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anaheim-gazette 1951-10-01

1951-10-01 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Anaheim Gazette MONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1951 ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA Caltech Win Over Arizona State LOS ANGELES OP — Suddenly and without prior notice, the brain boys of Caltech appeared to have transformed themselves into brawny title contenders in the Southern California Intercollegiate Conference. Caltech's football team, traditionally the league deformat except in war years, gets its second tough test of the season this Friday night against Redlands University, one of the circuit's top eleven last year. The Engineers flunked their first test by way of an unexpected 26-0 loss to little La Verne College on Sept. 22. Last Saturday, however, Caltech bounded back with a convincing 28-14 triumph over Arizona State at Flagstaff. Redlands, meanwhile, succumbed by 18-0 to a Marine Corps team from Barstow while La Verne, no longer a member of the league, continued to surprise by knocking over a Navy Training Center squad, 20-14. "Co" is the chemical symbol for cobalt. FRI. 8:00 P.M. OCT. 5 Rendezvous Ballroom Balboa PEACE OFFICERS BALL Handicapped to Have Week in October, 7-13 The Anaheim Chamber of Commerce today called attention to the seventh annual observance of National Employ the Physically Handicapped week, October 7th to 13th. This project was conceived and is being pushed forward to conserve and increase the productiveness of the physically handicapped who are already in the national labor force, and to reclaim the potential productiveness of those who are not. Some of the Handicapped are war casualties. The Veterans Administration has estimated that at the end of 1950 there were in our population some 2,368,000 veterans of World Wars I and II whose service-connected disabilities were serious enough to warrant the payment of compensation. In addition to these, according to a VA estimate, there must be taken into account about a million veterans of the two wars who have service-connected but not compensated disabilities. There are at present no census or other figures available upon which to base an approximation of how many of this total of nearly 3,000,000 physically impaired veterans are employed, or unemployed and actively seeking work. Recent figures of the United States Employment Service, however, show that in March of this year there were approximately FRI. 8:00 P.M. OCT.5 Rendezvous Ballroom Balboa PEACE OFFICERS BALL FRANKIE CARLE HIS PIANO AND HIS ORCHESTRA WITH AN ALL NEW CARLE COMES CALLING REVUE Admission 1.25 tax incl. Recent figures of the United States Employment Service, however, show that in March of this year there were approximately 40,000 handicapped veterans with active job applications on file with public employment officers. That same month, 89,531 disabled veterans were enrolled in Public Law 16 training, including 39-125 attending schools. Some have suffered physical handicaps from accidents at work, in automobile accidents or accidents at home. During World War II there were seven times as many amputations—120,000—at home as on the fighting fronts. Some were born with physical handicaps. Most, however, have suffered them through illness. These, and other handicapped Americans, make up an estimated 10 percent of our present labor force. Additional hundreds of thousands, including the severely disabled, can and must be brought into our labor force as our country girds itself again for the defense of freedom. The Piggy Bank is CUTE but CARELESS The members and friends Michael's church, and many people of neighboring communities are looking forward with interest to the teaching masters which is to be conducted by Michael's church in Anaheim. Meetings will be held at and 11 a.m. October 7, and on the evenings of October 9, and 10. There will be Communion at 7 and 10 a.m. October 8, 9 and 10. The meeting on October 8 will be preceded by 6 p.m. by a supper meeting all present and former men of the church. Conducting this meeting was a great preacher and thinker the Episcopal Church in the Rt. Rev. Donald James bell, Suffragan Bishop of the oceese of Los Angeles. He was in Ontario, Canada, on April 1903. He attended Ridley Cambridge, England, and an Episcopal Theological School Cambridge, Mass., from when received a B.D. in 1931. He was ordained a Deacon Bishop Sherrill in 1932 and elevated to the Priesthood by the late Bishop Stevens Angeles. In 1934 he married former Hester Hooking, daughter of Professor Emeritus W. E. Inging of Harvard. They have children. Bishop Campbell served Christ Church, Cambridge, 1931-32, and in 1932-33 was rate under the late Harry Dean at St. Paul's Cathedral Angeles. He then served sively at St. Paul's church Haven, Conn., as Rector of Church of the Redeemer, dence, Rhode Island, and the Dean of Christ Church Cathedral Angeles, until his tion as Suffragan Bishop