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anaheim-gazette 1950-09-05

1950-09-05 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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TWINS WIN—David and Daniel Claypool, 12-year-old twins of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Claypool, 8161 Alamo, Freeway Park, combined to win a pair of prizes at the 13th Annual Twins Convention at Huntington Beach yesterday. Above they point to the September 3 birthday which got them each a monogrammed cake. They also won a medal for being the oldest twins present born in Orange County. 218 sets of twins entered the competition. Anaheim YMCA (Continued from Page 1) clude Frank Kellogg, Bob Quast, Clyde Nickle and Paul Demaree, ranch bosses; and Walt Taylor, Big Wheel and chairman of advanced gifts section of the drive. Santa Ana College Schedule Two Days For 1950-51 Year General Registration Two days of general registration have been set for Wednesday and Thursday, September 6 and 7, at Nation at Glance Anaheim YMCA (Continued from Page 1) include Frank Kellogg, Bob Quast, Clyde Nickle and Paul Demaree, ranch bosses; and Walt Taylor, Big Wheel and chairman of advanced gifts section of the drive. In outlining the campaign, Thomason pointed out that this is the second year since the war that the YMCA has undertaken to carry out its activities without the help the local Community Chest. Last year was the first. Last year the local Y served 650 boys and girls in 36 Anaheim Y groups, ranging in ages from six years through twenty. Groups presently operating within the Y program include Father and Son Y Indian Guides, for boys six to nine and their dads; Gra-Y Friendly Indian groups for boys nine to 12; Junior Hi-Y and Junior Tri-Hi-Y for boys and girls of junior high school age; Hi-Y and Tri-Hi-Y for high school agers; and the college Y group. Activities include weekly meetings and special activities such as camps, conferences, social and recreational activities with clubs from other areas and attention to religious and inspirational instruction. Santa Ana College Schedule Two Days For 1950-51 Year General Registration Two days of general registration have been set for Wednesday and Thursday, September 6 and 7, at Santa Ana College to enable all students not having previously completed registration to do so before the first day of instruction on Monday, September 11. Appointments are not necessary as additional college staff members and department heads have been called on duty to assist the registrar and counselors to advise each student in planning his college course. The veterans' office will be open Tuesday through Friday for completion of veteran eligibility certificates and issuance of book and supply orders. Standard college entrance examinations will be given Friday, September 8, for all students not having previously taken them. No appointments are necessary and students are requested to report to rooms A2, A3, or A4 promptly at 1 p.m. All materials for the examination are furnished, and candidates should allow three hours for completion. All students will report to the campus Monday, September 11, to have their pictures taken, pick up their class cards, and report for the first meeting of their classes. Korean War (Continued from Page 1) sion Infantrymen smashed ahead six miles in the bridgehead area west of Yongsan, 32 miles south of Taegu. The reds were reported abandoning guns and equipment in their flight back to the Naktong river, which was swollen by rain. On the extreme southern front, where the reds lost an estimated 13,000 men in the last four days, the U.S. 25th Infantry Division "annihilated" 1000 North Koreans trapped west of Masan. AP correspondent Jack MacBeth reported from immediately north of Taegu that muddy U.S. First Cavalrymen and Engineers came down from the walled citadel of Kasan atop a 3000 foot ridge which they almost captured in two days of hard fighting. Maj. Gen. Hobart R. Gay, comNation at Glance (Continued from Page 1) weekend 1949—California, Illinois, Indiana, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas and Virginia. Ohio's record was improved substantially. There last year's toll of 30 compared with 21 last week-end. The toll by states, traffic, drowning, miscellaneous: Alabama 16-1-1; Arizona 6-3-1; Arkansas 8-2-0; California 35-7-3; Colorado 2-1-0; Connecticut 0-0-1; Florida 4-0-2; Georgia 8-2-0; Idaho 3-1-0; Illinois 19-2-6; Indiana 18-1-2; Iowa 4-2-2; Kansas 3-0-0; Kentucky 17-0-1; Louisiana 10-2-0; Maryland 6-4-0; Massachusetts 3-0-0; Michigan 17-4-2; Minnesota 7-1-3; Mississippi 5-1-0; Missouri 4-2-0; Montana 2-1-1; Nebraska 5-0-0; Nevada 3-0-1; New Hampshire 1-1-0; New Jersey 8-2-0; New Mexico 2-1-1; New York 20-3-20; North Carolina 13-3-0; North Dakota 2-0-1; Ohio 21-1-1; Oklahoma 5-0-1; Oregon 4-2-1; Pennsylvania 14-4-4; Rhode Island 7-0-1; South Carolina 2-0-0; South Dakota 0-0-1; Tennessee 2-0-2; Texas 27-6-9; Utah 4-1-4; Vermont 1-1-1; Virginia 23-5-4; Washington 4-2-3; West Virginia 4-2-0; Wisconsin 12-2-13. SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — CIO Electrical workers called off a strike today at General Electric Company's Knolls