£ 2 


14 
INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL, WecL, Feb. 14, 1951 


1— lo st 
3— Help W cm fd 


GREY and white cat with a bobed 
BI° 
tail. Missing since Saturday. No- 
HAPPY EVENTS! 
tlfy me at San Anselmo 2281. Re- Sell friends, others 
21 Birthday, 
ward. 


San 
EOST: Puppy, German 
Lost vicinity Fairfax, 
Anselmo 6180-M.________ 
LOST San Anselmo, grey striped 
cat. 
Collar 
on 
neck 
reading 
“Nuckums.” 
Cat's ñame “Lin­ 
coln,” Phone San Anselmo 5718-R. 


other Cards only $1. 
Pays you 
up to 100% cash profit! Also 25 
for $1, Deluxe Gift Wraps, 
big 
selection, 
Assortments ON AP­ 
PROVAL, 
FREE 
Samples Im­ 
printed Notes, Stationery, Matches. 
STYLART, 
1310 Santee, 
Dept. 
D-98, Los Angeles, Calif. 
LAST' Sundayroerm an 
shepherd. H O O S K K E E ^, unattached Live 
Answers to “Ginger”. Wolf grey. 
10 months old. In season. Guide 
Dogs for the Blind. 
Phone San 
Rafael 2820.__________ 
GREEN' leather 'Zipper wallet. Please 
return important papers, identi­ 
fication, and pictures. 
Reward. 
29 Grove Hill, San Anselmo or 
phone San Anselmo 8468- W. 


2— Personáis 


WEAK EYES? Beware of brilliance 
from rugs and upholstery cleaned 
with 
Pina Foam. 
San Rafael 
Hardware. _______ ____________ 
Unwanted ^ a ir_ 
Permanently 
removed 
by 
Hattie j 
Shahinian, Reg. nurse and elec- 
trologist. Hour» 2-6 PJM 
... 
• THE ELECTROLYSIS STUDIO 
889 4th St. 
SR 1883-R ¡ 
Consultation Without Obligation 


GERMAN lessons and coaching by j 
German born lady. Write to In* 
dependent Journal, Box 154. 
ROUSE drawings by draftsmanfTO 1 
and up. Call San Anselmo 6159-R 
P. O. Box 313. Fairfax. California. 
Alcoholics Anonymous 
P. O. Box 266. San Anselmo 
P. o. Box 44( Sausalito 
P. O. Box 306. Mill Valley 
Phone S. R. 5200 


3—Help Wanted 


in, for man and wife. Phone San 
Rafael 1393-W. 
_____ ___ 
If you lack 
NEEDED: Twfc men. 
% 
ambition ana do not need money 
ignore this ad. 
Exclusive fran­ 
chise offered with national repu­ 
tation. Car necessary. Part time 
earning. 
$100 per week. 
Inde- 
pendent-Journal, Box 181. 
HARDWARE 
salesman 
with 
or 
without experience. See Mr. Ran­ 
kin, J. B. Rice Company. 
liberal 


W ANTED 
Clean Cotton Rags, used for wiping 
Independent-Journal. | 
machinery. 
San Rafael_______ 
_________ 
YOUNG Woman capable of h a n d l - _____________ 
ing accounts receivable, Pasting BOOKKEEPER, 
and general clerical work. MUST 
and bus boy. 
know how to type, use adding ma­ 
chine, and do simple arithmetic. 
Reply in your handwriting giving 
phone number. Write Independ­ 
ent Journal, Box 155._____ ^ 
school 


USED car salesman, liberal com­ 
mission basis. State age and ex­ 
perience in first letter. Box 160, 
I n d e p e n d e n t- J o u r n a l._____ 


CHECK THE 
ADVANTAGES 
OF A JOB AS A 
TELEPHONE 
OPERATOR 
—Good pay 
—Regular salary increases 
—Earn while you learn 
( —Pleasant working conditions 


Work in Marin County and avoid 
the time and expense of commut 
ting to San Francisco: 


APPLY AT OUR OFFICE 
1 H Street, San Rafael 
587 Bridgeway Blvd., Sausalito 
300 E. Blithedale Ave.. Mill Valley 
464 Magnolia Ave., Larkspur 


TELEPHONE 
CLASSIFIED ADS TO 
INDEPENDENT OFFICE 
SR 52 
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 


CLASSIFIED DEPT. 
DEADLINE 
For All Classified Advertising Is 
t P. fli. Day Before Publication 


7— Business Personals 
8-A— Musical Instruction 


PRE-SCHOOL for children, 4 to 5 
years. Limited number. Also eve­ 
ning tutoring. SR . 7889-M. 
INCOME tax advice, returns pre- 
pared by instructor of accounting. 
Call Larkspur 895-W for appoint­ 
ment. 
n p f J ’T MAfCR A M O V R T T L L ~ 
YOU PHONE GOSS 
GARDENS designed, and construct— 
ed, altered and renovated. Agent 
for Merry-Tiller. Free demonstra­ 
tion. William Miles, 
San Rafael 
1410. 


PIANO. 
Beginning, intermediate 
advanced. Concert pianist teach­ 
er. Former Iturbi pupil. Will teach 
in your home. Mill Valley, DUn 
lap 8-2724. 


10— Musical Instruments 


Painting - Decorating 
Papering — Sheet Rock 
Finishing That Doesn’t Show 
MOTCHER—San Rafael 1364-M 


3— fiisiness Services 


PIANO, Wurlitzer spinet, 9 months 
old. $575. 312 Corrillo Drive, San 
Rafael. 
SPINET, Poole. 
Mahogany. 
Less 
than 3 years old. Excellent con­ 
dition. Make offer. 
San Rafael 
4723-W. 
Cl a r in e t s for sale, 
b flat, 
a 
Matched 
set. 
Godd 
condition 
Double aligátor case, zipper cover 
Very reasonable. 
121 Woodland 
Ave., San Anselmo.____________ 
Bl o n d e finish Kimball- piano ex- 


Pacific Telephone 


Ho u s e k e e p e r . 
6 
school 
age 
children. 
Mpther works. Modern 
conveniences. 
No washing. Plain 
cooking. Ph. San Rafael 4985-W. 
I NEED A N ASSISTANT 
Man under 45 with car for perman­ 
ent position, with large manufac­ 
turing and sales corporation. This 
position is permanent. Sales ex­ 


lubrication 
man, 
Annual and sick 
leave benefits. Report to person­ 
nel manager, Post Exchange of- 
fice, Hamilton Air Force Base. 
MEN WITH CAR Average $1.50 to 
$3 per hour on Watkins Route. 
Advancement bonus. No lay-offs. 
Apply 8:30 to 10 ajn. 1543 Fourth 
St., San Rafael.________________ 
WOMEN canvassers wanted. 
3 or 
4 hours a day. Central Valley's 
Roofing Company, Corte Madera 
1082-J. 


Earwood Maintenance 
Boors 
cleaned, 
waxed, 
polished. 
Windows, walls washed. Free es- 
timates. 
San Rafael 4659-R. 
Banfield 
Rug Cleaning 
16 YEARS SERVING MARIN 
Bugs—Carpets dyed, moth- 
Jroofed, repaired 
Specialists. Insurance 
Carried. Upholstery Cleaning 
Free estimates, pick up and delivery 
San Anselmo 2660 


cellent tone and action, $90 
Laurel Ave., San Anselmo. 
PHONE GOSS — Pianos, u 


450 


and grands. 
SR 4461 
Free storage.______________ 
PIANOS — New ancr usedrUorights, 
grands, spinets 
— at bargain 
prices. Ray Hime Piano Co.. 1421 
fourth St.. San Rafael. 


13— Poultry 


Commercial Printing 


0 
I ip~ iT¿,kHEADS 
B IT »I .HEADS 
ENVELOPES 
BUSINESS CARDS 
FOLDERS 
PUBLICATION WORK 
Whatever Your Printing Needs, 
No Job Too Large 
Or Too Small 


Independent-Journal 
Phone San Rafael 52 


RABBITS. New Zealand does. Bel­ 
gian Hares. 
Young stock. 
Rea­ 
sonable. San Anselmo 2630, after 
5:30. 


14— Garden Supplies 


PULVERIZED dry manure. 
Field 
rock. Sandy loam soil. E. D. Strock- 
blne. Phone Novato 832-W, San 
Rafael 6363. 
LEA*’ - LOÁÑL 50c sack" Sonoma I 
field and blue rock, very good. $6 j 
ton. San Rafael 3069-W. 
SONOMA flagstone $25 ton. 
Field 
;tone $7.50 
ton. 
Sonoma 
wall 
rock $8.00 ton. 
Delivery prices 
Phone Santa Rosa 1914-J. 


16— Miscellaneous For Sato I 18 ■" 'Root Estate! Fof Sale 


USED 


#» a ■ 
Or* a l ü ! J * 
wOUflTy wwiag 


WASHING MACHINES! Parmelee Really 
G.L RESALE 
Montgomery Ward..$22.50 
Thor 
............. 
24.50 
Easy .... .............. 29.50 
Thor ................... 29.50 
Horton with Ironer.. 29.50 
Kenmore .............. 35.00 
Montgomery Ward.. 39.50 
Maytag ............... 39.50 
AR P 
Cn ;n . . . 
AC n n I charm ing 
and 
well 
maintained, 
•D .U . s p i n n e r 
40.U U 
near shopping center and schools. 
A .B .C 
....... 49.50 
General Electric ...... 69.50 
A. B. C .................. 69.50 
M a y ta g 
1950) 


Owner anxious to sell this 3 year 
old home, clean — 2 bedrooms — 
fireplace — hardwood floors—large 
kitchen—elevated bedrooms. 
At­ 
tached garage. 
Weatherstripped. 
Close to school. Assume large 4% 
G.I. loan. Full price $13,500. Make 
offer. 
. 
CLOSE IN 


is a 
Reg. 164.95-N ow $119.50, 


1 5— Pets 


n i mm -i* 
HEAVY EQUIPMENT 
perience an MMt, but will ■con- Men are being selected in this area 
rider inexperienced man _ who ^is j 
^ ^ trained for high pay jobs as 
willing worker. 
Accepted appli­ 
cant will be given personal super­ 
vision by manager. Not canvass­ 
ing. For appointment phone San 
Rafael 6112-W, 9-12 A.M., Wed­ 
nesday 
Jndej>enftent*tfountal 


Entered in San Rafael Post Office 
as second d a » m atter under 
Act of March 6. 1897 


Published Daily Except 
Oundavs and certain holidays at 
1028-32 B Street 
bf California Newspapers, Inc. 
Roy A. Brown, President 
If you m l» your paper a special 
messenger service la maintained up 
to 6'. 45 p .m» 
Subscribers in the following cities 
and to wns 


Combining the San Rafael Inde­ 
pendent. 
Marin 
Journal, 
Marin 
Herald, San Anselmo Herald, Fair-1 
fax Gazette, Larkspur-Cortc Madera | 
News 


diesel mechanics, 
marine diesel 
operators, parts men and many 
other jobs in this rapidly expand­ 
ing industry. If you are mechanic­ 
ally minded and want increased 
earnings you owe it to yourself to 
find out whether or nob you can 
qualify. For free information with­ 
out obligation write: Independ- 
ent-Joumal Box 158,jg 
EXCELLENT position now open for 
woman of education interested in 
earnings far above average, flex­ 
ible hours. 
For personal inter- 
view telephone San Rafael 2473 
HELP WAN ikD , female accountant. 