Diocese of Los Angeles. He received an S.T.M. from the versity of Southern California a D.D. from the Church D School in Berkeley. Bishop bell is the author of "The nature of Prayer." and ... by the same token PAYS NO INTEREST We have no special quarrel with Piggy Banks, however they are very useful in teaching junior the fundamentals of consistent Saving but equally as unsafe and unprofitable for the adult as Mother's cookie jar, the old sock, the buried can or under the mattress. REMEMBER ... WE HAVE NEVER PAID OUR SAVERS LESS THAN 3% and DEPOSITS MADE ON OR BEFORE OCT. 10th DRAW INTEREST FROM THE 1st ANAHEIM BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION Member Federal Home Loan Bank System 141 W. Center St. (Temporary Location) Anaheim, Calif. OMATOES WERE SCATTERED FOR A HUNDRED FEET—Thursday morning at 11:30 when three commercial trucks crashed at the intersection of Euclid and Ball roads. One truck, bearing a huge load of boxed tomatoes, crashed into a walnut grove at one side of the street and spewed the red product over the other two trucks and up and down the street.—(Gazette Photo by Robertson.) Teaching Mission to be Conducted in Anaheim for Church Friends The members and friends of St. Michael's church, and many people of neighboring communities, are looking forward with great interest to the teaching mission which is to be conducted at St. Michael's church in Anaheim. Besides conducting the mission, Bishop Campbell will on Monday, Oct. 8 address the Rotary club. Local Library Has New Books For Public New books announced by the local public library to be put into circulation this month are some of the most interesting seen from Revenue Office Hit by Charges Of Scandal WASHINGTON (UP)—Signed off of the Treasury Snyder that pressed full confidence in internal Revenue Bureau, congressional criticism first open scandals in year. But Snyder said he woke the bureau's chief in five employees "who may have ed their high trust." Internal Revenue Commissioner John B. Dunlap, who was vise collection of more than 000,000,000 in taxes then promised a house cleanliness he took over the bureau. He repeated it with a phasis last Thursday who nounced irregularities in Francisco office and the sion of nine employees including the collector in its never before in the min officials has the big taxing agency been hit with black headlines. Four deputy collectors been suspended or fired of these have been indicted fraud. More lesser emploi been involved in similar grand jury investigation still under way in San Diego and St. Louis. A congress quiry is just getting started. In addition, there has extension personnel shaken directly connected with accusations. Snyder, who supervises Teaching Mission to be Conducted in Anaheim for Church Friends The members and friends of St. Michael's church, and many people of neighboring communities, are looking forward with great interest to the teaching mission which is to be conducted at St. Michael's church in Anaheim. Meetings will be held at 9:30 and 11 a.m. October 7, and at 7:45 on the evenings of October 7, 8, and 10. There will be Holy Communion at 7 and 10 a.m. on October 8, 9 and 10. The meeting October 8 will be preceded at p.m. by a supper meeting for all present and former vestrymen of the church. Conducting this meeting will be great preacher and thinker of the Episcopal Church in the West. He Rt. Rev. Donald James Campbell, Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese of Los Angeles. He was born Ontario, Canada, on Jan. 1, 1903. He attended Ridley Hall, Cambridge, England, and also the Episcopal Theological school at Cambridge, Mass., from which he received a B.D. in 1931. He was ordained a Deacon by Bishop Sherrill in 1932 and was elevated to the Priesthood in 1932 at the late Bishop Stevens of Los Angeles. In 1934 he married the former Hester Hocking, daughter Professor Emeritus W. E. Hocking of Harvard. They have three children. Bishop Campbell served at Christ Church, Cambridge, in 1931-32, and in 1932-33 was Curate under the late Harry Beal, Dean at St. Paul's Cathedral, Los Angeles. He then served successfully at St. Paul's church, Newaven, Conn., as Rector of the church of the Redeemer, Province, Rhode Island, and then as Dean of Christ Church Cathedral Springfield, Mass., until his election as Suffragan Bishop of the Diocese of Los Angeles. He has received an S.T.M. from the University of Southern California and D.D. from the Church Divinity School in Berkeley. Bishop Campbell is the author of "The Adventure of Prayer." Kwikset Makes Survey of Employee Policy Reactions About 500 Kwikset Locks, Inc., employees participated last week in a personnel relations survey made by the company. Results of the survey, taken by Facts Consolidated, will not be revealed until the company holds its annual anniversary celebration next May. Questionnaires were filled out by each employee anonymously. Questions concerned company policies and the employee's reaction to