anaheim-bulletin 1959-04-29
Searchable text
TV in Review
By WILLIAM EWALD
NEW YORK (UPI)—"Ah, Wilderness," a Eugene O'Neill memoir baked back in 1933, is one of those uncomplicated celebrations of wholesomeness that threatens constantly to topple into failure.
It is a kind of Penrod with seek or to change the image, a clumsy Norman Rockwell cover redeemed from banality by the thread of course vitality that weaves through its innards.
Tuesday night NBC TV's Hallmark Hall of Fame presented a 60-minute version of "Ah, Wilderness!" and handled its creaky bones with reverence and a good deal of skill. Robert Hartung's adaptation was tight and geared admirably for the TV screen and director Bob Mulligan pumped enough oil and movement into its skeleton to keep it from looking like three Father Knows Bests brunched back-to-back.
There's not much to trouble an audience in "Ah, Wilderness!"
Uncle Sid drinks and is canned from jobs, but he is essentially a comic figure; young Richard is portrayed by adolescence, but we know he is made of Good Stuff and will muddle his way through happiness; Aunt Lily is settling down into old maidishness, but she seems to have adjusted to it; mother worries and father frets, but they are worries and frets that never really threaten their gingercake existence.
It's all a little like a candy musical and it would not have surprised me at all if someone had burst into "Ah, it's a beautiful morning."
EVERYONE INVITED — In preparation for Western High School's Open House to be held Thursday in conjunction with Public Schools Week, Carl Lenhart puts the finishing touches to a poster proclaiming the event. Tomorrow's evening program is dedicated by Wendy vited to attend local youth.
Mailman Minister Trip of Preaching
By George MacLaren
A Placentia ordained minister was back on the job last week as a mounted mail carrier at the Brookhurst sub-station after an extended 13-week vacation spreading Christianity from Calcutta to Madras—a distance of a thousand miles—in India.
Robert (Bob) Wallace, an ordained minister of the Udenominal Church of the Lord, Placentia, went to India by invitation to establish a branch of his local church.
The mild-mannered evangelist who celebrated his 60th birthday March 13 in India returned home
cians' strike, seemed to have a good deal of trouble adjusting the color on the taped show. At one point, during the "facts of life" scene, one staffer pushed the wrong button, blacking out the screen for about 10 seconds.
Ed Murrow's one-hour filmed interview with Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery Tuesday night on CBS-TV was a stunning portrait of the man — crusty, outspoken, prideful, strutting. Agreement or disagreement with his views aside, it was wonderful to bear a personality speak clearly and bluntly and a relief from the vague nice-Nellyisms that afflict many TV conversations.
Wallace was accompanied his mission through Indian and villages by K. Krupanand and O. J. N. Edwards, a worker at Nidadavole. Both had read the Second Comfort paper which the local churchishes and sends all over world.
Both, more than a year invited Wallace to visit India teach Christianity to the people Today Krupanadam is past the Undenominational Church India, and O.J.N. Edwards, a visional superintendent of his Wallace's mother, Mrs. beth Wallace, 89, said that past she would have opposed but thought that now "the call of the Lord."
The evangelist accumulate Post Office vacation time asked for some extra time sure of having enough for the journey.
Wallace had never been on North American continent discovered the plane ride from Angeles to Calcutta much comfortable than the trip he in a two-seater bi-plane as porter for the Galveston No. 1920.
While in India, the miss enjoyed several modes of portation: bullock cart, bus and in cities, rickshaw dra bicycle.
SPECIAL LOW . . . AUTO INSURANCE RATES!
For this area:
NEWT GREENWAY, Agent
8325 Brookhurst Ave.
FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Phone PRospect
4-7283
NEWT GREENWAY, Agent
8225 Brookhurst Ave.
FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Phone PRospect 4-7283
the Diner's Club
RECOMMENDED MEMBER
DINERS CLUB CARDS ARE WELCOME AT DOWS WE ARE OPEN Sun. thru Thurs. 9 A.M. Until Midnight Fri. and Sat. 9 A.M. Until 2 A.M.
Hap's
PARAKEET SEED
2-lb. Pkg. 29¢
TRIPLE JACK
Is Back—We've Got It!
82¢ Fifth Plus tax
Jean's Frozen
ROLLS 2 Pkg. of 12 29¢
Laura Scudder
PEANUT BUTTER
Ib. Jar 39¢
Stahl Meyer
Corned-Beef Hash
No. 2 Can 23¢
Manhattan Sliced
Cotto Salami or Bologna 6-oz. Pkg. 29¢
Subject to Stock
KOLD KIST King Size Steaks 4½-oz. Ea. 17¢ ea.
LIQUOR frozen food DELICATE Corner Brook ANAHEIM, CA
April 30; May 1, 2, 3
Please Come
open house
Western High School Plans Dinner
Climax at Western High School of the April 27 to May 1 Public School Week observance will be the second Annual Open House and PTA-sponsored Ham Dinner on Thursday.
Parents and the general public are invited to the dinner which will be served from 5 to 7 p.m. in the school cafeteria and to then visit classrooms which will be open from 6 to 9 p.m. with teachers present.
Lockheed Announces Division's PR Director
LOS ANGELES — Appointment of Benjamin H. Cook, La Habra, as director of public relations of the new Lockheed Electronics and Avionics Division (LEAD) was announced today by Dr. Louis N. Ridenour, Lockheed vice president and LEAD general manager.
Establishment of the new division to expand Lockheed's participation in the fast-growing military and industrial electronics market was announced early last month. LEAD has opened temporary headquarters in Lockheed branch plant near Mavwood Calif., to develop, manufacture and market a variety of electronic mechanical devices and advance instrumentation.
