anaheim-gazette 1952-09-19
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THIRTY YEARS OLD — Members and friends of (Calvary) First Baptist church of Anaheim, above, will join this weekend in observance of its 30th anniversary. Activities are scheduled for tonight, tomorrow and Sunday.
Lutheran TV Film Series to Begin On KTTV Sunday
Zion Lutheran church, Emily and Chartres, reports through its pastor E. H. Pflug, that beginning this Sunday the television series, "This Is the Life," will be shown at 7 p.m., over KTTV, 11, Los Angeles.
This film is produced by the Lutheran church. Missouri synod
First Baptist Church to Celebrate 30th Anniversary during Weekend
First Baptist church of Anaheim, Broadway and Citron, will celebrate its thirteenth anniversary this week end. The program will commence with the anniversary banquet, on night at 8:30.
Friends of the church are dially invited to attend the S day and Sunday programs. Cording to the Rev. Bob Ke kian, pastor of the church, weekend will prove a high
Series to Begin On KTTV Sunday
Zion Lutheran church, Emily and Chartres, reports through its pastor E. H. Pflug, that beginning this Sunday the television series, "This Is the Life," will be shown at 7 p.m., over KTTV, 11, Los Angeles.
This film is produced by the Lutheran church, Missouri synod, and in a series of 26 releases presents Christian truth in word and picture each Sunday evening as a public service item. This series of television programs is being highly advertised in leading magazines.
Pastor Pflug says: "It is our heartfelt prayer that many will make use of this opportunity to get better acquainted with the one thing needful. 'This Is the Life' once again stamps the Lutheran church, Missouri synod, as progressive in its endeavor to contribute as much as possible to the spiritual welfare of the public."
HOLLYWOOD (F)—Mary Pickford, the aging sweetheart of the screen, has withdrawn from her first movie role in 20 years because the picture is not being shot in color, as originally planned.
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Anaheim
TODAY'S CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
First Baptist church of Anaheim at Broadway and Citron, will celebrate its thirteenth anniversary this week end. The program will commence with the anniversary banquet, onnight at 8:30. The Rev. Earl Berg, pastor of the church from 1940 - 1946, and now minister of the First Baptist church of La Mesa, is to be the speaker. Other special guests will include the Rev. James Cowee and the Rev. Rudolph Ullrich, both of whom are former pastors of the church, and the Rev. William Christie who will bring congratulatory greetings from the Southern California Baptist convention.
A fellowship rally will be conducted Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. James Forrester, pastor of the church from 1946-1948, will be the guest speaker. The churches of the community have been invited to attend, as well as the Baptist churches of surrounding cities.
Crusader to Speak
The anniversary sermon will be delivered at the Sunday 11 a.m. service by the Rev. Harry M. Lintz, D.D., the nationally-known Twentieth Century Crusader. Chartermembers of the church and their families will be honored. The Rev. Virgil Ledbetter, pastor from 1924 - 1927 and 1931 - 1936, will deliver the address of the closing anniversary rally at the Sunday 7:30 p.m. service.
REV. VIRGIL LEDBETTER
Tent Services
With the assistance of the Southern California Baptist convention, the property on the corner of Citron and Broadway was held in the Old Mexican Mission on Clementine st., across from Pressel, Perry and Tull hardware store.
Tent Services were held in a tent on the grounds.
TODAY'S CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
HORIZONTAL
1 Value highly
2 Lethargy
3 Sap of the rubber tree
4 Small carrot
5 Article
6 Team race
7 Field of granular snow
8 Famous fiddler
9 English river
10 Roman money
11 Consonant
12 Scenes of combat
13 Direction
14 Dashers
15 To card wool
16 Refines, as ore
17 Ship's accountant
18 Incription
19 The hawkpin turtle
20 Area measure
21 Guarantee
22 Vaccine
23 Marble
24 Shoe
VERTICAL
1 Factory
2 Title of noble rank (India)
3 Pronoun
4 Cipher
5 River in England
6 Drudges
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
STOP BAT FREE LOVE AMA HERE AZEB GUROEASE ELRIM EL KMPEL OAT ELD AGO SHZE OABT UEMTRX SALLOW AZEB LEFT DUO HEX ERE ARADA VA IREB DXBASTER AMEN XZEM OPE FADE ?BAS ETA ANZE
