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anaheim-gazette 1951-04-25

1951-04-25 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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5 Anaheim Gazette WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1951 CAMPAIGN'S OVER—It's over for Claire Larson, owner of the Betty Rose shop at 216 E. Center st., at any rate, as she hands over her contribution kit to Bert Arnold, vice chairman of the Anaheim 1951 Red Cross fund drive. Arnold said yesterday the local goal has almost been reached and urged volunteer workers to turn in their kits as soon as possible to bring the campaign to a close. (Gazette photo by Kreidt) Many Anaheim Organizations Join Chamber in Noting 'Civic Progress' "Civic Progress Week" is celebrated in Anaheim each year under the direction and sponsorship of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce Membership Meeting at noon, Anaheim Elks Club. Symposium will be club will sponsor the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce Membership Meeting at noon, Anaheim Elks Club. Symposium will be the pre-Korea price, plus we increase and increased cost materials. On most materials. Many Anaheim Organizations Join Chamber in Noting 'Civic Progress' "Civic Progress Week" is celebrated in Anaheim each year under the direction and sponsorship of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce. Its purpose is to focus the attention on the need for sound comprehensive planning to adequately meet the need for a rapidly growing community. During the week participation of all civic organizations, clubs, city departments, city officials and the Anaheim Planning Commission will take place. A galaxy of outstanding speakers will appear on the program scheduled for the week, commencing Monday, May 7 and running through May 11. Symposiums and pannel sessions will be held on Land Use; Zoning; Roads; Industrial Expansion and Preparing Industry for Defense Production; Transportation by Air, Rail, Highways; Recreation, Education; and Public Utilities such as Gas, Water, Power and Sewers. The program of the week will include Moriday, May 7—"Youth, Recreation and Education Day," Anaheim Rotary Club—12:00 Noon—Anaheim Elks Club. Tuesday, May 8—"Transportation Day," Anaheim Kiwanis Club—12:00 Noon — Anaheim Elks Club. Speaker Clarence Belinn, President of the Los Angeles Airways. Wednesday May 9 — Optimist Club will sponsor the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce Membership Meeting at noon, Anaheim Elks Club. Symposium will be held on local community planning problems. Thursday, May 10—"Community Planning Day"—All day program—Anaheim Elks Club. Evening banquet, 6:30 p.m. Speaker: Dr. John O. Moseley, Immediate Past President of the University of Nevada. Subject: "Planning a Life for Leadership." Friday, May 11—"Industrial Day"—Anaheim Lions Club—12 noon—Anaheim Elks Club. Speaker: Harry E. Blythe, adviser to chairman of munitions board. Upon approval of the activities of the committees in the various meetings, the entire proceedings will be compiled and adopted as the program of work for the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce for the ensuing year and printed in a pamphlet entitled "What We Stand for in Anaheim, California." MRS. MILLER DIES LAGUNA BEACH OP — Mrs. Thomas Spencer Miller, who sculptured the bust of Martha Washington which appears on the one and one-half cent stamp, died yesterday at her home. She was 90. Mrs. Miller was known professionally as Lola MacDonald Sieeth. The new order will bring so price increases—mainly for those who heeded the government's appeal for "voluntary" restraints and then were caught in the 26 price freeze. But these will outweighed by the rollbacks, salle said. Stripped to essentials, e factory's new price ceiling be: the pre-Korea price, plus increases and increased cost materials. On most materials, creases only up to last Dec. 31 be counted. Even if a firm finds itself titled to a price boost on its basis, it must give OPS 15 days before marking up the price tag. OPS thus gets a chance double-check. Under these rules, manufacturers sharpened their pencils; reprice goods having an annual gross value estimated by OPS $70 billion. This is about 23 percent of the nation's entire output of goods and services. The new cellings must be force by May 