anaheim-gazette 1929-05-30
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Living, Throbbing Melody, Pouring From the Screen
With Boundless Magnificence—The Supreme Achievement of Modern Motion Picture Art!
With John Boles and Carlotta Kings
132 singing voices, 116 exotic dancers
and operatic orchestra of 109 players.
WARNER BROS.
SPECTACULAR
SINGING
SUCCESS!
The
DESERT
SONG
A WARNER BROS.
VITAPHONE SINGING PICTURE
A WARNER BROS. VITAPHONE SINGING PICTURE
4 DAYS STARTING
MONDAY, JUNE 3
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30 EACH EVENING
Try to get in at the start of the Feature
CALIFORNIA THEATRE ANNIVERSARY
"Desert Song"
Goes on at 7:08 and 9:18
Marquette
DISPLAY
SATURDAY
A NEW SIX AT A PRICE WITHIN THE REACH OF
On Saturday, Buick will present the new Marquette—designed by Buick engineers and built in Buick factories. Marketed as an additional member of the Buick family, it will in no way affect Buick itself. Buick will continue to express the policies that made it the leader of the fine car field for the past quarter-century. In the smart, comfortable bodies of the Marquette you will recognize the fine hand of Fisher design. In poise you will see experience. And in performance—that which all cars are judged—Marquette leading its price clive margin. Be on hand with new car is shown Saturdare remarkable new automobiles duced at a price within the m
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN
Canadian Factories
McLaughlin-Buick, Oshawa, Ont.
Corporation
Builders of Buick and Marquette Mata
ANAHEIM
128 S. L. A. St.
Phone 354
GEORGE F. KOWAR
NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY DEALER
Tune in our BUICK program over KHJ each Wednesday night between 8:00 AM and 10:00 AM.
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL
Richfield Company Invading Canada
Twenty-Six Service Stations to Handle Its Products Across the Border
As part of its general expansion program the Richfield Oil company is preparing to enter British Columbia and anticipates very shortly having Richfield products on sale at not less than 26 service stations in Vancouver through the Paragon Oil, Ltd., who are to be distributors for the company in that territory.
R. R. Hall, district sales manager for Richfield with headquarters at Seattle, is at present in Vancouver supervising the erection of a bulk distributing plant, with seel storage for the present to be confined primarily to gasoline and lubricating oils.
At Seattle, Richfield has just enlarged its bulk storage facilities and has tankage for 45,000 barrels of gasoline, 140,000 barrels of fuel and diesel oils and 140,000 gallons of lubricating oil, while at Tacoma 50,000 barrels of additional fuel or storage has just been erected.
Shipments for this entire territory are being made by Richfield tankers direct from Los Angeles harbor and it is anticipated that all class of bulk storage will be considerably increased within the next few months.
Richfield is also starting construction on ten 134,000 barrel steel tanks at its Rioco refinery at Long Beach, California, the additional storage being required by the company's general expansion work in outside territories. Enlargement of pipeline and gathering facilities in the Signal Hill area has been sufficiently completed to take care of 8,000 barrels new production recently added in this field; 11,000 barrels at Santa Fe Springs, and in anticipation of the successful completion of a number of additional wells now drilling.
Honey Production Costs Underway
Bankers of County Endorse the Bonds
Lew Wallace's Attempt to Side-track Resolution Was Dismal Failure
Approval of Flood Control Engineer Paul Bailey's report and indorsement of the proposed $16,500,000 bond issue, to be voted upon June 25, marked Tuesday night's annual meeting of the Orange County Bankers' Association, held in the Elks clubhouse, Anaheim.
"There'll come a time when these dams will be worth $16,000,000 to Orange county in 16 days," declared Attorney H. C. Head, pioneer, in a dramatic review of damage done by historic floods in this county.
The decisive action on the part of the bankers of the county came following a detailed explanation of the project by Engineer Bailey, County Auditor W. C. Jerome, who explained that the peak rate throughout the 40 years the bonds are to run would be but 47 cents, running down to six cents per $100 of assessed valuation; Attorney H. C. Head, W. E. Williams, cashier of the First National bank of Santa Ana and a member of the flood control advisory board; Willard Smith of Orange, and Wm. Schumacher of Buena Park, member of the county board of supervisors.
The motion to endorse the bonds was made by F. E. Farnsworth of Santa Ana, and it received the entire vote of the bankers present excepting that of Lew H. Wallace of Newport Beach, who said that it had not been demonstrated to his satisfaction by the engineer that the strata of water from which the beach townns draw their supply would be replenished by the plan as outlined.
Emphasis upon two important points was made by State Senator N. T. Edwards, president of the association, W. C. Jerome and H. C. Head.
Edwards and Jerome pointed out that the engineering data was passed upon unanimously by Bailey, who formerly was state engineer and a man of very high standing in his profession, by three of the best known consulting engineers in America and by a committee, and it embraced also a pledge of non-interference with the existing colonies of European nations. Its application was wholly to Europe, and it was designed equally to protect the United States and the Latin American countries, as at least one of them has attested gratefully with a monument.
"The Clark memorandum makes clear, from original historical sources, what legitimate part the Monroe Doctrine has played in our international relations, and, what is now more important, some of the distortions of it and the flagrant misrepresentations by some of its critics from which it and American policy alike have suffered in repute."
Our internationalists and pinks will doubtless continue to oppose American policy in Latin America, will continue to re-echo the European charge that we are imperialistic in our dealings with the nations to the south of us. But they can hardly, if they will study Mr. Clark's memorandum, blame this "imperialism" on the Monroe Doctrine. As a matter of fact, of course, Uncle Sam's "imperialism" exists only in the crafty minds of European propagandists and their American dupes.
American trade in the nations to the south is increasing steadily year by year. We are taking more and more South American goods than in the years before the World War and are selling more in return. This increase of American trade has had a reactionary effect in Europe. Small wonder then that European propagandists accuse Uncle Sam of imperialism in Latin America. What they really mean is that he is a good business man and that he has succeeded in cultivating friendly trade relations in the Western Hemisphere. From this source arises all the criticism of the Monroe Doctrine and American foreign policy. There are only two ways to silence it. One is by exposing the false propaganda and other giving up our South, and Central American trade and turning the market over to Europe. There is no question as to which method real Americans will adopt.
Honey Production Costs Underway
The 1928 records of honey production costs under Orange county conditions are now being summarized by the Agricultural Extension Service. Several members of the Beekeepers Department of the Orange County Farm Bureau have been co-operating with the farm advisor's office in submitting cost records during the past year. An analysis is being made of the cost for the growers in the study.
The Orange county study is the first honey cost study to be made in California. The Beekeepers Department is looking forward to an interesting summary when completed.
The engineering data was passed upon unanimously by Bailey, who formerly was state engineer and a man of very high standing in his profession, by three of the best known consulting engineers in America and by a committee of the Orange county association of Civil Engineers.
"That leaves no question in my mind as to the soundness of the proposition," said Jerome.
Head dwelt upon the flood menace and his recital of conditions that will prevail in case the Santa Ana river really gets to cutting up in an old fashioned way proved interesting to the extreme to his hearers.
Head reviewed damage done in Fullerton and Anaheim by floods years ago.
"Those same floods today," he said, "would cause millions of dollars in loss as against thousands when these places were mere country villages."
The devastation that was caused by the great flood of 1884 was pictured by Head. He said that the river broke out on its old channel below First street and tore out a deep new channel across farms southward along the way the river now flows. Previous to that flood the river had cut across below Bolsa and then along the Huntington Beach mesa to the bay. Part of that flood cut off across country between Anaheim and Fullerton, leaving a sandy channel that had to be bridged.
"I am ordinarily pessimistic about bond issues," said Head, "but here is one that, after careful study, I endorse."
The bankers association elected officers at the meeting, Dr. J. G. Hillary of Anaheim being named president to succeed Senator N. T. Edwards of Orange; Alex Brownridge of the Farmers and Merchants Savings bank, of Santa Ana, was elected vice-president; O. E. Hanson of Anaheim was named secretary, succeeding W. F. Kogler of Orange. J. R. Porter of Orange was re-elected treasurer.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place the activities of the United States in Latin America have not been imperialistic. This is demonstrated to his satisfaction by the engineer that the strata of water from which the beach town draws their supply would be replenished by the plan outlined.
Emphasis upon two important points was made by State Senator N. T. Edwards, president of the association, W. C. Jerome and H. C. Head.
Edwards and Jerome pointed out that the engineering data was passed upon unanimously by Bailey, who formerly was state engineer and a man of very high standing in his profession, by three of the best known consulting engineers in America and by a committee of the Orange county association of Civil Engineers.
"That leaves no question in my mind as to the soundness of the proposition," said Jerome.
Head dwelt upon the flood menace and his recital of conditions that will prevail in case the Santa Ana river really gets to cutting up in an old fashioned way proved interesting to the extreme to his hearers.
Head reviewed damage done in Fullerton and Anaheim by floods years ago.
"Those same floods today," he said, "would cause millions of dollars in loss as against thousands when these places were mere country villages."
The devastation that was caused by the great flood of 1884 was pictured by Head. He said that the river broke out on its old channel below First street and tore out a deep new channel across farms southward along the way the river now flows. Previous to that flood the river had cut across below Bolsa and then along the Huntington Beach mesa to the bay. Part of that flood cut off across country between Anaheim and Fullerton, leaving a sandy channel that had to be bridged.
"I am ordinarily pessimistic about bond issues," said Head, "but here is one that, after careful study, I endorse."
The bankers association elected officers at the meeting, Dr. J. G. Hillary of Anaheim being named president to succeed Senator N. T. Edwards of Orange; Alex Brownridge of the Farmers and Merchants savings bank, of Santa Ana, was elected vice-president; O. E. Hanson of Anaheim was named secretary, succeeding W. F. Kogler of Orange. J. R. Porter of Orange was re-elected treasurer.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place the activities of the United States in Latin America have not been imperialistic. This is demonstrated to his satisfaction by the engineer that the strata of water from which the beach town draws their supply would be replenished by the plan outlined.
Emphasis upon two important points was made by State Senator N. T. Edwards, president of the association, W. C. Jerome and H. C. Head.
Edwards and Jerome pointed out that the engineering data was passed upon unanimously by Bailey, who formerly was state engineer and a man of very high standing in his profession, by three of the best known consulting engineers in America and by a committee of the Orange county association of Civil Engineers.
"That leaves no question in my mind as to the soundness of the proposition," said Jerome.
Head dwelt upon the flood menace and his recital of conditions that will prevail in case the Santa Ana river really gets to cutting up in an old fashioned way proved interesting to the extreme to his hearers.
Head reviewed damage done in Fullerton and Anaheim by floods years ago.
"Those same floods today," he said, "would cause millions of dollars in loss as against thousands when these places were mere country villages."
The devastation that was caused by the great flood of 1884 was pictured by Head. He said that the river broke out on its old channel below First street and tore out a deep new channel across farms southward along the way the river now flows. Previous to that flood the river had cut across below Bolsa and then along the Huntington Beach mesa to the bay. Part of that flood cut off across country between Anaheim and Fullerton, leaving a sandy channel that had to be bridged.
"I am ordinarily pessimistic about bond issues," said Head, "but here is one that, after careful study, I endorse."
The bankers association elected officers at the meeting, Dr. J. G. Hillary of Anaheim being named president to succeed Senator N. T. Edwards of Orange; Alex Brownridge of the Farmers and Merchants savings bank, of Santa Ana, was elected vice-president; O. E. Hanson of Anaheim was named secretary, succeeding W. F. Kogler of Orange. J. R. Porter of Orange was re-elected treasurer.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place the activities of the United States in Latin America have not been imperialistic. This is demonstrated to his satisfaction by the engineer that the strata of water from which the beach town draws their supply would be replenished by the plan outlined.
Emphasis upon two important points was made by State Senator N. T. Edwards, president of the association, W. C. Jerome and H. C. Head.
Edwards and Jerome pointed out that the engineering data was passed upon unanimously by Bailey, who formerly was state engineer and a man of very high standing in his profession, by three of the best known consulting engineers in America and by a committee of the Orange county association of Civil Engineers.
"That leaves no question in my mind as to the soundness of the proposition," said Jerome.
Head dwelt upon the flood menace and his recital of conditions that will prevail in case the Santa Ana river really gets to cutting up in an old fashioned way proved interesting to the extreme to his hearers.
Head reviewed damage done in Fullerton and Anaheim by floods years ago.
"Those same floods today," he said, "would cause millions of dollars in loss as against thousands when these places were mere country villages."
The devastation that was caused by the great flood of 1884 was pictured by Head. He said that the river broke out on its old channel below First street and tore out a deep new channel across farms southward along the way the river now flows. Previous to that flood the river had cut across below Bolsa and then along the Huntington Beach mesa to the bay. Part of that flood cut off across country between Anaheim and Fullerton, leaving a sandy channel that had to be bridged.
"I am ordinarily pessimistic about bond issues," said Head, "but here is one that, after careful study, I endorse."
The bankers association elected officers at the meeting, Dr. J. G. Hillary of Anaheim being named president to succeed Senator N. T. Edwards of Orange; Alex Brownridge of the Farmers and Merchants savings bank, of Santa Ana, was elected vice-president; O. E. Hanson of Anaheim was named secretary, succeeding W. F. Kogler of Orange. J.R.Porter of Orange was re-elected treasurer.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place the activities of the United States in Latin America have not been imperialistic. This is demonstrated to his satisfaction by the engineer that the strata of water from which the beach town draws their supply would be replenished by the plan outlined.
Emphasis upon two important points was made by State Senator N.T.Edwards or Orange; Alex Brownridge or Farmers and Merchants savings bank;of Santa Ana;was elected vice-president;O.E.Hanson or Anaheim was named secretary,succeeding W.F.Kogler or Orange.J.R.Porter or Orange was re-elected treasurer.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth.Inthe first placethe activitiesoftheUnitedStatesinLatinAmericahavenotbeenimperialisicThisisproventohissatisfactionbytheengineerthatthestrataofwaterfromwhichthebeachtowndrawsfurpremiumanddurable.
2.CASEOFseamlesshardrubberandproofstronganddurable.
3.CASEWALLSpartof,andmouldedinsomepiecewithoutercase.
4.PLATESextra thickandlouslived.Bestmaterials-high-gradeoxide-gridsandleadplatescontaincorrectamountofantimonyforcertaindurability.
5.SEPARATORSOfhigh-gradedwhiteusedthoroughtestinsuregreatercapacityallowrenttoflowfreeylydgivecompleteinsulation。
We have heard a great deal of discussion of late years concerning the Monroe Doctrine, and this great principle enunciated by one of our early Presidents has come in for its share of criticism on the part of our pinks and internationalists who have claimed that Uncle Sam was using this time honored doctrine as a cloak for imperialistic activities in South and Central America.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In the first place the activities of the United States in Latin America have not been imperialistic. This is proved by he fact that we have never acquired a foot of territory in that region for the United States. There has never been a time since the close of the Civil War when we could not have enriched ourselves territorially by marching in and taking possession. There have been excuses in abundance in Central America and in Mexico. But our policy has always been not for the acquisition of new possessions but for the preservation of peace and the rights of individuals and their property in the troubled areas.
In the second place the Monroe Doctrine has not been the basis for our interventions in Latin America. We have landed marines in China, too, and in other distant parts of the world for the preservation of American lives and property and we have done this not under the Monroe Doctrine, but under the moral right which every nation possesses to defend its own—and surely a nation which will not look after its own people in time of trouble is not worthy of the name.
A short time ago Reuben J. Clark, Undersecretary of State, in an exhaustive memorandum redefined the Monroe Doctrine and in so doing performed a cran service, in clearing away some of the misinformation which has resulted in unjust criticism of the doctrine. In commenting on this the Boston Transcript says:
"In its entirety, the doctrine as enunciated in 1823 comprehended only two main features: Opposition to European colonization and to the extension of European political systems to this con-
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the living room
An extension telephone in the living room is a real convenience.
If one of your guests expects a call he will have the telephone at his elbow. If there is an unexpected call, one need not leave the game.
Before you build or remodel, please let us tell you about concealed ducts and channels and other new developments in telephone convenience.
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