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anaheim-gazette 1960-07-07

1960-07-07 · Anaheim Gazette · page 2 of 14 · OCR glm-ocr
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A2-Anaheim Gazette (Anaheim, Thursday, July 7, 1960) ANAHEIM GAZETTE NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION GAZETTE PUBLISHING CO., INC. BERT J. ABRAHAM President MRS. HENRY KUCHEL Vice-President THEODORE KUCHEL Secretary-Treasurer SENATOR THOS. KUCHEL Director BERT J. ABRAHAM and TED KUCHEL Co-Publishers NEW PHONE: PR 2-1800 Published Thursday of each week at 259 East Center Street, Anaheim, California Legal Adjudication No. A 22441 Entered as second class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879. All rights herein are reserved. SUBSCRIPTION: $3.00 per year, payable in advance. Government Seeks Young Men for Vital Radio Engineering Career Precaution Warned In Using Firearms "Bang! Bang! You're dead!" Sound like a child's game? It Advice Offered on Using Rural Roads What's it like driving on roads? "At times it can be a little exploring another planet," the National Safety Council day. "Even if you use rural lot," said the Council, "along smooth highways at 60 may make you overconfident you reach secondary roads. You may fail to keep an eye for the unexpected." What could loom up around very next curve? "A two-foot chuckhole, a moving tractor, a flock of chick or someone coming out of a lane," said the Council. Because almost three time many persons are killed each in rural traffic accidents as ban areas, the Council offers tips on rural motoring: 1. Slow down right away you reach gravel or dirt And don't let country black fool you — you may hit a or a bump and land in a ditch. 2. Always stay on the side of the road on country'c—and on city curves, too. 3. When going up a hill, down, keep to the right and your horn to warn another that might be in the middle of road on the other side of the. 4. Watch out for farm vehicles darting out from drive Start slowing down the m you see such a vehicle in lane ahead. Vital Radio Engineering Career A career in one of the liveliest and most interesting professions is open to anyone who can qualify as a radio engineer with the Federal Communications Commission. Engineers are a "must" to the Commission in looking after its now nearly 2,500,000 radio authorizations. These represent more than 500,000 radio stations in about 65 categories which use a total of some 1,800,000 transmitters. In addition, the Commission has to minister to nearly 2,000,000 radio amateur and more than 1,700,000 commercial. Its present force of about 300 engineers is inadequate to keep up with this mounting technical job. So it is looking for additional engineering assistance. The Commission is particularly desirous of obtaining young people who want to make government radio-engineering a career. Such opportunities are open to college seniors and graduates in engineering; also persons with some experience in electronics in general. These positions pay a starting salary of $4,490 to $4,940 a year for those in GS-5 grade and $5,430 to $5,880 a year for those in GS-7 grade. Those interested should write to the Executive Secretary, Board of U.S. Civil Service Examiners, Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C., and request Announcement 187-B. Engineers who feel that they can qualify by education and experience for higher grades should write for Announcement 211-B. Engineering positions are open in Washington and at various FCC field offices which are located throughout the U.S. to the inclusion of Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. Transportation expenses covering movement of household goods as well as travel to the first place of assignment are paid by the Commission. Precaution Warned In Using Firearms "Bang! Bang! You're dead!" Sound like a child's game? It is! Yet, many adults play the game unintentionally — with real guns. Every year, the National Safety Council points out, about 2,400 persons are killed accidentally by firearms. The main victims are persons 15-24 years of age, and children under 15, in that order. Many firearm fatalities come in off-hunting months, such as during the summer. Firearms take about 200 lives every month of the year. Exclusive of home deaths, people using the weapons kill 1,200 persons annually. The 1,200 away-from-home firearms deaths don't always involve hunting according to the Council, whose records show only 1 out of 3 away-from-home firearms deaths results from a hunting accident. In Illinois, for example, more deaths in a recent year came from such assorted activities as playing with a gun, handling a gun and target shooting than from actually hunting. What actions led to the Illinois firearms fatalities? Handing a gun to another person and wrestling for a gun, for instance. One death came in a freak accident: Someone thought Russian roulette would be greater sport than hunting. How can firearms accidents be avoided? 