anaheim-gazette 1955-10-27
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Keeping Track of Local Servicemen
Army Pvt. Billie Walker, son of Mrs. Edgar A. Hiller, 10012 Forrest lane, Anaheim, is playing in the backfield on the 38th Infantry Regiment's football team at Fort Lewis, Wash.
Private Walker’s team is scheduled to play against seven other regimental level teams at the fort.
An assistant machine gunner in the regiments Company E, Walker entered the Army last January and completed basic training at Fort Ord.
Round St. Martin, carpodoman’s mate second class, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Aldeas St. Martin of 218 N. Philadelphia st., Anaheim, and husband of the former Miss Lorraine M. Picotte of Northridge, Mass., was promoted to his present rate Sept. 16, while serving aboard the submarine USS Cutlass.
Before entering the Navy in June 1952, St. Martin was graduated from Northbridge High school and was employed by the Eagle Printing Co., Northbridge.
Marine Pvt. James T. Walsh, son of Mrs. Dorothy L. Walsh of 901 Hanover, Anaheim, landed in Japan Oct. 3 for duty with the 3rd Marine Division's 1st Amphibious Tractor Battalion.
In amphibious operations, amphibious tractors bring the assault waves ashore while furnishing artillery support with their 75 millimeter howitzers.
Camp McGill is 40 miles south of Tokyo.
Thomas J. Stagner, fireman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Stagner, 328 S. Olive Anaheim, is scheduled to return here in late October aboard the destroyer, USS Trathen.
While on a six-month cruise in the Far East, the ship operated with first carrier Task Force 77.
Training exercises included anti-submarine and anti-aircraft exercises, shore bombardment and plane guarding for aircraft carriers.
The Trathen visited Pearl Harbor T. H.; Midway Island; the Philippines; Hong Kong, and ports in Japan and Formosa.
Unless a friend turns out to be trump it's time to discard.
HALLOWEEN GOODIES
CHEWING GUM
CANDY BARS
Fleers Bubble Candy
15¢ Cracker Jack 70¢ 1.39
HALLOWEEN GOODIES
CHEWING GUM
CANDY BARS
Fleers Bubble Gum
15¢ Cracker Jack 70¢ 1.39
Rexbury Pure Candies for Trick-or-Treaters!
Gum Drops 22¢ Halloween Mix 35¢
Jelly Beans 28¢ Candy Lollipops 43¢
APPLE CIDER
MARTINELLI
qt. 29¢ gal. jug 1.09
Cider-Smooth, mellow,
WESTFAIR
qt. 19¢ gal. jug 59¢
Half-gallon Jug, 37¢
MILD CHEESE
OREGON CHEDDAR per lb. 39¢
weighed and wrapped.
TUNA CHUNK STYLE Breast O' Chicken 25¢
SEA TRADER CHUNK STYLE, 6-oz. can, 19¢
SALAD DRESSING qt. 39¢
DUCHESS Brand. Top quality, pt. jar; 25¢.
SOUPS CAMPBELL'S Brand 29¢ cans
Cream Chicken, Chicken Noodle, Chicken w/Rice.
ZEE NAPKINS per package 10¢
White Dinner or Regular Colored, Regular Size.
BEVERAGES 2 full quarts 35£
CRAGMDNT Brand. Ass't soft drinks and mixers.
PEACHES HIGHWAY SLICED 29-oz. can 23£
Yellow Cling 16-oz. can, 17£
CASTLE CREST PEACHES. Clings, 18-oz. can, 19£.
COOKIES 2 bag 49£
MELROSE. Ginger, Vanilla, Lemon, Chocolate Sapee.
CHU ROA
USDA Choice Beef.
Tender, juicy! Cut from shoulder of beef. trimmed before weighing.
ROUND BONE CUT OF CH
BEEF SHORT RI
BOILING BEEF
GROUND BEEF
FRANKFURTER
Pork SPAREII
SLICED BACON
PORK LIVER
HALIBUT STEA
FROZEN FOODS
LEMONADE 6 oz. 9¢ 12 oz. 17¢
FREE 7-oz. Busy Baker box Sodas with the purchase of 1-lb. PIRATE'S GOLD both for 31¢
PEACHES
Yellow Cling 16 oz. can 17¢
CASTLE CREST PEACHES. Clings 18 oz. can 19¢
COOKIES
MELROSE. Ginger, Vanilla, Lemon, Chocolate.
FROZEN FOODS
LEMONADE 6 oz. can 9¢ 12 oz. can 17¢
GRAPE JUICE 6 oz. can 15¢
STRAWBERRIES SUCED 10 oz. can 23¢
RASPBERRIES 10 oz. can 23£
BROCCOLI SPEARS 10 oz. pkg 19¢
WHOLE BABY OKRA 10 oz. pkg 19¢
Curtsy BAKERY Special
ORANGE FRUIT ANGEL CAKE
Full ring. Made the way you'd make it with home ingredients.
Reg. 47¢
Cinnamon Rolls 25¢
Curtsy Baked.
POPCORN
Sunny Hill Yellow or white 15¢
(2-pound package, 29¢.)
Instani Coffee 6 oz. can 1.39
Canterbury Tea GRAND SIZE of 24¢
Reg. size 16's, 19's, 48's, 49'
Apple Butter Shade Brand 25¢
Right to limit reserved. No sales to dealers.
Sale tax collected on feasible items.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS., FRI, SAT., OCTOBER
27, 28, 29, 1955, AT SAFEWAY STORES IN THIS AREA.
FREE 7-oz. Busy Baker box Sodas both for 31¢
1-lb. PIRATE'S GOLD for box GRAHAMS
GREEN GIANT PEAS 17 oz. can 19¢
POTATOES Princella Sweet 16 oz. can 18¢
RED APPLES
WASHINGTON
Crispl Tangyt Good!
BANANAS CENTRAL AMERICAN GOLDEN ARTICHOKES CUCUMBERS
SAFE
PEARS
Make this, remove peel, core
pears into halves or quarfet peeled fruit is to stand
minutes before packing,
into slightly salted water
vent discoloration. Drain
roll 3 to 5 minutes in thin
medium syrup, Pack into sterears. A teaspoon of lemon
adds a real tang to each
FILL JARS WITH SYRUP TO
1/2 inch of top of jar, add
teaspoon mint extract and
pure green fruit coloring
desired shade. Put on cap,
tight and process for 25
minutes in boiling water bath.
USES, shore bombardment and
guarding for aircraft carriage. Trathen visited Pearl Harbor H.; Midway Island; the
pines; Hong Kong, and ports
and Formosa.
LESS a friend turns out to be a
it's time to discard.
PEAR HONEY
8 cups chopped pears
1 lemon
5 cups sugar
1 teaspoon ginger
Wash, core, pare, finely chop
and measure pears. Add lemon
(sliced), sugar, ginger, and ½
cup water to pears. Boll until thick. Pour boiling water and flavoring into hot jars; seal at once.
PEAR CONSERVE
5 pounds firm pears
(15 cups if sliced)
10 cups sugar
1 pound seedless raisins
rind of 2 oranges
juice of 3 oranges and 2 lemons
Peel pears and cut in small pieces. Add sugar and let stand overnight. Then add raisins, orange rind cut in small pieces and juices of oranges and lemons. Cook until thick, about 30-35 minutes. Pour into sterilized jars and seal while hot.
A life is more precious than the time you'll save speeding.
LAW IN ACTION
EXTRA! FREEDOM!
Suppose Joseph Q. Thronk,
Transpace Journal, put his space ship down in California for a first hand story of our government.
Could you give it to him?
Or would you go on and on with complaints about taxes, elections, the price of groceries, co-existence wrongs. Without an informed, educated and powerful public opinion to check the whole operation, you could say, the mere separation of the executive legislative and judicial powers might fail to protect the people's rights.
You might try to tell Mr. Thronk that we oppose personal or abusive government: No king as a monarchy; no absolute fuehrer or leader as in fascism or nazism; no absolute class as in communist society.
SAFEWAY FOODS
IN NOVEMBER
MAMIE EISENHOWER
Family Circle
CHUCK ROAST
39¢
SEVEN BONE OR BLADE
FISH SHORT RIBS
USDA CHOICE 29¢
BILING BEEF
USDA CHOICE 9¢
OUND BEEF AS FAMOUS AS SAFEWAY STEAKS 39¢
ANKFURTERS SOMERSET SKINLESS 45¢
k SPARERIBS SMALL SIZE 3 LBS. OR LESS!
