HomeMy WebLinkAbout1950-05-20 - Newport Balboa News Times·------,
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li~h,., ·Game Man3gement Offere·d at Humboldt State
Witt. Include Ry d rob I o 1o11.
wblch ta concerned with the de-
tftmlnaUon of polluUon ln ftab-
lng .u.am., and 1tttam and lake
surveya. Ot.ber counea ln the
l'laba1et1 prosram lnclude M.an-
agement ol GaJDe Fish, Commer-
dal Fllberiea., Icbtb.yolol)' and
Hatchery BloJoo. 1be· latter la
a sractlcal coune In the arun-
clal propag:aUon of salmon and
trout. The collep maintalM a
fllh batc.bery lD which several
thou.sand f.lsh ..,.. ra.lsed each
year and llberaW<! In Humboldt
County. Other courees aapport.-
ina the Fishertee Major ll>dude
Marine Biology and Invertebrate
Zoology.
Aaslatance 11 received from the
Callfomla Dlvtsion of Flah and
Game whose personnel teach
such courses as Law Enforce-
ment, and act as lecturers to sup-
plement the instrucUon in other
courses.
The community has always
been greaUy interested In Fish
and Game conservation and has
been generous ln ottering per-
sonal assistance as well as fJnan·
dal wpport to this program.
This splrU wu recenUy mnnl·
tested by the large turnout
which attended the Flnrt Annual
Wlld.llfe Banquet held last De-
oembe'r.
Tbe Flabertee and Game stu-
dent.II have their own club, Con-
servation UnllmJted, which ·ta
composed entlrelJ' ol men major-
Annual Jumping Frog Jubilee
at Angel's Camp M.ay 19-21 .
Stlftt8 of hlstorlc Anpla
camp were actually paved with
gold thJ.a week In preparation
for the oolorfUl Jumplng Fr<>«
Jubilee to be held there May 19,
20 an 2L
Blocka of fabulously rkb gold
ore, valued at more than $200,000
a ton, were eet lnto the pave-
ment of the main street of An-
gela Camp Jn ettemonlea at-
tended by c1ty, it.ate and county
offldals. ·
Five blocb of the ore, cut Into
brick alze wltb a diamond saw,
were embedded ln concrete In
keeping with the lSM reputation
of the mountain mining town,
known then throughout the
world as a place "where the
streets w~ paved with gold.',
Wielding the trowel for the
pavtng Job was State Sen. Jesse
Jng In these two fieldp. The club
ls actl ve tn many projects, some ·
of which include stream clear·
snce, the training of Bo.Y Scouts
in conservation and .rood IJ)Ort.s-
marn1hlp, and the planting of
MuJU-nora Rose to stop erosion.
In general the over-all llsher-
tes and pme program at the col-
lege la apec~ to develop rap.
Idly and proms.ea to beoome one
of the moet prominent of lta
type ln the Weat.
Mayo, asslBted by Oeorp DlHs,
chalrman of the fair board, and
Carl M.llla, secretary-~r ol
the ~lebration.
Ore for the pav~ Job wu
supplied by Frank Tower, owner
of the rich Royal Mlne.
The ceJebratlon wUI open Fri-
day with School Day and JOO.-
Ing of exhlbUa. An Amateur
Talent Show,. sponsored by the
20-30 Club, will precede the Bell
of the Camp coronation to be
followed by a free dance.
Saturday afternoon the pre-
Jlmlnarlea of the Jumping Fros
Contest will be run olf, followed
by Hot Rod races, a champion-
ship meet for N.C.R.R.A. drlvera
f eaturlng the foremost leadf oota
on the West Coast.
An historical pageant end firf'-
works display will be given In
the evening. to be folJowed by
an all night dance.
Hell !or Leather horse racing
with five county races to be fol-
lowed by a Mother Lode Cham-
pionship event, wm be run Sun-
day morning.
The Christensen Brothers of
Eugen•, Ore., will present a
rodeo Sunday afternoon wJtb ·
National Champion cow b o Y 8
competing. The show wlll close
with the Frog Jump nnala Sun-
day afternoon with a $1000 prlie
for a new record.
