YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1950 October

anaheim-gazette 1950-10-06

1950-10-06 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1950-10-06 page 6
Searchable text
ANAIIEM GAZETTE Published afternoons, Monday through Friday, at 259 East Center, Anaheim, California. Phone Anaheim 2206. Entered as second-class matter at the Anaheim, California, Postoffice on June 5, 1879, under the Act of March 3, 1879. The Gazette is a member of the Associated Press, the National Editorial Association, and California Newspaper Publishers Association. All rights herein are reserved. Subscriptions: 50¢ per month by carrier or $5 per year by carrier or mail. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS—The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper as well as all A.P. news dispatches. THEODORE B. KUCHEL Publisher MAX BEULER Assistant Publisher WILLARD GREGORY Editor ERNEST BEYER Assistant Editor MYLES BRADLEY Picture Editor NEIL STANLEY Advertising Manager G. E. MELLEN Assistant Advertising Manager MARY ROULAND Assistant Advertising Manager RALPH ROULAND Classified Advertising Manager The troublesome bear... Those South Koreans today are digging deeper and deeper into North Korea and there are plenty of their Allies ready to give them a hard in occupying the area north of Parallel 38. In the U. N. today they are trying to cut through the confusion to come up with some sort of a plan for unifying Korea and stopping further commie moves. But hovering over everything involving Korea is the big Russian bear. The communist empire builders insist military strength has been lost in the gamble. The Korean war which the communists launched triggered a vast multi-billion dollar American rearmament program. Moscow didn't want that. Why did the Kremlin make a move that precipitated it? What the communists appear to have wanted was to wipe out the free government of South Korea, eradicate the 38th Parallel and make all of the peninsula a communist nation. Believe it or not, these companies—Anaconda, Sullivan Mining, American Smelting and Refining, and American Zinc Company—wanted to take care of their civilian clients first rather than risk losing business. Now same companies are protesting against supplying zinc for the nation's strategic stockpile. The basic commodities used in the manufacture of military items were the first to be shipped. In the U. N. today they are trying to cut through the confusion to come up with some sort of a plan for unifying Korea and stopping further commie moves. But hovering over everything involving Korea is the big Russian bear. The communist empire builders lost ground, politically and militarily, in their excursion into a shooting war with the free nations on the Korean battleground. Unless Russia tries belatedly to retrieve position by rushing Chinese communist or Russian military aid to the shattered forces of her North Korean satellite, she will find the Korean experiment costly to her military position and political prestige. If the communists had not gambled, South Korea today would be what it was last June 25, a militarily weak country with a small, lightly equipped army and an internal security force. But now the formerly weak buffer state between communist Russia and American-garrisoned Japan has 150,000 men fighting for it, a powerful Air Force flying against its enemy, a fleet of 200 warships ringing the communists from the sea. South Korean troops are moving in force into North Korea. If all Korea is unified and becomes one free nation, Russia will find she is facing United Nations forces not across a weak buffer state but across communist Manchuria and her own Siberian border. In the Korean war a communist army of more than 100,000 men has been cut up, rendered ineffectual, virtually destroyed. Russia herself has a huge pool of manpower for military purposes, but a noteworthy portion of community strength has been lost in the gamble. The Korean war which the communists launched triggered a vast multi-billion dollar American rearmament program. Moscow didn't want that. Why did the Kremlin make a move that precipitated it? What the communists appear to have wanted was to wipe out the free government of South Korea, eradicate the 38th Parallel and make all of the peninsula a communist nation. There are indications that could have been accomplished eventually by the usual communist technique of infiltration and subversion. Now it appears the political issue of Korean unification will be settled—by driving the communist government out. What impelled the Kremlin to resort to war in the Far East and risk setting off another world conflict? It may be that the communist leaders, the Politburo, felt a successful, free South Korea no longer could be tolerated, not even long enough to overcome it by stealth. Soviet prestige was involved. Some of the western satellites, like Yugoslavia, were becoming restless and should be shown the power of communism. In the Orient, prestige — "face" — is of paramount