anaheim-bulletin 1954-05-08
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4 — ANAHEIM (CaL) BULLETIN Saturday, May 8, 1954
Published Daily Events Except.
Sundays and Holidays by
ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC.
222 S. Lemon St. Anaheim, Calif. Phone KE 6-0651
HAZEL D. LOUDON, President
L. H. LOUDON Jr., Vice-President and Co-Publisher
STANLEY LOUDON, Co-Publisher and Treasurer
MILDRED TAGGART, Member of Board
RICHARD FISCHLE, Jr., Secretary and Business Manager
DON SHAFFER, Editor
CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Society and Women's Department
C. Wm. BLAND, Advertising Manager
Legalized in accordance California State Law December 28, 1951.
Entered as second-class mail matter August 16, 1923 at the post office at Anaheim, California, under the Act of March 2, 1879.
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Common Cry
History tells us that Ben Franklin was not only a noted philosopher, statesman, printer and inventor, but also quite a bookkeeper. Uncle Ben used to keep accounts of his daily expenditures right down to the last penny. In that way he knew just where his money went, and the fact that he acquired considerable means was undoubtedly due in some degree to his alertness on expenses. That brings up a point of considerable interest today. The common cry in almost every household is: "Where does the money go?" The average family has only the vaguest notion of how much is spent on various items, especially non-necessities. By keeping a careful record or by making all payments by check, the loopholes of waste can be plugged. In so many homes it isn't the lack of money so much as the poor handling of it that creates the problems. Following Ben's example may not make you rich but it will relieve that "broken down" feeling in the region of your pocketbook.
As It W
By H
WASHINGTON (UP) — new around Washington:
The press room at the Press became so cluttered with wanting to look at the teat for news of the McCarthy dispute that one scribe pans on the door which read authorized correspondents o
A lady in Washington had glued and ears bent to her vision set during an excitement in the hearings whi two little sons had a smash. Quit acting like ser
May 8, 1945
It's hard to believe, isn't it, that the war in Europe ended nine years ago. The official end of the struggle came on May 7, 1945 (with the announcement being made the next day). At that time the war in the Pacific was still going strong. We were making steady progress but there was little reason to hope that it would all be over by the middle of August. But at that time we hadn't met the atom bomb. In May 1945, the original session of the United Nations was under way in San Francisco. In Washington Harry Truman had been in the White House less than a month following the sudden death of Franklin Roosevelt. Both Hitler and Mussolini had died violently a few days before and their top henchmen were scrambling frantically for cover. Incidentally, it was on May 10, 1940, almost exactly five years earlier, that Hitler had sent his paratroopers swarming into France and the Low Countries. Time and events have a way of catching up with would-be conquerors of the world.
Competition in Action
The consumer has been getting a welcome break lately. The cost of many of the commodities we buy has declined. Others have held steady in price, which is itself a refreshing change from the time when every month brought jumps. Few costs have risen. And most of the forecasts say a moderate downward trend will continue.
Various reasons are responsible. For one thing, practically everything is in abundant supply—the output of our factories has literally been staggering. In some instances improved production methods have resulted in cost cuts. And, on the retail level, competition is at an extremely high pitch.
month brought jumps. Few costs have risen. And most of the forecasts say a moderate downward trend will continue.
Various reasons are responsible. For one thing, practically everything is in abundant supply—the output of our factories has literally been staggering. In some instances improved production methods have resulted in cost cuts. And, on the retail level, competition is at an extremely high pitch.
This means that the merchant must offer every inducement, including the lowest possible price, to the public—not because he is charitably inclined, but because that's the only way he can keep his business.
SONGS OF A SONNETEER
BY R. LOUIS SCOTT
"ALL THINGS TO ALL . . . !"
He created all: both the great and small;
The minute blossom, the sequoia tall;
All things that be—including man and breast.
Fish that swim, birds that fly—and snakes that crawl
Despite fulminations of sage or priest—
God is in all things: the famine, the feast,
Both right and wrong—and all that lies between:
He is nucleus of greatest—and of least!
At His command, the fields are sere—or green;
Soft breezes blow or angry storms careen
The ships at sea: neither omen nor spell
Bars Him from the souls of clean—or unclean!
Saints face their God wherever they may dwell—
And sinners find Him on the hearths of Hell!
KEY MAN?
KOREAN INDOCHINA PEACE
GENEVA CONFERENCE
As It Was Told To Me
By HARMAN NICHOLS
WASHINGTON (UP) — What's new around Washington: The press room at the Pentagon came so cluttered with persons anting to look at the teletypes of news of the McCarthy-Army dispute that one scribe pasted on the door which read: "For authorized correspondents only."
A lady in Washington had eyes used and ears bent to her television set during an exciting moment in the hearings when her little sons had a small-boy assault. Quit acting like senators.
Mundt that she wished the committee would start the hearings a little later. "Ten-thirty in the morning," she said, "is feedin time for myb aby. I would think you all would be more considerate!"
Rep. Clarence Brown (R-O) figures generals and admirals can save money by sharing limousines. Brown is on a Government Operations Committee considering a bill to create central government car pools which might save as much as five to 10 million dollars annually.
SATURDAY, MAY 8—Born today, the stars have given you many and diverse talents which should be developed at an early age. You must however, learn to develop your own will power and determination if you are to reach the heights which you desire. You are such a perfectionist, perhaps, that you lack confidence in your own ability. This is a serious defect, for all too often the world takes its measure of a person by the amount and degree of self-confidence one shows.
You have a gentle, kindly personality and have the capacity for great friendship. You are fond of the beautiful in nature and if possible should spend part of your time, at least, in the country. If you must work in a city., try and live in the surburbs.
The stars do not indicate that you have what is called "luck" in speculative ventures, so stick to sure things, rather than take any chances on something. The "hundred-to-one" chance of a lifetime to make a fortune is not for you! Your marriage should be an especially happy and contented one.
Among those who were born on this date are: Harry S. Truman, 3rd U. S. President; Danie, author; Robert Ingersoll Aitken, sculptor; William H. Vanderbilt, financier, and L. M. Gottschalk, pianist and composer.
To find what the stars have in store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
SUNDAY, May 9
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20)—If life seems just a little too confusing, seek spiritual advice. It can be very helpful, indeed.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Attendance at the church of your choice may bring a real uplift to your spirits just now.
CANCER (June 22-July 23)—Early hours should be for worship.After that, you may make recreational plans appropriate to the
SUNDAY, May 9—You are a person of emotions and very emotions. Your battle, most will be against become upon a subject, once interested in it.
You are not one who rely upon others life will depend upon initiative, your own writ and your own ability of the talents which he queathed you by that are, more than marry your own fate. You have netic personality with people to you and give influence over them themselves, may not at Remember to keep you for upon you rests tha to what your follow when you are leading.
Your family ties are since you are attractors of the opposite sex that you will have apt tunities to wed. Your section of a marriage have a great deal to do ultimate success and or failure and unhappy life.
Among those who wish this date are: James playwright; the former Zita of Hungary; Jizabolitoisto; Richard and Mae Murray, silent and Henry J. Kaiser, m.
To find what the store for your tomorrow your birthday star are corresponding paragraph birthday star be your Monday, May 9
TAURUS (Apr. 21-June 21)—Lemma may arise today for quiet, calm but tion. Be prepared for GEMINI (May 21-June 21)
While working conscientious today's schedule, give thought to your future CANCER (June 22-July 23) work and no play c
Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
HOLLYWOOD (UP)—Rosalind Russell, home in Hollywood after 20 years, said today her recent roadway hit should prove to move down she still has "audience acceptance."
The actress is sunning again by the swimming pool behind her nearby Hills home after scoring sensation in the stage musical, Wonderful Town.
Her first play in 18 years boosted her career after a few so-so pictures. But, the vivacious Roz reflected, "It's part of show business to keep proving your ability."
Everybody's career has ups and downs and that doesn't bother her.
She said, "There's lots of work if you go out and do it: You can't sit around and wait for Hollywood."
You can let studio executives on your life and tell you 'you're not of work. We don't want you.' Look at Lloyd Nolan. His success Broadway now should wake him up here to the fact he's good actor and has been all wrong.
Audience Counts
Once a star has audience acclimation, you always have it. Nobody can take that away from you.