CED BACON GRADE 'B' Popular brands 45¢
RK LIVER SLICED OR IN PIECE 29¢
LIBUT STEAKS CAPTAIN'S CHOICE 45¢
HOLIDAY FRUIT CAKE More than half fruits and nuts baked for an old time flavor treat 49¢
LAW IN ACTION
EXTRA! FREEDOM!
Suppose Joseph Q. Thronk, Transpace Journal, put his space ship down in California for a first hand story of our government.
Could you give it to him?
Or would you go on and on with complaints about taxes, elections, the price of groceries, co-existence and such like? No? Good. What would you tell Mr. Thronk?
That we agree with our first law makers that no government has any just power without the consent of the governed? That we put government under law to protect from tyrants our "unallenable" rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness?
That the courts check Congress and the President, and the President checks the Congress and the courts etc?
But could you tell Mr. Thronk how the people can check all branches of government from conspiring as they do elsewhere, to take the people's rights away?
Well yes, you could tell him about the first Amendment to our Constitution. There the free press can tell the public of its abuses. There the people can assemble and petition for redress of their wrongs. Without an informed, educated and powerful public opinion to check the whole operation, you could say, the mere separation of the executive legislative and judicial powers might fail to protect the people's rights.
You might try to tell Mr. Thronk that we oppose personal or solute government: No king as a monarchy; no absolute fuehre or leader as in fascism or nazism; no absolute class as in communism; no absolute state as in state socialism; and no absolute masses as in mob rule.
By now Mr. Thronk would be trying to fight his way back to his floating press room. Grab his coat tails and tell him a few more things:
Without independent courts, our rights would be nothing but loft words. Through our writ "habeas corpus," for example you can get an open court at once to look into the causes of your imprisonment. You can demand and get a speedy trial, before a impartial judge and jury, when the state has to prove you a guilty or let you off.
But nobody from outer space could believe all this: Yet, Mr. Thronk, Freedom is still the world's biggest news story. The Freedom to worship; to think; express our thoughts; and, unde law, to act for our own good.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Two recent graduates of Anaheim Union High school have announced their intentions to wed. They are Miss Ruth Hamie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver K. Foster, formerly of Anaheim and now of La Habra, and Vince DeVine, son of the Vincent C. Venneys of 307, W. Chartres.
The wedding date has not been set. They were graduated in 18 and are now attending Whitt College.
EVERY DOLLAR PLACED WITH US
BY THE 10th of November
STARTS EARNING
OUR CURRENT INTEREST RATE OF
CED BACON
RK LIVER
LIBUT STEAKS
HOLIDAY FRUIT CAKE
TABLE SYRUP
APPLES
WASHINGTON JONATHANS
Crispl Tangyf Good!
CENTRAL AMERICAN
SHOKES CUMBERS
SAFEWAY
135 S. Lemon St., Anaheim
10th of November
STARTS EARNING
OUR CURRENT INTEREST RATE OF
3 ½%
FROM THE 1st
YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT WITH US EARNS
Our Current Interest Rate of 3 ½%
and is INSURED UP TO $10,000
ANAHEIM BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION
Founded June 20, 1921
On the Friendly Corner — Anaheim, Calif.
Center and Lemon Sts.
Phones KE 5-2158—KE 5-21
DAN—Pontiac's 1956 two-door sedan, the most ecorific rides on a 122 inch wheelbase with 206 inches
Strato-Streak V-8 engine gives it power and performanced range. "Vogue" two-toning and luxurious intake it the best dollar for dollar buy.
Native Daughters Of Golden West Planning Float
Mrs. Madelaine Hainlin presided at the meeting of Grace Parlor No. 242 Native Daughters of the Golden West when Helen Renard and Betty Bennett were elected and installed as vice-presidents of the organization.
Plans were completed for the decoration of a float to be entered in the Hallowe'en parade. Special introduction was given deputy grand president Delinda Fallon of Santa Ana and supervising district deputy grand president Mrs. Olive Trook of Grace Parlor.
William J. Coyle Death Last Friday
William J. Coyle, 69, a native of Kansas who moved to Anaheim in 1946, residing at 9821 Webster Street, died early Friday evening, at his home, after an extended illness.
He is survived by his wife, Bessie S. Coyle; one daughter, Mrs. E. M. Edwards of Laguna Beach and one sister, Mrs. E. C. Wellman of Kansas.
He was a member of the United Presbyterian Church.
Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 2 o'clock. Rev. Harold Scott, pastor of the United Presbyterian Church of Santa Ana, officiated.
