anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-20
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Arraignment Set For Spreckels on Assault Charge
SANTA ANA—Filing of the official transcript of the preliminary hearing in Superior court today assured that Adolph Spreckels, 41-year-old sugar heir, would be arraigned in court next Friday morning on a charge of felony assault upon his former wife, Actress Kay Williams.
Spreckels was tentatively held for trial two weeks ago on the charge of assaulting Miss Williams by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury," but Justice Donald J. Dodge of Costa Mesa, withheld formal findings in the case until the official court report had time to prepare the luminous transcript of proceedings.
The asserted attack upon Miss Williams occurred last August at Spreckels' home 106 Grand Canal, Balboa Island, when his former wife came to visit their two children. She claims he struck and kicked her and beat her on the head with her own slipper.
She was hospitalized at Newport Beach for several weeks, the district attorney's office being forced to dismiss the original charge because she was unable to appear in court as a witness at the time the preliminary hearing was set. A new charge then was filed.
There's No Substitute for Paid Circulation.
Bob Hope and Notables Take Over Cleveland
CLEVELAND, O. (UP)—Where there's Hope, there's excitement, and there was plenty of both in Cleveland today.
Bob Hope, whose start in show business was in an eastside theater near his home, returned for a "day" in his honor. He arrived over the weekend, and the city has been in a state of minor turmoil ever since.
Tonight, Hope will present his first television show of the season. For that, too, he turned the town upside down. There were no adequate facilities ready made, so National Broadcasting Company technicians have spent the past three weeks renovating the 2200-seat Masonic Auditorium to satisfy his legion of fans.
Actually, Hope will have to share today's I-melight with a number of other celebrities. Ohio marks is 150th anniversary this year, and a governor's luncheon paid homage not only to Gov. Frank J. Lausche, but also Hope and numberless other Ohioans-made-good.
The long list of celebrities included author Louis Bromfield, cartoonist Million Caniff, sports figures Ezzard Charles, Johnny Kilbane, Jesse Owens, Harrison Dillard, Braneth Rickey, George Trautman, industrialist Harvey Firestone, Jr., clergyman Norman Vincent Peale and Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver.
Funeral Notices
SERR, Mrs. Hazel Mabel, 56, died at her home, 834 South Lemon St., last night after seven years illness. She was a native of Onell, Nebr., and had lived in Anaheim since 1932. She had been a life-long member of the Methodist church and was a member of Chispal chapter, 101, OES at Gregory, S. D. Other than her husband, Gilbert W. Serr, she leaves a daughter, Mary Lou of Orange auction al.
First grade
Second grade
Trend: About steer
Stock Exchange Prices in Dramatic
Railroad shares as the late sell off. Industry eased.
Outside of the rails, ment was very narrow sues held at their predecessor.
General Electric, which good earnings and received the first nine months of helped the market so day. The company also a special dividend of the first in three years.
Railroad shares meet profit taking. Losses were limited mostly tional zone.
Utilities were changed. Aircraft mated with Douglas the lead up more than a point.
Steel shares did live some quickly dispelled the industry was going prices.
Produce Mines
LOS ANGELES (UP)
Cantaloups: Crates perial valley 27-36s 3-3s Misc fruits: Dates C degett noors hydrated
The NAIL BIN
by Paul
This being the Halloween season maybe you'd like to hear a conversation I once heard between two cats. All this talk about who has the most H-Bombs reminded me of the conversation. It went like this.
FIRST CAT: Why is there a picture of a human skeleton hanging in the butcher's shop?
SECOND CAT: That is to entertain the children and impress the parents that the butcher is a kindly, fun loving man.
F.C.—Are human children entertained by seeing pictures of skeletons?
S.C.—Civilized children are. The skeleton, in civilized society, becomes a symbol of fun during a certain period of the year known as Halloween. Grownups laugh at it and their children learn, by example, to laugh at it too.
F.C.—Do you think the butcher hung the skeleton in his shop to sell more meat?
S. C.—Why certainly.
F. C.—Well, do you think if the man who sells meat for cats were to hang a cat's skeleton in his shop he would sell more meat?
S. C.—Great gobs of cream, no. What a frightful thought. All the cats would think that the meat had been provided by cats.
