anaheim-gazette 1952-10-21
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GOLDEN JUBILEE — Bethel Baptist its 50th anniversary tomorrow with a prechurch, shown above, begins a celebration of gram that will carry through next Sunday.
Bethel Baptist to Mark Golden Jubilee
Bethel Baptist church of Anaheim, known as the "Singing Church" throughout the
community, will begin celebration of its Golden Jubilee with an anniversary banquet t
morrow night at 6:30 o'clock. Six of the nine pastors who have served the church a
its congregation during that half century will be on hand to take part in the commenration activities.
The Rev. H. G. Dymmel, the
Rev. A. Rhode, the Rev. P. G.
Neuman, the Rev. Richard
Schilke, and the Rev. O. R.
Schroeder, all former pastors,
will join with the Rev. Berthold
during the ministry of the Rev.
Schilke, who's services to the
church dated from January, 1950,
until February, 1951.
Reorganization of the Sunday
school into the six point sys
Bethel Baptist church of Anaheim, known as the "Singing Church" throughout the community, will begin celebration of its Golden Jubilee with an anniversary banquet on morrow night at 6:30 o'clock. Six of the nine pastors who have served the church and its congregation during that half century will be on hand to take part in the commemoration activities.
The Rev. H. G. Dymmel, the Rev. A. Rhode, the Rev. P. G. Neuman, the Rev. Richard Schilke, and the Rev. O. R. Schroeder, all former pastors, will join with the Rev. Berthold Jacksteit, present minister, in marking the church's golden anniversary.
In addition to tomorrow night's banquet, the church will have a community night Thursday, a denominational night Friday, a 50 years in review night Saturday and a special anniversary service on Sunday.
The church has grown steadily through the years since its inception in 1902 and now numbers 400 members in its congregation, has a strong youth program and has recently purchased a lot on Broadway, east of the church, for future expansion.
Bethel Baptist church was formed on Thursday, Oct. 23, 1902, when 16 Baptists gathered in the Lincoln ave. home of Sam Hemmerling for the purpose of organizing a church.
At this meeting the name Bethel Bantist was chosen and the Rev. John Berg was elected pastor. Mike Hemmerling was named church clerk.
A house of worship was built and dedicated in 1903, located at Lemon and Broadway. The Rev. Berg, who came from Kansas, served the church from its formation until March 1908.
The Rev. Ernest Wiesle of Brooklyn, was pastor from 1909 to November 1910. He was followed in February 1911 by the Rev. August Rhode of Oklahoma. During the Rev. Rhode's term the church was enlarged and remodeled.
In March, 1916, the Rev. Max Leuschner began his ministry, staying at Bethel Baptist until February, 1925. During his pastorate a parsonage was built at 310 S. Lemon.
The present sanctuary was built during the ministry of the Rev. Schroeder, who served the church from 1925 until 1938. The Rev. Schroeder was followed in office by the Rev. Dymmel, a professor from Rochester Baptist seminary in New York.
During the Rev. Dymmel's stay the church debt was cleared and the church observed its 40th anniversary. The Rev. Dymmel left the church at 1936.
during the ministry of the Rev. Schilke, who's services to the church dated from January, 1950, until February, 1951.
Reorganization of the Sunday school into the six point system, revitalization of the youth program and purchase of property has been achieved under the ministry of the present pastor, the Rev. Berthold Jacksteit.
All branches of the church now revealed a healthy growth and successful 50 years of service and the community seems assured.
Henry Ford McCracken Makes Final Move to Dodge State Gas Chamber
Henry Ford McCracken, convicted sex slayer of 10-year-old Patty Hull, at Buena Park, today made his last move to dodge the San Quentin gas chamber, where he is now doomed to die Oct. 31.
With 11 days of life remaining to him, the 35-year-old ex-banio player, filed application through his attorneys, George Chula, James Monroe, and Kal Lines, to both the state supreme court and the U.S. supreme court for a stay of execution.
