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anaheim-gazette 1946-02-14

1946-02-14 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 12 · OCR glm-ocr
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Around Anaheim take a gander This has been a two-holiday week, with patriotic observance of Honest Abe Lincoln, our inimitable President who uttered his first "manly yell" Feb. 12, 1809... followed by "hearts and flowers day" Feb. 14... a day dedicated to guys and gals who are young in heart irregardless as to their birthday candle count! LOOMING OVER Orange county's horizon is a rosy promise of being able to keep Saturday night dinner-date. Even now, many of our world of merchants are contemplating with smiles a new era of week-ends beginning at 5:30 p.m. Women are looking forward to being better companions in their home... whipping up those gay little suppers by candelight... enjoying a luxurious leisure-bath, and appearing fresh and utterly feminine with shop-worn nerves and aching metatarsals forgotten. Forgotten too will be that antiquated tradition of the "Saturday night shopping" parade to be replaced by a new modern habit of just "living" as other folks do. Many of our prominent merchants contend that the finer things in life, such as rest and mutual association with their families, are much more important than mere dollars and cents appeal. ON THE OTHER side of the fence—and there are two sides to everything—we business people and ranchers will have to adjust ourselves to these new shopping hours... if they are city-wide, and this, of course, will take time. SAY IT WITH FLOWERS by CUFID PREDICTS Nora Warner will be wearing the handle "Missus" by this coming weekend. PAULA AND LAWRENCE KENYON report they fortunately did not have to resort to the mattress stored in the rear of their buggy during their recent spree to Las Vegas, having found a "shacteau" at Baker for their first overnight stop. HERE'S TO that "Home Run Team". The St. Louis Browns, scheduled to be Anaheim's guests for their spring season, opening February 20. PERSONALLY YOURS, job printing, the Gazette way. MARCH 21... will be the first day of spring! Do plans for your spring cleaning include a closet renovation? Why not give those hanger-ceased and out of date togs to the clothing drive. BRIDAL BOUQUETS, corsages and complete wedding arrangements, designed by Carmen's Flower Shop, 111 E. Center, Anaheim, phone 4997. SPRING AFFAIRS on the Junior Ebell calendar include: dance campus chat Devoted and dedicated to our READERS attending local schools district jaycees, and southland universities. Intensify y-o-u-column by phoning in those important big and little events. GOINGS ON AROUND the Colonist campus... Warren Mackay winner of the "King of Dimes' contest will be crowned tomorrow night, Feb. 15 at the student body dance sponsored by the junior class. Promising to be a gala occasion, "his majesty's" throne will feature a huge heart, eight feet tall, as background glamor. Wanda Rinehart, girl's league prexy is twice winner, with the state finals coming up next month, having won the city American Legion constitution contest, and the county award this week. All-musical assembly was presented today for the entire student body, with the school's orchestra playing favorite concert selections. Three faculty returnees were welcomed back this week and are now resuming their former positions prior to their respective enlistments. Ralph Kingsbury, Sgt. with the army for the past three years in the intelligence division serving in India and China begins this semester as swimming coach and world history instructor. ON THE OTHER side of the fence—and there are two sides to everything—we business people and ranchers will have to adjust ourselves to these new shopping hours... if they are city-wide, and this, of course, will take time. SAY IT WITH FLOWERS by Paula, phone 2025. —Adv. UNTIL DAWN they danced, feasted and reminisced... 28 close friends of Kenny Dougan, recent dischargee of the army, who with his wife Shirley were "welcomed home" guests of honor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Cook, 205 East Ellsworth, last Saturday night. Delicious buffet was served by the hostess from a daily appointed table as that finishing touch to the evening—or should we say morning. BRIDAL BOUQUETS, corsages and complete wedding arrangements, designed by Carmen's Flower Shop, 111 E. Center, Anaheim, phone 4997. —Adv. SPRING AFFAIRS on the Junior Ebell calendar include: dancing to the tunes of Bill Cook's eleven piece band, March 2 from nine p. m. on, with that pause that refreshes in a delightful intermission. Miss Betty Wingfield has charge of arrangements... so dig down girls... tickets are selling at $2.00 per couple. FASHION SHOW and spring tea has been set for March 9 with Mrs. Wallin Andrews in charge of arrangements and Mrs. Paul Winsor, chairman of ticket reservations. GUYS IN THE KNOW wear Lake's Men Wear, 225 West Center, Anaheim, phone 3534. —Adv. HORNETS REPORTING ... Taking prominent place in student activities at Fullerton Junior college for the next month will be the annual World Student Service Fund drive, sponsored jointly by the YMCA and YWCA of America. All school organizations have planned some fund raising event to contribute to this cause. Highlight of the campaign will be the international dinner next Tuesday night in the college lounge. Admission to the dinner is a dollar per person, which will be donated to the WSSF fund. Prominent speaker will appear, and the event is open to the public. Other events planned during the campaign are AWS sponsored food sales and sorority dances. Fullerton Junior college enrollment took another step towards its pre-war heights at the close of second semester registration with a total of 639 students enrolled, 255 of whom are returned servicemen. In definite contrast to the registration of the past two years, there are now more men enrolled than women. 