anaheim-bulletin 1954-06-03
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Shipkey Resigns Post As Chest Chairman
Arthur Shipkey tendered his resignation as campaign chairman of the fall fund drive for Anaheim Community Chest Tuesday night, but campaign plans are to continue under a committee which is seeking key leaders by July 1.
John Steffy, vice-president of the chest, heads the committee which will seek a replacement for Shipkey as well as a co-chairman
FOR ATHLETE'S FOOT USE A KERATOLYTIC BECAUSE—
It SLOUGHS OFF the tainted outer skin to expose buried fungi and kills it on contact. Get this STRONG, keratolytic fungicide, T-4-L, at any drug store. If not pleased IN ONE HOUR, yours 40e back. Now at Heying Drug Store.
and key workers for the drive divisions.
Three vacancies exist on the board now; it was announced by president B. W. Jordan, and Bob Routh was named chairman of the nominating committee to seek new board members. Ray Link was named insurance advisor to the board.
June 16 will be an important day in Community Chest circles. Local board members made plans to attend two events that day. First is the noon luncheon and annual meeting of Southern California Assn. of Community Chests at Knott's Berry Farm, with Gen. Omar Bradley to be speaker.
Second event June 16 is the annual meeting and fund distribution for Orange County Federation of Community Chests, a dinner at 7 p.m. in Santa Ana YWCA.
Bulletin Want Ads Bring Results
IF YOUR SAVINGS Are Not Currently EARNING at the RATE OF
3½%
A Change to This Association Is a Good Move to Make
WE PROTEST!—Disputing a plan bunted and was safe at first, Pau Sox manager, and first baseman Joe Paparella and Jim Honochick been called out. Game was played although Chicago won, 6-4.
Kwikset to Name New Administer Two Reps
Employees of Kwikset Locks, Inc. will vote June 7 to select new members for the employee committees which administer two of the Anaheim lockset manufacturing firm's retirement plans.
The committees are the Kwikset Pension Trust committee and the Kwikset Deferred Profit-Sharing committee. One new member will
3½%
A Change to This Association Is a Good Move to Make
Funds placed with us by the 10th of any month receive earnings from the 1st.
Your Account Is Insured Up to $10,000
ANAHEIM BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
On the Friendly Corner — Anaheim, Calif.
Center and Lemon Sts.
Phone KE. 5-2158—KE. 5-2159
Founded June 20, 1921
TOM'S Market
THE STORE OF BETTER MEATS
ONLY TOP GRADE MEAT SOLD HERE
GENUINE
GRAIN FED
BABY BEEF
POT ROAST
BLADE CUT.
49¢
KRAFT
Longhorn
CHEDDAR CHEESE
39¢
GENUINE
GRAIN FED
BABY BEEF
RIB STEAK
69¢
VERY LEAN
FRESH
GROUND BEEF
NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE
49¢
EASTERN
GRAIN FED
POCK CHOPS
50¢
KRAFT
Longhorn CHEDDAR CHEESE lb 39¢
GENUINE
GRAIN FED
BABY BEEF RIB STEAK lb 69¢
VERY LEAN
FRESH GROUND BEEF NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE lb 49¢
EASTERN
GRAIN FED PORK CHOPS lb 59¢
SPECIAL!
Cannon
DISH TOWEL
in ECONOMY size
Cannon
FACE CLOTH
in LARGE size
ECONOMY SIZE only
LARGE SIZE only
DURKEE'S NEW
MAYONNAISE Quart 57¢
Made With Fresh Eggs
SPRY 3 lb. can 85¢
NABISCO
SNOW FLAKE CRACKERS lb. box 23¢
IRIS FANCY PURE
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 18 oz. can 2 for 25¢
CHERRIES
Fancy Tartarian lb 17¢
Fancy Iced lb 5¢
CANTALOUPES Large Meaty each 9¢
MANY OTHER FOOD BARGAINS POSTED IN THE STORE
SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE IT HAS TO BE GOOD at TOM'S MARKET
401 S. LEMON ST., ANAHEIM PHONE KE 5-2508
Sales Tax Added To Taxable Items We Reserve Right to Limit
Now Open DAILY 8 A.M. to 7 P.M. SUNDAYS 8 A.M. to 1 P.M.
California Loses Chance for New Air Force School
WASHINGTON (UP)—The Site Selection Commission for the Air Force Academy recommended today that the academy be located at one of these three sites.
Alton, Ill.; Colorado Springs, Colo.; or Lake Geneva, Wis.
Air Secretary Harold E. Talbott will make the final choice from one of the three sites.
Talbott said he thinks we "will come up with a final answer fairly soon, certainly within a month."
Under the law setting up the Site Selection Commission, the secretary would have been required to accept any recommendation made unanimously by the five-man commission.
But the law specified that if the commission were unable to reach unanimous agreement on a single site it should designate three sites from which the secretary would choose one.
Talbott said he will make a personal inspection of each of the three proposed sites. He said his selection "will be made only after a thorough examination of land acquisition, construction engineering and many other problems incident to building the academy."
The commission, which included Charles A. Lindbergh, reserve brigadier general, traveled more than 18,000 miles by air to inspect proposed sites in many states.
Talbott said, "I wish to express the appreciation of the Air Force and the nation for the thorough, tireless and scriptulously fair study conducted by the commission in reaching its recommendations."
"The members of the commission applied to the problem some
TEST!—Disputing a plan when Bob Feller, Indian pitcher, and was safe at first, Paul Richards (left), Chicago Whiteager, and first baseman Ferris Fain, argue with umpires Merella and Jim Honochick. They think Feller should have ended out. Game was played under protest at Cleveland, Chicago won, 6-4.
set to Name New Members to Register Two Retirement Plans
of Kwikset Locks, Inc. June 7 to select new or the employee com-administer two of the Kwikset manufacturing plans.
Mittees are the Kwikset test committee and the deferred Profit-Sharing One new member will cash and annuity. Or, it may be paid to a beneficiary in case of the employee's death before retirement, or upon total disability of the employee, or after termination of employment.
Candidates for the pension committee are: Danny Bates, Chuck Benzie, Ewing Edwards, Ben Ford, Dave Garcia, Frank Goff, You
KEY TO CALLS—Pacific Teleing keys to place calls through dial direct to telephones in operation Sunday morning.
Mrs. Luce Capab As Ambassador
ROME — Question Do Italians resent the fact that United States has sent a wom ambassador?
Answer: The Italians being polite people gave Mrs. Boothe Luce a courteous reception but kept their distance. Mrs. I told President Elsenhower
of Kwikset Locks, Inc.
June 7 to select new
for the employee commander two of the
kwikset manufacturing
plans.
Ittees are the Kwikset
st committee and the
deferred Profit-Sharing
One new member will
each.
Locks, Inc. pays for
ment plans in their enployee never conthe funds. Under the
first plan, an employee
seen with Kwikset 25
retiree at age 65 and
monthly pension check
in the company equivailer cent of his monthly
pensions is given
periods of service at
the plan als provides
life insurance benefits.
In addition to benefederal Social Security
kwikset deferred profitreferred profit-sharing,
y sets aside part of its
ally to accumulate
better in the plan until
the normal retiring.
Upon retirement, the
to the Kwikset in
cash and annuity. Or, it may be paid to a beneficiary in case of the employee's death before retirement, or upon total disability of the employee, or after termination of employment.
Candidates for the pension committee are: Danny Bates, Chuck Benzie, Ewing Edwards, Ben Ford, Dave Garcia, Frank Goff, You Young Liu, Wally Schmidt, Lynn Stull and Chuck Wittersheim.
Candidates for the Deferred Profit-Sharing committee are: Nola Anderson, Dorothy Bell, Doris DeConnick, Theresa aBrennan, Brennan, Louise Carriss, Arlene Crowell, Dorothy Danenhauer, Edna Gautsche, Joan Hazard, and Molly Quandt.
Anaheim Soldier in England Interviewed By Radio Station
SANTA ANA (OCNS) — An Anaheim serviceman who is serving as an Army private in England says he will return to Anaheim schools when he finishes his military service.
Private Herman D. Jungkeit, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman A. Jungkeit of 720 S. Janss St., made the statement in a tape recorded interview prepared for radio station KVOE in Fairford, England.
The Anaheim GI said that he is serving as a smoke generator operator — part of the defensive measures that protect the British Isles from enemy planes.
He said that he has enrolled in an electronics course in the military and plans to fusher his studies when he is discharged.
In a side note of the broadcast, he gave his mother a special message to the effect that he has lost 10 pounds during the two and a half months he has been serving in England.
"But," he said, "don't worry. I'm getting plenty of good food. He says there are eight men in his platoon from Orange County. 'It's practically the same bunch we used to go to the drag races in Santa Ana with,' he said.
The commission, which included Charles A. Lindbergh, reserve brigadier general, traveled more than 18,000 miles by air to inspect proposed sites in many states.
Talbott said, "I wish to express the appreciation of the Air Force and the nation for the thorough, tireless and scriptulously fair study conducted by the commission in reaching its recommendations."
"The members of the commission applied to the problem some of the best brains and experience in the field of military and civilian aviation and of education, as well," said Talbott.
Members of the commission, in addition to Lindbergh, were retired Gen. Carl A. Spaatz; Lt. Gen. Hubert R. Harmon, special assistant to the chief of staff for Air Force Academy matters; Merrill C. Meigs, vice president of the Hearst Corp.; Chicago; and Virgil M. Hancher, president of Iowa University.
President Eisenhower signed on April 1 the bill creating a 126 million dollar West Point of the Air. The bill also authorized one million dollars for a temporary academy.
The Air Force has said students probably will start training in the temporary academy sometime in the summer of 1955. They probably will move to the permanent academy in 1957.
A class of 300 cadets is expected to enroll in the summer of 1955. The number of cadets from each state will be proportion to the state's membership in the House of Representatives.
By 1959 or 1960 the Air Force hopes to be graduating 600 to 750 officers a year.
The commission which recommended the three sites was appointed April 6.
It was told to look for a site which would have adequate space for a full size academy comparable to the Military Academy at West Point, N. Y., and the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., with additional provision for a modern flying field.
It was estimated that a total of 15,000 acres would be required. The commission also was instructed to take account of "the natural beauty of the site and of the surrounding country" and of a year-round climate without extremes of heat or cold.
Santa Anan Involved
ROME — Question Daisi Italians resent the fact that United States has sent a womassador?
Answer: The Italians being polite people gave Mrs. C Boothe Luce a courteous reception but kept their distance. Mrs. told President Eisenhower she offered her job that they were two strikes against her was a wmoan going to a "m country" and she was Mrs. Luce controversial woman. Today Luce feels the problem that she a woman has been overcome there remain both Italians Americans who believe her job twice as hard because of her.
Question: Is Mrs. Luce popu- Answer: This is not the meing stick for an ambassador who first job is to represent his own country. Obviously the most pilar ambassador is the one gives away $100,000,000 with strings attached. Mrs. Luce as representative of an economy-ed Republican administration less aid to give and more quest to ask than her predecessors.
Question: How good a job is Luce doing?
Answer: This is one which the State Department can ans-An ambassador is not supposed solve another country's prob- perhaps the chief task of an ex-in these days of rapid commun- is that of reporter—and Luce is a vateran reporter. She tells Washington about must be tailored into Amer- global strategy. Another main is to put Americas best foot- ward at all of the dedications ner parties and youth for which take so much of an am sador's time. She adds a not glamor to these occasions.
Question: What does her think of her?
Answer: She has the com-m loyalty of her staff. One ave Democrat who disagrees with politically has stayed an extra- to carry out her decisions. Say in private what they say public—that they respect her chief holdouts against her members of her own sex. Two ticisms are voiced: that she sa times fails to listen to her adv and that she fails to delegate day-ta-day running of th
In a side note of the broadcast, he gave his mother a special message to the effect that he has lost 10 pounds during the two and a half months he has been serving in England.
"But," he said, "don't worry. I'm getting plenty of good food. He says there are eight men in his platoon from Orange County. 'Its practically the same bunch we used to go to the drag races in Santa Ana with.' he said.
"I'll be back to school in Anaheim in another year,' Jungkeit promised, his parents in the broadcast."
Santa Anan Involved In Freeway Tieup
LOS ANGELES — A motion picture studio bus loaded with 33 technicians was involved yesterday in a seven-vehicle tangle at the main cloverleaf system of the downtown freeway system.
Traffic was tied up for miles in all directions after a car driven by Harold Binan, of Santa Ana, collided with the studio bus, which then was struck by another car. A chain reaction involving four more cars followed.
Two studio workers were injured sightly but none required hospitalization.
Bulletin Want Ads Bring Results
(POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT)
Republicans--Elect
FRED N. HOWSER REP.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
ATTORNEY GENERAL
COMMITTEE TO ELECT FRED N. HOWSER - 426 S. HILL STREET, LOS ANGELES
TO CALLS—Pacific Telephone's Glady Vogan, long distance operator, demonstrates method of punchkeys to place calls through $4½ million machine in Los Angeles. Equipment enables operators to
direct to telephones in distant cities without aid of others along route. Machine went into
operation Sunday morning.
s. Luce Capable Ambassador
ME — IP — Question Do the
ans resent the fact that the
States has sent a woman
ambassador?
ower: The Italians being a
people gave Mrs. Clare
e Luce a courteous reception
cept their distance. Mrs. Luce
President Eisenhower when
New Long-Distance Dialing Machine
Now in Use in Southland Areas
Telephone users in Anaheim and 63 other Southland communities
this week were enjoying faster connections on long distance calls to
distant cities after Pacific Teleph one activated its $4½ million operator dialing machine early Sunday morning in the company's Los
Angeles communications center.
A quick hand signal by Los Angles Mayor Poulson was all that
was required to put five floors of
near - human apparatus into lively
activity, enabling long distance
Santa Ana Housewives
Hold on Chock Counts
Ambassador
Me — Question Do the news present the fact that the United States has sent a woman ambassador?
Answer: The Italians being a people gave Mrs. Clare the Luce a courteous reception kept their distance. Mrs. Luce President Eisenhower when offered her the job that there two strikes against her—she was wmoan going to a "man's cry" and she was Mrs. Luce a universal woman. Today Mrs. feels the problem that she is man has been overcome but remain both Italians andicans who believe her job is as hard because of her sex.
Question: Is Mrs. Luce popular? Answer: This is not the measure for an ambassador whose job is to represent his or her cry. Obviously the most populambassador is the one who away $100,000,000 with no attached Mrs. Luce as the representative of an economy-minded republican administration has told to give and more questions than her predecessors.
Question: How good a job is Mrs. doing? Answer: This is one which only state Department can answer, ambassador is not supposed to another country's problems ups the chief task of an envoy these days of rapid communications that of reporter—and Mrs. is a vateran reporter. Whatells Washington about Italy be tailored into America's strategy. Another main role put Americas best foot forward at all of the dedications din-parties and youth forums take so much of an ambas-sons time. She adds a note of order to these occasions.
Question: What does her staff of her? Answer: She has the complete duty of her staff. One avowedocrat who disagrees with her really has stayed an extra year worry out her decisions. They on private what they say in that they respect her. The holdouts against her are bers of her own sex. Two criis are voiced: that she some-fails to listen to her advisers that she fails to delegate the day running of the em-
Telephone users in Anaheim and 63 other Southland communities this week were enjoying faster connections on long distance calls to distant cities after Pacific Telephone one activated its $4½ million operator dialing machine early Sunday morning in the company's Los Angeles communications center.
