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1953-09-07 · Anaheim Bulletin · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Vehicle Code Changes Listed Four major changes in the Vehicle Code of California enacted by the Legislature were called to the attention of the motoring public today by highway officials. Section 531 of the code is a new law effective Wednesday which makes it unlawful for the driver of any motor truck or any motor abusiness district or residential district, to follow another truck or car towing a trailer less than 500 feet to the rear except in passing. This law does not apply to passenger vehicles drawing camping trailers or towing another passenger car. Section 649 of the code is amended to be effective Wednesday and provides that it is unlawful for the driver of a vehicle following another vehicle within 200 feet, to use the high beam of his headlights. This does not apply, however, when overtaking and passing the car ahead. Another section amended is 674, which reads that it now requires any motor vehicle registered in California after Jan. 1, 1954, must have a mirror by which the driver can see the road for at least 200 feet to the rear of his car. Sections 685 and 686 are new laws which go into effect Jan. 1, 1954 which provide that all trucks used primarily for the transportation of workmen, must be equipped with seats, railings, and with steps for the purpose of mounting and dismounting, and further provides that all such trucks transporting workmen in addition to those riding in the cab must come to a complete stop at all railroad crossings in the same manner that gasoline trucks, buses, and taxi cabs are required to stop. Newhall Brush Fire Rages Out of Control NEWHALL (UP)—U.S. Forestry Service and county firemen today hoped to control a raging brush fire which has swept over an estimated 2,000 acres near here, destroying at least one structure and 200 hogs. Damage to livestock and ranch equipment, including hogs, chickens, brooders, haybarns, fences and communication lines, was estimated at more than $50,000. The fire broke out in Sand canyon shortly after noon yesterday and spread quickly into Pcallerest and Soledad canyons about sixty miles northeast of here. One injury was reported. Fire Captain John Franklin suffered a possible fractured ankle when a boulder tumbled from a hill in the fire area. He was taken to Newhall Community hospital. Some 200 firefighters were manning the fire lines. A Forestry Service spokesman said it was hoped the fire would be under control before noon today. A small structure, nearly 100 chickens and several acres of barley were destroyed on the Gene Walker ranch. Th A&A hog ranch, owned by Jack Arkellan and Art Agajianlan, reported 200 hogs were destroyed in addition to brooding houses and other equipment. Whittier Co-Ed Will Discuss Orientation Ways in which the new student Orientation program can successfully be continued throughout the entire school year will be the theme for discussions when 65 Whittier College co-eds meet on the Post campus on September 13. Water Contracts Being Reviewed SACRAMENTO (UP)—Terms of the Bureau of Reclamation's controversial water user contracts are under review by the Department of the Interior, officials have confirmed. "The department's solicitor is reviewing the whole thing," said R. S. Calland, assistant supervising engineer of the bureau's California Projects Office. But he denied statements made at last week's meeting of the state Water Project Authority that the department now desires to renegotiate its contracts with water users. The review was disclosed when the bureau asked the authority to stipulate to a delay in several of the controversial contract validation cases now pending in court. Attorneys said the bureau had asked a delay in the Ivanhoe, Madera, Sauselito, Albonico and Santa Barbara cases. The Water Project Authority took no action on the request except to agree to meet at the earliest possible opportunity for a full dress review of the legal situation which finds Attorney General Ed. Mund G. Brown supporting validity of the contracts while the state Division of Water Resources opposes them. State Officers Disagree The failure to act was apparently a victory for Brown, who argued against delay in the cases. He was opposed by Henry Holsinger, principal attorney for the division, and others. The question was opened by Harry Horton, widely known water