anaheim-gazette 1951-04-16
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2 Anaheim Gazette
MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1951
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
ANAHEIM 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, 1869, 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.
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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 BESLER Assistant Publisher
ERNEST BEYER Editor and Sports Editor
LEONARD KREIDT Assistant Editor
MYLES BRADLEY Picture Editor
NEIL STANLEY Advertising Manager
Q.E. BELLER Assistant Advertising Manager
MARY ROULAND Assistant Advertising Manager
RALPH ROULAND Classified Advertising Manager
LUCY HUBBARD Circulation Manager
Can anyone win?...
Already it's time to ask a question, even before General MacArthur returns home to speak his piece: Can anyone come out of this Truman-MacArthur feud looking good?
The most the general can do, no matter what he says now, is justify himself in the eyes of his countrymen and in the history books. He is finished soldiering while Mr. Truman is president.
He may by what he says damage the president and the Democratic party, perhaps being a major factor in the 1952 elections which MacArthur's Republican supporters are so anxious to win, although it's unlikely the 71-year-old general will be a candidate most fierce political warfare, with Republicans attacking the president on many sides and on many issues.
If MacArthur, who has grown political-minded himself in his later years, merely makes speeches in the United States in his usual purple prose, speaking ingeneralities and without heat or acensations, the feud might end quietly there.
If he uses such an occasion to attack the president and the Democratic party—in an effort to justify MacArthur—neither the president nor his Democrats can be expected to sit idly by and let the general damage them.
The general's stature in his country's service is too great to
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he may by what he says damage the president and the Democratic party, perhaps being a major factor in the 1952 elections which MacArthur's Republican supporters are so anxious to win, although it's unlikely the 71-year-old general will be a candidate himself.
And perhaps future events will show that the general, and not the president, was correct in his view of what should be done to stop communism: all-out attack on China.
(Mr. Truman's supporters, of course, can always insist that a general's farsightedness never gave him the right to defy the president and that Mr. Truman was right in firing him. Mr. Truman himself said he acted because he feared MacArthur's ideas, if unchecked, might end in World War III.) So perhaps the future will all be on the side of MacArthur. Perhaps it won't. This sturdy soldier with one of the most brilliant careers in history, comes home without the crowning glory of a hero: unbroken adulation.
While many have rushed to defend him for his differences with the president, he has criticized now that he never had before. Also he comes home stripped of his command and with a great defeat on his record near the very end of his career.
This was the rout of his United Nations troops by the Chinese communists in North Korea at the Yalu river. True, his troops had reformed and were pushing the invaders back when Mr. Truman yanked the rug from under him.
The general has been credited with a large ego. The memory of the Yalu river would have been wiped out if he had been able to smash the Chinese once for all. This opportunity now has been forever denied him.
Such a victory would have been a supreme triumph of a triumphal career. But he is returning here at a time of al-
If he uses such an occasion to attack the president and the Democratic party—in an effort to justify MacArthur—neither the president nor his Democrats can be expected to sit idly by and let the general damage them.
The general's stature in his country's service is too great to be demolished by attacks on him, but he could come out of such an engagement badly tarnished.
In short, if he opens up on the Democratic administration, He'll be up to his neck in politics. Further, much depends on the kind of joint House-Senate session he addresses.
If it's done one way—where he merely walks in amid thunderous applause, speaks his piece, no matter how caustic, and walks out—he'll have an easy time. In such a session no one can question him. It's a one-man show.
But if it's the kind of joint session affair where, after finishing his talk, the speaker leaves himself open to questions, he may be in for an unpleasant time, provided he attacks Mr. Truman and the Democrats.
And he may face some unpleasant hours if he goes before a joint hearing of the Senate's Foreign Relations and Armed Services committees.
For while those two committees have Republican members who'll do their best to make the general look good and the president bad, Democrats are in a majority on both. Once the shooting starts—if MacArthur starts it—they won't let him get away with it unchallenged.
