anaheim-gazette 1953-03-03
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82 YEARS OF DEVOTION TO ALL THAT
ANAHEIM
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST NEWSPAPER
ESTABLISHED IN 1860
VOLUME LXXXII
ANAHEIM, ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MORNING,
Iranian Mobs Turn o
OFFICER LEADS MOB AT MOSSADEGH'S HOME — Waving his cap and shouting threats, an Iranian army officer stands at the gates of the Tehran home of aged Premier Mohammed Mossadegh as mob mills around him. Mossadegh was forced to flee his home as mobs, some superporting the Shah and some supporting Mossadegh, rioted in the Iranian capital. The premier appeared to have gained control today when he had 70 top ranking retinues and active army officers arrested.
Chinese Commies Abandon Attempt to Crack UN Line
SEOUL (P)—Chinese Communist forces called off an attempt to crack the main allied line at Little Gibraltar on the rajn-soaked Korean western front Monday after one third of the Red attack force was killed or wounded in close-quarter battle.
The Eighth army said the front quieted after more than 200 Chinese were mowed down by U.S., French and Thai infantrymen and British Commonwealth gunners.
Overrun Americans
The Reds partially overran one U.S. unit, division officers reported from the front. American troops drove back the Chinese in 90 minutes.
Mortars and artillery shells were rained on the attacking force Sunday night as the Reds struck with a battalion (750) men at four points along a three mile front.
The Eighth army did not disclose the identity of the division fighting in the Little Gibraltar section, but French and Thai troops have fought in the U.S. Second division in past actions.
Two small Communist probes and a company sized attack were parried in smaller clashes before several hundred supply stacks nestled in nearby hills.
A thick cloud layer hid results. Other Superforts pounded Red frontline positions.
Except for the B-29 attacks rain and overcast stifled almost all air action.
Taylor Sees Long Walt
The new U.S. Eighth army commander, Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taythis troops were in the strongest entrenched positions of an army since World War I and expressed belief that the Reds would tire "sooner or later."
Taylor said the allies would win "no matter how long it takes" but admitted "We are sitting, waiting, and it may take a long time."
Calcuttans Burn Like in Effigy
CALCUTTA, India (P)—A communist mob burned President Elsenhower in effigy Monday as four U.S. destroyers lay in Calcutta harbor.
The demonstration apparently was sparked by the mistaken belief that the destroyers were Ko-tustin Expecting Fight Involving Police Dept.
Tustin has joined the citizen Orange county having police partment trouble, but this time is apparently political, according to predictions today that the council will come to grips at evening's meeting.
Charges a week ago by Couman Frank Bacon, who is a commissioner, that Chief E Johanson is not efficient and ordered certain supplies with consulting Bacon, were expected to be renewed tonight with opening and supporting delegation citizens on hand.
The other four councils Mayor Vincent Humeston, W Tadlock, William I. Miller Jerome C. Kidd, came to C Johanson's defense at the previous meeting.
One phase of the controversy is said, relates to the police chief recent-action in having circumsulated among parents, war of the growing use of marijuana.
Johanson was named po chief upon the death of four Chief Ray States, who reside
Mortars and artillery shells were rained on the attacking force Sunday night as the Reds struck with a battalion (750) men at four points along a three mile front.
The Eighth army did not disclose the identity of the division fighting in the Little Gibraltar section, but French and Thai troops have fought in the U.S. Second division in past actions.
Two small Communist probes and a company sized attack were parried in smaller clashes before dawn Monday on the central and eastern fronts.
Fog Reveals Foe
Heavy fog lifted just in time for UN defenders to see 100 to 150 Reds creeping up on allied positions north of the Punchbowl on the eastern front.
A hale of fire beat back the attack cutting down 17 Reds.
Far east air forces in Tokyo said its B-29 Superforts hit a 170-acre supply center near a main eastern front rail line Monday night. The target contained 30 supply storage buildings and tary uniform.
Before Judge Walter J. Labuy Bundy said:
"This Wave was so beautiful—she was a redhead that I just couldn't let the fact that I was only a civilian cheat me out of a date. After all, I was just in Chicago en route to Alaska where I intend to join the shrimp fleet."
Judge Labuy was sympathetic.
"I'll sentence you to one day, and consider it served," he said.
"Go on to the shrimp fleet, where bell bottom trousers without the rest of the uniform are QK."
The Shore Parolmen saw through Bundy's disguise because bell bottom trousers have been out-moded Navy uniform styles for a number of years.
TO ALL THAT IS GOOD IN ANAHEIM
ORANGE COUNTY
OLDEST NEWSPAPER
ESTABLISHED IN 1870
TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 1953
5 Cents per Copy
50 Cents per Month
No. 348
Return on U.S. Property
Pendulum of Favor Swings Back To Mossadegh; Army Brass Jailed
TEHRAN, Iran (P)—Roaming mobs, swinging to the support of Premier Mohammed Mossadegh, shouted anti-American slogans and stoned American homes and cars in Tehran Monday. The aged but durable premier seemed to be regaining the upper hand after a riotous weeknd precipitated by gangs of street demonstrators who rallied to the defense of young Shah Mohammed Pexa Pahlevi when it appealed he was about to be forced to leave the country.
The premier's police rounded up 70 retired and active army officers, some of whom were accused of haranguing the mobs that shouted for the 'Shah or death.' Amidi Nouri, owner of the opposition newspaper Dad which first reported the officers' arrests, was seized by police. But Foreign Minister Hossein Fatemi denied reports abroad that Tehran's chief of police had been arrested.
Maj. Fazollah Goghaddam, head of one of the city's police sections was stabbed in the cheek in a brush with Communist demonstrators.
Meanwhile, members of the pro-Mossadegh factions of parliament prepared to bed down Monday
Local Building Permits Set New Record in Feb.
The highest number of building permits issued in a single month in Anaheim were granted during February, Building Inspector Homer Wallace said, when 227 permits were approved.
Of the record-breaking total, 213 permits were designated as residential units, 196 of these being single-family homes.
The month's figures also marked the second highest month in value, with the value of the permits being set at $1,886,675 as
RANGOON, Burma seriously wounded by a area. The incident tussled viously trying to get all there was official silence sides.
The Russians were CoM. Anikine, 36, embassy flottery, and a Dr. Barbizo, attached to the embassy.
They drove in an embassy mobile into the military in the eastern side of Rangoon after midnight, police autopsal. The sentry three thundered them to halt. Then a burst from an automatic Barbizo suffered wound face, neck and right arm was shot in the abdomen.
At a hospital a stocky embassy official took up ghe corridor to their specimen He refused to let reporter to the wounded men and to answer questions himself.
At the Russian embassy secretary, Nicolai Statkev fused to discuss the include all questions, he replied: "Burmese police and forefice."
The foreign office and would give no further de At the same time another of Burma's delicate relation her Communist neighbor up in parliament.
Premier U Nu told par Monday night Burma will formal complaint to the
Amidi Nouri, owner of the opposition newspaper Dad which first reported the officers' arrests, was seized by police. But Foreign Minister Hossein Fatiemi denied reports abroad that Tehran's chief of police had been arrested.
Maj. Fazollah Goghaddam, head of one of the city's police sections was stabbed in the cheek in a brush with Communist demonstrators.
Meanwhile, members of the pro-Mossadegh factions of parliament prepared to bed down Monday night in the parliament building where they have been camped since Sunday morning.
Until further developments it appeared that the weekend troubles were a standoff—the Shah's departure from the country was prevented or delayed, and Mossadegh, who at one stage was chased out of his house in his pajamas by a mob, was still premier. But the big question was still unsettled as to whether Mossadegh or the 33-year-old Shah was real master.
The whole outburst, it was believed, arose from Mossadegh's efforts to make himself complete master of Iran before letting the nation know that negotiations to settle the oil nationalization issue with Britain have failed again.
No one was injured in the anti-American mob actions but United States point four offices and consular offices were closed throughout the city and embassy personnel were ordered to stay off the streets.
American houses on Roosevelt ave. and cars driven by the embassy attache, Warren Silver, administrative counsellor Laurence C. Frank and embassy secretary Betty White, were stoned.
In the main, mobs shouting "Death or Mossadegh," were masters of the streets.
Two Killed, 20 Injured In County Weekend Traffic
Death of two San Diego men, crushed under a heavy oil tank truck at Dana Point Saturday night, and injury of a score of persons in Orange county's week-end traffic, was reported by the California highway patrol.
Dean L. Ireland, 26, and his passenger, Lawrence Seats, 63, died in the wreckage of Ireland's car when it skidded against the side of the big tanker, while ed over the automobile. The driver, James M. McCallu, Huntington Beach, was slightly injured.
Three persons were injured Manchester and Harbor vards, Anaheim, Saturday at p.m. when cars driven by Orosco, 19, Garden Grove Ruben L. Banuelos, 19, Ana, collided. Hurt were Orosco, 17, Garden Grove Mary Cabello, 38, and dau Adele, 12, of Santa Ana.
Norman C. Winters, 33 Angeles, receiving minor injuries when a doughnut truck hit driving overturned on Mancheboulevard near Katella Road heim, at 4 a.m. Monday; placed in the jail ward a county hospital, facing chair stealing the truck from Angeles firm.
Mrs. Laura Bowers of Red suffered major injuries at a.m. Sunday when her car a divider strip on Tustin at Santiago boulevard, Olive car turned end over end. Bowers was brought to An Community hospital.
Injured in other crashes Daniel J. Kohlstadt, 29, Canyon; Lynn Smith, 16; Mesa; Ed H. Falk; Holly Mrs. Pauline James, 28; Mrs.
Cypress Mother Attacked by Unidentified Man
Search was being made today may enter the subdivision before final plans are drawn, for the present proposed tract would completely isolate their property from entrance to any road.
The commission was held up for nearly 30 minutes while waiting for a legal opinion from City Attorney Preston Turner when the members disagreed on whether a resolution required a simple majority or a two-third majority for approval.
The question arose when the commission voted four to three in favor of permitting the construction of five family units on two lots at La Palma ave. and Clementine st.
Commissioners E. P. Hanwood, Jake Schumacher, and Al Rieut-colored the claim.
Cypress Mother Attacked by Unidentified Man
Search was being made today for an unidentified rapist who entered the Cypress home of a young mother of five children, who is expecting a sixth child in several months, and criminally attacked her early Sunday morning.
Officers held to the theory that the man actually had intended to attack a young unmarried woman who lives next door, the two houses being virtually identical in appearance. He picked the wrong house in the darkness, they believe.
The husband of his victim had left at 2:30 a.m. for his job as milker in a dairy. An hour later, the man made his way into the house and to the bedroom of the young mother. He held a knife at her throat, threatening her life to compel her to submit.
The sheriff's office withheld the name of the woman victim.
Stolen from a United Auto Workers office in Maywood last week-end, a small safe was found Monday morning near 9900 Page st., Buena Park.
The safe was turned over to Fullerton police who, in turn, transferred it to Maywood police. They said it was not determined whether the save had been entered.
Weather
Mostly sunny weather Tuesday and Wednesday but a few clouds around mountains at times; slightly warmer afternoon.
Commissioners E. P. Hapood, Jake Schumacher, and Al Rieutcel opposed the plan because of two units which were to have been built over the garages. The other three residences were to be built in connecting one-story buildings in the front of the lot, satisfactory to the commission.
On finding that the resolution required the two-thirds majority, the contractors, Pebly Bros., 644 Carlton st., Anaheim, agreed to eliminate the two story building in favor of four one-story units, acceptable to the commission.
Garbageman Miss You? He's Earlier
Wonder why your garbage wasn't picked up yesterday?
There's a simple explanation; the garbage collector is coming earlier these days.
Warren Jaycox, who began collecting garbage for the city yesterday, makes the rounds at 7 a.m., slightly earlier than previous collectors.
So to be safe, and not have your garbage left until another day, put your garbage out the day before, or at least by 7 a.m., Jaycox suggests.
