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anaheim-gazette 1951-09-25

1951-09-25 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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8 Anaheim Gazette TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1931 ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA MRS. LILA NARATH (LEFT) NERVOUSLY looks on as police officers Earl Vipond (right) James McKenzie (hidden) check her car and the damage done to car in front of hers and parking meter which got in her way.—(Gazette photo by Robertson.) MORE ABOUT ... Accident (Continued from Page 1) swerved to avoid him. The cars struck at an angle which spun them around and rolled them both over. Mrs. Sandilands was MORE ABOUT ... Water (Continued from Page 1) 60,000 acre feet of water annually on the Colorado river. Annexation would bring Orange county territory, including that now in Poetic Justice Engulfs Park Me Mrs. Lila Narath, 740 N. ena, was having trouble get her '40 Oldsmobile started terday afternoon. She had p ed on N. Clementine, around MORE ABOUT ... Accident (Continued from Page 1) swerved to avoid him. The cars struck at an angle which spun them around and rolled them both over. Mrs. Sandilands was apparently thrown clear but Mr. Sandilands was pinned under his car. Mr. Sandilands was born in England in 1876 and had been a resident of Anaheim for 53 years. Surviving him are his widow, Rose B.; a son, Donald W. of Porterville and two sisters, Mrs. Ida M. Davie of Montreal, Canada, and Mrs. George D. Davie of Quebec. The deceased was manager of the Anaheim Valencia packing house. He was affiliated locally with the Masonic Lodge and St. Michael's Episcopal church. Funeral services will be announced later by Backs, Campbell and Kaulbars mortuary. Three other persons were injured in various traffic accidents during the past 24 hours. Robert Domries, 7, of 7231 Ballrd., member of a prominent Stanton family, is in Anaheim Community hospital with serious injuries received late yesterday when the dual rear wheels of a semi-trailer truck passed over his body. The boy had parked his bicycle next to the parked truck on Hwy. 29 near Cerritos ave., in Stanton. He was leaning against the truck when its driver, Sam Miyadi, 29, started the truck, not knowing of the boy's presence. Robert lost his balance and fell under the rear wheels. Edward Golgan, 27, El Toro Marine living in Santa Ana, received injuries of undetermined extent when his car collided with a car driven by John Parish, 40, of El Cajon. The accident took place at 11:40 p.m. yesterday on Manchester ave. north of Katella MORE ABOUT ... Water (Continued from Page 1) 60,000 acre feet of water annually on the Colorado river. Annexation would bring Orange county territory, including that now in MWD, an aggregate of more than 107,000 acre feet a year, it is estimated. John W. Crill, of Garden Grove, president of the Orange County Water district, an older organization formed to develop and preserve water supply, and protect water rights of the basin, will describe the district's annual purchases of surplus water from the Colorado river, to replenish the depleted local supply. Chairman Willis Warner of the county supervisors is slated to speak on similar activities of the Orange county flood control district. MORE ABOUT ... Festival (Continued from Page 1) available to the public. The show will precede the grandstand review of the Hallowe'en parade, outstanding feature of the day's events. Float entries in the parade are being sought by Stan Whieldon, general chairman and each of the six division captains of the parade. Divisions are each built around a central theme. Division 1, under Captain Walter Swanberger, will feature Mother Goose Rhymes; Division 2, headed by Leavitt Ford, will play up the Traditional Hallowe'en; Division 3, led by Rex Coons, will present the modern Hallowe'en of 1951; Division 4, under the captaincy of Adolf Schopee, will present Hallowe'en of the old west; Division 5, under Dr. Warren Hollingsworth, will be devoted to comedy and Division 6, the Grand Finale, will be captained by O. E. Hanson. Merchants and manufacturers, municipalities and service groups desiring to enter floats in