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anaheim-gazette 1952-11-12

1952-11-12 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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FJC Turkey Day Celebration Set For November 26 The publicity committee of the Fullerton Junior College Alumni association announced today that plans for the third annual turkey-day dinner and get together have been completed. The dinner, which is open to former students and friends of the college as well as alumni, will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 26 in the junior college lounge. Dinner will be buffet style with service beginning at 7:30 p.m. Informality will be the keynote of the evening. The business meeting will be brief and will be followed by a short talk by Dick Spaulding, head football coach, with Bud Dawson and Hugo DeGroot his assistants. The junior college student body has invited the group to join them in their annual homecoming dance immediately following the program. As accommodations are limited to 200 persons, it is urged that all planning to attend contact the Fullerton junior college office by mail at Fullerton, Calif., or by phone at Lambert 52331 Unemployment up 22% in State SACRAMENTO (CNS) — A sharp 22 per cent rise in the number of new claims marked unemployment insurance activities in California for the week ending Oct. 23, the state department of employment reported today. The Santa Ana office received 175 new claims, compared with 97 the week before. It paid 359 claims and processed a total of 621 during the week. New claims filed throughout California numbered 12,824, compared with 10,477 during the previous week. The state paid 45,141 claims, an increase of four per cent over the preceding week, and received a total of 64,670. IN California for the week ending Oct. 23, the state department of employment reported today. The Santa Ana office received 175 new claims, compared with 97 the week before. It paid 359 claims and processed a total of 621 during the week. New claims filed throughout California numbered 12,824, compared with 10,477 during the previous week. The state paid 45,141 claims, an increase of four percent over the preceding week, and received a total of 64,970, compared with 60,441 for the week ending Oct. 16. RATTAN FURNITURE IS DURABLE The TROPIC Shop 721 No. Los Angeles—Anaheim Phone 5015 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING! Dunn Funeral Funeral services for William E. Dunn will be held at 10 a.m. Friday in the chapel of Backs, Campbell and Kaulbars mortuary, with the Rev. Howard S. Congdon, pastor of First Presbyterian church, officiating. Interment will follow the chapel service in Forest Lawn Memorial park, Glendale. WASHINGTON (AP) — A three-day voting period to replace the present day election has been proposed by Sen. Smathers, D.-Fla., as "insurance for democracy." PHOTO SUPPLIES SPEARS Camera Shop & Photo Supply 117 S. Los Angeles St., Anaheim Phone 7128 TODAY'S BIGGEST BARGAIN Count the many jobs electricity does for you, for just a few cents a day. Actually, you get more electricity for your money today does for you, for just a few cents a day. Actually, you get more electricity for your money today than ever before. But inflation and high taxes make it cost Edison more and more to provide good service, and domestic electric rates—though lowered many times—have not been increased for thirty-one years. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY Santa Ana College Homecoming To be Held Tomorrow and Friday Santa Ana college will welcome back its alumni during a gala two-day homecoming Nov. 13 and 14. Activities for the homecoming include election of the queen, the homecoming game with Chaffey college Thursday night and the homecoming dance Friday night. Homecoming will officially begin with the football game with Chaffey Thursday night. Wednesday morning a special homecoming assembly was held in the SAC student union. Several SAC alumni will speak and the Santa Ana college swing choir will sing. Friday night a homecoming dance will be held in the SAC student union for students, alumni and their guests. Gracie and the Debonaires will play for the dance. All SAC alumni are invited. Admittance charge for the dance will be 30 cents to SAC student body cardholders and 60 cents to alumni and non-cardholders. Santa Ana college clubs and organizations are helping to provide a warm welcome for SAC grads during the two day festivities. The college Interclub council made up of residents of all El Toro Impact On County Told By Marine Major Major Norman Turley, of the marine air station, El Toro, yesterday swapped a few Korean war stories with Anaheim Rotarians at their regular noon meeting and explained El Toro's economic impact on Orange county. Major Turley said El Toro is now one of two permanent marine stations in the nation basing the marine fighting air arm. Tactically, the station is stressing close air support of ground Christian Science Monitor Writer Speak at Fullerton JC Forum Christian... 