anaheim-gazette 1951-02-19
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NEW JOB, NEW BOSS—George Spielman, right, formerly with the SQR store in Anaheim, today took up new duties as store manager for Daniger Bros. in Santa Ana. He is shown above with Ray Danner discussing plans for the store's future.
(Gazette photo by Kreldt)
NEW JOB, NEW BOSS—George Spielman, right, formerly with the SQR store in Anaheim, today took up new duties as store manager for Daniger Bros. in Santa Ana. He is shown above with Ray Danner discussing plans for the store's future.
Standard to Give Ten Scholarships
A scholarship fund of $2700 has been established by Standard Oil Company of California for equal division between applicants from Southern California 4-H Clubs and chapters of the Future Farmers of America, Harry Anderson, Santa Ana manager announced today.
The awards are to be made on the basis of candidates' record of accomplishment in club work, general scholastic ability, leadership, personality and need for financial aid in undertaking university work.
Announcement of the first winners under the new program will be made on the oil company's Sunday evening radio program, The Standard Hour, on Sunday, May 20. Winners and their parents will be guests of the company at a dinner just prior to the broadcast that evening.
Members of the Future Farmers of America will compete annually for five scholarships: one of $500, three of $230 each, and one of $100 value. Five scholarships of $270 value each will go to 4-H Club winners.
Standard emphasized that it will not participate in either selection of candidates for the awards or in naming of the winners; this phase of the program will be handled by the FFA and 4-H Club organizations.
If we are truly prudent we shall cherish those noblest and happiest of our tendencies—to love and to confide. — Bulwer-Lytton.
Spielman Leaves SQR to Take Job With Santa Ana Chinaware Store
George Spielman, who has been advertising manager of the Anaheim SQR store, has joined the Santa Ana firm of Daniger Brothers as store manager, it was announced today by Ray V. Dangerer, owner and general manager.
Spielman, who takes up his new duties today, will be in charge of merchandizing and sales promotion efforts for the well-known china, glassware and giftware store.
Connected with the SQR store since last April 1, Spielman became prominent in Anaheim civic affairs and made a host of friends. He participated in several civic projects and was a member of the Anaheim Rotary club.
Commenting on his departure from Anaheim business life, Spielman said: "Leaving Anaheim is not easy, for I have enjoyed these months I have spent here. I am going to miss my friends and I hope that our paths will cross many times. I believe in Anaheim's future and there is no doubt that with the coming of industry this city will progress faster than any other Orange county area."
Before coming to Anaheim Spielman had been president of the Los Angeles branch of C. L. Quaintance co., and had served as general merchandizing manager for Rankin's department store in Santa Ana.
Spielman came to Orange county in December, 1927, from Sheldon, Ia., where he was employed as a display manager. He started his retail career in Santa Ana with the Van Anter store (now the location of Vandermast's) and in 1933 became display and promotion manager for Rankin's. In 1942 he was promoted to general merchandise manager of Rankin's.
Before coming to Anaheim Spielman was a member of the Santa Ana Rotary club, Santa Ana Elks, the Congregational church was a past president of the Santa Ana Business Men's association and was chairman of the retail division of the Santa Ana Chamber of Commerce.
Jr. Chamber
Continued from Page 1
ton Model club was present at the meeting to work out details of the meet, which is American Model Association approved and sponsored jointly by the model club and the JC.
The membership committee for 1951 is composed of Warren Holingsworth, chairman, Bob Malone and Lee Fellows.
Action on "Mother of the Year" and "Young Man of the Year" committees was tabled for later consideration. Loren Wagner chairman of the committee for the JC dance to be held March 31 a Fullerton Legion hall, reported on arrangements made so far. Food for the buffet lunch at the dance will be provided by the losing team in the recent JC membership competition, he said.
"I'd Like to Know..."
"Would breaking up big oil company..."
If we are truly prudent we shall cherish those noblest and happiest of our tendencies—to love and to confide. — Bulwer-Lytton.
I'd Like to Know...
You may have heard that a suit has been filed by the Antitrust Division in Washington to break up Standard of California as well as six other West Coast oil companies. Many people have written us protesting this action, have asked pertinent questions. We believe these questions should be answered for everyone. We take this way of doing so. If you have a question, write: "I'd like to know"
225 Bush Street, San Francisco 20
"Would breaking up big oil company"
Mrs. Marie-Louise
bad time to be taken?
Or does it matter companies affect her?
Here at Standard oil companies clear public benefit.
Today, military needs first. Just recently, aviation gasollers 275% in the West oil companies sup
For hard jobs, the best our bigness and intelligence. Today, our U.S. preclude atomic research synthetic rubber pla
STAND
'Annie Laurie'
To Be Marywood Senior Production
Senior drama students at Marywood school are polishing final rehearsals for their production of the romantic drama by Wall Spence, "Annie Laurie," Saturday evening, Feb. 24 in Anaheim Union high school auditorium.