7 California berry
8 Biblical city
9 Pastan
10 The elves
11 Change to the opposite
12 Canopy
13 Ancestral spirits
14 Face with name (Mil.)
15 Inherent character
16 Vouch for
17 Parched
18 Cooking jar
19 Flower
20 Quiescent
21 Spanish washtower
22 Desorticated Reeder's assistant
23 Alarm
24 Oppose effectually
25 Amass
26 Endured usage
27 Fortification
28 Trim off Aegean island
29 Nickel
30 Effect
Donald Reck Serves in Korea
WITH I CORPS IN KOREA—Pvt. Donald R. Reck, son of My and Mrs. O. H. Reck, 910 E. Chapman, Fullerton, Calif., recently arrived in Korea and is serving with I corps.
A tactical command between army and divisional levels, I corps was the first of three to be organized in Korea. Special units attached to it perform duties for some or all of the organizations under its command.
Private Reck arrived in Korea July 15 and is serving as an aerial photo interpreter with the intelligence section of I corps.
A 1951 graduate of the University of California, he entered the army in July of that year. He received his basic training at Ft Ord, Calif., and was then stationed at Camp Palmer, Japan.
Attend Local Churches
Christian Science
Salvation, safety, satisfaction, and health are not to be found through reliance on materiality, declares the Bible Lesson on the subject of "Matter" in all Christian Science churches on Sunday.
The Golden Text from Jeremiah (3:23) reads, "Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hills, and from the multitude of mountains; truly in the Lord our God is the salvation of Israel."
Daniel (3:18,21,24-27) tells the story of the three Hebrew boys who refused to "worship the golden image" set up by Nebuchadnezzar and as a result "were cast into the midst of the burning fiery furnace. Then Nebuchadnezzar said unto his counsellors, Did not we cast three men bound into the midst of the fire?... Lo, I see four men loose, walking in the midst of the fire, and they have no hurt; and the form of the fourth is like the Son of God." Then he called out, "Ye servants of the most high God, come forth, and come hither." As they obeyed, those that stood by "saw these men, upon whose bodies the fire had no power."
Mary Baker Eddy writes in "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures": "From beginning to end, the Scriptures are full of accounts of the triumph of Spirit, Mind, over matter" (p. 139).
White Temple
"The Difference," a motion picture presenting the difference in roles of the church college and the state university, will be shown at the regular 7 p.m. evening service at White Temple Methodist church on Sunday night. In the light of the constantly rising tuition costs at the small colleges and the increasing difficulty in raising sizable endowments due to high taxation of large incomes, the churches of America are facing a real crisis in the maintenance of their own colleges. Many laymen are asking why they should support church colleges when the public tax-supported institutions have such excellent scholarship rating. This film is designed to show the unique contributions of the Christian college to our democratic way of life.
At the 10:50 a.m. morning service, Rev. Frank E. Butterworth will preach a rally day sermon on the theme, "Being Methodist in 1952," and will also conduct a special recognition service for teachers in the church school.
Wesley Methodist
"The Tragedy of a King Who Failed" will be related by the Rev. William McKinley Walker, pastor of Wesley Methodist church, Wilhelmina and Los Angeles sts., in the 11 a.m. worship service-Sunday.
The Sunday school meets regularly at 9:45 with classes for all ages.
The choir, under the direction of Margaret Elliott, will sing special music during the morning service.
First Presbyterian
"The Sin of Respectability" is the topic on which the Rev. Howe when U. S. military polls on a demonstration Wednesday.
Attend Local Churches
A church service forheim Christians has been 7:30 p.m., Sept. 30, in auditorium in observance release of the Revised Version of the Holy Bible.
Dr. Robert Burns McCormor of First Presbyterian Orange, will be the speaker.
The Revised Standard of the Bible is an attaching to the publisher late the book into English-speaking period.
This is the Word of Living language for our cording to the International Council of Religious Education authorized the translation ago.
In contrast to the modern version Bible, the 32 scholars in the new translation work of the accumulation of centuries of copying.
Local observance of this of the new version is joint sponsorship of the Ministerial Assn. and the tion of Christian Churchheim.
PUSAN, Korea (F)—prisoner of war commando sald 23 communist civilians were injured, two when U. S. military polls on a demonstration Wednesday.