337 men are on campus, with 302 women registered. Kappa Lambda Sigma social sorority is sponsoring a "Dutch-Date" dance tomorrow tonight in In a great big box that looks like the Thin Map's coffin, a geranium 13 feet 6 3/8 inches long was en route today to Mrs. Lillian P. Budd in Geneva, Illinois. Mrs. Budd asked the All-Year club for the geranium so she can confound doubting Illinoians who laughed at her story about geraniums growing up over the roof in southern California. Mrs. Budd is a loyal southern Californian who's with her Navy husband in Illinois. The all-year club found the ponderous posy growing at the home of Mrs. Sidney Hoedemaker, wife of the Pig'n Whistle executive, in Serman Oaks, Calif. With cameras clicking, it was chopped down, packed, and expressed. Mrs. Budd promises to present it to her hecklers, who are Illinois college professors, "in the presence of a large number of people." She was asked by the all-year club to mention to these gentlemen that, though impressed by the geranium, nevertheless they must restrain that impulse to start for southern california right now. They are advised to wait, because there's no place to put them now. The opening of the southland's vacationland doesn't begin until next summer-fall when hotels no longer have the load of returning servicemen. According to archaeologists, people first began settling in the district around Rome some time around the year 1000 B.C. Russian soldiers wear leather shoes with two thicknesses of sturdy sole leather. Japanese silk, before the war, was approximately 90 per cent of the world supply. California leads all states in the amount of gold mined in the United States, producing about 40 per cent of the total. Kappa Lambda Sigma social sorority is sponsoring a "Dutch-Date" dance tomorrow tonight in the college lounge following the basketball game as their effort in the WSSF drive. The dance will be stag and admission is 25c per couple. Tuesday night on the home court, Fullerton's Hornets defeated Santa Ana Junior College's Don's, 46-33, for the second time to ring up their fifth consecutive conference victory, securing their hold on the eastern conference championship. Tomorrow night the Hornets meet the Santa Monica Veteran's Service League in a home game at 8:00 in the non-conference league. CAMPUS QUEENS shop at Calarice Sportswear, 219 West Center street, Anaheim. —Adv. "HAVE YOU any close relatives?" ... "Yes all of them." Before a Massachusetts tanner in 1809 invented the first machine to split hides to make thin leather; this product was obtained by shaving down half-tanned hides with hand tools, wasting the shavings. The coast-to-coast airplane U.S. mail service is now 25 years old. WAITING... While the clock ticks, and the narrow, white room becomes camouflaged in cigarette smoke, the perspiring husband waits and waits for his wife to have that baby. Much shoe leather is lost, accompanied by the wear of the hospital carpet. If the hospital furnishers were wise, there would be no hall carpets—just highly polished floors, thereby increasing the number of patients, and necessitating an extra wing for injured husbands. As it is, the only treatment given those collapsing males, is spirits of ammonia. If the baby is temperamental, a good deal of time is wasted—waiting for it to go to sleep. Father's sleep, shoe leather, and house carpeting are lost here, while he coos, walks, and tries desperately to induce the bundle he carries, to slumber. After sleep has finally overcome these two, it seems only a few moments until the alarm shouts (with the baby) that it is time for morning milk. If the baby grows to be a sixteen year old girl, Mother and Father start waiting from the moment she leaves until her redance, and for her first date. But the girl has also waited for that tall, dark and compelling gentleman to ask her for the first rance, and for her first date. Waiting for this same dark and compelling individual to ask her to marry him, takes a lot of patience. And then, if he doesn't ask her, all waiting was wasted. Disappointment usually results, with a wilted outlook on living. Waiting for his "ship to come in" becomes a nightmare for Father, if creditors snarl behind lightposts and frosted doors labelled private; and demand between the lines of bill statements, immediate payment. Often "Please" can be interpreted as... Kingsbury, Sgt. with for the past three years intelligence division servidia and China begins master as swimming coach and history instructor. Henry, after extensive is a lieutenant with the one south Pacific theater, teaching world history special curricular rework for the adminstratment. War II is the second one the Booth, who served two an instructor in the army rank of first lieutenant heads the machine shop school. IN THE KNOW wear in Wear, 225 West Ceneim, phone 3534.—Adv. ITS REPORTING . . . prominent place in student at Fullerton Junior colthe next month will be World Student Service e, sponsored jointly by A and YWCA of Amerischool organizations have some fund raising event due to this cause. Out of the campaign will international dinner next night in the college Admission to the dinner per person, which will led to the WSSF fund. speaker will appear, event is open to the pubevents planned during sign are AWS sponsored and sorority dances. Junior college entook another step to pre-war heights at the second semester registrata total of 639 students of whom are returnmen. ite contrast to the regof the past two years, now more men enrolled then. 337 men are on with 302 women regissers. Lambda Sigma social sponsoring a "Dutchce tomorrow tonight in compelling individual to ask her to marry him, takes a lot of patience. And then, if he doesn't ask her, all waiting was wasted. Disappointment usually results, with a wilted outlook on living. Waiting for his "ship to come in" becomes a nightmare for Father, if creditors snarl behind lightposts and frosted doors labelled private; and demand between the lines of bill statements, immediate payment. Often "Please" can be interpreted as "Pay or else..." On the brink of bankruptcy, Father may "drown" himself in potent liquid from the "little brown jug." But Mother, armed with butcher knife, ice pick, and fortified with black coffee, waits until dawn to squelch her already squelched husband. Missing the bus next morning, and waiting for the next, are agony for "baggy eyed" Father, for to add to his troubles, he expects the Boss to politely roar, "You're fired!" when he finally appears an hour late. The boss does... Daughter hungrily waits for noon class bells to ring, with an increasing appetite for the lunch Mother will have ready for her. She doesn't know that Mother has been waiting in the dentist's office, and is now waiting for the novacane to take effect. So Daughter has no lunch and comes home to a gloomy Father, who is waiting for a new job to fall in his lap, or for the old-age pension, which, though it definitely will come in the future, would be welcomed in the present. Until now, in this essay, waiting has been unpleasant. Pleasant waiting occurs very seldom. Anticipation of vacations, furloughs and leaves, Christmas, birthdays (if one is young) and wedding days, with a honeymoon (if the right one has asked you) should be happy waiting, without dread. The beginning and ending of life is waiting. Cow Kicks; Man Beats; Wife Pays Francis R. Richards was fined $200 in police court Thursday. His wife paid the fine. Anyone who ever has had to milk a cantankerous cow—one of those vicious female critters that kicks with bruising accuracy—will sympathize with Richards. It all started when Mrs. Richard Anaheim Police to Attend FBI School At Santa Ana J. C. Members of the Anaheim police department are attending a peace officers' school, conducted by the FBI at the junior college in Santa Ana, on six dates during this month and next. Officers of the entire area are "students." First session of the school was held Monday afternoon and night. Men on the night shift attend afternoon sessions; those working days go at night. Speaker at the first session Monday was the Hon. Jas. L. Davis, Orange county district attorney. His subject was "Laws of Arrest and Search." Special agents of the FBI, Ira J. Kellogg and W. E. South, will speak on "Practical Arrest Problems" next Monday, when there will be a morning session, as (well as afternoon and night meetings). On February 18, Sgt. Rudolph Wellpott of the Los Angeles police department will discuss "Riots and Unlawful Assemblies." "Report Writing and Descriptions" will be the subject of W. A. Murphy of the FBI, whose headquarters are at San Diego, at the February-25 school. Kellogg will explain methods of "Collection, Identification and Preservation of Evidence" March 4, and South will wind up the series March 11, with a talk on "Burglary Investigations." GAME BODY READY FOR SPRING SEASON Changes Ordered In Sport Fishing Effective Feb. 15 Orders of the California Flood and Game Commission, affecting sport fishing, were issued January 29, after delegates of major sportsmen's organization met with the commission in Los Angeles. These orders, effective February 15, 1946, are: Salmon may not be taken with a spear in any part of the State of California. Unless otherwise provided by the fish and game code, no more than 15 trout, or 15 Rocky Mountain whitefish, or 15 trot and Rocky Mountain whitefish in the aggregate, nor more than 10 pounds of trout, nor more than 10 pounds of Rocky Mountain whitefish, nor more than 10 pounds of trout and Rocky Mountain whitefish in the aggregate, or one trout, or one Rocky Mountain whitefish may be taken or possessed in any way. Chumming in all inland waters in the State of California is prohibited. Black bass may be taken by angling in the South Lake of Lakes Merced, San Francisco County, between May 29 and Cow Kicks; Man Beats; Wife Pays Francis R. Richards was fined $200 in police court Thursday. His wife