importance. Here, Moscow undoubtedly reasoned, the need of a demonstration of power was particularly needed. Now the attempt at improving "face" seems to have backfired. Moscow has lots it not only in the Orient but in the western world as well. It is for this reason that a new, drastic communist move somewhere else in the world is considered possible. Russia must try to regain the lost ground. Let's hope the U. N. is working into a position to resist such a move. IN THE DAYS OF LONG AGO From the Files of the Anaheim Gazette By MRS. HENRY KUCHEL 75 Years Ago A dispatch from Washington says that the official survey of the Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana Don Pacifico Ontiveras con- 75 Years Ago A dispatch from Washington says that the official survey of the Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana Don Pacifico Ontiveras confirmee has been rejected by the commissioner of the General Land Office and a new survey ordered. It will take 202,000 feet of lumber for the flumes of the two water districts. The commissioners are now making out an estimate. The common council of Los Angeles at a meeting last night passed the ordinance locating the L.A. and I. R. R. depot on San Pedro st. over the mayor's veto. A committee was also appointed to investigate the charges of bribery made against some of the councilmen. 50 Years Ago Mrs. Dr. Bullard of Los Angeles is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dickel. Walter Robinson, mayor of Trabuco was in town on Saturday afternoon. William D. Baker and Miss Gustine Lemke, young people of Olive, were married by Justice of the Peace Wilson at Santa Ana last week. 25 Years Ago E. A. Beard, manager of the Anaheim Telephone Exchange, addressed the Brea Chamber of Commerce Monday evening, recommending that an exchange be put in that town. WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Acheson has been urging President Truman to deliver a fireside chat warning the nation against falling for the Russian peace offensive. Acheson fears that victory in Korea will lull Americans into forgetting that Western Europe is still Russia's No. 1 objective and that to let down now would prove disastrous later. Therefore, he has suggested the President give a blunt talk to the people, perhaps on Columbus Day, and in this way explode Moscow's peace talk. Acheson wants the president to point out that Russia still has 75 divisions in Eastern Germany—15 of them armored—and now is stockpiling huge quantities of food and raw materials—something you do only when you are preparing for war. Korean Costs Increase Most people don't realize that the cost of the Korean war to the taxpayers has been increased by about five billion dollars, because of two factors: 1. Unpatriotic war manufacturers and raw-material dealers have hiked prices; 2. President Truman, though given ample power by Congress, has failed to invoke price controls. As a result, it now costs the Armed Services more for their needs, without exception, than they paid before the Korean outbreak. Probably the most shameful is the sudden increase in the price of medical and surgical goods, urgently needed to save lives in Korea. The Army must now pay $220 for an instrument KNOWN BY THE COMPANY HE'S KEPT HIS VOTING RECORD SOME OF OUR CAMPAIGNING CONGRESSMEN THE HOME FOLKS Hal Boyle NORTH KOREA (AP) — The South Korean soldier now in the land of his red military enemy finds North Koreans a people in shreds and tatters after five years of communist rule. He also finds the North Korean civilians don't act like people who are losing a war. He walks under several hurriedly raised victory arches of logs and pine boards spanning the road. He comes to a small village. The red North Koreans had used it as a checkpoint to search vehicles coming from the South. But the crude log road barriers now are lifted and point skyward. The road north is clear. A group of villagers, happy that the war is sweeping beyond them, stand by the roadside. They cheer and wave South Korean flags as the army stragglers go by. But when the crowded trucks rumble through they raise both hands time after time and shout "Manzai! Manzai!" It is the Korean equivalent of the Japanese "Banzai" victory cry. If the stragglers were tanks they would get even louder "Manzais" than the trucks do. For in the Orient power is admired even more than in the western world. But on this day no tanks are going up this road. The ROK soldier see that after five years of communist rule, that boasted it would help the worker, these villagers are even more ragged than the peasants of South Korea. There are more children with open sores on their heads. There are more with diseased eyes. And there are few young farmers in the holiday crowd. They are in the fields harvesting each small patch of rice as it matures, for there is hunger here. A rifle slips from the hands of a ROK private in a crowded truck. It falls beneath the wheels and the barrel is badly bent. Before the truck can stop a ROK officer