YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1950 November

anaheim-gazette 1950-11-21

1950-11-21 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1950-11-21 page 8
Searchable text
Anaheim Gazette by JOHN S. NEUBAUER ROUND ANAHEIM — John O'Kane, one of Anaheim's better known citizens will serve as conservation director for the Izaak Walton League. With logging activities threatening the giant Sequcias east of Porterville, his job assumes added importance... Will of Alma Karlson, one-time county welfare worker who was killed in an automobile accident with her friend, Demaris Beeman, was offered for probate in Superior Court. She left an estimated estate of $10,000 ... C. L. Pharris, the Anaheim trucker, has been granted permission to extract sand from county-owned property in the Santa Ana river bed near the Olive-Anaheim bridge. He was required to post a $5000 bond to guarantee that the west levee will be protected, and an additional $500 bond to guarantee maintenance of the east levee which will be used as a roadway. A $100,000 public-liability insurance was required to protect both the county and any third party who might be injured by the operations... A car belong- Unhappy? Maybe You Are a Psychosomatic HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) — Ever feel like no one wants to give you anything? Too bad. That's a sign of a psychosomatie. Psychosomatics explains Dr. O. Spurgeon English, are persons who have bodily pains, one or more, that are directly caused by emotional disturbances. The professor of psychiatry yesterday told the South Texas post graduate medical assembly that headaches and cardiac disturbances are among the common pains that usually develop from emotional disturbances. Persons most subject to these diseases, he said, have the following attitudes: No one wants to give me anything. Life has not been good to me and I'll be darned if I'll enjoy it. I wish I felt as good as other people. Some people, he commented, just don't have any talent for living happily. Riverside Fair, Date Festival Schedule Told in the Santa Ana river bed near the Olive-Anaheim bridge. He was required to post a $5000 bond to guarantee that the west levee will be protected, and an additional $500 bond to guarantee maintenance of the east levee which will be used as a roadway. A $100,000 public liability insurance was required to protect both the county and any third party who might be injured by the operations... A car belonging to Nadine and Don West was damaged when it was "borrowed" by a 13-year-old Fullerton youth who rammed another car with it. The car was "borrowed" without permission or knowledge of the owners... Police Judge Gurman Hoppe is making the acquaintance of quite a few Anaheimers. So, a word to the wise oughta be sufficient: When driving through Fullerton watch for those stop signs... PRAISEWORTHY — Gazette readers are accustomed to getting the latest and best. The other night M. S. B. reviewed the Anaheim Hi Senior play. M. S. B. in her own right has appeared in more than 30 major stage productions from Broadway to Malibu. A student of the theatre, she has written about the legitimate stage for national publications. The Gazette's drama editor has nothing but praise for the fine way in which Louise Hitt directed her teen-age actors to play difficult roles with professional-like zest. HONORABLE MENTION — Virginia Oakley will tell you that there is a lot more to staging a class play than having the actors and actresses read lines. There are a lot of folks who work behind the scenes... Jim Ball, Phil LaMori, Janet Schacht, Carol Schafer and Rosemary Cram are just a few of the many who helped make the big event a success by working behind the scenes so that those on the stage might have the limelight... Dorothy Kuchel is following her father's — Ted Kuchel's—footsteps. She is a reporter for the Fullerton high school weekly. Incidentally, Ted Kuchel, the Gazette publisher, was one of Fullerton's outstanding footballers way back when Anaheim outlawed the sport because it was too rough... And Leo Sheridan will tell you that Riverside Fair, Date Festival Schedule Told INDIO—Plans are already underway here for staging another Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival. The 1951 spectacle is scheduled to open February 16, to continue for a seven day run through Washington's