Cook spent 13 years in Southern California reporting and editing work before joining Lockheed California Division public relations staff in 1963.
Minister Finishes Teaching in India
B.E.Goodrich
BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
10 DAYS ONLY
Minister Finishes Teaching in India
Wallace sent regular reports to his church and to Pastor Elsie Richards. The letters have been filed away for a possible book in the future.
The Indian visitor usually preached in his customary American dress, although his hosts invited him to wear the Indian sari.
"I had nothing to offer but the Bible," Wallace said. "For nearly all my listeners, my talk was the first they had ever had about Christianity, and they want to hear more."
Wallace said he held two and sometimes three meetings a day. "I would just finish one meeting, and be informed they were already singing at the next."
The Placentia evangelist said he personally prayed for hundreds of people, and sometimes took 2½ hours to go thrugh the prayer line.
During his mission through Indian cities and villages Wallace stayed in homes of rich and poor, Christian and Hindu.
"Living in an Indian home as a servant of God shows you’re a person of humility, something you don’t get living at a hotel," Wallace commented.
He appreciated the freedom of travel which the Indian government gave him. At San Francisco, he had presented his invitations from Krupanadam and Edwards to the Indian Consul-general, and traveled as "an ambassador of good will from the American people."
Very evident to Wallace during his mission was the very low standard of living. Much disease prevalent in India is caused by lack of proper food, and poor sanitation, he observed.
Upon his departure, Wallace said he was urgently invited to return. "My friends asked me to stay a year, and said they would petition Parliament for permission." Wallace noted.
While in India, the missionary enjoyed several modes of transportation: bullock cart, bus, train and in cities, rickshaw drawn by bicycle.
Also a DOWS at 1160 SOUTH ST. LONG BEACH
Stahl Meyer
Corned-Beef Hash
No. 2 Can 23¢
6-oz. Pkg. 29¢
LIQUOR
frozen foods • GROCERIES
DELICATESSEN
Corner Brookhurst & Lincoln
ANAHEIM, CALIF. Phone KE 5-3552
April 30; May 1, 2, 3
LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED
FRY-PAN
SALE PR
129
Other Bargain Specials
WAS NOW
Motorola TV 219.00 199.90
Kelvinator Refrigerator 219.00 189.50
Kelvinator Freezer 219.90 99.90
Kelvinator Washer 219.95 189.90
B.F.Goodrich
Smileage starts here
Plans Dinner, Open House
A highlight of this year's Open House will be tours conducted through the school's expanded facilities; especially through the new boys' gymnasium, locker rooms, and pool area.
The faculty chairman for Open House, together with a committee of the heads of the various departments, is in charge of arrangements for the evening Mrs. Dan Bellifante is dinner chairman for the PTA.
Use Stereophonic Sound In Latest Hearing Aids
NEW YORK (UPI) — Stereo has gone to work for the hard-of-bearing Hearing aids have been developed which come in pairs, one for each ear, separately adjusted.
The Hearing Aid Industry Conference said this method of binaural hearing enables persons with certain types of defects to achieve a better sense of sound direction and distance that a single aid would give them.
Rheem And Siegler Join In Manufacturing Merge
A joint manufacturing arrangement for the manufacture of consumer products in the home equipment field has been entered into by The Siegler Corporation and Rheem Manufacturing Company, it was announced today by both companies.
John G. Brooks, Siegler president and A. Lightfoot Walker, president of Rheem, said the new arrangement will result in improved manufacturing efficiencies for both companies. The arrangement will affect plants of Rheem and Siegler located in Southern California.
The new plan, worked out through the combined efforts of the Holly-General Division of Siegler and the Home Products Division of Rheem, calls for the manufacture of Siegler's line of General water heaters at the Rheem plant in South Gate. Concurrently, plans are being made for the production of certain added lines of Rheem heating equipment at the Pasadena plant of Siegler.
STORE-WIDE SALE!
10 DAYS ONLY
BUY NOW USE YOUR CREDIT
STORE-WIDE SALE!
10 DAYS ONLY
BUY NOW
USE YOUR CREDIT
PAY LATER
Schwinn
LIGHT DELUXE TORNADO
SALE PRICE ONLY
49 88
26" BOY'S OR GIRL'S
More Schwinn Bicycles are Sold Every Year than Any Other Make.
AS LOW AS 4.75 Down
AS 2.00 Weekly
ALUMINUM CHAISE LOUNGE
SARAN WEBBING
ALCOA TUBING
SPECIAL
8 95
Airy Spring Cushion
FULL WIDTH DESIGN
SALE PRICE
166
Coil spring construction
Open-weave fiber design
POLISHING CLOTH
1¢ SALE
Buy one for 75c
Get another for 1c
Wax-treated high quality cloth. Absorbs dust–dirt ...leaves finish clean and bright.
BATH SCALE
3.88
Tip-proof design
Magnifying lens for easier reading
Available in six exciting colors
Y-PAN
QUALITY
SALE PRICE
12'95
BATH SCALE
3'88
Tip-proof design
Magnifying lens for
easier reading
Available in six
exciting colors
54" IRONING BOARD PAD AND COVER SET
Stain-water-search resistant
Aluminized by Alcoa
Keeps softness permanently
SPECIAL
77¢
Again Specials
WAS NOW
219.00 199.95
ator 219.00 189.50
219.9 99.95
219.95 189.95
B.F.GOODRICH RETREADS
8'88*
6.70-15
TRADE THIS FOR THIS
Full tread width
Pull tread depth
*Plus tax and Retreadable Tire
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
B.F.Goodrich
524 W. CENTER
PRospect 4-7578
Open Friday Evenings Till 9 P.M.