anaheim-bulletin 1954-05-10
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WINNERS—Happy days for these participants and sponsors of annual Driver Road-Day-O at Schoen Ann, won by Newport Harbor Union High School team and Brea-Olinda lad. Left to right: J. L. McDonough, president of co-sponsoring North Santa Ana Kiwanis Club; Russell Meador of Brea-Olinda Union High School, best boy driver; Malinda Bechtold of Newport Habor Union High School, best girl driver; Tom Summer, with whom she teamed to take school honors; and Bob Stricklin, co-sponsoring Farmers' Insurance Group. (Staff photo)
Fourth Largest Cotton Crop in History Seen
WASHNGTON (UP)—The Agriculture Department in a final re-crop at 16,465,000 500-pound bales, up slightly from last December estimates. This was the fourth largest crop on record.
Today's figure, based on ginning reports from the Census Bureau, compares with a 16,437,000 bale crop estimated last December, production of 15,139,000 bales in 1952 and 1942-51 average output of 12,216,000 bales.
The report came as farmers, under surplus reducig acres controls, are planting 21,400 acres of cotton this year with normal yields would produce only an 11,500,000 bale crop.
Today's report said 25,240 acres of cotton were in cultivation last July, 24,341,000 acres were harvested, and national averages were a record 324.2 pounds an acre.
Fourth Largest Cotton
Crop in History Seen
WASHINGTON (UP)—The Agriculture Department in a final rencrop at 16,465,000 500-pound bales,
up slightly from last December
Today's figure, based on ginning reports from the Census Bureau, compares with a 16,437,000 bale crop estimated last December, production of 15,139,000 bales in 1952 and 1942-51 average output of 12.216,000 bales.
The report came as farmers.
Enter Skylark's
BUICK-A-WEEK
CONTEST
Details on Skylark Bread
at SAFEWAY
A BUICK-A-WEEK FOR 6 WEEKS plus 630 APPLIANCE PRIZES
WHITE or WHEAT BREAD
SKYLARK BRAND
Large std. loaf
26¢
SPLIT TOP WHITE BREAD
SKYLARK BRAND
Large std. loaf
26¢
SLENDER-WAY BREAD
SKYLARK BRAND
Std. loaf
24¢
MULTI-GRAIN BREAD
SKYLARK BRAND
Std. loaf
22¢
OTHER VALUES FOR MON., TUES., WED.
Curtsy
BAKERY SPECIAL
POUND CAKE
SPECIAL
25¢
Regular 32e
BREAKFAST GEMS
EGGS
MEDIUM SIZE
GRADE A doz. 42¢
MARSHMALLOWS.
Coconut Toasted
Roxbury brand
12-oz. 29¢
pkg.
DAIRY GLEN BUTTER
First Quality
Grade A
lb. 59¢
CONGENTRATED
FRESH MILK
Lucerna brand. A real space saver.
Ideal for outings and camping.
QUART.
CARTON
49½¢
Price in local milk
SDADED IRCS
SMALL SIZE, under 3-lbs.
MARSHMALLOWS
Coconut Toasted 12-oz. 29¢
Roxbury brand pkg.
DAIRY GLEN BUTTER
First Quality
Grade A lb. 59¢
CONGENTRATED FRESH MILK
Lucerne brand. A real space saver.
Ideal for outings and camping.
QUART CARTON 49½¢
Price in local milk
SPARERIBS
SMALL SIZE, under 3-lbs.
Lean and meaty. Select
Eastern pork
lb. 53¢
CORNED BEEF
USDA CHOICE GRADE
Boneless brisket
Serve hot or cold
lb. 49¢
VEAL ROLL
BONELESS FOR ROASTING
lb. 49¢
GIANT BOLOGNA
IN THE PIECE
lb. 39£
GROUND BEEF
FRESH-PACKED IN VISKING
lb. 39£
Entire sides of selected beef are ground daily to make the West's best buy in ground beef.
Made under California state inspection!