1. Treat all firearms as if they were loaded. 2. Don't release the safety until just before you shoot. 3. Never fool around with a lethal weapon, loaded or unloaded. 4. Don't clean a firearm when lots of people are around. Make sure all cartridges have been removed from the weapon. 5. Keep firearms unloaded and out of reach of children and irresponsible adults. 6. Never point a weapon at anything you don't intend to shoot side of the road on country roads—and on city curves, too. 3. When going up a hill down, keep to the right and your horn to warn another that might be in the middle of road on the other side of the lane ahead. 5. Slow down when approaching a bridge — many afte row for two cars at the same time If a car approaches a bridge same time you do, don't tr beat it across. Stop and wait till it crosses. You'll live long. 6. Come to a dead stop and intersections. The few exit stops sign often are overgrown with weeds. 7. Watch for sudden changes in the road surface. One more you may be on blacktop, the moment skidding on loose gravel. 8. Stop when a school stops ahead of you and pro again only after it's in motion. 9. Watch out for pedestrians and bicyclists. And when you ter a small town, watch out children playing along the roadside. 10. Stay calm when dogs carry your car. Heed "Danger — Crossing" signs. "There's only one way to enter rural roads," said the Clerk, "and that's as if you blazing a new trail." "Expect any hazard. Charge you won't be disappointed." Lutheran Hospital Ready in December When the Martin Luther King Memorial, 1201 N. Euclid Ave., Apt. 1a, heim, is completed next December. Orange County will have approximately 3,870 registered pilal beds, according to the re progress report to county supervisors. And the annual payroll for 4 employees in 16 hospitals amount to more than $16 million. State-controlled Fairview Hospital, Costa Mesa, tops the list number of beds and payrolls. Four New Teachers Employed by OCC Four new faculty members, including a dean of instruction, have bee nadded to the Orange Coast College staff for the coming school year. Robert B. Moore, who succeeds Dr. Donald C. riBdgman as dean of instruction, will join the faculty Aug. 1. Dr. Bridgman has resigned to accept a full professorship at Orange County State College. The other three new faculty members who will join the staff in September include Mrs. Dalyta Goodwin, counselor and psychology instructor; Richard L. Garrett, counsel or psychology instructor; and John R. Clark, mathematics instructor. Mrs. Goodwin was graduated from Fresno State College and received her Master's degree from Berkeley. Garrett was graduated from Compton College and Long Beach State College. He received his Master's degree from Long Beach State. He is also president of Garrett and Son Boat Manufacturing Co. in Redondo Beach. Clark comes to Coast from Long Beach Polytechnic High where he taught mathematics and MacDonnel Aircraft Corp. in St. Louis, Mo., and North American Aviation in Los Angeles. He received his Master's degree from the University of Kansas. Tip Offered Boaters On Outboard Motors If you are one of the million or so people planning to purchase an outboard motor in 1960, here's a tip that can save you dollars. Before you buy look around for a tested, water-proved used motor. In a recent study some dealers reported that a third of their new motor sales include trade-ins of motors less than 18 months old. Unlike automobiles, even a five-year-old outboard motor may have years of reliable service left. Examine the motor carefully. A loose or crooked shaft or a nicked propeller blade will effect performance. Look for worn control khobs, loose, fittings or a frayed pull rope; these may indicate the motor has had exceptionally rugged treatment. Turn the flywheel against compression. If it turns easily, the motor may need an overhaul. "America is that wonderful land where it's trashy to sit on the porch in your undershirt, but gracious living if you've got nothing on but shorts."