anaheim-gazette 1947-07-10
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CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
Broadway at Citron
Rev. James Forrester, Pastor.
9:30 a.m., Sunday school. A. C. Willis, superintendent.
10:50 a.m., Morning worship.
6:30 p.m., Youth Fellowship.
7:30 p.m., Gospel hour.
Wednesdays, Prayer service.
Visitors welcome to all services.
FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Broadway and Clementine
James B. Abbott, minister. Phone 3577.
9:45 a.m., Bible School. Nathan Lehman, superintendent.
11 a.m., Morning worship hour.
6:30 p.m., Young People's hour.
8:30 p.m., Evangelistic service.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Prayer meeting.
ANAHEIM FOURSQUARE
1317 West Broadway
Guy A. Martin, minister.
9:30 a.m., Sunday school.
11:00 a.m., Morning Worship.
6:15 p.m., Young People's service led by William Remland.
7:30 p.m. Evening service.
7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Prayer service.
GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH
South Palm and Elm streets
Rev. J. K. Jung, pastor. Phone 3454.
H. L. Heinze, Sunday school superintendent.
9:30 a.m., graded Sunday school
10:30 a.m., Divine worship.
WESLEY METHODIST
632 North Los Angeles street
Rev. Leslie Wyman Sim, minister Phone 2662.
Sunday school superintendent Wayne Clark.
9:45 a.m., Sunday school.
11 a.m., Morning worship.
7 p.m., Evening service.
Wednesday, 7 p.m., prayer meeting
FIRST CHURCH
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
Sunday Lesson-Sermon subject will be "Sacrament."
Sunday, 11 a.m. Sunday School.
9:30 a.m.
Wednesday services, 8 p.m., test monials of healings.
The Christian Science reading room is located in the church edifice.
"All persons having no church home, we welcome you."
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
L. E. Elfert, pastor. Phone 3483
126 North Emily at Chartres
10 a.m., Sunday school.
11 a.m., Morning worship service.
ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC
West Center and Palm streets
Sunday Masses at 7, 8:30, 10 and 11 o'clock in the morning.
4:30 p.m., Sunday evening service.
Wednesday evening service at 7:30 o'm.
BETHANY FULL GOSPEL
121 West Cypress. Phone 2446
Rev. John F. Moll, minister.
9:45 a.m., Sunday school.
11 a.m., Morning service.
7:30 p.m., Evening service.
7:30 p.m., on Wednesday and Friday evening services.
All are welcome.
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Broadway and Helena. Phone 4779
Rev. Al Casebeer, minister.
9:30 a.m., Bible School, George Watts, Jr., Sunday School superintendent.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship.
6:30 p.m., Christian Endeavor.
7:30 p.m., Evening worship.
ST. MICHAEL'S EPISCOPAL
East Adela at Emily
The Rev. John Kimball Saville, recorder. Phone 4654.
7:30 a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer (Holy Communion on the first Sunday of each month).
Rev. Wm. J. Hatter will have charge of the services during July while the ector is away on vacation.
FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Claudina and Cypress streets. Phone 148 (parsonage, 1001 W. Broadway)
"A Spiritual and Friendly church."
Rev. T. J. Crawford, pastor,
LeRoy Hildebrand, Sunday school superintendent.
9:30 a.m., Sunday school.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship.
6:30 p.m., Young People's service.
6:30 p.m., Junior Fellowship hour.
6:30 p.m., Hi-and-Y Society meeting.
When I was a small child on rare occasions given I do not recall that my ever spoke highly of the itself, nor argued that he value or any other inlue tue. The ar augment was "necessary" and would for me." There was an ing comment on my ha too much, or that in way I had broken the good health and the was part of the penalty it seems to me the Ta Act is similar to the ca my youth. I haven't he people, nor many news that it is a perfect bill that few, if any, memb Congress are antag unions. A situation h grown in the United S point where the unions accurately some labor le gan to think they were merful than the governme legislative castor oil wa ed, and the people in having it given.
Weeks and weeks had en to the discussion of management bill. There versal recognition of the the Wagner Act was even the unions wanted ed. Few things have been popular as jurisdictiona People don't like the strikes affecting public welfare. They like idea of strikes among fe ployees. People increase that both parties to any should be bound to fu
FIRST CHURCH
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
Sunday Lesson-Sermon subject will be "Sacrament."