Burglaries entered a market operated by Louis K. Davis at Freeway Park Sunday night or early Monday and stole food but no cash.
The loot, as Davis reported it to the sheriff's office, consisted of assorted meat, potatoes and shortening, all valued at $84.35.
A padlock was pried off the front door of the market to gain entry.
Mrs. Laura Bowers of Reeds suffered major injuries at 1 a.m. Sunday when her car ran a divider strip on Tustin at Santiago boulevard, Olivecar turned end over end. Bowers was brought to Anaheim Community hospital.
Injured in other crashes Daniel J. Kohlstadt, 29, Moo Canyon; Lynn Smith, 16, Mesa; Ed H. Falk, Holly Mrs. Pauline James, 28, Mrs. thy James, 49, Cynthia Jamie and Linda Newell, 11, all of Angeles; Donald R. Wilkin Los Alamitos, Sandro Allen, 8, Newport Beach.
Flood Control System Sought For Anaheim
Plans for a flood control system in Anaheim were discussed centently when representative Anaheim, Flood Control district and two consulting engineers attempted to find a solution.
George Holyoke and A. Daniels, city engineers; Budd and H. J. Osborne, control district engineers, are consulting firm of Harrison Wooley proposed three ground drains along the main flow of the flood waters in northern Anaheim.
The drains, spaced between Orangethorpe ave. and La Linda ave., would connect at La Linda ave., at a point in west Anaheim.
Two other suggested solutions are the construction of a dam in Carbon Canyon source of flood water, or annel to carry the water into Santa Ana river.
All three plans may be used for future City Adminisher Keith Murdoch said, but for present only the one is being sided.
RUSSIANS SHOT BY BURMESE
Guard in Restricted Area;
No Comment by Either Side
RANGOON, Burma (P)—Two members of the Russian embassy staff were shot and seriously wounded by a Burmese sentry early Monday when they entered a restricted army area. The incident turned a new spotlight on this Far Eastern sector where Burma is nervously trying to get along with her Red China neighbor and her Western friends. But there was official silence on all sides.
The Russians were Constantin M. Anikine, 36, embassy first secretary, and a Dr. Barbizo, 33, also attached to the embassy.
They drove in an embassy automobile into the military area on the eastern side of Rangoon well after midnight, police authorities said. The sentry three times ordered them to halt. Then he fired the burst from an automatic rifle. Barbizo suffered wounds in his face, neck and right arm. Anikine was shot in the abdomen.
At a hospital a stocky Russian embassy official took up guard in the corridor to their special ward. He refused to let reporters speak to the wounded men and declined to answer questions himself.
At the Russian embassy second secretary, Nicolal Statskevih, re-used to discuss the incident. To ask questions, he replied: "Ask the Burmese police and foreign office."
The foreign office and police would give no further details.
At the same time another angle of Burma's delicate relations with her Communist neighbor bobbed in parliament.
Premier U. Nu told parliament Monday night Burma will make a formal complaint to the United
At the Russian embassy second secretary, Nicolal Statskevih, refused to discuss the incident. To ask questions, he replied: "Ask the Burmese police and foreign office."
The foreign office and police would give no further details.
At the same time another angle in Burma's delicate relations with Communist neighbor bobbed in parliament.
Premier U Nu told parliament Monday night Burma will make a formal complaint to the United Nations on the "aggressive activities" of Nationalist Chinese troops in Burma's northeastern region, ordering Communist China.
Nu told the chamber of deputies the government had given "serious thought" to the question of Chinese nationalists encroaching in Burmese soil as far back as 1950, but to avoid any complications with Red China had decided to negotiate with the Nationalists in Formosa through the good offices of the U. S. and India.
But now, the Nationalist Chinese are "increasing their fearful deeds" near the frontier.
ON THE WARPATH—Anaheim Chamber membership drive workers are doing it Indian-style this year. From left, Vera Auest, Bob Borden, membership chairman, Jeff Palin and President Dick Gay display the scoring table to be used by the three "Indian tribes" as they seek "scalps". Gay shoots at the mark (a membership of 400) with his bow and arrow.
