Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Santa Cruz Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 7

Location:
Santa Cruz, California
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Santa Cruz Sentinef-News 7 NATIONAL Thursday, October 4, 1951 9l9 Governors United On Many State Problems, But Split Into Four Factions On Presidential Race SENTINEL-NEWS DITORIALS Washington ith Ray Tucker Fair Enough By Westbrook Pegler Obstacle For Through-Traffic Santa Cruzans, watching with keen interest any development tjiat influences conditions of highways from and to our area, receive with mixed feelings the decision of the Los Gatos city council to re-zone Saratoga avenue in that city for commercial use. According to the assistant state highway engineer for this district, the zoning decision may seriously interfere with state plans to widen that street, and widening of Saratoga avenue is something which. would find wholehearted approval hereabouts. The street in question is the one you reach after making a left turn off the main street (Santa Cruz avenue) in Los Gatos on your way to Saratoga, Sunnyvale and Washington, Oct. 4.

Any doubt that Senator Robert A. Taf is an eager and active rival of Eisenhower for the Republican presidential nomination next year has been dissipated by the tone of the speeches which the Ohioan has delivered on his pre-convention sallies, especially in the farrn states of the middle and central northwest It was the defection of eight agricultural states in 1948, together with his marginal defeats in Illinois, Ohio and California, which kept Governor Thomas E. Dewey from the presidency in that year. He might have carried Ohio and Illinois, if he had permitted Mr. Taft to campaign in those states.

Instead, partially out of resentment of the Taft rivalry at the convention, and in the foolish belief that the New Yorker could make a dent in the solid south, Dewey headquarters exiled Mr. Taft to making speeches below the Mason and Dixon line. Mr. Taft has never forgiven Mr. Dewey for that blunder, as the senator's recent review of the 1948 battle shows.

The two will meet at Chicago next June as bitter and avowed enemies, in view of Mr. Dewey's championship of General DISCUSSES 'MR. BIG' OF PORT OF NEW YORK The Mr. Big that many gossips have been hinting about lately is Bill McCormack, who is boss of the Port of New York. He controls Joe Ryan, the president of the International Longshoremen's Association of the AFL, and has authority in two big key locals of the Teamsters' Union.

These are 282, which -hauls Mc-Cormack's ready-mixed concrete and other building materials, and 202, downtown in the market district It is a coincidence that Tom Pendergast Harry Truman's political and ethical preceptor, also sold ready-mixed concrete. Pendergast gave himself a monopoly of public construction jobs and most private constrnction jobs through the political power of his organization. In McCormack's case there is an almost irresistible political power and, of course, a contractor having power in the unions has an advantage over other contractors. McCormack is rich now and lives on an island in Long Island Sound, off Greenwich, Conn. He is a very tough man and an element of physical fear has deterred some persons from handling him as frankly as they deal with Frank Costello.

selves in the so-called internationalist camp of the party rallied to the Eisenhower campaign under the leadership of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. Those who seemed determined to put the emphasis in next year's presidential drive on domestic issues and who don't go along with many of the major phases of the Truman administration's foreign policy gravitated to the camp of Sen. Robert A.

Taft of Ohio, along Lee. The Democrats also were divided into two camps. One faction, represented by such governors as Michigan's G. Mennen Williams, is backing President Truman for another term. Most of them hope Eisenhower will not become the Republican presidential candidate and hope Taft will be the GOP nominee.

Williams told a news conference yesterday that if he were In Eisenhower's position "I would be very loathe to turn a distinguished military career upside down and get into politics." He said the Michigan Democratic state central committee lias adopted a resolution supporting President Truman if he runs again, "and that reflects the general sentiment in my state." The other Democratic faction, headed by Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, made it plain at the conference that it intends to leave no stone unturned in its effort to prevent Mr. Truman's nomination and to defeat him at the polls in November, 1952, if he runs again. This group embraces a segment of southern governors who range in their expressions on Mr.

Truman from complete public silence to open condemnation. At most three southern governors seem likely to give Mr. Truman any support. Border state governors generally are lukewarm. The governors will meet again next spring.