Sunday, 11 a.m. Sunday School
9:30 a.m.
Wednesday services, 8 p.m., testimonials of healings.
The Christian Science reading room is located in the church edifice. Operally daily, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Corner of Cypress and Helena (Ebel clubhouse) Phone 2972
Richard L. Morrison, minister.
10 a.m., Bible school.
11 a.m., Morning worship.
11:45 a.m., Communion.
All welcome at any service.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
310 West Broadway, Phone 2176
Rev. Howard S. Congdon, minister
Phone 4146.
9:50 a.m., Sunday school. Richard Wise, superintendent.
11 a.m., Worship hour.
7 p.m., Youth Fellowship.
GOOD HOPE SPIRITUALIST
135 West Center Street
Second Floor
Rev. Estelle Anderson, pastor.
Willbur Powell, president.
Howard Kelley, founder.
Services Sunday and Thursday at 7:45 p.m.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Stanton Blvd. at Chester
Rev. Ramond Manriquez, pastor.
Phone 2-8458.
10 a.m., Sunday school.
7:30 p.m., Evening service. Sermon by Rev. Manriquez.
10 a.m., Sunday school.
11 a.m., Morning worship service
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., "Christ's Ambassadors" meeting.
Friday, 7:30 p.m., Devotional service.
Wednesday prayer and fellowship meeting at 7:30 p.m.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
The Golden Text of the Sunday Lesson-Sermon on "Sacrament" in all branches of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, is from I Corinthians: "Let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth."
In John's Gospel it is related that following the resurrection the disciples entered into a ship to go fishing, "and that night they caught nothing. But when the morning was now come, Jesus stood on the shore; but the disciples knew not that it was Jesus... And he said unto them, Cast the net on the right side of the ship, and ye shall find. They cast thesefore, and now they were not able to draw it for the multitude of fishes... As soon then as they were come to land, they saw a fire of coals there, and fish laid thereon, and bread... Jesus saith unto them, Come and dine. And none of the disciples durst ask him, Who art thou? knowing that it was the Lord."
In "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" Mary Baker Eddy writes: "This spiritual meeting of the services during July while the ector is away on vacation."
FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Claudina and Cypress streets. Phone 148 (parsonage, 1001 W. Broadway)
"A Spiritual and Friendly church."
Rev. T. J. Crawford, pastor.
LeRoy Hildebrand, Sunday school superintendent.
9:30 a.m., Sunday school.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship.
6:30 p.m., Young People's service.
6:30 p.m., Junior Fellowship hour.
6:30 p.m., Hi-and-Y Society meeting.
SALEM EVANGELICAL
400 West Center street
Rev. Alvin L. Horn, minister.
Phone 4642.
9:45 a.m., Sunday school. S. F. Illigenfeld, superintendent.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship.
7:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship nour.
Wednesday, 7:15 p.m., prayer meeting.
WHITE TEMPLE METHODIST
East Broadway at Philadelphia
Phone 4133
9:30 a.m., Church school. Melvin Hilgenfeld, superintendent. Warren Schutz assistance superintendent.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship.
10:45 a.m., nursery for small children.
6:15 p.m., High school M.Y.F., worship and discussion.
7:15 p.m., Evening worship.
8:15 p.m., Fellowship hour. High school group in basement of church. Prescendo club at the Harlows'.
Mrs. Nan Moore and Paul Sanford, youth councillors.
METHODIST CHURCH GARDEN GROVE
Phone G. G. 5471
Rev. G. Edwin Osher, pastor. Phone 476. G. G.
9:30 a.m., Church school for all ages.
11 a.m., Nursery for young children during service.
11 a.m., Morning Worship.
7:30 p.m., Evangelistic service.
7:30 p.m., Evening worship.
8:10-9:30 p.m., Methodist Youth Fellowship.
Cancer Hospital To Combat Malady In Youngsters
"Cancer is now the second greatest killer of our children," cancer specialist Dr. Ian MacDonald declared in revealing that the proposed $2,000,000 Memorial Cancer Hospital, to be located in Los Angeles to serve the needs of the west, will contain extensive facilities for research into and treatment of cancer in youngsters.