attorney, who told the authority: "The Department of Interior desires that all contracts be renegotiated to get rid of objections. They ask the cases be held in abeyance." Sections 685 and 686 are new laws which go into effect Jan. 1, 1934 which provide that all trucks used primarily for the transportation of workmen, must be equipped with seats, railings, and with steps for the purpose of mounting and dismounting, and further provides that all such trucks transporting workmen in addition to those riding in the cab must come to a complete stop at all railroad crossings in the same manner that gasoline trucks, buses, and taxi cabs are required to stop. Local POW Feted by Friends and Relatives (Continued from Page 1) received from Anaheimers. He said he went to a dance last night and people he had never seen before shook his hand, welcomed him home. He said this has occurred every place he has gone since being home and has overwhelmed him. Manuel reports to Port Ord Oct. 6 to be discharged. He said he has no definite plans while he is home on leave, but after being discharged and receiving his back pay, he and two of his buddies that were in prison with him are going to Mexico City for an extended vacation. One of the things Manuel missed most during his 23 months of imprisonment, he said, was the sound of a woman's voice. "It really sounded good to hear a woman talk," he said with a big smile. When asked if he had a girl, Manuel laughed and said "no" Whittier Co-Ed Will Discuss Orientation Ways in which the new student Orientation program can successfully be continued throughout the entire school year will be the theme for discussions when 65 Whittier College co-eds meet on the Poet campus on September 12. The long-range planning conference will be the first event of the extensive Orientation program which will get officially underway on Sunday, Set. 13, when approximately 350 new students will arrive. Representing the three women's service organizations, Senior Counselors, Junior Sponsors, and Sosecos, the girls will evaluate programs of past years in an attempt to insure that incoming students will receive the greatest possible benefit from the Orientation program. Beverly Kohn, Associated Women Students, president, and Miss Marjorie Gregg, Dean of Women, are being assisted with plans for the meeting by Elizabeth Adams, Mary DeLapp, and Joan Erreca. Senior Sponsor, and Soseco chairmen respectively. and I have no intentions of getting one for awhile. After all I'm only 21, so give me a chance. Besides, I have my vacation in Mexico City coming up and that comes first. We spent two years planning it and that is number one on my list of things to do. State Officers Disagree The faire to act was apparently a victory for Brown, who argued against delay in the cases. He was opposed by Henry Holsinger, principal attorney for the division, and others. The question was opened by Harry Horton, widely known water attorney, who told the authority: "The Department of Interior desires that all contracts be renegotiated to get rid of objections. They ask the cases be held in abeyance until they get a chance to do so." Holsinger said that at a conference with Clyde Spencer, chief of the California Projects Office, the purpose of the requested delay was said by Spencer to be to "permit the department to study the very important questions presented by the litigation and orient its future course." Wants to Avoid Suits Holsinger said he sought the delay in the public interest of avoiding long drawn out litigation. Brown argued it was in the best interest of the state to have the validity of the contracts determined in the courts as quickly as possible. He said he understood the Madera Irrigation District and the Santa Barbara Irrigation District also opposed any delay. Brown said the continuance of litigation need have no effect on renegotiation of the contracts. "They're licked," interjected Horton, "That's why they are willing to negotiate. If you succeed in unlicking them, they'll tell us to jump in the lake." If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin GHOSTLY HOOFBEATS by Norman A. Fox CHAPTER FOURTEEN THE SUN was well up when Manning awakened to find Laura dressed and seated on the edge of the bunk, combing out her long tawny hair. She looked up at him, smiling faintly, and said, "I guess we both slept late. If you'll get a fire going, I'll make some breakfast." "Sure," he said. Boots and belt donned, he rattled the stove lids and picked kindling from a box that had probably been kept filled by the elusive Purdy. He looked about for paper and remembered the letter inside his shirt, the one from the warden, the one Sheriff Burke Griffin had given him. He used the envelope to get the fire started; and while Laura rumaged in the food sacks, he and helped send the man to Doer Lodge for life. An unofficial job, according to Burke Griffin; and that made sense, too, for Flint Manning had shucked his badge two years before... The smell of coffee rose in the dugout, and Manning saw Laura busying herself before the stove. He heard a bacon sizzling, and a short time later she called him to the table. He ate absently, his mind still working at that letter, and then it hit him. Gall There was a queer name for a man to be packing, though once or twice in his life Manning had heard of people with such a surname. But Gal could also be short for Galveston, the place of Texas Joe Bridger's birth. Six foot one and a half. A hundred and eighty-five feet in addition to brooding houses and other equipmen. Whittier Co-Ed Will Discuss Orientation Ways in which the new student Orientation program can successfully be continued throughout the entire school year will be the theme for discussions when 65 Whittier College co-eds meet on the Poet campus on September 12. The long-range planning conference will be the first event of the extensive Orientation program which will get officially underway on Sunday, Set. 13, when approximately 350 new students will arrive. Representing the three women's service organizations, Senior Councilors, Junior Sponsors, and Sosecos, the girls will evaluate programs of past years in an attempt to insure that incoming students will receive the greatest possible benefit from the Orientation program. Beverly Kohn, Associated Women Students, president, and Miss Marjorie Gregg, Dean of Women, are being assisted with plans for the meeting by Elizabeth Adams, Mary DeLapp, and Joan Erreca. Senior Sponsor, and Soseco chairmen respectively. and I have no intentions of getting one for awhile. After all I'm only 21, so give me a chance. Besides, I have my vacation in Mexico City coming up and that comes first. We spent two years planning it and that is number one on my list of things to do. He felt her eyes on him. "What changed your mind?" she asked. "Burt Griffin would only scold you and turn you loose. Why should I waste the time?" Then I'm going with you to Slash 7." "No!" he snapped, and that one word was wrung out of something skim to fear. She leaned forward, laying a hand on his arm, her face showing faint alarm. "Cole you're pinning too much faith on a badge," she said intently. "Suppose Mack Torgin isn't of a mind to let Packrat go and decides to keep you prisoner, too. He's capable of it. Have you thought'of that?" "Yes," he said. "But I'll chance it." smiling faintly, and said, "I guess we both slept late. If you'll get a fire going, I'll make some breakfast." "Sure," he said. Boots and belt donned, he rattled the stove lids and picked kindling from a box that had probably been kept filled by the elusive Purdy. He looked about for paper and remembered the letter inside his shirt, the one from the warden, the one Sheriff Burke Griffin had given him. He used the envelope to get the fire started; and while Laura rummaged in the food sacks, he sat down to give the letter a quick skimming: ...Joseph Bridger, known as Texas Joe Bridger...born in Galveston, Texas...former cowboy ...convicted of murdering and rustling at Shelby in 1894...in early prison years evidenced a great hatred for Flint Manning ...escaped recently...six foot one and a half...one hundred and eighty pounds...light hair...blue eyes...model prisoner in many respects... Manning folded the letter and thrust it into his pocket, his eyes thoughtful. 1894...He'd been—let's see—ten years old then. Lately he'd learned just how tricky memory could be. Here was another sample. He could remember things from the early Bootjack days, yet this later event had escaped him completely. But now that he thought about it, fragments of recollection began pleasing themselves together. There was that group of grim-faced riders who'd come to the Maria ranch and talked to his father in the yard. That must be the time his father had been gone for so many days and his mother had paced the floor and peered from the windows and stood in the yard evenings, looking to the far horizons till it grew too dark to see. His father had come home, but whatever he'd had to say had been for his wife's earn only. Thereafter he'd gone again, a few weeks later, and Cole Manning remembered asking about that and being told that his father had gone to testify in court. "How do you like your eggs?" Laura asked. "Straight up," he answered absently. Testify...So that had been the time when Flint Manning had tracked down Texas Joe Bridger The smell of coffee rose in the dugout, and Manning saw Laura buys herself before the stove. He heard bacon sizzling, and a short time later she called him to the table. He ate abstently, his mind still working at that letter, and then it hit him. Gal! There was a queen name for a man to be packing, though once or twice in his life Manning had heard of people with such a surname. But Gal could also be short for Galveston, the place of Texas Joe Bridger's birth. Six foot one and a half. A hundred and eighty pounds. Blue eyes. Yes, it all fitted. "I think," he said slowly, "that I'll have two jobs to do at Slash 7." She made a face. "So you're a lawman the last thing before you go to sleep and the first thing when you get up." He shoved back his plate and drained his coffee cup. "Time to get going," he announced. "It must be near noon." He walked over to his discarded chaps and climbed into them. When he'd saddled and helped her up behind him, they rode down the coulee to where she'd left the team hobbled and the wagon standing. He frowned, facing a problem. He could hitch up the team and have Laura drive the wagon back to town, but they would have to stay with the wagon road, and he wamn't sure that would be wise. He suggested that she ride one of the team bareback as she'd done yesterday. She fashioned a hackamore from a bit of rope in the wagon, and shortly they were jogging along side by side. "Rather sit a saddle?" he asked. She shook her head. "I like riding Injun style." Laura knew the trail which led to Slash 7. In late afternoon, when they'd dropped to the basin's floor again and were crossing openness, she pointed west. "See that clump of trees?" she said. "Head through them and you'll find yourself on the trail that drops down to Slash 7. You'll need to know so you can find your way when you come back from town." He drew rein and was careful not to look at her. "I'm not going to take you on to town," he said gruffly. "We part here. I'm going to Torgin's." "No!" he snapped, and that one word was wrung out of something akın to fear. She leaned forward, laying a hand on his arm, her face showing faint alarm. "Cole, you're pinning too much faith on a badge," she said intently. "Suppose Mack Torgin isn't of mind to let Packrat go and decides to keep you prisoner, too. He's capable of it. Have you thought' of that?" "Yes," he said. "But I'll chance it." "Name a time," she urged him. "Tell me how long you think it will take to do your chore down there. I'll wait up here. If you're not back by sundown, you'll know it's because I can't come back. So long, Laura." "So long, Cole," she said and lifted her hand and let it fall. Earlier this day, while Cole Manning and Laura Brownleh had prepared to ride south toward Slash 7, Slade Ruxton had left the vicinity of Torgin's ranch and turned his face toward Mannington. A sleepless night had weared Ruxton and left a shadow on his thinking. He'd set a goal when he'd come to the Bootjack, and his feeling was strong that the goal was very near, so near that he was filled with impatience. Yet now, more than ever, he must be careful, very careful. He could hear the clink of that twenty-five thousand dollars reward money, and it made sweet music in his ears. Hang onto yourself, his instinct shouted, but still impatience tautened him. Last night, when he'd stood in that ancient dugout and heard Laura Brownleh announce that Packrat Purdy had vanished, he'd taken the news without finching. Not that it didn't hit him hard. But often in a long career of pursuing an easy dollar he'd been checkmated, and often he'd wrung a new chance out of disaster. Torgin's found him," the girl had said, and that remark had pointed Ruxton's way. He'd been prepared to split the reward with Cole Manning, if necessary, though the notion had held no pleasure. But the trail had taken a sudden new turn and given Ruxton his chance to work alone again. (To Be Continued) CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING PERSONAL SALES TAKING NO CHANCES—Policeman (right) and detectives (center) stand guard over four of five gunmen lying face down in the street. The captives were caught attempting to break into a building in downtown New York. The fifth gunman was captured after being wounded in a running gun battle with police. Hospitalize Nine In Airliner Crash TACOMA, Wash. (UP) — Nine persons of 32 aboard a super-today for treatment of burns received when the plane crash-landed and burst into flames at McChord Air Force Base. Officer Tells of Red “Confession” By FRANK JORDAN INCHON, Korea, (UP)—An Air Force Colonel repudiated today his "confessions" that United Nations waged germ warfare in Korea and Democrats Link GOP Member to Four Percent Deal By FRANK ELEAZER Hospitalize Nine In Airliner Crash TACOMA, Wash. (UP) — Nine persons of 32 aboard a super-today for treatment of burns received when the plane crash-landed and burst into flames at McChord Air Force Base. All 32 aboard the plane wer pulled to safety in a dramatic pre-dawn rescue yesterday. Sixteen were burned as they scrambled through a circle of flaming gasoline. The Constellation was on a non-stop flight from Seattle to Chicago for Northwest Airlines, which had leased the plane from Eastern Airlines of the weekend. Northwest said one engine on the plane failed shortly after it took off from Seattle-Tacoma airport. The pilot, Russ Bird, decided to land at Portland, Ore., for repairs. However, the other engine on the same side failed as the Constellation passed over McChord. Bird was forced to make an instrument landing on the fog-shrouded field. As the plane struck the runway, the landing gear failed. One side of the plane crashed to the ground and the plane skidded, spilling gasoline in a circle. The accident took place about 2:30 a.m. PST. The flames reduced one wing of the plane to a lump of molten metal. The other wing was unundamaged. Quick-thinking Air Force personnel had drained its gasoline tanks. The body of the plane was left a charred hulk. The 16 injured were treated a McChord Base Hospital. Eight were still there. Included among those still hospitalized was Richard D. Ritter, of Seattle, Wash. The passengers included E. G. King, Bellingham, Wash.; Mrs. Francis Leonard and infant son Eric, Northway, Alaska; and Mrs. W. A. Hawley, Seattle, Wash. The crew consisted of Pilot Ross Bird, co-pilot Dale Moore; flight engineer R. Fuller; Stewart J. Johnson and Stewardess Murial Harms and Patricia Grivna, all of Seattle. Mutual Aid CLAREMONT, Calif. (UP) — Richard Castillo, a Navy veteran, and his wife, Dorothy, both of San Bernardino, Calif., took turns at bread-winning after their marriage in 1940 so each could get a B.A. degree at Pomona College. Dorothy got her degree in 1952, and Castillo, last June. He worked in a steel mill and she was a choral conductor in Chino High School. He will Officer Tells of Red “Confession” By FRANK JORDAN INCHON, Korea, (UP)—An Air Force Colonel repudiated today his "confessions" that United Nations waged germ warfare in Korea and said he was tortured into making the statements. Col. Frank Schwable of Arlington, Va. branded the Communist germ warfare' propaganda campaign as "fantastic lies based on false statements forced from helpless prisoners of war." Schwable, former chief of staff of the First Marine Air Wing, was the Communist' prized "confessor." He was freed in the last group of prisoners returned to the United Nations Command. "Until I was repatriated at Panmunjom yesterday, I expected to be met by a military policeman who would arrest me as a traitor," the colonel said. Death By Torture Schwable said he did as the Reds wanted only after he realized he must sign the charges or die by torture. Shortly after he was shot down on July 8, 1952, Schwable was segregated and thrown into a lean-to built against the side of a Korean house. He was kept there until he "confessed" at the end of November. "It was during the last couple of days in November that I gave up," Schwable said. "I was cold. I was damn cold. My hand was frozen." There was no question in my mind. I knew they weren't going to let me stand up in front of a firing squad. They were going to leave me there all winter. I knew I'd never make it through the winter." Forced To Write When he went in, the Chinese forced him to write up a plan of bacteriological warfare "as practised by the United States." He