Yet it's amusing and interesting you must continue to producers. But I understand," the actress said, fluffing her short, black curls, "the studios have stockholders to keep happy.
But just because studio executives don't want you doesn't mean a million other people don't. You just have to go out and find the work.
Now that she's discovered she can be a song-and-dance queen, Roz has returned to pictures for her first film musical, "Girl Rush," which has a Las Vegas gambling hall background. She and her husband, Fred Brisson, are making the movie for their own producing company.
"I just got paid on Broadway for doing a lot of junk I do in people's living rooms," the fast-talking actress grinned. "At parties people usually ask me to keep quiet. I've been clowning chronically for years."
"If we could fool the people in 'Wonderful Town' with a foghorn voice like mine we thought we'd try it on the public."
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
Rep. Clarence Brown (R-O) figures generals and admirals can save money by sharing limousines. Brown is on a Government Operations Committee considering a bill to create central government car pools which might save as much as five to 10 million dollars annually.
Brown recalled that once during the gasoline saving days of World War II Army and Navy officers came to Congress for appropriations. He told the committee that when the generals and admirals came out of the meeting "each one of them got into his own limousine. There were a dozen or so lined up, all with the motors running so the generals wouldn't get their toosies cold."
Chairman Clare E. Hoffman commented: "I hope we aren't getting into a contest with the Army like some members of the Senate."
Acceptance, you always have it. Nobody can take that away from you.
Yet it's amusing and interesting you must continue to producers. But I understand," the actress said, fluffing her short, black curls, "the studios have stockholders to keep happy.
But just because studio executives don't want you doesn't mean a million other people don't. You just have to go out and find the work.
Now that she's discovered she can be a song-and-dance queen, Roz has returned to pictures for her first film musical, "Girl Rush," which has a Las Vegas gambling hall background. She and her husband, Fred Brisson, are making the movie for their own producing company.
"I just got paid on Broadway for doing a lot of junk I do in people's living rooms," the fast-talking actress grinned. "At parties people usually ask me to keep quiet. I've been clowning chronically for years."
"If we could fool the people in 'Wonderful Town' with a foghorn voice like mine we thought we'd try it on the public."
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
Sunday, May 9
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20)—If life seems just a little too confusing, seek spiritual advice. It can be very helpful, indeed.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Attendance at the church of your choice may bring a real uplift to your spirits just now.
CANCER (June 22-July 23)—Early hours should be for worship.After that, you may make recreational plans appropriate to the day.
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23)—Not a day to brood over things you didn't do yesterday! Relax tensions today and make plans for tomorrow.
VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23)—This should be a definite day of rest for you. If energies are sagging, they will spring back.
LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23)—This is a day for care on the roads of you are driving in heavy traffic. Watch out!
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—This is a good day for your activities. Do what you wish and your plans will work out well.
BAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 22)—If you are restless and find you are worrying over things, seek the help of spiritual guidance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 20)—This could be a fine time for a family outing in the country, weather permitting.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19)—Even if you are a careful driver, yourself, watch out for the other fellow.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20)—Make it a point to visit an old acquaintance. If you cannot go in person, telephone!
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20)—Spiritual activities are favored. Your church and your community may need your cooperation.
(Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Women's Work
ITHACA, NY — Spring cleaning is good for the figure as well as the house.
So say home economists at Cornell University, who point out that if properly done the semi - annual battle against dirt is good for body toning and health. But proper equipment and intelligent supervision of your capacities are necessary.
The experts also say it's a smart woman who must be daily guide to birthday star be your daily guide.
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20)—If life seems just a little too confusing, seek spiritual advice. It can be very helpful, indeed.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Attendance at the church of your choice may bring a real uplift to your spirits just now.
CANCER (June 22-July 23)—Early hours should be for worship.After that, you may make recreational plans appropriate to the day.
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23)—Not a day to brood over things you didn't do yesterday! Relax tensions today and make plans for tomorrow.
VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23)—This should be a definite day of rest for you. If energies are sagging, they will spring back.
LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23)—This is a day for care on the roads of you are driving in heavy traffic. Watch out!
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—This is a good day for your activities. Do what you wish and your plans will work out well.
BAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 22)—If you are restless and find you are worrying over things, seek the help of spiritual guidance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 20)—This could be a fine time for a family outing in the country, weather permitting.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19)—Even if you are a careful driver, yourself, watch out for the other fellow.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20)—Make it a point to visit an old acquaintance. If you cannot go in person, telephone!
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20)—Spiritual activities are favored. Your church and your community may need your cooperation.
(Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS BY ELSIE BAY
A UNIQUE CHEMICAL -- Calcium cyanamide when applied to the soil kills weeds, then undergoes a rapid chemical change and becomes a highly effective fertilizer.
TOURISTS CAN PICK FAR UNDERGROUND FOR TROUT AND BAGG — MERAMEC CAVERNG, STANTON, MO.
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
ITHACA, NY UP — Spring cleaning is good for the figure as well as the house.
So say home economists at Cornell University, who point out that if properly done the semi-annual battle against dirt is good for body toning and health. But proper equipment and intelligent supervision of your capacities are necessary.
The experts also say it's a smart woman who puts her husband to helping. He seems to fit in the "proper equipment" category—he can be helpful at taking care of the younger children, preparing a meal or two, praising the wife for the cleaning job well done, and helping. He seems to fit in the ture. If he wants to go farther, he can wash walls and windows or run the vacuum cleaner.
Ring in Family
Actually, Cornell experts say, the campaign against dirt should be well organized, with all members of the family participating, sometimes over the full year.
Women are finding that by distributing special cleaning processes over a period of time, they are able to eliminate the annual upheaval. A woman might wash windows in one or two rooms one week and brush down walls or launder curtains the next week. Or she may prefer thoroughly renovating one room at a time. In this way, she lessens the great physical effort of the annual cleaning.
Dirt can be kept out of the house. Hard - surfaced walks leading to the house or doormats and scrapers near entrances will cut down on mud or dirt clinging to shoes. Frequent sweeping of steps, porches and walks also helps.
Good Ladder Needed
Another step in making cleaning easier and safer is the kind of equipment used.
Equipment for sweeping, mopping or cleaning rugs should have frequent bending while plays havoc with mother's small table on cast used for supplies to be from room to room. For at different levels, safety as fatigue should be sturdy stepladder, preferably attached shelf to hold water, is a good ladders should be long allow two or three steps one on which the work thus reducing the changing.
Learn how to lift here with a minimum of effort the strong thigh musculating rather than benchtaking rather than benchtaking or washing based when picking up articles strain on the back muscles fortable working clothes ventilation also are impaired.
Above all, don't over first few days. Take free periods and alternate between hard tasks.
Ten Years A
Janet Power, daughter of Mrs. Edward Power of was recently cast in a Sian play at Plintridge girls.
John Tuffree of Plain show motion pictures through Mexico at the Anaheim Farm Center.
Angela Martinez of the Edmund Mendoza of have obtained a license to Mr. and Mrs. A. O. of Placentia announce the of her daughter, Patricia J. Kraemer, USN.
1350 Anaheim elements participated in the festival at the city park.
SUNDAY, MAY 8 — Born today you are a person of very intense emotions and very definite opinions. Your battle, most of your life, will be against becoming fanatical upon a subject, once you become interested in it.
You are not one who can hope to rely upon others. Your entire life will depend upon your own initiative, your own will to succeed, and your own ability to make use of the talents which have been bequeathed by the stars. You are, more than many, master of your own fate. You have a magnetic personality which draws people to you and gives you an influence over them which they themselves, may not at first realize. Remember to keep your ideals high for upon you rests the decision as to what your followers may do when you are leading.
Your family ties are strong and since you are attractive to members of the opposite sex, it is likely that you will have several opportunities to wed. Your ultimate selection of a marriage partner will have a great deal to do with your ultimate success and happiness — or failure and unhappiness — in life.
Among those who were born on this date are: James M. Barrie, playwright; the former Empress Zita of Hungary; John Brown abolitionist; Richard Bartlehness and Mae Murray, silent screen stars; and Henry J. Kaiser, manufacturer.
To find what the stars have in store for your tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Monday, May 19
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20)—Problems may arise today which call for quiet, calm but decisive action. Be prepared for it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21) — While working conscientiously on today's schedule, give a serious thought to your future plans.