them. Among the items touched were the company's credit union, proft-sharing plan and the new company magazine, Kwikset Ink. The questionnaires will be tabulated mechanically, with percentages and other data computed entirely by impartial machinery. Kwikset's new line of locksets, the "600," was placed on exhibition at the annual National Contract Hardware show in Chicago from Sept. 17 to 21. Adolf Schopee, president of the company who attended with the Kwikset sales force, reported the line favorably received by buyers and merchandisers. "The '600' line of locksets isn't in production yet due to shortage of materials." Shoepee said, "but production will begin as soon as Local Library Has New Books For Public New books announced by the local public library to be put into circulation this month are some of the most interesting seen from the stacks in many months. There are succ highlights as George Kenney's "The MacArthur I Know," Waldo Frank's "Birth of A Nation," Grantley Dick Reed's "Introduction to Motherhood" and Henry Betle Hough's "Singing in the Morning." These books and many more were added to the circulation files today and are ready to be checked out. Following are the books put on the shelves today: The Agged Ones, Burke Davis; The Pedlocks, Stephen Longstreet; Bring Me Wild Horses, Clay Starr; Brotherly Love Unlimited; Ethel Hueston; Mr. Smith, Louis Bromfield; Lie Down In Darkness; William Styron; Stairway to an Empty Room; Dolores Hitchins; A Way Through the Wood; Nigel Balchin; The Reckless Heart; Catherine Severn; The Captain, Russell Thacher; Swanson, Timothy Pember. Maria and the Captain, Isabel Dunn; A Time to go Home, William C. Fridley; The Stranger Beside Me, Mabel Seeley; Play a Lone Hand, Luke Short; Trail Herd, Chuck Stanley; Who Killed Pretty Becky Low, A. B. Cunningham; Solitaire, Pierre Larothomas; Sudden Glory, Cid Rickets Sumner; Some Are Friends, Lewis T. Apple; Angel of Galey, Joseph Hitrec; Time and the Wind, Eric Verissimo; Harbin's Ridge, Henry Giles. NONFICTION The MacArthur I know, George C. Kenney; Talks with Nehru, Jawaharlal Nehru and Norman Cousins; Birth of a World, Waldo Frank; I'm a Lucky Guy, Frank B. Gilbreth; The Carbonate Camp Called Leadville, Don L. and Jean H. Griswold; Introduction to Motherhood, Grantly Dick Read; Second Threshold, Philip Barry; Snyder, who supervises enue Bureau from the level indicated today that these incidents he sees for loss of public confidence tax agency as a whole. Snyder told a reporter pleately agrees with a by Dunlap that a "mere of employees out of the bureau have failed up to our tradition." FREE THYAVALS • FREE THYAVALS YES McCoy’s Drug Store 100 W. Center St., Anaheim IS GOING TO GIVE YOU YOUR THYAVALS Absolutely FREE! No Purchase—No Money Necessary BRING THIS AD IN AT ONCE FOR IMMEDIATE ACTION! FREE THYAVALS • FREE THYAVALS FREE THYAVALS•FREE THYAVALS•FREE THYAVALS The MacArthur I know, George C. Kenney; Talks with Nehru, Jawaharlal Nehru and Norman Cousins; Birth of a World, Waldo Frank; I'm a Lucky Guy, Frank B. Gilbreth; The Carbonate Camp Called Leadville, Don L. and Jean H. Griswold; Introduction to Motherhood, Grantly Dick Read; Second Threshold, Philip Barry; I Am a Protestant, Ray Freeman Jenney; Crime in America, Estes Kefauver. Good Food for Bad Stomachs, Sara M. Jordan and Shelia Hilben; The Rose Bowl Game, Rube Samuelson; Florence Nightingale, Lucy Seymer; The Retail Florist, John H. Liesveld; The Rise and Fall of Hermann Goering, Willi Frischauer; The New Joy of Cooking, Irma S. Rombauer and Marion R. Becker; Loafing Along Death Valley Trails, William Caruthers; The Sea Around Us, Rachel L. Carson; My Home on the Range, Margaret Wallace Kennedy. Leather Animals, Joan Aldridge; The Magnificent Century, Thomas Costain; The Jeffersonians, Leonard D. White; The Golden Land, a Background to South Africa; Julian Mockford; Water—or Your Life, Arthur H. Gearhart; Rockets, Missiles and Space Travel, Willy Ley; Singing in the Morning, Henry Beetle Hough; The World Series and Highlights of Baseball, Lamont Buchanan; White Man Returns, Agnes Newton Keith. The Empire State Building is 1248 feet high not counting the recently installed TV antenna atop the famous building. Revenue Office Hit by Charge Of Scandal WASHINGTON (UP)—Secretary of the Treasury Snyder today expressed full confidence in the Internal Revenue Bureau, beset by congressional criticism and its first open scandals in years. But Snyder said he would back the bureau's chief in firing any employees "who may have betrayed their high trust." Internal Revenue Commissioner John B. Dunlap, who will supervise collection of more than $60,000,000,000 in taxes this year, promised a house cleaning when he took over the bureau Aug. 1. He repeated it with new emphasis last Thursday when he announced irregularities in the San Francisco office and the suspension of nine employees there, including the collector in charge. Never before in the memory of officials has the big tax collecting