CIRCULATION INFORMATION 
SAN 
RAFAEL, 
SAN 
ANSELMO. 
FAIRFX, ROSS, K E N T F IE L D , 
HAMILTON FIELD—CALL SR 40001 


Nelson Ss Boyd, Attys. 


In accounting office, General con­ 
tractor, San Rafael. 
Must have 
5 to 10 years general office ex­ 
perience. including accounts pay­ 
able, receivable, cashier, payroll, 
typing, calculator, adding ma­ 
chine, dictaphone, etc. 
Married 
woman with permanet job aspects 
preferred, # Salary commensurate 
with qualifications. Our employees 
know of this>d. Write Independ­ 
ent Journal, Box 157, give full 
qualifications and references. 
AVON COSMETICS. Sales 
ladies. 
Information write Post Office Box 
100, Santa Rosa.________________ 
MIDDLE-AGED woman for house­ 
work 
and 
companion. 
Room 
board and small salary. 
Phone 
San Rafael 655-J. 


PIANO TUNING 
Pianos, 
violin 
bows, 
saxophones, 
clarinets repaired. B. Young, San 
Rafael 4154-W. 
CEMENT FINISHER 
Form setting, patios, etc. Work by 
day. Simmons, San Rafael 7323-J. j 


M IM E O G R A P H IN G 
Typing 
Dictation 
Call ACE, San Rafael 7821 
Cheda Bldg.. Room 5 
S..me Da~ Service 
TYPEWRITERS 
ADDING MACHINES REPAIRED 
WORK GUARANTEED, PRICES 
REASONABLE 
Over Thirty Years Experience 
Is Your Assurance of 
F '“ ^ c to rv Service 
TYPEWRITER GUY 
1411 4th St.. San Rafael, Ph. SR 775 
(BELOW P.GAsE.) 


FREE—Pretty cat to good 
home. 
San Anselmo 5649-J. 
_______ 
PEKINGESE, female, six months. 
Wonderful 
disposition. 
Phone 
Novato 921-W. 
_____ ___ 
COCKER pups. Beautiful pure bred 
black males. 
Give away price 
$10. 
Phone Mill Valley, DUnlap 
8-3259._______ _ _ _ ________ 
PUREBRED Kerry blue female, 8 
months old, untrained, no papers, 
$5. 
110 Summit, 
Mill • Valley, 
DUnlap 8-0773._________________ 
GREAT DANE lovers, here is an 
exceptionally mild spayed home 
trained 2 year old decorative and 
loves children. Any offer will be 
considered. Especially interested 
in good placement. Phone Lucky 
Pet Shop, San Rafael 2716-J. 


16— Miscellaneous for Sale 


FURNITURE — Stove, refrigerator 
& misc. items. Call after 6, week­ 
days—Saturday or Sunday, S. R. 
2916-M._________________ * 
BENDIX 1946 Spin Dry washer. In 
fair condition. $75. San Anselmo 
2775. 


Ernest Ongaro 
243 SAN ANSELMO AVENUE 
PHONE SA. 4600 * 
TWO complete women’s ski sets, 
>les, boots 6*4 and 7, skiis, bind- 
$25. Sausalito 94-J, 
WEDGEWOOD stove, 
left 
hand | 
oven, trash burner, good condi­ 
tion. 
Reasonable pnce. 
Phone | 
S. R. 1658-M. 
DEER rifle, modri 70, 30-06. 
Tax- 
an 2 té plus scope, Stith master 
mount, sling. 300 rounds ammuni­ 
tion. 
Like new. 
$195, 
Phone 
Sausalito 1100. 
________ 
LARGE crib. 
Excellent condition, 
with springs, new mattress. Only 
used two weeks. 
$30. 
Call San 
Rafael 886-W.___________* 
RESTAURANT equipment. 
Booth, 
counter and stools. Other items. 
Reasonable. San Anselmo 5105-W 
• after 6 p. m. 
WESTERN - HOLLY stove with“ ex- 
fcras, $90. 
Twin bedroom set, 6 
pieces of Monterey, $60. 10 Ham- 
flton Ct., S. R. 
PORTABLE building 6 x 9.r Phone 
5505-J. Bill Dietz. 


2 bedrooms and 2 baths, plus 
rumpus room and bar, Completely 
landscaped 
garden 
and 
patio, 
Fenced. Price $14,950. 
CENTRAL HALL 
Nearing completion, 3 bedrooms, 1% 
baths, in a new tract. Fireplace. 
Hardwood floors, heavy roof with 
gutters. Extra room In basement. 
2 car garage Buy new and choose 
your colors. 
$18,250. 
Parmelee Realty 
222 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
San Anselmo 
Phone 1415 


18— Real Estate For Sale 


County Wide 


JAMES R. AITKEN 


San Rafael 


WHITE gas stove. 6 burner. Oven 
and warming oven. Good condi­ 
tion. 
Reasonable. 
Chinee rqg 
9 x 12. San Anselmo 2838. 
IVORY bedroom set, double bed, 
springs 
and 
mattress, 
vanity, 
dregser and chest of drawees, price 
$50. Also double spring, $5. Phone 
San Anselmo 7718-W.__________ 
NEWLY refinished and repaired 
walnut kidney shaped desk. 
$60. 
100 Redwood Road, San Anselmo, 
Phone S.A. 4027-J. 


General Contracting 
Kitchen cabinets, made, installed. 12& x 3*4 VIEW camera, coated lens, 


8” TABLE saw with motor. Portable 
paint sprayer. Larkspur 


GENERAL ELECTRIC dish washer, 
Free Standing. 
Used one week. 
Will sell or trade for a deep freez­ 
er. Mill Valley, DUnlap 8-0176 or 
Sausalito 403.__________________ 
PORTABLE electric Singer, $407 Ph. 
Larkspur 327. 


4—Salesmen Wanted 


NOTICE OF PROBATE 
Stats of California, 
ss. 
County of Marin 
- 
_ 
In the Superior Court of the State REAL EST, ^ 
talesman or sales- 
of California, in *r»d for the County 
woman. With or without erner- 


FOR ROOFING, installation and 
siding. 
A-l proposition 
offered 
Central Velley’s Roofing Company 
Corte Madera 1082-J. 


of Marin. 
In The Matter Of The Estate Of 
MARGARET A. GRADY, Deceased. 
No. 9657. 
Notice of time set for proving Will, 
etc., and Application for Letters 
Testamentary. 
NOTICE IS 
HEREBY GIVEN 
that a petition for the probate of 
the will of MARGARET’' A. GRADY, 
deceased, and for the issuance to 
NELLIE GRADY of letters testa­ 
mentary thereon has been filed in 
this Court, and that Friday, the 
23rd day of February, A. D., 1951, 
at 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, at 
the courtroom of said Court, at 
the Court House, in the City of 
San Rafael, has been set for hearing 
of said petition, when and where _ 
any person interested may appear J EXPERIENCED 
and contest the same, and snow 
cause, if any they have, why said 
petition should not be granted. 
GEO. S. JONES, Clerk 
By Dante J. Pattarga, 
Deputy Clerk 
Filed: Feb. 5. 1951. 
GEO. S. JONES, County Clerk 
By Dante J. Pattarga, 
Deputy Clerk 
NELSON & BOYD, 
Attorneys for Petitioner 
402 Albert Bldg., 
San Rafael, Calif. 
No. 93/51—Feb. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12 
13, 14, 15, 16, 1951. 


woman. With or without exper 
ience. Full time work. Best com­ 
missions. 
W M . E. DOUD & CO . 
912 4th St., San Rafael, Ph. 7722 
REAL ESTATE SALESMAN OR 
LADY, 
EXPERIENCED. 
FULL 
TIME. 
A N NIPPER 
208 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE BLVD 
SAN ANSELMO 
PHONE 3838 
WANTED: Real Estate salesman 
or saleswoman. Good listings and 
commissions. Permanent. 
ROBERT W. BO G H 
1355 Sir Francis Drake, San Anselmo 
69 Bolinas, Fairfax 
Phones: 978-W and 3976____ 
real estate sales­ 
man or saleswoman wanted. Ex­ 
cellent conditions. 
DRAKE REALTY 
1605 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
FAIRFAX — Phone 6570 


o—r oiinoni Tvonreii 


Alterations, additions. MARIANI’S 
CABINET SHOP, San 
Anselmo 
5776-R - 6547-W. 
ROTOTELLING, Also Ford Tractor 
with 4’ rototiliing attachments. 
No weeds too high. Also loading 
and light bulldozing. 
Free esti­ 
mates. San Rafael 5352-R. 
PIAN O TUNING 
Regulating, Prompt Service. Chester 
Bowers, Mill Valley, DUnlap 8-4831 
DRAFTING 
Service. 
Residential 
house plans drawn. Phone: Corte 
Madera 131-M, after 6:00 p. m. 
GENERAL property care, painting. 
Some ceilings as low as $5. 
It 
pays to call San Rafael 6715-J, 
5-8 p.m. 
PO M ES, NEW O R OLD 
Alterations. 
Remodeling. 
Addi­ 
tions. Jobs large or small. Com­ 
plete service. 
For estimates call 
SR, 2898-M or 1490-M. 
BUILDING — REMODELING 
Any type of work. 
Carpentry. 
35 
years experience. 
San Anselmo 
3122. San Anselmo 5077-J. 


compur, film holders, pan head, 
fitted case $85. 
4x5 cold-light 
enlarger, 11x14 easel $75. Com- 
Ítleto developing and printing out- 
it in custom-built cabinet $55. 
All 3, $200. 450 Laurel Ave., San 
Anselmo eves., 
or phone Lang- 
worthy, YUkon 2-6891 days. 
ONE double roU-away 
steel bed. 
springs and mattress. 
In 
good 
condition. Price $30. 
126 Spring 
Grove Ave., San Rafael._______ 
ELECTRIC console sewing machine. 
No extra parts, $65. Rex-Air va­ 
cuum. All parts $45. Underwood 
portable typewriter $35. 
Bendixj 
washer, now in use, $110. 
Make 
deposit on washer, pick up when 
our new washer arrives. A-l con­ 
dition. See at 2 Allen Ave., Ross. 
Phone San Anselmo 3995-W. 
NEW Easy spin dryer washer. Used 


16— Miscellaneous For Sale 


STEPPING and PATIO STONES. 
Various colors and designs. 35c, 
100 or more 30c. Phone San An 
selmo 6254. 


B-503—1 year old, 3 bedrooms, plus 
basement room, full bath with 
stall shower, central heat, fire­ 
place, hardwood floors, garage. 75 
i t frontage. 
Near schools. 
In 
good section. $15,950, with $4,000 


A-803—2 
bedrooms, 
with 
dining 
room, service porch, patio, 2 yrs. 
old. Only 5 blocks from downtown. 
$13,750. 
Lot 47 x 116. Good fi­ 
nancing. * This will not last long, 
see it now. 
• 
A-786—Choice location. Newer, with 
2 elevated bedrooms, insulated and 
weatherstripped. 
Garage. 
Patio 
- Unfinished room in the rear for 
shop or third bedroom. GI loan 
$8,500. Full price $15,750. 


A-805—2 bedrooms, 3 yrs. old. Tile 
bath and kitchen. Large closets 
Weather stripped. Priced $13,750 
Loan of $7,600. Payable $55 mo 
Near school and park, 
* 
Country Club 


San Rafael 
B-586—2 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2 
baths, 2 car garage. Central heat, 
living room, 15 x 20, with fireplace 
patio. Landscaped. Fenced. Ma­ 
rine view on % acre. A hard to 
find ranch type at $28,500. Excel­ 
lent financing. 