There are some love songs included that have survived for ages. One ballad of undying charm falls in this category, the sweet, old song of "Annie Laurie." In the novel play, the wistful, haunting notes of this song re-echoes in the anguish and tribulations suffered by the young lovers in the story when fate interposes and tries to separate them.
It is inevitable that this love story should serve as the theme of a play. The coming production of "Annie Laurie" promises an evening full of dramatic tension, pathos, and quaint humor. Costumes in the play will be especially lovely, some of them having been obtained from the wardrobe of the film of "Annie Laurie."
Appearing in the title role will be Gall Nolan of Orange, and other principle roles will be taken by Nell Olsen of Los Angeles, Lu Ann Bertles of Ventura; Marilou Heavrin and Leona King of Buena Park, Rosalind Stoffel of Anaheim, Anna Mae Hohner of Orange, and Helen Spezia, Carol Watkins, Barbara Kern, Mary Lawrence. Jane
CONFESSION—Marcia Mae Jones, feminine lead in the enlightening new Hollywood feature, "STREET CORNER," reveals her desperate predicament to the sympathetic ears of Joseph Crehan, who portrays the understanding family doctor in the film which opens at the Orange Drive-In Theatre on Wednesday.
'Not in 1000 Years,' AUHS Junior Play Underway with Rehearsals
Rehearsals for the Junior class play, "Not In a Thousand Years," are currently underway at Anaheim Union high
R to Take Job
naware Store
play manager. He started
career in Santa Ana with
Anter store (now the
of Vandermast's) and in
came display and promomanager for Rankin's. In 1943
promoted to general merganer of Rankin's.
coming to Anaheim,
was a member of the
na Rotary club, Santa Ana
Congregational church,
fast president of the Santa
Business Men's association
as chairman of the retail
of the Santa Ana ChamCommerce.
Mr. Chamber
continued from Page 1
club was present at the
to work out details of the
which is American Model
ion approved and sponsorly by the model club and
membership committee for composed of Warren Holorth, chairman, Bob Malone
Fellows.
on "Mother of the Year"
young Man of the Year"
cees was tabled for later
ation. Loren Wagner,
n of the committee for the
cee to be held March 31 at
Legion hall, reported on
ments made so far. Food
buffet lunch at the dance
provided by the losing
the recent JC membership
tion, he said.
Ap to Take Job
naware Store
play manager. He started
career in Santa Ana with
Anter store (now the
of Vandermast's) and in
came display and promomanager for Rankin's. In 1943
promoted to general merganer of Rankin's.
coming to Anaheim,
was a member of the
na Rotary club, Santa Ana
Congregational church,
fast president of the Santa
Business Men's association
as chairman of the retail
of the Santa Ana ChamCommerce.
Mr. Chamber
continued from Page 1
club was present at the
to work out details of the
which is American Model
ion approved and sponsorly by the model club and
membership committee for composed of Warren Holorth, chairman, Bob Malone Fellows.
on "Mother of the Year"
young Man of the Year"
cees was tabled for later
ation. Loren Wagner,
n of the committee for the
cee to be held March 31 at
Legion hall, reported on
ments made so far. Food
buffet lunch at the dance
provided by the losing
the recent JC membership
tion, he said.
Edman to Address
Rose Bowl Throng
Dr. V. Raymond Edman, author,
college president and former missionary, will address the 1951 Easter throng attending the third annual sunrise service in Pasadena's famed Rose Bowl, the interdenominational sponsoring committee announced today.
Dr. Edman has served 10 years as president of Wheaton college in Illinois, the largest interdenominational evangelical liberal arts school in the world.
The Rose Bowl event is endorsed by the Pasadena Christian Businessmen's committee, and 100 laymen from Southern California churches are serving on various planning committees. The one-hour program, which has been carried each year by a nationwide radio network, is to begin at 6 a.m., just nine minutes after the March 25 sunrise. In 1949 the service attracted 13,000 worshipers and last year, despite heavy rain, more than 2000 were present. Parking and admission are free and no offering is solicited.
Slaughtering and meat packing ranks second among the manufacturing industries in Canada.
Not in 1000 Years,' AUHS Junior Play Underway with Rehearsals
Rehearsals for the Junior class play, "Not In A Thousand Years," are currently underway at Anaheim Union high school, Miss Louise Hitt, drama teacher reported this week.
To be presented on March 16, the play is a three-a-comedy dealing with the trials and tribulations of teenage boy on his first date.
The following people were chosen for parts: Bert Arden, is to be played by Don Hillary, veteran of the White Temple church Footlighters.
Mother Conroy will be Joan Hendrickson, a last semester import from Excelsior high school.
City editor George Conroy is Phil Taylor and teenager Marjorie Conroy, Leah Gerber, who also plays the part of the daughter in the Drama Club production of the "Balcony Scene."
Junior Conroy will be Jerry Farrow and Dilly Dalton, Jean Bastian, who is in her second year of Drama and a popular Footlighter actress.
Mrs. Grigsby will be Barbara Ryan and Mrs. Matthews, Georgia Drake.
Jeanhle Matthews will be played by Mary Jo Duncan, also of the Footlighters; Paul Matthews, Jeannie's father, by Paul Billows; Hap, Ira Webber; Mrs. Babbleton by Carol Dawson and Morrison Vanderpool by Stu Schmid.
Buzz Flugle, a "throw back to Darwin," will be Carl Starnes; Great Aunt Alice, Joan Kellogg and Cousin Alicia, Carlene Korn.
Offering something by way of variety in stage settings, "Not in a Thousand Years" will have three different sets. Scene II offers an original set, the audience being in position of the bathroom mirror and getting to watch son junior shave for his first date.
Juniors will make good use of the record player recently purchased by the Drama club with sound effects.
The Juhlor Drama class is a charge of the major committee. Leah Gerber heads the makee committee assisted by Jean Bastian, Marlon Simmons, Jean Hendricson, Gretchen Glover, Ma Joe Duncan, Elaine Stanky and Elva Lynn Glenn.
Props committee is headed by Jean Bastian and Barbara Roess assisting.
Marion Simmons is to take care of choice and care of costume Gwen Keithley is assistant.
Carlene Korn and Gwen Keithley are in charge of all new paper publicity. Posters will made by the Jnior Drama Class with Gretchen Glover in charge Publicity skits in charge of Ma Jo Duncan.
Don Hilliary will help R Hamilton with the stage sets and sound effects.
KOREAN WAR
Continued from Page 1
9 a.m. (4 p.m., PST, Sunday) advanced over snow - cover mountain roads. Stone sold art lery fire alone accounted for more than 200 enemy dead. Sm arms skirmishes continued throughout the day along the path of the advance.
AP correspondent Stan Swinton reported that the other American counter-attack occurred a bitterly-defended mile a wedge driven by the reds in the Chechon front last week.
This action covered a two-one-half mile front about
big oil companies affect national defense?"
Mrs. Marie-Louise Auer, Pasadena housewife, writes: It seems to me like a bad time to be tampering with our industries, as the antitrust lawyers want to do. Or does it matter? Would breaking up big oil companies affect national defense?
Here at Standard, one of the seven Western oil companies under attack, we see clear public benefit in having big companies in the business at all times. We believe we serve you well. But let's consider now just "bigness" and defense:
Today, military needs come first. Just recently, need for aviation gasoline jumped 275% in the West alone. Big oil companies supplied it.
Next: industry's demands. You know how industrial output keyed U.S. strength in World War II. It takes big companies to meet big needs.
Company bigness also means big-scale research, improved products. Example: oils developed by Standard which tripled range of U.S. subs.
For hard jobs, the U.S. uses our bigness and integration. Today, our U.S. projects include atomic research and a synthetic rubber plant.
Our taxes also aid defense. As one big company, we paid over $95,000,000 last year, more than we would pay as several smaller companies.
Meanwhile, bigness and integration enable us to keep on supplying products you need. Isn't this what you want from your oil company?
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA
• plans ahead to serve you better
more than 200 enemy dead. Small arms skirmishes continue throughout the day along the path of the advance.
AP correspondent Stan Swinton reported that the other American counter-attack recounted a bitterly-defended mile a wedge driven by the reds in the Chechon front last week.
This action covered two-one-half mile front about a miles due north of Chechon. Nightfall the Doughboys had captured the little mountain town Kumna and driven the reds from three hills.
Swinton said a furious battle was in progress for a fourth h Monday's main action, he added was fought in a huge natural phitheater ringed by pine-cover hills.
An estimated 3000 Korean riders had made light attacks in the afternoon, but these were repulsed.
It was quiet between this second and the west coast. The riders had pulled back along the 70-mile front after falling—at tremendous cost—to crack the Allied line a five-day drive.
Ridgway credited a magnificent stand by American and French forces at Chipyong with smashing the red drive Thursday. said the Chinese were so hard that his patrols have been unable to make contact for 36 hours.
Ridgway, commander of Eighth Army, told a news conference that although the Chinese have been beaten south Parallel 38 they have enough men and manpower to prevent an Allied crossing of the old north-so-called boundary.
"I have not given the Parallel a thought," said Ridgway. "As far as I am concerned it no significance."
Santa Anan to Take Weed Killer On 8000-Mile RR Tour of West
"Join the Spray Train and see the West" might be the motto of W. T. Cox, Santa Ana manufacturer of Hykil Weed Oil.