—Tom Dodds. It was a big day at the Saints Convent at Hayward, CA when the station wagon theaters got with Blue Chip Savings Stamps was delivered. The event children, their families and friends helped save the 1,990 stamps required for the car. After Francis Loretta, Mother Superior fo the convent, is shown above with some of the convoy youngsters as A. J. Pascarelli northern division operations manager for Blue Chip, delivers a vehicle. LAW IN ACTION RELEVANT FACTS A trial ends disputes. To do so justly gets a court disputed facts through witnesses under rules of evidence. You hear your lawyer object: The proposed evidence is "irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent." Unless he does object then and there, he may lose your right to appeal in higher courts later on. 1. If he objects to "irrelevant" evidence, he means the facts offered are beside the point. If you sue Jones for a debt, you might arouse the jury by showing that he beats his wife. Though true, the beatings scarcely prove your claim that Jones owes you money. Irrelevant. 2. If your lawyer objects to "immaterial" evidence, he is saying, in effect, that it may have something to do with the case all right, but would not tilt the scales either way. It has little weight. 3. If he objects to "incompetent" evidence, he is saying either that the witness or the facts are ruled out, no matter how true, relevant, or material they may be. For example, it is against public policy and "incompetent" for a wife to testify against her husband in most criminal trials. Hearsay, too, is mostly "incompetent." Suppose in a theft case Jones told a jury that he heard Smith tell Green that he saw Brown steal a car. In a theft case courts would rule out such a story as "hearsay" and incompetent. Like gossip, you cannot rely on hearsay nor test it by cross-examination. Green might have been talking out of spite or telling a tall tale for fun. But Brown's slander suit against Smith might well be something else. Jones' evidence would be material, relevant, and competent: For it would tend to show that by his gossip Smith had been hurting Brown's good name. As a rule only an expert can give competent "opinion" evidence. A doctor could give an opinion as to a cause of death. If the judge errs in ruling on evidence, your lawyer can ask for a new trial. Failing this, he can go to a higher court. There he must show that (1) the judge did err, and (2) his error unfairly harmed your case. Note: California lawyers offer this column so you may know about our laws. Trading Stamp Books to Have New Cash Redemption Rate in Effect BOOKS In Review Weekly book listings presented by the Anaheim Public Library, 241 S. Los Angeles St. FICTION CONQUERING HORSE by Frederick Manfred. A novel of the Sioux Indians, and of a great leader who had bravery, love, well-tended flocks, but was not a man until he had a dream after the Indian fashion and is led to greatness by the vision. FORTY BEST STORIES FROM MADEMOISELLE by C. Abels and M. Smith (ed.). Every one of these stories are gems. Contains writings of Jessamyn West, Truman Capote, Willia mFaulkner, Tennessee Williams and a host of others. ONE MORE SUMMER by Edward Stephens. The rough and tumble life and emotional clashes of a young man's life as he tries to grow up in a little town in Southern California. NON-FICTION FIRST AID FOR YOUR INFANT AND CHILD by Eric Northrup. How to prevent some of the accidents of childhood; what to do in emergencies, when to use respiration, how to handle Californians will be able to redeem trading stamps for cash as well as goods according to a state law passed by the 1959 Legislature to give consumers a choice between money and merchandise when turning in stamps, and to protect them from possible fraud. Stamp companies will set their own cash redemption rates, which probably will vary from company to company. The companies which issue S&H Green Stamps and Blue Chip Stamps have indicated their rate will be 1 mill—a tenth of a cent—per stamp, or $1.20 per book. Whatever the redemption value of any company's stamp, it must be imprinted on each stamp, along with the name of the issuing company. The law also requires all companies to be