A quick hand signal by Los Angeles Mayor Poulson was all that was required to put five floors of near - human apparatus into lively activity, enabling long distance operators to dial direct to telephones in many cities throughout the nation without assistance from operators along the way.
Manager Herb Perry said the machine makes it possible to establish most connections in a few seconds. Few will take more than a minute.
He said customers should continue to place long distance calls in the normal way. On a typical call a long distance operator plugs into the machine, dials a special code for the distant city, then the number of the telephone being called. Instead of a dial, however, she uses a set of keys resembling buttons on an adding machine.
The equipment automatically selects the most direct route, or if necessary an alternate route, and completes the connection.
Among the first to try out the new system on Sunday were the parents of Vice President Richard Nixon in Whittier. The elder Nixons placed their call through a long distance operator in the Whittier toll office and within a few seconds were speaking to their famous son Washington.
The Los Angeles machine, 27th in the nation, took more than nine months to install by 189 Western Electric technicians and another two months of testing before it was ready for the cutover.
"This machine," Perry said, "is a major step forward in the continuing progress of long distance telephoning. It represents a tremendous improvement over the crude system that carried the first long distance call in 1876 between Boston and Salem, Mass. — 16 miles apart."
Seek to Form Car Club Association for County
TUSTIN, (OCNS) — A meeting to organize all car clubs in Orange County into an association was
Santa Ana Housewives Held on Check Counts
SANTA ANA, (OCNS) — Two Santa Ana Gardens housewives were in Orange County jail today after a check - writing spree which amazed officers of the forgery and check detail.
Mrs. Martha Joan Yearton, 26, and her sister - in law, Mattie Margaret Yearton, 26, were arrested by police and sherif's deputies yesterday and charged with innumerable counts of writing bad checks. The two women were arrested on a Santa Ana warrant.
According to Sergeant E. E. Ely of the Santa Ana forgery detail Martha Yearton opened an account on March 19 at the Bank of America in Santa Ana. Since then she has deposited $244.76. However, since that time, also some 63 checks have been returned to Orange County merchants for insufficient funds. Mrs. Yearton also opened an account at another Santa Ana bank and admitted to officers she cashed as many as eight bad checks in one day on the second account.
Her sister-in-law opened an account at the Bank of America also, and then one at the Security First National. She told officers she had cashed some $400 worth of bad checks during the time since she opened the account.
Most of the checks were reportedly cashed in Santa Ana and Costa Mesa grocery stores, however, Sergeant Ely says many others are scattered throughout the county.
The two women are being held on multiple felony charges.
Seek to Form Car Club Association for County
TUSTIN, (OCNS) — A meeting to organize all car clubs in Orange County into an association was held at the city hall here.
Officer E. F. Zimmerman, CHP, president of the Orange County Peace Officers Association, discussed the improvement of car club standings with the public and expressed the opinion that if all Orange County car clubs were organized into an association, it would be easier to promote better understanding.
Car clubs from Fullerton, Santa Ana, Anaheim, and Tustin were represented at the meeting. It was decided to hold a second session June 8 at the Tustin city hall. All interested car clubs are invited to send a representative.
If It's News You'll See It In The Bulletin
SHOWS START AT DUSK
Pacific DRIVE-IN THEATRES
COME AS YOU ARE IN THE FAMILY CAR
Orange HELD OVER
ROADSHOW ENGAGEMENT
Adulta $1.00 Inc. Tax
Elizabeth Taylor "ELEPHANT WALK"
—Technicolor—
"ARROW IN THE DUST"
Paulo
THE YELLOW TOMAHAWK
IN OMEREO COLOR
BARBARA STANWYCK
GEORGE SANDERS
GARY MERRILL
"WITNESS TO MURDER"