By JOANN FAUST
Marilyn Hudson, president of the Commercial club, and Philip called a meeting of the officers Engebretson, sponsor of the club, Wednesday to set a date for a formal initiation and induction of officers sometime around the first of October. Any student taking a commercial subject is eligible, but the club is limited to 75 members.
Officers of the AUHS Mozart club were chosen as follows: Earl Peterson, president; Yvonne Fitz, vice president; Judy Bell Wielker, secretary; Carol Rutledge, treasurer; Ann Betts, historian.
Senior play tryouts will be held Monday and Tuesday at 3 p.m. after school.
Miss Louise Hitt, drama coach, has selected a gay comedy called, "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay."
After many weeks of practicing, the play will be presented to the public Nov. 13.
Bible club started their club off right with 60 members present.
Dora Cuevas was elected president, but her other officers will be chosen later.
Annual Anoranco editors were chosen this week. Those elected to fill in last year's places are: Nan Morales, editor of Anoranco; assistant editor, Pat Farmer; feature editor, Delores Wollenman; social editor, Kay Stockton; sports editor, Val Wiethorn.
Annual co-editors: Janice Pullman, JoAnn Faust, and section editors, Gary Knox, administration; Pat Farmer, classes; Kay Stockton, clubs; Nan Morales, activities; Dotty Jiles, art work and snapshots.
Tonight the varsity football team will travel to Redlands for their first football game. School rooters and the band will provide the “cheers,” and music, but the flag twirlers and the majorttes will not be entertaining this game, for they feel they are not ready. But tonight is Anaheim Night, plan to attend and root the team to victory.
Fine Hand of George McLain Seen In Ballot Propositions 10 and 11
By MORRIE LANDSBERG
SACRAMENTO (P)—Two measures on the November ballot carry the controversial imprint of Pension Profiter George H. McLain.
Through Prospectus 10 and 11 aid. Also eliminates any maximum now $3500 on the value of real property if occupied as a home or used for the pensioner’s needs.
Assoc. Chamber Form Telephone Committee
The Associated Chamber Commerce of Orange county nounced today that B.Crooke of Garden Grove, dent, that a county-wide ctee to study the complex prof of telephone service and regularly extended service.
One of the major aims of Orange County Farm Bureau been to institute extended to eliminate inter-city toll organization has opposedcessfully.
The associated will not itself in rate changes at thi
Fine Hand of George McLain Seen In Ballot Propositions 10 and 11
By MORRIE LANDSBERG
SACRAMENTO (UP)—Two measures on the November ballot carry the controversial imprint of Pension Pronter George H. McLain.
Through Proposition 10 he seeks to deny tax funds to semi-public organizations for lobbying purposes. It is aimed, he says, at "political bosses." Opponents call it "a political black-jack."
But there is far more at stake in Proposition 11. This is McLain's latest pension plan and his attempt at a comeback. Californians, you may remember, voted in McLain's welfare program in 1948, then chased it out a year later.
Welfare Cost Hike
McLain himself once testified Proposition 11 would increase state welfare costs by 55 million dollars a year. The legislative auditor figures the additional burden at 103 million.
Here are the leading features of No. 11:
Continue $80 a month payments to needy aged—subject to cost of living increases. In other words, the present $80 ceiling would become the floor for the relief payments.
Provide up to $25 a month for health services — including eyeglasses, hearing aids and artificial limbs—and a maximum of $150 for funeral expenses.
Allow pensioners to own $1500 in personal property—instead of the present $1,200-and still draw aid. Also eliminates any maximum now $3500 on the value of real property if occupied as a home or used for the pensioner's needs.
Repeals relatives responsibility clause.
State Control
Transfers administration of old age security from the 58 counties to the state—a feature of McLain's Proposition 4 of 1948 which the voters repealed in 1950.
As McLain sees it, his new measure is designed to "straighten out" the confusion he says was caused by repeal of Proposition 4 by an "unsuspecting public." He speaks of it as a common-sense proposal. The Los Angeles pension advocate says, too:
Cut County Costs
"The county tax rate has been increased three times this year alone to its highest peak because the cost of pensions and its administration was dumped on the counties.
"This proposal will compel the state to again resume this obligation, thereby saving the homeowners, farmers, ranchers and all other county taxpayers many millions of dollars a year."
First Church of Christ, Scientist
Corner Philadelphia and Chartres
Lesson Subject: "Matter"
11 A.M. SUNDAY
8:00 P.M. WEDNESDAY — Testimonials of Healing
9:30 A.M. — SUNDAY SCHOOL
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM IS LOCATED AT 110 S. LOS ANGELES STREET
Open daily from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
except Sundays and Holidays
Bible Observance Set for Sept. 30 At Fremont School
A church service for all Anaheim Christians has been set for 7:30 p.m., Sept. 30, in Fremont auditorium in observance of the release of the Revised Standard Version of the Holy Bible.
Dr. Robert Burns McAulay, pastor of First Presbyterian church of Orange, will be the speaker.
The Revised Standard Version of the Bible is an attempt, according to the publishers, to translate the book into English that will be easily understood by modern English-speaking peoples.
"This is the Word of Life in Living language for our time," according to the International Council of Religious Education, who authorized the translation 15 years ago.
In contrast to the method used in other modern versions of the Bible, the 32 scholars employed in the new translation attempted to retain the beauty and power of the King James Version.
Completion and publication of the New Testament of the Revised Standard Version was made in 1946.
Very important recent discoveries of old Biblical manuscripts were used as the basis of the new translation, thereby purging the work of the accumulated errors of centuries of copying.
Local observance of the release of the new version is under the joint sponsorship of the Anaheim Ministerial Assn. and the Association of Christian Churches of Anaheim.
PUSAN, Korea (U)—The Allied prisoner of war command today said 23 communist civilian prisoners were injured, two seriously when U. S. military police broke up a demonstration Wednesday.
SAFETY FIRST—Co-winners in the Optimist club safety campaign are these students from Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson schools. They received plaques and gold ribbons for completing pledge signups. Shown above are: Wilbert Bonney, principal of Benjamin Franklin; Mary Fox, sixth grade teacher; John Easton, class president; Ed Wisser, Optimist safety chairman; Merrie Alice Richards; Margaret Haugh, third grade teacher at Thomas Jefferson; and Mary Larsen.
MORE WINNERS—Zion Lutheran school took half of the prizes in the four way safety contest sponsored by the Optimist club. Shown above are Harwood Larson,
PUSAN, Korea — The Allied prisoner of war command today said 23 communist civilian prisoners were injured, two seriously when U.S. military police broke up a demonstration Wednesday at Pongam in South Korea.
The prisoners included some former inmates of the rebellious Compound 62 on Koje Island.
MORE WINNERS — Zion Lutheran school took half of the prizes in the four way safety contest sponsored by the Optimist club. Shown above are Harwood Larson, past-president of the Optimists; Raymie Grimm; Mrs. R. Heitshusen, first and second grade teacher; Pamela Gruerin; Jackie Grimm; R. Heitshusen, third and fourth grade teacher; and Elbert Landes.
At Capt. Hu department arrives, is under the direction of Chief of Plant Protection Myron Reed, third from left. Safety Engineer Al Marcoux, second from left, watches the proceedings.
GAZETTE PHOTO
Assoc. Chambers Form Telephone Committee
The Associated Chambers of commerce of Orange county announced today that Howardooke of Garden Grove, president, that a county-wide committee to study the complex problems telephone service and particularly extended service.
One of the major aims of the Orange County Farm Bureau has been to institute extended service eliminate inter-city tolls; the organization has opposed unsuccessfully.
San Clemente; Larry Patterson, Santa Ana; Al Leonard, Seal Beach; Victor Lobdell, Silverado; Mrs. Julian Black, Stanton; Dr. O. H. Schlosser, Sunset Beach; Mrs. Elizabeth Gelpi, Westminster; John Anderson, Yorba Linda; C. J. Marks, Orange County Farm Bureau.
ATHENS, Greece — Defense Minister George Mavros predicted last night that Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia would turn the Balkan peninsula into "an impregnable fortress for everyone who might threaten our territorial integrity and independence."
ATHENS, Greece (UP)—Defense Minister George Mavros predicted last night that Greece, Turkey and Yugoslavia would turn the Balkan peninsula into "an impregnable fortress for everyone who might threaten our territorial integrity and independence."
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