10.500—2 Bedroom — large 'living 
room and kitchen — Modern 
— close to shopping. 


12.750—5 Room home — 2 car gar­ 
age — modem 
secluded — 
easy down payment. 


13.750—Modern 2 Bedroom home, 
large tile kitchen — tile bath 
separate stall shower—Pic­ 
ture window — thermostat 
control heat — weatherstrip 
—insulated — level 
lot — 
close in for commuting. 


15.500—Redwood Ranch style 2 bed­ 
room home, picture window 
—built for outdoor living- 
secluded, yet close in. 


14,250—Spacious 3 bedrooms — ex­ 
cellent condition — break-1 
fast room — Patio — level 
lbt -r nicely landscaped. 


26,950—Ranch Style 3 bdrm. newl 
home—central 
hall 
p la n - 
large living room—wardrobe] 
closets — 2 baths — 2 car 
garage — large level lot. 
JAMES B. AITKEN 
10 Redhill Avenue, S. A. 4451 


NEXT TO ANDY’S DRIVE IN 
WOW! 


READ THIS — 


18— Red Estate For Sale 


County Wide 


Commuter's Delight 
4 yrs. old and located in an excel­ 
lent sun flooded district. Separata 
din. rm., 2 bedrms., tile kitchen 
with breakfast rm., lge. level lot. 
Approx. $3,200 down. 
Easy Moving • 
Just bring your bags! You’ll be com­ 
fortable in this nicely furnished 
2 bedroom home, lots of basement 
area, shopping is mighty handy, 
too. $5.500 cash and you can move 
right in. 
Hacienda Grande 
Full tile roof, 
walled loggia with 
fireplace. Stone floored entrance 
hall, massive fireplace, cathedral 
ceiling in living room. Full din­ 
ing room, tile kitchen and bath. 
Stall shower. Large closets, 2 bed­ 
rooms, maid’s room and bath. 2 
car garage. Lots of storage space. 
Sun all day. 
Excellent location. 
Make offer. 
A. N. NIPPER 
208 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
San Anselmo 
Phone 3838 


Country Club Heights 


VIEW ACRE 


PRICE $3,000 
We have 2 houses built in 1947 con­ 
sisting of 4 rooms, with 2 bed- 
rooms each. Located on beautiful Level and slight slope. Building site 
sunny property, consisting of ap-1 
graded in for that rambling ranch 
type home of your dreams. With 
plenty of privacy, and no need to 
garden unless you desire. 


Free Parking 
H. B. Granlee 


Multipie Realtor 


New Highland Realty 
220 Fourth St. 
Phone 7100—San Rafael 


CO NCRETE m ix e r 
3*á sack. Can be seen at 1115 San 
Anselmo Avenue, San 
Anselmo 
Ask for Charlie, between 2 and 
p. m. Any reasonable offer win 
be accepted. 


YEAR-END 


Income Tax Service 
Bookkeeping Service 


R. L BOURNE 
New Location 
38 MEADOWS AVE., SAN RAFAEL 
Phone 7134-W 
TWO carpenters: Remodeling, new 
work, retaining walls, screen doors 
and 
windows. 
Call 
Belvedere 
GEneva 5-49„0. 
________ 
; üXPEPT 
carpen tery. 
Reasonable 
Porches, extra rooms, retaining 
walls. 
Free 
estimates. 
Phone 
6782-W or 4358-J. 
_______ 
LANDSCAPE construction 
Retain- 
ing walls. 
Patios. Barbecue pits 
ALso pruning. San Anselmo 2630. 
Call foank GIULIANI. 


Gardiner Ss Riede, Attorneys 
NOTICE OF PROBATE 
State of California, 
County of Marin 
ss. 
In the Superior Court of the State 
of California, in and for the County 
of Mann. 
In the Matter of the Estate oi! 
ATT1LIO MARTINELLJ. also known 
as ATTXLIO C. MAR xTN ELLI, de­ 
ceased. 
No. 9669. 
Notice of time set for proving 
Will, etc., and Application for Let­ 
ters Testamentary. 
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 
a petition for the probate of the 
Will 
of A TTO jIO . MARTIN ELLI. 
also known as ATTILIO C. MAR- 
TTNELLI, deceased, and for the Is­ 
suance to JENNIE S. MARTINELLJ 
of letters testamentary thereon has 
been filed in this Court, and that 
Friday, the 23rd day of February, 
A.D., 1951, at 10 o’clock A.M. of said 
day, Dept. No. 1, at the courtroom 
of said Court, at the Court House, 
in the City of San Rafael, has been 
set for hearing of said petition, 
when and where any person inter­ 
ested may appear and contest the 
same, and show cause, if any they 
have, why said petition should not 
be granted. 
(SEAL) 
GEO. S. JONES, Clerk 
By Jack Stutz, Deputy Clerk 
Filed Feb. 9, 1951. 
GEO. S. JONES, County Clerk 
By Jack Stutz, Deputy 
GARDINER Ss RIEDE 
1010 B Street 
San Rafael. California 
Attorneys for Petitioner 
No. Í06-51—Feb. 12, 13» 14,15,16,17, 
19, 20, 21, 22, 1951 
J 


ENGINEER Graduate, age 40, wide 
experience. Mechanical, structural, 
construction 
sales, 
purchasing, 
estimating, what have you. Write 
Independent-Journal Box 166. 
lADY desires position in small of- 


RO O F TROUBLE? 
Phone Corte Madera 1082-J or 
539-M For Free Estimates 
OMlÉJI k.AT.a VALLEYS 
HOOPING CO.# CORTE MADERA 


flee. 
Previous experience in in­ 
surance and real estate. General 
office ability. Independent-Jour-1 PHONE 
nal. Box 162. 
HOUSEWORK"wanted- by^the day. 
Good worker.. Sausalito 67-R-l. 
EXPERIENCED secretary wants to 


LC Landscape Co* 


CORTE MADERA 541-M 
AFTER 5 
LANDSCAPE 
CO NSTRU CTIO N 
work part time in local office. Ma- L , 
. . . 
„ 
. . . 
.. , 
rin County references. Phone Mi 11 N° job 
bl* ! 
- v 
FREE ESTIMATES 
Valley DUnlap 8-1434.__________ 
M AN 
with pick-up! 
Will clean I 
— c-------o ----- n —c----- 
yards, basement, garages, etc. Rea-1 StewfN07reasonable“ 
My>ome 
sonable rates. Phone San Anselmo 


Easy wringer type washer. Lady’s 
wrist watch, Elgin, also Hamilton. 
Miniature Telex 99 hearing aid. 
Do not need anymore. Corte Ma­ 
dera 266 after 6 p. m. 
WASHING Machine, General Elec­ 
tric. 
With pump 
and 
wringer. 
Good condition. $25. 
70 Rafael 
Drive, San Rafael. 
STOVE, large Western Holly range. I 
All deluxe features. High broiler. ; 
2 years old. Cost $329.50, sell $200. 
Mornings call DUnlap 8-3137. 


WAREHOUSE SALE 
Upholstered living room groups 
bedrooms, dining sets, lamps, 
pictures, mirrors, rugs, chrome 
pieces—all at big savings over 
market value. You’ll find most 
anything you want here. 


FO RM AN FURNITURE C O 


535 IRWIN STREET 
South Side of Francisco Blvd. 
Past N.WP. Freight Shed 
PHONE 1040 
SAN RAFAEL 


USE 


NEW VICTOR 
Adding Machines 
$99.50 plus tax 
OUR RENTAL PURCHASE 
3 LATE 
model gas pumps. 
Lub. pfTTj 
equipment. 7 oil hi-boys. 2 grease *PLAN* NO CARRYING CHARGE 
dispensers. Stewart Wemei* wheel 
balance. Marquet tune up ma­ 
chine. Electric 4 post hoist. Fast 
charger. Price open. Phone S. A. 
7175-M or 6453-R. 
LIBRARY table $25. Walnut rock­ 
ing chair $20. Lamp table $5. Ph. 
San Anselmo 4638-W. 
GE REFRIGERATOR. 


RAY'S 
Office Machine Service 
Cor. 3rd & B St., SR. 6543-W 


room set. 
Stove, 
Other 
household 
Anselmo 2747-R. 


Twin bed- 
set of dishes. 


A G O S S M OVE CO STS 
YOU N O M O RE 


articles. 
San 16-D— Equipment Rentals 


THOR Gladiron. 
Excellent condi­ 
tion. Reasonable. Ross 387-W. 
Paint Sprayers ........ 
$2.50 day 
Cement Mixers (fits trunk 
of car) 
____$2.50 day 
Flor Sanders, American 8“ $3.50 day 


VALUE 


Look at this ! 3 large bed­ 
rooms, tile bathroom, sep­ 
arate dining room, 
large 
sunny 
kitchen, 
fireplace, 
central heat, all on one floor. 
PLUS detached 2 car gar­ 
age. 
Stone patio. 
Huge 
BBQ. 
Outdoor 
floodlights. 
Green 'house. Lovely ter­ 
raced grounds. Fruit trees. 
AND the location is ex­ 
tremely 
desirable, 
n e a r 
Wade Thomas and St. An­ 
selm’s schools. Only $16,500. 


MULTIPLE LISTING $1856 
Woodson Realty 


REALTORS. MULTIPLE LISTINGS 


22 Bank St., San Anselmo, Ph. 5973 


prox. líé acre. One is owner oc­ 
cupied, the other rented for $65 
per month. 
$13,750 BUYS BOTH 
H O M E S ! 
TERMS ARE $4650 CASH AND I 
$117 PER MO. OR $2700 CASH 
AND $142 PER' MONTH! LIVE; 
IN 
ONE 
AND 
RENT 
THE 
OTHER OR — PAY $1375 AND| 
HAVE A FRIEND PAY $1375 
AND YOU’LL EACH HAVE A¡ 
CUTE MODERN HOME! 


WE SUBMIT OFFERS 
Janes, Realtor 
Phone S.A. 2793 
727 Sir Francis Drake, S. A. 


$13,500 . 
REDW O O D RUSTIC 
R A N C H O 
3 bedrooms, large living room, with 
huge Sonoma stone fireplace. Full 
tile bath, stall «hower, central 
heat, and a delightful kitchen. 
Terms can be arranged. 
$21,500 


Cuie 'N' Cozy 
HERE’S YOUR ANSWER TO THE| 
HIGH COST OF LIVING! ONLY) 
$950 DOWN AND $35 PER. MO.| 
For this 4 rm. bungalow complete­ 
ly and tastefully fura, inclua. t. fc. 
stove, rugs, bedroom set, chester­ 
field. 2 studio couches, etc., etc. 
Owner Wants Trade 
For this gracious older home in­ 
cluding 3 bdrms., sleeping porch, i 
Ige. sep. din. rm., det. garage, j 
Wide level lot, fruit trees, etc. i 
Excellent cond. .and location. Ask­ 
ing $15,250. 
2 Uniis-$15,750 
One 6 Room— One 3 Room 
Conveniently Located 
MARIE RIVERS 
729 Sir Francis Drake Blvd.. S. A 
PH. 7478 OR 5216-J EVES. 


A home of distinction and charm 
in one of San Rafael’s best dis­ 
tricts. 
It’s not new but of the 
sturdiest construction. 
2 of the 
, bedrooms have walk-in closets. 
The tile bathroom is large and 
has a separate stall shower. The 
really spacious and beautiful front 
room, is ideal for entertaining. 
Large playroom and bath, and 2 
car garage, complete the picture. 
Why not call us now for appoint­ 
ment. 