also recorded it for a broadcast and appeared in a movie with British Communist Alan Winnington, correspondent for the London Daily Worker. Schwable said he knew that American military men would scoff at the "confessions" and that most of the American public would refuse to believe it. Another Air Force officer, 1st Lt. Floyd B. O'Neal, 25, Fairfax, S.C., "confessed" to having dropped germ warfare bombs only after he was given 48 hours in which to sign or die. O'Neal said the Chinese took him to the prison compound at Brooklyn and made him feel safe. Democrats Link GOP Member to Four Percent Deal By FRANK ELEAZER WASHINGTON (UP) — Democrats demanded today that a House Armed Services subcommittee publish "all the facts" about a secret investigation which linked a prominent local Republican to an attempted "four per cent" deal on a Navy munitions contract. Rep. Potter W. Hardy (d-Va.) said the subcommittee's findings at closed-door hearings last June and July, "show clearly that neither political party has a monopoly on influence pedaling." He said he and other Democratic members will insist at a subcommittee tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, that the full transcript of the hitherto secret hearing be made public. There was no immediate comment from subcommittee Chairman William E. Hess (R-O.) but Congressional sources said he has no intention of hushing up the matter and has instructed the subcommittee staff to begin preparing a full report. More Inquiry Rep. William H. Bates (R-Mass) a member of the group, said at his home in Salem, Mass., the matter was not "resolved" but it looked like an "inside job" with someone in the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics "operating with someone outside." Authoritative information about the hearings, made available to reporters over the weekend, showed that a principal figure was Warren L. Stephenson, a Washington socialite, who traveled last fall on President Eisenhower's campaign train and later became executive secretary of the presidential inaugural committee. Stephenson, who could not be for a time as secretary of the swank Capitol Hill club organized by Republican members of Congress early this year. The subcommittee inquiry centered around testimony that Stephenson offered to help a California manufacturer sell launchers for the Navy's "mighty mouse" rockets. The testimony showed that Stephenson sought a fee of four per cent of the sale price, but the manufacturer turned down the offer and reported it to the Navy. Congress has frowned on the practice of seeking percentage fees for helping to line up government Mutual Aid CLAREMONT, Calif. (UP) — Richard Castillo, a Navy veteran, and his wife, Dorothy, both of San Bernardino, Calif., took turns at bread-winning after their marriage in 1940 so each could get a B.A. degree at Pomona College. Dorothy got her degree in 1952, and Castillo, last June, he worked in a steel mill and she was a choral conductor in Chino High School. He will study medicine at the University of California this fall. If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Saturday's Puzzle ACROSS 1-Part of leg 2-Happy 3-Outfit 4-Conceal 5-Joose garment 6-Eat 7-Unit 8-While 9-Colorless 10-Organ of heart 11-Shadow on his left a shadow on his right 12-Destruction when he'd set a goal when the Bootjack, and his strong that the goal is so near that he was impatient. Yet now, he must be careful. He could hear that twenty-five thousand reward money, and it music in his ears. yourself, his instinct still impatience taut when he'd stood in dugout and heard nolee announce that they had vanished, he'd was without finching. didn't hit him hard. A long career of purity dollar he'd been and often he'd wring out of disaster. "Torn," the girl had said,ark had pointed Ruxe'd been prepared toard with Cole Manary, though the no pleasure. But the man a sudden new turn ruxton his chance to regain. DOWN 1-The urial 2-True to history 3-Cyprinold fish 4-Man's nickname 5-Apothecary's weight (p.l.) 6-having rounded divisions 7-Hebrew month 8-River in Wales 9-Country of Asia 6-Preposition 7-Symbol for tellurium 8-Sun god 9-Explanation 10-Spoken instrument 11-Chief executives 12-Experiences 13-Layer 14-Cash drawer 15-match 16-Flynn 17-Killed 18-Bound 19-Man's name 20-Having delicate labs 21-Communion plate 22-Interlaces 23-Wheresfore 24-Spanish article 25-Nocturnal bird 26-Period of time 27-Afternoon party 28-Proposition 29-Prefix; down 30-Cooled lava 31-Indefinite article Opening Soon Orange County's Newest 12 ABC LANES FREEWAY BOWL Next to South Sens Club Openings for Team Leagues, Individuals Phone LAmbert 59112 SHAVERS Schick - Sunbeam - Remington" Shearing Heads - Repairs Scissors Ground Car Shaves - Shavex Free Demonstrations Liberal trade-in allowance on old shaver ANAHEIM BARBER SHOP 111 So. Los Angeles St. "Slick" Arrives At U.S. Air Base By JOSEPH FINNIGAN TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, (UP)—"Slick," a handsome prisoner of war accused of "tatting" on fellow Americans in Red prison camps, arrived here protesting he told the Communists nothing they did not already know. The Army corporal returned to the United States yesterday aboard a plane carrying 13 other former prisoners, six of them litter patients. The animosity against "Slick" came about for two reasons, he told an Air Force officer here. One was that he told the Reds about an escape plot hatched by some of the prisoners and the other was that he refused to take part in camp quarrels. He said the Reds called him in one day and began questioning him about the plans of some of the prisoners, himself included, to escape from a prison camp near the Yalu River. Admits Plan "I admitted the plan because I knew they were aware of it," he said. He added none of the other prisoners involved was angry at him because they knew what he was up against. "The others might have disliked me because various cliques in the camp had friction between them," he said. "Slick," said he refused to take part in these disputes. "I felt I should not be fighting Americans, but should have been fighting the enemy." Demies Reports He denied reports he had become a "progressive." "I couldn't have been swayed too much by the Commies as I had only one friend." Postgraduate Seminars In Medicine Scheduled Postgraduate clinical medical seminars, sponsored by the U.O.L.A. School of Medicine and Medical Extension and the Long Beach Branch of the Los Angeles County Medical Association, will be offered as the Public Health Auditorium in Long Beach starting September 29 and meeting on Wednesday from 2 to 5 p.m., once monthly through June 23 of 1954. Exception to the Wednesday rule will be the opening session on Tuesday afternoon, September 29, according to Thomas H. Sternberg, M.D. Head of Postgraduate Instruction and Medical Extension for the University. The course, open only to graduates of medical schools approved by the Council on Medical Education and hospitals of the American Medical Association, represents a considerable departure from the usual postgraduate lecture series, and is a result of the efforts of a number of people, including Dr. Victor Maron and the members of the Long Beach Branch Postgraduate Education Committee, to find a more satisfactory method of postgraduate medical teaching, according to Dr. Sternberg. It will be "an attempt to combine the advantages of panel teaching, case presentation and audience participation", and will carry 30 hours of credit approval from the California Academy of General Practice. Members of the Postgraduate Education Committee with the 1953-54 annual postgraduate seminar are Dr. Maron, chairman, and Sylvia S. Kahlstrom, Arthur Lepon, William S. Cheney, Pettus G. Secrest and Claude F. Wagner. At the initial meeting on September 29, Dr. Maron and Dr. Sternberg will introduce the series, with Drs. Sherman M. Mellinkoff, Walter Lincoln Palmer and James Halsted lecturing on Management of Patients with Liver Disease. Information concerning fees and Hold Plant Guard In Mercy Killing PHOENIX, Ariz., (UP)—Police today held a 54-year-old plant guard in the "mercy killing" of his invalid, helpless daughter. Detectives said that Henry Herman Nagle, Airsearch Co. plant guard, admitted the fatal shooting Saturday of his 28-year-old daughter, Betty Virginia. Nagle said he is a retired New York City police officer. He told police his daughter was "completely helpless." He said he "dressed her, fed her, and looked after her need." Nagle told reporters he shot his daughter twice in the head with a .45 caliber automatic while she slept at home in her wheel chair "because I loved her." He said he believed he was suffering from a serious illness and "didn't want to leave her all alone in the world." Miss Nagle was found by officers after neighbors reported hearing shots. Nagle met officers at the door and gave himself up; police said. They said the suspect told them he had not called them because he wanted to send a telegram to another daughter, Lillian H. Nagle in the Army Nurse General Practice. Members of the Postgraduate Education Committee with the 1953-54 annual postgraduate seminar are Dr. Maron, chairman, and Sylvia E. Kahlstrom, Arthur Lepon, William S. Cheney, Pettus G. Secrest and Claude F. Wagner. At the initial meeting on September 29, Dr. Maron and Dr. Sternberg will introduce the series, with Drs. Sherman M. Mellinkoff, Walter Lincoln Palmer and James Halsted lecturing on Management of Patients with Liver Disease. Information concerning fees and applications for the seminars may be secured from the Long Beach Branch, Los Angeles County Medical Association, 1951 Pacific Avenue, Long Beach, or Dr. Sternberg at U.C.L.A. (BRadshaw 26161). ANNOUNCEMENTS 8. Lost and Found LOST—Boy's red Raynol bike (llc. No. 1859) vlc. City Park. Reward Ph. 5967. HAVE YOU LOST an article of value? Then don't lose any time in running a "Lost" want ad in the Anaheim Bulletin classified. That's the quickest way to find lost articles. 11. Transportation DOUGLAS BUS, 2 shifts daily. Contact driver at Plant or KI-20444. BUSINESS SERVICE 12. Services Rendered FLOORS New hardwood material furnished, laid, sanded and finished. Old Floors Sanded, Refinished. OELRICH FLOOR SERVICE 619 W. Broadway Ph. 4324 MOODY ELECTRIC Domestic and Industrial Wiring ALL WORK GUARANTEED Phone Anaheim 3852 OVERHEAD Doors Rebalanced and Adjusted and new installations Gus Litz Ph. 5437 540 S. Lemon COMMERCIAL Tractor Work WEED SPRAYING 11201 Katella Road Committee inquiry centred testimony that Stephens helped to help a California seller launchers for "mighty mouse" rockestimony showed that sought a fee of four of the sale price, but the auction turned down the reported it to the Navy. Has frowned on the seeking percentage hoping to line up governors, but there is nothabout it. Owed that Republicans' issue in last year's campaign of the "five conventions which conspire investigations had slight under the Truman administration." Testified that he had long in his conversation with prospect, Robert Q. Burbank. He said he contracts in either the Army. Said the information had to be secret because 120,000 units was being negotiated than made on a low-The Navy, with the aid I, is investigating the learns. A ship's speed was with a log at the end of this was thrown over the line played out. At arrivals knots had been were counted during as the line played out. The speed in "knots," to nautical miles per Opening Soon County's Newest ABC LANES NEWAY BOWL To South Seas Club For Teenage Leagues, Individuals LAmbert 59112 AVERS Sunbeam - Remington Heads - Repairs Glassors Ground Shaves - Shavex Demonstrations outside allowance on old shaves BARBER SHOP Los Angeles St. ANNOUNCEMENTS 7. Professional DR. HENRY C. VOGT Chiropractic Health Specialist — Licensed Palmer Graduate—107 E. Center St. Room 2 Phone 4222 or 4145 ELLIOTT'S TELEVISION SERVICE CALLS $295 419 S. Lemon. Ph. 6395 ANAHEIM BULLETIN CLASSIFIED INDEX Classifications Are Numbered and Appear in Numerical Order CLASSIFICATION NO. Houses Apartments 20 Houses for Sale 28 Automobiles 66 In Memorium 6 Auto Accessories 68 Loat and Found 8 Auto Repair—Paint 62 Lots for Sale 40 Bicycles—Motorcycles 61 Livestock—Wanted 26 Boarding—Kennels 48 Money to Loan 26 Building Materials 17 Music—Art 20 Business Opportunities 25 Business Instruments 25 Business Places 32 Real Estate Exchange 42 Business Property 31 Real Estate Loans 27 Card of Thanks 9 Real Estate—Wanted 43 Cars and Trucks Wanted 64 Personal Instruction 21 Cemeteries—Monuments 64 Pets 7 Correspondence Courses 18 Professional 7 Dress-up—Dramatic 18 Couple and Supplies 45 Death Notices 14 Resorts 45 Farm and Dairy Products 46 Rest Homes 25 Farm Machinery 50-A Rooms and Gardens 33 Farms and Ranches 32 Seed an Plants 47 Florists 2 Services Rendered 16 For Rent—Miscellaneous 61 Situation Wanted 16 Business Collegeaneous 61 Special Notices 10 Funeral Directors 4 Stocks, Bonds Mortgages 10 Garages 31-A Trade Schools 21 Garages—Service Stations 60 Transportation 11 Help Wanted—Female 14 Television—Radio 54 Help Wanted—Male 14 Trucks—Trallers 65 Help Wanted—M&P 15 Wanted Instruction 24 Hospital Cattle, Etc. 15 Wanted to Borrow 23 Household Appliances 52 Wanted to Buy 59 Household Furniture 52 Wanted to Rent 57 Rooms 56 Wearing Apparel 53