28. Retail buys will feel the effect later, depending on how long it takes for new goods to reach retail shelves and showrooms. This array of products is covered: Consumer "hard goods" including radios, television sets, refrigerators, washing machines ranges, furniture, hardware household appliances. Many processed food and gery items including breakfast cereals, crackers, cookies, ma roni, spaghetti, canned fish, pot chips, mustard, baked beans pickles, peanut butter, sauté seasonings, baking powder, can soup mixes, meat extracts, gelatin desserts, olives, yeast and oil. A wide group of miscellaneous items including auto tires tubes, many building materials (but not lumber or plywood which are otherwise controlled paper and paper products), rains and some other textiles. It covers, in short, all man factured items except those named as exempt. The exempt list covers raw farm and forest productions fuels and power, and a variety items most of which already under separate price ceiling. WAR HUMOR WITH AN EDGE—Some GI wag, remembering those shaving cream signs back home, put up these on poles along a highway in Korea. A military policeman patrolling the road scratches his head as he reads the series. In order they are: Disagree with Harry—If you want to get back—If you don't think its true—Ask poor ole Mac! ANNOUNCING . . . CHANGE OF ADDRESS of JOHN C. KNAPP PACKING COMPANY P.O. Box—Fullerton 014 or Phone Fullerton 0290 SERVICE — STRENGTH — REPUTATION Many of the Items You Purchase Go Under Government Ceilings WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly fourth of the American economy today went under a single keeping price order which the government said was designed to back "the general level of manufacturers' prices." Price Director Michael V. Diener expects the factory ceiling, rising 75,000 plants, to wipe part of the runaway price that followed the Korean invasion. The country will find, Disalle detected, that his Office of Price Utilization has "not been playat-a-cake with prices"—that one months ahead people will be "the whole program is more than they have been led believe." BS will follow up with three major ceilings within a city. These will cover machinery, on textiles and wearing apparel including shoes. The new order will bring some increases—mainly for those heeded the government's appeal for "voluntary" restraint when were caught in the Jan. price freeze. But these will be designed by the rollbacks, Disalled. Mapped to essentials, each year's new price ceiling will pre-Korea price, plus wage cases and increased cost of materials. On most materials in this page. 'Fine' Homes (Continued from Page 1) Ten Hills residential section. Medaris said the idea is a fallacy, that the isolation and original restrictions in the Fullerton Hills section made it ideal for fine homes. He said outlying areas of Anaheim should be developed for first class residential areas with restrictions placed on whole neighborhoods before they are developed. The council took the question under advisement and set a special meeting with the planning commission to consider RO zone problems tomorrow at 2 p.m. Another Medaris subdivision, 47 lots on Gerald Endicott's property on W. North st., west of West st., ran into objections of residents of the area, D. C. French, Vern Starr, Bill Sowder, Fred Meyer and A. L. Ronneberg complained that the proposed subdivision would leave 200 feet on the rear of each of their lots inaccessible for subdivision. City Administrator Keith Murdoch blamed the sale of land by metes and bounds (parcelis defined by length descriptions) for the predicament in which the protesting owners find themselves. He said plans for regulating such sales are in the making. Calendar Wednesday, April 25 BPO Elks, No. 1348—3 p.m., at Elks Lodge. RAM No. 125—7:30 p.m., at Masonic Temple Public School Week. Dark. Business and Professional Women — Directed by Mrs. R. L. Coons. Thursday, April 26 Optimist Boys Oratorical Contest — 7 p.m., at Mother's Kitchen. Recreation Dept. Activities — Social Dance class at Fremont will not be held this week. Playgrounds: Franklin, Mann, City Park—3-5 p.m. Softball: 7:15—Kiomiface vs Grace Lutheran 7:45—Evangollical vs Church of Christ. Volleyball: 5:30 to 10 p.m., at high school. Rhythm Swimming: 7:30 p.m., 2 high school. Camera Club—5 p.m., at high school Little