W ANTED 
Real Estate salesman or woman. 
SC0TT0 & ROBINSON 
“BUILDING WITH MARIN” 
882 4th St. 
San Rafael 
Ph. 2902 or 1520 — Ooen Sjilidays 


HIGHWAY forced sale. 2 matching 
Wilton rugs, 9x12, $55. 2 new b°x I Rototillers (rental by hour or day) 
« fib T a c f^ w w “Uve lió : | 
^ 


San Rafael 
Equipment Rentals 
609 Front St. (off Francisco next 
to State Hwy. Patrol) 
CALL 7541-J 


San Rafael 878, 626 Mission, San 
Rafael. 
AUTOMATIC washer. 
LaunderaQ. 
Good working condition. Moving. 
Must sacrifice. $95. 
Phone San 
Anselmo 266-J. 
HOUSES FOR SALE FOR THE 
BEST VALUES DONT MISS 
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED REAL 
ESTATE IN THE INDEPEND­ 
ENT. 


or 
yours. Phone San Rafael 6782-W 
Gp h o l s t e r in g 
Repairing— Refinishing 
ecial pieces built or order Low< 


3 9 1 8 - M . _________________ 
CHILDS or infant’s nurse, exper­ 
ienced, food references, 
wishes 
position. San Anselmo 6404-J. If [ Special pieces built or order Lowest 
no answer leave message at 1146. f 
i rices for first class work. Do- 
BABY Sitting, By the hour Have 
mestic and imported fabrics for 
own car. Ph. San Rafael 6418-M. 
your irapection. 
rtOUSEKEF.PFTR, companion, prac- j 
W» v * M cA I CC 
tical nursing, care of elderly. Do | 510 Caledonia St. 
Sausalito 432-W 
not smoke or drink. Healthy, d e-1 
F 
• 
j i~r% 
I 
pendable. 
References. 
Available 
Experienced Carpenter 
February 11. 
Independent-Jour- ] Save money on new homes. 
Re- 
i. .odeling. cabinet making. Ed R. 
Young. Phone San Rafael 2062-M. 
nal, Box 151. 
ACCOUNTANT-BookkeepeK Thor- 
oughiy 
experienced. 
Specialized 
in small accounts and automobile 
work. 
Independent-Joumal Box 
150. 
HOUSECLkANING and what have, 
you. 
$1 per hour and car fare. 
San Anselmo 7616-W. 


8>A— Musical Instruction 


HONING done in my home by the 
hour. Phone San Anselmo 7616-W. I 
10 Mono Avenue, Fairfax. 
EXPERIENCED gardener and house 


MRS. RUBY E. QUILITCH 
INSTRUCTION IN PIANO AND 
GRADE MUSICIANSHIP CLASSES 


Member Faculty San Francisco 
Conservatory of Music 


cleaning by hour or day. 
C all! 317 PALOMA . VE. 
SR. 2206-W 
after 6 P. M. 1450-R. 
POPULAR PIANO — Beginners or 
SPRING Cleaning? Let me do your | 
advanced. Special rate on 20 les­ 
sons. Kelley Studio. Phone Lark­ 
spur 32-W. 
curtains and ironing in my borne 
Ban Rafael 6622-R, 


GOSS PAYS CASH FOR BARRELS. 
ARMSTRONG 
furnace 
like new, 
20,000 B.T.Ü. Phone 1032-M. 
MAY I DO your dressmaking, alter­ 
ations, curtains a n i small uphol- 
stering for you? Call SR 4894-M. 
BURT’S JAZZ RECORD SHOP 
Complete line jazz records, new 
and old. Open evenings only. 5 
Latham Street, San Rafael. 
GOSS HAS SEVERAL GOOD P I­ 
ANOS, 
STANDARD 
M A K E S . 
FINE CONDITION GOSS WARE­ 
HOUSE SALES. 


17— Miscellaneous Wan tec 


WANTED to buy. Lady’s ice skates, 
size 6-B. Phone Mill Valley, DUn­ 
lap 8-2351, Monday thru Friday 
WANTED - Clean cotton rags — 
must be washed. Used for wiping 
machinery. 
Independent-Journal 
office. San Rafae l.__________ 
Highest prices paid for used Build 
Ing Material Plumbing fixtures, 
Basins, Bath Tubs, Etc. 
SAN RAFAEL 
WRECKING & LUMBER CO. 
375 Francisco Blvd., SR 2259-W 


G O SS BA RG A IN S 
STORAGE SOLD FOR CHARGES 
Bedroom sets, dining sets, washers 
stoves, refrigerators, 
ice boxes, 
desks, bed divan¿, chesterfields, 
lamps, rugs, pianos both upright 
Ss grand, chests of drawers, book­ 
cases, radios. Always a large as­ 
sortment of everything th at goes 
into a house. Terms, free deliv­ 
ery. free storage, priced to move 
fast. GOSS WAREHOUSE SALES 
comer of Francis and Magnolia 
(Where Larkspur Joins Kentiield), 
Phone San Rafael 4461 between 8 
and 5 Sundays by appointment 
CAFE equipment and fixtures? May 
be seen at Bevan Motel or Phone 


SEWING machine or vacuum clean­ 
er, any make. Highest price paid. 
Phone SR 7570.__________ 
WE BUY JUNK, autos,^machinery, 
scrap iron, equipment materials. 
Phone 5730. 


18— Real Estate Per Sola 


County Wide 


$2500 


DUnlap 8-0279* 


Comer lot, zoned for business. About 
50 x 125. 


PRIEN REALTY 
946 Sir Franci$ Drake Blvd. 
KENTFIELD CORNERS 
BA. 5936 OR 6457-M 


Home & Acreage 
Older 4 bdrm. home on a lovely 
aunnv knoll. 
3 acres of land. 
Good for building. 
1 blk. from 
business section. 
$12,500. 


bdrm. home with beautiful view. 
Close to everything. $12,500. 
$6500 


Comfortable 2 bedrm. home on small 
level lot. Close to everything. 
LOTS LOTS LOTS 


DRAKE REALTY 
1605 Sir Francis Drake Blvd.* 
FAIRFAX—PHONE 6570 
SAN RAFAEL 
Very modern 3 bdrm. ranch style 
Level lot. Wardrobe closets. Plas­ 
ter interior. Patio. TOe bath with 
stall shower. 
A honey. 
$16,250 
BAYSIDE ACRES 
Clever 2 bdrm., plus nursery. View 
home. 2té years old. 
Full base­ 
ment. 
GI 
resale. 
Large 
loan 
available. 
See this. 
$15,750. 
SAN ANSELMO 
Very attractive older home in fine 
district. Has enclosed porch and 2 
nice ‘bdrms. Full din. rm. Beauti- 
bal bar and rumpus room down­ 
stairs with extra bath. Nice yard 
for BBQ. 
Easy terms. 
$14,950. 
CROKER & CO. 
The “Heart of Real Estate Row’ 
228 Sir Francis Drake, S. A. 
PHONE 7333-J 
CANAL CABIN 


San Rafaai 
Situated 
1 
block from Moderae 
Apts. This waterfront cabin has 
3 bdrms. with Ige. liv.- rm. and 
kitchen combined. 
Lot extends 
into Canal with docking facilities. 
$6850. 
DRAKE REALTY 
1605 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
FAIRFAX—PHONE 6570 


At Water's Edge 


Where you can enjoy complete pri 
vacy is this unusual home. Mod­ 
ern beamed ceiling, 
living room 
with large stone fireplace, dining 
“L” and picture windows from 
which to enjoy the view. Stream­ 
line kitchen, 
breakfast nook, 2 
lovely bedrooms. Glassed-in tub- 
shower. Inclosed blue glass sun- 
deck with outdoor dining 
area 
and BBQ. Private boat pier and 
gear house. 2 room guest cottage 
with bath. 
Small lawn, storage 
spacj. COMPLETELY AND MOD- 
ERNLY 
FURNISHED. 
P r i c e 
$27,500. 
Assume loan of approx. 
$15,000. 


, EXCLUSIVE 
John J. Connolly 
"Fits You to a Home" 
Ross Valley Really Co 
999 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE BLVD 
KENTFIELD 
PHONE S. A. 6580 - 6007 


YOLANDA COURT 
San Anselmo ol^er home. Asking 
$10,500. 
Make cash offer. Clean, 
auiet, comfortable, corner lot, on 
ead-end street. Assures privacy 
and seclusion. 
Lge. shade trees. 
Nice 
landscaping. 
2 
porches, 
hardwood firs, in liv. rm.. fire­ 
place, cheerful kitchen. Workshop. 
Tarrant Realty 
SAN RAFAEL 
1011 3rd St., Ph. 7720-W 
3570 Redwood Highway, Ph. 1968 
$16,000 
For an extremely well built 5 rm. 
home that has been cared for and 
kept up to the minute. 
Modern 
kitchen and bathroom, fireplace, 
gas furnace, and an extremely lge. 
basement. 
Level lot, 100 x 150. 
All fenced. Fruit trees. Here you 
can have pets and live outdoors. 


PETER BACIGALUPJ 
• 509 4th St.. San Rafael, Ph 342 


COUNTRY LIVING 
W ITH IN C O M E 


Cozy, clean 2 bedrm. white cottage 
Big lot with lawn, patio.* A place 
to garden and á spot for the dog. 
Extra size garage. PLUS SEPAR­ 
ATE 
2 
ROOM 
AND 
B A T H 
APARTMENT, 
RENTABLE 
AT 
$50 MO. Both are nicely fura 
Central heat, refrigerator, wash 
ing machine. All this for only 
$9200. 


$7850 
$2,000 D O W N $65 MO. 
Quaint 2 bedrm. home with some 
knotty pine and nice patio. BBQ 
NINA FRANK 
Phone S.A. 2333 


ROSS 


You will search no further 
when you see 
the 
MAG­ 
NIFICENT VIEW from this 
lovely rustic home. 3 bed­ 
rooms, 
dining 
room, 
m 
baths and lots of Storage 
space. 
Solid construction, 
hand-split, redwood shake 
siding. Over K acre of beau­ 
tiful, terraced g r o u n d s . 
$14,000 loan available at 5% 
interest. 
Full 
price 
only 
$21,500. 


. MULTIPLE LISTING $1858 
Woodson Realty 


REALTORS. MULTIPLE LISTINGS 


22 Bank St* San Anselmo, Ph. 5973 


C A N 'T BE DUPLICATED 
$26.950—nearly new spacious home, 
charming liv. rm., fireplace. Pic­ 
ture windows, lge. dining space. A 
woman’s kitchen with a riot of 
cupboard. 3 bdrms. 2 tile baths. 2 
car gar. % acre level. Patio lawn, 
excellent value. 


N EW 3 BDRM. 
$17,850—Well designed with a woman 
in mind, liv. rm. picture windows, 
fireplace, 2 baths. Additional bed­ 
room dt den—For $650. 2 car gar. 
See and compare. 


RUSTIC 3 BDRMS. 
$12,500—Spacious liv. rm. fireplace, 
din. rm. breakfat. rm., den. Cen­ 
tral heat, lrge. view lot. Owner will 
finance. Near school, stores. 


SMART RUSTIC 
$11,500—Secluded c o u n t r y livinfc 
picturesque redwood setting. Close 
to golfing, riding, near Mt. lake, 
2 miles from center of town. 
Beamed living 'rm. .Fireplace. 2 
bdrms., separate studio apt. $8,400. 
G.I. loan. $58 mo. Looks like a 
million. 