Funeral Notices
SERR, Mrs. Hazel-Mabel, 56, died at her home, 834 South Lemon St., last night after seven years illness. She was a native of Onneil, Nebr., and had lived in Anaheim since 1932. She had been a life-long member of the Methodist church and was a member of Chispa chapter, 101, OES at Gregory, S. D. Other than her husband, Gilbert W. Serr, she leaves a daughter, Mary Lou of Anaheim and a son, Robert G. Serr of San Jose; three sisters, Miss Tille and Elsie A. Butler of Passadena; Mrs. Ethel Gesler of Anaheim, one brother, Reuben Butler of Visalia. Friends may call at the Eudaly Funeral home, Orange, until noon Thursday. Funeral services will be conducted at the Melrose Abbey mausoleum chapel, Thursday at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Clyde Beecher, pastor of the Orange First Methodist church officiating. Entombent will be in Melrose Abbey.
HUESCA, Mrs. Juanita R., 41, killed yesterday morning in an accident at Oceanside, will be buried from the Backs, Campbell and Kaulbars chapel. Rosy will be Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., with Mass at St. Boniface church, Thursday at 9 a.m. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre cemetery. The deceased lived at 112 West Adele St., and had been in this city for the past 20 years. She leaves her husband, Augustine; two sons, August and John, both of Anaheim, and one daughter, Aurora; three sisters, Mrs. Aurora Barber and Mrs. Tilerita Castillo, both of San Jose, and Mrs. Antonita Castro of Delano.
Missing Cabin Cruiser Found Out of Gas
SAN PEDRO (UP)—A 30-foot cabin cruiser with seven persons aboard was safe in San Pedro harbor today after a 24-hour search that started when the boat was reported missing in the Catalina channel.
Coast Guard planes and cutters began a search Sunday for the craft, the Boatswain, after it left San Pedro and failed to report at Catalina island. The boat was discovered shortly after noon yesterday. It had run out of fuel.
Those aboard the craft were reported in good condition. They were the owner, William W. Baker, of Santa Monica, his wife and daughter, and Alfred E. Veach, of Riverside, his wife and two daughters.
Weather
By UNITED PRESS
Temperature and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 6 a.m.
Public Relations
Told to Rotary Club
"Every businessman, small is faced with selling job than ever before Stewart Jr., Field Secretary National Automobile Club Rotary Club yesterday in "Personal Public Relation Off."
"Public Relations is vital business," he said. He is important of good public interest and stated that every office should realize that son he comes into contact important to his business a potential customer or of good will to others.
Ray Alden acted as chairman of the day andris president of the Rewarded over the ineffectiveness Department is bringing home one or six U.S. Army divisions in western Europe."
S. C.—Why certainly.
F. C.—Well, do you think if the man who sells meat for cats were to hang a cat's skeleton in his shop he would sell more meat?
S. C.—Great gobs of cream, no. What a frightful thought. All the cats would think that the meat had been provided by cats.
F. C.—Well, don't human beings think the same way?
S. C.—My dear kit, very few humans think at all. They have advanced to the point where thinking is unnecessary to living. Certain symbols, they are instructed from childhood, are amusing and so they laugh at them. That makes it much easier to go through life. Skeletons are amusing, mothers-in-law are amusing, people getting hit on the head are amusing, and so on.
S. C.—Is this only true of civilized human beings?
S. C.—Yes. The so-called barbarians respect their mothers-in-law, only hit people on the head when in earnest, and leave their dead buried.
F. C.—Is there any hope, then, that civilized people will become uncivilized again?
S. C.—Oh, yes. The whole animal kingdom is waiting for it. They have invented the means now, all they have to do is apply them.
NADORFF HARDWARE, 249 EAST CENTER in Anaheim ADV.
Catalina island. The boat was discovered shortly after noon yesterday. It had run out of fuel.
Those aboard the craft were reported in good condition. They were the owner, William W. Baker, of Santa Monica, his wife and daughter, and Alfred E. Veach, of Riverside, his wife and two daughters.
Weather
By UNITED PRESS
Temperature and rainfall for 24 hours ending at 6 a.m.
High Low Rain
Albuquerque 73 51 .39
Atlanta 79 55
Bakersfield 68 49
Boston 74 61
Brownsville 80 71
Chicago 83 57
Denver 77 48
Detroit 85 33
El Centro 80 57
Fairbanks 38 16
Fresno 65 44
Kansas City 85 66
Los Angeles 69 55
Miami 84 72 .07
Minneapolis 81 56
New Orleans 84 63
New York 73 61
Oakland 70 44
Phoenix 75 50
Pittsburgh 81 52
Red Bluff 82 54
San Francisco 66 45
Seattle 62 48 .14
Stockton 71 45
Thermal 83 55
Tucson 83 48
Washington 79 52
Yuma 80 55
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
UPHOLSTERING
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725 No. Los Angeles St., Ph. 4717 Free Estimates
HILGENEELD MORTUARY
Faithful, Courteous, Service
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Orange Auction Market Report
By UNITED PRESS
Orange auction all markets
126 150 176 200 220 252 288
First grade 6.77 6.11 5.72 5.15 4.60 4.48 4.38
Second grade 5.10 4.87 4.33 3.94
Trend: About steady
Stock Exchange Prices in Drop
NEW YORK (UP) — Prices on the Stock Exchange turned downward late in the session today after extending yesterday's advance.
Railroad shares as a group led the late sell off. Industrials also eased.
Outside of the rails, price movement was very narrow. Many issues held at their previous close.
General Electric, which reported good earnings and record sales in the first nine months of this year, helped the market somewhat today. The company also declared a special dividend of $1 a share, the first in three years.
Railroad shares met the most profit taking. Losses nevertheless were limited mostly to the fractional zone.
Utilities were virtually unchanged. Aircraft met demand with Douglas the leader. It ran up more than a point at one time.
Steel shares did little despite some quickly dispelled fears that the industry was going to cut its prices.
Produce Market
LOS ANGELES (UP)—Produce: Cantaloups; Crates jumbo Imperial valley 27-36s 3-3.25.
Misc fruits: Dates Coach valley deglet noors hydrated flats 15 lbs
Market Quotations
By William R. Staats Co.
617 First National Bank Building
Santa Ana
Phone KI-23228
Banco & Stores
Air Reduction 22%
Amer. Tel. & Tel. 156%
Anaconda Copre 32
Ralphson, TN SF 47
Caterpillar Tr. 47
Chrysler 67%
Crown Zellerbach 20%
Cons. Vulture 7%
Curtiss Wright 7%
Dixie Cup 37%
DuPont 103%
General Electric 60
General Motors 50%
Goodyear T&R 50%
Kennecott Ward 57%
N.Y. Central 20%
Northrop Aircraft Inc. 14%
N.American Co. 21
Gulf G&E Common 58
Pacific Lkg $4.50 pfg. 96% at 97%
Penney, J.C. Co. 72%
Pennsylvania RR 19%
Phillips Petroleum 52%
Phelpa Dodge 33%
Republic Steel 46%
Richfield Oil 47%
Robertshaw-Fulton Co. 128
Sears Roebuck 56%
Southern Ry. 42
So Cal Ed., Common 26%
So Cal Ed.$1.12 Pfd. 31% at 31%
So Cal Ed.$1.08 Pfd. 24% at 25
So Cal Ed.$1.02 Pfd. 23% at 24
So Cal Ed.$1.02 Pfd. 23% at 24
So Pacific RR 38
Standard Oil, Cal. 50
Standard Oil, N.J. 70
Texas Co. 53%
Transamerica Corp. 25%
Union Oil, Cal. 40%
Union Pacific RR 104%
U.S. Steel 97%
Bank of America 31%
Sec. 1st Natl. Bank 110 bid
Broadway Hale Sts.Com 10 at 10%
Bullock's Common 25 bid
CLOSING AVERAGES
30 Industrials 273.90 up .59
20 Rails 97.15 up .29
15 Utilities 51.03 up .29
VOLUME 1,350,000
Mother of POW Wants To Talk to Son
HAWTHORNE (UP)—The mother of a POW who has refused to leave his Communist captors said today she is sure she could change his mind if she went to Korea and talked to him.
Mrs. Irene Veneris, 53, said she refuses to believe her son, Pfc James Veneris, 31, has accepted the Communist ideology. She is confident he would return home if she reminded him "of his family and his dreams of the future."
The soldier's father, George Veneris, 63, said that if his son "just saw his mother, he'd come home where he belongs."
Bulletin Want Ads Bring Results
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ANAHEIM
Teenage Gang Beats.
with Douglas the leader. It ran up more than a point at one time. Steel shares did little despite some quickly dispelled fears that the industry was going to cut its prices.
Produce Market
LOS ANGELES (UP)—Produce: Cantaloups; Crates jumbo Imperial valley 27-36s 3-3.25. Misc fruits: Dates Coach valley deglet noors hydrated flats 15 lbs $3. Celery: Pascal sturdee and wire-bound crates 2-3s oceano 2.50-2.75. Corn: Wirebound crates golden cross 5 doz Coach valley 2.50-2.75. Eggplant: Lugs 18-24s Coach valley 90-$1. Squash: Italian flats Coach valley-Imperial valley 1-1.50. Misc vegetables: Asparagus per lb imperial valley bunched ex select 35 cents.
Citrus Market
LOS ANGELES — The local citrus report, as prepared by the Federal-State Market News service:
Grapefruit and oranges steady, prices unchanged; lemons about steady.
Lemons: Prices unchanged except local San Diego county-Ventura county loose fancy boxes 5.50-5.75, few fair 5.25.