2-24 fificance of the election rerom a national and interstandpoint, will be given st-hand account by one of it's foremost correspondsoce Drummond, chief of Christian Science Monitor's Boston Bureau, when he before Fullerton Public in Fullerton's Union High auditorium Thursday eveov. 13, at 7:30 p.m. The a is free to the public. ing traveled with both mental candidates aboard campaign trains, to accintimate information contheir views, promises public reactions, Drumis eminently qualified to the effects and trends of the new administration in Washington next year. The speaker returned to the United States after two years as Director of Information for the European Marshall Plan headquarters in Paris. This important position brought him into the middle of the cold war on the psychological front. Having taken a seat at many high policy meetings of American diplomats, Drummond brings to the lecture platform an authentic eye-witness account of the world struggle for freedom. He has been associated with the Christian Science Monitor since 1924 and has served as Assistant City Editor, European Editorial Manager, General News Editor, and Executive News Editor. Since 1940 his position with the paper has been chief of the Washington Bureau. Drummond knows intimately many of the federal government's leading figures and is a keen analyst of American foreign policy and the domestic political scene. He writes for American and British magazines and is heard frequently on forum radio broadcasts. He was responsible for directing an important segment of the U.S. government's propaganda offensive in 17 countries within recent years and his work took him into every country west of the Iron Curtain. Anaheim Gazetteer by JOHN S. NEUBAUER Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and every beast of the field. —Gen. 2:20. PREDICTION... In full view. By Marine Major Major Norman Turley, of the marine air station, El Toro, yesterday swapped a few Korean war stories with Anaheim Rotarians at their regular noon meeting and explained El Toro's economic impact on Orange county. Major Turley said El Toro is now one of two permanent marine stations in the nation basing the marine fighting air arm. Tactically, the station is stressing close air support of ground troops, a concept which largely has been perfected in Korea. The major told a few stories of how aircraft cooperated with front line ground elements in blasting a clearing through enemy concentrations holding up UN troops. El Toro personnel spend more than $68,000,000 annually in Orange county, the major estimated. He broke it down into payrolls and local purchases, and said surveys show El Toro money materially increases retail and service businesses in Orange county, particularly Santa Ana. He listed as chief recipients real estate, auto sales and service, appliances, food, insurance, and others participating in expenditures by the families of servicemen. One source of expenditure which the marine corps is attempting to alleviate by "education" Major Turley said, is the payment of a large number of traffic fines by the marines. Major Turley believes Anaheim is too far away from El Toro to participate heavily in the expenditures. However, whole sections of Santa Ana have been built to accommodate marines, he said, pointing out that marines reside mostly in Santa Ana, Tustin, Newport Beach, Orange, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach. rain-gauges is set for a wet winter... Gurman Hoppe, the Fullerton police judge who turns over his court to Judge John Shea af-of Oranco's outstanding amateur ter the first of the year is one weather prophets. He should be a meteorologist. He knows about as much about the weather as Dr. Irwin Krick, the Cal Tech scientist who became a rainmaker... Joe Martin, who operates an escort service (he's a crossing guard) in the north end of town, hopes that it won't be a wet winter. He's selfish—he doesn't want to get his feet wet... Herman Ziemer, the Norco manager of the State Employment Service, is spending a lot of time as a sidewalk supervisor. He's seeing to it that every brick is layed right in his new headgear... Gazetteer by JOHN S. NEUBAUER Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and every beast of the field. —Gen. 2:20. PREDICTION — In fall, during the American Legion tournament, the Old Gazetteer ventured to quip that Clare Van Hoorebeke's Anahi Colonists would bear watching. The Blue and Gold was going to have another football team, "What's he mean by that?" Van Hoorebeke is