Hilgenfeld mortuary was in
Married in East
George Herbert Lovett, son of Mrs. George Lovett of Anaheim, was married in Providerice, R.I., to Miss Elizabeth Buzdigian, daughter of the Elias Buzdigians of that city. The marriage took place in St. Vartanantz Armenian Apostolic Church with Rev. Nishan Papazian officiating.
The newlyweds motored to Niagara Falls and then went to Canada for a honeymoon trip.
Lovett attended Anaheim Union High School before serving four years in the Navy.
Miss Beatrice Fishman Passes Saturday Evening
Miss Beatrice B. Fishman, 44, a native of Philadelphia but a resident of California for five years and Anaheim for two months, died Saturday evening at the Anaheim Community hospital after an extended illness.
She is survived by her mother, Minnie Fishman of Jackson Heights, New York, and one brother, Samuel Fishman of St. Louis.
The cremated remains are being sent to St. Louis where memorial services will be conducted. Hilgenfeld mortuary was in charge of arrangements.
Edwin Teyler to Wed Norco Girl in June
A June wedding is being planned by Edwin Teyler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert G. Teyler of 512 E. Chartres st., and his fiancee, Patricia Donham, daughter of the Monroe J. Donhams of Norco.
The betrothal announcement was made by the bride-elect's parents. She will be graduated from Fullerton High school in June. He is a graduate of Anaheim High school, class of 1951, a Korean war veteran, is now associated with Hunt Foods, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Baert of 520 E. Vermont St. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Cpl. Peter Howard Strupp of the U.S. Marine Corps, stationed at 29 Palms. He is the son of the J.P. Strupps of Pluckein, N.J. The announce-
He is survived by his wife, Bessie S. Coyle; one daughter, Mrs. E.M. Edwards of Laguna Beach and one sister, Mrs. E.C. Wellman of Kansas.
He was a member of the United Presbyterian Church.
Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 2 o'clock. Rev. Harold Scott, pastor of the United Presbyterian Church of Santa Ana, officiated.
Hilgenfeld mortuary was in charge of arrangements.
Weight Control Classes Held
Weight control classes are being held each Monday between the hours of one and two o'clock at the Farm Bureau hall, 1916 Chapman Ave., Orange.
Those who would profit by nutrition notes and "moral support" of a group while reducing are invited, says Marian Prentiss, home advisor of the Orange County Extension Service.
TIME TO PLANT
Plant now for Christmas bloom—Winter flowering sweet peas.
Plant these seeds now in the vegetable garden and let the fall rains help water: Beets, broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, Chinese cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, endive, kale, kohl rabi, lettuce, mustard, parsley, parsnips, radish, rutabaga, spinach, turnip.
Dig up gladiolus bulbs, allow them to dry for one week in shallow trays or boxes. Dust the stored bulbs with DDT or Lindane to kill the thrips—California Asn. of Nurserymen.
Slick Pepper Coring — Use a curved grapefruit knife to remove the core from green peppers you plan to stuff. Curve of knife cuts closely around inside of pepper shell.
HILGENFELD MORTUARY
Faithful, Courteous Service
i20 E.Broadway,Anaheim
PHONE KE 5-4105
WARNING
TEST RATE OF
2% FROM THE 1st
June. He is a graduate of Anaheim High school, class of 1951, a Korean war veteran, is now associated with Hunt Foods, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Baert of 520 E. Vermont St. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Cpl. Peter Howard Strupp of the U.S. Marine Corps, stationed at 29 Palms. He is the son of the J. P. Strupps of Pluckein, N. J. The announcement was made at Helen's 21st birthday party.
"Hey Mabel,
BLACK LABEL!"
CARLING
Black Label
BEER
REAL EASTERN BEER,
at the WESTERN PRICE!
CARLING BREWING CO.
Cleveland, G. St. Louis Mo. Delleville, IA.
HILGENFELD MORTUARY
Faithful, Courteous, Service
i20 E.Broadway,Anaheim
PHONE KE 5-4105
HAMMOND ORGANS
The SPINET
All model Hammond Organ have the new, Touch-Response Percussion Control; enjoy the new added tones like chimes, harp, xylophone, marimba, etc.
Your Old Piano Accepted In Exchange
DANZ - SCHMIDT PIANO CO.
520 No. Main St., Santa Ana
KI 2-5140
100 Planos to Choose From
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT