anaheim-gazette 1929-05-30
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U. S. C. Athletics
At Philadelphia
University of Southern California will have a team of 8 to 13 men in the I. C. A. A. A. A. championships at Philadelphia May 31 and June 1, and this squad will also compete in the N. C. A. A. championships at Chicago June 7 and 8, according to Coach Dean Cromwell of the Trojan team.
The eight men who are sure of making the trip to the national intercollegiate and their best marks in competition this season are Milton Maurer, 100-yard dash, 9 4-5 second; Vic Williams, 440-yard dash, 49 1-5 seconds; James Payne, 220-yard low hurdles, 23 3-5 seconds; Jack Williams, pole vault, 13 feet, 10 inches; Jesse Hill, broad jump, 24 feet, 1 inch; Howard Paul, broad jump, 24 feet, 3-8 inch; Jesse Mortensen, Javelin throw, 203 feet 3 inches; and Clarence Schleimer, shot put, 48 feet, 4'1-4 inches.
Among the five considered for the long trip are Captain Charley Borah, who was kept out of the California intercollegiate last Saturday because of a pulled muscle. Cromwell will leave it up to Borah himself as to whether or not he will make the trip when the Trojan captain will try out his injured leg in a fast practice race on Friday. If the leg appears to be in condition, Borah will choose to run, but if it is still sore and uncertain in strength he will stay home and use the time that he would have consumed in making the trip in studying for the state board dental examinations, as he is being graduated from the Trojan College of Dentistry next month.
The other four being considered for the eastern track invasion of the Southern Californians are Dick Wehner, 100 and 220; Gerald Pearson, 440; Charley Webber, high hurdles, and Erny Payne, low hurdles. Decision as to whether or not they will go will be made by Friday by Coach Cromwell, Director of Athletics "Bill" Hunter, and the faculty athletic committee.
BUILT LIKE A SAFE
We are living in an age of progress.
The massive door fits perfectly, while the heavy hinges, machine screwed into the cabinet, make it impossible for the door to ever sag or get out of alignment. The all-stair refrigerator can never lose efficiency through door leakage. Its ruggedness should be of special interest to apartment owners and builders, for here is an individual refrigeration unit and cabinet that will give them the least amount of trouble. 'Safe-like' applies not only to construction and materials, but also to the service performed by the refrigerator as a unit. By keeping the temperature at the proper level, perishable food can be safely stored in it until ready for use. Since the first showing of the all-stair refrigerator, it has met with wide approval and experts have said that it is the greatest achievement in electric refrigation since the hermetically sealed unit."
ORDINANCE NO. 532
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM APPROPRIATING MONEY FOR PUBLICITY AND ADVERTISING PURPOSES, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDING MAY 1ST, 1930.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:
That there be, and is hereby appropriated for the fiscal year ending May 1st, 1930, from the General Fund of the City of Anaheim the sum of Six Thousand ($6,000.00) Dollars, which sum shall be used for the purposes of advertising the City of Anaheim, and providing for music and promotion within said City of Anaheim; said money to be paid out by direction of the City Council of the City of Anaheim for said purposes.
The City Clerk of the City of Anaheim shall cause the foregoing ordinance to be published once in the "Anaheim Gazette," a weekly newspaper published and circulated in the City of Anaheim, and the same shall be in full force and effect on and after its final passage.
The foregoing Ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 23rd
BUILT LIKE A SAFE
We are living in an age of progress. In the days of the old windjammer, picturesque but slow moving ships of our colorful past, the idea of a steel ship would have caused much merriment in shipping circles, according to Mr. Wm. LeVecke, local General Electric refrigerator dealer. More recently, the idea of an all-steel refrigerator would have been received somewhat dubiously.
The research laboratories of the General Electric company, however, realizing the need for a more efficient refrigerator cabinet, recently succeeded in producing the first all-steel refrigerator ever offered to the public. So sturdy and efficient is this refrigerator that in tests it has been made to stand the equivalent of 40 years of strenuous service. To determine the strength of the door, door catch and hinges, a machine was designed to slam the door. The machine was set in operation and after the door had been vigorously slammed 300,000 times, it was found that all parts had withstood the strain perfectly.
Mr. Wm. LeVecke, "means that pur-
"This safe-like construction," said chasers can expect the unmistakely efficiency and longevity from their all-steel refrigerators with the General Electric hermetically sealed unit. The cabinet is sturdy beyond belief. The seam are welded and cannot ope nup or leave crevices in which dust or dirt advertising the City of Anaheim, and providing for music and promotion within said City of Anaheim; said money to be paid out by direction of the City Council of the City of Anaheim for said purposes.
The City Clerk of the City of Anaheim shall cause the foregoing ordinance to be published once in the "Anaheim Gazette," a weekly newspaper published and circulated in the City of Anaheim, and the same shall be in full force and effect on and after its final passage.
The foregoing Ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 23rd day of May, 1929.
L. E. MILLER,
Mayor of the City of Anaheim.
(SEAL)
Attest:
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF ORANGE,
CITY OF ANAHEIM,
I. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim, do hereby certify that the foregoing Ordinance was introduced at a regular meeting of the Board of Trustees held on the 9th day of May, 1929; that it was duly passed and adopted at a regular meeting of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, held on the 23rd day of May, 1929, by the following vote of the members thereof:
AYES: Trustees Miller, Koesel, Grafton, Lakeneman and Franzen.
NOES: Trustees None.
ABSENT AND NOT VOTING: Trustees None.
And I further certify that the Mayor of the City of Anaheim signed and approved said Ordinance on the 23rd day of May, 1929.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
(SEAL)
Fourteen comely Fontana girls—three samples are shown above—have entered the race for the crown that is annually beatowed on the most popular maid during the birthday celebration of the community.
This year the celebration has been extended over three days, June 6, 7 and 8. Many entertainment features have been planned for the three days which will culminate in the crowning of the queen. The proceeds of the fiesta and circus will be used for the completion of Fontana's new community swimming pool.
"The Desert Song"
Scene From "The Desert Song"—A Warner Bros Production
"The Desert Song"
Marks New Era
John Boles, who portrays the masterful, glorious singing role of "The Red Shadow," has won the highest critical praise for his work.
One of the most affecting scenes in "The Desert Song," Warner Bros.' Vitaphone operetta, coming to the Fox California theatre on Monday next for four days, is the leave-taking between the mysterious Red Shadow and his band of Riff followers, by whom he has been condemned to banishment into the desert, with neither food nor medicine.
Writing in the Daily Worker, New York (national communist organ), of May 6th, Irving Keith says that the growth of industrialization in Tidewater, Va., calls for an intensification of communist revolutionary activity in that section. It is especially important, declares the article, that the negroes be organized along revolutionary lines. All this is especially important, writes Keith, because of the number of bases for manufacturing and storing war material, and the number of military schools in that section.
Thus Virginia becomes "one of the most strategic points in the country." "In the navy yard at Portsmouth," continues.
John Boles, who portrays the masterful, glorious singing role of "The Red Shadow," has won the highest critical praise for his work.
One of the most affecting scenes in "The Desert Song," Warner Bros.' Vitaphone operetta, coming to the Fox California theatre on Monday next for four days, is the leave-taking between the mysterious Red Shadow and his band of Riff followers, by whom he has been condemned to banishment into the desert, with neither food nor water, and no arms except his own broken sword. There is a great bond of affection between the leader and his men, but he has refused to meet the French General Birabeau in single combat—knowing him to be his father—and the law of the tribe is inexorable.
The story of "The Desert Song" is full of heart-thrubs, many of which are based on the love of the Red Shadow for Margot, the French girl who is strangely attracted by the masked bandit chieftain, but has no eyes for his other self, Pierre Birabeau.
John Boles and Carlotta King are seen as the Red Shadow and Margot, respectively, and other important members of the all-star cast are Louise Fazenda, Myrna Loy, John Mijan, Johnny Arthur, Marie Wells, Jack Pratt, Edward Martindel, Robert E. Guzman and Otto Hoffman. The production was filmed under the direction of Roy Del Ruth, and the screen adaptation of the operetta was made by Harvey H. Gates.
A Michigan minister says golf is next to religion, and on Sundays it seems to run a little ahead of it.
York (national communist organ), of May 6th, Irving Keith says that the growth of industrialization in Tidewater, Va., calls for an intensification of communist revolutionary activity in that section. It is especially important, declares the article, that the negroes be organized along revolutionary lines. All this is especially important, writes Keith, because of the number of bases for manufacturing and storing war material, and the number of military schools in that section. Thus Virginia becomes "one of the most strategic points in the country." "In the navy yard at Portsmouth," continues the article, "is a strong group of militant workers." This militant group in the navy yard is of the utmost importance. With the proper leadership it must be turned into an active shop nucleus, embracing the best element among negro and white workers. It is also of the utmost importance that nuclei be established immediately in all of these bases and military schools."
Commenting on this article the Daily Worker says editorially: "The district committee is now engaged in building a rela party unit from among the workers in the basic industries, concentrating among the workers at the navy yard. The condition described by Comrade Keith existed and to an extent still exists in other party units in the South. The party is now giving attention to these units in reorganizing them and orientating itself on the negro proletarians and the workers in the basic industries generally." When it is recalled that the avowed purpose of the communist "party" is to preludeiate armed revolution, the significance of this activity in the navy yard at Norfolk and in the military schools of the state can readily be grasped.
DON'T FAIL
—to see the all-steel electric refrigeration exhibit at the Orange Show!
GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL-STEEL REFRIGERATOR
More than a quarter of a million users
and they haven't spent
a single dollar for service
Two years ago this month the General Electric Refrigerator was first publicly announced.
Already more than 15,000 California users enjoy the convenience and health-guarding service of the General Electric Refrigerator. Not one of these owners has ever paid a penny for service.
Fifteen years of research and development had produced a refrigerator with an hermetically sealed, dust-proof mechanism.
$16.25
a month
pays for this LARGE all-star General Electric with 9 square feet of shell area...temperature dial on cabinet...porcelain lined including freezing unit...not a PRICE model—See it!
A radical improvement has been made in the cabinet! It is now all-steel! It can not warp. It is a strong as a safe.
The Wm. LeVecke Co.
Orange County Dealer
103 E. Center Street
ANAHEIM
Phone 530
FULLERTON
Be sure to attend the Orange Show, May 23 to June 2.
Come here for
FLORSHEIM
SHOES
BECAUSE there's satisfaction in selecting your shoes where so many men get theirs, and because the new styles are always shown here first.
SHOES
BECAUSE there’s satisfaction in selecting your shoes where so many men get theirs, and because the new styles are always shown here first.
Most Styles $10
F. A. YUNGBLUTH
THE HOME OF HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX
Florsheim Shoes
Outchess Trousers
Manhattan Shirts
Stetson Hats
Is there Something Missing in your home?
TODAY’S MODERN HOME is not complete without an electric refrigerator. Modern living demands it, just as it demands the electric range, vacuum cleaner and radio. Like them it takes its place as a necessary household fixture because it lightens routine tasks, gives you
TODAY'S MODERN HOME is not complete without an electric refrigerator. Modern living demands it, just as it demands the electric range, vacuum cleaner and radio. Like them it takes its place as a necessary household fixture because it lightens routine tasks, gives you more leisure and more time for the things you like to do.
The electric refrigerator serves you the year round with no more attention than the lamp on your library table. It permits the perfect preservation of food...makes entertaining a never-ending delight. And, most important of all, it safeguards the health of your family.
There is a model to fit the requirements of your family. See it at the nearest Edison office. Then let us tell you how easy it is to own.