anaheim-gazette 1951-08-16
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5 Anaheim Gazette THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1951 ANAHEIM, CALIF.
GRAND CHAMPION—Presentation of the Anaheim Lion's club trophy for the Grand Champion FFA steer at this year's Orange county fair was made yesterday to Lynn Steele from Placentia. Left to right: Raymond Husted, Forrest Berry and George E. Martin, judges; Bob Adams, Placentia ag instructor, and Steele.
MORE ABOUT... Fair
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prize of $50. Donald E. Todd, Orange, was awarded second place.
First place for Orange County Farm Centers and Granges (at least 200 square feet), went to the Costa Mesa Grange No. 612 with $250. Placing next was West Orange Farm Center; third, Cypress-Magnolia Farm Center; fourth Centralia Grange of Anaheim; fifth
Killduff's Meat Market Sold to Bob Beckler
Jimmy Kilduff's meat counter in the Greater Anaheim Market has been sold, effective last Monday, to R. H. (Bob) Beckler of 516 S. Helena st., Anaheim.
Beckler is, as he calls himself, "an Anaheim boy," and has been in the meat business here since 1934. He has operated several other markets in other Anaheim.
East Berlin Rail Second Invasion
BERLIN OP—Reinforced Berlin police patrols dissec young east zone communist from trying a second invasion west Berlin today.
Red youth leaders talked during the day, threatening the word to thousands of girls attending the con' peace festival' to try match into the American and French sectors. A three-hour invasion was yesterday by 14,000 your munist hooftums.
Lut West Berlin police forced patrols at troubles made it clear they were red anything the young comm might attempt.
A rumored noontime sieer happened.
Eleven police and scores were injured yesterday while young communists stormed about 14,000 strong. More 100 of the reds were arrested they attacked police stones and clubs.
This was the first visit the red youth festival which ended Aug. 5 and is due to ciday. West Berlin police denounced the invasion as saajsunon aq dao oi jop at the festival from peacefully across the seceder for a look at the weave have been more than 600, visitors in two weeks.
The rowdies who created day's disorders appeared t
Fair
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prize of $50. Donald E. Todd, Orange, was awarded second place.
First place for Orange County Farm Centers and Granges (at least 200 square feet), went to the Costa Mesa Grange No. 612 with $250. Placing next was West Orange Farm Center; third, Cypress-Magnolia Farm Center; fourth Centralia Grange of Anaheim; fifth Garden Grove Farm Center; sixth Wintersburg Grange of Santa Ana; seventh Garden Grove Grange, and eighth Anaheim Farm Center.
In the Orange County Farm Centers and Granges division (at least 100 square feet), the Tustin Farm Bureau took first with $200 to their credit. Next in line were the Orange County Farm Bureau, Young People's department; third place to Tustin Grange; fourth place to Anaheim Grange No. 621; fifth place La Habra, Grange No. 622, and sixth place to the Placentia Farm Center.
Next division was the lumber and lumber products—and in this division Bernard DeYclos of Westminster took first prize, followed by H. C. Bevins of Costa Mesa with second; W. I. Williams of Midway City with third, and Lawrence Archibald of Orange with fourth.
Fine and Applied Arts department made a good showing this year with numerous divisions.
Oil Painting—First, Frederick Jeninson of Santa Ana; second, William Winston of Santa Ana, and third, Emerson Lewis of Laguna Beach.
Casein Painting—First, Nels Y. Nelson of Garden Grove, and second, M. A. Paige of Midway City.
Water Color Painting—First, Frank M. Hamilton of Balboa Island; second, George R. James of Newport Harbor, and third, Nels Y. Nelson of Garden Grove.
Stone Sculpture—First and only prize went to William Fraser of Newport.
Wood Sculpture—First, Melvin Smith of Tustin and second to J. George Elmers of Placentia.
Ceramic Sculpture, non-figurine—First, William Fraser of Newport; second, H. Banday of Newport Harbor and third, Rosemary Ball of Corona del Mar.
Ceramic High-Fire Ware—First,
Market Sold to Bob Beckler
Jimmy Kilduff's meat counter in the Greater Anaheim Market has been sold, effective last Monday, to R. H. (Bob) Beckler of 516 S. Helena st., Anaheim.
Beckler is, as he calls himself, "an Anaheim boy," and has been in the meat business here since 1934. He has operated several other markets in other Anaheim locations.
"I've never handled anything but top quality meats," he said this morning.