The applications addressed to Chief Justice Phil Gibson of the California court and Associate Justice William O. Douglas of the U.S. tribunal, stated that within 60 days the McCracken attorneys would file with the U.S. supreme court a petition for a writ of review.
Appeals from his conviction have been denied by the district court of appeals and the state supreme court. The defense, in appeal, claimed that chance of venue should have been granted from Orange county to south other county, because of local position and prejudice. The appeal also claimed there was a prejudicial attitude at the trial on the part of both the court and the district attorney.
The state supreme court heard that there was nothing in the record of the case to uphold the defense claims.
Planners Consider Six Tract Maps Of Proposed Anaheim Developments
Six new tentative maps of proposed housing developments in Anaheim involving 443 lots, are currently in the planning commission hopper.
Yesterday, commissioners approved two tentative maps, subject to engineering requirements, and held another over for revision of lot and street layouts. The two approved were a 24-lot sub-division proposed by Eastmont Development Corp. of Costa Mesa at E. Vermont ave. and S. East st.; and a 145-lot subdivision at the northeast corner of North and Loara sts., proposed by Paul Pierce of Pico.
A 54-lot subdivision presented by D. E. Demonds and John D. Ardaiz at the north side of La Palma ave., about 500 feet west of West st., was held up.
Between the end of the meeting yesterday and this morning three new subdivision proposals were received by Planning Engineer Bob Mungall.
Tract 1648, proposed by C. Ra Miller of Los Angeles, involves 2 lots between Thomas Jefferson school and the proposed printing plant to locate just west of the ATSF tracks on the south side of South st. Tract 1696 would be 55 lots located north of E. South st., east of East st. Tract 1697 143 lots between Santa Ana and South st., west of Placentia ave Shields Construction Co. of Whittier is the developer.
The second public hearing on location of the Rotary Offset printing plant at South st., and the ATSF tracks was held and no objection was received.
Denials Flow Thick and Fast as Bridgford Trial Draws Near Close
Defendants in the trial of the $17,000 Bridgford meat plant robbery at Anaheim were entering their denials of guilt in Superior court at Santa Ana today as the trial neared its close.
Richard J. McGovern, Los Angeles taxi driver, told the jury that he had nothing whatever to do with the raid upon the Bridgford plant last Dec. 8. When 70 sides of beef were loaded into a truck belonging to the plant and were driven away, after Arnl Eggertson, plant watchman, had been overpowered and bound.
Irving Schulman, Los Angeles cafe operator, also a defendant in the case, and implicated McGovern in statements after his arrest, as disclosed in a wire recording made by Anaheim police and played to the jury yesterday.
Schulman and the other two defendants, Jack Goldberg and Morris Goldstein, owners of the Warner Provision company in Pasadena, were scheduled to follow McGovern on the witness stand. Goldberg and Goldstein, who received the stolen meat in their plant, have declared that they did not know it was stolen until they noted the absence of government inspection stamps.
They were then forced to accept it at the point of a gun, held by Roy Wiltsie, reputed leader of the gang, who has never been apprehended.
In his testimony today, McGovern declared that he knew Wiltsie and was a patron of Schulman's "Squeeze Inn" cafe in Los Angeles, where he said that he had been at the time of the robbery.
McGovern stated that he had met Charles Bocock, also a defendant, whose prosecution has been blocked by his serious illness in the county hospital. Bocock is said to have been driver of the truck that hauled the stolen beef.
McGovern flatly denied that he knew James William Drake, former plant engineer, who had acted as inside man in the robbery and then turned state's evidence. Drake has testified at the trial against the other defendants.
BP Girl Injured
Noreen O'Brien, 5. 8202 Holt, Buena Park, was injured yesterday when a car driven by her mother, Mrs. Dorothv O'Brien. 31, collided with a car driven by Herbert Gustafan, 54, Long Beach.
First hearing was held on changes in the Municipal Code to bring new areas into the city in the R-A (residential-agricultural) classification to give the city better control of their development and to provide for automatic rezoning to R-1 (single-family residential) zoning for areas subdivided for residential development.