birthday, February 22. Scene of the mid-winter event will again be the Indio Fairgrounds dotted with Arabic-style buildings topped with tall minarets and Moslem domes. Highlighting the coming fair and festival, along with hundreds of displays and scores of special features, will be exhibits of California dates, a six-day afternoon horse show, exciting camel races and the brilliant Arabian Nights Pageant to be presented free each evening with a cast of over 100 performers. More than $55,000 in premium awards will be offered exhibitors in the 1951 event, according to Manager Bob Fullenwider. Distribution of the new Premium List booklets and exhibit entry blanks will start next week. The booklets and entry blanks may be obtained free of charge by writing to Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival's year-round office at the Court House, Riverside, California. DAILY FARM BROADCAST SCHEDULE The Agricultural Extension Service announces the following subjects and speakers to be featured next week on its daily broadcast over KVOE (1480 kc) at 12:15 p.m. Also Thursday evening, 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 27—"Topics for Homemakers," Mrs. Marian Prentiss, home advisor. Tuesday, Nov. 28—"Animals Need Protein," W. M. Cory, farm advisor. DISTINCTION EARNED—Little tire, and the last for a while gold badge denoting 22 years. A. Stephenson. Rude says his first of the year. Nepalese Government Indian Border; Ke NEW DELHI, India (UP)—Nepalese government troops, trying bring the country's 10-day rebellion to a quick finish, have reached the Indian border, five miles south of Birganj, reports reading here said today. Birganj, key southern where rebel Nepal congress party followers had set up a provisional government, fell to government forces yesterday. A Nepalese embassy communique said only one village on that front Parasi—remained in rebel hand. It added that government troops were advancing on Parasi, which lies 95 miles west of Birganj. Increased insurgent activity reported, however, in the eastern sector where the rebels claim control of 150 square miles, including the village of Rangelli, 15 miles east of the industrial town of ratnagar. Official reports earlier said government troops had been patched to this sector, but so no clash has been reported. Rebel leader M. P. Koim meanwhile issued a statement from Patna, capital of Bihar stating that the fall of Birganj had only shifted the scene of erations. "The open struggle against medieval oligarchy of Nepal will continue, Koirala declared," till fully democratic government control is confirmed in four five administrative centers... the rest of Nepal the people, even the government forces andlice, are in complete sympa with the insurgents." The rebellion of the Nepal congress party, which broke Dorothy Kuchel is following her father's Ted Kuchel's footsteps. She is a reporter for the Fullerton high school weekly. Incidentally, Ted Kuchel, the Gazette publisher, was one of Fullerton's outstanding footballers way back when Anaheim outlawed the sport because it was too rough. And Leo Sherldan will tell you that high school football in the old days wasn't what it is now. They used to pick up substitutes from the innocent bystanders. The Anaheimers who saw Bob Ferguson streak 109 yards to a touchdown are still talking about it. In 1928 Bill Jewett scooted 103 yards as the late Art Nunn's eleven beat Compton, 6-0. Great as these individual performances might have been, Don Maxson who played a lot of football for Anaheim will tell you that Burt Kidd's work at Long Beach was the greatest individual accomplishment by "a local boy." And who is the Gazetteer to argue with Maxson? TAXOLOGY—Every man woman and child in Anaheim paid $423 in Federal, State or local taxes in 1950. Ten years ago the average was $138 per person. The people of California paid $4,480,-883,000 in taxes during the recent fiscal year. In 1933—the depression year, mind you—Californians paid a per capita tax of only $76. REMEMBER—If you give some folks an inch, they'll want the whole yardstick. In poultry raising, culling is the process of removing from the laying flock those hens which either do not lay at all or produce only occasionally. The Agricultural Extension Service announces the following subjects and speakers to be featured next week on its daily broadcast over KVOE (1480 kc) at 