Public Relations Value Told to Rotary Club
"Every businessman, large or small is faced with the biggest selling job than ever before," Bert Stewart Jr., Field Secretary of the National Automobile Club told the Rotary Club yesterday in his talk."Personal Public Relations Pays Off."
"Public Relations is vital to every business," he said. He stressed the importance of good public relations and stated that every one in business should realize that every person he comes into contact with is important to his business either as a potential customer or a courier of good will to others.
Ray Alden acted as program chairman of the day and Jim Morris, president of the Rotary Club, presided over the meeting.
Army May Lower Troops In Europe by Division
WASHINGTON (UP) — The Defense Department is considering bringing home one or more of the six U.S. Army divisions now stationed in western Europe.
Teenage Gang Beats, Robs Man Near Stanton
STANTON — Julius R. Martiness, 40, 10921 Chester St., Independencia Colony, last night was set upon and beaten by four teen-age youths who robbed him of his driver's license and identification card, he reported to the sheriff's office.
Martines said he was walking from the Mexican colony to Stanton along the Southern Pacific tracks at 11 p.m. when he was attacked by the four youths.
He was unable to identify any of his assailants he said.
More Men than Women Die of Lung Cancer
LOS ANGELES, Calif., (UP)—Some 150,000 Americans die of lung cancer each year and more than 80 per cent of the victims are men, a Tulsa, Okla., physician told the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons here today.
Dr. A. G. Reed, who said 10 per cent of all malignant growths are located in the lungs, told delegates to the college's 26th annual convention the incidence of lung cancer apparently is increasing.
This appearance, however, may be due to the increasing age of the population and improvement of diagnostic methods, he said.
BANK DEBITS
Anaheim bank debits yes-terday totaled $504,943.12, according to figures compiled today by local banks.
MANY SPECIALS
Botts Nursery
LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR
We Give and Redeem Gold Bond Stamps
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Ray Alden acted as program chairman of the day and Jim Morris, president of the Rotary Club, presided over the meeting.
Army May Lower Troops In Europe by Division
WASHINGTON (UP) — The Defense Department is considering bringing home one or more of the six U.S. Army divisions now stationed in western Europe.
High officials said today no firm plans have been made. The final decision will be up to President Eisenhower and the National Security Council.
A meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Council, top planning body of NATO, is tentatively scheduled for December. Any plan to reduce U.S. troop strength in Europe probably would be made known at that time.
MANY SPECIALS—Botts Nursery
LANDSCAPE CONTRACTOR
We Give and Redeem Gold Bond Stamps
1226 Lincoln, Anaheim Ph. 5450
CALIFORNIA BARBER SHOP
Six Barbers
To Serve You
Bill Jackson, Proprietor
314 W. Center St.
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Hallowe'en Breakfast Tickets Go on Sale
Continued From Page 1
Joy it," is the word from Whieldon. Joe Critchfield, Clyde Nickle, and E.R. Peterson are in charge of this part of the program.
Whieldon announced a preliminary list of committee chairman for the breakfast. Bob Beckler is in charge of food procurement, Howard Glimore and Maynard Glenn will handle the cooking, the Junior Chamber of Commerce will serve.
Table arrangements are under the chairmanship of Harold Daoust and Dee Fee; decorations, Lester Johnson and Fremont school art students; coffee makers, Alex Tamale Co.; table setting, Altrusa Club, Mrs. J. Lee Rogers, chairman; coffee serving, Business and Professional Women's Club, Mrs. Lawrence, chairman, Junior Ebell, Mrs. Katherine Suiter, chairman, and the Jaycettes, Mrs. Shirley Harris, chairman.
Reception committee is headed by J Bon Kaulbars; stage, John Ganahl; ticket takers, E. C. West; park arrangements, Paul King; public address system, Charles Organ; transportation, Jimmy Whielden; and stage decorations, Wayne Andrade.
CLOTHES STOLEN
Clothes valued at $32 were taken from the clothes line of Edward C. Dickenson, 899 Avocado St., sometime Sunday night or yesterday, he told police today.
Read the Anaheim Bulletin want ads for profit and pleasure.
Police Clear Youth In Kidnapping Case
NORWALK (UP)—Detectives have cleared one of three youth who confessed, then denied, killings eight-year-old Stella Darlene Nolan.
William R. Hardy, 22, was cleared yesterday after evidence was supplied that he was working in Willits, Calif., June 20, the day the little girl disappeared from Norwalk shopping center.
Hardy was sentenced, however, to six months in jail on a lew vagrancy charge involving the other two youths, 17 and 14 year olds. The latter two were to appear in juvenile court on petty theft charges today.
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