Hearing was set for the next regular meeting on rezoning the Placentia ave. and Ball rd. annexation. The planners have tentatively set the zoning to provide an industrial zone on each side of the Santa Fe tracks between Vermont st. and Ball rd. and the rest of the area as R-A zone. The nexted territory now becomes R-1 zone automatically upon entry to the city.
The planners recommended to city council consideration of west La Palma Annexation No. 2 for action. It involves about 17 acres of land north of La Palma ave. and west of West st. Commission-(Continued on Page 6)
Lagunan Killed
Claude Robert Leslie, 33, Laguna Beach, was instantly killed at 11:40 p.m. yesterday when his speeding car missed a sharp turn on the Coast highway near Laguna Beach.
The car overturned and skidded on its side for 39 feet, crushing Leslie to death, according to a report of the California highway patrol. He was alone in the car at the time.
ANAHEM Daily
The Anaheim Gazette Was Established in 1870 As A Weekly And Is Anaheim's First Newspaper
VOLUME LXXXI ANAHEIM ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, OCT
Prosecutor Will Assist
BSA Takes Campaign Lead; Vote Deadline is Tomorrow
Heavy voting registered today in the "Buy in Anaheim" campaign standings showed Boy Scouts of America once more in the lead, having garnered 232,800 votes for a 4,408,400 vote total.
Bethel Baptist church follows closely with 4,304,100 votes and First Baptist church, who received the highest vote for the day, 314,900, is in third place with 4,301,000 votes. Anaheim Junior Chamber of Commerce was second heaviest gainer in the standings with 254,100 votes.
The Gazette today reiterates its former announcement that tomorrow is the deadline for participating organizations to show a gain before being out of the daily standings.
This does not mean they will be eliminated from the campaign! It means their daily vote and vote totals will not appear in the newspaper for the remainder of the contest, which ends Nov. 15 at midnight. The move will be made to condense the standings, thereby liberating valuable space for news articles.
Vote standings to date:
| Boy Scouts of America | Today | Total |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Bethel Baptist Church | 4,175,600 | 232,800 | 4,408,400 |
| First Baptist Church, Anaheim (Calvary) | 4,262,700 | 41,400 | 4,304,100 |
| St. Michael's Episcopal Church | 3,986,100 | 314,900 | 4,301,000 |
| Anaheim Junior Chamber of Commerce | 1,893,300 | 36,700 | 1,930,000 |
| White Temple Methodist Church | 1,648,700 | 254,100 | 1,902,800 |
| Zion Lutheran Church | 1,648,700 | 254,100 | 1,902,800 |
| St. Boniface Church | 1,219,900 | 11,100 | 1,231,000 |
Pinky Lee to 1952 Hallowe'e Costume Fee
Ticket sales started too the annual Halloween'en a breakfast, it was announced Dick Gay, ticket sales of The event which will be cl by a stage show featuring vision star Pinkey Lee will at 7 a.m., Oct. 32.
Tickets may be purchased Jackson Drug Store, Bain America, Security-First No Bank, Anaheim Chamber Commerce office, SQR and Penney's.
Headlining the fast-moving show will be comedian Lee of the "Those Two" television program, shown area by KNBH. Lee, for years an Earl Carroll show will MC the several acts will be seen by the breakfifth.
The meal will consist scrambled eggs, hot cakes age, hot rolls, butter, coffee orange juice. Costumes are dairy.
Church" throughout the anniversary banquet to preserve the church and part in the commohas been achieved under ministry of the present passRev. Berthold Jackstelt. branches of the church now and a healthy growth and the life of another active and suc50 years of service and to community seems assured.
Makes Final Gas Chamber
keys would file with the supreme court a petition writ of review.
falls from his conviction by orange county jury already been denied by the district of appeals and the state sucourt. The defense, in filpeal, claimed that change he should have been granton Orange county to some county, because of local pasjudice. The appeal claimed there was a prejudiitude at the trial on the both the court and the attorney.
estate supreme court held here was nothing in the reccase to uphold the deaims.
Tract Maps Developments
en the end of the meetterday and this morning, new subdivision proposals received by Planning EnJob Mungall.
1648, proposed by C. Ray of Los Angeles, involves 22 between Thomas Jefferson and the proposed printing locate just west of the tracks on the south side st. Tract 1696 would be located north of E. South of East st. Tract 1697.
between Santa Ana and west of Placentia ave.
Construction Co. of White developer.
second public hearing on of the Rotary Offset plant at South st. and SF tracks was held and
Vote standings to date:
Yesterday Today Total
Boy Scouts of America 4,175,600 232,800 4,408,400
Bethel Baptist Church 4,262,700 41,400 4,304,100
First Baptist Church, Anaheim (Calvary) 3,986,100 314,900 4,301,000
St. Michael's Episcopal Church 1,893,300 36,700 1,930,000
Anaheim Junior Chamber of Commerce 1,648,700 254,100 1,902,800
White Temple Methodist Church 1,640,700 57,200 1,897,900
Zion Lutheran Church 1,219,900 11,100 1,231,000
St. Boniface Church 1,006,800 33,500 1,040,700
Veterans of Foreign Ware 882,500 7,100 889,600
Lois Rebekah Lodge 268 771,200 25,000 797,200
Grace Lutheran Church 501,000 25,600 526,600
Stanton Community Church 314,300 6,000 320,300
Cancer Society of Orange County 305,100 305,100
Young Ladies' Institute 277,600 277,600
YMCA 276,200 1,000 277,200
Orange County Branch Nat'l Fuchsia Society 271,300 1,800 273,100
First Christian Church of Fullerton 263,800 263,800
Cerebral Palsy Association 207,200 1,800 209,200
Marywood Catholic Girls High 188,700 500 189,290
Presbyterian Church 161,100 8,900 168,990
Church of Christ of Latter Day St., Fullerton 159,100 17,550 176,660
Girl Scouts of America 156,500 500 157,500
Christian Church, Bdw. & Helena, Anaheim 164,700 90 158,690
First Southern Baptist Church 135,800 3,100 138,980
Job's Daughters 131,100 40 131,590
First Church of Christ, Scientist 113,400 90 114,360
Nazarene Church 92,600 1,oo 93,6oo
Evangelical United Brethren 90,6oo 1,4oo 92,ooo
Wesley Methodist Church 61,4OO 13,5OO 74,ooO
St. Boniface P-TA 64,OO 4OO 65,OOo
Bethany Church,Cypress St., Anaheim 6O,OO 2,8OO 82,OOo
Elks Club $63,OO $33,OOo
Anaheim Optimist Club $48,OO $46,OOo
Salvation Army $44,OO $44,OOo
American Legion $41,OO $1O $41,OOo
Anaheim Business & Professional Women's Club $39,OO $39,OOo
Alamitos Friends Church of Garden Grove $33,OO $33,OOo
YWCA,Anaheim $28,OO $29,OOo
Our Lady of Guadalupe $29,OO $29,OOo
Assistance League of Anaheim $22,OO $22,OOo
Seventh Day Adventist Church $19,OO $19,OOo
St. Plus Church of Buena Park $18,OO $18,OOo
Masonic Lodge,Anaheim $18,OO $18,OOo
Red Cross $17,OO $17,OOo
Anaheim Recreation Department $14,OO $14,OOo
Warwick Auxiliary '96,Fullerton $13,OO $13,OOo
Masonic Lodge of Fullerton $12,OO $12,OOo
B'nal Brith $12,OO $12,OOo
Eastern Star $11,OO $11,OOo
Native Daughters,Fullerton $11,OO $11,OOo
YWCA of Fullerton $1O $1O,
Lions Club of Buena Park $9,OO $9,OOo
Assembly of God Church $8,OO $8,OOo
First Baptist Church,Fullerton $7,OO $7,OOo
Methodist Church of Yorba Linda $7,ОО $7,ООо
Native Daughters of the Golden West $6,ОО $6,ООо
Messiah Lutheran Church of Buena Park $6,ОО $6,ООо
Free Methodist Church $5,ОО $5,ООо
St. Mary's Catholic Church of Fullerton $5,ОО $5, ОООо
Lutheran Wilshire and Harvard,Fullerton $5, ОООо
Anaheim Knights of Columbus 'I I54 $5, ОООо
Katella P-TA $5, ОООо $
VFW Auxiliary 'I I73,Anaheim $5, ОООо $
KCPF $4,ООО $
Bethany Full Gospel $4,ООО $
North Orange County Panhellenic Assn. $4,ООО $
Valencia Junior Academy,Fullerton $4,ООО $
Anaheim Y'e Meh's Club $4,ООО $
First Congregational Church of Buena Park $3,ООО $
Commerce office,SQR and Penney.
Headlining the fast-movin show will be comedian Lee of "Those Two" movie area by KNBH. Lee; for years an Earl Carroll show will MC the several acts will be seen by the breakfast.
The meal will consist scrambled eggs,hot cakes age,hot rolls,butter,coffee orange juice.Costumes are diarytory.
Prizes will be awarded cleverest costumes with awards going to designers dian attire.
Kickoff Breakfast Scheduled Oct.2
In response to public demand for the old-fashioned Halloween Kickoff breakfast Adolf epe; in 1952 general chairman nounced today that the lay-out of the celebration year will be bared at a fast at Allen's cafe.6Oil sst. from t:45 to t:Oct.23.
Orange shirts; black tie dian headbands and Bud Squaw buttons are urged breakfast apparel.
COMMUNITY WELFARE best served by its citizen where you live is the place by Mr. and Mrs. Forest.
$125,Ooo Damage
and the proposed printing locate just west of the tracks on the south side of St. Tract 1696 would be located north of E. South of East st. Tract 1697, west of Placentia ave. Construction Co. of Whitte developer.
Second public hearing on of the Rotary Offset plant at South st. and SF tracks was held and meetings to it were volced. Commissioners approved K Miller. Anaheim real-estated plans of the pro-plant.
The hearing was held on in the Municipal Code to new areas into the city in (residential-agricultural) intention to give the city bet-ool of their development provide for automatic re- R-I (single-family resizoning for areas subdi- residential development. Was set for the next meeting on rezoning the Ave. and Ball rd. am- The planners have tenet the zoning to provide serial zone on each side of Fe tracks between Ver- and Ball rd. and the rest area as R-A zone. The an- territory now becomes R-1 dramatically upon entry toanners recommended to call consideration of west Annexation No. 2 for involves about 17 acres north of La Palma ave. of West st. Commission-continued on Page 8)
Man Killed
Robert Leslie, 33, Lagu- was instantly killed at yesterday when his car missed a sharp turn coast highway near Lach- overturned and skidded for 39 feet, crushing death, according to a re- California highway pa- was alone in the car nee.
TOKYO (E)—A truck carrying an 18-ton U.S. Army tank crash- into a building today when its brakes failed and demolished the structure.
That ended the petition campaign of suburban residents who had been seeking removal of the building as a traffic hazard.
TOKYO (F)—Japanese police lost face today. Also an automobile. They recovered the car.
An audacious thief stole a captain's car at National Police Headquarters. A nationwide alert was broadcast in record time. Four hours later, the thief was arrested.
COMMUNITY WELFAST best served by its citizen where you live, is the place by Mr. and Mrs. Forest
$125,000 Damage Suit Hits Courthouse
Trial of a suit for $125,000 ages, based upon a collision tween two trucks east of ton last Dec. 28, got under today before a jury in Sup Judge Franklin G. West's at Santa Ana.