12:15 p.m. Also Thursday evening, 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 27—"Topics for Homemakers," Mrs. Marian Prentiss, home advisor. Tuesday, Nov. 28—"Animals Need Protein," W. M. Cory, farm advisor. Wednesday, Nov. 29 — "The Home Food Farm," A. H. Holland, farm advisor. Thursday, Nov. 30—"Citrus Replanting," Carl D. Gustafson. Thursday, Nov. 30, (7 p.m.) — West Orange 4-H club, Anne Girod, home advisor. Friday, Dec. 1—"Orange county Crop Trends," Harold E. Wahlberg, farm advisor. FLYING TIGERS AID REFUGEES SINGAPORE (P)—The Fly Tigers airline is making 16 trips to Australia via Singapore from Germany carrying displaced persons to new homes. Poles, Hari garians and Ukrainians—many whom have spent years in placed persons camps, or fled Iron Curtain countries—make many of the transports. The airline is operated by Claire Chennault of the far Flying Tigers of China. 14 YEARS as AUTHORIZED GAFFERS and SATTLER DEALER and a host of SATISFIED CUSTOMERS Leads Us To Recommend GAFFERS and SATTLER GAS RANGES for beauty and reliability H. R. Fox & Co. 411 East Center Street—Phone 4886 ... in Anaheim since 1928 Former Japanese Warlord Sprung Over Strenuous Russian Objection TOKYO (AP)—Japan's wartime foreign minister, Mamoru Shigemitsu, was released on parole from a seven-year prison term today despite Russia's strenuous objections. It was the first parole granted a principal defendant in the war crimes convictions growing out of World War II. Shigemitsu was convicted at the Tojo trial in 1948. War-launching Premier Hideki Tojo was convicted and hanged. The seven-year sentence given the veteran Japanese diplomat was the lightest imposed by the international tribunal. He was paroled because of good behavior. Shigemitsu, G3, was one of two Japanese who signed the historic surrender aboard the U.S. Battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. His foreign service career dated back to 1911 and included ambassadorships to Moscow and Nanking. Russia protested his release from grim Sugamo prison as an "illegal and arbitrary action" taken by General MacArthur. The Soviet note, following up two earlier protests, asserted that MacArthur lacked authority to parole any Japanese war criminals. In reply to a Russian protest last summer, the United States said the parole system accorded with the prairie enlightened and democratic tries." MacArthur had ended the parole system in war crimes cases March 7. The Allied occupation said six more Japan be paroled Dec. 3, bringing 148 the number of minorants released. Shigemitsu's attorney, A. Furness, emphasized elderly prisoner had pardoned and that his has not expired. "It merely means that of serving the remainder seven-year sentence in prison may go home," Furness said. "There are so many who feel that he never have been indicted." Several Allied diplomats favorably of Shigemitsu's positions presented at Hankou among them was Joseph Forman, former U.S. ambassador to Tokyo. Shigemitsu was accustomed to Sugamo's main gate by J. W. Davis, prison commander Japanese prisoners cheered as he passed out of the Nepalese Government Troops Reach Indian Border; Key Red City Falls Nov. 11, was touched off by the exile of liberal-minded King Tribhuvana, who fled to India, after a palace revolution engineered by Nepal's ruling prime minister. The refugee king's three-year-old grandson now sits on the throne. Beautiful—Practical—Gas Ran at the HARRY I. HO Wedgewood—Tappan—O On Highway 101 Between Anaheim and Fullerton PHONE Anaheim 2173 NG TIGERS REFUGEES GAPORE (P)—The Flying airline is making 16 trips Ventilated-oven roasting ...GAS HAS GOT IT! A TURKEY roasted uncovered in the oven of an automatic gas range is turkey at its best. The skin is crisp and golden, and sealed beneath it are all the tempting juices and flavor bred into the bird. The meat is tender...moist...delicious...because it's really roasted, not "stewed." Continuous circulation distributes the heat uniformly to every part of the oven...creates an air-conditioned atmosphere where odors of foods from the previous meal never linger, where flavors of two foods cooked at the same don't mingle. Gas is so controllable roast at low temperature. This makes shrinkage, prevents dryness. Gas is truly superior for roasting every other cooking method. You furnish all of its exclusive advantages in a matic gas range. See the displays