In all this the general can become a political football. So can the president. It remains to be proved the general is as smart in a political war as he is in the military kind.
So the decision rests with the general. He can open up and attack and face the consequences or he can be mild and save his fire for his memoirs which wouldn't appear until this present fire has died down a bit.
NOW WE WILL QUIT News Letter" of April 4, 1860 POUNDS OF SOLIDS (cannon payment . . . This part so far to $32 per ton."
Better read that one in packing house, too.
Comparable Florida than TWICE that much tells that one to your Seriously, California gives this great state under that Remember what they say This is the year of decisi
(Ed Note — Today's takes the form of a letter Drew Pearson to Sen. Robert Taft on the MacArthur-Taft controversy.)
April 14
Honorable Robert A. Taft U.S. Senate Washington, D.C.
Dear Senator Taft:
When your father was sent of the United States late father-in-law, a gand and a military man all him had about the same opinion him that Douglas MacArthur of the present occupant of White House. In fact, your father whom history records as he done a fine job as Sequestration War, incurred the wrath of military men, because he kept within his budget and the military in their place.
He fully grasped the fundamental fact around which Constitution is written — ours is a civilian government which the military take over from civilians. He even can it out so conscientiously when your father was Secretary of War and used to carry to the White House. To Roosevelt would jokingly Mrs. Roosevelt to put away carving knife for fear my father-in-law, a cousin and old T.R., might use it against T.R.
I mention this because you all Senate leaders, are in a position to grasp and understand serious issue which faces
IN THE DAYS OF
LONG AGO
From the Files of
Anaheith Gazette
By MRS. HENRY KUCHEL
75 Years Ago
A Mr. Stone is building a residence near the depot, on a lot which he recently bought from Tim Boege.
The divorce case of N. G. Blanco vs Pedro Blanco has been referred to the court commissioner to take testimony.
The Cajon Land & Irrigation company have made application to the Secretary of State for articles of incorporation and we may soon expect an increase in our irrigation facilities.
A large and elegant dancing pavilion is now being erected at the Tivoli Gardens. Efforts are being made to have it completed in time for the IOOF celebration on the 28th inst. to honor the 57th anniversary of the introduction of Odd Fellowship into the United States. The Tivoli under the management of Mr. Lafond is becoming a popular place of resort.
50 Years Ago
The engagement is announced of Miss Estella D. Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Lewis, formerly of this city, now of Los Angeles, to Maxwell B. Fitch. The wedding will take place in the near future.
The ladies of the Presbyterian church served a New England supper in the building formerly occupied by Mr. Bourland's print shop, on Saturday afternoon and evening. Fine roast meats, salads, pies, cakes and home-made bread were served along with other toothsome edibles. Quite a goodly sum was realized which will be applied for the benefit of the church.
Buyers are said to be early in the field this year in the north for the deciduous fruit crop. At Haywards the cannery men are offering $25 per ton for apricots and $20 for pears, three cents per pound for black cherries and 5 cents for Royal Ann's.
Initial steps toward the purchase of additional lands in the city use as grammar school sites to be taken at a general district meeting to be held in the Fremont school auditorium April according to Melbourne Gauntlet of schools. Sites are under consideration in the southwest and northwest sections of the city where considerable unsubdivision land is still available. Crowd conditions at the Citron school and the fact that all the other school buildings have reached their capacity, is felt by the Board to justify steps to be taken towards providing for future needs. No immediate building program is contemplated however.
- Colony QuipsBy the Gazette Farm Editor
WE ASSURE OUR READERS that this is not the start of a temperance crusade in the interests of getting toers to switch from beer and wine to orange juice. We hasten to add, however, that it would be a good idea for the toppers' health. The orange growers would be out of juice in a matter of a few hours—so what.
The great propaganda mills of the Exchange are beginning to rumble and, if you can believe what you hear, condition the grower to the fact that he better get ready to take about a dollar a box for his fine valencia oranges. This is the finest crop of valencia that California has seen for many a year and these high-salaried self-styled "salesmen" can't more than a buck for the grower. They can keep any other California grower down to that level, too. We are thinking that they intend doing just that.
From the growers standpoint how sick the Florida citrus operation makes the California bungling look.
BUT TO GET BACK to the temperance angle. In the year of 1948 the consumption of alcoholic beverages per capita in the United States amounted to 20.43 gallons.
Of this total beer and wine accounted for about 94 per cent. Or, to put it another way the people of this country consumed about two billion, six hundred and fifty million gallons of beer and wine in that year. Today that figure is much higher both as to per capita consumption and total gallons consumed.
Last year there was nearly 25 million gallons of frozen orange concentrate put up in the entire United States.
Yes, boys and girls, there was well over a hundred times the gallons of beer and wine consumed in 1948 than there was frozen orange concentrate put away last year—which was the largest in the concentrates history.
NOW WE WILL QUOTE you a sentence from the “Exchange News Letter” of April 4, 1951: “Valencias in the juice pool WITH 120 BOUNDS OF SOLIDS (caps ours) will receive an additional $5 per ton payment . . . This partial brings the 1949-50 valencia juice pool so far to $32 per ton.”
Better read that one again. That miserable $32 a ton is at the back house, too.
Comparable Florida fruit last year brought the grower more than TWICE that much money IN HIS POCKET.
Lynx Collect Two Practice Victories
The Buena Park Lynx were prepared to meet their first really stiff opposition, of the season against Montebello tomorrow night after they swept past two more exhibition foes in games over the week-end.
Tommy Slappey and Beverly Meissen combined to pitch a no-hit, no-run game Friday night as the Lynx turned back El Monte, 5-0, and yesterday the same pair doled out only three hits as the Lynx belted the Los Angeles Golden Girls, 12-2.
Carolyn Broady paced the hitting on Friday night, collecting three-for-three, including a triple with one on. Yesterday, everyone hit as the Lynx collected 14 safeties, five of them going for extra bases.
RHE
Lynx ..... 200 030 000 ..... 5 71
El Monte ..... 000 '000 000 ..... 0 02
Slappey, Meissen and McDaniel;
Jones and Olson.
RHE
Golden Girls ..... 000 101 000 ..... 2 34
Lynx ..... 305 400 000 ..... 12 14
Agullar, Murray and Hill; Slappey, Meissen and McDaniel.
Dodgers Close Camp with Win
While the rest of the nation was ready to observe the opening of baseball season today, Anaheim was prepared to wait another year for its season as the Dodger training camp closed out its stay here on Saturday by punching out
Oaks, Angels
66 Hits for
Oakland's Acorn ringing today. But not only at Wrigley Field in one hour of baseball, one which were born 45.
And when it was all team were just where they ed. Each won one game happy twin bill. After four, the Acorns turned marksmanship and finally curtain-raiser 17-14.
In the last four fraternity finals, who won, 8-6, chiefly on Leslie four-run homer in the frame. Layton returned wars after being sidelined first finning of the openers crashed into a wall chasin.
The injury obviously did him any. In addition to homer, he collected a do two singles in three others bat in the final game.
Sixteen pitchers saw duo doubleheader.
Home runs also were t of the day in the finale of lywood-San Francisco tie the Stars winning 17-5.
NOW WE WILL QUOTE you a sentence from the "Exchange News Letter" of April 4, 1951: "Valencias in the juice pool WITH 120 POUNDS OF SOLIDS (caps ours) will receive an additional $5 per on payment... This partial brings the 1949-50 valencia juice pool to far to $32 per ton."
Better read that one again. That miserable $32 a ton is at the backing house, too.
Comparable Florida fruit last year brought the grower more than TWICE that much money IN HIS POCKET.
Tell that one to your Exchange boys.
Seriously, California growers, how long can we grow oranges in his great state under that kind of leadership?
Remember what they said last fall?
This is the year of decision—for the valencia grower.
(Ed Note — Today's column takes the form of a letter from New Pearson to Sen. Robert A. Lift on the MacArthur-Truman controversy.)
April 14, 1951
honorable Robert A. Taft
S. Senate
washington, D. C.
ear Senator Taft:
When your father was president of the United States my father-in-law, a general and a military man all his life, about the same opinion of that Douglas MacArthur has the present occupant of the White House. In fact, your father, from history records as having a fine job as Secretary of War, incurred the wrath of many itary men, because he both put within his budget and kept in military in their place.
He fully grasped the fundamental fact around which our institution is written — thatirs is a civilian government, in which the military take orders on civilians. He even carried out so conscientiously that, when your father was Secretary of War and used to come to the White House, Teddy Rosevelt would jokingly tell us Roosevelt to put away the living knife for fear my father-in-law, a cousin and alde of R., might use it against Taft mention this because you, of Senate leaders, are in a position to grasp and understand the issue which faces the thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off the Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it on the grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning — the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off the Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it on the grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning — the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off the Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it on the grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning — the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off the Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it on the grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning — the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off the Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it on the grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning —the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact thing in the world today is to join the wolfpack and kick Harry Truman in the pants. You, however, have not attained your present position by taking the easy way.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue is the Constitution of the United States—which provides that, if a general wants to run the government he must take off his uniform and become a civilian like the rest of us. He cannot have the perquisites and protection of the uniform and give orders in the White House too.
As far as President Truman is concerned, my personal feelings toward him are about the same as yours. He has castigated me just as much as he has you. But there is a difference between respect for the office of president and respect for the man.
People are easily confused these days, but you can help to prevent their confusion. And while it might be popular and even healthy to impeach Harry Truman, do it onthe grounds of corruption in his administration. There you might be on solid ground. Don't do it on an issue for which your father and every other president has keptthe torchof civilian government burning —the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected bythe people.
Or, if you will, impeachthe president onthe groundthathispolicyiswrong.ImpeachhimontheissueoffailureinChina.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodyingthe exactthingintheworldtodayistojointhewolfpackandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattainedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattainedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattainedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattachedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattachedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattachedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattachedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
The issue istheConstitutionoftheUnitedStates—whichprovidesthatifageneralwantstohirebaseintheballparkandkickHarryTrumaninthepants.Youhowever,havenotattachedyourpresentpositionbytakingtheeasyway.
Take Off The Uniform
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25 Years Ago
The election of William D. Clinton and A. W. Franzen to lead themselves as members of the city board of trustees and Carl Leonard to succeed Goddard J. Stock, who refused to run after serving the city faithfully well for years is proof that voters and taxpayers of city indorse the present city administration.
Special steps toward the purchase of additional lands in the city for its grammar school sites are taken at a general district meeting to be held in the Free-school auditorium April 26, leading to Melbourne Gauer, of schools. Sites are under operation in the southwest sections of the city, considerable unsubdivided as still available. Crowded areas at the Citron school are fact that all the other buildings have reached capacity, is felt by the Board of Trustees steps to be taken providing for future needs. Immediate building program emploded however.
Issue for which your father and every other president has kept the torch of civilian government burning — the principle that no soldier can overrule a civilian elected by the people.
Or, if you will, impeach the president on the ground that his policy is wrong. Impeach him on the issue of failure in China.
It might be healthy if you or Senator Wherry introduced a resolution embodying the exact terms of the MacArthur letter to Joe Martin, and let the Senate debate it—debate the bombing of Chinese bases the landing of Chiang Kai-Shek's troops on the mainland and the full probabilities and objectives of war with China.
Europe Watches U. S. A.
I have just returned from a trip through Europe. And I can report that you cannot travel abroad these days without sensing how vital is the issue now before our country. Many of the European nations have been through the struggle between military and civilian rule. They have seen the elected parliaments of Italy and Germany weaken. They have seen the people shaken in their confidence of the democratic system, confused by unfair debate — turn to military dictatorships.
In my opinion our country does not have a strong man in the White House. We do have a strong military man, who has sought to be in the White House.
But the times today are too dangerous. And it is in days such as these, when we do not have the most astute brains in or around the White House; that we need leadership and courage such as yours outside the White House to keep us on an even keel.
Superintendent of Parks Vic Ruedy has made arrangements with the Pacific Clay company to purchase a water-proof tile conduit to protect the wiring. This is a type similar to that used by the telephone company.
According to Caretaker Gil Hansard, water seeping down from the surface of the field eventually rots the rubber coating surrounding the wire causing a short circuit.
Hansard estimated that over 300 feet of wire has been replaced during the past four years.
Work is expected to start immediately.
CINCINNATI (P)—Bob Dawes, of the Cincinnati Mohawk forward line in the American Hockey league, plays baseball in the summer with Saskatoon. Sask.
Oaks, Angels Trade Wins by Belling 66 Hits for 45 Runs in Marathon
By The Associated Press
Oakland's Acorns and the Los Angeles Angels are resting today. But not on their Pacific Coast league laurels.
The lads and 8841 hardy fans got a workout yesterday at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles. There was more than five hours of baseball, or a reasonable facsimile thereof, during which were born 45 runs on 66 hits, including 11 homers.
And when it was all over, the teams were just where they started. Each won one game of the hit-happy twin bill. After trailing, 10-4, the Acorns turned on their marksmanship and finally won the curtain-raiser 17-14.
In the last four frames, the Acorns scored 13 times on 14 safeties. Oakland's slamming shortstop, Bill Jennings, plastered out three homers in succession, good for six runs.
The Angels came back in the seven-inning final, which they won, 8-6, chiefly on Les Layton's four-run homer in the fourth frame. Layton returned to the wars after being skidlined in the first inning of the opener when he crashed into a wall chasing a ball.
The injury obviously didn't slow him any. In addition to the big homer, he collected a double and two singles in three other times at bat in the final game.
Sixteen pitchers saw duty in the doubleheader.
Home runs also were the order of the day in the finale of the Hollywood-San Francisco twin bill, the Stars winning 8-0 of the
Morgan Surprise Yankee Starter
WASHINGTON (P) — H. Trueman, a veteran lefthanded pitcher with a fair fast ball, arranged to make the first pitch today and start the 1951 baseball season on its way.
Shortly after the presidential pitch (at 3 p.m., EST), the world champion New York Yankees meet the Washington Senators.
Manager Casey Stengel picked a surprise mound starter, rookie Tom Morgan. He officially became a member of the Yankees only yesterday with the formal transfer of his contract from Kansas City. Morgan won 17 and lost eight for Binghamton in the Eastern League last year. He is a righthander.
Manager Bucky Harris chose Bob Kuzava, lefthander who won eight games and lost seven for the fifth place Senators after coming here from the Chicago White Sox.
Covina Deals AUHS Ninth Loss of Year
Anaheim's Colonists, victorious over only Long Beach Wilson thus far this year, get another chance at that team tomorrow afternoon when they wind up 'their home practice schedule in La Palma park.
Covina handed the Colonists their ninth loss of the year on Friday when the Colts scored 10 times in the first two innings to top the Anaheimers 12-1.
Tom Bertommon hit a grand-slam home run in the first inning and Keith Carpenter followed with a three-run homer in the second to spark the Covina up-rising. John Steinborn tallied the only Anaheim run in the second when he came home from second on Duane Masterson's single.
Besides tomorrow's game, the Colonists will also play a practice game at Bellflower on Friday before launching their league season next Tuesday at Huntington Beach.
Anaheim— AB R H
Holve, cf 2 0 0
Roberts, cf 1 0 0
Herbel, 3b 4 0
Hattfield, 1b 4 0
Helnborn, if 2 1 2
Hevera, ss 2 0 0
Coen, ss 1 0 0
Masterson, rf 2 0 0
Mattox, 2b 2 0
Denney, p 1 0 0
Wiathorn, p 1 0 0
Wells, p 0 0 0
Covina— Porterfield, ss 4 3 3
Rueles, 3b 2 2 1
Oeilrich, cf 2 2 0
Joplin, 1b 3 1 3
Carpenter, rf 3 2 1
Hertommon, 2b 3 1 2
Noguja, If 4 0 0
Green c
California Takes Newport Inaugural NEWPORT BEACH (AP) — As anticipated, the University of California's powerful oarsmen went to victory to inaugurate newport bay's new crew course Saturday.
The Bear crew won by three lengths in the 2000 meter race over Stanford. Trailing Stanford, by five lengths, was UCLA and the University of Southern California was fourth, eight lengths behind the Bruins. California wasocked at 6 minutes, 29.6 seconds.
Members of the Harvard tennis team refer to their captain, Robert Bramhall of Ft. Smith, Ark., Shorty." He is six-feet-one.
Sixteen pitchers saw duty in the doubleheader.
Home runs also were the order of the day in the finale of the Hollywood-San Francisco twin bill, the Stars winning 8-0, seven of the eight-runs coming on circuit smashes.
Frank Kelleher, who also homered in the opener—which the Seals won 5-2—hammered a two-run roundtripper in the finale. Clint Conatser's home run brought in three runs and Murray Franklin's was good for a pair.
The league-leading Portland Beavers beat Sacramento 7-4 in the opener. But the Solons won the nightcap 8-1. It was the first Solon victory over the Beavers in eight tries this season.
The games—at Portland—were witnessed by 12,290 fans. They saw the Solons clinch the final in the third frame when pitcher Ken Gabels homered with the bags empty and Joe Marty collected one with two comrades on base.
Seattle moundsmen Marv Grisom and Charley Schanz tamed San Diego 11-3 and 2-1 to square their short series at two wins each.
The PCL parks are idle today, new series starting tomorrow.
BASEBALL STANDINGS
Pacific Coast League
W L Pet GB
Portland 15 6 .714
San Diego 11 8 .579
Los Angeles 14 9 .550
Hollywood 10 10 .500
Oakland 10 10 .500
Seattle 9 11 .450
Sacramento 9 12 .429
San Francisco 6 15 .286
Sunday's Results
San Francisco 5-0, Hollywood 2-8.
Seattle 11-2, San Diego 3-1.
Portland 7-1, Sacramento 4-8.
Oakland 17-8, Los Angeles 14-8.
Games Today
None scheduled.
American League
New York at Washington—Morgan (0-0) vs Kuzava (9-10).
National League
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati—Chambers (12-15) vs Blackwell (17-15).
Jeffries 76
BURBANK (AP)—Friends dropped by the house yesterday to chat over old times with James J. Jeffries. It was the 76th birthday for Jim, the brawny boilermaker who became the world's heavy-weight fight champion.
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.
PAINT - WALL PAPER
Treasure Tones
IMPERIAL
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 Bidg.
Phone 2248
COLLECTIONS
Bonded Representatives
in All Cities
No Collection — No Charge
Northern Orange County
Credit Bureau, Ltd.
410 Bank of America Bidg.
Phone 2248
INSURANCE BROKERS
Alfred H. Hansen
WRITING EVERY FORM
OF INSURANCE,
INCLUDING LIFE
515 N. Los Angeles Phone 4423
JAMES L. MORRIS
General Insurance
And Bonds
111 N. LOS ANGELES ST.
Phone Anaheim 4444
FRANK TAUSCH
INSURANCE
Reputation — Service
275 E. Center, Anaheim
Phones:
Office 2401 Res. 3575
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 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 Bidg.
Anaheim, California
Hours: 11 to 12 a.m.-2 to 5 p.m.
Physician and Surgeon
Open Evenings Sunday by Appl.
J. C. OSHER, D.D.S. M.D.
EXF, EAR, NOSE and THROAT
Dentist—Emphasizing Extractions
Oculist—Fitting Glasses
Treating—Skin Cancer
1224 W. Center - Anaheim
Phone 3212