paid the fine. Anyone who ever has had to milk a cantankerous cow—one of those violent female critters that kicks with bruising accuracy—will sympathize with Richards. It all started when Mrs. Richards complained to police that a man was "trying to beat a cow to death." She hurried, with Officer Vipond to Richards' dairy at 1429 Crone avenue. Richards admitted that he had walloped "old Bessy" with a club, and evidence on her hide attested to truth of his statement. Vipond avers. The reason: "She tried to kick the daylights out of me." The officer could do nothing, unless Mrs. Richards would sign a complaint. She would. Richards was placed in the city jail. The next morning, Mrs. Richards filed the complaint. Richards went before Judge Frank Tausch and pleaded guilty, and, as we remarked, before, Francis R. Richards was fined $200 and his wife paid the fine. Americans must like popcorn, because nearly 300,000 acres of it have been planted this year; the liking is growing because this is an increase of 68 per cent over last year's acreage. About 19 gardeners out of every 20 grew tomatoes last season, but all the home-canned and the factory-canned product did not meet the demand, causing ration points for tomatoes to be high this spring. "Report Writing and Descriptions" will be the subject of W. A. Murphy of the FBI, whose headquarters are at San Diego, at the February 25 school. Kellogg will explain methods of "Collection, Identification and Preservation of Evidence" March 4, and South will wind up the series March 11, with a talk on "Burglary Investigations." GAME BODY READY FOR SPRING SEASON Practically all hatcheries of the California division of fish and game have on hand a major portion of the eggs and young fish for the spring propagating and planting season, with the exception of steelhead trout and spring spawning rainbow trout, A. C. Taft chief of the division's bureau of fish conservation, reports. Taft said a considerable number of rainbow eggs were taken from brood stock in the hatcheries at Mt. Shasta, Hot Creek and Mt. Whitney where the taking of fall-spawning rainbow eggs is almost completed. STATE RELEASES 7000 PHEASANTS YOUNTVILLE. — Since close of the 1945 pheasant hunting season in California, 7155 pheasants have been released throughout the state. August Bade, chief of the bureau of game wardens, division of fish and game, reported that 90 per cent were males. He said that the additional cost of holding a large percentage of male birds until after the hunting season will be more than paid for by direct results in rebuilding the pheasant population, with these good potential breeders in the field. It is estimated that Shakespeare wrote two plays a year. Dec. 31, both dates inclusive. Black bass, Sacramento perch and sunfish may be taken by angling in Lake Britton between May 1 and October 31, both dates inclusive. No California whiting, also known as corbina and surf fish, of less than 12 inches in length shall be taken or possessed. Sportsmen's organizations presenting arguments for consideration included the Associated Sportsmen of California, Inc., Southern Council of Conservation Clubs, Stockton Rod and Gun Club, Sacramento-Sierra Sportsmen's Council, Truckee Outdoor Sportsmen, a delegate from sportsmen of Shasta and Siskiyou counties, Santa Anita Sportsmen's Club, Federated Sportsmen of Santa Barbara, Izaak Walton League of Bishop, and the Mono Sportsmen's Club. GAME LAW BREAKERS PAY HEAVY PENALTY Violations of the California fish and game code during December resulted in arrest and conviction of 274 hunters and fishermen, with fines totaling $9927 and two of the violators serving 90-day jail sentences. E. L. Macaulay, chief of the bureau of patrol and law enforcement, division of fish and game, reports that wardens arrested a total of 301 persons during the month. Of the total apprehended, 16 cases were suspended, three were dismissed, four were found not guilty, three were required to buy licenses, and one received U. S. navy disciplinary action. In the corresponding month last year, 283 arrests were made, with fines totaling $12,475. Joe Mandonado Buried Wednesday Funeral services for Joe Mandonado of 797 East Wilhelmina street, Anaheim, who passed away at 2 o'clock. He was 36 years of age at the time of his passing, was born in New Mexico and had lived in this city for the past 11 years. His widow, Luz, survivor. Burial was in Loma Vita Memorial park. INFANTS' DEPT. Nationally known Baby's Garments & Essentials. Layette Gifts BOYS' DEPT. TO 12 YEARS Undergarment Polo Shirt Slacks, Suits Wear and Tools. GIRLS DEPT. 2 TO 6 - 7 TO 14 Undergarments Dresses - Skirts Blouses - Coats Hats - Sweaters Slacks & Anklets. JUNIOR, 9 TO 15 Gay Gibson and Teenette. EVERYTHING FOR DRESS AND SCHOOL COMPLETE TOY DEPARTMENT ANAHEIM 4271 Joe Mandonado Buried Wednesday Funeral services for Joe Mandonado of 797 East Wilhelmina street, Anaheim, who passed away last Monday, were held from the chapel of Backs, Campbell and Kaulbars' mortuary on Wednesday. Hannah's 226 East Center phone Anaheim 4258 3 DAY SPECIAL chenille robes 5.95 8.95 Brunch coats 3.50 Luscious spring colors * BOOKKEEPING * BOOKKEEPING * ACCOUNTING * INCOME TAX Long or Short Form...$1.00 ..SEE.. John Murphy 222 EAST CENTER STREET Room 206—Kraemer Building ANAHEIM