"Tentative plans call for an allocation of 5 percent of the beds in the hospital to youth cases," Dr. MacDonald said. "Certain forms of cancer are particularly difficult to treat in children and few are cured at the present time. The Memorial Cancer Hospital will provide research facilities for en to the discussion of management bill. There is universal recognition of the Wagner Act was even the unions wanted. Few things have been popular as jurisdictions People don't like the strikes affecting public welfare. They like idea of strikes among female employees. People increase that both parties to any should be bound to contract. There were other matters and most of them on both sides. Yet when to the hearings, in the top flight labor leave most without exception, fore the committee only any change. There was no cooperation to correct that had grown up, only tion to any change in the conditions.
The result was the Talent Act, a combination of severe Hartley Bill and e bill. Each bill passed House by a safe margin President vetoed the final came to the floor of the Friday; there was no debate a tense and silent vote override, 83 to support one vacancy, 20 absent or is one vote short of 4 to 2.
It went to the Senate. began to read it at 2:20 finished, and at 3:07 Morse withheld unanimous sent for an immediate voteator Pepper began talking at 6:55 p.m. Senator Taylor talking and talked until m. Saturday. A quorum sumed 10 minutes. The had decided to keep the session until the filibuster broken. Senator Kilgore from 3:26 a.m. to 5:10 a.m.ator Morse took over at m. and spoke until 4:29 p.m.at that time an agreement reached to vote at 3 p.m.day.
That ended one of the striking filibusters in the Congress, and last one. Bills are in the hope to prevent their recurrence out disturbing the right of cited speech, which is one three differences between Houses on which the imposition of the Senate has been but amusing that two of the engaged in filibustering others of bills to prevent filibustering
ANAHEIMER HAS LONG EASTERN TRIP
D. D. 'Doc' Stall, long time Anaheim resident, has just returned from an extended visit in the east. He drove through Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and down through his old home in Oklahoma where his father was buried fifty years ago. The people all through the south have had too much rain and are all leaning to the Republican party with not a Democrat in sight, 'Doc' reports, and, they all want to come to California. He also visited Fort Knox where all our gold is stored but did not get a chance to bring any home. In fact he had to leave a good bit of the equivalent there in the east in payment of a new automobile.
THE D. E. COOKS WELCOME SON
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Cook of Big Bear Lake greeted a baby son Thursday morning in Big Bear hospital. He tipped the scales at eight pounds, eight ounces. Mrs. Cook is the former Agnes Allan of Anaheim.
Buy in Anaheim and get greater values for your money.
Dr. MacDonald, a member of the Cancer Prevention Society which is sponsoring this drive, further stated that cancer kills five times as many children as infantile paralysis, heretofore considered one of the deadliest of childhood ailments. It is this increasingly appalling death rate from cancer that has prompted the medical profession to lend its support to the fund raising drive for a Memorial Cancer Hospital, the cancer specialist declared.
THE KOPFER FAMILY IN ENCINITAS
Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Kopfer of Fullerton joined their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nellessen, and their baby son, Steven, of Romneya drive, Anaheim, who were spending the three-day July 4 holiday with Kopfer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Kopfer of Encinitas. The Nellessens enjoyed two successful grunion hunting trips Friday and Saturday nights. The Sunday dinner menu featured a huge platter of the crisp tender-fried marine delicacy.
Anaheim merchants offer the greatest in values!
WASHINGTON
As Seen By
CONGRESSMAN JOHN PHILLIPS
When I was a small boy I was, on rare occasions given castor oil. I do not recall that my mother ever spoke highly of the castor oil itself, nor argued that it had food value or any other inherent virtue. The arugment was that it was "necessary" and would be "good for me." There was accompanying comment on my having eaten too much, or that in some other way I had broken the rules of good health and the castor oil was part of the penalty.
It seems to me the Taft-Hartley Act is similar to the castor oil of my youth. I haven't heard many people, nor many newspapers, say that it is a perfect bill. I know that few, if any, members of the Congress are antagonistic to unions. A situation had simply grown in the United States to a point where the unions, or more accurately some labor leaders, began to think they were more powerful than the government, and legislative castor oil was indicated, and the people insisted on having it given.