leaps out of the truck and the private does too. The officer reaches the rifle first and picks it up. He unleashes a wild torrent of abuse and then turns the rifle around and smashes the but into the private's left shoulder. He does this five times and puts all his power into every blow. The private is knocked back each time but neither flinches nor shows pain. Nor do the faces of the men in the truck or in the chow line show either anger or surprise. This is an Oriental army. They know a man who carelessly ruins a weapon is lucky to escape a rifle butt blow on his skull. Weapons are precious—life is not. The trucks moves on. The doughboy finally gets his rice ball wrapped in seaweed. He wolfs it down hungrily. He has seen no fighting but he has walked all day and lonely. But he still hasn't up with his own outfit. Two other sleeping ROK men huddled together for on the porch of a hut. He sags to a sitting position on the porch. He slowly begins his leaden feet. And be bent little body has strained out he is fast alseep. Tomorrow at dawn he up and shuffling again up road that leads to stormy stone, to beyond the ed frontier of the 38th Pa. The Manchurian boarder when his army is halted border will all Korea be and he will be free to rest. Lions Take in Two New Memories Two new members of the club were introduced at the ing noon. Howard Eve investment broker on E. C. and Ivan Coltraine, plant tender at Kwikset Lock ben accepted by the A Lions. Bill Fackiner, program man, arranged to have the picture "Ghost Towns, U.K." the afternoon's program. Sully Roquet announced prodding, the birth of a d bank account for the new on the assurance that fath would match it, which he the tune of $50 collected. TODAY'S CROSS-WORD PUZZLE If the stragglers were tanks they would get even louder "Manzals" than the trucks do. For in the Orient power is admired even more than in the western world. But on this day no tanks are going a rifle butt blow on his skull. Weapons are precious—life is not. The trucks moves on. The doughboy finally gets his rice ball wrapped in seaweed. He wolfs it down hungrily. He has seen no fighting but he the tune of $50 collected. D. K. Guardsmen WALTER WILSON JAMES BLEECKER HORIZONTAL 1 Brief excerpt 6 Shade 11 Traveled 13 Light-hearted 14 Narcotic 15 Apportion 16 Enclosure 17 Sore 19 Fish 20 Hostile intruder 22 Veteran 25 Musical work 29 Visual 30 Voyage 32 Stipend 33 Blind 34 Regard with scorn 37 Base 40 Shore 41 A pigment 44 Not poisonous 46 Loose robe 48 Epic poem 49 Caught 50 Rankles 51 Touch and glance off VERTICAL 1 Discontinue 2 Ecclesiastical cloak 3 Destroy 4 Constellation Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: CARP CHAR RAP OPAL RENO DEDE SENATE TA GIN TIXER DARTS PRATTLES DE OESEL TAL FAT LA RELATED LE ADD SAX ARIAN AM ENGRAVED CARAT SOING RUT IS ASGARD ARE RILL ERIE BAD EROS DOPE He seeks information Raised Vehicle Dawdled Way Plant So. Amateur tuber Shipping Trench Apply Weight India The old family Briakly Resort Satan or Arabs Source Moveable of a tail River in Germany Beverage Bird Feminin name Ore vein Wager Damage Nation at Glance (Continued from Page 1) and Arizona and California they report more enquiries and earlier reservations than usual. Travel agents and cruise shipowners are saying the same. In the garment district makers of women's togs for resort and cruise wear predict better sales this year, although prices are likely to be up from 10 to 20 per cent. Many merchants, however, aren't convinced and report they bough sparingly. But they are watching sales closely, as they always regard winter sales of sportswear as indicators of style trends for next summer, and re-order accordingly. SANTA FE, N. M. (CP)—The nude wall panel, Miss Fertility, will be replaced in the New Mexico Capitol annex. W. C. Kruger, architect for the building, made the decision today after conferring with Santa Fe artists and ministerial representatives. The panel shows a nude woman lying in a cornfield. "Immoral, indecent and unfit for display in a public building," had been the ministers' verdict. Santa Fe artists reported that the two by four terra cotta panels was good art. The work was done by sculptor William Longley. He will do the Classified Rates for Anaheim Gazette and Anaheim Gazette Shopper (minimum 12 words) 36c word 1st day — 1½ thereafter 1 time 36c 2 times 54c 3 times 72c 4 times 90c 5 times $1.08 Address, phone numbers, etc., constitute a word. Minimum charge 36c. Deadline for copy, corrections or cancellations 9:00 a.m. day of publication. We will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement ordered for more than one time. We reserve the right to adjust in full, any error, by a correct publication of the advertisement. Phone 2206 for Results ANNOUNCEMENTS Lost and Found LOST: BLACK LACE VEIL. PH. 3907 ANNOUNCEMENTS Personals-Spec. Notices Personals-Spec. Notices Singer Sewing Machine Co. Has a few electric sewing machines for rent—only $5.00 per month. Pick-up and delivery was walked all day and he is