By Jack Bell Gatlinburg, Oct 4 UP) The nation's governors were united on many state problems but split into four distinct political factions as they went home today from their 43rd annual conference. With a Republican Gov. Val Peterson of Nebraska elected conference chairman, the governors demonstrated that both parties are divided in advance of the presidential campaign. Peterson, elected in a non-partisan atmosphere in which Democrats and Republicans are alternated as chairman, is a member of a faction of the Republican party that is campaigning to dbtain the GOP presidential nomination for Gen. Dwight D.

Eisenhower. Representing the other wing of the Republicans, Gov. J. Bracken Lee of Utah enlivened yesterday's closing session with demands that the governors lay aside a scheduled discussion of law enforcement and turn to what he called the "real issues" of deficit spending, high taxes and threats of communism. In the crime probe discussion, Gov.

Fuller Warren, Florida Democrat, attacked Senator Estes Ke-fauver, former chairman of the senate crime investigating committee. Warren called Kefauver a "madly ambitious political shyster." Gov. Peterson defended Kefauver, saying he thinks he is a "grand American." Asked for comment on Warren's attack, Kefauver said in Washington: "I've always heard a stuck pig always squeals." A Kefauver committee report said Florida was one of the nation's major centers of organized-gambling and crime. The report indirectly pointed a critical finger at Warren. In the political activity.

Republican governors who consider them Highway 101. It's a nice though fairly narrow residential street now, and if the would do what Colonel Skeggs says plans on doing, it might improve another stretch of a connecting link that is none too good as it is. All the unions concerned here are proteges of the Democratic national administration and political partners of the city administrations no matter what person happens to be mayor or what party happens to be in. O'Dwyer's committee named a subcommittee to investigate the problems of handling food in the Port of New York. Guess who wrote the learned and objective report of that subcommittee? Joe Ryan and Joe Papa.

I trust that you are keeping in mind the political power of Dan Tobin of the Teamsters' International Union. When Roosevelt wanted an occasion for the opening speech of his fourth-term campaign, Tobin rallied his mob to a big swilling in Washington which turned out to be one of the wildest drunks since Nero with cockeyed old bums, not unlike trained babboons in their tuxedos, bawling applause and smashing glassware. At one time, McCormack was Al Smith's partner in a trucking business. Long after he bad ceased to be governor, Mr. Smith told me that they had dissolved their personal friendship.

Soon after the Dempsey-Firpo fight at the Polo Grounds in 1923, Tex Rickard, who promoted the show, claimed that an official of the license committee of the Boxing Commission made him pay $80,000 currency, more than an appropriate rate. This was reported to Charles F. Murphy, the old boss of Tammany Hall, who told Smith. Smith said he ordered that the person who had taken the money should give it back. Both Rickard and Smith told me that the person who had received the money never gave it back to him but claimed to have handed it over to a member of the firm which operated the Giants and the Polo Grounds.

Rickard applied to this person for the money but said the man offered to fight him for it Tex said he wouldn't fight in the Giants' office but offered to go downstairs into Broadway. The Giants' man, a notorious saloon-fighter, then said Tex wanted to be near the cops. Smith withdrew his confidence in Bill McCormack because he had appointed him to the license committee and he felt that McCormack had not been duly diligent to protect his administration from scan-del. McCormack resigned. When Jim Farley was appointed boxing commissioner.

Smith and Murphy both told him to go to Jimmy Walker right away and get straightened out on the facts of an incident which might cause him embarrassment if he did not know them. Farley corroborates the version that I heard from Smith and Rickard but is careful to insist that Jimmy Walker was not in on the deal and never got any of the money. Itoiluwood By Bob (J lhomas Adolphe Menjou Bewails Fading of Elegant Dressers San Francisco, Oct. 4 "Ah," sighed Adolphe Menjou, "the age of male elegance is fading from our civilization." He almost shed a tear, and I think he might have if he pondered longer on the subject. He himself did not look up to his reputation as Hollywood's most high-powered dresser.