Newcomer Finds Bed the Hard Wife
Santa Ana police thought it a suicide attempt, but George Jager, 30, recent arrival from Arbor, Mich., just wanted to lodging because he couldn't take him to St. Joseph host and then swallowed 10 am- tablets en route. That would him a bed, he was sure.
The doctor merely pumped his stomach, as Jaeger figure would, then send him to the city hospital where Jaeger fled lodging as he also figured would.
He told police that he had an army cadet at the old S. Ana army air base during War II, and liked Santa Ana well that he had then vowed would some day return there live. His doctor had given two dozen tablets for his neck and he took four of them one plane, also drinking some lique which made him very ill, so knew their power, he said.
When he couldn't find a job decided he might as well use of the tablets. The doctor the hospital took the remain- 10 tablets away from him.
CALIFORNIA
STATE
LIBRARY
M Daily GAZETTE
Is Anaheim's First Newspaper. 82 YEARS OF DEVOTION TO ALL THAT IS GOOD IN ANAHEIM
CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1952
5 Cents per Copy
50 Cents per Month
No. 254
Will Ask Rupp’s Death
Pinky Lee to MC
1952 Hallowe’en
Costume Feed
Ticket sales started today for the annual Halloween’en costume breakfast, it was announced by Rick Gay, ticket sales director. The event which will be climaxed by a stage show featuring television star Pinkey Lee will begin at 7 a.m., Oct. 32.
Tickets may be purchased at Jackson Drug Store, Bank of America, Security-First National Bank, Anaheim Chamber of Commerce office, SQR store, and Penney’s.
Headlining the fast-moving stage now will be comedian Pinkey Lee of the "Those Two" network revision program, shown in this sea by KNBH. Lee, for many years an Earl Carroll show topper, will MC the several acts which will be seen by the breakfasters.
The meal will consist of crambled eggs, hot cakes, sausage, hot rolls, butter, coffee, and orange juice. Costumes are man-
Court Action Shows Girl’s Slayer May Pay Supreme Penalty for Crime
AUHS Yearbook Wins Top Rating
A top, “first class”, rating has been accorded to the Anaheim union high school 1951-52 yearbook. The Colonist, by the Columbia Scholastic Press in their 18th annual nation wide yearbook contest, the society revealed this week.
Edited by Don Hillary, now in his freshman year at Redlands university, the colorful 220 page book was given perfect scores of its idea and layout, engraving and printing. Judges pointed out that the book was “a workmanlike job with ingenuity” and added that “the Colonist is one of the most attractive printing productions we have seen.” They further stated: “Clever adaption, well organized and effectively illustrated! Nice going!”
Columbia Scholastic Press, located at Columbia university, will ask the prosecutors of William Francis Rupp, Jr., 18-year-old sex slayer of Ruby Ann Payne, 15, at Yorba Linda last Aug. 8, will ask the death penalty.
This was indicated today as deputy district attorney, James P. Devine, questioned prospective jurors and asked them whether they had scruples against a verdict that would mean the death penalty “in a proper case.”
Several talismen were excused from the jury when they replied that they did have such scruples. Others were excused because they had formed opinions of Rupp’s guilt or innocence. Speedy progress with the examining of jurors brought the possibility that selection of the jury might be completed today.
Rupp has freely admitted killing the girl, but is relying upon his plea of insanity to save him. Public Defender N. D. Meyer, representing him, asked prospective jurors whether they would consider Rupp’s mental condition to de-
Kickoff Breakfast Scheduled Oct. 23
In response to public demand for the old-fashioned Halloween kickoff breakfast, Adolf Schaepe, 1952 general chairman, announced today that the entire year will be bared at a breakfast at Allen's cafe, 601 S. Los Angeles st., from 7:45 to 9 a.m., Oct. 23.
Orange shirts, black ties, Indian headbands and Buck or quaw buttons are urged as breakfast apparel.
University, the colorful 220 page book was given perfect scores of its idea and layout, engraving and printing. Judges pointed out that the book was "a workmanlike job with ingenuity" and added that "the Colonist is one of the most attractive printing productions we have seen." They further stated: "Clever adaptation, well organized and effectively illustrated! Nice going!" Columbia Scholastic Press, located at Columbia university in New York, each year rate the nation's high school newspapers and annuals into four groups, first, second, third and fourth.
The prize winning book, planned and created by Hillary, featured a primitive islander theme, characterizing the school as "an island washed by an adult civilization." Printed in variety of colors, the book had all of its divisional pages done in jet-black.
Other student editors were Leah Gerber, Lynda Bennett, Pat Frahm, Eva Rodriguez, Beverly Apple, Fred Head and Thelma Clamp. Advertising was done by a student staff functioning under the direction of Ralph Wines. Printing was done in the school shop under direction of Bloyd Ross. In charge of photography and over-all production was Howard C. Hall.
OMMUNITY WELFARE of Anaheim is best served by its citizens by buying here, where you live, is the philosophy expressed by Mr. and Mrs. Forest Lee of Lee Trading
Co., 718 S. Los Angeles, another of the Anaheim firms cooperating in the Gazette's great "Buy in Anaheim" campaign.
GAZETTE PHOTO
125,000 Damage
Suit Hits Court
Serial of a suit for $125,000 damaged, based upon a collision benefected two trucks east of Stanlase Dec. 28, got underway
by before a jury in Superior
George Franklin G. West's court
santa Ana.
Newcomer Finds
Red the Hard Way
Santa Ana police thought it was
deicide attempt, but George A.
Ar, 30, recent arrival from Ann
Mar, Mich., just wanted to find
ing because he couldn't find
So he called a taxicab to
him to St. Joseph hospital
then swallowed 10 ambutol
ts en route. That would give
a bed, he was sure.
The doctor merely pumped out
tomach, as Jaeger figured he
had, then send him to the counospital where Jaeger found
as he also figured he
told police that he had been
army cadet at the old Santa
army air base during World
II, and liked Santa Ana, so
that he had then vowed he
some day return there to
His doctor had given him
dozen tablets for his nerves
he took four of them on the
also drinking some liquor,
made him very ill, so he
their power, he said.
When he couldn't find a job, he
he might as well make
of the tablets. The doctor at
hospital took the remaining
tablets away from him.
U. S. Blocks Russian Attempt to Include Red China in UN Debates
By STANLEY JOHNSON
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP)
The United States today blocked a Russian motion shutting off debate immediately after the 15-nation Steering committee had voted, 12-2 with President Lester B. Pearson of Canada not voting, to recommend inclusion of an American request for U.N. investigation of Red germ warfare charges on the Assembly agenda.
The adjournment of debate motion was carried 11-2 Poland and Russia with one abstention and Pearson not voting.
Russia's Andrei Gromyko called this a "cowardly move" and served notice he would raise the subject again on the floor of the Assembly or in committee when the item came up.
Before the germ warfare wrangle broke out, Poland charged that the United States had deliberately sabotaged the truce talks at Panmunjom and called on the Assembly itself to find a speedy solution to the Korean war.
Polish Foreign Minister Stanislaw Skrzeszczewki's speech, urging that the Assembly take up the question, left little doubt that the Communists consider discussion here a substitute for the talks at the Front.
After U.S. delegate Ernest Gross said this country did not oppose U.N. airing of the Korean question and other sections of the catch-all Polish "Peace Plan," the Committee unanimously recommended its inclusion on the Assembly agenda.
Weather
Southern California — Low cloudiness and fog extending from coast to intermediate valleys and lower foothills during the night and morning hours, clearing by midday and generally clear except for few high clouds elsewhere today and Wednesday. Cooler intermediate valleys Wednesday.
TONIGHT
when you are alone with your thoughts
THINK
about the things you forgot
COULD BE
your Community Chest. Your obligation to others
DECIDE NOW
so you can have that warm, comfortable feeling before you go to sleep.
GOOD MORNING
Gee. This is a beautiful DAY—HI NEIGHBOR.