ALL EXCLUSIVE WITH US 
Cordone Realty 
Opp. Depot, San Anselmo, Ph. 2106 
If no answer. Call 7223 or .5668-W 
MULTIPLE REALTOR 


INCOME PROPERTY 
10% and up on your Investment. Lge. 
6 ,rm. house and 3 rm. apartment 
on 1 piece of property, in refined 
section of San Rafael. 
BBQ pit. 
Total price only $17^00. C an t 
miss on this. 
A REAL BUY 
bdrms., liv. and dining combin­ 
ation. Kitchen with tile corner 
sink, sun deck, garage. Lge. 52 x 
202 ft. lot. 3 yrs. old. Price $13,000. 
George A. Bertram 
947 SIR FRANCIS DRAKE 
KENTFIELD. PHONE 4148-M 
IN MANOR. Small redwood house, 
outside varnished, 
large 
room, 
picture window, kitchen and sun 
porch, hillside, oak trees. Sunny 
exposure. 
$7,500. 
21 Bay Road, 
Manor. Call 7315-Wv 


18— Real Estate For Sal* 


County Wide 


LARKSPUR 


3 bedroom home, with full tile bath, 
larra tile kitchen with built-in 
leather nook. 
Living room with 
picture window. Garage plus car 
f 
»rt. 
On a level landscaped lot. 
block to buses, 2 blocks to shops. 
Cleanest home in town. All this 
for $12,500. You won't buy more 
for your iribney than this. 


IS— Real Estate For Sale 


County Wide 


18— Real Estate For Sale 
18— Real Estate For Sal* 
18-A— Income Property 


County Wide 
San Rafael 


The "H O U SE ” O f 
EARLE 


"For Better Values" 


Dial KTIM 
Sunday 10:45 A. M. 
$4850 
3 rm. rustic home, priced low for 
quick cash deal. Hurry. 


CONVENT d is t r ic t 
I f l RESALE - $2500 DN. 
Nearly completed, 3 bedroom, 2 bath 
ranch home, excellent location. 
Every modern feature. 
$26,500— 
$14,000 cash. 


Moss-Breen 
I $24,750 


3 bdrms., 2 yrs. old, good condition. 
Level lot. 
Fireplace, tile bath,,] 
partially fum. with stove and re­ 
frigerator. Full price $13,500. 


Modem 2 bdrms., Ige. kitchen, Itv. 
rm, with fireplace, level lot. Nice 
yard. Good value at $10,500. 
VALLEY VIEW 
2 bdrm. stucco home in excellent 
condition. 
Liv. rm. with fire- 
ÍÜS£ Ntoefy1 lanteMped. 
* Bink St.. San An*hno, Ph. 5073 
GI loan. Price $15,750. 


4 Deluxe Units 
LINCOLN AVENUE 


Each unit has outside entrance, 
feeling of privacy, fireplace, extra 
large, tile kitchen, 2 big bedrooms, 
tile bath, with shower, garage. Ex­ 
cellent financing, asking $47,000 
Exclusive. 
Woodson Really 


0JO SIR FRANCIS DRAKE 
B35NTF1ET .r> 


SAN ANSELMO 787 


— The Drive-In Office — 


200 ACRE RANCH 
30 MINUTES 
FROM SAN RAFAEL 


Situated in the heart of Marin 
County's daily land. Abundance 
of water. 
Has several plateaus. 
Excellent for bomesite. Good buy ] 
at $29,500. 
Kaenel-Healion 
1833 Fourth St., S. R., Ph. 1800 
Waterfront 
3 bedrm. cottage with water front­ 
age to tie up your own boat. Lge. 
liv. rm. bath, level lot. $6850. 


Lovely 3 yr. old home. On 2 acre 
knoll. 
% mile to Meadow Club. 
Superlative view. 
3 bedrms., 
2 
baths. 20x30 liv. room, beamed 
ceiling. Detached garage. 
Patio. 


2 SAN FRANCISCO OFFICES 2 
2 SERVE “U" 2 TRADE 
EARLÉ REALTY CO. 


4 BEDRM S— 2 BATHS 
Spacious, needs paint and repairs, 
close to school, basement. 
Fire­ 
place. 
Oak floors, $13,100. 
Only 
$2,600 down. 


H O M E & INVESTMENT 
Model home, 2 bedroom, near high 
school, beautifully planted: ar-l 
chitectural 
gem. 
Price 
$13,125. 
$5,500 down, $67 per month. 
APARTMENT SITE 
j Marvelous Marin Rea[ty 
,[24—400»$ Wonted 
Level tract, close in, 750 ft. front 
x 125 ft. 
Ideal for court apU. 
Will subdivide; make offer. 


REALTORS, MULTIPLE LISTINGS 


1314 4th St., San Rafael, Ph. 
OPEN SUNDAYS 


BUILD N O W !! 


035 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
Kentfleld Comers 
CaB San Anselmo 5552 


CLYDE J. BARNWELL 
1018 B ST. SAN RAFAEL 


40 years real estate experience at 
your service. Every deal handled 
personally. 
TELEPHONE 7807, RES. 2567-M 
Member Multiple Listing Board 


Last call before shortages! Wolland- 
er designed. Loxide red cedar, 2 
bedroom ranch home with garage, 
fireplace, erected on your lot,. 
$12,500, 
firm 
contract; 
precut IA . roomy older 
package, $3,500 cash. Build your­ 
self, save half—cabins $640 up. 


BY OWNERS 
Assume large loan. 
Full five Sun Valley home. Newly 
painted exterior. $12,950. 213 Al­ 
pine, San Rafael 7456-J. 
____ 


14451 $1400 LOAN wanted. 
Will pay 
or 6% interest. 
Good security. 
Write Independent-Journal, Box 
153.^ 


CONVENT DISTRICT 
22— Business Opportunities 


INDUSTRIAL BUILDING 
Close In, 40' x 80', vacant. *16.000— I 
Low down payment; or lease $150 j 
per mo. 


SA N RAFAEL LOTS 
75 ft. lot, street, sewer. $300 down. 
Wooded view knoll 11/3 acres $3995. 
100x110, close in. Utilities. $1850. 


Level comer zoned industrial. Paved | 
fenced, sell or lease. 


home built for 
large family. 
5 bdrms., and 
finished attic upstairs. 
5 
downstairs, maid's room and bath. 
Basement with room for work­ 
shop. Very lge. lot, with room for 
several guest houses. 
Priced at 
$20,000. 


EXCLUSIVE AGENT 


GIFT SHOP 
room» I Art objects, gift goods, antiques to 
delight the connoiseur. Supply not 
affected by restrictions. Excellent 


PETER BACIG ALU PI 
509 4th St.. San Rafael, Ph. 342 
________ 
Evenings 80 


NEW HOMES 
Marshall L. Smith 
f. 


$10,500 
Modem 2 bedrm. home in San Ra­ 
fael. Nice liv. am. with fireplace, 
hardwood firs, tile.bath, attached 
garage. Level lot. Excellent con­ 
dition. 
$10,500 


Large, 3 bedrooms, plenty of closet 
space, fireplace, huge bath with 
tile stall shower, oak floors, double 
garage. Soon ready for occupancy. 
Buy now and select your colors. 
Prices from $16,850. 


TRADE O R EXC H A N G E 
Your present property or equit 
a new home. 
If your 
more than is necessary 
down payment, you may have the 
balance in cash. 
We allow topj 
prices for your property. Our ap­ 
praisals are free. 


squity, for 
equity is; 
r for the 


115 Woodland Ave., at Irwin 
S.R. 7155 or 5568-R, eves. 


San Anselmo 


LITTLE W HITE CO TTAGE 
Surrounded by a picket fence and 
in a sunny convenient 
location. 
2 bedrooms, separate dining room, 
large kitchen and utility 
room. 
Recently redecorated. Loan com­ 
mitment, 
$6,000. 
$60 
per 
mo. j 
Owñer may carry 
2nd, 
asking] 
$11,250. 


San Rafael location. A sound in­ 
vestment at $3,000 plus stock, 
Manny Charnow 
MULTIPLE REALTOR 
1116 4th St., San Rafael. Phone 149 
MARIN County open for party with 
spare 
time to start. 
Exclusive 
franchise to service route of Na 
tional 
Biscuit 
Cookie 
vendin 
$817.50 cash required. This is vo 
utoe business and route set up 
for you. Write Independent-Jour- 
nal Box 164. 
1 ASSOCIATED Service- tatian ^ th 
4th Street in the heart oi oan ¡ 
anH r* atreeL Ran Pafaai 
Mn«i 
Rafael, 85x130. Two street front­ 
ages, zoned for offices, motel, apts., 
etc. The home is old and needs 
minor repairs but will show a good 
income, and think of the future. 
10 yrs. from now this property will 
be worth 3 or 4 times the present 
tractlve^t'erms1 canche Ranged I YELLOW C A B C O M P A N Y 
and owner will consider accept- ¡ For sale in Larkspur and Corte 


Here Is A 
Golden Opporiunily 


and G Street, San Rafael. Must 
sell, owner leaving 
for 
service. 
Phone 4088. 
WONDERFUL opportunity- for- ex- 
GI. 
3 car cab business on Air 
Base. 
For information call Mill 
Valley, DUnlap 8-1608, between 9 
a. m. and 4:10 p. m. 


27— Apts. For Reef 


3 ROOMS, bath, electric ranga and 
water heater, fuel oil heater, regt 
reasonable. Lagartijas 10-J-13. 
PARTLY furnished 2 rooms. Near 
bus and stores, Junior College. All 
utilities included. Call 8 A. 5425-J. 


INDEPENDENT-JOURNAL Wed., Feb. 14, 1951 
I I 


31— Wanted To Rea» 


SMALL furnished 
apartment or) 
cottage by quiet couple. No pets. 
In or near San Rafael. 
Inde-I 
pendent-Joumai, Box 163. 
couple desire small fur-1 
W 
nished apartment or house. 
Vi- 


UNFURNISHED 


SOLANO COURT 
APARTMENTS 


Applications now being 
taken for these lovely 
Garden Apartments 


1 AND 2 BEDROOMS 
SPACIOUS 
TILED B ATHS 
KITCHENS EQUIPPED 
BALCONIES 
TERRACES 
ENCLOSED OARAGES 


Veterana* Preference 


Greenbrae Co. 


Sir Francis Drake Blvd between 
Highway 101 and Kentfleld, 


9SsW 4 rm., 
2 lge. bedrm. above 
store. 
Kitchen 
stove furnished. 
Vacant. $100 per mo. TARRANT 
REALTY, 1868 or 7720-W., 
LINCOLN Avenue, 3 rm. apt. Utill- 
ties. No steps, yard. $95. 


On G Street, 3 rm. apt. 
Clean, 
sunny. $85. Phone S.R. 4700. 
$55” $75. 2 MODERN bedroom flafs. 
View. Partially furnished or un­ 
furnished. 95 Live Oak Ave„ Falr- 
fax. San Anselmo 4583-R. 
* 
1175. NEW 3 room unfurnished- studio 
apartment. 
Adults. 
References.' 
Call Sausalito 1058. 
$ LARGE rooms apt., all utilities 


cinlty Fairfax or San Anselmo. 
Parking space for two 
to $75. 
san Anselmo 5755-J *r| 
San Anselmo 2829-J. 
2 OR 3 Bedroom house, 2 school age 1 
children. 
Near grammar school. 
To $85. Permanent. San francisco 
SKyline 2-1889. % 
SAN RAFAEL PHYSICIAN AND 
FAMILY desire 2 or 3 bedroom 
home. In San Rafael, San An­ 
selmo, Ross or Kentfleld. 2 small 
children. Call SR 1560. 
dR LEASE. Unfurnished house. 4 
bedrooms. 2 baths. San Rafael 
area. Phone Sausalito 1160. 
WANTED to lease or rent. Substan 
tial business couple desire 2 bed­ 
room .modem home. 
View, fire­ 
place. Unusual, furnished or un­ 
furnished. Prefer South of San 
Rafael. Phone DUnlap 8-3575 after 
4:30 p. m 


32— Miscellaneous for Rent 


LARGE heavy industrial property. 
Suitable for wrecking yard or gar­ 
age. Storage bam with concrete 
bam. See Mr. Burdo, 839 Fran­ 
cisco Blvd. 
_____ 
FOR SALE or lease. Quonset hut.] 
4200 square feet floor space. Mez­ 
zanine and spraying booth. San I 
Rafael 394-M. 
gpÁcrforwATciri^EirTo i 
•LET. 
1537 4TH ST., SAN RA-] 
FAEL.________ 
tárr.T, 
VALLEY. 
Store or office. 
16x32. Lease. Available April 1. 
Across street from Post Office. 72 
East Blithedale, Mill Valley, DUn- 
lap 8-4468. 
_ 
MODERN 25x75 cement ~ building. 
Rent or lease, 605 Francisco Blvd., 
San Rafael. 
Call 
Mr. Madden, 
Sausalito 1101, days. 


34— Can Far Sale 
rnrnrnirnmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 


1950 PO NTIAC 
• 
Streamliner Sedan Coupe 
DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR 
AMERICA’S FINEST VALUE 
Beautiful starlight blue, radio and 
heater of course. Today’s best buy, 


1938 CHEVROLET 
Appearance fair, mechanically good» 
plus good tires, radio and heater, 
COMMUTER'S 
SPECIAL 
AT 
$252 


39 BUICK SPECIAL 
FORDOR SEDAN 
Good body, mechanically fair, but 
priced to sell at— 


36 DeSOTO 
’41 CHRYSLER ENGINE 
Short on looks, long on value. Run* 
like a banshee, looks like a witch» 
but good transportation at— 
$95 
de BEAUBIEN 
PO NTIAC C O M P A N Y 


374 Miller Ave. 
Mill Valej 
DUnap 8-2653 
STENSTROM 
BUICK CO. 
49 Ford Custom Cvt. 1650 
41 Cad 5 pas. cpe.... 1050 
4! Pontiac Club Cpe 
495 
V 


included. 
El Rey Ap 
SR 7534-M or 1516. 
2 BEDROOMS. 


Older 3 bedrm. home north of 
Fourth Street. Good condition. 
, Fireplace, hardwood floors. Va­ 
cant and ready for immediate 
occupancy. Plenty of storage. 


Pierce Realty 
Leach Realty Co, 


S. A. 4012 
800 Sir Francis Drake 


$11,250 
Modem 3 or 3 bedrm. home In nice 
district of San Anselmo. Newly 
redecorated. Lge. kitchen, plenty 
of tile work, laundry room. Va­ 
cant. Close to schools and trans­ 
portation. 
$4000 Down 


BAYSIDE ACRES 
2 year old 3 bedroom ranch type 
home, 
dining 
room, 
fireplace. 
Garage. Marine view. Extra large] 
lot. G.I. resale. $15,750. 


G I RESALE— $13,500 
Modem 2 elevated bedroom home, 
large living room with fireplace. 
Laundry room, garage. Level sun­ 
ny lot, in San Anselmo. 


PHONE 2060 
198 SIB FRANCIS DRAKE, S. j 
LARGE view lot near San Ailselmo. ¡ 
Desirable residential section. 8un« 
ny exposure. 
Close to schools, 
transportation, shopping. San An­ 
selmo 2497-W. 


MHI Valley 


Ing smaller house In exchange. 
Kaenel-Healion 


1833 Fourth St., J.R. 1800 


Fairfax_______ - , 


$8400 
4 rm. fum. cottage on beautiful level 
lot. FruL trees. Nice garden. Near 
Sleepy Hollow. 


$2,000CASH 
*11,500. Well constructed 5 rm. home, 
panel liv. rm., rock fireplace, hill­ 
side lot. 93x134. 


Madera. 
$2500 handles. 
Phone 
Larkspur 1010._____________ 
MUST SELL beauty shop 
imme­ 
diately. Fully equipped, going busi­ 
ness. Will make good offer to in­ 
terested party. Phone SR. 4768-R 
or SR. 4035-J. 


25— Real Estate Wanted 


Utilities included, 
$85. 
Children welcome. 
See at 
2 Oak avenue, San Rafael. 


OFFICE space available for profés- 
... 
sional man. Share waiting FOOfflu ; 
»ts. $95. Call | 
Ground floor on 4th St. Call SR. 
6769-J. 


SMALL three room apartment for 
one employed person. Near bus. 
$45 including utilities. Larkspur 
847-W.___________ ___________ 
NEW, 
large 3 room apartments. 
Stoves, refrigerators, parking. No 
pets. $60. $80. $85. San Rafael 
2290-W. 


Let. 8 bedrms, nearly new. 33 ft. 
liv. 
dining 
room 
combination. | cuta 
Fireplace, central hall plan. Va­ 
cant. Asking $14,500. 
Income 
7 Apartments 


Older home In good district of San 
Rafael. Converted into 7 fum. units. 
Income $450 per mo. Nets apprx. 
30%. Asking $21,000. Owner will 
carry necessary loan with reason­ 
able down payment. 


$2250 D O W N M A N O R 
liveable 4 room summer or] 
year ’round home. About 15 years 
old. Brick patio, fenced. A good] 
value for only $4,500. 


SUN VALLEY 
Modem 3 bdrm. home. Lovely tile 
kitchen, nice garden, GI resale. 
$12,950. 


NR. ST. ANSELM 'S 
S C H O O L 
' 
Modem pre-war 3 bdrm. home, din. 
rm., central heat, fireplace. 2 car 
garage. Patio. BBQ. Fruit trees, 
green house. Only $16,500. 


RANCH TYPE HOME!!!!! 
$0,950 — NEARLY NEW — RED­ 
WOOD RUSTIC. Beautiful View, 
Large Windows, Trees, Brook, %, 
Acre—2 Bedrooms, Real Country- 
i f 5 0 0 
Vacation Type Living In Sunny 
T 
Southern Marin! Includes New Big lot (sunny), 85x130. All utilities. 
Drapes, Venetian Blinds, Etc. This 
Close in. Includes plans for 3 bed- 
One Should Sell Immediately — 
A Real Buy??? 
room home. 


* - 
v e 
| . 
green nouse. <-miy fio.ouv. 
Atwell Realty 
i r 
. y nr u 


HR FOTTRTTr K T T tW W V 
J J U U I m G V * 
f l U i u l i 


C. R. DeWiit 
$13.950 — HILLSIDE VIEW DU­ 
PLEX! II!. 
Close To Bus Depot 
& 
Everything. 
Income 
From ¡ 
Apartment Pays For G. I. Loan- 
You Can Have A Fine 2 Or 3 
Bedroom Home To Live In For I _ 
____________________________ 
Only $5,000 Down — See This BY OWNER. Older home, 5 rooms. 
Property Now—Exclusive Location. | 
2 enclosed porches, patio. Seclud- 


HAVE CLIENT THAT WILL PAY 
$35,000 
for Ranch Style 2 bedroom home. 
Must have full dining room and 
social hall. 
JAM ES B. AITKEN 
10 RedhiH Avenue, S.A. 445! 
NEXT TO ANDY’S DRIVE-IN 
3 OR more bedrootn"home. Reason­ 
ably level land.. Have $8.000 for 
down 
payment. 
Call 
DUnlap 
8-3007._________________ ‘ _____ 
S. F. FAMILY want 3 or 4 be droom 
home, immediately, Ross, Kent* 
field or Dominican district. Older 
type preferred. Call S.A. 7625-M. 


3 ROOM unfum. apartment, stove 
and refrigerator. 
1 block from 
shopping. 
In San Rafael. 
$75 
month. Phone 7333-J between 9:30 
a. m. and 5 p. m. 
TWO 3 room 1 bedrm. unfum. apts. 
with stove and refrigerator. $90 
on lease. 


MaynardK Redmond, 
Realtor 
1011 A St.. San Rafael, Phone 3500 


34— Can For Sale 


MAR VISTA MOTORS 
YOUR 
Lincoln Mercury Deeper 


USED C A R DEPT. 
812 FOURTH STREET 


RUY-OF-THE-WEEK 
This is it — 
'*! ! 
Beautiful 1947 Mercury 
clb, cpe. 
Equipped with radio, j 
heater and expensive seat covers. 
Immaculate throughout. 
Only....................$1177 
28— Rooms For Rent 


Serving This Community 
For Over U Century 
S. A. 2594 


EASTERN family of four wants 2 
or 3 bedrm. home in Marin. All 
■ cash if necessary. DUnlap 8-0312. 


FURNISHED 
A P A R T M E N T S ] 
AVAILABLE!!! $35 & $55 & $70 
PER MONTH!?!?!?!?!?! 


ROBERT BLAKE 
245 Throckmorton 
DU 8-2447 ] 


ed. Mountain view. $6500 terms. 
Cascades, Fairfax. San Anselmo 
923-R. 
_____________ 


Novato 


26— Houses For Rent 


FURNISHED 


735 Sir Francis Drake, San Anselmo 
Phone 1868 
Multiple Board Member 


FIVE MONTHS OLD 


835 FOURTH STREET 
te a Rafael • 
Phone 7724 


ONE ACRE 
$3300 for this 150’ x 325’ beautiful 
level home site, located In ré- 
•tricted 
district 
adjoining 
San 
Rafael. All utilities. Owner paid ¡This immaculate 2 oedroom home 
$4000 for this property, is going 
Into service and needs cash. 
RAFAEL GARDENS 
$4500. Beautiful gentle sloping lot 
One of the few remaining lots left 
In this delightful area. This won’t 
last long. 
2 BEDROOMS 
$11,000 for this modem, one story 
home with attached garage. Tile 
kitchen and bath, floor furnace, 
fireplace, laundry room. Nice level 
r n T 
BARGAIN 
$11,500. Reduced from $13.000. Needs 
some foundation work. Modem, 2 
b e d r o o m stucco home. Large 
kitchen and breakfast nook, full 
dining 
room. 
Interior 
newly 
papered and painted. Garage and 
work shop. Close In. 
RANCH TYPE 
$13,125. 5 rooms with 2 large bed­ 
rooms, attached garage. Immacu­ 
late condition. 4 years old. Lawn 
front and rear. Very choice loca­ 
tion. 
COUNTRY HOME 
$19,500. 
Delightful 
two 
bedroom 
ranch type home, located in NO­ 
VATO. All rooms are very large. 
Maple flooring, central gas fur­ 
nace. Large lot, completely fenced. 
Rumpus room with bar. All new 
furniture Included. Move right in 


M AYN A RD 
REDMOND. 
MULTIPLE REALTOR 
1011 A St., San Rafael, Phone 3500 


on a very large lot, weatherstrip- 
ped, 
screens, 
picture 
windows, 
fireplace — all lent their charm 
to make this a lovely home. G.I. 
financed. $73 per mo. and $3000 
down will make this home yours. 
Full price $14,750. 
Cenfral Marin 


MULTIPLE REALTORS 
942 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
Kentfleld. 
Phone 3805 


4 BEDROOMS 
$2500 D O W N 


An ideal* location for a big family 
living room, separate dining room, 
large kitchen, breakfast room, de­ 
tached double garage. Built on a 
ftiSSJcvel corner lot A buy for 
f l 0,950. 
INCOME 
And * high refura on vour cash in­ 
vestment, on this two 
family 
dwelling—upper rented, lower va­ 
cant. Owner in service wants of­ 
fer. Asking $7,950. Low down 
payment will handle. 
Pierce Realty 


S. A. 4012 
300 Sir Francis Drake 


Personality Home 
Charming, 3 years old, nestled in 
sheltered spot with Mountain anc 
Marine view. - Truly different in 
derign, Cathedral celling liv. rm. 
with picture windows, 2 attractive 
bedrooms, wardrobe closets, un­ 
usual kitchen. French doors from 
dining area to lovely patio, with 
BBQ. Extra room for storage of­ 
fice, etc. $18,000. 
Spacious 3 Bedroom 
View of the mountains and bay, lge 
Uv. rm with picture windows, 3 
bdrms., 2 tile baths, marine view. 
•Sep. din. rm.. 2 car garage. Cen­ 
tral heat. 
Patio. 
Many closets, 
lots of storage space. 
Lge. lot. 
Nearly level. Asking $26,250. 
Home Wiih Guesl Apt. 
Nearly new 2 bdrm. home, sep. din. 
rm., central heat, 2 rm. apt. Near 
Hi-school. 
$18.950. 
Wm.E. Doud&Co 
012 4TH STREET, PHONE 7722 


! ! ! California Modern ! I ! 
$9950 
Redwood rustic! White steel kitch­ 
en, hardwood firs., big level lot] 
with lawn front and rear. Beauti- ] 
ful setting. 
“TREES." $3,000 dn. 


3 Bedrms — $2,000 Down 
8 yrs. old, tile bath, near commute.! 
Level. $11,300. 


"LIVE W IR E " - LIN DSKO G 
Alto Strawberry Office 
990 Hiway 101, DUnlap 8-3834 
188 East Blithedale, Mil’. Valley’ 
DUnlap 8-3831_________ 
BY ÓWNER. 5 i*oom choice prewar 
stucco hillside home. Garage on 
street. 
Ideal location. 
Parquet 
floors In living room and dinette. 
Large basement, fireplace. 
Cen­ 
tral 
heat. 
Thermostat. 
Owner 
being transferred. 
$13.250. 
As- 


2 ROOM garden cottage partially 
furnished, needs stove and refrig­ 
erator. 1 or 2 adults. Large gar- 
age. Phone San Anselmo 2358-W. 
NEED a house for two months? One 
available at reduced rent. 3 bed­ 
rooms, $95. Near transportation. 
DUnlap 8-3818, 1 to 5 p. m. 
IN SAN GERONIMO. Furnished 
room cabin. Garage. Part utilities. 
$35 a month, for 2 people. 
San 
Rafael 23-J-ll alter 6 p. m. 
2 BEDROOMS. 
1 year lease. Sun­ 
ny yi 
Call San Rafael 2997-J. 


SEE R. K. HUNTER FOR 
NO VATO REAL ESTATE 


7435 HIWAY 101 
PHONE NOVATO 159-J 
For a BETTER Buy 
Fable Farm Realty 
GRANT AVE., NOVATO 
PHONE 157-Y 


Corte Madera 


BUILT 1946—1580 SQ. FT. 
3 
*5 £ “ ¿ .3 5 !:16 MONTHS old, 2 bedrooms, modern 
place, central heat, 2 car garage 
Level corner lot. 2 blocks to bus 
$20,000, Terms. 


ROOM for couple or business wo­ 
man. Use of kitchen and dining 
room. 724 Mission, at Lincoln. 


48 MERCURY 4 dr. sedan... .$1295 
R&H, spotlte., fog Its., back up It., 
spc. grill gds., W7W tires. 
49 OLDS 98 4 dr. sedan 
$1095 
R&H, hydra., elect, window lifts,) 
backup lights, sun visor, W/W, 
tires. 
47 CHRYSLER Windsor conv.$1405! 
R&H, spot It., backup Its. Custom 
upholstery, power top. 
and entrance. 
For professional j 49 BUICK Super c o n v . .$1995 
or business man. Phone San Ra- 
R&H, W/W tires, backup Its. Two 
fael 1689-J. 
I 
SVM, Powder blue color. 
FURNISHED, 


NICE sunny front room, 
private 
bath, for gentleman. 1109 Grand 
Avenue, S. R. Ph. 1117-R. 
MODERN room with private bath; 


single 
and 
double 
rooms. Close to business dsitrict. 
501 Mission, Sani Rafael. 
ROOM, 


SVM, 
46 CHEVROLET Fleetline 
$13951 
R&H, W/W tires, new paint. 
40 MERCURY clb. cpe.. 
$1695] 
r-rrrrr i 
Black beauty, heater, W/W tires 
Kitchen priyl-146 CHEVROLET 4 dr. sedan. .$1095 
R&H, hi rubber, clean. 
49 FORD Custom 


reasonable, 
leges. 
Man and wifg. 
Close in. 
101 First St., San Rafael. 
| iq f o r d Custom 2 dr...........$1295] 
ROOMS for rent by the week or 
49 MERCURY conv.................$1995 
month. Marin Hotel, 1111 4th R&H, spot It., drive Its. 
O. D. [ 
Street, San Rafael. Phone SR 195. 
W/W tires, It. top. Sharp. 
SUNNY front bedroom, twin beds. 
Custom 4 dr........$1495 


COMFORTABLE, attractive, furn­ 
ished 2 bedroom house. Spacious 
living room. Dining room, kitchen 
Reasonable rent. Lagunltas 10-J-13 


UNFURNISHED 


MABELLE CULPEPPER 
Mulfiple-Realfop 
- 
i 
LARKSPUR 634-J • 
DUnlap7-0915 
Zoned for MULTIPLE DWELLING 


Kent Woodlands 


Excellent Condition 
Attractive and with 2 elevated bed­ 
rooms. On a separate level Is 
possible third bedroom or den 
Large living room with fireplace 
separate dining room. 
Cheerfu 
kitchen and breakfast area. Leve 
lot—well landscaped. Present GI 
loan with low payments may be 
assumed. 
Asking $15,750. 
$2500 Handles 
Homo and Income 
2 separate units on a hill, one rent­ 
ed at $50 per mo. the other va­ 
cant. Live in it or rent it for $50. 
Well-built. Many concrete steps. 
Wooded lot. Close in. Many porch­ 
es. Fine view. $5,500. G.I. loan 
balance. Owner will help finance. 
Total price $10,500. 


EXCLUSIVE 
Farrington Jones & Sons 
>p. Station, San Anselmo. Ph. 2107 
....................in Marin Slnca 1916 


Modern home, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths 
rumpus room with full bath. Close 
in. Oaks. View. 3 years old. % acre 
Great deal of rock work. An ex 
ceptionally a t t r a c t i v e home 
$40,000. 


Nearing completion; new, 3 bedroom, 
2 bath home, rustic With heavy 
shake roof. Close In. Large rum­ 
pus room. Oak trees. Extremely well 
built. Attractive location. $40,000 


Also in 
exclusive 
Chevy Chase 
Larkspur. 3 bedrooms, 2 
bath 
home, maid’s room with bath 
Large living room, separate dining 
room, flagstone patio. 2 blocks to 
school and bus. 
3 years old 
$27,500. 


Also veiy well constructed, 3 bed­ 
room, 2 bath ranch house in Palm 
Hill 
Area, 
Larkspur. 
Splendid 
view. 
Exceptional Kitchen. Dish­ 
washer and disposal. 
Charming 
living and dining room. Tile baths 
Practically new. $30,000. 
JAMES A. 0RR 
Kent Woodlands, Kentfleld 
4870 


Cotati 


COTATI, CA LIFO R N IA 
Nice clean 314 AC Ranch, 2 bed­ 
room home, gar. shop, nat. gas, 
well-press. 
Poultry hse, berries, 
fruit trees. 
$3500 down. 
Price 
$11,000. 
R E S T A U R A N T - FOUNTAIN - 
CANDY Store. 1950 gross $71,790. 
Sacrifice 
$12,000. 
L o n g 
lease 
Owner ill. 
THE T H O M AS A G E N C Y 
REALTORS 


is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath stucco 
home with extra lot. Level, sunny. 
Only 2 blocks to shopping and bus. 
This should be a good opportunity 
for you to have home and income 
combined. 
JOHN H. DANA 
123 Corte Madera Ave., on the comer 
Phone S.M. 1171 or C M. 153-R 
Larkspur 


SPECIAL 
3 Bdrms., modem bath, older home. 
Substantially 
built. 
Liv. 
rm. 
fireplace, sep. din. rm., lge. kite 
pantry, breakfast nook Many 1_ 
closets. 
Lge. 
porches, 
central 
heat, full cement basmt. On busi­ 
ness zoned lot. Basmt. suitable for 
workshop, etc.; GI resale. Includes 
Bendix, stove, and refrig. EXCLU­ 
SIVE. 
$13,650. 
Wm. E. Doud & Co 
LARK THEATRE BLDG. 
PHONE LARKSPUR 945 


home, in Santa Venetia. Located 
on a knoll with an 
exceptional 
view. This property is not suitable 
for children. $100 per mo. includ­ 
ing electric stove and refrigerator. 
Parmelee Really 
222 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. 
San Anselmo 
Phone 1415 
Un f u r n is h e d cottage on High­ 
way 101 adjoining Marvel Mar. 
Kitchen, stove and heater, includ­ 
ed. $36.50 per month. Ph. GEneva 
5-3316. 
_ 
2 BEDROOM unfurnished 
duplex 
$85 month. Call 5753-M. 


Use of kitchen. Two blocks to bus. 
Suitable for 2 girls 
or 
couple. 
Corte Madera 544-R. 
CLEAN, single room, 
comfortable 
bed, suitable for employed person. 
Reasonable rent. 326 1st St., San 
Rafael. 


sigs., seat covers, 
dlx. sedan...$1195] 
R&H, direct. 
48 FORD Super 
R&H, clean. 
48 OLDS 98 sedan.....................$1695 
R&H, hydra., visor, backup Its., 
direct, sigs. 


28-B— Homes For Aged 


VACANCY for 2 elderly ladies in 
E 
rivate Rest Home. 
Ambulatory, 
icensed home. Hayward, LUcerae 
1-8249. 22352 N. Third St., Hay- 
ward. 
__________________ 
VACANCY for lady, 
good 
home 
cooking. Lovely surroundings, 1046 
Sir 
Francis 
Drake, 
Kentfleld, 
S.A. 5206-M. 


Your New 
Kaiser-Frazer 
Wiih Confidence 


502 Francisco Blvd., 8. R. 5330 • 
OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL NOON 
DODGE 1946 Custom four door se­ 
dan. 
Radio, fluid 
drive, 
$950, 
Phone Corte Madera 1036-W. 
Í9ÍI 
STUDE 
Coupe. 
Overdrive. ’ ’ 
Hill holder, heater. 
Owner San 
Anselmo 3258-W after 6 pm. 
I937- iVTLLYS, $35. 1937 2-door'Ply"- 
mouth. Good condition. $150. San 
Anselmo 2630, after 5:30._______ 
Top Prices 
PAID FOR 
Lale Model 
USED CARS 


We need 1949 Fords, 
Chevrolet*, 
Piymouths. 
We will either pay you cash for • 
these or give you cash, plus one . 
* of our many 
good 
dependable 
lower priced earlier model 
cars. ~ 
We still have a large assortment 
of pre-war cars, priced right. 


