anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-06
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Anaheim High School Teachers Spend Summer "Vacation" Hard at Work
By FRAN STERLING
The same unalloyed joy witnessed on students' faces the final day of the school term always has been known to fill the countenances of their teachers too. However no all is reclination in contour TV chairs, nor leaning on a grassey alope at the end of a rod and reel, for the educationists' summer vacation.
A sizable portion of Anaheim High School faculty members reporting on their summer activities shows that vacation time is not necessarily a time of rest.
The title and denouement of Osborne Wheeler's written explanation perhaps would speak for some other less expressive. The U.S. History and Counselling teacher wrote:
"What I Did With My Summer—or Good Lord! Is it September Already"
In the distinguished company of the head of my department, Mr. J. Mason Henry, I attended the six weeks summer session at the University of Southern California. We took a course called "vocational Guidance in Secondary Schools," and I also took a seminar entitled "Critique of Research in Secondary Education," which is required as part of the doctoral program. Total: 4 units, 90 gallons of gas, 2 frazzled dispositions."
Principal and Dist. Supt. Paul H. Demaree spent a full week attending administrative conferences at Long Beach State College, as well as other conferences throughout the state.
Avon B. Carlson, agriculture teacher, attended a five-week summer course for agriculture teachers at U.C. at Davis.
Mrs. Evangeline Davis of Home Economics found time to take in the second Summer Session at theme was "Using Multi-Factor Aptitude Tests in Educational and Vocational Counseling and Prediction." Over 150 psychologists and counselors were there from schools in California, Nevada and Arizona. Nationally known psychologists like Donald Super of the University of Chicago and George Bennett of the Psychological Corporation were among the speakers.
Miss Reba Brown, librarian, devoted her summer to a trip into the Pacific Northwest. She visited Victoria, Vancouver, Jasper (Canadian) National Park, Lake Louise and Banff.
Claremont Graduate School's summer session was the place of furthering education for Mrs. Elizabeth Arnold, from home economics, mathematics and counseling. There she was working toward a masters degree in the field of Psychological Foundation of Education.
George J. DeRubeis, Mechanic Arts, Metal Shop Instructor, had a six-week summer session at Stout Institute of Menomonie, Wisconsin; three weeks of observation in the iron ore mines on the Gogelhin Range of Ironwaad, Mich. He spent two weeks at a musicians' conference in Quebec, Canada.
Mrs. Ethel J. Caverly spent much time during the summer as a memoirist.
Saves Boy's Life Hunch of Motorist
MIDLAND, Tex. (UP)—A year-old boy was alive today cause a motorist saw a wrist dog and a rag doll floating rain swollen drainage ditch played a hunch.
E. B. Young, the motorist, ped his automobile, stripped his outer clothing and dived five feet of water yesterday pulled out James Edwards.
"I just had a hunch there a kid in there," he said.
Young brought the boy on "I must have shook a qua water out of him," he said.
Jimmy, son of Mr. and E. F. Edwards, who lived by, was in satisfactory condition after a checkup at Midland Medical Hospital. His parents had yet missed the boy when Y rescued him.
She attended the Mistera' Senior of the summer school.
An educational and enjoy summer was spent traveling attending summer school by Barbara L. Houlihan, Girl'sical Education teachers. She graduate work on a master's degree at Syracuse University, acuse, New York. Some place interest she visited were New City, Taos Pueblo, Petrified P Grand Canyon and Hoover Dam.
Larry W. Quille, English Journalism teacher, took a weeks course in these writing research techniques at Long Island State College.
Mrs. Velda B. Worthy, mathematics teacher, added to her personal growth by a trip that made a story in itself. Startling by auto through the redwood California her peregrination her into Oregon, Washington.
Principal and Dist. Supt. Paul H. Demaree spent a full week attending administrative conferences at Long Beach State College, as well as other conferences throughout the state.
Avon B. Carlson, agriculture teacher, attended a five-week summer course for agriculture teachers at U. C. at Davis.