He was wearing a $32.50 suit for his detective role in "The Sniper," which has been filming location scenes in San Francisco streets. Menjou gazed at the crowd which was watching the film company work on Telegraph Hill. "Even a city like San Francisco, where the men used to dress smartly, has fallen down in quality," he complained. "You see the same sloppy clothes that you see in other parts of the country. As for Los Angeles, there is no incentive to dress well there; it is a semi-tropical country." The actor declared that the best-dressed city in the United States is New York.

He added that a few men in Cleveland and Chicago are well dressed, and a smaller number in Texas. But on whole, he believes we men have fallen into a low estate in the matter of attire. "Why, spats are virtually extinct," he exclaimed. "You never see a derby any more. Top hats appear only at the opening of the opera, and what moth-eaten specimens they are! "Do you know that for five years I tried to get men to wear knickers for golf? And why shouldn't they? Its the only sensible thing for that sport.

I got Lloyd Mangrum and a few others to wear them but now they have backslid. When I wear knickers myself, small boys throw rocks at me. They sneer. Imagine!" Among the things Menjou views with alarm (he is a great alarm viewer) is the sport coat with un-matching slacks. "You see that all the time in the cities," he observed.

"In reality, the sport coat was developed in England for use in the country only. They would leave the city on Friday afternoon and remain until Monday morning in the country. There they would wear sport coats with grey flannel trousers. But they wouldn't be caught dead wearing a sport coat in the city." Even Englind is no longer the fashion center for men, he added. "The average Englishman is so poor he cannot afford new clothes, even if he could get them," Menjou said.

"Many of them dress in little better than rags." Menjou sees this whole trend in men's clothing as part of the level-ing-off process of the world's wealth. "It is a sad thing," he remarked. "I hate to see the end of an era of graceful living. Even more, I hate to see the disappearance of the fine craftsmen who used to specialize in making superior clothing. Why, I can re- member when I bought shoes in England, one man had worked on the heels, another on the soles, and so on.

And families had been doing it for generations." The actor is doing his bit to stretch out the last days of the elegant era. He said he now pays between $250 and $300 for his suits and up to $500 for a dress suit He has about 200 suits and an equal number of hats and shoes. However, he didn't appear too dapper as he stood on the windswept Telegraph Hill waiting for his scene. It could have been that chain-store suit "the first ready-made suit I bought in my life." Also, he seemed lost without his smart mustache, which he had to shave off for "The Sniper." He denied making a protest over this. "Look I'm an actor," he explained.

"If it means a part, I'll do anything." commercial zoning, with its par King prpblems and increased traffic, will certainly impede through traffic much in the manner in which we now have to creep through Los Gatos and to mention another horrible example through Watson-ville. However, there is also another, side to the picture. If Saratoga avenue is made into a bottleneck, Los Gatos as a whole will be even more of an obstacle to through traffic than it already is. This gives an added amount of justification to our old demand only recently put on the official record through inclusion in the state chamber of commerce report that the 'state construct a Los Gatos by-pass that would allow through-traffic to pass from Highway 17 directly to the Saratoga road outside Los Gatos without touching the congested business streets. Construction of such a by-pass may still lie in the far future (you know the reason: money) but eventually it will have Retirement Kills More Men Than Hard WorU9 $ttys Mental Hygiene Director McCormack is a gentleman of the old school from Greenwich Village as of the days of the Hudson Dusters, the Avonia Club and other historic congeries of picturesque characters such as Linky Mitchell and Rubber Shaw.

These and other old neighbors lost their lives by gunfire in routine relations among the young bloods of that region and some expired in the electric chair. Bill and his late brother, Harry, started in the trucking racket in Jersey City with some one-horse rigs, hauling produce into New York. During the first war, they horned into the "business of loading beef for the Allied soldiers and made a lot of money. This was longshoremen's work. Bill, who has worked both sides of the street as employer and un-ioneer, organized his own local of the teamsters.

There was, to put it delicately, friction between his people and the opposition, and, to put it delicately, McCormack straightened that out. John O'Rourke, the president of Teamsters' Local 282, which hauls McCormack's building stuff and his gas and oil, has been "labor adviser" to Governor Dewey and served on his "labor committee" in a couple of campaigns. The president of Local 202 in the market area is Joe Papa. When William O'Dwyer was mayor, he named a committee to inquire why New York was losing so much revenue from internal and maritime commerce diverted to other ports. The reason is that the Port of New York has been strangled by a combination of union bosses and other racketeers.

"A man spends a long life working and producing. "Then, one day, because of the flip of a calendar page, he is told that he is no longer able to continue what he was doing the day before." Take a job away from a man, says Tallman, and he deteriorates and dies. As long as society takes away jobs by forcing retirement, Tallman believes, it is up to society to provide something for retired people to do in their leisure time. to be done anyway, and planning for it 1 A -11 1 1 1 a rr- a Dy-pass is open to tranic, motorists not interested in stopping at Los Gatos need no longer be concerned about such internal city affairs as the zoning of a city street." Meanwhile, however, it looks as though widening of the avenue, as proposed by the state, would have been preferable from our point of view. Los Gatos city councilmen discounted the state's pleas, because they contended that the widening was all talk and no action, anyway.

They may have a point there. Perhaps Mr. Skeggs and his superiors could prove that OCTOBER TIDES By TJ. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey Tides at Monterey.

California (Heights in eet) PACIFIC STANDARD TIMI The GLOBE and GUYS By Ha I Boyle Sacramento, Oct. 4 (Retirement kills more people than hard work. That's the contention of State Mental Hygiene Department Director Frank Tallman. "Retirement is one of the greatest dangers facing our senior citizens," says Tallman, in discussing the California conference on the problems of the aging, to be held here October 15 and 16. "Man is a working creature," says Tallman, and instead of retirement, he should be given something to keep him busy.

Tallman complains that: General Drum Is Dead At 72 New York, Oct. 4 (JP) Lt. Gen. Hugh A. Drum, 72, one of the nation's foremost soldiers and later a business executive, died of a heart ailment yesterday.

Gov. Thomas E. Dewey ordered flags on all public buildings in New York state to be flown at half staff. Drum was chief of staff of the First army, the combat army directly commanded by Gen. John J.

Pershing in World War and issued the armistice "cease fire" order to American troops. In the anxious days before the United States entered World War II, Drum dramatically emphasiz-this nation's lack of military equipment. Then commanding the First army, he sent his troops into training maneuvers with stove pipe for cannon and trucks for tanks. Pictures of the make-believe weapons startled the nation. He retired from the army in 1943 and in 1944 was appointed president of the Empire State, operators of the Empire State building, the world's tallest.

He succeeded the late Gov. Alfred E. Smith in this reputed post. Drum died at his desk on the 32nd floor, after reporting for work as usual. Eisenhower for the nomination.

Mr. J. ait is in a fighting mood. FRIEND Although he used to be an Ohio corporation lawyer and he has been depicted by his enemies as anti-labor and a reactionary, Mr. Taft appeared in the guise of the "farmer's friend" in his recent excursion through the agricultural area the same region which Mr.

Dewey failed to carry in 1948. Senator Taft pointed out that he had opposed a tax on farm co-operatives, as demanded by eastern, financial interests. In fact, on his arrival at he was greeted with an attack by a business Organization for his stand on this controversial question. The senator also recalled his support of rural electrification, and of other costly programs for the benefit of agriculture. He mentioned that, belatedly, President Truman and the American Federation of Labor had endorsed and used portions of the Taft-Hartley act.

He also noted that President Truman did not recommend repeal of this statute in his 1951 message to congress. SHOWDOWN As of today, although nothing is certain in American politics, most political experts forecast Senator Taft's nomination at Chicago next year. It is not too hazardous a prediction for the following reasons: General Eisenhower insists that he will not accept the honor, unless it is handed to him on a silver platter. Mr. Taft will not be a party to such a free gift.

General Eisenhower insists that the draft be unanimous. At least 50 per cent of the organization leaders oppose him. General Eisenhower demands that the platform endorse the Truman-Acheson foreign program, for which he is the military symbol. The G.OP.'s principal attack on the Roosevelt-Truman foreign policies will brand it as a failure and a sellouts But the main momentum for a Taft nomination is that Republican leaders, including those who do not approve the Ohioan's philosophy, want a final showdown with the New Deal-Fair Deal advocates of a "welfare state." They can get that kind of a test with Taft, but not with General Eisenhower! INITIAL A trivial but interesting discussion has cropped up at Washington as to whether General Douglas MacAr-thur has a middle initial. For years newspapermen, including the writer, have written his name as "Douglas A.

MacArthur," the being for his famous soldier-father, Lieutenant General Arthur MacArthur. According to old army buddies at the Pentagon, General MacArthur once used the as a middle initial in tribute to his father. But he is recorded on the official rolls as "Douglas MacArthur." Omission of a middle initial seems to be a family tradition. SIDELIGHT MacArthur's father had two sons, whom he named Douglas and Arthur Jr. And the general's son, Arthur, has no middle initial.

As a humorous sidelight a Washington correspondent tried to straighten out this question by calling General MacArthur's first wife, who is now remarried. He got no help from her. She said over the telephone: "I don't know whether he has a middle initial, and I don't care! I don't know or care how he spells his name, wears his uniform or parts his hair!" PERTINENT An unknown senate newspaper correspondent recently explod1 ed with the wittiest and most pertinent gallery comment on the current congressional session, according to Fellow Reporter Newman Wright of the Passaic (N. Herald News. It is one of those remarks which can be destructive, especially as it has become currency in congressional cloakrooms.

Mr. Wright does not give his name, but it seems that his press gallery associate had just read a New York Times headline to the effect that "Senator Humphrey Declares War on Poverty." The article referred to one of those paid speeches which Senator Humphrey, the former head of Americans for Democratic Action, the Roosevelt wing of the Democratic party, so frequently makes. "Well," remarked the unidentified reporter, "it is about time that Senator She appeared mystified at first but gradually she became more ana more absorbed in the plays. Her friends thought she was catching on fine until she asked late in the ninth inning: "I understand everything now except why that one man keeps throwing the ball at that other group of men there." The group consisted of the batter, the catcher and the umpire. Oh, well, in another few days it will be over.

Then, if you cut open the head of the most rabid fan, you wouldn't even find a single baseball. You'd find a football. HIGH LOW 4 0:57 3.9 5:38 3.1 11:36 5.3 18:55 -Oi 5 2:07 3.7 6:20 2.6 12:17 5.3 19:55 8 3:26 3.6 7:13 2.9 13:11 5.1 21:03 4:46 3.7 853 3.1 14:25 4.9 22:16 8 5:53 3.9 9:53 3.1 15:55 4.8 23:25 8 6:45 4.1 11:27 2.8 17:21 4.8 LOW HIGH 10 0:26 7:26 12:45 2.2 18:37 44 11 1:17 8:02 47 13:46 1.6 19:43 4.8 12 2:01 0.2 8:36 4.9 14:37 1.0 20:43 4.7 13 2:40 0.5 9:09 S3 15:24 0.4 21:39 4.6 14 3:15 1.0 9:38 5.3 16:07 0.0 22:33 4.4 15 3:48 1.4 10:07 5.3 16:47 2355 4.3 18 4:22 1.9 10:34 5.S 17:26 HIGH LOW 17 0:19 4.0 4:56 1.3 11:02 5.1 18:07 18 1:13 3.9 5:33 2.6 11:30 4.9 18:50 -03 19 2:13 3.8 6:14 2.9 12:03 4.7 19:38 20 3:18 3.7 7:04 3.1 12:44 4.5 20:32 0.1 '21 4:23 3.7 8:08 3.1 13:41 4.2 21:31 0.3 22 5:20 3.8 9:29 3.2 15:02 4.0 22:30 0.4 23 6:07 4.0 10:55 3.0 16:23 3.9 23 52 0.4 24 6:44 4.2 12:03 2.6 17:34 4.0 tlie Women ing a contract and starting to work right away. Los Gatos wouldn't mind that a bit, and neither, to be sure, would we. Merriwell And The Polo Grounds Not even the fondest grads of Old Eli ever had Frank Merriwell in such a dramatic situation as the finale the New York Giants put up yesterday afternoon in the 'Polo Grounds to win the National league pennant.

