anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-22
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Taxpayers Stand To Lose by New Tax Laws
By LYLE C. WILSON
WASHINGTON (UP)—Any way you slice it, the United States treasury and millions of taxpayers stand to lose next year when things begin happening to our tax laws.
Here's the program so far as it is known now:
1. The excess profits tax on corporatics and 10 per cent of the individual income tax levy come off at midnight Dec. 36.
2. Regular corporation income taxes will be cut from 52 to 47 per cent as of April 1 unless Congress votes otherwise. Certain emergency excise taxes also will be reduced in varying sums of liquors, beer, cigarettes, gasoline and automobiles.
3. As of Jan. 1, the Social Security tax paid by employees will increase from 11-2 to 2 per cent. This tax is paid on wages and salaries up to $3600 a year. The levy on employers also would go to 2 per cent.
4. The Eisenhower administration has agreed to expiration of the excess profits tax and the 10 per cent individual income tax reduction. It wants to postpone the five per cent regular corporation income tax cut and is on record that the reduction in emergency excise taxes.
5. Budget Director Joseph M. Dodge is most vitally concerned, next to President Eisenhower with balancing the budget. Budget officials estimate now that it would cost the Treasury about $7,000,000,000 of annual revenue to permit all the foregoing levies to expire on schedule next year. That would be a severe loss to the treasury, a bitter dose for Dodge.
ALL AMERICANS — Anytime is the time for a pretty girl, and a pretty girl and a seasonal favorite make a wonderful combination. She's Mamie Van Doren, Hollywood star who has been chosen as the "All American Waltress" by the National Restaurant Association. The blonde discovery has chosen an old favorite, pumpkin pie, as the All American dessert.
Searchers Find Pair Beside
SAN FRANCISCO (UP)—Harry Bridges, head of the powerful International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, appears today before a Senate subcommittee investigating the nation's merchant marine problems.
Sen. Charles E. Potter (R-Mich) chairman of the subcommittee, said his group had no intention of conducting a "labor probe" but that it was simply interested in hearing all aspects of West Coast shipping in its current three-day hearing.
Other members of the subcommittee are Sens. Warren Magnuson (D-Wash) and John M. Butler (R-Md). To broaden the inquiry, Potter invited Reps. John J. Allen Jr., (R-Calif) and John F. Shelley (D-Calif) to sit in with the subcommittee.
Shipping company executives testified yesterday they are particularly incensed at costly delays and heavy charges involved in getting ships through the Panama Canal.
Charles L. Wheeler, executive vice president of Pope — Talbot Steamship Company, said canal authorities have arbitrarily established conditions which turn a ship's profit into a loss.
“If they would have one conference—only one conference—and their customers, perhaps we could work out some equitable solution,” he said.
James Sinclair, president and general manager of Luckenbach Steamship Company, said his firm has paid $21,500,000 in Panama tolls since 1921 at the rate of about $7500 a ship for each trip.
Searchers Find Pair Beside Crashed Airplane
FRESNO, Calif. — Ben Baxter, pilot of a light plane missing for three days in the snow covered High Sierra, said today he and his woman companion were "getting mightily discouraged toward the last" as they lay beside their smashed plane awaiting rescue.
Baxter, 47, and Mrs. Edith Meade, 42, both of Fowler, Calif., were recovering in a hospital here from injuries suffered when their plane crashed Sunday on Big Shuteye Peak, 27 miles south of Arnold's Meadow, during the first Sierra storm of the season.
Nineteen planes joined in a wide search for the missing plane before the couple was found yesterday by two Forest Service employees.
The foresters, Don Pearson and Oscar Schlichting, said they spoted the downed plane about 1000 feet below the summit of Big Shuteye Peak. Their attention was caught by a signal fire started by Mrs. Meade.
"We would have died if it wasn't for Mrs. Meade," said Baxter, a Fowler auto dealer. "She pulled me from the wreckage, made us as comfortable as possible and built signal fires that finally brought help."
Baxter suffered a broken leg and Mrs. Meade was treated for a possible leg fracture and multiple bruises. Hospital officials said their condition "was very good."
Baxter was believed to be alone when he disappeared after taking off from Arnold's Meadow during a driving rainstorm. Mrs. Meade was not reported missing until Tuesday night.
House Agriculture Group To Move West Nov. 1
WASHINGTON (UP) — The House Agriculture Committee, seeking "grass roots" views on new farm legislation, will move into the West Nov. 1.
Chairman Clifford R. Hope (R-Kan) announced that the group will assemble at Cheyenne Nov. 1 and hold a formal hearing there the next day. Other hearings are scheduled for Pendleton, Ore., Nov. 4; Santa Rosa, Calif., Nov. 7; and Whittier, Calif., Nov. 12.
There's No Substitute for Paid Circulation.
Daffodils by Any Name Are Longest Lived Bulbs
Daffodils by Any Name Are Longest Lived Bulbs
Daffodil Types Differ Chiefly in Size of Trumpet.
Years of spring flowering may be expected of the bulbs planted in the fall which have three names—daffodils, jonquills, narcissi. Call them by either name and you will be correct for all practical and poetic purposes. The poets seem to prefer the first two, and the botanists use the last.
The flowers inspire the poets, because they are true heralds of spring, blossoming soon after the ground thaws, the first large blossoms in the garden. Of all bulbs they are probably the easiest for the amateurs to grow. They bloom each spring for many years without replanting, and with small attention. Many types multiply until they crowd, when they should be lifted, divided and replanted over a larger area.