Mrs. Evangeline Davis of Home Economics found time to take in the second Summer Session at Whittier College. Her courses were Psychology of Exceptional Children and Social Disorganization. Under Dr. Mills and Dr. Sheets respectively, she was working for a General Secondary.
There were three months of European travel for Miss Dora Gene Golder, who appropriately spent most of her time in England as she is an English teacher.
Ralph Wines of Commerce took administrative courses in the Claremont Graduate School, for next fall he will act as principle at Premont Junior High School.
William V. Rickel, who is in charge of Senior Problems participated in conference at University of California at Berkley. The field of Psychological Foundation of Education.
George J. DeRubeis, Mechanic Arts, Metal Shop Instructor, had a six-week summer session at Stout Institute of Menomonie, Wisconsin; three weeks of observation in the iron ore mines on the Gogelin Range of Ironwaad, Mich. He spent two weeks at musicians' conference in Quebec, Canada.
Mrs. Ethel J. Caverly spent much time during the summer as a member of the Arrangements Committee for the Convention of the National Council of English Teachers to be held in Los Angeles during November. She is also chairman of the banquet and luncheon This association has brought her in contact with many leading teachers of English in Southern California and also with some national leaders. Right, Mrs. Caverly teaches English.
Claude Booth, who instructs Machine Shop, received eight credits in Vocational Education through six weeks of study at U.C.L.A.
Mrs. Mildred N. Holen, World History, Mathematics, English, worked in the direction of her master's degree at Long Beach State.
And last but surely far least was the vacation accommodations of Major Ralph E. Coch of Driver Education and C. In June he attended two week summer training at Camp Louis Obispo as Instructor in vanced Map Reading. He was military active duty in the formia Cadet Corps. During A he was one two weeks active with the 40th Infantry Dt at Hunter Ligget Military aviation.
He tells us that also in A he "fathered a 10 pound James Ralph."
34 New Performance Records! 51 New Endurance
Never before in history has a new car... even before Announcthe public such dramatic proof of all-around gre
New '54
DODGE
Goes on Display
OCT.8
THE DODGE WITH MORE THAN EVER BEFORE
Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah, 12:00
noon, Sept. 24. Here at official AAA
Testing Headquarters, the new '54
Dodge which will be presented this
Thursday smashed 34 official AAA
records for speed and acceleration.
The new Dodge with its sensational Red Ram V-8 engine traveled faster than any standard
American car ever clocked officially by the AAA!
New PowerFlite Drive Sm
Fully automatic — and fully-proved! 4
records were set by a Dodge equippe
No automatic transmission in any
ROBERT H. BONEY
828 W. Center Street, Anakeim, Calif.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
GLEANED FROM FILE THIRTEEN
Compiled by Jim Duncan
From the Wires of United Press
The World Series are with us once again and it seems that everyone is affected somewhat by the exciting games each day. Although baseball is primarily an American sport, the World Series attracts attention all over the world.
But, no matter how enthusiastic you might be about the games, there is one person who is going to ignore them. At the United Nations in New York, Soviet United Nations delegate André Y. Vishinsky has adopted a "hands off" policy in regard to the World Series. "It is a very great event," he told a reporter who asked him which team he favored, "but I cannot interfere in the internal affairs of the United States."
Besides the World Series being the top news stories of the week, the animal kingdom also made the news. For the past several weeks parrots were in the news, but this week, skunks took over.
In Sturgeon Bay, Wis., the big hearted Sturgeon Bay police department gave in today and agreed to dispose of $2 dead skunks.
In a way, it was only right since the policemen killed the animals in an attempt to halt an unexplained skunk invasion of Sturgeon Bay.
Police Chief Romain Londo ordered his officers to attack the animals from the rear with shotguns, explaining:
"A shotgun in the proper hands aimed at the rear of a skunk gives the animal no opportunity to return fire."
Chief Londo insisted, for a time, that some other city department dispose of the dead skunks on the grounds that the policemen's only duty was to kill them.
The Street Department, however, answered that its traditions did not include skunks.
ductable item.
The officials denied Harry Byrd's $400 reduction for business losses because a skunk hid under his restaurant.