Trailing the Brooklyn Dodgers 4 to 2 with one man out and two men on base, Bobby Thomson came to bat After a called strike, Thomson smashed one of Ralph Branca's fast balls pto the left field stands to give the New Yorkers an amazing 5 to 4 triumph. The culminated one of the greatest stretch drives in baseball annals By RUTH MILLETT WE el tie Answer, to Previous Puzzfe Burrowing Rodent Kit itifi wTi mg sEtr i F3pl Tip RgiNO 1111 EIRM IN PEY ZHm ScL RE'Sy OjR 6 1 EiTA IAIr I Eli-RjA El repiELpmIeIainPer that found the Giants coming from 13 games behind the Dodgers in the last six weeks of play to finish the regular season in a tie and then go on to wi nthe playoff. PAPER DRIVE A SUCCESS Editor: The members of the Santa Cruz Lions club wish to sincerely thank you and your staff for the splendid cooperation extended during the recent paper drive conducted for our Boy Scout fund. The campaign was highly successful and much of this success can be attributed to The Sentinel-News for calling the drive to the attention of the people in Santa Cruz and vicinity who, in turn, were so generous in placing their old papers and magazines at our disposal for this most worthy cause. Very truly yours, E.

T. CRICK, Drive Chairman. 6 Symbol for iridium 7 Compass point 8 Ridicule 9 Fruit 10 Challenge 11 Malayan coin 13 Stitch 16 Nova Scotia (ab.) 21 Emaciated 22 On the New York, Oct. 4 (JP) Baseball has had more crises this year than the United Nations. If America survives the present world series, nothing should ever get it down.

For the national pastime in 1951 became a national disease. It is doubtful whether anything has stirred the people up more since the sinking of the battleship Maine. Or divided them more since the Civil War between the states. The world series itself comes as something of an anti-climax to the whing-ding playoff games in the National league between the New York Giants and the Brooklyn, Dodgers. These croocial contests did more to raise the blood pressure of the average fan than if you had put a bicycle pump in his veins.

They caused folk to forget the realities of taxes, politics, and international tensions. They broke up lifelong loyalties and created new ones. They turned friend against friend. They caused ordinary hen-pecked men to become wife beaters "If I'd known you were for the Dodgers I'd never a-married you." They caused wives to throw drinks in their husband's face with a snarling, "Why should you be for the Giants, you you mouse. Here in New York the temperature every day went five degrees above the weather bureau's forecast because of the hot air stirred up by arguing fans.

I don't ever remember a season where everybody buried his own troubles more in the troubles of his team. You think I'm kidding? After the Giants lost the second game 10 to 0, one angry fellow rushed over and bit his television set in the leg. In Brooklyn a lawyer broke down and wept openly after the Dodgers lost the first game. His wondering wife, who somehow had escaped the general madness, looked at him and said: "He wouldn't waste that many tears on me if I Cropped down dead." Of course, that's just like a woman. They take everything personal.

In upper Manhattan, a stronghold of the Giants, a 13-year-old girl paid her six-year-old sister and four-year-old brother a nickel each to pray for her team. "I can't pray myself," she explained. "I have to listen to the game on the After praying the Giants in successfully in thefirst contest, the two small children struck for higher pay. "A nickel isn't very said the little "Our kneeses is sore." The reaction of avisiting young Swedish woman to ou tempest-in-a-horsehide was interesting. Taken by friends to see her first game, she gazed astounded at the uproar in the stands.