the pa... lost his balance and fell under the rear wheels. Edward Golgan, 27, El Toro Marine living in Santa Ana, received injuries of undetermined extent when his car collided with a car driven by John Parish, 40, of El Cajon. The accident took place at 11:40 p.m. yesterday on Manchester ave. north of Katella ave. near Anaheim. Donald Klassa, 21, sailor from Los Alamitos Naval Air Station was injured at 2 a.m. today when his car ran off Los Alamitos blvd. near Farquhar ave. Select Christmas Gifts NOW USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN SEDLOCK of workers MISSIONS STREET MORE ABOUT... Oil Continued from Page 11 mit them to build 1001 square foot homes in the tract proposed between Evelyn dr. and Anaheim cemetery up to 10 per cent of the tract. That would permit 25 homes not measuring up to the required 1100 square feet of floor space. Half a chamber-full of persons, principally from the Bonnat tract, appeared to protest the variance. Machinery for the reclassification of the Morales and Robertshaw-Fulton annexations from R-1 to industrial classifications was begun. Kalash VITAMINS for Less SAVE UP TO 50% - BUY DIRECT or send for COMPLETE CATALOGUE PHONE or MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY— 234 E. Center — Anaheim — Phone 5451 at MAXINE'S BEAUTY SALON 308 S. Main — Santa Ana — Ph. KL 2-6457 Letter to Complaint Department Dear Editor: When the Gazette halls up a story—brother we do a mighty good job. Late last week we reported a difference of opinion which developed over whether one Anaheim business firm would erect a big sign in the too-near vicinity of another business firm. Between the two business houses is a parking lot for the convenience of customers. However, in our reporting of the story, we: Got a wrong business firm (the French Laundry). The wrong address for the scene of the battle (we said E. Center, but actually it was a mile or so away on N. Los Angeles). The wrong identification (Earl Ryan runs the French Laundry, not the fellow we wrongly "handed" the laundry business over to on our story). Another wrong identification (Douglas French runs the Paris Cleaners, thank you, not the French Laundry). The wrong parking lot (not a non-existent one at the French Laundry but the one between the Paris Cleaners and Glenns' Northgate Market in the 700 block on N. Los Angeles). Oh yes, we got the names of the two business men reasonably correct—but with faulty identifications. Glenn Casto owns the Northgate Market and wanted to erect a huge sign apparently over the sidewalk at the front of the parking lot—near the Paris Cleaners—where it could be readily spotted by one and all. Apparently, the big sign was quite a surprise to his neighboring businessman, Mr. French (of the Paris Cleaners). He didn't think I exactly cricket to suddenly erect a sign which would hide so much of his building. So, he enquired at City Hall to see if there wasn't an ordinance controlling such matters. (As if we later didn't give him cause for aroused iry by messing up the story, it seems Mr. French believes he received something less than cavallen treatment at City Hall before getting his point across.) Of course, everybody was ruffled slightly by all the foregoing events. THEN, oh then, we heaped big fire on olly waters by getting the whole thing jangled up in our esteemed news columns. So, I recommended we apologize. Especially to Earl Ryan and the fine French Laundry, who certainly were innocent bystander (standing about a mile away from the sign site). But, as long as we just had to rudely drag someone into this ruckus, we figure we couldn't have involved nicer folks than Mr. Ryan and his laundry people. As to Mr. French and Mr. Casto: they are good folks and we Oetic Justice Angulfs Park Meter Mrs. Lila Narath, 740 N. Helwas having trouble getting '40 Oldsmobile started yesday afternoon. She had parkon N. Clementine, around the inner from McNamara's Liquor are. Unexpectedly the motor caught and Mrs. Narath slammed the brake, but it wasn't the knee. It was the gas pedal and responded beautifully. The car charged ahead, pushthe car parked in front of down one more parking place where it stopped and Mrs. Narath's Olds climbed the other rear bumped