agency been hit with so many black headlines. Four deputy collectors have been suspended or fired and two of these have been indicted for fraud. More lesser employees have been involved in similar incidents. Grand jury investigations are still under way in San Francisco and St. Louis. A congressional inquiry is just getting started. In addition, there has been an extension personnel shake-up not directly connected with any ugly accusations. Snyder, who supervises the Rev- Bulldogs Eye Rose Bowl After Wins LOS ANGELES (UP)—Gunning for its first bid to the junior Rose Bowl Game in its back yard, Pasadena City College aims for victory number three this Friday night as Southern California's junior colleges swing into the third week of the football season. The Bulldogs will meet Glendale in the first Western State Conference game of the campaign for each school. Glendale succumbed, 21-18, to Bakersfield last Friday while Pasadena was knocking off Chaffey of the Eastern Conference, 35-6. In other feature attractions this week, Compton hosts Joliet, Ill., JC while Los Angeles CC, winner by 20-6 Saturday night over Fullerton, invades Centralia, Washington. Saturday night's scores included: San Bernardino 41, San Diego 14; Long Beach 34, San Mateo 7; Oregon Tech 14, Orange Coast 0; Mt. San Antonio 53, Pierce 20; Ventura 47, Cal Poly of San Dimas 0; Porterville 26, Oceanside 12; Palo Verde 7, Edwards Air Force Base 7 (tie); Whittier Jayvee 7, Citrus 7 (tie); Arizona Frosh 14, El Camino 0. Audio-Visual Aid Class for Teachers As an aid to teachers in the Santa Ana area a special course in audio-visual education will be given at the Santa Ana College by Leslie Harmon, director of Harbor Junior College. The class, which meets at 7 p.m. in room E-44, will hold its second Population Center Moving South and Across State Line DUNDAS, III., Crossroads, U.S.A. (UP)—Census experts have pinpointed a new U.S. population center in Carl Snider's cornfield. Farm folks in the Southern Illinois area are pleased, although amused at the fuss over it. The young Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sniders and their boys, Don, five, and John, two, live in Denver Township, Richland County, Ill. Crossroads nearest the new center are graveled—leading to the nearest village, Dundas (pop. 200), and the nearest church, Mt. Gilead. It's off the beaten track. U.S. highway 50 is a seven mile drive south. Snider's neighbors are typical general farmers. Most cash in on corn and soybeans. A few luckier ones get oil royalties. Most took the first news that the nation's center had moved into their midst, with less enthusiasm than they would have for a new family moving onto the next farm. They point out that it's only a mathematical balance of population: However, the Census Bureau formally fixes the center once every decade. The center now has crossed the state line for the first time since 1890 and gone farther south than ever on its western course. Reacting to the news that the center now is in her community, Mrs. Gene Kermicle said, "Early in the surveying we were told it might be on our own place... I kidded the man by saying wouldn't it be funny if it was in our hog..." Audio-Visual Aid Class for Teachers As an aid to teachers in the Santa Ana area a special course in audio-visual education will be given at the Santa Ana College by Leslie Harmon, director of Harbor Junior College. The class, which meets at 7 p.m. in room E-44, will hold its second meeting Thursday (10/4). The class is limited to 25 students and is being offered by the Community Service Division of the University of Southern California. Featured will be instruction in the use of equipment, preparation of materials, and surveys of audio-visual resources. Standards of loyalty, faithfulness and honesty." BANK BY MAIL WE PAY THE POSTAGE • SAVE TIME • SAVE MONEY • SAVE EFFORT YOU MAKE YOUR OWN BANKING HOURS WHEN YOU USE OUR CONVENIENT MAIL FACILITIES. ENJOY THE UTMOST IN SAFETY, ECONOMY AND CONVENIENCE WHEN MAKING DEPOSITS TO YOUR CHECKING OR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. YOU CAN BANK IN THE DAYTIME, OR BANK AT NIGHT, WITH EASE, FROM YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH OUR CONVENIENT BANK BY MAIL PLAN. THE MAIL WAY IS THE EASY WAY WHEN YOU USE OUR CONVENIENT MAIL FACILITIES. ENJOY THE UTMOST IN SAFETY, ECONOMY AND CONVENIENCE WHEN MAKING DEPOSITS TO YOUR CHECKING OR SAVINGS ACCOUNTS. YOU CAN BANK IN THE DAYTIME, OR BANK AT NIGHT, WITH EASE, FROM YOUR HOME OR OFFICE WITH OUR CONVENIENT BANK BY MAIL PLAN. THE MAIL WAY IS THE EASY WAY BANK BY MAIL WE PAY THE POSTAGE CLIP AND MAIL TODAY I AM INTERESTED IN RECEIVING FURTHER DETAILS ON YOUR BANK BY MAIL PLAN. THIS DOES NOT OBLIGATE ME IN ANY WAY. NAME STREET CITY Please check the following: ☐ Checking Account ☐ Joint Account ☐ Savings Account ☐ Individual Account The Southern County Bank COMMERCIAL SAVINGS Center and Lemon Streets Anaheim MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION