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anaheim-gazette 1927-12-08

1927-12-08 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Opposed to Vote on Reapportionment Farm Bloc Don't Want Special Election on Measure Senator Frank S. Boggs, Stockton author of the farm bloc plan, is now seeking to enjoin the submission of the reapportionment question to the people, but it is generally conceded that the injunction will likely be denied. Voicing the sentiments of the farm group of which he is the leader, Boggs insisted that the proponents of the farm bureau reapportionment plan did not want to have the measure voted on at a special election because they would not have the benefit of a full vote. The fighting farm bloc will probably carry their opposition to a special election to the governor on whom devolves the duty of calling it. If the referendum is delayed, then Orange, Riverside, and Imperial counties will again be combined in voting for only one senator, since they constitute an odd-numbered district and Senator Chester Kline's term expires in 1928. It the referendum is voted on in May and carries, then the three counties will each elect one senator. Orange, Imperial, and Riverside counties now constitute three assembly districts and will continue to do so under the new Districting act. Dr C. D. Ball, assemblyman from Orange county, will be one whose term in the lower house expires in 1928. Orange county is vitally interested in this reapportionment measure because it will give the county a separate senatorial district instead of combining it with Riverside and Imperial counties as at present. This Boggs law carries out the farm bureau amendment, giving control of the senate to the rural sections by providing that no county shall have more than one senator. Confusion is bound to result if both reapportionment and legislative candidates are voted on at the same election according to the state's attorney. Buena Park Notes (By MRS. J. P. ROBISON) The Woman's Club had their usual monthly business meeting Thursday afternoon. Miss Hattie Stanley left Friday for a visit with relatives at Van Nuys. Mrs. Horton and son, of Indiana, arrived last week for an extended visit with her daughter, Mrs. Victor Moffitt. Rev B. Y. Neal returned Saturday from a trip to Illinois, also down to Louisiana. During the trip he visited 12 states. Mr. and Mrs. M. Uttenweller and Miss Katharine Uttenweiler spent the weekend in San Diego. Mr. Garrison Coster is quite sick. The Jolly Neighbors made a surprise visit to Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Horn last Wednesday to remind them that it was their sixteenth wedding anniversary. Those enjoying the evening were Messrs. and Mesdames George Cole, James Cole, R. D. Bacon, Emanuel Pastady, Fred Bastady, E. E. Thurman, George McNell, H. H. Haggarty, L. A. Newman, J. H. Page, J. R. Schofield, M. Raymond, Lester Schofield, L. T. Willsey, and Mrs. Edward Martin. Mrs. Pauline Cole, Mrs. Rose Hartman. Mr. and Mrs. Harold West have moved to Court street. Miss Zoe Jackson has returned from a short visit to Redlands. A number of people from here attended the funeral of Eugene M. Miller of Coronia, at the Hilgenfeld-Rollins funeral parlors, Tuesday afternoon. Mr. Miller is well known here, as his wife, Mrs. Mabel Miller, was principal of our school; and they had many friends here. Mr. Miller had only been sick a short time, having pneumonia. The C. H. Owens family have moved into the Warren flat, over the bakery and meat market. Charles Richey of Brea has moved into the house vacated by the Owens, which he recently bought from C. W. Girvin. Mrs. Sarah Drysdale and son, of Custer, S. D., visited her cousin, Mrs. L. J. Robeson, several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Fisher have bought a dry cleaning establishment at Downey and have moved there. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Spohn and children, Wallace and Betty Jo, and Miss Authorities for Driving Two men, among five injured clients in the section over the hold by Santa Clarita thorites. Paul Bernard treated in the fractured skull lice with a Mattock, 25 o'clock. Mattock, who Habra pending nard's injuries jaw and other which wrecked yond repair. B cars when she W. W., her home with possible intern accident at B car said to hail Langdon of A have struck the riding. Langdon was following the is said to hail machine, reboothen Benner name was not have been injure that marks on the wheels on proximately 50 Mrs. N. R.jared Saturday in which she band collided G.V.Ison Garden Grove have been tracedthe time of th SUGGEST Orange county is vitally interested in this reapportionment measure because it will give the county a separate senatorial district instead of combining it with Riverside and Imperial counties as at present. This Boggs law carries out the farm bureau amendment, giving control of the senate to the rural sections by providing that no county shall have more than one senator. Confusion is bound to result if both reapportionment and legislative candidates are voted on at the same election, according to the state's attorney. The reapportionment referendum should be voted on at the presidential primary election in May in order to clear the legal air before the August primaries, according to Attorney U. S. Webb, attorney general. "Otherwise, if both candidates and the redistricting act are balloted on in November, 1928, and the reapportionment measure carries, it may be necessary for the courts to decide whether the legislators are lawfully elected before the 1929 session can engage in law-making," asserted the attorney. "If the people favor redistricting at the same election at which they elect the assembly and half the senate, they will have abolished the districts from which these candidates were elected before they take office. "Inevitably, it will lead to legal complications unless the governor submits the referendum to the voters at an early date so that the boundaries of the legislative districts may be fixed before the legislative election." Webb maintained. Don’t Procrastinate In Renewing License State Motor Vehicle Department Issues Warning to Autoists Do your auto license shopping early. This warning is being broadcast by the Automobile Club of Southern California, which will co-operate with the state division of motor vehicles in renewing the nearly 2,000,000 automobile licenses for 1928. To facilitate this huge task, distribution will begin December 15, which will allow two weeks in addition to the 30 days allotted by law. The last date upon which licenses may be obtained without penalty is January 30. After the legal expiration period, 100 per cent is added to the usual $3 fee. At headquarters of the Automobile Club of Southern California, at Piqueroa and Adams streets, Los Angeles, issuing of license plates will begin at one minute past midnight, December 14. This will give go-getters a chance to boast that they were first to obtain their new license plates in Southern California. In addition to the fee of $3 the applicant must bring the white registration slip, which must be legible in the correct address of the place. Don't Always Blame the Tire "Don't always blame the tire," says a general manager of one of the world's largest tire companies, in an article in India Tire and Rubber Review for December. This is striking at the very heart of a condition in dire need of remedy, less tire mileage. Very frequently you hear the phrase, "Balloon tires do not seem to give as long mileage as they did a year or so ago." Apparently many people think that present day balloon tires are not as good as those made then. But proof will show that tires are made better today than ever before, yet in many cases they do give less mileage. And here are the reasons. When motorists find they are not getting as much mileage as they had expected, they first blame the tires on their cars. Few, if any, of them stop FULLERTON VICTORIOUS Fullerton defeated Covina at football on the latter's grounds on Tuesday afternoon, by a score of 13 to 12. Fullerton won the championship of the Orange County league, while Covina took honors in the Citrus league. The game was well played and stubbornly contested throughout, with the Orange county boys having a shade the best of it. It was semi-final for the Southern California championship. The boys have yet to meet another southern club, winners of their semi-final. If they win this game, they will meet the northern team for the state championship. Semi-finals are now being played, and the game for the state championship will be played in a week or two. Coach Shorty Smith has had the valuable assistance of Johnny Hawkins in coaching the team. The last few years have seen marvelous developments in motor car construction. Many more good roads have created a demand for high speed cars. Speed is a bad enemy to tire mileage. Through a series of interesting tests, it is shown that tires wear out much faster at high speeds, not only because more heat is developed in the tires, but because the abrasion is much greater. For example, a grindstone operated at high speed will sharpen a knife much quicker than when run slowly. And if your wheels are not properly aligned, the highways are a grindstone in every sense of the word, to which your tires are subjected to. West Brothers, local India distributor, want their customers to understand the conditions which are constantly changing which decrease tire mileage. Five Are Injured In Auto Crashes Authorities Holding Two Men for Driving Recklessly Two men, one of whom was listed among five injured in automobile accidents in the northern Orange county section over the week-end, are being held by Santa Ana and La Habra authorities. Paul Bernard of Norco was being treated in the Fullerton hospital for a fractured skull as the result of a collision with a car driven by Marvin Matteck. 25 of Santa Fe Springs, at the La Habra cross roads Sunday night. Matteck, who is in custody at La Habra pending the outcome of Bernard's injuries, received a fractured jaw and other injuries in the crash, which wrecked both cars almost beyond repair. Both were alone in their cars when the crash occurred. Mrs. E. W. Benner was confined to her home with a fractured hip and possible internal injuries, following an accident at Buena Park in which a car said to have been driven by F. H. Langdon of Anaheim was reported to have struck the car in which she was riding. Langdon was held in the county jail, following the accident in which his car is said to have first struck another machine, rebounded and crashed into the Benner car. A woman, whose name was not reported, was said to have been injured. Witnesses declared that marks on the pavement showed the wheels on Langdon's car slid approximately 58 feet before the collision. Mrs. N. R. Bernard was slightly injured Saturday evening, when the car in which she was riding with her husband collided with another driver by G. V. Isom of Long Beach, west of Garden Grove. Isom's car was said to have been traveling without lights at the time of the crash. SUGGEST CRIME REMEDIES At a recent conference on press relations at the University of Virginia's Institute of Public Affairs, at Charleston point to our record of homicides as proof that the right and privilege of American citizens to buy and own guns is the cause of killing. Anyone who will take the trouble to study a state prison record will find that guns are not used in committing a large percentage of the most heinous crimes. The professional gun-toter, the dope peddler, the card shark, the drunken driver, and numerous other lawbreakers are a menace, but honest persons should not be denied the right to use useful instruments or other articles which the criminal uses, on the theory that this will prevent a criminal making improper use of such articles. Carrying arms to assist in crime should entail a double penalty. Why pamper the criminal? Taking guns away from law-abiding men and women insures immunity to assailants upon their homes or persons, and invites, rather than curtails crime. A new machine has been invented in England that will bake a potato in 60 seconds and broil a steak in 30. Think what a boon this will be to mother returning home late from the afternoon bridge club. A New York dentist was shot the other day, presumably by one of his patients. Most of us perhaps can sympathize a little with the patient. Chauncey Depew, hale and active at 93, delivered a political address the other night. Doubtless he attributes his long political life to the fact that he has always been a Republican. Try an 'burn em' Johns-Manville Rigid Asbestos Shingles Phone 801 GIBBS LUMBER 801 East Broadway, Anaheim, Calif. "FROM A MAIN The Gift That Will SUGGEST CRIME REMEDIES At a recent conference on press relations at the University of Virginia's Institute of Public Affairs, at Charlottesville, Judge Archie Dabney of that city declared that if the press would present the criminal in his true colors, would do more for the suppression of crime than all the court reform ever attempted. "Let the court reporter show the criminal as he is, not a hero or a coward, but a degenerate, a diseased creature, if not abnormal at least subnormal and a weakling without mental rigor to resist temptation to do wrong. The reporter should appeal to the sporting instinct: of the public by showing that the criminal is one who has taken unfair advantage of his victim." Well meaning anti-pistol enthusiasts NOTICE POULTRY AND DAIRYMEN: We are now open for business, with a full line of Poultry and Dairy Feed, Dairy and Rabbit Alfalfa, Wheat and Barley Straw. We solicit your business. RYAN'S FEED STORE C. H. RYAN, Prop. Atchison and Santa Ana St., Anahalm (formerly Sperry Flour Co. Bldg.) Phone 1047 11-3-4t CHURCH NOTICE First Church of Christ, Scientist—a branch of The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.—Philadelphia street at Chartres. Sunday service at 11 a.m. Subject, "God the Preserver of Man." Sunday School will be held at 9:30 a.m. Testimonial meeting every Wednesday at 8 p.m. The free reading room, 304 Bank of Italy building, is open daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sunday and legal holidays. No. 412 R MUFFLERS — A soft silk or a worsted—either in the gayest of colors or color combinations—and each in a special Christmas box. A gift HE will appreciate. UNDERWEAR—Here is a present mother can give—so practical that either father or the boys will understand. Full-length wool and cotton union suits. MANHATTAN First Ch SHIRTS—Fine shirts are and one of the best choices for giving. And one cannot receive at Christmas time. In our have assembled a line of the displayed in holiday showing new plain colors with collar and fancy stripes and mixtures, white in English broadcloths fine linen. You will make these before selecting a gift. SWEATERS—Every man have at least three sweaters so you are taking no chance. Stocked—if you had thought as a gift for HIM. Our stock slip-over style; the heavy winter wear; the coat or bweights, all colors and all in fact a knit goods department than a score of suggestions— Mother! March Child's Tongue California Fig Syrup" is Children's Harmless Laxative When your child is constipated, illious, has colic, feverish breath, constellation, tongue, or diarrhea, a teaspoonful of genuine "California Fig Syrup" weeps the stomach and promptly cleans the bowels of poisons, gases, bile, souring food and wasta. Never cramps or overacta. Contains no narcotics or soothing drugs. Children love its delicious taste. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has full directions for babies and children of all ages, plainly printed on bottle. Mother! You must say "California" or you may get an imitation fig syrup. UNDERWEAR—Here is a present mother can give—so practical that either father or the boys will understand. Full-length wool and cotton union suits. SOCKS — Sister can give these—and a great hit it will make with either Dad or brother. They are to be had in wool or wool and silk—or silk—and fancy or plain. SWEATERS—Every man have at least three sweaters so you are taking no chance. Stocked—if you had thought as a gift for HIM. Our stock slip-over style; the heavy Ju winter wear; the coat or b weights, all colors and all in fact a knit goods department than a score of suggestions—which meets the pocket-book. Throughout every department suggestion after suggestion Belts, Buckles, Watch Guards penders—and NECKWEAR more wonderful selection. boxes all their own—and s BUY HIS GIFT AT HE WILL KNOW THE GLANCES AT IT, WHEN IS RIGHT. NO DOUBTS HIS STORE—SO YOU CAN GREATER COMPLIMENT ING HIS GIFT HERE. ALWAYS CONSISTENT MERCHANDISE. "By All Means" F. A. YUNG "The Home of Hart Shirts Manhattan Shirts Florsheim Shoes" Anaheim, Calif., Dec. 8, 1927 Children Cry for Fletcher's CASTORIA MOTHER: Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children of all ages. It contains no narcotics. To avoid limitations, always look for the signature of Charles Fletcher. Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend 273 SS WELL AND SUCCEED A MAN'S STORE" at Will Please Him Most A MAN'S STORE" What Will Please Him Most GLOVES—Everybody can give gloves. These fine cape skin gloves in natural leathers—a ny shade—reinforced seams and as manish as they can be. MANHATTAN SHIRTS First Choice SHIRTS—Fine shirts are always first choice of the best choices for practical Christmas. And one cannot receive too many shirts Christmas time. In our shirt department we assembled a line of the finest shirts ever loved in holiday showing, including all the plain colors with collar attached or detached, stripes and mixtures, or the ever reliable in English broadcloths, basket weaves and men. You will make no mistake in seeing before selecting a gift for him. VEATERS—Every man and boy should at least three sweaters of various weights—you are taking no chance that he will be overdressed—if you had thought of a nice sweater gift for HIM. Our stocks include the light never style; the heavy Jumbo knit for coldest wear; the coat or buttoned model in all sizes, all colors and all color combinations—at a knit goods department which offers more score of suggestions—and at a price range WEATERS—Every man and boy should wear at least three sweaters of various weights—you are taking no chance that he will be overweight—if you had thought of a nice sweater gift for HIM. Our stocks include the light ever style; the heavy Jumbo knit for coldest wear; the coat or buttoned model in all colors, all colors and all color combinations—at a knit goods department which offers more score of suggestions—and at a price range meets the pocket-book requirements of all. Throughout every department you will find question after suggestion; Wind-breaks, Caps, Buckles, Watch Guards, Cuff Links, Suspenders—and NECKWEAR—you never saw a wonderful selection. Many with special features all their own—and some in special sets. BUY HIS GIFT AT A MAN'S STORE. YOU WILL KNOW THE MOMENT HE FINANCES AT IT, WHETHER OR NOT IT IS RIGHT. NO DOUBT THIS STORE IS THE STORE—SO YOU CAN PAY HIM NO FEATER COMPLIMENT THAN SELECTING HIS GIFT HERE. OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS CONSISTENT WITH GOOD MERCHANDISE. PAJAMAS—Never have we shown a finer assortment of men's and boys' pajamas. They are in white or the gayest of colors and fancy combinations. Silk, linen or cotton. "By All Means Get a Fit" YUNGBLUTH Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx" Shirts Dutchess Trousers Shoes Jantzen Swimming Suits