Chamber Directors Kick off Two-Day Membership Drive this A.M.
Residents on Anaheim's eastern frontier (near Dorothy-Wade's dinner house) doubtless believe Dorothy Ford, the proprietress, is entertaining a whole herd of wild Indians in the cafe in true renegade style—and they aren't far wrong.
It began at the stroke of 7:30 this morning, and it really isn't a hangover from the 1952 Hallowe'en celebration. A bunch of pale-faced Redskins who claimed to be Hopi, Apache and Navajo Indians, have taken the place over and they're really out for scalps—at least 50 of them.
A look under the feathers and warpaint would reveal the fact that these Indians have been around for sometime, mostly around the Chamber of Commerce.
There's Big Chief Dick
There’s Big Chief Dick Gay, otherwise known as the Chamber president; Chief Wilson Phelps of the Hopi who claims his tribe will take the 50 scalps by themselves; a squaw, Vera Auest of the Apache; and Chief Bob Borden of the Navajo. Each leads a warparty.
The pow-wow is the beginning of a concentrated, three-nation, two-day drive to get the scalp (membership) count of the Chamber up to 400 for the first time in its history.
Big Chief Gay stated this morn-
ing that the goal this year is to unite all interests in the city behind the Chamber's Plan of Progress for Greater Anaheim.
Vera Auest's party includes J. B. Collings, B. W. Jordan, Fred Krelin, Stuart Manly, Tom Quayle, C. R. Young, Helen Mitchell, Harold Smith, Roger McGuire, Clyde Cromer, Paul King, J. B. Holmes, and John Ganahl.
Borden's braves include Rex Coons, Harry Horn, Claude Owens, Ray Reafsynder, Oscar Schultz, Walter Swanberger, H. Wills Watkins, Larry Henderson, Ed Hawkins, George Relish, Robert Jaynes, Adolf Schoeps and Robert Boney.
The Phelos party includes Dr. Sam Gendel, Bill Walker, Wilson Phelos, Robert Rossberg, Walt Taylor, Tom Yellis, Stan Whieldon, E. J. Power, Robert Sweeney, Jeff Palin, Joe Scholz, Robert Grange and Leavitt Ford.
The team bringing in the most scalps are to receive a steak dinner at the expense of the two losing tribes as a reward. Other awards will be given the top two-man team in each tribe and the top team in the whole contest.
Borden, Chamber vice-president in charge of membership, sald the contest will continue today and tomorrow, with final reports to be in at the Chamber office by tomorrow night.
Daily Living for Peace of Mind
Daily Living for Peace of Mind
Editor's note: This is one of a series of daily articles by Anaheim ministers and is published by the Gazette in the interest of the kind of daily living that leads to contentment and happiness in troubled times.
Model Prayer
By The Rev. JOHN K. SAVILLE
St. Michael's Episcopal Church
When His disciples said to Him, "Lord, teach us to pray," Jesus answered with a great model prayer containing the three basic steps which we should follow in all our praying.
"Our Father which art in heaven." The initial requirement for a person who would pray is to get in touch with God. He is the Creator and Redeemer. Our first duty is to listen, to worship, and to adore. A great religious leader said once that if you have ten minutes for prayer, spend five of them getting ready; and he meant by this pure, free undivided contemplation of the goodness and beauty of God.
"Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, as in heaven, so in earth." This is called intercession, interceding with God in behalf of others and society as a whole. How characteristic that Jesus should have told us to think of others next after putting ourselves in right relationship with God!
"Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us, and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil." After we have raised our hearts to God and also have prayed for others, then and only then is it proper to offer a prayer of petition for ourselves. Some people limit themselves to petitionary prayers. More make them primary, beginning every meditation with "Lord, help ME." But in praying, as in every other aspect of living, the same spiritual law of receiving through self-giving is operative. He who would save his life alone, in prayer, will lose it, while he who loses his life in good thoughts for God and others will find the greatest spiritual return.
Adoration, intercession, petition—if we keep these three basic elements in proper order and proportion, our meditations will help us in all that we undertake for our fellowmen and will bring us, as never before, "the peace that passeth understanding."