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Swinwulta and p&aywear
in I h • SouthJand retain
high 8tyle again thi8 year.
aa witn... delligna here.
A .,,..loped .. *<Ip&-awlnwuU by llaarb Ronca. r. llbowa (Wt ahoft).
Swimwear bcilk:e that could well .. 90 fannar by adclitlaa oi a lldrt Ill IMwD
abon.. It Ill CllDOD9 &nt awhmmt c:olec:tioa by Boward er.. .. eas-.
I Sheer Blouses ·
Thia spring'• aheer blowies, ln
nylon or organdy, are designed
1 to show off pretty alJpe. But thla
means that bra and slip straps
must be Immaculate and neat.
A lln~rte check-up 11 one way
to m&.ke a\lre that you aren't ~
baM"assed by grime or by straps
held together by a&f et.7 plm. Go
through your dtts8er and IOl1.
out your Unseriea. Mend tbe
slips and bras that are ln good
condition and wearable. Dlacard
thoee beyond ttpalr. ~n be
sure your lingerie ls kept snowy
white.
It'• a good idea, too, t.o co-or-
dlnate your blou.8e and lingerie
colon. Pink bra at.raps ~king
through a sheer white blouse
don't carry the right tmpresalon
of dalnUnesa. The new white
bras and allpe wblch carry a Uny
embroidered motif a.re flne for
eplctng up sheer blou.aea.
Add Glamour
To give new glamour to an
old Jersey ennlng blouae, bor·
row a leaf from the not.ebook of
a famed deeigneT. He u.e1 large
rhinestone buttons to outline tho?
oR.atoulder lll!Ck.llne of a bl~.
It'• a cbanp whJch you1l make
In minute8 and wb.1ch will al·
low t.o dine out looklq chic.
The buttona you can find at
any noUo.na counter. Their glit-
ter enhances the plaln black and
gfves an old blouse a new dn·
mauc flalr. But wbeo you stud
your blouse with t.he&e Jewel·
like buttons. watch the other
Jewelry you wear. The buttons
ln themselvN create a necklace
effect, so lt'1 best to leave your
other sparklers ln their Jewel
cue.
But you can wear ~ninp
without marring the over-all
C&.111.
AUCTIONEER
MM. 1'21, wll TMCM • few ..._.
fw tMt PllOfnAMI CAiia.
ENlm .. $50.00
YA. UM w .... ,
.... "', ......... LA.
look. To have earrinp rlt ln with
your coetume, use two matdUgs
rhlne9tone buttons. Pry otf the
button ahanU with plief'I.
smooth the rough aurfoce with
a nail fUe and fit the buttont
wic.b ea~ bacb which you
can llnd at w dJme atott. UM
a hou.sebold cement « metal
glue to Jotn backs and hue.con.
and your Hrringl w\11 stay put
~rmanentty.
Cinnamon-sugar Mix
Read.7 mind cinnamon sucar
ls now being pactqect ln a ,..._
shaker. It'• delidoua to aprtnk.Je
over hot buttered ralatn tout.
Yukon Dahlla1
fry ew ...a. OU!N Pl.ANTS.
n., -ct-,., ..... '"'"-·
O..W the ..,...._.. M Y'9Ur ......
n., .. .,.. .. tfpe, .... .....-
fteww.. -.1.-4 f'Mh. Me ...
"'--~ .. ....,., ....w.
Keep .................. ..
'-1 Y'U«ON .,._ fllANTS fll pw .......,....,,_
!ROI 111111 UDDI
ITMI TtlllA &...._
....... Calll. ........... ~ ..... 'f· et Cl Oaw ~
Wllll• roa CATALOOVll
FAIR e.IELD :-SUISUN AIR FORCE BASE ·co" • First Hand Story of Recon1
By .Publisher-Writer, Gu.e!
By J. CUFTON TONEY, Publl1her, Solano Republican
To the residenta of Solatlo County the sight of a giant B-29
Superfortress, or the even larger new B-36 lofting in the heav-.
ens is almost as familiar as their own broad acres of rolling
pasture and grain land, or the vast fruit orchards that nestle
the foothills of their rich valleys.
Solano County, one of California's original 27 counties
that celebrated its centennial anniversary this year, was boun-
tifully sustained for most of those 100 yeats by the product3
of its soil. True, the West's oldest military arsenal is located
In the City of Benicia, Callfor-
nla'a nnrt State Capltol; anc;t the to make contact with the ene-
Navy'1 Mare Island Shipyard i8 my." Jn theBf" words Brig. Gen.
Just six miles away ftl Vallejo, Robert F. Travis, Commanding
Solano'• largest clty. Both have General of F-S AFB. briefly
contributed l m m e n 8 e govem-5tate-s the importance of this
ment. payrolla. to \)le economy of comparatively new pha~ of air
the county for man,. years. bat warfare . .And another fact obout
ajriculture ,,., • ._ and aUll la, the ·~testc reconnalssance Gen. maJ~ of Solano count.,y. Travla never falla t.o make
But World War u broualll known ls thnt the mlsalon la
Falrfleld-Sulsun Alr Force Base never complete untll the bomb-
1nto_ existe~. and with It came er·type reconnalsaa~ plane re-turns to lta home base and dJs-
a new era of proeperlty for the charges its lmportat fijm map·
Cltizena of Solano. sines, radar scope charta, weath-
, •Jw•pl•• Off" &.lie
Located on a vast tract of land
.even miles east of the ·county
seat, Fakfleld, and lta Twin
-City. Sullun, F-S AFB .erved an
important role in war yeitn u
the "Jumping off" but for oper-
aUona lil tbe Paclflc. Converted
to a peacetime role, the ideally
situa\ed fteld wu home bese tor • alrcraft n,ylng the Gttat Circle
Route, hauling suppllea and pel'
80nne1 to Hawaii, the Ph11l~
p1nee and tbe Far East. During
~ years 1mmedlatel1 follow·
Ing the war F-S AfB waa oper·
ated by MA TS-MlUtary .Alt
Tr an 1 P. or t Service-and thut
branch or our eervtce ls still an
important phaee of operations
there.
However, with the lnettaaed
emphuis being placed on air
power. F-S AFfJ today carrie• on
a conUnU0\19 ml.l&k>n of readl·
nem. JJ tbe home of the Giant
B-38, this naUon '• 1arp9t land·
' based bomber, tr e men do u 1
stl1dea att ~I taken ln de-
veloping a comparatively new
pbue of Alr Force operation&-
Strategic Reconnaissance.
Jn their briabt blue uniforma
otnc-r11 and en.Uated men of the
Air Foroe are a tam.War sl•ht
on the street.a of the dUefl of
Solano County. Shopping ln mar·
keta and department st.om with
thelr .Svee, dancing ln nl1bt
club9 with their girl friends or
attending church with lbelr fam·
Ules on Sundays, theee AJrmen
lead the same off-duty lives as
tbelr ch1llan neighbors. On duty,
they mp Jnto another world.
What def they do there? How
Important l8 their· work 1 To
answer these quest.Iona the writ·
er, report.Ing for Magazine Call·
fornlo, wH aUowed the privilege
of joining· them brlef17 lo their
't routine duties.
*In event of another wa~ Air·
men flytna strategic reconnals-
sance m.laalon.e will be the first
er dnta and other highly tech·
nlcal lnfonnntlon gathered by
the crew t.o be lntell>reted and
diasemlnat.ed to bomber crews
who will later ny the same
route.
The lnf or ma ti on supplied by
tbne pioneer airmen over a giv·
en tarpt area-through the me-
d.Juin ot powerful cameras that.
plck up ln minute detail all nec-
essary i n f o' r m a tl on about
ground 1 n 1 t a I 1 a t l o n • t.o be
bombed-glvea de3dly accuracy
to the bombardler who follow•
them. Success of the bombing
mlaaion ts further lns\Jred by
dnt.a suppUed by strategic recon·
naisaance radarmen. who chart
the route t.o be flown on radar
BCOPH; by the navtgat.or, who
also plots the courae uslng celes-
tial navtgatlon, records ot iden·
tHic:itlon potnta along the way
and by other navigational proc·
esses that may be duplicated by
those who follow him; and by
every other crew member of the
strategic reconnaiaaance aircTaft.
each for hla counterpart on the
bomber plane to follow.
f'1'acdce M•srlou
Glant Superf ortrHBe&-B-29's-
equlpped with all the latest equi~
ment developed by the United
Statn tor atrat.egtc reconnais-
sance purposes, are daily nytng
pracUce missions f r6m Fairfleld-
Sulsun AFB to points thousands
of mJlee away and returning
non .. top, keeping ln constant
readJneu for any emergency . .As
rapidly as they can be delivered,
IJ)eclally equipped B-36'a will be
sitbstituted for the 29'1.
CoL Arwol4 Co•ma ...
Typical of the missions being
flown la that one earlier thls
month, on which the writer was
a pasaenger. From start t.o fln.
lah, from pre-fll&ht briefing the
day before Uke-of I to de-briefing
immediately upon landing .. every
aspect of strat.eRfc reconnala·
sance waa demonstrated by the
Air Force offlcera and enlisted
men of the 9th Wlng, 5th Stra·
t.egtc Reconna1183n~ 0 r o u p,
'?.3rd Squadron, F ·S AFB, under
command of Col Wl\lt.er E . Ar·
nold. Following ls the story of
lhnt flight.
f>n Thursday afternoon at 3:00
o'clock members of Crew A·2
were called to oommand' head-
quarters and given theJr first in·
formation regarding the sched·
uled flight the next day. Opera·
tions officer, Capt. James B.
Wagner, Jr., pointed out on a
map that covered one wall of the
briefing room the first and see·
on<.lary targets selected-Salt
Lake City as target No. l, with
Phoenix, Ariz., as the optional
target m event of weather condl·
Oona over Salt Lake would not
allow for perfect photography.In
turn, members of Capt. Wagner's
staff outllned the s~lal details
each had prepared for the bene-
fit of the night crew. Pilot and
co-pilot were told at what alti-
tude they would ny to the tar-
get. and return, how to mnke
their photographic run over the
tarset. and whot weather condi·
Uons would be encountered en·
route. The navlptor was t.old
what compass course he would
foltow, chec.k·polnta to chart
along the way and a mass of
other detailed information for
h1m to follow. The radar oper-
ator was told at what lntervala
he should phot.ograph hls scope,
an<l he too waa ln!ormed as to
ldentification polnta along the
way be should record. Photog-
raphers were gtven detailed ln·
structlona as to what pho~
IJ"DPhe they should take on the
run over the target. and at what
lntervala they should set their
cameras for exposure to provide
terraiQ pictures of the enUre
area.
And IO on down the line until
every crew member was fuUy
instructed about his duties from
start to flnleb of the fllght.
At 7:20 the next morning, aa
scheduled, the B 29 c.arrylng
Crew .A·2 and one lone newspa·
pennan took off from F·S AFO
and circled east toward Salt
Lake. Under the experlenced
hand or LL Edward E . Sandin,
alrcraft commander with nearly
12,000 hours to his credl t, the
plane began its long cUmb t.o
20,000 feet, the alutude set for
the f)lght.
Obeen• Crew
Enroute to Ogden, Utah, first
J.P. (Identification Point) from
which the photo run over Salt
Lake would start. weather pro-
vlding, the wrlter left h18 ob-
servation a.eat in the glaaed-ln
noae of the B-29 to meet. the
crew members and observe them
at their du Ues.
With automatic pilot a.et, Lt.
Sandin was free t.o tell 90me-·
thing of hl8 Int.ere.Ung hlatory.
A native Californian from Ne-
vada City, he flnrt began ~ avt·
ation carttr In 1931 as a private
pilot. Lat#r he obtained hl• cozn.
merclal Hcense and operated air-
PoTta ln Sacramento and hill horn~ city until the outbreak of
World War 11, when he went to
Sequoia Field at Visalia, as a
clvlllan flight lnatructor, lat.er
to be<'ome chief pilot there. En-
listing In the Army Air Force
In HM4, he was assigned t.o the
India-Chin.a-Burma theatre of o~
eratJons and new 63 mi881ona
over "The Hump." Now 36 yean
old and beyond the age for pro-
motion trom hls rank of first
lieutenant., the genial aircraft
commander says he will stay
wl th the Al r Force as long as
they wm have hlm, because
''Where else can a pilot get be-
h
-------------------..--....
NTI NU ES ITS . "MISSION OF ·REAE)INESS"
naissa~ce Fligh t Related
st of A-2 Crew on Trip
hinct the controlR of a million
dollar plaue like this?"
Wlt.h his wire Allee and 1 l·
year-0ld daughter, Gale, Lt. San-
din makes his home in Vallejo'3
Chabot Terrace, a government
housing project. It was from his
wife we learned there is a San·
din Island in the Far North, dis·
covered by her husband when
he was testing ski-equipped alr-
crart in Greenland for the Air
1''orce ..
Sitting alongside Lt. Sandin
was the co-pilot, 1st Lt. William
Jr~erUg, also a World War 11 vet-
eran, from Indluna. Married and
the father of two sons, one and
fl ve years old, Lt. FerUg albO
makes hls home in Vallejo.
Riding back-to-back with the
co-pllot, separated by a crash
wall, was M/Sgt Garland Win-
free, a veteran of 13 years tn
the Air Force. Confronting Sgt.
Winfree there was a maze or ln·
etrument dials that commanded
most of his at~ntlon, but he
freed himself long enough to tell
us he had married an Australian
girl during the war, but waa
"batching" 1 t now while his wile
was visiting her homeland
Across from Sgt.. Winfree, and
one of the bualest men aboard
the c.aircra!t, rode the navigator,
youthful LL IA>ren Peck, who
cJespl~ hJs young appearance,
informed us he new 54 misslona.
tn Africa and Italy. A married
man and faU1er now, he also
Hves in Chabot Terrace.
Jn a private '•suite" behind the
navigator and engineer rode
St SgL Jo'red Wilson, radioman. A
navy veteran of the carrier Hor-
net, Sgt. Wllson now has two
years in the Air Force to his
cr~tlit. and as a single man, Uves
In the non-com barracks at Ule
baEW.
To lnter"lew the other crew
members, your reporter had to
crawl through the long tube \hat
connects the pressurized for·
ward and rear comparunenl8 of
the B-29. Back tbere 'Woe found
the baby member of the crew,
Jf>.year-old Cpl. Ramon Espino-
sa, gunner; and two overseas
veterans T /Sgt.. Arthur Tanner,
lat photographer; and T /Sgt.
Jack Goodman, 2nd photosJ"apb·
er, who was celebrating his wed·
dJng anniversary with us that
day.
The two crewmen with the
largeet famlllff, three children
each, both were aft members of
the flight crew; Lt. Lewia Con·
ley, radannan, and S/Sgt. Albttt
JohniOn, gunner.
The 11nal cl'ew member was
Sgt. Edward Sousa, another ex-
navymnn who .elected the Air
Force for r~nJlstment-not to
change his duties as an expert
gunner.
Up front agaha af~r the !°e'-
turn trip through the tube, we
were just passina over the flnit
I. P, Og~n. Utah, at 9:24 a.m.,
and eight. minutes later over
Salt Lake, we briefly glimpsed
the shining dome of the famed
Mormon Temple through the
cloud masa belo•.
.. No pboto run bere/' reported
Ll Sandin, tcannfng the ground
20,000 feet below tor identlflca·
tion points, 80 a course was set
for Wickenburg, Artz., L P. for
Rtart of the photo run over
Phoenix.
l"bo<'nlx Photo Run
The two hour flight south was
high-lighted by the beautlea of
Grand C.anyon as they passed
beneath us, and we arrived over
Wickenburg at 11:17 a.m. to st.art
the photo run over the specific
target.-the business center of
Phoenlx.. Cameras were set to
shoot one plctur~ every 40 11ee-
onds on the !)().mile flight llne,
aod these films, later developed.
would map the entire area for
the imaginary bomber crew to
follow. A navigator, check.Ing
visual points on the photo-
graphs, could easily follow the
ldeoUcal run set by our reoon·
naJsaance fllght, or if not visible
to the naked eye, they could ~
ltientttled from pictures on the
radar screen, Ukewlse being pho-
tographed on our run over the
target. The giant 4(}.lnch focal
length caroera carrled ln place
of a bomb load aboard our air·
craft. would record on fJJm, a
greatly magnifled vlew of th~
ctt.y below, from which experts
could easily identify au ground
installations and select the most
important for precision bomb-
ing.
Jet Fl&hfftra Attack
Circling after the run over
Phoenix, the Olght home over
Death Valfey, Mt. Whitney, Se-
quoia National Park and along
the fringe or Yosemite was un·
event..fUl until our alrcrart was
intercepted by F 84 jet flghtera
from Hamilton Field The dar·
lng fight.er pUota simulated an
octu.al attack of our heavy bomb-·
er, laying off ln the clouds above
us.out of gun range, then zoom·
lng down to attack at speeds ap.
pr2achJng t.hat of sound, with
their guns ex}>08lng camera fllm
at the press of a trigger. Gun·
nen aboard our aircraft monned
their weapons, simllarly JoadeJ
with rum, and fought back. Over
the lntncom \.My could be
heard telling one another where
the next attack wae oomlng
from. "One corning In at 7:00
o'clock high," Gunner John.son
report.ect. and eoon afw the
terse reply, ··G<>t Him" fr<>m Cpt
Espinosa on the other Bide Of
the plane. Whether or not he
told the truth would be ahown
when the film mquinea from
h.ls gun were developed.
Meanwhile, Lt. Sandin maneu
vered our aircraft In .mild evaa-
1 ve t.acUca to test the ablUUes
of the fighter pilots, but kffplng
Jn mind the safety of the civil-
ian pasaenger aboard.
Gun magazines exhausted, Ole
Jets left us after a halt hour ot
t.ag and seek over the airport,
and the methodical talk of brt"--
ing the Superfort 1n tor a land-
lng began Radlo contact with ·
the tower waa established and
ln&Vuctiona given for landing
according to GCA-Ground Con-
U'ol Approach.
The accuracy of ground con-
trol can easily be determined
when we we~ informed by the
tower t.hat at slx miles out, com·
Ing In on our filght pattern, we were 40 feet too high. Narrowln1
it. down to the finest det:ali, at
five miles out, the ground con·
trol oflicer stated "'You are now
five feet below flight pattern."
We were over the field and
..
scarcefy 50 feet In the alr when • Lt Sandin woe 1f)ld to take over
and make his own landing.
lnformatJoa P~
On the ground again after
nearly 2000 mllea and seven
hours, 50 mlutes 1n the air, the
second phase of etrateaic recon·
nalBsanoe took over. All inCor-
maUoil. gathered on our fllght
was Immediately taken to
''Recky Tech," Reconnaluance .
Technical headquarters. Remem.
ber the word& of Gen. Travta,
°'The mlaslon ls not complete un·
tU the atreralt 1' on the ground
and Jt8 lntonnluJOn proceaed. ..
Befo~ the sun •t th t da.1.
Phoenix waa a naked city for a
bomblng attack.. From the ma·
te.rlal supplied by OUI' tugbt,
Recky Tech crew1 had ~
mined it.I every oblllty to p10-
duce men and material.a of wer.
Its defenses were an open book..
Armed with the inf ormatlon 1ve
gathered, a bomblnt attack force
would ~now when and wb r. to
approach the city, wben1 to drop
Its bomb load and bow to ...
cape-even though pllota and
crew members could not 11ee tho
clcy below them.
But there would be another
mission for ltrategic recotinala·
14ll~ tn case of actual.: ar, and
that. would be a eecond !Upt
over the target after the bomb-
ing to, damage asseasm nt pur·
poses. Photos taken on the .ee-
ond mlsaion would determl~ if
the target should be re-bombed.
But our work tor thJ• day waa
done. For the newspaperman lt
was a memorable 9perte.nce-a
thrUUng night, a glimpse behind
the acenes of our mllita.ry pr•
paredneu, an assurance that our
peacetime Air Force ill perform-
Jng a vital functJon in develop-
ing a new technique that will
save countless. llvea ln even\ of
another war. ,
For the otflcen and enllated
men of Crew A·2, lt wu Jmt an-
other day'a work. Sst-GoOdmAn
went h«Jme to ~Jebrate bk wed·
ding anniversary; Lt. Sandln to
finiah apadln1 h18 garden, and
lat.er to read the funnJ• with
his dauglittt G•. Cpl. Espinosa
and Sgt. Wllaon both bad daie.
that nicht eveq member of
the crew knew trom UNnJna to
lhem d1scuaa a\ dull l'llObanta
over the intercom durlnl OW'
fllght.
Tomorrow ..• or the next day,
the..-would be another fillbt
for lhele men. ADOtber -.raet.
anotMr coune to be plotted.
Strategic ReconnaJsaance a. p
stndy job at J'alrfleld-SUisun
Air Force Base theae da19.
~ 9'0M ~'"'~ ••• ••T•L WHIT C O M B
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C'Siddie ~orner
tw7t(Y rS A CAP ON \/V A PA111t~Ul TOQT~
1.AR6ER THAN A CAP
ON A lofEAJ> ?
The BurllJ1gtOn f amlly were at
. wit's end for their Uvellhood,
and were t1ghting for economic
survival, but tound their solu-
tion through candyma.king at
home. The wldow Burlington,
her ln'falld mother, her slx chil-
dren and an u n e m p 1 o y e d
brother, all pitched In and made
thls home industry a success .••
Don Olson, who suffered a
broken hand in baseball, found
that he waa adept at manipula-
tion of rubber balls, which the
doctor prescribed for cure In the
hospital After he had recov-
ered, he found that he could en-
tertafh others through the han-
dling of these rubber balls, 800n
he had a routine and found him-
self booked tn many places for a
balancing act with a bit ot Jug-
gling. Today, Mr. Olson bu a
f\ill magic show that grew out of
his injured hand and a home In-
dustry that expanded! .•. One
of the most vicious rackets ol
the year ls the busl ness broker
who demands an advance tee to
Ust your business for ule, room.I
for rent. house or property for
sale. Get a clear unders~
of Just what services be or she
agrees to perform. Gyp pro-
moters change listing fees and
then perform no services! lf
you doubt th.Us ag.!nt, COD8\llt
your bank at once, or call your
Better Business BUttau! .•• One
other petty racket that LI gow-
lng ls for a restaurant to adver-
tise "complete meals" and then
flnd out that you have been
charged extn for the eoup, salad,
dessert and even the coffee!
Spring la the time for Deeclng-
so beware! • * •
Q. My husband bu been Ill
' and out of work. We came fJ'Om
MlchJgo.n. Will we rel work
soon! Mrs. L.E.B.
A. Your bwlba.nd wW feel
much better very 9000, and l
eense you botb wor~ You
need not feel badly about thl9
suc!den change ot tortune: u
good f ortuoe w1ll happen to you
Juat aa qulckly. I want you to
koow that I Rnse ~ery wonder-
ful thJnp around you both. • * •
Q. How Jong will my husband
work for th.la companyf How
long will I work? Will our on
royalty ever be drllled on and
•hen7 Mn E.S.N.