Weeks and weeks had been given to the discussion of a labor-management bill. There was universal recognition of the fact that the Wagner Act was one sided. Even the unions wanted it changed. Few things have been as unpopular as jurisdictional strikes. People don't like the idea of strikes affecting public peace or public welfare. They like less the idea of strikes among federal employees. People increasingly felt that both parties to any contract should be bound to fulfill that two sessions, and all bills and laws are marked first session or second session. The point to remember is that bills introduced this year, that is, in the first session, or committee actions, or whatever it may be in the routine of making laws, continues into the second session. If this were the second session and were preparing to adjourn, it would be more serious because all actions would end with that adjournment. Bills would have to be re-introduced; committees would have to re-hear them; discharge petitions would have to have new signatures, and the whole complicated machinery of government would have to start again.
It is too soon to evaluate the 80th Congress. Here are a few off-the-cuff impressions. It has been the hardest, but the accomplishments have been greater. On the other hand, the smaller items, which are as important to the people affected as the bigger things, will show less accomplishment. I could list a dozen items, of great interest to the district, that the Congress simply hasn't reahed, because of the requirements of reorganization, or the demands of other problems of broader interest. This will be hard to explain to anyone who has not been in Washington. One committee, which has personal claim bills, and other small bills of interest to us at home, has a "docket," if I may call it that, of about 1700 bills, and is struggling manfully with that load. These were to obtain life insurance.
Mr. Liebermann emphasized that a veteran is required to pay only two monthly premiums to reinstate his lapsed term insurance policy. At the same time, the amount of the insurance may be increased or decreased, and if desired the policy may be converted to a permanent form of coverage, such as endowment, ordinary life, 20-pay or 30-pay life.
'Petticoat Fever'
Being Given By Holiday Stage
"Petticoat Fever," clever comedy concerning people icebound in the frozen north, is being featured as the second show of Holiday Stage, summer stock company, in Tustin high school auditorium on 101 highway, at 8:30 o'clock each evening except Sunday. Saturday matinee begins at 2 o'clock. Oliver Cliff, broadway star, will take the leading role.
Also appearing are EllaNora, Robert Rockwell and June Shafter. Cliff has been prominent with the Katherine Cornell company, playing in the "Barretts of Wimpole Street," "Antignone" and "Candida." In the fall, he will rejoin Katherine Cornell to appear in her forthcoming production "Anthony and Cleopatra."
EllaNora is known to Orange county people from her excellent work in "State of the Union" as Kay Thorndyke. Supporting cast members include Scott Darnell, Norma Platt, Nancy Norvell, Victor Izay, Bill Pullen and Dick Dalley.
Acclaimed for its premier production of Howard Lindsay and Russell Crouse's Pulitzer prize
en to the discussion of a labor-management bill. There was universal recognition of the fact that the Wagner Act was one sided. Even the unions wanted it changed. Few things have been as unpopular as jurisdictional strikes. People don’t like the idea of strikes affecting public peace or public welfare. They like less the idea of strikes among federal employees. People increasingly felt that both parties to any contract should be bound to fulfill that contract. There were other arguments and most of them had merit on both sides. Yet when it came to the hearings, in the Congress, the top flight labor leaders, almost without exception, came before the committee only to protest any change. There was little or no cooperation to correct the evils that had grown up, only opposition to any change in the existing conditions.
The result was the Taft-Hartley Act, a combination of the more severe Hartley Bill and easier Taft bill. Each bill passed its own House by a safe margin. The President vetoed the final bill. It came to the floor of the House Friday; there was no debate, only a tense and silent vote, 331 to override, 83 to support the veto, one vacancy, 20 absent or ill. That is one vote short of 4 to 1.
It went to the Senate. The clerk began to read it at 2:20 p.m. He finished, and at 3:07 Senator Morse withheld unanimous consent for an immediate vote. Senator Pepper began talking. At 3:55 p.m. Senator Taylor began talking and talked until 3:15 a.m. Saturday. A quorum call consumed 10 minutes. The majority had decided to keep the Senate in session until the filibuster was broken. Senator Kilgore spoke from 3:26 a.m. to 5:10 a.m. Senator Morse took over at 6:30 a.m. and spoke until 4:29 p.m. and at that time an agreement was reached to vote at 3 p.m. Monday.