CANCER (June 22-July 23) — All work and no play can be very WASHINGTON — Now it turns out that the dramatis personae of the McCarthy-Army hearings consists solely of supermen. Such will power nobody ever did see before.
Here Sen. Joe McCarthy has been aboving a mystery letter under their noses, marked secret and confidential and bearing the name of J. Edgar Hoover as author. And every last one of em has refused to look at it, except slightly. How a man can slightly look at a letter is one of the marvels of the week.
Secretary of Army Robert Stevens wouldn't look at it at all. He said that wouldn't be right. His attorney, Joseph Welch, looked a little, but not enough to tell what it was about. An assortment of senators glanced at it, but did not look. That's quite a trick, too. And then there was the committee's No. 2 counselor, Robert A. Collier, who used to be a G-man himself.
He was assigned to take this carbon copy of a letter to J. Edgar Hoover and see whether the bold Federal agent actually had written it. Hoover said he hadn't; he'd send an Army general a 15-page memo concerning alleged subservients at the Army's radar laboratories in New Jersey. This letter of Sen. Joe's, however, ran only two and a quarter pages, but it did contain considerable language identical to that in Hoover's original memorandum. Or so Hoover told Collier.
"It has been a little, hard to carry it around all night and not read it," replied the forthright Collier. "But I tried hard not to read it."
He said he did read the beginning of it, all those confidential warnings and the salutation, "Sir." He glanced at page two long enough to note it contained a list of names, but he did not read them. He then turned to page three, where he saw the ending, "Sincerely yours." Nothing else in Sen. McCarthy, called the letter hot. He said, hand it to him. Carefully he did not read it.
"Now this document is a carbon copy of precisely ntohing," he said, averting his gaze from the billet doux. "Is that right?"
"So far as I know, it is," said Collier.
"And so far as you know, it is a perfect phony?" insisted Welch.
"You say that," retorted Collier, 'not me."
Counsellor Collier went on to say that he hadn't seen the original of Sen. McCarthy's carbon copy. Nobody yet had been able to find it. But if it is found, he said, then of course Sen. Joe's document is a carbon copy of something.
Sen. McCarthy insisted that all the secret stuff had been deleted from his carbon copy; he pleaded with the gentlemen at least to look at it. Nobody would, at least until the Attorney General ruled that they could.
It was about here that a stranger at the press table, a small man in a handsomely tailored blue suit, refused to be evicted by a working reporter. He said he was a commando. He pulled out a letter and in so doing revealed his monogram embroidered on his pocket. A cop tried to ease him out gently. He wouldn't be eased. And he walked out shouting, over and over again: "Flying Tigers, Flying Tigers."
Downstairs we kept and identified himself as a resident of The Bronx, N.Y. Upstairs the gentlemen were back arguing about that letter.
Sen. McCarthy said it was not either, a fake. He said he could prove this if a witness only would read it. Collier still wouldn't look at it further, but he was ordered to ask Hoover if in fact it was the same as the original memo, except for the deletions. Poor Collier. Ahead of him is another rough night with his power, but I would bet he wished...
your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Monday, May 19
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20) — Problems may arise today which call for quiet, calm but decisive action. Be prepared for it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21) — While working conscientiously on today's schedule, give a serious thought to your future plans.
CANCER (June 22-July 23) — All work and no play can be very dull — but today may have to be one of those "all work and no play" days!
LEO (July 24-Aug. 23) — Haste can cause accident. Be on your guard against carelessness with fire around the house today.
VIGRO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23) — Continuous effort, even though rather dull, should bring you the rewards you have been seeking.
LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23) — This is a day when your utmost in active energy may be needed to cope with matters at hand.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — It may not be easy to get back into the workaday routine after a pleasant week end, but you can try.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 28-Dec. 22) — Develop your artistic talents for it is a real waste not to make use of them when you can.
CAPRICORN* (Dec. 23-Kan. 20) — If you relaxed in the open yesterday, you should be willing and eager to get back to work today.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19) — Concentrate on the job now. Office detail may need every bit of your attention. Do a job well.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20) — No matter how complicated things seem today, you should be able to face them confidently.