Officials said the case "seems to have been taken care of automatically by his reduced income."
Now we'll bounce about the country on a jet powered pogostick and see what strange things are happening to others.
In Chicago, a 58-year-old woman was held today on suspicion of shoplifting after she was found in a Loop store with a mink cape and a mink coat worth a total of $4800.
She had stuffed them in a pair of ever-sized bloomers.
Jack A. Nelson, 22, of Berkeley, Calif., will think twice about visiting his girl friend's home in the early morning hours of the morning.
Nelson pounded on the door of Helen Rose's home early yesterday and was greeted by a fusillade of .32 caliber bullets.
Miss Rose told police she didn't know it was Nelson. Nelson said he wouldn't be back at any hour.
Over in Wilmington, two young women, armed with a beagle dog, were sought as suspects in the robbery of a sailor.
Homer Kelsell, a transient seaman, told police the women and the dog walked into his hotel room as he ate dinner.
He said the women chatted a while, then grabbed $1500 from a dresser and fled, the beagle barking ferociously.
Keisell said he did not pursue them because he was clad only in his underwear.
tion prevails.
Now for some news from police blottern. Patrolman B Paumbo of New York abandoned the customary practice seeing the notes of a making suspect the other Paumbo said the suspect scratching the bets on the of his automobile.
Joe's Liquor store in B did a thriving business in last night.
At 7:30 p.m. two gunmen up the store and escaped with headquarters to look over graphs of suspects, three thereted the store and took $2 bottles of whisky.
Richard Viner of Museum Iowa admitted today she had plenty of evidence he was fined $100 for larceny.
He learned in court y day the service station register from which he st $1 bill was duesed with fl print powder, an assistant lice chief watched the through binoculars from a street and another over took his picture.
Viner winced when he police say that as further caution, the $10 bill was exed.
Montreal police searched for a counterfeiter who applauds doesn't read the papers. They said he was turning bills bearing the signature "don, Deputy Governor." Gordon resigned three yeas.
In Los Angeles cab Edward Cropper, 36, turned bruised and bleeding rogue suspect over to police.
"The guy jumped in my and clubbed me with a lot wrench." Cropper exploded "That's the second time character has tried to stick up and I got tired of it."
NOUNCEMENT TESTS—
ODGE V·8
5 RECORDS
Police Chief Romain Londo ordered his officers to attack the animals from the rear with shotguns, explaining:
"A shotgun in the proper hands aimed at the rear of a skunk gives the animal no opportunity to return fire."
Chief洛多 insisted, for a time, that some other city department dispose of the dead skunks on the grounds that the policemen's only duty was to kill them.
The Street Department, however, answered that its traditions did not include skunks.
The garbage collectors pointed to their contract which indicated that a skunk is "not garbage until properly packaged."
Detroit officers searching for a young fugitive from Boys Republic, a training school, got some unexpected help from a well-armed volunteer.
The runaway boy abandoned a stolen truck yesterday and dashed into a nearby field. He soon was captured.
Police discovered that the stolen truck was occupied by a skunk.
In Knoxville, Tenn., Internal Revenue officials have ruled that the odor of a skunk is not a de-
young women, armed with a beagle dog, were sought as suspects in the robbery of a sailor.
Homer Kelsell, a transient seaman, told police the women and the dog walked into his hotel room as he ate dinner.
He said the women chatted while grabbed $1500 from a dresser and fled, the beagle barking ferociously.
Keisell said he did not pursue them because he was clad only in his underwear.
Radio-car patrolmen John Duffy and Paul Shoe pulled over to the curb in Philadelphia when they saw a cane twirling man on a street corner dressed like a perfect gentleman except for the absence of trousers.
"Where are your pants?" Duffy asked.
"In the cleaners," the unidentified man replied. "I'm waiting for them and I'm dressed any differently than a six-day bicycle rider."
The police took him home while a friend picked up his trousers.
Next time he'll look before he leaps. In Washington, Banks 5. Ross has filed suit against a cab company for $115,000 damages.
Ross said that when he woke up from a nap in a taxi cab he had hired he opened the door and stepped out—into thin air.
The cab had been heisted up on a grease rack for repairs.
Speaking of mishaps caused by autos, Harold Hild, an auto repair shop owner in Waterloo, Iowa, tangled with a reluctant auto and lost.
A damaged car was brought to his shop the other day.
Hild pushed the starter button.
Silence.
Hild lifted the hood and engaged the starter.
Zoom!
The car lurched forward over Hild and crashed through the rear of the shop.
It reversed itself and backed through the closed front doors.
It continued across an alley, smashed the corner of a double garage and wedged against a partition.
Hild, slightly injured, caught up and turned off the motor.
Teamwork failed when two 10-year-old boys decided to take a automobile and go for a joy ride.
Neither was big enough to drive unassisted so one lad knelt on the floorboards and worked the accelerator and clutch while the other steered and shifted gears.
They rode 75 feet before they smashed into a parked car.
The boy on the floor said he formed all about the bushes.
In New Orleans John Lanksthon was given a month suspended sentence financed $1000 for failure to his federal income tax rate from 1949 and 1950. Lanksthon is a professional tax consultant.
In Columbus, Ohio firefighters cided to become carpenters answering several calls to a building on a viaduct across the Union Railway Terminal. Each time firemen rushed address they found that from locomotives passing near was coming up through the hole in the floor of the bushes.
Everytime we go the smoke is pouring out of sand so we decided ot patch up the one fireman said.
Farmer Art Debban paid Charles City, Iowa fire department the standard count fee of $1000 to put out a his barn, but not with grumble.
The sparks Debban sailed his barn turned out to blaze.
Barbers in Vancouver headed the wake of children.
TE1 New Endurance Records!
Open before Announcement Day...offered
of all-around greatness
Flats, Utah, 12:00
Here at official AAA
quarters, the new '54
will be presented this
hed 34 official AAA
d and acceleration.
ledge with its sensan V-8 engine travlan any standard
ever clocked offiAA!
In tests of stamina and endurance, too, Dodge has already set
51 new records as this is written,
with more piling up every hour.
This dramatic achievement in performance and endurance is matched by new elegance, more massive length and flashing style.
See this new '54 Dodge this Thursday at your Dodge dealer's.
It is elegance in action!
PowerFlite Drive Smashes 41 Records!
Static—and fully-proved! 41 of the speed and endurance
set by a Dodge equipped with new PowerFlite Drive.
static transmission in any car can match this record!
ANAHEIM BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Anaheim Community Hospital
Medical, Surgical, Industrial, Emergency
Advertising
When You Want, Try a Want Ad—Anaheim Bulletin
Garage, Arnold E. Howard
Buick and Authorized United Motors Service, 130 S. Lemon—Ph
Fire Department
Anaheim
Appliance Repair, Arnold E. Howard
Household and Fractional H.P. Motor Repair 130 S. Lemon.
Moving, Storage, and General Trucking
Ansheim Truck and Transfer Co., 505 S. Los Angeles St.
Police Department
Anaheim
Photo Engraving, Photography, Photostats
Myles D. Bradley, Bulletin Bidg——Office Ph. 5714—
Briggs and Stratton Engines
Arnold E. Howard, Sales and Service, 130 S. Lemon
Now for some news from the police blotters. Patrolman Louis Paumbo of New York abandoned the customary practice of booking the notes of a book-making suspect the other day. Paumbo said the suspect was scratching the bets on the side of his automobile.
Joe's Liquor store in Brooklyn had a thriving business in reverse of night.
At 7:30 p.m. two gunmen held the store and escaped with $250. While the clerk went to police headquarters to look over photographs of suspects, three thugs entered the store and took $15 and two bottles of whiskey.
Richard Viner of Muscatine, Iowa admitted today the police had plenty of evidence when he was fined $100 for petty carrency.
He learned in court yesterday the service station case register from which he stole a $1 bill was dusted with fingerprint powder, an assistant police chief watched the theft through binoculars from across the street and another observer took his picture.
Viner winced when he heard police say that as further precaution, the $10 bill was marked.
Montreal police searched today or a counterfeiter who apparently isn't read the papers. They said he was turning $10 bills bearing the signature "D. Goron, Deputy Governor." Gordon resigned three years ago.
In Los Angeles cab driver Edward Cropper, 36, turned a bruised and bleeding robbery suspect over to police.
"The guy jumped in my cab and clubbed me with a 18-inch wrench," Cropper explained. "That's the second time some character has tried to stick me up and I got tired of it."
Post Office Tries Flying 3-Cent Letters in East
WASHINGTON — Plain, ordinary three-cent letters began flying between Washington, New York, and Chicago today in a post office experiment aimed at speeding up mail deliveries.
The inaugural flight, with first class letters riding right alongside their more expensive air mail bretherm, left Washington for Chicago at 8:30 a.m. EST.
Postmaster Gen. Arthur E. Summerfield, who ordered the experiment, presided at brief ceremonia at the Capital's National Airport and then climbed aboard the plane to keep personal tabs on the initial flight.
Under the new system, regular letter postcards and some newspapers and other preferential mail which has a time value will be flown between Chicago and New York and Chicago and Washington whenever planes have space available.
Postal customers pay no extra charge for the service, but they get no guarantee that the regular mail will go by air.
If the Chicago-New York-Washington operation works successfully, postal officials plan to put the speed-up service on a nationwide basis.
the livestock yards in South Omaha carried the following notation today.
"We will serve your drink in a coffee cup if your boss or client is at the next table."
Read the Anaheim Bulletin want
In Los Angeles cab driver Edward Cropper, 36, turned a bruised and bleeding robbery suspect over to police.
"The guy jumped in my cab and clubbed me with a 10-inch wrench." Cropper explained.
"That's the second time some character has tried to stick me up and I got tired of it."
A bold thief stole a $587 mink from a dummy in a downtown Boston department store the other day while dozens of shoppers watched him from the street.
Judge Edward Grey got tough with a traffic violator in his court yesterday in Lincoln, Calif.
"Sixty days suspension of drivers license or $25 fine," the judge ordered.
"I'll pay the fine, the young motorist said.
"No, you won't. That'll come out of my pocket," Grey said.
He then ordered his daughter's license suspended for 60 days.
Over in Guevennatten, France, the village bell tollled only when disaster struck. It is getting rusty with misuse, so the village elders set to decide what use the bell would be put. They finally decided that henceforth it would be run to announce the regular monthly visit of the tax collector.
In New Orleans John O. Lanksthon was given a six-month suspended sentence and fined $1000 for failure to file his federal income tax returns from 1949 and 1950. Lankston is a professional tax consultant.
In Columbus, Ohio firemen decided to become carpenters after sensing several calls to a vacant building on a viaduct across from the Union Railway Terminal. Each time firemen rushed to the address they found that smoke from locomotives passing underneath was coming up through a hole in the floor of the building.
"Everytime we go there the smoke is pouring out of same place so we decided of patch up the hole," one fireman said.
Farmer Art Debban paid the Charles City, Iowa fire department the standard country call fee of $1000 to put out a fire in his barn, but not without a grumble.
The sparka Debban saw in his barn turned out to be fireflies.
Barbers in Vancouver, B.C. ordered the signature "D. Gordon, Deputy Governor."
Gordon resigned three years ago.
In the Chicago-New York-Washington operation works successfully, postal officials plan to put the speed-up service on a nationwide basis.
the livestock yards in South Omaha carried the following notation today.
"We will serve your drink in a coffee cup if your boss or client is at the next table."
Read the Anaheim Bulletin wants for profit and pleasure.
ANAHEIM BULLETIN
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Classifications Are Numbered and Appear in Numerical Order
CLASSIFICATION NO.
Apartments 30
Automobiles 62
Auto Accessories 62
Auto Repair—Paint 62
Bicycles—Motorcycles 61
Boarding—Kennels 61
Building Materials 51
Business Colleges 51
Business Opportunities 51
Business Places 51
Business Property 71
Card of Thanks 71
Cars and Trucks Wanted 71
Cemeteries — Monuments 18
Correspondence Courses 18
Dancing — Dramatic 18
Health Notices 18
Farm and Dairy Products 46
Farm Machinery 46-A
Farms and Ranches 46-Florists 36
For Rent—Miscellaneous 36
For Sale—Miscellaneous 36
Funeral Directors 31
Garages—Service Stations 60
Help Wanted—Female 16
Help Wanted—Male 16
Help Wanted—M&P 16
Horses—Cattle, Etc. 44
Household Appliances 44
Household Furniture 31
Houses for Sale 31
In Memorium 31
Lost and Found 31
Lots for Sale 40
Livestock—Wanted 40
Money to Loan 20
Music Instruments 25
Real Estate Exchange 43
Real Estate Loans 43
Real Estate—Wanted 42
Personal Instruction 21
Professional Poultry and Supplies 45
Resorts 35
Rest Homes 35
Rooms and ...rd 47
Seed an Plants 47
Water Rendered 17
Situation Weeded 17
Special Notices 28
Stocks, Bonds, Mortgages 28
Trade Schools 22
Transportation 54
Television—Radio 54
Trucks—Trailer 54
Antenna Installation 59
Wanted to Borrow 59
Wanted to Buy 59
Wanted to Rent 59
Wearing Apparel 57
ANNOUNCEMENTS
7. Professional
ROY L. KIRK
LANDSCAPE NURSERY
New Lawns and Shrubbery Lawns Renovated - Reseeding Fertilizing
128 W. Broadway Ph. 5108 Across from Post Office
HERMAN ZACHAY
Special Agent For NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Expert advice on Life Insurance.
Annualities, Accident, Sickness and Group Insurance
Phone Anaheim 5242, or write P. O. B. 483
BALLMAN'S
TELEVISION AND APPLIANCE SERVICE
122 W. Broadway Ph. ANAHEIM 570$
PRENTISS & WILLIAMS LICENSED TILE CONTRACTOR Satisfaction Guaranteed Phone Anaheim 5933 or Placentia 6236
ANAHEIM PAINTING AND DECORATING CO.
for the finest in Residential & Commercial Painting
DALE HAMLIN Ph. Anaheim $808.
EMPLOYMENT
13. Help Wantee — Male
INCOME POTENTIAL UNLIMITED
Salesman; Up to $1500 salary, and incentive commission to man age $8-45 for special sales work in vicinity of Orange Co. with the ESTATE CONTROL PLAN. 6 weeks intensive training in home office school at Hartford, Connecticut with salary & expense paid as part of a 3 yr training for grammar just a $5 yr. resident of Orange Co. or vicinity. Rate top scores on our aptitude test and give evidence of success in former occupations. State qualifications in letter to E. Rush Coffin, Insurance Co. HIS Fine Avenue, Long Beach or phone Long Beach T-06667.
WANT male driver for Foster Freeze Sales Car. Apply 725 N. Los Angeles St.
EXPERIENCED TILE SETter, phone Newport Beach, Harbor 1044 W.wetek days bet. 9-4.
ARTHUR MURRAY has opening for young men $20 to $35 yrs of age to join her team.
Farmer Art Debban paid the Charles City, Iowa fire department the standard country call fee of $1000 to put out a fire in his barn, but not without a grumble.
The sparks Debban saw in his barn turned out to be fireflies.
Barbers in Vancouver, B.C., boosted the price of children's haircuts today from 50 to 75 cents. A spokesman said the hike was due to the "mental anguish" caused when junior climbs into the barbershop chair.
Also in Canada, an election bet loser in Ottawa who asked a National Research Council chemist how to eat his shirt got the following recipe:
"Take one cotton shirt; grill one large steak; burn it to a crisp in a very hot oven; recover ashes of shirt; sprinkle liberally on steak; smother with onions; eat shirt, steak and all."
The menu of a restaurant near Capital Agency Phone 2208
Anheim Bulletin Phone 2251
Service, 130 S. Lemon—Phone 2298
Phone 2345
E. Howard Repair 130 S. Lemon. Phone 2229
General Trucking 130 S. Los Angeles St. Phone 2123
Phone 2131
Phy, Photostats Office Ph. 5714—Res. 7537
cares, 130 S. Lemon Phone 2280
ANNOUNCEMENTS
7. Professional
DR. HENRY C. VOGT
Chiropractic Health Specialist —Licensed Palmer Graduate—107 E. Center St. Room 2 Phone 4223 or 4145
8. Lost and Found
PET SKUNK lost, upper body & tail solid white. Liberal reward. 121 N. Placentia, Ph. Ana. 7608.
HAVE YOU LOST an article of value? Then don't lose any time in running at Anahim Bulletin classified. That's the quickest way to find lost articles.
9. Personals
ANYONE KNOWING Henry King, formerly of Detroit, now working for large produce concern in Anaheim, please convey message.
Need you badly, miss you terribly, phone immediately, San Jose, Cypress R-2711, Arlene.
11. Transportation
DESIRE RIDER going to night classes at U.S.C. Tuesday & Thursday eve. Call 4149.
DOUGLAS BUS, 2 shifts daily. Contact driver at Plant or KI-30444.
RIDERS WANTED for station wagons to Douglas, 1 shirts for Will pickup at home. Manuel Sandoval, Ph. Placentia 5486 or 6926 or contact drivers of station wagons at North tunnel.
BUSINESS SERVICE
12. Services Rendered
LADIES & Gents 1-tone shoes, 35c: All white shoes, 50c, 2-tone shoes 75c. Shoes can be left in the morning and placed on the following morning, at Office Barber Shop. Shoe Shine Parlor, 129 E. Center.
MOODY ELECTRIC Domestic and Industrial Wiring ALL WORK GUARANTED Phone Anaheim 3852
2 Yr. training program. Must be a yr resident of Orange Co. or vicinity long term or our aptitude test and give evidence of success in former occupations. State qualifications in letter to S. Rush Coffin, Insurance Co., 115 Pine Avenue, Long Beach or phone Long Beach 7-66467.
WANT male driver for Foster Freeze Sales Car. Apply 725 N. Los Angeles St.
EXPERIENCED TILE Setter, phone Newport Beach, Harbor 1044 W. wtek days bet. 3-4.
ARTHUR MURRAY has opening for young men 28 to 35 yrs of age to train as dance teachers. Fine opportunity for advancement. No experience necessary. We train your Please apply in person 114% N. Broadway, Santa Ana.
14. Help Wanted — Female
TOUNG LADY for general office work, typing required. Must be willing to work Saturdays. Apply at 129 W. Center.
EXPERIENCED WAITRESS wanted at once. Apply 900 N. Los Angeles St.
HOUSEKEEPER, 3 or 8 days week. Permanent, Own transportation. Call Anhelm 6206
SELL LANOLIN - Line Cosmetics. Full or part. 1106 W. Lincoln Ave.
ARTHUR MURRAY has opening for young women 23 to 30 yrs of age to train as dance teachers. Fine opportunity for advancement. No experience necessary. We train your Please apply in person. 114% N. Broadway, Santa Ana.
WANTED: DEPENDABLE Woman for care of one child in my home days. Ph. 2595
WANTED GIRL for marking and silk finishing. Seama Cleaners, 130 Elm St.
BANK TRAINEE, previous office experience preferred but not essential. Good mathematical background; under 35 yrs of age. Apply in person Security First National Bank, 184 W. Center St. Anhelm
BANK BOOKKEEPER, bank experience essential. Apply in person; under 35 yrs of age. Security First National Bank, 134 W. Center St. Anhelm.
DISHWASHER, Dorothy Wyde, Dinner House, 1418 E. Center.
WAITRESS, CURRIES Ice Cream Parlor, 621 W. Center St., Anhelm 9061
15. Help Wanter M&F
ARE YOU A GOOD COOK? Do you like to care for children? Then a situation wanted ad in the Anahim Bulletin will find the work you want. Call 2351.
CAR HOPS, dishwashers & cooks needed at Hog Heaven Barbeuse, Ph. Anhelm 7698