The "spray train," a specially-designed railroad car for the destruction of weeds along railroad tracks, will take off on a 8000-mile, summer-long cruise of the West for three major railway companies, the Santa Fe, Southern Pacific and Union Pacific, in the near future. On its way, the brightly painted car will serve as a traveling billboard to advertise Hykill, its manufacturer and Santa Ana as his place of business.
Hykill is the result of Cox's 18 years of experience in combatting weeds and a lot of research. The oil is absorbed by the plant and penetrates to the roots, causing wilting three hours after the spraying; death in 24 hours and drying to a burnable condition.
Hadacol Helps New Mother
HADACOL Supplies Vitamins B1, B2, Niacin and Iron in Which Her System Was Deficient
Mrs. Lottle F. Edwards, who lives at Route 1, Inverness, Miss., has two careers... she is a registered nurse and also a wife and mother of a new baby. After her baby was born, Mrs. Edwards felt run-down, she knew she had to do something to help overcome this condition so Mrs. Edwards that she would feel up to her many duties. Mrs. Edwards began taking HADACOL and says it really helped her. Mrs. Edwards was suffering a deficiency of Vitamins B1, B2, Niacin and Iron, which HADACOL contains.
Here is what Mrs. Edwards says:
"I have taken one bottle of your HADACOL and am now on my second bottle, and I can say that it has really helped me. After my baby came I didn't feel like walking around. I had headaches and was very nervous, and even one..."
AUHS Junior Rehearsals
play, "Not In A Thousand Anaheim Union high school reported this week. The play is a three-act tribulations of teenage based by the Drama club sound effects.
Juhlor Drama class is in of the major committees. Gerber heads the makeuptee assisted by Jean Bas-Marion Simmons; Jean Henne, Gretchen Glover, Maryuncan, Elaine Stanky and Lynn Glenn.
The committee is headed by Bastian and Barbara Reesing. Motion Simmons is to take care of ice and care of the costumes. Keithley is assistant.
Gene Korn and Gwen Keithlee in charge of all news-publicity. Posters will be by the Jnlor Drama Class Gretchen Glover in charge. City skits in charge of Mary uncan.
Hilliary will help Redon with the stage sets and effects.
ANAHEIM BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
CREDIT REPORTS
On Anyone, From Anywhere Over 1300 Affiliated Bureaus Covering the United States and Canada
"We keep the record"
Northern Orange County Credit Bureau, Ltd.
410 Bank of America Bldg.
Phone 2248
FUNERAL HOMES
BACKS CAMPBELL KAULBARS Mortuary
Phone 2209
251 N. Lemon
PAINT - WALL PAPER
Treasure Tones
IMPERIAL WALLPAPERS
Schaeffler Paints Phone 2469
120 No. Los Angeles St. - Anaheim
Physicians & Surgeons
Dr. J. W. Truxaw PHYSICIAN
Phones: Office 2215, Res. 2610 Center & L.A. Anaheim
FUNERAL HOMES
BACKS CAMPBELL KAULBARS Mortuary
Phone 3209
251 N. Lemon
HILGENFELD MORTUARY
faithful, Courteous Service
120 E. Broadway Phone 4105
COLLECTIONS
Bonded Representatives in All Cities
No Collection — No Charge
Northern Orange County Credit Bureau, Ltd.
410 Bang of America Bldg.
Phone 2248
INSURANCE BROKERS
Alfred H. Hansen
WRITING EVERY FORM OF INSURANCE,
INCLUDING LIFE
515 N. Los Angeles Phone 442
JAMES L. MORRIS
General Insurance And Bonds
111 N. LOS ANGELES ST.
Phone Anaheim 444
FRANK TAUSCH
INSURANCE
Reputation — Service
275 E. Center, Anaheim
Phones:
Office 2401 Res. 3575
Schaeffler Paints
Phone 2469
120 No. Los Angeles St. Anaheim
Physicians & Surgeons
Dr. J. W. Truxaw
PHYSICIAN
Phones: Office 3215, Res. 2610
Center & L.A. Anaheim
Open Evenings and Sunday Morning
J. W. UTTER, M.D.
Office Phone 3211
Residence: 1001 W. Center St.
201-202 California Bldg.
Anheim, Califothia
Hours: 11 to 11 a.m.-2 to 5 p.m.
Physician and Surgeon
Open Evenings, Sunday by Appt.
J. C. OSHER, D.D.S. M.D.
EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT
Dentist—Emphasizing Extractions
Oculist—Fitting Glasses
Treating—Skin Cancer
1224 W. Center Anaheim
Phone 3212
PHOTOSTATS
Birth Certificates, Checks
Discharge Papers, Letters
Marriage Certificates
Business Records
SMALL CHARGE—QUICK SERVICE
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
ENGRAVING DEPT.
(ITTLES BRADLEY)
239 E. CENTER ST.