CARROTS
TOPS REMOVED
Crisp and juicy because they are fresh-pulled!
lb. 5¢
GRAPEFRUIT
LARGE SIZE
Grown in sunny Coachella Valley. Heavy with juice
lb. 5¢
PRICES EFFECTIVE MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 11, 12, 1954.
AT SAFEWAY STORES IN ANAHEIM AREA. Right to limit reserved. No sales to dealers
SAFEWAY
Store Hours: Including Meat Section
PARK FREE AT 135 S. LEMON
Daily—Sunday thru Wednesday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Thursday 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturdays 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Jacksteit Relates Story of Boyhood Under Red Rule
Telling a story of oppression in Russian Lithuania, Reverend Berthold Jackstein, pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church, related to the Anaheim Optimists the tragic sequence of events of his boyhood under Soviet rule.
"You, who were born here, can hardly realize that love and mutual respect for one another, together with a sense of security are perhaps the greatest privileges of being an American," stated the Anaheim clergyman.
Rev. Jackstein's father was a Free Baptist minister in the Ukrainian area of southern Russia. Born of German parents, he was promptly taken into Russian custody in 1914 at the outbreak of hostilities between Germany and Russia. For three years and ten months they were not to hear from him again.
Given 24 hours to pack up and leave, the Jackstein family, consisting of the mother and seven children, were forced to bid a tearful gobdbye to their blind and bedfast grandfather and to gather up only a few of their belongings and leave forever the place that once was home. With no remuneration for the home they owned, their few possessions packed in a neighbor's open wagon, they set off on a three week trip to find refuge with a family living in a log cabin by the Black Sea.
Followed Rumor
A rumor persisted that father Jackstein 'was somewhere in Odessa and his wife went there in futile search. In reality, with 85 others considered to be security risks, he...
Newport Drivers Win Road-Day-O
SANTA ANA—By only a two-point margin, Newport Harbor Union High School's boy-girl team of student drivers, Tom Sumner and Malinda Bechtold snatched a coveted trophy from Brea-Olinda Union High School at Saturday's Driver Road-Day-O.
And by only two-thirds of a point, Brea-Olinda's Russell Meador became best-of-boy drivers over Larry Shepard of Huntington Beach—who forgot to answer one question on a written test.
Miss Bechtold scored again when she rang up but a one-point lead over Ruth Stevens of Orange, to become best-of-girl drivers.
In team competition Huntington Beach ranked third, and these in order named: Orange, Santa Ana, Valencia, Garden Grove, Fullerton, Anaheim and Capistrano.
Rankings behind Meador were Shepard of Huntington Beach and Tommy Sumner of Newport Beach; and behind Miss Bechtold were Miss Stevens and Sharon Miller of Brea-Olinda.
Student journalists competing for awards for their stories about the annual Driver Road-Day-O at Santa Ana Community Center will get their trophies, along with the drivers, at an awards luncheon Thursday noon at Balboa Bay Club.
The driving competition was sponsored by the Farmers' Insurance Group and the North Santa Ana Kiwanis Club, and both will join as hosts for all the competitors at the awards luncheon.
Bulletin Wani Ada Bring Results
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ment in New York where friendly neighbors had set up a table loaded with more food than the Jack-steita had seen in years.
Young Berthold Jacksteit entered a New York 5th ward school. There he learned our language. One day his teacher pointed him out and openly gave him praise. The lad was overwhelmed. That was the turning point in his life. From then on he became an honor student and vowed to follow in the steps of his father and enter the ministry.
"The dignity and worth of the individual is all important," concluded Rev. Jacksteit, "and I thank God that I am now an American."
Optimist Rev. Harry Stief introduced the speaker. President Lloyd Lichtenwalter presided.
If It's News You'll See It In
The Bulletin
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Monday, May 10, 1954 ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN — 7
Jimmy Durante ‘Scared’ During TV Show While Pulling Tail of Lion
HOLLYWOOD — Comedian Jimmy Durante, who entered a cage and yanked a lion’s tail, wisecracked today that “the only thing between me and them lions was my nose.”
The audience that witnessed last night’s Colgate comedy hour television show on NBS didn’t realize that Durante was performing a stunt considered dangerous enough that he couldn’t get insurance. The lions, ironically, were insured.
Durante walked into the cage and yanked the lion’s tail after guest star Shelley Winters, standing outside the cage in the role of a lion tamer, told him “If you love me, go in there and fight those lions.”
“It could have been disastrous,” Durante said afterward. “Thank God it’s over. I was scared and any man would be a fool who wasn’t.”
When the comedian emerged from the cage the entire cast heaved a sigh of relief.
What most of the viewers didn’t know was that Durante, who played the part of a sad clown, had to tweak the lion’s tail five times during rehearsals just to get the act right.
While rehearsing, one of the two lions acted up and growled at Durante. The comedian admitted he was frightened to go through with the scene on his last show of the season.
The lion trainer Mel Koontz said:
The lions are trained, but they’re dangerous. They have to be considered as wild animals. Jimmy was in danger every second that he was in the cage. I’ve got to give him a lot of credit for his courage.”
could put McCarthy in the witness chair before nightfall.
On his return from a Wisconsin
Long Beach Housewife Wins Net Tourney Title
LOS ANGELES (UP) — Herb Flam of the San Diego Naval Training Station, and top seeded Beverly Baker Fleitz, Long Beach housewife, won the singles crowns at the 68th annual Southern California Tennis Tournament.
Bob Perez and Bill Crosby teamed to defeat Flam and Stewart, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3, for the men’s doubles championship.
CHRYSLER COPS RACE
LANCASTER (UP-Chuck Dalgh drove his red Chrysler Curtis to victory yesterday in the featured 40-lap event of the California Sports Car club’s first open road race.
If It’s News You’ll See It In The Bulletin
ASK SHOWDOWN ON MOVE TO END ROW OVER McCarthy
WASHINGTON (UP)—Sen. Everitt M. Dirksen (R-Ill demanded "showdown" today on his move to terminate the Army-McCarthy hearings, with just one more witness — Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy. Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark) charged in an interview that the proposal would violate the "Ameri-ian sense of justice" by preventing full and public presentation of all the facts in the angry row.
But Dirksen insisted on putting his formula before the Senate Investigating subcommittee today as resumed its inquiry with Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens on the stand for the 13th day.
A pitched battle between the Republican and Democratic members seemed assured for the first time in the hearings. It was expected to overshadow McCarthy's promised final day of cross-examining Stevens.
Informed sources revealed GOP leaders are pushing the Dirksen plan to the hilt on the theory that removing the all-Republican squabble from the nation's television screens would politically outweigh Democratic criticism.
Dirksen, who happens to be chairman of Senate GOP Campaign Committee, indicated in an interview today that he believes the subcommittee's four Republicans should override the Democrats to put his plan across, even the Army side objects. That could put McCarthy in the witness chair before nightfall.
On his return from a Wisconsin speaking engagement late Sunday, McCarthy said the Dirksen proposal is a "good thing" because it would let him get back "to the more important work" of hunting Communists.
The Army's counsel, Joseph N. Welch, has maintained the hearings should go on to "the end of the furrow." There were reports the Army feels that a full airing of the case will help rather than hurt its side.
Sen. Henry C. Dworshak (R-Idaho), who replaced McCarthy on the subcommittee for the hearings, endorsed the Dirksen proposal on the grounds it is far more important to adjudicate this case than to prolong the public spectacle." Acting Chairman Karl E. Mundt (R-SD) indicated the views of both sides should be considered.
Dirksen suggested that if "supplementary" testimony is needed to wind up the investigation after McCarthy testifies, it could be taken behind closed doors. But the Democrats also sharply attacked this.
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7:10x15 15.95*
6:50x16 16.95*
7:60x15 17.45*
* Plus tax and your recappable tire
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201
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