ALW A YS THE BEST DEAL 
In Marin 


2}YEARS 
A Ford Dealer 
Spells 


D-E-P-E-N-D-A-B-l-L-l-T-Y 


Open Unlil 9:00 P.M. 


San Rafael 
Phone 1730 or 734 


3 LO CATIO NS O N 
FOURTH STREET 
D0HEMANN 
MOTOR CO. 


T*r 


FROM 
Johnson Molor Co. 
Your Friendly Neighborhood 
KAISER - FRAZER DEALER 
29— Room And Beard 


1941 BUICK. Special sedan70rigin- . 
al owner. $450. Phone San Rafael 
173 or San Rafael 4394-M. 
1948 CHEVROLET Aero sedan, very 
- 
clean, good mechanical condition, 
• 
good tires, original owner. 
Mill 
Valley, DUnlap 8-2581. 


BUSINESS, college girls. Good food, 
home. $70-$75. 
Close to college, 
transportation. 
Kentfleld. 
San ] 
Rafael 4760, Miss Rau. 
LOOK! 


29-A— Child Care 


*47 Plymouth Coupe ......— $998 
3 passenger, Special Deluxe. Im­ 
maculate throughout. 
47 Chevrolet Aero Sedan 
$1195 


27— Apts. For Rent 


FURNISHED 


f 8.A— Income Property 


Tiburón 


BEDROOMS 
liv. rm., f: 
doors, view 
appointment 


lus I V bath, Ige. 
hand hewed 
entire bay. Seen by 
only. $14,700. 


*3 plus 
ireplace. 
■ of entii 


'LIVE W IR E" - LIN DSKO G 
Alto Strawberry Office 
990 Hiway 101, DUnlap 8-3834 
188 East Blithedale, Mill Valley 
DUnlap 8-3831 


3 APTS. AND 2 ROOMS 


ALL RENTED 


FULLY FURNISHED 


NEAR DOWNTOWN SAN RAFAEL 


NETTING ABOUT 12% 


FULL PRICE $17,500 


EXCLUSIVE 
Woodson Realiy 
REALTORS, MULTIPLE LISTINGS 


22 Bank S t, San Anselmo. Ph. 5973 


THREE room apartment and gar- 
age. Phone San Anselmo 2377-W. 
MODERN 5 room furnished apart­ 
ment. 
Completely 
redecorated. 
Close to Greyhound depot. Utili­ 
ties and garage included. No chil- 
dren. $100. San Rafael 5880-W. 
1 BEDROOM apartment, $85, in­ 
cluding utilities. Adults only. See 
at 2 Oak avenue. San Rafael. 
SINGLE apartment, complete with 
, bath 
and 
kitchenette. 
Sunny, 
view. 
Nice for 
person 
alone. 
Phone Corte Madera' 898-R days 
or 482-J evenings._________ 
FIVE- room furnished apartmen 
Adults 
only. 
No 
pets. 
Phone 
Sausalito 861. 


DAY CARE for infants and pre­ 
school children. 
Licensed home. 
Phone San Rafael 5748-R. 
Va c a n c ies for pre-schooi chii- 
dren. In private home care center. 
Nursery school program. San Ra­ 
fael 6020. 


Attractive 2 tone tan 
owner car. 
Radio. 
finish. 1 


FULL time care by nurse. Any age. 
Infants thru teen-age. 
San An­ 
selmo 5160-W. 
W ALTO N DAY NURSERY 
School and 
Rafael 
d pre-a 
6468-J. 
-school children. San 


29-B— Haftb 


e per week and up. 
720 B St, San Ra- 


Fa ir FAX. 
Immediate occupancy 
new 2 room apartment, reason 
able rent. 1 minute from bus and 
stores. Furniture at nominal fig 
we. 
Frigid aire 
and 
Simmon’s 
hide-a-bed by 
assuming 
pay 
ments. 
Phone 
days 
7854-J 
or 
4613-M even in gs_____________ 
28 PALM avenue, San Rafael 
rooms, furnished. Fireplace. Cen- 
tral heating. Inquire on premises 


hillside 
persons 
fax. Call 4584-R 


w 
One or two 
r Park District, Fair- 
apartment. 
. Dee 


23— Leans 


REAL ESTATE loans of all types. 
Immediate appraisal and service. 
Phone DUnlap 8-3301. 
DUnlap 
8-0096. 
FOR FítOMPT, reliable service on 
FHA or conventional loans, Phone 
Ban Rafael 2902. 


m r ATTRACTIVE 
new 
modern 
three room apartment. 
Close to 
Locust. 
Pet welcome. 
DUnlap 
8-0695.____________________ 
FIVE room furnished flat. Utilities 


3 ROOMS furnished apt. Rents $65, 
including utilities. Phone 1187- T, 
Larkspur. Call before 1, after 7._ 
IN SAN RAFAEL. 
Two" room de­ 
tached apartment. 
Refrigerator, 
shower. 
Rent $50 a month, in­ 
cluding utilities. Call Corte Ma- 
dera 368-W 
. __________ 
3 ROOM furnished apartment, liv­ 
ing, bedroom, 
kitchen, 
dinette 
and bathroom. Modeme Apart­ 
ments. Apt. 3, 27 Harbor, 
San 
Rafael 


ROOMS with private bath. 
Also 
other rooms. 
Mission Inn. 
fael. 
Phone 1837._____________ 
ROOMS with or without bath. Rea­ 
sonable price. CARMEL HOTEL, 
830 B Street, San Rafael. Phone 
086 
_____ 
30— Room. Board Wanted 
■in ■■■■■■ 
m 
mm.. 
BOARD and room wanted by male, 
single, Independent-Journal re­ 
porter. Starting March 12th. Sin­ 
gle room with bath and a garage 
preferred. State costs. Write In­ 
dependent-Journal, Box 165. 


31— Wanted To Rent 


WANTED to lease. Clean, modem, 
2 bedroom 
house, 
unfurnished. 
Must be convenient to transporta- 
tion. Phone San Anselmo 2204-J. 
MIDDLE AGE couple, life-long resi­ 
dents Marin County desire 4 or 
5 room house or duplex with gar­ 
age, unfurnished. By March first. 
Phone San Rafael 1470. 
DESPERATE. Need 2 or 3 bedroom 
home by March 1. 
Will pay up 
to $90 a month. Near transporta­ 
tion. 
Call San Anselmo 2380- 
after 6 p. m. 
PARTIALLY- furnished “ for singfe 
woman. 
Two room cottage or 
cabin. Don’t drink or smoke. Have 
nc pets. 
Up to $40. 
Call even­ 
ings between 7 and 8 p. m. San 
Rafael 7802-W.________________ 
HOUSE for summer — 3 bedroom 
home for June, July, and August. 
Fairfax, San Anselmo and San 
Rafael. 
Excellent references. Ph. 
Montrose 4-1842 or write Inde- 
pendent-Joumal, Box 159. 


WE HAVE A CLIENTELE WHO 
HAVE BEEN BUYING THEIR 
NEW CARS FROM 
US FOR 
OVER 20 YEARS. JUST ASK 
THEM WHAT SATISFACTION 
THEY GET FROM OUR GUAR­ 
ANTEES AND COMPLETE SER­ 
VICE. 
Low Overhead 
We Own Our Own 
Building 
OUR DEAL 
TOPS 'EM ALL 


50 Kaiser Special 
Delivered $2427.05 
150 p|ymouthi Conv. Cpe. 


50 Henry J. 2 dr. Sedan 46 Plymouth, 4r. Sed. 
Delivered $1499.50 
JOHNSON 
MOTOR CO. 
22 MILLER AVE, MILL VALLEY 
Phone Mill Valley DUnlap 8-0375 


• > 


,11 


DeLong 
Chevrolet Inc. 


719 Francisco Blvd. 
Phone 4124-25-26 


ROSSI GARAGE 


WE CONSIDER THESE .CARS TO 
BE EXCELLENT VALUE. MANY 
EXTRAS ARE INCLUDED AND 
YOUR TERMS CAN BE AR­ 
RANGED; 


OPEN 7 DAYS 
626 Fourth St. 
SEE 


A WEEK 
San Rafael 


1946 BUICK Roadmaster. A-l con­ 
dition. $1200. Phone San Rafael 
2983._______ ______________ 
Í938- CHEVROLET Sedan. 
Radio, 
heater, new fires. Excellent condi­ 
tion $300. 
SH. 5060 or 4772-R. 
Eves. 
_____ ‘ 
• ________ 
*39 BUICK Convertible, 5 passenger 
coupe. New paint, new top, very 
clean. Can be seen at Tony’s Asso­ 
ciated Service Station, San Ra­ 
fael. Phone S.R. 7150. 
1937 STUDEBAKER Sedan. 
Runs 
good. $60. 122 Momingside Drive. 
Phone San AnseBno 4226-W. 
1940 FORD deluxe business coupe. 
Excellent condition. Copious lug­ 
gage space. 
Leather upholstery. 
Good tires. 
Ideal “second” car. 
$500. Corte Madera 629-W. 
’ILFORD sedan. 
Used commer­ 
cially. Going up soon. Now $395. 
Also will sell equity in 1950 Aus­ 
tin. 
Phone San Rafael 89. 


BILL DIETZ 
For Used Cars 


San Anselmo 
Ph. 5505-J 


•v. 
,, i* 


3 4 -A — Trueles 
ft 


1942 CHEVROLET 1*4 .ton army 
truck, flat bed. Also 1929 Model 
A truck, VÁ ton. 
Make offers. 
San Anselmo 2630, after 5:30. 


34.D—Trailers 


Í941 STUD^AKERCommanáer \ 
door sedan. Overdrive. Hill hold­ 
er. Good condition. $285. Phone 
San Rafael 4895-R.__________ 
1940 SUPER BUICK club coupe. 
Good condition. Newly painted. At 
3 Bank S i, Phone 8A. 7603-W, 


HOUSE TRAILER. 25 ft. All mahog­ 
any interior. Westinghouse refrig­ 
erator. Two skylights. She’s seen 
some happy Vagabonding. Ready 
to roll again now. Novato Trailer 
Court Or see J. Schermerhom, If 
Greenwood Ave., San Rafael. 
_ 
3VH— Motorcycles 
Vi. 


1951 LIGHT weight Harley David­ 
son motorcycle. 
License, Insur 
anee, many extras, reasonable. See 
at 40 Inyo Ave., after 5:30. 


at t r e m e n d o u s s a v i n g s 


-/ u ~ iwnPPP^PgNT-JOURNAT. W ed.. Feb'. 14. I95T 


''^iiwCTiiWTmBgiiiiiliiilii llllM ^ llllWIIIMIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIimniM 
The GREATEST SALE of all 


* ________________ 
1 
- --------------------------------- 
h u h........................ 
i n i ...... 
... 
R 
a 
n 
n 
M 
i 


Í; 
| 
§ § 4K 
J jf e 


Nationally Advertised at $45, 


COMPANION 


EVENT . . . ! 


Come in 
fabrics 


h> £ 


You’ll find your size here! 


• Coverts 


REGULARS 
e Gab­ 
ardine 


e Tweeds 
SHORTS 


LONGS 


STOUTS 
• Sizes 
36 to 46, 
but not In 
every fabric 
LONG 
STOUTS 


if Neta: Dim to the unusually lew sola price 
thorn will bo a nominal charge *or alterations 


, or Ask About Our 90-Day Charge Plan. Albert's Store for Men 


i lililí i iiiíiiíÍB i 


Use Your Charge Account 


. :mmam