reported to have asked Kenny Eckels who skipped the successful Fullerton Tournament baseballers. Van told of being called by an administrator who remarked, "I see by the paper you're going to have another good team this year" We knew at the time that Van Hoorebeke faced a difficult rebuilding job. Graduation had taken most of his '51 team, but the Old Gazetteer has faith in that man's abilities. He's a builder! He's an inspirational leader to the boys! Van Hoorebeke is a tireless worker who has the knack of imparting his "know-how" to the lads playing for him. This has been one of the most successful football campaigns for Anaheim. True, the Colonists don't have a championship team, but they've more than held their own with all comers—including the team that will win the title. WHO'S WHO — Charles Rinehart, head of the Anahi social science department, is doing an outstanding job in teaching civies and government by making the subject matter interesting. It is men like him who help make democracy live. MEN AT WORK—Ken Hellyer who formerly sold cars in Anaheim is now on the west side of NITECAPSULE — When will some promoter come up with drive-in football games? Ellay. Glenn Fry, Anaheim's builder and civic leader, is one of the best wood-butchery in the business. Edwin (Bud) Tyreman is an Anaheimer with opportunities. He doesn't like being a grease monkey, so he pounds nails. Kurt Epstein used to be one of Anaheim's best dressed merchants, but ill health forced him out of business. His job is keeping healthy. We're pulling for him. He's a mighty swell guy. J. W. Stewart is an Anaheimer who keeps busy pulling wires—or, perhaps it would be better to say, making wires for others to pull. Charlie Griffith is an Anaheimer who does an outstanding chore keeping the record straight. Doug Hankins is a busy man these days keeping rolling stock rolling. He's what you might call a car doctor. QUERY — An Anaheimer asks: "Who was the first Anaheim mayor?" A.-Max Von Stroble, one of the most colorful figures in Anaheim history. BACKS CAMPBELL KAULBARS Mortuary Phone 3200 251 N. Lemon Homecoming Fete now and Friday organized campus groups is sponsoring the homecoming. SAC student President John Dowden and social commissioner, Marilyn Larzer, are co-chairmen for the event. Six SAC coeds are currently running for homecoming queen. She will be named during half-time ceremonies at the football game. Candidates for queen are sponsored by campus clubs and votes are bought for a penny a vote. Proceeds from the voting go to help pay for the SAC Christmas formal. Candidates for queen are Eleanor Pettis, Joanne Gruver, Mary Eckford, Patty Conzelman, Jeanine Oakes and Helen Weir, the latter an Anaheim girl. You never before drove a car like the 1953 PLYMOUTH! Will arrive at your Plymouth dealer's Thursday, November 20th drove a car like the 1953 PLYMOUTH! Will arrive at your Plymouth dealer's Thursday, November 20th Meeting the growing demands for service in timber-rich Roseburg has meant more than tripling the city’s telephone system since 1941 Roseburg, Oregon: Thriving Timber Town Meeting the growing demands for service in timber-rich Roseburg has meant more than tripling the city's telephone system since 1941 Roseburg, Oregon: Thriving Timber Town You may find this is the telephone story of your town, too Roseburg, key city of the nation's largest timber county—grew fast during the war and postwar era. Like many Western communities, its population almost doubled—from 4,900 in 1940 to nearly 8,500 today. Its annual income soared, retail sales in the county increased six-fold single decade. In these figures lies the reason our amazing telephone expansion in Roseburg. We had to grow fast to meet the needs of people in town—and more of those people needing telephone service. Major telephone construction in Roseburg began shortly after the war. We built a new central office building. And in February, 1951, a completely new dial telephone system was placed in service for Roseburg telephone subscribers; Altogether, we spent more than $3,000,000 expanding Roseburg's telephone system. Even so, because Roseburg is continuing to boom beyond all expectations, we cannot provide all telephones needed the moment requests for service come in. But, in the face of materials shortages, we'll keep doing our best to take care of present orders...as well as those which we know still lie ahead. Your telephone is one of today's best bargains Roseburg's telephone story has been told in hundreds of communities up and down the West. Just as the population has grown, the telephone is grown at an even faster rate...twice as fast, fact, in the territory we serve. For at today's price, the telephone is so economical more people can afford it...so useful, more people want it. Pacific Telephone