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anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-20

1953-10-20 · Anaheim Bulletin · page 2 of 12 · OCR glm-ocr
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AUHS Adds Two Adult Courses To Teach Skills Residents of Northern Orange County are being offered the opportunity by the adult night school of Anaheim Union High School to learn two skills which are commanding high wages in this area and are in demand by local industry. The courses are Machine Operations: and Blueprint, Reading, Shop Mathematics and Sketching. Both courses are being taught by instructors recruited from Northern Orange County industry. The course of study has been approved by the Anaheim Area Industrial Group which is composed of representatives of all major industrial units in the area. Machine Operations offers a complete course in the basic principles of the machine shop and includes instruction in operative skills, correct procedures and proper uses for such important industrial machines as lathes, shapers and mills. Although all adults, in or out of industry, are urged to enroll in the class, and need no previous experience in the field, the course will be of particular interest to production planners, tool planners, tool expediters, metal parts workers and similar personnel. The other course also is considered by industry to be of priority importance to manufacturing plants. The studies provide a basic course in industry's application of blue print reading, shop mathematics and freehand sketching. A practical consideration is made of sketching from simple objects and blueprints, isometric drawing, blueprint signs, symbols and terms; layout of angles, speeds of gear train belts and chain drives, and other useful functions. Both courses are considered "basic" and will teach the fundamentals of the skills being learned. The instruction is being offered at Anaheim Union High School, Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 7 to 9 o'clock. Registration may be made at the school at that time. Fee is $1. Courses will run at least one school semester, and may be continued in advance courses for the full school year. President Emeritus William "Big Bill" INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP) William L. "Big Bill" Hutcheson 79, president emeritus of the A Carpenters Union and one of elder statesmen of the labor movement in the United States, d today. Hutcheson made the 800.0 member union a powerful segment of organized labor and became personally potent he virtually c The Most Delicious CHINESE FOODS And American Dishes IN ORANGE COUNTY Under New Ownership DRAGON-CHOP SUEY 1125 N. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim Sunday thru Thursday 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Friday and Saturday 11 a.m. to 3 a.m. Now on Display! Elegant New '54 DO The Dodge with more than ever ROYAL V-8 FOUR DOOR SEDAN More to it—More in it—More New! "Color Harmony" Interiors with Exquisite Jacquard Fabrics As tasteful and colorful as your own home! New! Fully-Automatic PowerFlite Drivel Newest, smoothest, most powerful of all automatic transmissions! New! Dodge Fulf-Time Power Steering! Takes the work out of driving—leaves all the pleasure in! New! Stepped-up 150-hp Red Ram V-8 Engine! Most efficient engine in any American car! New! Dodge Airtemp Air Conditioning! Takes the heat and humidity out of the stickiest day! New! Sweeping Style ... Distinctive Bee Longer from bumper to bumper—headlamp to taillight. New '54 DODGE V-8 Shotters 196 AAA Recordals In official AAA performance trials on the Bonneville Salt Flats, Dodge proved the stamina, endurance and nimbleness that make it "The Action Car for Active Americans." DEPENDABLE New'54 DODGE ROBERT H. BONEY Anaheim, Calif. 328 W. Center Street GOP Hopes For Broad Outline of Farm Program By PATRICIA WIGGING WASHINGTON (UP)—The administration hopes that at least some of the broad outlines of a new farm program will be developed during the meeting here next week of the National Agricultural Advisory Commission. Undersecretary of Agriculture True D. Morse said he "doubts very much" that "firm conclusions" about farm policies will be reached. But he said the commission already has done an "immense amount of work" testing out proposals and working out alternatives' and that some ideas of what will have to be done might begin to take shape. Conferences Set The commission, a bi-partisan organization set up by the President to advise the administration on farm problems, will confer with officials at the Agriculture Department Thursday, Friday and Saturday. It will meet with President Eisenhower Saturday. Lending urgency to the sessions is the mounting demand for federal action to help the nation's farmers who have been hit hard by drought, falling prices, and surpluses. An upset Democratic victory in a predominately rural congressional district in Wisconsin this week underlined Republican fears that they may fare badly in next year's elections if the farm problem isn't solved quickly. Group Not Complete The Advisory Commission, headed by Dean W. I. Myers of Cornell University's College of Agriculture, Change of Tactics After Resistance William "Big Bill" Hutcheson, Dies DIDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP) — William