or your Gas Company. You'll find wonderful new ranges cost less to operate, too! SOUTHERN COUNTIES GAS COMPANY Warlord Sprung Russian Objection Last summer, the United States said the parole system was "in accordance with the practice in unlightened and democratic countries." MacArthur had established the parole system in Japanese war crimes cases March 7. The Allied occupation legal section said six more Japanese will be paroled Dec. 3, bringing to 48 the number of minor defendants released. Shigemitsu's attorney, George A. Furness, emphasized that the elderly prisoner had not been boarded and that his sentence has not expired. "It merely means that instead of serving the remainder of his seven-year sentence in prison he may go home," Furness said in a statement. "There are some of us who feel that he never should have been indicted." Several Allied diplomats spoke favorably of Snigemitsu in depositions presented at his trial. Among them was Joseph C. Grew, former U.S. ambassador to Tokyo. Shigemitsu was accompanied into Sugamo's main gate by Lt. Col. J. W. Davis, prison commandant. Japanese prisoners cheered him as he passed out of the grounds. Berlin Communist Boss Warns Of Possible New Party Purge BERLIN (P)—Communist boss Walter Ulbricht bluntly warned party leaders in East Germany today that a new purge may be just around the corner. Ulbricht has engineered two wide-spread purges, ousting hundreds of party workers, since he seized complete control as general secretary last summer. The new threatened house-cleaning stems from the Oct. 15 elections in the Soviet zone. Ulbricht used the official party newspaper Neues Deutschland to express dissatisfaction with the role of some workers in the voting. His comments also cast some doubt on the party's own claims in that balloting. The East German government, hand-run by Ulbricht, contends that 99.72 per cent of the valid ballots were cast for the single list "National Front" ticket. Today, however, the party chief said: "I imagine that the hair of comrades in district and state leadership stood on end at the discoveries they made in some towns and villages. "We were also horrified at the discoveries in some large plants. The election work has given us a knowledge of things and men which our organization had never known." Without defining the "discoveries," Ulbricht asailed party workers for lacking lively leadership. He indicated thereby that they failed to get out the vote properly, a contradiction of the claim that only one and one-half per cent of the entire east zone failed to go to the polls. "Our party machinery has paid too little attention to the dangers of formalism and bureaucracy," Ulbricht asserted. "That we must and will correct." "The election work was a real test for all party leadership. Who has not stood this test must be replaced and without consideration of previous merits and pre-personal friendships." Opposition to the ruling SED (communist) party has reached such proportions that 20,000 political "enemies of the state" now are in concentration camps in the Soviet zone, the American high commission newspaper Die Neue Zeitung reported. The camps have developed high death rate due especially to tuberculosis. Today, however, the party chief said: "I imagine that the hair of comrades in district and state leaderships stood on end at the discoveries they made in some towns and villages. "We were also horrified at the discoveries in some large plants. Gas Ranges at the HARRY I. HORN Co. d—Tappan—O'Keefe & Merritt PHONE Anaheim 2173 All Horn Appliances Operate in Town or Country—on Natural or Sol-Gas Sol Gas LPG HARRY I. HORN CO. ANAHEIM NOT JUST GAS-but SERVICE roasting NOT IT! two foods cooked at the same time e. Gas is so controllable you can w temperature. This minimizes prevents dryness. fully superior for roasting and for cooking method. You fully enjoy exclusive advantages in a new autorange. See the displays at dealers' Company. You’ll find that these new ranges cost less to buy and rate, too! Among the many makes of gas ranges on display is this beautiful new GAFFERS & SATTLER ...a CP model. Others you'll see include Caloric, Grand, Hardwick, Magic Chef, Maytag, Occidental, O'Keefe & Merritt, Roper, Tappan, Wedgewood, Western-Holly. Look for this seal. It's your guide to the very finest in modern cooking appliances. GAS cooks better, costs less