licensed by the state corporations commissioner. Thus the commissioner theoretically will have power to act against a company with excessively low redemption rates, by refusing it a license. The commissioner has the power, too, to file claims in the consumer's behalf against any company refusing to redeem stamps for cash. Consumers, however, cannot redeem less than a dollar's worth of stamps at one time. Some provisions of the new law are designed to prevent a situation that our belief is that we call "mine," toward ourselves. We refuse to see to it the necessity of soul in our wives, nesian, Chinese, India, "But the righteous saint." In our own nation destruction. One of our fraught with heartache tha many hydrogen bureth and non-conformity tha It is time that we finest abilities and seize to hold to our ownself power of a God whose eants, then we are too weaesthe member. The hour has already failed Until and unless a premise of any free s Lord on our agenda calling on the sick, an until and unless we be than for shouting pro God used Egypt his power. God used arouse the conscience o to a day by day walk "Behold, he who "But the righteou "The fam This message DR. E. E. COLEM & STAFF Physicians and Surgeon 7523 Orangethorpe Ave Buena Park LA 2 WARDENS SUPER SERVICE Tune-Up — Brake Service Lubrication 7731 PLACENTIA KE 5-1585 BROADWAY VILLA OF ANAHEIM Single, 1 Bedroom, 2 Booth Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments KEystone 5-0183 RANCH HOUSE COFFEE SHOP June and La Verne 135 W. Center PR 4 H. E. SLAYTON & SONS 90,800 Stamps Deemed for Car was a big day at the All S Convent at Hayward, Calif., the station wagon the sisgot with Blue Chip Savings cups was delivered. The conchildren, their families and is helped save the 1,990,800 is required for the car. Sisfrancs Loretta, Mother Sufo the convent, is shown with some of the convent masters as A. J. Pascarello,ern division operations manfor Blue Chip, delivers the e. NON-FICTION FIRST AID FOR YOUR INFANT AND CHILD by Eric Northrup. How to prevent some of the accidents of childhood; what to do in emergencies, when to use respiration, how to handle common ills. GUIDE TO ALL MEXICO by John Wilhelm. Cities and resort areas, interesting places to see while in Mexico; shopping in Mexico; sports and amusements, hotels and rate scales. HOLIDAY AND PARTY COOKBOOK by Sadie Le Sueur. Includes menus and decoration ideas for all the major holidays, some special personal holidays, with a section of recipes for suppers, lunches, showers, etc. HOW TO DECORATE AND LIGHT YOUR HOME by E.W. Commery and C.E. Stephenson. An interior decorator and engineer team up to give expert advice on home planning, color schemes, arrangement of rooms, walls, windows, and correct lighting for porches, terraces, rooms. A PARENTS' GUIDE TO CHILDREN'S ILLNESSES by John Henderson (M.D.). Contains charts of childhood diseases, illustrates skin diseases by color plates, plates on eye diseases, proper nursing care, sickroom supplies and equipment. POLITICAL MAN by Seymour Lipset. The social basis of political life through the centuries, emphasis on democracy and the political scene in the present world situation. Written in easy-to-read style. 858 Enroll at OCC For Summer School A record-breaking number of students are taking college courses on the Orange Coast College campus this summer, according to Correllan J. Thompson, associate dean of admissions and records. At the close of registration June 27, 969 students had enrolled to show a 12 per cent gain over the 858 enrollment last summer. Many students on summer vacation from other colleges are attending OCC summer school. Heaviest enrollment of 126 adults is in the theatre arts class which will produce "The King and P." Aug. 4, 5, 6. College credit courses are being offered in art, anthropology, chemistry, economics, English, French, German, geography, history, life science mathematics, nursing physical science, psychology, social science, Spanish, speech and business education. Fireworks in Chrtst's Church A Sermon Based on Hahakkuk 2:4 The prophet Habukkuk lived in times like our own. A dangerous threat to the world he knew was personified in the Chaldeans from the east. So the prophet knew, as we must learn, that any nation which seeks to endure in liberty and in freedom must be based on principles which ensure those privileges. No wonder that he writes: "Behold, he whose soul is not upright in him shall fail; but the righteous shall live by his faith." This idea was St. Paul's charter for Christian freedom in his letter to the church in Galatia: "Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath set you free. Be no longer entangled with the yoke of bondage which is the law." Is this true? Do we believe it, in the world, in our nation, in Christ's church? The moan of the world from the struggle of our birth into the power of nuclear fission and rocet wakrfare, of hidden and open persuasion is the moan of a fear that a careless word or a hasty deed could press a button and launch us into total, almost instantaneous war. Habakkuk stood upon a tower and looked out upon the world to see if God had anything relevant to say about life and death, today and tomorrow. He declared that on this tower are the righteous and the self-righteous, those who live by faith and those who live by force. The battle in the world today is not that centered on strong and growing tension between communism and the free world. We are aware of this enemy to our heritage and to our future. The real battle, the final battle, is that gigantic and overpowering battle for a man's soul—for that which he counts dear. We who live in Anaheim need not be reminded that we live in a shrinking world—not when so many of our citizens can be absent each weekend on a trip to Las Vegas or to Seattle, to Honolulu or to Tokyo, to London or to Paris. In this small world, we know that Russia is doomed to eventual defeat, for never in the history of man has any nation endured which debased, ridiculed, or negated God. But we too are doomed in the world, as history teaches us, unless we make certain that our belief in God is one which applies day by day to everything we do, to all that we call "mine", yes, even to our frugality toward our Lord and our generosity toward ourselves. Woe to those who say that God is on the side of right, but who refuse to see to it that right is the worship of the one and only God. This is the sickness of soul in our world today. That soul, be it Russian, American, Japanese, Indonesian, Chinese, Indian, African, English—that soul which is not upright shall fail. "But the righteous shall live by his faith"—a faith which works. In our own nation, there are those seeds of evil which bear the fruit of their own destruction. One of those evils, more dangerous than the revolution of 1776, more fraught with heartache and decision than the war of brothers in 1865, more terrible than any hydrogen bomb, is the evil of insisting that conformity is loyalty to nation. But we too are doomed in the world, as history teaches us, unless we make certain that our belief in God is one which applies day by day to everything we do, to all that we call "mine", yes, even to our frugality toward our Lord and our generosity toward ourselves. Woe to those who say that God is on the side of right, but who refuse to see to it that right is the worship of the one and only God. This is the sickness of soul in our world today. That soul, be it Russian, American, Japanese, Indonesian, Chinese, Indian, African, English—that soul which is not upright shall fail. "But the righteous shall live by his faith"—a faith which works. In our own nation, there are those seeds of evil which bear the fruit of their own destruction. One of those evils, more dangerous than the revolution of 1776, more fraught with heartache and decision than the war of brothers in 1865, more terrible than any hydrogen bomb, is the evil of insisting that conformity is loyalty to nation, and non-conformity or dissent is treason. It is time that we chose our best minds, our most dedicated young people, our finest abilities and set them to work as ministers in the church of Christ. If we wish to hold to our ownselfish little groups, ignore the stranger or newcomer, ridicule the power of a God whose sway means much more than a million long-whitte-nighty pag-eants, then we are to grow up as adults and see that any church is as strong as its weaestk member. That church which makes the going too easy for the peril of this hour has already failed, for its soul is not upright within it. Until and unless we can see that the separation of Church and State is a basic premise of any free society, until and unless, we be willing to put the work of our Lord on our agenda and give a proportionate share of our time, ringing doorbells, calling on the sick, and being ministers with the Pastors, Priests, Rabbis of our faiths, until and unless we be more eager to use the Bible for consistent Christian living than for shouting prooftexts, we shall not win. God used Egypt to bring the descendants of Abraham to a new awareness of his power. God used Assyria to punish an idolatrous nation. God used a Hitler to aruse the conscience of the world. Will God use Russia and the Kremlin to bring us to a day by day walk with him today? "Behold, he whose soul is not upright in him shall fail, 'But the righteous shall live by his faith.'" "The family that prays together stays together" This message sponsored by the following leading Orange County firms. DR. E. E. COLEMAN & STAFF Physicians and Surgeons 7523 Orangethorpe Ave. Buena Park LA 2-4889 WARDENS SUPER SERVICE Tune-Up — Brake Service Lubrication 7731 PLACENTIA KE 5-1585 BROADWAY VILLAGE OF ANAHEIM Single, 1 Bedroom, 2 Bedroom Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments KEystone 5-0183 RANCH HOUSE COPFEE SHOP June and La Verne 135 W. Center PR 4-2185 H. E. SLAYTON & SONS Midas Muffler Shop Complete line of Mufflers, Tailpipes and Dual Exhausts 404 N. Los Angeles St. KE 3-3194 THE S.Q.R. STORE Anahiem's Finest Department Store KE 5-7251 Center at Lemon D. S. Collins, Realtor In New Offices at 1077 W. Ball Rd. at West St. PR 2-0144 Arsene Photographer 222 E. Center KE 5-5644 BOTTS NURSERY Quality Shrubs and Trees 1228 Lincoln Ave. KE 5-5450 VICTOR G. LOLY Jewelry 138 W. Center Ambassador Enterprise Hardwood Flooring—Linoleum Carpets — Draperies & Formica 881 South East St. PR 2-4880 Carl E. Jackson, Inc. Drywall Contractor 1597 W. Ball Ed—Apt. D KE 5-0763 KE 3-4376 Leo's Family Restaurant Breakfast — Lunch — Dinners 101 West Center ALIGATOR FARM Across from Knott's Berry Farm 761 E. La Palma Buena Park LA 2-2615 Bridgford Packing Co. Vacuum Packaged Luncheon Meat 1308 No. Patt LA 6-3533 HURST JEWELLERS Meet Joe Hurat and Wear Diamonds Single, 1 Bedroom, 2 Bedroom Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments KEystone 5-0183 RANCH HOUSE COFFEE SHOP June and La Verne 135 W. Center PR 4-2185 H. E. SLAYTON & SONS Tree Service and Wood Sales 1006 S. Los Angeles St. KE 5-7310 ANAHEIM SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION The Oldest Locally Owned Association in Anaheim Center at Lemon Street ANAHEIM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 1111 W. La Palma Ave. PR 4-1450 STATE WIDE CITRUS GROWERS INC. 605 E. Commercial Anaheim P.O. Box 300 ANAHEIM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 1111 W. La Palma Ave. PR 4-1450 BACKS. TROUTMAN, KAULBARS Orange County's First Funeral Directors 251 N. Lemon St. ANAHEIM LANAI APARTMENTS Heated Pool — Lanal Room Furnished and Unfurnished 629 W. Vermont PR 4-3428 Arsene Photographer 222 E. Center KE 5-5644 BOTTS NURSERY Quality Shrubs and Trees 1228 Lincoln Ave. KE 5-5450 VICTOR G. LOLY Jewelry 138 W. Center Kendricks' Jewelers Diamonds — Watches—Jewelry 155 West Center KE 5-4403 Hardin Oldsmobile Authorized Oldsmobile Sales and Service 252 No. Los Angeles KE 5-7211 Western Fence Co. Inc. Serving All of Orange Co. 9100 W. Lincoln JA 7-9821 KEN CLARK MANCHESTER AUTO SALVAGE 137 N. Manchester KE 5-3859 KE 5-9400 HOME CRAFT Fireplace Screens and Fixtures Barbecues Gifts Post Lamps 914 South Palm Electra Motors Inc. 1110 No. Lemon St. KE 5-6061 Add-a-Room Sales Corp. Specializing in Room Additions 252 No. Lemon PR 4-6883 L. M. Banks Packing Co. Citrus Fruit Packers 500 South Claudina KE 5-6081 Across from Knott's Berry Farm 761 E. La Palma Buena Park LA 2-2615 Bridgford Packing Co. Vacuum Packaged Luncheon Meat 1308 No. Paft LA 6-5533 HURST JEWELLERS Meet Joe Hurat and Wear Diamonds 132 West Center St. KE 3-3107 HENNIG AUTO PAINT & BODY CO. Auto — Truck & House Trailer Painting Baked Enamel 900 W. Vermont KE 5-2407 NEWMAN'S HEALTH FOODS Whole Grain Vegetarian Specialties Dietetic Foods Vitamins and Minerals 322 East Center KE 5-3304 Brick's Coffee Shop Breakfast and Lunches 300 Center Street KE 5-8244 Heinz Imported Cars Authorized Dealer for Hillman Minx — English Ford Sunbeam and Singer 338 So. Los Angeles St. PE 2-7660 Walt's Shell Service Complete Brake and Tune-Up Firestone Tires — Batteries Accessories Free Pick Up & Delivery 1200 E. Center & East KE 3-1411 Hub Furniture Stores 500 Center Street KE 5-8028