Theatre. Friday, April 27 Lions Club—12:15 p.m., at Elks club. Anaheim Lodge 207, F & AM—7:30 p.m., at Masonic Temple. Council P-TA—10 a.m., directed by Mrs. Sam Loader. Recreation Dept. Activities — Playgrounds—3-5 p.m. Katella School—7 p.m., Social dance for Elementary schools in the high school district. Saturday, April 28 Kiwans Club—Will organize a work party at the Idyllwild Lodge over April 28 to the 20th. Contact Roscoe Young or Elmer Hall. High School Cadet Bivouac—In Irvine Park, April 28, 20. IOOF Roundup IOOF Round-up last night at the Anaheim IOOF hall was a riot of costumes and entertainment. Nine clubs and over a 100 members turned up in western and hillbilly costumes from all over Orange county. Each lodge gave a brief skit, either musical or comedy, with a Kangaroo court as recourse. Re- new order will bring some increases—mainly for those needed the government's ap- for "voluntary" restraint when were caught in the Jan- price freeze. But these will be designed by the rollbacks, Dis- said. hipped to essentials, each year's new price ceiling will pre-Korea price, plus wageases and increased cost of trials. On most materials, in- ties only up to last Dec. 31 can be counted. when if a firm finds itself en- to a price boost on this it must give OPS 15 days before marking up the price OPS thus gets a chance to re-check. under these rules, manufac- sharpened their pencils to make goods having an annual value estimated by OPS at $20 million. This is about 23 per- of the nation's entire out- of goods and services. the new ceilings must be in May 28. Retail buyers feel the effect later, depend- on how long it takes for the goods to reach retailers' ces and showrooms. its array of products is cover- consumer "hard goods" includ- radios, television sets, re-ators, washing machines, s, furniture, hardware. hold appliances. any processed food and gro- items including breakfast foods, crackers, cookies, maca- spaghetti, canned fish, potato mustard, baked beans, peanut butter, sauces, nings, baking powder, candy, mixes, meat extracts, gel-a- esserts, olives, yeast and dog wide group of miscellaneous items including auto tires and many building materials not lumber or plywood are otherwise controlled). and paper products, rayon come other textiles. covers, in short, all manu- red items except those named exempt. The exempt list covers farm and forest products, land power, and a variety of most of which already are separate price ceilings— IOOF Roundup IOOF Round-up last night at the Anaheim IOOF hall was a riot of costumes and entertainment. Nine clubs and over a 100 members turned up in western and hillbilly costumes from all over Orange county. Each lodge gave a brief skit, either musical or comedy, with a Kangaroo court as recourse. Refreshments ended the evening on a contested note. Last night was Anaheim IOOF's night to entertain at a series of Round-ups, given by all the lodges in the county. May 23 will be Westminster's turn to entertain. A brief business session was presided over by Noble Grand Howard. ARTIST'S SKETCH of Southern erating Station: now under be an outdoor type installi watts, and completion is ex dondo Beach steam stations construction were held at t civic leaders and Edison Co America's Largest Low-Priced The Stylerline De Luxe 2-Door Sedan (Continuation of standard equipment and trim illustrated is dependent on availability of material) LARGEST! The Styleline De Luxe 2-Door Sedan (Continuation of standard equipment and trim illustrated is dependent on availability of material) LARGEST! Only Chevrolet in the Low-Price Field Can Say: IT'S LONGEST! 197½ inches IT'S HEAVIEST! 3140 lbs.* (shipping weight) IT HAS THE WIDEST TREAD! 56½ inches (rear wheels) Line up all the cars in the low-price field, and you'll find Chevrolet the longest. Looks longest, is longest. And this greater length means greater comfort on the road. Chevrolet is a solid value. It outweighs all others in the low-price field. This greater weight helps to give you a steadier, more solid ride... gives you that big-car feel. Full measure, full value, in every dimension... including the widest tread in the low-price field. This greater width of tread contributes to exceptional roadability. Put them all together... longest, heaviest, widest tread. They add up to the largest car in the field, and underscore the rugged virtues that make Chevrolet America's first choice. Big-car, massive look, most like the most costly. Staunch, sturdy construction that makes Chevrolet stand up better, as resale values show. Solid, roadhugging ride with big-car steadiness on the highway. All this is part and parcel of the largest and finest low-priced car—Chevrolet. Good Reasons Why MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLET CONE BROTHERS 215 No. Los Angeles St. — Anaheim Kwikset Plans Open House, Birthday Meeting Kwikset Locks, Inc., again will participate in Civic Progress Week opening its doors to the pub for an Open House inspection of the company's facilities, on Friday, May 11. Many persons who visited the Kwikset factory during the 1949 and 1950 Open House programs will be surprised by the changes which have taken place in the plant during this short interval. The company, now employing nearly 600 persons, has added by thousands of dollars worth of new production equipment. Many factory operations have been improved by the addition automatic processes and con- or belt production methods. Visitors will be conducted on guided tours through the plant during regular shift hours, when they can observe Kwikset employees at work. PACIFIC GREYHOUND HUSES TO GO ON DAYLIGHT TIME Pacific Greyhound lines' bus schedules will operate on daylight savings time effective April 29, 1951, in those areas observing the time change, according to an announcement made this week by Glen G. Magnuson, general traffic manager of the company. Arrivals and departures listed in the bus company's time tables, and clocks of Pacific Greyhound depots in the areas affected will coincide with daylight savings time. Observing the sixth anniversary of its founding, May 5, Kwikset Locks, Inc., will have a general meeting of all employees in the auditorium of Anaheim Union High school. On that date, the company will inaugurate the award of service pins to employees who have been with the Kwikset for three years or more. The first award of service pins and certificates will include some five-year employees as well as three-year veterans. Speaker at the meeting will be Harry E. Blythe, advisor to the chairman of the Munitions Board, president of STD, Inc., and former Goodyear Rubber and Aircraft executive, according to A. Schoepe, Kwikset president. IST'S SKETCH of Southern California Edison Company's $35,000,000 Etiwanda Steam-electric Generating Station now under construction on a 200 acre site near Fontana. The modern, new plant will be an outdoor type installation. Total capacity of the station's two generators will be 250,000 kilo-attats, and completion is expected by December, 1952. It ranks with the great Long Beach and Rehondo Beach steam stations of the company. Ground breaking ceremonies to mark the beginning of construction were held at the plant site today, with nearly 200 Southern California public officials, civic leaders and Edison Company executives in attendance. largest and Finest Priced Car! ! FINEST! FINEST! Only Chevrolet in the Low-Price Field Can Offer FISHER BODY QUALITY . . distinguished by the great strength and lasting goodness of Unisteel construction . . by new luxury of fabric and appointments. VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE ECONOMY . . setting the standard for performance at low cost . . setting the trend in engine design. UNITIZED KNEE-ACTION SMOOTHNESS . . integrated suspension that levels out bumps for a restful, gliding ride. WIDE-VIEW CURVED WINDSHIELD . . "opens up" the road ahead of you with a clear, wide-angle view. Teamed with Chevrolet's Panoramic Visibility—large windows all around—for safer, more pleasant driving. SAFETY-SIGHT INSTRUMENT PANEL . . with recessed controls, distinctive instrument grouping and shielded instrument lights to prevent reflections in the windshield. JUMBO-DRUM BRAKE SAFETY . . new, more powerful brakes; biggest in Chevrolet's field, to provide smoother stops with up to 25% less pedal pressure. POWER GLIDE DRIVING EASE . . first and finest automatic transmission in the low-price field, with a continuous flow of power at all speeds. Billion-mile-proved in owner service. Powerglide is teamed with the 105-h.p. valve-in-head engine, optional on De Luxe models at extra cost. PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLET THAN ANY OTHER CAR! CHEVROLET OTHERS, Chevrolet Phone 2215