A. For quite a wbll~. Three
more yea.rs. and t.ben you w1ll
have a good paytn• tii.•11.,,... of
your ownt Aa for your oil NY·
alt,y, see your banker and he wUl
be able to actfi.e J'O'L
INVESTORS
It t1 a ~ fact that parttdpaUon ln the common
stock offering of a youna. well organlzed. ,rowing corpor-
ation that bu to otter.
1. Reasonable eipect.aUon ot enMncement of lnvest..
, ment,
2. Expert mana,mient,
3. Unbroken record of quarterly dlv1denda slntt tlrst
year of o~tion,
4. SubetanUal yearly tncreue ln assets,
5. Re.d7 market for Its producta,
6. Unbroken record of sa~ customtts, 7 Expanaion of tu faclUUee to meet the demand for It.a
· product. by r.ome of the Nation's largest CorporaUons
could lead to expectation of reasonable enhancement. It I'
Ole opinion of the management of Central Machine Work•
Corporation that thil CorporaUon bas such an investment
to ofter.
ACT NOW
$10.00 per s~
nta •ffH I• Ual~ Ud aa1 h ...... ,. .. wtilt9wt a-'ke.
---------~·~· _______________ _.. ________ .._ ______ __
GcntltmM\.'
Further lnfonnaUon 18 desired regarding the oflerlng or your Capital Stock at par $10.00 per shar~.
NAME .........•••.. · · · · • • • • • • · · · • • • • • · • • · · · • • · · • · · · · · · · •
STR E'ET ........... · · · · • • · • • · • · · • · • • • • · • · • · • • • • • · · · • · · · · ·
CITY ..•••.••.............•••• • ..•........••••....... \V.A.
CENTRAL
MACHINE WOW CO"ORA TION
MaJn OfOce an4 Martoe Dlvlttlon
Foot of 29th Av•. Klllon 2·73J4 Oakland, Calif.
Thb o/fmnq fa made to bona ffdt rt1Ldent•
of Calff ornfa cmlJI
I
TDt, wttb dual Yal'fe 8eGe ..-... fc~. ~Uoo~ •• , .. 94ift. .. fWi, fZJM
f'OIMn and ptQa ..... ~···"••··= Tl>U, WLe -•, ooJ1 '"1t hr •••••
, 'lll '1-raoa-er .... , lUle MW• , •• ~ MADCIU. K.t.CJll.HIUlY 00. •10 e.-aua )U&bwa, " MAO~ J>.liW'l.11 loaol
J'Oa llALll &ai.90HAIU..a 0.. 1t' ~---lllM-l!new; •• ~ c.au.u; -.. .. a.anow; .. n. 8«" ........ ~ pW""-L \lll'C&e .. ~ ~1 ~ ~ ........... 11.oeL
RAT ·~ Jualw Moaarea. 6 win. UU .... OeoA ..,, Joe ~ r. 0. ._ ua,
De 0.-. ca1lt.
Jl&D T All .Pla~a•at1-n 9-.t POl&C• pWIU. W , llla4, JU. I, ...
'"· va.u.. .
Help Wanhd-Men
.,.~m:..~ '===~ .. ·~·-..........
•rrIL ~~..JA!!...<!' o ...... w ..... o~'c.ull'~
Ml..a .... .,.
!
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f r ' -
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he do .,. Cracked Crab Grune rs it. ·
-
Connoisseurs of
CoTMstibles <J(J it! •
.n~ op .
~v3 '"fO;) umO(] "P~Sdfl
Hasenpfeffer Habitues
do it!•
T·Bone Tasters do it!•
Pizza Patrons do it/• t
..
'
Borscht Buyers do it! •
. . .
* Spaghetti Spinners do it!•
Abalone Addicts
do it!•
Taco TaJJters
do it!.
--..""' ..
Chefs de Cuisine cU> it!•
Food Editors ~! • .
Cioppino Crauers do it!•
Shishkebab Stabbers do it!•
·* for ...
w;_, 6 to 4 11 8112 taste
tests vs. 6igier prk-' Mtrs
I
..
..