The principal difference between the types is in the size of the trumpets, which vary from the large trumpet varieties, which when well grown rise two feet high with flowers six inches across and trumpets three inches long, to the poeticus type whose trumpets are mere cups, usually of bright red.
Hybrid varieties between these extremes have trumpets of varying sizes. While large trumpets are so far limited in color to white and yellow, there are medium trumpet varieties which have red and orange trumpets, combined with white or yellow petals, in vivid contrast.
Breeders have long sought to produce "pink daffodils," and a few varieties have been introduced which have trumpets faintly suffused with pink when grown in greenhouses, or in shady places outdoors. But this color fades quickly in the sun.
Daffodils thrive in woods, where they can be naturalized and grow with little attention. They like to nestle at the feet of shrubs, or under trees, where they blossom before the leaves come out in locations which then are in the sun, but later will be shaded. They are seldom lifted oftener than once in three years. But never plant them where their foliage will be cut off before it turns yellow, which indicates that a new bulb has been formed and has matured.
Some of them are delightfully fragrant. They are ideal cut flowers, as is shown by the quantities of daffodils forced and sold by florists each winter. The trumpet varieties are easily grown as house plants, provided only that the atmosphere is not too dry, in which case buds often blast.
The sooner daffodils are planted in the fall, the better; it gives them more time to make roots and become established in the new location before the freeze-up. They need this time, because they blossom so early in the spring, they have little time to grow then, after the ground thaws out.
PARK FREE IN AN
Indicates City-Free Auto Park
– JUST FOLLOW THE A
ROQUET'S MA
5 West Broadway, Anaheim Tax Added to Taxable Items Open 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Inc
LARGE RANCH LOCAL
EGGS DOZEN 67¢
SHORTENING
CRISCO 3 lb. cans 87¢
TIDE large pkg. 29¢
CHEER large pkg. 29¢
SAVE 10¢ Get coupon worth 10% on Lipton Chicken Noodle or Tomato-Vegetable Soup with 1 lb. Snow Flake Saltines
LARGE PACKAGE DISQUIT 2 40 oz. 41¢
RICH'S
R. H. RICH
Special Prices to Churches and Clubs — PKO
Well folks another week rolls by and this "Believe it or Not" it pleases us to please yo RICH'S MARKET
A REAL DEAL FOLKS
Bridgford's Sugar Cured Sweet SMOKED PORK SALE!
Smoked PORK CHOPS lb 65¢
Boneless 3 to 4 lb. ave. HAMS Smoked Butts lb 65¢
No. 1 Piece Sugar Cured BACON Any Size lb 63¢
Tendered Bacon SQUARES lb 35¢
BACON Armour full sliced ... lb
WISCONSIN CHEDDAR CHEESE ... lb
SAVE 10¢
Get coupon worth 10¢ on LIPTON CHICKEN NOODLE or TOMATO-VEGETABLE SOUP with 1 lb. SNOW FLAXE SALTINES
Snow Pound Flake Box Crackers 23¢
LARGE PACKAGE
BISQUIT 2 40 oz. Pkg. 41¢
BEECH NUT STRAINED
BABY FOOD 2 jars 21¢
Borden's Ready To Bake
BISCUITS 2 cans 25¢
Swifts' Oleomargarine
ALL SWEET lb 28¢
Durkee's Fresh Egg
MAYONNAISE qt. 57¢
RED YAMS
FINE FOR BAKING
4 lbs. for 25¢
THOMPSON SEEDLESS
GRAPES
2 lbs. for 15¢
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1853 ANAHEIM (CaL) BULLETIN
IN ANAHEIM
LOW THE ARROWS -
MARKET
9 A.M. to 8 P.M. Including Sunday Specials for Friday and Saturday
CH'S MEATS
R. H. RICHARD'S & SONS
ues and Clubs — PKONE 6948
Next Door to the Post Office
rolls by and this week another variety ad — you know something folks,
pleases us to please you. We LOVE TO SERVE YOU! The Best For Less at
DEAL FOLKS
Gar Cured Sweet
PORK SALE!
OPS lb 65c
b. ave.
ked lb 65c
r Cured
y Size lb 63c
lb 35c
U.S. Choice Legs 0'
LAMB Oven Ready lb 63c
U.S. Choice
LAMB CHOPS lb 69c
U.S. Choice or Good Rounds
None Finer
Round Steak Full Cut lb 55c
Swiss Steak lb
SIRLOIN TIP STEAKS lb 65c
All Meat Boneless lb 55c
PIKE'S PEAK ROAST Extra Spec.
Oven Ready lb. 53c
RUMP ROAST FRESH GROUND BEEF -- 3 lbs. 95c
63c
lb 35c
All Meat Boneless
PIKE'S PEAK ROAST 55c
RUMP ROAST Extra Spec.
Oven Ready lb. 53c
FRESH GROUND BEEF -- 3 lbs. 95c
57c Fresh Steaks lb. 65c Steaks lb. 45c
SWORDFISH HALIBUT
THE POCKET ITEMS
1b 35c
1b 29c
1b 23c
2 lb 25c
FRESH DRESSED POULTRY
Fresh Turkeys 10 to 12 lbs. lb 59c
Caponized Fryers lb 63c
Fresh Dressed Rabbits lb 54c
Red Stewing Hens lb 39c
YAMS FOR BAKING
lbs. for 25c
PSON SEEDLESS GRAPES
lbs. for 15c
WASHINGTON JONATHA APPLES
3 lbs. for 25c
CASABAS
lb. $2\frac{1}{2}$
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