L. "Big Bill" Hutcheson, president emeritus of the AFL centers union and one of the statesmen of the labor movement in the United States, died on July 14, 1954. Hutcheson made the 800,000-unit union a powerful segment organized labor and became so highly potent he virtually controlled the rise and fall of every other in the nation. Of the few union leaders in country who supported the Italian party, Hutcheson went on line for Dwight D. Eisenhower over San Anselmo Eisenhower over San Anselmo A. Taft because he disliked with Taft's views on labor pressed in the Taft-Hartley Union, with international headquarters in Indianapolis, from 1915 to 1951. Two years ago he became president emeritus, yielding the reins of the big union to his son, Maurice. But Hutcheson remained active. He was responsible for the carpenters' withdrawal from the AFL in mid-summer in a dispute over a no-raiding policy. The carpenters rejoined the AFL soon afterward. Hutcheson was a Michigan farm boy who started carpentry at 20 cents an hour. His career was marked by physical and verbal attacks, including a poke on the jaw by John L. Lewis during an AFL convention. But nothing deterred Hutcheson from his policy of keeping all carpentry work, from cutting down giant redwood trees to sandpapering chairs, for members of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters Joiners. "Big Bill" was a potent factor in internal affairs of the AFL and the Republican party. Men Stake Claim In SF Bay SAN RAFAEL (UP)—Nine bay area men yesterday staked out a mining claim to 160 acres on the east shore of a Angel island in San Francisco bay. The claim was recorded under an almost forgotten California mining law. It was the first mining claim filed in Marin county since 1884. Reese Wolfe, San Rafael writer and spokesman for the group, said he and John E. Jennings Jr., also a San Rafael writer, became interested in the possibilities of mining on the island. They are both graduates of the Colorado School of Mines. They found the Department of the Interior has custody of the island as public land. "We're we know the government owns the land and the Department of Interior is custodian," Wolfe said, "we're still trying to determine just what the status actually is." "The Navy hasn't any legal right. We haven't been able to learn what rights the Army has. So far as we're concerned, it's vacant government land." Wolfe said the group plans to mine red rock on the island for use as building stone. Then he said it will amend the present claim to a lode claim "which would enable us to do some assessment work—cutting off a slice of land and following any veins that may show" An upset Democratic victory in a predominately rural congressional district in Wisconsin this week underlined Republican fears that they may fare badly in next year's elections if the farm problem isn't solved quickly. Group Not Complete The Advisory Commission, headed by Dean W. I. Myers of Cornell University's College of Agriculture, is composed of five Democrats, nine Republicans, and one Independent. Nine members are "representative" farmers. Three members still remain to be appointed. Mr. Eisenhower emphasized the importance of the commission's work in his farm policy speech in Kansas City, Mo., Thursday. Some farm experts here believe this was an effort spread responsibility for farm actions to take some of the heat off Agriculture Secretary Ezra T. Benson who has been taking the brunt of farm belt criticism of administration policy. League of Cities Hears Discussion On Tax Structure SAN FRANCISCO (UP)—Mary Elmer E. Robinson of San Francisco believes cities are faced with a breakdown in their local structure because state and federal governments have "usurpated" so many sources of local revenue. Speaking to the 55th annual conference of the League of California Cities yesterday, Robinson warns that cities may soon find themselves unable to provide their residents with needed services. "The state and federal governments have usurped and appropriated and taken over so much sources of taxation from the cities," he said, "that we are forced to continue to raise taxes on our major remaining source of revenue, real property." Burden on Property "The time may be coming when the small amount of real property cannot carry the burden of paying the funds to meet the continually expanding demands by local government." Robinson's remarks were sharp contrast to a statement R'chard Graves of Berkeley, who said that California cities are not the best financial condition of a nation." A state official's Controller R'bert C. Kirkwood, offered smoother hope for any reductions in state taxes. "We cannot reduce taxes at state level," he said, "in fact, less conditions change, they must have to be increased." it—More of it! Style... Distinctive Beauty! o bumper—headlamp to tail light! DODGE BONEY Calif. Phone 2113 EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING CARE FOR YOUR WATCH SEDLOCK 113 S. LOS ANGELES STREET which do YOU prefer? Sunny Brook straight blended Cheerful as its Name WORLD'S GARDEST SELLING KENTUCKY WHISKEY BOTH 86 PROOF • KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY CONTAINS 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS • THE OLD SUNNY BROOK COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY Seek Annulment Of Long Beach Annexations SAN FRANCISCO (UP)—The Central Basin Municipal Water District has asked the state Supreme Court to order the city of Long Beach to annul two recent annexations. The request was filed yesterday on grounds that the annexations prevent the district from importing urgently needed Colorado river water. The district, formed last year, said it could not get Colorado river water until it becomes a part of the Metropolitan Water District and that it could not do so until its own boundaries stop shifting. Metropolitan owns the Colorado river acqueduct supplying parts of Southern California. The Central district contends the two Long Beach Annexations would cost it up to $10,000,000 in added interest in amortization and that to cover the cost it must be annexed to the Metropolitan District by March 1, 1954. In order to do so, it said its boundaries must be set as of Dec. 1, 1952. Annexations involved are the Douglas Aircraft plant territory next to the Long Beach Airport and the parcel of land known as Increment 110 on Clark ave. Nab Thief Who Stole Hospital Supplies KANKAKEE, Ill. UP — Arrest of a truck driver who was selling hams and butter at bargain prices has uncovered a ring which robbed the Kankakee State Hospital Range of Tactics by Reds Indicated After Resistance of Anti Communists By PHIL NEWSOM (United Press Foreign Analyst) The United Nations had better be ready for another Communist in Korea. And the truly neutral members of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission, Sweden and Switzerland in particular, had better be for a lot of abuse. Underlying reason is paragraph No. 3 of the Korean truce dealing with prisoners of war. It says: "No force or threat of force shall be used against the prisoners of war... to prevent or effect their repatriation, and no violence to their persons or affront to their dignity or self-respect shall be permitted in any manner for any purpose whatsoever." Reds Lost Face The Communists have suffered considerable loss of face so far in the prisoner "explanations," and a change of statics is indicated. Of anti-Red prisoners so far interviewed, the Reds have been able to persuade less than two per cent to return to the Communist limbo behind the bamboo curtain. Tipoff to a switch in Red strategy came yesterday. Polish and Czech members of the commission stamped out of a commission meeting which—with Sweden, Switzerland and India agreeing—refused to call up balky North Koreans who were next in line to submit to the Reds' counter "brain washing." The Koreans had pledged to die rather than return to Communism and thy threatened a mass breakout should their Indian guards attempt to force them to submit to Red "explanations." The Swiss have said their representative will not "tolerate" use of force on the prisoners. Swedes Agreed The Swedes have agreed, pointing to the clear-cut language of paragraph in the truce agreement. Which, with India voting with Switzerland and Sweden, seems to leave the Reds on a limb. So the Red walkout seemed another obvious Communist stall. Only for the loss of face, the Reds do not want to lose some 23,500 anti-Reds to the U.N. The result of the present stalemate could be a renewal of the war. But there are more immediate alternatives. To be expected is a redoubling Nab Thief Who Stole Hospital Supplies KANKAKEE, Ill. UP — Arrest of a truck driver who was selling hams and butter at bargain prices has uncovered a ring which robbed the Kankakee State Hospital of $250,000 worth of supplies this year, police said today. Perdinand Foster, a 64-year-old supply truck driver arrested yesterday, has admitted stealing clothes and food from the hospital for nine years, police said. Bulletin Want Ads Bring Results the place to go WEST COAST THEATRE Last Day — Doors open 6:45 'ROMAN HOLIDAY' 'WAR PAINT' STARTS WEDNESDAY — Both Features in 2-D By Fiction's Greatest Mystery Writer IT'S DYNAMITE! MICKEY SPILLMAN'S TOP THRILLER I THE JURY BIFF ELLIOT OMIKI HAMMER AND BIG HIT MAN-WOMAN EXCITEMENT Explodes on the Screen! THRILLING IN ADVENTURE by local government." contrast to a statement by Grand Graves of Berkeley, exdirector of the league. He that California cities are "in fast financial condition of any nation." state official, Controller RobKirkwood, offered small for any reductions in state cannot reduce taxes at the level," he said. "In fact, unconditions change, they may be increased. Sales Tax Trap more of the burden of govment is thrown back on local ment, you in the cities will through increased pressure our property tax base." Bk L. Kidner, professor of mics at University of Caliwa, warned that cities relying taxes for much of their are "vulnerable" to busichanges. sald sales taxes are "exply sensitive to changes in ass activity and prices." he pointed out, adverse conditions would mean a of revenues for cities "with catching drop in costs." William F. Knowland (Rtold the league that admis- SHOW STARTS AT SEVEN Pacific DRIVE-IN THEATRES COME AS YOU ARE IN THE FAMILY CAR SPECIAL EVENT NIGHT, TONIT Orange LAST TIMES "The HEAT" "SKY COMMANDO" STARTS TOMORROW Gary COOPER • Barbarn STANWYCK BLOWING WILD Paulo LAST TIMES "Redheads From Seattle" "Crusin Down The River" STARTS TOMORROW JAMES CAGNEY TECHNICOLOR A LION IS IN THE STREETS AND