Ervin Wedel, 1110A Diamond st., Anaheim, will continue in the market with Beckler. He has been a clerk there for the past 13 years.
Kilduff has not stated his plans for the future.
MORE ABOUT ... McCracken
Gal points involved in possible court instructions, which the defense lawyers asked many times of each juror, cracked down yesterday afternoon and ordered defense counsel George Chula to stop it.
Chula retorted warmly, so the court excused the jury and had it out with the defense attorneys in chambers. He told Chula that he would permit unlimited questioning with respect to the possible bias or prejudice of jurors, but would no longer allow the defense to drag out the proceedings by going over and over the same ground with jurors. He read a Supreme Court decision showing the latitude of the trial judge in this respect.
On the preceding day, District Attorney James L. Davis had brought an outburst from Chula when he protested that Chula was trying to wear out the jurors by going over and over the same questions.
PROWLERS REPORTED
Lutheran home called the police station last night and asked for aid. Prowlers or a prowler had been shaking the windows. Patrol car did not find anyone.
MORE ABOUT ... Color & Excitement
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This was the first violet red youth festival which ended Aug. 5 and is due to close day. West Berlin police are denounced the invasion as sausagesJunosq dawn on June at the festival from peacefully across the secerer for a look at the west have been more than 600,000 visitors in two weeks.
The rowdies who created day's disorders appeared to organized bands of Soviet "hard core" fanatics.
Moscow's Pravda commons on the melee, told its reside day the West Berlin politically attacked the coyouth after the latter wilticed into the western secreter talk about freedom." It several hundred boys and girls arrested.
Explosion Blast Louisiana Esso Oil Refinery
BATON ROUGE (P)-explosion ripped through treating plant at Esso Oil company's refinery on the Mississippi river bank in northern Rouge.
The dead were not immediately.
A thick tower of black soared from a fiercely area of five or six gasoline tanks at the naptha plant.
Plant officials were unable give the cause of the explosion.
MORE ABOUT ... 4 Hour Period
Continued from Page 1
William Jacks, Santa Ana one was hurt.
The fruit truck crash at 5:30 p.m. at Tustin air man aves in Orange, a tersection here traffic lated by an electric sign truck containing pickers ed by a Fullerton packer was traveling west on turnover over while
CONQUER YOUR CONSTIPATION
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21 Tabs 25s. 90 Tabs $1.00.
200 Tabs $2.00. On sale at McCoy's Drug Store, 100 W. Center, Anaheim.
PROWLERS REPORTED
Lutheran home called the police station last night and asked for aid. Prowlers or a prowler had been shaking the windows. Patrol car did not find anyone.
MORE ABOUT
Color & Excitment
Continued from Page 1)
their money with a spectacular chocolate marshmallow sponge roll, a Betty Crocker chiffon cake and a caramel pie. And speaking of chiffon cakes, 20 of these prides of the culinary art have entered the race for the special Betty Crocker awards.
Anaheim's own Linnie Cambell, who was top prize winner last year, is out to beat her own record with 51 entries of jelly, preserves, marmalade, pickles, juice and canned fruit. Prominent Anaheimers like Mrs. Claude Slack, Sylvia Mauerhan, Doris Burdick, and Mrs. Paul Gilger have also entries in this department.
It is a good thing that the sea breezes are cool at the fair grounds because there is yet much more to see. The hobby show occupies three buildings, and near it is the gem collection. Potters demonstrate their arts in front of the fine arts building. In the commercial building are free samples of ice cream and chocolate milk and a jam packed display of the latest household equipment, new cars, cake decorators, gadgets and such.
There are plenty of benches, drinking fountains and rest rooms on the fair grounds, and a free nursery and playground for checking tired tiny-tots. The show is on until Sunday and is well worth seeing.
VANDALS SOUGHT
Unknown boys with broke 10 windows in the shaw-Fulton plant last night young vandals have been habit of taking pot-shots plant windows quite often managers claim. Police woke up the section from now on.
East Berlin Red Youths Threaten Second Invasion of West Sector
BERLIN UP—Reinforced West Berlin police patrols unleashed young east zone communist tough from trying a second invasion of west Berlin today.
Red youth leaders talked tough during the day, threatening to give the word to thousands of boys girls attending the communist peace festival to try another match into the American, British and French sectors. A rotational three-hour invasion was staged yesterday by 14,000 young communist hoo-tuns.
Lut West Berlin police reinforced patrols at trouble spot made it clear they were ready to anything the young communists might attempt.
A rumored noontime sally never happened.
Eleven police and scores of reds were injured yesterday when the young communists stormed across about 14,000 strong. More than 600 of the reds were arrested after they attacked police with stones and clubs.
This was the first violence of the red youth festival which opened Aug. 5 and is due to close Sunday. West Berlin police and press denounced the invasion as a commasanunu daq ojod isunu at the festival from shipping peacefully across the sector border for a look at the west. There have been more than 600,000 such visitors in two weeks.
The rowdies who created yesterday's disorders appeared to be or-
Hope for Break In Texas Heat falls to Develop
DALLAS UP — A tantalizing weak cool front floundered in the Red river valley of north Texas today and gave out.
The Weather Bureau said the push behind it collapsed and the front got only as far as the edge of Wichita Falls.
More heat for all of Texas was the forecast for today.
Yesterday was another day of 100-plus temperatures for most of Texas. Corsicana registered 109 degrees and Fort Worth 107.
MORE ABOUT ... Oil
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According to a Long Beach FHA official, any encroachment deterrimental to residential use would have a depreciative effect on the property value and therefore on loan value. Such encroachment, he said, would include industrial activities, including oil drilling operations, but would not apply to subterranean encroachment of the "whipstock" drilling variety.
"Decisions are made in each individual case, of course," he explained, "but if we can assure ourselves that adequate protection is provided for the value of the property and, in this particle-
Two-Year-Old's Pains Turns Out to be Nail
LONG BEACH UP—Michael Schadel, two years old, told his mother he had a stomach ache. Doctors found the reason, by X-ray.
It's a six-penny nail, lodged in the small intestine. Physicians told Mrs. Chester Schadel not to worry, it has passed the danger point and nature will take care of the problem.
BUILDING STRUCK
The Antique Snoppe at Palm and Vermont sts. was undamaged although Paul Bates Langley of 913 S. Palm st., trailer space 91, drove into the building with a 1942 Chevrolet. He was apparently drunk when officers found him at home soon after the accident.
GIGANTIC SUNDAE—To yesterday south of Ana escaped unhurt.
New about a pleasing punch? Made with CANNED JUICES!
It's as simple as this: Combine a No.2 can pineapple juice with a No.2 can orange juice. Pour over ice in tall glasses to about 2/3 full; fill glasses to top with ginger ale; garnish with orange slices, and – presto! Healthful refreshment! Try your own variations with other juices.
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 2 cans 19°
Town House brand. Sweetened or natural. Excellent flavor. (46-oz. can, 21c)
APPLE CIDER Pure bottle 27°
ORANGE JUICE Bel-air 6 oz.
Frozen can 19°
LEMONADE Bel-air 6 oz.
Frozen can 11°
This was the first violence of the red youth festival which opened Aug. 5 and is due to close Sunday. West Berlin police and press denounced the invasion as a commissar's sin on Aug. 10, 2013, unanimously at the festival from shipping peacefully across the sector: border for a look at the west. There have been more than 600,000 such visitors in two weeks.
The rowdies who created yesterday's disorders appeared to be organized bands of Soviet-trained "hard core" fanatics.
Moscow's Pravda, commenting on the melee, told its readers today the West Berlin police brutally attacked the communist youth after the latter were "enticed into the western sectors by talk about freedom." It said "several hundred boys and girls" were arrested.
Explosion Blasts Louisiana Esso Oil Refinery
BATON ROUGE (P)—A giant explosion ripped through a naptha treating plant at Esso Standard Oil company's refinery here early today. Two persons were reported killed and 13 injured.
Witnesses said house windows and shop panes were shattered in areas leading to the 1100-acre Esso refinery on the Mississippi river, bank in northern Baton Rouge.
The dead were not identified immediately.
A thick tower of black smoke soared from a fiercely burning area of five or six gasoline storage tanks at the naptha treating plant.
Plant officials were unable to give the cause of the explosion.
MORE ABOUT
4 Hour Period
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William Jacks, Santa Ana, but no one was hurt.
The fruit truck crash took place at 5:30 p.m. at Tustin and Chapman aves. In Orange, a busy intersection, here traffic is regulated by an electric signal. The truck containing pickers employed by a Fullerton packing house was traveling west on Chapman and turned over while trying to property value and therefore on loan value. Such encroachment, he said, would include industrial activities, including oil drilling operations, but would not apply to subterranean encroachment of the "whipstock" drilling variety.
Decisions are made in each individual case, of course," he explained, "but if we can assure ourselves that adequate protection is provided for the value of the property and, in this particular case, if drilling will permit residential use of the surface, the FHA would not refuse to insure a loan."
A Los Angeles official stated that the lease or reservation of subterranean mineral rights does not affect the granting of FHA loan insurance if no right is granted for surface uses for exploration of the subterranean area, and if well drilling sites are not established closer than 500 feet from the boundaries of the property involved.
FHA regulations require that an oil company acquiring a lease to a piece of property must quitclaim surface rights to that property in the event the owner seeks an FHA-insured loan upon it. Steele Petroleum Co., in effect gave a quit-claim in advance when the following note was sent to the Gazette by their attorney, Earl Sheffler of Los Angeles:
"When necessary and requested by the property owner or a lending institution, Steele Petroleum Co., will subordinate their oil and gas lease to an existing or proposed incumbrance on leased property in question."
Word is said to be going about Anaheim via the grapevine that an oil lease will also nullify existing loans on the property from either private institutions or the FHA.
Private lending agencies cannot recall such loans unless a clause is included in the original deed of trust specifically making such an exception, and FHA officials stated that they would have no interest in nullifying a loan under those circumstances unless monthly installment payments were not paid.
Drinkkeness Pleaded By Youth Who Stole
William Jacks, Santa Ana, but no one was hurt.
The fruit truck crash took place at 5:30 p.m. at Tustin and Chapman aves. in Orange, a busy intersection, here traffic is regulated by an electric signal. The truck containing pickers employed by a Fullerton packing house was travelling west on Chapman and turned over while trying to avoid collision with a car driven by Miss Joan K. Pettygrove, 18, Orange, who was travelling north on Tustin ave.
The truck went over on its back with its wheels in the air on the lawn at the Paul Clark home on the corner. It knocked down one of the electric signal standards before turning over. Its driver, Robert Lagunas, 46, Plco, was unhurt. Miss Pettygrove also escaped injury.
Ambulances shuttled back and forth from the scene and various hospitals taking care of the 26 injured, some of whom received fractures. Traffic was blocked for half an hour.
VANDALS SOUGHT
Unknown boys with BB guns broke 10 windows in the Roberl-shaw-Fulton plant last night. The young vandals have been in the habit of taking pot-shots at the plant windows quite often, plant managers claim. Police will patrol the section from now on.
PHONE 4618 ERMISCH
"MY CLEANER"
Branch: 350 W. Center
Plant: 117 W. Cypress Anaheim
DRUHKENESS PLEADED BY YOUTH WHO STOLE ART FESTIVAL PRIZE
LAGUNA BEACH CP—The case of the missing art objects has been formally closed today with the fining of Otho Pettyjohn, Jr.
Pettyjohn was assessed $175 yesterday after pleading guilty to malicious mischief, druhkeness and drunk driving. Officers found a $5000 painting and a sculptured bust in a garage next to Pettyjohn's home. The painting, "Ladies of the Evening," won first prize at the recent Laguna Beach arts festival.
RECOVER BRIEFCASE
Three boys found a brief case containing papers and no name near the Borden Packing House last night about 7 p.m. They turned the brief case over to officers at the station.
KEYS TO FIT ANY LOCK While You Wait EHLERS
KEY : LAWN MOWER and BICYCLE SHOP
419 W. CENTER=ANAHEIM
Phone Anaheim 2759
PRODUCE FOR COOLING ORANGES GRAPES CELERY CARROTS TOMATOES APPLES
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., AUG. 18, 1951.
AT SAFEWAY STORES IN THIS AREA.
Right to limit reserved. No sales to dealers. Sales tax added to retail prices on taxable items.
YOUR NEAREST SAFE
GIGANTIC SUNDAE—Tons of ice cream were mingled with wreckage in a train-ice cream truck crash yesterday south of Anaheim. Engineer and fireman of the train were injured, but the truck driver escaped unhurt.
(Gazette photo by Anita Robertson)
Make your own ICE CREAM SODAS at home
this easy way: Place large serving of ice cream in tall glass; pour over it chilled ginger ale, root beer, cola, or other carbonated beverage. For variations, try adding crushed pineapple, or mashed bananas, or chocolate syrup. Serve with straws and an iced tea spoon.
ICE CREAM
Party Pride Catering
Vanilla, Chocolate, Strawberry or Peppermint Stick.
(Two pint cartons, 47c)
Pint 24c ctn.
SNOW STAR
Vanilla or pint Chocolate carton
Two pint cartons, 35c
SOFT DRINKS
Cragmont brand. Choice of Root Beer, Merry Mix Soda, Ginger Ale, Strawberry Soda, Orange Soda.
Cream Soda.
2 32-oz. bottles 29°
VIVA COLA
A refreshing 2 32-oz. beverage.
Deposits extra on bottles.
E 2 18-oz 19¢
veetened or nat-
(46-oz can, 21c)
quart bottle 27¢
air 6-oz 19¢
zen can 6-oz 11¢
olate syrup. Serve with straws and an ice tea spoon.
ICE CREAM
Party Pride Catering
Vanilla, Chocolate, Strawberry or Pepermint Sick.
(Two pint cartons, 47c)
pint 24¢
ctn.
SNOW STAR
Vanilla or pint
Chocolate carton
Two pint cartons, 25c
SOFT DRINKS
Cragmont brand. Choice of
Root Beer, Merry Mix Soda,
Ginger Ale, Strawberry
Soda, Orange Soda,
Cream Soda.
2 32-oz bottles 29¢
VIVA COLA
A refreshing 2 32-oz, 29¢
beverage. Deposits extra on bottles.
summer treat!
ure it is fresh!
ed fresh! And
coffee
1-lb. bag 72¢
coffee
1-lb. bag 74¢
coffee
1-lb. bug 69¢
Beat the heat with these
Frosty fresher-uppers
from SAFEWAY
FLA-VOR-AID
A delicious beverage
concentrate. Just add
water and sugar.
Assorted flavors.
2 pkgs. 9¢
Make FROZEN SUCKERS
Use fruit juices, frozen dessert
powders, soft drink powders,
or carbonated beverages. Pour
liquid into ice trays which have
dividers in place. When partially
frozen, insert small wooden paddles,
or toothpicks.
INS AT YOUR SAFEWAY
Edwards Vacuum Packed
Drip or Regular, (2-lb. can, 1.57)
New Half-pound Size, 41c
1-lb. can 79¢
Star Kist Brand
Fine for Salads
6½-oz. can 25¢
MEAT
Bath Black Hawk
For Summer Meals
12-oz. can 45¢
MARGARINE
2 rolls 13¢
Scott Tissue
2 rolls 19¢
Dalewood Yellow
Quarters, Cartoned
lb. 21¢
CHECK THESE MEAT VALUES
BEEF ROAST
Shoulder,
Blade Cut
lb. 69¢
From U.S. CHOICE beef. (Arm cuts, lb. 73c)
GROUND BEEF
Packed In
Visking
lb. 65¢
Excellent for summer meals. Freshly made, flavorful.
BOILING BEEF
Plate Meat
lb. 25¢
CHECK THESE MEAT VALUES
BEEF ROAST
Shoulder,
Blade Cut
lb. 69¢
From U.S. CHOICE beef (Arm cuts, lb. 73c)
GROUND BEEF
Packed in
Visking
lb. 65¢
Excellent for summer meals. Freshly made, flavorful.
BOILING BEEF
Plate Meat
U.S. CHOICE
lb. 25¢
BEEF LIVER
SLICED. Excellent
With Bacon
lb. 75£
RABBITS
Frying Size, Fresh.
Local, Fine Eating
lb. 59£
FOR COOLING MEALS
Medium Size Valencias
Excellent for Juice
lb. 4¢
Thompson Seedless
Add Zest to Summer Salads
2 lbs. 17¢
Utah Type. Crisp. Fresh.
For Tasty Salads
lb. 5¢
Crisp. Freshly Pulled.
Tops Have Been Removed
lb. 7¢
Locally Grown. Firm.
Ripe. Meaty. To Slice.
2 lbs. 25£
New Crop Gravensteins
Excellent for Pies. Sauce
lb. 6¢
SPARERIBS
Select Eastern
Pork. Medium size.
3 to 5-lb. average.
lb. 39¢
CHICKEN PARTS
Swanson brand. Select your favorite at Safeway today.
Chicken Breasts
White Meat
lb. 1.19
Chicken Legs
Fine Flavor
lb. 1.09
Chicken Thighs
Dark Meat
lb. 1.09
MIDGET TURKEYS
Beltsville type. Gov't Grade A, Eviscerated.
Small size, 4 to 8-lb.
SAFEWAY