onto the sidewalk and made a crash landing a passing city parking meter. Mrs. Narath wasn't hurt, only my nervous, no bystanders are hurt, even the cars didn't um to be hurt too badly; only a parking meter looked as if needed a face lifting. Of course, everybody was ruffled slightly by all the foregoing events. THEN, oh then, we heaped big fire on olly waters by getting the whole thing jangled up in our esteemed news columns. So, I recommended we apologize. Especially to Earl Ryan and the fine French Laundry, who certainly were innocent by-standers (standing about a mile away from the sign site). But, as long as we just had to rudely drag someone into this ruckus, we figure we couldn't have involved nicer folks than Mr. Ryan and his laundry people. As to Mr. French and Mr. Casto: they are good folks and we like them, too, so unless we have this thing all balled up again I recommend we adopt a hands-off policy and put these two gentlemen strictly on their own. After all, we don't want to ham up their lives too much. And, may I mention that the two gentlemen apparently got together—in spite of our interference—and settled on a site for the sign where it would cease to be cause of friction. Signed, The Cub P.S.—May I work the mouth out ??? MORE ABOUT ... Idle Shops Continued from Page 1 our country who voted communist are not followers of Marx and Lenin. They are simply people who do not have enough to eat or people who do not feel secure about work and their standard of life." De Gasperi said Italy must "leave no stone unturned" in its efforts to raise the living standard and cut down unemployment. But the basic problem, as he put it, is that Italy has too many people for its size and opportunities. He said emigration had benefitted both Italy and other countries in the past and suggested this might be a solution now. KEND CARPENTERS—Shown above working on the remodeling of the sanctuary of Wesley Methodist church at Los Angeles and Wilhelmina sts., Anaheim, are, from left, William Helms, A. Snyder, Wayne Clark, Hugh Nipp (on ladder), John Albright, and Rev. W. M. Walker. Small litters near Rev. Walker are Richard Nipp and Larry Boothe. Remodeling will provide Sunday school classrooms, also.—(Gazette photo by Robertson). THE ABOUT... Bethel Baptist (Continued from Page 1) Rev. Edmund Mittelstedt. 5—The Use of the Bible in Winning. Speaker: Rev. Robbchreiber. 5—"How to Pray with the Dev." Speaker: Rev. P. G. Mann. 5—Discussion on "Visitation Angelism." Leader: Rev. Robert Schreiber. 0—Musical interlude. 5—Evangelism in the Sunday ol. Speaker: Lay leader from first Baptist Church of Costa 5—"Conserving the Results." Speaker: Rev. Robert Schreiber. 0—Supper. 0—Evangelistic service. "The mics of Evangelism." Speak- rev. Robert Schreiber. Laniers Win First Place in Contest Karl and Sandra Lanier, members of the Alamitos Pioneers 4-H club of Orange county, won first place in the demonstration team contest at the Los Angeles County Fair at Pomona Saturday when they demonstrated to several hundred spectators how to bud new citrus varieties onto any backyard orange or lemon tree. A new variety recently developed by the Riverside Experiment Station was shown by Karl who stated that this Dweet tangor was a cross between an orange and a tangerine and produced extremely juicy fruit about the size of an orange and which peels easily like a tangerine. The demonstration team warned that plantings of Dweet should be on an experimental basis only or in home gardens because it was too new to be tried in commercial plantings. Bud-wood is now available at the Citrus Experiment Station, Karl said. Karl and Sandra then gave ten easy steps in their 4-H demonstration which they said can be easily learned by anyone desiring to bud fruit trees. 