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20) — Be efficient in all you undertake. Wasting either time or energy today is a very bad idea.
(Distribute by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
long handles. These prevent the frequent bending which usually plays havoc with mother's back.
A small table on casters can be used for supplies to be transported from room to room. For tasks lone at different levels, safety as well as fatigue should be considered. A sturdy stepladder, preferably with attached shelf to hold a container of water, is a good investment.
Ladders should be long enough to allow two or three steps above the one on which the worker stands.
Record Review
Concert Music
NEW YORK — Of the many young men with pianos, Leonard Pennario is one of the more spectacular. He plays with much technical finesse to which is added a quality of personal communicability that is right if it hits you as right. His playing of Chopin's Barcarolle, a frequently abused splash of veiled emotion, struck this reviewer as precisely right.
The reverse record side has his playing of the full Mephisto Walts of Liszt which becomes monotonous no matter how accurately and drastically played (Capitol). An excerpt conveys its flavor and worth, as in the memorial record of the late William Kapell (RCA Victor).
It is not Liszt which makes that record worthwhile, but Kapell's sensitively poetic playing of Bach's D major partita and of six landler and one impromptu of Schubert, particularly the Bach. Aside from the sentiment conjured by the words "In Memoriam," the record gives you a sense of the enormous loss when this young man (31 years) died in a plane accident last September.
Liszt is the sole subject in the introductory recording of another young man, Peter Katin. The Liszt is the Dante Sonata, the lesser known E major Polonaise and the six "Consolations." To play Liszt accurately and even brilliantly is gratifying to the youngish pianist, of course, You assume Katin found it so. But it adds up to a lot of Liszt (London).
Katechen's Records
The third piano concertos of both Bartok and Prokofieff are the materials of 27-year-old, Julius Katechen, backed by Ernest Andersen and his Suisse Remande Orchestra (London). Born in New Jersey, a child prodigy who played with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the age of 11, Katechen lives in Europe and his American reputation is based largely on his records. This one reveals his acute grasp of the modern idiom.
John Eggington, English organist, is the master of the Bachian language in his exquisite performances of two of the Preludes and Pugues, of the C major Toccata, Adagio, and Fugue, of one of the Chorale Preludes, and of the D major fugue. This is altogether an exceptional organ-tone recording, as well as being exceptional for musicianly quality (LDisease Lyre).
Jascha Heifetz's newest recording is of the violin concerto of Erich Korngold, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Wallenstein, and Lalo's concero; "Symphony Expagnole," with an orchestra under Steinberg. Korngold's chief identification now is with the movies. Heifetz's superb musicianship reminds that he once was a composer in the romantic tradition (RCA Vieter).
Farmer McCabe
May 8, 1954
Went ever to the big city to git a Passport the other day, but them fellers told me that I'd have to some other proof that I was born—This struck me as being sorta funny, cause for a guy that can't prove that he was born, them Treasury Hounds shoregit a lotta taxes outta me.
Farmer McCabe
(All rights reserved)
frequent bending which usually plays havoc with mother's back.
A small table on canisters can be used for supplies to be transported from room to room. For tasks lone at different levels, safety as well as fatigue should be considered. A sturdy stepladder, preferably with attached shelf to hold a container of water, is a good investment.
Ladders should be long enough to allow two or three steps above the one on which the worker stands, thus reducing the chance of falling.
Learn how to lift heavy objects with a minimum of effort by using the strong thigh muscles. Squatting rather than bending when dusting or washing baseboards and when picking up articles relieves strain on the back muscles. Comfortable working clothes and good ventilation also are important.
Above all, don't overwork the first few days. Take frequent rest periods and alternate between easy and hard tasks.
Ten Years Ago
Janet Power, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Power of this city was recently cast in a Shakespearean play at Flintridge school for girls.
John Tuffree of Placentia will show motion pictures of his trip through Mexico at the meeting of the Anaheim Farm Center May 2.
Angelta Martinez of this city and Edmund Mendoza of Santa Ana have obtained a license to vard.
Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Ackerman of Placentia announce the marriage of their daughter, Patricia to Lt. M. J. Kraemer, USN.
1350 Anaheim elementary students participated in the May Day festival at the city park Friday.