HORIZONTAL 1,8 Depicted rodent 11 Betrayers 12 Ages 14 Disturbed 15 Madden 17 Parts of churches 18 Tendon 19 Symbol for erbium 20 Decigram (ais.) 21 Cushions 23 Lampreys 26 Chemical suffix Giants, the "team that couldn't be beat," enter the world series as an underdog to the New York Yankees. The sports experts have the American League Yankees tabbed as the favorite 40 Trudge 41 Golf devices 42 Worm 44 Deed 45 Note in Guido's seale 48 Correlative of either 33 "Lily maid of Astolat" 34 Rouse into action 37 Tree fluid 38 Large plant 39 "Flickertail State" (ab.) sheltered side 24 Young sheep 25 Mineral springs 31 Humiliated 32 Tests Life Is Fuller and More Fun When You Try to Help Others I recently heard a man describe a wonderfully kind and happy woJ man with these words: "She is always going out of her way to do thoughtful things for other people. And the strange thing about it is that in thinking of others and doing things for their happiness, she usually has a fine time herself and enjoys many interesting experiences that would never come her way if she weren't thinking of others, rather than of herself." That is the strange thing about true unselfishness. The person who genuinely likes and understands others and is willing to lend a helping hand wherever it is needed does get more fun out of living than the person who is" mainly interested in himself, his own convenience and his own pleasure. Lose yourself in doing something for another and there is often real pleasure in the doing.

Take yourself outside your own worries and problems in thinking of others and you benefit as much as those you are trying to give a happy time. Selfish Folk Lead Narrow Lives But think only of yourself and your life is narrow and your experiences meager. The things done without thought of reward are usually the most rewarding. It is only when you do something with the expectation of gratitude that you are likely to get hurt. Do a thing willingly and gladly and simply because you want to make someone else happy and the reward will come from the doing.

That is the strange and wonderful thing about unselfishness. It is the only kind of do-gooding that really pays off. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP Notice Is hereby given that the limited partnership known as "Homer's and Ken's at Hartman's Erookdale Inn" has been and is dissolved, elective September 16. 1951. The names of the partners are as follows: Homer L.

Wv-lie and Kenneth C. Stone, general partners, and Richard H. Hartman and Ethel M. Hartman. limited partners.

Oct. 4 because the club is rested, they have three top line pitchers ready to go while the Giants have been embattled in a race they couldn't lose a game for more than two weeks. BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF TIME APPOINTED FOR PROVING WILL, ETC.

No. 12.637 rrrrrrr iOL- fT iF a L- WWM J. 27 According to (ab.) 28 Whirlwind 29 Parent 30 Pause 33 Recedes 35 Period of time (ab.) 36 French article On paper the Yankees seem to be the superior ball club, a steadier infield, better catching and left-handed batters facing the Giants' predominantly right-handed pitching staff. Rut nn nanof 4Va TA a be the best team in the National league all season. Unfortunately for the fans in Flatbush, no one told the Giants about Brooklyn's supremacy.

In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Santa Cruz. In- the Matter of the Estate of JOSEPH A. WHEELER, also known as JOSEPH WHEELER, also known as J. A. WHEELER, Deceased.

Notice is hereby given that a petition for the probate of the will of Joseph A. Wheeler, also known as Joseph Wheeler, also known as J. A. Wheeler, "deceased, and for the issu-ance-to petitioner, Josephine C. ingle, of letters testamentary has been tiled in this court, and that Friday, October 19, 1951, at ten o'clock A.

M. of said dav, and the courtroom of said court, in "the courthouse, in the city of Santa Cruz. County of Santa Cruz, State of California, have been fixed as the time and place for the hearing of said petition, when and where all persons interested may appear and contest the same and show cause why said petition should not be granted. Dated: October 3. 1951.

H. E. MILLER, Clerk. By EMMA RODHOUSE. Deputy Clerk.

J. FRANK MURPHY and EUGENE J. ADAMS. Attorneys for Petitioner, Santa Cruz, California. Oct.

4 to IS 122 3 11 125 1 llll 55" IP L-H 1 I 1 1 1 II Lr 37 Discolor 40 Sticking substance 43 Armed fleet 45 Flowers 46 Pare 47 It lives in large or villages 49 Editors (ab.) 50 Barterers VERTICAL 1 Support 2 Elevated 3 Sick ones 4 Followers SWaad Perhaps more for sentimental reasons than baseball percentage, well have to string along with the New York Giants in the world series, we want to find out if the Giants just can't be beat Humphrey began to make war on poverty! He has been fighting prosperity eyer since he came to the senate!" BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS BUY U. S. SAVINGS BONDS.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Santa Cruz Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
909,325
Years Available:
1884-2005