That ended one of the most striking filibusters in the history of the Congress, and perhaps the last one. Bills are in the hopper to prevent their recurrence without disturbing the right of unlimited speech, which is one of the three differences between the two houses on which the importance of the Senate has been built. It is musing that two of the Senators engaged in filibustering are authors of bills to prevent filibusters!
of great interest to the district, that the Congress simply hasn’t reahed, because of the requirements of reorganization, or the demands of other problems of broader interest. This will be hard to explain to anyone who has not been in Washington. One committee, which has personal claim bills, and other small bills of interest to us at home, has a “docket,” if I may call it that, of about 1700 bills, and is struggling manfully with that load. These were things which the reorganization plan had to work out by the process of trial and error, and which could not have been foreseen.
On these little things, I am disappointed; on the broader and more important things I am greatly encouraged. The finances of the United States, for the first time in more than fifteen years, are in the black. The Administration has fought every economy, every reduction, but they have been made, and the nation benefitted. The appropriation bills have been taken apart, item by item. This was a new experience to the agencies. The results will show not only in money savings, but in returning controls to the Congress, where they belong. The “Truman Doctrine” was revealed to be as empty a shell as the “Atlantic Charter” of unhappy memory, which was finally discovered never to have been written. The Marshall doctrine or plan on the other hand, appears to have increasing starch in its backbone, and the secretary’s statements have an encouraging Americanism, as opposed to the Russian accent which seemed to accompany prior pronouncements of our State department.
The net results of the season are therefore good. To the writer of this column, as we recall that the nation was founded to give representative government to free people, the happiest results will lie in the limitations placed on the growing and arrogant beaurocaries of the last ten years. As Mr. Justice Jackson said at the annual meeting of the American Bar Association last October:
“... In the United States, once Congress delegates authority to an administrative agency, the Congress loses effective control of the use to which that authority will be put, because it places the power in the hands of an independent and sometimes antagonistic executive department of govern-
join Katherine Corrille to appear in her forthcoming production “Anthony and Cleopatra.”
EllaNora is known to Orange county people from her excellent work in “State of the Union” as Kay Thorndyke. Supporting cast members include Scott Darnell, Norma Platt, Nancy Norvell, Victor Izay, Bill Pullen and Dick Dalley.
Acclaimed for its premier production of Howard Lindsay and Russell Crouse’s Pulitzer prize winning famous political satire, “State of the Union,” the company, with its array of talented stars, got off to a flying start June 30. Two leads in the professionally smooth week’s performances were George Reeves, Broadway, and Paramount picture star, and Mabel Albertson, nationally-known radio actress and script writer, and motion picture and stage personality.
Harold Turney is directing the production again. Norman Mennes is the art director; Barry McGee, technical director and May Rose Borum, production coordinator. Outstanding sets and staging mark this week’s presentations again.
Plot of “Petticoat Fever” gives the “eternal triangle” a unique twist as the hero’s heart reaches the boiling point during six-months long nights and temperatures of 40 below.
“The Royal Family,” starring Adeline DeWalt Reynolds who appeared in “Going My Way,” “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” “The Corn is Green” will be staged July 14 to 19. Six other plays will be presented by the stock company.
Seal Beach May Go Ahead With Recall Election
The July 17 recall election of the city of Seal Beach can go ahead as scheduled, it was determined last weekend as Presiding Superior Judge Franklin G. West ruled against two citizens seeking to enjoin holding the election.
Vincent F. Boles and John C. Felts had sought an injunction against five members of the city council, the city clerk and city treasurer, to prevent them holding the vote to recall all five council members, on ground the petitions were insufficient and that certain irregularities had occurred in the obtaining of signatures on recall petitions.
Principal contention of Atty.
That ended one of the most striking filibusters in the history of the Congress, and perhaps the last one. Bills are in the hopper to prevent their recurrence without disturbing the right of unlimited speech, which is one of the three differences between the two houses on which the importance of the Senate has been built. It is unusual that two of the Senators engaged in filibustering are authors of bills to prevent filibusters!
The President said the Act was startling, dangerous, far-reaching, unprecedented, unworkable, unique, complex, burdensome, arbitrary, unnecessary, impossible, ineffective, discriminatory, elaborate, clumsy, cumbersome, inquitable, backward, unfair, unwarranted, interfering, troubleome, serious, drastic.
Other than that, I guess it was all right. Seriously it wasn't as bad as it was painted, and it wasn't as good. It won't stop John Lewis, and it will point the way to improved labor-management conditions. The President didn't like it because in certain conditions, the executive branch must take action, and that will put him squarely on the spot. Whether it works or not depends entirely on the cooperation given by labor and by management. An honest effort is made to make it work, and changes are down to be necessary, then Congress will be very willing to make them. If the only efforts made are efforts to see that it doesn't work, then I am afraid that the inevitable results, in the Congress, would make the labor leaders responsible for the situation look back wistfully to the castor oilattle of the present session.