4-H Club work in Orange county is under the direction of the Agricultural Extension Service, H. W. Longfellow said today as he reported the prize winning demonstration team at the Pomona Fair. STOCK MARKET A FREE lecture will be given on "How to Invest and Trade in the Block Market" beginning at 7:30 p.m. SANTA ANA Fell, Sept. 28. The Ebell Club House, $25 French, St. LONG BEACH, Wed., Sept. 26, Town Hall, $35 Locust St. FREE LECTURE on "Commodity Market" only, LONG BEACH, Mon., Oct. 17, Town Hall, $35 Locust St., 7:30 p.m. IT'S AARON SCHULTZ END — OF — SUMMER ANNUAL E.O.S. CLEARANCE LAST 4 DAYS ... To take Advantage of Aaron Schultz Store-Wide End of Summer Clearance. Still many outstanding selections available in all departments of our store. It's the outstanding sale of the summer. Check these wonderful bedroom values ... Come in and see for yourself all the budget-wise values. Remember this sale ends on Saturday, Sept. 29—Don't Delay! Close-Out Sale on Johnson Carper BED ROOM FURNITURE This furniture has solid oak interiors, center drawer guides, dove tail construction, on all drawers. Excitingly Fine Finishes—Nationally Advertised Merchandise Compare these prices, very limited stock left. SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE 1—4-Pc. Blond Suite, Vanity, 2 Commodes, full size Bed. Reg. $282.00, Now ..... $182.00 1—Oak Wardrobe, dove gray finish. Reg. $138.00, Now ..... $89.50 1—Dresser & Mirror, dove gray oak. Reg. $110.50, Now ..... $76.50 1—5-Drawer Chest, dove gray oak. Reg. $129.50, Now ..... $79.50 2—3-Drawer Commodes, dove gray oak. Reg. $49.50, Now ..... $35.00 1—3-Pc. 2-Tone Bedroom Suite. Dresser with plate glass mirror, large 5-drawer chest, full size Bed. Reg. $327.00, Now ..... $212.50 1—Gray oak Double Dresser. Reg. $102.50, Now ..... $72.50 1—Oak Wardrobe, dove gray finish, Reg $138.00, Now ... $89.50 1—Dresser & Mirror, dove gray oak, Reg. $110.50, Now ... $76.50 1—5-Drawer Chest, dove gray oak, Reg. $129.50, Now ... $79.50 2—3-Drawer Commodes, dove gray oak, Reg. $49.50, Now ... $35.00 1—3-Pc. 2-Tone Bedroom Suite. Dresser with plate glass mirror, large 5-drawer chest, full size Bed. Reg. $327.00, Now ... $212.50 1—Gray oak Double Dresser, Reg. $102.50, Now ... $72.50 4—Large 3-Drawer Commodes, Reg. $45.00, Now ... $33.50 1—5-Pc. Bedroom Suite, Double Dresser & Mirror, 2-Commodes, Full Size Bed. Reg. $242.00, Now ... $182.00 1—Straw finish Mahogany Bedroom Suite, Mr. & Mrs. Dresser & Mirror, 2-Twin Beds, 2-Commodes, Reg. $348.50, Now ... $295.00 1—4-Pc. Blonde Mahogany Bedroom Suite, 1-Double Dresser, 2-Commodes, 1 Full Size Bed. Reg. $199.50, Now ... $153.50 Large Selection of Mahogany Bed Room Furniture 1—Only, 5-Pc. Suite, Large Double Dresser & Mirror, 2-Commodes, 1-Book Case Headboard. Reg. $275.00, Now ... $189.50 Solid Mahogany 5-Drawer Chest, Reg. $119.50, Now $99.50 Solid Mahogany Poster Bed, Full or Twin size. Reg. $79.50, Now ... $69.50 Solid Mahogany Nite Stand, With 1-Drawer. Reg. $49.50, Now ... $42.50 Solid Mahogany Vanity & Mirror. Reg. $149.50, Now ... $139.50 Low posted Mahogany Finish Full Size Bed. Reg. $49.50, Now ... $39.50 Sleigh Style Full Size Beds. Reg. $49.50, Now ... $39.95 Nite Stand, Mahogany. Reg. $29.50, Now ... $17.50 Mahogany Double Dresser, Reg. $99.50, Now ... $89.50 Mahogany Vanity & Mirror, Reg. $83.50, Now ... $72.50 Mahogany Full Size Bed. Reg. $69.50, Now ... $59.50 Maple Bed Room Suites Are Specially Priced for Our Final Week of Our E.O.S Sale 1—4-Pc. Maple Suite, Reg. $159.50, Now ... $119.50 1—Double Dresser & Mirror, Reg. $144.50, Now ... $129.50 1—4-Drawer Chest, Reg. $89.50, Now ... $79.50 Full Size or Twin Beds, Reg. $64.50, Now ... $54.50 Twin Bedroom Suite, Double Dresser with Mirror, 2-Twin Beds, 1-Nite Stand, Reg.$265.00, Now ...$159.50 Are Specially Priced for Our Final Week of Our E.O.S. Sale 1—4-Pc. Maple Suite. Reg. $159.50, Now ... $119.50 1—Double Dresser & Mirror. Reg. $144.50, Now ... $129.50 1—4-Drawer Chest. Reg. $89.50, Now ... $79.50 Full Size or Twin Beds. Reg. $64.50, Now ... $54.50 Twin Bedroom Suite, Double Dresser with Mirror, 2-Twin Beds, 1-Nite Stand. Reg. $265.00, Now ... $159.50 Now Is The Chance To Get a Deluxe BOX SPRING AND INNERSPRING MATTRESS In extra heavy ticking, in gray with green block pattern. Prebuilt borders with hand holds. These sell for $99.50 per set. Either twin size or full size. NOW $64.95 per set This Is The Last Week ALL MERCHANDISE SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE *COMPLETE HOME FURNITURE FOR OVER A QUARTER CENTURY Aaron Schultz EASY TERMS AVAILABLE ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST COMPLETE FURNITURE STORE 301 W. CENTER ST., ANAHEIM PHONE 2144