lonely. But he still hasn't caught up with his own outfit. He sees two other sleeping ROK infantrymen huddled together for warmth on the porch of a hut. He sags to a sitting position on the porch. He slowly begins to lift his leaden feet. And before his tent little body has straightened out he is fast alseep. Tomorrow at dawn he will be up and shuffling again up the long road that leads to stone after rusty stone, to beyond the vanish-frontier of the 38th Parallel to the Manchurian boarder. Only when his army is halted at that border will all Korea be united—and he will be free to rest. Lions Take in Two New Members Two new members of the Lions club were introduced at the meeting this noon. Howard Evans, investment broker on E. Center st. and Ivan Coltraine, plant superintendent at Kwikset Locks, have been accepted by the Anaheim lions. Bill Fackiner, program chairman, arranged to have the motion picture "Ghost Towns, USA" for the afternoon's program. Sully Roquet announced, after wooding, the birth of a daughter. A collection was taken to start a bank account for the new addition in the assurance that father Sully would match it, which he did, to the tune of $50 collected. WORD PUZZLE building, made the decision today after conferring with Santa Fe artists and ministerial representatives. The panel shows a nude woman lying in a cornfield. "Imoral, indecent and unfit for display in a public building," had been the ministers' verdict. Santa Fe artists reported that the two by four term cotta panel was good art. The work was done by sculptor William Longley. He will do the new panel which will replace "Miss Ferulity." World Series (Continued from Page 2) rap and whipped him out at first in a lighting play. Coleman walked on a full count. Berra also walked on four pitches. That brought manager Eddie Sawyer out to the mound to confer with his battery. DiMaggio walked on four pitches to load the bases. It was Heintzelman's sixth pass. Heintzelman was replaced by Jim Konstanty. Bobby Brown, a left-handed batter, went in to hit for Bauer. Brown sent a roller to Hammer who in his anxiety to start a force play fumbled and Coleman scored with the tying run on the error. There was no run batted in. Jackie Jensen ran for Brown. Then Mize fouled out to Jones near the third base-field boxes. One run, no hits, one error, three left. NINTH INNING PHILLIES—Joe Collins is now playing first base, Gene Woodling in left field and Tom Ferrick pitching for the Yankees. Hamner clouted Ferrick's first pitch between DiMaggio and Woodling. Only a barehanded stop by DiMaggio prevented Hamner for stretching it beyond a double. Seminick bunted a low pop fly to third which Johnson could have caught. He elected, however, to let it bounce but Hamner sneaked into third safely and Johnson barely threw out Seminick at first. It was scored as a sacrifice. Gollat was purposely walked. Dick Whitman, a left handed hitter, batted for Konstanty. Whitman bounced to Collins whose throw to Berra nipped Hammer at the plate. Goliate advanced to second on the play. Ralph Caballero ran for Gollat. Mapes came in to get under Waltkus' fly in short right. No runs, one hit, no errors, two left. YANKEES—Jimmy Bloodworth now playing second base, and Russ Meyer pitching for the Phillies. Johnson lined to Mayo in left. Mapes struck out. Woodling beat out an infield single to Bloodworth who fumbled the trickly bounder. Bloodworth made a diving stop of Rizzuto's liner but could not hold the ball and Woodling reached second on the single. Coleman singled to left center between Mayo and Ashburn scoring Woodling with the winning run. One run, three hits, no errors, two left. TOTALS R H E Phillies 2 10 2 Yankees 3 7 0 Time—2.35. Attendance—64,505. HIOT ROD COPS VAN NUYS(LP)—Even a hot-rod will have a tough time getting away from four new "soupup" Sully Roquet announced, after woodding, the birth of a daughter. Collection was taken to start a bank account for the new addition in the assurance that father Sully would match it, which he did, to the tune of $50 collected. TOTALS RHE Phillies 210 2 Yankees 370 Time—2.35. Attendance—64,505. HOT ROD COPS VAN NUYSUP—Even a hot-rod will have a tough time getting away from four new "souped up" police cars assigned to San Fernando valley. They are part of a fleet of 20 specially built cars for the entire city. Policemen who have test-driven the cars say they can go 85 miles an hour in second gear and over 100 in high. READY TO GO - WHY WAIT ANY LONGER 1949 Chev. Stylcline dlx. 4 dr. sed., Radio, heater, fender panels, two-tone paint, five new tires...$1795.00 1948 Chev. Fleetmaster sport sed. Radio, heater, backup lamp. All dlx. equipment. Only...$1395.00 1948 Chev. Styleline club coupe. Radio, heater. Very clean—For ...$1345.00 1948 Dodge Fluid Drive—Twodoor dlx. sed. Radio and heater. Looks and runs like new...$1395.00 1940 Olds bus. coupe. New motor overhaul, nice paint and tires. Like new ...$ 595.00 CROWELL MOTOR CO., Inc. 252 N. LOS ANGELES ST. Anaheim, Calif. Phone 5746