Aomic Power laboratory near here. The strike, which began at 5:25 a.m. (PDT), was ended about five hours later. Jack Suarez, president of Local 301, CIO International Union of Electrical Workers, notified the company at 10:43 a.m., PDT, that the strike was off. Suarez acted a short time after receiving a back-to-work call from James B. Carey, chairman of the International union. Picket lines were withdrawn. Suarez said the striking strikers would return to their jobs this afternoon. An estimated 300 workers walked out and set up picket lines. The laboratory is reported to employ approximately 600, but the company has declined to disclose the exact number because of the secret nature of their work. On the extreme southern front, where the reds lost an estimated 13,000 men in the last four days, the U.S. 25th Infantry Division "annihilated" 1000 North Koreans trapped west of Masan. AP correspondent Jack MacBeth reported from immediately north of Taegu that muddy U.S. First Cavalrymen and Engineers came down from the walled citadel of Kasan atop a 3000 foot ridge which they almost captured in two days of hard fighting. Maj. Gen. Hobart R. Gay, commanding the troopers' division, said the men were pulled back because the rainy weather made it impossible to keep them supplied by air drops. Suarez acted a short time after receiving a back-to-work call from James B. Carey, chairman of the International union. Picket lines were withdrawn. Suarez said the striking strikers would return to their jobs this afternoon. An estimated 300 workers walked out and set up picket lines. The laboratory is reported to employ approximately 600, but the company has declined to disclose the exact number because of the secret nature of their work. The union, formed by the CIO after the parent organization had ousted the United Electrical Workers, seeks a contract with the company on a national scale. A scheduled general strike by the CIO union against GE was delayed by a government request yesterday. A company spokesman said the union had given no notice of the strike at the atomic laboratory. MIAMIA, Fla. — A tropical hurricane drove into the Upper Florida Peninsula from the Gulf of Mexico today, bearing winds reported at more than 125 miles an hour, but stalled a short distance inland. The Weather Bureau said it was informed by the Florida Highway patrol that the wind at Cedar Keys, little coastal town was "measured at 125 miles per hour just before the instrument blew away." The instrument was an anemometer for measuring winds at Cedar Keys. But at Gainsville, 52 miles northeast and in the course of the storm, winds were only 22 miles an hour five hours later. The Weather Bureau said the storm stalled in the area barely inland from Yankeetown, a coast village south of Cedar Keys. Marine Propaganda Nearly Equal to Russ -- Truman WASHINGTON (AP)—President Truman says the Marine Corps has a propaganda machine that is almost equal to Stalin's. Mr. Truman's opinion was expressed in a letter dated August 29 to Representative McDonough R—Calif). McDonough had written the president requesting that the Marines have their representative on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, along with the Army, Air Force and Navy. Instead he got a reply remarking on the Marines' "propaganda machine." Mr. Truman's letter: 'My dear Congressman, McDonough: "I read with a lot of interest your letter in regard to the Marine Corps. For your information the Marine Corps is the Navy's police force and as long as I am president that is what it will remain. They have a propaganda machine that is almost equal to Stalin's. "Nobody desires to belittle the efforts of the Marine Corps but when the Marine Corps goes into the Army it works with and for the Army and that is the way it should be. I am more than happy to have your expression of interest in this Naval military organization. The Chief of Naval Operations is the Chief of Staff of the Navy of which the Marines are a part. "Sincerely yours, "Harry S. Truman." McDonough inserted his letter, and Mr. Truman's reply in the Congressional record." In the Senate today, Senator Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) called attention to the McDonough-Tru-conduct of such land operations as may be essential to the prosecution of a Naval campaign." The definition of missions did state emphatically that these Marine functions "do not contemplate the creation of a second land army." The unification conferences charged the Corps with "primary interest" in the development of landing force tactics, technique and equipment which are of common interest to the Army and the Marine Corps. PFE to Add 2100 Refrigerator Cars Pacific Fruit Express Company will add another 2100 refrigerator cars to its present fleet of more than 38,000 cars, the world's largest, it was announced today by PFE's joint owners, Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroads. The new acquisition will raise to approximately $125,000,000, the cost of PFE's fleet modernization and general repair program since World War II, it was stated. Included will be 100 heavily insulated 50-foot cars for use in the steadily increasing traffic in frozen foods. PFE already has 414 cars designed for this type of service. The other 2000 new cars will have modern improvements already built into other PFE post-war cars. These include air-circulating fans, half stage ice grates for economy where full New High School Teachers Greet Final preparations pave way for return of a record number of students got under way to Anaheim Union high school, the welcoming of new teachers at the campus by Superintendent Paul H. Demaree. The meeting, first in a seven-pre-school teacher meeting for the week, began at 10 a.m. the board room as the school new faculty members were introduced to various details of procedure. Lunch and a tea school facilities followed. The row the same group of teachers will visit the County Schools in Santa Ana to meet department personnel and observeices available. First general faculty meet the year is scheduled for Thursday morning in the school library. Luncheon will follow in the teria. Departmental conference have been set for both tomorrow and Thursday to coordinatericulum. Registration day for new dents will take place Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. First actual dschool comes next Monday, 11, and will begin with a ge assembly in the auditorium. periods will follow and schoo be dismissed at 12:30. BEGONIA SOCIETY MEETS THURSDAY The regular monthly meeting of the Orange county branch of the American Begonia Society be held Thursday, September in the Farm Bureau hall, 3 Main st., Orange. A potluck dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. G bring own table service. HULE Two Days Registration IN at Glance (Included from Page 1) 1949—California, Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia. Ohio's improved substantially. year's toll of 30 com-21 last week-end. All by states, traffic, miscellaneous: a 16-1-1; Arizona 3-1-1; b 3-2-0; California 35-7-3; c 1-0; Connecticut 0-0-1; d 4-0-2; Georgia 8-2-0; e 0; Illinois 19-2-6; Infairy 2; Iowa 4-2-2; Kansas Kutucky 17-0-1; Louisiana Maryland 6-4-0; Massatoo 0; Michigan 17-4-2; f 7-1-3; Mississippi 5-14-2-0; Montana 2-1-1; g 5-0-0; Nevada 3-0-1; hopshire 1-1-0; New JerNew Mexico 2-1-1; kirk 20-3-20; North Caroroo 0; North Dakota 2-0-1; l 1-1; Oklahoma 5-0-1; m 2-1; Pennsylvania 14-4Island 7-0-1; South 2-0-0; South Dakota 0Tennessee 2-0-2; Texas 274-1-4; Vermont 1-1-1; n 3-5-4; Washington 4-2Virginia 4-2-0; Wisconsin ECTADY, N.Y. — CIO workers called off a day at General Electric's Knolls Aomic Power near here. Lake, which began at 5:25 (S), was ended about five o'clock. Carez, president of Local International Union of Workers, notified theat 10:43 a.m., PDT, that was off. Acted a short time after a back-to-work call B. Carey, chairman of national union. Lines were withdrawn. Did the striking strikers return to their jobs this An estimated 300 work-out and set up picket laboratory is reported approximately 600, but many has declined to dis-exact number because wet nature of their work. Red Bomber (Continued from Page 1) ment did not pinpoint the action above or below that parallel. The State Department said the bomber passed over one of the outer ships in a U.N. formation and headed toward the center "in cost of PFE's fleet moderization and general repair program since World War II, it was stated. Included will be 100 heavily insulated 50-foot cars for use in the steadily increasing traffic in frozen foods. PFE already has 414 cars designed for this type of service. The other 2000 new cars will have modern improvements already built into other PFE post-war cars. These include air circulating fans, half stage iceing grates for economy where full iceing is not needed, and sidewall flues. In addition, they will have larger door openings employing sliding doors, and steel slatted instead of wooden floor racks. Mr. Citrus WE HAVE FOR YOU WE NEED CITY THE QUALITY SHOULD COMMUNICATE LET US GIVE Paramount is set up as organization with all open compact plant including selling of fresh citrus to frozen concentrates. We our own label. Red Bomber (Continued from Page 1) ment did not pinpoint the action above or below that parallel. The State Department said the bomber passed over one of the outer ships in a U.N. formation and headed toward the center "in a hostile manner." "The bomber opened fire upon a United Nations fighter patrol which returned its fire and shot it down," the State Department said. "A United Nations destroyer succeeded in picking up the body of 'one member of the bomber crew. Identification papers indicated that the body was that of Lieut. Mishin Tennadii Vasilebiu of the armed forces of the U.S.S.R., Serial No. 25054." Stock Market NEW YORK (P)—Lazy buying gave the Stock Market a gentle lift today. The rise was scarcely decisive but a majority of issues scored modest gains. Most advances were below $1 a share. A good many shares remained at Friday's closing levels. The market, in short, followed the same narrow price pattern which was traced last week prior to the Labor Day holiday. Trading was sluggish throughout with turnover at a rate of about 1,200,000 shares for the full session. New High School Teachers Greeted Final preparations paving the way for return of a record