The Congress is within four weeks, at the longest, of adjourning its first session. Each Congress this is the 80th Congress) has
Vets Reminded Deadline Near On Insurance
Ben Liebermann, county service officer, warned veterans who have allowed their National Service Life Insurance to lapse that the deadline is drawing near for reinstatement of their policies without a physical examination. The final date is August 1.
This date is particularly important to the veteran who may for some reason be unable to pass a physical examination, and the opportunity to reinstate his war-time insurance coverage may be the last chance he will ever have
Vincent F. Boles and John C. Felts had sought an injunction against the five members of the city council, the city clerk and city treasurer, to prevent them holding the vote to recall all five council members, on ground the petitions were insufficient and that certain irregularities had occurred in the obtaining of signatures on recall petitions.
Principal contention of Atty. Theodore Lee who represented the plaintiffs was that one of the petitions was circulated by Christine Jackson, who was not a qualified elector. Mrs. Jackson's name had been checked as not qualified as a signer. Clerk John W. Mulcahy said, because she was not registered from her home address but from a mailing address.
The court ruled there was a sufficient compliance with the statutes in the obtaining of signatures, and certification by the clerk to permit the election to be held. Mulcahy said there were only 17 signatures on the petition circulated by Mrs. Jackson and that there still were sufficient names of qualified voters on the petitions to make the election legal.
Vets of Area Draw Over Four Million Monthly
More than 85,000 veterans of both World Wars and regular peacetime service who live in the Los Angeles regional area are now being paid approximately $4,021,-000 in disability compensation and pension checks each month. Veterans Administration regional manager L. C. Chapman announced.
In addition, Chapman said, a much smaller group of veterans in this area from the Spanish American War, Civil War and In-
dian Wars are paid disability compensation or pension checks by the Washington, D. C., office of the VA.
The largest group of veterans in the Los Angeles region receiving disability and compensation checks from VA are veterans of World War II who receive 61,458 checks totaling $2,559,000 a month. Of this number only 200 are being compensated for non-service connected disabilities.
Chapman revealed that 21,404 veterans of World War I are drawing $1,342,900 a month in disability compensation and pensions. Of this total, 5,240 receive pensions for non-service connected disabilities.
Veterans in this area disabled in peacetime service number 2,580 and draw VA compensation checks totaling $119,159.
June Sick Pay Total $35,800 In County
Sick pay benefits from the State of California amounting to $35,800 were distributed during June to residents of the Orange county area who were unemployed because of sickness or injury, according to V. L. Hetzel, manager of the State Department of Employment's disability insurance office in Long Beach.
The district office in Long Beach, which serves all of Orange county and that portion of Los Angeles county south of Slauson avenue, paid out a total of $200,-000 last month.
"Disability insurance payments are made to individuals who suffer wage loss because of non-occupational sickness or injury," Hetzel said. "These payments are made from the state disability fund, which is a fund financed entirely by taxes paid by employees on their wages. Every employee whose job is subject to the state unemployment insurance act is protected under the disability insurance system, and is potentially eligible for benefits up to $20 a week if he becomes temporarily or permanently unemployed because of illness or injury."
Mr. Hetzel pointed out that failure to file claims within the specified time limit has resulted in loss of benefits by some workers.
"First claims for disability insurance benefits must be filed before the twenty-first day of sickness or injury which causes the unemployment," he said. "Employees who wait until they return to work before filing claims may find they have lost one or more weeks of benefit payments because of this delay."
It has been demonstrated that under intense heat, and in the presence of oxygen or air, the carbon in a diamond unites with the oxygen and the gem burns itself into a black, worthless crisp laboratories.
Santa Fe system carloadings for week ending July 5 were 30,872 compared with 27,506 for same week in 1946.
LAST TIMES THURSDAY,
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
OLIVER CLIFF
in
“PETTICOAT FEVER”
STARTS MONDAY
MABEL ALBERTSON
ADELINE DeWALT
REYNOLDS
OLIVER CLIFF
in
“ROYAL FAMILY”
by
George S. Kaufman and
Edna Ferber
HOLIDAY STAGE
Hi-way 101, Tustin
Phone S.A. 6818 or S.A. 63G1
Tickets Available
BATON MUSIC CO.