number of students got under way today at Aheima Union high school with a welcoming of new teachers to campus by Superintendent H. Demaree. The meeting, first in a series of high-school teacher meetings set for the week, began at 10 a.m. in board room as the school's 101 faculty members were introduced to various details of school procedure. Lunch and a tour of school facilities followed. Tomorrow the same group of teachers will visit the County Schools offices in Santa Ana to meet department personnel and observe service available. First general faculty meeting of year is scheduled for Thursday morning in the school library. Scheduled will follow in the cafeteria. Departmental conferences have been set for both tomorrow and Thursday to coordinate curriculum. Registration day for new students will take place Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. First actual day of school comes next Monday, Sept. and will begin with a general assembly in the auditorium. Shortods will follow and school will dismiss at 12:30. GONIA SOCIETY MEETS THURSDAY The regular monthly meeting of Orange county branch of American Begonia Society will held Thursday, September 7, the Farm Bureau hall, 353 S. St., Orange. A potluck dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. Guests own table service. Sewer Relief (Continued from Page 1) Dr. Russell said health authorities have been concerned for some time about the dangerous conditions that exist due to sewage backing up in overloaded lines into homes, streets and schools. He explained that control of conditions of this nature are vitally necessary to the general health. Both speakers said that overflowing of sewages is common since the sewage system is serving 100,000 people and was originally designed to serve not more than 80,000. Dr. Russell said that unless some measures were taken there can be no real health security in the county. He pointed out that the time to take care of dangerous, communicable diseases is before they gain a foothold—not after they begin spreading. Ellis told Kiwians that the Magnolia ave., trunk will be a solution to the present sewerage situation that not only threatens the general health, but is acting as a bar to community and industrial growth. He said the line is designed to take care of sewerage system needs for the next 40 years and will take care of a population of 340,000. The engineer explained that all possible steps have been taken to enable the present system to take care of the tremendous loads it is now required to carry. He asserted that building of the Magnolia ave., trunk is the only real solution. Ellis said due to the dangerously overcrowded system, it has been necessary to refuse sewer connections to new subdivisions definite stumbling block to community progress. Industry has also been forced to curtail the amount of water and waste they dump into Valencia Sales Edge Upward The Southern California Valencia orange market edged upward the last week in August, the f.o.b. average showing a gain of 15c to 20c per box on a sales volume line with those of recent weeks. A second nation-wide Giant Orange Sale was staged during the week and practically every leading chain and independent retail outlet actively supported the promotion, resulting in widespread merchandising activity on fresh California Valencias. Prorate for the first week in September was set at 1150 cars of 288s and larger Southern California Valencias, an increase of 150 cars over the prorate for the current week. The California lemon market showed a steady advance throughout the week ending September 2. Sales declined approximately 40 cars due to lighter arrivals because of sharply reduced supplies on track and enroute; the f.o.b. average improving about 15c a box. Unseasonably cold and wet weather in almost every major city of the country, excepting the Deep South, continued to adversely affect lemon demand. In the south, trade and consumer demand was strong prior to the Labor Day holiday, particularly on best quality 432s to 490s. Despite the generally unfavorable weather, shipers anticipate an improved marketing situation next week, largely because of lighter track and rolling supplies. Go to Church on Sunday. Citrus Grower WE HAVE CASH FOR YOUR VALENCIAS NEED CITRUS FRUIT NOW! THE QUALITY FRUIT YOU GROW WOULD COMMAND PREMIUM PRICES LET US GIVE YOU A CASH BID! Count is set up as a complete, well-balanced ortion with all operations under one roof. Our plant includes the packing, shipping, and of fresh citrus together with the processing of concentrates. We do all our own selling under label. LET US GIVE YOU A CASH BID! ount is set up as a complete, well-balanced ortion with all operations under one roof. Our act plant includes the packing, shipping, and of fresh citrus together with the processing of concentrates. We do all our own selling under on label. for cash and we sell for cash. ount is exerting every effort to help citrus s put their groves on a paying basis.. Further details on our plan call our repesenta- PHONE ANAHEIM 4407 JACK OGILVIE LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE Mount Citrus Assn., Inc. BRAND and STANWOOD SAN FERNANDO, CALIFORNIA