157 West Center
$2.40, $1.80, $1.20, 60c
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Anaheim, California
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CANNING SUPPLIES
Regular Mason Jars 85¢ et., Jar Regular 10¢
Mason Jar Lids 40¢
Squar Jelly Glasses 23¢
Jar Caps—Regular 23¢
FLOUR
Kitchen Craft Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢ (10-lb. bag, 89¢; 25-lb. sock, 2,05.1)
Flour 1,92 Harvest Blossom 25-lb. sock 47¢
Globe A-1 Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢ (10-lb. bag, 89¢; 25-lb. sock, 2,05.1)
Pillsbury Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢
CHUCK ROAST
Good eating, 7-bone or Round bone beef roast.
SHORT RIBS
Beef to braise or bake. Plate boiling beef, lb. 17c.
GROUND BEEF
Quality beef, ground fresh daily. Packed in Visking.
GROUND ROUND
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CANNING SUPPLIES
Regular Mason Jars 85¢
Mason Jar Lids 10¢
Squat Jelly Glasses 40¢
Jar Caps—Regular 23¢
FLOUR
Kitchen Craft Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢
(10-lb. bag, 69¢; 25-lb. sock, 2.05.)
Flour 1.92
Globe A-1 Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢
(10-lb. bag, 89¢; 25-lb. sock, 2.05.)
Pillsbury Flour 5-lb. bag 47¢
(10-lb. bag, 89¢.)
Pancake Flour Aunt Jamina 28¢
(3½-lb. bag, 36c.)
Pancake Flour Suzanne brand 40-cm. pkg, 24¢
PET FOODS
Gaines Dog Meal 2-lb. pkg, 28¢
(5-lb. pkg, 59¢.)
Marco Dog Food 15½-cm. cm 10¢
Cat Food 2 lbs. 15¢
(Pear's Boots brand.)
JULY ISSUE OF THE NEW Family Circle
NOW OR SALE
5¢
CHUCK ROAST
Good eating, 7-bone or Round bone beef roast.
SHORT RIBS
Beef to braise or bake. Plate boiling beef, lb. 17c.
GROUND BEEF
Quality beef, ground fresh daily. Packed in Visking.
GROUND ROUND
Now packed in Visking. Lean, fresh, top quality!
PORK SPARERIBS
Lean and meaty. Boil, bake, or serve en casserole.
SLICED BACON
Grade-A. Cured just right.
STEWING HENS
New York style. Dressed.
FRYERS
Fancy quality chicken.
SMOKED PICNICS
Shoulder cuts.
MEAT LOAF
Firmloft or macaroni variety.
LAMB CHOPS
(Round bone cuts, 59¢)
3 Intriguing Savings from Palm Squeeze!
Dessert! Ideal for home or gift!
Cut order blanks and details with purchase of SUNNYBANK MARGARINE lb., 39¢
CHECK THESE VALUES
Margarine Alluminized bran 39¢
Nu-Made Mayonnaise Potato 41¢
Kraft Mayonnaise Potato 43¢
Tomato Juice 6 lbs. net 43£
Sunny Daisy (40-cm. can, 2 for $5c)
Cherub Milk 2 ounce 11£
Jiffy Lou Pudding Chocolate Vanilla or Butterwatch.
Edwards Coffee 1-lb. can or jar 40£
(Drip regular, or pubertizer)
Edwards Coffee Regular or dip 3-lbs. can or jar 91£
Wakefield Coffee 1-lb. can or jar 42£
(Hill's Broth Red Can brand 1-lb. jar or can 40£
(M.J.B.Coffee Dip or regular 1-lb. jar or can 40£
Chase & Sanborn Dip or regular 1-lb. jar or can 40£
FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
POTATOES 10 lbs. 39¢
New White Rose variety. Big value at Safeway.
WATERMELONS 3 lbs.
CANTALOUPES Swift, fragrant, ripe.
6 lbs.
LETTUCE Nice for summer salads.
7 lbs.
PEACHES Large, juicy Ellerte.
7 lbs.
ORANGES This skinned for juice.
3 lbs.
SAFEWAY
These prices effective through Saturday, July 12, 1947.
No sales to dealers. Right to limit reserved.